Christopher W. Fraser and David R. Hanson, Microsoft Research
Version 4.1 is the latest release of lcc, the ANSI C compiler described in our book A Retargetable C Compiler: Design and Implementation (Addison-Wesley, 1995, ISBN 0-8053-1670-1). This document summarizes the differences between the 4.1 code-generation interface and the 3.x interface described in Chap. 5 of A Retargetable C Compiler.
Previous versions of lcc supported only three sizes of integers, two sizes of floats, and insisted that pointers fit in unsigned integers (see Sec. 5.1 of A Retargetable C Compiler). These assumptions simplified the compiler, and were suitable for 32-bit architectures. But on 64-bit architectures, such as the DEC ALPHA, it's natural to have four sizes of integers and perhaps three sizes of floats, and on 16-bit architectures, 32-bit pointers don't fit in unsigned integers. Also, the 3.x constaints limited the use of lcc's back ends for other languages, such as Java.
Version 4.x removes all of these restrictions: It supports any number of sizes for integers and floats, and the size of pointers need not be related to the size of any of the integer types. The major changes in the code-generation interface are:
In addition, version 4.x is written in ANSI C and uses the standard I/O library and other standard C functions.
The sections below parallel the subsections of Chap. 5 of A Retargetable C Compiler and summarize the differences between the 3.x and 4.x code-generation interface. Unaffected subsections are omitted. Page citations refer to pages in A Retargetable C Compiler.
There are now 10 metrics in an interface record:
Metrics charmetric; Metrics shortmetric; Metrics intmetric; Metrics longmetric; Metrics longlongmetric; Metrics floatmetric; Metrics doublemetric; Metrics longdoublemetric; Metrics ptrmetric; Metrics structmetric;
Each of these specifies the size and alignment of the corresponding type. ptrmetric
describes all pointers.
The actual value of a constant is stored in the u.c.v
field of a symbol,
which holds a Value
:
typedef union value { long i; unsigned long u; long double d; void *p; void (*g)(void); } Value;
The value is stored in the appropriate field according to its type, which is given by
the symbol's type
field.
The op
field a of node
structure holds a dag operator, which
consists of a generic operator, a type suffix, and a size indicator. The type suffixes
are:
enum { F=FLOAT, I=INT, U=UNSIGNED, P=POINTER, V=VOID, B=STRUCT }; #define sizeop(n) ((n)<<10)
Given a generic operator o
, a type suffix t
, and a size s
,
a type- and size-specific operator is formed by o+t+sizeop(s)
. For example, ADD+F+sizeop(4)
forms the operator ADDF4
, which denotes the sum of two 4-byte floats.
Similarly, ADD+F+sizeop(8)
forms ADDF8
, which denotes 8-byte
floating addition. In the 3.x code-generation interface, ADDF
and ADDD
denoted these operations. There was no size indicator in the 3.x operators because the
type suffix supplied both a type and a size.
Table 5.1 lists each generic operator, its valid type suffixes, and the number of kids
and syms
that it uses; multiple values for kids
indicate
type-specific variants. The notations in the syms column give the number
of syms
values and a one-letter code that suggests their uses: 1V indicates
that syms[0]
points to a symbol for a variable, 1C indicates that syms[0]
is a constant, and 1L indicates that syms[0]
is a label. For 1S, syms[0]
is a constant whose value is a size in bytes; 2S adds syms[1]
, which is a
constant whose value is an alignment. For most operators, the type suffix and size
indicator denote the type and size of operation to perform and the type and size of the
result.
