1@c Copyright (C) 1988-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
2@c This is part of the GCC manual.
3@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
4
5@node RTL
6@chapter RTL Representation
7@cindex RTL representation
8@cindex representation of RTL
9@cindex Register Transfer Language (RTL)
10
11The last part of the compiler work is done on a low-level intermediate
12representation called Register Transfer Language.  In this language, the
13instructions to be output are described, pretty much one by one, in an
14algebraic form that describes what the instruction does.
15
16RTL is inspired by Lisp lists.  It has both an internal form, made up of
17structures that point at other structures, and a textual form that is used
18in the machine description and in printed debugging dumps.  The textual
19form uses nested parentheses to indicate the pointers in the internal form.
20
21@menu
22* RTL Objects::       Expressions vs vectors vs strings vs integers.
23* RTL Classes::       Categories of RTL expression objects, and their structure.
24* Accessors::         Macros to access expression operands or vector elts.
25* Special Accessors:: Macros to access specific annotations on RTL.
26* Flags::             Other flags in an RTL expression.
27* Machine Modes::     Describing the size and format of a datum.
28* Constants::         Expressions with constant values.
29* Regs and Memory::   Expressions representing register contents or memory.
30* Arithmetic::        Expressions representing arithmetic on other expressions.
31* Comparisons::       Expressions representing comparison of expressions.
32* Bit-Fields::        Expressions representing bit-fields in memory or reg.
33* Vector Operations:: Expressions involving vector datatypes.
34* Conversions::       Extending, truncating, floating or fixing.
35* RTL Declarations::  Declaring volatility, constancy, etc.
36* Side Effects::      Expressions for storing in registers, etc.
37* Incdec::            Embedded side-effects for autoincrement addressing.
38* Assembler::         Representing @code{asm} with operands.
39* Debug Information:: Expressions representing debugging information.
40* Insns::             Expression types for entire insns.
41* Calls::             RTL representation of function call insns.
42* Sharing::           Some expressions are unique; others *must* be copied.
43* Reading RTL::       Reading textual RTL from a file.
44@end menu
45
46@node RTL Objects
47@section RTL Object Types
48@cindex RTL object types
49
50@cindex RTL integers
51@cindex RTL strings
52@cindex RTL vectors
53@cindex RTL expression
54@cindex RTX (See RTL)
55RTL uses five kinds of objects: expressions, integers, wide integers,
56strings and vectors.  Expressions are the most important ones.  An RTL
57expression (``RTX'', for short) is a C structure, but it is usually
58referred to with a pointer; a type that is given the typedef name
59@code{rtx}.
60
61An integer is simply an @code{int}; their written form uses decimal
62digits.  A wide integer is an integral object whose type is
63@code{HOST_WIDE_INT}; their written form uses decimal digits.
64
65A string is a sequence of characters.  In core it is represented as a
66@code{char *} in usual C fashion, and it is written in C syntax as well.
67However, strings in RTL may never be null.  If you write an empty string in
68a machine description, it is represented in core as a null pointer rather
69than as a pointer to a null character.  In certain contexts, these null
70pointers instead of strings are valid.  Within RTL code, strings are most
71commonly found inside @code{symbol_ref} expressions, but they appear in
72other contexts in the RTL expressions that make up machine descriptions.
73
74In a machine description, strings are normally written with double
75quotes, as you would in C@.  However, strings in machine descriptions may
76extend over many lines, which is invalid C, and adjacent string
77constants are not concatenated as they are in C@.  Any string constant
78may be surrounded with a single set of parentheses.  Sometimes this
79makes the machine description easier to read.
80
81There is also a special syntax for strings, which can be useful when C
82code is embedded in a machine description.  Wherever a string can
83appear, it is also valid to write a C-style brace block.  The entire
84brace block, including the outermost pair of braces, is considered to be
85the string constant.  Double quote characters inside the braces are not
86special.  Therefore, if you write string constants in the C code, you
87need not escape each quote character with a backslash.
88
89A vector contains an arbitrary number of pointers to expressions.  The
90number of elements in the vector is explicitly present in the vector.
91The written form of a vector consists of square brackets
92(@samp{[@dots{}]}) surrounding the elements, in sequence and with
93whitespace separating them.  Vectors of length zero are not created;
94null pointers are used instead.
95
96@cindex expression codes
97@cindex codes, RTL expression
98@findex GET_CODE
99@findex PUT_CODE
100Expressions are classified by @dfn{expression codes} (also called RTX
101codes).  The expression code is a name defined in @file{rtl.def}, which is
102also (in uppercase) a C enumeration constant.  The possible expression
103codes and their meanings are machine-independent.  The code of an RTX can
104be extracted with the macro @code{GET_CODE (@var{x})} and altered with
105@code{PUT_CODE (@var{x}, @var{newcode})}.
106
107The expression code determines how many operands the expression contains,
108and what kinds of objects they are.  In RTL, unlike Lisp, you cannot tell
109by looking at an operand what kind of object it is.  Instead, you must know
110from its context---from the expression code of the containing expression.
111For example, in an expression of code @code{subreg}, the first operand is
112to be regarded as an expression and the second operand as an integer.  In
113an expression of code @code{plus}, there are two operands, both of which
114are to be regarded as expressions.  In a @code{symbol_ref} expression,
115there is one operand, which is to be regarded as a string.
116
117Expressions are written as parentheses containing the name of the
118expression type, its flags and machine mode if any, and then the operands
119of the expression (separated by spaces).
120
121Expression code names in the @samp{md} file are written in lowercase,
122but when they appear in C code they are written in uppercase.  In this
123manual, they are shown as follows: @code{const_int}.
124
125@cindex (nil)
126@cindex nil
127In a few contexts a null pointer is valid where an expression is normally
128wanted.  The written form of this is @code{(nil)}.
129
130@node RTL Classes
131@section RTL Classes and Formats
132@cindex RTL classes
133@cindex classes of RTX codes
134@cindex RTX codes, classes of
135@findex GET_RTX_CLASS
136
137The various expression codes are divided into several @dfn{classes},
138which are represented by single characters.  You can determine the class
139of an RTX code with the macro @code{GET_RTX_CLASS (@var{code})}.
140Currently, @file{rtl.def} defines these classes:
141
142@table @code
143@item RTX_OBJ
144An RTX code that represents an actual object, such as a register
145(@code{REG}) or a memory location (@code{MEM}, @code{SYMBOL_REF}).
146@code{LO_SUM}) is also included; instead, @code{SUBREG} and
147@code{STRICT_LOW_PART} are not in this class, but in class @code{x}.
148
149@item RTX_CONST_OBJ
150An RTX code that represents a constant object.  @code{HIGH} is also
151included in this class.
152
153@item RTX_COMPARE
154An RTX code for a non-symmetric comparison, such as @code{GEU} or
155@code{LT}.
156
157@item RTX_COMM_COMPARE
158An RTX code for a symmetric (commutative) comparison, such as @code{EQ}
159or @code{ORDERED}.
160
161@item RTX_UNARY
162An RTX code for a unary arithmetic operation, such as @code{NEG},
163@code{NOT}, or @code{ABS}.  This category also includes value extension
164(sign or zero) and conversions between integer and floating point.
165
166@item RTX_COMM_ARITH
167An RTX code for a commutative binary operation, such as @code{PLUS} or
168@code{AND}.  @code{NE} and @code{EQ} are comparisons, so they have class
169@code{<}.
170
171@item RTX_BIN_ARITH
172An RTX code for a non-commutative binary operation, such as @code{MINUS},
173@code{DIV}, or @code{ASHIFTRT}.
174
175@item RTX_BITFIELD_OPS
176An RTX code for a bit-field operation.  Currently only
177@code{ZERO_EXTRACT} and @code{SIGN_EXTRACT}.  These have three inputs
178and are lvalues (so they can be used for insertion as well).
179@xref{Bit-Fields}.
180
181@item RTX_TERNARY
182An RTX code for other three input operations.  Currently only
183@code{IF_THEN_ELSE},  @code{VEC_MERGE}, @code{SIGN_EXTRACT},
184@code{ZERO_EXTRACT}, and @code{FMA}.
185
186@item RTX_INSN
187An RTX code for an entire instruction:  @code{INSN}, @code{JUMP_INSN}, and
188@code{CALL_INSN}.  @xref{Insns}.
189
190@item RTX_MATCH
191An RTX code for something that matches in insns, such as
192@code{MATCH_DUP}.  These only occur in machine descriptions.
193
194@item RTX_AUTOINC
195An RTX code for an auto-increment addressing mode, such as
196@code{POST_INC}.  @samp{XEXP (@var{x}, 0)} gives the auto-modified
197register.
198
199@item RTX_EXTRA
200All other RTX codes.  This category includes the remaining codes used
201only in machine descriptions (@code{DEFINE_*}, etc.).  It also includes
202all the codes describing side effects (@code{SET}, @code{USE},
203@code{CLOBBER}, etc.) and the non-insns that may appear on an insn
204chain, such as @code{NOTE}, @code{BARRIER}, and @code{CODE_LABEL}.
205@code{SUBREG} is also part of this class.
206@end table
207
208@cindex RTL format
209For each expression code, @file{rtl.def} specifies the number of
210contained objects and their kinds using a sequence of characters
211called the @dfn{format} of the expression code.  For example,
212the format of @code{subreg} is @samp{ei}.
213
214@cindex RTL format characters
215These are the most commonly used format characters:
216
217@table @code
218@item e
219An expression (actually a pointer to an expression).
220
221@item i
222An integer.
223
224@item w
225A wide integer.
226
227@item s
228A string.
229
230@item E
231A vector of expressions.
232@end table
233
234A few other format characters are used occasionally:
235
236@table @code
237@item u
238@samp{u} is equivalent to @samp{e} except that it is printed differently
239in debugging dumps.  It is used for pointers to insns.
240
241@item n
242@samp{n} is equivalent to @samp{i} except that it is printed differently
243in debugging dumps.  It is used for the line number or code number of a
244@code{note} insn.
245
246@item S
247@samp{S} indicates a string which is optional.  In the RTL objects in
248core, @samp{S} is equivalent to @samp{s}, but when the object is read,
249from an @samp{md} file, the string value of this operand may be omitted.
250An omitted string is taken to be the null string.
251
252@item V
253@samp{V} indicates a vector which is optional.  In the RTL objects in
254core, @samp{V} is equivalent to @samp{E}, but when the object is read
255from an @samp{md} file, the vector value of this operand may be omitted.
256An omitted vector is effectively the same as a vector of no elements.
257
258@item B
259@samp{B} indicates a pointer to basic block structure.
260
261@item 0
262@samp{0} means a slot whose contents do not fit any normal category.
263@samp{0} slots are not printed at all in dumps, and are often used in
264special ways by small parts of the compiler.
265@end table
266
267There are macros to get the number of operands and the format
268of an expression code:
269
270@table @code
271@findex GET_RTX_LENGTH
272@item GET_RTX_LENGTH (@var{code})
273Number of operands of an RTX of code @var{code}.
274
275@findex GET_RTX_FORMAT
276@item GET_RTX_FORMAT (@var{code})
277The format of an RTX of code @var{code}, as a C string.
278@end table
279
280Some classes of RTX codes always have the same format.  For example, it
281is safe to assume that all comparison operations have format @code{ee}.
282
283@table @code
284@item 1
285All codes of this class have format @code{e}.
286
287@item <
288@itemx c
289@itemx 2
290All codes of these classes have format @code{ee}.
291
292@item b
293@itemx 3
294All codes of these classes have format @code{eee}.
295
296@item i
297All codes of this class have formats that begin with @code{iuueiee}.
298@xref{Insns}.  Note that not all RTL objects linked onto an insn chain
299are of class @code{i}.
300
301@item o
302@itemx m
303@itemx x
304You can make no assumptions about the format of these codes.
305@end table
306
307@node Accessors
308@section Access to Operands
309@cindex accessors
310@cindex access to operands
311@cindex operand access
312
313@findex XEXP
314@findex XINT
315@findex XWINT
316@findex XSTR
317Operands of expressions are accessed using the macros @code{XEXP},
318@code{XINT}, @code{XWINT} and @code{XSTR}.  Each of these macros takes
319two arguments: an expression-pointer (RTX) and an operand number
320(counting from zero).  Thus,
321
322@smallexample
323XEXP (@var{x}, 2)
324@end smallexample
325
326@noindent
327accesses operand 2 of expression @var{x}, as an expression.
328
329@smallexample
330XINT (@var{x}, 2)
331@end smallexample
332
333@noindent
334accesses the same operand as an integer.  @code{XSTR}, used in the same
335fashion, would access it as a string.
336
337Any operand can be accessed as an integer, as an expression or as a string.
338You must choose the correct method of access for the kind of value actually
339stored in the operand.  You would do this based on the expression code of
340the containing expression.  That is also how you would know how many
341operands there are.
342
343For example, if @var{x} is a @code{subreg} expression, you know that it has
344two operands which can be correctly accessed as @code{XEXP (@var{x}, 0)}
345and @code{XINT (@var{x}, 1)}.  If you did @code{XINT (@var{x}, 0)}, you
346would get the address of the expression operand but cast as an integer;
347that might occasionally be useful, but it would be cleaner to write
348@code{(int) XEXP (@var{x}, 0)}.  @code{XEXP (@var{x}, 1)} would also
349compile without error, and would return the second, integer operand cast as
350an expression pointer, which would probably result in a crash when
351accessed.  Nothing stops you from writing @code{XEXP (@var{x}, 28)} either,
352but this will access memory past the end of the expression with
353unpredictable results.
354
355Access to operands which are vectors is more complicated.  You can use the
356macro @code{XVEC} to get the vector-pointer itself, or the macros
357@code{XVECEXP} and @code{XVECLEN} to access the elements and length of a
358vector.
359
360@table @code
361@findex XVEC
362@item XVEC (@var{exp}, @var{idx})
363Access the vector-pointer which is operand number @var{idx} in @var{exp}.
364
365@findex XVECLEN
366@item XVECLEN (@var{exp}, @var{idx})
367Access the length (number of elements) in the vector which is
368in operand number @var{idx} in @var{exp}.  This value is an @code{int}.
369
370@findex XVECEXP
371@item XVECEXP (@var{exp}, @var{idx}, @var{eltnum})
372Access element number @var{eltnum} in the vector which is
373in operand number @var{idx} in @var{exp}.  This value is an RTX@.
374
375It is up to you to make sure that @var{eltnum} is not negative
376and is less than @code{XVECLEN (@var{exp}, @var{idx})}.
