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449 lines
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449 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
0. Improved efficiency.
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* Parse and output array initializers an element at a time, freeing
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storage after each, instead of parsing the whole initializer first and
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then outputting. This would reduce memory usage for large
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initializers.
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* See if the techniques describe in Oct 1991 SIGPLAN Notices
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(Frazer and Hanson) are applicable to GCC.
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1. Better optimization.
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* Constants in unused inline functions
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It would be nice to delay output of string constants so that string
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constants mentioned in unused inline functions are never generated.
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Perhaps this would also take care of string constants in dead code.
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The difficulty is in finding a clean way for the RTL which refers
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to the constant (currently, only by an assembler symbol name)
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to point to the constant and cause it to be output.
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* More cse
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The techniques for doing full global cse are described in the red
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dragon book, or (a different version) in Frederick Chow's thesis from
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Stanford. It is likely to be slow and use a lot of memory, but it
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might be worth offering as an additional option.
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It is probably possible to extend cse to a few very frequent cases
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without so much expense.
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For example, it is not very hard to handle cse through if-then
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statements with no else clauses. Here's how to do it. On reaching a
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label, notice that the label's use-count is 1 and that the last
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preceding jump jumps conditionally to this label. Now you know it
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is a simple if-then statement. Remove from the hash table
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all the expressions that were entered since that jump insn
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and you can continue with cse.
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It is probably not hard to handle cse from the end of a loop
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around to the beginning, and a few loops would be greatly sped
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up by this.
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* Optimize a sequence of if statements whose conditions are exclusive.
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It is possible to optimize
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if (x == 1) ...;
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if (x == 2) ...;
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if (x == 3) ...;
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into
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if (x == 1) ...;
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else if (x == 2) ...;
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else if (x == 3) ...;
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provided that x is not altered by the contents of the if statements.
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It's not certain whether this is worth doing. Perhaps programmers
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nearly always write the else's themselves, leaving few opportunities
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to improve anything.
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* Un-cse.
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Perhaps we should have an un-cse step right after cse, which tries to
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replace a reg with its value if the value can be substituted for the
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reg everywhere, if that looks like an improvement. Which is if the
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reg is used only a few times. Use rtx_cost to determine if the
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change is really an improvement.
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* Clean up how cse works.
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The scheme is that each value has just one hash entry. The
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first_same_value and next_same_value chains are no longer needed.
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For arithmetic, each hash table elt has the following slots:
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* Operation. This is an rtx code.
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* Mode.
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* Operands 0, 1 and 2. These point to other hash table elements.
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So, if we want to enter (PLUS:SI (REG:SI 30) (CONST_INT 104)), we
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first enter (CONST_INT 104) and find the entry that (REG:SI 30) now
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points to. Then we put these elts into operands 0 and 1 of a new elt.
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We put PLUS and SI into the new elt.
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Registers and mem refs would never be entered into the table as such.
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However, the values they contain would be entered. There would be a
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table indexed by regno which points at the hash entry for the value in
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that reg.
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The hash entry index now plays the role of a qty number.
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We still need qty_first_reg, reg_next_eqv, etc. to record which regs
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share a particular qty.
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When a reg is used whose contents are unknown, we need to create a
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hash table entry whose contents say "unknown", as a place holder for
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whatever the reg contains. If that reg is added to something, then
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the hash entry for the sum will refer to the "unknown" entry. Use
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UNKNOWN for the rtx code in this entry. This replaces make_new_qty.
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For a constant, a unique hash entry would be made based on the
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value of the constant.
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What about MEM? Each time a memory address is referenced, we need a
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qty (a hash table elt) to represent what is in it. (Just as for a
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register.) If this isn't known, create one, just as for a reg whose
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contents are unknown.
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We need a way to find all mem refs that still contain a certain value.
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Do this with a chain of hash elts (for memory addresses) that point to
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locations that hold the value. The hash elt for the value itself should
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point to the start of the chain. It would be good for the hash elt
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for an address to point to the hash elt for the contents of that address
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(but this ptr can be null if the contents have never been entered).
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With this data structure, nothing need ever be invalidated except
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the lists of which regs or mems hold a particular value. It is easy
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to see if there is a reg or mem that is equiv to a particular value.
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If the value is constant, it is always explicitly constant.
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* Support more general tail-recursion among different functions.
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This might be possible under certain circumstances, such as when
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the argument lists of the functions have the same lengths.
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Perhaps it could be done with a special declaration.
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You would need to verify in the calling function that it does not
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use the addresses of any local variables and does not use setjmp.
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* Put short statics vars at low addresses and use short addressing mode?
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Useful on the 68000/68020 and perhaps on the 32000 series,
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provided one has a linker that works with the feature.
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This is said to make a 15% speedup on the 68000.
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* Keep global variables in registers.
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Here is a scheme for doing this. A global variable, or a local variable
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whose address is taken, can be kept in a register for an entire function
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if it does not use non-constant memory addresses and (for globals only)
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does not call other functions. If the entire function does not meet
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this criterion, a loop may.
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The VAR_DECL for such a variable would have to have two RTL expressions:
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the true home in memory, and the pseudo-register used temporarily.
