1 /* Alias analysis for GNU C
2 Copyright (C) 1997-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Contributed by John Carr (jfc@mit.edu).
5 This file is part of GCC.
7 GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
8 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
9 Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
12 GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
13 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
14 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see
19 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
23 #include "coretypes.h"
32 #include "gimple-ssa.h"
35 #include "fold-const.h"
38 #include "langhooks.h"
43 /* The aliasing API provided here solves related but different problems:
45 Say there exists (in c)
59 Consider the four questions:
61 Can a store to x1 interfere with px2->y1?
62 Can a store to x1 interfere with px2->z2?
63 Can a store to x1 change the value pointed to by with py?
64 Can a store to x1 change the value pointed to by with pz?
66 The answer to these questions can be yes, yes, yes, and maybe.
68 The first two questions can be answered with a simple examination
69 of the type system. If structure X contains a field of type Y then
70 a store through a pointer to an X can overwrite any field that is
71 contained (recursively) in an X (unless we know that px1 != px2).
73 The last two questions can be solved in the same way as the first
74 two questions but this is too conservative. The observation is
75 that in some cases we can know which (if any) fields are addressed
76 and if those addresses are used in bad ways. This analysis may be
77 language specific. In C, arbitrary operations may be applied to
78 pointers. However, there is some indication that this may be too
79 conservative for some C++ types.
81 The pass ipa-type-escape does this analysis for the types whose
82 instances do not escape across the compilation boundary.
84 Historically in GCC, these two problems were combined and a single
85 data structure that was used to represent the solution to these
86 problems. We now have two similar but different data structures,
87 The data structure to solve the last two questions is similar to
88 the first, but does not contain the fields whose address are never
89 taken. For types that do escape the compilation unit, the data
90 structures will have identical information.
93 /* The alias sets assigned to MEMs assist the back-end in determining
94 which MEMs can alias which other MEMs. In general, two MEMs in
95 different alias sets cannot alias each other, with one important
96 exception. Consider something like:
98 struct S { int i; double d; };
100 a store to an `S' can alias something of either type `int' or type
101 `double'. (However, a store to an `int' cannot alias a `double'
102 and vice versa.) We indicate this via a tree structure that looks
110 (The arrows are directed and point downwards.)
111 In this situation we say the alias set for `struct S' is the
112 `superset' and that those for `int' and `double' are `subsets'.
114 To see whether two alias sets can point to the same memory, we must
115 see if either alias set is a subset of the other. We need not trace
116 past immediate descendants, however, since we propagate all
117 grandchildren up one level.
119 Alias set zero is implicitly a superset of all other alias sets.
120 However, this is no actual entry for alias set zero. It is an
121 error to attempt to explicitly construct a subset of zero. */
123 struct alias_set_hash
: int_hash
<int, INT_MIN
, INT_MIN
+ 1> {};
125 struct GTY(()) alias_set_entry
{
126 /* The alias set number, as stored in MEM_ALIAS_SET. */
127 alias_set_type alias_set
;
129 /* Nonzero if would have a child of zero: this effectively makes this
130 alias set the same as alias set zero. */
132 /* Nonzero if alias set corresponds to pointer type itself (i.e. not to
133 aggregate contaiing pointer.
134 This is used for a special case where we need an universal pointer type
135 compatible with all other pointer types. */
137 /* Nonzero if is_pointer or if one of childs have has_pointer set. */
140 /* The children of the alias set. These are not just the immediate
141 children, but, in fact, all descendants. So, if we have:
143 struct T { struct S s; float f; }
145 continuing our example above, the children here will be all of
146 `int', `double', `float', and `struct S'. */
147 hash_map
<alias_set_hash
, int> *children
;
150 static int rtx_equal_for_memref_p (const_rtx
, const_rtx
);
151 static void record_set (rtx
, const_rtx
, void *);
152 static int base_alias_check (rtx
, rtx
, rtx
, rtx
, machine_mode
,
154 static rtx
find_base_value (rtx
);
155 static int mems_in_disjoint_alias_sets_p (const_rtx
, const_rtx
);
156 static alias_set_entry
*get_alias_set_entry (alias_set_type
);
157 static tree
decl_for_component_ref (tree
);
158 static int write_dependence_p (const_rtx
,
159 const_rtx
, machine_mode
, rtx
,
161 static int compare_base_symbol_refs (const_rtx
, const_rtx
);
163 static void memory_modified_1 (rtx
, const_rtx
, void *);
165 /* Query statistics for the different low-level disambiguators.
166 A high-level query may trigger multiple of them. */
169 unsigned long long num_alias_zero
;
170 unsigned long long num_same_alias_set
;
171 unsigned long long num_same_objects
;
172 unsigned long long num_volatile
;
173 unsigned long long num_dag
;
174 unsigned long long num_universal
;
175 unsigned long long num_disambiguated
;
179 /* Set up all info needed to perform alias analysis on memory references. */
181 /* Returns the size in bytes of the mode of X. */
182 #define SIZE_FOR_MODE(X) (GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (X)))
184 /* Cap the number of passes we make over the insns propagating alias
185 information through set chains.
186 ??? 10 is a completely arbitrary choice. This should be based on the
187 maximum loop depth in the CFG, but we do not have this information
188 available (even if current_loops _is_ available). */
189 #define MAX_ALIAS_LOOP_PASSES 10
191 /* reg_base_value[N] gives an address to which register N is related.
192 If all sets after the first add or subtract to the current value
193 or otherwise modify it so it does not point to a different top level
194 object, reg_base_value[N] is equal to the address part of the source
197 A base address can be an ADDRESS, SYMBOL_REF, or LABEL_REF. ADDRESS
198 expressions represent three types of base:
200 1. incoming arguments. There is just one ADDRESS to represent all
201 arguments, since we do not know at this level whether accesses
202 based on different arguments can alias. The ADDRESS has id 0.
204 2. stack_pointer_rtx, frame_pointer_rtx, hard_frame_pointer_rtx
205 (if distinct from frame_pointer_rtx) and arg_pointer_rtx.
206 Each of these rtxes has a separate ADDRESS associated with it,
207 each with a negative id.
209 GCC is (and is required to be) precise in which register it
210 chooses to access a particular region of stack. We can therefore
211 assume that accesses based on one of these rtxes do not alias
212 accesses based on another of these rtxes.
214 3. bases that are derived from malloc()ed memory (REG_NOALIAS).
215 Each such piece of memory has a separate ADDRESS associated
216 with it, each with an id greater than 0.
218 Accesses based on one ADDRESS do not alias accesses based on other
219 ADDRESSes. Accesses based on ADDRESSes in groups (2) and (3) do not
220 alias globals either; the ADDRESSes have Pmode to indicate this.
221 The ADDRESS in group (1) _may_ alias globals; it has VOIDmode to
224 static GTY(()) vec
<rtx
, va_gc
> *reg_base_value
;
225 static rtx
*new_reg_base_value
;
227 /* The single VOIDmode ADDRESS that represents all argument bases.
229 static GTY(()) rtx arg_base_value
;
231 /* Used to allocate unique ids to each REG_NOALIAS ADDRESS. */
232 static int unique_id
;
234 /* We preserve the copy of old array around to avoid amount of garbage
235 produced. About 8% of garbage produced were attributed to this
237 static GTY((deletable
)) vec
<rtx
, va_gc
> *old_reg_base_value
;
239 /* Values of XINT (address, 0) of Pmode ADDRESS rtxes for special
241 #define UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_SP -1
242 #define UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_ARGP -2
243 #define UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_FP -3
244 #define UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_HFP -4
246 #define static_reg_base_value \
247 (this_target_rtl->x_static_reg_base_value)
249 #define REG_BASE_VALUE(X) \
250 (REGNO (X) < vec_safe_length (reg_base_value) \
251 ? (*reg_base_value)[REGNO (X)] : 0)
253 /* Vector indexed by N giving the initial (unchanging) value known for
254 pseudo-register N. This vector is initialized in init_alias_analysis,
255 and does not change until end_alias_analysis is called. */
256 static GTY(()) vec
<rtx
, va_gc
> *reg_known_value
;
258 /* Vector recording for each reg_known_value whether it is due to a
259 REG_EQUIV note. Future passes (viz., reload) may replace the
260 pseudo with the equivalent expression and so we account for the
261 dependences that would be introduced if that happens.
263 The REG_EQUIV notes created in assign_parms may mention the arg
264 pointer, and there are explicit insns in the RTL that modify the
265 arg pointer. Thus we must ensure that such insns don't get
266 scheduled across each other because that would invalidate the
267 REG_EQUIV notes. One could argue that the REG_EQUIV notes are
268 wrong, but solving the problem in the scheduler will likely give
269 better code, so we do it here. */
270 static sbitmap reg_known_equiv_p
;
272 /* True when scanning insns from the start of the rtl to the
273 NOTE_INSN_FUNCTION_BEG note. */
274 static bool copying_arguments
;
277 /* The splay-tree used to store the various alias set entries. */
278 static GTY (()) vec
<alias_set_entry
*, va_gc
> *alias_sets
;
280 /* Build a decomposed reference object for querying the alias-oracle
281 from the MEM rtx and store it in *REF.
282 Returns false if MEM is not suitable for the alias-oracle. */
285 ao_ref_from_mem (ao_ref
*ref
, const_rtx mem
)
287 tree expr
= MEM_EXPR (mem
);
293 ao_ref_init (ref
, expr
);
295 /* Get the base of the reference and see if we have to reject or
297 base
= ao_ref_base (ref
);
298 if (base
== NULL_TREE
)
301 /* The tree oracle doesn't like bases that are neither decls
302 nor indirect references of SSA names. */
304 || (TREE_CODE (base
) == MEM_REF
305 && TREE_CODE (TREE_OPERAND (base
, 0)) == SSA_NAME
)
306 || (TREE_CODE (base
) == TARGET_MEM_REF
307 && TREE_CODE (TMR_BASE (base
)) == SSA_NAME
)))
310 /* If this is a reference based on a partitioned decl replace the
311 base with a MEM_REF of the pointer representative we
312 created during stack slot partitioning. */
314 && ! is_global_var (base
)
315 && cfun
->gimple_df
->decls_to_pointers
!= NULL
)
317 tree
*namep
= cfun
->gimple_df
->decls_to_pointers
->get (base
);
319 ref
->base
= build_simple_mem_ref (*namep
);
322 ref
->ref_alias_set
= MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem
);
324 /* If MEM_OFFSET or MEM_SIZE are unknown what we got from MEM_EXPR
325 is conservative, so trust it. */
326 if (!MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (mem
)
327 || !MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (mem
))
330 /* If MEM_OFFSET/MEM_SIZE get us outside of ref->offset/ref->max_size
332 if (maybe_lt (MEM_OFFSET (mem
), 0)
333 || (ref
->max_size_known_p ()
334 && maybe_gt ((MEM_OFFSET (mem
) + MEM_SIZE (mem
)) * BITS_PER_UNIT
,
336 ref
->ref
= NULL_TREE
;
338 /* Refine size and offset we got from analyzing MEM_EXPR by using
339 MEM_SIZE and MEM_OFFSET. */
341 ref
->offset
+= MEM_OFFSET (mem
) * BITS_PER_UNIT
;
342 ref
->size
= MEM_SIZE (mem
) * BITS_PER_UNIT
;
344 /* The MEM may extend into adjacent fields, so adjust max_size if
346 if (ref
->max_size_known_p ())
347 ref
->max_size
= upper_bound (ref
->max_size
, ref
->size
);
349 /* If MEM_OFFSET and MEM_SIZE might get us outside of the base object of
350 the MEM_EXPR punt. This happens for STRICT_ALIGNMENT targets a lot. */
351 if (MEM_EXPR (mem
) != get_spill_slot_decl (false)
352 && (maybe_lt (ref
->offset
, 0)
353 || (DECL_P (ref
->base
)
354 && (DECL_SIZE (ref
->base
) == NULL_TREE
355 || !poly_int_tree_p (DECL_SIZE (ref
->base
))
356 || maybe_lt (wi::to_poly_offset (DECL_SIZE (ref
->base
)),
357 ref
->offset
+ ref
->size
)))))
363 /* Query the alias-oracle on whether the two memory rtx X and MEM may
364 alias. If TBAA_P is set also apply TBAA. Returns true if the
365 two rtxen may alias, false otherwise. */
368 rtx_refs_may_alias_p (const_rtx x
, const_rtx mem
, bool tbaa_p
)
372 if (!ao_ref_from_mem (&ref1
, x
)
373 || !ao_ref_from_mem (&ref2
, mem
))
376 return refs_may_alias_p_1 (&ref1
, &ref2
,
378 && MEM_ALIAS_SET (x
) != 0
379 && MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem
) != 0);
382 /* Returns a pointer to the alias set entry for ALIAS_SET, if there is
383 such an entry, or NULL otherwise. */
385 static inline alias_set_entry
*
386 get_alias_set_entry (alias_set_type alias_set
)
388 return (*alias_sets
)[alias_set
];
391 /* Returns nonzero if the alias sets for MEM1 and MEM2 are such that
392 the two MEMs cannot alias each other. */
395 mems_in_disjoint_alias_sets_p (const_rtx mem1
, const_rtx mem2
)
397 return (flag_strict_aliasing
398 && ! alias_sets_conflict_p (MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem1
),
399 MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem2
)));
402 /* Return true if the first alias set is a subset of the second. */
405 alias_set_subset_of (alias_set_type set1
, alias_set_type set2
)
407 alias_set_entry
*ase2
;
409 /* Disable TBAA oracle with !flag_strict_aliasing. */
410 if (!flag_strict_aliasing
)
413 /* Everything is a subset of the "aliases everything" set. */
417 /* Check if set1 is a subset of set2. */
418 ase2
= get_alias_set_entry (set2
);
420 && (ase2
->has_zero_child
421 || (ase2
->children
&& ase2
->children
->get (set1
))))
424 /* As a special case we consider alias set of "void *" to be both subset
425 and superset of every alias set of a pointer. This extra symmetry does
426 not matter for alias_sets_conflict_p but it makes aliasing_component_refs_p
427 to return true on the following testcase:
430 char **ptr2=(char **)&ptr;
433 Additionally if a set contains universal pointer, we consider every pointer
434 to be a subset of it, but we do not represent this explicitely - doing so
435 would require us to update transitive closure each time we introduce new
436 pointer type. This makes aliasing_component_refs_p to return true
437 on the following testcase:
439 struct a {void *ptr;}
440 char **ptr = (char **)&a.ptr;
443 This makes void * truly universal pointer type. See pointer handling in
444 get_alias_set for more details. */
445 if (ase2
&& ase2
->has_pointer
)
447 alias_set_entry
*ase1
= get_alias_set_entry (set1
);
449 if (ase1
&& ase1
->is_pointer
)
451 alias_set_type voidptr_set
= TYPE_ALIAS_SET (ptr_type_node
);
452 /* If one is ptr_type_node and other is pointer, then we consider
453 them subset of each other. */
454 if (set1
== voidptr_set
|| set2
== voidptr_set
)
456 /* If SET2 contains universal pointer's alias set, then we consdier
457 every (non-universal) pointer. */
458 if (ase2
->children
&& set1
!= voidptr_set
459 && ase2
->children
->get (voidptr_set
))
466 /* Return 1 if the two specified alias sets may conflict. */
469 alias_sets_conflict_p (alias_set_type set1
, alias_set_type set2
)
471 alias_set_entry
*ase1
;
472 alias_set_entry
*ase2
;
475 if (alias_sets_must_conflict_p (set1
, set2
))
478 /* See if the first alias set is a subset of the second. */
479 ase1
= get_alias_set_entry (set1
);
481 && ase1
->children
&& ase1
->children
->get (set2
))
483 ++alias_stats
.num_dag
;
487 /* Now do the same, but with the alias sets reversed. */
488 ase2
= get_alias_set_entry (set2
);
490 && ase2
->children
&& ase2
->children
->get (set1
))
492 ++alias_stats
.num_dag
;
496 /* We want void * to be compatible with any other pointer without
497 really dropping it to alias set 0. Doing so would make it
498 compatible with all non-pointer types too.
