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b5e01d4b 1@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
3ab51846 2@c 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3@c This is part of the GCC manual.
4@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
5
6@ifset INTERNALS
7@node Machine Desc
8@chapter Machine Descriptions
9@cindex machine descriptions
10
11A machine description has two parts: a file of instruction patterns
12(@file{.md} file) and a C header file of macro definitions.
13
14The @file{.md} file for a target machine contains a pattern for each
15instruction that the target machine supports (or at least each instruction
16that is worth telling the compiler about). It may also contain comments.
17A semicolon causes the rest of the line to be a comment, unless the semicolon
18is inside a quoted string.
19
20See the next chapter for information on the C header file.
21
22@menu
55e4756f 23* Overview:: How the machine description is used.
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24* Patterns:: How to write instruction patterns.
25* Example:: An explained example of a @code{define_insn} pattern.
26* RTL Template:: The RTL template defines what insns match a pattern.
27* Output Template:: The output template says how to make assembler code
28 from such an insn.
29* Output Statement:: For more generality, write C code to output
30 the assembler code.
31* Constraints:: When not all operands are general operands.
32* Standard Names:: Names mark patterns to use for code generation.
33* Pattern Ordering:: When the order of patterns makes a difference.
34* Dependent Patterns:: Having one pattern may make you need another.
35* Jump Patterns:: Special considerations for patterns for jump insns.
6e4fcc95 36* Looping Patterns:: How to define patterns for special looping insns.
03dda8e3 37* Insn Canonicalizations::Canonicalization of Instructions
03dda8e3 38* Expander Definitions::Generating a sequence of several RTL insns
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39 for a standard operation.
40* Insn Splitting:: Splitting Instructions into Multiple Instructions.
04d8aa70 41* Including Patterns:: Including Patterns in Machine Descriptions.
f3a3d0d3 42* Peephole Definitions::Defining machine-specific peephole optimizations.
03dda8e3 43* Insn Attributes:: Specifying the value of attributes for generated insns.
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44* Conditional Execution::Generating @code{define_insn} patterns for
45 predication.
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46* Constant Definitions::Defining symbolic constants that can be used in the
47 md file.
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48@end menu
49
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50@node Overview
51@section Overview of How the Machine Description is Used
52
53There are three main conversions that happen in the compiler:
54
55@enumerate
56
57@item
58The front end reads the source code and builds a parse tree.
59
60@item
61The parse tree is used to generate an RTL insn list based on named
62instruction patterns.
63
64@item
65The insn list is matched against the RTL templates to produce assembler
66code.
67
68@end enumerate
69
70For the generate pass, only the names of the insns matter, from either a
71named @code{define_insn} or a @code{define_expand}. The compiler will
72choose the pattern with the right name and apply the operands according
73to the documentation later in this chapter, without regard for the RTL
74template or operand constraints. Note that the names the compiler looks
d7d9c429 75for are hard-coded in the compiler---it will ignore unnamed patterns and
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76patterns with names it doesn't know about, but if you don't provide a
77named pattern it needs, it will abort.
78
79If a @code{define_insn} is used, the template given is inserted into the
80insn list. If a @code{define_expand} is used, one of three things
81happens, based on the condition logic. The condition logic may manually
82create new insns for the insn list, say via @code{emit_insn()}, and
aee96fe9 83invoke @code{DONE}. For certain named patterns, it may invoke @code{FAIL} to tell the
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84compiler to use an alternate way of performing that task. If it invokes
85neither @code{DONE} nor @code{FAIL}, the template given in the pattern
86is inserted, as if the @code{define_expand} were a @code{define_insn}.
87
88Once the insn list is generated, various optimization passes convert,
89replace, and rearrange the insns in the insn list. This is where the
90@code{define_split} and @code{define_peephole} patterns get used, for
91example.
92
93Finally, the insn list's RTL is matched up with the RTL templates in the
94@code{define_insn} patterns, and those patterns are used to emit the
95final assembly code. For this purpose, each named @code{define_insn}
96acts like it's unnamed, since the names are ignored.
97
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98@node Patterns
99@section Everything about Instruction Patterns
100@cindex patterns
101@cindex instruction patterns
102
103@findex define_insn
104Each instruction pattern contains an incomplete RTL expression, with pieces
105to be filled in later, operand constraints that restrict how the pieces can
106be filled in, and an output pattern or C code to generate the assembler
107output, all wrapped up in a @code{define_insn} expression.
108
109A @code{define_insn} is an RTL expression containing four or five operands:
110
111@enumerate
112@item
113An optional name. The presence of a name indicate that this instruction
114pattern can perform a certain standard job for the RTL-generation
115pass of the compiler. This pass knows certain names and will use
116the instruction patterns with those names, if the names are defined
117in the machine description.
118
119The absence of a name is indicated by writing an empty string
120where the name should go. Nameless instruction patterns are never
121used for generating RTL code, but they may permit several simpler insns
122to be combined later on.
123
124Names that are not thus known and used in RTL-generation have no
125effect; they are equivalent to no name at all.
126
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127For the purpose of debugging the compiler, you may also specify a
128name beginning with the @samp{*} character. Such a name is used only
129for identifying the instruction in RTL dumps; it is entirely equivalent
130to having a nameless pattern for all other purposes.
131
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132@item
133The @dfn{RTL template} (@pxref{RTL Template}) is a vector of incomplete
134RTL expressions which show what the instruction should look like. It is
135incomplete because it may contain @code{match_operand},
136@code{match_operator}, and @code{match_dup} expressions that stand for
137operands of the instruction.
138
139If the vector has only one element, that element is the template for the
140instruction pattern. If the vector has multiple elements, then the
141instruction pattern is a @code{parallel} expression containing the
142elements described.
143
144@item
145@cindex pattern conditions
146@cindex conditions, in patterns
147A condition. This is a string which contains a C expression that is
148the final test to decide whether an insn body matches this pattern.
149
150@cindex named patterns and conditions
151For a named pattern, the condition (if present) may not depend on
152the data in the insn being matched, but only the target-machine-type
153flags. The compiler needs to test these conditions during
154initialization in order to learn exactly which named instructions are
155available in a particular run.
156
157@findex operands
158For nameless patterns, the condition is applied only when matching an
159individual insn, and only after the insn has matched the pattern's
160recognition template. The insn's operands may be found in the vector
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161@code{operands}. For an insn where the condition has once matched, it
162can't be used to control register allocation, for example by excluding
163certain hard registers or hard register combinations.
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164
165@item
166The @dfn{output template}: a string that says how to output matching
167insns as assembler code. @samp{%} in this string specifies where
168to substitute the value of an operand. @xref{Output Template}.
169
170When simple substitution isn't general enough, you can specify a piece
171of C code to compute the output. @xref{Output Statement}.
172
173@item
174Optionally, a vector containing the values of attributes for insns matching
175this pattern. @xref{Insn Attributes}.
176@end enumerate
177
178@node Example
179@section Example of @code{define_insn}
180@cindex @code{define_insn} example
181
182Here is an actual example of an instruction pattern, for the 68000/68020.
183
3ab51846 184@smallexample
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185(define_insn "tstsi"
186 [(set (cc0)
187 (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "rm"))]
188 ""
189 "*
f282ffb3 190@{
0f40f9f7 191 if (TARGET_68020 || ! ADDRESS_REG_P (operands[0]))
03dda8e3 192 return \"tstl %0\";
f282ffb3 193 return \"cmpl #0,%0\";
0f40f9f7 194@}")
3ab51846 195@end smallexample
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196
197@noindent
198This can also be written using braced strings:
199
3ab51846 200@smallexample
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201(define_insn "tstsi"
202 [(set (cc0)
203 (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "rm"))]
204 ""
f282ffb3 205@{
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206 if (TARGET_68020 || ! ADDRESS_REG_P (operands[0]))
207 return "tstl %0";
f282ffb3 208 return "cmpl #0,%0";
0f40f9f7 209@})
3ab51846 210@end smallexample
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211
212This is an instruction that sets the condition codes based on the value of
213a general operand. It has no condition, so any insn whose RTL description
214has the form shown may be handled according to this pattern. The name
215@samp{tstsi} means ``test a @code{SImode} value'' and tells the RTL generation
216pass that, when it is necessary to test such a value, an insn to do so
217can be constructed using this pattern.
218
219The output control string is a piece of C code which chooses which
220output template to return based on the kind of operand and the specific
221type of CPU for which code is being generated.
222
223@samp{"rm"} is an operand constraint. Its meaning is explained below.
224
225@node RTL Template
226@section RTL Template
227@cindex RTL insn template
228@cindex generating insns
229@cindex insns, generating
230@cindex recognizing insns
231@cindex insns, recognizing
232
233The RTL template is used to define which insns match the particular pattern
234and how to find their operands. For named patterns, the RTL template also
235says how to construct an insn from specified operands.
236
237Construction involves substituting specified operands into a copy of the
238template. Matching involves determining the values that serve as the
239operands in the insn being matched. Both of these activities are
240controlled by special expression types that direct matching and
241substitution of the operands.
242
243@table @code
244@findex match_operand
245@item (match_operand:@var{m} @var{n} @var{predicate} @var{constraint})
246This expression is a placeholder for operand number @var{n} of
247the insn. When constructing an insn, operand number @var{n}
248will be substituted at this point. When matching an insn, whatever
249appears at this position in the insn will be taken as operand
250number @var{n}; but it must satisfy @var{predicate} or this instruction
251pattern will not match at all.
252
253Operand numbers must be chosen consecutively counting from zero in
254each instruction pattern. There may be only one @code{match_operand}
255expression in the pattern for each operand number. Usually operands
256are numbered in the order of appearance in @code{match_operand}
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257expressions. In the case of a @code{define_expand}, any operand numbers
258used only in @code{match_dup} expressions have higher values than all
259other operand numbers.
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260
261@var{predicate} is a string that is the name of a C function that accepts two
262arguments, an expression and a machine mode. During matching, the
263function will be called with the putative operand as the expression and
264@var{m} as the mode argument (if @var{m} is not specified,
265@code{VOIDmode} will be used, which normally causes @var{predicate} to accept
266any mode). If it returns zero, this instruction pattern fails to match.
267@var{predicate} may be an empty string; then it means no test is to be done
268on the operand, so anything which occurs in this position is valid.
269
270Most of the time, @var{predicate} will reject modes other than @var{m}---but
271not always. For example, the predicate @code{address_operand} uses
272@var{m} as the mode of memory ref that the address should be valid for.
273Many predicates accept @code{const_int} nodes even though their mode is
274@code{VOIDmode}.
275
276@var{constraint} controls reloading and the choice of the best register
277class to use for a value, as explained later (@pxref{Constraints}).
278
279People are often unclear on the difference between the constraint and the
280predicate. The predicate helps decide whether a given insn matches the
281pattern. The constraint plays no role in this decision; instead, it
282controls various decisions in the case of an insn which does match.
283
284@findex general_operand
285On CISC machines, the most common @var{predicate} is
286@code{"general_operand"}. This function checks that the putative
287operand is either a constant, a register or a memory reference, and that
288it is valid for mode @var{m}.
289
290@findex register_operand
291For an operand that must be a register, @var{predicate} should be
292@code{"register_operand"}. Using @code{"general_operand"} would be
293valid, since the reload pass would copy any non-register operands
f0523f02 294through registers, but this would make GCC do extra work, it would
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295prevent invariant operands (such as constant) from being removed from
296loops, and it would prevent the register allocator from doing the best
297possible job. On RISC machines, it is usually most efficient to allow
298@var{predicate} to accept only objects that the constraints allow.
299
300@findex immediate_operand
301For an operand that must be a constant, you must be sure to either use
302@code{"immediate_operand"} for @var{predicate}, or make the instruction
303pattern's extra condition require a constant, or both. You cannot
304expect the constraints to do this work! If the constraints allow only
305constants, but the predicate allows something else, the compiler will
306crash when that case arises.
307
308@findex match_scratch
309@item (match_scratch:@var{m} @var{n} @var{constraint})
310This expression is also a placeholder for operand number @var{n}
311and indicates that operand must be a @code{scratch} or @code{reg}
312expression.
313
314When matching patterns, this is equivalent to
315
316@smallexample
317(match_operand:@var{m} @var{n} "scratch_operand" @var{pred})
318@end smallexample
319
320but, when generating RTL, it produces a (@code{scratch}:@var{m})
321expression.
322
323If the last few expressions in a @code{parallel} are @code{clobber}
324expressions whose operands are either a hard register or
325@code{match_scratch}, the combiner can add or delete them when
326necessary. @xref{Side Effects}.
327
328@findex match_dup
329@item (match_dup @var{n})
330This expression is also a placeholder for operand number @var{n}.
331It is used when the operand needs to appear more than once in the
332insn.
333
334In construction, @code{match_dup} acts just like @code{match_operand}:
335the operand is substituted into the insn being constructed. But in
336matching, @code{match_dup} behaves differently. It assumes that operand
337number @var{n} has already been determined by a @code{match_operand}
338appearing earlier in the recognition template, and it matches only an
339identical-looking expression.
340
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341Note that @code{match_dup} should not be used to tell the compiler that
342a particular register is being used for two operands (example:
343@code{add} that adds one register to another; the second register is
344both an input operand and the output operand). Use a matching
345constraint (@pxref{Simple Constraints}) for those. @code{match_dup} is for the cases where one
346operand is used in two places in the template, such as an instruction
347that computes both a quotient and a remainder, where the opcode takes
348two input operands but the RTL template has to refer to each of those
349twice; once for the quotient pattern and once for the remainder pattern.
350
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351@findex match_operator
352@item (match_operator:@var{m} @var{n} @var{predicate} [@var{operands}@dots{}])
353This pattern is a kind of placeholder for a variable RTL expression
354code.
355
356When constructing an insn, it stands for an RTL expression whose
357expression code is taken from that of operand @var{n}, and whose
358operands are constructed from the patterns @var{operands}.
359
360When matching an expression, it matches an expression if the function
361@var{predicate} returns nonzero on that expression @emph{and} the
362patterns @var{operands} match the operands of the expression.
363
364Suppose that the function @code{commutative_operator} is defined as
365follows, to match any expression whose operator is one of the
366commutative arithmetic operators of RTL and whose mode is @var{mode}:
367
368@smallexample
369int
ec8e098d 370commutative_integer_operator (x, mode)
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371 rtx x;
372 enum machine_mode mode;
373@{
374 enum rtx_code code = GET_CODE (x);
375 if (GET_MODE (x) != mode)
376 return 0;
ec8e098d 377 return (GET_RTX_CLASS (code) == RTX_COMM_ARITH
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378 || code == EQ || code == NE);
379@}
380@end smallexample
381
382Then the following pattern will match any RTL expression consisting
383of a commutative operator applied to two general operands:
384
385@smallexample
386(match_operator:SI 3 "commutative_operator"
387 [(match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "g")
388 (match_operand:SI 2 "general_operand" "g")])
389@end smallexample
390
391Here the vector @code{[@var{operands}@dots{}]} contains two patterns
392because the expressions to be matched all contain two operands.
393
394When this pattern does match, the two operands of the commutative
395operator are recorded as operands 1 and 2 of the insn. (This is done
396by the two instances of @code{match_operand}.) Operand 3 of the insn
397will be the entire commutative expression: use @code{GET_CODE
398(operands[3])} to see which commutative operator was used.
399
400The machine mode @var{m} of @code{match_operator} works like that of
401@code{match_operand}: it is passed as the second argument to the
402predicate function, and that function is solely responsible for
403deciding whether the expression to be matched ``has'' that mode.
404
405When constructing an insn, argument 3 of the gen-function will specify
e979f9e8 406the operation (i.e.@: the expression code) for the expression to be
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407made. It should be an RTL expression, whose expression code is copied
408into a new expression whose operands are arguments 1 and 2 of the
409gen-function. The subexpressions of argument 3 are not used;
410only its expression code matters.
411
412When @code{match_operator} is used in a pattern for matching an insn,
413it usually best if the operand number of the @code{match_operator}
414is higher than that of the actual operands of the insn. This improves
415register allocation because the register allocator often looks at
416operands 1 and 2 of insns to see if it can do register tying.
417
418There is no way to specify constraints in @code{match_operator}. The
419operand of the insn which corresponds to the @code{match_operator}
420never has any constraints because it is never reloaded as a whole.
421However, if parts of its @var{operands} are matched by
422@code{match_operand} patterns, those parts may have constraints of
423their own.
424
425@findex match_op_dup
426@item (match_op_dup:@var{m} @var{n}[@var{operands}@dots{}])
427Like @code{match_dup}, except that it applies to operators instead of
428operands. When constructing an insn, operand number @var{n} will be
429substituted at this point. But in matching, @code{match_op_dup} behaves
430differently. It assumes that operand number @var{n} has already been
431determined by a @code{match_operator} appearing earlier in the
432recognition template, and it matches only an identical-looking
433expression.
434
435@findex match_parallel
436@item (match_parallel @var{n} @var{predicate} [@var{subpat}@dots{}])
437This pattern is a placeholder for an insn that consists of a
438@code{parallel} expression with a variable number of elements. This
439expression should only appear at the top level of an insn pattern.
440
441When constructing an insn, operand number @var{n} will be substituted at
442this point. When matching an insn, it matches if the body of the insn
443is a @code{parallel} expression with at least as many elements as the
444vector of @var{subpat} expressions in the @code{match_parallel}, if each
445@var{subpat} matches the corresponding element of the @code{parallel},
446@emph{and} the function @var{predicate} returns nonzero on the
447@code{parallel} that is the body of the insn. It is the responsibility
448of the predicate to validate elements of the @code{parallel} beyond
bd819a4a 449those listed in the @code{match_parallel}.
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450
451A typical use of @code{match_parallel} is to match load and store
452multiple expressions, which can contain a variable number of elements
453in a @code{parallel}. For example,
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454
455@smallexample
456(define_insn ""
457 [(match_parallel 0 "load_multiple_operation"
458 [(set (match_operand:SI 1 "gpc_reg_operand" "=r")
459 (match_operand:SI 2 "memory_operand" "m"))
460 (use (reg:SI 179))
461 (clobber (reg:SI 179))])]
462 ""
463 "loadm 0,0,%1,%2")
464@end smallexample
465
466This example comes from @file{a29k.md}. The function
9c34dbbf 467@code{load_multiple_operation} is defined in @file{a29k.c} and checks
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468that subsequent elements in the @code{parallel} are the same as the
469@code{set} in the pattern, except that they are referencing subsequent
470registers and memory locations.
471
472An insn that matches this pattern might look like:
473
474@smallexample
475(parallel
476 [(set (reg:SI 20) (mem:SI (reg:SI 100)))
477 (use (reg:SI 179))
478 (clobber (reg:SI 179))
479 (set (reg:SI 21)
480 (mem:SI (plus:SI (reg:SI 100)
481 (const_int 4))))
482 (set (reg:SI 22)
483 (mem:SI (plus:SI (reg:SI 100)
484 (const_int 8))))])
485@end smallexample
486
487@findex match_par_dup
488@item (match_par_dup @var{n} [@var{subpat}@dots{}])
489Like @code{match_op_dup}, but for @code{match_parallel} instead of
490@code{match_operator}.
491
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492@end table
493
494@node Output Template
495@section Output Templates and Operand Substitution
496@cindex output templates
497@cindex operand substitution
498
499@cindex @samp{%} in template
500@cindex percent sign
501The @dfn{output template} is a string which specifies how to output the
502assembler code for an instruction pattern. Most of the template is a
503fixed string which is output literally. The character @samp{%} is used
504to specify where to substitute an operand; it can also be used to
505identify places where different variants of the assembler require
506different syntax.
507
508In the simplest case, a @samp{%} followed by a digit @var{n} says to output
509operand @var{n} at that point in the string.
510
511@samp{%} followed by a letter and a digit says to output an operand in an
512alternate fashion. Four letters have standard, built-in meanings described
513below. The machine description macro @code{PRINT_OPERAND} can define
514additional letters with nonstandard meanings.
515
516@samp{%c@var{digit}} can be used to substitute an operand that is a
517constant value without the syntax that normally indicates an immediate
518operand.
519
520@samp{%n@var{digit}} is like @samp{%c@var{digit}} except that the value of
521the constant is negated before printing.
522
523@samp{%a@var{digit}} can be used to substitute an operand as if it were a
524memory reference, with the actual operand treated as the address. This may
525be useful when outputting a ``load address'' instruction, because often the
526assembler syntax for such an instruction requires you to write the operand
527as if it were a memory reference.
528
529@samp{%l@var{digit}} is used to substitute a @code{label_ref} into a jump
530instruction.
531
532@samp{%=} outputs a number which is unique to each instruction in the
533entire compilation. This is useful for making local labels to be
534referred to more than once in a single template that generates multiple
535assembler instructions.
536
537@samp{%} followed by a punctuation character specifies a substitution that
538does not use an operand. Only one case is standard: @samp{%%} outputs a
539@samp{%} into the assembler code. Other nonstandard cases can be
540defined in the @code{PRINT_OPERAND} macro. You must also define
541which punctuation characters are valid with the
542@code{PRINT_OPERAND_PUNCT_VALID_P} macro.
543
544@cindex \
545@cindex backslash
546The template may generate multiple assembler instructions. Write the text
547for the instructions, with @samp{\;} between them.
548
549@cindex matching operands
550When the RTL contains two operands which are required by constraint to match
551each other, the output template must refer only to the lower-numbered operand.
552Matching operands are not always identical, and the rest of the compiler
553arranges to put the proper RTL expression for printing into the lower-numbered
554operand.
555
556One use of nonstandard letters or punctuation following @samp{%} is to
557distinguish between different assembler languages for the same machine; for
558example, Motorola syntax versus MIT syntax for the 68000. Motorola syntax
559requires periods in most opcode names, while MIT syntax does not. For
560example, the opcode @samp{movel} in MIT syntax is @samp{move.l} in Motorola
561syntax. The same file of patterns is used for both kinds of output syntax,
562but the character sequence @samp{%.} is used in each place where Motorola
563syntax wants a period. The @code{PRINT_OPERAND} macro for Motorola syntax
564defines the sequence to output a period; the macro for MIT syntax defines
565it to do nothing.
566
567@cindex @code{#} in template
568As a special case, a template consisting of the single character @code{#}
569instructs the compiler to first split the insn, and then output the
570resulting instructions separately. This helps eliminate redundancy in the
571output templates. If you have a @code{define_insn} that needs to emit
572multiple assembler instructions, and there is an matching @code{define_split}
573already defined, then you can simply use @code{#} as the output template
574instead of writing an output template that emits the multiple assembler
575instructions.
576
577If the macro @code{ASSEMBLER_DIALECT} is defined, you can use construct
578of the form @samp{@{option0|option1|option2@}} in the templates. These
579describe multiple variants of assembler language syntax.
580@xref{Instruction Output}.
581
582@node Output Statement
583@section C Statements for Assembler Output
584@cindex output statements
585@cindex C statements for assembler output
586@cindex generating assembler output
587
588Often a single fixed template string cannot produce correct and efficient
589assembler code for all the cases that are recognized by a single
590instruction pattern. For example, the opcodes may depend on the kinds of
591operands; or some unfortunate combinations of operands may require extra
592machine instructions.
593
594If the output control string starts with a @samp{@@}, then it is actually
595a series of templates, each on a separate line. (Blank lines and
596leading spaces and tabs are ignored.) The templates correspond to the
597pattern's constraint alternatives (@pxref{Multi-Alternative}). For example,
598if a target machine has a two-address add instruction @samp{addr} to add
599into a register and another @samp{addm} to add a register to memory, you
600might write this pattern:
601
602@smallexample
603(define_insn "addsi3"
604 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=r,m")
605 (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "0,0")
606 (match_operand:SI 2 "general_operand" "g,r")))]
607 ""
608 "@@
609 addr %2,%0
610 addm %2,%0")
611@end smallexample
612
613@cindex @code{*} in template
614@cindex asterisk in template
615If the output control string starts with a @samp{*}, then it is not an
616output template but rather a piece of C program that should compute a
617template. It should execute a @code{return} statement to return the
618template-string you want. Most such templates use C string literals, which
619require doublequote characters to delimit them. To include these
620doublequote characters in the string, prefix each one with @samp{\}.
621
0f40f9f7
ZW
622If the output control string is written as a brace block instead of a
623double-quoted string, it is automatically assumed to be C code. In that
624case, it is not necessary to put in a leading asterisk, or to escape the
625doublequotes surrounding C string literals.
626
03dda8e3
RK
627The operands may be found in the array @code{operands}, whose C data type
628is @code{rtx []}.
629
630It is very common to select different ways of generating assembler code
631based on whether an immediate operand is within a certain range. Be
632careful when doing this, because the result of @code{INTVAL} is an
633integer on the host machine. If the host machine has more bits in an
634@code{int} than the target machine has in the mode in which the constant
635will be used, then some of the bits you get from @code{INTVAL} will be
636superfluous. For proper results, you must carefully disregard the
637values of those bits.
638
639@findex output_asm_insn
640It is possible to output an assembler instruction and then go on to output
641or compute more of them, using the subroutine @code{output_asm_insn}. This
642receives two arguments: a template-string and a vector of operands. The
643vector may be @code{operands}, or it may be another array of @code{rtx}
644that you declare locally and initialize yourself.
645
646@findex which_alternative
647When an insn pattern has multiple alternatives in its constraints, often
648the appearance of the assembler code is determined mostly by which alternative
649was matched. When this is so, the C code can test the variable
650@code{which_alternative}, which is the ordinal number of the alternative
651that was actually satisfied (0 for the first, 1 for the second alternative,
652etc.).
653
654For example, suppose there are two opcodes for storing zero, @samp{clrreg}
655for registers and @samp{clrmem} for memory locations. Here is how
656a pattern could use @code{which_alternative} to choose between them:
657
658@smallexample
659(define_insn ""
660 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=r,m")
661 (const_int 0))]
662 ""
0f40f9f7 663 @{
03dda8e3 664 return (which_alternative == 0
0f40f9f7
ZW
665 ? "clrreg %0" : "clrmem %0");
666 @})
03dda8e3
RK
667@end smallexample
668
669The example above, where the assembler code to generate was
670@emph{solely} determined by the alternative, could also have been specified
671as follows, having the output control string start with a @samp{@@}:
672
673@smallexample
674@group
675(define_insn ""
676 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=r,m")
677 (const_int 0))]
678 ""
679 "@@
680 clrreg %0
681 clrmem %0")
682@end group
683@end smallexample
684@end ifset
685
686@c Most of this node appears by itself (in a different place) even
b11cc610
JM
687@c when the INTERNALS flag is clear. Passages that require the internals
688@c manual's context are conditionalized to appear only in the internals manual.
03dda8e3
RK
689@ifset INTERNALS
690@node Constraints
691@section Operand Constraints
692@cindex operand constraints
693@cindex constraints
694
695Each @code{match_operand} in an instruction pattern can specify a
696constraint for the type of operands allowed.
697@end ifset
698@ifclear INTERNALS
699@node Constraints
700@section Constraints for @code{asm} Operands
701@cindex operand constraints, @code{asm}
702@cindex constraints, @code{asm}
703@cindex @code{asm} constraints
704
705Here are specific details on what constraint letters you can use with
706@code{asm} operands.
707@end ifclear
708Constraints can say whether
709an operand may be in a register, and which kinds of register; whether the
710operand can be a memory reference, and which kinds of address; whether the
711operand may be an immediate constant, and which possible values it may
712have. Constraints can also require two operands to match.
713
714@ifset INTERNALS
715@menu
716* Simple Constraints:: Basic use of constraints.
717* Multi-Alternative:: When an insn has two alternative constraint-patterns.
718* Class Preferences:: Constraints guide which hard register to put things in.
719* Modifiers:: More precise control over effects of constraints.
720* Machine Constraints:: Existing constraints for some particular machines.
03dda8e3
RK
721@end menu
722@end ifset
723
724@ifclear INTERNALS
725@menu
726* Simple Constraints:: Basic use of constraints.
727* Multi-Alternative:: When an insn has two alternative constraint-patterns.
728* Modifiers:: More precise control over effects of constraints.
729* Machine Constraints:: Special constraints for some particular machines.
730@end menu
731@end ifclear
732
733@node Simple Constraints
734@subsection Simple Constraints
735@cindex simple constraints
736
737The simplest kind of constraint is a string full of letters, each of
738which describes one kind of operand that is permitted. Here are
739the letters that are allowed:
740
741@table @asis
88a56c2e
HPN
742@item whitespace
743Whitespace characters are ignored and can be inserted at any position
744except the first. This enables each alternative for different operands to
745be visually aligned in the machine description even if they have different
746number of constraints and modifiers.
747
03dda8e3
RK
748@cindex @samp{m} in constraint
749@cindex memory references in constraints
750@item @samp{m}
751A memory operand is allowed, with any kind of address that the machine
752supports in general.
753
754@cindex offsettable address
755@cindex @samp{o} in constraint
756@item @samp{o}
757A memory operand is allowed, but only if the address is
758@dfn{offsettable}. This means that adding a small integer (actually,
759the width in bytes of the operand, as determined by its machine mode)
760may be added to the address and the result is also a valid memory
761address.
762
763@cindex autoincrement/decrement addressing
764For example, an address which is constant is offsettable; so is an
765address that is the sum of a register and a constant (as long as a
766slightly larger constant is also within the range of address-offsets
767supported by the machine); but an autoincrement or autodecrement
768address is not offsettable. More complicated indirect/indexed
769addresses may or may not be offsettable depending on the other
770addressing modes that the machine supports.
771
772Note that in an output operand which can be matched by another
773operand, the constraint letter @samp{o} is valid only when accompanied
774by both @samp{<} (if the target machine has predecrement addressing)
775and @samp{>} (if the target machine has preincrement addressing).
776
777@cindex @samp{V} in constraint
778@item @samp{V}
779A memory operand that is not offsettable. In other words, anything that
780would fit the @samp{m} constraint but not the @samp{o} constraint.
781
782@cindex @samp{<} in constraint
783@item @samp{<}
784A memory operand with autodecrement addressing (either predecrement or
785postdecrement) is allowed.
786
787@cindex @samp{>} in constraint
788@item @samp{>}
789A memory operand with autoincrement addressing (either preincrement or
790postincrement) is allowed.
791
792@cindex @samp{r} in constraint
793@cindex registers in constraints
794@item @samp{r}
795A register operand is allowed provided that it is in a general
796register.
797
03dda8e3
RK
798@cindex constants in constraints
799@cindex @samp{i} in constraint
800@item @samp{i}
801An immediate integer operand (one with constant value) is allowed.
802This includes symbolic constants whose values will be known only at
8ac658b6 803assembly time or later.
03dda8e3
RK
804
805@cindex @samp{n} in constraint
806@item @samp{n}
807An immediate integer operand with a known numeric value is allowed.
808Many systems cannot support assembly-time constants for operands less
809than a word wide. Constraints for these operands should use @samp{n}
810rather than @samp{i}.
811
812@cindex @samp{I} in constraint
813@item @samp{I}, @samp{J}, @samp{K}, @dots{} @samp{P}
814Other letters in the range @samp{I} through @samp{P} may be defined in
815a machine-dependent fashion to permit immediate integer operands with
816explicit integer values in specified ranges. For example, on the
81768000, @samp{I} is defined to stand for the range of values 1 to 8.