Table 5.1Node Operators. | |||||
syms | kids | Operator | Type Suffixes | Sizes | Operation |
1V | 0 | ADDRF |
...P.. |
p | address of a parameter |
1V | 0 | ADDRG |
...P.. |
p | address of a global |
1V | 0 | ADDRL |
...P.. |
p | address of a local |
1C | 0 | CNST |
FIUP.. |
fdx csilh p | constant |
1 | BCOM |
.IU... |
ilh | bitwise complement | |
1S | 1 | CVF |
FI.... |
fdx ilh | convert from float |
1S | 1 | CVI |
FIU... |
fdx csilh csilhp | convert from signed integer |
1S | 1 | CVP |
..U.. |
p | convert from pointer |
1S | 1 | CVU |
.IUP.. |
csilh p | convert from unsigned integer |
1 | INDIR |
FIUP.B |
fdx csilh p | fetch | |
1 | NEG |
FI.... |
fdx ilh | negation | |
2 | ADD |
FIUP.. |
fdx ilh ilhp p | addition | |
2 | BAND |
.IU... |
ilh | bitwise AND | |
2 | BOR |
.IU... |
ilh | bitwise inclusive OR | |
2 | BXOR |
.IU... |
ilh | bitwise exclusive OR | |
2 | DIV |
FIU... |
fdx ilh | division | |
2 | LSH |
.IU... |
ilh | left shift | |
2 | MOD |
.IU... |
ilh | modulus | |
2 | MUL |
FIU... |
fdx ilh | multiplication | |
2 | RSH |
.IU... |
ilh | right shift | |
2 | SUB |
FIUP.. |
fdx ilh ilhp p | subtraction | |
2S | 2 | ASGN |
FIUP.B |
fdx csilh p | assignment |
1L | 2 | EQ |
FIU... |
fdx ilh ilhp | jump if equal |
1L | 2 | GE |
FIU... |
fdx ilh ilhp | jump if greater than or equal |
1L | 2 | GT |
FIU... |
fdx ilh ilhp | jump if greater than |
1L | 2 | LE |
FIU... |
fdx ilh ilhp | jump if less than or equal |
1L | 2 | LT |
FIU... |
fdx ilh ilhp | jump if less than |
1L | 2 | NE |
FIU... |
fdx ilh ilhp | jump if not equal |
2S | 1 | ARG |
FIUP.B |
fdx ilh p | argument |
1 | 1 or 2 | CALL |
FIUPVB |
fdx ilh p | function call |
1 | RET |
FIUPV. |
fdx ilh p | return from function | |
1 | JUMP |
....V. |
unconditional jump | ||
1L | 0 | LABEL |
....V. |
label definition |
The entries in the Sizes column indicate sizes of the operators that back ends must implement. Letters denote the size of float (f), double (d), long double (x), character (c), short integer (s), integer (i), long integer (l), "long long" integer (h) , and pointer (p). These sizes are separated into sets for each type suffix, except that a single set is used for both I and U when the set for I is identical to the set for U.
The actual values for the size indicators, fdxcsilhp, depend on the target. A
specification like ADDF
f denotes the operator ADD+F+sizeop(
f)
,
where "f" is replaced by a target-dependent value, e.g., ADDF4
and ADDF8
.
For example, back ends must implement the following CVI
and MUL
operators.
CVIF
fCVIF
dCVIF
x
CVII
cCVII
sCVII
iCVII
lCVII
h
CVIU
cCVIU
sCVIU
iCVIU
lCVIU
hCVIU
p
MULF
fMULF
dMULF
x
MULI
iMULI
lMULI
h
MULU
iMULU
lMULU
h
On most platforms, there are fewer than three sizes of floats and six sizes of
integers, and pointers are usually the same size as one of the integers. And lcc doesn't
support the "long long" type, so h is not currently used. So the set of
platform-specific operators is usually smaller than the list above suggests. For example,
the X86, SPARC, and MIPS back ends implement the following CVI
and MUL
operators.
CVIF
4CVIF
8
CVII
1CVII
2CVII
4
CVIU
1CVIU
2CVIU
4
MULF
4MULF
8
MULI
4
MULU
4
The set of operators is thus target-dependent; for example, ADDI8
appears
only if the target supports an 8-byte integer type. ops.c
is
a program that, given a set of sizes, prints the required operators and their values,
e.g.,
% ops c=1 s=2 i=4 l=4 h=4 f=4 d=8 x=8 p=4 ... CVIF4=4225 CVIF8=8321 CVII1=1157 CVII2=2181 CVII4=4229 CVIU1=1158 CVIU2=2182 CVIU4=4230 ... MULF4=4561 MULF8=8657 MULI4=4565 MULU4=4566 ... 131 operators
The type suffix for a conversion operator denotes the type of the result and the size
indicator gives the size of the result. For example, CVUI4
converts an
unsigned (U
) to a 4-byte signed integer (I4
). The syms[0]
field points to a symbol-table entry for a integer constant that gives the size of the
source operand. For example, if syms[0]
in a CVUI4
points to a
symbol-table entry for 2, the conversion widens a 2-byte unsigned integer to a 4-byte
signed integer. Conversions that widen unsigned integers zero-extend; those that widen
signed integers sign-extend.
