gensupport.c: Include hashtab.h.
[gcc.git] / gcc / rtl.def
1 /* This file contains the definitions and documentation for the
2 Register Transfer Expressions (rtx's) that make up the
3 Register Transfer Language (rtl) used in the Back End of the GNU compiler.
4 Copyright (C) 1987, 88, 92, 94, 95, 97, 98, 1999, 2000
5 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 This file is part of GCC.
8
9 GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
10 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
11 Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later
12 version.
13
14 GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
15 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
16 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
17 for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with GCC; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free
21 Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA
22 02111-1307, USA. */
23
24
25 /* Expression definitions and descriptions for all targets are in this file.
26 Some will not be used for some targets.
27
28 The fields in the cpp macro call "DEF_RTL_EXPR()"
29 are used to create declarations in the C source of the compiler.
30
31 The fields are:
32
33 1. The internal name of the rtx used in the C source.
34 It is a tag in the enumeration "enum rtx_code" defined in "rtl.h".
35 By convention these are in UPPER_CASE.
36
37 2. The name of the rtx in the external ASCII format read by
38 read_rtx(), and printed by print_rtx().
39 These names are stored in rtx_name[].
40 By convention these are the internal (field 1) names in lower_case.
41
42 3. The print format, and type of each rtx->fld[] (field) in this rtx.
43 These formats are stored in rtx_format[].
44 The meaning of the formats is documented in front of this array in rtl.c
45
46 4. The class of the rtx. These are stored in rtx_class and are accessed
47 via the GET_RTX_CLASS macro. They are defined as follows:
48
49 "o" an rtx code that can be used to represent an object (e.g, REG, MEM)
50 "<" an rtx code for a comparison (e.g, EQ, NE, LT)
51 "1" an rtx code for a unary arithmetic expression (e.g, NEG, NOT)
52 "c" an rtx code for a commutative binary operation (e.g,, PLUS, MULT)
53 "3" an rtx code for a non-bitfield three input operation (IF_THEN_ELSE)
54 "2" an rtx code for a non-commutative binary operation (e.g., MINUS, DIV)
55 "b" an rtx code for a bit-field operation (ZERO_EXTRACT, SIGN_EXTRACT)
56 "i" an rtx code for a machine insn (INSN, JUMP_INSN, CALL_INSN)
57 "m" an rtx code for something that matches in insns (e.g, MATCH_DUP)
58 "g" an rtx code for grouping insns together (e.g, GROUP_PARALLEL)
59 "a" an rtx code for autoincrement addressing modes (e.g. POST_DEC)
60 "x" everything else
61
62 */
63
64 /* ---------------------------------------------------------------------
65 Expressions (and "meta" expressions) used for structuring the
66 rtl representation of a program.
67 --------------------------------------------------------------------- */
68
69 /* an expression code name unknown to the reader */
70 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNKNOWN, "UnKnown", "*", 'x')
71
72 /* (NIL) is used by rtl reader and printer to represent a null pointer. */
73
74 DEF_RTL_EXPR(NIL, "nil", "*", 'x')
75
76
77 /* include a file */
78
79 DEF_RTL_EXPR(INCLUDE, "include", "s", 'x')
80
81 /* ---------------------------------------------------------------------
82 Expressions used in constructing lists.
83 --------------------------------------------------------------------- */
84
85 /* a linked list of expressions */
86 DEF_RTL_EXPR(EXPR_LIST, "expr_list", "ee", 'x')
87
88 /* a linked list of instructions.
89 The insns are represented in print by their uids. */
90 DEF_RTL_EXPR(INSN_LIST, "insn_list", "ue", 'x')
91
92 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
93 Expression types for machine descriptions.
94 These do not appear in actual rtl code in the compiler.
95 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
96
97 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
98 Means use the function named by the second arg (the string)
99 as a predicate; if matched, store the structure that was matched
100 in the operand table at index specified by the first arg (the integer).
101 If the second arg is the null string, the structure is just stored.
102
103 A third string argument indicates to the register allocator restrictions
104 on where the operand can be allocated.
105
106 If the target needs no restriction on any instruction this field should
107 be the null string.
108
109 The string is prepended by:
110 '=' to indicate the operand is only written to.
111 '+' to indicate the operand is both read and written to.
112
113 Each character in the string represents an allocable class for an operand.
114 'g' indicates the operand can be any valid class.
115 'i' indicates the operand can be immediate (in the instruction) data.
116 'r' indicates the operand can be in a register.
117 'm' indicates the operand can be in memory.
118 'o' a subset of the 'm' class. Those memory addressing modes that
119 can be offset at compile time (have a constant added to them).
120
121 Other characters indicate target dependent operand classes and
122 are described in each target's machine description.
123
124 For instructions with more than one operand, sets of classes can be
125 separated by a comma to indicate the appropriate multi-operand constraints.
126 There must be a 1 to 1 correspondence between these sets of classes in
127 all operands for an instruction.
128 */
129 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_OPERAND, "match_operand", "iss", 'm')
130
131 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
132 Means match a SCRATCH or a register. When used to generate rtl, a
133 SCRATCH is generated. As for MATCH_OPERAND, the mode specifies
134 the desired mode and the first argument is the operand number.
135 The second argument is the constraint. */
136 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_SCRATCH, "match_scratch", "is", 'm')
137
138 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
139 Means match only something equal to what is stored in the operand table
140 at the index specified by the argument. */
141 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_DUP, "match_dup", "i", 'm')
142
143 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
144 Means apply a predicate, AND match recursively the operands of the rtx.
145 Operand 0 is the operand-number, as in match_operand.
146 Operand 1 is a predicate to apply (as a string, a function name).
147 Operand 2 is a vector of expressions, each of which must match
148 one subexpression of the rtx this construct is matching. */
149 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_OPERATOR, "match_operator", "isE", 'm')
150
151 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
152 Means to match a PARALLEL of arbitrary length. The predicate is applied
153 to the PARALLEL and the initial expressions in the PARALLEL are matched.