818This is the range permitted as a shift count in the shift
819instructions.
820
821@cindex @samp{E} in constraint
822@item @samp{E}
823An immediate floating operand (expression code @code{const_double}) is
824allowed, but only if the target floating point format is the same as
825that of the host machine (on which the compiler is running).
826
827@cindex @samp{F} in constraint
828@item @samp{F}
bf7cd754
R
829An immediate floating operand (expression code @code{const_double} or
830@code{const_vector}) is allowed.
03dda8e3
RK
831
832@cindex @samp{G} in constraint
833@cindex @samp{H} in constraint
834@item @samp{G}, @samp{H}
835@samp{G} and @samp{H} may be defined in a machine-dependent fashion to
836permit immediate floating operands in particular ranges of values.
837
838@cindex @samp{s} in constraint
839@item @samp{s}
840An immediate integer operand whose value is not an explicit integer is
841allowed.
842
843This might appear strange; if an insn allows a constant operand with a
844value not known at compile time, it certainly must allow any known
845value. So why use @samp{s} instead of @samp{i}? Sometimes it allows
846better code to be generated.
847
848For example, on the 68000 in a fullword instruction it is possible to
630d3d5a 849use an immediate operand; but if the immediate value is between @minus{}128
03dda8e3
RK
850and 127, better code results from loading the value into a register and
851using the register. This is because the load into the register can be
852done with a @samp{moveq} instruction. We arrange for this to happen
853by defining the letter @samp{K} to mean ``any integer outside the
630d3d5a 854range @minus{}128 to 127'', and then specifying @samp{Ks} in the operand
03dda8e3
RK
855constraints.
856
857@cindex @samp{g} in constraint
858@item @samp{g}
859Any register, memory or immediate integer operand is allowed, except for
860registers that are not general registers.
861
862@cindex @samp{X} in constraint
863@item @samp{X}
864@ifset INTERNALS
865Any operand whatsoever is allowed, even if it does not satisfy
866@code{general_operand}. This is normally used in the constraint of
867a @code{match_scratch} when certain alternatives will not actually
868require a scratch register.
869@end ifset
870@ifclear INTERNALS
871Any operand whatsoever is allowed.
872@end ifclear
873
874@cindex @samp{0} in constraint
875@cindex digits in constraint
876@item @samp{0}, @samp{1}, @samp{2}, @dots{} @samp{9}
877An operand that matches the specified operand number is allowed. If a
878digit is used together with letters within the same alternative, the
879digit should come last.
880
84b72302 881This number is allowed to be more than a single digit. If multiple
c0478a66 882digits are encountered consecutively, they are interpreted as a single
84b72302
RH
883decimal integer. There is scant chance for ambiguity, since to-date
884it has never been desirable that @samp{10} be interpreted as matching
885either operand 1 @emph{or} operand 0. Should this be desired, one
886can use multiple alternatives instead.
887
03dda8e3
RK
888@cindex matching constraint
889@cindex constraint, matching
890This is called a @dfn{matching constraint} and what it really means is
891that the assembler has only a single operand that fills two roles
892@ifset INTERNALS
893considered separate in the RTL insn. For example, an add insn has two
894input operands and one output operand in the RTL, but on most CISC
895@end ifset
896@ifclear INTERNALS
897which @code{asm} distinguishes. For example, an add instruction uses
898two input operands and an output operand, but on most CISC
899@end ifclear
900machines an add instruction really has only two operands, one of them an
901input-output operand:
902
903@smallexample
904addl #35,r12
905@end smallexample
906
907Matching constraints are used in these circumstances.
908More precisely, the two operands that match must include one input-only
909operand and one output-only operand. Moreover, the digit must be a
910smaller number than the number of the operand that uses it in the
911constraint.
912
913@ifset INTERNALS
914For operands to match in a particular case usually means that they
915are identical-looking RTL expressions. But in a few special cases
916specific kinds of dissimilarity are allowed. For example, @code{*x}
917as an input operand will match @code{*x++} as an output operand.
918For proper results in such cases, the output template should always
919use the output-operand's number when printing the operand.
920@end ifset
921
922@cindex load address instruction
923@cindex push address instruction
924@cindex address constraints
925@cindex @samp{p} in constraint
926@item @samp{p}
927An operand that is a valid memory address is allowed. This is
928for ``load address'' and ``push address'' instructions.
929
930@findex address_operand
931@samp{p} in the constraint must be accompanied by @code{address_operand}
932as the predicate in the @code{match_operand}. This predicate interprets
933the mode specified in the @code{match_operand} as the mode of the memory
934reference for which the address would be valid.
935
c2cba7a9 936@cindex other register constraints
03dda8e3 937@cindex extensible constraints
630d3d5a 938@item @var{other-letters}
c2cba7a9
RH
939Other letters can be defined in machine-dependent fashion to stand for
940particular classes of registers or other arbitrary operand types.
941@samp{d}, @samp{a} and @samp{f} are defined on the 68000/68020 to stand
942for data, address and floating point registers.
03dda8e3 943
c2cba7a9
RH
944@ifset INTERNALS
945The machine description macro @code{REG_CLASS_FROM_LETTER} has first
946cut at the otherwise unused letters. If it evaluates to @code{NO_REGS},
947then @code{EXTRA_CONSTRAINT} is evaluated.
03dda8e3 948
c0478a66 949A typical use for @code{EXTRA_CONSTRAINT} would be to distinguish certain
c2cba7a9 950types of memory references that affect other insn operands.
03dda8e3
RK
951@end ifset
952@end table
953
954@ifset INTERNALS
955In order to have valid assembler code, each operand must satisfy
956its constraint. But a failure to do so does not prevent the pattern
957from applying to an insn. Instead, it directs the compiler to modify
958the code so that the constraint will be satisfied. Usually this is
959done by copying an operand into a register.
960
961Contrast, therefore, the two instruction patterns that follow:
962
963@smallexample
964(define_insn ""
965 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=r")
966 (plus:SI (match_dup 0)
967 (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "r")))]
968 ""
969 "@dots{}")
970@end smallexample
971
972@noindent
973which has two operands, one of which must appear in two places, and
974
975@smallexample
976(define_insn ""
977 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=r")
978 (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "0")
979 (match_operand:SI 2 "general_operand" "r")))]
980 ""
981 "@dots{}")
982@end smallexample
983
984@noindent
985which has three operands, two of which are required by a constraint to be
986identical. If we are considering an insn of the form
987
988@smallexample
989(insn @var{n} @var{prev} @var{next}
990 (set (reg:SI 3)
991 (plus:SI (reg:SI 6) (reg:SI 109)))
992 @dots{})
993@end smallexample
994
995@noindent
996the first pattern would not apply at all, because this insn does not
997contain two identical subexpressions in the right place. The pattern would
998say, ``That does not look like an add instruction; try other patterns.''
999The second pattern would say, ``Yes, that's an add instruction, but there
1000is something wrong with it.'' It would direct the reload pass of the
1001compiler to generate additional insns to make the constraint true. The
1002results might look like this:
1003
1004@smallexample
1005(insn @var{n2} @var{prev} @var{n}
1006 (set (reg:SI 3) (reg:SI 6))
1007 @dots{})
1008
1009(insn @var{n} @var{n2} @var{next}
1010 (set (reg:SI 3)
1011 (plus:SI (reg:SI 3) (reg:SI 109)))
1012 @dots{})
1013@end smallexample
1014
1015It is up to you to make sure that each operand, in each pattern, has
1016constraints that can handle any RTL expression that could be present for
1017that operand. (When multiple alternatives are in use, each pattern must,
1018for each possible combination of operand expressions, have at least one
1019alternative which can handle that combination of operands.) The
1020constraints don't need to @emph{allow} any possible operand---when this is
1021the case, they do not constrain---but they must at least point the way to
1022reloading any possible operand so that it will fit.
1023
1024@itemize @bullet
1025@item
1026If the constraint accepts whatever operands the predicate permits,
1027there is no problem: reloading is never necessary for this operand.
1028
1029For example, an operand whose constraints permit everything except
1030registers is safe provided its predicate rejects registers.
1031
1032An operand whose predicate accepts only constant values is safe
1033provided its constraints include the letter @samp{i}. If any possible
1034constant value is accepted, then nothing less than @samp{i} will do;
1035if the predicate is more selective, then the constraints may also be
1036more selective.
1037
1038@item
1039Any operand expression can be reloaded by copying it into a register.
1040So if an operand's constraints allow some kind of register, it is
1041certain to be safe. It need not permit all classes of registers; the
1042compiler knows how to copy a register into another register of the
1043proper class in order to make an instruction valid.
1044
1045@cindex nonoffsettable memory reference
1046@cindex memory reference, nonoffsettable
1047@item
1048A nonoffsettable memory reference can be reloaded by copying the
1049address into a register. So if the constraint uses the letter
1050@samp{o}, all memory references are taken care of.
1051
1052@item
1053A constant operand can be reloaded by allocating space in memory to
1054hold it as preinitialized data. Then the memory reference can be used
1055in place of the constant. So if the constraint uses the letters
1056@samp{o} or @samp{m}, constant operands are not a problem.
1057
1058@item
1059If the constraint permits a constant and a pseudo register used in an insn
1060was not allocated to a hard register and is equivalent to a constant,
1061the register will be replaced with the constant. If the predicate does
1062not permit a constant and the insn is re-recognized for some reason, the
1063compiler will crash. Thus the predicate must always recognize any
1064objects allowed by the constraint.
1065@end itemize
1066
1067If the operand's predicate can recognize registers, but the constraint does
1068not permit them, it can make the compiler crash. When this operand happens
1069to be a register, the reload pass will be stymied, because it does not know
1070how to copy a register temporarily into memory.
1071
1072If the predicate accepts a unary operator, the constraint applies to the
1073operand. For example, the MIPS processor at ISA level 3 supports an
1074instruction which adds two registers in @code{SImode} to produce a
1075@code{DImode} result, but only if the registers are correctly sign
1076extended. This predicate for the input operands accepts a
1077@code{sign_extend} of an @code{SImode} register. Write the constraint
1078to indicate the type of register that is required for the operand of the
1079@code{sign_extend}.
1080@end ifset
1081
1082@node Multi-Alternative
1083@subsection Multiple Alternative Constraints
1084@cindex multiple alternative constraints
1085
1086Sometimes a single instruction has multiple alternative sets of possible
1087operands. For example, on the 68000, a logical-or instruction can combine
1088register or an immediate value into memory, or it can combine any kind of
1089operand into a register; but it cannot combine one memory location into
1090another.
1091
1092These constraints are represented as multiple alternatives. An alternative
1093can be described by a series of letters for each operand. The overall
1094constraint for an operand is made from the letters for this operand
1095from the first alternative, a comma, the letters for this operand from
1096the second alternative, a comma, and so on until the last alternative.
1097@ifset INTERNALS
1098Here is how it is done for fullword logical-or on the 68000:
1099
1100@smallexample
1101(define_insn "iorsi3"
1102 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=m,d")
1103 (ior:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "%0,0")
1104 (match_operand:SI 2 "general_operand" "dKs,dmKs")))]
1105 @dots{})
1106@end smallexample
1107
1108The first alternative has @samp{m} (memory) for operand 0, @samp{0} for
1109operand 1 (meaning it must match operand 0), and @samp{dKs} for operand
11102. The second alternative has @samp{d} (data register) for operand 0,
1111@samp{0} for operand 1, and @samp{dmKs} for operand 2. The @samp{=} and
1112@samp{%} in the constraints apply to all the alternatives; their
1113meaning is explained in the next section (@pxref{Class Preferences}).
1114@end ifset
1115
1116@c FIXME Is this ? and ! stuff of use in asm()? If not, hide unless INTERNAL
1117If all the operands fit any one alternative, the instruction is valid.
1118Otherwise, for each alternative, the compiler counts how many instructions
1119must be added to copy the operands so that that alternative applies.
1120The alternative requiring the least copying is chosen. If two alternatives
1121need the same amount of copying, the one that comes first is chosen.
1122These choices can be altered with the @samp{?} and @samp{!} characters:
1123
1124@table @code
1125@cindex @samp{?} in constraint
1126@cindex question mark
1127@item ?
1128Disparage slightly the alternative that the @samp{?} appears in,
1129as a choice when no alternative applies exactly. The compiler regards
1130this alternative as one unit more costly for each @samp{?} that appears
1131in it.
1132
1133@cindex @samp{!} in constraint
1134@cindex exclamation point
1135@item !
1136Disparage severely the alternative that the @samp{!} appears in.
1137This alternative can still be used if it fits without reloading,
1138but if reloading is needed, some other alternative will be used.
1139@end table
1140
1141@ifset INTERNALS
1142When an insn pattern has multiple alternatives in its constraints, often
1143the appearance of the assembler code is determined mostly by which
1144alternative was matched. When this is so, the C code for writing the
1145assembler code can use the variable @code{which_alternative}, which is
1146the ordinal number of the alternative that was actually satisfied (0 for
1147the first, 1 for the second alternative, etc.). @xref{Output Statement}.
1148@end ifset
1149
1150@ifset INTERNALS
1151@node Class Preferences
1152@subsection Register Class Preferences
1153@cindex class preference constraints
1154@cindex register class preference constraints
1155
1156@cindex voting between constraint alternatives
1157The operand constraints have another function: they enable the compiler
1158to decide which kind of hardware register a pseudo register is best
1159allocated to. The compiler examines the constraints that apply to the
1160insns that use the pseudo register, looking for the machine-dependent
1161letters such as @samp{d} and @samp{a} that specify classes of registers.
1162The pseudo register is put in whichever class gets the most ``votes''.
1163The constraint letters @samp{g} and @samp{r} also vote: they vote in
1164favor of a general register. The machine description says which registers
1165are considered general.
1166
1167Of course, on some machines all registers are equivalent, and no register
1168classes are defined. Then none of this complexity is relevant.
1169@end ifset
1170
1171@node Modifiers
1172@subsection Constraint Modifier Characters
1173@cindex modifiers in constraints
1174@cindex constraint modifier characters
1175
1176@c prevent bad page break with this line
1177Here are constraint modifier characters.
1178
1179@table @samp
1180@cindex @samp{=} in constraint
1181@item =
1182Means that this operand is write-only for this instruction: the previous
1183value is discarded and replaced by output data.
1184
1185@cindex @samp{+} in constraint
1186@item +
1187Means that this operand is both read and written by the instruction.
1188
1189When the compiler fixes up the operands to satisfy the constraints,
1190it needs to know which operands are inputs to the instruction and
1191which are outputs from it. @samp{=} identifies an output; @samp{+}
1192identifies an operand that is both input and output; all other operands
1193are assumed to be input only.
1194
c5c76735
JL
1195If you specify @samp{=} or @samp{+} in a constraint, you put it in the
1196first character of the constraint string.
1197
03dda8e3
RK
1198@cindex @samp{&} in constraint
1199@cindex earlyclobber operand
1200@item &
1201Means (in a particular alternative) that this operand is an
1202@dfn{earlyclobber} operand, which is modified before the instruction is
1203finished using the input operands. Therefore, this operand may not lie
1204in a register that is used as an input operand or as part of any memory
1205address.
1206
1207@samp{&} applies only to the alternative in which it is written. In
1208constraints with multiple alternatives, sometimes one alternative
1209requires @samp{&} while others do not. See, for example, the
1210@samp{movdf} insn of the 68000.
1211
ebb48a4d 1212An input operand can be tied to an earlyclobber operand if its only
03dda8e3
RK
1213use as an input occurs before the early result is written. Adding
1214alternatives of this form often allows GCC to produce better code
ebb48a4d 1215when only some of the inputs can be affected by the earlyclobber.
161d7b59 1216See, for example, the @samp{mulsi3} insn of the ARM@.
03dda8e3
RK
1217
1218@samp{&} does not obviate the need to write @samp{=}.
1219
1220@cindex @samp{%} in constraint
1221@item %
1222Declares the instruction to be commutative for this operand and the
1223following operand. This means that the compiler may interchange the
1224two operands if that is the cheapest way to make all operands fit the
1225constraints.
1226@ifset INTERNALS
1227This is often used in patterns for addition instructions
1228that really have only two operands: the result must go in one of the
1229arguments. Here for example, is how the 68000 halfword-add
1230instruction is defined:
1231
1232@smallexample
1233(define_insn "addhi3"
1234 [(set (match_operand:HI 0 "general_operand" "=m,r")
1235 (plus:HI (match_operand:HI 1 "general_operand" "%0,0")
1236 (match_operand:HI 2 "general_operand" "di,g")))]
1237 @dots{})
1238@end smallexample
1239@end ifset
daf2f129 1240GCC can only handle one commutative pair in an asm; if you use more,
9efb4cb6 1241the compiler may fail.
03dda8e3
RK
1242
1243@cindex @samp{#} in constraint
1244@item #
1245Says that all following characters, up to the next comma, are to be
1246ignored as a constraint. They are significant only for choosing
1247register preferences.
1248
03dda8e3
RK
1249@cindex @samp{*} in constraint
1250@item *
1251Says that the following character should be ignored when choosing
1252register preferences. @samp{*} has no effect on the meaning of the
1253constraint as a constraint, and no effect on reloading.
1254
9f339dde 1255@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
1256Here is an example: the 68000 has an instruction to sign-extend a
1257halfword in a data register, and can also sign-extend a value by
1258copying it into an address register. While either kind of register is
1259acceptable, the constraints on an address-register destination are
1260less strict, so it is best if register allocation makes an address
1261register its goal. Therefore, @samp{*} is used so that the @samp{d}
1262constraint letter (for data register) is ignored when computing
1263register preferences.
1264
1265@smallexample
1266(define_insn "extendhisi2"
1267 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=*d,a")
1268 (sign_extend:SI
1269 (match_operand:HI 1 "general_operand" "0,g")))]
1270 @dots{})
1271@end smallexample
1272@end ifset
1273@end table
1274
1275@node Machine Constraints
1276@subsection Constraints for Particular Machines
1277@cindex machine specific constraints
1278@cindex constraints, machine specific
1279
1280Whenever possible, you should use the general-purpose constraint letters
1281in @code{asm} arguments, since they will convey meaning more readily to
1282people reading your code. Failing that, use the constraint letters
1283that usually have very similar meanings across architectures. The most
1284commonly used constraints are @samp{m} and @samp{r} (for memory and
1285general-purpose registers respectively; @pxref{Simple Constraints}), and
1286@samp{I}, usually the letter indicating the most common
1287immediate-constant format.
1288
9c34dbbf
ZW
1289For each machine architecture, the
1290@file{config/@var{machine}/@var{machine}.h} file defines additional
1291constraints. These constraints are used by the compiler itself for
1292instruction generation, as well as for @code{asm} statements; therefore,
1293some of the constraints are not particularly interesting for @code{asm}.
1294The constraints are defined through these macros:
03dda8e3
RK
1295
1296@table @code
1297@item REG_CLASS_FROM_LETTER
4bd0bee9 1298Register class constraints (usually lowercase).
03dda8e3
RK
1299
1300@item CONST_OK_FOR_LETTER_P
1301Immediate constant constraints, for non-floating point constants of
4bd0bee9 1302word size or smaller precision (usually uppercase).
03dda8e3
RK
1303
1304@item CONST_DOUBLE_OK_FOR_LETTER_P
1305Immediate constant constraints, for all floating point constants and for
4bd0bee9 1306constants of greater than word size precision (usually uppercase).
03dda8e3
RK
1307
1308@item EXTRA_CONSTRAINT
1309Special cases of registers or memory. This macro is not required, and
1310is only defined for some machines.
1311@end table
1312
1313Inspecting these macro definitions in the compiler source for your
1314machine is the best way to be certain you have the right constraints.
1315However, here is a summary of the machine-dependent constraints
1316available on some particular machines.
1317
1318@table @emph
1319@item ARM family---@file{arm.h}
1320@table @code
1321@item f
1322Floating-point register
1323
9b66ebb1
PB
1324@item w
1325VFP floating-point register
1326
03dda8e3
RK
1327@item F
1328One of the floating-point constants 0.0, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0
1329or 10.0
1330
1331@item G
1332Floating-point constant that would satisfy the constraint @samp{F} if it
1333were negated
1334
1335@item I
1336Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in a data processing
1337instruction. That is, an integer in the range 0 to 255 rotated by a
1338multiple of 2
1339
1340@item J
630d3d5a 1341Integer in the range @minus{}4095 to 4095
03dda8e3
RK
1342
1343@item K
1344Integer that satisfies constraint @samp{I} when inverted (ones complement)
1345
1346@item L
1347Integer that satisfies constraint @samp{I} when negated (twos complement)
1348
1349@item M
1350Integer in the range 0 to 32
1351
1352@item Q
1353A memory reference where the exact address is in a single register
1354(`@samp{m}' is preferable for @code{asm} statements)
1355
1356@item R
1357An item in the constant pool
1358
1359@item S
1360A symbol in the text segment of the current file
1361@end table
1362
1e1ab407 1363@item Uv
9b66ebb1
PB
1364A memory reference suitable for VFP load/store insns (reg+constant offset)
1365
fdd695fd
PB
1366@item Uy
1367A memory reference suitable for iWMMXt load/store instructions.
1368
1e1ab407
RE
1369@item Uq
1370A memory reference suitable for for the ARMv4 ldrsb instruction.
1371
052a4b28
DC
1372@item AVR family---@file{avr.h}
1373@table @code
1374@item l
1375Registers from r0 to r15
1376
1377@item a
1378Registers from r16 to r23
1379
1380@item d
1381Registers from r16 to r31
1382
1383@item w
3a69a7d5 1384Registers from r24 to r31. These registers can be used in @samp{adiw} command
052a4b28
DC
1385
1386@item e
d7d9c429 1387Pointer register (r26--r31)
052a4b28
DC
1388
1389@item b
d7d9c429 1390Base pointer register (r28--r31)
052a4b28 1391
3a69a7d5
MM
1392@item q
1393Stack pointer register (SPH:SPL)
1394
052a4b28
DC
1395@item t
1396Temporary register r0
1397
1398@item x
1399Register pair X (r27:r26)
1400
1401@item y
1402Register pair Y (r29:r28)
1403
1404@item z
1405Register pair Z (r31:r30)
1406
1407@item I
630d3d5a 1408Constant greater than @minus{}1, less than 64
052a4b28
DC
1409
1410@item J
630d3d5a 1411Constant greater than @minus{}64, less than 1
052a4b28
DC
1412
1413@item K
1414Constant integer 2
1415
1416@item L
1417Constant integer 0
1418
1419@item M
1420Constant that fits in 8 bits
1421
1422@item N
630d3d5a 1423Constant integer @minus{}1
052a4b28
DC
1424
1425@item O
3a69a7d5 1426Constant integer 8, 16, or 24
052a4b28
DC
1427
1428@item P
1429Constant integer 1
1430
1431@item G
1432A floating point constant 0.0
1433@end table
1434
2dcfc29d 1435@item PowerPC and IBM RS6000---@file{rs6000.h}
03dda8e3
RK
1436@table @code
1437@item b
1438Address base register
1439
1440@item f
1441Floating point register
1442
2dcfc29d
DE
1443@item v
1444Vector register
1445
03dda8e3
RK
1446@item h
1447@samp{MQ}, @samp{CTR}, or @samp{LINK} register
1448
1449@item q
1450@samp{MQ} register
1451
1452@item c
1453@samp{CTR} register
1454
1455@item l
1456@samp{LINK} register
1457
1458@item x
1459@samp{CR} register (condition register) number 0
1460
1461@item y
1462@samp{CR} register (condition register)
1463
8f685459
DE
1464@item z
1465@samp{FPMEM} stack memory for FPR-GPR transfers
1466
03dda8e3 1467@item I
1e5f973d 1468Signed 16-bit constant
03dda8e3
RK
1469
1470@item J
ebb48a4d 1471Unsigned 16-bit constant shifted left 16 bits (use @samp{L} instead for
5f59ecb7 1472@code{SImode} constants)
03dda8e3
RK
1473
1474@item K
1e5f973d 1475Unsigned 16-bit constant
03dda8e3
RK
1476
1477@item L
1e5f973d 1478Signed 16-bit constant shifted left 16 bits
03dda8e3
RK
1479
1480@item M
1481Constant larger than 31
1482
1483@item N
1484Exact power of 2
1485
1486@item O
1487Zero
1488
1489@item P
1e5f973d 1490Constant whose negation is a signed 16-bit constant
03dda8e3
RK
1491
1492@item G
1493Floating point constant that can be loaded into a register with one
1494instruction per word
1495
1496@item Q
1497Memory operand that is an offset from a register (@samp{m} is preferable
1498for @code{asm} statements)
1499
1500@item R
1501AIX TOC entry
1502
1503@item S
8f685459 1504Constant suitable as a 64-bit mask operand
03dda8e3 1505
5f59ecb7
DE
1506@item T
1507Constant suitable as a 32-bit mask operand
1508
03dda8e3
RK
1509@item U
1510System V Release 4 small data area reference
1511@end table
1512
1513@item Intel 386---@file{i386.h}
1514@table @code
1515@item q
0c56474e 1516@samp{a}, @code{b}, @code{c}, or @code{d} register for the i386.
1e5f973d 1517For x86-64 it is equivalent to @samp{r} class. (for 8-bit instructions that
0c56474e
JH
1518do not use upper halves)
1519
1520@item Q
1e5f973d 1521@samp{a}, @code{b}, @code{c}, or @code{d} register. (for 8-bit instructions,
0c56474e
JH
1522that do use upper halves)
1523
1524@item R
d7d9c429 1525Legacy register---equivalent to @code{r} class in i386 mode.
1e5f973d 1526(for non-8-bit registers used together with 8-bit upper halves in a single
0c56474e 1527instruction)
03dda8e3
RK
1528
1529@item A
994682b9
AJ
1530Specifies the @samp{a} or @samp{d} registers. This is primarily useful
1531for 64-bit integer values (when in 32-bit mode) intended to be returned
1532with the @samp{d} register holding the most significant bits and the
1533@samp{a} register holding the least significant bits.
03dda8e3
RK
1534
1535@item f
1536Floating point register
1537
1538@item t
1539First (top of stack) floating point register
1540
1541@item u
1542Second floating point register
1543
1544@item a
1545@samp{a} register
1546
1547@item b
1548@samp{b} register
1549
1550@item c
1551@samp{c} register
1552
f8ca7923 1553@item C
c0478a66 1554Specifies constant that can be easily constructed in SSE register without
f8ca7923
JH
1555loading it from memory.
1556
03dda8e3
RK
1557@item d
1558@samp{d} register
1559
1560@item D
1561@samp{di} register
1562
1563@item S
1564@samp{si} register
1565
994682b9
AJ
1566@item x
1567@samp{xmm} SSE register
1568
1569@item y
1570MMX register
1571
03dda8e3 1572@item I
1e5f973d 1573Constant in range 0 to 31 (for 32-bit shifts)
03dda8e3
RK
1574
1575@item J
1e5f973d 1576Constant in range 0 to 63 (for 64-bit shifts)
03dda8e3
RK
1577
1578@item K
1579@samp{0xff}
1580
1581@item L
1582@samp{0xffff}
1583
1584@item M
15850, 1, 2, or 3 (shifts for @code{lea} instruction)
1586
1587@item N
1588Constant in range 0 to 255 (for @code{out} instruction)
1589
0c56474e 1590@item Z
aee96fe9 1591Constant in range 0 to @code{0xffffffff} or symbolic reference known to fit specified range.
1e5f973d 1592(for using immediates in zero extending 32-bit to 64-bit x86-64 instructions)
0c56474e
JH
1593
1594@item e
630d3d5a 1595Constant in range @minus{}2147483648 to 2147483647 or symbolic reference known to fit specified range.
1e5f973d 1596(for using immediates in 64-bit x86-64 instructions)
0c56474e 1597
03dda8e3
RK
1598@item G
1599Standard 80387 floating point constant
1600@end table
1601
7a430e3b
SC
1602@item Intel IA-64---@file{ia64.h}
1603@table @code
1604@item a
1605General register @code{r0} to @code{r3} for @code{addl} instruction
1606
1607@item b
1608Branch register
1609
1610@item c
1611Predicate register (@samp{c} as in ``conditional'')
1612
1613@item d
1614Application register residing in M-unit
1615
1616@item e
1617Application register residing in I-unit
1618
1619@item f
1620Floating-point register
1621
1622@item m
1623Memory operand.
1624Remember that @samp{m} allows postincrement and postdecrement which
1625require printing with @samp{%Pn} on IA-64.
1626Use @samp{S} to disallow postincrement and postdecrement.
1627
1628@item G
1629Floating-point constant 0.0 or 1.0
1630
1631@item I
163214-bit signed integer constant
1633
1634@item J
163522-bit signed integer constant
1636
1637@item K
16388-bit signed integer constant for logical instructions
1639
1640@item L
16418-bit adjusted signed integer constant for compare pseudo-ops
1642
1643@item M
16446-bit unsigned integer constant for shift counts
1645
1646@item N
16479-bit signed integer constant for load and store postincrements
1648
1649@item O
1650The constant zero
1651
1652@item P
16530 or -1 for @code{dep} instruction
1654
1655@item Q
1656Non-volatile memory for floating-point loads and stores
1657
1658@item R
1659Integer constant in the range 1 to 4 for @code{shladd} instruction
1660
1661@item S
1662Memory operand except postincrement and postdecrement
1663@end table
03dda8e3 1664
70899148
BS
1665@item FRV---@file{frv.h}
1666@table @code
1667@item a
840758d3 1668Register in the class @code{ACC_REGS} (@code{acc0} to @code{acc7}).
70899148
BS
1669
1670@item b
840758d3 1671Register in the class @code{EVEN_ACC_REGS} (@code{acc0} to @code{acc7}).
70899148
BS
1672
1673@item c
840758d3
BS
1674Register in the class @code{CC_REGS} (@code{fcc0} to @code{fcc3} and
1675@code{icc0} to @code{icc3}).
70899148
BS
1676
1677@item d
840758d3 1678Register in the class @code{GPR_REGS} (@code{gr0} to @code{gr63}).
70899148
BS
1679
1680@item e
840758d3 1681Register in the class @code{EVEN_REGS} (@code{gr0} to @code{gr63}).
70899148
BS
1682Odd registers are excluded not in the class but through the use of a machine
1683mode larger than 4 bytes.
1684
1685@item f
840758d3 1686Register in the class @code{FPR_REGS} (@code{fr0} to @code{fr63}).
70899148
BS
1687
1688@item h
840758d3 1689Register in the class @code{FEVEN_REGS} (@code{fr0} to @code{fr63}).
70899148
BS
1690Odd registers are excluded not in the class but through the use of a machine
1691mode larger than 4 bytes.
1692
1693@item l
840758d3 1694Register in the class @code{LR_REG} (the @code{lr} register).
70899148
BS
1695
1696@item q
840758d3 1697Register in the class @code{QUAD_REGS} (@code{gr2} to @code{gr63}).
70899148
BS
1698Register numbers not divisible by 4 are excluded not in the class but through
1699the use of a machine mode larger than 8 bytes.
1700
1701@item t
840758d3 1702Register in the class @code{ICC_REGS} (@code{icc0} to @code{icc3}).
70899148
BS
1703
1704@item u
840758d3 1705Register in the class @code{FCC_REGS} (@code{fcc0} to @code{fcc3}).
