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GNU Info File
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1992-09-10
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This is Info file gcc.info, produced by Makeinfo-1.47 from the input
file gcc.texinfo.
This file documents the use and the internals of the GNU compiler.
Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also
that the sections entitled "GNU General Public License" and "Protect
Your Freedom--Fight `Look And Feel'" are included exactly as in the
original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is
distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this
one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
versions, except that the sections entitled "GNU General Public
License" and "Protect Your Freedom--Fight `Look And Feel'" and this
permission notice may be included in translations approved by the Free
Software Foundation instead of in the original English.
File: gcc.info, Node: Registers, Next: Register Classes, Prev: Storage Layout, Up: Machine Macros
Register Usage
==============
`FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER'
Number of hardware registers known to the compiler. They receive
numbers 0 through `FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER-1'; thus, the first
pseudo register's number really is assigned the number
`FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER'.
`FIXED_REGISTERS'
An initializer that says which registers are used for fixed
purposes all throughout the compiled code and are therefore not
available for general allocation. These would include the stack
pointer, the frame pointer (except on machines where that can be
used as a general register when no frame pointer is needed), the
program counter on machines where that is considered one of the
addressable registers, and any other numbered register with a
standard use.
This information is expressed as a sequence of numbers, separated
by commas and surrounded by braces. The Nth number is 1 if
register N is fixed, 0 otherwise.
The table initialized from this macro, and the table initialized by
the following one, may be overridden at run time either
automatically, by the actions of the macro
`CONDITIONAL_REGISTER_USAGE', or by the user with the command
options `-ffixed-REG', `-fcall-used-REG' and `-fcall-saved-REG'.
`CALL_USED_REGISTERS'
Like `FIXED_REGISTERS' but has 1 for each register that is
clobbered (in general) by function calls as well as for fixed
registers. This macro therefore identifies the registers that are
not available for general allocation of values that must live
across function calls.
If a register has 0 in `CALL_USED_REGISTERS', the compiler
automatically saves it on function entry and restores it on
function exit, if the register is used within the function.
`DEFAULT_CALLER_SAVES'
Define this macro if function calls on the target machine do not
preserve any registers; in other words, if `CALL_USED_REGISTERS'
has 1 for all registers. This macro enables `-fcaller-saves' by
default. Eventually that option will be enabled by default on all
machines and both the option and this macro will be eliminated.
`CONDITIONAL_REGISTER_USAGE'
Zero or more C statements that may conditionally modify two
variables `fixed_regs' and `call_used_regs' (both of type `char
[]') after they have been initialized from the two preceding
macros.
This is necessary in case the fixed or call-clobbered registers
depend on target flags.
You need not define this macro if it has no work to do.
If the usage of an entire class of registers depends on the target
flags, you may indicate this to GCC by using this macro to modify
`fixed_regs' and `call_used_regs' to 1 for each of the registers
in the classes which should not be used by GCC. Also define the
macro `REG_CLASS_FROM_LETTER' to return `NO_REGS' if it is called
with a letter for a class that shouldn't be used.
(However, if this class is not included in `GENERAL_REGS' and all
of the insn patterns whose constraints permit this class are
controlled by target switches, then GCC will automatically avoid
using these registers when the target switches are opposed to
them.)
`OVERLAPPING_REGNO_P (REGNO)'
If defined, this is a C expression whose value is nonzero if hard
register number REGNO is an overlapping register. This means a
hard register which overlaps a hard register with a different
number. (Such overlap is undesirable, but occasionally it allows a
machine to be supported which otherwise could not be.) This macro
must return nonzero for *all* the registers which overlap each
other. GNU CC can use an overlapping register only in certain
limited ways. It can be used for allocation within a basic block,
and may be spilled for reloading; that is all.
If this macro is not defined, it means that none of the hard
registers overlap each other. This is the usual situation.
`INSN_CLOBBERS_REGNO_P (INSN, REGNO)'
If defined, this is a C expression whose value should be nonzero if
the insn INSN has the effect of mysteriously clobbering the
contents of hard register number REGNO. By "mysterious" we mean
that the insn's RTL expression doesn't describe such an effect.
If this macro is not defined, it means that no insn clobbers
registers mysteriously. This is the usual situation; all else
being equal, it is best for the RTL expression to show all the
activity.
`PRESERVE_DEATH_INFO_REGNO_P (REGNO)'
If defined, this is a C expression whose value is nonzero if
accurate `REG_DEAD' notes are needed for hard register number REGNO
at the time of outputting the assembler code. When this is so, a
few optimizations that take place after register allocation and
could invalidate the death notes are not done when this register is
involved.
You would arrange to preserve death info for a register when some
of the code in the machine description which is executed to write
the assembler code looks at the death notes. This is necessary
only when the actual hardware feature which GNU CC thinks of as a
register is not actually a register of the usual sort. (It might,
for example, be a hardware stack.)
