1.. Copyright (C) 2014-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
2   Originally contributed by David Malcolm <dmalcolm@redhat.com>
3
4   This is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it
5   under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6   the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
7   (at your option) any later version.
8
9   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
10   WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
12   General Public License for more details.
13
14   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15   along with this program.  If not, see
16   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
17
18.. default-domain:: c
19
20Compilation contexts
21====================
22
23.. type:: gcc_jit_context
24
25The top-level of the API is the :c:type:`gcc_jit_context` type.
26
27A :c:type:`gcc_jit_context` instance encapsulates the state of a
28compilation.
29
30You can set up options on it, and add types, functions and code.
31Invoking :c:func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` on it gives you a
32:c:type:`gcc_jit_result`.
33
34Lifetime-management
35-------------------
36Contexts are the unit of lifetime-management within the API: objects
37have their lifetime bounded by the context they are created within, and
38cleanup of such objects is done for you when the context is released.
39
40.. function:: gcc_jit_context *gcc_jit_context_acquire (void)
41
42  This function acquires a new :c:type:`gcc_jit_context *` instance,
43  which is independent of any others that may be present within this
44  process.
45
46.. function:: void gcc_jit_context_release (gcc_jit_context *ctxt)
47
48  This function releases all resources associated with the given context.
49  Both the context itself and all of its :c:type:`gcc_jit_object *`
50  instances are cleaned up.  It should be called exactly once on a given
51  context.
52
53  It is invalid to use the context or any of its "contextual" objects
54  after calling this.
55
56  .. code-block:: c
57
58    gcc_jit_context_release (ctxt);
59
60.. function:: gcc_jit_context * gcc_jit_context_new_child_context (gcc_jit_context *parent_ctxt)
61
62   Given an existing JIT context, create a child context.
63
64   The child inherits a copy of all option-settings from the parent.
65
66   The child can reference objects created within the parent, but not
67   vice-versa.
68
69   The lifetime of the child context must be bounded by that of the
70   parent: you should release a child context before releasing the parent
71   context.
72
73   If you use a function from a parent context within a child context,
74   you have to compile the parent context before you can compile the
75   child context, and the gcc_jit_result of the parent context must
76   outlive the gcc_jit_result of the child context.
77
78   This allows caching of shared initializations.  For example, you could
79   create types and declarations of global functions in a parent context
80   once within a process, and then create child contexts whenever a
81   function or loop becomes hot. Each such child context can be used for
82   JIT-compiling just one function or loop, but can reference types
83   and helper functions created within the parent context.
84
85   Contexts can be arbitrarily nested, provided the above rules are
86   followed, but it's probably not worth going above 2 or 3 levels, and
87   there will likely be a performance hit for such nesting.
88
89
90Thread-safety
91-------------
92Instances of :c:type:`gcc_jit_context *` created via
93:c:func:`gcc_jit_context_acquire` are independent from each other:
94only one thread may use a given context at once, but multiple threads
95could each have their own contexts without needing locks.
96
97Contexts created via :c:func:`gcc_jit_context_new_child_context` are
98related to their parent context.  They can be partitioned by their
99ultimate ancestor into independent "family trees".   Only one thread
100within a process may use a given "family tree" of such contexts at once,
101and if you're using multiple threads you should provide your own locking
102around entire such context partitions.
103
104.. _error-handling:
105
106Error-handling
107--------------
108Various kinds of errors are possible when using the API, such as
109mismatched types in an assignment.  You can only compile and get code from
110a context if no errors occur.
111
112Errors are printed on stderr and can be queried using
113:c:func:`gcc_jit_context_get_first_error`.
