PR bootstrap/18033
[official-gcc.git] / gcc / sched-int.h
blob777adacdeaec7be3ba2e460210c9b3169fe709da
1 /* Instruction scheduling pass. This file contains definitions used
2 internally in the scheduler.
3 Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
4 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 This file is part of GCC.
8 GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
9 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
10 Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later
11 version.
13 GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
14 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
15 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
16 for more details.
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with GCC; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free
20 Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA
21 02111-1307, USA. */
23 #ifndef GCC_SCHED_INT_H
24 #define GCC_SCHED_INT_H
26 /* For state_t. */
27 #include "insn-attr.h"
28 /* For regset_head. */
29 #include "basic-block.h"
30 /* For reg_note. */
31 #include "rtl.h"
33 /* Pointer to data describing the current DFA state. */
34 extern state_t curr_state;
36 /* Forward declaration. */
37 struct ready_list;
39 /* Describe state of dependencies used during sched_analyze phase. */
40 struct deps
42 /* The *_insns and *_mems are paired lists. Each pending memory operation
43 will have a pointer to the MEM rtx on one list and a pointer to the
44 containing insn on the other list in the same place in the list. */
46 /* We can't use add_dependence like the old code did, because a single insn
47 may have multiple memory accesses, and hence needs to be on the list
48 once for each memory access. Add_dependence won't let you add an insn
49 to a list more than once. */
51 /* An INSN_LIST containing all insns with pending read operations. */
52 rtx pending_read_insns;
54 /* An EXPR_LIST containing all MEM rtx's which are pending reads. */
55 rtx pending_read_mems;
57 /* An INSN_LIST containing all insns with pending write operations. */
58 rtx pending_write_insns;
60 /* An EXPR_LIST containing all MEM rtx's which are pending writes. */
61 rtx pending_write_mems;
63 /* Indicates the combined length of the two pending lists. We must prevent
64 these lists from ever growing too large since the number of dependencies
65 produced is at least O(N*N), and execution time is at least O(4*N*N), as
66 a function of the length of these pending lists. */
67 int pending_lists_length;
69 /* Length of the pending memory flush list. Large functions with no
70 calls may build up extremely large lists. */
71 int pending_flush_length;
73 /* The last insn upon which all memory references must depend.
74 This is an insn which flushed the pending lists, creating a dependency
75 between it and all previously pending memory references. This creates
76 a barrier (or a checkpoint) which no memory reference is allowed to cross.
78 This includes all non constant CALL_INSNs. When we do interprocedural
79 alias analysis, this restriction can be relaxed.
80 This may also be an INSN that writes memory if the pending lists grow
81 too large. */
82 rtx last_pending_memory_flush;
84 /* A list of the last function calls we have seen. We use a list to
85 represent last function calls from multiple predecessor blocks.
86 Used to prevent register lifetimes from expanding unnecessarily. */
87 rtx last_function_call;
89 /* A list of insns which use a pseudo register that does not already
90 cross a call. We create dependencies between each of those insn
91 and the next call insn, to ensure that they won't cross a call after
92 scheduling is done. */
93 rtx sched_before_next_call;
95 /* Used to keep post-call pseudo/hard reg movements together with
96 the call. */
97 enum { not_post_call, post_call, post_call_initial } in_post_call_group_p;
99 /* Set to the tail insn of the outermost libcall block.
101 When nonzero, we will mark each insn processed by sched_analyze_insn
102 with SCHED_GROUP_P to ensure libcalls are scheduled as a unit. */
103 rtx libcall_block_tail_insn;
105 /* The maximum register number for the following arrays. Before reload
106 this is max_reg_num; after reload it is FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER. */
107 int max_reg;
109 /* Element N is the next insn that sets (hard or pseudo) register
110 N within the current basic block; or zero, if there is no
111 such insn. Needed for new registers which may be introduced
112 by splitting insns. */
113 struct deps_reg
115 rtx uses;
116 rtx sets;
117 rtx clobbers;
118 int uses_length;
119 int clobbers_length;
120 } *reg_last;
122 /* Element N is set for each register that has any nonzero element
123 in reg_last[N].{uses,sets,clobbers}. */
124 regset_head reg_last_in_use;
126 /* Element N is set for each register that is conditionally set. */
127 regset_head reg_conditional_sets;
130 /* This structure holds some state of the current scheduling pass, and
131 contains some function pointers that abstract out some of the non-generic
132 functionality from functions such as schedule_block or schedule_insn.