If this macro is not defined, it means that no death notes need to
be preserved. This is the usual situation.
`HARD_REGNO_NREGS (REGNO, MODE)'
A C expression for the number of consecutive hard registers,
starting at register number REGNO, required to hold a value of mode
MODE.
On a machine where all registers are exactly one word, a suitable
definition of this macro is
#define HARD_REGNO_NREGS(REGNO, MODE) \
((GET_MODE_SIZE (MODE) + UNITS_PER_WORD - 1) \
/ UNITS_PER_WORD))
`HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK (REGNO, MODE)'
A C expression that is nonzero if it is permissible to store a
value of mode MODE in hard register number REGNO (or in several
registers starting with that one). For a machine where all
registers are equivalent, a suitable definition is
#define HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK(REGNO, MODE) 1
It is not necessary for this macro to check for the numbers of
fixed registers, because the allocation mechanism considers them
to be always occupied.
On some machines, double-precision values must be kept in even/odd
register pairs. The way to implement that is to define this macro
to reject odd register numbers for such modes.
GNU CC assumes that it can always move values between registers and
(suitably addressed) memory locations. If it is impossible to
move a value of a certain mode between memory and certain
registers, then `HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK' must not allow this mode in
those registers.
Many machines have special registers for floating point arithmetic.
Often people assume that floating point machine modes are allowed
only in floating point registers. This is not true. Any
registers that can hold integers can safely *hold* a floating
point machine mode, whether or not floating arithmetic can be done
on it in those registers.
On some machines, though, the converse is true: fixed-point machine
modes may not go in floating registers. This is true if the
floating registers normalize any value stored in them, because
storing a non-floating value there would garble it. In this case,
`HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK' should reject fixed-point machine modes in
floating registers. But if the floating registers do not
automatically normalize, if you can store any bit pattern in one
and retrieve it unchanged without a trap, then any machine mode
may go in a floating register and this macro should say so.
The primary significance of special floating registers is rather
that they are the registers acceptable in floating point arithmetic
instructions. However, this is of no concern to
`HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK'. You handle it by writing the proper
constraints for those instructions.
On some machines, the floating registers are especially slow to
access, so that it is better to store a value in a stack frame
than in such a register if floating point arithmetic is not being
done. As long as the floating registers are not in class
`GENERAL_REGS', they will not be used unless some insn's
constraint asks for one.
`MODES_TIEABLE_P (MODE1, MODE2)'
A C expression that is nonzero if it is desirable to choose
register allocation so as to avoid move instructions between a
value of mode MODE1 and a value of mode MODE2.
If `HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK (R, MODE1)' and `HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK (R,
MODE2)' are ever different for any R, then `MODES_TIEABLE_P (MODE1,
MODE2)' must be zero.
`PC_REGNUM'
If the program counter has a register number, define this as that
register number. Otherwise, do not define it.
`STACK_POINTER_REGNUM'
The register number of the stack pointer register, which must also
be a fixed register according to `FIXED_REGISTERS'. On many
machines, the hardware determines which register this is.
`FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM'
The register number of the frame pointer register, which is used to
access automatic variables in the stack frame. On some machines,
the hardware determines which register this is. On other
machines, you can choose any register you wish for this purpose.
`FRAME_POINTER_REQUIRED'
A C expression which is nonzero if a function must have and use a
frame pointer. This expression is evaluated twice: at the
beginning of generating RTL, and in the reload pass. If its value
is nonzero at either time, then the function will have a frame
pointer.
The expression can in principle examine the current function and
decide according to the facts, but on most machines the constant 0
or the constant 1 suffices. Use 0 when the machine allows code to
be generated with no frame pointer, and doing so saves some time
or space. Use 1 when there is no possible advantage to avoiding a
frame pointer.
In certain cases, the compiler does not know how to produce valid
code without a frame pointer. The compiler recognizes those cases
and automatically gives the function a frame pointer regardless of
what `FRAME_POINTER_REQUIRED' says. You don't need to worry about
them.
In a function that does not require a frame pointer, the frame
pointer register can be allocated for ordinary usage, unless you
mark it as a fixed register. See `FIXED_REGISTERS' for more
information.
`ARG_POINTER_REGNUM'
The register number of the arg pointer register, which is used to
access the function's argument list. On some machines, this is the
same as the frame pointer register. On some machines, the hardware
determines which register this is. On other machines, you can
choose any register you wish for this purpose. If this is not the
same register as the frame pointer register, then you must mark it
as a fixed register according to `FIXED_REGISTERS'.
`STATIC_CHAIN_REGNUM'
The register number used for passing a function's static chain
pointer. This is needed for languages such as Pascal and Algol
where functions defined within other functions can access the local
variables of the outer functions; it is not currently used because
C does not provide this feature, but you must define the macro.
The static chain register need not be a fixed register.
`STRUCT_VALUE_REGNUM'
When a function's value's mode is `BLKmode', the value is not
returned according to `FUNCTION_VALUE'. Instead, the caller
passes the address of a block of memory in which the value should
be stored.