500 This is not strictly necessary by the C/C++ language
501 standards, but avoids common type punning mistakes. In
502 addition to that, we need the existence of such universal
503 pointer to implement Fortran's C_PTR type (which is defined as
504 type compatible with all C pointers). */
505 if (ase1
&& ase2
&& ase1
->has_pointer
&& ase2
->has_pointer
)
507 alias_set_type voidptr_set
= TYPE_ALIAS_SET (ptr_type_node
);
509 /* If one of the sets corresponds to universal pointer,
510 we consider it to conflict with anything that is
511 or contains pointer. */
512 if (set1
== voidptr_set
|| set2
== voidptr_set
)
514 ++alias_stats
.num_universal
;
517 /* If one of sets is (non-universal) pointer and the other
518 contains universal pointer, we also get conflict. */
519 if (ase1
->is_pointer
&& set2
!= voidptr_set
520 && ase2
->children
&& ase2
->children
->get (voidptr_set
))
522 ++alias_stats
.num_universal
;
525 if (ase2
->is_pointer
&& set1
!= voidptr_set
526 && ase1
->children
&& ase1
->children
->get (voidptr_set
))
528 ++alias_stats
.num_universal
;
533 ++alias_stats
.num_disambiguated
;
535 /* The two alias sets are distinct and neither one is the
536 child of the other. Therefore, they cannot conflict. */
540 /* Return 1 if the two specified alias sets will always conflict. */
543 alias_sets_must_conflict_p (alias_set_type set1
, alias_set_type set2
)
545 /* Disable TBAA oracle with !flag_strict_aliasing. */
546 if (!flag_strict_aliasing
)
548 if (set1
== 0 || set2
== 0)
550 ++alias_stats
.num_alias_zero
;
555 ++alias_stats
.num_same_alias_set
;
562 /* Return 1 if any MEM object of type T1 will always conflict (using the
563 dependency routines in this file) with any MEM object of type T2.
564 This is used when allocating temporary storage. If T1 and/or T2 are
565 NULL_TREE, it means we know nothing about the storage. */
568 objects_must_conflict_p (tree t1
, tree t2
)
570 alias_set_type set1
, set2
;
572 /* If neither has a type specified, we don't know if they'll conflict
573 because we may be using them to store objects of various types, for
574 example the argument and local variables areas of inlined functions. */
575 if (t1
== 0 && t2
== 0)
578 /* If they are the same type, they must conflict. */
581 ++alias_stats
.num_same_objects
;
584 /* Likewise if both are volatile. */
585 if (t1
!= 0 && TYPE_VOLATILE (t1
) && t2
!= 0 && TYPE_VOLATILE (t2
))
587 ++alias_stats
.num_volatile
;
591 set1
= t1
? get_alias_set (t1
) : 0;
592 set2
= t2
? get_alias_set (t2
) : 0;
594 /* We can't use alias_sets_conflict_p because we must make sure
595 that every subtype of t1 will conflict with every subtype of
596 t2 for which a pair of subobjects of these respective subtypes
597 overlaps on the stack. */
598 return alias_sets_must_conflict_p (set1
, set2
);
601 /* Return the outermost parent of component present in the chain of
602 component references handled by get_inner_reference in T with the
604 - the component is non-addressable, or
605 - the parent has alias set zero,
606 or NULL_TREE if no such parent exists. In the former cases, the alias
607 set of this parent is the alias set that must be used for T itself. */
610 component_uses_parent_alias_set_from (const_tree t
)
612 const_tree found
= NULL_TREE
;
614 if (AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (t
))
615 && TYPE_TYPELESS_STORAGE (TREE_TYPE (t
)))
616 return const_cast <tree
> (t
);
618 while (handled_component_p (t
))
620 switch (TREE_CODE (t
))
623 if (DECL_NONADDRESSABLE_P (TREE_OPERAND (t
, 1)))
625 /* Permit type-punning when accessing a union, provided the access
626 is directly through the union. For example, this code does not
627 permit taking the address of a union member and then storing
628 through it. Even the type-punning allowed here is a GCC
629 extension, albeit a common and useful one; the C standard says
630 that such accesses have implementation-defined behavior. */
631 else if (TREE_CODE (TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (t
, 0))) == UNION_TYPE
)
636 case ARRAY_RANGE_REF
:
637 if (TYPE_NONALIASED_COMPONENT (TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (t
, 0))))
646 case VIEW_CONVERT_EXPR
:
647 /* Bitfields and casts are never addressable. */
655 if (get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (t
, 0))) == 0)
658 t
= TREE_OPERAND (t
, 0);
662 return TREE_OPERAND (found
, 0);
668 /* Return whether the pointer-type T effective for aliasing may
669 access everything and thus the reference has to be assigned
673 ref_all_alias_ptr_type_p (const_tree t
)
675 return (TREE_CODE (TREE_TYPE (t
)) == VOID_TYPE
676 || TYPE_REF_CAN_ALIAS_ALL (t
));
679 /* Return the alias set for the memory pointed to by T, which may be
680 either a type or an expression. Return -1 if there is nothing
681 special about dereferencing T. */
683 static alias_set_type
684 get_deref_alias_set_1 (tree t
)
686 /* All we care about is the type. */
690 /* If we have an INDIRECT_REF via a void pointer, we don't
691 know anything about what that might alias. Likewise if the
692 pointer is marked that way. */
693 if (ref_all_alias_ptr_type_p (t
))
699 /* Return the alias set for the memory pointed to by T, which may be
700 either a type or an expression. */
703 get_deref_alias_set (tree t
)
705 /* If we're not doing any alias analysis, just assume everything
706 aliases everything else. */
707 if (!flag_strict_aliasing
)
710 alias_set_type set
= get_deref_alias_set_1 (t
);
712 /* Fall back to the alias-set of the pointed-to type. */
717 set
= get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (t
));
723 /* Return the pointer-type relevant for TBAA purposes from the
724 memory reference tree *T or NULL_TREE in which case *T is
725 adjusted to point to the outermost component reference that
726 can be used for assigning an alias set. */
729 reference_alias_ptr_type_1 (tree
*t
)
733 /* Get the base object of the reference. */
735 while (handled_component_p (inner
))
737 /* If there is a VIEW_CONVERT_EXPR in the chain we cannot use
738 the type of any component references that wrap it to
739 determine the alias-set. */
740 if (TREE_CODE (inner
) == VIEW_CONVERT_EXPR
)
741 *t
= TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 0);
742 inner
= TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 0);
745 /* Handle pointer dereferences here, they can override the
747 if (INDIRECT_REF_P (inner
)
748 && ref_all_alias_ptr_type_p (TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 0))))
749 return TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 0));
750 else if (TREE_CODE (inner
) == TARGET_MEM_REF
)
751 return TREE_TYPE (TMR_OFFSET (inner
));
752 else if (TREE_CODE (inner
) == MEM_REF
753 && ref_all_alias_ptr_type_p (TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 1))))
754 return TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 1));
756 /* If the innermost reference is a MEM_REF that has a
757 conversion embedded treat it like a VIEW_CONVERT_EXPR above,
758 using the memory access type for determining the alias-set. */
759 if (TREE_CODE (inner
) == MEM_REF
760 && (TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (TREE_TYPE (inner
))
762 (TREE_TYPE (TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 1))))))
763 return TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (inner
, 1));
765 /* Otherwise, pick up the outermost object that we could have
767 tree tem
= component_uses_parent_alias_set_from (*t
);
774 /* Return the pointer-type relevant for TBAA purposes from the
775 gimple memory reference tree T. This is the type to be used for
776 the offset operand of MEM_REF or TARGET_MEM_REF replacements of T
777 and guarantees that get_alias_set will return the same alias
778 set for T and the replacement. */
781 reference_alias_ptr_type (tree t
)
783 /* If the frontend assigns this alias-set zero, preserve that. */
784 if (lang_hooks
.get_alias_set (t
) == 0)
785 return ptr_type_node
;
787 tree ptype
= reference_alias_ptr_type_1 (&t
);
788 /* If there is a given pointer type for aliasing purposes, return it. */
789 if (ptype
!= NULL_TREE
)
792 /* Otherwise build one from the outermost component reference we
794 if (TREE_CODE (t
) == MEM_REF
795 || TREE_CODE (t
) == TARGET_MEM_REF
)
796 return TREE_TYPE (TREE_OPERAND (t
, 1));
798 return build_pointer_type (TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (TREE_TYPE (t
)));
801 /* Return whether the pointer-types T1 and T2 used to determine
802 two alias sets of two references will yield the same answer
803 from get_deref_alias_set. */
806 alias_ptr_types_compatible_p (tree t1
, tree t2
)
808 if (TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (t1
) == TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (t2
))
811 if (ref_all_alias_ptr_type_p (t1
)
812 || ref_all_alias_ptr_type_p (t2
))
815 return (TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (TREE_TYPE (t1
))
816 == TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (TREE_TYPE (t2
)));
819 /* Create emptry alias set entry. */
822 init_alias_set_entry (alias_set_type set
)
824 alias_set_entry
*ase
= ggc_alloc
<alias_set_entry
> ();
825 ase
->alias_set
= set
;
826 ase
->children
= NULL
;
827 ase
->has_zero_child
= false;
828 ase
->is_pointer
= false;
829 ase
->has_pointer
= false;
830 gcc_checking_assert (!get_alias_set_entry (set
));
831 (*alias_sets
)[set
] = ase
;
835 /* Return the alias set for T, which may be either a type or an
836 expression. Call language-specific routine for help, if needed. */
839 get_alias_set (tree t
)
843 /* We can not give up with -fno-strict-aliasing because we need to build
844 proper type representation for possible functions which are build with
845 -fstrict-aliasing. */
847 /* return 0 if this or its type is an error. */
848 if (t
== error_mark_node
850 && (TREE_TYPE (t
) == 0 || TREE_TYPE (t
) == error_mark_node
)))
853 /* We can be passed either an expression or a type. This and the
854 language-specific routine may make mutually-recursive calls to each other
855 to figure out what to do. At each juncture, we see if this is a tree
856 that the language may need to handle specially. First handle things that
860 /* Give the language a chance to do something with this tree
861 before we look at it. */
863 set
= lang_hooks
.get_alias_set (t
);
867 /* Get the alias pointer-type to use or the outermost object
868 that we could have a pointer to. */
869 tree ptype
= reference_alias_ptr_type_1 (&t
);
871 return get_deref_alias_set (ptype
);
873 /* If we've already determined the alias set for a decl, just return
874 it. This is necessary for C++ anonymous unions, whose component
875 variables don't look like union members (boo!). */
877 && DECL_RTL_SET_P (t
) && MEM_P (DECL_RTL (t
)))
878 return MEM_ALIAS_SET (DECL_RTL (t
));
880 /* Now all we care about is the type. */
884 /* Variant qualifiers don't affect the alias set, so get the main
886 t
= TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (t
);
888 if (AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (t
)
889 && TYPE_TYPELESS_STORAGE (t
))
892 /* Always use the canonical type as well. If this is a type that
893 requires structural comparisons to identify compatible types
894 use alias set zero. */
895 if (TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P (t
))
897 /* Allow the language to specify another alias set for this
899 set
= lang_hooks
.get_alias_set (t
);
902 /* Handle structure type equality for pointer types, arrays and vectors.
