llvm-6502/include/llvm/Analysis/CallGraph.h

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//===- CallGraph.h - Build a Module's call graph ----------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This interface is used to build and manipulate a call graph, which is a very
// useful tool for interprocedural optimization.
//
// Every function in a module is represented as a node in the call graph. The
// callgraph node keeps track of which functions the are called by the function
// corresponding to the node.
//
// A call graph may contain nodes where the function that they correspond to is
// null. These 'external' nodes are used to represent control flow that is not
// represented (or analyzable) in the module. In particular, this analysis
// builds one external node such that:
// 1. All functions in the module without internal linkage will have edges
// from this external node, indicating that they could be called by
// functions outside of the module.
// 2. All functions whose address is used for something more than a direct
// call, for example being stored into a memory location will also have an
// edge from this external node. Since they may be called by an unknown
// caller later, they must be tracked as such.
//
// There is a second external node added for calls that leave this module.
// Functions have a call edge to the external node iff:
// 1. The function is external, reflecting the fact that they could call
// anything without internal linkage or that has its address taken.
// 2. The function contains an indirect function call.
//
// As an extension in the future, there may be multiple nodes with a null
// function. These will be used when we can prove (through pointer analysis)
// that an indirect call site can call only a specific set of functions.
//
// Because of these properties, the CallGraph captures a conservative superset
// of all of the caller-callee relationships, which is useful for
// transformations.
//
// The CallGraph class also attempts to figure out what the root of the
// CallGraph is, which it currently does by looking for a function named 'main'.
// If no function named 'main' is found, the external node is used as the entry
// node, reflecting the fact that any function without internal linkage could
// be called into (which is common for libraries).
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_ANALYSIS_CALLGRAPH_H
#define LLVM_ANALYSIS_CALLGRAPH_H
#include "llvm/Function.h"
#include "llvm/Pass.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/GraphTraits.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h"
#include "llvm/Support/CallSite.h"
#include "llvm/Support/ValueHandle.h"
#include "llvm/Support/IncludeFile.h"
#include <map>
namespace llvm {
class Function;
class Module;
class CallGraphNode;
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// CallGraph class definition
//
class CallGraph {
protected:
Module *Mod; // The module this call graph represents
typedef std::map<const Function *, CallGraphNode *> FunctionMapTy;
FunctionMapTy FunctionMap; // Map from a function to its node
public:
static char ID; // Class identification, replacement for typeinfo
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------
// Accessors.
//
typedef FunctionMapTy::iterator iterator;
typedef FunctionMapTy::const_iterator const_iterator;
/// getModule - Return the module the call graph corresponds to.
///
Module &getModule() const { return *Mod; }
inline iterator begin() { return FunctionMap.begin(); }
inline iterator end() { return FunctionMap.end(); }
inline const_iterator begin() const { return FunctionMap.begin(); }
inline const_iterator end() const { return FunctionMap.end(); }
// Subscripting operators, return the call graph node for the provided
// function
inline const CallGraphNode *operator[](const Function *F) const {
const_iterator I = FunctionMap.find(F);
assert(I != FunctionMap.end() && "Function not in callgraph!");
return I->second;
}
inline CallGraphNode *operator[](const Function *F) {
const_iterator I = FunctionMap.find(F);
assert(I != FunctionMap.end() && "Function not in callgraph!");
return I->second;
}
/// Returns the CallGraphNode which is used to represent undetermined calls
/// into the callgraph. Override this if you want behavioral inheritance.
virtual CallGraphNode* getExternalCallingNode() const { return 0; }
Step #1 to giving Callgraph some sane invariants. The problems with callgraph stem from the fact that we have two types of passes that need to update it: 1. callgraphscc and module passes that are explicitly aware of it 2. Functionpasses (and loop passes etc) that are interlaced with CGSCC passes by the CGSCC Passmgr. In the case of #1, we can reasonably expect the passes to update the call graph just like any analysis. However, functionpasses are not and generally should not be CG aware. This has caused us no end of problems, so this takes a new approach. Logically, the CGSCC Pass manager can rescan every function after it runs a function pass over it to see if the functionpass made any updates to the IR that affect the callgraph. This allows it to catch new calls introduced by the functionpass. In practice, doing this would be slow. This implementation keeps track of whether or not the current scc is dirtied by a function pass, and, if so, delays updating the callgraph until it is actually needed again. This was we avoid extraneous rescans, but we still have good invariants when the callgraph is needed. Step #2 of the "give Callgraph some sane invariants" is to change CallGraphNode to use a CallBackVH for the callsite entry of the CallGraphNode. This way we can immediately remove entries from the callgraph when a FunctionPass is active instead of having dangling pointers. The current pass tries to tolerate these dangling pointers, but it is just an evil hack. This is related to PR3601/4835/4029. This also reverts r80541, a hack working around the sad lack of invariants. git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@80566 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2009-08-31 07:23:46 +00:00
virtual CallGraphNode* getCallsExternalNode() const { return 0; }
/// Return the root/main method in the module, or some other root node, such
/// as the externalcallingnode. Overload these if you behavioral
/// inheritance.
virtual CallGraphNode* getRoot() { return 0; }
virtual const CallGraphNode* getRoot() const { return 0; }
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------
// Functions to keep a call graph up to date with a function that has been
// modified.
