Rename slots in unwind-block and catch-block.
[sbcl.git] / src / compiler / generic / objdef.lisp
blob5580a298fcb9ccf334ff23f877de7a506e3c03cc
1 ;;;; machine-independent aspects of the object representation
3 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
4 ;;;; more information.
5 ;;;;
6 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
7 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
8 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
9 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
10 ;;;; files for more information.
12 (in-package "SB!VM")
14 ;;;; KLUDGE: The primitive objects here may look like self-contained
15 ;;;; definitions, but in general they're not. In particular, if you
16 ;;;; try to add a slot to them, beware of the following:
17 ;;;; * The GC scavenging code (and for all I know other GC code too)
18 ;;;; is not automatically generated from these layouts, but instead
19 ;;;; was hand-written to correspond to them. The offsets are
20 ;;;; automatically propagated into the GC scavenging code, but the
21 ;;;; existence of slots, and whether they should be scavenged, is
22 ;;;; not automatically propagated. Thus e.g. if you add a
23 ;;;; SIMPLE-FUN-DEBUG-INFO slot holding a tagged object which needs
24 ;;;; to be GCed, you need to tweak scav_code_header() and
25 ;;;; verify_space() in gencgc.c, and the corresponding code in gc.c.
26 ;;;; * The src/runtime/print.c code (used by LDB) is implemented
27 ;;;; using hand-written lists of slot names, which aren't automatically
28 ;;;; generated from the code in this file.
29 ;;;; * Various code (e.g. STATIC-FSET in genesis.lisp) is hard-wired
30 ;;;; to know the name of the last slot of the object the code works
31 ;;;; with, and implicitly to know that the last slot is special (being
32 ;;;; the beginning of an arbitrary-length sequence of bytes following
33 ;;;; the fixed-layout slots).
34 ;;;; -- WHN 2001-12-29
36 ;;;; the primitive objects themselves
38 (!define-primitive-object (cons :type cons
39 :lowtag list-pointer-lowtag
40 :alloc-trans cons)
41 (car :ref-trans car :set-trans sb!c::%rplaca :init :arg
42 :cas-trans %compare-and-swap-car)
43 (cdr :ref-trans cdr :set-trans sb!c::%rplacd :init :arg
44 :cas-trans %compare-and-swap-cdr))
46 (!define-primitive-object (instance :lowtag instance-pointer-lowtag
47 :widetag instance-header-widetag
48 :alloc-trans %make-instance)
49 (slots :rest-p t))
51 (!define-primitive-object (bignum :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
52 :widetag bignum-widetag
53 :alloc-trans sb!bignum::%allocate-bignum)
54 (digits :rest-p t :c-type #!-alpha "sword_t" #!+alpha "u32"))
56 (!define-primitive-object (ratio :type ratio
57 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
58 :widetag ratio-widetag
59 :alloc-trans %make-ratio)
60 (numerator :type integer
61 :ref-known (flushable movable)
62 :ref-trans %numerator
63 :init :arg)
64 (denominator :type integer
65 :ref-known (flushable movable)
66 :ref-trans %denominator
67 :init :arg))
69 #!-64-bit
70 (!define-primitive-object (single-float :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
71 :widetag single-float-widetag)
72 (value :c-type "float"))
74 (!define-primitive-object (double-float :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
75 :widetag double-float-widetag)
76 #!-64-bit (filler)
77 (value :c-type "double" :length #.(/ 64 n-word-bits)))
79 #!+long-float
80 (!define-primitive-object (long-float :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
81 :widetag long-float-widetag)
82 #!+sparc (filler)
83 (value :c-type "long double" :length #!+x86 3 #!+sparc 4))
85 (!define-primitive-object (complex :type complex
86 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
87 :widetag complex-widetag
88 :alloc-trans %make-complex)
89 (real :type real
90 :ref-known (flushable movable)
91 :ref-trans %realpart
92 :init :arg)
93 (imag :type real
94 :ref-known (flushable movable)
95 :ref-trans %imagpart
96 :init :arg))
98 (!define-primitive-object (array :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
99 :widetag t)
100 ;; FILL-POINTER of an ARRAY is in the same place as LENGTH of a
101 ;; VECTOR -- see SHRINK-VECTOR.
