target.h revision 146895
1/* Data structure definitions for a generic GCC target.
2   Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
5under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
6Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
7later version.
8
9This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
10but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
12GNU General Public License for more details.
13
14You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
16Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
17
18 In other words, you are welcome to use, share and improve this program.
19 You are forbidden to forbid anyone else to use, share and improve
20 what you give them.   Help stamp out software-hoarding!  */
21
22/* This file contains a data structure that describes a GCC target.
23   At present it is incomplete, but in future it should grow to
24   contain most or all target machine and target O/S specific
25   information.
26
27   This structure has its initializer declared in target-def.h in the
28   form of large macro TARGET_INITIALIZER that expands to many smaller
29   macros.
30
31   The smaller macros each initialize one component of the structure,
32   and each has a default.  Each target should have a file that
33   includes target.h and target-def.h, and overrides any inappropriate
34   defaults by undefining the relevant macro and defining a suitable
35   replacement.  That file should then contain the definition of
36   "targetm" like so:
37
38   struct gcc_target targetm = TARGET_INITIALIZER;
39
40   Doing things this way allows us to bring together everything that
41   defines a GCC target.  By supplying a default that is appropriate
42   to most targets, we can easily add new items without needing to
43   edit dozens of target configuration files.  It should also allow us
44   to gradually reduce the amount of conditional compilation that is
45   scattered throughout GCC.  */
46
47#include "tm.h"
48
49struct gcc_target
50{
51  /* Functions that output assembler for the target.  */
52  struct asm_out
53  {
54    /* Opening and closing parentheses for asm expression grouping.  */
55    const char *open_paren, *close_paren;
56
57    /* Assembler instructions for creating various kinds of integer object.  */
58    const char *byte_op;
59    struct asm_int_op
60    {
61      const char *hi;
62      const char *si;
63      const char *di;
64      const char *ti;
65    } aligned_op, unaligned_op;
66
67    /* Try to output the assembler code for an integer object whose
68       value is given by X.  SIZE is the size of the object in bytes and
69       ALIGNED_P indicates whether it is aligned.  Return true if
70       successful.  Only handles cases for which BYTE_OP, ALIGNED_OP
71       and UNALIGNED_OP are NULL.  */
72    bool (* integer) (rtx x, unsigned int size, int aligned_p);
73
74    /* Output code that will globalize a label.  */
75    void (* globalize_label) (FILE *, const char *);
76
77    /* Output an internal label.  */
78    void (* internal_label) (FILE *, const char *, unsigned long);
79
80    /* Emit an assembler directive to set visibility for the symbol
81       associated with the tree decl.  */
82    void (* visibility) (tree, int);
83
84    /* Output the assembler code for entry to a function.  */
85    void (* function_prologue) (FILE *, HOST_WIDE_INT);
86
87    /* Output the assembler code for end of prologue.  */
88    void (* function_end_prologue) (FILE *);
89
90    /* Output the assembler code for start of epilogue.  */
91    void (* function_begin_epilogue) (FILE *);
92
93    /* Output the assembler code for function exit.  */
94    void (* function_epilogue) (FILE *, HOST_WIDE_INT);
95
96    /* Switch to an arbitrary section NAME with attributes as
97       specified by FLAGS.  */
98    void (* named_section) (const char *, unsigned int);
99
100    /* Switch to the section that holds the exception table.  */
101    void (* exception_section) (void);
102
103    /* Switch to the section that holds the exception frames.  */
104    void (* eh_frame_section) (void);
105
106    /* Select and switch to a section for EXP.  It may be a DECL or a
107       constant.  RELOC is nonzero if runtime relocations must be applied;
108       bit 1 will be set if the runtime relocations require non-local
109       name resolution.  ALIGN is the required alignment of the data.  */
110    void (* select_section) (tree, int, unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT);
111
112    /* Select and switch to a section for X with MODE.  ALIGN is
113       the desired alignment of the data.  */
114    void (* select_rtx_section) (enum machine_mode, rtx,
115				 unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT);
116
117    /* Select a unique section name for DECL.  RELOC is the same as
118       for SELECT_SECTION.  */
119    void (* unique_section) (tree, int);
120
121    /* Output a constructor for a symbol with a given priority.  */
122    void (* constructor) (rtx, int);
123
124    /* Output a destructor for a symbol with a given priority.  */
125    void (* destructor) (rtx, int);
126
127    /* Output the assembler code for a thunk function.  THUNK_DECL is the
128       declaration for the thunk function itself, FUNCTION is the decl for
129       the target function.  DELTA is an immediate constant offset to be
130       added to THIS.  If VCALL_OFFSET is nonzero, the word at
131       *(*this + vcall_offset) should be added to THIS.  */
132    void (* output_mi_thunk) (FILE *file, tree thunk_decl,
133			      HOST_WIDE_INT delta, HOST_WIDE_INT vcall_offset,
134			      tree function_decl);
135
136    /* Determine whether output_mi_thunk would succeed.  */
137    /* ??? Ideally, this hook would not exist, and success or failure
138       would be returned from output_mi_thunk directly.  But there's
139       too much undo-able setup involved in invoking output_mi_thunk.