903 This is easy to do, because the code bellow ignore canonical types on
904 these anyway. This is important for LTO, where TYPE_CANONICAL for
905 pointers can not be meaningfuly computed by the frotnend. */
906 if (canonical_type_used_p (t
))
908 /* In LTO we set canonical types for all types where it makes
909 sense to do so. Double check we did not miss some type. */
910 gcc_checking_assert (!in_lto_p
|| !type_with_alias_set_p (t
));
916 t
= TYPE_CANONICAL (t
);
917 gcc_checking_assert (!TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P (t
));
920 /* If this is a type with a known alias set, return it. */
921 gcc_checking_assert (t
== TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (t
));
922 if (TYPE_ALIAS_SET_KNOWN_P (t
))
923 return TYPE_ALIAS_SET (t
);
925 /* We don't want to set TYPE_ALIAS_SET for incomplete types. */
926 if (!COMPLETE_TYPE_P (t
))
928 /* For arrays with unknown size the conservative answer is the
929 alias set of the element type. */
930 if (TREE_CODE (t
) == ARRAY_TYPE
)
931 return get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (t
));
933 /* But return zero as a conservative answer for incomplete types. */
937 /* See if the language has special handling for this type. */
938 set
= lang_hooks
.get_alias_set (t
);
942 /* There are no objects of FUNCTION_TYPE, so there's no point in
943 using up an alias set for them. (There are, of course, pointers
944 and references to functions, but that's different.) */
945 else if (TREE_CODE (t
) == FUNCTION_TYPE
|| TREE_CODE (t
) == METHOD_TYPE
)
948 /* Unless the language specifies otherwise, let vector types alias
949 their components. This avoids some nasty type punning issues in
950 normal usage. And indeed lets vectors be treated more like an
952 else if (TREE_CODE (t
) == VECTOR_TYPE
)
953 set
= get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (t
));
955 /* Unless the language specifies otherwise, treat array types the
956 same as their components. This avoids the asymmetry we get
957 through recording the components. Consider accessing a
958 character(kind=1) through a reference to a character(kind=1)[1:1].
959 Or consider if we want to assign integer(kind=4)[0:D.1387] and
960 integer(kind=4)[4] the same alias set or not.
961 Just be pragmatic here and make sure the array and its element
962 type get the same alias set assigned. */
963 else if (TREE_CODE (t
) == ARRAY_TYPE
964 && (!TYPE_NONALIASED_COMPONENT (t
)
965 || TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P (t
)))
966 set
= get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (t
));
968 /* From the former common C and C++ langhook implementation:
970 Unfortunately, there is no canonical form of a pointer type.
971 In particular, if we have `typedef int I', then `int *', and
972 `I *' are different types. So, we have to pick a canonical
973 representative. We do this below.
975 Technically, this approach is actually more conservative that
976 it needs to be. In particular, `const int *' and `int *'
977 should be in different alias sets, according to the C and C++
978 standard, since their types are not the same, and so,
979 technically, an `int **' and `const int **' cannot point at
982 But, the standard is wrong. In particular, this code is
987 const int* const* cipp = ipp;
988 And, it doesn't make sense for that to be legal unless you
989 can dereference IPP and CIPP. So, we ignore cv-qualifiers on
990 the pointed-to types. This issue has been reported to the
993 For this reason go to canonical type of the unqalified pointer type.
994 Until GCC 6 this code set all pointers sets to have alias set of
995 ptr_type_node but that is a bad idea, because it prevents disabiguations
996 in between pointers. For Firefox this accounts about 20% of all
997 disambiguations in the program. */
998 else if (POINTER_TYPE_P (t
) && t
!= ptr_type_node
)
1001 auto_vec
<bool, 8> reference
;
1003 /* Unnest all pointers and references.
1004 We also want to make pointer to array/vector equivalent to pointer to
1005 its element (see the reasoning above). Skip all those types, too. */
1006 for (p
= t
; POINTER_TYPE_P (p
)
1007 || (TREE_CODE (p
) == ARRAY_TYPE
1008 && (!TYPE_NONALIASED_COMPONENT (p
)
1009 || !COMPLETE_TYPE_P (p
)
1010 || TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P (p
)))
1011 || TREE_CODE (p
) == VECTOR_TYPE
;
1014 /* Ada supports recusive pointers. Instead of doing recrusion check
1015 just give up once the preallocated space of 8 elements is up.
1016 In this case just punt to void * alias set. */
1017 if (reference
.length () == 8)
1022 if (TREE_CODE (p
) == REFERENCE_TYPE
)
1023 /* In LTO we want languages that use references to be compatible
1024 with languages that use pointers. */
1025 reference
.safe_push (true && !in_lto_p
);
1026 if (TREE_CODE (p
) == POINTER_TYPE
)
1027 reference
.safe_push (false);
1029 p
= TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (p
);
1031 /* Make void * compatible with char * and also void **.
1032 Programs are commonly violating TBAA by this.
1034 We also make void * to conflict with every pointer
1035 (see record_component_aliases) and thus it is safe it to use it for
1036 pointers to types with TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P. */
1037 if (TREE_CODE (p
) == VOID_TYPE
|| TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P (p
))
1038 set
= get_alias_set (ptr_type_node
);
1041 /* Rebuild pointer type starting from canonical types using
1042 unqualified pointers and references only. This way all such
1043 pointers will have the same alias set and will conflict with
1046 Most of time we already have pointers or references of a given type.
1047 If not we build new one just to be sure that if someone later
1048 (probably only middle-end can, as we should assign all alias
1049 classes only after finishing translation unit) builds the pointer
1050 type, the canonical type will match. */
1051 p
= TYPE_CANONICAL (p
);
1052 while (!reference
.is_empty ())
1054 if (reference
.pop ())
1055 p
= build_reference_type (p
);
1057 p
= build_pointer_type (p
);
1058 gcc_checking_assert (p
== TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (p
));
1059 /* build_pointer_type should always return the canonical type.
1060 For LTO TYPE_CANOINCAL may be NULL, because we do not compute
1061 them. Be sure that frontends do not glob canonical types of
1062 pointers in unexpected way and that p == TYPE_CANONICAL (p)
1063 in all other cases. */
1064 gcc_checking_assert (!TYPE_CANONICAL (p
)
1065 || p
== TYPE_CANONICAL (p
));
1068 /* Assign the alias set to both p and t.
1069 We can not call get_alias_set (p) here as that would trigger
1070 infinite recursion when p == t. In other cases it would just
1071 trigger unnecesary legwork of rebuilding the pointer again. */
1072 gcc_checking_assert (p
== TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (p
));
1073 if (TYPE_ALIAS_SET_KNOWN_P (p
))
1074 set
= TYPE_ALIAS_SET (p
);
1077 set
= new_alias_set ();
1078 TYPE_ALIAS_SET (p
) = set
;
1082 /* Alias set of ptr_type_node is special and serve as universal pointer which
1083 is TBAA compatible with every other pointer type. Be sure we have the
1084 alias set built even for LTO which otherwise keeps all TYPE_CANONICAL
1085 of pointer types NULL. */
1086 else if (t
== ptr_type_node
)
1087 set
= new_alias_set ();
1089 /* Otherwise make a new alias set for this type. */
1092 /* Each canonical type gets its own alias set, so canonical types
1093 shouldn't form a tree. It doesn't really matter for types
1094 we handle specially above, so only check it where it possibly
1095 would result in a bogus alias set. */
1096 gcc_checking_assert (TYPE_CANONICAL (t
) == t
);
1098 set
= new_alias_set ();
1101 TYPE_ALIAS_SET (t
) = set
;
1103 /* If this is an aggregate type or a complex type, we must record any
1104 component aliasing information. */
1105 if (AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (t
) || TREE_CODE (t
) == COMPLEX_TYPE
)
1106 record_component_aliases (t
);
1108 /* We treat pointer types specially in alias_set_subset_of. */
1109 if (POINTER_TYPE_P (t
) && set
)
1111 alias_set_entry
*ase
= get_alias_set_entry (set
);
1113 ase
= init_alias_set_entry (set
);
1114 ase
->is_pointer
= true;
1115 ase
->has_pointer
= true;
1121 /* Return a brand-new alias set. */
1124 new_alias_set (void)
1126 if (alias_sets
== 0)
1127 vec_safe_push (alias_sets
, (alias_set_entry
*) NULL
);
1128 vec_safe_push (alias_sets
, (alias_set_entry
*) NULL
);
1129 return alias_sets
->length () - 1;
1132 /* Indicate that things in SUBSET can alias things in SUPERSET, but that
1133 not everything that aliases SUPERSET also aliases SUBSET. For example,
1134 in C, a store to an `int' can alias a load of a structure containing an
1135 `int', and vice versa. But it can't alias a load of a 'double' member
1136 of the same structure. Here, the structure would be the SUPERSET and
1137 `int' the SUBSET. This relationship is also described in the comment at
1138 the beginning of this file.
1140 This function should be called only once per SUPERSET/SUBSET pair.
1142 It is illegal for SUPERSET to be zero; everything is implicitly a
1143 subset of alias set zero. */
1146 record_alias_subset (alias_set_type superset
, alias_set_type subset
)
1148 alias_set_entry
*superset_entry
;
1149 alias_set_entry
*subset_entry
;
1151 /* It is possible in complex type situations for both sets to be the same,
1152 in which case we can ignore this operation. */
1153 if (superset
== subset
)
1156 gcc_assert (superset
);
1158 superset_entry
= get_alias_set_entry (superset
);
1159 if (superset_entry
== 0)
1161 /* Create an entry for the SUPERSET, so that we have a place to
1162 attach the SUBSET. */
1163 superset_entry
= init_alias_set_entry (superset
);
1167 superset_entry
->has_zero_child
= 1;
1170 subset_entry
= get_alias_set_entry (subset
);
1171 if (!superset_entry
->children
)
1172 superset_entry
->children
1173 = hash_map
<alias_set_hash
, int>::create_ggc (64);
1174 /* If there is an entry for the subset, enter all of its children
1175 (if they are not already present) as children of the SUPERSET. */
1178 if (subset_entry
->has_zero_child
)
1179 superset_entry
->has_zero_child
= true;
1180 if (subset_entry
->has_pointer
)
1181 superset_entry
->has_pointer
= true;
1183 if (subset_entry
->children
)
1185 hash_map
<alias_set_hash
, int>::iterator iter
1186 = subset_entry
->children
->begin ();
1187 for (; iter
!= subset_entry
->children
->end (); ++iter
)
1188 superset_entry
->children
->put ((*iter
).first
, (*iter
).second
);
1192 /* Enter the SUBSET itself as a child of the SUPERSET. */
1193 superset_entry
->children
->put (subset
, 0);
1197 /* Record that component types of TYPE, if any, are part of that type for
1198 aliasing purposes. For record types, we only record component types
1199 for fields that are not marked non-addressable. For array types, we
1200 only record the component type if it is not marked non-aliased. */
1203 record_component_aliases (tree type
)
1205 alias_set_type superset
= get_alias_set (type
);
1211 switch (TREE_CODE (type
))
1215 case QUAL_UNION_TYPE
:
1216 for (field
= TYPE_FIELDS (type
); field
!= 0; field
= DECL_CHAIN (field
))
1217 if (TREE_CODE (field
) == FIELD_DECL
&& !DECL_NONADDRESSABLE_P (field
))
1219 /* LTO type merging does not make any difference between
1220 component pointer types. We may have
1222 struct foo {int *a;};
1224 as TYPE_CANONICAL of
1226 struct bar {float *a;};
1228 Because accesses to int * and float * do not alias, we would get
1229 false negative when accessing the same memory location by
1230 float ** and bar *. We thus record the canonical type as:
1234 void * is special cased and works as a universal pointer type.
1235 Accesses to it conflicts with accesses to any other pointer
1237 tree t
= TREE_TYPE (field
);
1240 /* VECTOR_TYPE and ARRAY_TYPE share the alias set with their
1241 element type and that type has to be normalized to void *,
1242 too, in the case it is a pointer. */
1243 while (!canonical_type_used_p (t
) && !POINTER_TYPE_P (t
))
1245 gcc_checking_assert (TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P (t
));
1248 if (POINTER_TYPE_P (t
))
1250 else if (flag_checking
)
1251 gcc_checking_assert (get_alias_set (t
)
1252 == get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (field
)));
1255 record_alias_subset (superset
, get_alias_set (t
));
1260 record_alias_subset (superset
, get_alias_set (TREE_TYPE (type
)));
1263 /* VECTOR_TYPE and ARRAY_TYPE share the alias set with their
1271 /* Allocate an alias set for use in storing and reading from the varargs
1274 static GTY(()) alias_set_type varargs_set
= -1;
1277 get_varargs_alias_set (void)
1280 /* We now lower VA_ARG_EXPR, and there's currently no way to attach the
1281 varargs alias set to an INDIRECT_REF (FIXME!), so we can't
1282 consistently use the varargs alias set for loads from the varargs
1283 area. So don't use it anywhere. */
1286 if (varargs_set
== -1)
1287 varargs_set
= new_alias_set ();
1293 /* Likewise, but used for the fixed portions of the frame, e.g., register
1296 static GTY(()) alias_set_type frame_set
= -1;
1299 get_frame_alias_set (void)
1301 if (frame_set
== -1)
1302 frame_set
= new_alias_set ();
1307 /* Create a new, unique base with id ID. */
1310 unique_base_value (HOST_WIDE_INT id
)
1312 return gen_rtx_ADDRESS (Pmode
, id
);
1315 /* Return true if accesses based on any other base value cannot alias
1316 those based on X. */
1319 unique_base_value_p (rtx x
)
1321 return GET_CODE (x
) == ADDRESS
&& GET_MODE (x
) == Pmode
;
1324 /* Return true if X is known to be a base value. */
1327 known_base_value_p (rtx x
)
1329 switch (GET_CODE (x
))
1336 /* Arguments may or may not be bases; we don't know for sure. */
1337 return GET_MODE (x
) != VOIDmode
;
1344 /* Inside SRC, the source of a SET, find a base address. */
1347 find_base_value (rtx src
)
1350 scalar_int_mode int_mode
;
1352 #if defined (FIND_BASE_TERM)
1353 /* Try machine-dependent ways to find the base term. */
1354 src
= FIND_BASE_TERM (src
);
1357 switch (GET_CODE (src
))
1364 regno
= REGNO (src
);
1365 /* At the start of a function, argument registers have known base
1366 values which may be lost later. Returning an ADDRESS
1367 expression here allows optimization based on argument values
1368 even when the argument registers are used for other purposes. */
1369 if (regno
< FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
&& copying_arguments
)
1370 return new_reg_base_value
[regno
];
1372 /* If a pseudo has a known base value, return it. Do not do this
1373 for non-fixed hard regs since it can result in a circular
1374 dependency chain for registers which have values at function entry.