If this value is passed in a register, then `STRUCT_VALUE_REGNUM'
should be the number of that register.
`STRUCT_VALUE'
If the structure value address is not passed in a register, define
`STRUCT_VALUE' as an expression returning an RTX for the place
where the address is passed. If it returns a `mem' RTX, the
address is passed as an "invisible" first argument.
`STRUCT_VALUE_INCOMING_REGNUM'
On some architectures the place where the structure value address
is found by the called function is not the same place that the
caller put it. This can be due to register windows, or it could
be because the function prologue moves it to a different place.
If the incoming location of the structure value address is in a
register, define this macro as the register number.
`STRUCT_VALUE_INCOMING'
If the incoming location is not a register, define
`STRUCT_VALUE_INCOMING' as an expression for an RTX for where the
called function should find the value. If it should find the
value on the stack, define this to create a `mem' which refers to
the frame pointer. If the value is a `mem', the compiler assumes
it is for an invisible first argument, and leaves space for it when
finding the first real argument.
`REG_ALLOC_ORDER'
If defined, an initializer for a vector of integers, containing the
numbers of hard registers in the order in which the GNU CC should
prefer to use them (from most preferred to least).
If this macro is not defined, registers are used lowest numbered
first (all else being equal).
One use of this macro is on the 360, where the highest numbered
registers must always be saved and the save-multiple-registers
instruction supports only sequences of consecutive registers. This
macro is defined to cause the highest numbered allocatable
registers to be used first.
File: gcc.info, Node: Register Classes, Next: Stack Layout, Prev: Registers, Up: Machine Macros
Register Classes
================
On many machines, the numbered registers are not all equivalent. For
example, certain registers may not be allowed for indexed addressing;
certain registers may not be allowed in some instructions. These
machine restrictions are described to the compiler using "register
classes".
You define a number of register classes, giving each one a name and
saying which of the registers belong to it. Then you can specify
register classes that are allowed as operands to particular instruction
patterns.
In general, each register will belong to several classes. In fact,
one class must be named `ALL_REGS' and contain all the registers.
Another class must be named `NO_REGS' and contain no registers. Often
the union of two classes will be another class; however, this is not
required.
One of the classes must be named `GENERAL_REGS'. There is nothing
terribly special about the name, but the operand constraint letters `r'
and `g' specify this class. If `GENERAL_REGS' is the same as
`ALL_REGS', just define it as a macro which expands to `ALL_REGS'.
The way classes other than `GENERAL_REGS' are specified in operand
constraints is through machine-dependent operand constraint letters.
You can define such letters to correspond to various classes, then use
them in operand constraints.
You should define a class for the union of two classes whenever some
instruction allows both classes. For example, if an instruction allows
either a floating-point (coprocessor) register or a general register
for a certain operand, you should define a class `FLOAT_OR_GENERAL_REGS'
which includes both of them. Otherwise you will get suboptimal code.
You must also specify certain redundant information about the
register classes: for each class, which classes contain it and which
ones are contained in it; for each pair of classes, the largest class
contained in their union.
When a value occupying several consecutive registers is expected in a
certain class, all the registers used must belong to that class.
Therefore, register classes cannot be used to enforce a requirement for
a register pair to start with an even-numbered register. The way to
specify this requirement is with `HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK'.
Register classes used for input-operands of bitwise-and or shift
instructions have a special requirement: each such class must have, for
each fixed-point machine mode, a subclass whose registers can transfer
that mode to or from memory. For example, on some machines, the
operations for single-byte values (`QImode') are limited to certain
registers. When this is so, each register class that is used in a
bitwise-and or shift instruction must have a subclass consisting of
registers from which single-byte values can be loaded or stored. This
is so that `PREFERRED_RELOAD_CLASS' can always have a possible value to
return.
`enum reg_class'
An enumeral type that must be defined with all the register class
names as enumeral values. `NO_REGS' must be first. `ALL_REGS'
must be the last register class, followed by one more enumeral
value, `LIM_REG_CLASSES', which is not a register class but rather
tells how many classes there are.
Each register class has a number, which is the value of casting
the class name to type `int'. The number serves as an index in
many of the tables described below.
`N_REG_CLASSES'
The number of distinct register classes, defined as follows:
#define N_REG_CLASSES (int) LIM_REG_CLASSES
`REG_CLASS_NAMES'
An initializer containing the names of the register classes as C
string constants. These names are used in writing some of the
debugging dumps.
`REG_CLASS_CONTENTS'
An initializer containing the contents of the register classes, as
integers which are bit masks. The Nth integer specifies the
contents of class N. The way the integer MASK is interpreted is
that register R is in the class if `MASK & (1 << R)' is 1.
When the machine has more than 32 registers, an integer does not
suffice. Then the integers are replaced by sub-initializers,
braced groupings containing several integers. Each
sub-initializer must be suitable as an initializer for the type
`HARD_REG_SET' which is defined in `hard-reg-set.h'.