377@end table
378
379All the macros defined in this section expand into lvalues and therefore
380can be used to assign the operands, lengths and vector elements as well as
381to access them.
382
383@node Special Accessors
384@section Access to Special Operands
385@cindex access to special operands
386
387Some RTL nodes have special annotations associated with them.
388
389@table @code
390@item MEM
391@table @code
392@findex MEM_ALIAS_SET
393@item MEM_ALIAS_SET (@var{x})
394If 0, @var{x} is not in any alias set, and may alias anything.  Otherwise,
395@var{x} can only alias @code{MEM}s in a conflicting alias set.  This value
396is set in a language-dependent manner in the front-end, and should not be
397altered in the back-end.  In some front-ends, these numbers may correspond
398in some way to types, or other language-level entities, but they need not,
399and the back-end makes no such assumptions.
400These set numbers are tested with @code{alias_sets_conflict_p}.
401
402@findex MEM_EXPR
403@item MEM_EXPR (@var{x})
404If this register is known to hold the value of some user-level
405declaration, this is that tree node.  It may also be a
406@code{COMPONENT_REF}, in which case this is some field reference,
407and @code{TREE_OPERAND (@var{x}, 0)} contains the declaration,
408or another @code{COMPONENT_REF}, or null if there is no compile-time
409object associated with the reference.
410
411@findex MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P
412@item MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (@var{x})
413True if the offset of the memory reference from @code{MEM_EXPR} is known.
414@samp{MEM_OFFSET (@var{x})} provides the offset if so.
415
416@findex MEM_OFFSET
417@item MEM_OFFSET (@var{x})
418The offset from the start of @code{MEM_EXPR}.  The value is only valid if
419@samp{MEM_OFFSET_KNOWN_P (@var{x})} is true.
420
421@findex MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P
422@item MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (@var{x})
423True if the size of the memory reference is known.
424@samp{MEM_SIZE (@var{x})} provides its size if so.
425
426@findex MEM_SIZE
427@item MEM_SIZE (@var{x})
428The size in bytes of the memory reference.
429This is mostly relevant for @code{BLKmode} references as otherwise
430the size is implied by the mode.  The value is only valid if
431@samp{MEM_SIZE_KNOWN_P (@var{x})} is true.
432
433@findex MEM_ALIGN
434@item MEM_ALIGN (@var{x})
435The known alignment in bits of the memory reference.
436
437@findex MEM_ADDR_SPACE
438@item MEM_ADDR_SPACE (@var{x})
439The address space of the memory reference.  This will commonly be zero
440for the generic address space.
441@end table
442
443@item REG
444@table @code
445@findex ORIGINAL_REGNO
446@item ORIGINAL_REGNO (@var{x})
447This field holds the number the register ``originally'' had; for a
448pseudo register turned into a hard reg this will hold the old pseudo
449register number.
450
451@findex REG_EXPR
452@item REG_EXPR (@var{x})
453If this register is known to hold the value of some user-level
454declaration, this is that tree node.
455
456@findex REG_OFFSET
457@item REG_OFFSET (@var{x})
458If this register is known to hold the value of some user-level
459declaration, this is the offset into that logical storage.
460@end table
461
462@item SYMBOL_REF
463@table @code
464@findex SYMBOL_REF_DECL
465@item SYMBOL_REF_DECL (@var{x})
466If the @code{symbol_ref} @var{x} was created for a @code{VAR_DECL} or
467a @code{FUNCTION_DECL}, that tree is recorded here.  If this value is
468null, then @var{x} was created by back end code generation routines,
469and there is no associated front end symbol table entry.
470
471@code{SYMBOL_REF_DECL} may also point to a tree of class @code{'c'},
472that is, some sort of constant.  In this case, the @code{symbol_ref}
473is an entry in the per-file constant pool; again, there is no associated
474front end symbol table entry.
475
476@findex SYMBOL_REF_CONSTANT
477@item SYMBOL_REF_CONSTANT (@var{x})
478If @samp{CONSTANT_POOL_ADDRESS_P (@var{x})} is true, this is the constant
479pool entry for @var{x}.  It is null otherwise.
480
481@findex SYMBOL_REF_DATA
482@item SYMBOL_REF_DATA (@var{x})
483A field of opaque type used to store @code{SYMBOL_REF_DECL} or
484@code{SYMBOL_REF_CONSTANT}.
485
486@findex SYMBOL_REF_FLAGS
487@item SYMBOL_REF_FLAGS (@var{x})
488In a @code{symbol_ref}, this is used to communicate various predicates
489about the symbol.  Some of these are common enough to be computed by
490common code, some are specific to the target.  The common bits are:
491
492@table @code
493@findex SYMBOL_REF_FUNCTION_P
494@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_FUNCTION
495@item SYMBOL_FLAG_FUNCTION
496Set if the symbol refers to a function.
497
498@findex SYMBOL_REF_LOCAL_P
499@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_LOCAL
500@item SYMBOL_FLAG_LOCAL
501Set if the symbol is local to this ``module''.
502See @code{TARGET_BINDS_LOCAL_P}.
503
504@findex SYMBOL_REF_EXTERNAL_P
505@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_EXTERNAL
506@item SYMBOL_FLAG_EXTERNAL
507Set if this symbol is not defined in this translation unit.
508Note that this is not the inverse of @code{SYMBOL_FLAG_LOCAL}.
509
510@findex SYMBOL_REF_SMALL_P
511@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_SMALL
512@item SYMBOL_FLAG_SMALL
513Set if the symbol is located in the small data section.
514See @code{TARGET_IN_SMALL_DATA_P}.
515
516@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_TLS_SHIFT
517@findex SYMBOL_REF_TLS_MODEL
518@item SYMBOL_REF_TLS_MODEL (@var{x})
519This is a multi-bit field accessor that returns the @code{tls_model}
520to be used for a thread-local storage symbol.  It returns zero for
521non-thread-local symbols.
522
523@findex SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P
524@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_HAS_BLOCK_INFO
525@item SYMBOL_FLAG_HAS_BLOCK_INFO
526Set if the symbol has @code{SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK} and
527@code{SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK_OFFSET} fields.
528
529@findex SYMBOL_REF_ANCHOR_P
530@findex SYMBOL_FLAG_ANCHOR
531@cindex @option{-fsection-anchors}
532@item SYMBOL_FLAG_ANCHOR
533Set if the symbol is used as a section anchor.  ``Section anchors''
534are symbols that have a known position within an @code{object_block}
535and that can be used to access nearby members of that block.
536They are used to implement @option{-fsection-anchors}.
537
538If this flag is set, then @code{SYMBOL_FLAG_HAS_BLOCK_INFO} will be too.
539@end table
540
541Bits beginning with @code{SYMBOL_FLAG_MACH_DEP} are available for
542the target's use.
543@end table
544
545@findex SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK
546@item SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK (@var{x})
547If @samp{SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P (@var{x})}, this is the
548@samp{object_block} structure to which the symbol belongs,
549or @code{NULL} if it has not been assigned a block.
550
551@findex SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK_OFFSET
552@item SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK_OFFSET (@var{x})
553If @samp{SYMBOL_REF_HAS_BLOCK_INFO_P (@var{x})}, this is the offset of @var{x}
554from the first object in @samp{SYMBOL_REF_BLOCK (@var{x})}.  The value is
555negative if @var{x} has not yet been assigned to a block, or it has not
556been given an offset within that block.
557@end table
558
559@node Flags
560@section Flags in an RTL Expression
561@cindex flags in RTL expression
562
563RTL expressions contain several flags (one-bit bit-fields)
564that are used in certain types of expression.  Most often they
565are accessed with the following macros, which expand into lvalues.
566
567@table @code
568@findex CONSTANT_POOL_ADDRESS_P
569@cindex @code{symbol_ref} and @samp{/u}
570@cindex @code{unchanging}, in @code{symbol_ref}
571@item CONSTANT_POOL_ADDRESS_P (@var{x})
572Nonzero in a @code{symbol_ref} if it refers to part of the current
573function's constant pool.  For most targets these addresses are in a
574@code{.rodata} section entirely separate from the function, but for
575some targets the addresses are close to the beginning of the function.
576In either case GCC assumes these addresses can be addressed directly,
577perhaps with the help of base registers.
578Stored in the @code{unchanging} field and printed as @samp{/u}.
579
580@findex RTL_CONST_CALL_P
581@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/u}
582@cindex @code{unchanging}, in @code{call_insn}
583@item RTL_CONST_CALL_P (@var{x})
584In a @code{call_insn} indicates that the insn represents a call to a
585const function.  Stored in the @code{unchanging} field and printed as
586@samp{/u}.
587
588@findex RTL_PURE_CALL_P
589@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/i}
590@cindex @code{return_val}, in @code{call_insn}
591@item RTL_PURE_CALL_P (@var{x})
592In a @code{call_insn} indicates that the insn represents a call to a
593pure function.  Stored in the @code{return_val} field and printed as
594@samp{/i}.
595
596@findex RTL_CONST_OR_PURE_CALL_P
597@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/u} or @samp{/i}
598@item RTL_CONST_OR_PURE_CALL_P (@var{x})
599In a @code{call_insn}, true if @code{RTL_CONST_CALL_P} or
600@code{RTL_PURE_CALL_P} is true.
601
602@findex RTL_LOOPING_CONST_OR_PURE_CALL_P
603@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/c}
604@cindex @code{call}, in @code{call_insn}
605@item RTL_LOOPING_CONST_OR_PURE_CALL_P (@var{x})
606In a @code{call_insn} indicates that the insn represents a possibly
607infinite looping call to a const or pure function.  Stored in the
608@code{call} field and printed as @samp{/c}.  Only true if one of
609@code{RTL_CONST_CALL_P} or @code{RTL_PURE_CALL_P} is true.
610
611@findex INSN_ANNULLED_BRANCH_P
612@cindex @code{jump_insn} and @samp{/u}
613@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/u}
614@cindex @code{insn} and @samp{/u}
615@cindex @code{unchanging}, in @code{jump_insn}, @code{call_insn} and @code{insn}
616@item INSN_ANNULLED_BRANCH_P (@var{x})
617In a @code{jump_insn}, @code{call_insn}, or @code{insn} indicates
618that the branch is an annulling one.  See the discussion under
619@code{sequence} below.  Stored in the @code{unchanging} field and
620printed as @samp{/u}.
621
622@findex INSN_DELETED_P
623@cindex @code{insn} and @samp{/v}
624@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/v}
625@cindex @code{jump_insn} and @samp{/v}
626@cindex @code{code_label} and @samp{/v}
627@cindex @code{jump_table_data} and @samp{/v}
628@cindex @code{barrier} and @samp{/v}
629@cindex @code{note} and @samp{/v}
630@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{insn}, @code{call_insn}, @code{jump_insn}, @code{code_label}, @code{jump_table_data}, @code{barrier}, and @code{note}
631@item INSN_DELETED_P (@var{x})
632In an @code{insn}, @code{call_insn}, @code{jump_insn}, @code{code_label},
633@code{jump_table_data}, @code{barrier}, or @code{note},
634nonzero if the insn has been deleted.  Stored in the
635@code{volatil} field and printed as @samp{/v}.
636
637@findex INSN_FROM_TARGET_P
638@cindex @code{insn} and @samp{/s}
639@cindex @code{jump_insn} and @samp{/s}
640@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/s}
641@cindex @code{in_struct}, in @code{insn} and @code{jump_insn} and @code{call_insn}
642@item INSN_FROM_TARGET_P (@var{x})
643In an @code{insn} or @code{jump_insn} or @code{call_insn} in a delay
644slot of a branch, indicates that the insn
645is from the target of the branch.  If the branch insn has
646@code{INSN_ANNULLED_BRANCH_P} set, this insn will only be executed if
647the branch is taken.  For annulled branches with
648@code{INSN_FROM_TARGET_P} clear, the insn will be executed only if the
649branch is not taken.  When @code{INSN_ANNULLED_BRANCH_P} is not set,
650this insn will always be executed.  Stored in the @code{in_struct}
651field and printed as @samp{/s}.
652
653@findex LABEL_PRESERVE_P
654@cindex @code{code_label} and @samp{/i}
655@cindex @code{note} and @samp{/i}
656@cindex @code{in_struct}, in @code{code_label} and @code{note}
657@item LABEL_PRESERVE_P (@var{x})
658In a @code{code_label} or @code{note}, indicates that the label is referenced by
659code or data not visible to the RTL of a given function.
660Labels referenced by a non-local goto will have this bit set.  Stored
661in the @code{in_struct} field and printed as @samp{/s}.
662
663@findex LABEL_REF_NONLOCAL_P
664@cindex @code{label_ref} and @samp{/v}
665@cindex @code{reg_label} and @samp{/v}
666@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{label_ref} and @code{reg_label}
667@item LABEL_REF_NONLOCAL_P (@var{x})
668In @code{label_ref} and @code{reg_label} expressions, nonzero if this is
669a reference to a non-local label.
670Stored in the @code{volatil} field and printed as @samp{/v}.
671
672@findex MEM_KEEP_ALIAS_SET_P
673@cindex @code{mem} and @samp{/j}
674@cindex @code{jump}, in @code{mem}
675@item MEM_KEEP_ALIAS_SET_P (@var{x})
676In @code{mem} expressions, 1 if we should keep the alias set for this
677mem unchanged when we access a component.  Set to 1, for example, when we
678are already in a non-addressable component of an aggregate.
679Stored in the @code{jump} field and printed as @samp{/j}.
680
681@findex MEM_VOLATILE_P
682@cindex @code{mem} and @samp{/v}
683@cindex @code{asm_input} and @samp{/v}
684@cindex @code{asm_operands} and @samp{/v}
685@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{mem}, @code{asm_operands}, and @code{asm_input}
686@item MEM_VOLATILE_P (@var{x})
687In @code{mem}, @code{asm_operands}, and @code{asm_input} expressions,
688nonzero for volatile memory references.
689Stored in the @code{volatil} field and printed as @samp{/v}.
690
691@findex MEM_NOTRAP_P
692@cindex @code{mem} and @samp{/c}
693@cindex @code{call}, in @code{mem}
694@item MEM_NOTRAP_P (@var{x})
695In @code{mem}, nonzero for memory references that will not trap.
696Stored in the @code{call} field and printed as @samp{/c}.
697
698@findex MEM_POINTER
699@cindex @code{mem} and @samp{/f}
700@cindex @code{frame_related}, in @code{mem}
701@item MEM_POINTER (@var{x})
702Nonzero in a @code{mem} if the memory reference holds a pointer.
703Stored in the @code{frame_related} field and printed as @samp{/f}.
