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@c markers: BUG TODO
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@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
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@c 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
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@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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@c This is part of the GCC manual.
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@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
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9
@node Passes
10
@chapter Passes and Files of the Compiler
11
@cindex passes and files of the compiler
12
@cindex files and passes of the compiler
13
@cindex compiler passes and files
14
 
15
This chapter is dedicated to giving an overview of the optimization and
16
code generation passes of the compiler.  In the process, it describes
17
some of the language front end interface, though this description is no
18
where near complete.
19
 
20
@menu
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* Parsing pass::         The language front end turns text into bits.
22
* Gimplification pass::  The bits are turned into something we can optimize.
23
* Pass manager::         Sequencing the optimization passes.
24
* Tree SSA passes::      Optimizations on a high-level representation.
25
* RTL passes::           Optimizations on a low-level representation.
26
@end menu
27
 
28
@node Parsing pass
29
@section Parsing pass
30
@cindex GENERIC
31
@findex lang_hooks.parse_file
32
The language front end is invoked only once, via
33
@code{lang_hooks.parse_file}, to parse the entire input.  The language
34
front end may use any intermediate language representation deemed
35
appropriate.  The C front end uses GENERIC trees (@pxref{GENERIC}), plus
36
a double handful of language specific tree codes defined in
37
@file{c-common.def}.  The Fortran front end uses a completely different
38
private representation.
39
 
40
@cindex GIMPLE
41
@cindex gimplification
42
@cindex gimplifier
43
@cindex language-independent intermediate representation
44
@cindex intermediate representation lowering
45
@cindex lowering, language-dependent intermediate representation
46
At some point the front end must translate the representation used in the
47
front end to a representation understood by the language-independent
48
portions of the compiler.  Current practice takes one of two forms.
49
The C front end manually invokes the gimplifier (@pxref{GIMPLE}) on each function,
50
and uses the gimplifier callbacks to convert the language-specific tree
51
nodes directly to GIMPLE before passing the function off to be compiled.
52
The Fortran front end converts from a private representation to GENERIC,
53
which is later lowered to GIMPLE when the function is compiled.  Which
54
route to choose probably depends on how well GENERIC (plus extensions)
55
can be made to match up with the source language and necessary parsing
56
data structures.
57
 
58
BUG: Gimplification must occur before nested function lowering,
59
and nested function lowering must be done by the front end before
60
passing the data off to cgraph.
61
 
62
TODO: Cgraph should control nested function lowering.  It would
63
only be invoked when it is certain that the outer-most function
64
is used.
65
 
66
TODO: Cgraph needs a gimplify_function callback.  It should be
67
invoked when (1) it is certain that the function is used, (2)
68
warning flags specified by the user require some amount of
69
compilation in order to honor, (3) the language indicates that
70
semantic analysis is not complete until gimplification occurs.
71
Hum@dots{} this sounds overly complicated.  Perhaps we should just
72
have the front end gimplify always; in most cases it's only one
73
function call.
74
 
75
The front end needs to pass all function definitions and top level
76
declarations off to the middle-end so that they can be compiled and
77
emitted to the object file.  For a simple procedural language, it is
78
usually most convenient to do this as each top level declaration or
79
definition is seen.  There is also a distinction to be made between
80
generating functional code and generating complete debug information.
81
The only thing that is absolutely required for functional code is that
82
function and data @emph{definitions} be passed to the middle-end.  For
83
complete debug information, function, data and type declarations
84
should all be passed as well.
85
 
86
@findex rest_of_decl_compilation
87
@findex rest_of_type_compilation
88
@findex cgraph_finalize_function
89
In any case, the front end needs each complete top-level function or
90
data declaration, and each data definition should be passed to
91
@code{rest_of_decl_compilation}.  Each complete type definition should
92
be passed to @code{rest_of_type_compilation}.  Each function definition
93
should be passed to @code{cgraph_finalize_function}.
94
 
95
TODO: I know rest_of_compilation currently has all sorts of
96
RTL generation semantics.  I plan to move all code generation
97
bits (both Tree and RTL) to compile_function.  Should we hide
98
cgraph from the front ends and move back to rest_of_compilation
99
as the official interface?  Possibly we should rename all three
100
interfaces such that the names match in some meaningful way and
101
that is more descriptive than "rest_of".
102
 
103
The middle-end will, at its option, emit the function and data
104
definitions immediately or queue them for later processing.
105
 
106
@node Gimplification pass
107
@section Gimplification pass
108
 
109
@cindex gimplification
110
@cindex GIMPLE
111
@dfn{Gimplification} is a whimsical term for the process of converting
112
the intermediate representation of a function into the GIMPLE language
113
(@pxref{GIMPLE}).  The term stuck, and so words like ``gimplification'',
114
``gimplify'', ``gimplifier'' and the like are sprinkled throughout this
115
section of code.
116
 
117
While a front end may certainly choose to generate GIMPLE directly if
118
it chooses, this can be a moderately complex process unless the
119
intermediate language used by the front end is already fairly simple.
120
Usually it is easier to generate GENERIC trees plus extensions
121
and let the language-independent gimplifier do most of the work.
122
 
