Registers and Memory#
Here are the RTL expression types for describing access to machine registers and to main memory.
(reg:m n)For small values of the integer
n(those that are less thanFIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER), this stands for a reference to machine register numbern: a hard register. For larger values ofn, it stands for a temporary value or pseudo register. The compiler’s strategy is to generate code assuming an unlimited number of such pseudo registers, and later convert them into hard registers or into memory references.mis the machine mode of the reference. It is necessary because machines can generally refer to each register in more than one mode. For example, a register may contain a full word but there may be instructions to refer to it as a half word or as a single byte, as well as instructions to refer to it as a floating point number of various precisions.Even for a register that the machine can access in only one mode, the mode must always be specified.
The symbol
FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTERis defined by the machine description, since the number of hard registers on the machine is an invariant characteristic of the machine. Note, however, that not all of the machine registers must be general registers. All the machine registers that can be used for storage of data are given hard register numbers, even those that can be used only in certain instructions or can hold only certain types of data.A hard register may be accessed in various modes throughout one function, but each pseudo register is given a natural mode and is accessed only in that mode. When it is necessary to describe an access to a pseudo register using a nonnatural mode, a
subregexpression is used.A
regexpression with a machine mode that specifies more than one word of data may actually stand for several consecutive registers. If in addition the register number specifies a hardware register, then it actually represents several consecutive hardware registers starting with the specified one.Each pseudo register number used in a function’s RTL code is represented by a unique
regexpression.Some pseudo register numbers, those within the range of
FIRST_VIRTUAL_REGISTERtoLAST_VIRTUAL_REGISTERonly appear during the RTL generation phase and are eliminated before the optimization phases. These represent locations in the stack frame that cannot be determined until RTL generation for the function has been completed. The following virtual register numbers are defined:- VIRTUAL_INCOMING_ARGS_REGNUM#
This points to the first word of the incoming arguments passed on the stack. Normally these arguments are placed there by the caller, but the callee may have pushed some arguments that were previously passed in registers.
When RTL generation is complete, this virtual register is replaced by the sum of the register given by
ARG_POINTER_REGNUMand the value ofFIRST_PARM_OFFSET.
- VIRTUAL_STACK_VARS_REGNUM#
If
FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARDis defined to a nonzero value, this points to immediately above the first variable on the stack. Otherwise, it points to the first variable on the stack.VIRTUAL_STACK_VARS_REGNUMis replaced with the sum of the register given byFRAME_POINTER_REGNUMand the valueTARGET_STARTING_FRAME_OFFSET.
- VIRTUAL_STACK_DYNAMIC_REGNUM#
This points to the location of dynamically allocated memory on the stack immediately after the stack pointer has been adjusted by the amount of memory desired.
This virtual register is replaced by the sum of the register given by
STACK_POINTER_REGNUMand the valueSTACK_DYNAMIC_OFFSET.
- VIRTUAL_OUTGOING_ARGS_REGNUM#
This points to the location in the stack at which outgoing arguments should be written when the stack is pre-pushed (arguments pushed using push insns should always use
STACK_POINTER_REGNUM).This virtual register is replaced by the sum of the register given by
STACK_POINTER_REGNUMand the valueSTACK_POINTER_OFFSET.
(subreg:m1 reg:m2 bytenum)subregexpressions are used to refer to a register in a machine mode other than its natural one, or to refer to one register of a multi-partregthat actually refers to several registers.Each pseudo register has a natural mode. If it is necessary to operate on it in a different mode, the register must be enclosed in a
subreg.There are currently three supported types for the first operand of a
subreg:pseudo registers This is the most common case. Most
subregs have pseudoregs as their first operand.mem
subregs ofmemwere common in earlier versions of GCC and are still supported. During the reload pass these are replaced by plainmems. On machines that do not do instruction scheduling, use ofsubregs ofmemare still used, but this is no longer recommended. Suchsubregs are considered to beregister_operands rather thanmemory_operands before and during reload. Because of this, the scheduling passes cannot properly schedule instructions withsubregs ofmem, so for machines that do scheduling,subregs ofmemshould never be used. To support this, the combine and recog passes have explicit code to inhibit the creation ofsubregs ofmemwhenINSN_SCHEDULINGis defined.The use of
subregs ofmemafter the reload pass is an area that is not well understood and should be avoided. There is still some code in the compiler to support this, but this code has possibly rotted. This use ofsubregs is discouraged and will most likely not be supported in the future.hard registers It is seldom necessary to wrap hard registers in
subregs; such registers would normally reduce to a singleregrtx. This use ofsubregs is discouraged and may not be supported in the future.
