llvm-6502/lib/ExecutionEngine/Interpreter/Interpreter.cpp
Jeff Cohen 8c9191c644 The interpreter assumes that the caller of runFunction() must be lli, and
therefore the function being called must be a main() returning an int.  The
consequences when these assumptions are false are not good, so don't assume
them.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@26031 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2006-02-07 05:29:44 +00:00

107 lines
3.4 KiB
C++

//===- Interpreter.cpp - Top-Level LLVM Interpreter Implementation --------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file was developed by the LLVM research group and is distributed under
// the University of Illinois Open Source License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file implements the top-level functionality for the LLVM interpreter.
// This interpreter is designed to be a very simple, portable, inefficient
// interpreter.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "Interpreter.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/IntrinsicLowering.h"
#include "llvm/DerivedTypes.h"
#include "llvm/Module.h"
using namespace llvm;
/// create - Create a new interpreter object. This can never fail.
///
ExecutionEngine *Interpreter::create(Module *M, IntrinsicLowering *IL) {
bool isLittleEndian = false;
switch (M->getEndianness()) {
case Module::LittleEndian: isLittleEndian = true; break;
case Module::BigEndian: isLittleEndian = false; break;
case Module::AnyPointerSize:
int Test = 0;
*(char*)&Test = 1; // Return true if the host is little endian
isLittleEndian = (Test == 1);
break;
}
bool isLongPointer = false;
switch (M->getPointerSize()) {
case Module::Pointer32: isLongPointer = false; break;
case Module::Pointer64: isLongPointer = true; break;
case Module::AnyPointerSize:
isLongPointer = (sizeof(void*) == 8); // Follow host
break;
}
return new Interpreter(M, isLittleEndian, isLongPointer, IL);
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Interpreter ctor - Initialize stuff
//
Interpreter::Interpreter(Module *M, bool isLittleEndian, bool isLongPointer,
IntrinsicLowering *il)
: ExecutionEngine(M),
TD("lli", isLittleEndian, isLongPointer ? 8 : 4, isLongPointer ? 8 : 4,
isLongPointer ? 8 : 4), IL(il) {
memset(&ExitValue, 0, sizeof(ExitValue));
setTargetData(TD);
// Initialize the "backend"
initializeExecutionEngine();
initializeExternalFunctions();
emitGlobals();
if (IL == 0) IL = new DefaultIntrinsicLowering();
}
Interpreter::~Interpreter() {
delete IL;
}
void Interpreter::runAtExitHandlers () {
while (!AtExitHandlers.empty()) {
callFunction(AtExitHandlers.back(), std::vector<GenericValue>());
AtExitHandlers.pop_back();
run();
}
}
/// run - Start execution with the specified function and arguments.
///
GenericValue
Interpreter::runFunction(Function *F,
const std::vector<GenericValue> &ArgValues) {
assert (F && "Function *F was null at entry to run()");
// Try extra hard not to pass extra args to a function that isn't
// expecting them. C programmers frequently bend the rules and
// declare main() with fewer parameters than it actually gets
// passed, and the interpreter barfs if you pass a function more
// parameters than it is declared to take. This does not attempt to
// take into account gratuitous differences in declared types,
// though.
std::vector<GenericValue> ActualArgs;
const unsigned ArgCount = F->getFunctionType()->getNumParams();
for (unsigned i = 0; i < ArgCount; ++i)
ActualArgs.push_back(ArgValues[i]);
// Set up the function call.
callFunction(F, ActualArgs);
// Start executing the function.
run();
return ExitValue;
}