704
705@findex REG_FUNCTION_VALUE_P
706@cindex @code{reg} and @samp{/i}
707@cindex @code{return_val}, in @code{reg}
708@item REG_FUNCTION_VALUE_P (@var{x})
709Nonzero in a @code{reg} if it is the place in which this function's
710value is going to be returned.  (This happens only in a hard
711register.)  Stored in the @code{return_val} field and printed as
712@samp{/i}.
713
714@findex REG_POINTER
715@cindex @code{reg} and @samp{/f}
716@cindex @code{frame_related}, in @code{reg}
717@item REG_POINTER (@var{x})
718Nonzero in a @code{reg} if the register holds a pointer.  Stored in the
719@code{frame_related} field and printed as @samp{/f}.
720
721@findex REG_USERVAR_P
722@cindex @code{reg} and @samp{/v}
723@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{reg}
724@item REG_USERVAR_P (@var{x})
725In a @code{reg}, nonzero if it corresponds to a variable present in
726the user's source code.  Zero for temporaries generated internally by
727the compiler.  Stored in the @code{volatil} field and printed as
728@samp{/v}.
729
730The same hard register may be used also for collecting the values of
731functions called by this one, but @code{REG_FUNCTION_VALUE_P} is zero
732in this kind of use.
733
734@findex RTX_FRAME_RELATED_P
735@cindex @code{insn} and @samp{/f}
736@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/f}
737@cindex @code{jump_insn} and @samp{/f}
738@cindex @code{barrier} and @samp{/f}
739@cindex @code{set} and @samp{/f}
740@cindex @code{frame_related}, in @code{insn}, @code{call_insn}, @code{jump_insn}, @code{barrier}, and @code{set}
741@item RTX_FRAME_RELATED_P (@var{x})
742Nonzero in an @code{insn}, @code{call_insn}, @code{jump_insn},
743@code{barrier}, or @code{set} which is part of a function prologue
744and sets the stack pointer, sets the frame pointer, or saves a register.
745This flag should also be set on an instruction that sets up a temporary
746register to use in place of the frame pointer.
747Stored in the @code{frame_related} field and printed as @samp{/f}.
748
749In particular, on RISC targets where there are limits on the sizes of
750immediate constants, it is sometimes impossible to reach the register
751save area directly from the stack pointer.  In that case, a temporary
752register is used that is near enough to the register save area, and the
753Canonical Frame Address, i.e., DWARF2's logical frame pointer, register
754must (temporarily) be changed to be this temporary register.  So, the
755instruction that sets this temporary register must be marked as
756@code{RTX_FRAME_RELATED_P}.
757
758If the marked instruction is overly complex (defined in terms of what
759@code{dwarf2out_frame_debug_expr} can handle), you will also have to
760create a @code{REG_FRAME_RELATED_EXPR} note and attach it to the
761instruction.  This note should contain a simple expression of the
762computation performed by this instruction, i.e., one that
763@code{dwarf2out_frame_debug_expr} can handle.
764
765This flag is required for exception handling support on targets with RTL
766prologues.
767
768@findex MEM_READONLY_P
769@cindex @code{mem} and @samp{/u}
770@cindex @code{unchanging}, in @code{mem}
771@item MEM_READONLY_P (@var{x})
772Nonzero in a @code{mem}, if the memory is statically allocated and read-only.
773
774Read-only in this context means never modified during the lifetime of the
775program, not necessarily in ROM or in write-disabled pages.  A common
776example of the later is a shared library's global offset table.  This
777table is initialized by the runtime loader, so the memory is technically
778writable, but after control is transferred from the runtime loader to the
779application, this memory will never be subsequently modified.
780
781Stored in the @code{unchanging} field and printed as @samp{/u}.
782
783@findex SCHED_GROUP_P
784@cindex @code{insn} and @samp{/s}
785@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/s}
786@cindex @code{jump_insn} and @samp{/s}
787@cindex @code{jump_table_data} and @samp{/s}
788@cindex @code{in_struct}, in @code{insn}, @code{call_insn}, @code{jump_insn} and @code{jump_table_data}
789@item SCHED_GROUP_P (@var{x})
790During instruction scheduling, in an @code{insn}, @code{call_insn},
791@code{jump_insn} or @code{jump_table_data}, indicates that the
792previous insn must be scheduled together with this insn.  This is used to
793ensure that certain groups of instructions will not be split up by the
794instruction scheduling pass, for example, @code{use} insns before
795a @code{call_insn} may not be separated from the @code{call_insn}.
796Stored in the @code{in_struct} field and printed as @samp{/s}.
797
798@findex SET_IS_RETURN_P
799@cindex @code{insn} and @samp{/j}
800@cindex @code{jump}, in @code{insn}
801@item SET_IS_RETURN_P (@var{x})
802For a @code{set}, nonzero if it is for a return.
803Stored in the @code{jump} field and printed as @samp{/j}.
804
805@findex SIBLING_CALL_P
806@cindex @code{call_insn} and @samp{/j}
807@cindex @code{jump}, in @code{call_insn}
808@item SIBLING_CALL_P (@var{x})
809For a @code{call_insn}, nonzero if the insn is a sibling call.
810Stored in the @code{jump} field and printed as @samp{/j}.
811
812@findex STRING_POOL_ADDRESS_P
813@cindex @code{symbol_ref} and @samp{/f}
814@cindex @code{frame_related}, in @code{symbol_ref}
815@item STRING_POOL_ADDRESS_P (@var{x})
816For a @code{symbol_ref} expression, nonzero if it addresses this function's
817string constant pool.
818Stored in the @code{frame_related} field and printed as @samp{/f}.
819
820@findex SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_P
821@cindex @code{subreg} and @samp{/u} and @samp{/v}
822@cindex @code{unchanging}, in @code{subreg}
823@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{subreg}
824@item SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_P (@var{x})
825Returns a value greater then zero for a @code{subreg} that has
826@code{SUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_P} nonzero if the object being referenced is kept
827zero-extended, zero if it is kept sign-extended, and less then zero if it is
828extended some other way via the @code{ptr_extend} instruction.
829Stored in the @code{unchanging}
830field and @code{volatil} field, printed as @samp{/u} and @samp{/v}.
831This macro may only be used to get the value it may not be used to change
832the value.  Use @code{SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_SET} to change the value.
833
834@findex SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_SET
835@cindex @code{subreg} and @samp{/u}
836@cindex @code{unchanging}, in @code{subreg}
837@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{subreg}
838@item SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_SET (@var{x})
839Set the @code{unchanging} and @code{volatil} fields in a @code{subreg}
840to reflect zero, sign, or other extension.  If @code{volatil} is
841zero, then @code{unchanging} as nonzero means zero extension and as
842zero means sign extension.  If @code{volatil} is nonzero then some
843other type of extension was done via the @code{ptr_extend} instruction.
844
845@findex SUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_P
846@cindex @code{subreg} and @samp{/s}
847@cindex @code{in_struct}, in @code{subreg}
848@item SUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_P (@var{x})
849Nonzero in a @code{subreg} if it was made when accessing an object that
850was promoted to a wider mode in accord with the @code{PROMOTED_MODE} machine
851description macro (@pxref{Storage Layout}).  In this case, the mode of
852the @code{subreg} is the declared mode of the object and the mode of
853@code{SUBREG_REG} is the mode of the register that holds the object.
854Promoted variables are always either sign- or zero-extended to the wider
855mode on every assignment.  Stored in the @code{in_struct} field and
856printed as @samp{/s}.
857
858@findex SYMBOL_REF_USED
859@cindex @code{used}, in @code{symbol_ref}
860@item SYMBOL_REF_USED (@var{x})
861In a @code{symbol_ref}, indicates that @var{x} has been used.  This is
862normally only used to ensure that @var{x} is only declared external
863once.  Stored in the @code{used} field.
864
865@findex SYMBOL_REF_WEAK
866@cindex @code{symbol_ref} and @samp{/i}
867@cindex @code{return_val}, in @code{symbol_ref}
868@item SYMBOL_REF_WEAK (@var{x})
869In a @code{symbol_ref}, indicates that @var{x} has been declared weak.
870Stored in the @code{return_val} field and printed as @samp{/i}.
871
872@findex SYMBOL_REF_FLAG
873@cindex @code{symbol_ref} and @samp{/v}
874@cindex @code{volatil}, in @code{symbol_ref}
875@item SYMBOL_REF_FLAG (@var{x})
876In a @code{symbol_ref}, this is used as a flag for machine-specific purposes.
877Stored in the @code{volatil} field and printed as @samp{/v}.
878
879Most uses of @code{SYMBOL_REF_FLAG} are historic and may be subsumed
880by @code{SYMBOL_REF_FLAGS}.  Certainly use of @code{SYMBOL_REF_FLAGS}
881is mandatory if the target requires more than one bit of storage.
882
883@findex PREFETCH_SCHEDULE_BARRIER_P
884@cindex @code{prefetch} and @samp{/v}
885@cindex @code{volatile}, in @code{prefetch}
886@item PREFETCH_SCHEDULE_BARRIER_P (@var{x})
887In a @code{prefetch}, indicates that the prefetch is a scheduling barrier.
888No other INSNs will be moved over it.
889Stored in the @code{volatil} field and printed as @samp{/v}.
890@end table
891
892These are the fields to which the above macros refer:
893
894@table @code
895@findex call
896@cindex @samp{/c} in RTL dump
897@item call
898In a @code{mem}, 1 means that the memory reference will not trap.
899
900In a @code{call}, 1 means that this pure or const call may possibly
901infinite loop.
902
903In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/c}.
904
905@findex frame_related
906@cindex @samp{/f} in RTL dump
907@item frame_related
908In an @code{insn} or @code{set} expression, 1 means that it is part of
909a function prologue and sets the stack pointer, sets the frame pointer,
910saves a register, or sets up a temporary register to use in place of the
911frame pointer.
912
913In @code{reg} expressions, 1 means that the register holds a pointer.
914
915In @code{mem} expressions, 1 means that the memory reference holds a pointer.
916
917In @code{symbol_ref} expressions, 1 means that the reference addresses
918this function's string constant pool.
919
920In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/f}.
921
922@findex in_struct
923@cindex @samp{/s} in RTL dump
924@item in_struct
925In @code{reg} expressions, it is 1 if the register has its entire life
926contained within the test expression of some loop.
927
928In @code{subreg} expressions, 1 means that the @code{subreg} is accessing
929an object that has had its mode promoted from a wider mode.
930
931In @code{label_ref} expressions, 1 means that the referenced label is
932outside the innermost loop containing the insn in which the @code{label_ref}
933was found.
934
935In @code{code_label} expressions, it is 1 if the label may never be deleted.
936This is used for labels which are the target of non-local gotos.  Such a
937label that would have been deleted is replaced with a @code{note} of type
938@code{NOTE_INSN_DELETED_LABEL}.
939
940In an @code{insn} during dead-code elimination, 1 means that the insn is
941dead code.
942
943In an @code{insn} or @code{jump_insn} during reorg for an insn in the
944delay slot of a branch,
9451 means that this insn is from the target of the branch.
946
947In an @code{insn} during instruction scheduling, 1 means that this insn
948must be scheduled as part of a group together with the previous insn.
949
950In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/s}.
951
952@findex return_val
953@cindex @samp{/i} in RTL dump
954@item return_val
955In @code{reg} expressions, 1 means the register contains
956the value to be returned by the current function.  On
957machines that pass parameters in registers, the same register number
958may be used for parameters as well, but this flag is not set on such
959uses.
960
961In @code{symbol_ref} expressions, 1 means the referenced symbol is weak.
962
963In @code{call} expressions, 1 means the call is pure.
964
965In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/i}.
966
967@findex jump
968@cindex @samp{/j} in RTL dump
969@item jump
970In a @code{mem} expression, 1 means we should keep the alias set for this
971mem unchanged when we access a component.
972
973In a @code{set}, 1 means it is for a return.
974
975In a @code{call_insn}, 1 means it is a sibling call.
976
977In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/j}.
978
979@findex unchanging
980@cindex @samp{/u} in RTL dump
981@item unchanging
982In @code{reg} and @code{mem} expressions, 1 means
983that the value of the expression never changes.
984
985In @code{subreg} expressions, it is 1 if the @code{subreg} references an
986unsigned object whose mode has been promoted to a wider mode.
987
988In an @code{insn} or @code{jump_insn} in the delay slot of a branch
989instruction, 1 means an annulling branch should be used.
990
991In a @code{symbol_ref} expression, 1 means that this symbol addresses
992something in the per-function constant pool.
993
994In a @code{call_insn} 1 means that this instruction is a call to a const
995function.
996
997In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/u}.
998
999@findex used
1000@item used
1001This flag is used directly (without an access macro) at the end of RTL
1002generation for a function, to count the number of times an expression
1003appears in insns.  Expressions that appear more than once are copied,
1004according to the rules for shared structure (@pxref{Sharing}).
1005
1006For a @code{reg}, it is used directly (without an access macro) by the
1007leaf register renumbering code to ensure that each register is only
1008renumbered once.
1009
1010In a @code{symbol_ref}, it indicates that an external declaration for
1011the symbol has already been written.
1012
1013@findex volatil
1014@cindex @samp{/v} in RTL dump
1015@item volatil
1016@cindex volatile memory references
1017In a @code{mem}, @code{asm_operands}, or @code{asm_input}
1018expression, it is 1 if the memory
1019reference is volatile.  Volatile memory references may not be deleted,
1020reordered or combined.
1021
1022In a @code{symbol_ref} expression, it is used for machine-specific
1023purposes.
1024
1025In a @code{reg} expression, it is 1 if the value is a user-level variable.
10260 indicates an internal compiler temporary.
1027
1028In an @code{insn}, 1 means the insn has been deleted.
1029
1030In @code{label_ref} and @code{reg_label} expressions, 1 means a reference
1031to a non-local label.
1032
1033In @code{prefetch} expressions, 1 means that the containing insn is a
1034scheduling barrier.
1035
1036In an RTL dump, this flag is represented as @samp{/v}.
1037@end table
1038
1039@node Machine Modes
1040@section Machine Modes
1041@cindex machine modes
1042
1043@findex machine_mode
1044A machine mode describes a size of data object and the representation used
1045for it.  In the C code, machine modes are represented by an enumeration
1046type, @code{machine_mode}, defined in @file{machmode.def}.  Each RTL
1047expression has room for a machine mode and so do certain kinds of tree
1048expressions (declarations and types, to be precise).