123
@findex gimplify_function_tree
124
@findex gimplify_expr
125
@findex lang_hooks.gimplify_expr
126
The main entry point to this pass is @code{gimplify_function_tree}
127
located in @file{gimplify.c}.  From here we process the entire
128
function gimplifying each statement in turn.  The main workhorse
129
for this pass is @code{gimplify_expr}.  Approximately everything
130
passes through here at least once, and it is from here that we
131
invoke the @code{lang_hooks.gimplify_expr} callback.
132
 
133
The callback should examine the expression in question and return
134
@code{GS_UNHANDLED} if the expression is not a language specific
135
construct that requires attention.  Otherwise it should alter the
136
expression in some way to such that forward progress is made toward
137
producing valid GIMPLE@.  If the callback is certain that the
138
transformation is complete and the expression is valid GIMPLE, it
139
should return @code{GS_ALL_DONE}.  Otherwise it should return
140
@code{GS_OK}, which will cause the expression to be processed again.
141
If the callback encounters an error during the transformation (because
142
the front end is relying on the gimplification process to finish
143
semantic checks), it should return @code{GS_ERROR}.
144
 
145
@node Pass manager
146
@section Pass manager
147
 
148
The pass manager is located in @file{passes.c}, @file{tree-optimize.c}
149
and @file{tree-pass.h}.
150
Its job is to run all of the individual passes in the correct order,
151
and take care of standard bookkeeping that applies to every pass.
152
 
153
The theory of operation is that each pass defines a structure that
154
represents everything we need to know about that pass---when it
155
should be run, how it should be run, what intermediate language
156
form or on-the-side data structures it needs.  We register the pass
157
to be run in some particular order, and the pass manager arranges
158
for everything to happen in the correct order.
159
 
160
The actuality doesn't completely live up to the theory at present.
161
Command-line switches and @code{timevar_id_t} enumerations must still
162
be defined elsewhere.  The pass manager validates constraints but does
163
not attempt to (re-)generate data structures or lower intermediate
164
language form based on the requirements of the next pass.  Nevertheless,
165
what is present is useful, and a far sight better than nothing at all.
166
 
167
Each pass should have a unique name.
168
Each pass may have its own dump file (for GCC debugging purposes).
169
Passes with a name starting with a star do not dump anything.
170
Sometimes passes are supposed to share a dump file / option name.
171
To still give these unique names, you can use a prefix that is delimited
172
by a space from the part that is used for the dump file / option name.
173
E.g. When the pass name is "ud dce", the name used for dump file/options
174
is "dce".
175
 
176
TODO: describe the global variables set up by the pass manager,
177
and a brief description of how a new pass should use it.
178
I need to look at what info RTL passes use first@enddots{}
179
 
180
@node Tree SSA passes
181
@section Tree SSA passes
182
 
183
The following briefly describes the Tree optimization passes that are
184
run after gimplification and what source files they are located in.
185
 
186
@itemize @bullet
187
@item Remove useless statements
188
 
189
This pass is an extremely simple sweep across the gimple code in which
190
we identify obviously dead code and remove it.  Here we do things like
191
simplify @code{if} statements with constant conditions, remove
192
exception handling constructs surrounding code that obviously cannot
193
throw, remove lexical bindings that contain no variables, and other
194
assorted simplistic cleanups.  The idea is to get rid of the obvious
195
stuff quickly rather than wait until later when it's more work to get
196
rid of it.  This pass is located in @file{tree-cfg.c} and described by
197
@code{pass_remove_useless_stmts}.
198
 
199
@item Mudflap declaration registration
200
 
201
If mudflap (@pxref{Optimize Options,,-fmudflap -fmudflapth
202
-fmudflapir,gcc,Using the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)}) is
203
enabled, we generate code to register some variable declarations with
204
the mudflap runtime.  Specifically, the runtime tracks the lifetimes of
205
those variable declarations that have their addresses taken, or whose
206
bounds are unknown at compile time (@code{extern}).  This pass generates
207
new exception handling constructs (@code{try}/@code{finally}), and so
208
must run before those are lowered.  In addition, the pass enqueues
209
declarations of static variables whose lifetimes extend to the entire
210
program.  The pass is located in @file{tree-mudflap.c} and is described
211
by @code{pass_mudflap_1}.
212
 
213
@item OpenMP lowering
214
 
215
If OpenMP generation (@option{-fopenmp}) is enabled, this pass lowers
216
OpenMP constructs into GIMPLE.
217
 
218
Lowering of OpenMP constructs involves creating replacement
219
expressions for local variables that have been mapped using data
220
sharing clauses, exposing the control flow of most synchronization
221
directives and adding region markers to facilitate the creation of the
222
control flow graph.  The pass is located in @file{omp-low.c} and is
223
described by @code{pass_lower_omp}.
224
 
225
@item OpenMP expansion
226
 
227
If OpenMP generation (@option{-fopenmp}) is enabled, this pass expands
228
parallel regions into their own functions to be invoked by the thread
229
library.  The pass is located in @file{omp-low.c} and is described by
230
@code{pass_expand_omp}.
231
 