subregs ofsubregs are not supported. Usingsimplify_gen_subregis the recommended way to avoid this problem.subregs come in two distinct flavors, each having its own usage and rules:- Paradoxical subregs
When
m1is strictly wider thanm2, thesubregexpression is called paradoxical. The canonical test for this class ofsubregis:paradoxical_subreg_p (m1, m2)
Paradoxical
subregs can be used as both lvalues and rvalues. When used as an lvalue, the low-order bits of the source value are stored inregand the high-order bits are discarded. When used as an rvalue, the low-order bits of thesubregare taken fromregwhile the high-order bits may or may not be defined.The high-order bits of rvalues are defined in the following circumstances:
subregs ofmemWhenm2is smaller than a word, the macroLOAD_EXTEND_OP, can control how the high-order bits are defined.subregofregs The upper bits are defined whenSUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_Pis true.SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_Pdescribes what the upper bits hold. Such subregs usually represent local variables, register variables and parameter pseudo variables that have been promoted to a wider mode.
bytenumis always zero for a paradoxicalsubreg, even on big-endian targets.For example, the paradoxical
subreg:(set (subreg:SI (reg:HI x) 0) y)
stores the lower 2 bytes of
yinxand discards the upper 2 bytes. A subsequent:(set z (subreg:SI (reg:HI x) 0))
would set the lower two bytes of
ztoyand set the upper two bytes to an unknown value assumingSUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_Pis false.- Normal subregs
When
m1is at least as narrow asm2thesubregexpression is called normal.Normal
subregs restrict consideration to certain bits ofreg. For this purpose,regis divided into individually-addressable blocks in which each block has:REGMODE_NATURAL_SIZE (m2)
bytes. Usually the value is
UNITS_PER_WORD; that is, most targets usually treat each word of a register as being independently addressable.There are two types of normal
subreg. Ifm1is known to be no bigger than a block, thesubregrefers to the least-significant part (or lowpart) of one block ofreg. Ifm1is known to be larger than a block, thesubregrefers to two or more complete blocks.When used as an lvalue,
subregis a block-based accessor. Storing to asubregmodifies all the blocks ofregthat overlap thesubreg, but it leaves the other blocks ofregalone.When storing to a normal
subregthat is smaller than a block, the other bits of the referenced block are usually left in an undefined state. This laxity makes it easier to generate efficient code for such instructions. To represent an instruction that preserves all the bits outside of those in thesubreg, usestrict_low_partorzero_extractaround thesubreg.bytenummust identify the offset of the first byte of thesubregfrom the start ofreg, assuming thatregis laid out in memory order. The memory order of bytes is defined by two target macros,WORDS_BIG_ENDIANandBYTES_BIG_ENDIAN:WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN, if set to 1, says that byte number zero is part of the most significant word; otherwise, it is part of the least significant word.
BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN, if set to 1, says that byte number zero is the most significant byte within a word; otherwise, it is the least significant byte within a word.
On a few targets,
FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIANdisagrees withWORDS_BIG_ENDIAN. However, most parts of the compiler treat floating point values as if they had the same endianness as integer values. This works because they handle them solely as a collection of integer values, with no particular numerical value. Only real.cc and the runtime libraries care aboutFLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN.Thus,
(subreg:HI (reg:SI x) 2)
on a
BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN,UNITS_PER_WORD == 4target is the same as(subreg:HI (reg:SI x) 0)
on a little-endian,
UNITS_PER_WORD == 4target. Bothsubregs access the lower two bytes of registerx.Note that the byte offset is a polynomial integer; it may not be a compile-time constant on targets with variable-sized modes. However, the restrictions above mean that there are only a certain set of acceptable offsets for a given combination of
m1andm2. The compiler can always tell which blocks a valid subreg occupies, and whether the subreg is a lowpart of a block.
