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jeremybenn |
/* Code to analyze doloop loops in order for targets to perform late
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optimizations converting doloops to other forms of hardware loops.
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Copyright (C) 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GCC.
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GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
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Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
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version.
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GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
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WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
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for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see
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<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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/* We need to keep a vector of loops */
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typedef struct hwloop_info_d *hwloop_info;
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DEF_VEC_P (hwloop_info);
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DEF_VEC_ALLOC_P (hwloop_info,heap);
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/* Information about a loop we have found (or are in the process of
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finding). */
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struct GTY (()) hwloop_info_d
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{
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/* loop number, for dumps */
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int loop_no;
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/* Next loop in the graph. */
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hwloop_info next;
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/* Vector of blocks only within the loop, including those within
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inner loops. */
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VEC (basic_block, heap) *blocks;
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/* Same information in a bitmap. */
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bitmap block_bitmap;
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/* Vector of inner loops within this loop. Includes loops of every
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nesting level. */
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VEC (hwloop_info, heap) *loops;
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/* All edges that jump into the loop. */
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VEC(edge, gc) *incoming;
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/* The ports currently using this infrastructure can typically
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handle two cases: all incoming edges have the same destination
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block, or all incoming edges have the same source block. These
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two members are set to the common source or destination we found,
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or NULL if different blocks were found. If both are NULL the
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loop can't be optimized. */
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basic_block incoming_src;
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basic_block incoming_dest;
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/* First block in the loop. This is the one branched to by the loop_end
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insn. */
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basic_block head;
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/* Last block in the loop (the one with the loop_end insn). */
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basic_block tail;
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/* The successor block of the loop. This is the one the loop_end insn
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falls into. */
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basic_block successor;
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/* The last instruction in the tail. */
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rtx last_insn;
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/* The loop_end insn. */
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rtx loop_end;
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/* The iteration register. */
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rtx iter_reg;
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/* The new label placed at the beginning of the loop. */
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rtx start_label;
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/* The new label placed at the end of the loop. */
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rtx end_label;
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/* The length of the loop. */
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int length;
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/* The nesting depth of the loop. Innermost loops are given a depth
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of 1. Only successfully optimized doloops are counted; if an inner
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loop was marked as bad, it does not increase the depth of its parent
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loop.
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This value is valid when the target's optimize function is called. */
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int depth;
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/* True if we can't optimize this loop. */
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bool bad;
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/* True if we have visited this loop during the optimization phase. */
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bool visited;
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/* The following values are collected before calling the target's optimize
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function and are not valid earlier. */
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/* Record information about control flow: whether the loop has calls
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or asm statements, whether it has edges that jump out of the loop,
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or edges that jump within the loop. */
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bool has_call;
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bool has_asm;
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bool jumps_within;
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bool jumps_outof;
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/* True if there is an instruction other than the doloop_end which uses the
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iteration register. */
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bool iter_reg_used;
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/* True if the iteration register lives past the doloop instruction. */
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bool iter_reg_used_outside;
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/* Hard registers set at any point in the loop, except for the loop counter
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register's set in the doloop_end instruction. */
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HARD_REG_SET regs_set_in_loop;
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};
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/* A set of hooks to be defined by a target that wants to use the reorg_loops
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functionality.
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reorg_loops is intended to handle cases where special hardware loop
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setup instructions are required before the loop, for example to set
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up loop counter registers that are not exposed to the register
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allocator, or to inform the hardware about loop bounds.
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reorg_loops performs analysis to discover loop_end patterns created
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by the earlier loop-doloop pass, and sets up a hwloop_info
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structure for each such insn it finds. It then tries to discover
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the basic blocks containing the loop by tracking the lifetime of
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the iteration register.
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If a valid loop can't be found, the FAIL function is called;
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otherwise the OPT function is called for each loop, visiting
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innermost loops first and ascending. */
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struct hw_doloop_hooks
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{
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/* Examine INSN. If it is a suitable doloop_end pattern, return the
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iteration register, which should be a single hard register.
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Otherwise, return NULL_RTX. */
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rtx (*end_pattern_reg) (rtx insn);
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/* Optimize LOOP. The target should perform any additional analysis
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(e.g. checking that the loop isn't too long), and then perform
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its transformations. Return true if successful, false if the
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loop should be marked bad. If it returns false, the FAIL
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function is called. */
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bool (*opt) (hwloop_info loop);
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/* Handle a loop that was marked bad for any reason. This could be
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used to split the doloop_end pattern. */
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void (*fail) (hwloop_info loop);
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};
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extern void reorg_loops (bool, struct hw_doloop_hooks *);
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