232
@item Lower control flow
233
 
234
This pass flattens @code{if} statements (@code{COND_EXPR})
235
and moves lexical bindings (@code{BIND_EXPR}) out of line.  After
236
this pass, all @code{if} statements will have exactly two @code{goto}
237
statements in its @code{then} and @code{else} arms.  Lexical binding
238
information for each statement will be found in @code{TREE_BLOCK} rather
239
than being inferred from its position under a @code{BIND_EXPR}.  This
240
pass is found in @file{gimple-low.c} and is described by
241
@code{pass_lower_cf}.
242
 
243
@item Lower exception handling control flow
244
 
245
This pass decomposes high-level exception handling constructs
246
(@code{TRY_FINALLY_EXPR} and @code{TRY_CATCH_EXPR}) into a form
247
that explicitly represents the control flow involved.  After this
248
pass, @code{lookup_stmt_eh_region} will return a non-negative
249
number for any statement that may have EH control flow semantics;
250
examine @code{tree_can_throw_internal} or @code{tree_can_throw_external}
251
for exact semantics.  Exact control flow may be extracted from
252
@code{foreach_reachable_handler}.  The EH region nesting tree is defined
253
in @file{except.h} and built in @file{except.c}.  The lowering pass
254
itself is in @file{tree-eh.c} and is described by @code{pass_lower_eh}.
255
 
256
@item Build the control flow graph
257
 
258
This pass decomposes a function into basic blocks and creates all of
259
the edges that connect them.  It is located in @file{tree-cfg.c} and
260
is described by @code{pass_build_cfg}.
261
 
262
@item Find all referenced variables
263
 
264
This pass walks the entire function and collects an array of all
265
variables referenced in the function, @code{referenced_vars}.  The
266
index at which a variable is found in the array is used as a UID
267
for the variable within this function.  This data is needed by the
268
SSA rewriting routines.  The pass is located in @file{tree-dfa.c}
269
and is described by @code{pass_referenced_vars}.
270
 
271
@item Enter static single assignment form
272
 
273
This pass rewrites the function such that it is in SSA form.  After
274
this pass, all @code{is_gimple_reg} variables will be referenced by
275
@code{SSA_NAME}, and all occurrences of other variables will be
276
annotated with @code{VDEFS} and @code{VUSES}; PHI nodes will have
277
been inserted as necessary for each basic block.  This pass is
278
located in @file{tree-ssa.c} and is described by @code{pass_build_ssa}.
279
 
280
@item Warn for uninitialized variables
281
 
282
This pass scans the function for uses of @code{SSA_NAME}s that
283
are fed by default definition.  For non-parameter variables, such
284
uses are uninitialized.  The pass is run twice, before and after
285
optimization (if turned on).  In the first pass we only warn for uses that are
286
positively uninitialized; in the second pass we warn for uses that
287
are possibly uninitialized.  The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa.c}
288
and is defined by @code{pass_early_warn_uninitialized} and
289
@code{pass_late_warn_uninitialized}.
290
 
291
@item Dead code elimination
292
 
293
This pass scans the function for statements without side effects whose
294
result is unused.  It does not do memory life analysis, so any value
295
that is stored in memory is considered used.  The pass is run multiple
296
times throughout the optimization process.  It is located in
297
@file{tree-ssa-dce.c} and is described by @code{pass_dce}.
298
 
299
@item Dominator optimizations
300
 
301
This pass performs trivial dominator-based copy and constant propagation,
302
expression simplification, and jump threading.  It is run multiple times
303
throughout the optimization process.  It is located in @file{tree-ssa-dom.c}
304
and is described by @code{pass_dominator}.
305
 
306
@item Forward propagation of single-use variables
307
 
308
This pass attempts to remove redundant computation by substituting
309
variables that are used once into the expression that uses them and
310
seeing if the result can be simplified.  It is located in
311
@file{tree-ssa-forwprop.c} and is described by @code{pass_forwprop}.
312
 
313
@item Copy Renaming
314
 
315
This pass attempts to change the name of compiler temporaries involved in
316
copy operations such that SSA->normal can coalesce the copy away.  When compiler
317
temporaries are copies of user variables, it also renames the compiler
318
temporary to the user variable resulting in better use of user symbols.  It is
319
located in @file{tree-ssa-copyrename.c} and is described by
320
@code{pass_copyrename}.
321
 
322
@item PHI node optimizations
323
 
324
This pass recognizes forms of PHI inputs that can be represented as
325
conditional expressions and rewrites them into straight line code.
326
It is located in @file{tree-ssa-phiopt.c} and is described by
327
@code{pass_phiopt}.
328
 
329
@item May-alias optimization
330
 
331
This pass performs a flow sensitive SSA-based points-to analysis.
332
The resulting may-alias, must-alias, and escape analysis information
333
is used to promote variables from in-memory addressable objects to
334
non-aliased variables that can be renamed into SSA form.  We also
335
update the @code{VDEF}/@code{VUSE} memory tags for non-renameable
336
aggregates so that we get fewer false kills.  The pass is located
337
in @file{tree-ssa-alias.c} and is described by @code{pass_may_alias}.
338
 
339
Interprocedural points-to information is located in
340
@file{tree-ssa-structalias.c} and described by @code{pass_ipa_pta}.
341
 
342
@item Profiling
343
 
344
This pass rewrites the function in order to collect runtime block
345
and value profiling data.  Such data may be fed back into the compiler
346
on a subsequent run so as to allow optimization based on expected
347
execution frequencies.  The pass is located in @file{predict.c} and
348
is described by @code{pass_profile}.
349
 