114
115They typically contain the name of the API entrypoint where the error
116occurred, and pertinent information on the problem:
117
118.. code-block:: console
119
120  ./buggy-program: error: gcc_jit_block_add_assignment: mismatching types: assignment to i (type: int) from "hello world" (type: const char *)
121
122In general, if an error occurs when using an API entrypoint, the
123entrypoint returns NULL.  You don't have to check everywhere for NULL
124results, since the API handles a NULL being passed in for any
125argument by issuing another error.  This typically leads to a cascade of
126followup error messages, but is safe (albeit verbose).  The first error
127message is usually the one to pay attention to, since it is likely to
128be responsible for all of the rest:
129
130.. function:: const char *\
131              gcc_jit_context_get_first_error (gcc_jit_context *ctxt)
132
133   Returns the first error message that occurred on the context.
134
135   The returned string is valid for the rest of the lifetime of the
136   context.
137
138   If no errors occurred, this will be NULL.
139
140If you are wrapping the C API for a higher-level language that supports
141exception-handling, you may instead be interested in the last error that
142occurred on the context, so that you can embed this in an exception:
143
144.. function:: const char *\
145              gcc_jit_context_get_last_error (gcc_jit_context *ctxt)
146
147   Returns the last error message that occurred on the context.
148
149   If no errors occurred, this will be NULL.
150
151   If non-NULL, the returned string is only guaranteed to be valid until
152   the next call to libgccjit relating to this context.
153
154Debugging
155---------
156
157.. function:: void\
158              gcc_jit_context_dump_to_file (gcc_jit_context *ctxt,\
159                                            const char *path,\
160                                            int update_locations)
161
162   To help with debugging: dump a C-like representation to the given path,
163   describing what's been set up on the context.
164
165   If "update_locations" is true, then also set up :type:`gcc_jit_location`
166   information throughout the context, pointing at the dump file as if it
167   were a source file.  This may be of use in conjunction with
168   :macro:`GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO` to allow stepping through the
169   code in a debugger.
170
171.. function:: void\
172              gcc_jit_context_set_logfile (gcc_jit_context *ctxt,\
173                                           FILE *logfile,\
174                                           int flags,\
175                                           int verbosity)
176
177   To help with debugging; enable ongoing logging of the context's
178   activity to the given file.
179
180   For example, the following will enable logging to stderr.
181
182   .. code-block:: c
183
184      gcc_jit_context_set_logfile (ctxt, stderr, 0, 0);
185
186   Examples of information logged include:
187
188   * API calls
189
190   * the various steps involved within compilation
191
192   * activity on any :c:type:`gcc_jit_result` instances created by
193     the context
194
195   * activity within any child contexts
196
197   An example of a log can be seen :ref:`here <example-of-log-file>`,
198   though the precise format and kinds of information logged is subject
199   to change.
200
201   The caller remains responsible for closing `logfile`, and it must not
202   be closed until all users are released.  In particular, note that
203   child contexts and :c:type:`gcc_jit_result` instances created by
204   the context will use the logfile.
205
206   There may a performance cost for logging.
207
208   You can turn off logging on `ctxt` by passing `NULL` for `logfile`.
209   Doing so only affects the context; it does not affect child contexts
210   or :c:type:`gcc_jit_result` instances already created by
211   the context.
212
213   The parameters "flags" and "verbosity" are reserved for future
214   expansion, and must be zero for now.
215
216To contrast the above: :c:func:`gcc_jit_context_dump_to_file` dumps the
217current state of a context to the given path, whereas
218:c:func:`gcc_jit_context_set_logfile` enables on-going logging of
219future activies on a context to the given `FILE *`.
220
221
222.. function:: void\
223              gcc_jit_context_dump_reproducer_to_file (gcc_jit_context *ctxt,\
224                                                       const char *path)
225
226   Write C source code into `path` that can be compiled into a
227   self-contained executable (i.e. with libgccjit as the only dependency).
228   The generated code will attempt to replay the API calls that have been
229   made into the given context.
230
231   This may be useful when debugging the library or client code, for
232   reducing a complicated recipe for reproducing a bug into a simpler
233   form.  For example, consider client code that parses some source file
234   into some internal representation, and then walks this IR, calling into
235   libgccjit.  If this encounters a bug, a call to
236   `gcc_jit_context_dump_reproducer_to_file` will write out C code for
237   a much simpler executable that performs the equivalent calls into
238   libgccjit, without needing the client code and its data.