154 Operand 0 is the operand-number, as in match_operand.
155 Operand 1 is a predicate to apply to the PARALLEL.
156 Operand 2 is a vector of expressions, each of which must match the
157 corresponding element in the PARALLEL. */
158 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_PARALLEL, "match_parallel", "isE", 'm')
159
160 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
161 Means match only something equal to what is stored in the operand table
162 at the index specified by the argument. For MATCH_OPERATOR. */
163 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_OP_DUP, "match_op_dup", "iE", 'm')
164
165 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
166 Means match only something equal to what is stored in the operand table
167 at the index specified by the argument. For MATCH_PARALLEL. */
168 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_PAR_DUP, "match_par_dup", "iE", 'm')
169
170 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
171 Operand 0 is the operand number, as in match_operand.
172 Operand 1 is the predicate to apply to the insn. */
173 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MATCH_INSN, "match_insn", "is", 'm')
174
175 /* Appears only in machine descriptions.
176 Defines the pattern for one kind of instruction.
177 Operand:
178 0: names this instruction.
179 If the name is the null string, the instruction is in the
180 machine description just to be recognized, and will never be emitted by
181 the tree to rtl expander.
182 1: is the pattern.
183 2: is a string which is a C expression
184 giving an additional condition for recognizing this pattern.
185 A null string means no extra condition.
186 3: is the action to execute if this pattern is matched.
187 If this assembler code template starts with a * then it is a fragment of
188 C code to run to decide on a template to use. Otherwise, it is the
189 template to use.
190 4: optionally, a vector of attributes for this insn.
191 */
192 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN, "define_insn", "sEsTV", 'x')
193
194 /* Definition of a peephole optimization.
195 1st operand: vector of insn patterns to match
196 2nd operand: C expression that must be true
197 3rd operand: template or C code to produce assembler output.
198 4: optionally, a vector of attributes for this insn.
199 */
200 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_PEEPHOLE, "define_peephole", "EsTV", 'x')
201
202 /* Definition of a split operation.
203 1st operand: insn pattern to match
204 2nd operand: C expression that must be true
205 3rd operand: vector of insn patterns to place into a SEQUENCE
206 4th operand: optionally, some C code to execute before generating the
207 insns. This might, for example, create some RTX's and store them in
208 elements of `recog_data.operand' for use by the vector of
209 insn-patterns.
210 (`operands' is an alias here for `recog_data.operand'). */
211 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_SPLIT, "define_split", "EsES", 'x')
212
213 /* Definition of an insn and associated split.
214 This is the concatenation, with a few modifications, of a define_insn
215 and a define_split which share the same pattern.
216 Operand:
217 0: names this instruction.
218 If the name is the null string, the instruction is in the
219 machine description just to be recognized, and will never be emitted by
220 the tree to rtl expander.
221 1: is the pattern.
222 2: is a string which is a C expression
223 giving an additional condition for recognizing this pattern.
224 A null string means no extra condition.
225 3: is the action to execute if this pattern is matched.
226 If this assembler code template starts with a * then it is a fragment of
227 C code to run to decide on a template to use. Otherwise, it is the
228 template to use.
229 4: C expression that must be true for split. This may start with "&&"
230 in which case the split condition is the logical and of the insn
231 condition and what follows the "&&" of this operand.
232 5: vector of insn patterns to place into a SEQUENCE
233 6: optionally, some C code to execute before generating the
234 insns. This might, for example, create some RTX's and store them in
235 elements of `recog_data.operand' for use by the vector of
236 insn-patterns.
237 (`operands' is an alias here for `recog_data.operand').
238 7: optionally, a vector of attributes for this insn. */
239 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN_AND_SPLIT, "define_insn_and_split", "sEsTsESV", 'x')
240
241 /* Definition of an RTL peephole operation.
242 Follows the same arguments as define_split. */
243 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_PEEPHOLE2, "define_peephole2", "EsES", 'x')
244
245 /* Definition of a combiner pattern.
246 Operands not defined yet. */
247 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_COMBINE, "define_combine", "Ess", 'x')
248
249 /* Define how to generate multiple insns for a standard insn name.
250 1st operand: the insn name.
251 2nd operand: vector of insn-patterns.
252 Use match_operand to substitute an element of `recog_data.operand'.
253 3rd operand: C expression that must be true for this to be available.
254 This may not test any operands.
255 4th operand: Extra C code to execute before generating the insns.
256 This might, for example, create some RTX's and store them in
257 elements of `recog_data.operand' for use by the vector of
258 insn-patterns.
259 (`operands' is an alias here for `recog_data.operand'). */
260 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_EXPAND, "define_expand", "sEss", 'x')
261
262 /* Define a requirement for delay slots.
263 1st operand: Condition involving insn attributes that, if true,
264 indicates that the insn requires the number of delay slots
265 shown.
266 2nd operand: Vector whose length is the three times the number of delay
267 slots required.
268 Each entry gives three conditions, each involving attributes.
269 The first must be true for an insn to occupy that delay slot
270 location. The second is true for all insns that can be
271 annulled if the branch is true and the third is true for all
272 insns that can be annulled if the branch is false.
273
274 Multiple DEFINE_DELAYs may be present. They indicate differing
275 requirements for delay slots. */
276 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_DELAY, "define_delay", "eE", 'x')
277
278 /* Define a set of insns that requires a function unit. This means that
279 these insns produce their result after a delay and that there may be
280 restrictions on the number of insns of this type that can be scheduled
281 simultaneously.
282
283 More than one DEFINE_FUNCTION_UNIT can be specified for a function unit.
284 Each gives a set of operations and associated delays. The first three
285 operands must be the same for each operation for the same function unit.
286
287 All delays are specified in cycles.
288
289 1st operand: Name of function unit (mostly for documentation)
290 2nd operand: Number of identical function units in CPU
291 3rd operand: Total number of simultaneous insns that can execute on this
292 function unit; 0 if unlimited.
293 4th operand: Condition involving insn attribute, that, if true, specifies
294 those insns that this expression applies to.
295 5th operand: Constant delay after which insn result will be
296 available.
297 6th operand: Delay until next insn can be scheduled on the function unit
298 executing this operation. The meaning depends on whether or
299 not the next operand is supplied.
300 7th operand: If this operand is not specified, the 6th operand gives the
301 number of cycles after the instruction matching the 4th
302 operand begins using the function unit until a subsequent
303 insn can begin. A value of zero should be used for a
304 unit with no issue constraints. If only one operation can
305 be executed a time and the unit is busy for the entire time,
306 the 3rd operand should be specified as 1, the 6th operand
307 should be specified as 0, and the 7th operand should not
308 be specified.