140       Could be fixed by making output_mi_thunk emit rtl instead of
141       text to the output file.  */
142    bool (* can_output_mi_thunk) (tree thunk_decl, HOST_WIDE_INT delta,
143				  HOST_WIDE_INT vcall_offset,
144				  tree function_decl);
145
146    /* Output any boilerplate text needed at the beginning of a
147       translation unit.  */
148    void (*file_start) (void);
149
150    /* Output any boilerplate text needed at the end of a
151       translation unit.  */
152    void (*file_end) (void);
153
154    /* Output an assembler pseudo-op to declare a library function name
155       external.  */
156    void (*external_libcall) (rtx);
157  } asm_out;
158
159  /* Functions relating to instruction scheduling.  */
160  struct sched
161  {
162    /* Given the current cost, COST, of an insn, INSN, calculate and
163       return a new cost based on its relationship to DEP_INSN through
164       the dependence LINK.  The default is to make no adjustment.  */
165    int (* adjust_cost) (rtx insn, rtx link, rtx def_insn, int cost);
166
167    /* Adjust the priority of an insn as you see fit.  Returns the new
168       priority.  */
169    int (* adjust_priority) (rtx, int);
170
171    /* Function which returns the maximum number of insns that can be
172       scheduled in the same machine cycle.  This must be constant
173       over an entire compilation.  The default is 1.  */
174    int (* issue_rate) (void);
175
176    /* Calculate how much this insn affects how many more insns we
177       can emit this cycle.  Default is they all cost the same.  */
178    int (* variable_issue) (FILE *, int, rtx, int);
179
180    /* Initialize machine-dependent scheduling code.  */
181    void (* md_init) (FILE *, int, int);
182
183    /* Finalize machine-dependent scheduling code.  */
184    void (* md_finish) (FILE *, int);
185
186    /* Reorder insns in a machine-dependent fashion, in two different
187       places.  Default does nothing.  */
188    int (* reorder) (FILE *, int, rtx *, int *, int);
189    int (* reorder2) (FILE *, int, rtx *, int *, int);
190
191    /* The following member value is a pointer to a function called
192       after evaluation forward dependencies of insns in chain given
193       by two parameter values (head and tail correspondingly).  */
194    void (* dependencies_evaluation_hook) (rtx, rtx);
195
196    /* The following member value is a pointer to a function returning
197       nonzero if we should use DFA based scheduling.  The default is
198       to use the old pipeline scheduler.  */
199    int (* use_dfa_pipeline_interface) (void);
200    /* The values of all the following members are used only for the
201       DFA based scheduler: */
202    /* The values of the following four members are pointers to
203       functions used to simplify the automaton descriptions.