102 (fill-pointer :type index
103 :ref-trans %array-fill-pointer
104 :ref-known (flushable foldable)
105 :set-trans (setf %array-fill-pointer)
106 :set-known ())
107 (fill-pointer-p :type (member t nil)
108 :ref-trans %array-fill-pointer-p
109 :ref-known (flushable foldable)
110 :set-trans (setf %array-fill-pointer-p)
111 :set-known ())
112 (elements :type index
113 :ref-trans %array-available-elements
114 :ref-known (flushable foldable)
115 :set-trans (setf %array-available-elements)
116 :set-known ())
117 (data :type array
118 ;; FIXME: terrible name for the accessor.
119 ;; It is in general just an ARRAY,
120 ;; and should be named %ARRAY-DATA.
121 :ref-trans %array-data-vector
122 :ref-known (flushable foldable)
123 :set-trans (setf %array-data-vector)
124 :set-known ())
125 (displacement :type (or index null)
126 :ref-trans %array-displacement
127 :ref-known (flushable foldable)
128 :set-trans (setf %array-displacement)
129 :set-known ())
130 (displaced-p :type t
131 :ref-trans %array-displaced-p
132 :ref-known (flushable foldable)
133 :set-trans (setf %array-displaced-p)
134 :set-known ())
135 (displaced-from :type list
136 :ref-trans %array-displaced-from
137 :ref-known (flushable)
138 :set-trans (setf %array-displaced-from)
139 :set-known ())
140 (dimensions :rest-p t))
142 (!define-primitive-object (vector :type vector
143 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
144 :widetag t)
145 ;; FILL-POINTER of an ARRAY is in the same place as LENGTH of a
146 ;; VECTOR -- see SHRINK-VECTOR.
147 (length :ref-trans sb!c::vector-length
148 :type index)
149 (data :rest-p t :c-type #!-alpha "uword_t" #!+alpha "u32"))
151 ;;; The header contains the size of slots and constants in words.
152 (!define-primitive-object (code :type code-component
153 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
154 :widetag t)
155 ;; This is the size of instructions in bytes, not aligned.
156 ;; Adding the size from the header and aligned code-size will yield
157 ;; the total size of the code-object.
158 (code-size :type index
159 :ref-known (flushable movable)
160 :ref-trans %code-code-size)
161 (entry-points :type (or function null)
162 :ref-known (flushable)
163 :ref-trans %code-entry-points
164 :set-known ()
165 :set-trans (setf %code-entry-points))
166 (debug-info :type t
167 :ref-known (flushable)
168 :ref-trans %code-debug-info
169 :set-known ()
170 :set-trans (setf %code-debug-info))
171 (constants :rest-p t))
173 (!define-primitive-object (fdefn :type fdefn
174 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
175 :widetag fdefn-widetag)
176 (name :ref-trans fdefn-name
177 :set-trans %set-fdefn-name :set-known ())
178 (fun :type (or function null) :ref-trans fdefn-fun)
179 (raw-addr :c-type #!-alpha "char *" #!+alpha "u32"))
181 ;;; a simple function (as opposed to hairier things like closures
182 ;;; which are also subtypes of Common Lisp's FUNCTION type)
183 (!define-primitive-object (simple-fun :type function
184 :lowtag fun-pointer-lowtag
185 :widetag simple-fun-header-widetag)
186 #!-(or x86 x86-64) (self :ref-trans %simple-fun-self
187 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-self))
188 ;; FIXME: we don't currently detect/prevent at compile-time the bad
189 ;; scenario this comment claims to disallow, as determined by re-enabling
190 ;; these SET- and REF- specifiers, which led to a cold-init crash.
191 #!+(or x86 x86-64) (self
192 ;; KLUDGE: There's no :SET-KNOWN, :SET-TRANS, :REF-KNOWN, or
193 ;; :REF-TRANS here in this case. Instead, there's separate
194 ;; DEFKNOWN/DEFINE-VOP/DEFTRANSFORM stuff in
195 ;; compiler/x86/system.lisp to define and declare them by
196 ;; hand. I don't know why this is, but that's (basically)
197 ;; the way it was done in CMU CL, and it works. (It's not
198 ;; exactly the same way it was done in CMU CL in that CMU
199 ;; CL's allows duplicate DEFKNOWNs, blithely overwriting any
200 ;; previous data associated with the previous DEFKNOWN, and
201 ;; that property was used to mask the definitions here. In
202 ;; SBCL as of 0.6.12.64 that's not allowed -- too confusing!