The front end composes conversions between types T1 and T2 by widening T1 to it's "supertype", if necessary, converting that result to T2's supertype, then narrowing the result to T2, if necessary. The following table lists the supertypes; omitted entries are their own supertypes.
Type Supertype signed char int signed short int unsigned char int, if sizeof (char) < sizeof (int)
unsigned, otherwiseunsigned short int, if sizeof (short) < sizeof (int)
unsigned, otherwisevoid * an unsigned type as large as a pointer
Pointers are converted to an unsigned type of the same size, even when that type is not one of the integer types.
For example, the front end converts a signed short to a float by first converting it to
an int and then to a float. It converts an unsigned short to an int with a single CVUI
i
conversion, when shorts are smaller than ints.
There are now signed and unsigned variants of ASGN
, INDIR
, BCOM
,
BOR
, BXOR
, BAND
, ARG
, CALL
,
and RET
to simplify code generation on platforms that use different
instructions or register set for signed and unsigned operations. Likewise there are now
pointer variants of ASGN
, INDIR
, ARG
, CALL
,
and RET
.
unsigned unsigned_char:1;
tells the front end whether plain characters are signed or unsigned. If it's zero, char is a signed type; otherwise, char is an unsigned type.
All the interface flags can be set by command-line options, e.g., -Wf-unsigned_char=1
causes plain characters to be unsigned.
The front end announces local variables by calling
void (*local)(Symbol);
It announces temporaries likewise; these have the symbol's temporary
flag
set, which indicates that the symbol will be used only in the next call to gen
.
If a temporary's u.t.cse
field is nonnull, it points to the node that
computes the value assigned to the temporary; see page 346.
The front end calls
void (*address)(Symbol p, Symbol q, long n);
to initialize q
to a symbol that represents an address of the form x+n
,
where x is the address represented by p
and the long integer n
is positive or negative.
The interface function
void (*defconst)(int suffix, int size, Value v);
initializes constants. defconst emits directives to define a cell and initialize it to a constant value. v is the constant value, suffix identifies the type of the value, and size is the size of the value in bytes. The value of suffix indicates which field of v holds the value, as shown in the following table.
suffix v Field size F
v.d
float, double, long double I
v.i
signed char, signed short, signed int, signed long U
v.u
unsigned char, unsigned short, unsigned int, unsigned long P
v.p
void *
defconst
must narrow v.
x when size
is less than sizeof
v.
x; e.g., to emit an unsigned char, defconst
should emit (unsigned
char)v.i
.
lcc 4.x uses standard I/O and its I/O functions have been changed accordingly. lcc
reads input from the standard input, emits code to the standard output, and writes
diagnostics to the standard error output. It uses freopen
to redirect these
streams to explicit files, when necessary.
bp
, outflush
, and outs
have been eliminated.
extern void fprint(FILE *f, const char *fmt, ...); extern void print(const char *fmt, ...);
print formatted data to file f
(fprint
) or the standard
output (print
). These functions are like standard C's printf
and
fprintf
, but support only some of the standard conversion specifiers and do
not support flags, precision, and field-width specifications. They support the following
new conversion specifiers in addition to those described on page 99.
Specifiers Corresponding printf Specifiers %c
%c
%d %D
%d %ld
%u %U
%u %lu
%x %X
%x %lx
%f %e %g
%e %f %g
%p
Converts the corresponding void * argument to unsigned long and prints it with the printf
%#x
specifier or just%x
when the argument is null.%I
Prints the number of spaces given by the corresponding argument.
#define generic(op) ((op)&0x3F0) #define specific(op) ((op)&0x3FF)
generic(op)
returns the generic variant of op
; that is,
without its type suffix and size indicator. specific(op)
returns the
type-specific variant of op
; that is, without its size indicator.
newconst
has been replaced by
extern Symbol intconst(int n);
which installs the integer constant n
in the symbol table, if necessary,
and returns a pointer to the symbol-table entry.