350
@item Lower complex arithmetic
351
 
352
This pass rewrites complex arithmetic operations into their component
353
scalar arithmetic operations.  The pass is located in @file{tree-complex.c}
354
and is described by @code{pass_lower_complex}.
355
 
356
@item Scalar replacement of aggregates
357
 
358
This pass rewrites suitable non-aliased local aggregate variables into
359
a set of scalar variables.  The resulting scalar variables are
360
rewritten into SSA form, which allows subsequent optimization passes
361
to do a significantly better job with them.  The pass is located in
362
@file{tree-sra.c} and is described by @code{pass_sra}.
363
 
364
@item Dead store elimination
365
 
366
This pass eliminates stores to memory that are subsequently overwritten
367
by another store, without any intervening loads.  The pass is located
368
in @file{tree-ssa-dse.c} and is described by @code{pass_dse}.
369
 
370
@item Tail recursion elimination
371
 
372
This pass transforms tail recursion into a loop.  It is located in
373
@file{tree-tailcall.c} and is described by @code{pass_tail_recursion}.
374
 
375
@item Forward store motion
376
 
377
This pass sinks stores and assignments down the flowgraph closer to their
378
use point.  The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-sink.c} and is
379
described by @code{pass_sink_code}.
380
 
381
@item Partial redundancy elimination
382
 
383
This pass eliminates partially redundant computations, as well as
384
performing load motion.  The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-pre.c}
385
and is described by @code{pass_pre}.
386
 
387
Just before partial redundancy elimination, if
388
@option{-funsafe-math-optimizations} is on, GCC tries to convert
389
divisions to multiplications by the reciprocal.  The pass is located
390
in @file{tree-ssa-math-opts.c} and is described by
391
@code{pass_cse_reciprocal}.
392
 
393
@item Full redundancy elimination
394
 
395
This is a simpler form of PRE that only eliminates redundancies that
396
occur on all paths.  It is located in @file{tree-ssa-pre.c} and
397
described by @code{pass_fre}.
398
 
399
@item Loop optimization
400
 
401
The main driver of the pass is placed in @file{tree-ssa-loop.c}
402
and described by @code{pass_loop}.
403
 
404
The optimizations performed by this pass are:
405
 
406
Loop invariant motion.  This pass moves only invariants that
407
would be hard to handle on RTL level (function calls, operations that expand to
408
nontrivial sequences of insns).  With @option{-funswitch-loops} it also moves
409
operands of conditions that are invariant out of the loop, so that we can use
410
just trivial invariantness analysis in loop unswitching.  The pass also includes
411
store motion.  The pass is implemented in @file{tree-ssa-loop-im.c}.
412
 
413
Canonical induction variable creation.  This pass creates a simple counter
414
for number of iterations of the loop and replaces the exit condition of the
415
loop using it, in case when a complicated analysis is necessary to determine
416
the number of iterations.  Later optimizations then may determine the number
417
easily.  The pass is implemented in @file{tree-ssa-loop-ivcanon.c}.
418
 
419
Induction variable optimizations.  This pass performs standard induction
420
variable optimizations, including strength reduction, induction variable
421
merging and induction variable elimination.  The pass is implemented in
422
@file{tree-ssa-loop-ivopts.c}.
423
 
424
Loop unswitching.  This pass moves the conditional jumps that are invariant
425
out of the loops.  To achieve this, a duplicate of the loop is created for
426
each possible outcome of conditional jump(s).  The pass is implemented in
427
@file{tree-ssa-loop-unswitch.c}.  This pass should eventually replace the
428
RTL level loop unswitching in @file{loop-unswitch.c}, but currently
429
the RTL level pass is not completely redundant yet due to deficiencies
430
in tree level alias analysis.
431
 
432
The optimizations also use various utility functions contained in
433
@file{tree-ssa-loop-manip.c}, @file{cfgloop.c}, @file{cfgloopanal.c} and
434
@file{cfgloopmanip.c}.
435
 
436
Vectorization.  This pass transforms loops to operate on vector types
437
instead of scalar types.  Data parallelism across loop iterations is exploited
438
to group data elements from consecutive iterations into a vector and operate
439
on them in parallel.  Depending on available target support the loop is
440
conceptually unrolled by a factor @code{VF} (vectorization factor), which is
441
the number of elements operated upon in parallel in each iteration, and the
442
@code{VF} copies of each scalar operation are fused to form a vector operation.
443
Additional loop transformations such as peeling and versioning may take place
444
to align the number of iterations, and to align the memory accesses in the
445
loop.
446
The pass is implemented in @file{tree-vectorizer.c} (the main driver),
447
@file{tree-vect-loop.c} and @file{tree-vect-loop-manip.c} (loop specific parts
448
and general loop utilities), @file{tree-vect-slp} (loop-aware SLP
449
functionality), @file{tree-vect-stmts.c} and @file{tree-vect-data-refs.c}.
450
Analysis of data references is in @file{tree-data-ref.c}.
451
 
452
SLP Vectorization.  This pass performs vectorization of straight-line code. The
453
pass is implemented in @file{tree-vectorizer.c} (the main driver),
454
@file{tree-vect-slp.c}, @file{tree-vect-stmts.c} and
455
@file{tree-vect-data-refs.c}.
456
 