70899148
BS
1706
1707@item v
840758d3 1708Register in the class @code{ICR_REGS} (@code{cc4} to @code{cc7}).
70899148
BS
1709
1710@item w
840758d3 1711Register in the class @code{FCR_REGS} (@code{cc0} to @code{cc3}).
70899148
BS
1712
1713@item x
840758d3 1714Register in the class @code{QUAD_FPR_REGS} (@code{fr0} to @code{fr63}).
70899148
BS
1715Register numbers not divisible by 4 are excluded not in the class but through
1716the use of a machine mode larger than 8 bytes.
1717
1718@item z
840758d3 1719Register in the class @code{SPR_REGS} (@code{lcr} and @code{lr}).
70899148
BS
1720
1721@item A
840758d3 1722Register in the class @code{QUAD_ACC_REGS} (@code{acc0} to @code{acc7}).
70899148
BS
1723
1724@item B
840758d3 1725Register in the class @code{ACCG_REGS} (@code{accg0} to @code{accg7}).
70899148
BS
1726
1727@item C
840758d3 1728Register in the class @code{CR_REGS} (@code{cc0} to @code{cc7}).
70899148
BS
1729
1730@item G
1731Floating point constant zero
1732
1733@item I
17346-bit signed integer constant
1735
1736@item J
173710-bit signed integer constant
1738
1739@item L
174016-bit signed integer constant
1741
1742@item M
174316-bit unsigned integer constant
1744
1745@item N
840758d3
BS
174612-bit signed integer constant that is negative---i.e.@: in the
1747range of @minus{}2048 to @minus{}1
70899148
BS
1748
1749@item O
1750Constant zero
1751
1752@item P
840758d3 175312-bit signed integer constant that is greater than zero---i.e.@: in the
70899148
BS
1754range of 1 to 2047.
1755
1756@end table
1757
e3223ea2
DC
1758@item IP2K---@file{ip2k.h}
1759@table @code
1760@item a
1761@samp{DP} or @samp{IP} registers (general address)
1762
1763@item f
1764@samp{IP} register
1765
1766@item j
1767@samp{IPL} register
1768
1769@item k
1770@samp{IPH} register
1771
1772@item b
1773@samp{DP} register
1774
1775@item y
1776@samp{DPH} register
1777
1778@item z
1779@samp{DPL} register
1780
1781@item q
1782@samp{SP} register
1783
1784@item c
1785@samp{DP} or @samp{SP} registers (offsettable address)
1786
1787@item d
1788Non-pointer registers (not @samp{SP}, @samp{DP}, @samp{IP})
1789
1790@item u
1791Non-SP registers (everything except @samp{SP})
1792
1793@item R
95ea367d 1794Indirect through @samp{IP} - Avoid this except for @code{QImode}, since we
e3223ea2
DC
1795can't access extra bytes
1796
1797@item S
95ea367d 1798Indirect through @samp{SP} or @samp{DP} with short displacement (0..127)
e3223ea2
DC
1799
1800@item T
1801Data-section immediate value
1802
1803@item I
1804Integers from @minus{}255 to @minus{}1
1805
1806@item J
1807Integers from 0 to 7---valid bit number in a register
1808
1809@item K
1810Integers from 0 to 127---valid displacement for addressing mode
1811
1812@item L
1813Integers from 1 to 127
1814
1815@item M
1816Integer @minus{}1
1817
1818@item N
1819Integer 1
1820
1821@item O
1822Zero
1823
1824@item P
1825Integers from 0 to 255
1826@end table
1827
4226378a
PK
1828@item MIPS---@file{mips.h}
1829@table @code
1830@item d
1831General-purpose integer register
1832
1833@item f
1834Floating-point register (if available)
1835
1836@item h
1837@samp{Hi} register
1838
1839@item l
1840@samp{Lo} register
1841
1842@item x
1843@samp{Hi} or @samp{Lo} register
1844
1845@item y
1846General-purpose integer register
1847
1848@item z
1849Floating-point status register
1850
1851@item I
1852Signed 16-bit constant (for arithmetic instructions)
1853
1854@item J
1855Zero
1856
1857@item K
1858Zero-extended 16-bit constant (for logic instructions)
1859
1860@item L
1861Constant with low 16 bits zero (can be loaded with @code{lui})
1862
1863@item M
186432-bit constant which requires two instructions to load (a constant
1865which is not @samp{I}, @samp{K}, or @samp{L})
1866
1867@item N
1868Negative 16-bit constant
1869
1870@item O
1871Exact power of two
1872
1873@item P
1874Positive 16-bit constant
1875
1876@item G
1877Floating point zero
1878
1879@item Q
1880Memory reference that can be loaded with more than one instruction
1881(@samp{m} is preferable for @code{asm} statements)
1882
1883@item R
1884Memory reference that can be loaded with one instruction
1885(@samp{m} is preferable for @code{asm} statements)
1886
1887@item S
1888Memory reference in external OSF/rose PIC format
1889(@samp{m} is preferable for @code{asm} statements)
1890@end table
1891
03dda8e3
RK
1892@item Motorola 680x0---@file{m68k.h}
1893@table @code
1894@item a
1895Address register
1896
1897@item d
1898Data register
1899
1900@item f
190168881 floating-point register, if available
1902
03dda8e3
RK
1903@item I
1904Integer in the range 1 to 8
1905
1906@item J
1e5f973d 190716-bit signed number
03dda8e3
RK
1908
1909@item K
1910Signed number whose magnitude is greater than 0x80
1911
1912@item L
630d3d5a 1913Integer in the range @minus{}8 to @minus{}1
03dda8e3
RK
1914
1915@item M
1916Signed number whose magnitude is greater than 0x100
1917
1918@item G
1919Floating point constant that is not a 68881 constant
03dda8e3
RK
1920@end table
1921
2856c3e3
SC
1922@item Motorola 68HC11 & 68HC12 families---@file{m68hc11.h}
1923@table @code
1924@item a
1925Register 'a'
1926
1927@item b
1928Register 'b'
1929
1930@item d
1931Register 'd'
1932
1933@item q
1934An 8-bit register
1935
1936@item t
1937Temporary soft register _.tmp
1938
1939@item u
1940A soft register _.d1 to _.d31
1941
1942@item w
1943Stack pointer register
1944
1945@item x
1946Register 'x'
1947
1948@item y
1949Register 'y'
1950
1951@item z
1952Pseudo register 'z' (replaced by 'x' or 'y' at the end)
1953
1954@item A
1955An address register: x, y or z
1956
1957@item B
1958An address register: x or y
1959
1960@item D
1961Register pair (x:d) to form a 32-bit value
1962
1963@item L
630d3d5a 1964Constants in the range @minus{}65536 to 65535
2856c3e3
SC
1965
1966@item M
1967Constants whose 16-bit low part is zero
1968
1969@item N
630d3d5a 1970Constant integer 1 or @minus{}1
2856c3e3
SC
1971
1972@item O
1973Constant integer 16
1974
1975@item P
630d3d5a 1976Constants in the range @minus{}8 to 2
2856c3e3
SC
1977
1978@end table
1979
03dda8e3
RK
1980@need 1000
1981@item SPARC---@file{sparc.h}
1982@table @code
1983@item f
53e5f173
EB
1984Floating-point register on the SPARC-V8 architecture and
1985lower floating-point register on the SPARC-V9 architecture.
03dda8e3
RK
1986
1987@item e
53e5f173
EB
1988Floating-point register. It is equivalent to @samp{f} on the
1989SPARC-V8 architecture and contains both lower and upper
1990floating-point registers on the SPARC-V9 architecture.
03dda8e3 1991
8a69f99f
EB
1992@item c
1993Floating-point condition code register.
1994
1995@item d
53e5f173
EB
1996Lower floating-point register. It is only valid on the SPARC-V9
1997architecture when the Visual Instruction Set is available.
8a69f99f
EB
1998
1999@item b
53e5f173
EB
2000Floating-point register. It is only valid on the SPARC-V9 architecture
2001when the Visual Instruction Set is available.
8a69f99f
EB
2002
2003@item h
200464-bit global or out register for the SPARC-V8+ architecture.
2005
03dda8e3 2006@item I
1e5f973d 2007Signed 13-bit constant
03dda8e3
RK
2008
2009@item J
2010Zero
2011
2012@item K
1e5f973d 201332-bit constant with the low 12 bits clear (a constant that can be
03dda8e3
RK
2014loaded with the @code{sethi} instruction)
2015
7d6040e8
AO
2016@item L
2017A constant in the range supported by @code{movcc} instructions
2018
2019@item M
2020A constant in the range supported by @code{movrcc} instructions
2021
2022@item N
2023Same as @samp{K}, except that it verifies that bits that are not in the
57694e40 2024lower 32-bit range are all zero. Must be used instead of @samp{K} for
7d6040e8
AO
2025modes wider than @code{SImode}
2026
ef0139b1
EB
2027@item O
2028The constant 4096
2029
03dda8e3
RK
2030@item G
2031Floating-point zero
2032
2033@item H
1e5f973d 2034Signed 13-bit constant, sign-extended to 32 or 64 bits
03dda8e3
RK
2035
2036@item Q
62190128
DM
2037Floating-point constant whose integral representation can
2038be moved into an integer register using a single sethi
2039instruction
2040
2041@item R
2042Floating-point constant whose integral representation can
2043be moved into an integer register using a single mov
2044instruction
03dda8e3
RK
2045
2046@item S
62190128
DM
2047Floating-point constant whose integral representation can
2048be moved into an integer register using a high/lo_sum
2049instruction sequence
03dda8e3
RK
2050
2051@item T
2052Memory address aligned to an 8-byte boundary
2053
2054@item U
2055Even register
6ca30df6 2056
7a31a340
DM
2057@item W
2058Memory address for @samp{e} constraint registers.
2059
6ca30df6
MH
2060@end table
2061
2062@item TMS320C3x/C4x---@file{c4x.h}
2063@table @code
2064@item a
2065Auxiliary (address) register (ar0-ar7)
2066
2067@item b
2068Stack pointer register (sp)
2069
2070@item c
1e5f973d 2071Standard (32-bit) precision integer register
6ca30df6
MH
2072
2073@item f
1e5f973d 2074Extended (40-bit) precision register (r0-r11)
6ca30df6
MH
2075
2076@item k
2077Block count register (bk)
2078
2079@item q
1e5f973d 2080Extended (40-bit) precision low register (r0-r7)
6ca30df6
MH
2081
2082@item t
1e5f973d 2083Extended (40-bit) precision register (r0-r1)
6ca30df6
MH
2084
2085@item u
1e5f973d 2086Extended (40-bit) precision register (r2-r3)
6ca30df6
MH
2087
2088@item v
2089Repeat count register (rc)
2090
2091@item x
2092Index register (ir0-ir1)
2093
2094@item y
2095Status (condition code) register (st)
2096
2097@item z
2098Data page register (dp)
2099
2100@item G
2101Floating-point zero
2102
2103@item H
1e5f973d 2104Immediate 16-bit floating-point constant
6ca30df6
MH
2105
2106@item I
1e5f973d 2107Signed 16-bit constant
6ca30df6
MH
2108
2109@item J
1e5f973d 2110Signed 8-bit constant
6ca30df6
MH
2111
2112@item K
1e5f973d 2113Signed 5-bit constant
6ca30df6
MH
2114
2115@item L
1e5f973d 2116Unsigned 16-bit constant
6ca30df6
MH
2117
2118@item M
1e5f973d 2119Unsigned 8-bit constant
6ca30df6
MH
2120
2121@item N
1e5f973d 2122Ones complement of unsigned 16-bit constant
6ca30df6
MH
2123
2124@item O
1e5f973d 2125High 16-bit constant (32-bit constant with 16 LSBs zero)
6ca30df6
MH
2126
2127@item Q
ebb48a4d 2128Indirect memory reference with signed 8-bit or index register displacement
6ca30df6
MH
2129
2130@item R
1e5f973d 2131Indirect memory reference with unsigned 5-bit displacement
6ca30df6
MH
2132
2133@item S
ebb48a4d 2134Indirect memory reference with 1 bit or index register displacement
6ca30df6
MH
2135
2136@item T
2137Direct memory reference
2138
2139@item U
2140Symbolic address
2141
03dda8e3 2142@end table
91abf72d
HP
2143
2144@item S/390 and zSeries---@file{s390.h}
2145@table @code
2146@item a
2147Address register (general purpose register except r0)
2148
2149@item d
2150Data register (arbitrary general purpose register)
2151
2152@item f
2153Floating-point register
2154
2155@item I
2156Unsigned 8-bit constant (0--255)
2157
2158@item J
2159Unsigned 12-bit constant (0--4095)
2160
2161@item K
2162Signed 16-bit constant (@minus{}32768--32767)
2163
2164@item L
f19a9af7
AK
2165Value appropriate as displacement.
2166@table @code
2167 @item (0..4095)
2168 for short displacement
2169 @item (-524288..524287)
2170 for long displacement
2171@end table
2172
2173@item M
2174Constant integer with a value of 0x7fffffff.
2175
2176@item N
2177Multiple letter constraint followed by 4 parameter letters.
2178@table @code
2179 @item 0..9:
2180 number of the part counting from most to least significant
2181 @item H,Q:
2182 mode of the part
2183 @item D,S,H:
2184 mode of the containing operand
2185 @item 0,F:
2186 value of the other parts (F - all bits set)
2187@end table
2188The constraint matches if the specified part of a constant
2189has a value different from it's other parts.
91abf72d
HP
2190
2191@item Q
f19a9af7
AK
2192Memory reference without index register and with short displacement.
2193
2194@item R
2195Memory reference with index register and short displacement.
91abf72d
HP
2196
2197@item S
f19a9af7
AK
2198Memory reference without index register but with long displacement.
2199
2200@item T
2201Memory reference with index register and long displacement.
2202
2203@item U
2204Pointer with short displacement.
2205
2206@item W
2207Pointer with long displacement.
2208
2209@item Y
2210Shift count operand.
91abf72d
HP
2211
2212@end table
2213
9f339dde
GK
2214@item Xstormy16---@file{stormy16.h}
2215@table @code
2216@item a
2217Register r0.
2218
2219@item b
2220Register r1.
2221
2222@item c
2223Register r2.
2224
2225@item d
2226Register r8.
2227
2228@item e
2229Registers r0 through r7.
2230
2231@item t
2232Registers r0 and r1.
2233
2234@item y
2235The carry register.
2236
2237@item z
2238Registers r8 and r9.
2239
2240@item I
2241A constant between 0 and 3 inclusive.
2242
2243@item J
2244A constant that has exactly one bit set.
2245
2246@item K
2247A constant that has exactly one bit clear.
2248
2249@item L
2250A constant between 0 and 255 inclusive.
2251
2252@item M
69a0611f 2253A constant between @minus{}255 and 0 inclusive.
9f339dde
GK
2254
2255@item N
69a0611f 2256A constant between @minus{}3 and 0 inclusive.
9f339dde
GK
2257
2258@item O
2259A constant between 1 and 4 inclusive.
2260
2261@item P
69a0611f 2262A constant between @minus{}4 and @minus{}1 inclusive.
9f339dde
GK
2263
2264@item Q
2265A memory reference that is a stack push.
2266
2267@item R
2268A memory reference that is a stack pop.
2269
2270@item S
63519d23 2271A memory reference that refers to a constant address of known value.
9f339dde
GK
2272
2273@item T
2274The register indicated by Rx (not implemented yet).
2275
2276@item U
2277A constant that is not between 2 and 15 inclusive.
2278
e2ce66a9
DD
2279@item Z
2280The constant 0.
2281
9f339dde
GK
2282@end table
2283
03984308
BW
2284@item Xtensa---@file{xtensa.h}
2285@table @code
2286@item a
2287General-purpose 32-bit register
2288
2289@item b
2290One-bit boolean register
2291
2292@item A
2293MAC16 40-bit accumulator register
2294
2295@item I
2296Signed 12-bit integer constant, for use in MOVI instructions
2297
2298@item J
2299Signed 8-bit integer constant, for use in ADDI instructions
2300
2301@item K
2302Integer constant valid for BccI instructions
2303
2304@item L
2305Unsigned constant valid for BccUI instructions
2306
2307@end table
2308
03dda8e3
RK
2309@end table
2310
03dda8e3
RK
2311@ifset INTERNALS
2312@node Standard Names
2313@section Standard Pattern Names For Generation
2314@cindex standard pattern names
2315@cindex pattern names
2316@cindex names, pattern
2317
2318Here is a table of the instruction names that are meaningful in the RTL
2319generation pass of the compiler. Giving one of these names to an
2320instruction pattern tells the RTL generation pass that it can use the
556e0f21 2321pattern to accomplish a certain task.
03dda8e3
RK
2322
2323@table @asis
2324@cindex @code{mov@var{m}} instruction pattern
2325@item @samp{mov@var{m}}
4bd0bee9 2326Here @var{m} stands for a two-letter machine mode name, in lowercase.
03dda8e3
RK
2327This instruction pattern moves data with that machine mode from operand
23281 to operand 0. For example, @samp{movsi} moves full-word data.
2329
2330If operand 0 is a @code{subreg} with mode @var{m} of a register whose
2331own mode is wider than @var{m}, the effect of this instruction is
2332to store the specified value in the part of the register that corresponds
8feb4e28
JL
2333to mode @var{m}. Bits outside of @var{m}, but which are within the
2334same target word as the @code{subreg} are undefined. Bits which are
2335outside the target word are left unchanged.
03dda8e3
RK
2336
2337This class of patterns is special in several ways. First of all, each
65945ec1
HPN
2338of these names up to and including full word size @emph{must} be defined,
2339because there is no other way to copy a datum from one place to another.
2340If there are patterns accepting operands in larger modes,
2341@samp{mov@var{m}} must be defined for integer modes of those sizes.
03dda8e3
RK
2342
2343Second, these patterns are not used solely in the RTL generation pass.
2344Even the reload pass can generate move insns to copy values from stack
2345slots into temporary registers. When it does so, one of the operands is
2346a hard register and the other is an operand that can need to be reloaded
2347into a register.
2348
2349@findex force_reg
2350Therefore, when given such a pair of operands, the pattern must generate
2351RTL which needs no reloading and needs no temporary registers---no
2352registers other than the operands. For example, if you support the
2353pattern with a @code{define_expand}, then in such a case the
2354@code{define_expand} mustn't call @code{force_reg} or any other such
2355function which might generate new pseudo registers.
2356
2357This requirement exists even for subword modes on a RISC machine where
2358fetching those modes from memory normally requires several insns and
39ed8974 2359some temporary registers.
03dda8e3
RK
2360
2361@findex change_address
2362During reload a memory reference with an invalid address may be passed
2363as an operand. Such an address will be replaced with a valid address
2364later in the reload pass. In this case, nothing may be done with the
2365address except to use it as it stands. If it is copied, it will not be
2366replaced with a valid address. No attempt should be made to make such
2367an address into a valid address and no routine (such as
2368@code{change_address}) that will do so may be called. Note that
2369@code{general_operand} will fail when applied to such an address.
2370
2371@findex reload_in_progress
2372The global variable @code{reload_in_progress} (which must be explicitly
2373declared if required) can be used to determine whether such special
2374handling is required.
2375
2376The variety of operands that have reloads depends on the rest of the
2377machine description, but typically on a RISC machine these can only be
2378pseudo registers that did not get hard registers, while on other
2379machines explicit memory references will get optional reloads.
2380
2381If a scratch register is required to move an object to or from memory,
f1db3576
JL
2382it can be allocated using @code{gen_reg_rtx} prior to life analysis.
2383
9c34dbbf
ZW
2384If there are cases which need scratch registers during or after reload,
2385you must define @code{SECONDARY_INPUT_RELOAD_CLASS} and/or
03dda8e3
RK
2386@code{SECONDARY_OUTPUT_RELOAD_CLASS} to detect them, and provide
2387patterns @samp{reload_in@var{m}} or @samp{reload_out@var{m}} to handle
2388them. @xref{Register Classes}.
2389
f1db3576
JL
2390@findex no_new_pseudos
2391The global variable @code{no_new_pseudos} can be used to determine if it
2392is unsafe to create new pseudo registers. If this variable is nonzero, then
2393it is unsafe to call @code{gen_reg_rtx} to allocate a new pseudo.
2394
956d6950 2395The constraints on a @samp{mov@var{m}} must permit moving any hard
03dda8e3
RK
2396register to any other hard register provided that
2397@code{HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK} permits mode @var{m} in both registers and
2398@code{REGISTER_MOVE_COST} applied to their classes returns a value of 2.
2399
956d6950 2400It is obligatory to support floating point @samp{mov@var{m}}
03dda8e3
RK
2401instructions into and out of any registers that can hold fixed point
2402values, because unions and structures (which have modes @code{SImode} or
2403@code{DImode}) can be in those registers and they may have floating
2404point members.
2405
956d6950 2406There may also be a need to support fixed point @samp{mov@var{m}}
03dda8e3
RK
2407instructions in and out of floating point registers. Unfortunately, I
2408have forgotten why this was so, and I don't know whether it is still
2409true. If @code{HARD_REGNO_MODE_OK} rejects fixed point values in
2410floating point registers, then the constraints of the fixed point
956d6950 2411@samp{mov@var{m}} instructions must be designed to avoid ever trying to
03dda8e3
RK
2412reload into a floating point register.
2413
2414@cindex @code{reload_in} instruction pattern
2415@cindex @code{reload_out} instruction pattern
2416@item @samp{reload_in@var{m}}
2417@itemx @samp{reload_out@var{m}}
2418Like @samp{mov@var{m}}, but used when a scratch register is required to
2419move between operand 0 and operand 1. Operand 2 describes the scratch
2420register. See the discussion of the @code{SECONDARY_RELOAD_CLASS}
2421macro in @pxref{Register Classes}.
2422
d989f648 2423There are special restrictions on the form of the @code{match_operand}s
f282ffb3 2424used in these patterns. First, only the predicate for the reload
560dbedd
RH
2425operand is examined, i.e., @code{reload_in} examines operand 1, but not
2426the predicates for operand 0 or 2. Second, there may be only one
d989f648
RH
2427alternative in the constraints. Third, only a single register class
2428letter may be used for the constraint; subsequent constraint letters
2429are ignored. As a special exception, an empty constraint string
2430matches the @code{ALL_REGS} register class. This may relieve ports
2431of the burden of defining an @code{ALL_REGS} constraint letter just
2432for these patterns.
2433
03dda8e3
RK
2434@cindex @code{movstrict@var{m}} instruction pattern
2435@item @samp{movstrict@var{m}}
2436Like @samp{mov@var{m}} except that if operand 0 is a @code{subreg}
2437with mode @var{m} of a register whose natural mode is wider,
2438the @samp{movstrict@var{m}} instruction is guaranteed not to alter
2439any of the register except the part which belongs to mode @var{m}.
2440
2441@cindex @code{load_multiple} instruction pattern
2442@item @samp{load_multiple}
2443Load several consecutive memory locations into consecutive registers.
2444Operand 0 is the first of the consecutive registers, operand 1
2445is the first memory location, and operand 2 is a constant: the
2446number of consecutive registers.
2447
2448Define this only if the target machine really has such an instruction;
2449do not define this if the most efficient way of loading consecutive
2450registers from memory is to do them one at a time.
2451
2452On some machines, there are restrictions as to which consecutive
2453registers can be stored into memory, such as particular starting or
2454ending register numbers or only a range of valid counts. For those
2455machines, use a @code{define_expand} (@pxref{Expander Definitions})
2456and make the pattern fail if the restrictions are not met.
2457
2458Write the generated insn as a @code{parallel} with elements being a
2459@code{set} of one register from the appropriate memory location (you may
2460also need @code{use} or @code{clobber} elements). Use a
2461@code{match_parallel} (@pxref{RTL Template}) to recognize the insn. See
c9693e96 2462@file{rs6000.md} for examples of the use of this insn pattern.
03dda8e3
RK
2463
2464@cindex @samp{store_multiple} instruction pattern
2465@item @samp{store_multiple}
2466Similar to @samp{load_multiple}, but store several consecutive registers
2467into consecutive memory locations. Operand 0 is the first of the
2468consecutive memory locations, operand 1 is the first register, and
2469operand 2 is a constant: the number of consecutive registers.
2470
ef1140a9
JH
2471@cindex @code{vec_set@var{m}} instruction pattern
2472@item @samp{vec_set@var{m}}
2473Set given field in the vector value. Operand 0 is the vector to modify,
2474operand 1 is new value of field and operand 2 specify the field index.
2475
2476@cindex @code{vec_extract@var{m}} instruction pattern
2477@item @samp{vec_extract@var{m}}
2478Extract given field from the vector value. Operand 1 is the vector, operand 2
2479specify field index and operand 0 place to store value into.
2480
2481@cindex @code{vec_init@var{m}} instruction pattern
2482@item @samp{vec_init@var{m}}
425a2bde 2483Initialize the vector to given values. Operand 0 is the vector to initialize
ef1140a9
JH
2484and operand 1 is parallel containing values for individual fields.
2485
38f4324c
JH
2486@cindex @code{push@var{m}} instruction pattern
2487@item @samp{push@var{m}}
299c5111 2488Output a push instruction. Operand 0 is value to push. Used only when
38f4324c
JH
2489@code{PUSH_ROUNDING} is defined. For historical reason, this pattern may be
2490missing and in such case an @code{mov} expander is used instead, with a
6e9aac46 2491@code{MEM} expression forming the push operation. The @code{mov} expander
38f4324c
JH
2492method is deprecated.
2493
03dda8e3
RK
2494@cindex @code{add@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2495@item @samp{add@var{m}3}
2496Add operand 2 and operand 1, storing the result in operand 0. All operands
2497must have mode @var{m}. This can be used even on two-address machines, by
2498means of constraints requiring operands 1 and 0 to be the same location.
2499
2500@cindex @code{sub@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2501@cindex @code{mul@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2502@cindex @code{div@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2503@cindex @code{udiv@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2504@cindex @code{mod@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2505@cindex @code{umod@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2506@cindex @code{smin@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2507@cindex @code{smax@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2508@cindex @code{umin@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2509@cindex @code{umax@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2510@cindex @code{and@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2511@cindex @code{ior@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2512@cindex @code{xor@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2513@item @samp{sub@var{m}3}, @samp{mul@var{m}3}
2514@itemx @samp{div@var{m}3}, @samp{udiv@var{m}3}, @samp{mod@var{m}3}, @samp{umod@var{m}3}
2515@itemx @samp{smin@var{m}3}, @samp{smax@var{m}3}, @samp{umin@var{m}3}, @samp{umax@var{m}3}
2516@itemx @samp{and@var{m}3}, @samp{ior@var{m}3}, @samp{xor@var{m}3}
2517Similar, for other arithmetic operations.
b71b019a
JH
2518@cindex @code{min@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2519@cindex @code{max@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2520@itemx @samp{min@var{m}3}, @samp{max@var{m}3}
2521Floating point min and max operations. If both operands are zeros,
2522or if either operand is NaN, then it is unspecified which of the two
2523operands is returned as the result.
2524
03dda8e3
RK
2525
2526@cindex @code{mulhisi3} instruction pattern
2527@item @samp{mulhisi3}
2528Multiply operands 1 and 2, which have mode @code{HImode}, and store
2529a @code{SImode} product in operand 0.
2530
2531@cindex @code{mulqihi3} instruction pattern
2532@cindex @code{mulsidi3} instruction pattern
2533@item @samp{mulqihi3}, @samp{mulsidi3}
2534Similar widening-multiplication instructions of other widths.
2535
2536@cindex @code{umulqihi3} instruction pattern
2537@cindex @code{umulhisi3} instruction pattern
2538@cindex @code{umulsidi3} instruction pattern
2539@item @samp{umulqihi3}, @samp{umulhisi3}, @samp{umulsidi3}
2540Similar widening-multiplication instructions that do unsigned
2541multiplication.
2542
2543@cindex @code{smul@var{m}3_highpart} instruction pattern
759c58af 2544@item @samp{smul@var{m}3_highpart}
03dda8e3
RK
2545Perform a signed multiplication of operands 1 and 2, which have mode
2546@var{m}, and store the most significant half of the product in operand 0.
2547The least significant half of the product is discarded.
2548
2549@cindex @code{umul@var{m}3_highpart} instruction pattern
2550@item @samp{umul@var{m}3_highpart}
2551Similar, but the multiplication is unsigned.
2552
2553@cindex @code{divmod@var{m}4} instruction pattern
2554@item @samp{divmod@var{m}4}
2555Signed division that produces both a quotient and a remainder.
2556Operand 1 is divided by operand 2 to produce a quotient stored
2557in operand 0 and a remainder stored in operand 3.
2558
2559For machines with an instruction that produces both a quotient and a
2560remainder, provide a pattern for @samp{divmod@var{m}4} but do not
2561provide patterns for @samp{div@var{m}3} and @samp{mod@var{m}3}. This
2562allows optimization in the relatively common case when both the quotient
2563and remainder are computed.
2564
2565If an instruction that just produces a quotient or just a remainder
2566exists and is more efficient than the instruction that produces both,
2567write the output routine of @samp{divmod@var{m}4} to call
2568@code{find_reg_note} and look for a @code{REG_UNUSED} note on the
2569quotient or remainder and generate the appropriate instruction.
2570
2571@cindex @code{udivmod@var{m}4} instruction pattern
2572@item @samp{udivmod@var{m}4}
2573Similar, but does unsigned division.
2574
2575@cindex @code{ashl@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2576@item @samp{ashl@var{m}3}
2577Arithmetic-shift operand 1 left by a number of bits specified by operand
25782, and store the result in operand 0. Here @var{m} is the mode of
2579operand 0 and operand 1; operand 2's mode is specified by the
2580instruction pattern, and the compiler will convert the operand to that
2581mode before generating the instruction.
2582
2583@cindex @code{ashr@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2584@cindex @code{lshr@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2585@cindex @code{rotl@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2586@cindex @code{rotr@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2587@item @samp{ashr@var{m}3}, @samp{lshr@var{m}3}, @samp{rotl@var{m}3}, @samp{rotr@var{m}3}
2588Other shift and rotate instructions, analogous to the
2589@code{ashl@var{m}3} instructions.
2590
2591@cindex @code{neg@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2592@item @samp{neg@var{m}2}
2593Negate operand 1 and store the result in operand 0.
2594
2595@cindex @code{abs@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2596@item @samp{abs@var{m}2}
2597Store the absolute value of operand 1 into operand 0.
2598
2599@cindex @code{sqrt@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2600@item @samp{sqrt@var{m}2}
2601Store the square root of operand 1 into operand 0.
2602
2603The @code{sqrt} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
e7b489c8
RS
2604corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{sqrtf}
2605built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2606type @code{float}.
2607
2608@cindex @code{cos@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2609@item @samp{cos@var{m}2}
2610Store the cosine of operand 1 into operand 0.
2611
2612The @code{cos} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2613corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{cosf}
2614built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2615type @code{float}.
2616
2617@cindex @code{sin@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2618@item @samp{sin@var{m}2}
2619Store the sine of operand 1 into operand 0.
2620
2621The @code{sin} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2622corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{sinf}
2623built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2624type @code{float}.
2625
2626@cindex @code{exp@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2627@item @samp{exp@var{m}2}
2628Store the exponential of operand 1 into operand 0.