1049
1050In debugging dumps and machine descriptions, the machine mode of an RTL
1051expression is written after the expression code with a colon to separate
1052them.  The letters @samp{mode} which appear at the end of each machine mode
1053name are omitted.  For example, @code{(reg:SI 38)} is a @code{reg}
1054expression with machine mode @code{SImode}.  If the mode is
1055@code{VOIDmode}, it is not written at all.
1056
1057Here is a table of machine modes.  The term ``byte'' below refers to an
1058object of @code{BITS_PER_UNIT} bits (@pxref{Storage Layout}).
1059
1060@table @code
1061@findex BImode
1062@item BImode
1063``Bit'' mode represents a single bit, for predicate registers.
1064
1065@findex QImode
1066@item QImode
1067``Quarter-Integer'' mode represents a single byte treated as an integer.
1068
1069@findex HImode
1070@item HImode
1071``Half-Integer'' mode represents a two-byte integer.
1072
1073@findex PSImode
1074@item PSImode
1075``Partial Single Integer'' mode represents an integer which occupies
1076four bytes but which doesn't really use all four.  On some machines,
1077this is the right mode to use for pointers.
1078
1079@findex SImode
1080@item SImode
1081``Single Integer'' mode represents a four-byte integer.
1082
1083@findex PDImode
1084@item PDImode
1085``Partial Double Integer'' mode represents an integer which occupies
1086eight bytes but which doesn't really use all eight.  On some machines,
1087this is the right mode to use for certain pointers.
1088
1089@findex DImode
1090@item DImode
1091``Double Integer'' mode represents an eight-byte integer.
1092
1093@findex TImode
1094@item TImode
1095``Tetra Integer'' (?) mode represents a sixteen-byte integer.
1096
1097@findex OImode
1098@item OImode
1099``Octa Integer'' (?) mode represents a thirty-two-byte integer.
1100
1101@findex XImode
1102@item XImode
1103``Hexadeca Integer'' (?) mode represents a sixty-four-byte integer.
1104
1105@findex QFmode
1106@item QFmode
1107``Quarter-Floating'' mode represents a quarter-precision (single byte)
1108floating point number.
1109
1110@findex HFmode
1111@item HFmode
1112``Half-Floating'' mode represents a half-precision (two byte) floating
1113point number.
1114
1115@findex TQFmode
1116@item TQFmode
1117``Three-Quarter-Floating'' (?) mode represents a three-quarter-precision
1118(three byte) floating point number.
1119
1120@findex SFmode
1121@item SFmode
1122``Single Floating'' mode represents a four byte floating point number.
1123In the common case, of a processor with IEEE arithmetic and 8-bit bytes,
1124this is a single-precision IEEE floating point number; it can also be
1125used for double-precision (on processors with 16-bit bytes) and
1126single-precision VAX and IBM types.
1127
1128@findex DFmode
1129@item DFmode
1130``Double Floating'' mode represents an eight byte floating point number.
1131In the common case, of a processor with IEEE arithmetic and 8-bit bytes,
1132this is a double-precision IEEE floating point number.
1133
1134@findex XFmode
1135@item XFmode
1136``Extended Floating'' mode represents an IEEE extended floating point
1137number.  This mode only has 80 meaningful bits (ten bytes).  Some
1138processors require such numbers to be padded to twelve bytes, others
1139to sixteen; this mode is used for either.
1140
1141@findex SDmode
1142@item SDmode
1143``Single Decimal Floating'' mode represents a four byte decimal
1144floating point number (as distinct from conventional binary floating
1145point).
1146
1147@findex DDmode
1148@item DDmode
1149``Double Decimal Floating'' mode represents an eight byte decimal
1150floating point number.
1151
1152@findex TDmode
1153@item TDmode
1154``Tetra Decimal Floating'' mode represents a sixteen byte decimal
1155floating point number all 128 of whose bits are meaningful.
1156
1157@findex TFmode
1158@item TFmode
1159``Tetra Floating'' mode represents a sixteen byte floating point number
1160all 128 of whose bits are meaningful.  One common use is the
1161IEEE quad-precision format.
1162
1163@findex QQmode
1164@item QQmode
1165``Quarter-Fractional'' mode represents a single byte treated as a signed
1166fractional number.  The default format is ``s.7''.
1167
1168@findex HQmode
1169@item HQmode
1170``Half-Fractional'' mode represents a two-byte signed fractional number.
1171The default format is ``s.15''.
1172
1173@findex SQmode
1174@item SQmode
1175``Single Fractional'' mode represents a four-byte signed fractional number.
1176The default format is ``s.31''.
1177
1178@findex DQmode
1179@item DQmode
1180``Double Fractional'' mode represents an eight-byte signed fractional number.
1181The default format is ``s.63''.
1182
1183@findex TQmode
1184@item TQmode
1185``Tetra Fractional'' mode represents a sixteen-byte signed fractional number.
1186The default format is ``s.127''.
1187
1188@findex UQQmode
1189@item UQQmode
1190``Unsigned Quarter-Fractional'' mode represents a single byte treated as an
1191unsigned fractional number.  The default format is ``.8''.
1192
1193@findex UHQmode
1194@item UHQmode
1195``Unsigned Half-Fractional'' mode represents a two-byte unsigned fractional
1196number.  The default format is ``.16''.
1197
1198@findex USQmode
1199@item USQmode
1200``Unsigned Single Fractional'' mode represents a four-byte unsigned fractional
1201number.  The default format is ``.32''.
1202
1203@findex UDQmode
1204@item UDQmode
1205``Unsigned Double Fractional'' mode represents an eight-byte unsigned
1206fractional number.  The default format is ``.64''.
1207
1208@findex UTQmode
1209@item UTQmode
1210``Unsigned Tetra Fractional'' mode represents a sixteen-byte unsigned
1211fractional number.  The default format is ``.128''.
1212
1213@findex HAmode
1214@item HAmode
1215``Half-Accumulator'' mode represents a two-byte signed accumulator.
1216The default format is ``s8.7''.
1217
1218@findex SAmode
1219@item SAmode
1220``Single Accumulator'' mode represents a four-byte signed accumulator.
1221The default format is ``s16.15''.
1222
1223@findex DAmode
1224@item DAmode
1225``Double Accumulator'' mode represents an eight-byte signed accumulator.
1226The default format is ``s32.31''.
1227
1228@findex TAmode
1229@item TAmode
1230``Tetra Accumulator'' mode represents a sixteen-byte signed accumulator.
1231The default format is ``s64.63''.
1232
1233@findex UHAmode
1234@item UHAmode
1235``Unsigned Half-Accumulator'' mode represents a two-byte unsigned accumulator.
1236The default format is ``8.8''.
1237
1238@findex USAmode
1239@item USAmode
1240``Unsigned Single Accumulator'' mode represents a four-byte unsigned
1241accumulator.  The default format is ``16.16''.
1242
1243@findex UDAmode
1244@item UDAmode
1245``Unsigned Double Accumulator'' mode represents an eight-byte unsigned
1246accumulator.  The default format is ``32.32''.
1247
1248@findex UTAmode
1249@item UTAmode
1250``Unsigned Tetra Accumulator'' mode represents a sixteen-byte unsigned
1251accumulator.  The default format is ``64.64''.
1252
1253@findex CCmode
1254@item CCmode
1255``Condition Code'' mode represents the value of a condition code, which
1256is a machine-specific set of bits used to represent the result of a
1257comparison operation.  Other machine-specific modes may also be used for
1258the condition code.  These modes are not used on machines that use
1259@code{cc0} (@pxref{Condition Code}).
1260
1261@findex BLKmode
1262@item BLKmode
1263``Block'' mode represents values that are aggregates to which none of
1264the other modes apply.  In RTL, only memory references can have this mode,
1265and only if they appear in string-move or vector instructions.  On machines
1266which have no such instructions, @code{BLKmode} will not appear in RTL@.
1267
1268@findex VOIDmode
1269@item VOIDmode
1270Void mode means the absence of a mode or an unspecified mode.
1271For example, RTL expressions of code @code{const_int} have mode
1272@code{VOIDmode} because they can be taken to have whatever mode the context
1273requires.  In debugging dumps of RTL, @code{VOIDmode} is expressed by
1274the absence of any mode.
1275
1276@findex QCmode
1277@findex HCmode
1278@findex SCmode
1279@findex DCmode
1280@findex XCmode
1281@findex TCmode
1282@item QCmode, HCmode, SCmode, DCmode, XCmode, TCmode
1283These modes stand for a complex number represented as a pair of floating
1284point values.  The floating point values are in @code{QFmode},
1285@code{HFmode}, @code{SFmode}, @code{DFmode}, @code{XFmode}, and
1286@code{TFmode}, respectively.
1287
1288@findex CQImode
1289@findex CHImode
1290@findex CSImode
1291@findex CDImode
1292@findex CTImode
1293@findex COImode
1294@item CQImode, CHImode, CSImode, CDImode, CTImode, COImode
1295These modes stand for a complex number represented as a pair of integer
1296values.  The integer values are in @code{QImode}, @code{HImode},
1297@code{SImode}, @code{DImode}, @code{TImode}, and @code{OImode},
1298respectively.
1299
1300@findex BND32mode
1301@findex BND64mode
1302@item BND32mode BND64mode
1303These modes stand for bounds for pointer of 32 and 64 bit size respectively.
1304Mode size is double pointer mode size.
1305@end table
1306
1307The machine description defines @code{Pmode} as a C macro which expands
1308into the machine mode used for addresses.  Normally this is the mode
1309whose size is @code{BITS_PER_WORD}, @code{SImode} on 32-bit machines.
1310
1311The only modes which a machine description @i{must} support are
1312@code{QImode}, and the modes corresponding to @code{BITS_PER_WORD},
1313@code{FLOAT_TYPE_SIZE} and @code{DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE}.
1314The compiler will attempt to use @code{DImode} for 8-byte structures and
1315unions, but this can be prevented by overriding the definition of
1316@code{MAX_FIXED_MODE_SIZE}.  Alternatively, you can have the compiler
1317use @code{TImode} for 16-byte structures and unions.  Likewise, you can
1318arrange for the C type @code{short int} to avoid using @code{HImode}.
1319
1320@cindex mode classes
1321Very few explicit references to machine modes remain in the compiler and
1322these few references will soon be removed.  Instead, the machine modes
1323are divided into mode classes.  These are represented by the enumeration
1324type @code{enum mode_class} defined in @file{machmode.h}.  The possible
1325mode classes are:
1326
1327@table @code
1328@findex MODE_INT
1329@item MODE_INT
1330Integer modes.  By default these are @code{BImode}, @code{QImode},
1331@code{HImode}, @code{SImode}, @code{DImode}, @code{TImode}, and
1332@code{OImode}.
1333
1334@findex MODE_PARTIAL_INT
1335@item MODE_PARTIAL_INT
1336The ``partial integer'' modes, @code{PQImode}, @code{PHImode},
1337@code{PSImode} and @code{PDImode}.
1338
1339@findex MODE_FLOAT
1340@item MODE_FLOAT
1341Floating point modes.  By default these are @code{QFmode},
1342@code{HFmode}, @code{TQFmode}, @code{SFmode}, @code{DFmode},
1343@code{XFmode} and @code{TFmode}.
1344
1345@findex MODE_DECIMAL_FLOAT
1346@item MODE_DECIMAL_FLOAT
1347Decimal floating point modes.  By default these are @code{SDmode},
1348@code{DDmode} and @code{TDmode}.
1349
1350@findex MODE_FRACT
1351@item MODE_FRACT
1352Signed fractional modes.  By default these are @code{QQmode}, @code{HQmode},
1353@code{SQmode}, @code{DQmode} and @code{TQmode}.
1354
1355@findex MODE_UFRACT
1356@item MODE_UFRACT
1357Unsigned fractional modes.  By default these are @code{UQQmode}, @code{UHQmode},
1358@code{USQmode}, @code{UDQmode} and @code{UTQmode}.
1359
1360@findex MODE_ACCUM
1361@item MODE_ACCUM
1362Signed accumulator modes.  By default these are @code{HAmode},
1363@code{SAmode}, @code{DAmode} and @code{TAmode}.
1364
1365@findex MODE_UACCUM
1366@item MODE_UACCUM
1367Unsigned accumulator modes.  By default these are @code{UHAmode},
1368@code{USAmode}, @code{UDAmode} and @code{UTAmode}.
1369
1370@findex MODE_COMPLEX_INT
1371@item MODE_COMPLEX_INT
1372Complex integer modes.  (These are not currently implemented).
1373
1374@findex MODE_COMPLEX_FLOAT
1375@item MODE_COMPLEX_FLOAT
1376Complex floating point modes.  By default these are @code{QCmode},
1377@code{HCmode}, @code{SCmode}, @code{DCmode}, @code{XCmode}, and
1378@code{TCmode}.
1379
1380@findex MODE_FUNCTION
1381@item MODE_FUNCTION
1382Algol or Pascal function variables including a static chain.
1383(These are not currently implemented).
1384
1385@findex MODE_CC
1386@item MODE_CC
1387Modes representing condition code values.  These are @code{CCmode} plus
1388any @code{CC_MODE} modes listed in the @file{@var{machine}-modes.def}.
1389@xref{Jump Patterns},
1390also see @ref{Condition Code}.
1391
1392@findex MODE_POINTER_BOUNDS
1393@item MODE_POINTER_BOUNDS
1394Pointer bounds modes.  Used to represent values of pointer bounds type.
1395Operations in these modes may be executed as NOPs depending on hardware
1396features and environment setup.
1397
1398@findex MODE_RANDOM
1399@item MODE_RANDOM
1400This is a catchall mode class for modes which don't fit into the above
1401classes.  Currently @code{VOIDmode} and @code{BLKmode} are in
1402@code{MODE_RANDOM}.
1403@end table
1404
1405Here are some C macros that relate to machine modes:
1406
1407@table @code
1408@findex GET_MODE
1409@item GET_MODE (@var{x})
1410Returns the machine mode of the RTX @var{x}.
1411
1412@findex PUT_MODE
1413@item PUT_MODE (@var{x}, @var{newmode})
1414Alters the machine mode of the RTX @var{x} to be @var{newmode}.
1415
1416@findex NUM_MACHINE_MODES
1417@item NUM_MACHINE_MODES
1418Stands for the number of machine modes available on the target
1419machine.  This is one greater than the largest numeric value of any
1420machine mode.
1421
1422@findex GET_MODE_NAME
1423@item GET_MODE_NAME (@var{m})
1424Returns the name of mode @var{m} as a string.
1425
1426@findex GET_MODE_CLASS
1427@item GET_MODE_CLASS (@var{m})
1428Returns the mode class of mode @var{m}.