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It is necessary to emit insns to copy the memory location into the
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pseudo-register at the beginning of the function or loop, and perhaps
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back out at the end. These insns should have REG_EQUIV notes so that,
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if the pseudo-register does not get a hard register, it is spilled into
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the memory location which exists in any case.
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The easiest way to set up these insns is to modify the routine
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put_var_into_stack so that it does not apply to the entire function
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(sparing any loops which contain nothing dangerous) and to call it at
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the end of the function regardless of where in the function the
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address of a local variable is taken. It would be called
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unconditionally at the end of the function for all relevant global
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variables.
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For debugger output, the thing to do is to invent a new binding level
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around the appropriate loop and define the variable name as a register
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variable with that scope.
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* Live-range splitting.
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Currently a variable is allocated a hard register either for the full
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extent of its use or not at all. Sometimes it would be good to
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allocate a variable a hard register for just part of a function; for
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example, through a particular loop where the variable is mostly used,
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or outside of a particular loop where the variable is not used. (The
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latter is nice because it might let the variable be in a register most
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of the time even though the loop needs all the registers.)
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It might not be very hard to do this in global.c when a variable
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fails to get a hard register for its entire life span.
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The first step is to find a loop in which the variable is live, but
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which is not the whole life span or nearly so. It's probably best to
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use a loop in which the variable is heavily used.
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Then create a new pseudo-register to represent the variable in that loop.
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Substitute this for the old pseudo-register there, and insert move insns
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to copy between the two at the loop entry and all exits. (When several
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such moves are inserted at the same place, some new feature should be
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added to say that none of those registers conflict merely because of
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overlap between the new moves. And the reload pass should reorder them
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so that a store precedes a load, for any given hard register.)
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After doing this for all the reasonable candidates, run global-alloc
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over again. With luck, one of the two pseudo-registers will be fit
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somewhere. It may even have a much higher priority due to its reduced
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life span.
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There will be no room in general for the new pseudo-registers in
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basic_block_live_at_start, so there will need to be a second such
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matrix exclusively for the new ones. Various other vectors indexed by
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register number will have to be made bigger, or there will have to be
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secondary extender vectors just for global-alloc.
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A simple new feature could arrange that both pseudo-registers get the
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same stack slot if they both fail to get hard registers.
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Other compilers split live ranges when they are not connected, or
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try to split off pieces `at the edge'. I think splitting around loops
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will provide more speedup.
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Creating a fake binding block and a new like-named variable with
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shorter life span and different address might succeed in describing
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this technique for the debugger.
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* Detect dead stores into memory?
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A store into memory is dead if it is followed by another store into
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the same location; and, in between, there is no reference to anything
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that might be that location (including no reference to a variable
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address).
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* Loop optimization.
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Strength reduction and iteration variable elimination could be
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smarter. They should know how to decide which iteration variables are
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not worth making explicit because they can be computed as part of an
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address calculation. Based on this information, they should decide
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when it is desirable to eliminate one iteration variable and create
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another in its place.
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It should be possible to compute what the value of an iteration
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variable will be at the end of the loop, and eliminate the variable
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within the loop by computing that value at the loop end.
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When a loop has a simple increment that adds 1,
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instead of jumping in after the increment,
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decrement the loop count and jump to the increment.
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This allows aob insns to be used.
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* Using constraints on values.
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Many operations could be simplified based on knowledge of the
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minimum and maximum possible values of a register at any particular time.
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These limits could come from the data types in the tree, via rtl generation,
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or they can be deduced from operations that are performed. For example,
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the result of an `and' operation one of whose operands is 7 must be in
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the range 0 to 7. Compare instructions also tell something about the
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possible values of the operand, in the code beyond the test.
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Value constraints can be used to determine the results of a further
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comparison. They can also indicate that certain `and' operations are
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redundant. Constraints might permit a decrement and branch
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instruction that checks zeroness to be used when the user has
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specified to exit if negative.
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* Smarter reload pass.
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The reload pass as currently written can reload values only into registers
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that are reserved for reloading. This means that in order to use a
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register for reloading it must spill everything out of that register.
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It would be straightforward, though complicated, for reload1.c to keep
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track, during its scan, of which hard registers were available at each
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point in the function, and use for reloading even registers that were
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free only at the point they were needed. This would avoid much spilling
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and make better code.
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* Change the type of a variable.
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Sometimes a variable is declared as `int', it is assigned only once
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from a value of type `char', and then it is used only by comparison
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against constants. On many machines, better code would result if
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the variable had type `char'. If the compiler could detect this
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case, it could change the declaration of the variable and change
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all the places that use it.
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* Better handling for very sparse switches.
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There may be cases where it would be better to compile a switch
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statement to use a fixed hash table rather than the current
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combination of jump tables and binary search.
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* Order of subexpressions.
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It might be possible to make better code by paying attention
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to the order in which to generate code for subexpressions of an expression.
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* More code motion.
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Consider hoisting common code up past conditional branches or
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tablejumps.
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* Trace scheduling.
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This technique is said to be able to figure out which way a jump
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will usually go, and rearrange the code to make that path the
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faster one.