`REGNO_REG_CLASS (REGNO)'
A C expression whose value is a register class containing hard
register REGNO. In general there is more that one such class;
choose a class which is "minimal", meaning that no smaller class
also contains the register.
`BASE_REG_CLASS'
A macro whose definition is the name of the class to which a valid
base register must belong. A base register is one used in an
address which is the register value plus a displacement.
`INDEX_REG_CLASS'
A macro whose definition is the name of the class to which a valid
index register must belong. An index register is one used in an
address where its value is either multiplied by a scale factor or
added to another register (as well as added to a displacement).
`REG_CLASS_FROM_LETTER (CHAR)'
A C expression which defines the machine-dependent operand
constraint letters for register classes. If CHAR is such a
letter, the value should be the register class corresponding to
it. Otherwise, the value should be `NO_REGS'.
`REGNO_OK_FOR_BASE_P (NUM)'
A C expression which is nonzero if register number NUM is suitable
for use as a base register in operand addresses. It may be either
a suitable hard register or a pseudo register that has been
allocated such a hard register.
`REGNO_OK_FOR_INDEX_P (NUM)'
A C expression which is nonzero if register number NUM is suitable
for use as an index register in operand addresses. It may be
either a suitable hard register or a pseudo register that has been
allocated such a hard register.
The difference between an index register and a base register is
that the index register may be scaled. If an address involves the
sum of two registers, neither one of them scaled, then either one
may be labeled the "base" and the other the "index"; but whichever
labeling is used must fit the machine's constraints of which
registers may serve in each capacity. The compiler will try both
labelings, looking for one that is valid, and will reload one or
both registers only if neither labeling works.
`PREFERRED_RELOAD_CLASS (X, CLASS)'
A C expression that places additional restrictions on the register
class to use when it is necessary to copy value X into a register
in class CLASS. The value is a register class; perhaps CLASS, or
perhaps another, smaller class. On many machines, the definition
#define PREFERRED_RELOAD_CLASS(X,CLASS) CLASS
is safe.
Sometimes returning a more restrictive class makes better code.
For example, on the 68000, when X is an integer constant that is
in range for a `moveq' instruction, the value of this macro is
always `DATA_REGS' as long as CLASS includes the data registers.
Requiring a data register guarantees that a `moveq' will be used.
If X is a `const_double', by returning `NO_REGS' you can force X
into a memory constant. This is useful on certain machines where
immediate floating values cannot be loaded into certain kinds of
registers.
In a shift instruction or a bitwise-and instruction, the mode of X,
the value being reloaded, may not be the same as the mode of the
instruction's operand. (They will both be fixed-point modes,
however.) In such a case, CLASS may not be a safe value to
return. CLASS is certainly valid for the instruction, but it may
not be valid for reloading X. This problem can occur on machines
such as the 68000 and 80386 where some registers can handle
full-word values but cannot handle single-byte values.
On such machines, this macro must examine the mode of X and return
a subclass of CLASS which can handle loads and stores of that
mode. On the 68000, where address registers cannot handle
`QImode', if X has `QImode' then you must return `DATA_REGS'. If
CLASS is `ADDR_REGS', then there is no correct value to return;
but the shift and bitwise-and instructions don't use `ADDR_REGS',
so this fatal case never arises.
`CLASS_MAX_NREGS (CLASS, MODE)'
A C expression for the maximum number of consecutive registers of
class CLASS needed to hold a value of mode MODE.
This is closely related to the macro `HARD_REGNO_NREGS'. In fact,
the value of the macro `CLASS_MAX_NREGS (CLASS, MODE)' should be
the maximum value of `HARD_REGNO_NREGS (REGNO, MODE)' for all
REGNO values in the class CLASS.
This macro helps control the handling of multiple-word values in
the reload pass.
Two other special macros describe which constants fit which
constraint letters.
`CONST_OK_FOR_LETTER_P (VALUE, C)'
A C expression that defines the machine-dependent operand
constraint letters that specify particular ranges of integer
values. If C is one of those letters, the expression should check
that VALUE, an integer, is in the appropriate range and return 1
if so, 0 otherwise. If C is not one of those letters, the value
should be 0 regardless of VALUE.
`CONST_DOUBLE_OK_FOR_LETTER_P (VALUE, C)'
A C expression that defines the machine-dependent operand
constraint letters that specify particular ranges of floating
values. If C is one of those letters, the expression should check
that VALUE, an RTX of code `const_double', is in the appropriate
range and return 1 if so, 0 otherwise. If C is not one of those
letters, the value should be 0 regardless of VALUE.
File: gcc.info, Node: Stack Layout, Next: Library Calls, Prev: Register Classes, Up: Machine Macros
Describing Stack Layout
=======================
`STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD'
Define this macro if pushing a word onto the stack moves the stack
pointer to a smaller address.