1376 The test above is not sufficient because the scheduler may move
1377 a copy out of an arg reg past the NOTE_INSN_FUNCTION_BEGIN. */
1378 if ((regno
>= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
|| fixed_regs
[regno
])
1379 && regno
< vec_safe_length (reg_base_value
))
1381 /* If we're inside init_alias_analysis, use new_reg_base_value
1382 to reduce the number of relaxation iterations. */
1383 if (new_reg_base_value
&& new_reg_base_value
[regno
]
1384 && DF_REG_DEF_COUNT (regno
) == 1)
1385 return new_reg_base_value
[regno
];
1387 if ((*reg_base_value
)[regno
])
1388 return (*reg_base_value
)[regno
];
1394 /* Check for an argument passed in memory. Only record in the
1395 copying-arguments block; it is too hard to track changes
1397 if (copying_arguments
1398 && (XEXP (src
, 0) == arg_pointer_rtx
1399 || (GET_CODE (XEXP (src
, 0)) == PLUS
1400 && XEXP (XEXP (src
, 0), 0) == arg_pointer_rtx
)))
1401 return arg_base_value
;
1405 src
= XEXP (src
, 0);
1406 if (GET_CODE (src
) != PLUS
&& GET_CODE (src
) != MINUS
)
1414 rtx temp
, src_0
= XEXP (src
, 0), src_1
= XEXP (src
, 1);
1416 /* If either operand is a REG that is a known pointer, then it
1418 if (REG_P (src_0
) && REG_POINTER (src_0
))
1419 return find_base_value (src_0
);
1420 if (REG_P (src_1
) && REG_POINTER (src_1
))
1421 return find_base_value (src_1
);
1423 /* If either operand is a REG, then see if we already have
1424 a known value for it. */
1427 temp
= find_base_value (src_0
);
1434 temp
= find_base_value (src_1
);
1439 /* If either base is named object or a special address
1440 (like an argument or stack reference), then use it for the
1442 if (src_0
!= 0 && known_base_value_p (src_0
))
1445 if (src_1
!= 0 && known_base_value_p (src_1
))
1448 /* Guess which operand is the base address:
1449 If either operand is a symbol, then it is the base. If
1450 either operand is a CONST_INT, then the other is the base. */
1451 if (CONST_INT_P (src_1
) || CONSTANT_P (src_0
))
1452 return find_base_value (src_0
);
1453 else if (CONST_INT_P (src_0
) || CONSTANT_P (src_1
))
1454 return find_base_value (src_1
);
1460 /* The standard form is (lo_sum reg sym) so look only at the
1462 return find_base_value (XEXP (src
, 1));
1465 /* If the second operand is constant set the base
1466 address to the first operand. */
1467 if (CONST_INT_P (XEXP (src
, 1)) && INTVAL (XEXP (src
, 1)) != 0)
1468 return find_base_value (XEXP (src
, 0));
1472 /* As we do not know which address space the pointer is referring to, we can
1473 handle this only if the target does not support different pointer or
1474 address modes depending on the address space. */
1475 if (!target_default_pointer_address_modes_p ())
1477 if (!is_a
<scalar_int_mode
> (GET_MODE (src
), &int_mode
)
1478 || GET_MODE_PRECISION (int_mode
) < GET_MODE_PRECISION (Pmode
))
1488 return find_base_value (XEXP (src
, 0));
1491 case SIGN_EXTEND
: /* used for NT/Alpha pointers */
1492 /* As we do not know which address space the pointer is referring to, we can
1493 handle this only if the target does not support different pointer or
1494 address modes depending on the address space. */
1495 if (!target_default_pointer_address_modes_p ())
1499 rtx temp
= find_base_value (XEXP (src
, 0));
1501 if (temp
!= 0 && CONSTANT_P (temp
))
1502 temp
= convert_memory_address (Pmode
, temp
);
1514 /* Called from init_alias_analysis indirectly through note_stores,
1515 or directly if DEST is a register with a REG_NOALIAS note attached.
1516 SET is null in the latter case. */
1518 /* While scanning insns to find base values, reg_seen[N] is nonzero if
1519 register N has been set in this function. */
1520 static sbitmap reg_seen
;
1523 record_set (rtx dest
, const_rtx set
, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED
)
1532 regno
= REGNO (dest
);
1534 gcc_checking_assert (regno
< reg_base_value
->length ());
1536 n
= REG_NREGS (dest
);
1541 bitmap_set_bit (reg_seen
, regno
+ n
);
1542 new_reg_base_value
[regno
+ n
] = 0;
1549 /* A CLOBBER wipes out any old value but does not prevent a previously
1550 unset register from acquiring a base address (i.e. reg_seen is not
1552 if (GET_CODE (set
) == CLOBBER
)
1554 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = 0;
1557 src
= SET_SRC (set
);
1561 /* There's a REG_NOALIAS note against DEST. */
1562 if (bitmap_bit_p (reg_seen
, regno
))
1564 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = 0;
1567 bitmap_set_bit (reg_seen
, regno
);
1568 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = unique_base_value (unique_id
++);
1572 /* If this is not the first set of REGNO, see whether the new value
1573 is related to the old one. There are two cases of interest:
1575 (1) The register might be assigned an entirely new value
1576 that has the same base term as the original set.
1578 (2) The set might be a simple self-modification that
1579 cannot change REGNO's base value.
1581 If neither case holds, reject the original base value as invalid.
1582 Note that the following situation is not detected:
1584 extern int x, y; int *p = &x; p += (&y-&x);
1586 ANSI C does not allow computing the difference of addresses
1587 of distinct top level objects. */
1588 if (new_reg_base_value
[regno
] != 0
1589 && find_base_value (src
) != new_reg_base_value
[regno
])
1590 switch (GET_CODE (src
))
1594 if (XEXP (src
, 0) != dest
&& XEXP (src
, 1) != dest
)
1595 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = 0;
1598 /* If the value we add in the PLUS is also a valid base value,
1599 this might be the actual base value, and the original value
1602 rtx other
= NULL_RTX
;
1604 if (XEXP (src
, 0) == dest
)
1605 other
= XEXP (src
, 1);
1606 else if (XEXP (src
, 1) == dest
)
1607 other
= XEXP (src
, 0);
1609 if (! other
|| find_base_value (other
))
1610 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = 0;
1614 if (XEXP (src
, 0) != dest
|| !CONST_INT_P (XEXP (src
, 1)))
1615 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = 0;
1618 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = 0;
1621 /* If this is the first set of a register, record the value. */
1622 else if ((regno
>= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
|| ! fixed_regs
[regno
])
1623 && ! bitmap_bit_p (reg_seen
, regno
) && new_reg_base_value
[regno
] == 0)
1624 new_reg_base_value
[regno
] = find_base_value (src
);
1626 bitmap_set_bit (reg_seen
, regno
);
1629 /* Return REG_BASE_VALUE for REGNO. Selective scheduler uses this to avoid
1630 using hard registers with non-null REG_BASE_VALUE for renaming. */
1632 get_reg_base_value (unsigned int regno
)
1634 return (*reg_base_value
)[regno
];
1637 /* If a value is known for REGNO, return it. */
1640 get_reg_known_value (unsigned int regno
)
1642 if (regno
>= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
)
1644 regno
-= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
;
1645 if (regno
< vec_safe_length (reg_known_value
))
1646 return (*reg_known_value
)[regno
];
1654 set_reg_known_value (unsigned int regno
, rtx val
)
1656 if (regno
>= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
)
1658 regno
-= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
;
1659 if (regno
< vec_safe_length (reg_known_value
))
1660 (*reg_known_value
)[regno
] = val
;
1664 /* Similarly for reg_known_equiv_p. */
1667 get_reg_known_equiv_p (unsigned int regno
)
1669 if (regno
>= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
)
1671 regno
-= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
;
1672 if (regno
< vec_safe_length (reg_known_value
))
1673 return bitmap_bit_p (reg_known_equiv_p
, regno
);
1679 set_reg_known_equiv_p (unsigned int regno
, bool val
)
1681 if (regno
>= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
)
1683 regno
-= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
;
1684 if (regno
< vec_safe_length (reg_known_value
))
1687 bitmap_set_bit (reg_known_equiv_p
, regno
);
1689 bitmap_clear_bit (reg_known_equiv_p
, regno
);
1695 /* Returns a canonical version of X, from the point of view alias
1696 analysis. (For example, if X is a MEM whose address is a register,
1697 and the register has a known value (say a SYMBOL_REF), then a MEM
1698 whose address is the SYMBOL_REF is returned.) */
1703 /* Recursively look for equivalences. */
1704 if (REG_P (x
) && REGNO (x
) >= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
)
1706 rtx t
= get_reg_known_value (REGNO (x
));
1710 return canon_rtx (t
);
1713 if (GET_CODE (x
) == PLUS
)
1715 rtx x0
= canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0));
1716 rtx x1
= canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 1));
1718 if (x0
!= XEXP (x
, 0) || x1
!= XEXP (x
, 1))
1719 return simplify_gen_binary (PLUS
, GET_MODE (x
), x0
, x1
);
1722 /* This gives us much better alias analysis when called from
1723 the loop optimizer. Note we want to leave the original
1724 MEM alone, but need to return the canonicalized MEM with
1725 all the flags with their original values. */
1727 x
= replace_equiv_address_nv (x
, canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0)));
1732 /* Return 1 if X and Y are identical-looking rtx's.
1733 Expect that X and Y has been already canonicalized.
1735 We use the data in reg_known_value above to see if two registers with
1736 different numbers are, in fact, equivalent. */
1739 rtx_equal_for_memref_p (const_rtx x
, const_rtx y
)
1746 if (x
== 0 && y
== 0)
1748 if (x
== 0 || y
== 0)
1754 code
= GET_CODE (x
);
1755 /* Rtx's of different codes cannot be equal. */
1756 if (code
!= GET_CODE (y
))
1759 /* (MULT:SI x y) and (MULT:HI x y) are NOT equivalent.
1760 (REG:SI x) and (REG:HI x) are NOT equivalent. */
1762 if (GET_MODE (x
) != GET_MODE (y
))
1765 /* Some RTL can be compared without a recursive examination. */
1769 return REGNO (x
) == REGNO (y
);
1772 return label_ref_label (x
) == label_ref_label (y
);
1775 return compare_base_symbol_refs (x
, y
) == 1;
1778 /* This is magic, don't go through canonicalization et al. */
1779 return rtx_equal_p (ENTRY_VALUE_EXP (x
), ENTRY_VALUE_EXP (y
));
1783 /* Pointer equality guarantees equality for these nodes. */
1790 /* canon_rtx knows how to handle plus. No need to canonicalize. */
1792 return ((rtx_equal_for_memref_p (XEXP (x
, 0), XEXP (y
, 0))
1793 && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (XEXP (x
, 1), XEXP (y
, 1)))
1794 || (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (XEXP (x
, 0), XEXP (y
, 1))
1795 && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (XEXP (x
, 1), XEXP (y
, 0))));
1796 /* For commutative operations, the RTX match if the operand match in any
1797 order. Also handle the simple binary and unary cases without a loop. */
1798 if (COMMUTATIVE_P (x
))
1800 rtx xop0
= canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0));
1801 rtx yop0
= canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0));
1802 rtx yop1
= canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 1));
1804 return ((rtx_equal_for_memref_p (xop0
, yop0
)
1805 && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 1)), yop1
))
1806 || (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (xop0
, yop1
)
1807 && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 1)), yop0
)));
1809 else if (NON_COMMUTATIVE_P (x
))
1811 return (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0)),
1812 canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0)))
1813 && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 1)),
1814 canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 1))));
1816 else if (UNARY_P (x
))
1817 return rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0)),
1818 canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0)));
1820 /* Compare the elements. If any pair of corresponding elements
1821 fail to match, return 0 for the whole things.
1823 Limit cases to types which actually appear in addresses. */
1825 fmt
= GET_RTX_FORMAT (code
);
1826 for (i
= GET_RTX_LENGTH (code
) - 1; i
>= 0; i
--)
1831 if (XINT (x
, i
) != XINT (y
, i
))
1836 if (maybe_ne (SUBREG_BYTE (x
), SUBREG_BYTE (y
)))
1841 /* Two vectors must have the same length. */
1842 if (XVECLEN (x
, i
) != XVECLEN (y
, i
))
1845 /* And the corresponding elements must match. */
1846 for (j
= 0; j
< XVECLEN (x
, i
); j
++)
1847 if (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XVECEXP (x
, i
, j
)),
1848 canon_rtx (XVECEXP (y
, i
, j
))) == 0)
1853 if (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, i
)),
1854 canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, i
))) == 0)
1858 /* This can happen for asm operands. */
1860 if (strcmp (XSTR (x
, i
), XSTR (y
, i
)))
1864 /* This can happen for an asm which clobbers memory. */
1868 /* It is believed that rtx's at this level will never
1869 contain anything but integers and other rtx's,
1870 except for within LABEL_REFs and SYMBOL_REFs. */
1879 find_base_term (rtx x
, vec
<std::pair
<cselib_val
*,
1880 struct elt_loc_list
*> > &visited_vals
)
1883 struct elt_loc_list
*l
, *f
;
1885 scalar_int_mode int_mode
;
1887 #if defined (FIND_BASE_TERM)
1888 /* Try machine-dependent ways to find the base term. */
1889 x
= FIND_BASE_TERM (x
);
1892 switch (GET_CODE (x
))
1895 return REG_BASE_VALUE (x
);
1898 /* As we do not know which address space the pointer is referring to, we can
1899 handle this only if the target does not support different pointer or
1900 address modes depending on the address space. */
1901 if (!target_default_pointer_address_modes_p ())
1903 if (!is_a
<scalar_int_mode
> (GET_MODE (x
), &int_mode
)
1904 || GET_MODE_PRECISION (int_mode
) < GET_MODE_PRECISION (Pmode
))
1914 return find_base_term (XEXP (x
, 0), visited_vals
);
1917 case SIGN_EXTEND
: /* Used for Alpha/NT pointers */
1918 /* As we do not know which address space the pointer is referring to, we can
1919 handle this only if the target does not support different pointer or
1920 address modes depending on the address space. */
1921 if (!target_default_pointer_address_modes_p ())
1925 rtx temp
= find_base_term (XEXP (x
, 0), visited_vals
);
1927 if (temp
!= 0 && CONSTANT_P (temp
))
1928 temp
= convert_memory_address (Pmode
, temp
);
1934 val
= CSELIB_VAL_PTR (x
);
1940 if (cselib_sp_based_value_p (val
))
1941 return static_reg_base_value
[STACK_POINTER_REGNUM
];
1944 /* Reset val->locs to avoid infinite recursion. */
1946 visited_vals
.safe_push (std::make_pair (val
, f
));
1949 for (l
= f
; l
; l
= l
->next
)
1950 if (GET_CODE (l
->loc
) == VALUE
1951 && CSELIB_VAL_PTR (l
->loc
)->locs
1952 && !CSELIB_VAL_PTR (l
->loc
)->locs
->next
1953 && CSELIB_VAL_PTR (l
->loc
)->locs
->loc
== x
)
1955 else if ((ret
= find_base_term (l
->loc
, visited_vals
)) != 0)
1961 /* The standard form is (lo_sum reg sym) so look only at the
1963 return find_base_term (XEXP (x
, 1), visited_vals
);
1967 if (GET_CODE (x
) != PLUS
&& GET_CODE (x
) != MINUS
)
1973 rtx tmp1
= XEXP (x
, 0);
1974 rtx tmp2
= XEXP (x
, 1);
1976 /* This is a little bit tricky since we have to determine which of
1977 the two operands represents the real base address. Otherwise this
1978 routine may return the index register instead of the base register.