204       dfa_pre_cycle_insn and dfa_post_cycle_insn give functions
205       returning insns which are used to change the pipeline hazard
206       recognizer state when the new simulated processor cycle
207       correspondingly starts and finishes.  The function defined by
208       init_dfa_pre_cycle_insn and init_dfa_post_cycle_insn are used
209       to initialize the corresponding insns.  The default values of
210       the members result in not changing the automaton state when
211       the new simulated processor cycle correspondingly starts and
212       finishes.  */
213    void (* init_dfa_pre_cycle_insn) (void);
214    rtx (* dfa_pre_cycle_insn) (void);
215    void (* init_dfa_post_cycle_insn) (void);
216    rtx (* dfa_post_cycle_insn) (void);
217    /* The following member value is a pointer to a function returning value
218       which defines how many insns in queue `ready' will we try for
219       multi-pass scheduling.  if the member value is nonzero and the
220       function returns positive value, the DFA based scheduler will make
221       multi-pass scheduling for the first cycle.  In other words, we will
222       try to choose ready insn which permits to start maximum number of
223       insns on the same cycle.  */
224    int (* first_cycle_multipass_dfa_lookahead) (void);
225    /* The following member value is pointer to a function controlling
226       what insns from the ready insn queue will be considered for the
227       multipass insn scheduling.  If the hook returns zero for insn
228       passed as the parameter, the insn will be not chosen to be
229       issued.  */
230    int (* first_cycle_multipass_dfa_lookahead_guard) (rtx);
231    /* The following member value is pointer to a function called by
232       the insn scheduler before issuing insn passed as the third
233       parameter on given cycle.  If the hook returns nonzero, the
234       insn is not issued on given processors cycle.  Instead of that,
235       the processor cycle is advanced.  If the value passed through
236       the last parameter is zero, the insn ready queue is not sorted
237       on the new cycle start as usually.  The first parameter passes
238       file for debugging output.  The second one passes the scheduler
239       verbose level of the debugging output.  The forth and the fifth
240       parameter values are correspondingly processor cycle on which
241       the previous insn has been issued and the current processor
242       cycle.  */
243    int (* dfa_new_cycle) (FILE *, int, rtx, int, int, int *);
244    /* The values of the following members are pointers to functions
245       used to improve the first cycle multipass scheduling by
246       inserting nop insns.  dfa_scheduler_bubble gives a function
247       returning a nop insn with given index.  The indexes start with
248       zero.  The function should return NULL if there are no more nop
249       insns with indexes greater than given index.  To initialize the
250       nop insn the function given by member
251       init_dfa_scheduler_bubbles is used.  The default values of the
252       members result in not inserting nop insns during the multipass
253       scheduling.  */
254    void (* init_dfa_bubbles) (void);
255    rtx (* dfa_bubble) (int);
256    /* The following member value is a pointer to a function called
257       by the insn scheduler.  It should return true if there exists a
258       dependence which is considered costly by the target, between
259       the insn passed as the first parameter, and the insn passed as
260       the second parameter.  The third parameter is the INSN_DEPEND
261       link that represents the dependence between the two insns.  The
262       fourth argument is the cost of the dependence as estimated by
263       the scheduler.  The last argument is the distance in cycles
264       between the already scheduled insn (first parameter) and the
265       the second insn (second parameter).  */
266    bool (* is_costly_dependence) (rtx, rtx, rtx, int, int);
267  } sched;
268
269  /* Given two decls, merge their attributes and return the result.  */
270  tree (* merge_decl_attributes) (tree, tree);
271
272  /* Given two types, merge their attributes and return the result.  */
273  tree (* merge_type_attributes) (tree, tree);
274
275  /* Table of machine attributes and functions to handle them.