239
240   Typically you need to supply :option:`-Wno-unused-variable` when
241   compiling the generated file (since the result of each API call is
242   assigned to a unique variable within the generated C source, and not
243   all are necessarily then used).
244
245.. function:: void\
246              gcc_jit_context_enable_dump (gcc_jit_context *ctxt,\
247                                           const char *dumpname, \
248                                           char **out_ptr)
249
250   Enable the dumping of a specific set of internal state from the
251   compilation, capturing the result in-memory as a buffer.
252
253   Parameter "dumpname" corresponds to the equivalent gcc command-line
254   option, without the "-fdump-" prefix.
255   For example, to get the equivalent of :option:`-fdump-tree-vrp1`,
256   supply ``"tree-vrp1"``:
257
258   .. code-block:: c
259
260      static char *dump_vrp1;
261
262      void
263      create_code (gcc_jit_context *ctxt)
264      {
265         gcc_jit_context_enable_dump (ctxt, "tree-vrp1", &dump_vrp1);
266         /* (other API calls omitted for brevity) */
267      }
268
269   The context directly stores the dumpname as a ``(const char *)``, so
270   the passed string must outlive the context.
271
272   :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will capture the dump as a
273   dynamically-allocated buffer, writing it to ``*out_ptr``.
274
275   The caller becomes responsible for calling:
276
277   .. code-block:: c
278
279      free (*out_ptr)
280
281   each time that :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` is called.
282   ``*out_ptr`` will be written to, either with the address of a buffer,
283   or with ``NULL`` if an error occurred.
284
285   .. warning::
286
287      This API entrypoint is likely to be less stable than the others.
288      In particular, both the precise dumpnames, and the format and content
289      of the dumps are subject to change.
290
291      It exists primarily for writing the library's own test suite.
292
293Options
294-------
295
296Options present in the initial release of libgccjit were handled using
297enums, whereas those added subsequently have their own per-option API
298entrypoints.
299
300Adding entrypoints for each new option means that client code that use
301the new options can be identified directly from binary metadata, which
302would not be possible if we instead extended the various
303``enum gcc_jit_*_option``.
304
305String Options
306**************
307
308.. function:: void gcc_jit_context_set_str_option(gcc_jit_context *ctxt, \
309                                                  enum gcc_jit_str_option opt, \
310                                                  const char *value)
311
312   Set a string option of the context.
313
314   .. type:: enum gcc_jit_str_option
315
316   The parameter ``value`` can be NULL.   If non-NULL, the call takes a
317   copy of the underlying string, so it is valid to pass in a pointer to
318   an on-stack buffer.
319
320   There is just one string option specified this way:
321
322   .. macro:: GCC_JIT_STR_OPTION_PROGNAME
323
324      The name of the program, for use as a prefix when printing error
325      messages to stderr.  If `NULL`, or default, "libgccjit.so" is used.
326
327Boolean options
328***************
329
330.. function:: void gcc_jit_context_set_bool_option(gcc_jit_context *ctxt, \
331				                   enum gcc_jit_bool_option opt, \
332				                   int value)
333
334  Set a boolean option of the context.
335  Zero is "false" (the default), non-zero is "true".
336
337  .. type:: enum gcc_jit_bool_option
338
339  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO
340
341     If true, :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will attempt to do the right
342     thing so that if you attach a debugger to the process, it will
343     be able to inspect variables and step through your code.
344
345     Note that you can't step through code unless you set up source
346     location information for the code (by creating and passing in
347     :type:`gcc_jit_location` instances).
348
349  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DUMP_INITIAL_TREE
350
351     If true, :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will dump its initial
352     "tree" representation of your code to stderr (before any
353     optimizations).