1980 That may cause us to believe no aliasing was possible, when in
1981 fact aliasing is possible.
1983 We use a few simple tests to guess the base register. Additional
1984 tests can certainly be added. For example, if one of the operands
1985 is a shift or multiply, then it must be the index register and the
1986 other operand is the base register. */
1988 if (tmp1
== pic_offset_table_rtx
&& CONSTANT_P (tmp2
))
1989 return find_base_term (tmp2
, visited_vals
);
1991 /* If either operand is known to be a pointer, then prefer it
1992 to determine the base term. */
1993 if (REG_P (tmp1
) && REG_POINTER (tmp1
))
1995 else if (REG_P (tmp2
) && REG_POINTER (tmp2
))
1996 std::swap (tmp1
, tmp2
);
1997 /* If second argument is constant which has base term, prefer it
1998 over variable tmp1. See PR64025. */
1999 else if (CONSTANT_P (tmp2
) && !CONST_INT_P (tmp2
))
2000 std::swap (tmp1
, tmp2
);
2002 /* Go ahead and find the base term for both operands. If either base
2003 term is from a pointer or is a named object or a special address
2004 (like an argument or stack reference), then use it for the
2006 rtx base
= find_base_term (tmp1
, visited_vals
);
2007 if (base
!= NULL_RTX
2008 && ((REG_P (tmp1
) && REG_POINTER (tmp1
))
2009 || known_base_value_p (base
)))
2011 base
= find_base_term (tmp2
, visited_vals
);
2012 if (base
!= NULL_RTX
2013 && ((REG_P (tmp2
) && REG_POINTER (tmp2
))
2014 || known_base_value_p (base
)))
2017 /* We could not determine which of the two operands was the
2018 base register and which was the index. So we can determine
2019 nothing from the base alias check. */
2024 if (CONST_INT_P (XEXP (x
, 1)) && INTVAL (XEXP (x
, 1)) != 0)
2025 return find_base_term (XEXP (x
, 0), visited_vals
);
2037 /* Wrapper around the worker above which removes locs from visited VALUEs
2038 to avoid visiting them multiple times. We unwind that changes here. */
2041 find_base_term (rtx x
)
2043 auto_vec
<std::pair
<cselib_val
*, struct elt_loc_list
*>, 32> visited_vals
;
2044 rtx res
= find_base_term (x
, visited_vals
);
2045 for (unsigned i
= 0; i
< visited_vals
.length (); ++i
)
2046 visited_vals
[i
].first
->locs
= visited_vals
[i
].second
;
2050 /* Return true if accesses to address X may alias accesses based
2051 on the stack pointer. */
2054 may_be_sp_based_p (rtx x
)
2056 rtx base
= find_base_term (x
);
2057 return !base
|| base
== static_reg_base_value
[STACK_POINTER_REGNUM
];
2060 /* BASE1 and BASE2 are decls. Return 1 if they refer to same object, 0
2061 if they refer to different objects and -1 if we can not decide. */
2064 compare_base_decls (tree base1
, tree base2
)
2067 gcc_checking_assert (DECL_P (base1
) && DECL_P (base2
));
2071 /* If we have two register decls with register specification we
2072 cannot decide unless their assembler names are the same. */
2073 if (DECL_REGISTER (base1
)
2074 && DECL_REGISTER (base2
)
2075 && HAS_DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME_P (base1
)
2076 && HAS_DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME_P (base2
)
2077 && DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME_SET_P (base1
)
2078 && DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME_SET_P (base2
))
2080 if (DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME_RAW (base1
) == DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME_RAW (base2
))
2085 /* Declarations of non-automatic variables may have aliases. All other
2086 decls are unique. */
2087 if (!decl_in_symtab_p (base1
)
2088 || !decl_in_symtab_p (base2
))
2091 /* Don't cause symbols to be inserted by the act of checking. */
2092 symtab_node
*node1
= symtab_node::get (base1
);
2095 symtab_node
*node2
= symtab_node::get (base2
);
2099 ret
= node1
->equal_address_to (node2
, true);
2103 /* Same as compare_base_decls but for SYMBOL_REF. */
2106 compare_base_symbol_refs (const_rtx x_base
, const_rtx y_base
)
2108 tree x_decl
= SYMBOL_REF_DECL (x_base
);
2109 tree y_decl
= SYMBOL_REF_DECL (y_base
);
2110 bool binds_def
= true;
2112 if (XSTR (x_base
, 0) == XSTR (y_base
, 0))
2114 if (x_decl
&& y_decl
)
2115 return compare_base_decls (x_decl
, y_decl
);
2116 if (x_decl
|| y_decl
)
2120 std::swap (x_decl
, y_decl
);
2121 std::swap (x_base
, y_base
);
2123 /* We handle specially only section anchors and assume that other
2124 labels may overlap with user variables in an arbitrary way. */
2125 if (!SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P (y_base
))
2127 /* Anchors contains static VAR_DECLs and CONST_DECLs. We are safe
2128 to ignore CONST_DECLs because they are readonly. */
2130 || (!TREE_STATIC (x_decl
) && !TREE_PUBLIC (x_decl
)))
2133 symtab_node
*x_node
= symtab_node::get_create (x_decl
)
2134 ->ultimate_alias_target ();
2135 /* External variable can not be in section anchor. */
2136 if (!x_node
->definition
)
2138 x_base
= XEXP (DECL_RTL (x_node
->decl
), 0);
2139 /* If not in anchor, we can disambiguate. */
2140 if (!SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P (x_base
))
2143 /* We have an alias of anchored variable. If it can be interposed;
2144 we must assume it may or may not alias its anchor. */
2145 binds_def
= decl_binds_to_current_def_p (x_decl
);
2147 /* If we have variable in section anchor, we can compare by offset. */
2148 if (SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P (x_base
)
2149 && SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P (y_base
))
2151 if (SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK (x_base
) != SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK (y_base
))
2153 if (SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK_OFFSET (x_base
) == SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK_OFFSET (y_base
))
2154 return binds_def
? 1 : -1;
2155 if (SYMBOL_REF_ANCHOR_P (x_base
) != SYMBOL_REF_ANCHOR_P (y_base
))
2159 /* In general we assume that memory locations pointed to by different labels
2160 may overlap in undefined ways. */
2164 /* Return 0 if the addresses X and Y are known to point to different
2165 objects, 1 if they might be pointers to the same object. */
2168 base_alias_check (rtx x
, rtx x_base
, rtx y
, rtx y_base
,
2169 machine_mode x_mode
, machine_mode y_mode
)
2171 /* If the address itself has no known base see if a known equivalent
2172 value has one. If either address still has no known base, nothing
2173 is known about aliasing. */
2178 if (! flag_expensive_optimizations
|| (x_c
= canon_rtx (x
)) == x
)
2181 x_base
= find_base_term (x_c
);
2189 if (! flag_expensive_optimizations
|| (y_c
= canon_rtx (y
)) == y
)
2192 y_base
= find_base_term (y_c
);
2197 /* If the base addresses are equal nothing is known about aliasing. */
2198 if (rtx_equal_p (x_base
, y_base
))
2201 /* The base addresses are different expressions. If they are not accessed
2202 via AND, there is no conflict. We can bring knowledge of object
2203 alignment into play here. For example, on alpha, "char a, b;" can
2204 alias one another, though "char a; long b;" cannot. AND addresses may
2205 implicitly alias surrounding objects; i.e. unaligned access in DImode
2206 via AND address can alias all surrounding object types except those
2207 with aligment 8 or higher. */
2208 if (GET_CODE (x
) == AND
&& GET_CODE (y
) == AND
)
2210 if (GET_CODE (x
) == AND
2211 && (!CONST_INT_P (XEXP (x
, 1))
2212 || (int) GET_MODE_UNIT_SIZE (y_mode
) < -INTVAL (XEXP (x
, 1))))
2214 if (GET_CODE (y
) == AND
2215 && (!CONST_INT_P (XEXP (y
, 1))
2216 || (int) GET_MODE_UNIT_SIZE (x_mode
) < -INTVAL (XEXP (y
, 1))))
2219 /* Differing symbols not accessed via AND never alias. */
2220 if (GET_CODE (x_base
) == SYMBOL_REF
&& GET_CODE (y_base
) == SYMBOL_REF
)
2221 return compare_base_symbol_refs (x_base
, y_base
) != 0;
2223 if (GET_CODE (x_base
) != ADDRESS
&& GET_CODE (y_base
) != ADDRESS
)
2226 if (unique_base_value_p (x_base
) || unique_base_value_p (y_base
))
2232 /* Return TRUE if EXPR refers to a VALUE whose uid is greater than
2233 (or equal to) that of V. */
2236 refs_newer_value_p (const_rtx expr
, rtx v
)
2238 int minuid
= CSELIB_VAL_PTR (v
)->uid
;
2239 subrtx_iterator::array_type array
;
2240 FOR_EACH_SUBRTX (iter
, array
, expr
, NONCONST
)
2241 if (GET_CODE (*iter
) == VALUE
&& CSELIB_VAL_PTR (*iter
)->uid
>= minuid
)
2246 /* Convert the address X into something we can use. This is done by returning
2247 it unchanged unless it is a VALUE or VALUE +/- constant; for VALUE
2248 we call cselib to get a more useful rtx. */
2254 struct elt_loc_list
*l
;
2256 if (GET_CODE (x
) != VALUE
)
2258 if ((GET_CODE (x
) == PLUS
|| GET_CODE (x
) == MINUS
)
2259 && GET_CODE (XEXP (x
, 0)) == VALUE
2260 && CONST_SCALAR_INT_P (XEXP (x
, 1)))
2262 rtx op0
= get_addr (XEXP (x
, 0));
2263 if (op0
!= XEXP (x
, 0))
2265 if (GET_CODE (x
) == PLUS
2266 && GET_CODE (XEXP (x
, 1)) == CONST_INT
)
2267 return plus_constant (GET_MODE (x
), op0
, INTVAL (XEXP (x
, 1)));
2268 return simplify_gen_binary (GET_CODE (x
), GET_MODE (x
),
2274 v
= CSELIB_VAL_PTR (x
);
2277 bool have_equivs
= cselib_have_permanent_equivalences ();
2279 v
= canonical_cselib_val (v
);
2280 for (l
= v
->locs
; l
; l
= l
->next
)
2281 if (CONSTANT_P (l
->loc
))
2283 for (l
= v
->locs
; l
; l
= l
->next
)
2284 if (!REG_P (l
->loc
) && !MEM_P (l
->loc
)
2285 /* Avoid infinite recursion when potentially dealing with
2286 var-tracking artificial equivalences, by skipping the
2287 equivalences themselves, and not choosing expressions
2288 that refer to newer VALUEs. */
2290 || (GET_CODE (l
->loc
) != VALUE
2291 && !refs_newer_value_p (l
->loc
, x
))))
2295 for (l
= v
->locs
; l
; l
= l
->next
)
2297 || (GET_CODE (l
->loc
) != VALUE
2298 && !refs_newer_value_p (l
->loc
, x
)))
2300 /* Return the canonical value. */
2304 return v
->locs
->loc
;
2309 /* Return the address of the (N_REFS + 1)th memory reference to ADDR
2310 where SIZE is the size in bytes of the memory reference. If ADDR
2311 is not modified by the memory reference then ADDR is returned. */
2314 addr_side_effect_eval (rtx addr
, poly_int64 size
, int n_refs
)
2316 poly_int64 offset
= 0;
2318 switch (GET_CODE (addr
))
2321 offset
= (n_refs
+ 1) * size
;
2324 offset
= -(n_refs
+ 1) * size
;
2327 offset
= n_refs
* size
;
2330 offset
= -n_refs
* size
;
2337 addr
= plus_constant (GET_MODE (addr
), XEXP (addr
, 0), offset
);
2338 addr
= canon_rtx (addr
);
2343 /* Return TRUE if an object X sized at XSIZE bytes and another object
2344 Y sized at YSIZE bytes, starting C bytes after X, may overlap. If
2345 any of the sizes is zero, assume an overlap, otherwise use the
2346 absolute value of the sizes as the actual sizes. */
2349 offset_overlap_p (poly_int64 c
, poly_int64 xsize
, poly_int64 ysize
)
2351 if (known_eq (xsize
, 0) || known_eq (ysize
, 0))
2354 if (maybe_ge (c
, 0))
2355 return maybe_gt (maybe_lt (xsize
, 0) ? -xsize
: xsize
, c
);
2357 return maybe_gt (maybe_lt (ysize
, 0) ? -ysize
: ysize
, -c
);
2360 /* Return one if X and Y (memory addresses) reference the
2361 same location in memory or if the references overlap.
