llvm-6502/include/llvm/CodeGen/LiveVariables.h
Chris Lattner 7a3abdc63c Move two methods out of line, make them work when the record for a machine
instruction includes physregs.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@30061 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2006-09-03 00:05:09 +00:00

310 lines
12 KiB
C++

//===-- llvm/CodeGen/LiveVariables.h - Live Variable Analysis ---*- C++ -*-===//
//
// 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 LiveVariable analysis pass. For each machine
// instruction in the function, this pass calculates the set of registers that
// are immediately dead after the instruction (i.e., the instruction calculates
// the value, but it is never used) and the set of registers that are used by
// the instruction, but are never used after the instruction (i.e., they are
// killed).
//
// This class computes live variables using are sparse implementation based on
// the machine code SSA form. This class computes live variable information for
// each virtual and _register allocatable_ physical register in a function. It
// uses the dominance properties of SSA form to efficiently compute live
// variables for virtual registers, and assumes that physical registers are only
// live within a single basic block (allowing it to do a single local analysis
// to resolve physical register lifetimes in each basic block). If a physical
// register is not register allocatable, it is not tracked. This is useful for
// things like the stack pointer and condition codes.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_CODEGEN_LIVEVARIABLES_H
#define LLVM_CODEGEN_LIVEVARIABLES_H
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineFunctionPass.h"
#include <map>
namespace llvm {
class MRegisterInfo;
class LiveVariables : public MachineFunctionPass {
public:
/// VarInfo - This represents the regions where a virtual register is live in
/// the program. We represent this with three difference pieces of
/// information: the instruction that uniquely defines the value, the set of
/// blocks the instruction is live into and live out of, and the set of
/// non-phi instructions that are the last users of the value.
///
/// In the common case where a value is defined and killed in the same block,
/// DefInst is the defining inst, there is one killing instruction, and
/// AliveBlocks is empty.
///
/// Otherwise, the value is live out of the block. If the value is live
/// across any blocks, these blocks are listed in AliveBlocks. Blocks where
/// the liveness range ends are not included in AliveBlocks, instead being
/// captured by the Kills set. In these blocks, the value is live into the
/// block (unless the value is defined and killed in the same block) and lives
/// until the specified instruction. Note that there cannot ever be a value
/// whose Kills set contains two instructions from the same basic block.
///
/// PHI nodes complicate things a bit. If a PHI node is the last user of a
/// value in one of its predecessor blocks, it is not listed in the kills set,
/// but does include the predecessor block in the AliveBlocks set (unless that
/// block also defines the value). This leads to the (perfectly sensical)
/// situation where a value is defined in a block, and the last use is a phi
/// node in the successor. In this case, DefInst will be the defining
/// instruction, AliveBlocks is empty (the value is not live across any
/// blocks) and Kills is empty (phi nodes are not included). This is sensical
/// because the value must be live to the end of the block, but is not live in
/// any successor blocks.
struct VarInfo {
/// DefInst - The machine instruction that defines this register.
///
MachineInstr *DefInst;
/// AliveBlocks - Set of blocks of which this value is alive completely
/// through. This is a bit set which uses the basic block number as an
/// index.
///
std::vector<bool> AliveBlocks;
/// Kills - List of MachineInstruction's which are the last use of this
/// virtual register (kill it) in their basic block.
///
std::vector<MachineInstr*> Kills;
VarInfo() : DefInst(0) {}
/// removeKill - Delete a kill corresponding to the specified
/// machine instruction. Returns true if there was a kill
/// corresponding to this instruction, false otherwise.
bool removeKill(MachineInstr *MI) {
for (std::vector<MachineInstr*>::iterator i = Kills.begin(),
e = Kills.end(); i != e; ++i)
if (*i == MI) {
Kills.erase(i);
return true;
}
return false;
}
void dump() const;
};
private:
/// VirtRegInfo - This list is a mapping from virtual register number to
/// variable information. FirstVirtualRegister is subtracted from the virtual
/// register number before indexing into this list.
///
std::vector<VarInfo> VirtRegInfo;
/// RegistersKilled - This map keeps track of all of the registers that
/// are dead immediately after an instruction reads its operands. If an
/// instruction does not have an entry in this map, it kills no registers.
///
std::map<MachineInstr*, std::vector<unsigned> > RegistersKilled;
/// RegistersDead - This map keeps track of all of the registers that are
/// dead immediately after an instruction executes, which are not dead after
/// the operands are evaluated. In practice, this only contains registers
/// which are defined by an instruction, but never used.
///
std::map<MachineInstr*, std::vector<unsigned> > RegistersDead;
/// Dummy - An always empty vector used for instructions without dead or
/// killed operands.
std::vector<unsigned> Dummy;
/// AllocatablePhysicalRegisters - This vector keeps track of which registers
/// are actually register allocatable by the target machine. We can not track
/// liveness for values that are not in this set.