203 ;; -- so we have to explicitly suppress the DEFKNOWNish
204 ;; stuff here in order to allow this old hack to work in the
205 ;; new world. -- WHN 2001-08-82
207 (next :type (or function null)
208 :ref-known (flushable)
209 :ref-trans %simple-fun-next
210 :set-known ()
211 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-next))
212 (name :ref-known (flushable)
213 :ref-trans %simple-fun-name
214 :set-known ()
215 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-name))
216 (arglist :type list
217 :ref-known (flushable)
218 :ref-trans %simple-fun-arglist
219 :set-known ()
220 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-arglist))
221 (type :ref-known (flushable)
222 :ref-trans %simple-fun-type
223 :set-known ()
224 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-type))
225 ;; NIL for empty, STRING for a docstring, SIMPLE-VECTOR for XREFS, and (CONS
226 ;; STRING SIMPLE-VECTOR) for both.
227 (info :init :null
228 :ref-trans %simple-fun-info
229 :ref-known (flushable)
230 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-info)
231 :set-known ())
232 ;; the SB!C::DEBUG-FUN object corresponding to this object, or NIL for none
233 #+nil ; FIXME: doesn't work (gotcha, lowly maintenoid!) See notes on bug 137.
234 (debug-fun :ref-known (flushable)
235 :ref-trans %simple-fun-debug-fun
236 :set-known ()
237 :set-trans (setf %simple-fun-debug-fun))
238 (code :rest-p t :c-type "unsigned char"))
240 (!define-primitive-object (return-pc :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag :widetag t)
241 (return-point :c-type "unsigned char" :rest-p t))
243 (!define-primitive-object (closure :lowtag fun-pointer-lowtag
244 :widetag closure-header-widetag)
245 ;; %CLOSURE-FUN should never be invoked on x86[-64].
246 ;; The above remark at %SIMPLE-FUN-SELF is relevant in its sentiment,
247 ;; but actually no longer true - the confusing situation is not caught
248 ;; until too late. But at least this one was nonfatal.
249 #!-(or x86 x86-64) (fun :init :arg :ref-trans %closure-fun)
250 #!+(or x86 x86-64) (fun :init :arg)
251 (info :rest-p t))
253 (!define-primitive-object (funcallable-instance
254 :lowtag fun-pointer-lowtag
255 :widetag funcallable-instance-header-widetag
256 :alloc-trans %make-funcallable-instance)
257 (trampoline :init :funcallable-instance-tramp)
258 (function :ref-known (flushable) :ref-trans %funcallable-instance-function
259 :set-known () :set-trans (setf %funcallable-instance-function))
260 (info :rest-p t))
262 (!define-primitive-object (value-cell :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
263 :widetag value-cell-header-widetag
264 ;; FIXME: We also have an explicit VOP
265 ;; for this. Is this needed as well?
266 :alloc-trans make-value-cell)
267 (value :set-trans value-cell-set
268 :set-known ()
269 :ref-trans value-cell-ref
270 :ref-known (flushable)
271 :init :arg))
273 (!define-primitive-object (sap :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
274 :widetag sap-widetag)
275 (pointer :c-type "char *" :pointer t))
278 (!define-primitive-object (weak-pointer :type weak-pointer
279 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
280 :widetag weak-pointer-widetag
281 :alloc-trans make-weak-pointer)
282 ;; FIXME: SB!C should be almost *anything* but that. Probably SB!KERNEL
283 (value :ref-trans sb!c::%weak-pointer-value :ref-known (flushable)
284 :init :arg)
285 (broken :type (member t nil)
286 :ref-trans sb!c::%weak-pointer-broken :ref-known (flushable)
287 :init :null)
288 (next :c-type #!-alpha "struct weak_pointer *" #!+alpha "u32"))
290 ;;;; other non-heap data blocks
292 (!define-primitive-object (binding)
293 value
294 symbol) ;; on sb-thread, this is actually a tls-index
296 (!define-primitive-object (unwind-block)
297 (uwp :c-type #!-alpha "struct unwind_block *" #!+alpha "u32")
298 (cfp :c-type #!-alpha "lispobj *" #!+alpha "u32")
299 #!-(or x86 x86-64) code
300 entry-pc
301 #!+win32 next-seh-frame
302 #!+win32 seh-frame-handler)
304 (!define-primitive-object (catch-block)
305 (uwp :c-type #!-alpha "struct unwind_block *" #!+alpha "u32")
306 (cfp :c-type #!-alpha "lispobj *" #!+alpha "u32")
307 #!-(or x86 x86-64) code
308 entry-pc
309 #!+(and win32 x86) next-seh-frame
310 #!+(and win32 x86) seh-frame-handler
312 (previous-catch :c-type #!-alpha "struct catch_block *" #!+alpha "u32"))
314 ;;;; symbols
316 (!define-primitive-object (symbol :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
317 :widetag symbol-header-widetag
318 :alloc-trans %make-symbol
319 :type symbol)
321 ;; Beware when changing this definition. NIL-the-symbol is defined
322 ;; using this layout, and NIL-the-end-of-list-marker is the cons
323 ;; ( NIL . NIL ), living in the first two slots of NIL-the-symbol
324 ;; (conses have no header). Careful selection of lowtags ensures
325 ;; that the same pointer can be used for both purposes:
326 ;; OTHER-POINTER-LOWTAG is 7, LIST-POINTER-LOWTAG is 3, so if you
327 ;; subtract 3 from (SB-KERNEL:GET-LISP-OBJ-ADDRESS 'NIL) you get the
328 ;; first data slot, and if you subtract 7 you get a symbol header.
