//===-- llvm/MC/MCInstrDesc.h - Instruction Descriptors -*- C++ -*-===// // // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure // // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // // This file defines the MCOperandInfo and MCInstrDesc classes, which // are used to describe target instructions and their operands. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #ifndef LLVM_MC_MCINSTRDESC_H #define LLVM_MC_MCINSTRDESC_H #include "llvm/Support/DataTypes.h" #include namespace llvm { class MCInst; class MCRegisterInfo; class MCSubtargetInfo; class FeatureBitset; //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // Machine Operand Flags and Description //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// namespace MCOI { // Operand constraints enum OperandConstraint { TIED_TO = 0, // Must be allocated the same register as. EARLY_CLOBBER // Operand is an early clobber register operand }; /// \brief These are flags set on operands, but should be considered /// private, all access should go through the MCOperandInfo accessors. /// See the accessors for a description of what these are. enum OperandFlags { LookupPtrRegClass = 0, Predicate, OptionalDef }; /// \brief Operands are tagged with one of the values of this enum. enum OperandType { OPERAND_UNKNOWN = 0, OPERAND_IMMEDIATE = 1, OPERAND_REGISTER = 2, OPERAND_MEMORY = 3, OPERAND_PCREL = 4, OPERAND_FIRST_TARGET = 5 }; } /// \brief This holds information about one operand of a machine instruction, /// indicating the register class for register operands, etc. class MCOperandInfo { public: /// \brief This specifies the register class enumeration of the operand /// if the operand is a register. If isLookupPtrRegClass is set, then this is /// an index that is passed to TargetRegisterInfo::getPointerRegClass(x) to /// get a dynamic register class. int16_t RegClass; /// \brief These are flags from the MCOI::OperandFlags enum. uint8_t Flags; /// \brief Information about the type of the operand. uint8_t OperandType; /// \brief The lower 16 bits are used to specify which constraints are set. /// The higher 16 bits are used to specify the value of constraints (4 bits /// each). uint32_t Constraints; /// \brief Set if this operand is a pointer value and it requires a callback /// to look up its register class. bool isLookupPtrRegClass() const { return Flags & (1 << MCOI::LookupPtrRegClass); } /// \brief Set if this is one of the operands that made up of the predicate /// operand that controls an isPredicable() instruction. bool isPredicate() const { return Flags & (1 << MCOI::Predicate); } /// \brief Set if this operand is a optional def. bool isOptionalDef() const { return Flags & (1 << MCOI::OptionalDef); } }; //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // Machine Instruction Flags and Description //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// namespace MCID { /// \brief These should be considered private to the implementation of the /// MCInstrDesc class. Clients should use the predicate methods on MCInstrDesc, /// not use these directly. These all correspond to bitfields in the /// MCInstrDesc::Flags field. enum Flag { Variadic = 0, HasOptionalDef, Pseudo, Return, Call, Barrier, Terminator, Branch, IndirectBranch, Compare, MoveImm, Bitcast, Select, DelaySlot, FoldableAsLoad, MayLoad, MayStore, Predicable, NotDuplicable, UnmodeledSideEffects, Commutable, ConvertibleTo3Addr, UsesCustomInserter, HasPostISelHook, Rematerializable, CheapAsAMove, ExtraSrcRegAllocReq, ExtraDefRegAllocReq, RegSequence, ExtractSubreg, InsertSubreg, Convergent }; } /// \brief Describe properties that are true of each instruction in the target /// description file. This captures information about side effects, register /// use and many other things. There is one instance of this struct for each /// target instruction class, and the MachineInstr class points to this struct /// directly to describe itself. class MCInstrDesc { public: unsigned short Opcode; // The opcode number unsigned short NumOperands; // Num of args (may be more if variable_ops) unsigned char NumDefs; // Num of args that are definitions unsigned char Size; // Number of bytes in encoding. unsigned short SchedClass; // enum identifying instr sched class uint64_t Flags; // Flags identifying machine instr class uint64_t TSFlags; // Target Specific Flag values const uint16_t *ImplicitUses; // Registers implicitly read by this instr const uint16_t *ImplicitDefs; // Registers implicitly defined by this instr const MCOperandInfo *OpInfo; // 'NumOperands' entries about operands // Subtarget feature that this is deprecated on, if any // -1 implies this is not deprecated by any single feature. It may still be // deprecated due to a "complex" reason, below. int64_t DeprecatedFeature; // A complex method to determine is a certain is deprecated or not, and return // the reason for deprecation. bool (*ComplexDeprecationInfo)(MCInst &, const MCSubtargetInfo &, std::string &); /// \brief Returns the value of the specific constraint if /// it is set. Returns -1 if it is not set. int getOperandConstraint(unsigned OpNum, MCOI::OperandConstraint Constraint) const { if (OpNum < NumOperands && (OpInfo[OpNum].Constraints & (1 << Constraint))) { unsigned Pos = 16 + Constraint * 4; return (int)(OpInfo[OpNum].Constraints >> Pos) & 0xf; } return -1; } /// \brief Returns true if a certain instruction is deprecated and if so /// returns the reason in \p Info. bool getDeprecatedInfo(MCInst &MI, const MCSubtargetInfo &STI, std::string &Info) const; /// \brief Return the opcode number for this descriptor. unsigned getOpcode() const { return Opcode; } /// \brief Return the number of declared MachineOperands for this /// MachineInstruction. Note that variadic (isVariadic() returns true) /// instructions may have additional operands at the end of the list, and note /// that the machine instruction may include implicit register def/uses as /// well. unsigned getNumOperands() const { return NumOperands; } /// \brief Return the number of MachineOperands that are register /// definitions. Register definitions always occur at the start of the /// machine operand list. This is the number of "outs" in the .td file, /// and does not include implicit defs. unsigned getNumDefs() const { return NumDefs; } /// \brief Return flags of this instruction. unsigned getFlags() const { return Flags; } /// \brief Return true if this instruction can have a variable number of /// operands. In this case, the variable operands will be after the normal /// operands but before the implicit definitions and uses (if any are /// present). bool isVariadic() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Variadic); } /// \brief Set if this instruction has an optional definition, e.g. /// ARM instructions which can set condition code if 's' bit is set. bool hasOptionalDef() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::HasOptionalDef); } /// \brief Return true if this is a pseudo instruction that doesn't /// correspond to a real machine instruction. bool isPseudo() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Pseudo); } /// \brief Return true if the instruction is a return. bool isReturn() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Return); } /// \brief Return true if the instruction is a call. bool isCall() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Call); } /// \brief Returns true if the specified instruction stops control flow /// from executing the instruction immediately following it. Examples include /// unconditional branches and return instructions. bool isBarrier() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Barrier); } /// \brief Returns true if this instruction part of the terminator for /// a basic block. Typically this is things like return and branch /// instructions. /// /// Various passes use this to insert code into the bottom of a basic block, /// but before control flow occurs. bool isTerminator() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Terminator); } /// \brief Returns true if this is a conditional, unconditional, or /// indirect branch. Predicates below can be used to discriminate between /// these cases, and the TargetInstrInfo::AnalyzeBranch method can be used to /// get more information. bool isBranch() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Branch); } /// \brief Return true if this is an indirect branch, such as a /// branch through a register. bool isIndirectBranch() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::IndirectBranch); } /// \brief Return true if this is a branch which may fall /// through to the next instruction or may transfer control flow to some other /// block. The TargetInstrInfo::AnalyzeBranch method can be used to get more /// information about this branch. bool isConditionalBranch() const { return isBranch() & !isBarrier() & !isIndirectBranch(); } /// \brief Return true if this is a branch which always /// transfers control flow to some other block. The /// TargetInstrInfo::AnalyzeBranch method can be used to get more information /// about this branch. bool isUnconditionalBranch() const { return isBranch() & isBarrier() & !isIndirectBranch(); } /// \brief Return true if this is a branch or an instruction which directly /// writes to the program counter. Considered 'may' affect rather than /// 'does' affect as things like predication are not taken into account. bool mayAffectControlFlow(const MCInst &MI, const MCRegisterInfo &RI) const; /// \brief Return true if this instruction has a predicate operand /// that controls execution. It may be set to 'always', or may be set to other /// values. There are various methods in TargetInstrInfo that can be used to /// control and modify the predicate in this instruction. bool isPredicable() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Predicable); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction is a comparison. bool isCompare() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Compare); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction is a move immediate /// (including conditional moves) instruction. bool isMoveImmediate() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::MoveImm); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction is a bitcast instruction. bool isBitcast() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Bitcast); } /// \brief Return true if this is a select instruction. bool isSelect() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Select); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction cannot be safely /// duplicated. For example, if the instruction has a unique labels attached /// to it, duplicating it would cause multiple definition errors. bool isNotDuplicable() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::NotDuplicable); } /// \brief Returns true if the specified instruction has a delay slot which /// must be filled by the code generator. bool hasDelaySlot() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::DelaySlot); } /// \brief Return true for instructions that can be folded as memory operands /// in other instructions. The most common use for this is instructions that /// are simple loads from memory that don't modify the loaded value in any /// way, but it can also be used for instructions that can be expressed as /// constant-pool loads, such as V_SETALLONES on x86, to allow them to be /// folded when it is beneficial. This should only be set on instructions /// that return a value in their