309
310 If this operand is specified, it is a list of attribute
311 expressions. If an insn for which any of these expressions
312 is true is currently executing on the function unit, the
313 issue delay will be given by the 6th operand. Otherwise,
314 the insn can be immediately scheduled (subject to the limit
315 on the number of simultaneous operations executing on the
316 unit.) */
317 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_FUNCTION_UNIT, "define_function_unit", "siieiiV", 'x')
318
319 /* Define attribute computation for `asm' instructions. */
320 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_ASM_ATTRIBUTES, "define_asm_attributes", "V", 'x' )
321
322 /* Definition of a conditional execution meta operation. Automatically
323 generates new instances of DEFINE_INSN, selected by having attribute
324 "predicable" true. The new pattern will contain a COND_EXEC and the
325 predicate at top-level.
326
327 Operand:
328 0: The predicate pattern. The top-level form should match a
329 relational operator. Operands should have only one alternative.
330 1: A C expression giving an additional condition for recognizing
331 the generated pattern.
332 2: A template or C code to produce assembler output. */
333 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_COND_EXEC, "define_cond_exec", "Ess", 'x')
334
335 /* SEQUENCE appears in the result of a `gen_...' function
336 for a DEFINE_EXPAND that wants to make several insns.
337 Its elements are the bodies of the insns that should be made.
338 `emit_insn' takes the SEQUENCE apart and makes separate insns. */
339 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SEQUENCE, "sequence", "E", 'x')
340
341 /* Refers to the address of its argument. This is only used in alias.c. */
342 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDRESS, "address", "e", 'm')
343
344 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
345 Constructions for CPU pipeline description described by NDFAs.
346 These do not appear in actual rtl code in the compiler.
347 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
348
349 /* (define_cpu_unit string [string]) describes cpu functional
350 units (separated by comma).
351
352 1st operand: Names of cpu functional units.
353 2nd operand: Name of automaton (see comments for DEFINE_AUTOMATON).
354
355 All define_reservations, define_cpu_units, and
356 define_query_cpu_units should have unique names which may not be
357 "nothing". */
358 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_CPU_UNIT, "define_cpu_unit", "sS", 'x')
359
360 /* (define_query_cpu_unit string [string]) describes cpu functional
361 units analogously to define_cpu_unit. If we use automaton without
362 minimization, the reservation of such units can be queried for
363 automaton state. */
364 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_QUERY_CPU_UNIT, "define_query_cpu_unit", "sS", 'x')
365
366 /* (exclusion_set string string) means that each CPU functional unit
367 in the first string can not be reserved simultaneously with any
368 unit whose name is in the second string and vise versa. CPU units
369 in the string are separated by commas. For example, it is useful
370 for description CPU with fully pipelined floating point functional
371 unit which can execute simultaneously only single floating point
372 insns or only double floating point insns. All CPU functional
373 units in a set should belong the same automaton. */
374 DEF_RTL_EXPR(EXCLUSION_SET, "exclusion_set", "ss", 'x')
375
376 /* (presence_set string string) means that each CPU functional unit in
377 the first string can not be reserved unless at least one of units
378 whose names are in the second string is reserved. This is an
379 asymmetric relation. CPU units in the string are separated by
380 commas. For example, it is useful for description that slot1 is
381 reserved after slot0 reservation for VLIW processor. All CPU
382 functional units in a set should belong the same automaton. */
383 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRESENCE_SET, "presence_set", "ss", 'x')
384
385 /* (absence_set string string) means that each CPU functional unit in
386 the first string can not be reserved only if each unit whose name
387 is in the second string is not reserved. This is an asymmetric
388 relation (actually exclusion set is analogous to this one but it is
389 symmetric). CPU units in the string are separated by commas. For
390 example, it is useful for description that slot0 can not be
391 reserved after slot1 or slot2 reservation for VLIW processor. All
392 CPU functional units in a set should belong the same automaton. */
393 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ABSENCE_SET, "absence_set", "ss", 'x')
394
395 /* (define_bypass number out_insn_names in_insn_names) names bypass
396 with given latency (the first number) from insns given by the first
397 string (see define_insn_reservation) into insns given by the second
398 string. Insn names in the strings are separated by commas. The
399 third operand is optional name of function which is additional
400 guard for the bypass. The function will get the two insns as
401 parameters. If the function returns zero the bypass will be
402 ignored for this case. Additional guard is necessary to recognize
403 complicated bypasses, e.g. when consumer is load address. */
404 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_BYPASS, "define_bypass", "issS", 'x')
405
406 /* (define_automaton string) describes names of automata generated and
407 used for pipeline hazards recognition. The names are separated by
408 comma. Actually it is possibly to generate the single automaton
409 but unfortunately it can be very large. If we use more one
410 automata, the summary size of the automata usually is less than the
411 single one. The automaton name is used in define_cpu_unit and
412 define_query_cpu_unit. All automata should have unique names. */
413 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_AUTOMATON, "define_automaton", "s", 'x')
414
415 /* (automata_option string) describes option for generation of
416 automata. Currently there are the following options:
417
418 o "no-minimization" which makes no minimization of automata. This
419 is only worth to do when we are going to query CPU functional
420 unit reservations in an automaton state.
421
422 o "time" which means printing additional time statistics about
423 generation of automata.
424
425 o "v" which means generation of file describing the result
426 automata. The file has suffix `.dfa' and can be used for the
427 description verification and debugging.
428
429 o "w" which means generation of warning instead of error for
430 non-critical errors.
431
432 o "ndfa" which makes nondeterministic finite state automata. */
433 DEF_RTL_EXPR(AUTOMATA_OPTION, "automata_option", "s", 'x')
434
435 /* (define_reservation string string) names reservation (the first
436 string) of cpu functional units (the 2nd string). Sometimes unit
437 reservations for different insns contain common parts. In such
438 case, you can describe common part and use its name (the 1st
439 parameter) in regular expression in define_insn_reservation. All
440 define_reservations, define_cpu_units, and define_query_cpu_units
441 should have unique names which may not be "nothing". */
442 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_RESERVATION, "define_reservation", "ss", 'x')
443
444 /* (define_insn_reservation name default_latency condition regexpr)
445 describes reservation of cpu functional units (the 3nd operand) for
446 instruction which is selected by the condition (the 2nd parameter).
447 The first parameter is used for output of debugging information.
448 The reservations are described by a regular expression according
449 the following syntax:
450
451 regexp = regexp "," oneof
452 | oneof
453
454 oneof = oneof "|" allof
455 | allof
456
457 allof = allof "+" repeat
458 | repeat
459
460 repeat = element "*" number
461 | element
462
463 element = cpu_function_unit_name
464 | reservation_name
465 | result_name
466 | "nothing"
467 | "(" regexp ")"
468
469 1. "," is used for describing start of the next cycle in
470 reservation.