2629
2630The @code{exp} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2631corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{expf}
2632built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2633type @code{float}.
2634
2635@cindex @code{log@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2636@item @samp{log@var{m}2}
2637Store the natural logarithm of operand 1 into operand 0.
2638
2639The @code{log} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2640corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{logf}
2641built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2642type @code{float}.
03dda8e3 2643
b5e01d4b
RS
2644@cindex @code{pow@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2645@item @samp{pow@var{m}3}
2646Store the value of operand 1 raised to the exponent operand 2
2647into operand 0.
2648
2649The @code{pow} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2650corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{powf}
2651built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2652type @code{float}.
2653
2654@cindex @code{atan2@var{m}3} instruction pattern
2655@item @samp{atan2@var{m}3}
2656Store the arc tangent (inverse tangent) of operand 1 divided by
2657operand 2 into operand 0, using the signs of both arguments to
2658determine the quadrant of the result.
2659
2660The @code{atan2} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2661corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{atan2f}
2662built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2663type @code{float}.
2664
4977bab6
ZW
2665@cindex @code{floor@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2666@item @samp{floor@var{m}2}
2667Store the largest integral value not greater than argument.
2668
2669The @code{floor} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2670corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{floorf}
2671built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2672type @code{float}.
2673
2674@cindex @code{trunc@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2675@item @samp{trunc@var{m}2}
2676Store the argument rounded to integer towards zero.
2677
2678The @code{trunc} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2679corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{truncf}
2680built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2681type @code{float}.
2682
2683@cindex @code{round@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2684@item @samp{round@var{m}2}
2685Store the argument rounded to integer away from zero.
2686
2687The @code{round} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2688corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{roundf}
2689built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2690type @code{float}.
2691
2692@cindex @code{ceil@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2693@item @samp{ceil@var{m}2}
2694Store the argument rounded to integer away from zero.
2695
2696The @code{ceil} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2697corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{ceilf}
2698built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2699type @code{float}.
2700
2701@cindex @code{nearbyint@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2702@item @samp{nearbyint@var{m}2}
2703Store the argument rounded according to the default rounding mode
2704
2705The @code{nearbyint} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2706corresponds to the C data type @code{double} and the @code{nearbyintf}
2707built-in function uses the mode which corresponds to the C data
2708type @code{float}.
2709
03dda8e3
RK
2710@cindex @code{ffs@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2711@item @samp{ffs@var{m}2}
2712Store into operand 0 one plus the index of the least significant 1-bit
2713of operand 1. If operand 1 is zero, store zero. @var{m} is the mode
2714of operand 0; operand 1's mode is specified by the instruction
2715pattern, and the compiler will convert the operand to that mode before
2716generating the instruction.
2717
2718The @code{ffs} built-in function of C always uses the mode which
2719corresponds to the C data type @code{int}.
2720
2928cd7a
RH
2721@cindex @code{clz@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2722@item @samp{clz@var{m}2}
2723Store into operand 0 the number of leading 0-bits in @var{x}, starting
2724at the most significant bit position. If @var{x} is 0, the result is
2725undefined. @var{m} is the mode of operand 0; operand 1's mode is
2726specified by the instruction pattern, and the compiler will convert the
2727operand to that mode before generating the instruction.
2728
2729@cindex @code{ctz@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2730@item @samp{ctz@var{m}2}
2731Store into operand 0 the number of trailing 0-bits in @var{x}, starting
2732at the least significant bit position. If @var{x} is 0, the result is
2733undefined. @var{m} is the mode of operand 0; operand 1's mode is
2734specified by the instruction pattern, and the compiler will convert the
2735operand to that mode before generating the instruction.
2736
2737@cindex @code{popcount@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2738@item @samp{popcount@var{m}2}
2739Store into operand 0 the number of 1-bits in @var{x}. @var{m} is the
2740mode of operand 0; operand 1's mode is specified by the instruction
2741pattern, and the compiler will convert the operand to that mode before
2742generating the instruction.
2743
2744@cindex @code{parity@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2745@item @samp{parity@var{m}2}
2746Store into operand 0 the parity of @var{x}, i.@:e. the number of 1-bits
2747in @var{x} modulo 2. @var{m} is the mode of operand 0; operand 1's mode
2748is specified by the instruction pattern, and the compiler will convert
2749the operand to that mode before generating the instruction.
2750
03dda8e3
RK
2751@cindex @code{one_cmpl@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2752@item @samp{one_cmpl@var{m}2}
2753Store the bitwise-complement of operand 1 into operand 0.
2754
2755@cindex @code{cmp@var{m}} instruction pattern
2756@item @samp{cmp@var{m}}
2757Compare operand 0 and operand 1, and set the condition codes.
2758The RTL pattern should look like this:
2759
2760@smallexample
2761(set (cc0) (compare (match_operand:@var{m} 0 @dots{})
2762 (match_operand:@var{m} 1 @dots{})))
2763@end smallexample
2764
2765@cindex @code{tst@var{m}} instruction pattern
2766@item @samp{tst@var{m}}
2767Compare operand 0 against zero, and set the condition codes.
2768The RTL pattern should look like this:
2769
2770@smallexample
2771(set (cc0) (match_operand:@var{m} 0 @dots{}))
2772@end smallexample
2773
2774@samp{tst@var{m}} patterns should not be defined for machines that do
2775not use @code{(cc0)}. Doing so would confuse the optimizer since it
2776would no longer be clear which @code{set} operations were comparisons.
2777The @samp{cmp@var{m}} patterns should be used instead.
2778
2779@cindex @code{movstr@var{m}} instruction pattern
2780@item @samp{movstr@var{m}}
2781Block move instruction. The addresses of the destination and source
2782strings are the first two operands, and both are in mode @code{Pmode}.
e5e809f4 2783
03dda8e3 2784The number of bytes to move is the third operand, in mode @var{m}.
e5e809f4
JL
2785Usually, you specify @code{word_mode} for @var{m}. However, if you can
2786generate better code knowing the range of valid lengths is smaller than
2787those representable in a full word, you should provide a pattern with a
2788mode corresponding to the range of values you can handle efficiently
2789(e.g., @code{QImode} for values in the range 0--127; note we avoid numbers
2790that appear negative) and also a pattern with @code{word_mode}.
03dda8e3
RK
2791
2792The fourth operand is the known shared alignment of the source and
2793destination, in the form of a @code{const_int} rtx. Thus, if the
2794compiler knows that both source and destination are word-aligned,
2795it may provide the value 4 for this operand.
2796
8c01d9b6 2797Descriptions of multiple @code{movstr@var{m}} patterns can only be
4693911f 2798beneficial if the patterns for smaller modes have fewer restrictions
8c01d9b6
JL
2799on their first, second and fourth operands. Note that the mode @var{m}
2800in @code{movstr@var{m}} does not impose any restriction on the mode of
2801individually moved data units in the block.
2802
03dda8e3
RK
2803These patterns need not give special consideration to the possibility
2804that the source and destination strings might overlap.
2805
2806@cindex @code{clrstr@var{m}} instruction pattern
2807@item @samp{clrstr@var{m}}
2808Block clear instruction. The addresses of the destination string is the
2809first operand, in mode @code{Pmode}. The number of bytes to clear is
e5e809f4
JL
2810the second operand, in mode @var{m}. See @samp{movstr@var{m}} for
2811a discussion of the choice of mode.
03dda8e3
RK
2812
2813The third operand is the known alignment of the destination, in the form
2814of a @code{const_int} rtx. Thus, if the compiler knows that the
2815destination is word-aligned, it may provide the value 4 for this
2816operand.
2817
8c01d9b6
JL
2818The use for multiple @code{clrstr@var{m}} is as for @code{movstr@var{m}}.
2819
03dda8e3
RK
2820@cindex @code{cmpstr@var{m}} instruction pattern
2821@item @samp{cmpstr@var{m}}
358b8f01 2822String compare instruction, with five operands. Operand 0 is the output;
03dda8e3
RK
2823it has mode @var{m}. The remaining four operands are like the operands
2824of @samp{movstr@var{m}}. The two memory blocks specified are compared
5cc2f4f3
KG
2825byte by byte in lexicographic order starting at the beginning of each
2826string. The instruction is not allowed to prefetch more than one byte
2827at a time since either string may end in the first byte and reading past
2828that may access an invalid page or segment and cause a fault. The
2829effect of the instruction is to store a value in operand 0 whose sign
2830indicates the result of the comparison.
03dda8e3 2831
358b8f01
JJ
2832@cindex @code{cmpmem@var{m}} instruction pattern
2833@item @samp{cmpmem@var{m}}
2834Block compare instruction, with five operands like the operands
2835of @samp{cmpstr@var{m}}. The two memory blocks specified are compared
2836byte by byte in lexicographic order starting at the beginning of each
2837block. Unlike @samp{cmpstr@var{m}} the instruction can prefetch
2838any bytes in the two memory blocks. The effect of the instruction is
2839to store a value in operand 0 whose sign indicates the result of the
2840comparison.
2841
03dda8e3
RK
2842@cindex @code{strlen@var{m}} instruction pattern
2843@item @samp{strlen@var{m}}
2844Compute the length of a string, with three operands.
2845Operand 0 is the result (of mode @var{m}), operand 1 is
2846a @code{mem} referring to the first character of the string,
2847operand 2 is the character to search for (normally zero),
2848and operand 3 is a constant describing the known alignment
2849of the beginning of the string.
2850
2851@cindex @code{float@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2852@item @samp{float@var{m}@var{n}2}
2853Convert signed integer operand 1 (valid for fixed point mode @var{m}) to
2854floating point mode @var{n} and store in operand 0 (which has mode
2855@var{n}).
2856
2857@cindex @code{floatuns@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2858@item @samp{floatuns@var{m}@var{n}2}
2859Convert unsigned integer operand 1 (valid for fixed point mode @var{m})
2860to floating point mode @var{n} and store in operand 0 (which has mode
2861@var{n}).
2862
2863@cindex @code{fix@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2864@item @samp{fix@var{m}@var{n}2}
2865Convert operand 1 (valid for floating point mode @var{m}) to fixed
2866point mode @var{n} as a signed number and store in operand 0 (which
2867has mode @var{n}). This instruction's result is defined only when
2868the value of operand 1 is an integer.
2869
0e1d7f32
AH
2870If the machine description defines this pattern, it also needs to
2871define the @code{ftrunc} pattern.
2872
03dda8e3
RK
2873@cindex @code{fixuns@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2874@item @samp{fixuns@var{m}@var{n}2}
2875Convert operand 1 (valid for floating point mode @var{m}) to fixed
2876point mode @var{n} as an unsigned number and store in operand 0 (which
2877has mode @var{n}). This instruction's result is defined only when the
2878value of operand 1 is an integer.
2879
2880@cindex @code{ftrunc@var{m}2} instruction pattern
2881@item @samp{ftrunc@var{m}2}
2882Convert operand 1 (valid for floating point mode @var{m}) to an
2883integer value, still represented in floating point mode @var{m}, and
2884store it in operand 0 (valid for floating point mode @var{m}).
2885
2886@cindex @code{fix_trunc@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2887@item @samp{fix_trunc@var{m}@var{n}2}
2888Like @samp{fix@var{m}@var{n}2} but works for any floating point value
2889of mode @var{m} by converting the value to an integer.
2890
2891@cindex @code{fixuns_trunc@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2892@item @samp{fixuns_trunc@var{m}@var{n}2}
2893Like @samp{fixuns@var{m}@var{n}2} but works for any floating point
2894value of mode @var{m} by converting the value to an integer.
2895
2896@cindex @code{trunc@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2897@item @samp{trunc@var{m}@var{n}2}
2898Truncate operand 1 (valid for mode @var{m}) to mode @var{n} and
2899store in operand 0 (which has mode @var{n}). Both modes must be fixed
2900point or both floating point.
2901
2902@cindex @code{extend@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2903@item @samp{extend@var{m}@var{n}2}
2904Sign-extend operand 1 (valid for mode @var{m}) to mode @var{n} and
2905store in operand 0 (which has mode @var{n}). Both modes must be fixed
2906point or both floating point.
2907
2908@cindex @code{zero_extend@var{mn}2} instruction pattern
2909@item @samp{zero_extend@var{m}@var{n}2}
2910Zero-extend operand 1 (valid for mode @var{m}) to mode @var{n} and
2911store in operand 0 (which has mode @var{n}). Both modes must be fixed
2912point.
2913
2914@cindex @code{extv} instruction pattern
2915@item @samp{extv}
c771326b 2916Extract a bit-field from operand 1 (a register or memory operand), where
03dda8e3
RK
2917operand 2 specifies the width in bits and operand 3 the starting bit,
2918and store it in operand 0. Operand 0 must have mode @code{word_mode}.
2919Operand 1 may have mode @code{byte_mode} or @code{word_mode}; often
2920@code{word_mode} is allowed only for registers. Operands 2 and 3 must
2921be valid for @code{word_mode}.
2922
2923The RTL generation pass generates this instruction only with constants
2924for operands 2 and 3.
2925
2926The bit-field value is sign-extended to a full word integer
2927before it is stored in operand 0.
2928
2929@cindex @code{extzv} instruction pattern
2930@item @samp{extzv}
2931Like @samp{extv} except that the bit-field value is zero-extended.
2932
2933@cindex @code{insv} instruction pattern
2934@item @samp{insv}
c771326b
JM
2935Store operand 3 (which must be valid for @code{word_mode}) into a
2936bit-field in operand 0, where operand 1 specifies the width in bits and
03dda8e3
RK
2937operand 2 the starting bit. Operand 0 may have mode @code{byte_mode} or
2938@code{word_mode}; often @code{word_mode} is allowed only for registers.
2939Operands 1 and 2 must be valid for @code{word_mode}.
2940
2941The RTL generation pass generates this instruction only with constants
2942for operands 1 and 2.
2943
2944@cindex @code{mov@var{mode}cc} instruction pattern
2945@item @samp{mov@var{mode}cc}
2946Conditionally move operand 2 or operand 3 into operand 0 according to the
2947comparison in operand 1. If the comparison is true, operand 2 is moved
2948into operand 0, otherwise operand 3 is moved.
2949
2950The mode of the operands being compared need not be the same as the operands
2951being moved. Some machines, sparc64 for example, have instructions that
2952conditionally move an integer value based on the floating point condition
2953codes and vice versa.
2954
2955If the machine does not have conditional move instructions, do not
2956define these patterns.
2957
068f5dea 2958@cindex @code{add@var{mode}cc} instruction pattern
4b5cc2b3 2959@item @samp{add@var{mode}cc}
068f5dea
JH
2960Similar to @samp{mov@var{mode}cc} but for conditional addition. Conditionally
2961move operand 2 or (operands 2 + operand 3) into operand 0 according to the
2962comparison in operand 1. If the comparison is true, operand 2 is moved into
4b5cc2b3 2963operand 0, otherwise (operand 2 + operand 3) is moved.
068f5dea 2964
03dda8e3
RK
2965@cindex @code{s@var{cond}} instruction pattern
2966@item @samp{s@var{cond}}
2967Store zero or nonzero in the operand according to the condition codes.
2968Value stored is nonzero iff the condition @var{cond} is true.
2969@var{cond} is the name of a comparison operation expression code, such
2970as @code{eq}, @code{lt} or @code{leu}.
2971
2972You specify the mode that the operand must have when you write the
2973@code{match_operand} expression. The compiler automatically sees
2974which mode you have used and supplies an operand of that mode.
2975
2976The value stored for a true condition must have 1 as its low bit, or
2977else must be negative. Otherwise the instruction is not suitable and
2978you should omit it from the machine description. You describe to the
2979compiler exactly which value is stored by defining the macro
2980@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} (@pxref{Misc}). If a description cannot be
2981found that can be used for all the @samp{s@var{cond}} patterns, you
2982should omit those operations from the machine description.
2983
2984These operations may fail, but should do so only in relatively
2985uncommon cases; if they would fail for common cases involving
2986integer comparisons, it is best to omit these patterns.
2987
2988If these operations are omitted, the compiler will usually generate code
2989that copies the constant one to the target and branches around an
2990assignment of zero to the target. If this code is more efficient than
2991the potential instructions used for the @samp{s@var{cond}} pattern
2992followed by those required to convert the result into a 1 or a zero in
2993@code{SImode}, you should omit the @samp{s@var{cond}} operations from
2994the machine description.
2995
2996@cindex @code{b@var{cond}} instruction pattern
2997@item @samp{b@var{cond}}
2998Conditional branch instruction. Operand 0 is a @code{label_ref} that
2999refers to the label to jump to. Jump if the condition codes meet
3000condition @var{cond}.
3001
3002Some machines do not follow the model assumed here where a comparison
3003instruction is followed by a conditional branch instruction. In that
3004case, the @samp{cmp@var{m}} (and @samp{tst@var{m}}) patterns should
3005simply store the operands away and generate all the required insns in a
3006@code{define_expand} (@pxref{Expander Definitions}) for the conditional
3007branch operations. All calls to expand @samp{b@var{cond}} patterns are
3008immediately preceded by calls to expand either a @samp{cmp@var{m}}
3009pattern or a @samp{tst@var{m}} pattern.
3010
3011Machines that use a pseudo register for the condition code value, or
3012where the mode used for the comparison depends on the condition being
0b433de6 3013tested, should also use the above mechanism. @xref{Jump Patterns}.
03dda8e3
RK
3014
3015The above discussion also applies to the @samp{mov@var{mode}cc} and
3016@samp{s@var{cond}} patterns.
3017
66c87bae
KH
3018@cindex @code{cbranch@var{mode}4} instruction pattern
3019@item @samp{cbranch@var{mode}4}
3020Conditional branch instruction combined with a compare instruction.
3021Operand 0 is a comparison operator. Operand 1 and operand 2 are the
3022first and second operands of the comparison, respectively. Operand 3
3023is a @code{label_ref} that refers to the label to jump to.
3024
d26eedb6
HPN
3025@cindex @code{jump} instruction pattern
3026@item @samp{jump}
3027A jump inside a function; an unconditional branch. Operand 0 is the
3028@code{label_ref} of the label to jump to. This pattern name is mandatory
3029on all machines.
3030
03dda8e3
RK
3031@cindex @code{call} instruction pattern
3032@item @samp{call}
3033Subroutine call instruction returning no value. Operand 0 is the
3034function to call; operand 1 is the number of bytes of arguments pushed
f5963e61
JL
3035as a @code{const_int}; operand 2 is the number of registers used as
3036operands.
03dda8e3
RK
3037
3038On most machines, operand 2 is not actually stored into the RTL
3039pattern. It is supplied for the sake of some RISC machines which need
3040to put this information into the assembler code; they can put it in
3041the RTL instead of operand 1.
3042
3043Operand 0 should be a @code{mem} RTX whose address is the address of the
3044function. Note, however, that this address can be a @code{symbol_ref}
3045expression even if it would not be a legitimate memory address on the
3046target machine. If it is also not a valid argument for a call
3047instruction, the pattern for this operation should be a
3048@code{define_expand} (@pxref{Expander Definitions}) that places the
3049address into a register and uses that register in the call instruction.
3050
3051@cindex @code{call_value} instruction pattern
3052@item @samp{call_value}
3053Subroutine call instruction returning a value. Operand 0 is the hard
3054register in which the value is returned. There are three more
3055operands, the same as the three operands of the @samp{call}
3056instruction (but with numbers increased by one).
3057
3058Subroutines that return @code{BLKmode} objects use the @samp{call}
3059insn.
3060
3061@cindex @code{call_pop} instruction pattern
3062@cindex @code{call_value_pop} instruction pattern
3063@item @samp{call_pop}, @samp{call_value_pop}
3064Similar to @samp{call} and @samp{call_value}, except used if defined and
df2a54e9 3065if @code{RETURN_POPS_ARGS} is nonzero. They should emit a @code{parallel}
03dda8e3
RK
3066that contains both the function call and a @code{set} to indicate the
3067adjustment made to the frame pointer.
3068
df2a54e9 3069For machines where @code{RETURN_POPS_ARGS} can be nonzero, the use of these
03dda8e3
RK
3070patterns increases the number of functions for which the frame pointer
3071can be eliminated, if desired.
3072
3073@cindex @code{untyped_call} instruction pattern
3074@item @samp{untyped_call}
3075Subroutine call instruction returning a value of any type. Operand 0 is
3076the function to call; operand 1 is a memory location where the result of
3077calling the function is to be stored; operand 2 is a @code{parallel}
3078expression where each element is a @code{set} expression that indicates
3079the saving of a function return value into the result block.
3080
3081This instruction pattern should be defined to support
3082@code{__builtin_apply} on machines where special instructions are needed
3083to call a subroutine with arbitrary arguments or to save the value
3084returned. This instruction pattern is required on machines that have
e979f9e8
JM
3085multiple registers that can hold a return value
3086(i.e.@: @code{FUNCTION_VALUE_REGNO_P} is true for more than one register).
03dda8e3
RK
3087
3088@cindex @code{return} instruction pattern
3089@item @samp{return}
3090Subroutine return instruction. This instruction pattern name should be
3091defined only if a single instruction can do all the work of returning
3092from a function.
3093
3094Like the @samp{mov@var{m}} patterns, this pattern is also used after the
3095RTL generation phase. In this case it is to support machines where
3096multiple instructions are usually needed to return from a function, but
3097some class of functions only requires one instruction to implement a
3098return. Normally, the applicable functions are those which do not need
3099to save any registers or allocate stack space.
3100
3101@findex reload_completed
3102@findex leaf_function_p
3103For such machines, the condition specified in this pattern should only
df2a54e9 3104be true when @code{reload_completed} is nonzero and the function's
03dda8e3
RK
3105epilogue would only be a single instruction. For machines with register
3106windows, the routine @code{leaf_function_p} may be used to determine if
3107a register window push is required.
3108
3109Machines that have conditional return instructions should define patterns
3110such as
3111
3112@smallexample
3113(define_insn ""
3114 [(set (pc)
3115 (if_then_else (match_operator
3116 0 "comparison_operator"
3117 [(cc0) (const_int 0)])
3118 (return)
3119 (pc)))]
3120 "@var{condition}"
3121 "@dots{}")
3122@end smallexample
3123
3124where @var{condition} would normally be the same condition specified on the
3125named @samp{return} pattern.
3126
3127@cindex @code{untyped_return} instruction pattern
3128@item @samp{untyped_return}
3129Untyped subroutine return instruction. This instruction pattern should
3130be defined to support @code{__builtin_return} on machines where special
3131instructions are needed to return a value of any type.
3132
3133Operand 0 is a memory location where the result of calling a function
3134with @code{__builtin_apply} is stored; operand 1 is a @code{parallel}
3135expression where each element is a @code{set} expression that indicates
3136the restoring of a function return value from the result block.
3137
3138@cindex @code{nop} instruction pattern
3139@item @samp{nop}
3140No-op instruction. This instruction pattern name should always be defined
3141to output a no-op in assembler code. @code{(const_int 0)} will do as an
3142RTL pattern.
3143
3144@cindex @code{indirect_jump} instruction pattern
3145@item @samp{indirect_jump}
3146An instruction to jump to an address which is operand zero.
3147This pattern name is mandatory on all machines.
3148
3149@cindex @code{casesi} instruction pattern
3150@item @samp{casesi}
3151Instruction to jump through a dispatch table, including bounds checking.
3152This instruction takes five operands:
3153
3154@enumerate
3155@item
3156The index to dispatch on, which has mode @code{SImode}.
3157
3158@item
3159The lower bound for indices in the table, an integer constant.
3160
3161@item
3162The total range of indices in the table---the largest index
3163minus the smallest one (both inclusive).
3164
3165@item
3166A label that precedes the table itself.
3167
3168@item
3169A label to jump to if the index has a value outside the bounds.
3170(If the machine-description macro @code{CASE_DROPS_THROUGH} is defined,
3171then an out-of-bounds index drops through to the code following
3172the jump table instead of jumping to this label. In that case,
3173this label is not actually used by the @samp{casesi} instruction,
3174but it is always provided as an operand.)
3175@end enumerate
3176
3177The table is a @code{addr_vec} or @code{addr_diff_vec} inside of a
3178@code{jump_insn}. The number of elements in the table is one plus the
3179difference between the upper bound and the lower bound.
3180
3181@cindex @code{tablejump} instruction pattern
3182@item @samp{tablejump}
3183Instruction to jump to a variable address. This is a low-level
3184capability which can be used to implement a dispatch table when there
3185is no @samp{casesi} pattern.
3186
3187This pattern requires two operands: the address or offset, and a label
3188which should immediately precede the jump table. If the macro
f1f5f142
JL
3189@code{CASE_VECTOR_PC_RELATIVE} evaluates to a nonzero value then the first
3190operand is an offset which counts from the address of the table; otherwise,
3191it is an absolute address to jump to. In either case, the first operand has
03dda8e3
RK
3192mode @code{Pmode}.
3193
3194The @samp{tablejump} insn is always the last insn before the jump
3195table it uses. Its assembler code normally has no need to use the
3196second operand, but you should incorporate it in the RTL pattern so
3197that the jump optimizer will not delete the table as unreachable code.
3198
6e4fcc95
MH
3199
3200@cindex @code{decrement_and_branch_until_zero} instruction pattern
3201@item @samp{decrement_and_branch_until_zero}
3202Conditional branch instruction that decrements a register and
df2a54e9 3203jumps if the register is nonzero. Operand 0 is the register to
6e4fcc95 3204decrement and test; operand 1 is the label to jump to if the
df2a54e9 3205register is nonzero. @xref{Looping Patterns}.
6e4fcc95
MH
3206
3207This optional instruction pattern is only used by the combiner,
3208typically for loops reversed by the loop optimizer when strength
3209reduction is enabled.
3210
3211@cindex @code{doloop_end} instruction pattern
3212@item @samp{doloop_end}
3213Conditional branch instruction that decrements a register and jumps if
df2a54e9 3214the register is nonzero. This instruction takes five operands: Operand
6e4fcc95
MH
32150 is the register to decrement and test; operand 1 is the number of loop
3216iterations as a @code{const_int} or @code{const0_rtx} if this cannot be
3217determined until run-time; operand 2 is the actual or estimated maximum
3218number of iterations as a @code{const_int}; operand 3 is the number of
3219enclosed loops as a @code{const_int} (an innermost loop has a value of
df2a54e9 32201); operand 4 is the label to jump to if the register is nonzero.
5c25e11d 3221@xref{Looping Patterns}.
6e4fcc95
MH
3222
3223This optional instruction pattern should be defined for machines with
3224low-overhead looping instructions as the loop optimizer will try to
3225modify suitable loops to utilize it. If nested low-overhead looping is
3226not supported, use a @code{define_expand} (@pxref{Expander Definitions})
3227and make the pattern fail if operand 3 is not @code{const1_rtx}.
3228Similarly, if the actual or estimated maximum number of iterations is
3229too large for this instruction, make it fail.
3230
3231@cindex @code{doloop_begin} instruction pattern
3232@item @samp{doloop_begin}
3233Companion instruction to @code{doloop_end} required for machines that
c21cd8b1
JM
3234need to perform some initialization, such as loading special registers
3235used by a low-overhead looping instruction. If initialization insns do
6e4fcc95
MH
3236not always need to be emitted, use a @code{define_expand}
3237(@pxref{Expander Definitions}) and make it fail.
3238
3239
03dda8e3
RK
3240@cindex @code{canonicalize_funcptr_for_compare} instruction pattern
3241@item @samp{canonicalize_funcptr_for_compare}
3242Canonicalize the function pointer in operand 1 and store the result
3243into operand 0.
3244
3245Operand 0 is always a @code{reg} and has mode @code{Pmode}; operand 1
3246may be a @code{reg}, @code{mem}, @code{symbol_ref}, @code{const_int}, etc
3247and also has mode @code{Pmode}.
3248
3249Canonicalization of a function pointer usually involves computing
3250the address of the function which would be called if the function
3251pointer were used in an indirect call.
3252
3253Only define this pattern if function pointers on the target machine
3254can have different values but still call the same function when
3255used in an indirect call.
3256
3257@cindex @code{save_stack_block} instruction pattern
3258@cindex @code{save_stack_function} instruction pattern
3259@cindex @code{save_stack_nonlocal} instruction pattern
3260@cindex @code{restore_stack_block} instruction pattern
3261@cindex @code{restore_stack_function} instruction pattern
3262@cindex @code{restore_stack_nonlocal} instruction pattern
3263@item @samp{save_stack_block}
3264@itemx @samp{save_stack_function}
3265@itemx @samp{save_stack_nonlocal}
3266@itemx @samp{restore_stack_block}
3267@itemx @samp{restore_stack_function}
3268@itemx @samp{restore_stack_nonlocal}
3269Most machines save and restore the stack pointer by copying it to or
3270from an object of mode @code{Pmode}. Do not define these patterns on
3271such machines.
3272
3273Some machines require special handling for stack pointer saves and
3274restores. On those machines, define the patterns corresponding to the
3275non-standard cases by using a @code{define_expand} (@pxref{Expander
3276Definitions}) that produces the required insns. The three types of
3277saves and restores are:
3278
3279@enumerate
3280@item
3281@samp{save_stack_block} saves the stack pointer at the start of a block
3282that allocates a variable-sized object, and @samp{restore_stack_block}
3283restores the stack pointer when the block is exited.
3284
3285@item
3286@samp{save_stack_function} and @samp{restore_stack_function} do a
3287similar job for the outermost block of a function and are used when the
3288function allocates variable-sized objects or calls @code{alloca}. Only
3289the epilogue uses the restored stack pointer, allowing a simpler save or
3290restore sequence on some machines.
3291
3292@item
3293@samp{save_stack_nonlocal} is used in functions that contain labels
3294branched to by nested functions. It saves the stack pointer in such a
3295way that the inner function can use @samp{restore_stack_nonlocal} to
3296restore the stack pointer. The compiler generates code to restore the
3297frame and argument pointer registers, but some machines require saving
3298and restoring additional data such as register window information or
3299stack backchains. Place insns in these patterns to save and restore any
3300such required data.
3301@end enumerate
3302
3303When saving the stack pointer, operand 0 is the save area and operand 1
73c8090f
DE
3304is the stack pointer. The mode used to allocate the save area defaults
3305to @code{Pmode} but you can override that choice by defining the
7e390c9d 3306@code{STACK_SAVEAREA_MODE} macro (@pxref{Storage Layout}). You must
73c8090f
DE
3307specify an integral mode, or @code{VOIDmode} if no save area is needed
3308for a particular type of save (either because no save is needed or
3309because a machine-specific save area can be used). Operand 0 is the
3310stack pointer and operand 1 is the save area for restore operations. If
3311@samp{save_stack_block} is defined, operand 0 must not be
3312@code{VOIDmode} since these saves can be arbitrarily nested.
03dda8e3
RK
3313
3314A save area is a @code{mem} that is at a constant offset from
3315@code{virtual_stack_vars_rtx} when the stack pointer is saved for use by
3316nonlocal gotos and a @code{reg} in the other two cases.
3317
3318@cindex @code{allocate_stack} instruction pattern
3319@item @samp{allocate_stack}
72938a4c 3320Subtract (or add if @code{STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD} is undefined) operand 1 from
03dda8e3
RK
3321the stack pointer to create space for dynamically allocated data.