When we say, "define this macro if ...," it means that the
compiler checks this macro only with `#ifdef' so the precise
definition used does not matter.
`FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARD'
Define this macro if the addresses of local variable slots are at
negative offsets from the frame pointer.
`STARTING_FRAME_OFFSET'
Offset from the frame pointer to the first local variable slot to
be allocated.
If `FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARD', the next slot's offset is found by
subtracting the length of the first slot from
`STARTING_FRAME_OFFSET'. Otherwise, it is found by adding the
length of the first slot to the value `STARTING_FRAME_OFFSET'.
`PUSH_ROUNDING (NPUSHED)'
A C expression that is the number of bytes actually pushed onto the
stack when an instruction attempts to push NPUSHED bytes.
If the target machine does not have a push instruction, do not
define this macro. That directs GNU CC to use an alternate
strategy: to allocate the entire argument block and then store the
arguments into it.
On some machines, the definition
#define PUSH_ROUNDING(BYTES) (BYTES)
will suffice. But on other machines, instructions that appear to
push one byte actually push two bytes in an attempt to maintain
alignment. Then the definition should be
#define PUSH_ROUNDING(BYTES) (((BYTES) + 1) & ~1)
`FIRST_PARM_OFFSET (FUNDECL)'
Offset from the argument pointer register to the first argument's
address. On some machines it may depend on the data type of the
function. (In the next version of GNU CC, the argument will be
changed to the function data type rather than its declaration.)
`FIRST_PARM_CALLER_OFFSET (FUNDECL)'
Define this macro on machines where register parameters have shadow
locations on the stack, at addresses below the nominal parameter.
This matters because certain arguments cannot be passed on the
stack. On these machines, such arguments must be stored into the
shadow locations.
This macro should expand into a C expression whose value is the
offset of the first parameter's shadow location from the nominal
stack pointer value. (That value is itself computed by adding the
value of `STACK_POINTER_OFFSET' to the stack pointer register.)
`REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE'
Define this macro if functions should assume that stack space has
been allocated for arguments even when their values are passed in
registers.
The actual allocation of such space would be done either by the
call instruction or by the function prologue, or by defining
`FIRST_PARM_CALLER_OFFSET'.
`STACK_ARGS_ADJUST (SIZE)'
Define this macro if the machine requires padding on the stack for
certain function calls. This is padding on a per-function-call
basis, not padding for individual arguments.
The argument SIZE will be a C variable of type `struct arg_data'
which contains two fields, an integer named `constant' and an RTX
named `var'. These together represent a size measured in bytes
which is the sum of the integer and the RTX. Most of the time
`var' is 0, which means that the size is simply the integer.
The definition should be a C statement or compound statement which
alters the variable supplied in whatever way you wish.
Note that the value you leave in the variable `size' will
ultimately be rounded up to a multiple of `STACK_BOUNDARY' bits.
This macro is not fully implemented for machines which have push
instructions (i.e., on which `PUSH_ROUNDING' is defined).
`RETURN_POPS_ARGS (FUNTYPE)'
A C expression that should be 1 if a function pops its own
arguments on returning, or 0 if the function pops no arguments and
the caller must therefore pop them all after the function returns.
FUNTYPE is a C variable whose value is a tree node that describes
the function in question. Normally it is a node of type
`FUNCTION_TYPE' that describes the data type of the function. From
this it is possible to obtain the data types of the value and
arguments (if known).
When a call to a library function is being considered, FUNTYPE
will contain an identifier node for the library function. Thus, if
you need to distinguish among various library functions, you can
do so by their names. Note that "library function" in this
context means a function used to perform arithmetic, whose name is
known specially in the compiler and was not mentioned in the C
code being compiled.
On the Vax, all functions always pop their arguments, so the
definition of this macro is 1. On the 68000, using the standard
calling convention, no functions pop their arguments, so the value
of the macro is always 0 in this case. But an alternative calling
convention is available in which functions that take a fixed
number of arguments pop them but other functions (such as
`printf') pop nothing (the caller pops all). When this convention
is in use, FUNTYPE is examined to determine whether a function
takes a fixed number of arguments.
When this macro returns nonzero, the macro `FRAME_POINTER_REQUIRED'
must also return nonzero for proper operation.
`FUNCTION_VALUE (VALTYPE, FUNC)'
A C expression to create an RTX representing the place where a
function returns a value of data type VALTYPE. VALTYPE is a tree
node representing a data type. Write `TYPE_MODE (VALTYPE)' to get
the machine mode used to represent that type. On many machines,
only the mode is relevant. (Actually, on most machines, scalar
values are returned in the same place regardless of mode).
If the precise function being called is known, FUNC is a tree node
(`FUNCTION_DECL') for it; otherwise, FUNC is a null pointer. This
makes it possible to use a different value-returning convention
for specific functions when all their calls are known.