1429
1430@findex GET_MODE_WIDER_MODE
1431@item GET_MODE_WIDER_MODE (@var{m})
1432Returns the next wider natural mode.  For example, the expression
1433@code{GET_MODE_WIDER_MODE (QImode)} returns @code{HImode}.
1434
1435@findex GET_MODE_SIZE
1436@item GET_MODE_SIZE (@var{m})
1437Returns the size in bytes of a datum of mode @var{m}.
1438
1439@findex GET_MODE_BITSIZE
1440@item GET_MODE_BITSIZE (@var{m})
1441Returns the size in bits of a datum of mode @var{m}.
1442
1443@findex GET_MODE_IBIT
1444@item GET_MODE_IBIT (@var{m})
1445Returns the number of integral bits of a datum of fixed-point mode @var{m}.
1446
1447@findex GET_MODE_FBIT
1448@item GET_MODE_FBIT (@var{m})
1449Returns the number of fractional bits of a datum of fixed-point mode @var{m}.
1450
1451@findex GET_MODE_MASK
1452@item GET_MODE_MASK (@var{m})
1453Returns a bitmask containing 1 for all bits in a word that fit within
1454mode @var{m}.  This macro can only be used for modes whose bitsize is
1455less than or equal to @code{HOST_BITS_PER_INT}.
1456
1457@findex GET_MODE_ALIGNMENT
1458@item GET_MODE_ALIGNMENT (@var{m})
1459Return the required alignment, in bits, for an object of mode @var{m}.
1460
1461@findex GET_MODE_UNIT_SIZE
1462@item GET_MODE_UNIT_SIZE (@var{m})
1463Returns the size in bytes of the subunits of a datum of mode @var{m}.
1464This is the same as @code{GET_MODE_SIZE} except in the case of complex
1465modes.  For them, the unit size is the size of the real or imaginary
1466part.
1467
1468@findex GET_MODE_NUNITS
1469@item GET_MODE_NUNITS (@var{m})
1470Returns the number of units contained in a mode, i.e.,
1471@code{GET_MODE_SIZE} divided by @code{GET_MODE_UNIT_SIZE}.
1472
1473@findex GET_CLASS_NARROWEST_MODE
1474@item GET_CLASS_NARROWEST_MODE (@var{c})
1475Returns the narrowest mode in mode class @var{c}.
1476@end table
1477
1478The following 3 variables are defined on every target.   They can be
1479used to allocate buffers that are guaranteed to be large enough to
1480hold any value that can be represented on the target.   The first two
1481can be overridden by defining them in the target's mode.def file,
1482however, the value must be a constant that can determined very early
1483in the compilation process.   The third symbol cannot be overridden.
1484
1485@table @code
1486@findex BITS_PER_UNIT
1487@item BITS_PER_UNIT
1488The number of bits in an addressable storage unit (byte).  If you do
1489not define this, the default is 8.
1490
1491@findex MAX_BITSIZE_MODE_ANY_INT
1492@item MAX_BITSIZE_MODE_ANY_INT
1493The maximum bitsize of any mode that is used in integer math.  This
1494should be overridden by the target if it uses large integers as
1495containers for larger vectors but otherwise never uses the contents to
1496compute integer values.
1497
1498@findex MAX_BITSIZE_MODE_ANY_MODE
1499@item MAX_BITSIZE_MODE_ANY_MODE
1500The bitsize of the largest mode on the target.   
1501@end table
1502
1503@findex byte_mode
1504@findex word_mode
1505The global variables @code{byte_mode} and @code{word_mode} contain modes
1506whose classes are @code{MODE_INT} and whose bitsizes are either
1507@code{BITS_PER_UNIT} or @code{BITS_PER_WORD}, respectively.  On 32-bit
1508machines, these are @code{QImode} and @code{SImode}, respectively.
1509
1510@node Constants
1511@section Constant Expression Types
1512@cindex RTL constants
1513@cindex RTL constant expression types
1514
1515The simplest RTL expressions are those that represent constant values.
1516
1517@table @code
1518@findex const_int
1519@item (const_int @var{i})
1520This type of expression represents the integer value @var{i}.  @var{i}
1521is customarily accessed with the macro @code{INTVAL} as in
1522@code{INTVAL (@var{exp})}, which is equivalent to @code{XWINT (@var{exp}, 0)}.
1523
1524Constants generated for modes with fewer bits than in
1525@code{HOST_WIDE_INT} must be sign extended to full width (e.g., with
1526@code{gen_int_mode}).  For constants for modes with more bits than in
1527@code{HOST_WIDE_INT} the implied high order bits of that constant are
1528copies of the top bit.  Note however that values are neither
1529inherently signed nor inherently unsigned; where necessary, signedness
1530is determined by the rtl operation instead.
1531
1532@findex const0_rtx
1533@findex const1_rtx
1534@findex const2_rtx
1535@findex constm1_rtx
1536There is only one expression object for the integer value zero; it is
1537the value of the variable @code{const0_rtx}.  Likewise, the only
1538expression for integer value one is found in @code{const1_rtx}, the only
1539expression for integer value two is found in @code{const2_rtx}, and the
1540only expression for integer value negative one is found in
1541@code{constm1_rtx}.  Any attempt to create an expression of code
1542@code{const_int} and value zero, one, two or negative one will return
1543@code{const0_rtx}, @code{const1_rtx}, @code{const2_rtx} or
1544@code{constm1_rtx} as appropriate.
1545
1546@findex const_true_rtx
1547Similarly, there is only one object for the integer whose value is
1548@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE}.  It is found in @code{const_true_rtx}.  If
1549@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} is one, @code{const_true_rtx} and
1550@code{const1_rtx} will point to the same object.  If
1551@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} is @minus{}1, @code{const_true_rtx} and
1552@code{constm1_rtx} will point to the same object.
1553
1554@findex const_double
1555@item (const_double:@var{m} @var{i0} @var{i1} @dots{})
1556This represents either a floating-point constant of mode @var{m} or
1557(on older ports that do not define
1558@code{TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT}) an integer constant too large to fit
1559into @code{HOST_BITS_PER_WIDE_INT} bits but small enough to fit within
1560twice that number of bits.  In the latter case, @var{m} will be
1561@code{VOIDmode}.  For integral values constants for modes with more
1562bits than twice the number in @code{HOST_WIDE_INT} the implied high
1563order bits of that constant are copies of the top bit of
1564@code{CONST_DOUBLE_HIGH}.  Note however that integral values are
1565neither inherently signed nor inherently unsigned; where necessary,
1566signedness is determined by the rtl operation instead.
1567
1568On more modern ports, @code{CONST_DOUBLE} only represents floating
1569point values.  New ports define @code{TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT} to
1570make this designation.
1571
1572@findex CONST_DOUBLE_LOW
1573If @var{m} is @code{VOIDmode}, the bits of the value are stored in
1574@var{i0} and @var{i1}.  @var{i0} is customarily accessed with the macro
1575@code{CONST_DOUBLE_LOW} and @var{i1} with @code{CONST_DOUBLE_HIGH}.
1576
1577If the constant is floating point (regardless of its precision), then
1578the number of integers used to store the value depends on the size of
1579@code{REAL_VALUE_TYPE} (@pxref{Floating Point}).  The integers
1580represent a floating point number, but not precisely in the target
1581machine's or host machine's floating point format.  To convert them to
1582the precise bit pattern used by the target machine, use the macro
1583@code{REAL_VALUE_TO_TARGET_DOUBLE} and friends (@pxref{Data Output}).
1584
1585@findex CONST_WIDE_INT
1586@item (const_wide_int:@var{m} @var{nunits} @var{elt0} @dots{})
1587This contains an array of @code{HOST_WIDE_INT}s that is large enough
1588to hold any constant that can be represented on the target.  This form
1589of rtl is only used on targets that define
1590@code{TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT} to be nonzero and then
1591@code{CONST_DOUBLE}s are only used to hold floating-point values.  If
1592the target leaves @code{TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT} defined as 0,
1593@code{CONST_WIDE_INT}s are not used and @code{CONST_DOUBLE}s are as
1594they were before.
1595
1596The values are stored in a compressed format.  The higher-order
15970s or -1s are not represented if they are just the logical sign
1598extension of the number that is represented.
1599
1600@findex CONST_WIDE_INT_VEC
1601@item CONST_WIDE_INT_VEC (@var{code})
1602Returns the entire array of @code{HOST_WIDE_INT}s that are used to
1603store the value.  This macro should be rarely used.
1604
1605@findex CONST_WIDE_INT_NUNITS
1606@item CONST_WIDE_INT_NUNITS (@var{code})
1607The number of @code{HOST_WIDE_INT}s used to represent the number.
1608Note that this generally is smaller than the number of
1609@code{HOST_WIDE_INT}s implied by the mode size.
1610
1611@findex CONST_WIDE_INT_ELT
1612@item CONST_WIDE_INT_NUNITS (@var{code},@var{i})
1613Returns the @code{i}th element of the array.   Element 0 is contains
1614the low order bits of the constant.
1615
1616@findex const_fixed
1617@item (const_fixed:@var{m} @dots{})
1618Represents a fixed-point constant of mode @var{m}.
1619The operand is a data structure of type @code{struct fixed_value} and
1620is accessed with the macro @code{CONST_FIXED_VALUE}.  The high part of
1621data is accessed with @code{CONST_FIXED_VALUE_HIGH}; the low part is
1622accessed with @code{CONST_FIXED_VALUE_LOW}.
1623
1624@findex const_vector
1625@item (const_vector:@var{m} [@var{x0} @var{x1} @dots{}])
1626Represents a vector constant.  The square brackets stand for the vector
1627containing the constant elements.  @var{x0}, @var{x1} and so on are
1628the @code{const_int}, @code{const_double} or @code{const_fixed} elements.
1629
1630The number of units in a @code{const_vector} is obtained with the macro
1631@code{CONST_VECTOR_NUNITS} as in @code{CONST_VECTOR_NUNITS (@var{v})}.
1632
1633Individual elements in a vector constant are accessed with the macro
1634@code{CONST_VECTOR_ELT} as in @code{CONST_VECTOR_ELT (@var{v}, @var{n})}
1635where @var{v} is the vector constant and @var{n} is the element
1636desired.
1637
1638@findex const_string
1639@item (const_string @var{str})
1640Represents a constant string with value @var{str}.  Currently this is
1641used only for insn attributes (@pxref{Insn Attributes}) since constant
1642strings in C are placed in memory.
1643
1644@findex symbol_ref
1645@item (symbol_ref:@var{mode} @var{symbol})
1646Represents the value of an assembler label for data.  @var{symbol} is
1647a string that describes the name of the assembler label.  If it starts
1648with a @samp{*}, the label is the rest of @var{symbol} not including
1649the @samp{*}.  Otherwise, the label is @var{symbol}, usually prefixed
1650with @samp{_}.
1651
1652The @code{symbol_ref} contains a mode, which is usually @code{Pmode}.
1653Usually that is the only mode for which a symbol is directly valid.
1654
1655@findex label_ref
1656@item (label_ref:@var{mode} @var{label})
1657Represents the value of an assembler label for code.  It contains one
1658operand, an expression, which must be a @code{code_label} or a @code{note}
1659of type @code{NOTE_INSN_DELETED_LABEL} that appears in the instruction
1660sequence to identify the place where the label should go.
1661
1662The reason for using a distinct expression type for code label
1663references is so that jump optimization can distinguish them.
1664
1665The @code{label_ref} contains a mode, which is usually @code{Pmode}.
1666Usually that is the only mode for which a label is directly valid.
1667
1668@findex const
1669@item (const:@var{m} @var{exp})
1670Represents a constant that is the result of an assembly-time
1671arithmetic computation.  The operand, @var{exp}, is an expression that
1672contains only constants (@code{const_int}, @code{symbol_ref} and
1673@code{label_ref} expressions) combined with @code{plus} and
1674@code{minus}.  However, not all combinations are valid, since the
1675assembler cannot do arbitrary arithmetic on relocatable symbols.
1676
1677@var{m} should be @code{Pmode}.
1678
1679@findex high
1680@item (high:@var{m} @var{exp})
1681Represents the high-order bits of @var{exp}, usually a
1682@code{symbol_ref}.  The number of bits is machine-dependent and is
1683normally the number of bits specified in an instruction that initializes
1684the high order bits of a register.  It is used with @code{lo_sum} to
1685represent the typical two-instruction sequence used in RISC machines to
1686reference a global memory location.
1687
1688@var{m} should be @code{Pmode}.
1689@end table
1690
1691@findex CONST0_RTX
1692@findex CONST1_RTX
1693@findex CONST2_RTX
1694The macro @code{CONST0_RTX (@var{mode})} refers to an expression with
1695value 0 in mode @var{mode}.  If mode @var{mode} is of mode class
1696@code{MODE_INT}, it returns @code{const0_rtx}.  If mode @var{mode} is of
1697mode class @code{MODE_FLOAT}, it returns a @code{CONST_DOUBLE}
1698expression in mode @var{mode}.  Otherwise, it returns a
1699@code{CONST_VECTOR} expression in mode @var{mode}.  Similarly, the macro
1700@code{CONST1_RTX (@var{mode})} refers to an expression with value 1 in
1701mode @var{mode} and similarly for @code{CONST2_RTX}.  The
1702@code{CONST1_RTX} and @code{CONST2_RTX} macros are undefined
1703for vector modes.
1704
1705@node Regs and Memory
1706@section Registers and Memory
1707@cindex RTL register expressions
1708@cindex RTL memory expressions
1709
1710Here are the RTL expression types for describing access to machine
1711registers and to main memory.
1712
1713@table @code
1714@findex reg
1715@cindex hard registers
1716@cindex pseudo registers
1717@item (reg:@var{m} @var{n})
1718For small values of the integer @var{n} (those that are less than
1719@code{FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER}), this stands for a reference to machine
1720register number @var{n}: a @dfn{hard register}.  For larger values of
1721@var{n}, it stands for a temporary value or @dfn{pseudo register}.
1722The compiler's strategy is to generate code assuming an unlimited
1723number of such pseudo registers, and later convert them into hard
1724registers or into memory references.
1725
1726@var{m} is the machine mode of the reference.  It is necessary because
1727machines can generally refer to each register in more than one mode.
1728For example, a register may contain a full word but there may be
1729instructions to refer to it as a half word or as a single byte, as
1730well as instructions to refer to it as a floating point number of
1731various precisions.
1732
1733Even for a register that the machine can access in only one mode,
1734the mode must always be specified.