330 ;; also the CAR of NIL-as-end-of-list
331 (value :init :unbound
332 :set-trans %set-symbol-global-value
333 :set-known ())
334 ;; also the CDR of NIL-as-end-of-list. Its reffer needs special
335 ;; care for this reason, as hash values must be fixnums.
336 (hash :set-trans %set-symbol-hash)
338 (info :ref-trans symbol-info :ref-known (flushable)
339 :set-trans (setf symbol-info)
340 :set-known ()
341 :cas-trans %compare-and-swap-symbol-info
342 :type (or simple-vector list)
343 :init :null)
344 (name :ref-trans symbol-name :init :arg)
345 (package :ref-trans symbol-package
346 :set-trans %set-symbol-package
347 :init :null)
348 ;; 0 tls-index means no tls-index is allocated
349 ;; 64-bit put the tls-index in the header word.
350 #!+(and sb-thread (not 64-bit))
351 (tls-index :ref-known (flushable) :ref-trans symbol-tls-index))
353 (!define-primitive-object (complex-single-float
354 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
355 :widetag complex-single-float-widetag)
356 #!+64-bit
357 (data :c-type "struct { float data[2]; } ")
358 #!-64-bit
359 (real :c-type "float")
360 #!-64-bit
361 (imag :c-type "float"))
363 (!define-primitive-object (complex-double-float
364 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
365 :widetag complex-double-float-widetag)
366 (filler)
367 (real :c-type "double" :length #.(/ 64 n-word-bits))
368 (imag :c-type "double" :length #.(/ 64 n-word-bits)))
370 #!+sb-simd-pack
371 (!define-primitive-object (simd-pack
372 :lowtag other-pointer-lowtag
373 :widetag simd-pack-widetag)
374 (tag :ref-trans %simd-pack-tag
375 :attributes (movable flushable)
376 :type fixnum)
377 (lo-value :c-type "long" :type (unsigned-byte 64))
378 (hi-value :c-type "long" :type (unsigned-byte 64)))
380 ;;; this isn't actually a lisp object at all, it's a c structure that lives
381 ;;; in c-land. However, we need sight of so many parts of it from Lisp that
382 ;;; it makes sense to define it here anyway, so that the GENESIS machinery
383 ;;; can take care of maintaining Lisp and C versions.
384 (!define-primitive-object (thread)
385 ;; no_tls_value_marker is borrowed very briefly at thread startup to
386 ;; pass the address of initial-function into new_thread_trampoline.
387 ;; tls[0] = NO_TLS_VALUE_MARKER_WIDETAG because a the tls index slot
388 ;; of a symbol is initialized to zero
389 (no-tls-value-marker)
390 (os-thread :c-type "os_thread_t")
391 ;; This is the original address at which the memory was allocated,
392 ;; which may have different alignment then what we prefer to use.
393 ;; Kept here so that when the thread dies we can release the whole
394 ;; memory we reserved.
395 (os-address :c-type "void *" :pointer t)
397 ;; Keep these next six slots (alloc-region being figured in as 1 slot)
398 ;; near the beginning of the structure so that x86[-64] assembly code
399 ;; can use single-byte displacements from thread-base-tn.
