Struct cranelift_codegen::ir::dfg::DataFlowGraph
source · pub struct DataFlowGraph {
pub value_lists: ValueListPool,
pub signatures: PrimaryMap<SigRef, Signature>,
pub old_signatures: SecondaryMap<SigRef, Option<Signature>>,
pub ext_funcs: PrimaryMap<FuncRef, ExtFuncData>,
pub values_labels: Option<HashMap<Value, ValueLabelAssignments>>,
pub constants: ConstantPool,
pub immediates: PrimaryMap<Immediate, ConstantData>,
/* private fields */
}
Expand description
A data flow graph defines all instructions and basic blocks in a function as well as the data flow dependencies between them. The DFG also tracks values which can be either instruction results or block parameters.
The layout of blocks in the function and of instructions in each block is recorded by the
Layout
data structure which forms the other half of the function representation.
Fields§
§value_lists: ValueListPool
Memory pool of value lists.
The ValueList
references into this pool appear in many places:
- Instructions in
insts
that don’t have room for their entire argument list inline. - Instruction result values in
results
. - block parameters in
blocks
.
signatures: PrimaryMap<SigRef, Signature>
Function signature table. These signatures are referenced by indirect call instructions as well as the external function references.
old_signatures: SecondaryMap<SigRef, Option<Signature>>
The pre-legalization signature for each entry in signatures
, if any.
ext_funcs: PrimaryMap<FuncRef, ExtFuncData>
External function references. These are functions that can be called directly.
values_labels: Option<HashMap<Value, ValueLabelAssignments>>
Saves Value labels.
constants: ConstantPool
Constants used within the function
immediates: PrimaryMap<Immediate, ConstantData>
Stores large immediates that otherwise will not fit on InstructionData
Implementations§
source§impl DataFlowGraph
impl DataFlowGraph
sourcepub fn num_insts(&self) -> usize
pub fn num_insts(&self) -> usize
Get the total number of instructions created in this function, whether they are currently inserted in the layout or not.
This is intended for use with SecondaryMap::with_capacity
.
sourcepub fn inst_is_valid(&self, inst: Inst) -> bool
pub fn inst_is_valid(&self, inst: Inst) -> bool
Returns true
if the given instruction reference is valid.
sourcepub fn num_blocks(&self) -> usize
pub fn num_blocks(&self) -> usize
Get the total number of basic blocks created in this function, whether they are currently inserted in the layout or not.
This is intended for use with SecondaryMap::with_capacity
.
sourcepub fn block_is_valid(&self, block: Block) -> bool
pub fn block_is_valid(&self, block: Block) -> bool
Returns true
if the given block reference is valid.
sourcepub fn num_values(&self) -> usize
pub fn num_values(&self) -> usize
Get the total number of values.
sourcepub fn collect_debug_info(&mut self)
pub fn collect_debug_info(&mut self)
Starts collection of debug information.
sourcepub fn add_value_label_alias(
&mut self,
to_alias: Value,
from: SourceLoc,
value: Value
)
pub fn add_value_label_alias(
&mut self,
to_alias: Value,
from: SourceLoc,
value: Value
)
Inserts a ValueLabelAssignments::Alias
for to_alias
if debug info
collection is enabled.
source§impl DataFlowGraph
impl DataFlowGraph
Handling values.
Values are either block parameters or instruction results.
sourcepub fn value_is_valid(&self, v: Value) -> bool
pub fn value_is_valid(&self, v: Value) -> bool
Check if a value reference is valid.
sourcepub fn value_type(&self, v: Value) -> Type
pub fn value_type(&self, v: Value) -> Type
Get the type of a value.
sourcepub fn value_def(&self, v: Value) -> ValueDef
pub fn value_def(&self, v: Value) -> ValueDef
Get the definition of a value.
This is either the instruction that defined it or the Block that has the value as an parameter.
sourcepub fn value_is_attached(&self, v: Value) -> bool
pub fn value_is_attached(&self, v: Value) -> bool
Determine if v
is an attached instruction result / block parameter.
An attached value can’t be attached to something else without first being detached.
Value aliases are not considered to be attached to anything. Use resolve_aliases()
to
determine if the original aliased value is attached.
sourcepub fn resolve_aliases(&self, value: Value) -> Value
pub fn resolve_aliases(&self, value: Value) -> Value
Resolve value aliases.