1735
1736The symbol @code{FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER} is defined by the machine
1737description, since the number of hard registers on the machine is an
1738invariant characteristic of the machine.  Note, however, that not
1739all of the machine registers must be general registers.  All the
1740machine registers that can be used for storage of data are given
1741hard register numbers, even those that can be used only in certain
1742instructions or can hold only certain types of data.
1743
1744A hard register may be accessed in various modes throughout one
1745function, but each pseudo register is given a natural mode
1746and is accessed only in that mode.  When it is necessary to describe
1747an access to a pseudo register using a nonnatural mode, a @code{subreg}
1748expression is used.
1749
1750A @code{reg} expression with a machine mode that specifies more than
1751one word of data may actually stand for several consecutive registers.
1752If in addition the register number specifies a hardware register, then
1753it actually represents several consecutive hardware registers starting
1754with the specified one.
1755
1756Each pseudo register number used in a function's RTL code is
1757represented by a unique @code{reg} expression.
1758
1759@findex FIRST_VIRTUAL_REGISTER
1760@findex LAST_VIRTUAL_REGISTER
1761Some pseudo register numbers, those within the range of
1762@code{FIRST_VIRTUAL_REGISTER} to @code{LAST_VIRTUAL_REGISTER} only
1763appear during the RTL generation phase and are eliminated before the
1764optimization phases.  These represent locations in the stack frame that
1765cannot be determined until RTL generation for the function has been
1766completed.  The following virtual register numbers are defined:
1767
1768@table @code
1769@findex VIRTUAL_INCOMING_ARGS_REGNUM
1770@item VIRTUAL_INCOMING_ARGS_REGNUM
1771This points to the first word of the incoming arguments passed on the
1772stack.  Normally these arguments are placed there by the caller, but the
1773callee may have pushed some arguments that were previously passed in
1774registers.
1775
1776@cindex @code{FIRST_PARM_OFFSET} and virtual registers
1777@cindex @code{ARG_POINTER_REGNUM} and virtual registers
1778When RTL generation is complete, this virtual register is replaced
1779by the sum of the register given by @code{ARG_POINTER_REGNUM} and the
1780value of @code{FIRST_PARM_OFFSET}.
1781
1782@findex VIRTUAL_STACK_VARS_REGNUM
1783@cindex @code{FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARD} and virtual registers
1784@item VIRTUAL_STACK_VARS_REGNUM
1785If @code{FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARD} is defined to a nonzero value, this points
1786to immediately above the first variable on the stack.  Otherwise, it points
1787to the first variable on the stack.
1788
1789@cindex @code{STARTING_FRAME_OFFSET} and virtual registers
1790@cindex @code{FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM} and virtual registers
1791@code{VIRTUAL_STACK_VARS_REGNUM} is replaced with the sum of the
1792register given by @code{FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM} and the value
1793@code{STARTING_FRAME_OFFSET}.
1794
1795@findex VIRTUAL_STACK_DYNAMIC_REGNUM
1796@item VIRTUAL_STACK_DYNAMIC_REGNUM
1797This points to the location of dynamically allocated memory on the stack
1798immediately after the stack pointer has been adjusted by the amount of
1799memory desired.
1800
1801@cindex @code{STACK_DYNAMIC_OFFSET} and virtual registers
1802@cindex @code{STACK_POINTER_REGNUM} and virtual registers
1803This virtual register is replaced by the sum of the register given by
1804@code{STACK_POINTER_REGNUM} and the value @code{STACK_DYNAMIC_OFFSET}.
1805
1806@findex VIRTUAL_OUTGOING_ARGS_REGNUM
1807@item VIRTUAL_OUTGOING_ARGS_REGNUM
1808This points to the location in the stack at which outgoing arguments
1809should be written when the stack is pre-pushed (arguments pushed using
1810push insns should always use @code{STACK_POINTER_REGNUM}).
1811
1812@cindex @code{STACK_POINTER_OFFSET} and virtual registers
1813This virtual register is replaced by the sum of the register given by
1814@code{STACK_POINTER_REGNUM} and the value @code{STACK_POINTER_OFFSET}.
1815@end table
1816
1817@findex subreg
1818@item (subreg:@var{m1} @var{reg:m2} @var{bytenum})
1819
1820@code{subreg} expressions are used to refer to a register in a machine
1821mode other than its natural one, or to refer to one register of
1822a multi-part @code{reg} that actually refers to several registers.
1823
1824Each pseudo register has a natural mode.  If it is necessary to
1825operate on it in a different mode, the register must be
1826enclosed in a @code{subreg}.
1827
1828There are currently three supported types for the first operand of a
1829@code{subreg}:
1830@itemize
1831@item pseudo registers
1832This is the most common case.  Most @code{subreg}s have pseudo
1833@code{reg}s as their first operand.
1834
1835@item mem
1836@code{subreg}s of @code{mem} were common in earlier versions of GCC and
1837are still supported.  During the reload pass these are replaced by plain
1838@code{mem}s.  On machines that do not do instruction scheduling, use of
1839@code{subreg}s of @code{mem} are still used, but this is no longer
1840recommended.  Such @code{subreg}s are considered to be
1841@code{register_operand}s rather than @code{memory_operand}s before and
1842during reload.  Because of this, the scheduling passes cannot properly
1843schedule instructions with @code{subreg}s of @code{mem}, so for machines
1844that do scheduling, @code{subreg}s of @code{mem} should never be used.
1845To support this, the combine and recog passes have explicit code to
1846inhibit the creation of @code{subreg}s of @code{mem} when
1847@code{INSN_SCHEDULING} is defined.
1848
1849The use of @code{subreg}s of @code{mem} after the reload pass is an area
1850that is not well understood and should be avoided.  There is still some
1851code in the compiler to support this, but this code has possibly rotted.
1852This use of @code{subreg}s is discouraged and will most likely not be
1853supported in the future.
1854
1855@item hard registers
1856It is seldom necessary to wrap hard registers in @code{subreg}s; such
1857registers would normally reduce to a single @code{reg} rtx.  This use of
1858@code{subreg}s is discouraged and may not be supported in the future.
1859
1860@end itemize
1861
1862@code{subreg}s of @code{subreg}s are not supported.  Using
1863@code{simplify_gen_subreg} is the recommended way to avoid this problem.
1864
1865@code{subreg}s come in two distinct flavors, each having its own
1866usage and rules:
1867
1868@table @asis
1869@item Paradoxical subregs
1870When @var{m1} is strictly wider than @var{m2}, the @code{subreg}
1871expression is called @dfn{paradoxical}.  The canonical test for this
1872class of @code{subreg} is:
1873
1874@smallexample
1875GET_MODE_SIZE (@var{m1}) > GET_MODE_SIZE (@var{m2})
1876@end smallexample
1877
1878Paradoxical @code{subreg}s can be used as both lvalues and rvalues.
1879When used as an lvalue, the low-order bits of the source value
1880are stored in @var{reg} and the high-order bits are discarded.
1881When used as an rvalue, the low-order bits of the @code{subreg} are
1882taken from @var{reg} while the high-order bits may or may not be
1883defined.
1884
1885The high-order bits of rvalues are in the following circumstances:
1886
1887@itemize
1888@item @code{subreg}s of @code{mem}
1889When @var{m2} is smaller than a word, the macro @code{LOAD_EXTEND_OP},
1890can control how the high-order bits are defined.
1891
1892@item @code{subreg} of @code{reg}s
1893The upper bits are defined when @code{SUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_P} is true.
1894@code{SUBREG_PROMOTED_UNSIGNED_P} describes what the upper bits hold.
1895Such subregs usually represent local variables, register variables
1896and parameter pseudo variables that have been promoted to a wider mode.
1897
1898@end itemize
1899
1900@var{bytenum} is always zero for a paradoxical @code{subreg}, even on
1901big-endian targets.
1902
1903For example, the paradoxical @code{subreg}:
1904
1905@smallexample
1906(set (subreg:SI (reg:HI @var{x}) 0) @var{y})
1907@end smallexample
1908
1909stores the lower 2 bytes of @var{y} in @var{x} and discards the upper
19102 bytes.  A subsequent:
1911
1912@smallexample
1913(set @var{z} (subreg:SI (reg:HI @var{x}) 0))
1914@end smallexample
1915
1916would set the lower two bytes of @var{z} to @var{y} and set the upper
1917two bytes to an unknown value assuming @code{SUBREG_PROMOTED_VAR_P} is
1918false.
1919
1920@item Normal subregs
1921When @var{m1} is at least as narrow as @var{m2} the @code{subreg}
1922expression is called @dfn{normal}.
1923
1924Normal @code{subreg}s restrict consideration to certain bits of
1925@var{reg}.  There are two cases.  If @var{m1} is smaller than a word,
1926the @code{subreg} refers to the least-significant part (or
1927@dfn{lowpart}) of one word of @var{reg}.  If @var{m1} is word-sized or
1928greater, the @code{subreg} refers to one or more complete words.
1929
1930When used as an lvalue, @code{subreg} is a word-based accessor.
1931Storing to a @code{subreg} modifies all the words of @var{reg} that
1932overlap the @code{subreg}, but it leaves the other words of @var{reg}
1933alone.
1934
1935When storing to a normal @code{subreg} that is smaller than a word,
1936the other bits of the referenced word are usually left in an undefined
1937state.  This laxity makes it easier to generate efficient code for
1938such instructions.  To represent an instruction that preserves all the
1939bits outside of those in the @code{subreg}, use @code{strict_low_part}
1940or @code{zero_extract} around the @code{subreg}.
1941
1942@var{bytenum} must identify the offset of the first byte of the
1943@code{subreg} from the start of @var{reg}, assuming that @var{reg} is
1944laid out in memory order.  The memory order of bytes is defined by
1945two target macros, @code{WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN} and @code{BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN}:
1946
1947@itemize
1948@item
1949@cindex @code{WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN}, effect on @code{subreg}
1950@code{WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN}, if set to 1, says that byte number zero is
1951part of the most significant word; otherwise, it is part of the least
1952significant word.
1953
1954@item
1955@cindex @code{BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN}, effect on @code{subreg}
1956@code{BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN}, if set to 1, says that byte number zero is
1957the most significant byte within a word; otherwise, it is the least
1958significant byte within a word.
1959@end itemize
1960
1961@cindex @code{FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN}, (lack of) effect on @code{subreg}
1962On a few targets, @code{FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN} disagrees with
1963@code{WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN}.  However, most parts of the compiler treat
1964floating point values as if they had the same endianness as integer
1965values.  This works because they handle them solely as a collection of
1966integer values, with no particular numerical value.  Only real.c and
1967the runtime libraries care about @code{FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN}.
1968
1969Thus,
1970
1971@smallexample
1972(subreg:HI (reg:SI @var{x}) 2)
1973@end smallexample
1974
1975on a @code{BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN}, @samp{UNITS_PER_WORD == 4} target is the same as
1976
1977@smallexample
1978(subreg:HI (reg:SI @var{x}) 0)
1979@end smallexample
1980
1981on a little-endian, @samp{UNITS_PER_WORD == 4} target.  Both
1982@code{subreg}s access the lower two bytes of register @var{x}.
1983
1984@end table
1985
1986A @code{MODE_PARTIAL_INT} mode behaves as if it were as wide as the
1987corresponding @code{MODE_INT} mode, except that it has an unknown
1988number of undefined bits.  For example:
1989
1990@smallexample
1991(subreg:PSI (reg:SI 0) 0)
1992@end smallexample
1993
1994accesses the whole of @samp{(reg:SI 0)}, but the exact relationship
1995between the @code{PSImode} value and the @code{SImode} value is not
1996defined.  If we assume @samp{UNITS_PER_WORD <= 4}, then the following
1997two @code{subreg}s:
1998
1999@smallexample
2000(subreg:PSI (reg:DI 0) 0)
2001(subreg:PSI (reg:DI 0) 4)
2002@end smallexample
2003
2004represent independent 4-byte accesses to the two halves of
2005@samp{(reg:DI 0)}.  Both @code{subreg}s have an unknown number
2006of undefined bits.
2007
2008If @samp{UNITS_PER_WORD <= 2} then these two @code{subreg}s:
2009
2010@smallexample
2011(subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 0)
2012(subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 2)
2013@end smallexample
2014
2015represent independent 2-byte accesses that together span the whole
2016of @samp{(reg:PSI 0)}.  Storing to the first @code{subreg} does not
2017affect the value of the second, and vice versa.  @samp{(reg:PSI 0)}
2018has an unknown number of undefined bits, so the assignment:
2019
2020@smallexample
2021(set (subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 0) (reg:HI 4))
2022@end smallexample
2023
2024does not guarantee that @samp{(subreg:HI (reg:PSI 0) 0)} has the
2025value @samp{(reg:HI 4)}.
2026
2027@cindex @code{CANNOT_CHANGE_MODE_CLASS} and subreg semantics
2028The rules above apply to both pseudo @var{reg}s and hard @var{reg}s.
2029If the semantics are not correct for particular combinations of
2030@var{m1}, @var{m2} and hard @var{reg}, the target-specific code
2031must ensure that those combinations are never used.  For example:
2032
2033@smallexample
2034CANNOT_CHANGE_MODE_CLASS (@var{m2}, @var{m1}, @var{class})
2035@end smallexample
2036
2037must be true for every class @var{class} that includes @var{reg}.
2038
2039@findex SUBREG_REG
2040@findex SUBREG_BYTE
2041The first operand of a @code{subreg} expression is customarily accessed
2042with the @code{SUBREG_REG} macro and the second operand is customarily
2043accessed with the @code{SUBREG_BYTE} macro.
2044
2045It has been several years since a platform in which
2046@code{BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN} not equal to @code{WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN} has
2047been tested.  Anyone wishing to support such a platform in the future
2048may be confronted with code rot.
2049
2050@findex scratch
2051@cindex scratch operands
2052@item (scratch:@var{m})
2053This represents a scratch register that will be required for the
2054execution of a single instruction and not used subsequently.  It is
2055converted into a @code{reg} by either the local register allocator or
2056the reload pass.
2057
2058@code{scratch} is usually present inside a @code{clobber} operation
2059(@pxref{Side Effects}).
2060
2061@findex cc0
2062@cindex condition code register
2063@item (cc0)
2064This refers to the machine's condition code register.  It has no
2065operands and may not have a machine mode.  There are two ways to use it:
2066
2067@itemize @bullet
2068@item
2069To stand for a complete set of condition code flags.  This is best on
2070most machines, where each comparison sets the entire series of flags.