471
472 2. "|" is used for describing the reservation described by the
473 first regular expression *or* the reservation described by the
474 second regular expression *or* etc.
475
476 3. "+" is used for describing the reservation described by the
477 first regular expression *and* the reservation described by the
478 second regular expression *and* etc.
479
480 4. "*" is used for convinience and simply means sequence in
481 which the regular expression are repeated NUMBER times with
482 cycle advancing (see ",").
483
484 5. cpu functional unit name which means its reservation.
485
486 6. reservation name -- see define_reservation.
487
488 7. string "nothing" means no units reservation. */
489
490 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_INSN_RESERVATION, "define_insn_reservation", "sies", 'x')
491
492 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
493 Expressions used for insn attributes. These also do not appear in
494 actual rtl code in the compiler.
495 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
496
497 /* Definition of an insn attribute.
498 1st operand: name of the attribute
499 2nd operand: comma-separated list of possible attribute values
500 3rd operand: expression for the default value of the attribute. */
501 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DEFINE_ATTR, "define_attr", "sse", 'x')
502
503 /* Marker for the name of an attribute. */
504 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ATTR, "attr", "s", 'x')
505
506 /* For use in the last (optional) operand of DEFINE_INSN or DEFINE_PEEPHOLE and
507 in DEFINE_ASM_INSN to specify an attribute to assign to insns matching that
508 pattern.
509
510 (set_attr "name" "value") is equivalent to
511 (set (attr "name") (const_string "value")) */
512 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SET_ATTR, "set_attr", "ss", 'x')
513
514 /* In the last operand of DEFINE_INSN and DEFINE_PEEPHOLE, this can be used to
515 specify that attribute values are to be assigned according to the
516 alternative matched.
517
518 The following three expressions are equivalent:
519
520 (set (attr "att") (cond [(eq_attrq "alternative" "1") (const_string "a1")
521 (eq_attrq "alternative" "2") (const_string "a2")]
522 (const_string "a3")))
523 (set_attr_alternative "att" [(const_string "a1") (const_string "a2")
524 (const_string "a3")])
525 (set_attr "att" "a1,a2,a3")
526 */
527 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SET_ATTR_ALTERNATIVE, "set_attr_alternative", "sE", 'x')
528
529 /* A conditional expression true if the value of the specified attribute of
530 the current insn equals the specified value. The first operand is the
531 attribute name and the second is the comparison value. */
532 DEF_RTL_EXPR(EQ_ATTR, "eq_attr", "ss", 'x')
533
534 /* A conditional expression which is true if the specified flag is
535 true for the insn being scheduled in reorg.
536
537 genattr.c defines the following flags which can be tested by
538 (attr_flag "foo") expressions in eligible_for_delay.
539
540 forward, backward, very_likely, likely, very_unlikely, and unlikely. */
541
542 DEF_RTL_EXPR (ATTR_FLAG, "attr_flag", "s", 'x')
543
544 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
545 Expression types used for things in the instruction chain.
546
547 All formats must start with "iuu" to handle the chain.
548 Each insn expression holds an rtl instruction and its semantics
549 during back-end processing.
550 See macros's in "rtl.h" for the meaning of each rtx->fld[].
551
552 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
553
554 /* An instruction that cannot jump. */
555 DEF_RTL_EXPR(INSN, "insn", "iuuBteiee", 'i')
556
557 /* An instruction that can possibly jump.
558 Fields ( rtx->fld[] ) have exact same meaning as INSN's. */
559 DEF_RTL_EXPR(JUMP_INSN, "jump_insn", "iuuBteiee0", 'i')
560
561 /* An instruction that can possibly call a subroutine
562 but which will not change which instruction comes next
563 in the current function.
564 Field ( rtx->fld[9] ) is CALL_INSN_FUNCTION_USAGE.
565 All other fields ( rtx->fld[] ) have exact same meaning as INSN's. */
566 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CALL_INSN, "call_insn", "iuuBteieee", 'i')
567
568 /* A marker that indicates that control will not flow through. */
569 DEF_RTL_EXPR(BARRIER, "barrier", "iuu", 'x')
570
571 /* Holds a label that is followed by instructions.
572 Operand:
573 4: is used in jump.c for the use-count of the label.
574 5: is used in flow.c to point to the chain of label_ref's to this label.
575 6: is a number that is unique in the entire compilation.
576 7: is the user-given name of the label, if any. */
577 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CODE_LABEL, "code_label", "iuuB00is", 'x')
578
579 /* Say where in the code a source line starts, for symbol table's sake.
580 Operand:
581 4: filename, if line number > 0, note-specific data otherwise.
582 5: line number if > 0, enum note_insn otherwise.
583 6: unique number if line number == note_insn_deleted_label. */
584 DEF_RTL_EXPR(NOTE, "note", "iuuB0ni", 'x')
585
586 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
587 Top level constituents of INSN, JUMP_INSN and CALL_INSN.
588 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
589
590 /* Conditionally execute code.
591 Operand 0 is the condition that if true, the code is executed.
592 Operand 1 is the code to be executed (typically a SET).
593
594 Semantics are that there are no side effects if the condition
595 is false. This pattern is created automatically by the if_convert
596 pass run after reload or by target-specific splitters. */
597 DEF_RTL_EXPR(COND_EXEC, "cond_exec", "ee", 'x')
598
599 /* Several operations to be done in parallel (perhaps under COND_EXEC). */
600 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PARALLEL, "parallel", "E", 'x')
601
602 /* A string that is passed through to the assembler as input.
603 One can obviously pass comments through by using the
604 assembler comment syntax.
605 These occur in an insn all by themselves as the PATTERN.
606 They also appear inside an ASM_OPERANDS
607 as a convenient way to hold a string. */
608 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASM_INPUT, "asm_input", "s", 'x')
609
610 /* An assembler instruction with operands.
611 1st operand is the instruction template.
612 2nd operand is the constraint for the output.
613 3rd operand is the number of the output this expression refers to.
614 When an insn stores more than one value, a separate ASM_OPERANDS
615 is made for each output; this integer distinguishes them.
616 4th is a vector of values of input operands.
617 5th is a vector of modes and constraints for the input operands.
618 Each element is an ASM_INPUT containing a constraint string
619 and whose mode indicates the mode of the input operand.
620 6th is the name of the containing source file.