//
/// removeFunctionFromModule - Unlink the function from this module, returning
/// it. Because this removes the function from the module, the call graph
/// node is destroyed. This is only valid if the function does not call any
/// other functions (ie, there are no edges in it's CGN). The easiest way to
/// do this is to dropAllReferences before calling this.
///
Function *removeFunctionFromModule(CallGraphNode *CGN);
Function *removeFunctionFromModule(Function *F) {
return removeFunctionFromModule((*this)[F]);
}
/// getOrInsertFunction - This method is identical to calling operator[], but
/// it will insert a new CallGraphNode for the specified function if one does
/// not already exist.
CallGraphNode *getOrInsertFunction(const Function *F);
/// spliceFunction - Replace the function represented by this node by another.
/// This does not rescan the body of the function, so it is suitable when
/// splicing the body of one function to another while also updating all
/// callers from the old function to the new.
///
void spliceFunction(const Function *From, const Function *To);
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------
// Pass infrastructure interface glue code.
//
protected:
CallGraph() {}
public:
virtual ~CallGraph() { destroy(); }
/// initialize - Call this method before calling other methods,
/// re/initializes the state of the CallGraph.
///
void initialize(Module &M);
void print(raw_ostream &o, Module *) const;
void dump() const;
protected:
// destroy - Release memory for the call graph
virtual void destroy();
};
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// CallGraphNode class definition.
//
class CallGraphNode {
friend class CallGraph;
AssertingVH<Function> F;
// CallRecord - This is a pair of the calling instruction (a call or invoke)
// and the callgraph node being called.
public:
typedef std::pair<WeakVH, CallGraphNode*> CallRecord;
private:
std::vector<CallRecord> CalledFunctions;
/// NumReferences - This is the number of times that this CallGraphNode occurs
/// in the CalledFunctions array of this or other CallGraphNodes.
unsigned NumReferences;
CallGraphNode(const CallGraphNode &); // DO NOT IMPLEMENT
void operator=(const CallGraphNode &); // DO NOT IMPLEMENT
void DropRef() { --NumReferences; }
void AddRef() { ++NumReferences; }
public:
typedef std::vector<CallRecord> CalledFunctionsVector;
// CallGraphNode ctor - Create a node for the specified function.
inline CallGraphNode(Function *f) : F(f), NumReferences(0) {}
~CallGraphNode() {
assert(NumReferences == 0 && "Node deleted while references remain");
}
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------
// Accessor methods.
//
typedef std::vector<CallRecord>::iterator iterator;
typedef std::vector<CallRecord>::const_iterator const_iterator;
// getFunction - Return the function that this call graph node represents.
Function *getFunction() const { return F; }
inline iterator begin() { return CalledFunctions.begin(); }
inline iterator end() { return CalledFunctions.end(); }
inline const_iterator begin() const { return CalledFunctions.begin(); }
inline const_iterator end() const { return CalledFunctions.end(); }
inline bool empty() const { return CalledFunctions.empty(); }
inline unsigned size() const { return (unsigned)CalledFunctions.size(); }
/// getNumReferences - Return the number of other CallGraphNodes in this
/// CallGraph that reference this node in their callee list.
unsigned getNumReferences() const { return NumReferences; }
// Subscripting operator - Return the i'th called function.
//
CallGraphNode *operator[](unsigned i) const {
assert(i < CalledFunctions.size() && "Invalid index");
return CalledFunctions[i].second;
}
/// dump - Print out this call graph node.