457
Autoparallelization.  This pass splits the loop iteration space to run
458
into several threads.  The pass is implemented in @file{tree-parloops.c}.
459
 
460
Graphite is a loop transformation framework based on the polyhedral
461
model.  Graphite stands for Gimple Represented as Polyhedra.  The
462
internals of this infrastructure are documented in
463
@w{@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Graphite}}.  The passes working on
464
this representation are implemented in the various @file{graphite-*}
465
files.
466
 
467
@item Tree level if-conversion for vectorizer
468
 
469
This pass applies if-conversion to simple loops to help vectorizer.
470
We identify if convertible loops, if-convert statements and merge
471
basic blocks in one big block.  The idea is to present loop in such
472
form so that vectorizer can have one to one mapping between statements
473
and available vector operations.  This pass is located in
474
@file{tree-if-conv.c} and is described by @code{pass_if_conversion}.
475
 
476
@item Conditional constant propagation
477
 
478
This pass relaxes a lattice of values in order to identify those
479
that must be constant even in the presence of conditional branches.
480
The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-ccp.c} and is described
481
by @code{pass_ccp}.
482
 
483
A related pass that works on memory loads and stores, and not just
484
register values, is located in @file{tree-ssa-ccp.c} and described by
485
@code{pass_store_ccp}.
486
 
487
@item Conditional copy propagation
488
 
489
This is similar to constant propagation but the lattice of values is
490
the ``copy-of'' relation.  It eliminates redundant copies from the
491
code.  The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-copy.c} and described by
492
@code{pass_copy_prop}.
493
 
494
A related pass that works on memory copies, and not just register
495
copies, is located in @file{tree-ssa-copy.c} and described by
496
@code{pass_store_copy_prop}.
497
 
498
@item Value range propagation
499
 
500
This transformation is similar to constant propagation but
501
instead of propagating single constant values, it propagates
502
known value ranges.  The implementation is based on Patterson's
503
range propagation algorithm (Accurate Static Branch Prediction by
504
Value Range Propagation, J. R. C. Patterson, PLDI '95).  In
505
contrast to Patterson's algorithm, this implementation does not
506
propagate branch probabilities nor it uses more than a single
507
range per SSA name. This means that the current implementation
508
cannot be used for branch prediction (though adapting it would
509
not be difficult).  The pass is located in @file{tree-vrp.c} and is
510
described by @code{pass_vrp}.
511
 
512
@item Folding built-in functions
513
 
514
This pass simplifies built-in functions, as applicable, with constant
515
arguments or with inferable string lengths.  It is located in
516
@file{tree-ssa-ccp.c} and is described by @code{pass_fold_builtins}.
517
 
518
@item Split critical edges
519
 
520
This pass identifies critical edges and inserts empty basic blocks
521
such that the edge is no longer critical.  The pass is located in
522
@file{tree-cfg.c} and is described by @code{pass_split_crit_edges}.
523
 
524
@item Control dependence dead code elimination
525
 
526
This pass is a stronger form of dead code elimination that can
527
eliminate unnecessary control flow statements.   It is located
528
in @file{tree-ssa-dce.c} and is described by @code{pass_cd_dce}.
529
 
530
@item Tail call elimination
531
 
532
This pass identifies function calls that may be rewritten into
533
jumps.  No code transformation is actually applied here, but the
534
data and control flow problem is solved.  The code transformation
535
requires target support, and so is delayed until RTL@.  In the
536
meantime @code{CALL_EXPR_TAILCALL} is set indicating the possibility.
537
The pass is located in @file{tree-tailcall.c} and is described by
538
@code{pass_tail_calls}.  The RTL transformation is handled by
539
@code{fixup_tail_calls} in @file{calls.c}.
540
 
541
@item Warn for function return without value
542
 
543
For non-void functions, this pass locates return statements that do
544
not specify a value and issues a warning.  Such a statement may have
545
been injected by falling off the end of the function.  This pass is
546
run last so that we have as much time as possible to prove that the
547
statement is not reachable.  It is located in @file{tree-cfg.c} and
548
is described by @code{pass_warn_function_return}.
549
 
550
@item Mudflap statement annotation
551
 
552
If mudflap is enabled, we rewrite some memory accesses with code to
553
validate that the memory access is correct.  In particular, expressions
554
involving pointer dereferences (@code{INDIRECT_REF}, @code{ARRAY_REF},
555
etc.) are replaced by code that checks the selected address range
556
against the mudflap runtime's database of valid regions.  This check
557
includes an inline lookup into a direct-mapped cache, based on
558
shift/mask operations of the pointer value, with a fallback function
559
call into the runtime.  The pass is located in @file{tree-mudflap.c} and
560
is described by @code{pass_mudflap_2}.
561
 
562
@item Leave static single assignment form
563
 
564
This pass rewrites the function such that it is in normal form.  At
565
the same time, we eliminate as many single-use temporaries as possible,
566
so the intermediate language is no longer GIMPLE, but GENERIC@.  The
567
pass is located in @file{tree-outof-ssa.c} and is described by
568
@code{pass_del_ssa}.
569
 