621 7th is the source line number. */
622 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASM_OPERANDS, "asm_operands", "ssiEEsi", 'x')
623
624 /* A machine-specific operation.
625 1st operand is a vector of operands being used by the operation so that
626 any needed reloads can be done.
627 2nd operand is a unique value saying which of a number of machine-specific
628 operations is to be performed.
629 (Note that the vector must be the first operand because of the way that
630 genrecog.c record positions within an insn.)
631 This can occur all by itself in a PATTERN, as a component of a PARALLEL,
632 or inside an expression. */
633 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSPEC, "unspec", "Ei", 'x')
634
635 /* Similar, but a volatile operation and one which may trap. */
636 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSPEC_VOLATILE, "unspec_volatile", "Ei", 'x')
637
638 /* Vector of addresses, stored as full words. */
639 /* Each element is a LABEL_REF to a CODE_LABEL whose address we want. */
640 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDR_VEC, "addr_vec", "E", 'x')
641
642 /* Vector of address differences X0 - BASE, X1 - BASE, ...
643 First operand is BASE; the vector contains the X's.
644 The machine mode of this rtx says how much space to leave
645 for each difference and is adjusted by branch shortening if
646 CASE_VECTOR_SHORTEN_MODE is defined.
647 The third and fourth operands store the target labels with the
648 minimum and maximum addresses respectively.
649 The fifth operand stores flags for use by branch shortening.
650 Set at the start of shorten_branches:
651 min_align: the minimum alignment for any of the target labels.
652 base_after_vec: true iff BASE is after the ADDR_DIFF_VEC.
653 min_after_vec: true iff minimum addr target label is after the ADDR_DIFF_VEC.
654 max_after_vec: true iff maximum addr target label is after the ADDR_DIFF_VEC.
655 min_after_base: true iff minimum address target label is after BASE.
656 max_after_base: true iff maximum address target label is after BASE.
657 Set by the actual branch shortening process:
658 offset_unsigned: true iff offsets have to be treated as unsigned.
659 scale: scaling that is necessary to make offsets fit into the mode.
660
661 The third, fourth and fifth operands are only valid when
662 CASE_VECTOR_SHORTEN_MODE is defined, and only in an optimizing
663 compilations. */
664
665 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDR_DIFF_VEC, "addr_diff_vec", "eEee0", 'x')
666
667 /* Memory prefetch, with attributes supported on some targets.
668 Operand 1 is the address of the memory to fetch.
669 Operand 2 is 1 for a write access, 0 otherwise.
670 Operand 3 is the level of temporal locality; 0 means there is no
671 temporal locality and 1, 2, and 3 are for increasing levels of temporal
672 locality.
673
674 The attributes specified by operands 2 and 3 are ignored for targets
675 whose prefetch instructions do not support them. */
676 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PREFETCH, "prefetch", "eee", 'x')
677
678 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
679 At the top level of an instruction (perhaps under PARALLEL).
680 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
681
682 /* Assignment.
683 Operand 1 is the location (REG, MEM, PC, CC0 or whatever) assigned to.
684 Operand 2 is the value stored there.
685 ALL assignment must use SET.
686 Instructions that do multiple assignments must use multiple SET,
687 under PARALLEL. */
688 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SET, "set", "ee", 'x')
689
690 /* Indicate something is used in a way that we don't want to explain.
691 For example, subroutine calls will use the register
692 in which the static chain is passed. */
693 DEF_RTL_EXPR(USE, "use", "e", 'x')
694
695 /* Indicate something is clobbered in a way that we don't want to explain.
696 For example, subroutine calls will clobber some physical registers
697 (the ones that are by convention not saved). */
698 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CLOBBER, "clobber", "e", 'x')
699
700 /* Call a subroutine.
701 Operand 1 is the address to call.
702 Operand 2 is the number of arguments. */
703
704 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CALL, "call", "ee", 'x')
705
706 /* Return from a subroutine. */
707
708 DEF_RTL_EXPR(RETURN, "return", "", 'x')
709
710 /* Conditional trap.
711 Operand 1 is the condition.
712 Operand 2 is the trap code.
713 For an unconditional trap, make the condition (const_int 1). */
714 DEF_RTL_EXPR(TRAP_IF, "trap_if", "ee", 'x')
715
716 /* Placeholder for _Unwind_Resume before we know if a function call
717 or a branch is needed. Operand 1 is the exception region from
718 which control is flowing. */
719 DEF_RTL_EXPR(RESX, "resx", "i", 'x')
720
721 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
722 Primitive values for use in expressions.
723 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
724
725 /* numeric integer constant */
726 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_INT, "const_int", "w", 'o')
727
728 /* numeric floating point constant.
729 Operand 0 ('0') is a chain of all CONST_DOUBLEs in use in the
730 current function.
731 Remaining operands hold the actual value. They are all 'w' and
732 there may be from 1 to 4; see rtl.c. */
733 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_DOUBLE, "const_double", CONST_DOUBLE_FORMAT, 'o')
734
735 /* Describes a vector constant. */
736 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_VECTOR, "const_vector", "E", 'x')
737
738 /* String constant. Used only for attributes right now. */
739 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST_STRING, "const_string", "s", 'o')
740
741 /* This is used to encapsulate an expression whose value is constant
742 (such as the sum of a SYMBOL_REF and a CONST_INT) so that it will be
743 recognized as a constant operand rather than by arithmetic instructions. */
744
745 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONST, "const", "e", 'o')
746
747 /* program counter. Ordinary jumps are represented
748 by a SET whose first operand is (PC). */
749 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PC, "pc", "", 'o')
750
751 /* Used in the cselib routines to describe a value. */
752 DEF_RTL_EXPR(VALUE, "value", "0", 'o')
753
754 /* A register. The "operand" is the register number, accessed with
755 the REGNO macro. If this number is less than FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
756 than a hardware register is being referred to. The second operand
757 holds the original register number - this will be different for a
758 pseudo register that got turned into a hard register.
759 This rtx needs to have as many (or more) fields as a MEM, since we
760 can change REG rtx's into MEMs during reload. */
761 DEF_RTL_EXPR(REG, "reg", "i0", 'o')
762
763 /* A scratch register. This represents a register used only within a
764 single insn. It will be turned into a REG during register allocation
765 or reload unless the constraint indicates that the register won't be
766 needed, in which case it can remain a SCRATCH. This code is
767 marked as having one operand so it can be turned into a REG. */
768 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SCRATCH, "scratch", "0", 'o')
769
770 /* One word of a multi-word value.