354
355     Here's some sample output (from the `square` example)::
356
357        <statement_list 0x7f4875a62cc0
358           type <void_type 0x7f4875a64bd0 VOID
359               align 8 symtab 0 alias set -1 canonical type 0x7f4875a64bd0
360               pointer_to_this <pointer_type 0x7f4875a64c78>>
361           side-effects head 0x7f4875a761e0 tail 0x7f4875a761f8 stmts 0x7f4875a62d20 0x7f4875a62d00
362
363           stmt <label_expr 0x7f4875a62d20 type <void_type 0x7f4875a64bd0>
364               side-effects
365               arg 0 <label_decl 0x7f4875a79080 entry type <void_type 0x7f4875a64bd0>
366                   VOID file (null) line 0 col 0
367                   align 1 context <function_decl 0x7f4875a77500 square>>>
368           stmt <return_expr 0x7f4875a62d00
369               type <integer_type 0x7f4875a645e8 public SI
370                   size <integer_cst 0x7f4875a623a0 constant 32>
371                   unit size <integer_cst 0x7f4875a623c0 constant 4>
372                   align 32 symtab 0 alias set -1 canonical type 0x7f4875a645e8 precision 32 min <integer_cst 0x7f4875a62340 -2147483648> max <integer_cst 0x7f4875a62360 2147483647>
373                   pointer_to_this <pointer_type 0x7f4875a6b348>>
374               side-effects
375               arg 0 <modify_expr 0x7f4875a72a78 type <integer_type 0x7f4875a645e8>
376                   side-effects arg 0 <result_decl 0x7f4875a7a000 D.54>
377                   arg 1 <mult_expr 0x7f4875a72a50 type <integer_type 0x7f4875a645e8>
378                       arg 0 <parm_decl 0x7f4875a79000 i> arg 1 <parm_decl 0x7f4875a79000 i>>>>>
379
380  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DUMP_INITIAL_GIMPLE
381
382     If true, :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will dump the "gimple"
383     representation of your code to stderr, before any optimizations
384     are performed.  The dump resembles C code:
385
386     .. code-block:: c
387
388       square (signed int i)
389       {
390         signed int D.56;
391
392         entry:
393         D.56 = i * i;
394         return D.56;
395       }
396
397  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DUMP_GENERATED_CODE
398
399     If true, :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will dump the final
400     generated code to stderr, in the form of assembly language:
401
402     .. code-block:: gas
403
404           .file    "fake.c"
405           .text
406           .globl    square
407           .type    square, @function
408       square:
409       .LFB0:
410           .cfi_startproc
411           pushq    %rbp
412           .cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
413           .cfi_offset 6, -16
414           movq    %rsp, %rbp
415           .cfi_def_cfa_register 6
416           movl    %edi, -4(%rbp)
417       .L2:
418           movl    -4(%rbp), %eax
419           imull    -4(%rbp), %eax
420           popq    %rbp
421           .cfi_def_cfa 7, 8
422           ret
423           .cfi_endproc
424       .LFE0:
425           .size    square, .-square
426           .ident    "GCC: (GNU) 4.9.0 20131023 (Red Hat 0.1-%{gcc_release})"
427           .section    .note.GNU-stack,"",@progbits
428
429
430  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DUMP_SUMMARY
431
432     If true, :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will print information to stderr
433     on the actions it is performing.
434
435  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DUMP_EVERYTHING
436
437     If true, :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` will dump copious
438     amount of information on what it's doing to various
439     files within a temporary directory.  Use
440     :macro:`GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_KEEP_INTERMEDIATES` (see below) to
441     see the results.  The files are intended to be human-readable,
442     but the exact files and their formats are subject to change.
443
444  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_SELFCHECK_GC
445
446     If true, libgccjit will aggressively run its garbage collector, to
447     shake out bugs (greatly slowing down the compile).  This is likely
448     to only be of interest to developers *of* the library.  It is
449     used when running the selftest suite.
450
451  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_KEEP_INTERMEDIATES
452
453     If true, the :type:`gcc_jit_context` will not clean up intermediate files
454     written to the filesystem, and will display their location on stderr.
455
456.. function:: void \
457              gcc_jit_context_set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks (gcc_jit_context *ctxt, \
458                                                                 int bool_value)
459
460   By default, libgccjit will issue an error about unreachable blocks
461   within a function.