`FUNCTION_OUTGOING_VALUE (VALTYPE, FUNC)'
Define this macro if the target machine has "register windows" so
that the register in which a function returns its value is not the
same as the one in which the caller sees the value.
For such machines, `FUNCTION_VALUE' computes the register in which
the caller will see the value, and `FUNCTION_OUTGOING_VALUE'
should be defined in a similar fashion to tell the function where
to put the value.
If `FUNCTION_OUTGOING_VALUE' is not defined, `FUNCTION_VALUE'
serves both purposes.
`RETURN_IN_MEMORY (TYPE)'
A C expression which can inhibit the returning of certain function
values in registers, based on the type of value. A nonzero value
says to return the function value in memory, just as large
structures are always returned. Here TYPE will be a C expression
of type `tree', representing the data type of the value.
Note that values of mode `BLKmode' are returned in memory
regardless of this macro. Also, the option `-fpcc-struct-return'
takes effect regardless of this macro. On most systems, it is
possible to leave the macro undefined; this causes a default
definition to be used, whose value is the constant 0.
`LIBCALL_VALUE (MODE)'
A C expression to create an RTX representing the place where a
library function returns a value of mode MODE. If the precise
function being called is known, FUNC is a tree node
(`FUNCTION_DECL') for it; otherwise, FUNC is a null pointer. This
makes it possible to use a different value-returning convention
for specific functions when all their calls are known.
Note that "library function" in this context means a compiler
support routine, used to perform arithmetic, whose name is known
specially by the compiler and was not mentioned in the C code being
compiled.
`FUNCTION_VALUE_REGNO_P (REGNO)'
A C expression that is nonzero if REGNO is the number of a hard
register in which the values of called function may come back.
A register whose use for returning values is limited to serving as
the second of a pair (for a value of type `double', say) need not
be recognized by this macro. So for most machines, this definition
suffices:
#define FUNCTION_VALUE_REGNO_P(N) ((N) == 0)
If the machine has register windows, so that the caller and the
called function use different registers for the return value, this
macro should recognize only the caller's register numbers.
`FUNCTION_ARG (CUM, MODE, TYPE, NAMED)'
A C expression that controls whether a function argument is passed
in a register, and which register.
The arguments are CUM, which summarizes all the previous
arguments; MODE, the machine mode of the argument; TYPE, the data
type of the argument as a tree node or 0 if that is not known
(which happens for C support library functions); and NAMED, which
is 1 for an ordinary argument and 0 for nameless arguments that
correspond to `...' in the called function's prototype.
The value of the expression should either be a `reg' RTX for the
hard register in which to pass the argument, or zero to pass the
argument on the stack.
For the Vax and 68000, where normally all arguments are pushed,
zero suffices as a definition.
The usual way to make the ANSI library `stdarg.h' work on a machine
where some arguments are usually passed in registers, is to cause
nameless arguments to be passed on the stack instead. This is done
by making `FUNCTION_ARG' return 0 whenever NAMED is 0.
`FUNCTION_INCOMING_ARG (CUM, MODE, TYPE, NAMED)'
Define this macro if the target machine has "register windows", so
that the register in which a function sees an arguments is not
necessarily the same as the one in which the caller passed the
argument.
For such machines, `FUNCTION_ARG' computes the register in which
the caller passes the value, and `FUNCTION_INCOMING_ARG' should be
defined in a similar fashion to tell the function being called
where the arguments will arrive.
If `FUNCTION_INCOMING_ARG' is not defined, `FUNCTION_ARG' serves
both purposes.
`FUNCTION_ARG_PARTIAL_NREGS (CUM, MODE, TYPE, NAMED)'
A C expression for the number of words, at the beginning of an
argument, must be put in registers. The value must be zero for
arguments that are passed entirely in registers or that are
entirely pushed on the stack.
On some machines, certain arguments must be passed partially in
registers and partially in memory. On these machines, typically
the first N words of arguments are passed in registers, and the
rest on the stack. If a multi-word argument (a `double' or a
structure) crosses that boundary, its first few words must be
passed in registers and the rest must be pushed. This macro tells
the compiler when this occurs, and how many of the words should go
in registers.
`FUNCTION_ARG' for these arguments should return the first
register to be used by the caller for this argument; likewise
`FUNCTION_INCOMING_ARG', for the called function.
`CUMULATIVE_ARGS'
A C type for declaring a variable that is used as the first
argument of `FUNCTION_ARG' and other related values. For some
target machines, the type `int' suffices and can hold the number of
bytes of argument so far.
`INIT_CUMULATIVE_ARGS (CUM, FNTYPE)'
A C statement (sans semicolon) for initializing the variable CUM
for the state at the beginning of the argument list. The variable
has type `CUMULATIVE_ARGS'. The value of FNTYPE is the tree node
for the data type of the function which will receive the args, or 0
if the args are to a compiler support library function.