2071
2072With this technique, @code{(cc0)} may be validly used in only two
2073contexts: as the destination of an assignment (in test and compare
2074instructions) and in comparison operators comparing against zero
2075(@code{const_int} with value zero; that is to say, @code{const0_rtx}).
2076
2077@item
2078To stand for a single flag that is the result of a single condition.
2079This is useful on machines that have only a single flag bit, and in
2080which comparison instructions must specify the condition to test.
2081
2082With this technique, @code{(cc0)} may be validly used in only two
2083contexts: as the destination of an assignment (in test and compare
2084instructions) where the source is a comparison operator, and as the
2085first operand of @code{if_then_else} (in a conditional branch).
2086@end itemize
2087
2088@findex cc0_rtx
2089There is only one expression object of code @code{cc0}; it is the
2090value of the variable @code{cc0_rtx}.  Any attempt to create an
2091expression of code @code{cc0} will return @code{cc0_rtx}.
2092
2093Instructions can set the condition code implicitly.  On many machines,
2094nearly all instructions set the condition code based on the value that
2095they compute or store.  It is not necessary to record these actions
2096explicitly in the RTL because the machine description includes a
2097prescription for recognizing the instructions that do so (by means of
2098the macro @code{NOTICE_UPDATE_CC}).  @xref{Condition Code}.  Only
2099instructions whose sole purpose is to set the condition code, and
2100instructions that use the condition code, need mention @code{(cc0)}.
2101
2102On some machines, the condition code register is given a register number
2103and a @code{reg} is used instead of @code{(cc0)}.  This is usually the
2104preferable approach if only a small subset of instructions modify the
2105condition code.  Other machines store condition codes in general
2106registers; in such cases a pseudo register should be used.
2107
2108Some machines, such as the SPARC and RS/6000, have two sets of
2109arithmetic instructions, one that sets and one that does not set the
2110condition code.  This is best handled by normally generating the
2111instruction that does not set the condition code, and making a pattern
2112that both performs the arithmetic and sets the condition code register
2113(which would not be @code{(cc0)} in this case).  For examples, search
2114for @samp{addcc} and @samp{andcc} in @file{sparc.md}.
2115
2116@findex pc
2117@item (pc)
2118@cindex program counter
2119This represents the machine's program counter.  It has no operands and
2120may not have a machine mode.  @code{(pc)} may be validly used only in
2121certain specific contexts in jump instructions.
2122
2123@findex pc_rtx
2124There is only one expression object of code @code{pc}; it is the value
2125of the variable @code{pc_rtx}.  Any attempt to create an expression of
2126code @code{pc} will return @code{pc_rtx}.
2127
2128All instructions that do not jump alter the program counter implicitly
2129by incrementing it, but there is no need to mention this in the RTL@.
2130
2131@findex mem
2132@item (mem:@var{m} @var{addr} @var{alias})
2133This RTX represents a reference to main memory at an address
2134represented by the expression @var{addr}.  @var{m} specifies how large
2135a unit of memory is accessed.  @var{alias} specifies an alias set for the
2136reference.  In general two items are in different alias sets if they cannot
2137reference the same memory address.
2138
2139The construct @code{(mem:BLK (scratch))} is considered to alias all
2140other memories.  Thus it may be used as a memory barrier in epilogue
2141stack deallocation patterns.
2142
2143@findex concat
2144@item (concat@var{m} @var{rtx} @var{rtx})
2145This RTX represents the concatenation of two other RTXs.  This is used
2146for complex values.  It should only appear in the RTL attached to
2147declarations and during RTL generation.  It should not appear in the
2148ordinary insn chain.
2149
2150@findex concatn
2151@item (concatn@var{m} [@var{rtx} @dots{}])
2152This RTX represents the concatenation of all the @var{rtx} to make a
2153single value.  Like @code{concat}, this should only appear in
2154declarations, and not in the insn chain.
2155@end table
2156
2157@node Arithmetic
2158@section RTL Expressions for Arithmetic
2159@cindex arithmetic, in RTL
2160@cindex math, in RTL
2161@cindex RTL expressions for arithmetic
2162
2163Unless otherwise specified, all the operands of arithmetic expressions
2164must be valid for mode @var{m}.  An operand is valid for mode @var{m}
2165if it has mode @var{m}, or if it is a @code{const_int} or
2166@code{const_double} and @var{m} is a mode of class @code{MODE_INT}.
2167
2168For commutative binary operations, constants should be placed in the
2169second operand.
2170
2171@table @code
2172@findex plus
2173@findex ss_plus
2174@findex us_plus
2175@cindex RTL sum
2176@cindex RTL addition
2177@cindex RTL addition with signed saturation
2178@cindex RTL addition with unsigned saturation
2179@item (plus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2180@itemx (ss_plus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2181@itemx (us_plus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2182
2183These three expressions all represent the sum of the values
2184represented by @var{x} and @var{y} carried out in machine mode
2185@var{m}.  They differ in their behavior on overflow of integer modes.
2186@code{plus} wraps round modulo the width of @var{m}; @code{ss_plus}
2187saturates at the maximum signed value representable in @var{m};
2188@code{us_plus} saturates at the maximum unsigned value.
2189
2190@c ??? What happens on overflow of floating point modes?
2191
2192@findex lo_sum
2193@item (lo_sum:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2194
2195This expression represents the sum of @var{x} and the low-order bits
2196of @var{y}.  It is used with @code{high} (@pxref{Constants}) to
2197represent the typical two-instruction sequence used in RISC machines
2198to reference a global memory location.
2199
2200The number of low order bits is machine-dependent but is
2201normally the number of bits in a @code{Pmode} item minus the number of
2202bits set by @code{high}.
2203
2204@var{m} should be @code{Pmode}.
2205
2206@findex minus
2207@findex ss_minus
2208@findex us_minus
2209@cindex RTL difference
2210@cindex RTL subtraction
2211@cindex RTL subtraction with signed saturation
2212@cindex RTL subtraction with unsigned saturation
2213@item (minus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2214@itemx (ss_minus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2215@itemx (us_minus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2216
2217These three expressions represent the result of subtracting @var{y}
2218from @var{x}, carried out in mode @var{M}.  Behavior on overflow is
2219the same as for the three variants of @code{plus} (see above).
2220
2221@findex compare
2222@cindex RTL comparison
2223@item (compare:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2224Represents the result of subtracting @var{y} from @var{x} for purposes
2225of comparison.  The result is computed without overflow, as if with
2226infinite precision.
2227
2228Of course, machines can't really subtract with infinite precision.
2229However, they can pretend to do so when only the sign of the result will
2230be used, which is the case when the result is stored in the condition
2231code.  And that is the @emph{only} way this kind of expression may
2232validly be used: as a value to be stored in the condition codes, either
2233@code{(cc0)} or a register.  @xref{Comparisons}.
2234
2235The mode @var{m} is not related to the modes of @var{x} and @var{y}, but
2236instead is the mode of the condition code value.  If @code{(cc0)} is
2237used, it is @code{VOIDmode}.  Otherwise it is some mode in class
2238@code{MODE_CC}, often @code{CCmode}.  @xref{Condition Code}.  If @var{m}
2239is @code{VOIDmode} or @code{CCmode}, the operation returns sufficient
2240information (in an unspecified format) so that any comparison operator
2241can be applied to the result of the @code{COMPARE} operation.  For other
2242modes in class @code{MODE_CC}, the operation only returns a subset of
2243this information.
2244
2245Normally, @var{x} and @var{y} must have the same mode.  Otherwise,
2246@code{compare} is valid only if the mode of @var{x} is in class
2247@code{MODE_INT} and @var{y} is a @code{const_int} or
2248@code{const_double} with mode @code{VOIDmode}.  The mode of @var{x}
2249determines what mode the comparison is to be done in; thus it must not
2250be @code{VOIDmode}.
2251
2252If one of the operands is a constant, it should be placed in the
2253second operand and the comparison code adjusted as appropriate.
2254
2255A @code{compare} specifying two @code{VOIDmode} constants is not valid
2256since there is no way to know in what mode the comparison is to be
2257performed; the comparison must either be folded during the compilation
2258or the first operand must be loaded into a register while its mode is
2259still known.
2260
2261@findex neg
2262@findex ss_neg
2263@findex us_neg
2264@cindex negation
2265@cindex negation with signed saturation
2266@cindex negation with unsigned saturation
2267@item (neg:@var{m} @var{x})
2268@itemx (ss_neg:@var{m} @var{x})
2269@itemx (us_neg:@var{m} @var{x})
2270These two expressions represent the negation (subtraction from zero) of
2271the value represented by @var{x}, carried out in mode @var{m}.  They
2272differ in the behavior on overflow of integer modes.  In the case of
2273@code{neg}, the negation of the operand may be a number not representable
2274in mode @var{m}, in which case it is truncated to @var{m}.  @code{ss_neg}
2275and @code{us_neg} ensure that an out-of-bounds result saturates to the
2276maximum or minimum signed or unsigned value.
2277
2278@findex mult
2279@findex ss_mult
2280@findex us_mult
2281@cindex multiplication
2282@cindex product
2283@cindex multiplication with signed saturation
2284@cindex multiplication with unsigned saturation
2285@item (mult:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2286@itemx (ss_mult:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2287@itemx (us_mult:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2288Represents the signed product of the values represented by @var{x} and
2289@var{y} carried out in machine mode @var{m}.
2290@code{ss_mult} and @code{us_mult} ensure that an out-of-bounds result
2291saturates to the maximum or minimum signed or unsigned value.
2292
2293Some machines support a multiplication that generates a product wider
2294than the operands.  Write the pattern for this as
2295
2296@smallexample
2297(mult:@var{m} (sign_extend:@var{m} @var{x}) (sign_extend:@var{m} @var{y}))
2298@end smallexample
2299
2300where @var{m} is wider than the modes of @var{x} and @var{y}, which need
2301not be the same.
2302
2303For unsigned widening multiplication, use the same idiom, but with
2304@code{zero_extend} instead of @code{sign_extend}.
2305
2306@findex fma
2307@item (fma:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y} @var{z})
2308Represents the @code{fma}, @code{fmaf}, and @code{fmal} builtin
2309functions, which compute @samp{@var{x} * @var{y} + @var{z}}
2310without doing an intermediate rounding step.
2311
2312@findex div
2313@findex ss_div
2314@cindex division
2315@cindex signed division
2316@cindex signed division with signed saturation
2317@cindex quotient
2318@item (div:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2319@itemx (ss_div:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2320Represents the quotient in signed division of @var{x} by @var{y},
2321carried out in machine mode @var{m}.  If @var{m} is a floating point
2322mode, it represents the exact quotient; otherwise, the integerized
2323quotient.
2324@code{ss_div} ensures that an out-of-bounds result saturates to the maximum
2325or minimum signed value.
2326
2327Some machines have division instructions in which the operands and
2328quotient widths are not all the same; you should represent
2329such instructions using @code{truncate} and @code{sign_extend} as in,
2330
2331@smallexample
2332(truncate:@var{m1} (div:@var{m2} @var{x} (sign_extend:@var{m2} @var{y})))
2333@end smallexample
2334
2335@findex udiv
2336@cindex unsigned division
2337@cindex unsigned division with unsigned saturation
2338@cindex division
2339@item (udiv:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2340@itemx (us_div:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2341Like @code{div} but represents unsigned division.
2342@code{us_div} ensures that an out-of-bounds result saturates to the maximum
2343or minimum unsigned value.
2344
2345@findex mod
2346@findex umod
2347@cindex remainder
2348@cindex division
2349@item (mod:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2350@itemx (umod:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2351Like @code{div} and @code{udiv} but represent the remainder instead of
2352the quotient.
2353
2354@findex smin
2355@findex smax
2356@cindex signed minimum
2357@cindex signed maximum
2358@item (smin:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2359@itemx (smax:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2360Represents the smaller (for @code{smin}) or larger (for @code{smax}) of
2361@var{x} and @var{y}, interpreted as signed values in mode @var{m}.
2362When used with floating point, if both operands are zeros, or if either
2363operand is @code{NaN}, then it is unspecified which of the two operands
2364is returned as the result.
2365
2366@findex umin
2367@findex umax
2368@cindex unsigned minimum and maximum
2369@item (umin:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2370@itemx (umax:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2371Like @code{smin} and @code{smax}, but the values are interpreted as unsigned
2372integers.
2373
2374@findex not
2375@cindex complement, bitwise
2376@cindex bitwise complement
2377@item (not:@var{m} @var{x})
2378Represents the bitwise complement of the value represented by @var{x},
2379carried out in mode @var{m}, which must be a fixed-point machine mode.
2380
2381@findex and
2382@cindex logical-and, bitwise
2383@cindex bitwise logical-and
2384@item (and:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2385Represents the bitwise logical-and of the values represented by
2386@var{x} and @var{y}, carried out in machine mode @var{m}, which must be
2387a fixed-point machine mode.
2388
2389@findex ior
2390@cindex inclusive-or, bitwise
2391@cindex bitwise inclusive-or
2392@item (ior:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2393Represents the bitwise inclusive-or of the values represented by @var{x}
2394and @var{y}, carried out in machine mode @var{m}, which must be a
2395fixed-point mode.
2396
2397@findex xor
2398@cindex exclusive-or, bitwise
2399@cindex bitwise exclusive-or
2400@item (xor:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2401Represents the bitwise exclusive-or of the values represented by @var{x}
2402and @var{y}, carried out in machine mode @var{m}, which must be a
2403fixed-point mode.
2404
2405@findex ashift
2406@findex ss_ashift
2407@findex us_ashift
2408@cindex left shift
2409@cindex shift
2410@cindex arithmetic shift
2411@cindex arithmetic shift with signed saturation
2412@cindex arithmetic shift with unsigned saturation
2413@item (ashift:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2414@itemx (ss_ashift:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2415@itemx (us_ashift:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2416These three expressions represent the result of arithmetically shifting @var{x}
2417left by @var{c} places.  They differ in their behavior on overflow of integer
2418modes.  An @code{ashift} operation is a plain shift with no special behavior
2419in case of a change in the sign bit; @code{ss_ashift} and @code{us_ashift}
2420saturates to the minimum or maximum representable value if any of the bits
2421shifted out differs from the final sign bit.
2422
2423@var{x} have mode @var{m}, a fixed-point machine mode.  @var{c}
2424be a fixed-point mode or be a constant with mode @code{VOIDmode}; which
2425mode is determined by the mode called for in the machine description
2426entry for the left-shift instruction.  For example, on the VAX, the mode
2427of @var{c} is @code{QImode} regardless of @var{m}.