133 There is one global variable, current_sched_info, which points to the
134 sched_info structure currently in use. */
135 struct sched_info
137 /* Add all insns that are initially ready to the ready list. Called once
138 before scheduling a set of insns. */
139 void (*init_ready_list) (struct ready_list *);
140 /* Called after taking an insn from the ready list. Returns nonzero if
141 this insn can be scheduled, nonzero if we should silently discard it. */
142 int (*can_schedule_ready_p) (rtx);
143 /* Return nonzero if there are more insns that should be scheduled. */
144 int (*schedule_more_p) (void);
145 /* Called after an insn has all its dependencies resolved. Return nonzero
146 if it should be moved to the ready list or the queue, or zero if we
147 should silently discard it. */
148 int (*new_ready) (rtx);
149 /* Compare priority of two insns. Return a positive number if the second
150 insn is to be preferred for scheduling, and a negative one if the first
151 is to be preferred. Zero if they are equally good. */
152 int (*rank) (rtx, rtx);
153 /* Return a string that contains the insn uid and optionally anything else
154 necessary to identify this insn in an output. It's valid to use a
155 static buffer for this. The ALIGNED parameter should cause the string
156 to be formatted so that multiple output lines will line up nicely. */
157 const char *(*print_insn) (rtx, int);
158 /* Return nonzero if an insn should be included in priority
159 calculations. */
160 int (*contributes_to_priority) (rtx, rtx);
161 /* Called when computing dependencies for a JUMP_INSN. This function
162 should store the set of registers that must be considered as set by
163 the jump in the regset. */
164 void (*compute_jump_reg_dependencies) (rtx, regset, regset, regset);
166 /* The boundaries of the set of insns to be scheduled. */
167 rtx prev_head, next_tail;
169 /* Filled in after the schedule is finished; the first and last scheduled
170 insns. */
171 rtx head, tail;
173 /* If nonzero, enables an additional sanity check in schedule_block. */
174 unsigned int queue_must_finish_empty:1;
175 /* Nonzero if we should use cselib for better alias analysis. This
176 must be 0 if the dependency information is used after sched_analyze
177 has completed, e.g. if we're using it to initialize state for successor
178 blocks in region scheduling. */
179 unsigned int use_cselib:1;
181 /* Maximum priority that has been assigned to an insn. */
182 int sched_max_insns_priority;
185 extern struct sched_info *current_sched_info;
187 /* Indexed by INSN_UID, the collection of all data associated with
188 a single instruction. */
190 struct haifa_insn_data
192 /* A list of insns which depend on the instruction. Unlike LOG_LINKS,
193 it represents forward dependencies. */
194 rtx depend;
196 /* The line number note in effect for each insn. For line number
197 notes, this indicates whether the note may be reused. */
198 rtx line_note;
200 /* Logical uid gives the original ordering of the insns. */
201 int luid;
203 /* A priority for each insn. */
204 int priority;
206 /* The number of incoming edges in the forward dependency graph.
207 As scheduling proceeds, counts are decreased. An insn moves to
208 the ready queue when its counter reaches zero. */
209 int dep_count;
211 /* An encoding of the blockage range function. Both unit and range
212 are coded. This member is used only for old pipeline interface. */
213 unsigned int blockage;
215 /* Number of instructions referring to this insn. */
216 int ref_count;
218 /* The minimum clock tick at which the insn becomes ready. This is
219 used to note timing constraints for the insns in the pending list. */
220 int tick;
222 short cost;
224 /* An encoding of the function units used. This member is used only
225 for old pipeline interface. */
226 short units;
228 /* This weight is an estimation of the insn's contribution to
229 register pressure. */
230 short reg_weight;
232 /* Some insns (e.g. call) are not allowed to move across blocks. */
233 unsigned int cant_move : 1;
235 /* Set if there's DEF-USE dependence between some speculatively
236 moved load insn and this one. */
237 unsigned int fed_by_spec_load : 1;
238 unsigned int is_load_insn : 1;
240 /* Nonzero if priority has been computed already. */
241 unsigned int priority_known : 1;
244 extern struct haifa_insn_data *h_i_d;
246 /* Accessor macros for h_i_d. There are more in haifa-sched.c and
247 sched-rgn.c. */
248 #define INSN_DEPEND(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].depend)
249 #define INSN_LUID(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].luid)
250 #define CANT_MOVE(insn) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (insn)].cant_move)
251 #define INSN_DEP_COUNT(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].dep_count)
252 #define INSN_PRIORITY(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].priority)
253 #define INSN_PRIORITY_KNOWN(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].priority_known)
254 #define INSN_COST(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].cost)
255 #define INSN_UNIT(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].units)
256 #define INSN_REG_WEIGHT(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].reg_weight)
258 #define INSN_BLOCKAGE(INSN) (h_i_d[INSN_UID (INSN)].blockage)
259 #define UNIT_BITS 5
260 #define BLOCKAGE_MASK ((1 << BLOCKAGE_BITS) - 1)
261 #define ENCODE_BLOCKAGE(U, R) \
262 (((U) << BLOCKAGE_BITS \
263 | MIN_BLOCKAGE_COST (R)) << BLOCKAGE_BITS \
264 | MAX_BLOCKAGE_COST (R))
265 #define UNIT_BLOCKED(B) ((B) >> (2 * BLOCKAGE_BITS))
266 #define BLOCKAGE_RANGE(B) \
267 (((((B) >> BLOCKAGE_BITS) & BLOCKAGE_MASK) << (HOST_BITS_PER_INT / 2)) \
268 | ((B) & BLOCKAGE_MASK))
270 /* Encodings of the `<name>_unit_blockage_range' function. */
271 #define MIN_BLOCKAGE_COST(R) ((R) >> (HOST_BITS_PER_INT / 2))
272 #define MAX_BLOCKAGE_COST(R) ((R) & ((1 << (HOST_BITS_PER_INT / 2)) - 1))
274 extern FILE *sched_dump;
275 extern int sched_verbose;
277 /* Exception Free Loads:
279 We define five classes of speculative loads: IFREE, IRISKY,
280 PFREE, PRISKY, and MFREE.
282 IFREE loads are loads that are proved to be exception-free, just
283 by examining the load insn. Examples for such loads are loads
284 from TOC and loads of global data.