570
@item Merge PHI nodes that feed into one another
571
 
572
This is part of the CFG cleanup passes.  It attempts to join PHI nodes
573
from a forwarder CFG block into another block with PHI nodes.  The
574
pass is located in @file{tree-cfgcleanup.c} and is described by
575
@code{pass_merge_phi}.
576
 
577
@item Return value optimization
578
 
579
If a function always returns the same local variable, and that local
580
variable is an aggregate type, then the variable is replaced with the
581
return value for the function (i.e., the function's DECL_RESULT).  This
582
is equivalent to the C++ named return value optimization applied to
583
GIMPLE@.  The pass is located in @file{tree-nrv.c} and is described by
584
@code{pass_nrv}.
585
 
586
@item Return slot optimization
587
 
588
If a function returns a memory object and is called as @code{var =
589
foo()}, this pass tries to change the call so that the address of
590
@code{var} is sent to the caller to avoid an extra memory copy.  This
591
pass is located in @code{tree-nrv.c} and is described by
592
@code{pass_return_slot}.
593
 
594
@item Optimize calls to @code{__builtin_object_size}
595
 
596
This is a propagation pass similar to CCP that tries to remove calls
597
to @code{__builtin_object_size} when the size of the object can be
598
computed at compile-time.  This pass is located in
599
@file{tree-object-size.c} and is described by
600
@code{pass_object_sizes}.
601
 
602
@item Loop invariant motion
603
 
604
This pass removes expensive loop-invariant computations out of loops.
605
The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-loop.c} and described by
606
@code{pass_lim}.
607
 
608
@item Loop nest optimizations
609
 
610
This is a family of loop transformations that works on loop nests.  It
611
includes loop interchange, scaling, skewing and reversal and they are
612
all geared to the optimization of data locality in array traversals
613
and the removal of dependencies that hamper optimizations such as loop
614
parallelization and vectorization.  The pass is located in
615
@file{tree-loop-linear.c} and described by
616
@code{pass_linear_transform}.
617
 
618
@item Removal of empty loops
619
 
620
This pass removes loops with no code in them.  The pass is located in
621
@file{tree-ssa-loop-ivcanon.c} and described by
622
@code{pass_empty_loop}.
623
 
624
@item Unrolling of small loops
625
 
626
This pass completely unrolls loops with few iterations.  The pass
627
is located in @file{tree-ssa-loop-ivcanon.c} and described by
628
@code{pass_complete_unroll}.
629
 
630
@item Predictive commoning
631
 
632
This pass makes the code reuse the computations from the previous
633
iterations of the loops, especially loads and stores to memory.
634
It does so by storing the values of these computations to a bank
635
of temporary variables that are rotated at the end of loop.  To avoid
636
the need for this rotation, the loop is then unrolled and the copies
637
of the loop body are rewritten to use the appropriate version of
638
the temporary variable.  This pass is located in @file{tree-predcom.c}
639
and described by @code{pass_predcom}.
640
 
641
@item Array prefetching
642
 
643
This pass issues prefetch instructions for array references inside
644
loops.  The pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-loop-prefetch.c} and
645
described by @code{pass_loop_prefetch}.
646
 
647
@item Reassociation
648
 
649
This pass rewrites arithmetic expressions to enable optimizations that
650
operate on them, like redundancy elimination and vectorization.  The
651
pass is located in @file{tree-ssa-reassoc.c} and described by
652
@code{pass_reassoc}.
653
 
654
@item Optimization of @code{stdarg} functions
655
 
656
This pass tries to avoid the saving of register arguments into the
657
stack on entry to @code{stdarg} functions.  If the function doesn't
658
use any @code{va_start} macros, no registers need to be saved.  If
659
@code{va_start} macros are used, the @code{va_list} variables don't
660
escape the function, it is only necessary to save registers that will
661
be used in @code{va_arg} macros.  For instance, if @code{va_arg} is
662
only used with integral types in the function, floating point
663
registers don't need to be saved.  This pass is located in
664
@code{tree-stdarg.c} and described by @code{pass_stdarg}.
665
 
666
@end itemize
667
 
668
@node RTL passes
669
@section RTL passes
670
 
671
The following briefly describes the RTL generation and optimization
672
passes that are run after the Tree optimization passes.
673
 
674
@itemize @bullet
675
@item RTL generation
676
 
677
@c Avoiding overfull is tricky here.
678
The source files for RTL generation include
679
@file{stmt.c},
680
@file{calls.c},
681
@file{expr.c},
682
@file{explow.c},
683
@file{expmed.c},
684
@file{function.c},
685
@file{optabs.c}
686
and @file{emit-rtl.c}.
687
Also, the file
688
@file{insn-emit.c}, generated from the machine description by the
689
program @code{genemit}, is used in this pass.  The header file
690
@file{expr.h} is used for communication within this pass.
691
 
692
@findex genflags
693
@findex gencodes
694
The header files @file{insn-flags.h} and @file{insn-codes.h},
695
generated from the machine description by the programs @code{genflags}
696
and @code{gencodes}, tell this pass which standard names are available
697
for use and which patterns correspond to them.
698
 
699
@item Generation of exception landing pads
700
 
701
This pass generates the glue that handles communication between the
702
exception handling library routines and the exception handlers within
703
the function.  Entry points in the function that are invoked by the
704
exception handling library are called @dfn{landing pads}.  The code
705
for this pass is located in @file{except.c}.
706
 