400 ;; Doing so reduces code size for allocation sequences and special variable
401 ;; manipulations by fixing their TLS offsets to be < 2^7, the largest
402 ;; aligned displacement fitting in a signed byte.
403 #!+gencgc (alloc-region :c-type "struct alloc_region" :length 5)
404 #!+sb-thread (pseudo-atomic-bits #!+(or x86 x86-64) :special #!+(or x86 x86-64) *pseudo-atomic-bits*)
405 ;; next two not used in C, but this wires the TLS offsets to small values
406 #!+(and x86-64 sb-thread)
407 (current-catch-block :special *current-catch-block*)
408 #!+(and x86-64 sb-thread)
409 (current-unwind-protect-block :special *current-unwind-protect-block*)
410 (alien-stack-pointer :c-type "lispobj *" :pointer t
411 :special *alien-stack-pointer*)
412 (binding-stack-pointer :c-type "lispobj *" :pointer t
413 :special *binding-stack-pointer*)
414 (stepping)
415 ;; END of slots to keep near the beginning.
417 ;; These aren't accessed (much) from Lisp, so don't really care
418 ;; if it takes a 4-byte displacement.
419 (alien-stack-start :c-type "lispobj *" :pointer t)
420 (binding-stack-start :c-type "lispobj *" :pointer t
421 :special *binding-stack-start*)
423 #!+sb-thread
424 (os-attr :c-type "pthread_attr_t *" :pointer t)
425 #!+(and sb-thread (not sb-safepoint))
426 (state-sem :c-type "os_sem_t *" :pointer t)
427 #!+(and sb-thread (not sb-safepoint))
428 (state-not-running-sem :c-type "os_sem_t *" :pointer t)
429 #!+(and sb-thread (not sb-safepoint))
430 (state-not-running-waitcount :c-type "int" :length 1)
431 #!+(and sb-thread (not sb-safepoint))
432 (state-not-stopped-sem :c-type "os_sem_t *" :pointer t)
433 #!+(and sb-thread (not sb-safepoint))
434 (state-not-stopped-waitcount :c-type "int" :length 1)
435 (control-stack-start :c-type "lispobj *" :pointer t
436 :special *control-stack-start*)
437 (control-stack-end :c-type "lispobj *" :pointer t
438 :special *control-stack-end*)
439 (control-stack-guard-page-protected)
440 #!+win32 (private-events :c-type "struct private_events" :length 2)
441 (this :c-type "struct thread *" :pointer t)
442 (prev :c-type "struct thread *" :pointer t)
443 (next :c-type "struct thread *" :pointer t)
444 ;; starting, running, suspended, dead
445 (state :c-type "lispobj")
447 #!+x86 (tls-cookie) ; LDT index
448 (interrupt-data :c-type "struct interrupt_data *"
449 :pointer t)
450 ;; For various reasons related to pseudo-atomic and interrupt
451 ;; handling, we need to know if the machine context is in Lisp code
452 ;; or not. On non-threaded targets, this is a global variable in
453 ;; the runtime, but it's clearly a per-thread value.
454 #!+sb-thread
455 (foreign-function-call-active :c-type "boolean")
456 ;; Same as above for the location of the current control stack frame.
457 #!+(and sb-thread (not (or x86 x86-64)))
458 (control-frame-pointer :c-type "lispobj *")
459 ;; Same as above for the location of the current control stack
460 ;; pointer. This is also used on threaded x86oids to allow LDB to
461 ;; print an approximation of the CSP as needed.
462 #!+sb-thread
463 (control-stack-pointer :c-type "lispobj *")
464 #!+mach-exception-handler
465 (mach-port-name :c-type "mach_port_name_t")
466 ;; Context base pointer for running on top of system libraries built using
467 ;; -fomit-frame-pointer. Currently truly required and implemented only
468 ;; for (and win32 x86-64), but could be generalized to other platforms if
469 ;; needed:
470 #!+win32 (carried-base-pointer :c-type "os_context_register_t")
471 #!+sb-safepoint (csp-around-foreign-call :c-type "lispobj *")
472 #!+sb-safepoint (pc-around-foreign-call :c-type "lispobj *")
473 #!+win32 (synchronous-io-handle-and-flag :c-type "HANDLE" :length 1)
474 #!+(and sb-safepoint-strictly (not win32))
475 (sprof-alloc-region :c-type "struct alloc_region" :length 5)
476 (interrupt-contexts :c-type "os_context_t *" :rest-p t :pointer t))