///
void dump() const;
void print(raw_ostream &OS) const;
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------
// Methods to keep a call graph up to date with a function that has been
// modified
//
/// removeAllCalledFunctions - As the name implies, this removes all edges
/// from this CallGraphNode to any functions it calls.
void removeAllCalledFunctions() {
while (!CalledFunctions.empty()) {
CalledFunctions.back().second->DropRef();
CalledFunctions.pop_back();
}
}
/// stealCalledFunctionsFrom - Move all the callee information from N to this
/// node.
void stealCalledFunctionsFrom(CallGraphNode *N) {
assert(CalledFunctions.empty() &&
"Cannot steal callsite information if I already have some");
std::swap(CalledFunctions, N->CalledFunctions);
}
/// addCalledFunction - Add a function to the list of functions called by this
/// one.
void addCalledFunction(CallSite CS, CallGraphNode *M) {
CalledFunctions.push_back(std::make_pair(CS.getInstruction(), M));
M->AddRef();
}
void removeCallEdge(iterator I) {
I->second->DropRef();
*I = CalledFunctions.back();
CalledFunctions.pop_back();
}
/// removeCallEdgeFor - This method removes the edge in the node for the
/// specified call site. Note that this method takes linear time, so it
/// should be used sparingly.
void removeCallEdgeFor(CallSite CS);
/// removeAnyCallEdgeTo - This method removes all call edges from this node
/// to the specified callee function. This takes more time to execute than
/// removeCallEdgeTo, so it should not be used unless necessary.
void removeAnyCallEdgeTo(CallGraphNode *Callee);
/// removeOneAbstractEdgeTo - Remove one edge associated with a null callsite
/// from this node to the specified callee function.
void removeOneAbstractEdgeTo(CallGraphNode *Callee);
/// replaceCallEdge - This method replaces the edge in the node for the
/// specified call site with a new one. Note that this method takes linear
/// time, so it should be used sparingly.
void replaceCallEdge(CallSite CS, CallSite NewCS, CallGraphNode *NewNode);
/// allReferencesDropped - This is a special function that should only be
/// used by the CallGraph class.
void allReferencesDropped() {
NumReferences = 0;
}
};
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// GraphTraits specializations for call graphs so that they can be treated as
// graphs by the generic graph algorithms.
//
// Provide graph traits for tranversing call graphs using standard graph
// traversals.
template <> struct GraphTraits<CallGraphNode*> {
typedef CallGraphNode NodeType;
typedef CallGraphNode::CallRecord CGNPairTy;
typedef std::pointer_to_unary_function<CGNPairTy, CallGraphNode*> CGNDerefFun;
static NodeType *getEntryNode(CallGraphNode *CGN) { return CGN; }
typedef mapped_iterator<NodeType::iterator, CGNDerefFun> ChildIteratorType;
static inline ChildIteratorType child_begin(NodeType *N) {
return map_iterator(N->begin(), CGNDerefFun(CGNDeref));
}
static inline ChildIteratorType child_end (NodeType *N) {
return map_iterator(N->end(), CGNDerefFun(CGNDeref));
}
static CallGraphNode *CGNDeref(CGNPairTy P) {
return P.second;
}
};
template <> struct GraphTraits<const CallGraphNode*> {
typedef const CallGraphNode NodeType;
typedef NodeType::const_iterator ChildIteratorType;
static NodeType *getEntryNode(const CallGraphNode *CGN) { return CGN; }
static inline ChildIteratorType child_begin(NodeType *N) { return N->begin();}
static inline ChildIteratorType child_end (NodeType *N) { return N->end(); }
};
template<> struct GraphTraits<CallGraph*> : public GraphTraits<CallGraphNode*> {
static NodeType *getEntryNode(CallGraph *CGN) {
return CGN->getExternalCallingNode(); // Start at the external node!
}
typedef std::pair<const Function*, CallGraphNode*> PairTy;
typedef std::pointer_to_unary_function<PairTy, CallGraphNode&> DerefFun;
// nodes_iterator/begin/end - Allow iteration over all nodes in the graph
typedef mapped_iterator<CallGraph::iterator, DerefFun> nodes_iterator;
static nodes_iterator nodes_begin(CallGraph *CG) {
return map_iterator(CG->begin(), DerefFun(CGdereference));
}
static nodes_iterator nodes_end (CallGraph *CG) {
return map_iterator(CG->end(), DerefFun(CGdereference));
}
static CallGraphNode &CGdereference(PairTy P) {
return *P.second;
}
};
template<> struct GraphTraits<const CallGraph*> :
public GraphTraits<const CallGraphNode*> {
static NodeType *getEntryNode(const CallGraph *CGN) {
return CGN->getExternalCallingNode();
}
// nodes_iterator/begin/end - Allow iteration over all nodes in the graph
typedef CallGraph::const_iterator nodes_iterator;
static nodes_iterator nodes_begin(const CallGraph *CG) { return CG->begin(); }
static nodes_iterator nodes_end (const CallGraph *CG) { return CG->end(); }
};
} // End llvm namespace
// Make sure that any clients of this file link in CallGraph.cpp
FORCE_DEFINING_FILE_TO_BE_LINKED(CallGraph)
#endif