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* Distributive law.
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The C expression *(X + 4 * (Y + C)) compiles better on certain
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machines if rewritten as *(X + 4*C + 4*Y) because of known addressing
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modes. It may be tricky to determine when, and for which machines, to
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use each alternative.
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Some work has been done on this, in combine.c.
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* Can optimize by changing if (x) y; else z; into z; if (x) y;
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if z and x do not interfere and z has no effects not undone by y.
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This is desirable if z is faster than jumping.
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* For a two-insn loop on the 68020, such as
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foo: movb a2@+,a3@+
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jne foo
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it is better to insert dbeq d0,foo before the jne.
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d0 can be a junk register. The challenge is to fit this into
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a portable framework: when can you detect this situation and
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still be able to allocate a junk register?
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2. Simpler porting.
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Right now, describing the target machine's instructions is done
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cleanly, but describing its addressing mode is done with several
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ad-hoc macro definitions. Porting would be much easier if there were
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an RTL description for addressing modes like that for instructions.
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Tools analogous to genflags and genrecog would generate macros from
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this description.
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There would be one pattern in the address-description file for each
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kind of addressing, and this pattern would have:
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* the RTL expression for the address
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* C code to verify its validity (since that may depend on
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the exact data).
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* C code to print the address in assembler language.
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* C code to convert the address into a valid one, if it is not valid.
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(This would replace LEGITIMIZE_ADDRESS).
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* Register constraints for all indeterminates that appear
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in the RTL expression.
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3. Other languages.
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Front ends for Pascal, Fortran, Algol, Cobol, Modula-2 and Ada are
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desirable.
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Pascal, Modula-2 and Ada require the implementation of functions
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within functions. Some of the mechanisms for this already exist.
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4. More extensions.
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* Generated unique labels. Have some way of generating distinct labels
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for use in extended asm statements. I don't know what a good syntax would
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be.
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* A way of defining a structure containing a union, in which the choice of
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union alternative is controlled by a previous structure component.
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Here is a possible syntax for this.
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struct foo {
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enum { INT, DOUBLE } code;
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auto union { case INT: int i; case DOUBLE: double d;} value : code;
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};
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* Allow constructor expressions as lvalues, like this:
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(struct foo) {a, b, c} = foo();
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This would call foo, which returns a structure, and then store the
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several components of the structure into the variables a, b, and c.
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5. Generalize the machine model.
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* Some new compiler features may be needed to do a good job on machines
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where static data needs to be addressed using base registers.
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* Some machines have two stacks in different areas of memory, one used
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for scalars and another for large objects. The compiler does not
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now have a way to understand this.
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6. Useful warnings.
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* Warn about statements that are undefined because the order of
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evaluation of increment operators makes a big difference. Here is an
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example:
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*foo++ = hack (*foo);
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7. Better documentation of how GCC works and how to port it.
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Here is an outline proposed by Allan Adler.
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I. Overview of this document
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II. The machines on which GCC is implemented
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A. Prose description of those characteristics of target machines and
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their operating systems which are pertinent to the implementation
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of GCC.
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i. target machine characteristics
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ii. comparison of this system of machine characteristics with
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other systems of machine specification currently in use
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B. Tables of the characteristics of the target machines on which
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GCC is implemented.
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C. A priori restrictions on the values of characteristics of target
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machines, with special reference to those parts of the source code
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which entail those restrictions
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i. restrictions on individual characteristics
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ii. restrictions involving relations between various characteristics
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D. The use of GCC as a cross-compiler
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i. cross-compilation to existing machines
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ii. cross-compilation to non-existent machines
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E. Assumptions which are made regarding the target machine
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i. assumptions regarding the architecture of the target machine
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ii. assumptions regarding the operating system of the target machine
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iii. assumptions regarding software resident on the target machine
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iv. where in the source code these assumptions are in effect made
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III. A systematic approach to writing the files tm.h and xm.h
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A. Macros which require special care or skill
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B. Examples, with special reference to the underlying reasoning
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IV. A systematic approach to writing the machine description file md
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A. Minimal viable sets of insn descriptions
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B. Examples, with special reference to the underlying reasoning
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V. Uses of the file aux-output.c
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VI. Specification of what constitutes correct performance of an
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implementation of GCC
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A. The components of GCC
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B. The itinerary of a C program through GCC
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C. A system of benchmark programs
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D. What your RTL and assembler should look like with these benchmarks
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E. Fine tuning for speed and size of compiled code
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VII. A systematic procedure for debugging an implementation of GCC
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A. Use of GDB
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i. the macros in the file .gdbinit for GCC
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ii. obstacles to the use of GDB
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a. functions implemented as macros can't be called in GDB
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B. Debugging without GDB
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i. How to turn off the normal operation of GCC and access specific
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parts of GCC
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C. Debugging tools
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D. Debugging the parser
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i. how machine macros and insn definitions affect the parser
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E. Debugging the recognizer
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i. how machine macros and insn definitions affect the recognizer
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ditto for other components
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VIII. Data types used by GCC, with special reference to restrictions not
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specified in the formal definition of the data type
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IX. References to the literature for the algorithms used in GCC
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