2362 Return zero if they do not overlap, else return
2363 minus one in which case they still might reference the same location.
2365 C is an offset accumulator. When
2366 C is nonzero, we are testing aliases between X and Y + C.
2367 XSIZE is the size in bytes of the X reference,
2368 similarly YSIZE is the size in bytes for Y.
2369 Expect that canon_rtx has been already called for X and Y.
2371 If XSIZE or YSIZE is zero, we do not know the amount of memory being
2372 referenced (the reference was BLKmode), so make the most pessimistic
2375 If XSIZE or YSIZE is negative, we may access memory outside the object
2376 being referenced as a side effect. This can happen when using AND to
2377 align memory references, as is done on the Alpha.
2379 Nice to notice that varying addresses cannot conflict with fp if no
2380 local variables had their addresses taken, but that's too hard now.
2382 ??? Contrary to the tree alias oracle this does not return
2383 one for X + non-constant and Y + non-constant when X and Y are equal.
2384 If that is fixed the TBAA hack for union type-punning can be removed. */
2387 memrefs_conflict_p (poly_int64 xsize
, rtx x
, poly_int64 ysize
, rtx y
,
2390 if (GET_CODE (x
) == VALUE
)
2394 struct elt_loc_list
*l
= NULL
;
2395 if (CSELIB_VAL_PTR (x
))
2396 for (l
= canonical_cselib_val (CSELIB_VAL_PTR (x
))->locs
;
2398 if (REG_P (l
->loc
) && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (l
->loc
, y
))
2405 /* Don't call get_addr if y is the same VALUE. */
2409 if (GET_CODE (y
) == VALUE
)
2413 struct elt_loc_list
*l
= NULL
;
2414 if (CSELIB_VAL_PTR (y
))
2415 for (l
= canonical_cselib_val (CSELIB_VAL_PTR (y
))->locs
;
2417 if (REG_P (l
->loc
) && rtx_equal_for_memref_p (l
->loc
, x
))
2424 /* Don't call get_addr if x is the same VALUE. */
2428 if (GET_CODE (x
) == HIGH
)
2430 else if (GET_CODE (x
) == LO_SUM
)
2433 x
= addr_side_effect_eval (x
, maybe_lt (xsize
, 0) ? -xsize
: xsize
, 0);
2434 if (GET_CODE (y
) == HIGH
)
2436 else if (GET_CODE (y
) == LO_SUM
)
2439 y
= addr_side_effect_eval (y
, maybe_lt (ysize
, 0) ? -ysize
: ysize
, 0);
2441 if (GET_CODE (x
) == SYMBOL_REF
&& GET_CODE (y
) == SYMBOL_REF
)
2443 int cmp
= compare_base_symbol_refs (x
,y
);
2445 /* If both decls are the same, decide by offsets. */
2447 return offset_overlap_p (c
, xsize
, ysize
);
2448 /* Assume a potential overlap for symbolic addresses that went
2449 through alignment adjustments (i.e., that have negative
2450 sizes), because we can't know how far they are from each
2452 if (maybe_lt (xsize
, 0) || maybe_lt (ysize
, 0))
2454 /* If decls are different or we know by offsets that there is no overlap,
2456 if (!cmp
|| !offset_overlap_p (c
, xsize
, ysize
))
2458 /* Decls may or may not be different and offsets overlap....*/
2461 else if (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (x
, y
))
2463 return offset_overlap_p (c
, xsize
, ysize
);
2466 /* This code used to check for conflicts involving stack references and
2467 globals but the base address alias code now handles these cases. */
2469 if (GET_CODE (x
) == PLUS
)
2471 /* The fact that X is canonicalized means that this
2472 PLUS rtx is canonicalized. */
2473 rtx x0
= XEXP (x
, 0);
2474 rtx x1
= XEXP (x
, 1);
2476 /* However, VALUEs might end up in different positions even in
2477 canonical PLUSes. Comparing their addresses is enough. */
2479 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x1
, ysize
, const0_rtx
, c
);
2481 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, const0_rtx
, c
);
2483 poly_int64 cx1
, cy1
;
2484 if (GET_CODE (y
) == PLUS
)
2486 /* The fact that Y is canonicalized means that this
2487 PLUS rtx is canonicalized. */
2488 rtx y0
= XEXP (y
, 0);
2489 rtx y1
= XEXP (y
, 1);
2492 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x1
, ysize
, y0
, c
);
2494 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, y1
, c
);
2496 if (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (x1
, y1
))
2497 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, y0
, c
);
2498 if (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (x0
, y0
))
2499 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x1
, ysize
, y1
, c
);
2500 if (poly_int_rtx_p (x1
, &cx1
))
2502 if (poly_int_rtx_p (y1
, &cy1
))
2503 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, y0
,
2506 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, y
, c
- cx1
);
2508 else if (poly_int_rtx_p (y1
, &cy1
))
2509 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x
, ysize
, y0
, c
+ cy1
);
2513 else if (poly_int_rtx_p (x1
, &cx1
))
2514 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, y
, c
- cx1
);
2516 else if (GET_CODE (y
) == PLUS
)
2518 /* The fact that Y is canonicalized means that this
2519 PLUS rtx is canonicalized. */
2520 rtx y0
= XEXP (y
, 0);
2521 rtx y1
= XEXP (y
, 1);
2524 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, const0_rtx
, ysize
, y1
, c
);
2526 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, const0_rtx
, ysize
, y0
, c
);
2529 if (poly_int_rtx_p (y1
, &cy1
))
2530 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x
, ysize
, y0
, c
+ cy1
);
2535 if (GET_CODE (x
) == GET_CODE (y
))
2536 switch (GET_CODE (x
))
2540 /* Handle cases where we expect the second operands to be the
2541 same, and check only whether the first operand would conflict
2544 rtx x1
= canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 1));
2545 rtx y1
= canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 1));
2546 if (! rtx_equal_for_memref_p (x1
, y1
))
2548 x0
= canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0));
2549 y0
= canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0));
2550 if (rtx_equal_for_memref_p (x0
, y0
))
2551 return offset_overlap_p (c
, xsize
, ysize
);
2553 /* Can't properly adjust our sizes. */
2554 if (!CONST_INT_P (x1
)
2555 || !can_div_trunc_p (xsize
, INTVAL (x1
), &xsize
)
2556 || !can_div_trunc_p (ysize
, INTVAL (x1
), &ysize
)
2557 || !can_div_trunc_p (c
, INTVAL (x1
), &c
))
2559 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x0
, ysize
, y0
, c
);
2566 /* Deal with alignment ANDs by adjusting offset and size so as to
2567 cover the maximum range, without taking any previously known
2568 alignment into account. Make a size negative after such an
2569 adjustments, so that, if we end up with e.g. two SYMBOL_REFs, we
2570 assume a potential overlap, because they may end up in contiguous
2571 memory locations and the stricter-alignment access may span over
2573 if (GET_CODE (x
) == AND
&& CONST_INT_P (XEXP (x
, 1)))
2575 HOST_WIDE_INT sc
= INTVAL (XEXP (x
, 1));
2576 unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT uc
= sc
;
2577 if (sc
< 0 && pow2_or_zerop (-uc
))
2579 if (maybe_gt (xsize
, 0))
2581 if (maybe_ne (xsize
, 0))
2584 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0)),
2588 if (GET_CODE (y
) == AND
&& CONST_INT_P (XEXP (y
, 1)))
2590 HOST_WIDE_INT sc
= INTVAL (XEXP (y
, 1));
2591 unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT uc
= sc
;
2592 if (sc
< 0 && pow2_or_zerop (-uc
))
2594 if (maybe_gt (ysize
, 0))
2596 if (maybe_ne (ysize
, 0))
2599 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x
,
2600 ysize
, canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0)), c
);
2607 if (poly_int_rtx_p (x
, &cx
) && poly_int_rtx_p (y
, &cy
))
2610 return offset_overlap_p (c
, xsize
, ysize
);
2613 if (GET_CODE (x
) == CONST
)
2615 if (GET_CODE (y
) == CONST
)
2616 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0)),
2617 ysize
, canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0)), c
);
2619 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, canon_rtx (XEXP (x
, 0)),
2622 if (GET_CODE (y
) == CONST
)
2623 return memrefs_conflict_p (xsize
, x
, ysize
,
2624 canon_rtx (XEXP (y
, 0)), c
);
2626 /* Assume a potential overlap for symbolic addresses that went
2627 through alignment adjustments (i.e., that have negative
2628 sizes), because we can't know how far they are from each
2631 return (maybe_lt (xsize
, 0)
2632 || maybe_lt (ysize
, 0)
2633 || offset_overlap_p (c
, xsize
, ysize
));
2641 /* Functions to compute memory dependencies.
2643 Since we process the insns in execution order, we can build tables
2644 to keep track of what registers are fixed (and not aliased), what registers
2645 are varying in known ways, and what registers are varying in unknown
2648 If both memory references are volatile, then there must always be a
2649 dependence between the two references, since their order can not be
2650 changed. A volatile and non-volatile reference can be interchanged
2653 We also must allow AND addresses, because they may generate accesses
2654 outside the object being referenced. This is used to generate aligned
2655 addresses from unaligned addresses, for instance, the alpha
2656 storeqi_unaligned pattern. */
2658 /* Read dependence: X is read after read in MEM takes place. There can
2659 only be a dependence here if both reads are volatile, or if either is
2660 an explicit barrier. */
2663 read_dependence (const_rtx mem
, const_rtx x
)
2665 if (MEM_VOLATILE_P (x
) && MEM_VOLATILE_P (mem
))
2667 if (MEM_ALIAS_SET (x
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
2668 || MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
)
2673 /* Look at the bottom of the COMPONENT_REF list for a DECL, and return it. */
2676 decl_for_component_ref (tree x
)
2680 x
= TREE_OPERAND (x
, 0);
2682 while (x
&& TREE_CODE (x
) == COMPONENT_REF
);
2684 return x
&& DECL_P (x
) ? x
: NULL_TREE
;
2687 /* Walk up the COMPONENT_REF list in X and adjust *OFFSET to compensate
2688 for the offset of the field reference. *KNOWN_P says whether the
2692 adjust_offset_for_component_ref (tree x
, bool *known_p
,
2699 tree xoffset
= component_ref_field_offset (x
);
2700 tree field
= TREE_OPERAND (x
, 1);
2701 if (TREE_CODE (xoffset
) != INTEGER_CST
)
2708 = (wi::to_offset (xoffset
)
2709 + (wi::to_offset (DECL_FIELD_BIT_OFFSET (field
))
2710 >> LOG2_BITS_PER_UNIT
));
2711 if (!wi::fits_uhwi_p (woffset
))
2716 *offset
+= woffset
.to_uhwi ();
2718 x
= TREE_OPERAND (x
, 0);
2720 while (x
&& TREE_CODE (x
) == COMPONENT_REF
);
2723 /* Return nonzero if we can determine the exprs corresponding to memrefs
2724 X and Y and they do not overlap.
2725 If LOOP_VARIANT is set, skip offset-based disambiguation */
2728 nonoverlapping_memrefs_p (const_rtx x
, const_rtx y
, bool loop_invariant
)
2730 tree exprx
= MEM_EXPR (x
), expry
= MEM_EXPR (y
);
2733 bool moffsetx_known_p
, moffsety_known_p
;
2734 poly_int64 moffsetx
= 0, moffsety
= 0;
2735 poly_int64 offsetx
= 0, offsety
= 0, sizex
, sizey
;
2737 /* Unless both have exprs, we can't tell anything. */
2738 if (exprx
== 0 || expry
== 0)
2741 /* For spill-slot accesses make sure we have valid offsets. */
2742 if ((exprx
== get_spill_slot_decl (false)
2743 && ! MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (x
))
2744 || (expry
== get_spill_slot_decl (false)
2745 && ! MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (y
)))
2748 /* If the field reference test failed, look at the DECLs involved. */
2749 moffsetx_known_p
= MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (x
);
2750 if (moffsetx_known_p
)
2751 moffsetx
= MEM_OFFSET (x
);
2752 if (TREE_CODE (exprx
) == COMPONENT_REF
)
2754 tree t
= decl_for_component_ref (exprx
);
2757 adjust_offset_for_component_ref (exprx
, &moffsetx_known_p
, &moffsetx
);
2761 moffsety_known_p
= MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (y
);
2762 if (moffsety_known_p
)
2763 moffsety
= MEM_OFFSET (y
);
2764 if (TREE_CODE (expry
) == COMPONENT_REF
)
2766 tree t
= decl_for_component_ref (expry
);
2769 adjust_offset_for_component_ref (expry
, &moffsety_known_p
, &moffsety
);
2773 if (! DECL_P (exprx
) || ! DECL_P (expry
))
2776 /* If we refer to different gimple registers, or one gimple register
2777 and one non-gimple-register, we know they can't overlap. First,
2778 gimple registers don't have their addresses taken. Now, there
2779 could be more than one stack slot for (different versions of) the
2780 same gimple register, but we can presumably tell they don't
2781 overlap based on offsets from stack base addresses elsewhere.
2782 It's important that we don't proceed to DECL_RTL, because gimple
2783 registers may not pass DECL_RTL_SET_P, and make_decl_rtl won't be
2784 able to do anything about them since no SSA information will have
2785 remained to guide it. */
2786 if (is_gimple_reg (exprx
) || is_gimple_reg (expry
))
2787 return exprx
!= expry
2788 || (moffsetx_known_p
&& moffsety_known_p
2789 && MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (x
) && MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (y
)
2790 && !offset_overlap_p (moffsety
- moffsetx
,
2791 MEM_SIZE (x
), MEM_SIZE (y
)));
2793 /* With invalid code we can end up storing into the constant pool.