771 The first operand is the complete value; the second says which word.
772 The WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN flag controls whether word number 0
773 (as numbered in a SUBREG) is the most or least significant word.
774
775 This is also used to refer to a value in a different machine mode.
776 For example, it can be used to refer to a SImode value as if it were
777 Qimode, or vice versa. Then the word number is always 0. */
778 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SUBREG, "subreg", "ei", 'x')
779
780 /* This one-argument rtx is used for move instructions
781 that are guaranteed to alter only the low part of a destination.
782 Thus, (SET (SUBREG:HI (REG...)) (MEM:HI ...))
783 has an unspecified effect on the high part of REG,
784 but (SET (STRICT_LOW_PART (SUBREG:HI (REG...))) (MEM:HI ...))
785 is guaranteed to alter only the bits of REG that are in HImode.
786
787 The actual instruction used is probably the same in both cases,
788 but the register constraints may be tighter when STRICT_LOW_PART
789 is in use. */
790
791 DEF_RTL_EXPR(STRICT_LOW_PART, "strict_low_part", "e", 'x')
792
793 /* (CONCAT a b) represents the virtual concatenation of a and b
794 to make a value that has as many bits as a and b put together.
795 This is used for complex values. Normally it appears only
796 in DECL_RTLs and during RTL generation, but not in the insn chain. */
797 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONCAT, "concat", "ee", 'o')
798
799 /* A memory location; operand is the address. The second operand is the
800 alias set to which this MEM belongs. We use `0' instead of `w' for this
801 field so that the field need not be specified in machine descriptions. */
802 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MEM, "mem", "e0", 'o')
803
804 /* Reference to an assembler label in the code for this function.
805 The operand is a CODE_LABEL found in the insn chain.
806 The unprinted fields 1 and 2 are used in flow.c for the
807 LABEL_NEXTREF and CONTAINING_INSN. */
808 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LABEL_REF, "label_ref", "u00", 'o')
809
810 /* Reference to a named label: the string that is the first operand,
811 with `_' added implicitly in front.
812 Exception: if the first character explicitly given is `*',
813 to give it to the assembler, remove the `*' and do not add `_'. */
814 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SYMBOL_REF, "symbol_ref", "s", 'o')
815
816 /* The condition code register is represented, in our imagination,
817 as a register holding a value that can be compared to zero.
818 In fact, the machine has already compared them and recorded the
819 results; but instructions that look at the condition code
820 pretend to be looking at the entire value and comparing it. */
821 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CC0, "cc0", "", 'o')
822
823 /* Reference to the address of a register. Removed by purge_addressof after
824 CSE has elided as many as possible.
825 1st operand: the register we may need the address of.
826 2nd operand: the original pseudo regno we were generated for.
827 3rd operand: the decl for the object in the register, for
828 put_reg_in_stack. */
829
830 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ADDRESSOF, "addressof", "eit", 'o')
831
832 /* =====================================================================
833 A QUEUED expression really points to a member of the queue of instructions
834 to be output later for postincrement/postdecrement.
835 QUEUED expressions never become part of instructions.
836 When a QUEUED expression would be put into an instruction,
837 instead either the incremented variable or a copy of its previous
838 value is used.
839
840 Operands are:
841 0. the variable to be incremented (a REG rtx).
842 1. the incrementing instruction, or 0 if it hasn't been output yet.
843 2. A REG rtx for a copy of the old value of the variable, or 0 if none yet.
844 3. the body to use for the incrementing instruction
845 4. the next QUEUED expression in the queue.
846 ====================================================================== */
847
848 DEF_RTL_EXPR(QUEUED, "queued", "eeeee", 'x')
849
850 /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
851 Expressions for operators in an rtl pattern
852 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- */
853
854 /* if_then_else. This is used in representing ordinary
855 conditional jump instructions.
856 Operand:
857 0: condition
858 1: then expr
859 2: else expr */
860 DEF_RTL_EXPR(IF_THEN_ELSE, "if_then_else", "eee", '3')
861
862 /* General conditional. The first operand is a vector composed of pairs of
863 expressions. The first element of each pair is evaluated, in turn.
864 The value of the conditional is the second expression of the first pair
865 whose first expression evaluates non-zero. If none of the expressions is
866 true, the second operand will be used as the value of the conditional.
867
868 This should be replaced with use of IF_THEN_ELSE. */
869 DEF_RTL_EXPR(COND, "cond", "Ee", 'x')
870
871 /* Comparison, produces a condition code result. */
872 DEF_RTL_EXPR(COMPARE, "compare", "ee", '2')
873
874 /* plus */
875 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PLUS, "plus", "ee", 'c')
876
877 /* Operand 0 minus operand 1. */
878 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MINUS, "minus", "ee", '2')
879
880 /* Minus operand 0. */
881 DEF_RTL_EXPR(NEG, "neg", "e", '1')
882
883 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MULT, "mult", "ee", 'c')
884
885 /* Operand 0 divided by operand 1. */
886 DEF_RTL_EXPR(DIV, "div", "ee", '2')
887 /* Remainder of operand 0 divided by operand 1. */
888 DEF_RTL_EXPR(MOD, "mod", "ee", '2')
889
890 /* Unsigned divide and remainder. */
891 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UDIV, "udiv", "ee", '2')
892 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMOD, "umod", "ee", '2')
893
894 /* Bitwise operations. */
895 DEF_RTL_EXPR(AND, "and", "ee", 'c')
896
897 DEF_RTL_EXPR(IOR, "ior", "ee", 'c')
898
899 DEF_RTL_EXPR(XOR, "xor", "ee", 'c')
900
901 DEF_RTL_EXPR(NOT, "not", "e", '1')
902
903 /* Operand:
904 0: value to be shifted.
905 1: number of bits. */
906 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASHIFT, "ashift", "ee", '2') /* shift left */
907 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ROTATE, "rotate", "ee", '2') /* rotate left */
908 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ASHIFTRT, "ashiftrt", "ee", '2') /* arithmetic shift right */
909 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LSHIFTRT, "lshiftrt", "ee", '2') /* logical shift right */
910 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ROTATERT, "rotatert", "ee", '2') /* rotate right */
911
912 /* Minimum and maximum values of two operands. We need both signed and
913 unsigned forms. (We cannot use MIN for SMIN because it conflicts
914 with a macro of the same name.) */
915
916 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SMIN, "smin", "ee", 'c')
917 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SMAX, "smax", "ee", 'c')
918 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMIN, "umin", "ee", 'c')
919 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UMAX, "umax", "ee", 'c')
920
921 /* These unary operations are used to represent incrementation
922 and decrementation as they occur in memory addresses.