286 IRISKY loads are loads that are proved to be exception-risky,
287 just by examining the load insn. Examples for such loads are
288 volatile loads and loads from shared memory.
290 PFREE loads are loads for which we can prove, by examining other
291 insns, that they are exception-free. Currently, this class consists
292 of loads for which we are able to find a "similar load", either in
293 the target block, or, if only one split-block exists, in that split
294 block. Load2 is similar to load1 if both have same single base
295 register. We identify only part of the similar loads, by finding
296 an insn upon which both load1 and load2 have a DEF-USE dependence.
298 PRISKY loads are loads for which we can prove, by examining other
299 insns, that they are exception-risky. Currently we have two proofs for
300 such loads. The first proof detects loads that are probably guarded by a
301 test on the memory address. This proof is based on the
302 backward and forward data dependence information for the region.
303 Let load-insn be the examined load.
304 Load-insn is PRISKY iff ALL the following hold:
306 - insn1 is not in the same block as load-insn
307 - there is a DEF-USE dependence chain (insn1, ..., load-insn)
308 - test-insn is either a compare or a branch, not in the same block
309 as load-insn
310 - load-insn is reachable from test-insn
311 - there is a DEF-USE dependence chain (insn1, ..., test-insn)
313 This proof might fail when the compare and the load are fed
314 by an insn not in the region. To solve this, we will add to this
315 group all loads that have no input DEF-USE dependence.
317 The second proof detects loads that are directly or indirectly
318 fed by a speculative load. This proof is affected by the
319 scheduling process. We will use the flag fed_by_spec_load.
320 Initially, all insns have this flag reset. After a speculative
321 motion of an insn, if insn is either a load, or marked as
322 fed_by_spec_load, we will also mark as fed_by_spec_load every
323 insn1 for which a DEF-USE dependence (insn, insn1) exists. A
324 load which is fed_by_spec_load is also PRISKY.
326 MFREE (maybe-free) loads are all the remaining loads. They may be
327 exception-free, but we cannot prove it.
329 Now, all loads in IFREE and PFREE classes are considered
330 exception-free, while all loads in IRISKY and PRISKY classes are
331 considered exception-risky. As for loads in the MFREE class,
332 these are considered either exception-free or exception-risky,
333 depending on whether we are pessimistic or optimistic. We have
334 to take the pessimistic approach to assure the safety of
335 speculative scheduling, but we can take the optimistic approach
336 by invoking the -fsched_spec_load_dangerous option. */
338 enum INSN_TRAP_CLASS
340 TRAP_FREE = 0, IFREE = 1, PFREE_CANDIDATE = 2,
341 PRISKY_CANDIDATE = 3, IRISKY = 4, TRAP_RISKY = 5
344 #define WORST_CLASS(class1, class2) \
345 ((class1 > class2) ? class1 : class2)
347 #ifndef __GNUC__
348 #define __inline
349 #endif
351 #ifndef HAIFA_INLINE
352 #define HAIFA_INLINE __inline
353 #endif
355 /* Functions in sched-vis.c. */
356 extern void print_insn (char *, rtx, int);
358 /* Functions in sched-deps.c. */
359 extern int add_dependence (rtx, rtx, enum reg_note);
360 extern void sched_analyze (struct deps *, rtx, rtx);
361 extern void init_deps (struct deps *);
362 extern void free_deps (struct deps *);
363 extern void init_deps_global (void);
364 extern void finish_deps_global (void);
365 extern void add_forward_dependence (rtx, rtx, enum reg_note);
366 extern void compute_forward_dependences (rtx, rtx);
367 extern rtx find_insn_list (rtx, rtx);
368 extern void init_dependency_caches (int);
369 extern void free_dependency_caches (void);
371 /* Functions in haifa-sched.c. */
372 extern int haifa_classify_insn (rtx);
373 extern void get_block_head_tail (int, rtx *, rtx *);
374 extern int no_real_insns_p (rtx, rtx);
376 extern void rm_line_notes (rtx, rtx);
377 extern void save_line_notes (int, rtx, rtx);
378 extern void restore_line_notes (rtx, rtx);
379 extern void rm_redundant_line_notes (void);
380 extern void rm_other_notes (rtx, rtx);
382 extern int insn_cost (rtx, rtx, rtx);
383 extern int set_priorities (rtx, rtx);
385 extern void schedule_block (int, int);
386 extern void sched_init (FILE *);
387 extern void sched_finish (void);
389 extern void ready_add (struct ready_list *, rtx);
391 #endif /* GCC_SCHED_INT_H */