276     Ignored if NULL.  */
277  const struct attribute_spec *attribute_table;
278
279  /* Return zero if the attributes on TYPE1 and TYPE2 are incompatible,
280     one if they are compatible and two if they are nearly compatible
281     (which causes a warning to be generated).  */
282  int (* comp_type_attributes) (tree type1, tree type2);
283
284  /* Assign default attributes to the newly defined TYPE.  */
285  void (* set_default_type_attributes) (tree type);
286
287  /* Insert attributes on the newly created DECL.  */
288  void (* insert_attributes) (tree decl, tree *attributes);
289
290  /* Return true if FNDECL (which has at least one machine attribute)
291     can be inlined despite its machine attributes, false otherwise.  */
292  bool (* function_attribute_inlinable_p) (tree fndecl);
293
294  /* Return true if bitfields in RECORD_TYPE should follow the
295     Microsoft Visual C++ bitfield layout rules.  */
296  bool (* ms_bitfield_layout_p) (tree record_type);
297
298  /* Set up target-specific built-in functions.  */
299  void (* init_builtins) (void);
300
301  /* Expand a target-specific builtin.  */
302  rtx (* expand_builtin) (tree exp, rtx target, rtx subtarget,
303			  enum machine_mode mode, int ignore);
304
305  /* For a vendor-specific fundamental TYPE, return a pointer to
306     a statically-allocated string containing the C++ mangling for
307     TYPE.  In all other cases, return NULL.  */
308  const char * (* mangle_fundamental_type) (tree type);
309
310  /* Make any adjustments to libfunc names needed for this target.  */
311  void (* init_libfuncs) (void);
312
313  /* Given a decl, a section name, and whether the decl initializer
314     has relocs, choose attributes for the section.  */
315  /* ??? Should be merged with SELECT_SECTION and UNIQUE_SECTION.  */
316  unsigned int (* section_type_flags) (tree, const char *, int);
317
318  /* True if new jumps cannot be created, to replace existing ones or
319     not, at the current point in the compilation.  */
320  bool (* cannot_modify_jumps_p) (void);
321
322  /* Return a register class for which branch target register
323     optimizations should be applied.  */
324  int (* branch_target_register_class) (void);
325
326  /* Return true if branch target register optimizations should include
327     callee-saved registers that are not already live during the current
328     function.  AFTER_PE_GEN is true if prologues and epilogues have
329     already been generated.  */
330  bool (* branch_target_register_callee_saved) (bool after_pe_gen);
331
332  /* True if the constant X cannot be placed in the constant pool.  */
333  bool (* cannot_force_const_mem) (rtx);
334
335  /* True if the insn X cannot be duplicated.  */
336  bool (* cannot_copy_insn_p) (rtx);
337
338  /* Given an address RTX, undo the effects of LEGITIMIZE_ADDRESS.  */
339  rtx (* delegitimize_address) (rtx);
340
341  /* True if it is OK to do sibling call optimization for the specified
342     call expression EXP.  DECL will be the called function, or NULL if
343     this is an indirect call.  */
344  bool (*function_ok_for_sibcall) (tree decl, tree exp);
345
346  /* True if EXP should be placed in a "small data" section.  */
347  bool (* in_small_data_p) (tree);
348
349  /* True if EXP names an object for which name resolution must resolve
350     to the current module.  */
351  bool (* binds_local_p) (tree);
352
353  /* Do something target-specific to record properties of the DECL into
354     the associated SYMBOL_REF.  */
355  void (* encode_section_info) (tree, rtx, int);
356
357  /* Undo the effects of encode_section_info on the symbol string.  */
358  const char * (* strip_name_encoding) (const char *);
359
360  /* True if MODE is valid for a pointer in __attribute__((mode("MODE"))).  */
361  bool (* valid_pointer_mode) (enum machine_mode mode);
362
363  /* True if a vector is opaque.  */
364  bool (* vector_opaque_p) (tree);
365
366  /* Compute a (partial) cost for rtx X.  Return true if the complete
367     cost has been computed, and false if subexpressions should be
368     scanned.  In either case, *TOTAL contains the cost result.  */
369  /* Note that CODE and OUTER_CODE ought to be RTX_CODE, but that's
370     not necessarily defined at this point.  */
371  bool (* rtx_costs) (rtx x, int code, int outer_code, int *total);