923 The amount of increment or decrement are not represented
924 because they can be understood from the machine-mode of the
925 containing MEM. These operations exist in only two cases:
926 1. pushes onto the stack.
927 2. created automatically by the life_analysis pass in flow.c. */
928 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRE_DEC, "pre_dec", "e", 'a')
929 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRE_INC, "pre_inc", "e", 'a')
930 DEF_RTL_EXPR(POST_DEC, "post_dec", "e", 'a')
931 DEF_RTL_EXPR(POST_INC, "post_inc", "e", 'a')
932
933 /* These binary operations are used to represent generic address
934 side-effects in memory addresses, except for simple incrementation
935 or decrementation which use the above operations. They are
936 created automatically by the life_analysis pass in flow.c.
937 The first operand is a REG which is used as the address.
938 The second operand is an expression that is assigned to the
939 register, either before (PRE_MODIFY) or after (POST_MODIFY)
940 evaluating the address.
941 Currently, the compiler can only handle second operands of the
942 form (plus (reg) (reg)) and (plus (reg) (const_int)), where
943 the first operand of the PLUS has to be the same register as
944 the first operand of the *_MODIFY. */
945 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PRE_MODIFY, "pre_modify", "ee", 'a')
946 DEF_RTL_EXPR(POST_MODIFY, "post_modify", "ee", 'a')
947
948 /* Comparison operations. The ordered comparisons exist in two
949 flavors, signed and unsigned. */
950 DEF_RTL_EXPR(NE, "ne", "ee", '<')
951 DEF_RTL_EXPR(EQ, "eq", "ee", '<')
952 DEF_RTL_EXPR(GE, "ge", "ee", '<')
953 DEF_RTL_EXPR(GT, "gt", "ee", '<')
954 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LE, "le", "ee", '<')
955 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LT, "lt", "ee", '<')
956 DEF_RTL_EXPR(GEU, "geu", "ee", '<')
957 DEF_RTL_EXPR(GTU, "gtu", "ee", '<')
958 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LEU, "leu", "ee", '<')
959 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LTU, "ltu", "ee", '<')
960
961 /* Additional floating point unordered comparision flavors. */
962 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNORDERED, "unordered", "ee", '<')
963 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ORDERED, "ordered", "ee", '<')
964
965 /* These are equivalent to unordered or ... */
966 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNEQ, "uneq", "ee", '<')
967 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNGE, "unge", "ee", '<')
968 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNGT, "ungt", "ee", '<')
969 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNLE, "unle", "ee", '<')
970 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNLT, "unlt", "ee", '<')
971
972 /* This is an ordered NE, ie !UNEQ, ie false for NaN. */
973 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LTGT, "ltgt", "ee", '<')
974
975 /* Represents the result of sign-extending the sole operand.
976 The machine modes of the operand and of the SIGN_EXTEND expression
977 determine how much sign-extension is going on. */
978 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SIGN_EXTEND, "sign_extend", "e", '1')
979
980 /* Similar for zero-extension (such as unsigned short to int). */
981 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ZERO_EXTEND, "zero_extend", "e", '1')
982
983 /* Similar but here the operand has a wider mode. */
984 DEF_RTL_EXPR(TRUNCATE, "truncate", "e", '1')
985
986 /* Similar for extending floating-point values (such as SFmode to DFmode). */
987 DEF_RTL_EXPR(FLOAT_EXTEND, "float_extend", "e", '1')
988 DEF_RTL_EXPR(FLOAT_TRUNCATE, "float_truncate", "e", '1')
989
990 /* Conversion of fixed point operand to floating point value. */
991 DEF_RTL_EXPR(FLOAT, "float", "e", '1')
992
993 /* With fixed-point machine mode:
994 Conversion of floating point operand to fixed point value.
995 Value is defined only when the operand's value is an integer.
996 With floating-point machine mode (and operand with same mode):
997 Operand is rounded toward zero to produce an integer value
998 represented in floating point. */
999 DEF_RTL_EXPR(FIX, "fix", "e", '1')
1000
1001 /* Conversion of unsigned fixed point operand to floating point value. */
1002 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSIGNED_FLOAT, "unsigned_float", "e", '1')
1003
1004 /* With fixed-point machine mode:
1005 Conversion of floating point operand to *unsigned* fixed point value.
1006 Value is defined only when the operand's value is an integer. */
1007 DEF_RTL_EXPR(UNSIGNED_FIX, "unsigned_fix", "e", '1')
1008
1009 /* Absolute value */
1010 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ABS, "abs", "e", '1')
1011
1012 /* Square root */
1013 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SQRT, "sqrt", "e", '1')
1014
1015 /* Find first bit that is set.
1016 Value is 1 + number of trailing zeros in the arg.,
1017 or 0 if arg is 0. */
1018 DEF_RTL_EXPR(FFS, "ffs", "e", '1')
1019
1020 /* Reference to a signed bit-field of specified size and position.
1021 Operand 0 is the memory unit (usually SImode or QImode) which
1022 contains the field's first bit. Operand 1 is the width, in bits.
1023 Operand 2 is the number of bits in the memory unit before the
1024 first bit of this field.
1025 If BITS_BIG_ENDIAN is defined, the first bit is the msb and
1026 operand 2 counts from the msb of the memory unit.
1027 Otherwise, the first bit is the lsb and operand 2 counts from
1028 the lsb of the memory unit. */
1029 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SIGN_EXTRACT, "sign_extract", "eee", 'b')
1030
1031 /* Similar for unsigned bit-field. */
1032 DEF_RTL_EXPR(ZERO_EXTRACT, "zero_extract", "eee", 'b')
1033
1034 /* For RISC machines. These save memory when splitting insns. */
1035
1036 /* HIGH are the high-order bits of a constant expression. */
1037 DEF_RTL_EXPR(HIGH, "high", "e", 'o')
1038
1039 /* LO_SUM is the sum of a register and the low-order bits
1040 of a constant expression. */
1041 DEF_RTL_EXPR(LO_SUM, "lo_sum", "ee", 'o')
1042
1043 /* Header for range information. Operand 0 is the NOTE_INSN_RANGE_BEG insn.