only virtual register definition. bool canFoldAsLoad() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::FoldableAsLoad); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction behaves /// the same way as the generic REG_SEQUENCE instructions. /// E.g., on ARM, /// dX VMOVDRR rY, rZ /// is equivalent to /// dX = REG_SEQUENCE rY, ssub_0, rZ, ssub_1. /// /// Note that for the optimizers to be able to take advantage of /// this property, TargetInstrInfo::getRegSequenceLikeInputs has to be /// override accordingly. bool isRegSequenceLike() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::RegSequence); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction behaves /// the same way as the generic EXTRACT_SUBREG instructions. /// E.g., on ARM, /// rX, rY VMOVRRD dZ /// is equivalent to two EXTRACT_SUBREG: /// rX = EXTRACT_SUBREG dZ, ssub_0 /// rY = EXTRACT_SUBREG dZ, ssub_1 /// /// Note that for the optimizers to be able to take advantage of /// this property, TargetInstrInfo::getExtractSubregLikeInputs has to be /// override accordingly. bool isExtractSubregLike() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::ExtractSubreg); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction behaves /// the same way as the generic INSERT_SUBREG instructions. /// E.g., on ARM, /// dX = VSETLNi32 dY, rZ, Imm /// is equivalent to a INSERT_SUBREG: /// dX = INSERT_SUBREG dY, rZ, translateImmToSubIdx(Imm) /// /// Note that for the optimizers to be able to take advantage of /// this property, TargetInstrInfo::getInsertSubregLikeInputs has to be /// override accordingly. bool isInsertSubregLike() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::InsertSubreg); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction is convergent. /// /// Convergent instructions may only be moved to locations that are /// control-equivalent to their original positions. bool isConvergent() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Convergent); } //===--------------------------------------------------------------------===// // Side Effect Analysis //===--------------------------------------------------------------------===// /// \brief Return true if this instruction could possibly read memory. /// Instructions with this flag set are not necessarily simple load /// instructions, they may load a value and modify it, for example. bool mayLoad() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::MayLoad); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction could possibly modify memory. /// Instructions with this flag set are not necessarily simple store /// instructions, they may store a modified value based on their operands, or /// may not actually modify anything, for example. bool mayStore() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::MayStore); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction has side /// effects that are not modeled by other flags. This does not return true /// for instructions whose effects are captured by: /// /// 1. Their operand list and implicit definition/use list. Register use/def /// info is explicit for instructions. /// 2. Memory accesses. Use mayLoad/mayStore. /// 3. Calling, branching, returning: use isCall/isReturn/isBranch. /// /// Examples of side effects would be modifying 'invisible' machine state like /// a control register, flushing a cache, modifying a register invisible to /// LLVM, etc. bool hasUnmodeledSideEffects() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::UnmodeledSideEffects); } //===--------------------------------------------------------------------===// // Flags that indicate whether an instruction can be modified by a method. //===--------------------------------------------------------------------===// /// \brief Return true if this may be a 2- or 3-address instruction (of the /// form "X = op Y, Z, ..."), which produces the same result if Y and Z are /// exchanged. If this flag is set, then the /// TargetInstrInfo::commuteInstruction method may be used to hack on the /// instruction. /// /// Note that this flag may be set on instructions that are only commutable /// sometimes. In these cases, the call to commuteInstruction will fail. /// Also note that some instructions require non-trivial modification to /// commute them. bool isCommutable() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Commutable); } /// \brief Return true if this is a 2-address instruction which can be changed /// into a 3-address instruction if needed. Doing this transformation can be /// profitable in the register allocator, because it means that the /// instruction can use a 2-address form if possible, but degrade into a less /// efficient form if the source and dest register cannot be assigned to the /// same register. For example, this allows the x86 backend to turn a "shl /// reg, 3" instruction into an LEA instruction, which is the same speed as /// the shift but has bigger code size. /// /// If this returns true, then the target must implement the /// TargetInstrInfo::convertToThreeAddress method for this instruction, which /// is allowed to fail if the transformation isn't valid for this specific /// instruction (e.g. shl reg, 4 on x86). /// bool isConvertibleTo3Addr() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::ConvertibleTo3Addr); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction requires custom insertion support /// when the DAG scheduler is inserting it into a machine basic block. If /// this is true for the instruction, it basically means that it is a pseudo /// instruction used at SelectionDAG time that is expanded out into magic code /// by the target when MachineInstrs are formed. /// /// If this is true, the TargetLoweringInfo::InsertAtEndOfBasicBlock method /// is