2794 Bail out to avoid ICEing when creating RTL for this.
2795 See gfortran.dg/lto/20091028-2_0.f90. */
2796 if (TREE_CODE (exprx
) == CONST_DECL
2797 || TREE_CODE (expry
) == CONST_DECL
)
2800 /* If one decl is known to be a function or label in a function and
2801 the other is some kind of data, they can't overlap. */
2802 if ((TREE_CODE (exprx
) == FUNCTION_DECL
2803 || TREE_CODE (exprx
) == LABEL_DECL
)
2804 != (TREE_CODE (expry
) == FUNCTION_DECL
2805 || TREE_CODE (expry
) == LABEL_DECL
))
2808 /* If either of the decls doesn't have DECL_RTL set (e.g. marked as
2809 living in multiple places), we can't tell anything. Exception
2810 are FUNCTION_DECLs for which we can create DECL_RTL on demand. */
2811 if ((!DECL_RTL_SET_P (exprx
) && TREE_CODE (exprx
) != FUNCTION_DECL
)
2812 || (!DECL_RTL_SET_P (expry
) && TREE_CODE (expry
) != FUNCTION_DECL
))
2815 rtlx
= DECL_RTL (exprx
);
2816 rtly
= DECL_RTL (expry
);
2818 /* If either RTL is not a MEM, it must be a REG or CONCAT, meaning they
2819 can't overlap unless they are the same because we never reuse that part
2820 of the stack frame used for locals for spilled pseudos. */
2821 if ((!MEM_P (rtlx
) || !MEM_P (rtly
))
2822 && ! rtx_equal_p (rtlx
, rtly
))
2825 /* If we have MEMs referring to different address spaces (which can
2826 potentially overlap), we cannot easily tell from the addresses
2827 whether the references overlap. */
2828 if (MEM_P (rtlx
) && MEM_P (rtly
)
2829 && MEM_ADDR_SPACE (rtlx
) != MEM_ADDR_SPACE (rtly
))
2832 /* Get the base and offsets of both decls. If either is a register, we
2833 know both are and are the same, so use that as the base. The only
2834 we can avoid overlap is if we can deduce that they are nonoverlapping
2835 pieces of that decl, which is very rare. */
2836 basex
= MEM_P (rtlx
) ? XEXP (rtlx
, 0) : rtlx
;
2837 basex
= strip_offset_and_add (basex
, &offsetx
);
2839 basey
= MEM_P (rtly
) ? XEXP (rtly
, 0) : rtly
;
2840 basey
= strip_offset_and_add (basey
, &offsety
);
2842 /* If the bases are different, we know they do not overlap if both
2843 are constants or if one is a constant and the other a pointer into the
2844 stack frame. Otherwise a different base means we can't tell if they
2846 if (compare_base_decls (exprx
, expry
) == 0)
2847 return ((CONSTANT_P (basex
) && CONSTANT_P (basey
))
2848 || (CONSTANT_P (basex
) && REG_P (basey
)
2849 && REGNO_PTR_FRAME_P (REGNO (basey
)))
2850 || (CONSTANT_P (basey
) && REG_P (basex
)
2851 && REGNO_PTR_FRAME_P (REGNO (basex
))));
2853 /* Offset based disambiguation not appropriate for loop invariant */
2857 /* Offset based disambiguation is OK even if we do not know that the
2858 declarations are necessarily different
2859 (i.e. compare_base_decls (exprx, expry) == -1) */
2861 sizex
= (!MEM_P (rtlx
) ? poly_int64 (GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (rtlx
)))
2862 : MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (rtlx
) ? MEM_SIZE (rtlx
)
2864 sizey
= (!MEM_P (rtly
) ? poly_int64 (GET_MODE_SIZE (GET_MODE (rtly
)))
2865 : MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (rtly
) ? MEM_SIZE (rtly
)
2868 /* If we have an offset for either memref, it can update the values computed
2870 if (moffsetx_known_p
)
2871 offsetx
+= moffsetx
, sizex
-= moffsetx
;
2872 if (moffsety_known_p
)
2873 offsety
+= moffsety
, sizey
-= moffsety
;
2875 /* If a memref has both a size and an offset, we can use the smaller size.
2876 We can't do this if the offset isn't known because we must view this
2877 memref as being anywhere inside the DECL's MEM. */
2878 if (MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (x
) && moffsetx_known_p
)
2879 sizex
= MEM_SIZE (x
);
2880 if (MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (y
) && moffsety_known_p
)
2881 sizey
= MEM_SIZE (y
);
2883 return !ranges_maybe_overlap_p (offsetx
, sizex
, offsety
, sizey
);
2886 /* Helper for true_dependence and canon_true_dependence.
2887 Checks for true dependence: X is read after store in MEM takes place.
2889 If MEM_CANONICALIZED is FALSE, then X_ADDR and MEM_ADDR should be
2890 NULL_RTX, and the canonical addresses of MEM and X are both computed
2891 here. If MEM_CANONICALIZED, then MEM must be already canonicalized.
2893 If X_ADDR is non-NULL, it is used in preference of XEXP (x, 0).
2895 Returns 1 if there is a true dependence, 0 otherwise. */
2898 true_dependence_1 (const_rtx mem
, machine_mode mem_mode
, rtx mem_addr
,
2899 const_rtx x
, rtx x_addr
, bool mem_canonicalized
)
2905 gcc_checking_assert (mem_canonicalized
? (mem_addr
!= NULL_RTX
)
2906 : (mem_addr
== NULL_RTX
&& x_addr
== NULL_RTX
));
2908 if (MEM_VOLATILE_P (x
) && MEM_VOLATILE_P (mem
))
2911 /* (mem:BLK (scratch)) is a special mechanism to conflict with everything.
2912 This is used in epilogue deallocation functions, and in cselib. */
2913 if (GET_MODE (x
) == BLKmode
&& GET_CODE (XEXP (x
, 0)) == SCRATCH
)
2915 if (GET_MODE (mem
) == BLKmode
&& GET_CODE (XEXP (mem
, 0)) == SCRATCH
)
2917 if (MEM_ALIAS_SET (x
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
2918 || MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
)
2922 x_addr
= XEXP (x
, 0);
2923 x_addr
= get_addr (x_addr
);
2927 mem_addr
= XEXP (mem
, 0);
2928 if (mem_mode
== VOIDmode
)
2929 mem_mode
= GET_MODE (mem
);
2931 true_mem_addr
= get_addr (mem_addr
);
2933 /* Read-only memory is by definition never modified, and therefore can't
2934 conflict with anything. However, don't assume anything when AND
2935 addresses are involved and leave to the code below to determine
2936 dependence. We don't expect to find read-only set on MEM, but
2937 stupid user tricks can produce them, so don't die. */
2938 if (MEM_READONLY_P (x
)
2939 && GET_CODE (x_addr
) != AND
2940 && GET_CODE (true_mem_addr
) != AND
)
2943 /* If we have MEMs referring to different address spaces (which can
2944 potentially overlap), we cannot easily tell from the addresses
2945 whether the references overlap. */
2946 if (MEM_ADDR_SPACE (mem
) != MEM_ADDR_SPACE (x
))
2949 base
= find_base_term (x_addr
);
2950 if (base
&& (GET_CODE (base
) == LABEL_REF
2951 || (GET_CODE (base
) == SYMBOL_REF
2952 && CONSTANT_POOL_ADDRESS_P (base
))))
2955 rtx mem_base
= find_base_term (true_mem_addr
);
2956 if (! base_alias_check (x_addr
, base
, true_mem_addr
, mem_base
,
2957 GET_MODE (x
), mem_mode
))
2960 x_addr
= canon_rtx (x_addr
);
2961 if (!mem_canonicalized
)
2962 mem_addr
= canon_rtx (true_mem_addr
);
2964 if ((ret
= memrefs_conflict_p (GET_MODE_SIZE (mem_mode
), mem_addr
,
2965 SIZE_FOR_MODE (x
), x_addr
, 0)) != -1)
2968 if (mems_in_disjoint_alias_sets_p (x
, mem
))
2971 if (nonoverlapping_memrefs_p (mem
, x
, false))
2974 return rtx_refs_may_alias_p (x
, mem
, true);
2977 /* True dependence: X is read after store in MEM takes place. */
2980 true_dependence (const_rtx mem
, machine_mode mem_mode
, const_rtx x
)
2982 return true_dependence_1 (mem
, mem_mode
, NULL_RTX
,
2983 x
, NULL_RTX
, /*mem_canonicalized=*/false);
2986 /* Canonical true dependence: X is read after store in MEM takes place.
2987 Variant of true_dependence which assumes MEM has already been
2988 canonicalized (hence we no longer do that here).
2989 The mem_addr argument has been added, since true_dependence_1 computed
2990 this value prior to canonicalizing. */
2993 canon_true_dependence (const_rtx mem
, machine_mode mem_mode
, rtx mem_addr
,
2994 const_rtx x
, rtx x_addr
)
2996 return true_dependence_1 (mem
, mem_mode
, mem_addr
,
2997 x
, x_addr
, /*mem_canonicalized=*/true);
3000 /* Returns nonzero if a write to X might alias a previous read from
3001 (or, if WRITEP is true, a write to) MEM.
3002 If X_CANONCALIZED is true, then X_ADDR is the canonicalized address of X,
3003 and X_MODE the mode for that access.
3004 If MEM_CANONICALIZED is true, MEM is canonicalized. */
3007 write_dependence_p (const_rtx mem
,
3008 const_rtx x
, machine_mode x_mode
, rtx x_addr
,
3009 bool mem_canonicalized
, bool x_canonicalized
, bool writep
)
3012 rtx true_mem_addr
, true_x_addr
;
3016 gcc_checking_assert (x_canonicalized
3017 ? (x_addr
!= NULL_RTX
3018 && (x_mode
!= VOIDmode
|| GET_MODE (x
) == VOIDmode
))
3019 : (x_addr
== NULL_RTX
&& x_mode
== VOIDmode
));
3021 if (MEM_VOLATILE_P (x
) && MEM_VOLATILE_P (mem
))
3024 /* (mem:BLK (scratch)) is a special mechanism to conflict with everything.
3025 This is used in epilogue deallocation functions. */
3026 if (GET_MODE (x
) == BLKmode
&& GET_CODE (XEXP (x
, 0)) == SCRATCH
)
3028 if (GET_MODE (mem
) == BLKmode
&& GET_CODE (XEXP (mem
, 0)) == SCRATCH
)
3030 if (MEM_ALIAS_SET (x
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
3031 || MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
)
3035 x_addr
= XEXP (x
, 0);
3036 true_x_addr
= get_addr (x_addr
);
3038 mem_addr
= XEXP (mem
, 0);
3039 true_mem_addr
= get_addr (mem_addr
);
3041 /* A read from read-only memory can't conflict with read-write memory.
3042 Don't assume anything when AND addresses are involved and leave to
3043 the code below to determine dependence. */
3045 && MEM_READONLY_P (mem
)
3046 && GET_CODE (true_x_addr
) != AND
3047 && GET_CODE (true_mem_addr
) != AND
)
3050 /* If we have MEMs referring to different address spaces (which can
3051 potentially overlap), we cannot easily tell from the addresses
3052 whether the references overlap. */
3053 if (MEM_ADDR_SPACE (mem
) != MEM_ADDR_SPACE (x
))
3056 base
= find_base_term (true_mem_addr
);
3059 && (GET_CODE (base
) == LABEL_REF
3060 || (GET_CODE (base
) == SYMBOL_REF
3061 && CONSTANT_POOL_ADDRESS_P (base
))))
3064 rtx x_base
= find_base_term (true_x_addr
);
3065 if (! base_alias_check (true_x_addr
, x_base
, true_mem_addr
, base
,
3066 GET_MODE (x
), GET_MODE (mem
)))
3069 if (!x_canonicalized
)
3071 x_addr
= canon_rtx (true_x_addr
);
3072 x_mode
= GET_MODE (x
);
3074 if (!mem_canonicalized
)
3075 mem_addr
= canon_rtx (true_mem_addr
);
3077 if ((ret
= memrefs_conflict_p (SIZE_FOR_MODE (mem
), mem_addr
,
3078 GET_MODE_SIZE (x_mode
), x_addr
, 0)) != -1)
3081 if (nonoverlapping_memrefs_p (x
, mem
, false))
3084 return rtx_refs_may_alias_p (x
, mem
, false);
3087 /* Anti dependence: X is written after read in MEM takes place. */
3090 anti_dependence (const_rtx mem
, const_rtx x
)
3092 return write_dependence_p (mem
, x
, VOIDmode
, NULL_RTX
,
3093 /*mem_canonicalized=*/false,
3094 /*x_canonicalized*/false, /*writep=*/false);
3097 /* Likewise, but we already have a canonicalized MEM, and X_ADDR for X.
3098 Also, consider X in X_MODE (which might be from an enclosing
3099 STRICT_LOW_PART / ZERO_EXTRACT).
3100 If MEM_CANONICALIZED is true, MEM is canonicalized. */
3103 canon_anti_dependence (const_rtx mem
, bool mem_canonicalized
,
3104 const_rtx x
, machine_mode x_mode
, rtx x_addr
)
3106 return write_dependence_p (mem
, x
, x_mode
, x_addr
,
3107 mem_canonicalized
, /*x_canonicalized=*/true,
3111 /* Output dependence: X is written after store in MEM takes place. */
3114 output_dependence (const_rtx mem
, const_rtx x
)
3116 return write_dependence_p (mem
, x
, VOIDmode
, NULL_RTX
,
3117 /*mem_canonicalized=*/false,
3118 /*x_canonicalized*/false, /*writep=*/true);
3121 /* Likewise, but we already have a canonicalized MEM, and X_ADDR for X.
3122 Also, consider X in X_MODE (which might be from an enclosing
3123 STRICT_LOW_PART / ZERO_EXTRACT).
3124 If MEM_CANONICALIZED is true, MEM is canonicalized. */
3127 canon_output_dependence (const_rtx mem
, bool mem_canonicalized
,
3128 const_rtx x
, machine_mode x_mode
, rtx x_addr
)
3130 return write_dependence_p (mem
, x
, x_mode
, x_addr
,
3131 mem_canonicalized
, /*x_canonicalized=*/true,
3137 /* Check whether X may be aliased with MEM. Don't do offset-based
3138 memory disambiguation & TBAA. */
3140 may_alias_p (const_rtx mem
, const_rtx x
)
3142 rtx x_addr
, mem_addr
;
3144 if (MEM_VOLATILE_P (x
) && MEM_VOLATILE_P (mem
))
3147 /* (mem:BLK (scratch)) is a special mechanism to conflict with everything.