Find the original SSA value that value
aliases.
sourcepub fn resolve_aliases_in_arguments(&mut self, inst: Inst)
pub fn resolve_aliases_in_arguments(&mut self, inst: Inst)
Resolve all aliases among inst’s arguments.
For each argument of inst which is defined by an alias, replace the alias with the aliased value.
sourcepub fn change_to_alias(&mut self, dest: Value, src: Value)
pub fn change_to_alias(&mut self, dest: Value, src: Value)
Turn a value into an alias of another.
Change the dest
value to behave as an alias of src
. This means that all uses of dest
will behave as if they used that value src
.
The dest
value can’t be attached to an instruction or block.
sourcepub fn replace_with_aliases(&mut self, dest_inst: Inst, src_inst: Inst)
pub fn replace_with_aliases(&mut self, dest_inst: Inst, src_inst: Inst)
Replace the results of one instruction with aliases to the results of another.
Change all the results of dest_inst
to behave as aliases of
corresponding results of src_inst
, as if calling change_to_alias for
each.
After calling this instruction, dest_inst
will have had its results
cleared, so it likely needs to be removed from the graph.
source§impl DataFlowGraph
impl DataFlowGraph
Instructions.
sourcepub fn make_inst(&mut self, data: InstructionData) -> Inst
pub fn make_inst(&mut self, data: InstructionData) -> Inst
Create a new instruction.
The type of the first result is indicated by data.ty
. If the instruction produces
multiple results, also call make_inst_results
to allocate value table entries.
sourcepub fn display_inst<'a>(&'a self, inst: Inst) -> DisplayInst<'a>
pub fn display_inst<'a>(&'a self, inst: Inst) -> DisplayInst<'a>
Returns an object that displays inst
.
sourcepub fn inst_args_mut(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> &mut [Value]
pub fn inst_args_mut(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> &mut [Value]
Get all value arguments on inst
as a mutable slice.
sourcepub fn inst_fixed_args(&self, inst: Inst) -> &[Value]
pub fn inst_fixed_args(&self, inst: Inst) -> &[Value]
Get the fixed value arguments on inst
as a slice.
sourcepub fn inst_fixed_args_mut(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> &mut [Value]
pub fn inst_fixed_args_mut(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> &mut [Value]
Get the fixed value arguments on inst
as a mutable slice.
sourcepub fn inst_variable_args(&self, inst: Inst) -> &[Value]
pub fn inst_variable_args(&self, inst: Inst) -> &[Value]
Get the variable value arguments on inst
as a slice.
sourcepub fn inst_variable_args_mut(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> &mut [Value]
pub fn inst_variable_args_mut(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> &mut [Value]
Get the variable value arguments on inst
as a mutable slice.
sourcepub fn make_inst_results(&mut self, inst: Inst, ctrl_typevar: Type) -> usize
pub fn make_inst_results(&mut self, inst: Inst, ctrl_typevar: Type) -> usize
Create result values for an instruction that produces multiple results.
Instructions that produce no result values only need to be created with make_inst
,
otherwise call make_inst_results
to allocate value table entries for the results.
The result value types are determined from the instruction’s value type constraints and the
provided ctrl_typevar
type for polymorphic instructions. For non-polymorphic
instructions, ctrl_typevar
is ignored, and INVALID
can be used.
The type of the first result value is also set, even if it was already set in the
InstructionData
passed to make_inst
. If this function is called with a single-result
instruction, that is the only effect.
sourcepub fn make_inst_results_reusing<I>(
&mut self,
inst: Inst,
ctrl_typevar: Type,
reuse: I
) -> usizewhere
I: Iterator<Item = Option<Value>>,
pub fn make_inst_results_reusing<I>(
&mut self,
inst: Inst,
ctrl_typevar: Type,
reuse: I
) -> usizewhere
I: Iterator<Item = Option<Value>>,
Create result values for inst
, reusing the provided detached values.
Create a new set of result values for inst
using ctrl_typevar
to determine the result
types. Any values provided by reuse
will be reused. When reuse
is exhausted or when it
produces None
, a new value is created.
sourcepub fn replace(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> ReplaceBuilder<'_>
pub fn replace(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> ReplaceBuilder<'_>
Create a ReplaceBuilder
that will replace inst
with a new instruction in place.
sourcepub fn detach_results(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> ValueList
pub fn detach_results(&mut self, inst: Inst) -> ValueList
Detach the list of result values from inst
and return it.