707
@item Control flow graph cleanup
708
 
709
This pass removes unreachable code, simplifies jumps to next, jumps to
710
jump, jumps across jumps, etc.  The pass is run multiple times.
711
For historical reasons, it is occasionally referred to as the ``jump
712
optimization pass''.  The bulk of the code for this pass is in
713
@file{cfgcleanup.c}, and there are support routines in @file{cfgrtl.c}
714
and @file{jump.c}.
715
 
716
@item Forward propagation of single-def values
717
 
718
This pass attempts to remove redundant computation by substituting
719
variables that come from a single definition, and
720
seeing if the result can be simplified.  It performs copy propagation
721
and addressing mode selection.  The pass is run twice, with values
722
being propagated into loops only on the second run.  The code is
723
located in @file{fwprop.c}.
724
 
725
@item Common subexpression elimination
726
 
727
This pass removes redundant computation within basic blocks, and
728
optimizes addressing modes based on cost.  The pass is run twice.
729
The code for this pass is located in @file{cse.c}.
730
 
731
@item Global common subexpression elimination
732
 
733
This pass performs two
734
different types of GCSE  depending on whether you are optimizing for
735
size or not (LCM based GCSE tends to increase code size for a gain in
736
speed, while Morel-Renvoise based GCSE does not).
737
When optimizing for size, GCSE is done using Morel-Renvoise Partial
738
Redundancy Elimination, with the exception that it does not try to move
739
invariants out of loops---that is left to  the loop optimization pass.
740
If MR PRE GCSE is done, code hoisting (aka unification) is also done, as
741
well as load motion.
742
If you are optimizing for speed, LCM (lazy code motion) based GCSE is
743
done.  LCM is based on the work of Knoop, Ruthing, and Steffen.  LCM
744
based GCSE also does loop invariant code motion.  We also perform load
745
and store motion when optimizing for speed.
746
Regardless of which type of GCSE is used, the GCSE pass also performs
747
global constant and  copy propagation.
748
The source file for this pass is @file{gcse.c}, and the LCM routines
749
are in @file{lcm.c}.
750
 
751
@item Loop optimization
752
 
753
This pass performs several loop related optimizations.
754
The source files @file{cfgloopanal.c} and @file{cfgloopmanip.c} contain
755
generic loop analysis and manipulation code.  Initialization and finalization
756
of loop structures is handled by @file{loop-init.c}.
757
A loop invariant motion pass is implemented in @file{loop-invariant.c}.
758
Basic block level optimizations---unrolling, peeling and unswitching loops---
759
are implemented in @file{loop-unswitch.c} and @file{loop-unroll.c}.
760
Replacing of the exit condition of loops by special machine-dependent
761
instructions is handled by @file{loop-doloop.c}.
762
 
763
@item Jump bypassing
764
 
765
This pass is an aggressive form of GCSE that transforms the control
766
flow graph of a function by propagating constants into conditional
767
branch instructions.  The source file for this pass is @file{gcse.c}.
768
 
769
@item If conversion
770
 
771
This pass attempts to replace conditional branches and surrounding
772
assignments with arithmetic, boolean value producing comparison
773
instructions, and conditional move instructions.  In the very last
774
invocation after reload, it will generate predicated instructions
775
when supported by the target.  The code is located in @file{ifcvt.c}.
776
 
777
@item Web construction
778
 
779
This pass splits independent uses of each pseudo-register.  This can
780
improve effect of the other transformation, such as CSE or register
781
allocation.  The code for this pass is located in @file{web.c}.
782
 
783
@item Instruction combination
784
 
785
This pass attempts to combine groups of two or three instructions that
786
are related by data flow into single instructions.  It combines the
787
RTL expressions for the instructions by substitution, simplifies the
788
result using algebra, and then attempts to match the result against
789
the machine description.  The code is located in @file{combine.c}.
790
 
791
@item Register movement
792
 
793
This pass looks for cases where matching constraints would force an
794
instruction to need a reload, and this reload would be a
795
register-to-register move.  It then attempts to change the registers
796
used by the instruction to avoid the move instruction.  The code is
797
located in @file{regmove.c}.
798
 
799
@item Mode switching optimization
800
 
801
This pass looks for instructions that require the processor to be in a
802
specific ``mode'' and minimizes the number of mode changes required to
803
satisfy all users.  What these modes are, and what they apply to are
804
completely target-specific.  The code for this pass is located in
805
@file{mode-switching.c}.
806
 
807
@cindex modulo scheduling
808
@cindex sms, swing, software pipelining
809
@item Modulo scheduling
810
 
811
This pass looks at innermost loops and reorders their instructions
812
by overlapping different iterations.  Modulo scheduling is performed
813
immediately before instruction scheduling.  The code for this pass is
814
located in @file{modulo-sched.c}.
815
 
816
@item Instruction scheduling
817
 
818
This pass looks for instructions whose output will not be available by
819
the time that it is used in subsequent instructions.  Memory loads and
820
floating point instructions often have this behavior on RISC machines.
821
It re-orders instructions within a basic block to try to separate the
822
definition and use of items that otherwise would cause pipeline
823
stalls.  This pass is performed twice, before and after register
824
allocation.  The code for this pass is located in @file{haifa-sched.c},
825
@file{sched-deps.c}, @file{sched-ebb.c}, @file{sched-rgn.c} and
826
@file{sched-vis.c}.
827
 
