llvm-6502/include/llvm/Constant.h
Chris Lattner 225e8dd2f5 Split SimpleConstantVal up into its components, so each Constant subclass gets
a different enum value.  This allows 'classof' for these to be really simple,
not needing to call getType() anymore.

This speeds up isa/dyncast/etc for constants, and also makes them smaller.
For example, the text section of a release build of InstCombine.cpp shrinks
from 230037 bytes to 216363 bytes, a 6% reduction.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@23466 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2005-09-27 06:08:32 +00:00

97 lines
3.8 KiB
C++

//===-- llvm/Constant.h - Constant class definition -------------*- 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 contains the declaration of the Constant class.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_CONSTANT_H
#define LLVM_CONSTANT_H
#include "llvm/User.h"
namespace llvm {
class Constant : public User {
protected:
Constant(const Type *Ty, ValueTy vty, Use *Ops, unsigned NumOps,
const std::string& Name = "")
: User(Ty, vty, Ops, NumOps, Name) {}
void destroyConstantImpl();
public:
/// Static constructor to get a '0' constant of arbitrary type...
///
static Constant *getNullValue(const Type *Ty);
/// isNullValue - Return true if this is the value that would be returned by
/// getNullValue.
virtual bool isNullValue() const = 0;
virtual void print(std::ostream &O) const;
// Specialize get/setOperand for Constant's as their operands are always
// constants as well.
Constant *getOperand(unsigned i) {
return static_cast<Constant*>(User::getOperand(i));
}
const Constant *getOperand(unsigned i) const {
return static_cast<const Constant*>(User::getOperand(i));
}
void setOperand(unsigned i, Constant *C) {
User::setOperand(i, C);
}
/// destroyConstant - Called if some element of this constant is no longer
/// valid. At this point only other constants may be on the use_list for this
/// constant. Any constants on our Use list must also be destroy'd. The
/// implementation must be sure to remove the constant from the list of
/// available cached constants. Implementations should call
/// destroyConstantImpl as the last thing they do, to destroy all users and
/// delete this.
virtual void destroyConstant() { assert(0 && "Not reached!"); }
//// Methods for support type inquiry through isa, cast, and dyn_cast:
static inline bool classof(const Constant *) { return true; }
static inline bool classof(const GlobalValue *) { return true; }
static inline bool classof(const Value *V) {
return V->getValueType() >= ConstantFirstVal &&
V->getValueType() <= ConstantLastVal;
}
/// replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant - This method is a special form of
/// User::replaceUsesOfWith (which does not work on constants) that does work
/// on constants. Basically this method goes through the trouble of building
/// a new constant that is equivalent to the current one, with all uses of
/// From replaced with uses of To. After this construction is completed, all
/// of the users of 'this' are replaced to use the new constant, and then
/// 'this' is deleted. In general, you should not call this method, instead,
/// use Value::replaceAllUsesWith, which automatically dispatches to this
/// method as needed.
///
virtual void replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant(Value *From, Value *To,
bool DisableChecking = false) {
// Provide a default implementation for constants (like integers) that
// cannot use any other values. This cannot be called at runtime, but needs
// to be here to avoid link errors.
assert(getNumOperands() == 0 && "replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant must be "
"implemented for all constants that have operands!");
assert(0 && "Constants that do not have operands cannot be using 'From'!");
}
/// clearAllValueMaps - This method frees all internal memory used by the
/// constant subsystem, which can be used in environments where this memory
/// is otherwise reported as a leak.
static void clearAllValueMaps();
};
} // End llvm namespace
#endif