used to insert this into the MachineBasicBlock. bool usesCustomInsertionHook() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::UsesCustomInserter); } /// \brief Return true if this instruction requires *adjustment* after /// instruction selection by calling a target hook. For example, this can be /// used to fill in ARM 's' optional operand depending on whether the /// conditional flag register is used. bool hasPostISelHook() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::HasPostISelHook); } /// \brief Returns true if this instruction is a candidate for remat. This /// flag is only used in TargetInstrInfo method isTriviallyRematerializable. /// /// If this flag is set, the isReallyTriviallyReMaterializable() /// or isReallyTriviallyReMaterializableGeneric methods are called to verify /// the instruction is really rematable. bool isRematerializable() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::Rematerializable); } /// \brief Returns true if this instruction has the same cost (or less) than a /// move instruction. This is useful during certain types of optimizations /// (e.g., remat during two-address conversion or machine licm) where we would /// like to remat or hoist the instruction, but not if it costs more than /// moving the instruction into the appropriate register. Note, we are not /// marking copies from and to the same register class with this flag. /// /// This method could be called by interface TargetInstrInfo::isAsCheapAsAMove /// for different subtargets. bool isAsCheapAsAMove() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::CheapAsAMove); } /// \brief Returns true if this instruction source operands have special /// register allocation requirements that are not captured by the operand /// register classes. e.g. ARM::STRD's two source registers must be an even / /// odd pair, ARM::STM registers have to be in ascending order. Post-register /// allocation passes should not attempt to change allocations for sources of /// instructions with this flag. bool hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::ExtraSrcRegAllocReq); } /// \brief Returns true if this instruction def operands have special register /// allocation requirements that are not captured by the operand register /// classes. e.g. ARM::LDRD's two def registers must be an even / odd pair, /// ARM::LDM registers have to be in ascending order. Post-register /// allocation passes should not attempt to change allocations for definitions /// of instructions with this flag. bool hasExtraDefRegAllocReq() const { return Flags & (1 << MCID::ExtraDefRegAllocReq); } /// \brief Return a list of registers that are potentially read by any /// instance of this machine instruction. For example, on X86, the "adc" /// instruction adds two register operands and adds the carry bit in from the /// flags register. In this case, the instruction is marked as implicitly /// reading the flags. Likewise, the variable shift instruction on X86 is /// marked as implicitly reading the 'CL' register, which it always does. /// /// This method returns null if the instruction has no implicit uses. const uint16_t *getImplicitUses() const { return ImplicitUses; } /// \brief Return the number of implicit uses this instruction has. unsigned getNumImplicitUses() const { if (!ImplicitUses) return 0; unsigned i = 0; for (; ImplicitUses[i]; ++i) /*empty*/ ; return i; } /// \brief Return a list of registers that are potentially written by any /// instance of this machine instruction. For example, on X86, many /// instructions implicitly set the flags register. In this case, they are /// marked as setting the FLAGS. Likewise, many instructions always deposit /// their result in a physical register. For example, the X86 divide /// instruction always deposits the quotient and remainder in the EAX/EDX /// registers. For that instruction, this will return a list containing the /// EAX/EDX/EFLAGS registers. /// /// This method returns null if the instruction has no implicit defs. const uint16_t *getImplicitDefs() const { return ImplicitDefs; } /// \brief Return the number of implicit defs this instruct has. unsigned getNumImplicitDefs() const { if (!ImplicitDefs) return 0; unsigned i = 0; for (; ImplicitDefs[i]; ++i) /*empty*/ ; return i; } /// \brief Return true if this instruction implicitly /// uses the specified physical register. bool hasImplicitUseOfPhysReg(unsigned Reg) const { if (const uint16_t *ImpUses = ImplicitUses) for (; *ImpUses; ++ImpUses) if (*ImpUses == Reg) return true; return false; } /// \brief Return true if this instruction implicitly /// defines the specified physical register. bool hasImplicitDefOfPhysReg(unsigned Reg, const MCRegisterInfo *MRI = nullptr) const; /// \brief Return the scheduling class for this instruction. The /// scheduling class is an index into the InstrItineraryData table. This /// returns zero if there is no known scheduling information for the /// instruction. unsigned getSchedClass() const { return SchedClass; } /// \brief Return the number of bytes in the encoding of this instruction, /// or zero if the encoding size cannot be known from the opcode. unsigned getSize() const { return Size; } /// \brief Find the index of the first operand in the /// operand list that is used to represent the predicate. It returns -1 if /// none is found. int findFirstPredOperandIdx() const { if (isPredicable()) { for (unsigned i = 0, e = getNumOperands(); i != e; ++i) if (OpInfo[i].isPredicate()) return i; } return -1; } private: /// \brief Return true if this instruction defines the specified physical /// register, either explicitly or implicitly. bool hasDefOfPhysReg(const MCInst &MI, unsigned Reg, const MCRegisterInfo &RI) const; }; } // end namespace llvm #endif