1044 Operand 1 is the NOTE_INSN_RANGE_END insn. Operand 2 is a vector of all of
1045 the registers that can be substituted within this range. Operand 3 is the
1046 number of calls in the range. Operand 4 is the number of insns in the
1047 range. Operand 5 is the unique range number for this range. Operand 6 is
1048 the basic block # of the start of the live range. Operand 7 is the basic
1049 block # of the end of the live range. Operand 8 is the loop depth. Operand
1050 9 is a bitmap of the registers live at the start of the range. Operand 10
1051 is a bitmap of the registers live at the end of the range. Operand 11 is
1052 marker number for the start of the range. Operand 12 is the marker number
1053 for the end of the range. */
1054 DEF_RTL_EXPR(RANGE_INFO, "range_info", "uuEiiiiiibbii", 'x')
1055
1056 /* Registers that can be substituted within the range. Operand 0 is the
1057 original pseudo register number. Operand 1 will be filled in with the
1058 pseudo register the value is copied for the duration of the range. Operand
1059 2 is the number of references within the range to the register. Operand 3
1060 is the number of sets or clobbers of the register in the range. Operand 4
1061 is the number of deaths the register has. Operand 5 is the copy flags that
1062 give the status of whether a copy is needed from the original register to
1063 the new register at the beginning of the range, or whether a copy from the
1064 new register back to the original at the end of the range. Operand 6 is the
1065 live length. Operand 7 is the number of calls that this register is live
1066 across. Operand 8 is the symbol node of the variable if the register is a
1067 user variable. Operand 9 is the block node that the variable is declared
1068 in if the register is a user variable. */
1069 DEF_RTL_EXPR(RANGE_REG, "range_reg", "iiiiiiiitt", 'x')
1070
1071 /* Information about a local variable's ranges. Operand 0 is an EXPR_LIST of
1072 the different ranges a variable is in where it is copied to a different
1073 pseudo register. Operand 1 is the block that the variable is declared in.
1074 Operand 2 is the number of distinct ranges. */
1075 DEF_RTL_EXPR(RANGE_VAR, "range_var", "eti", 'x')
1076
1077 /* Information about the registers that are live at the current point. Operand
1078 0 is the live bitmap. Operand 1 is the original block number. */
1079 DEF_RTL_EXPR(RANGE_LIVE, "range_live", "bi", 'x')
1080
1081 /* A unary `__builtin_constant_p' expression. These are only emitted
1082 during RTL generation, and then only if optimize > 0. They are
1083 eliminated by the first CSE pass. */
1084 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CONSTANT_P_RTX, "constant_p_rtx", "e", 'x')
1085
1086 /* A placeholder for a CALL_INSN which may be turned into a normal call,
1087 a sibling (tail) call or tail recursion.
1088
1089 Immediately after RTL generation, this placeholder will be replaced
1090 by the insns to perform the call, sibcall or tail recursion.
1091
1092 This RTX has 4 operands. The first three are lists of instructions to
1093 perform the call as a normal call, sibling call and tail recursion
1094 respectively. The latter two lists may be NULL, the first may never
1095 be NULL.
1096
1097 The last operand is the tail recursion CODE_LABEL, which may be NULL if no
1098 potential tail recursive calls were found.
1099
1100 The tail recursion label is needed so that we can clear LABEL_PRESERVE_P
1101 after we select a call method.
1102
1103 This method of tail-call elimination is intended to be replaced by
1104 tree-based optimizations once front-end conversions are complete. */
1105 DEF_RTL_EXPR(CALL_PLACEHOLDER, "call_placeholder", "uuuu", 'x')
1106
1107 /* Describes a merge operation between two vector values.
1108 Operands 0 and 1 are the vectors to be merged, operand 2 is a bitmask
1109 that specifies where the parts of the result are taken from. Set bits
1110 indicate operand 0, clear bits indicate operand 1. The parts are defined
1111 by the mode of the vectors. */
1112 DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_MERGE, "vec_merge", "eee", 'x')
1113
1114 /* Describes an operation that selects parts of a vector.
1115 Operands 0 is the source vector, operand 1 is a PARALLEL that contains
1116 a CONST_INT for each of the subparts of the result vector, giving the
1117 number of the source subpart that should be stored into it. */
1118 DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_SELECT, "vec_select", "ee", 'x')
1119
1120 /* Describes a vector concat operation. Operands 0 and 1 are the source
1121 vectors, the result is a vector that is as long as operands 0 and 1
1122 combined and is the concatenation of the two source vectors. */
1123 DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_CONCAT, "vec_concat", "ee", 'x')
1124
1125 /* Describes an operation that converts a small vector into a larger one by
1126 duplicating the input values. The output vector mode must have the same
1127 submodes as the input vector mode, and the number of output parts must be
1128 an integer multiple of the number of input parts. */
1129 DEF_RTL_EXPR(VEC_DUPLICATE, "vec_duplicate", "e", 'x')
1130
1131 /* Addition with signed saturation */
1132 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_PLUS, "ss_plus", "ee", 'c')
1133
1134 /* Addition with unsigned saturation */
1135 DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_PLUS, "us_plus", "ee", 'c')
1136
1137 /* Operand 0 minus operand 1, with signed saturation. */
1138 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_MINUS, "ss_minus", "ee", '2')
1139
1140 /* Operand 0 minus operand 1, with unsigned saturation. */
1141 DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_MINUS, "us_minus", "ee", '2')
1142
1143 /* Signed saturating truncate. */
1144 DEF_RTL_EXPR(SS_TRUNCATE, "ss_truncate", "e", '1')
1145
1146 /* Unsigned saturating truncate. */
1147 DEF_RTL_EXPR(US_TRUNCATE, "us_truncate", "e", '1')
1148
1149 /* The SSA phi operator.
1150
1151 The argument is a vector of 2N rtxes. Element 2N+1 is a CONST_INT
1152 containing the block number of the predecessor through which control
1153 has passed when the register at element 2N is used.
1154
1155 Note that PHI may only appear at the beginning of a basic block.
1156
1157 ??? There may be multiple PHI insns, but they are all evaluated
1158 in parallel. This probably ought to be changed to use a real
1159 PARALLEL, as that would be less confusing and more in the spirit
1160 of canonical RTL. It is, however, easier to manipulate this way. */
1161 DEF_RTL_EXPR(PHI, "phi", "E", 'x')
1162
1163
1164 /*
1165 Local variables:
1166 mode:c
1167 End:
1168 */