3322
72938a4c
MM
3323Store the resultant pointer to this space into operand 0. If you
3324are allocating space from the main stack, do this by emitting a
3325move insn to copy @code{virtual_stack_dynamic_rtx} to operand 0.
3326If you are allocating the space elsewhere, generate code to copy the
3327location of the space to operand 0. In the latter case, you must
956d6950 3328ensure this space gets freed when the corresponding space on the main
72938a4c
MM
3329stack is free.
3330
03dda8e3
RK
3331Do not define this pattern if all that must be done is the subtraction.
3332Some machines require other operations such as stack probes or
3333maintaining the back chain. Define this pattern to emit those
3334operations in addition to updating the stack pointer.
3335
861bb6c1
JL
3336@cindex @code{check_stack} instruction pattern
3337@item @samp{check_stack}
3338If stack checking cannot be done on your system by probing the stack with
3339a load or store instruction (@pxref{Stack Checking}), define this pattern
3340to perform the needed check and signaling an error if the stack
3341has overflowed. The single operand is the location in the stack furthest
3342from the current stack pointer that you need to validate. Normally,
3343on machines where this pattern is needed, you would obtain the stack
3344limit from a global or thread-specific variable or register.
3345
03dda8e3
RK
3346@cindex @code{nonlocal_goto} instruction pattern
3347@item @samp{nonlocal_goto}
3348Emit code to generate a non-local goto, e.g., a jump from one function
3349to a label in an outer function. This pattern has four arguments,
3350each representing a value to be used in the jump. The first
45bb86fd 3351argument is to be loaded into the frame pointer, the second is
03dda8e3
RK
3352the address to branch to (code to dispatch to the actual label),
3353the third is the address of a location where the stack is saved,
3354and the last is the address of the label, to be placed in the
3355location for the incoming static chain.
3356
f0523f02 3357On most machines you need not define this pattern, since GCC will
03dda8e3
RK
3358already generate the correct code, which is to load the frame pointer
3359and static chain, restore the stack (using the
3360@samp{restore_stack_nonlocal} pattern, if defined), and jump indirectly
3361to the dispatcher. You need only define this pattern if this code will
3362not work on your machine.
3363
3364@cindex @code{nonlocal_goto_receiver} instruction pattern
3365@item @samp{nonlocal_goto_receiver}
3366This pattern, if defined, contains code needed at the target of a
161d7b59 3367nonlocal goto after the code already generated by GCC@. You will not
03dda8e3
RK
3368normally need to define this pattern. A typical reason why you might
3369need this pattern is if some value, such as a pointer to a global table,
c30ddbc9 3370must be restored when the frame pointer is restored. Note that a nonlocal
89bcce1b 3371goto only occurs within a unit-of-translation, so a global table pointer
c30ddbc9
RH
3372that is shared by all functions of a given module need not be restored.
3373There are no arguments.
861bb6c1
JL
3374
3375@cindex @code{exception_receiver} instruction pattern
3376@item @samp{exception_receiver}
3377This pattern, if defined, contains code needed at the site of an
3378exception handler that isn't needed at the site of a nonlocal goto. You
3379will not normally need to define this pattern. A typical reason why you
3380might need this pattern is if some value, such as a pointer to a global
3381table, must be restored after control flow is branched to the handler of
3382an exception. There are no arguments.
c85f7c16 3383
c30ddbc9
RH
3384@cindex @code{builtin_setjmp_setup} instruction pattern
3385@item @samp{builtin_setjmp_setup}
3386This pattern, if defined, contains additional code needed to initialize
3387the @code{jmp_buf}. You will not normally need to define this pattern.
3388A typical reason why you might need this pattern is if some value, such
3389as a pointer to a global table, must be restored. Though it is
3390preferred that the pointer value be recalculated if possible (given the
3391address of a label for instance). The single argument is a pointer to
3392the @code{jmp_buf}. Note that the buffer is five words long and that
3393the first three are normally used by the generic mechanism.
3394
c85f7c16
JL
3395@cindex @code{builtin_setjmp_receiver} instruction pattern
3396@item @samp{builtin_setjmp_receiver}
3397This pattern, if defined, contains code needed at the site of an
c771326b 3398built-in setjmp that isn't needed at the site of a nonlocal goto. You
c85f7c16
JL
3399will not normally need to define this pattern. A typical reason why you
3400might need this pattern is if some value, such as a pointer to a global
c30ddbc9
RH
3401table, must be restored. It takes one argument, which is the label
3402to which builtin_longjmp transfered control; this pattern may be emitted
3403at a small offset from that label.
3404
3405@cindex @code{builtin_longjmp} instruction pattern
3406@item @samp{builtin_longjmp}
3407This pattern, if defined, performs the entire action of the longjmp.
3408You will not normally need to define this pattern unless you also define
3409@code{builtin_setjmp_setup}. The single argument is a pointer to the
3410@code{jmp_buf}.
f69864aa 3411
52a11cbf
RH
3412@cindex @code{eh_return} instruction pattern
3413@item @samp{eh_return}
f69864aa 3414This pattern, if defined, affects the way @code{__builtin_eh_return},
52a11cbf
RH
3415and thence the call frame exception handling library routines, are
3416built. It is intended to handle non-trivial actions needed along
3417the abnormal return path.
3418
34dc173c 3419The address of the exception handler to which the function should return
daf2f129 3420is passed as operand to this pattern. It will normally need to copied by
34dc173c
UW
3421the pattern to some special register or memory location.
3422If the pattern needs to determine the location of the target call
3423frame in order to do so, it may use @code{EH_RETURN_STACKADJ_RTX},
3424if defined; it will have already been assigned.
3425
3426If this pattern is not defined, the default action will be to simply
3427copy the return address to @code{EH_RETURN_HANDLER_RTX}. Either
3428that macro or this pattern needs to be defined if call frame exception
3429handling is to be used.
0b433de6
JL
3430
3431@cindex @code{prologue} instruction pattern
17b53c33 3432@anchor{prologue instruction pattern}
0b433de6
JL
3433@item @samp{prologue}
3434This pattern, if defined, emits RTL for entry to a function. The function
b192711e 3435entry is responsible for setting up the stack frame, initializing the frame
0b433de6
JL
3436pointer register, saving callee saved registers, etc.
3437
3438Using a prologue pattern is generally preferred over defining
17b53c33 3439@code{TARGET_ASM_FUNCTION_PROLOGUE} to emit assembly code for the prologue.
0b433de6
JL
3440
3441The @code{prologue} pattern is particularly useful for targets which perform
3442instruction scheduling.
3443
3444@cindex @code{epilogue} instruction pattern
17b53c33 3445@anchor{epilogue instruction pattern}
0b433de6 3446@item @samp{epilogue}
396ad517 3447This pattern emits RTL for exit from a function. The function
b192711e 3448exit is responsible for deallocating the stack frame, restoring callee saved
0b433de6
JL
3449registers and emitting the return instruction.
3450
3451Using an epilogue pattern is generally preferred over defining
17b53c33 3452@code{TARGET_ASM_FUNCTION_EPILOGUE} to emit assembly code for the epilogue.
0b433de6
JL
3453
3454The @code{epilogue} pattern is particularly useful for targets which perform
3455instruction scheduling or which have delay slots for their return instruction.
3456
3457@cindex @code{sibcall_epilogue} instruction pattern
3458@item @samp{sibcall_epilogue}
3459This pattern, if defined, emits RTL for exit from a function without the final
3460branch back to the calling function. This pattern will be emitted before any
3461sibling call (aka tail call) sites.
3462
3463The @code{sibcall_epilogue} pattern must not clobber any arguments used for
3464parameter passing or any stack slots for arguments passed to the current
ebb48a4d 3465function.
a157febd
GK
3466
3467@cindex @code{trap} instruction pattern
3468@item @samp{trap}
3469This pattern, if defined, signals an error, typically by causing some
3470kind of signal to be raised. Among other places, it is used by the Java
c771326b 3471front end to signal `invalid array index' exceptions.
a157febd
GK
3472
3473@cindex @code{conditional_trap} instruction pattern
3474@item @samp{conditional_trap}
3475Conditional trap instruction. Operand 0 is a piece of RTL which
3476performs a comparison. Operand 1 is the trap code, an integer.
3477
3478A typical @code{conditional_trap} pattern looks like
3479
3480@smallexample
3481(define_insn "conditional_trap"
ebb48a4d 3482 [(trap_if (match_operator 0 "trap_operator"
a157febd
GK
3483 [(cc0) (const_int 0)])
3484 (match_operand 1 "const_int_operand" "i"))]
3485 ""
3486 "@dots{}")
3487@end smallexample
3488
e83d297b
JJ
3489@cindex @code{prefetch} instruction pattern
3490@item @samp{prefetch}
3491
3492This pattern, if defined, emits code for a non-faulting data prefetch
3493instruction. Operand 0 is the address of the memory to prefetch. Operand 1
3494is a constant 1 if the prefetch is preparing for a write to the memory
3495address, or a constant 0 otherwise. Operand 2 is the expected degree of
3496temporal locality of the data and is a value between 0 and 3, inclusive; 0
3497means that the data has no temporal locality, so it need not be left in the
3498cache after the access; 3 means that the data has a high degree of temporal
3499locality and should be left in all levels of cache possible; 1 and 2 mean,
3500respectively, a low or moderate degree of temporal locality.
3501
3502Targets that do not support write prefetches or locality hints can ignore
3503the values of operands 1 and 2.
3504
03dda8e3
RK
3505@end table
3506
a5249a21
HPN
3507@end ifset
3508@c Each of the following nodes are wrapped in separate
3509@c "@ifset INTERNALS" to work around memory limits for the default
3510@c configuration in older tetex distributions. Known to not work:
3511@c tetex-1.0.7, known to work: tetex-2.0.2.
3512@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
3513@node Pattern Ordering
3514@section When the Order of Patterns Matters
3515@cindex Pattern Ordering
3516@cindex Ordering of Patterns
3517
3518Sometimes an insn can match more than one instruction pattern. Then the
3519pattern that appears first in the machine description is the one used.
3520Therefore, more specific patterns (patterns that will match fewer things)
3521and faster instructions (those that will produce better code when they
3522do match) should usually go first in the description.
3523
3524In some cases the effect of ordering the patterns can be used to hide
3525a pattern when it is not valid. For example, the 68000 has an
3526instruction for converting a fullword to floating point and another
3527for converting a byte to floating point. An instruction converting
3528an integer to floating point could match either one. We put the
3529pattern to convert the fullword first to make sure that one will
3530be used rather than the other. (Otherwise a large integer might
3531be generated as a single-byte immediate quantity, which would not work.)
3532Instead of using this pattern ordering it would be possible to make the
3533pattern for convert-a-byte smart enough to deal properly with any
3534constant value.
3535
a5249a21
HPN
3536@end ifset
3537@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
3538@node Dependent Patterns
3539@section Interdependence of Patterns
3540@cindex Dependent Patterns
3541@cindex Interdependence of Patterns
3542
3543Every machine description must have a named pattern for each of the
3544conditional branch names @samp{b@var{cond}}. The recognition template
3545must always have the form
3546
3ab51846 3547@smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3548(set (pc)
3549 (if_then_else (@var{cond} (cc0) (const_int 0))
3550 (label_ref (match_operand 0 "" ""))
3551 (pc)))
3ab51846 3552@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3553
3554@noindent
3555In addition, every machine description must have an anonymous pattern
3556for each of the possible reverse-conditional branches. Their templates
3557look like
3558
3ab51846 3559@smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3560(set (pc)
3561 (if_then_else (@var{cond} (cc0) (const_int 0))
3562 (pc)
3563 (label_ref (match_operand 0 "" ""))))
3ab51846 3564@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3565
3566@noindent
3567They are necessary because jump optimization can turn direct-conditional
3568branches into reverse-conditional branches.
3569
3570It is often convenient to use the @code{match_operator} construct to
3571reduce the number of patterns that must be specified for branches. For
3572example,
3573
3ab51846 3574@smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3575(define_insn ""
3576 [(set (pc)
3577 (if_then_else (match_operator 0 "comparison_operator"
3578 [(cc0) (const_int 0)])
3579 (pc)
3580 (label_ref (match_operand 1 "" ""))))]
3581 "@var{condition}"
3582 "@dots{}")
3ab51846 3583@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3584
3585In some cases machines support instructions identical except for the
3586machine mode of one or more operands. For example, there may be
3587``sign-extend halfword'' and ``sign-extend byte'' instructions whose
3588patterns are
3589
3ab51846 3590@smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3591(set (match_operand:SI 0 @dots{})
3592 (extend:SI (match_operand:HI 1 @dots{})))
3593
3594(set (match_operand:SI 0 @dots{})
3595 (extend:SI (match_operand:QI 1 @dots{})))
3ab51846 3596@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3597
3598@noindent
3599Constant integers do not specify a machine mode, so an instruction to
3600extend a constant value could match either pattern. The pattern it
3601actually will match is the one that appears first in the file. For correct
3602results, this must be the one for the widest possible mode (@code{HImode},
3603here). If the pattern matches the @code{QImode} instruction, the results
3604will be incorrect if the constant value does not actually fit that mode.
3605
3606Such instructions to extend constants are rarely generated because they are
3607optimized away, but they do occasionally happen in nonoptimized
3608compilations.
3609
3610If a constraint in a pattern allows a constant, the reload pass may
3611replace a register with a constant permitted by the constraint in some
3612cases. Similarly for memory references. Because of this substitution,
3613you should not provide separate patterns for increment and decrement
3614instructions. Instead, they should be generated from the same pattern
3615that supports register-register add insns by examining the operands and
3616generating the appropriate machine instruction.
3617
a5249a21
HPN
3618@end ifset
3619@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
3620@node Jump Patterns
3621@section Defining Jump Instruction Patterns
3622@cindex jump instruction patterns
3623@cindex defining jump instruction patterns
3624
f0523f02 3625For most machines, GCC assumes that the machine has a condition code.
03dda8e3
RK
3626A comparison insn sets the condition code, recording the results of both
3627signed and unsigned comparison of the given operands. A separate branch
3628insn tests the condition code and branches or not according its value.
3629The branch insns come in distinct signed and unsigned flavors. Many
8aeea6e6 3630common machines, such as the VAX, the 68000 and the 32000, work this
03dda8e3
RK
3631way.
3632
3633Some machines have distinct signed and unsigned compare instructions, and
3634only one set of conditional branch instructions. The easiest way to handle
3635these machines is to treat them just like the others until the final stage
3636where assembly code is written. At this time, when outputting code for the
3637compare instruction, peek ahead at the following branch using
3638@code{next_cc0_user (insn)}. (The variable @code{insn} refers to the insn
3639being output, in the output-writing code in an instruction pattern.) If
3640the RTL says that is an unsigned branch, output an unsigned compare;
3641otherwise output a signed compare. When the branch itself is output, you
3642can treat signed and unsigned branches identically.
3643
f0523f02 3644The reason you can do this is that GCC always generates a pair of
03dda8e3
RK
3645consecutive RTL insns, possibly separated by @code{note} insns, one to
3646set the condition code and one to test it, and keeps the pair inviolate
3647until the end.
3648
3649To go with this technique, you must define the machine-description macro
3650@code{NOTICE_UPDATE_CC} to do @code{CC_STATUS_INIT}; in other words, no
3651compare instruction is superfluous.
3652
3653Some machines have compare-and-branch instructions and no condition code.
3654A similar technique works for them. When it is time to ``output'' a
3655compare instruction, record its operands in two static variables. When
3656outputting the branch-on-condition-code instruction that follows, actually
3657output a compare-and-branch instruction that uses the remembered operands.
3658
3659It also works to define patterns for compare-and-branch instructions.
3660In optimizing compilation, the pair of compare and branch instructions
3661will be combined according to these patterns. But this does not happen
3662if optimization is not requested. So you must use one of the solutions
3663above in addition to any special patterns you define.
3664
3665In many RISC machines, most instructions do not affect the condition
3666code and there may not even be a separate condition code register. On
3667these machines, the restriction that the definition and use of the
3668condition code be adjacent insns is not necessary and can prevent
3669important optimizations. For example, on the IBM RS/6000, there is a
3670delay for taken branches unless the condition code register is set three
3671instructions earlier than the conditional branch. The instruction
3672scheduler cannot perform this optimization if it is not permitted to
3673separate the definition and use of the condition code register.
3674
3675On these machines, do not use @code{(cc0)}, but instead use a register
3676to represent the condition code. If there is a specific condition code
3677register in the machine, use a hard register. If the condition code or
3678comparison result can be placed in any general register, or if there are
3679multiple condition registers, use a pseudo register.
3680
3681@findex prev_cc0_setter
3682@findex next_cc0_user
3683On some machines, the type of branch instruction generated may depend on
3684the way the condition code was produced; for example, on the 68k and
981f6289 3685SPARC, setting the condition code directly from an add or subtract
03dda8e3
RK
3686instruction does not clear the overflow bit the way that a test
3687instruction does, so a different branch instruction must be used for
3688some conditional branches. For machines that use @code{(cc0)}, the set
3689and use of the condition code must be adjacent (separated only by
3690@code{note} insns) allowing flags in @code{cc_status} to be used.
3691(@xref{Condition Code}.) Also, the comparison and branch insns can be
3692located from each other by using the functions @code{prev_cc0_setter}
3693and @code{next_cc0_user}.
3694
3695However, this is not true on machines that do not use @code{(cc0)}. On
3696those machines, no assumptions can be made about the adjacency of the
3697compare and branch insns and the above methods cannot be used. Instead,
3698we use the machine mode of the condition code register to record
3699different formats of the condition code register.
3700
3701Registers used to store the condition code value should have a mode that
3702is in class @code{MODE_CC}. Normally, it will be @code{CCmode}. If
3703additional modes are required (as for the add example mentioned above in
981f6289 3704the SPARC), define the macro @code{EXTRA_CC_MODES} to list the
03dda8e3 3705additional modes required (@pxref{Condition Code}). Also define
03dda8e3
RK
3706@code{SELECT_CC_MODE} to choose a mode given an operand of a compare.
3707
3708If it is known during RTL generation that a different mode will be
3709required (for example, if the machine has separate compare instructions
3710for signed and unsigned quantities, like most IBM processors), they can
3711be specified at that time.
3712
3713If the cases that require different modes would be made by instruction
3714combination, the macro @code{SELECT_CC_MODE} determines which machine
3715mode should be used for the comparison result. The patterns should be
981f6289 3716written using that mode. To support the case of the add on the SPARC
03dda8e3
RK
3717discussed above, we have the pattern
3718
3719@smallexample
3720(define_insn ""
3721 [(set (reg:CC_NOOV 0)
3722 (compare:CC_NOOV
3723 (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "%r")
3724 (match_operand:SI 1 "arith_operand" "rI"))
3725 (const_int 0)))]
3726 ""
3727 "@dots{}")
3728@end smallexample
3729
981f6289 3730The @code{SELECT_CC_MODE} macro on the SPARC returns @code{CC_NOOVmode}
03dda8e3
RK
3731for comparisons whose argument is a @code{plus}.
3732
a5249a21
HPN
3733@end ifset
3734@ifset INTERNALS
6e4fcc95
MH
3735@node Looping Patterns
3736@section Defining Looping Instruction Patterns
3737@cindex looping instruction patterns
3738@cindex defining looping instruction patterns
3739
05713b80 3740Some machines have special jump instructions that can be utilized to
6e4fcc95
MH
3741make loops more efficient. A common example is the 68000 @samp{dbra}
3742instruction which performs a decrement of a register and a branch if the
3743result was greater than zero. Other machines, in particular digital
3744signal processors (DSPs), have special block repeat instructions to
3745provide low-overhead loop support. For example, the TI TMS320C3x/C4x
3746DSPs have a block repeat instruction that loads special registers to
3747mark the top and end of a loop and to count the number of loop
3748iterations. This avoids the need for fetching and executing a
c771326b 3749@samp{dbra}-like instruction and avoids pipeline stalls associated with
6e4fcc95
MH
3750the jump.
3751
9c34dbbf
ZW
3752GCC has three special named patterns to support low overhead looping.
3753They are @samp{decrement_and_branch_until_zero}, @samp{doloop_begin},
3754and @samp{doloop_end}. The first pattern,
6e4fcc95
MH
3755@samp{decrement_and_branch_until_zero}, is not emitted during RTL
3756generation but may be emitted during the instruction combination phase.
3757This requires the assistance of the loop optimizer, using information
3758collected during strength reduction, to reverse a loop to count down to
3759zero. Some targets also require the loop optimizer to add a
3760@code{REG_NONNEG} note to indicate that the iteration count is always
3761positive. This is needed if the target performs a signed loop
3762termination test. For example, the 68000 uses a pattern similar to the
3763following for its @code{dbra} instruction:
3764
3765@smallexample
3766@group
3767(define_insn "decrement_and_branch_until_zero"
3768 [(set (pc)
3769 (if_then_else
3770 (ge (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "+d*am")
3771 (const_int -1))
3772 (const_int 0))
3773 (label_ref (match_operand 1 "" ""))
3774 (pc)))
3775 (set (match_dup 0)
3776 (plus:SI (match_dup 0)
3777 (const_int -1)))]
3778 "find_reg_note (insn, REG_NONNEG, 0)"
630d3d5a 3779 "@dots{}")
6e4fcc95
MH
3780@end group
3781@end smallexample
3782
3783Note that since the insn is both a jump insn and has an output, it must
3784deal with its own reloads, hence the `m' constraints. Also note that
3785since this insn is generated by the instruction combination phase
3786combining two sequential insns together into an implicit parallel insn,
3787the iteration counter needs to be biased by the same amount as the
630d3d5a 3788decrement operation, in this case @minus{}1. Note that the following similar
6e4fcc95
MH
3789pattern will not be matched by the combiner.
3790
3791@smallexample
3792@group
3793(define_insn "decrement_and_branch_until_zero"
3794 [(set (pc)
3795 (if_then_else
3796 (ge (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "+d*am")
3797 (const_int 1))
3798 (label_ref (match_operand 1 "" ""))
3799 (pc)))
3800 (set (match_dup 0)
3801 (plus:SI (match_dup 0)
3802 (const_int -1)))]
3803 "find_reg_note (insn, REG_NONNEG, 0)"
630d3d5a 3804 "@dots{}")
6e4fcc95
MH
3805@end group
3806@end smallexample
3807
3808The other two special looping patterns, @samp{doloop_begin} and
c21cd8b1 3809@samp{doloop_end}, are emitted by the loop optimizer for certain
6e4fcc95 3810well-behaved loops with a finite number of loop iterations using
ebb48a4d 3811information collected during strength reduction.
6e4fcc95
MH
3812
3813The @samp{doloop_end} pattern describes the actual looping instruction
3814(or the implicit looping operation) and the @samp{doloop_begin} pattern
c21cd8b1 3815is an optional companion pattern that can be used for initialization
6e4fcc95
MH
3816needed for some low-overhead looping instructions.
3817
3818Note that some machines require the actual looping instruction to be
3819emitted at the top of the loop (e.g., the TMS320C3x/C4x DSPs). Emitting
3820the true RTL for a looping instruction at the top of the loop can cause
3821problems with flow analysis. So instead, a dummy @code{doloop} insn is
3822emitted at the end of the loop. The machine dependent reorg pass checks
3823for the presence of this @code{doloop} insn and then searches back to
3824the top of the loop, where it inserts the true looping insn (provided
3825there are no instructions in the loop which would cause problems). Any
3826additional labels can be emitted at this point. In addition, if the
3827desired special iteration counter register was not allocated, this
3828machine dependent reorg pass could emit a traditional compare and jump
3829instruction pair.
3830
3831The essential difference between the
3832@samp{decrement_and_branch_until_zero} and the @samp{doloop_end}
3833patterns is that the loop optimizer allocates an additional pseudo
3834register for the latter as an iteration counter. This pseudo register
3835cannot be used within the loop (i.e., general induction variables cannot
3836be derived from it), however, in many cases the loop induction variable
3837may become redundant and removed by the flow pass.
3838
3839
a5249a21
HPN
3840@end ifset
3841@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
3842@node Insn Canonicalizations
3843@section Canonicalization of Instructions
3844@cindex canonicalization of instructions
3845@cindex insn canonicalization
3846
3847There are often cases where multiple RTL expressions could represent an
3848operation performed by a single machine instruction. This situation is
3849most commonly encountered with logical, branch, and multiply-accumulate
3850instructions. In such cases, the compiler attempts to convert these
3851multiple RTL expressions into a single canonical form to reduce the
3852number of insn patterns required.
3853
3854In addition to algebraic simplifications, following canonicalizations
3855are performed:
3856
3857@itemize @bullet
3858@item
3859For commutative and comparison operators, a constant is always made the
3860second operand. If a machine only supports a constant as the second
3861operand, only patterns that match a constant in the second operand need
3862be supplied.
3863
e3d6e740
GK
3864@item
3865For associative operators, a sequence of operators will always chain
3866to the left; for instance, only the left operand of an integer @code{plus}
3867can itself be a @code{plus}. @code{and}, @code{ior}, @code{xor},
3868@code{plus}, @code{mult}, @code{smin}, @code{smax}, @code{umin}, and
3869@code{umax} are associative when applied to integers, and sometimes to
3870floating-point.
3871
3872@item
03dda8e3
RK
3873@cindex @code{neg}, canonicalization of
3874@cindex @code{not}, canonicalization of
3875@cindex @code{mult}, canonicalization of
3876@cindex @code{plus}, canonicalization of
3877@cindex @code{minus}, canonicalization of
3878For these operators, if only one operand is a @code{neg}, @code{not},
3879@code{mult}, @code{plus}, or @code{minus} expression, it will be the
3880first operand.
3881
16823694
GK
3882@item
3883In combinations of @code{neg}, @code{mult}, @code{plus}, and
3884@code{minus}, the @code{neg} operations (if any) will be moved inside
daf2f129 3885the operations as far as possible. For instance,
16823694
GK
3886@code{(neg (mult A B))} is canonicalized as @code{(mult (neg A) B)}, but
3887@code{(plus (mult (neg A) B) C)} is canonicalized as
3888@code{(minus A (mult B C))}.
3889
03dda8e3
RK
3890@cindex @code{compare}, canonicalization of
3891@item
3892For the @code{compare} operator, a constant is always the second operand
3893on machines where @code{cc0} is used (@pxref{Jump Patterns}). On other
3894machines, there are rare cases where the compiler might want to construct
3895a @code{compare} with a constant as the first operand. However, these
3896cases are not common enough for it to be worthwhile to provide a pattern
3897matching a constant as the first operand unless the machine actually has
3898such an instruction.
3899
3900An operand of @code{neg}, @code{not}, @code{mult}, @code{plus}, or
3901@code{minus} is made the first operand under the same conditions as
3902above.
3903
3904@item
3905@code{(minus @var{x} (const_int @var{n}))} is converted to
3906@code{(plus @var{x} (const_int @var{-n}))}.
3907
3908@item
3909Within address computations (i.e., inside @code{mem}), a left shift is
3910converted into the appropriate multiplication by a power of two.
3911
3912@cindex @code{ior}, canonicalization of
3913@cindex @code{and}, canonicalization of
3914@cindex De Morgan's law
72938a4c 3915@item
03dda8e3
RK
3916De`Morgan's Law is used to move bitwise negation inside a bitwise
3917logical-and or logical-or operation. If this results in only one
3918operand being a @code{not} expression, it will be the first one.
3919
3920A machine that has an instruction that performs a bitwise logical-and of one
3921operand with the bitwise negation of the other should specify the pattern
3922for that instruction as
3923
3ab51846 3924@smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3925(define_insn ""
3926 [(set (match_operand:@var{m} 0 @dots{})
3927 (and:@var{m} (not:@var{m} (match_operand:@var{m} 1 @dots{}))
3928 (match_operand:@var{m} 2 @dots{})))]
3929 "@dots{}"
3930 "@dots{}")
3ab51846 3931@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3932
3933@noindent
3934Similarly, a pattern for a ``NAND'' instruction should be written
3935
3ab51846 3936@smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3937(define_insn ""
3938 [(set (match_operand:@var{m} 0 @dots{})
3939 (ior:@var{m} (not:@var{m} (match_operand:@var{m} 1 @dots{}))
3940 (not:@var{m} (match_operand:@var{m} 2 @dots{}))))]
3941 "@dots{}"
3942 "@dots{}")
3ab51846 3943@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3944
3945In both cases, it is not necessary to include patterns for the many
3946logically equivalent RTL expressions.
3947
3948@cindex @code{xor}, canonicalization of
3949@item
3950The only possible RTL expressions involving both bitwise exclusive-or
3951and bitwise negation are @code{(xor:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})}
bd819a4a 3952and @code{(not:@var{m} (xor:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y}))}.
03dda8e3
RK
3953
3954@item
3955The sum of three items, one of which is a constant, will only appear in
3956the form
3957
3ab51846 3958@smallexample
03dda8e3 3959(plus:@var{m} (plus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y}) @var{constant})
3ab51846 3960@end smallexample
03dda8e3
RK
3961
3962@item
3963On machines that do not use @code{cc0},
3964@code{(compare @var{x} (const_int 0))} will be converted to
bd819a4a 3965@var{x}.
03dda8e3
RK
3966
3967@cindex @code{zero_extract}, canonicalization of
3968@cindex @code{sign_extract}, canonicalization of
3969@item
3970Equality comparisons of a group of bits (usually a single bit) with zero
3971will be written using @code{zero_extract} rather than the equivalent
3972@code{and} or @code{sign_extract} operations.
3973
3974@end itemize
3975
a5249a21
HPN
3976@end ifset
3977@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
3978@node Expander Definitions
3979@section Defining RTL Sequences for Code Generation
3980@cindex expander definitions
3981@cindex code generation RTL sequences
3982@cindex defining RTL sequences for code generation
3983
3984On some target machines, some standard pattern names for RTL generation
3985cannot be handled with single insn, but a sequence of RTL insns can
3986represent them. For these target machines, you can write a
161d7b59 3987@code{define_expand} to specify how to generate the sequence of RTL@.
03dda8e3
RK
3988
3989@findex define_expand
3990A @code{define_expand} is an RTL expression that looks almost like a
3991@code{define_insn}; but, unlike the latter, a @code{define_expand} is used
3992only for RTL generation and it can produce more than one RTL insn.
3993
3994A @code{define_expand} RTX has four operands:
3995
3996@itemize @bullet
3997@item
3998The name. Each @code{define_expand} must have a name, since the only
3999use for it is to refer to it by name.
4000
03dda8e3 4001@item
f3a3d0d3
RH
4002The RTL template. This is a vector of RTL expressions representing
4003a sequence of separate instructions. Unlike @code{define_insn}, there
4004is no implicit surrounding @code{PARALLEL}.
03dda8e3
RK
4005
4006@item
4007The condition, a string containing a C expression. This expression is
4008used to express how the availability of this pattern depends on
f0523f02
JM
4009subclasses of target machine, selected by command-line options when GCC
4010is run. This is just like the condition of a @code{define_insn} that
03dda8e3
RK
4011has a standard name. Therefore, the condition (if present) may not
4012depend on the data in the insn being matched, but only the
4013target-machine-type flags. The compiler needs to test these conditions
4014during initialization in order to learn exactly which named instructions
4015are available in a particular run.