`FUNCTION_ARG_ADVANCE (CUM, MODE, TYPE, NAMED)'
A C statement (sans semicolon) to update the summarizer variable
CUM to advance past an argument in the argument list. The values
MODE, TYPE and NAMED describe that argument. Once this is done,
the variable CUM is suitable for analyzing the *following*
argument with `FUNCTION_ARG', etc.
`FUNCTION_ARG_REGNO_P (REGNO)'
A C expression that is nonzero if REGNO is the number of a hard
register in which function arguments are sometimes passed. This
does *not* include implicit arguments such as the static chain and
the structure-value address. On many machines, no registers can be
used for this purpose since all function arguments are pushed on
the stack.
`FUNCTION_ARG_PADDING (MODE, SIZE)'
If defined, a C expression which determines whether, and in which
direction, to pad out an argument with extra space. The value
should be of type `enum direction': either `upward' to pad above
the argument, `downward' to pad below, or `none' to inhibit
padding.
The argument SIZE is an RTX which describes the size of the
argument, in bytes. It should be used only if MODE is `BLKmode'.
Otherwise, SIZE is 0.
This macro does not control the *amount* of padding; that is
always just enough to reach the next multiple of `PARM_BOUNDARY'.
This macro has a default definition which is right for most
systems. For little-endian machines, the default is to pad upward.
For big-endian machines, the default is to pad downward for an
argument of constant size shorter than an `int', and upward
otherwise.
`FUNCTION_PROLOGUE (FILE, SIZE)'
A C compound statement that outputs the assembler code for entry
to a function. The prologue is responsible for setting up the
stack frame, initializing the frame pointer register, saving
registers that must be saved, and allocating SIZE additional bytes
of storage for the local variables. SIZE is an integer. FILE is
a stdio stream to which the assembler code should be output.
The label for the beginning of the function need not be output by
this macro. That has already been done when the macro is run.
To determine which registers to save, the macro can refer to the
array `regs_ever_live': element R is nonzero if hard register R is
used anywhere within the function. This implies the function
prologue should save register R, but not if it is one of the
call-used registers.
On machines where functions may or may not have frame-pointers, the
function entry code must vary accordingly; it must set up the frame
pointer if one is wanted, and not otherwise. To determine whether
a frame pointer is in wanted, the macro can refer to the variable
`frame_pointer_needed'. The variable's value will be 1 at run
time in a function that needs a frame pointer.
On machines where an argument may be passed partly in registers and
partly in memory, this macro must examine the variable
`current_function_pretend_args_size', and allocate that many bytes
of uninitialized space on the stack just underneath the first
argument arriving on the stack. (This may not be at the very end
of the stack, if the calling sequence has pushed anything else
since pushing the stack arguments. But usually, on such machines,
nothing else has been pushed yet, because the function prologue
itself does all the pushing.)
`FUNCTION_PROFILER (FILE, LABELNO)'
A C statement or compound statement to output to FILE some
assembler code to call the profiling subroutine `mcount'. Before
calling, the assembler code must load the address of a counter
variable into a register where `mcount' expects to find the
address. The name of this variable is `LP' followed by the number
LABELNO, so you would generate the name using `LP%d' in a
`fprintf'.
The details of how the address should be passed to `mcount' are
determined by your operating system environment, not by GNU CC. To
figure them out, compile a small program for profiling using the
system's installed C compiler and look at the assembler code that
results.
`FUNCTION_BLOCK_PROFILER (FILE, LABELNO)'
A C statement or compound statement to output to FILE some
assembler code to initialize basic-block profiling for the current
object module. This code should call the subroutine
`__bb_init_func' once per object module, passing it as its sole
argument the address of a block allocated in the object module.
The name of the block is a local symbol made with this statement:
ASM_GENERATE_INTERNAL_LABEL (BUFFER, "LPBX", 0);
Of course, since you are writing the definition of
`ASM_GENERATE_INTERNAL_LABEL' as well as that of this macro, you
can take a short cut in the definition of this macro and use the
name that you know will result.
The first word of this block is a flag which will be nonzero if the
object module has already been initialized. So test this word
first, and do not call `__bb_init_func' if the flag is nonzero.
`BLOCK_PROFILER (FILE, BLOCKNO)'
A C statement or compound statement to increment the count
associated with the basic block number BLOCKNO. Basic blocks are
numbered separately from zero within each compilation. The count
associated with block number BLOCKNO is at index BLOCKNO in a
vector of words; the name of this array is a local symbol made
with this statement:
ASM_GENERATE_INTERNAL_LABEL (BUFFER, "LPBX", 2);
Of course, since you are writing the definition of
`ASM_GENERATE_INTERNAL_LABEL' as well as that of this macro, you
can take a short cut in the definition of this macro and use the
name that you know will result.
`EXIT_IGNORE_STACK'
Define this macro as a C expression that is nonzero if the return
instruction or the function epilogue ignores the value of the stack
pointer; in other words, if it is safe to delete an instruction to
adjust the stack pointer before a return from the function.