///
std::vector<bool> AllocatablePhysicalRegisters;
private: // Intermediate data structures
const MRegisterInfo *RegInfo;
MachineInstr **PhysRegInfo;
bool *PhysRegUsed;
void HandlePhysRegUse(unsigned Reg, MachineInstr *MI);
void HandlePhysRegDef(unsigned Reg, MachineInstr *MI);
public:
virtual bool runOnMachineFunction(MachineFunction &MF);
/// killed_iterator - Iterate over registers killed by a machine instruction
///
typedef std::vector<unsigned>::iterator killed_iterator;
std::vector<unsigned> &getKillsVector(MachineInstr *MI) {
std::map<MachineInstr*, std::vector<unsigned> >::iterator I =
RegistersKilled.find(MI);
return I != RegistersKilled.end() ? I->second : Dummy;
}
std::vector<unsigned> &getDeadDefsVector(MachineInstr *MI) {
std::map<MachineInstr*, std::vector<unsigned> >::iterator I =
RegistersDead.find(MI);
return I != RegistersDead.end() ? I->second : Dummy;
}
/// killed_begin/end - Get access to the range of registers killed by a
/// machine instruction.
killed_iterator killed_begin(MachineInstr *MI) {
return getKillsVector(MI).begin();
}
killed_iterator killed_end(MachineInstr *MI) {
return getKillsVector(MI).end();
}
std::pair<killed_iterator, killed_iterator>
killed_range(MachineInstr *MI) {
std::vector<unsigned> &V = getKillsVector(MI);
return std::make_pair(V.begin(), V.end());
}
/// KillsRegister - Return true if the specified instruction kills the
/// specified register.
bool KillsRegister(MachineInstr *MI, unsigned Reg) const;
killed_iterator dead_begin(MachineInstr *MI) {
return getDeadDefsVector(MI).begin();
}
killed_iterator dead_end(MachineInstr *MI) {
return getDeadDefsVector(MI).end();
}
std::pair<killed_iterator, killed_iterator>
dead_range(MachineInstr *MI) {
std::vector<unsigned> &V = getDeadDefsVector(MI);
return std::make_pair(V.begin(), V.end());
}
/// RegisterDefIsDead - Return true if the specified instruction defines the
/// specified register, but that definition is dead.
bool RegisterDefIsDead(MachineInstr *MI, unsigned Reg) const;
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// API to update live variable information
/// instructionChanged - When the address of an instruction changes, this
/// method should be called so that live variables can update its internal
/// data structures. This removes the records for OldMI, transfering them to
/// the records for NewMI.
void instructionChanged(MachineInstr *OldMI, MachineInstr *NewMI);
/// addVirtualRegisterKilled - Add information about the fact that the
/// specified register is killed after being used by the specified
/// instruction.
///
void addVirtualRegisterKilled(unsigned IncomingReg, MachineInstr *MI) {
std::vector<unsigned> &V = RegistersKilled[MI];
// Insert in a sorted order.
if (V.empty() || IncomingReg > V.back()) {
V.push_back(IncomingReg);
} else {
std::vector<unsigned>::iterator I = V.begin();
for (; *I < IncomingReg; ++I)
/*empty*/;
if (*I != IncomingReg) // Don't insert duplicates.
V.insert(I, IncomingReg);
}
getVarInfo(IncomingReg).Kills.push_back(MI);
}
/// removeVirtualRegisterKilled - Remove the specified virtual
/// register from the live variable information. Returns true if the
/// variable was marked as killed by the specified instruction,
/// false otherwise.
bool removeVirtualRegisterKilled(unsigned reg,
MachineBasicBlock *MBB,
MachineInstr *MI) {
if (!getVarInfo(reg).removeKill(MI))
return false;
std::vector<unsigned> &V = getKillsVector(MI);
for (unsigned i = 0, e = V.size(); i != e; ++i)
if (V[i] == reg) {
V.erase(V.begin()+i);
return true;
}
return true;
}
/// removeVirtualRegistersKilled - Remove all killed info for the specified
/// instruction.
void removeVirtualRegistersKilled(MachineInstr *MI);
/// addVirtualRegisterDead - Add information about the fact that the specified
/// register is dead after being used by the specified instruction.
///
void addVirtualRegisterDead(unsigned IncomingReg, MachineInstr *MI) {
std::vector<unsigned> &V = RegistersDead[MI];
// Insert in a sorted order.
if (V.empty() || IncomingReg > V.back()) {
V.push_back(IncomingReg);
} else {
std::vector<unsigned>::iterator I = V.begin();
for (; *I < IncomingReg; ++I)
/*empty*/;
if (*I != IncomingReg) // Don't insert duplicates.
V.insert(I, IncomingReg);
}
getVarInfo(IncomingReg).Kills.push_back(MI);
}
/// removeVirtualRegisterDead - Remove the specified virtual
/// register from the live variable information. Returns true if the
/// variable was marked dead at the specified instruction, false
/// otherwise.
bool removeVirtualRegisterDead(unsigned reg,
MachineBasicBlock *MBB,
MachineInstr *MI) {
if (!getVarInfo(reg).removeKill(MI))
return false;
std::vector<unsigned> &V = getDeadDefsVector(MI);
for (unsigned i = 0, e = V.size(); i != e; ++i)
if (V[i] == reg) {
V.erase(V.begin()+i);
return true;
}
return true;
}
/// removeVirtualRegistersDead - Remove all of the dead registers for the
/// specified instruction from the live variable information.
void removeVirtualRegistersDead(MachineInstr *MI);
virtual void getAnalysisUsage(AnalysisUsage &AU) const {
AU.setPreservesAll();
}
virtual void releaseMemory() {
VirtRegInfo.clear();
RegistersKilled.clear();
RegistersDead.clear();
}
/// getVarInfo - Return the VarInfo structure for the specified VIRTUAL
/// register.
VarInfo &getVarInfo(unsigned RegIdx);
void MarkVirtRegAliveInBlock(VarInfo &VRInfo, MachineBasicBlock *BB);
void HandleVirtRegUse(VarInfo &VRInfo, MachineBasicBlock *MBB,
MachineInstr *MI);
};
} // End llvm namespace
#endif