4016
4017@item
4018The preparation statements, a string containing zero or more C
4019statements which are to be executed before RTL code is generated from
4020the RTL template.
4021
4022Usually these statements prepare temporary registers for use as
4023internal operands in the RTL template, but they can also generate RTL
4024insns directly by calling routines such as @code{emit_insn}, etc.
4025Any such insns precede the ones that come from the RTL template.
4026@end itemize
4027
4028Every RTL insn emitted by a @code{define_expand} must match some
4029@code{define_insn} in the machine description. Otherwise, the compiler
4030will crash when trying to generate code for the insn or trying to optimize
4031it.
4032
4033The RTL template, in addition to controlling generation of RTL insns,
4034also describes the operands that need to be specified when this pattern
4035is used. In particular, it gives a predicate for each operand.
4036
4037A true operand, which needs to be specified in order to generate RTL from
4038the pattern, should be described with a @code{match_operand} in its first
4039occurrence in the RTL template. This enters information on the operand's
f0523f02 4040predicate into the tables that record such things. GCC uses the
03dda8e3
RK
4041information to preload the operand into a register if that is required for
4042valid RTL code. If the operand is referred to more than once, subsequent
4043references should use @code{match_dup}.
4044
4045The RTL template may also refer to internal ``operands'' which are
4046temporary registers or labels used only within the sequence made by the
4047@code{define_expand}. Internal operands are substituted into the RTL
4048template with @code{match_dup}, never with @code{match_operand}. The
4049values of the internal operands are not passed in as arguments by the
4050compiler when it requests use of this pattern. Instead, they are computed
4051within the pattern, in the preparation statements. These statements
4052compute the values and store them into the appropriate elements of
4053@code{operands} so that @code{match_dup} can find them.
4054
4055There are two special macros defined for use in the preparation statements:
4056@code{DONE} and @code{FAIL}. Use them with a following semicolon,
4057as a statement.
4058
4059@table @code
4060
4061@findex DONE
4062@item DONE
4063Use the @code{DONE} macro to end RTL generation for the pattern. The
4064only RTL insns resulting from the pattern on this occasion will be
4065those already emitted by explicit calls to @code{emit_insn} within the
4066preparation statements; the RTL template will not be generated.
4067
4068@findex FAIL
4069@item FAIL
4070Make the pattern fail on this occasion. When a pattern fails, it means
4071that the pattern was not truly available. The calling routines in the
4072compiler will try other strategies for code generation using other patterns.
4073
4074Failure is currently supported only for binary (addition, multiplication,
c771326b 4075shifting, etc.) and bit-field (@code{extv}, @code{extzv}, and @code{insv})
03dda8e3
RK
4076operations.
4077@end table
4078
55e4756f
DD
4079If the preparation falls through (invokes neither @code{DONE} nor
4080@code{FAIL}), then the @code{define_expand} acts like a
4081@code{define_insn} in that the RTL template is used to generate the
4082insn.
4083
4084The RTL template is not used for matching, only for generating the
4085initial insn list. If the preparation statement always invokes
4086@code{DONE} or @code{FAIL}, the RTL template may be reduced to a simple
4087list of operands, such as this example:
4088
4089@smallexample
4090@group
4091(define_expand "addsi3"
4092 [(match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "")
4093 (match_operand:SI 1 "register_operand" "")
4094 (match_operand:SI 2 "register_operand" "")]
4095@end group
4096@group
4097 ""
4098 "
58097133 4099@{
55e4756f
DD
4100 handle_add (operands[0], operands[1], operands[2]);
4101 DONE;
58097133 4102@}")
55e4756f
DD
4103@end group
4104@end smallexample
4105
03dda8e3
RK
4106Here is an example, the definition of left-shift for the SPUR chip:
4107
4108@smallexample
4109@group
4110(define_expand "ashlsi3"
4111 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "")
4112 (ashift:SI
4113@end group
4114@group
4115 (match_operand:SI 1 "register_operand" "")
4116 (match_operand:SI 2 "nonmemory_operand" "")))]
4117 ""
4118 "
4119@end group
4120@end smallexample
4121
4122@smallexample
4123@group
4124@{
4125 if (GET_CODE (operands[2]) != CONST_INT
4126 || (unsigned) INTVAL (operands[2]) > 3)
4127 FAIL;
4128@}")
4129@end group
4130@end smallexample
4131
4132@noindent
4133This example uses @code{define_expand} so that it can generate an RTL insn
4134for shifting when the shift-count is in the supported range of 0 to 3 but
4135fail in other cases where machine insns aren't available. When it fails,
4136the compiler tries another strategy using different patterns (such as, a
4137library call).
4138
4139If the compiler were able to handle nontrivial condition-strings in
4140patterns with names, then it would be possible to use a
4141@code{define_insn} in that case. Here is another case (zero-extension
4142on the 68000) which makes more use of the power of @code{define_expand}:
4143
4144@smallexample
4145(define_expand "zero_extendhisi2"
4146 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "")
4147 (const_int 0))
4148 (set (strict_low_part
4149 (subreg:HI
4150 (match_dup 0)
4151 0))
4152 (match_operand:HI 1 "general_operand" ""))]
4153 ""
4154 "operands[1] = make_safe_from (operands[1], operands[0]);")
4155@end smallexample
4156
4157@noindent
4158@findex make_safe_from
4159Here two RTL insns are generated, one to clear the entire output operand
4160and the other to copy the input operand into its low half. This sequence
4161is incorrect if the input operand refers to [the old value of] the output
4162operand, so the preparation statement makes sure this isn't so. The
4163function @code{make_safe_from} copies the @code{operands[1]} into a
4164temporary register if it refers to @code{operands[0]}. It does this
4165by emitting another RTL insn.
4166
4167Finally, a third example shows the use of an internal operand.
4168Zero-extension on the SPUR chip is done by @code{and}-ing the result
4169against a halfword mask. But this mask cannot be represented by a
4170@code{const_int} because the constant value is too large to be legitimate
4171on this machine. So it must be copied into a register with
4172@code{force_reg} and then the register used in the @code{and}.
4173
4174@smallexample
4175(define_expand "zero_extendhisi2"
4176 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "")
4177 (and:SI (subreg:SI
4178 (match_operand:HI 1 "register_operand" "")
4179 0)
4180 (match_dup 2)))]
4181 ""
4182 "operands[2]
3a598fbe 4183 = force_reg (SImode, GEN_INT (65535)); ")
03dda8e3
RK
4184@end smallexample
4185
4186@strong{Note:} If the @code{define_expand} is used to serve a
c771326b 4187standard binary or unary arithmetic operation or a bit-field operation,
03dda8e3
RK
4188then the last insn it generates must not be a @code{code_label},
4189@code{barrier} or @code{note}. It must be an @code{insn},
4190@code{jump_insn} or @code{call_insn}. If you don't need a real insn
4191at the end, emit an insn to copy the result of the operation into
4192itself. Such an insn will generate no code, but it can avoid problems
bd819a4a 4193in the compiler.
03dda8e3 4194
a5249a21
HPN
4195@end ifset
4196@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
4197@node Insn Splitting
4198@section Defining How to Split Instructions
4199@cindex insn splitting
4200@cindex instruction splitting
4201@cindex splitting instructions
4202
fae15c93
VM
4203There are two cases where you should specify how to split a pattern
4204into multiple insns. On machines that have instructions requiring
4205delay slots (@pxref{Delay Slots}) or that have instructions whose
4206output is not available for multiple cycles (@pxref{Processor pipeline
4207description}), the compiler phases that optimize these cases need to
4208be able to move insns into one-instruction delay slots. However, some
4209insns may generate more than one machine instruction. These insns
4210cannot be placed into a delay slot.
03dda8e3
RK
4211
4212Often you can rewrite the single insn as a list of individual insns,
4213each corresponding to one machine instruction. The disadvantage of
4214doing so is that it will cause the compilation to be slower and require
4215more space. If the resulting insns are too complex, it may also
4216suppress some optimizations. The compiler splits the insn if there is a
4217reason to believe that it might improve instruction or delay slot
4218scheduling.
4219
4220The insn combiner phase also splits putative insns. If three insns are
4221merged into one insn with a complex expression that cannot be matched by
4222some @code{define_insn} pattern, the combiner phase attempts to split
4223the complex pattern into two insns that are recognized. Usually it can
4224break the complex pattern into two patterns by splitting out some
4225subexpression. However, in some other cases, such as performing an
4226addition of a large constant in two insns on a RISC machine, the way to
4227split the addition into two insns is machine-dependent.
4228
f3a3d0d3 4229@findex define_split
03dda8e3
RK
4230The @code{define_split} definition tells the compiler how to split a
4231complex insn into several simpler insns. It looks like this:
4232
4233@smallexample
4234(define_split
4235 [@var{insn-pattern}]
4236 "@var{condition}"
4237 [@var{new-insn-pattern-1}
4238 @var{new-insn-pattern-2}
4239 @dots{}]
630d3d5a 4240 "@var{preparation-statements}")
03dda8e3
RK
4241@end smallexample
4242
4243@var{insn-pattern} is a pattern that needs to be split and
4244@var{condition} is the final condition to be tested, as in a
4245@code{define_insn}. When an insn matching @var{insn-pattern} and
4246satisfying @var{condition} is found, it is replaced in the insn list
4247with the insns given by @var{new-insn-pattern-1},
4248@var{new-insn-pattern-2}, etc.
4249
630d3d5a 4250The @var{preparation-statements} are similar to those statements that
03dda8e3
RK
4251are specified for @code{define_expand} (@pxref{Expander Definitions})
4252and are executed before the new RTL is generated to prepare for the
4253generated code or emit some insns whose pattern is not fixed. Unlike
4254those in @code{define_expand}, however, these statements must not
4255generate any new pseudo-registers. Once reload has completed, they also
4256must not allocate any space in the stack frame.
4257
4258Patterns are matched against @var{insn-pattern} in two different
4259circumstances. If an insn needs to be split for delay slot scheduling
4260or insn scheduling, the insn is already known to be valid, which means
4261that it must have been matched by some @code{define_insn} and, if
df2a54e9 4262@code{reload_completed} is nonzero, is known to satisfy the constraints
03dda8e3
RK
4263of that @code{define_insn}. In that case, the new insn patterns must
4264also be insns that are matched by some @code{define_insn} and, if
df2a54e9 4265@code{reload_completed} is nonzero, must also satisfy the constraints
03dda8e3
RK
4266of those definitions.
4267
4268As an example of this usage of @code{define_split}, consider the following
4269example from @file{a29k.md}, which splits a @code{sign_extend} from
4270@code{HImode} to @code{SImode} into a pair of shift insns:
4271
4272@smallexample
4273(define_split
4274 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "gen_reg_operand" "")
4275 (sign_extend:SI (match_operand:HI 1 "gen_reg_operand" "")))]
4276 ""
4277 [(set (match_dup 0)
4278 (ashift:SI (match_dup 1)
4279 (const_int 16)))
4280 (set (match_dup 0)
4281 (ashiftrt:SI (match_dup 0)
4282 (const_int 16)))]
4283 "
4284@{ operands[1] = gen_lowpart (SImode, operands[1]); @}")
4285@end smallexample
4286
4287When the combiner phase tries to split an insn pattern, it is always the
4288case that the pattern is @emph{not} matched by any @code{define_insn}.
4289The combiner pass first tries to split a single @code{set} expression
4290and then the same @code{set} expression inside a @code{parallel}, but
4291followed by a @code{clobber} of a pseudo-reg to use as a scratch
4292register. In these cases, the combiner expects exactly two new insn
4293patterns to be generated. It will verify that these patterns match some
4294@code{define_insn} definitions, so you need not do this test in the
4295@code{define_split} (of course, there is no point in writing a
4296@code{define_split} that will never produce insns that match).
4297
4298Here is an example of this use of @code{define_split}, taken from
4299@file{rs6000.md}:
4300
4301@smallexample
4302(define_split
4303 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "gen_reg_operand" "")
4304 (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "gen_reg_operand" "")
4305 (match_operand:SI 2 "non_add_cint_operand" "")))]
4306 ""
4307 [(set (match_dup 0) (plus:SI (match_dup 1) (match_dup 3)))
4308 (set (match_dup 0) (plus:SI (match_dup 0) (match_dup 4)))]
4309"
4310@{
4311 int low = INTVAL (operands[2]) & 0xffff;
4312 int high = (unsigned) INTVAL (operands[2]) >> 16;
4313
4314 if (low & 0x8000)
4315 high++, low |= 0xffff0000;
4316
3a598fbe
JL
4317 operands[3] = GEN_INT (high << 16);
4318 operands[4] = GEN_INT (low);
03dda8e3
RK
4319@}")
4320@end smallexample
4321
4322Here the predicate @code{non_add_cint_operand} matches any
4323@code{const_int} that is @emph{not} a valid operand of a single add
4324insn. The add with the smaller displacement is written so that it
4325can be substituted into the address of a subsequent operation.
4326
4327An example that uses a scratch register, from the same file, generates
4328an equality comparison of a register and a large constant:
4329
4330@smallexample
4331(define_split
4332 [(set (match_operand:CC 0 "cc_reg_operand" "")
4333 (compare:CC (match_operand:SI 1 "gen_reg_operand" "")
4334 (match_operand:SI 2 "non_short_cint_operand" "")))
4335 (clobber (match_operand:SI 3 "gen_reg_operand" ""))]
4336 "find_single_use (operands[0], insn, 0)
4337 && (GET_CODE (*find_single_use (operands[0], insn, 0)) == EQ
4338 || GET_CODE (*find_single_use (operands[0], insn, 0)) == NE)"
4339 [(set (match_dup 3) (xor:SI (match_dup 1) (match_dup 4)))
4340 (set (match_dup 0) (compare:CC (match_dup 3) (match_dup 5)))]
4341 "
4342@{
4343 /* Get the constant we are comparing against, C, and see what it
4344 looks like sign-extended to 16 bits. Then see what constant
4345 could be XOR'ed with C to get the sign-extended value. */
4346
4347 int c = INTVAL (operands[2]);
4348 int sextc = (c << 16) >> 16;
4349 int xorv = c ^ sextc;
4350
3a598fbe
JL
4351 operands[4] = GEN_INT (xorv);
4352 operands[5] = GEN_INT (sextc);
03dda8e3
RK
4353@}")
4354@end smallexample
4355
4356To avoid confusion, don't write a single @code{define_split} that
4357accepts some insns that match some @code{define_insn} as well as some
4358insns that don't. Instead, write two separate @code{define_split}
4359definitions, one for the insns that are valid and one for the insns that
4360are not valid.
4361
6b24c259
JH
4362The splitter is allowed to split jump instructions into sequence of
4363jumps or create new jumps in while splitting non-jump instructions. As
4364the central flowgraph and branch prediction information needs to be updated,
f282ffb3 4365several restriction apply.
6b24c259
JH
4366
4367Splitting of jump instruction into sequence that over by another jump
c21cd8b1 4368instruction is always valid, as compiler expect identical behavior of new
6b24c259
JH
4369jump. When new sequence contains multiple jump instructions or new labels,
4370more assistance is needed. Splitter is required to create only unconditional
4371jumps, or simple conditional jump instructions. Additionally it must attach a
63519d23 4372@code{REG_BR_PROB} note to each conditional jump. A global variable
6b24c259
JH
4373@code{split_branch_probability} hold the probability of original branch in case
4374it was an simple conditional jump, @minus{}1 otherwise. To simplify
4375recomputing of edge frequencies, new sequence is required to have only
4376forward jumps to the newly created labels.
4377
fae81b38 4378@findex define_insn_and_split
c88c0d42
CP
4379For the common case where the pattern of a define_split exactly matches the
4380pattern of a define_insn, use @code{define_insn_and_split}. It looks like
4381this:
4382
4383@smallexample
4384(define_insn_and_split
4385 [@var{insn-pattern}]
4386 "@var{condition}"
4387 "@var{output-template}"
4388 "@var{split-condition}"
4389 [@var{new-insn-pattern-1}
4390 @var{new-insn-pattern-2}
4391 @dots{}]
630d3d5a 4392 "@var{preparation-statements}"
c88c0d42
CP
4393 [@var{insn-attributes}])
4394
4395@end smallexample
4396
4397@var{insn-pattern}, @var{condition}, @var{output-template}, and
4398@var{insn-attributes} are used as in @code{define_insn}. The
4399@var{new-insn-pattern} vector and the @var{preparation-statements} are used as
4400in a @code{define_split}. The @var{split-condition} is also used as in
4401@code{define_split}, with the additional behavior that if the condition starts
4402with @samp{&&}, the condition used for the split will be the constructed as a
d7d9c429 4403logical ``and'' of the split condition with the insn condition. For example,
c88c0d42
CP
4404from i386.md:
4405
4406@smallexample
4407(define_insn_and_split "zero_extendhisi2_and"
4408 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "=r")
4409 (zero_extend:SI (match_operand:HI 1 "register_operand" "0")))
4410 (clobber (reg:CC 17))]
4411 "TARGET_ZERO_EXTEND_WITH_AND && !optimize_size"
4412 "#"
4413 "&& reload_completed"
f282ffb3 4414 [(parallel [(set (match_dup 0)
9c34dbbf 4415 (and:SI (match_dup 0) (const_int 65535)))
c88c0d42
CP
4416 (clobber (reg:CC 17))])]
4417 ""
4418 [(set_attr "type" "alu1")])
4419
4420@end smallexample
4421
ebb48a4d 4422In this case, the actual split condition will be
aee96fe9 4423@samp{TARGET_ZERO_EXTEND_WITH_AND && !optimize_size && reload_completed}.
c88c0d42
CP
4424
4425The @code{define_insn_and_split} construction provides exactly the same
4426functionality as two separate @code{define_insn} and @code{define_split}
4427patterns. It exists for compactness, and as a maintenance tool to prevent
4428having to ensure the two patterns' templates match.
4429
a5249a21
HPN
4430@end ifset
4431@ifset INTERNALS
04d8aa70
AM
4432@node Including Patterns
4433@section Including Patterns in Machine Descriptions.
4434@cindex insn includes
4435
4436@findex include
4437The @code{include} pattern tells the compiler tools where to
4438look for patterns that are in files other than in the file
4439@file{.md}. This is used only at build time and there is no preprocessing allowed.
4440
4441It looks like:
4442
4443@smallexample
4444
4445(include
4446 @var{pathname})
4447@end smallexample
4448
4449For example:
4450
4451@smallexample
4452
f282ffb3 4453(include "filestuff")
04d8aa70
AM
4454
4455@end smallexample
4456
27d30956 4457Where @var{pathname} is a string that specifies the location of the file,
04d8aa70
AM
4458specifies the include file to be in @file{gcc/config/target/filestuff}. The
4459directory @file{gcc/config/target} is regarded as the default directory.
4460
4461
f282ffb3
JM
4462Machine descriptions may be split up into smaller more manageable subsections
4463and placed into subdirectories.
04d8aa70
AM
4464
4465By specifying:
4466
4467@smallexample
4468
f282ffb3 4469(include "BOGUS/filestuff")
04d8aa70
AM
4470
4471@end smallexample
4472
4473the include file is specified to be in @file{gcc/config/@var{target}/BOGUS/filestuff}.
4474
4475Specifying an absolute path for the include file such as;
4476@smallexample
4477
f282ffb3 4478(include "/u2/BOGUS/filestuff")
04d8aa70
AM
4479
4480@end smallexample
f282ffb3 4481is permitted but is not encouraged.
04d8aa70
AM
4482
4483@subsection RTL Generation Tool Options for Directory Search
4484@cindex directory options .md
4485@cindex options, directory search
4486@cindex search options
4487
4488The @option{-I@var{dir}} option specifies directories to search for machine descriptions.
4489For example:
4490
4491@smallexample
4492
4493genrecog -I/p1/abc/proc1 -I/p2/abcd/pro2 target.md
4494
4495@end smallexample
4496
4497
4498Add the directory @var{dir} to the head of the list of directories to be
4499searched for header files. This can be used to override a system machine definition
4500file, substituting your own version, since these directories are
4501searched before the default machine description file directories. If you use more than
4502one @option{-I} option, the directories are scanned in left-to-right
4503order; the standard default directory come after.
4504
4505
a5249a21
HPN
4506@end ifset
4507@ifset INTERNALS
f3a3d0d3
RH
4508@node Peephole Definitions
4509@section Machine-Specific Peephole Optimizers
4510@cindex peephole optimizer definitions
4511@cindex defining peephole optimizers
4512
4513In addition to instruction patterns the @file{md} file may contain
4514definitions of machine-specific peephole optimizations.
4515
4516The combiner does not notice certain peephole optimizations when the data
4517flow in the program does not suggest that it should try them. For example,
4518sometimes two consecutive insns related in purpose can be combined even
4519though the second one does not appear to use a register computed in the
4520first one. A machine-specific peephole optimizer can detect such
4521opportunities.
4522
4523There are two forms of peephole definitions that may be used. The
4524original @code{define_peephole} is run at assembly output time to
4525match insns and substitute assembly text. Use of @code{define_peephole}
4526is deprecated.
4527
4528A newer @code{define_peephole2} matches insns and substitutes new
4529insns. The @code{peephole2} pass is run after register allocation
ebb48a4d 4530but before scheduling, which may result in much better code for
f3a3d0d3
RH
4531targets that do scheduling.
4532
4533@menu
4534* define_peephole:: RTL to Text Peephole Optimizers
4535* define_peephole2:: RTL to RTL Peephole Optimizers
4536@end menu
4537
a5249a21
HPN
4538@end ifset
4539@ifset INTERNALS
f3a3d0d3
RH
4540@node define_peephole
4541@subsection RTL to Text Peephole Optimizers
4542@findex define_peephole
4543
4544@need 1000
4545A definition looks like this:
4546
4547@smallexample
4548(define_peephole
4549 [@var{insn-pattern-1}
4550 @var{insn-pattern-2}
4551 @dots{}]
4552 "@var{condition}"
4553 "@var{template}"
630d3d5a 4554 "@var{optional-insn-attributes}")
f3a3d0d3
RH
4555@end smallexample
4556
4557@noindent
4558The last string operand may be omitted if you are not using any
4559machine-specific information in this machine description. If present,
4560it must obey the same rules as in a @code{define_insn}.
4561
4562In this skeleton, @var{insn-pattern-1} and so on are patterns to match
4563consecutive insns. The optimization applies to a sequence of insns when
4564@var{insn-pattern-1} matches the first one, @var{insn-pattern-2} matches
bd819a4a 4565the next, and so on.
f3a3d0d3
RH
4566
4567Each of the insns matched by a peephole must also match a
4568@code{define_insn}. Peepholes are checked only at the last stage just
4569before code generation, and only optionally. Therefore, any insn which
4570would match a peephole but no @code{define_insn} will cause a crash in code
4571generation in an unoptimized compilation, or at various optimization
4572stages.
4573
4574The operands of the insns are matched with @code{match_operands},
4575@code{match_operator}, and @code{match_dup}, as usual. What is not
4576usual is that the operand numbers apply to all the insn patterns in the
4577definition. So, you can check for identical operands in two insns by
4578using @code{match_operand} in one insn and @code{match_dup} in the
4579other.
4580
4581The operand constraints used in @code{match_operand} patterns do not have
4582any direct effect on the applicability of the peephole, but they will
4583be validated afterward, so make sure your constraints are general enough
4584to apply whenever the peephole matches. If the peephole matches
4585but the constraints are not satisfied, the compiler will crash.
4586
4587It is safe to omit constraints in all the operands of the peephole; or
4588you can write constraints which serve as a double-check on the criteria
4589previously tested.
4590
4591Once a sequence of insns matches the patterns, the @var{condition} is
4592checked. This is a C expression which makes the final decision whether to
4593perform the optimization (we do so if the expression is nonzero). If
4594@var{condition} is omitted (in other words, the string is empty) then the
4595optimization is applied to every sequence of insns that matches the
4596patterns.
4597
4598The defined peephole optimizations are applied after register allocation
4599is complete. Therefore, the peephole definition can check which
4600operands have ended up in which kinds of registers, just by looking at
4601the operands.
4602
4603@findex prev_active_insn
4604The way to refer to the operands in @var{condition} is to write
4605@code{operands[@var{i}]} for operand number @var{i} (as matched by
4606@code{(match_operand @var{i} @dots{})}). Use the variable @code{insn}
4607to refer to the last of the insns being matched; use
4608@code{prev_active_insn} to find the preceding insns.
4609
4610@findex dead_or_set_p
4611When optimizing computations with intermediate results, you can use
4612@var{condition} to match only when the intermediate results are not used
4613elsewhere. Use the C expression @code{dead_or_set_p (@var{insn},
4614@var{op})}, where @var{insn} is the insn in which you expect the value
4615to be used for the last time (from the value of @code{insn}, together
4616with use of @code{prev_nonnote_insn}), and @var{op} is the intermediate
bd819a4a 4617value (from @code{operands[@var{i}]}).
f3a3d0d3
RH
4618
4619Applying the optimization means replacing the sequence of insns with one
4620new insn. The @var{template} controls ultimate output of assembler code
4621for this combined insn. It works exactly like the template of a
4622@code{define_insn}. Operand numbers in this template are the same ones
4623used in matching the original sequence of insns.
4624
4625The result of a defined peephole optimizer does not need to match any of
4626the insn patterns in the machine description; it does not even have an
4627opportunity to match them. The peephole optimizer definition itself serves
4628as the insn pattern to control how the insn is output.
4629
4630Defined peephole optimizers are run as assembler code is being output,
4631so the insns they produce are never combined or rearranged in any way.
4632
4633Here is an example, taken from the 68000 machine description:
4634
4635@smallexample
4636(define_peephole
4637 [(set (reg:SI 15) (plus:SI (reg:SI 15) (const_int 4)))
4638 (set (match_operand:DF 0 "register_operand" "=f")
4639 (match_operand:DF 1 "register_operand" "ad"))]
4640 "FP_REG_P (operands[0]) && ! FP_REG_P (operands[1])"
f3a3d0d3
RH
4641@{
4642 rtx xoperands[2];
a2a8cc44 4643 xoperands[1] = gen_rtx_REG (SImode, REGNO (operands[1]) + 1);
f3a3d0d3 4644#ifdef MOTOROLA
0f40f9f7
ZW
4645 output_asm_insn ("move.l %1,(sp)", xoperands);
4646 output_asm_insn ("move.l %1,-(sp)", operands);
4647 return "fmove.d (sp)+,%0";
f3a3d0d3 4648#else
0f40f9f7
ZW
4649 output_asm_insn ("movel %1,sp@@", xoperands);
4650 output_asm_insn ("movel %1,sp@@-", operands);
4651 return "fmoved sp@@+,%0";
f3a3d0d3 4652#endif
0f40f9f7 4653@})
f3a3d0d3
RH
4654@end smallexample
4655
4656@need 1000
4657The effect of this optimization is to change
4658
4659@smallexample
4660@group
4661jbsr _foobar
4662addql #4,sp
4663movel d1,sp@@-
4664movel d0,sp@@-
4665fmoved sp@@+,fp0
4666@end group
4667@end smallexample
4668
4669@noindent
4670into
4671
4672@smallexample
4673@group
4674jbsr _foobar
4675movel d1,sp@@
4676movel d0,sp@@-
4677fmoved sp@@+,fp0
4678@end group
4679@end smallexample
4680
4681@ignore
4682@findex CC_REVERSED
4683If a peephole matches a sequence including one or more jump insns, you must
4684take account of the flags such as @code{CC_REVERSED} which specify that the
4685condition codes are represented in an unusual manner. The compiler
4686automatically alters any ordinary conditional jumps which occur in such
4687situations, but the compiler cannot alter jumps which have been replaced by
4688peephole optimizations. So it is up to you to alter the assembler code
4689that the peephole produces. Supply C code to write the assembler output,
4690and in this C code check the condition code status flags and change the
4691assembler code as appropriate.
4692@end ignore
4693
4694@var{insn-pattern-1} and so on look @emph{almost} like the second
4695operand of @code{define_insn}. There is one important difference: the
4696second operand of @code{define_insn} consists of one or more RTX's
4697enclosed in square brackets. Usually, there is only one: then the same
4698action can be written as an element of a @code{define_peephole}. But
4699when there are multiple actions in a @code{define_insn}, they are
4700implicitly enclosed in a @code{parallel}. Then you must explicitly
4701write the @code{parallel}, and the square brackets within it, in the
4702@code{define_peephole}. Thus, if an insn pattern looks like this,
4703
4704@smallexample
4705(define_insn "divmodsi4"
4706 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=d")
4707 (div:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "0")
4708 (match_operand:SI 2 "general_operand" "dmsK")))
4709 (set (match_operand:SI 3 "general_operand" "=d")
4710 (mod:SI (match_dup 1) (match_dup 2)))]
4711 "TARGET_68020"
4712 "divsl%.l %2,%3:%0")
4713@end smallexample
4714
4715@noindent
4716then the way to mention this insn in a peephole is as follows:
4717
4718@smallexample
4719(define_peephole
4720 [@dots{}
4721 (parallel
4722 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=d")
4723 (div:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "0")
4724 (match_operand:SI 2 "general_operand" "dmsK")))
4725 (set (match_operand:SI 3 "general_operand" "=d")
4726 (mod:SI (match_dup 1) (match_dup 2)))])
4727 @dots{}]
4728 @dots{})
4729@end smallexample
4730
a5249a21
HPN
4731@end ifset
4732@ifset INTERNALS
f3a3d0d3
RH
4733@node define_peephole2
4734@subsection RTL to RTL Peephole Optimizers
4735@findex define_peephole2
4736
4737The @code{define_peephole2} definition tells the compiler how to
ebb48a4d 4738substitute one sequence of instructions for another sequence,
f3a3d0d3
RH
4739what additional scratch registers may be needed and what their
4740lifetimes must be.
4741
4742@smallexample
4743(define_peephole2
4744 [@var{insn-pattern-1}
4745 @var{insn-pattern-2}
4746 @dots{}]
4747 "@var{condition}"
4748 [@var{new-insn-pattern-1}
4749 @var{new-insn-pattern-2}
4750 @dots{}]
630d3d5a 4751 "@var{preparation-statements}")
f3a3d0d3
RH
4752@end smallexample
4753
4754The definition is almost identical to @code{define_split}
4755(@pxref{Insn Splitting}) except that the pattern to match is not a
4756single instruction, but a sequence of instructions.
4757
4758It is possible to request additional scratch registers for use in the
4759output template. If appropriate registers are not free, the pattern
4760will simply not match.
4761
4762@findex match_scratch
4763@findex match_dup
4764Scratch registers are requested with a @code{match_scratch} pattern at
4765the top level of the input pattern. The allocated register (initially) will
4766be dead at the point requested within the original sequence. If the scratch
4767is used at more than a single point, a @code{match_dup} pattern at the
4768top level of the input pattern marks the last position in the input sequence
4769at which the register must be available.