Note that this macro's value is relevant only for functions for
which frame pointers are maintained. It is never safe to delete a
final stack adjustment in a function that has no frame pointer,
and the compiler knows this regardless of `EXIT_IGNORE_STACK'.
`FUNCTION_EPILOGUE (FILE, SIZE)'
A C compound statement that outputs the assembler code for exit
from a function. The epilogue is responsible for restoring the
saved registers and stack pointer to their values when the
function was called, and returning control to the caller. This
macro takes the same arguments as the macro `FUNCTION_PROLOGUE',
and the registers to restore are determined from `regs_ever_live'
and `CALL_USED_REGISTERS' in the same way.
On some machines, there is a single instruction that does all the
work of returning from the function. On these machines, give that
instruction the name `return' and do not define the macro
`FUNCTION_EPILOGUE' at all.
Do not define a pattern named `return' if you want the
`FUNCTION_EPILOGUE' to be used. If you want the target switches
to control whether return instructions or epilogues are used,
define a `return' pattern with a validity condition that tests the
target switches appropriately. If the `return' pattern's validity
condition is false, epilogues will be used.
On machines where functions may or may not have frame-pointers, the
function exit code must vary accordingly. Sometimes the code for
these two cases is completely different. To determine whether a
frame pointer is in wanted, the macro can refer to the variable
`frame_pointer_needed'. The variable's value will be 1 at run
time in a function that needs a frame pointer.
On some machines, some functions pop their arguments on exit while
others leave that for the caller to do. For example, the 68020
when given `-mrtd' pops arguments in functions that take a fixed
number of arguments.
Your definition of the macro `RETURN_POPS_ARGS' decides which
functions pop their own arguments. `FUNCTION_EPILOGUE' needs to
know what was decided. The variable `current_function_pops_args'
is nonzero if the function should pop its own arguments. If so,
use the variable `current_function_args_size' as the number of
bytes to pop.
`FIX_FRAME_POINTER_ADDRESS (ADDR, DEPTH)'
A C compound statement to alter a memory address that uses the
frame pointer register so that it uses the stack pointer register
instead. This must be done in the instructions that load parameter
values into registers, when the reload pass determines that a
frame pointer is not necessary for the function. ADDR will be a C
variable name, and the updated address should be stored in that
variable. DEPTH will be the current depth of stack temporaries
(number of bytes of arguments currently pushed). The change in
offset between a frame-pointer-relative address and a
stack-pointer-relative address must include DEPTH.
Even if your machine description specifies there will always be a
frame pointer in the frame pointer register, you must still define
`FIX_FRAME_POINTER_ADDRESS', but the definition will never be
executed at run time, so it may be empty.
`LONGJMP_RESTORE_FROM_STACK'
Define this macro if the `longjmp' function restores registers
from the stack frames, rather than from those saved specifically by
`setjmp'. Certain quantities must not be kept in registers across
a call to `setjmp' on such machines.
File: gcc.info, Node: Library Calls, Next: Addressing Modes, Prev: Stack Layout, Up: Machine Macros
Implicit Use of Library Routines
================================
`MULSI3_LIBCALL'
A C string constant giving the name of the function to call for
multiplication of one signed full-word by another. If you do not
define this macro, the default name is used, which is `__mulsi3',
a function defined in `gnulib'.
`UMULSI3_LIBCALL'
A C string constant giving the name of the function to call for
multiplication of one unsigned full-word by another. If you do not
define this macro, the default name is used, which is `__umulsi3',
a function defined in `gnulib'.
`DIVSI3_LIBCALL'
A C string constant giving the name of the function to call for
division of one signed full-word by another. If you do not define
this macro, the default name is used, which is `__divsi3', a
function defined in `gnulib'.
`UDIVSI3_LIBCALL'
A C string constant giving the name of the function to call for
division of one unsigned full-word by another. If you do not
define this macro, the default name is used, which is `__udivsi3',
a function defined in `gnulib'.
`MODSI3_LIBCALL'
A C string constant giving the name of the function to call for the
remainder in division of one signed full-word by another. If you
do not define this macro, the default name is used, which is
`__modsi3', a function defined in `gnulib'.
`UMODSI3_LIBCALL'
A C string constant giving the name of the function to call for the
remainder in division of one unsigned full-word by another. If
you do not define this macro, the default name is used, which is
`__umodsi3', a function defined in `gnulib'.
`TARGET_MEM_FUNCTIONS'
Define this macro if GNU CC should generate calls to the System V
(and ANSI C) library functions `memcpy' and `memset' rather than
the BSD functions `bcopy' and `bzero'.
`GNULIB_NEEDS_DOUBLE'
Define this macro if only `float' arguments cannot be passed to
library routines (so they must be converted to `double'). This
macro affects both how library calls are generated and how the
library routines in `gnulib.c' accept their arguments. It is
useful on machines where floating and fixed point arguments are
passed differently, such as the i860.