462
463   This entrypoint can be used to disable that error.
464
465   This entrypoint was added in :ref:`LIBGCCJIT_ABI_2`; you can test for
466   its presence using
467
468   .. code-block:: c
469
470      #ifdef LIBGCCJIT_HAVE_gcc_jit_context_set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks
471
472.. function:: void \
473              gcc_jit_context_set_bool_use_external_driver (gcc_jit_context *ctxt, \
474                                                            int bool_value)
475
476   libgccjit internally generates assembler, and uses "driver" code
477   for converting it to other formats (e.g. shared libraries).
478
479   By default, libgccjit will use an embedded copy of the driver
480   code.
481
482   This option can be used to instead invoke an external driver executable
483   as a subprocess.
484
485   This entrypoint was added in :ref:`LIBGCCJIT_ABI_5`; you can test for
486   its presence using
487
488   .. code-block:: c
489
490      #ifdef LIBGCCJIT_HAVE_gcc_jit_context_set_bool_use_external_driver
491
492Integer options
493***************
494
495.. function:: void gcc_jit_context_set_int_option (gcc_jit_context *ctxt, \
496				                   enum gcc_jit_int_option opt, \
497				                   int value)
498
499  Set an integer option of the context.
500
501  .. type:: enum gcc_jit_int_option
502
503  There is just one integer option specified this way:
504
505  .. macro:: GCC_JIT_INT_OPTION_OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL
506
507     How much to optimize the code.
508
509     Valid values are 0-3, corresponding to GCC's command-line options
510     -O0 through -O3.
511
512     The default value is 0 (unoptimized).
513
514Additional command-line options
515*******************************
516
517.. function:: void gcc_jit_context_add_command_line_option (gcc_jit_context *ctxt,\
518                                                            const char *optname)
519
520   Add an arbitrary gcc command-line option to the context, for use
521   by :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` and
522   :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile_to_file`.
523
524   The parameter ``optname`` must be non-NULL.  The underlying buffer is
525   copied, so that it does not need to outlive the call.
526
527   Extra options added by `gcc_jit_context_add_command_line_option` are
528   applied *after* the regular options above, potentially overriding them.
529   Options from parent contexts are inherited by child contexts; options
530   from the parent are applied *before* those from the child.
531
532   For example:
533
534   .. code-block:: c
535
536      gcc_jit_context_add_command_line_option (ctxt, "-ffast-math");
537      gcc_jit_context_add_command_line_option (ctxt, "-fverbose-asm");
538
539   Note that only some options are likely to be meaningful; there is no
540   "frontend" within libgccjit, so typically only those affecting
541   optimization and code-generation are likely to be useful.
542
543   This entrypoint was added in :ref:`LIBGCCJIT_ABI_1`; you can test for
544   its presence using
545
546   .. code-block:: c
547
548      #ifdef LIBGCCJIT_HAVE_gcc_jit_context_add_command_line_option
549
550.. function:: void gcc_jit_context_add_driver_option (gcc_jit_context *ctxt,\
551						      const char *optname)
552
553   Add an arbitrary gcc driver option to the context, for use by
554   :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile` and
555   :func:`gcc_jit_context_compile_to_file`.
556
557   The parameter ``optname`` must be non-NULL.  The underlying buffer is
558   copied, so that it does not need to outlive the call.
559
560   Extra options added by `gcc_jit_context_add_driver_option` are
561   applied *after* all other options potentially overriding them.
562   Options from parent contexts are inherited by child contexts; options
563   from the parent are applied *before* those from the child.
564
565   For example:
566
567   .. code-block:: c
568
569      gcc_jit_context_add_driver_option (ctxt, "-lm");
570      gcc_jit_context_add_driver_option (ctxt, "-fuse-linker-plugin");
571
572   Note that only some options are likely to be meaningful; there is no
573   "frontend" within libgccjit, so typically only those affecting
574   assembler and linker are likely to be useful.
575
576   This entrypoint was added in :ref:`LIBGCCJIT_ABI_11`; you can test for
577   its presence using
578
579   .. code-block:: c
580
581      #ifdef LIBGCCJIT_HAVE_gcc_jit_context_add_driver_option
582