3148 This is used in epilogue deallocation functions. */
3149 if (GET_MODE (x
) == BLKmode
&& GET_CODE (XEXP (x
, 0)) == SCRATCH
)
3151 if (GET_MODE (mem
) == BLKmode
&& GET_CODE (XEXP (mem
, 0)) == SCRATCH
)
3153 if (MEM_ALIAS_SET (x
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
3154 || MEM_ALIAS_SET (mem
) == ALIAS_SET_MEMORY_BARRIER
)
3157 x_addr
= XEXP (x
, 0);
3158 x_addr
= get_addr (x_addr
);
3160 mem_addr
= XEXP (mem
, 0);
3161 mem_addr
= get_addr (mem_addr
);
3163 /* Read-only memory is by definition never modified, and therefore can't
3164 conflict with anything. However, don't assume anything when AND
3165 addresses are involved and leave to the code below to determine
3166 dependence. We don't expect to find read-only set on MEM, but
3167 stupid user tricks can produce them, so don't die. */
3168 if (MEM_READONLY_P (x
)
3169 && GET_CODE (x_addr
) != AND
3170 && GET_CODE (mem_addr
) != AND
)
3173 /* If we have MEMs referring to different address spaces (which can
3174 potentially overlap), we cannot easily tell from the addresses
3175 whether the references overlap. */
3176 if (MEM_ADDR_SPACE (mem
) != MEM_ADDR_SPACE (x
))
3179 rtx x_base
= find_base_term (x_addr
);
3180 rtx mem_base
= find_base_term (mem_addr
);
3181 if (! base_alias_check (x_addr
, x_base
, mem_addr
, mem_base
,
3182 GET_MODE (x
), GET_MODE (mem_addr
)))
3185 if (nonoverlapping_memrefs_p (mem
, x
, true))
3188 /* TBAA not valid for loop_invarint */
3189 return rtx_refs_may_alias_p (x
, mem
, false);
3193 init_alias_target (void)
3197 if (!arg_base_value
)
3198 arg_base_value
= gen_rtx_ADDRESS (VOIDmode
, 0);
3200 memset (static_reg_base_value
, 0, sizeof static_reg_base_value
);
3202 for (i
= 0; i
< FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
; i
++)
3203 /* Check whether this register can hold an incoming pointer
3204 argument. FUNCTION_ARG_REGNO_P tests outgoing register
3205 numbers, so translate if necessary due to register windows. */
3206 if (FUNCTION_ARG_REGNO_P (OUTGOING_REGNO (i
))
3207 && targetm
.hard_regno_mode_ok (i
, Pmode
))
3208 static_reg_base_value
[i
] = arg_base_value
;
3210 /* RTL code is required to be consistent about whether it uses the
3211 stack pointer, the frame pointer or the argument pointer to
3212 access a given area of the frame. We can therefore use the
3213 base address to distinguish between the different areas. */
3214 static_reg_base_value
[STACK_POINTER_REGNUM
]
3215 = unique_base_value (UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_SP
);
3216 static_reg_base_value
[ARG_POINTER_REGNUM
]
3217 = unique_base_value (UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_ARGP
);
3218 static_reg_base_value
[FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM
]
3219 = unique_base_value (UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_FP
);
3221 /* The above rules extend post-reload, with eliminations applying
3222 consistently to each of the three pointers. Cope with cases in
3223 which the frame pointer is eliminated to the hard frame pointer
3224 rather than the stack pointer. */
3225 if (!HARD_FRAME_POINTER_IS_FRAME_POINTER
)
3226 static_reg_base_value
[HARD_FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM
]
3227 = unique_base_value (UNIQUE_BASE_VALUE_HFP
);
3230 /* Set MEMORY_MODIFIED when X modifies DATA (that is assumed
3231 to be memory reference. */
3232 static bool memory_modified
;
3234 memory_modified_1 (rtx x
, const_rtx pat ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED
, void *data
)
3238 if (anti_dependence (x
, (const_rtx
)data
) || output_dependence (x
, (const_rtx
)data
))
3239 memory_modified
= true;
3244 /* Return true when INSN possibly modify memory contents of MEM
3245 (i.e. address can be modified). */
3247 memory_modified_in_insn_p (const_rtx mem
, const_rtx insn
)
3251 /* Conservatively assume all non-readonly MEMs might be modified in
3255 memory_modified
= false;
3256 note_stores (PATTERN (insn
), memory_modified_1
, CONST_CAST_RTX(mem
));
3257 return memory_modified
;
3260 /* Return TRUE if the destination of a set is rtx identical to
3263 set_dest_equal_p (const_rtx set
, const_rtx item
)
3265 rtx dest
= SET_DEST (set
);
3266 return rtx_equal_p (dest
, item
);
3269 /* Initialize the aliasing machinery. Initialize the REG_KNOWN_VALUE
3273 init_alias_analysis (void)
3275 unsigned int maxreg
= max_reg_num ();
3284 timevar_push (TV_ALIAS_ANALYSIS
);
3286 vec_safe_grow_cleared (reg_known_value
, maxreg
- FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
);
3287 reg_known_equiv_p
= sbitmap_alloc (maxreg
- FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
);
3288 bitmap_clear (reg_known_equiv_p
);
3290 /* If we have memory allocated from the previous run, use it. */
3291 if (old_reg_base_value
)
3292 reg_base_value
= old_reg_base_value
;
3295 reg_base_value
->truncate (0);
3297 vec_safe_grow_cleared (reg_base_value
, maxreg
);
3299 new_reg_base_value
= XNEWVEC (rtx
, maxreg
);
3300 reg_seen
= sbitmap_alloc (maxreg
);
3302 /* The basic idea is that each pass through this loop will use the
3303 "constant" information from the previous pass to propagate alias
3304 information through another level of assignments.
3306 The propagation is done on the CFG in reverse post-order, to propagate
3307 things forward as far as possible in each iteration.
3309 This could get expensive if the assignment chains are long. Maybe
3310 we should throttle the number of iterations, possibly based on
3311 the optimization level or flag_expensive_optimizations.
3313 We could propagate more information in the first pass by making use
3314 of DF_REG_DEF_COUNT to determine immediately that the alias information
3315 for a pseudo is "constant".
3317 A program with an uninitialized variable can cause an infinite loop
3318 here. Instead of doing a full dataflow analysis to detect such problems
3319 we just cap the number of iterations for the loop.
3321 The state of the arrays for the set chain in question does not matter
3322 since the program has undefined behavior. */
3324 rpo
= XNEWVEC (int, n_basic_blocks_for_fn (cfun
));
3325 rpo_cnt
= pre_and_rev_post_order_compute (NULL
, rpo
, false);
3327 /* The prologue/epilogue insns are not threaded onto the
3328 insn chain until after reload has completed. Thus,
3329 there is no sense wasting time checking if INSN is in
3330 the prologue/epilogue until after reload has completed. */
3331 bool could_be_prologue_epilogue
= ((targetm
.have_prologue ()
3332 || targetm
.have_epilogue ())
3333 && reload_completed
);
3338 /* Assume nothing will change this iteration of the loop. */
3341 /* We want to assign the same IDs each iteration of this loop, so
3342 start counting from one each iteration of the loop. */
3345 /* We're at the start of the function each iteration through the
3346 loop, so we're copying arguments. */
3347 copying_arguments
= true;
3349 /* Wipe the potential alias information clean for this pass. */
3350 memset (new_reg_base_value
, 0, maxreg
* sizeof (rtx
));
3352 /* Wipe the reg_seen array clean. */
3353 bitmap_clear (reg_seen
);
3355 /* Initialize the alias information for this pass. */
3356 for (i
= 0; i
< FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
; i
++)
3357 if (static_reg_base_value
[i
]
3358 /* Don't treat the hard frame pointer as special if we
3359 eliminated the frame pointer to the stack pointer instead. */
3360 && !(i
== HARD_FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM
3362 && !frame_pointer_needed
3363 && targetm
.can_eliminate (FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM
,
3364 STACK_POINTER_REGNUM
)))
3366 new_reg_base_value
[i
] = static_reg_base_value
[i
];
3367 bitmap_set_bit (reg_seen
, i
);
3370 /* Walk the insns adding values to the new_reg_base_value array. */
3371 for (i
= 0; i
< rpo_cnt
; i
++)
3373 basic_block bb
= BASIC_BLOCK_FOR_FN (cfun
, rpo
[i
]);
3374 FOR_BB_INSNS (bb
, insn
)
3376 if (NONDEBUG_INSN_P (insn
))
3380 if (could_be_prologue_epilogue
3381 && prologue_epilogue_contains (insn
))
3384 /* If this insn has a noalias note, process it, Otherwise,
3385 scan for sets. A simple set will have no side effects
3386 which could change the base value of any other register. */
3388 if (GET_CODE (PATTERN (insn
)) == SET
3389 && REG_NOTES (insn
) != 0
3390 && find_reg_note (insn
, REG_NOALIAS
, NULL_RTX
))
3391 record_set (SET_DEST (PATTERN (insn
)), NULL_RTX
, NULL
);
3393 note_stores (PATTERN (insn
), record_set
, NULL
);
3395 set
= single_set (insn
);
3398 && REG_P (SET_DEST (set
))
3399 && REGNO (SET_DEST (set
)) >= FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
)
3401 unsigned int regno
= REGNO (SET_DEST (set
));
3402 rtx src
= SET_SRC (set
);
3405 note
= find_reg_equal_equiv_note (insn
);
3406 if (note
&& REG_NOTE_KIND (note
) == REG_EQUAL
3407 && DF_REG_DEF_COUNT (regno
) != 1)
3410 if (note
!= NULL_RTX
3411 && GET_CODE (XEXP (note
, 0)) != EXPR_LIST
3412 && ! rtx_varies_p (XEXP (note
, 0), 1)
3413 && ! reg_overlap_mentioned_p (SET_DEST (set
),
3416 set_reg_known_value (regno
, XEXP (note
, 0));
3417 set_reg_known_equiv_p (regno
,
3418 REG_NOTE_KIND (note
) == REG_EQUIV
);
3420 else if (DF_REG_DEF_COUNT (regno
) == 1
3421 && GET_CODE (src
) == PLUS
3422 && REG_P (XEXP (src
, 0))
3423 && (t
= get_reg_known_value (REGNO (XEXP (src
, 0))))
3424 && CONST_INT_P (XEXP (src
, 1)))
3426 t
= plus_constant (GET_MODE (src
), t
,
3427 INTVAL (XEXP (src
, 1)));
3428 set_reg_known_value (regno
, t
);
3429 set_reg_known_equiv_p (regno
, false);
3431 else if (DF_REG_DEF_COUNT (regno
) == 1
3432 && ! rtx_varies_p (src
, 1))
3434 set_reg_known_value (regno
, src
);
3435 set_reg_known_equiv_p (regno
, false);
3439 else if (NOTE_P (insn
)
3440 && NOTE_KIND (insn
) == NOTE_INSN_FUNCTION_BEG
)
3441 copying_arguments
= false;
3445 /* Now propagate values from new_reg_base_value to reg_base_value. */
3446 gcc_assert (maxreg
== (unsigned int) max_reg_num ());
3448 for (ui
= 0; ui
< maxreg
; ui
++)
3450 if (new_reg_base_value
[ui
]
3451 && new_reg_base_value
[ui
] != (*reg_base_value
)[ui
]
3452 && ! rtx_equal_p (new_reg_base_value
[ui
], (*reg_base_value
)[ui
]))
3454 (*reg_base_value
)[ui
] = new_reg_base_value
[ui
];
3459 while (changed
&& ++pass
< MAX_ALIAS_LOOP_PASSES
);
3462 /* Fill in the remaining entries. */
3463 FOR_EACH_VEC_ELT (*reg_known_value
, i
, val
)
3465 int regno
= i
+ FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
;
3467 set_reg_known_value (regno
, regno_reg_rtx
[regno
]);
3471 free (new_reg_base_value
);
3472 new_reg_base_value
= 0;
3473 sbitmap_free (reg_seen
);
3475 timevar_pop (TV_ALIAS_ANALYSIS
);
3478 /* Equate REG_BASE_VALUE (reg1) to REG_BASE_VALUE (reg2).
3479 Special API for var-tracking pass purposes. */
3482 vt_equate_reg_base_value (const_rtx reg1
, const_rtx reg2
)
3484 (*reg_base_value
)[REGNO (reg1
)] = REG_BASE_VALUE (reg2
);
3488 end_alias_analysis (void)
3490 old_reg_base_value
= reg_base_value
;
3491 vec_free (reg_known_value
);
3492 sbitmap_free (reg_known_equiv_p
);
3496 dump_alias_stats_in_alias_c (FILE *s
)
3498 fprintf (s
, " TBAA oracle: %llu disambiguations %llu queries\n"
3499 " %llu are in alias set 0\n"
3500 " %llu queries asked about the same object\n"
3501 " %llu queries asked about the same alias set\n"
3502 " %llu access volatile\n"
3503 " %llu are dependent in the DAG\n"
3504 " %llu are aritificially in conflict with void *\n",
3505 alias_stats
.num_disambiguated
,
3506 alias_stats
.num_alias_zero
+ alias_stats
.num_same_alias_set
3507 + alias_stats
.num_same_objects
+ alias_stats
.num_volatile
3508 + alias_stats
.num_dag
+ alias_stats
.num_disambiguated
3509 + alias_stats
.num_universal
,
3510 alias_stats
.num_alias_zero
, alias_stats
.num_same_alias_set
,
3511 alias_stats
.num_same_objects
, alias_stats
.num_volatile
,
3512 alias_stats
.num_dag
, alias_stats
.num_universal
);
3514 #include "gt-alias.h"