4770
4771Here is an example from the IA-32 machine description:
4772
4773@smallexample
4774(define_peephole2
4775 [(match_scratch:SI 2 "r")
4776 (parallel [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "")
4777 (match_operator:SI 3 "arith_or_logical_operator"
4778 [(match_dup 0)
4779 (match_operand:SI 1 "memory_operand" "")]))
4780 (clobber (reg:CC 17))])]
4781 "! optimize_size && ! TARGET_READ_MODIFY"
4782 [(set (match_dup 2) (match_dup 1))
4783 (parallel [(set (match_dup 0)
4784 (match_op_dup 3 [(match_dup 0) (match_dup 2)]))
4785 (clobber (reg:CC 17))])]
4786 "")
4787@end smallexample
4788
4789@noindent
4790This pattern tries to split a load from its use in the hopes that we'll be
4791able to schedule around the memory load latency. It allocates a single
4792@code{SImode} register of class @code{GENERAL_REGS} (@code{"r"}) that needs
4793to be live only at the point just before the arithmetic.
4794
b192711e 4795A real example requiring extended scratch lifetimes is harder to come by,
f3a3d0d3
RH
4796so here's a silly made-up example:
4797
4798@smallexample
4799(define_peephole2
4800 [(match_scratch:SI 4 "r")
4801 (set (match_operand:SI 0 "" "") (match_operand:SI 1 "" ""))
4802 (set (match_operand:SI 2 "" "") (match_dup 1))
4803 (match_dup 4)
4804 (set (match_operand:SI 3 "" "") (match_dup 1))]
630d3d5a 4805 "/* @r{determine 1 does not overlap 0 and 2} */"
f3a3d0d3
RH
4806 [(set (match_dup 4) (match_dup 1))
4807 (set (match_dup 0) (match_dup 4))
4808 (set (match_dup 2) (match_dup 4))]
4809 (set (match_dup 3) (match_dup 4))]
4810 "")
4811@end smallexample
4812
4813@noindent
a628d195
RH
4814If we had not added the @code{(match_dup 4)} in the middle of the input
4815sequence, it might have been the case that the register we chose at the
4816beginning of the sequence is killed by the first or second @code{set}.
f3a3d0d3 4817
a5249a21
HPN
4818@end ifset
4819@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
4820@node Insn Attributes
4821@section Instruction Attributes
4822@cindex insn attributes
4823@cindex instruction attributes
4824
4825In addition to describing the instruction supported by the target machine,
4826the @file{md} file also defines a group of @dfn{attributes} and a set of
4827values for each. Every generated insn is assigned a value for each attribute.
4828One possible attribute would be the effect that the insn has on the machine's
4829condition code. This attribute can then be used by @code{NOTICE_UPDATE_CC}
4830to track the condition codes.
4831
4832@menu
4833* Defining Attributes:: Specifying attributes and their values.
4834* Expressions:: Valid expressions for attribute values.
4835* Tagging Insns:: Assigning attribute values to insns.
4836* Attr Example:: An example of assigning attributes.
4837* Insn Lengths:: Computing the length of insns.
4838* Constant Attributes:: Defining attributes that are constant.
4839* Delay Slots:: Defining delay slots required for a machine.
fae15c93 4840* Processor pipeline description:: Specifying information for insn scheduling.
03dda8e3
RK
4841@end menu
4842
a5249a21
HPN
4843@end ifset
4844@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
4845@node Defining Attributes
4846@subsection Defining Attributes and their Values
4847@cindex defining attributes and their values
4848@cindex attributes, defining
4849
4850@findex define_attr
4851The @code{define_attr} expression is used to define each attribute required
4852by the target machine. It looks like:
4853
4854@smallexample
4855(define_attr @var{name} @var{list-of-values} @var{default})
4856@end smallexample
4857
4858@var{name} is a string specifying the name of the attribute being defined.
4859
4860@var{list-of-values} is either a string that specifies a comma-separated
4861list of values that can be assigned to the attribute, or a null string to
4862indicate that the attribute takes numeric values.
4863
4864@var{default} is an attribute expression that gives the value of this
4865attribute for insns that match patterns whose definition does not include
4866an explicit value for this attribute. @xref{Attr Example}, for more
4867information on the handling of defaults. @xref{Constant Attributes},
4868for information on attributes that do not depend on any particular insn.
4869
4870@findex insn-attr.h
4871For each defined attribute, a number of definitions are written to the
4872@file{insn-attr.h} file. For cases where an explicit set of values is
4873specified for an attribute, the following are defined:
4874
4875@itemize @bullet
4876@item
4877A @samp{#define} is written for the symbol @samp{HAVE_ATTR_@var{name}}.
4878
4879@item
4880An enumeral class is defined for @samp{attr_@var{name}} with
4881elements of the form @samp{@var{upper-name}_@var{upper-value}} where
4bd0bee9 4882the attribute name and value are first converted to uppercase.
03dda8e3
RK
4883
4884@item
4885A function @samp{get_attr_@var{name}} is defined that is passed an insn and
4886returns the attribute value for that insn.
4887@end itemize
4888
4889For example, if the following is present in the @file{md} file:
4890
4891@smallexample
4892(define_attr "type" "branch,fp,load,store,arith" @dots{})
4893@end smallexample
4894
4895@noindent
4896the following lines will be written to the file @file{insn-attr.h}.
4897
4898@smallexample
4899#define HAVE_ATTR_type
4900enum attr_type @{TYPE_BRANCH, TYPE_FP, TYPE_LOAD,
4901 TYPE_STORE, TYPE_ARITH@};
4902extern enum attr_type get_attr_type ();
4903@end smallexample
4904
4905If the attribute takes numeric values, no @code{enum} type will be
4906defined and the function to obtain the attribute's value will return
4907@code{int}.
4908
a5249a21
HPN
4909@end ifset
4910@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
4911@node Expressions
4912@subsection Attribute Expressions
4913@cindex attribute expressions
4914
4915RTL expressions used to define attributes use the codes described above
4916plus a few specific to attribute definitions, to be discussed below.
4917Attribute value expressions must have one of the following forms:
4918
4919@table @code
4920@cindex @code{const_int} and attributes
4921@item (const_int @var{i})
4922The integer @var{i} specifies the value of a numeric attribute. @var{i}
4923must be non-negative.
4924
4925The value of a numeric attribute can be specified either with a
00bc45c1
RH
4926@code{const_int}, or as an integer represented as a string in
4927@code{const_string}, @code{eq_attr} (see below), @code{attr},
4928@code{symbol_ref}, simple arithmetic expressions, and @code{set_attr}
4929overrides on specific instructions (@pxref{Tagging Insns}).
03dda8e3
RK
4930
4931@cindex @code{const_string} and attributes
4932@item (const_string @var{value})
4933The string @var{value} specifies a constant attribute value.
4934If @var{value} is specified as @samp{"*"}, it means that the default value of
4935the attribute is to be used for the insn containing this expression.
4936@samp{"*"} obviously cannot be used in the @var{default} expression
bd819a4a 4937of a @code{define_attr}.
03dda8e3
RK
4938
4939If the attribute whose value is being specified is numeric, @var{value}
4940must be a string containing a non-negative integer (normally
4941@code{const_int} would be used in this case). Otherwise, it must
4942contain one of the valid values for the attribute.
4943
4944@cindex @code{if_then_else} and attributes
4945@item (if_then_else @var{test} @var{true-value} @var{false-value})
4946@var{test} specifies an attribute test, whose format is defined below.
4947The value of this expression is @var{true-value} if @var{test} is true,
4948otherwise it is @var{false-value}.
4949
4950@cindex @code{cond} and attributes
4951@item (cond [@var{test1} @var{value1} @dots{}] @var{default})
4952The first operand of this expression is a vector containing an even
4953number of expressions and consisting of pairs of @var{test} and @var{value}
4954expressions. The value of the @code{cond} expression is that of the
4955@var{value} corresponding to the first true @var{test} expression. If
4956none of the @var{test} expressions are true, the value of the @code{cond}
4957expression is that of the @var{default} expression.
4958@end table
4959
4960@var{test} expressions can have one of the following forms:
4961
4962@table @code
4963@cindex @code{const_int} and attribute tests
4964@item (const_int @var{i})
df2a54e9 4965This test is true if @var{i} is nonzero and false otherwise.
03dda8e3
RK
4966
4967@cindex @code{not} and attributes
4968@cindex @code{ior} and attributes
4969@cindex @code{and} and attributes
4970@item (not @var{test})
4971@itemx (ior @var{test1} @var{test2})
4972@itemx (and @var{test1} @var{test2})
4973These tests are true if the indicated logical function is true.
4974
4975@cindex @code{match_operand} and attributes
4976@item (match_operand:@var{m} @var{n} @var{pred} @var{constraints})
4977This test is true if operand @var{n} of the insn whose attribute value
4978is being determined has mode @var{m} (this part of the test is ignored
4979if @var{m} is @code{VOIDmode}) and the function specified by the string
df2a54e9 4980@var{pred} returns a nonzero value when passed operand @var{n} and mode
03dda8e3
RK
4981@var{m} (this part of the test is ignored if @var{pred} is the null
4982string).
4983
4984The @var{constraints} operand is ignored and should be the null string.
4985
4986@cindex @code{le} and attributes
4987@cindex @code{leu} and attributes
4988@cindex @code{lt} and attributes
4989@cindex @code{gt} and attributes
4990@cindex @code{gtu} and attributes
4991@cindex @code{ge} and attributes
4992@cindex @code{geu} and attributes
4993@cindex @code{ne} and attributes
4994@cindex @code{eq} and attributes
4995@cindex @code{plus} and attributes
4996@cindex @code{minus} and attributes
4997@cindex @code{mult} and attributes
4998@cindex @code{div} and attributes
4999@cindex @code{mod} and attributes
5000@cindex @code{abs} and attributes
5001@cindex @code{neg} and attributes
5002@cindex @code{ashift} and attributes
5003@cindex @code{lshiftrt} and attributes
5004@cindex @code{ashiftrt} and attributes
5005@item (le @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5006@itemx (leu @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5007@itemx (lt @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5008@itemx (ltu @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5009@itemx (gt @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5010@itemx (gtu @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5011@itemx (ge @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5012@itemx (geu @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5013@itemx (ne @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5014@itemx (eq @var{arith1} @var{arith2})
5015These tests are true if the indicated comparison of the two arithmetic
5016expressions is true. Arithmetic expressions are formed with
5017@code{plus}, @code{minus}, @code{mult}, @code{div}, @code{mod},
5018@code{abs}, @code{neg}, @code{and}, @code{ior}, @code{xor}, @code{not},
bd819a4a 5019@code{ashift}, @code{lshiftrt}, and @code{ashiftrt} expressions.
03dda8e3
RK
5020
5021@findex get_attr
5022@code{const_int} and @code{symbol_ref} are always valid terms (@pxref{Insn
5023Lengths},for additional forms). @code{symbol_ref} is a string
5024denoting a C expression that yields an @code{int} when evaluated by the
5025@samp{get_attr_@dots{}} routine. It should normally be a global
bd819a4a 5026variable.
03dda8e3
RK
5027
5028@findex eq_attr
5029@item (eq_attr @var{name} @var{value})
5030@var{name} is a string specifying the name of an attribute.
5031
5032@var{value} is a string that is either a valid value for attribute
5033@var{name}, a comma-separated list of values, or @samp{!} followed by a
5034value or list. If @var{value} does not begin with a @samp{!}, this
5035test is true if the value of the @var{name} attribute of the current
5036insn is in the list specified by @var{value}. If @var{value} begins
5037with a @samp{!}, this test is true if the attribute's value is
5038@emph{not} in the specified list.
5039
5040For example,
5041
5042@smallexample
5043(eq_attr "type" "load,store")
5044@end smallexample
5045
5046@noindent
5047is equivalent to
5048
5049@smallexample
5050(ior (eq_attr "type" "load") (eq_attr "type" "store"))
5051@end smallexample
5052
5053If @var{name} specifies an attribute of @samp{alternative}, it refers to the
5054value of the compiler variable @code{which_alternative}
5055(@pxref{Output Statement}) and the values must be small integers. For
bd819a4a 5056example,
03dda8e3
RK
5057
5058@smallexample
5059(eq_attr "alternative" "2,3")
5060@end smallexample
5061
5062@noindent
5063is equivalent to
5064
5065@smallexample
5066(ior (eq (symbol_ref "which_alternative") (const_int 2))
5067 (eq (symbol_ref "which_alternative") (const_int 3)))
5068@end smallexample
5069
5070Note that, for most attributes, an @code{eq_attr} test is simplified in cases
5071where the value of the attribute being tested is known for all insns matching
bd819a4a 5072a particular pattern. This is by far the most common case.
03dda8e3
RK
5073
5074@findex attr_flag
5075@item (attr_flag @var{name})
5076The value of an @code{attr_flag} expression is true if the flag
5077specified by @var{name} is true for the @code{insn} currently being
5078scheduled.
5079
5080@var{name} is a string specifying one of a fixed set of flags to test.
5081Test the flags @code{forward} and @code{backward} to determine the
5082direction of a conditional branch. Test the flags @code{very_likely},
5083@code{likely}, @code{very_unlikely}, and @code{unlikely} to determine
5084if a conditional branch is expected to be taken.
5085
5086If the @code{very_likely} flag is true, then the @code{likely} flag is also
5087true. Likewise for the @code{very_unlikely} and @code{unlikely} flags.
5088
5089This example describes a conditional branch delay slot which
5090can be nullified for forward branches that are taken (annul-true) or
5091for backward branches which are not taken (annul-false).
5092
5093@smallexample
5094(define_delay (eq_attr "type" "cbranch")
5095 [(eq_attr "in_branch_delay" "true")
5096 (and (eq_attr "in_branch_delay" "true")
5097 (attr_flag "forward"))
5098 (and (eq_attr "in_branch_delay" "true")
5099 (attr_flag "backward"))])
5100@end smallexample
5101
5102The @code{forward} and @code{backward} flags are false if the current
5103@code{insn} being scheduled is not a conditional branch.
5104
5105The @code{very_likely} and @code{likely} flags are true if the
5106@code{insn} being scheduled is not a conditional branch.
5107The @code{very_unlikely} and @code{unlikely} flags are false if the
5108@code{insn} being scheduled is not a conditional branch.
5109
5110@code{attr_flag} is only used during delay slot scheduling and has no
5111meaning to other passes of the compiler.
00bc45c1
RH
5112
5113@findex attr
5114@item (attr @var{name})
5115The value of another attribute is returned. This is most useful
5116for numeric attributes, as @code{eq_attr} and @code{attr_flag}
5117produce more efficient code for non-numeric attributes.
03dda8e3
RK
5118@end table
5119
a5249a21
HPN
5120@end ifset
5121@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
5122@node Tagging Insns
5123@subsection Assigning Attribute Values to Insns
5124@cindex tagging insns
5125@cindex assigning attribute values to insns
5126
5127The value assigned to an attribute of an insn is primarily determined by
5128which pattern is matched by that insn (or which @code{define_peephole}
5129generated it). Every @code{define_insn} and @code{define_peephole} can
5130have an optional last argument to specify the values of attributes for
5131matching insns. The value of any attribute not specified in a particular
5132insn is set to the default value for that attribute, as specified in its
5133@code{define_attr}. Extensive use of default values for attributes
5134permits the specification of the values for only one or two attributes
5135in the definition of most insn patterns, as seen in the example in the
bd819a4a 5136next section.
03dda8e3
RK
5137
5138The optional last argument of @code{define_insn} and
5139@code{define_peephole} is a vector of expressions, each of which defines
5140the value for a single attribute. The most general way of assigning an
5141attribute's value is to use a @code{set} expression whose first operand is an
5142@code{attr} expression giving the name of the attribute being set. The
5143second operand of the @code{set} is an attribute expression
bd819a4a 5144(@pxref{Expressions}) giving the value of the attribute.
03dda8e3
RK
5145
5146When the attribute value depends on the @samp{alternative} attribute
5147(i.e., which is the applicable alternative in the constraint of the
5148insn), the @code{set_attr_alternative} expression can be used. It
5149allows the specification of a vector of attribute expressions, one for
5150each alternative.
5151
5152@findex set_attr
5153When the generality of arbitrary attribute expressions is not required,
5154the simpler @code{set_attr} expression can be used, which allows
5155specifying a string giving either a single attribute value or a list
5156of attribute values, one for each alternative.
5157
5158The form of each of the above specifications is shown below. In each case,
5159@var{name} is a string specifying the attribute to be set.
5160
5161@table @code
5162@item (set_attr @var{name} @var{value-string})
5163@var{value-string} is either a string giving the desired attribute value,
5164or a string containing a comma-separated list giving the values for
5165succeeding alternatives. The number of elements must match the number
5166of alternatives in the constraint of the insn pattern.
5167
5168Note that it may be useful to specify @samp{*} for some alternative, in
5169which case the attribute will assume its default value for insns matching
5170that alternative.
5171
5172@findex set_attr_alternative
5173@item (set_attr_alternative @var{name} [@var{value1} @var{value2} @dots{}])
5174Depending on the alternative of the insn, the value will be one of the
5175specified values. This is a shorthand for using a @code{cond} with
5176tests on the @samp{alternative} attribute.
5177
5178@findex attr
5179@item (set (attr @var{name}) @var{value})
5180The first operand of this @code{set} must be the special RTL expression
5181@code{attr}, whose sole operand is a string giving the name of the
5182attribute being set. @var{value} is the value of the attribute.
5183@end table
5184
5185The following shows three different ways of representing the same
5186attribute value specification:
5187
5188@smallexample
5189(set_attr "type" "load,store,arith")
5190
5191(set_attr_alternative "type"
5192 [(const_string "load") (const_string "store")
5193 (const_string "arith")])
5194
5195(set (attr "type")
5196 (cond [(eq_attr "alternative" "1") (const_string "load")
5197 (eq_attr "alternative" "2") (const_string "store")]
5198 (const_string "arith")))
5199@end smallexample
5200
5201@need 1000
5202@findex define_asm_attributes
5203The @code{define_asm_attributes} expression provides a mechanism to
5204specify the attributes assigned to insns produced from an @code{asm}
5205statement. It has the form:
5206
5207@smallexample
5208(define_asm_attributes [@var{attr-sets}])
5209@end smallexample
5210
5211@noindent
5212where @var{attr-sets} is specified the same as for both the
5213@code{define_insn} and the @code{define_peephole} expressions.
5214
5215These values will typically be the ``worst case'' attribute values. For
5216example, they might indicate that the condition code will be clobbered.
5217
5218A specification for a @code{length} attribute is handled specially. The
5219way to compute the length of an @code{asm} insn is to multiply the
5220length specified in the expression @code{define_asm_attributes} by the
5221number of machine instructions specified in the @code{asm} statement,
5222determined by counting the number of semicolons and newlines in the
5223string. Therefore, the value of the @code{length} attribute specified
5224in a @code{define_asm_attributes} should be the maximum possible length
5225of a single machine instruction.
5226
a5249a21
HPN
5227@end ifset
5228@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
5229@node Attr Example
5230@subsection Example of Attribute Specifications
5231@cindex attribute specifications example
5232@cindex attribute specifications
5233
5234The judicious use of defaulting is important in the efficient use of
5235insn attributes. Typically, insns are divided into @dfn{types} and an
5236attribute, customarily called @code{type}, is used to represent this
5237value. This attribute is normally used only to define the default value
5238for other attributes. An example will clarify this usage.
5239
5240Assume we have a RISC machine with a condition code and in which only
5241full-word operations are performed in registers. Let us assume that we
5242can divide all insns into loads, stores, (integer) arithmetic
5243operations, floating point operations, and branches.
5244
5245Here we will concern ourselves with determining the effect of an insn on
5246the condition code and will limit ourselves to the following possible
5247effects: The condition code can be set unpredictably (clobbered), not
5248be changed, be set to agree with the results of the operation, or only
5249changed if the item previously set into the condition code has been
5250modified.
5251
5252Here is part of a sample @file{md} file for such a machine:
5253
5254@smallexample
5255(define_attr "type" "load,store,arith,fp,branch" (const_string "arith"))
5256
5257(define_attr "cc" "clobber,unchanged,set,change0"
5258 (cond [(eq_attr "type" "load")
5259 (const_string "change0")
5260 (eq_attr "type" "store,branch")
5261 (const_string "unchanged")
5262 (eq_attr "type" "arith")
5263 (if_then_else (match_operand:SI 0 "" "")
5264 (const_string "set")
5265 (const_string "clobber"))]
5266 (const_string "clobber")))
5267
5268(define_insn ""
5269 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "general_operand" "=r,r,m")
5270 (match_operand:SI 1 "general_operand" "r,m,r"))]
5271 ""
5272 "@@
5273 move %0,%1
5274 load %0,%1
5275 store %0,%1"
5276 [(set_attr "type" "arith,load,store")])
5277@end smallexample
5278
5279Note that we assume in the above example that arithmetic operations
5280performed on quantities smaller than a machine word clobber the condition
5281code since they will set the condition code to a value corresponding to the
5282full-word result.
5283
a5249a21
HPN
5284@end ifset
5285@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
5286@node Insn Lengths
5287@subsection Computing the Length of an Insn
5288@cindex insn lengths, computing
5289@cindex computing the length of an insn
5290
5291For many machines, multiple types of branch instructions are provided, each
5292for different length branch displacements. In most cases, the assembler
5293will choose the correct instruction to use. However, when the assembler
5294cannot do so, GCC can when a special attribute, the @samp{length}
5295attribute, is defined. This attribute must be defined to have numeric
5296values by specifying a null string in its @code{define_attr}.
5297
5298In the case of the @samp{length} attribute, two additional forms of
5299arithmetic terms are allowed in test expressions:
5300
5301@table @code
5302@cindex @code{match_dup} and attributes
5303@item (match_dup @var{n})
5304This refers to the address of operand @var{n} of the current insn, which
5305must be a @code{label_ref}.
5306
5307@cindex @code{pc} and attributes
5308@item (pc)
5309This refers to the address of the @emph{current} insn. It might have
5310been more consistent with other usage to make this the address of the
5311@emph{next} insn but this would be confusing because the length of the
5312current insn is to be computed.
5313@end table
5314
5315@cindex @code{addr_vec}, length of
5316@cindex @code{addr_diff_vec}, length of
5317For normal insns, the length will be determined by value of the
5318@samp{length} attribute. In the case of @code{addr_vec} and
5319@code{addr_diff_vec} insn patterns, the length is computed as
5320the number of vectors multiplied by the size of each vector.
5321
5322Lengths are measured in addressable storage units (bytes).
5323
5324The following macros can be used to refine the length computation:
5325
5326@table @code
03dda8e3
RK
5327@findex ADJUST_INSN_LENGTH
5328@item ADJUST_INSN_LENGTH (@var{insn}, @var{length})
5329If defined, modifies the length assigned to instruction @var{insn} as a
5330function of the context in which it is used. @var{length} is an lvalue
5331that contains the initially computed length of the insn and should be
a8aa4e0b 5332updated with the correct length of the insn.
03dda8e3
RK
5333
5334This macro will normally not be required. A case in which it is
161d7b59 5335required is the ROMP@. On this machine, the size of an @code{addr_vec}
03dda8e3
RK
5336insn must be increased by two to compensate for the fact that alignment
5337may be required.
5338@end table
5339
5340@findex get_attr_length
5341The routine that returns @code{get_attr_length} (the value of the
5342@code{length} attribute) can be used by the output routine to
5343determine the form of the branch instruction to be written, as the
5344example below illustrates.
5345
5346As an example of the specification of variable-length branches, consider
5347the IBM 360. If we adopt the convention that a register will be set to
5348the starting address of a function, we can jump to labels within 4k of
5349the start using a four-byte instruction. Otherwise, we need a six-byte
5350sequence to load the address from memory and then branch to it.
5351
5352On such a machine, a pattern for a branch instruction might be specified
5353as follows:
5354
5355@smallexample
5356(define_insn "jump"
5357 [(set (pc)
5358 (label_ref (match_operand 0 "" "")))]
5359 ""
03dda8e3
RK
5360@{
5361 return (get_attr_length (insn) == 4
0f40f9f7
ZW
5362 ? "b %l0" : "l r15,=a(%l0); br r15");
5363@}
9c34dbbf
ZW
5364 [(set (attr "length")
5365 (if_then_else (lt (match_dup 0) (const_int 4096))
5366 (const_int 4)
5367 (const_int 6)))])
03dda8e3
RK
5368@end smallexample
5369
a5249a21
HPN
5370@end ifset
5371@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
5372@node Constant Attributes
5373@subsection Constant Attributes
5374@cindex constant attributes
5375
5376A special form of @code{define_attr}, where the expression for the
5377default value is a @code{const} expression, indicates an attribute that
5378is constant for a given run of the compiler. Constant attributes may be
5379used to specify which variety of processor is used. For example,
5380
5381@smallexample
5382(define_attr "cpu" "m88100,m88110,m88000"
5383 (const
5384 (cond [(symbol_ref "TARGET_88100") (const_string "m88100")
5385 (symbol_ref "TARGET_88110") (const_string "m88110")]
5386 (const_string "m88000"))))
5387
5388(define_attr "memory" "fast,slow"
5389 (const
5390 (if_then_else (symbol_ref "TARGET_FAST_MEM")
5391 (const_string "fast")
5392 (const_string "slow"))))
5393@end smallexample
5394
5395The routine generated for constant attributes has no parameters as it
5396does not depend on any particular insn. RTL expressions used to define
5397the value of a constant attribute may use the @code{symbol_ref} form,
5398but may not use either the @code{match_operand} form or @code{eq_attr}
5399forms involving insn attributes.
5400
a5249a21
HPN
5401@end ifset
5402@ifset INTERNALS
03dda8e3
RK
5403@node Delay Slots
5404@subsection Delay Slot Scheduling
5405@cindex delay slots, defining
5406
5407The insn attribute mechanism can be used to specify the requirements for
5408delay slots, if any, on a target machine. An instruction is said to
5409require a @dfn{delay slot} if some instructions that are physically
5410after the instruction are executed as if they were located before it.
5411Classic examples are branch and call instructions, which often execute
5412the following instruction before the branch or call is performed.
5413
5414On some machines, conditional branch instructions can optionally
5415@dfn{annul} instructions in the delay slot. This means that the
5416instruction will not be executed for certain branch outcomes. Both
5417instructions that annul if the branch is true and instructions that
5418annul if the branch is false are supported.
5419
5420Delay slot scheduling differs from instruction scheduling in that
5421determining whether an instruction needs a delay slot is dependent only
5422on the type of instruction being generated, not on data flow between the
5423instructions. See the next section for a discussion of data-dependent
5424instruction scheduling.
5425
5426@findex define_delay
5427The requirement of an insn needing one or more delay slots is indicated
5428via the @code{define_delay} expression. It has the following form:
5429
5430@smallexample
5431(define_delay @var{test}
5432 [@var{delay-1} @var{annul-true-1} @var{annul-false-1}
5433 @var{delay-2} @var{annul-true-2} @var{annul-false-2}
5434 @dots{}])
5435@end smallexample
5436
5437@var{test} is an attribute test that indicates whether this
5438@code{define_delay} applies to a particular insn. If so, the number of
5439required delay slots is determined by the length of the vector specified
5440as the second argument. An insn placed in delay slot @var{n} must
5441satisfy attribute test @var{delay-n}. @var{annul-true-n} is an
5442attribute test that specifies which insns may be annulled if the branch
5443is true. Similarly, @var{annul-false-n} specifies which insns in the
5444delay slot may be annulled if the branch is false. If annulling is not
bd819a4a 5445supported for that delay slot, @code{(nil)} should be coded.
03dda8e3
RK
5446
5447For example, in the common case where branch and call insns require
5448a single delay slot, which may contain any insn other than a branch or
5449call, the following would be placed in the @file{md} file:
5450
5451@smallexample
5452(define_delay (eq_attr "type" "branch,call")
5453 [(eq_attr "type" "!branch,call") (nil) (nil)])
5454@end smallexample
5455
5456Multiple @code{define_delay} expressions may be specified. In this
5457case, each such expression specifies different delay slot requirements
5458and there must be no insn for which tests in two @code{define_delay}
5459expressions are both true.
5460
5461For example, if we have a machine that requires one delay slot for branches
5462but two for calls, no delay slot can contain a branch or call insn,
5463and any valid insn in the delay slot for the branch can be annulled if the
5464branch is true, we might represent this as follows:
5465
5466@smallexample
5467(define_delay (eq_attr "type" "branch")
5468 [(eq_attr "type" "!branch,call")
5469 (eq_attr "type" "!branch,call")
5470 (nil)])
5471
5472(define_delay (eq_attr "type" "call")
5473 [(eq_attr "type" "!branch,call") (nil) (nil)
5474 (eq_attr "type" "!branch,call") (nil) (nil)])
5475@end smallexample
5476@c the above is *still* too long. --mew 4feb93
5477
a5249a21
HPN
5478@end ifset
5479@ifset INTERNALS
fae15c93
VM
5480@node Processor pipeline description
5481@subsection Specifying processor pipeline description
5482@cindex processor pipeline description
5483@cindex processor functional units
5484@cindex instruction latency time
5485@cindex interlock delays
5486@cindex data dependence delays
5487@cindex reservation delays
5488@cindex pipeline hazard recognizer
5489@cindex automaton based pipeline description
5490@cindex regular expressions
5491@cindex deterministic finite state automaton
5492@cindex automaton based scheduler
5493@cindex RISC
5494@cindex VLIW
5495
ef261fee 5496To achieve better performance, most modern processors
fae15c93
VM
5497(super-pipelined, superscalar @acronym{RISC}, and @acronym{VLIW}
5498processors) have many @dfn{functional units} on which several
5499instructions can be executed simultaneously. An instruction starts
5500execution if its issue conditions are satisfied. If not, the
ef261fee 5501instruction is stalled until its conditions are satisfied. Such
fae15c93
VM
5502@dfn{interlock (pipeline) delay} causes interruption of the fetching
5503of successor instructions (or demands nop instructions, e.g. for some
5504MIPS processors).
5505
5506There are two major kinds of interlock delays in modern processors.
5507The first one is a data dependence delay determining @dfn{instruction
5508latency time}. The instruction execution is not started until all
5509source data have been evaluated by prior instructions (there are more
5510complex cases when the instruction execution starts even when the data
c0478a66 5511are not available but will be ready in given time after the
fae15c93
VM
5512instruction execution start). Taking the data dependence delays into
5513account is simple. The data dependence (true, output, and
5514anti-dependence) delay between two instructions is given by a
5515constant. In most cases this approach is adequate. The second kind
5516of interlock delays is a reservation delay. The reservation delay
5517means that two instructions under execution will be in need of shared
5518processors resources, i.e. buses, internal registers, and/or
5519functional units, which are reserved for some time. Taking this kind
5520of delay into account is complex especially for modern @acronym{RISC}
5521processors.
5522
5523The task of exploiting more processor parallelism is solved by an
ef261fee 5524instruction scheduler. For a better solution to this problem, the
fae15c93 5525instruction scheduler has to have an adequate description of the
daf2f129 5526processor parallelism (or @dfn{pipeline description}). Currently GCC
ef261fee
R
5527provides two alternative ways to describe processor parallelism,
5528both described below. The first method is outlined in the next section;
5529it was once the only method provided by GCC, and thus is used in a number
5530of exiting ports. The second, and preferred method, specifies functional
5531unit reservations for groups of instructions with the aid of @dfn{regular
daf2f129 5532expressions}. This is called the @dfn{automaton based description}.
ef261fee
R
5533
5534The GCC instruction scheduler uses a @dfn{pipeline hazard recognizer} to
fae15c93 5535figure out the possibility of the instruction issue by the processor
ef261fee
R
5536on a given simulated processor cycle. The pipeline hazard recognizer is
5537automatically generated from the processor pipeline description. The
fae15c93 5538pipeline hazard recognizer generated from the automaton based
ef261fee 5539description is more sophisticated and based on a deterministic finite
fae15c93 5540state automaton (@acronym{DFA}) and therefore faster than one
ef261fee
R
5541generated from the old description. Furthermore, its speed is not dependent
5542on processor complexity. The instruction issue is possible if there is
fae15c93
VM
5543a transition from one automaton state to another one.
