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- /* Generic dominator tree walker
- Copyright (C) 2003-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- Contributed by Diego Novillo <dnovillo@redhat.com>
- This file is part of GCC.
- GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option)
- any later version.
- GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see
- <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
- #include "config.h"
- #include "system.h"
- #include "coretypes.h"
- #include "tm.h"
- #include "predict.h"
- #include "vec.h"
- #include "hashtab.h"
- #include "hash-set.h"
- #include "machmode.h"
- #include "hard-reg-set.h"
- #include "input.h"
- #include "function.h"
- #include "dominance.h"
- #include "cfg.h"
- #include "cfganal.h"
- #include "basic-block.h"
- #include "domwalk.h"
- #include "sbitmap.h"
- /* This file implements a generic walker for dominator trees.
- To understand the dominator walker one must first have a grasp of dominators,
- immediate dominators and the dominator tree.
- Dominators
- A block B1 is said to dominate B2 if every path from the entry to B2 must
- pass through B1. Given the dominance relationship, we can proceed to
- compute immediate dominators. Note it is not important whether or not
- our definition allows a block to dominate itself.
- Immediate Dominators:
- Every block in the CFG has no more than one immediate dominator. The
- immediate dominator of block BB must dominate BB and must not dominate
- any other dominator of BB and must not be BB itself.
- Dominator tree:
- If we then construct a tree where each node is a basic block and there
- is an edge from each block's immediate dominator to the block itself, then
- we have a dominator tree.
- [ Note this walker can also walk the post-dominator tree, which is
- defined in a similar manner. i.e., block B1 is said to post-dominate
- block B2 if all paths from B2 to the exit block must pass through
- B1. ]
- For example, given the CFG
- 1
- |
- 2
- / \
- 3 4
- / \
- +---------->5 6
- | / \ /
- | +--->8 7
- | | / |
- | +--9 11
- | / |
- +--- 10 ---> 12
- We have a dominator tree which looks like
- 1
- |
- 2
- / \
- / \
- 3 4
- / / \ \
- | | | |
- 5 6 7 12
- | |
- 8 11
- |
- 9
- |
- 10
- The dominator tree is the basis for a number of analysis, transformation
- and optimization algorithms that operate on a semi-global basis.
- The dominator walker is a generic routine which visits blocks in the CFG
- via a depth first search of the dominator tree. In the example above
- the dominator walker might visit blocks in the following order
- 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 6, 7, 11, 12.
- The dominator walker has a number of callbacks to perform actions
- during the walk of the dominator tree. There are two callbacks
- which walk statements, one before visiting the dominator children,
- one after visiting the dominator children. There is a callback
- before and after each statement walk callback. In addition, the
- dominator walker manages allocation/deallocation of data structures
- which are local to each block visited.
- The dominator walker is meant to provide a generic means to build a pass
- which can analyze or transform/optimize a function based on walking
- the dominator tree. One simply fills in the dominator walker data
- structure with the appropriate callbacks and calls the walker.
- We currently use the dominator walker to prune the set of variables
- which might need PHI nodes (which can greatly improve compile-time
- performance in some cases).
- We also use the dominator walker to rewrite the function into SSA form
- which reduces code duplication since the rewriting phase is inherently
- a walk of the dominator tree.
- And (of course), we use the dominator walker to drive our dominator
- optimizer, which is a semi-global optimizer.
- TODO:
- Walking statements is based on the block statement iterator abstraction,
- which is currently an abstraction over walking tree statements. Thus
- the dominator walker is currently only useful for trees. */
- static int *bb_postorder;
- static int
- cmp_bb_postorder (const void *a, const void *b)
- {
- basic_block bb1 = *(basic_block *)const_cast<void *>(a);
- basic_block bb2 = *(basic_block *)const_cast<void *>(b);
- if (bb1->index == bb2->index)
- return 0;
- /* Place higher completion number first (pop off lower number first). */
- if (bb_postorder[bb1->index] > bb_postorder[bb2->index])
- return -1;
- return 1;
- }
- /* Recursively walk the dominator tree.
- BB is the basic block we are currently visiting. */
- void
- dom_walker::walk (basic_block bb)
- {
- basic_block dest;
- basic_block *worklist = XNEWVEC (basic_block,
- n_basic_blocks_for_fn (cfun) * 2);
- int sp = 0;
- int *postorder, postorder_num;
- if (m_dom_direction == CDI_DOMINATORS)
- {
- postorder = XNEWVEC (int, n_basic_blocks_for_fn (cfun));
- postorder_num = inverted_post_order_compute (postorder);
- bb_postorder = XNEWVEC (int, last_basic_block_for_fn (cfun));
- for (int i = 0; i < postorder_num; ++i)
- bb_postorder[postorder[i]] = i;
- free (postorder);
- }
- while (true)
- {
- /* Don't worry about unreachable blocks. */
- if (EDGE_COUNT (bb->preds) > 0
- || bb == ENTRY_BLOCK_PTR_FOR_FN (cfun)
- || bb == EXIT_BLOCK_PTR_FOR_FN (cfun))
- {
- /* Callback for subclasses to do custom things before we have walked
- the dominator children, but before we walk statements. */
- before_dom_children (bb);
- /* Mark the current BB to be popped out of the recursion stack
- once children are processed. */
- worklist[sp++] = bb;
- worklist[sp++] = NULL;
- int saved_sp = sp;
- for (dest = first_dom_son (m_dom_direction, bb);
- dest; dest = next_dom_son (m_dom_direction, dest))
- worklist[sp++] = dest;
- if (m_dom_direction == CDI_DOMINATORS)
- switch (sp - saved_sp)
- {
- case 0:
- case 1:
- break;
- default:
- qsort (&worklist[saved_sp], sp - saved_sp,
- sizeof (basic_block), cmp_bb_postorder);
- }
- }
- /* NULL is used to mark pop operations in the recursion stack. */
- while (sp > 0 && !worklist[sp - 1])
- {
- --sp;
- bb = worklist[--sp];
- /* Callback allowing subclasses to do custom things after we have
- walked dominator children, but before we walk statements. */
- after_dom_children (bb);
- }
- if (sp)
- bb = worklist[--sp];
- else
- break;
- }
- if (m_dom_direction == CDI_DOMINATORS)
- {
- free (bb_postorder);
- bb_postorder = NULL;
- }
- free (worklist);
- }
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