| //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// | 
 | // Representing sign/zero extension of function results | 
 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// | 
 |  | 
 | Mar 25, 2009  - Initial Revision | 
 |  | 
 | Most ABIs specify that functions which return small integers do so in a | 
 | specific integer GPR.  This is an efficient way to go, but raises the question: | 
 | if the returned value is smaller than the register, what do the high bits hold? | 
 |  | 
 | There are three (interesting) possible answers: undefined, zero extended, or | 
 | sign extended.  The number of bits in question depends on the data-type that | 
 | the front-end is referencing (typically i1/i8/i16/i32). | 
 |  | 
 | Knowing the answer to this is important for two reasons: 1) we want to be able | 
 | to implement the ABI correctly.  If we need to sign extend the result according | 
 | to the ABI, we really really do need to do this to preserve correctness.  2) | 
 | this information is often useful for optimization purposes, and we want the | 
 | mid-level optimizers to be able to process this (e.g. eliminate redundant | 
 | extensions). | 
 |  | 
 | For example, lets pretend that X86 requires the caller to properly extend the | 
 | result of a return (I'm not sure this is the case, but the argument doesn't | 
 | depend on this).  Given this, we should compile this: | 
 |  | 
 | int a(); | 
 | short b() { return a(); } | 
 |  | 
 | into: | 
 |  | 
 | _b: | 
 | 	subl	$12, %esp | 
 | 	call	L_a$stub | 
 | 	addl	$12, %esp | 
 | 	cwtl | 
 | 	ret | 
 |  | 
 | An optimization example is that we should be able to eliminate the explicit | 
 | sign extension in this example: | 
 |  | 
 | short y(); | 
 | int z() { | 
 |   return ((int)y() << 16) >> 16; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | _z: | 
 | 	subl	$12, %esp | 
 | 	call	_y | 
 | 	;;  movswl %ax, %eax   -> not needed because eax is already sext'd | 
 | 	addl	$12, %esp | 
 | 	ret | 
 |  | 
 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// | 
 | // What we have right now. | 
 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// | 
 |  | 
 | Currently, these sorts of things are modelled by compiling a function to return | 
 | the small type and a signext/zeroext marker is used.  For example, we compile | 
 | Z into: | 
 |  | 
 | define i32 @z() nounwind { | 
 | entry: | 
 | 	%0 = tail call signext i16 (...)* @y() nounwind | 
 | 	%1 = sext i16 %0 to i32 | 
 | 	ret i32 %1 | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | and b into: | 
 |  | 
 | define signext i16 @b() nounwind { | 
 | entry: | 
 | 	%0 = tail call i32 (...)* @a() nounwind		; <i32> [#uses=1] | 
 | 	%retval12 = trunc i32 %0 to i16		; <i16> [#uses=1] | 
 | 	ret i16 %retval12 | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | This has some problems: 1) the actual precise semantics are really poorly | 
 | defined (see PR3779).  2) some targets might want the caller to extend, some | 
 | might want the callee to extend 3) the mid-level optimizer doesn't know the | 
 | size of the GPR, so it doesn't know that %0 is sign extended up to 32-bits  | 
 | here, and even if it did, it could not eliminate the sext. 4) the code | 
 | generator has historically assumed that the result is extended to i32, which is | 
 | a problem on PIC16 (and is also probably wrong on alpha and other 64-bit | 
 | targets). | 
 |  | 
 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// | 
 | // The proposal | 
 | //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// | 
 |  | 
 | I suggest that we have the front-end fully lower out the ABI issues here to | 
 | LLVM IR.  This makes it 100% explicit what is going on and means that there is | 
 | no cause for confusion.  For example, the cases above should compile into: | 
 |  | 
 | define i32 @z() nounwind { | 
 | entry: | 
 |         %0 = tail call i32 (...)* @y() nounwind | 
 | 	%1 = trunc i32 %0 to i16 | 
 |         %2 = sext i16 %1 to i32 | 
 |         ret i32 %2 | 
 | } | 
 | define i32 @b() nounwind { | 
 | entry: | 
 | 	%0 = tail call i32 (...)* @a() nounwind | 
 | 	%retval12 = trunc i32 %0 to i16 | 
 | 	%tmp = sext i16 %retval12 to i32 | 
 | 	ret i32 %tmp | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | In this model, no functions will return an i1/i8/i16 (and on a x86-64 target | 
 | that extends results to i64, no i32).  This solves the ambiguity issue, allows us  | 
 | to fully describe all possible ABIs, and now allows the optimizers to reason | 
 | about and eliminate these extensions. | 
 |  | 
 | The one thing that is missing is the ability for the front-end and optimizer to | 
 | specify/infer the guarantees provided by the ABI to allow other optimizations. | 
 | For example, in the y/z case, since y is known to return a sign extended value, | 
 | the trunc/sext in z should be eliminable. | 
 |  | 
 | This can be done by introducing new sext/zext attributes which mean "I know | 
 | that the result of the function is sign extended at least N bits.  Given this, | 
 | and given that it is stuck on the y function, the mid-level optimizer could | 
 | easily eliminate the extensions etc with existing functionality. | 
 |  | 
 | The major disadvantage of doing this sort of thing is that it makes the ABI | 
 | lowering stuff even more explicit in the front-end, and that we would like to | 
 | eventually move to having the code generator do more of this work.  However, | 
 | the sad truth of the matter is that this is a) unlikely to happen anytime in | 
 | the near future, and b) this is no worse than we have now with the existing | 
 | attributes. | 
 |  | 
 | C compilers fundamentally have to reason about the target in many ways.   | 
 | This is ugly and horrible, but a fact of life. | 
 |  |