372
373  /* Compute the cost of X, used as an address.  Never called with
374     invalid addresses.  */
375  int (* address_cost) (rtx x);
376
377  /* Given a register, this hook should return a parallel of registers
378     to represent where to find the register pieces.  Define this hook
379     if the register and its mode are represented in Dwarf in
380     non-contiguous locations, or if the register should be
381     represented in more than one register in Dwarf.  Otherwise, this
382     hook should return NULL_RTX.  */
383  rtx (* dwarf_register_span) (rtx);
384
385  /* Fetch the fixed register(s) which hold condition codes, for
386     targets where it makes sense to look for duplicate assignments to
387     the condition codes.  This should return true if there is such a
388     register, false otherwise.  The arguments should be set to the
389     fixed register numbers.  Up to two condition code registers are
390     supported.  If there is only one for this target, the int pointed
391     at by the second argument should be set to -1.  */
392  bool (* fixed_condition_code_regs) (unsigned int *, unsigned int *);
393
394  /* If two condition code modes are compatible, return a condition
395     code mode which is compatible with both, such that a comparison
396     done in the returned mode will work for both of the original
397     modes.  If the condition code modes are not compatible, return
398     VOIDmode.  */
399  enum machine_mode (* cc_modes_compatible) (enum machine_mode,
400					     enum machine_mode);
401
402  /* Do machine-dependent code transformations.  Called just before
403     delayed-branch scheduling.  */
404  void (* machine_dependent_reorg) (void);
405
406  /* Create the __builtin_va_list type.  */
407  tree (* build_builtin_va_list) (void);
408
409  /* Validity-checking routines for PCH files, target-specific.
410     get_pch_validity returns a pointer to the data to be stored,
411     and stores the size in its argument.  pch_valid_p gets the same
412     information back and returns NULL if the PCH is valid,
413     or an error message if not.
414  */
415  void * (* get_pch_validity) (size_t *);
416  const char * (* pch_valid_p) (const void *, size_t);
417
418  /* Functions relating to calls - argument passing, returns, etc.  */
419  struct calls {
420    bool (*promote_function_args) (tree fntype);
421    bool (*promote_function_return) (tree fntype);
422    bool (*promote_prototypes) (tree fntype);
423    rtx (*struct_value_rtx) (tree fndecl, int incoming);
424    bool (*return_in_memory) (tree type, tree fndecl);
425    bool (*return_in_msb) (tree type);
426    rtx (*expand_builtin_saveregs) (void);
427    /* Returns pretend_argument_size.  */
428    void (*setup_incoming_varargs) (CUMULATIVE_ARGS *ca, enum machine_mode mode,
429				    tree type, int *pretend_arg_size,
430				    int second_time);
431    bool (*strict_argument_naming) (CUMULATIVE_ARGS *ca);
432    /* Returns true if we should use SETUP_INCOMING_VARARGS and/or
433       targetm.calls.strict_argument_naming().  */
434    bool (*pretend_outgoing_varargs_named) (CUMULATIVE_ARGS *ca);
435
436    /* Given a complex type T, return true if a parameter of type T
437       should be passed as two scalars.  */
438    bool (* split_complex_arg) (tree type);
439  } calls;
440
441  /* Leave the boolean fields at the end.  */
442
443  /* True if arbitrary sections are supported.  */
444  bool have_named_sections;
445
446  /* True if "native" constructors and destructors are supported,
447     false if we're using collect2 for the job.  */
448  bool have_ctors_dtors;
449
450  /* True if thread-local storage is supported.  */
451  bool have_tls;
452
453  /* True if a small readonly data section is supported.  */
454  bool have_srodata_section;
455
456  /* True if EH frame info sections should be zero-terminated.  */
457  bool terminate_dw2_eh_frame_info;
458
459  /* True if #NO_APP should be emitted at the beginning of
460     assembly output.  */
461  bool file_start_app_off;
462
463  /* True if output_file_directive should be called for main_input_filename
464     at the beginning of assembly output.  */
465  bool file_start_file_directive;
466
467  /* Leave the boolean fields at the end.  */
468};
469
470extern struct gcc_target targetm;
471