This leaves inst
without any result values. New result values can be created by calling
make_inst_results
or by using a replace(inst)
builder.
sourcepub fn clear_results(&mut self, inst: Inst)
pub fn clear_results(&mut self, inst: Inst)
Clear the list of result values from inst
.
This leaves inst
without any result values. New result values can be created by calling
make_inst_results
or by using a replace(inst)
builder.
sourcepub fn attach_result(&mut self, inst: Inst, res: Value)
pub fn attach_result(&mut self, inst: Inst, res: Value)
Attach an existing value to the result value list for inst
.
The res
value is appended to the end of the result list.
This is a very low-level operation. Usually, instruction results with the correct types are
created automatically. The res
value must not be attached to anything else.
sourcepub fn replace_result(&mut self, old_value: Value, new_type: Type) -> Value
pub fn replace_result(&mut self, old_value: Value, new_type: Type) -> Value
Replace an instruction result with a new value of type new_type
.
The old_value
must be an attached instruction result.
The old value is left detached, so it should probably be changed into something else.
Returns the new value.
sourcepub fn append_result(&mut self, inst: Inst, ty: Type) -> Value
pub fn append_result(&mut self, inst: Inst, ty: Type) -> Value
Append a new instruction result value to inst
.
sourcepub fn append_inst_arg(&mut self, inst: Inst, new_arg: Value)
pub fn append_inst_arg(&mut self, inst: Inst, new_arg: Value)
Append a new value argument to an instruction.
Panics if the instruction doesn’t support arguments.
sourcepub fn first_result(&self, inst: Inst) -> Value
pub fn first_result(&self, inst: Inst) -> Value
Get the first result of an instruction.
This function panics if the instruction doesn’t have any result.
sourcepub fn has_results(&self, inst: Inst) -> bool
pub fn has_results(&self, inst: Inst) -> bool
Test if inst
has any result values currently.
sourcepub fn inst_results(&self, inst: Inst) -> &[Value]
pub fn inst_results(&self, inst: Inst) -> &[Value]
Return all the results of an instruction.
sourcepub fn inst_results_list(&self, inst: Inst) -> ValueList
pub fn inst_results_list(&self, inst: Inst) -> ValueList
Return all the results of an instruction as ValueList.
sourcepub fn call_signature(&self, inst: Inst) -> Option<SigRef>
pub fn call_signature(&self, inst: Inst) -> Option<SigRef>
Get the call signature of a direct or indirect call instruction.
Returns None
if inst
is not a call instruction.
sourcepub fn analyze_branch(&self, inst: Inst) -> BranchInfo<'_>
pub fn analyze_branch(&self, inst: Inst) -> BranchInfo<'_>
Check if inst
is a branch.
sourcepub fn compute_result_type(
&self,
inst: Inst,
result_idx: usize,
ctrl_typevar: Type
) -> Option<Type>
pub fn compute_result_type(
&self,
inst: Inst,
result_idx: usize,
ctrl_typevar: Type
) -> Option<Type>
Compute the type of an instruction result from opcode constraints and call signatures.
This computes the same sequence of result types that make_inst_results()
above would
assign to the created result values, but it does not depend on make_inst_results()
being
called first.
Returns None
if asked about a result index that is too large.
sourcepub fn ctrl_typevar(&self, inst: Inst) -> Type
pub fn ctrl_typevar(&self, inst: Inst) -> Type
Get the controlling type variable, or INVALID
if inst
isn’t polymorphic.
source§impl DataFlowGraph
impl DataFlowGraph
basic blocks.
sourcepub fn make_block(&mut self) -> Block
pub fn make_block(&mut self) -> Block
Create a new basic block.
sourcepub fn num_block_params(&self, block: Block) -> usize
pub fn num_block_params(&self, block: Block) -> usize
Get the number of parameters on block
.
sourcepub fn block_params(&self, block: Block) -> &[Value]
pub fn block_params(&self, block: Block) -> &[Value]
Get the parameters on block
.
sourcepub fn block_param_types(&self, block: Block) -> Vec<Type>
pub fn block_param_types(&self, block: Block) -> Vec<Type>
Get the types of the parameters on block
.
sourcepub fn append_block_param(&mut self, block: Block, ty: Type) -> Value
pub fn append_block_param(&mut self, block: Block, ty: Type) -> Value
Append a parameter with type ty
to block
.
sourcepub fn swap_remove_block_param(&mut self, val: Value) -> usize
pub fn swap_remove_block_param(&mut self, val: Value) -> usize
Removes val
from block
’s parameters by swapping it with the last parameter on block
.