5544
cc6a602b
BE
5545You can use either model to describe processor pipeline
5546characteristics or even mix them. You could use the old description
5547for some processor submodels and the @acronym{DFA}-based one for other
fae15c93
VM
5548processor submodels.
5549
cc6a602b
BE
5550In general, using the automaton based description is preferred. Its
5551model is richer and makes it possible to more accurately describe
5552pipeline characteristics of processors, which results in improved
5553code quality (although sometimes only marginally). It will also be
5554used as an infrastructure to implement sophisticated and practical
5555instruction scheduling which will try many instruction sequences to
5556choose the best one.
fae15c93
VM
5557
5558
5559@menu
5560* Old pipeline description:: Specifying information for insn scheduling.
5561* Automaton pipeline description:: Describing insn pipeline characteristics.
5562* Comparison of the two descriptions:: Drawbacks of the old pipeline description
5563@end menu
5564
a5249a21
HPN
5565@end ifset
5566@ifset INTERNALS
fae15c93
VM
5567@node Old pipeline description
5568@subsubsection Specifying Function Units
5569@cindex old pipeline description
03dda8e3
RK
5570@cindex function units, for scheduling
5571
fae15c93
VM
5572On most @acronym{RISC} machines, there are instructions whose results
5573are not available for a specific number of cycles. Common cases are
5574instructions that load data from memory. On many machines, a pipeline
5575stall will result if the data is referenced too soon after the load
5576instruction.
03dda8e3
RK
5577
5578In addition, many newer microprocessors have multiple function units, usually
5579one for integer and one for floating point, and often will incur pipeline
5580stalls when a result that is needed is not yet ready.
5581
5582The descriptions in this section allow the specification of how much
5583time must elapse between the execution of an instruction and the time
5584when its result is used. It also allows specification of when the
5585execution of an instruction will delay execution of similar instructions
5586due to function unit conflicts.
5587
5588For the purposes of the specifications in this section, a machine is
5589divided into @dfn{function units}, each of which execute a specific
fae15c93
VM
5590class of instructions in first-in-first-out order. Function units
5591that accept one instruction each cycle and allow a result to be used
5592in the succeeding instruction (usually via forwarding) need not be
5593specified. Classic @acronym{RISC} microprocessors will normally have
5594a single function unit, which we can call @samp{memory}. The newer
5595``superscalar'' processors will often have function units for floating
5596point operations, usually at least a floating point adder and
5597multiplier.
03dda8e3
RK
5598
5599@findex define_function_unit
5600Each usage of a function units by a class of insns is specified with a
5601@code{define_function_unit} expression, which looks like this:
5602
5603@smallexample
5604(define_function_unit @var{name} @var{multiplicity} @var{simultaneity}
5605 @var{test} @var{ready-delay} @var{issue-delay}
5606 [@var{conflict-list}])
5607@end smallexample
5608
5609@var{name} is a string giving the name of the function unit.
5610
5611@var{multiplicity} is an integer specifying the number of identical
5612units in the processor. If more than one unit is specified, they will
5613be scheduled independently. Only truly independent units should be
5614counted; a pipelined unit should be specified as a single unit. (The
5615only common example of a machine that has multiple function units for a
5616single instruction class that are truly independent and not pipelined
5617are the two multiply and two increment units of the CDC 6600.)
5618
5619@var{simultaneity} specifies the maximum number of insns that can be
5620executing in each instance of the function unit simultaneously or zero
5621if the unit is pipelined and has no limit.
5622
5623All @code{define_function_unit} definitions referring to function unit
5624@var{name} must have the same name and values for @var{multiplicity} and
5625@var{simultaneity}.
5626
5627@var{test} is an attribute test that selects the insns we are describing
5628in this definition. Note that an insn may use more than one function
5629unit and a function unit may be specified in more than one
5630@code{define_function_unit}.
5631
5632@var{ready-delay} is an integer that specifies the number of cycles
5633after which the result of the instruction can be used without
5634introducing any stalls.
5635
5636@var{issue-delay} is an integer that specifies the number of cycles
5637after the instruction matching the @var{test} expression begins using
5638this unit until a subsequent instruction can begin. A cost of @var{N}
5639indicates an @var{N-1} cycle delay. A subsequent instruction may also
5640be delayed if an earlier instruction has a longer @var{ready-delay}
5641value. This blocking effect is computed using the @var{simultaneity},
5642@var{ready-delay}, @var{issue-delay}, and @var{conflict-list} terms.
5643For a normal non-pipelined function unit, @var{simultaneity} is one, the
5644unit is taken to block for the @var{ready-delay} cycles of the executing
5645insn, and smaller values of @var{issue-delay} are ignored.
5646
5647@var{conflict-list} is an optional list giving detailed conflict costs
5648for this unit. If specified, it is a list of condition test expressions
5649to be applied to insns chosen to execute in @var{name} following the
5650particular insn matching @var{test} that is already executing in
5651@var{name}. For each insn in the list, @var{issue-delay} specifies the
5652conflict cost; for insns not in the list, the cost is zero. If not
5653specified, @var{conflict-list} defaults to all instructions that use the
5654function unit.
5655
5656Typical uses of this vector are where a floating point function unit can
5657pipeline either single- or double-precision operations, but not both, or
5658where a memory unit can pipeline loads, but not stores, etc.
5659
fae15c93
VM
5660As an example, consider a classic @acronym{RISC} machine where the
5661result of a load instruction is not available for two cycles (a single
5662``delay'' instruction is required) and where only one load instruction
5663can be executed simultaneously. This would be specified as:
03dda8e3
RK
5664
5665@smallexample
5666(define_function_unit "memory" 1 1 (eq_attr "type" "load") 2 0)
5667@end smallexample
5668
5669For the case of a floating point function unit that can pipeline either
5670single or double precision, but not both, the following could be specified:
5671
5672@smallexample
5673(define_function_unit
5674 "fp" 1 0 (eq_attr "type" "sp_fp") 4 4 [(eq_attr "type" "dp_fp")])
5675(define_function_unit
5676 "fp" 1 0 (eq_attr "type" "dp_fp") 4 4 [(eq_attr "type" "sp_fp")])
5677@end smallexample
5678
5679@strong{Note:} The scheduler attempts to avoid function unit conflicts
5680and uses all the specifications in the @code{define_function_unit}
5681expression. It has recently come to our attention that these
5682specifications may not allow modeling of some of the newer
5683``superscalar'' processors that have insns using multiple pipelined
5684units. These insns will cause a potential conflict for the second unit
5685used during their execution and there is no way of representing that
5686conflict. We welcome any examples of how function unit conflicts work
5687in such processors and suggestions for their representation.
3262c1f5 5688
a5249a21
HPN
5689@end ifset
5690@ifset INTERNALS
fae15c93
VM
5691@node Automaton pipeline description
5692@subsubsection Describing instruction pipeline characteristics
5693@cindex automaton based pipeline description
5694
5695This section describes constructions of the automaton based processor
c62347f0
BE
5696pipeline description. The order of constructions within the machine
5697description file is not important.
fae15c93
VM
5698
5699@findex define_automaton
5700@cindex pipeline hazard recognizer
5701The following optional construction describes names of automata
5702generated and used for the pipeline hazards recognition. Sometimes
5703the generated finite state automaton used by the pipeline hazard
ef261fee 5704recognizer is large. If we use more than one automaton and bind functional
daf2f129 5705units to the automata, the total size of the automata is usually
fae15c93
VM
5706less than the size of the single automaton. If there is no one such
5707construction, only one finite state automaton is generated.
5708
5709@smallexample
5710(define_automaton @var{automata-names})
5711@end smallexample
5712
5713@var{automata-names} is a string giving names of the automata. The
5714names are separated by commas. All the automata should have unique names.
c62347f0 5715The automaton name is used in the constructions @code{define_cpu_unit} and
fae15c93
VM
5716@code{define_query_cpu_unit}.
5717
5718@findex define_cpu_unit
5719@cindex processor functional units
c62347f0 5720Each processor functional unit used in the description of instruction
fae15c93
VM
5721reservations should be described by the following construction.
5722
5723@smallexample
5724(define_cpu_unit @var{unit-names} [@var{automaton-name}])
5725@end smallexample
5726
5727@var{unit-names} is a string giving the names of the functional units
5728separated by commas. Don't use name @samp{nothing}, it is reserved
5729for other goals.
5730
ef261fee 5731@var{automaton-name} is a string giving the name of the automaton with
fae15c93
VM
5732which the unit is bound. The automaton should be described in
5733construction @code{define_automaton}. You should give
5734@dfn{automaton-name}, if there is a defined automaton.
5735
30028c85
VM
5736The assignment of units to automata are constrained by the uses of the
5737units in insn reservations. The most important constraint is: if a
5738unit reservation is present on a particular cycle of an alternative
5739for an insn reservation, then some unit from the same automaton must
5740be present on the same cycle for the other alternatives of the insn
5741reservation. The rest of the constraints are mentioned in the
5742description of the subsequent constructions.
5743
fae15c93
VM
5744@findex define_query_cpu_unit
5745@cindex querying function unit reservations
5746The following construction describes CPU functional units analogously
30028c85
VM
5747to @code{define_cpu_unit}. The reservation of such units can be
5748queried for an automaton state. The instruction scheduler never
5749queries reservation of functional units for given automaton state. So
5750as a rule, you don't need this construction. This construction could
5751be used for future code generation goals (e.g. to generate
5752@acronym{VLIW} insn templates).
fae15c93
VM
5753
5754@smallexample
5755(define_query_cpu_unit @var{unit-names} [@var{automaton-name}])
5756@end smallexample
5757
5758@var{unit-names} is a string giving names of the functional units
5759separated by commas.
5760
ef261fee 5761@var{automaton-name} is a string giving the name of the automaton with
fae15c93
VM
5762which the unit is bound.
5763
5764@findex define_insn_reservation
5765@cindex instruction latency time
5766@cindex regular expressions
5767@cindex data bypass
ef261fee 5768The following construction is the major one to describe pipeline
fae15c93
VM
5769characteristics of an instruction.
5770
5771@smallexample
5772(define_insn_reservation @var{insn-name} @var{default_latency}
5773 @var{condition} @var{regexp})
5774@end smallexample
5775
5776@var{default_latency} is a number giving latency time of the
5777instruction. There is an important difference between the old
5778description and the automaton based pipeline description. The latency
5779time is used for all dependencies when we use the old description. In
ef261fee
R
5780the automaton based pipeline description, the given latency time is only
5781used for true dependencies. The cost of anti-dependencies is always
fae15c93
VM
5782zero and the cost of output dependencies is the difference between
5783latency times of the producing and consuming insns (if the difference
ef261fee
R
5784is negative, the cost is considered to be zero). You can always
5785change the default costs for any description by using the target hook
fae15c93
VM
5786@code{TARGET_SCHED_ADJUST_COST} (@pxref{Scheduling}).
5787
cc6a602b 5788@var{insn-name} is a string giving the internal name of the insn. The
fae15c93
VM
5789internal names are used in constructions @code{define_bypass} and in
5790the automaton description file generated for debugging. The internal
ef261fee 5791name has nothing in common with the names in @code{define_insn}. It is a
fae15c93
VM
5792good practice to use insn classes described in the processor manual.
5793
5794@var{condition} defines what RTL insns are described by this
5795construction. You should remember that you will be in trouble if
5796@var{condition} for two or more different
5797@code{define_insn_reservation} constructions is TRUE for an insn. In
5798this case what reservation will be used for the insn is not defined.
5799Such cases are not checked during generation of the pipeline hazards
5800recognizer because in general recognizing that two conditions may have
5801the same value is quite difficult (especially if the conditions
5802contain @code{symbol_ref}). It is also not checked during the
5803pipeline hazard recognizer work because it would slow down the
5804recognizer considerably.
5805
ef261fee 5806@var{regexp} is a string describing the reservation of the cpu's functional
fae15c93
VM
5807units by the instruction. The reservations are described by a regular
5808expression according to the following syntax:
5809
5810@smallexample
5811 regexp = regexp "," oneof
5812 | oneof
5813
5814 oneof = oneof "|" allof
5815 | allof
5816
5817 allof = allof "+" repeat
5818 | repeat
daf2f129 5819
fae15c93
VM
5820 repeat = element "*" number
5821 | element
5822
5823 element = cpu_function_unit_name
5824 | reservation_name
5825 | result_name
5826 | "nothing"
5827 | "(" regexp ")"
5828@end smallexample
5829
5830@itemize @bullet
5831@item
5832@samp{,} is used for describing the start of the next cycle in
5833the reservation.
5834
5835@item
5836@samp{|} is used for describing a reservation described by the first
5837regular expression @strong{or} a reservation described by the second
5838regular expression @strong{or} etc.
5839
5840@item
5841@samp{+} is used for describing a reservation described by the first
5842regular expression @strong{and} a reservation described by the
5843second regular expression @strong{and} etc.
5844
5845@item
5846@samp{*} is used for convenience and simply means a sequence in which
5847the regular expression are repeated @var{number} times with cycle
5848advancing (see @samp{,}).
5849
5850@item
5851@samp{cpu_function_unit_name} denotes reservation of the named
5852functional unit.
5853
5854@item
5855@samp{reservation_name} --- see description of construction
5856@samp{define_reservation}.
5857
5858@item
5859@samp{nothing} denotes no unit reservations.
5860@end itemize
5861
5862@findex define_reservation
5863Sometimes unit reservations for different insns contain common parts.
5864In such case, you can simplify the pipeline description by describing
5865the common part by the following construction
5866
5867@smallexample
5868(define_reservation @var{reservation-name} @var{regexp})
5869@end smallexample
5870
5871@var{reservation-name} is a string giving name of @var{regexp}.
5872Functional unit names and reservation names are in the same name
5873space. So the reservation names should be different from the
cc6a602b 5874functional unit names and can not be the reserved name @samp{nothing}.
fae15c93
VM
5875
5876@findex define_bypass
5877@cindex instruction latency time
5878@cindex data bypass
5879The following construction is used to describe exceptions in the
5880latency time for given instruction pair. This is so called bypasses.
5881
5882@smallexample
5883(define_bypass @var{number} @var{out_insn_names} @var{in_insn_names}
5884 [@var{guard}])
5885@end smallexample
5886
5887@var{number} defines when the result generated by the instructions
5888given in string @var{out_insn_names} will be ready for the
5889instructions given in string @var{in_insn_names}. The instructions in
5890the string are separated by commas.
5891
ef261fee 5892@var{guard} is an optional string giving the name of a C function which
fae15c93
VM
5893defines an additional guard for the bypass. The function will get the
5894two insns as parameters. If the function returns zero the bypass will
5895be ignored for this case. The additional guard is necessary to
ef261fee 5896recognize complicated bypasses, e.g. when the consumer is only an address
fae15c93
VM
5897of insn @samp{store} (not a stored value).
5898
5899@findex exclusion_set
5900@findex presence_set
30028c85 5901@findex final_presence_set
fae15c93 5902@findex absence_set
30028c85 5903@findex final_absence_set
fae15c93
VM
5904@cindex VLIW
5905@cindex RISC
cc6a602b
BE
5906The following five constructions are usually used to describe
5907@acronym{VLIW} processors, or more precisely, to describe a placement
5908of small instructions into @acronym{VLIW} instruction slots. They
5909can be used for @acronym{RISC} processors, too.
fae15c93
VM
5910
5911@smallexample
5912(exclusion_set @var{unit-names} @var{unit-names})
30028c85
VM
5913(presence_set @var{unit-names} @var{patterns})
5914(final_presence_set @var{unit-names} @var{patterns})
5915(absence_set @var{unit-names} @var{patterns})
5916(final_absence_set @var{unit-names} @var{patterns})
fae15c93
VM
5917@end smallexample
5918
5919@var{unit-names} is a string giving names of functional units
5920separated by commas.
5921
30028c85
VM
5922@var{patterns} is a string giving patterns of functional units
5923separated by comma. Currently pattern is is one unit or units
5924separated by white-spaces.
5925
fae15c93
VM
5926The first construction (@samp{exclusion_set}) means that each
5927functional unit in the first string can not be reserved simultaneously
5928with a unit whose name is in the second string and vice versa. For
5929example, the construction is useful for describing processors
5930(e.g. some SPARC processors) with a fully pipelined floating point
5931functional unit which can execute simultaneously only single floating
5932point insns or only double floating point insns.
5933
5934The second construction (@samp{presence_set}) means that each
5935functional unit in the first string can not be reserved unless at
30028c85
VM
5936least one of pattern of units whose names are in the second string is
5937reserved. This is an asymmetric relation. For example, it is useful
5938for description that @acronym{VLIW} @samp{slot1} is reserved after
5939@samp{slot0} reservation. We could describe it by the following
5940construction
5941
5942@smallexample
5943(presence_set "slot1" "slot0")
5944@end smallexample
5945
5946Or @samp{slot1} is reserved only after @samp{slot0} and unit @samp{b0}
5947reservation. In this case we could write
5948
5949@smallexample
5950(presence_set "slot1" "slot0 b0")
5951@end smallexample
5952
5953The third construction (@samp{final_presence_set}) is analogous to
5954@samp{presence_set}. The difference between them is when checking is
5955done. When an instruction is issued in given automaton state
5956reflecting all current and planned unit reservations, the automaton
5957state is changed. The first state is a source state, the second one
5958is a result state. Checking for @samp{presence_set} is done on the
5959source state reservation, checking for @samp{final_presence_set} is
5960done on the result reservation. This construction is useful to
5961describe a reservation which is actually two subsequent reservations.
5962For example, if we use
5963
5964@smallexample
5965(presence_set "slot1" "slot0")
5966@end smallexample
5967
5968the following insn will be never issued (because @samp{slot1} requires
5969@samp{slot0} which is absent in the source state).
5970
5971@smallexample
5972(define_reservation "insn_and_nop" "slot0 + slot1")
5973@end smallexample
5974
5975but it can be issued if we use analogous @samp{final_presence_set}.
5976
5977The forth construction (@samp{absence_set}) means that each functional
5978unit in the first string can be reserved only if each pattern of units
5979whose names are in the second string is not reserved. This is an
5980asymmetric relation (actually @samp{exclusion_set} is analogous to
5981this one but it is symmetric). For example, it is useful for
5982description that @acronym{VLIW} @samp{slot0} can not be reserved after
5983@samp{slot1} or @samp{slot2} reservation. We could describe it by the
5984following construction
5985
5986@smallexample
5987(absence_set "slot2" "slot0, slot1")
5988@end smallexample
5989
5990Or @samp{slot2} can not be reserved if @samp{slot0} and unit @samp{b0}
5991are reserved or @samp{slot1} and unit @samp{b1} are reserved. In
5992this case we could write
5993
5994@smallexample
5995(absence_set "slot2" "slot0 b0, slot1 b1")
5996@end smallexample
fae15c93 5997
ef261fee 5998All functional units mentioned in a set should belong to the same
fae15c93
VM
5999automaton.
6000
30028c85
VM
6001The last construction (@samp{final_absence_set}) is analogous to
6002@samp{absence_set} but checking is done on the result (state)
6003reservation. See comments for @samp{final_presence_set}.
6004
fae15c93
VM
6005@findex automata_option
6006@cindex deterministic finite state automaton
6007@cindex nondeterministic finite state automaton
6008@cindex finite state automaton minimization
6009You can control the generator of the pipeline hazard recognizer with
6010the following construction.
6011
6012@smallexample
6013(automata_option @var{options})
6014@end smallexample
6015
6016@var{options} is a string giving options which affect the generated
6017code. Currently there are the following options:
6018
6019@itemize @bullet
6020@item
6021@dfn{no-minimization} makes no minimization of the automaton. This is
30028c85
VM
6022only worth to do when we are debugging the description and need to
6023look more accurately at reservations of states.
fae15c93
VM
6024
6025@item
e3c8eb86
VM
6026@dfn{time} means printing additional time statistics about
6027generation of automata.
6028
6029@item
6030@dfn{v} means a generation of the file describing the result automata.
6031The file has suffix @samp{.dfa} and can be used for the description
6032verification and debugging.
6033
6034@item
6035@dfn{w} means a generation of warning instead of error for
6036non-critical errors.
fae15c93
VM
6037
6038@item
6039@dfn{ndfa} makes nondeterministic finite state automata. This affects
6040the treatment of operator @samp{|} in the regular expressions. The
6041usual treatment of the operator is to try the first alternative and,
6042if the reservation is not possible, the second alternative. The
6043nondeterministic treatment means trying all alternatives, some of them
6044may be rejected by reservations in the subsequent insns. You can not
6045query functional unit reservations in nondeterministic automaton
6046states.
dfa849f3
VM
6047
6048@item
6049@dfn{progress} means output of a progress bar showing how many states
6050were generated so far for automaton being processed. This is useful
6051during debugging a @acronym{DFA} description. If you see too many
6052generated states, you could interrupt the generator of the pipeline
6053hazard recognizer and try to figure out a reason for generation of the
6054huge automaton.
fae15c93
VM
6055@end itemize
6056
6057As an example, consider a superscalar @acronym{RISC} machine which can
6058issue three insns (two integer insns and one floating point insn) on
6059the cycle but can finish only two insns. To describe this, we define
6060the following functional units.
6061
6062@smallexample
6063(define_cpu_unit "i0_pipeline, i1_pipeline, f_pipeline")
ef261fee 6064(define_cpu_unit "port0, port1")
fae15c93
VM
6065@end smallexample
6066
6067All simple integer insns can be executed in any integer pipeline and
6068their result is ready in two cycles. The simple integer insns are
6069issued into the first pipeline unless it is reserved, otherwise they
6070are issued into the second pipeline. Integer division and
6071multiplication insns can be executed only in the second integer
6072pipeline and their results are ready correspondingly in 8 and 4
6073cycles. The integer division is not pipelined, i.e. the subsequent
6074integer division insn can not be issued until the current division
6075insn finished. Floating point insns are fully pipelined and their
ef261fee
R
6076results are ready in 3 cycles. Where the result of a floating point
6077insn is used by an integer insn, an additional delay of one cycle is
6078incurred. To describe all of this we could specify
fae15c93
VM
6079
6080@smallexample
6081(define_cpu_unit "div")
6082
68e4d4c5 6083(define_insn_reservation "simple" 2 (eq_attr "type" "int")
ef261fee 6084 "(i0_pipeline | i1_pipeline), (port0 | port1)")
fae15c93 6085
68e4d4c5 6086(define_insn_reservation "mult" 4 (eq_attr "type" "mult")
ef261fee 6087 "i1_pipeline, nothing*2, (port0 | port1)")
fae15c93 6088
68e4d4c5 6089(define_insn_reservation "div" 8 (eq_attr "type" "div")
ef261fee 6090 "i1_pipeline, div*7, div + (port0 | port1)")
fae15c93 6091
68e4d4c5 6092(define_insn_reservation "float" 3 (eq_attr "type" "float")
ef261fee 6093 "f_pipeline, nothing, (port0 | port1))
fae15c93 6094
ef261fee 6095(define_bypass 4 "float" "simple,mult,div")
fae15c93
VM
6096@end smallexample
6097
6098To simplify the description we could describe the following reservation
6099
6100@smallexample
6101(define_reservation "finish" "port0|port1")
6102@end smallexample
6103
6104and use it in all @code{define_insn_reservation} as in the following
6105construction
6106
6107@smallexample
68e4d4c5 6108(define_insn_reservation "simple" 2 (eq_attr "type" "int")
fae15c93
VM
6109 "(i0_pipeline | i1_pipeline), finish")
6110@end smallexample
6111
6112
a5249a21
HPN
6113@end ifset
6114@ifset INTERNALS
fae15c93
VM
6115@node Comparison of the two descriptions
6116@subsubsection Drawbacks of the old pipeline description
6117@cindex old pipeline description
6118@cindex automaton based pipeline description
6119@cindex processor functional units
6120@cindex interlock delays
6121@cindex instruction latency time
6122@cindex pipeline hazard recognizer
6123@cindex data bypass
6124
6125The old instruction level parallelism description and the pipeline
6126hazards recognizer based on it have the following drawbacks in
6127comparison with the @acronym{DFA}-based ones:
daf2f129 6128
fae15c93
VM
6129@itemize @bullet
6130@item
6131Each functional unit is believed to be reserved at the instruction
6132execution start. This is a very inaccurate model for modern
6133processors.
6134
6135@item
6136An inadequate description of instruction latency times. The latency
6137time is bound with a functional unit reserved by an instruction not
6138with the instruction itself. In other words, the description is
6139oriented to describe at most one unit reservation by each instruction.
6140It also does not permit to describe special bypasses between
6141instruction pairs.
6142
6143@item
6144The implementation of the pipeline hazard recognizer interface has
6145constraints on number of functional units. This is a number of bits
6146in integer on the host machine.
6147
6148@item
6149The interface to the pipeline hazard recognizer is more complex than
6150one to the automaton based pipeline recognizer.
6151
6152@item
ef261fee 6153An unnatural description when you write a unit and a condition which
fae15c93
VM
6154selects instructions using the unit. Writing all unit reservations
6155for an instruction (an instruction class) is more natural.
6156
6157@item
ef261fee 6158The recognition of the interlock delays has a slow implementation. The GCC
fae15c93 6159scheduler supports structures which describe the unit reservations.
ef261fee
R
6160The more functional units a processor has, the slower its pipeline hazard
6161recognizer will be. Such an implementation would become even slower when we
6162allowed to
fae15c93 6163reserve functional units not only at the instruction execution start.
ef261fee 6164In an automaton based pipeline hazard recognizer, speed is not dependent
fae15c93
VM
6165on processor complexity.
6166@end itemize
6167
a5249a21
HPN
6168@end ifset
6169@ifset INTERNALS
3262c1f5
RH
6170@node Conditional Execution
6171@section Conditional Execution
6172@cindex conditional execution
6173@cindex predication
6174
6175A number of architectures provide for some form of conditional
6176execution, or predication. The hallmark of this feature is the
6177ability to nullify most of the instructions in the instruction set.
6178When the instruction set is large and not entirely symmetric, it
6179can be quite tedious to describe these forms directly in the
6180@file{.md} file. An alternative is the @code{define_cond_exec} template.
6181
6182@findex define_cond_exec
6183@smallexample
6184(define_cond_exec
6185 [@var{predicate-pattern}]
6186 "@var{condition}"
630d3d5a 6187 "@var{output-template}")
3262c1f5
RH
6188@end smallexample
6189
6190@var{predicate-pattern} is the condition that must be true for the
6191insn to be executed at runtime and should match a relational operator.
6192One can use @code{match_operator} to match several relational operators
6193at once. Any @code{match_operand} operands must have no more than one
6194alternative.
6195
6196@var{condition} is a C expression that must be true for the generated
6197pattern to match.
6198
6199@findex current_insn_predicate
630d3d5a 6200@var{output-template} is a string similar to the @code{define_insn}
3262c1f5
RH
6201output template (@pxref{Output Template}), except that the @samp{*}
6202and @samp{@@} special cases do not apply. This is only useful if the
6203assembly text for the predicate is a simple prefix to the main insn.
6204In order to handle the general case, there is a global variable
6205@code{current_insn_predicate} that will contain the entire predicate
6206if the current insn is predicated, and will otherwise be @code{NULL}.
6207
ebb48a4d
JM
6208When @code{define_cond_exec} is used, an implicit reference to
6209the @code{predicable} instruction attribute is made.
e979f9e8 6210@xref{Insn Attributes}. This attribute must be boolean (i.e.@: have
3262c1f5
RH
6211exactly two elements in its @var{list-of-values}). Further, it must
6212not be used with complex expressions. That is, the default and all
ebb48a4d 6213uses in the insns must be a simple constant, not dependent on the
3262c1f5
RH
6214alternative or anything else.
6215
ebb48a4d 6216For each @code{define_insn} for which the @code{predicable}
3262c1f5
RH
6217attribute is true, a new @code{define_insn} pattern will be
6218generated that matches a predicated version of the instruction.
6219For example,
6220
6221@smallexample
6222(define_insn "addsi"
6223 [(set (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "r")
6224 (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "register_operand" "r")
6225 (match_operand:SI 2 "register_operand" "r")))]
6226 "@var{test1}"
6227 "add %2,%1,%0")
6228
6229(define_cond_exec
6230 [(ne (match_operand:CC 0 "register_operand" "c")
6231 (const_int 0))]
6232 "@var{test2}"
6233 "(%0)")
6234@end smallexample
6235
6236@noindent
6237generates a new pattern
6238
6239@smallexample
6240(define_insn ""
6241 [(cond_exec
6242 (ne (match_operand:CC 3 "register_operand" "c") (const_int 0))
6243 (set (match_operand:SI 0 "register_operand" "r")
6244 (plus:SI (match_operand:SI 1 "register_operand" "r")
6245 (match_operand:SI 2 "register_operand" "r"))))]
6246 "(@var{test2}) && (@var{test1})"
6247 "(%3) add %2,%1,%0")
6248@end smallexample
c25c12b8 6249
a5249a21
HPN
6250@end ifset
6251@ifset INTERNALS
c25c12b8
R
6252@node Constant Definitions
6253@section Constant Definitions
6254@cindex constant definitions
6255@findex define_constants
6256
6257Using literal constants inside instruction patterns reduces legibility and
6258can be a maintenance problem.
6259
6260To overcome this problem, you may use the @code{define_constants}
6261expression. It contains a vector of name-value pairs. From that
6262point on, wherever any of the names appears in the MD file, it is as
6263if the corresponding value had been written instead. You may use
6264@code{define_constants} multiple times; each appearance adds more
6265constants to the table. It is an error to redefine a constant with
6266a different value.
6267
6268To come back to the a29k load multiple example, instead of
6269
6270@smallexample
6271(define_insn ""
6272 [(match_parallel 0 "load_multiple_operation"
6273 [(set (match_operand:SI 1 "gpc_reg_operand" "=r")
6274 (match_operand:SI 2 "memory_operand" "m"))
6275 (use (reg:SI 179))
6276 (clobber (reg:SI 179))])]
6277 ""
6278 "loadm 0,0,%1,%2")
6279@end smallexample
6280
6281You could write:
6282
6283@smallexample
6284(define_constants [
6285 (R_BP 177)
6286 (R_FC 178)
6287 (R_CR 179)
6288 (R_Q 180)
6289])
6290
6291(define_insn ""
6292 [(match_parallel 0 "load_multiple_operation"
6293 [(set (match_operand:SI 1 "gpc_reg_operand" "=r")
6294 (match_operand:SI 2 "memory_operand" "m"))
6295 (use (reg:SI R_CR))
6296 (clobber (reg:SI R_CR))])]
6297 ""
6298 "loadm 0,0,%1,%2")
6299@end smallexample
6300
6301The constants that are defined with a define_constant are also output
6302in the insn-codes.h header file as #defines.
b11cc610 6303@end ifset
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