A
MODE_PARTIAL_INTmode behaves as if it were as wide as the correspondingMODE_INTmode, except that it has a number of undefined bits, which are determined by the precision of the mode.For example, on a little-endian target which defines
PSImodeto have a precision of 20 bits:(subreg:PSI (reg:SI 0) 0)
accesses the low 20 bits of
(reg:SI 0).Continuing with a
PSImodeprecision of 20 bits, if we assumeREGMODE_NATURAL_SIZE (DImode) <= 4, then the following twosubregs:(subreg:PSI (reg:DI 0) 0) (subreg:PSI (reg:DI 0) 4)
represent accesses to the low 20 bits of the two halves of
(reg:DI 0).If
REGMODE_NATURAL_SIZE (PSImode) <= 2then these twosubregs:(subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 0) (subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 2)
represent independent 2-byte accesses that together span the whole of
(reg:PSI 0). Storing to the firstsubregdoes not affect the value of the second, and vice versa, so the assignment:(set (subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 0) (reg:HI 4))
sets the low 16 bits of
(reg:PSI 0)to(reg:HI 4), and the high 4 defined bits of(reg:PSI 0)retain their original value. The behavior here is the same as for normalsubregs, when there are noMODE_PARTIAL_INTmodes involved.The rules above apply to both pseudo
regs and hardregs. If the semantics are not correct for particular combinations ofm1,m2and hardreg, the target-specific code must ensure that those combinations are never used. For example:TARGET_CAN_CHANGE_MODE_CLASS (m2, m1, class)
must be false for every class
classthat includesreg.GCC must be able to determine at compile time whether a subreg is paradoxical, whether it occupies a whole number of blocks, or whether it is a lowpart of a block. This means that certain combinations of variable-sized mode are not permitted. For example, if
m2holdsnSIvalues, wherenis greater than zero, it is not possible to form aDIsubregof it; such asubregwould be paradoxical whennis 1 but not whennis greater than 1.The first operand of a
subregexpression is customarily accessed with theSUBREG_REGmacro and the second operand is customarily accessed with theSUBREG_BYTEmacro.It has been several years since a platform in which
BYTES_BIG_ENDIANnot equal toWORDS_BIG_ENDIANhas been tested. Anyone wishing to support such a platform in the future may be confronted with code rot.(scratch:m)This represents a scratch register that will be required for the execution of a single instruction and not used subsequently. It is converted into a
regby either the local register allocator or the reload pass.scratchis usually present inside aclobberoperation (see Side Effect Expressions).On some machines, the condition code register is given a register number and a
regis used. Other machines store condition codes in general registers; in such cases a pseudo register should be used.Some machines, such as the SPARC and RS/6000, have two sets of arithmetic instructions, one that sets and one that does not set the condition code. This is best handled by normally generating the instruction that does not set the condition code, and making a pattern that both performs the arithmetic and sets the condition code register. For examples, search for
addccandandccinsparc.md.
(pc)
This represents the machine’s program counter. It has no operands and may not have a machine mode.
(pc)may be validly used only in certain specific contexts in jump instructions.There is only one expression object of code
pc; it is the value of the variablepc_rtx. Any attempt to create an expression of codepcwill returnpc_rtx.All instructions that do not jump alter the program counter implicitly by incrementing it, but there is no need to mention this in the RTL.
(mem:m addr alias)This RTX represents a reference to main memory at an address represented by the expression
addr.mspecifies how large a unit of memory is accessed.aliasspecifies an alias set for the reference. In general two items are in different alias sets if they cannot reference the same memory address.The construct
(mem:BLK (scratch))is considered to alias all other memories. Thus it may be used as a memory barrier in epilogue stack deallocation patterns.(concatm rtx rtx)This RTX represents the concatenation of two other RTXs. This is used for complex values. It should only appear in the RTL attached to declarations and during RTL generation. It should not appear in the ordinary insn chain.
(concatnm [rtx ...])This RTX represents the concatenation of all the
rtxto make a single value. Likeconcat, this should only appear in declarations, and not in the insn chain.