Returns the position of val
before removal.
Important: to ensure O(1) deletion, this method swaps the removed parameter with the
last block
parameter. This can disrupt all the branch instructions jumping to this
block
for which you have to change the branch argument order if necessary.
Panics if val
is not a block parameter.
sourcepub fn remove_block_param(&mut self, val: Value)
pub fn remove_block_param(&mut self, val: Value)
Removes val
from block
‘s parameters by a standard linear time list removal which
preserves ordering. Also updates the values’ data.
sourcepub fn attach_block_param(&mut self, block: Block, param: Value)
pub fn attach_block_param(&mut self, block: Block, param: Value)
Append an existing value to block
’s parameters.
The appended value can’t already be attached to something else.
In almost all cases, you should be using append_block_param()
instead of this method.
sourcepub fn replace_block_param(&mut self, old_value: Value, new_type: Type) -> Value
pub fn replace_block_param(&mut self, old_value: Value, new_type: Type) -> Value
Replace a block parameter with a new value of type ty
.
The old_value
must be an attached block parameter. It is removed from its place in the list
of parameters and replaced by a new value of type new_type
. The new value gets the same
position in the list, and other parameters are not disturbed.
The old value is left detached, so it should probably be changed into something else.
Returns the new value.
sourcepub fn detach_block_params(&mut self, block: Block) -> ValueList
pub fn detach_block_params(&mut self, block: Block) -> ValueList
Detach all the parameters from block
and return them as a ValueList
.
This is a quite low-level operation. Sensible things to do with the detached block parameters
is to put them back on the same block with attach_block_param()
or change them into aliases
with change_to_alias()
.
source§impl DataFlowGraph
impl DataFlowGraph
Parser routines. These routines should not be used outside the parser.
sourcepub fn make_inst_results_for_parser(
&mut self,
inst: Inst,
ctrl_typevar: Type,
reuse: &[Value]
) -> usize
pub fn make_inst_results_for_parser(
&mut self,
inst: Inst,
ctrl_typevar: Type,
reuse: &[Value]
) -> usize
Create result values for inst
, reusing the provided detached values.
This is similar to make_inst_results_reusing
except it’s only for use
in the parser, which needs to reuse previously invalid values.
sourcepub fn append_block_param_for_parser(&mut self, block: Block, ty: Type, val: Value)
pub fn append_block_param_for_parser(&mut self, block: Block, ty: Type, val: Value)
Similar to append_block_param
, append a parameter with type ty
to
block
, but using value val
. This is only for use by the parser to
create parameters with specific values.
sourcepub fn make_value_alias_for_serialization(&mut self, src: Value, dest: Value)
pub fn make_value_alias_for_serialization(&mut self, src: Value, dest: Value)
Create a new value alias. This is only for use by the parser to create aliases with specific values, and the printer for testing.
sourcepub fn value_alias_dest_for_serialization(&self, v: Value) -> Option<Value>
pub fn value_alias_dest_for_serialization(&self, v: Value) -> Option<Value>
If v
is already defined as an alias, return its destination value.
Otherwise return None. This allows the parser to coalesce identical
alias definitions, and the printer to identify an alias’s immediate target.
sourcepub fn set_alias_type_for_parser(&mut self, v: Value) -> bool
pub fn set_alias_type_for_parser(&mut self, v: Value) -> bool
Compute the type of an alias. This is only for use in the parser. Returns false if an alias cycle was encountered.
sourcepub fn make_invalid_value_for_parser(&mut self)
pub fn make_invalid_value_for_parser(&mut self)
Create an invalid value, to pad the index space. This is only for use by the parser to pad out the value index space.
sourcepub fn value_is_valid_for_parser(&self, v: Value) -> bool
pub fn value_is_valid_for_parser(&self, v: Value) -> bool
Check if a value reference is valid, while being aware of aliases which may be unresolved while parsing.
Trait Implementations§
source§impl Clone for DataFlowGraph
impl Clone for DataFlowGraph
source§fn clone(&self) -> DataFlowGraph
fn clone(&self) -> DataFlowGraph
1.0.0 · source§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source
. Read moresource§impl Index<Inst> for DataFlowGraph
impl Index<Inst> for DataFlowGraph
Allow immutable access to instructions via indexing.