828
@item Register allocation
829
 
830
These passes make sure that all occurrences of pseudo registers are
831
eliminated, either by allocating them to a hard register, replacing
832
them by an equivalent expression (e.g.@: a constant) or by placing
833
them on the stack.  This is done in several subpasses:
834
 
835
@itemize @bullet
836
@item
837
Register move optimizations.  This pass makes some simple RTL code
838
transformations which improve the subsequent register allocation.  The
839
source file is @file{regmove.c}.
840
 
841
@item
842
The integrated register allocator (@acronym{IRA}).  It is called
843
integrated because coalescing, register live range splitting, and hard
844
register preferencing are done on-the-fly during coloring.  It also
845
has better integration with the reload pass.  Pseudo-registers spilled
846
by the allocator or the reload have still a chance to get
847
hard-registers if the reload evicts some pseudo-registers from
848
hard-registers.  The allocator helps to choose better pseudos for
849
spilling based on their live ranges and to coalesce stack slots
850
allocated for the spilled pseudo-registers.  IRA is a regional
851
register allocator which is transformed into Chaitin-Briggs allocator
852
if there is one region.  By default, IRA chooses regions using
853
register pressure but the user can force it to use one region or
854
regions corresponding to all loops.
855
 
856
Source files of the allocator are @file{ira.c}, @file{ira-build.c},
857
@file{ira-costs.c}, @file{ira-conflicts.c}, @file{ira-color.c},
858
@file{ira-emit.c}, @file{ira-lives}, plus header files @file{ira.h}
859
and @file{ira-int.h} used for the communication between the allocator
860
and the rest of the compiler and between the IRA files.
861
 
862
@cindex reloading
863
@item
864
Reloading.  This pass renumbers pseudo registers with the hardware
865
registers numbers they were allocated.  Pseudo registers that did not
866
get hard registers are replaced with stack slots.  Then it finds
867
instructions that are invalid because a value has failed to end up in
868
a register, or has ended up in a register of the wrong kind.  It fixes
869
up these instructions by reloading the problematical values
870
temporarily into registers.  Additional instructions are generated to
871
do the copying.
872
 
873
The reload pass also optionally eliminates the frame pointer and inserts
874
instructions to save and restore call-clobbered registers around calls.
875
 
876
Source files are @file{reload.c} and @file{reload1.c}, plus the header
877
@file{reload.h} used for communication between them.
878
@end itemize
879
 
880
@item Basic block reordering
881
 
882
This pass implements profile guided code positioning.  If profile
883
information is not available, various types of static analysis are
884
performed to make the predictions normally coming from the profile
885
feedback (IE execution frequency, branch probability, etc).  It is
886
implemented in the file @file{bb-reorder.c}, and the various
887
prediction routines are in @file{predict.c}.
888
 
889
@item Variable tracking
890
 
891
This pass computes where the variables are stored at each
892
position in code and generates notes describing the variable locations
893
to RTL code.  The location lists are then generated according to these
894
notes to debug information if the debugging information format supports
895
location lists.  The code is located in @file{var-tracking.c}.
896
 
897
@item Delayed branch scheduling
898
 
899
This optional pass attempts to find instructions that can go into the
900
delay slots of other instructions, usually jumps and calls.  The code
901
for this pass is located in @file{reorg.c}.
902
 
903
@item Branch shortening
904
 
905
On many RISC machines, branch instructions have a limited range.
906
Thus, longer sequences of instructions must be used for long branches.
907
In this pass, the compiler figures out what how far each instruction
908
will be from each other instruction, and therefore whether the usual
909
instructions, or the longer sequences, must be used for each branch.
910
The code for this pass is located in @file{final.c}.
911
 
912
@item Register-to-stack conversion
913
 
914
Conversion from usage of some hard registers to usage of a register
915
stack may be done at this point.  Currently, this is supported only
916
for the floating-point registers of the Intel 80387 coprocessor.  The
917
code for this pass is located in @file{reg-stack.c}.
918
 
919
@item Final
920
 
921
This pass outputs the assembler code for the function.  The source files
922
are @file{final.c} plus @file{insn-output.c}; the latter is generated
923
automatically from the machine description by the tool @file{genoutput}.
924
The header file @file{conditions.h} is used for communication between
925
these files.  If mudflap is enabled, the queue of deferred declarations
926
and any addressed constants (e.g., string literals) is processed by
927
@code{mudflap_finish_file} into a synthetic constructor function
928
containing calls into the mudflap runtime.
929
 
930
@item Debugging information output
931
 
932
This is run after final because it must output the stack slot offsets
933
for pseudo registers that did not get hard registers.  Source files
934
are @file{dbxout.c} for DBX symbol table format, @file{sdbout.c} for
935
SDB symbol table format, @file{dwarfout.c} for DWARF symbol table
936
format, files @file{dwarf2out.c} and @file{dwarf2asm.c} for DWARF2
937
symbol table format, and @file{vmsdbgout.c} for VMS debug symbol table
938
format.
939
 
940
@end itemize

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