2428
2429@findex lshiftrt
2430@cindex right shift
2431@findex ashiftrt
2432@item (lshiftrt:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2433@itemx (ashiftrt:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2434Like @code{ashift} but for right shift.  Unlike the case for left shift,
2435these two operations are distinct.
2436
2437@findex rotate
2438@cindex rotate
2439@cindex left rotate
2440@findex rotatert
2441@cindex right rotate
2442@item (rotate:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2443@itemx (rotatert:@var{m} @var{x} @var{c})
2444Similar but represent left and right rotate.  If @var{c} is a constant,
2445use @code{rotate}.
2446
2447@findex abs
2448@findex ss_abs
2449@cindex absolute value
2450@item (abs:@var{m} @var{x})
2451@item (ss_abs:@var{m} @var{x})
2452Represents the absolute value of @var{x}, computed in mode @var{m}.
2453@code{ss_abs} ensures that an out-of-bounds result saturates to the
2454maximum signed value.
2455
2456
2457@findex sqrt
2458@cindex square root
2459@item (sqrt:@var{m} @var{x})
2460Represents the square root of @var{x}, computed in mode @var{m}.
2461Most often @var{m} will be a floating point mode.
2462
2463@findex ffs
2464@item (ffs:@var{m} @var{x})
2465Represents one plus the index of the least significant 1-bit in
2466@var{x}, represented as an integer of mode @var{m}.  (The value is
2467zero if @var{x} is zero.)  The mode of @var{x} must be @var{m}
2468or @code{VOIDmode}.
2469
2470@findex clrsb
2471@item (clrsb:@var{m} @var{x})
2472Represents the number of redundant leading sign bits in @var{x},
2473represented as an integer of mode @var{m}, starting at the most
2474significant bit position.  This is one less than the number of leading
2475sign bits (either 0 or 1), with no special cases.  The mode of @var{x}
2476must be @var{m} or @code{VOIDmode}.
2477
2478@findex clz
2479@item (clz:@var{m} @var{x})
2480Represents the number of leading 0-bits in @var{x}, represented as an
2481integer of mode @var{m}, starting at the most significant bit position.
2482If @var{x} is zero, the value is determined by
2483@code{CLZ_DEFINED_VALUE_AT_ZERO} (@pxref{Misc}).  Note that this is one of
2484the few expressions that is not invariant under widening.  The mode of
2485@var{x} must be @var{m} or @code{VOIDmode}.
2486
2487@findex ctz
2488@item (ctz:@var{m} @var{x})
2489Represents the number of trailing 0-bits in @var{x}, represented as an
2490integer of mode @var{m}, starting at the least significant bit position.
2491If @var{x} is zero, the value is determined by
2492@code{CTZ_DEFINED_VALUE_AT_ZERO} (@pxref{Misc}).  Except for this case,
2493@code{ctz(x)} is equivalent to @code{ffs(@var{x}) - 1}.  The mode of
2494@var{x} must be @var{m} or @code{VOIDmode}.
2495
2496@findex popcount
2497@item (popcount:@var{m} @var{x})
2498Represents the number of 1-bits in @var{x}, represented as an integer of
2499mode @var{m}.  The mode of @var{x} must be @var{m} or @code{VOIDmode}.
2500
2501@findex parity
2502@item (parity:@var{m} @var{x})
2503Represents the number of 1-bits modulo 2 in @var{x}, represented as an
2504integer of mode @var{m}.  The mode of @var{x} must be @var{m} or
2505@code{VOIDmode}.
2506
2507@findex bswap
2508@item (bswap:@var{m} @var{x})
2509Represents the value @var{x} with the order of bytes reversed, carried out
2510in mode @var{m}, which must be a fixed-point machine mode.
2511The mode of @var{x} must be @var{m} or @code{VOIDmode}.
2512@end table
2513
2514@node Comparisons
2515@section Comparison Operations
2516@cindex RTL comparison operations
2517
2518Comparison operators test a relation on two operands and are considered
2519to represent a machine-dependent nonzero value described by, but not
2520necessarily equal to, @code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} (@pxref{Misc})
2521if the relation holds, or zero if it does not, for comparison operators
2522whose results have a `MODE_INT' mode,
2523@code{FLOAT_STORE_FLAG_VALUE} (@pxref{Misc}) if the relation holds, or
2524zero if it does not, for comparison operators that return floating-point
2525values, and a vector of either @code{VECTOR_STORE_FLAG_VALUE} (@pxref{Misc})
2526if the relation holds, or of zeros if it does not, for comparison operators
2527that return vector results.
2528The mode of the comparison operation is independent of the mode
2529of the data being compared.  If the comparison operation is being tested
2530(e.g., the first operand of an @code{if_then_else}), the mode must be
2531@code{VOIDmode}.
2532
2533@cindex condition codes
2534There are two ways that comparison operations may be used.  The
2535comparison operators may be used to compare the condition codes
2536@code{(cc0)} against zero, as in @code{(eq (cc0) (const_int 0))}.  Such
2537a construct actually refers to the result of the preceding instruction
2538in which the condition codes were set.  The instruction setting the
2539condition code must be adjacent to the instruction using the condition
2540code; only @code{note} insns may separate them.
2541
2542Alternatively, a comparison operation may directly compare two data
2543objects.  The mode of the comparison is determined by the operands; they
2544must both be valid for a common machine mode.  A comparison with both
2545operands constant would be invalid as the machine mode could not be
2546deduced from it, but such a comparison should never exist in RTL due to
2547constant folding.
2548
2549In the example above, if @code{(cc0)} were last set to
2550@code{(compare @var{x} @var{y})}, the comparison operation is
2551identical to @code{(eq @var{x} @var{y})}.  Usually only one style
2552of comparisons is supported on a particular machine, but the combine
2553pass will try to merge the operations to produce the @code{eq} shown
2554in case it exists in the context of the particular insn involved.
2555
2556Inequality comparisons come in two flavors, signed and unsigned.  Thus,
2557there are distinct expression codes @code{gt} and @code{gtu} for signed and
2558unsigned greater-than.  These can produce different results for the same
2559pair of integer values: for example, 1 is signed greater-than @minus{}1 but not
2560unsigned greater-than, because @minus{}1 when regarded as unsigned is actually
2561@code{0xffffffff} which is greater than 1.
2562
2563The signed comparisons are also used for floating point values.  Floating
2564point comparisons are distinguished by the machine modes of the operands.
2565
2566@table @code
2567@findex eq
2568@cindex equal
2569@item (eq:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2570@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} if the values represented by @var{x} and @var{y}
2571are equal, otherwise 0.
2572
2573@findex ne
2574@cindex not equal
2575@item (ne:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2576@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} if the values represented by @var{x} and @var{y}
2577are not equal, otherwise 0.
2578
2579@findex gt
2580@cindex greater than
2581@item (gt:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2582@code{STORE_FLAG_VALUE} if the @var{x} is greater than @var{y}.  If they
2583are fixed-point, the comparison is done in a signed sense.
2584
2585@findex gtu
2586@cindex greater than
2587@cindex unsigned greater than
2588@item (gtu:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2589Like @code{gt} but does unsigned comparison, on fixed-point numbers only.
2590
2591@findex lt
2592@cindex less than
2593@findex ltu
2594@cindex unsigned less than
2595@item (lt:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2596@itemx (ltu:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2597Like @code{gt} and @code{gtu} but test for ``less than''.
2598
2599@findex ge
2600@cindex greater than
2601@findex geu
2602@cindex unsigned greater than
2603@item (ge:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2604@itemx (geu:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2605Like @code{gt} and @code{gtu} but test for ``greater than or equal''.
2606
2607@findex le
2608@cindex less than or equal
2609@findex leu
2610@cindex unsigned less than
2611@item (le:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2612@itemx (leu:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
2613Like @code{gt} and @code{gtu} but test for ``less than or equal''.
2614
2615@findex if_then_else
2616@item (if_then_else @var{cond} @var{then} @var{else})
2617This is not a comparison operation but is listed here because it is
2618always used in conjunction with a comparison operation.  To be
2619precise, @var{cond} is a comparison expression.  This expression
2620represents a choice, according to @var{cond}, between the value
2621represented by @var{then} and the one represented by @var{else}.
2622
2623On most machines, @code{if_then_else} expressions are valid only
2624to express conditional jumps.
2625
2626@findex cond
2627@item (cond [@var{test1} @var{value1} @var{test2} @var{value2} @dots{}] @var{default})
2628Similar to @code{if_then_else}, but more general.  Each of @var{test1},
2629@var{test2}, @dots{} is performed in turn.  The result of this expression is
2630the @var{value} corresponding to the first nonzero test, or @var{default} if
2631none of the tests are nonzero expressions.
2632
2633This is currently not valid for instruction patterns and is supported only
2634for insn attributes.  @xref{Insn Attributes}.
2635@end table
2636
2637@node Bit-Fields
2638@section Bit-Fields
2639@cindex bit-fields
2640
2641Special expression codes exist to represent bit-field instructions.
2642
2643@table @code
2644@findex sign_extract
2645@cindex @code{BITS_BIG_ENDIAN}, effect on @code{sign_extract}
2646@item (sign_extract:@var{m} @var{loc} @var{size} @var{pos})
2647This represents a reference to a sign-extended bit-field contained or
2648starting in @var{loc} (a memory or register reference).  The bit-field
2649is @var{size} bits wide and starts at bit @var{pos}.  The compilation
2650option @code{BITS_BIG_ENDIAN} says which end of the memory unit
2651@var{pos} counts from.
2652
2653If @var{loc} is in memory, its mode must be a single-byte integer mode.
2654If @var{loc} is in a register, the mode to use is specified by the
2655operand of the @code{insv} or @code{extv} pattern
2656(@pxref{Standard Names}) and is usually a full-word integer mode,
2657which is the default if none is specified.
2658
2659The mode of @var{pos} is machine-specific and is also specified
2660in the @code{insv} or @code{extv} pattern.
2661
2662The mode @var{m} is the same as the mode that would be used for
2663@var{loc} if it were a register.
2664
2665A @code{sign_extract} can not appear as an lvalue, or part thereof,
2666in RTL.
2667
2668@findex zero_extract
2669@item (zero_extract:@var{m} @var{loc} @var{size} @var{pos})
2670Like @code{sign_extract} but refers to an unsigned or zero-extended
2671bit-field.  The same sequence of bits are extracted, but they
2672are filled to an entire word with zeros instead of by sign-extension.
2673
2674Unlike @code{sign_extract}, this type of expressions can be lvalues
2675in RTL; they may appear on the left side of an assignment, indicating
2676insertion of a value into the specified bit-field.
2677@end table
2678
2679@node Vector Operations
2680@section Vector Operations
2681@cindex vector operations
2682
2683All normal RTL expressions can be used with vector modes; they are
2684interpreted as operating on each part of the vector independently.
2685Additionally, there are a few new expressions to describe specific vector
2686operations.
2687
2688@table @code
2689@findex vec_merge
2690@item (vec_merge:@var{m} @var{vec1} @var{vec2} @var{items})
2691This describes a merge operation between two vectors.  The result is a vector
2692of mode @var{m}; its elements are selected from either @var{vec1} or
2693@var{vec2}.  Which elements are selected is described by @var{items}, which
2694is a bit mask represented by a @code{const_int}; a zero bit indicates the
2695corresponding element in the result vector is taken from @var{vec2} while
2696a set bit indicates it is taken from @var{vec1}.
2697
2698@findex vec_select
2699@item (vec_select:@var{m} @var{vec1} @var{selection})
2700This describes an operation that selects parts of a vector.  @var{vec1} is
2701the source vector, and @var{selection} is a @code{parallel} that contains a
2702@code{const_int} for each of the subparts of the result vector, giving the
2703number of the source subpart that should be stored into it.
2704The result mode @var{m} is either the submode for a single element of
2705@var{vec1} (if only one subpart is selected), or another vector mode
2706with that element submode (if multiple subparts are selected).
2707
2708@findex vec_concat
2709@item (vec_concat:@var{m} @var{x1} @var{x2})
2710Describes a vector concat operation.  The result is a concatenation of the
2711vectors or scalars @var{x1} and @var{x2}; its length is the sum of the
2712lengths of the two inputs.
2713
2714@findex vec_duplicate
2715@item (vec_duplicate:@var{m} @var{x})
2716This operation converts a scalar into a vector or a small vector into a
2717larger one by duplicating the input values.  The output vector mode must have
2718the same submodes as the input vector mode or the scalar modes, and the
2719number of output parts must be an integer multiple of the number of input
2720parts.
2721
2722@end table
2723
2724@node Conversions
2725@section Conversions
2726@cindex conversions
2727@cindex machine mode conversions
2728
2729All conversions between machine modes must be represented by
2730explicit conversion operations.  For example, an expression
2731which is the sum of a byte and a full word cannot be written as
2732@code{(plus:SI (reg:QI 34) (reg:SI 80))} because the @code{plus}
2733operation requires two operands of the same machine mode.
2734Therefore, the byte-sized operand is enclosed in a conversion
2735operation, as in
2736
2737@smallexample
2738(plus:SI (sign_extend:SI (reg:QI 34)) (reg:SI 80))
2739@end smallexample
2740
2741The conversion operation is not a mere placeholder, because there
2742may be more than one way of converting from a given starting mode
2743to the desired final mode.  The conversion operation code says how
2744to do it.
2745
2746For all conversion operations, @var{x} must not be @code{VOIDmode}
2747because the mode in which to do the conversion would not be known.
2748The conversion must either be done at compile-time or @var{x}
2749must be placed into a register.
2750
2751@table @code
2752@findex sign_extend
2753@item (sign_extend:@var{m} @var{x})
2754Represents the result of sign-extending the value @var{x}
2755to machine mode @var{m}.  @var{m} must be a fixed-point mode
2756and @var{x} a fixed-point value of a mode narrower than @var{m}.
2757
2758@findex zero_extend
2759@item (zero_extend:@var{m} @var{x})
2760Represents the result of zero-extending the value @var{x}
2761to machine mode @var{m}.  @var{m} must be a fixed-point mode
2762and @var{x} a fixed-point value of a mode narrower than @var{m}.
2763
2764@findex float_extend
2765@item (float_extend:@var{m} @var{x})
2766Represents the result of extending the value @var{x}
2767to machine mode @var{m}.  @var{m} must be a floating point mode
2768and @var{x} a floating point value of a mode narrower than @var{m}.
2769
2770@findex truncate
2771@item (truncate:@var{m} @var{x})
2772Represents the result of truncating the value @var{x}
2773to machine mode @var{m}.  @var{m} must be a fixed-point mode
2774and @var{x} a fixed-point value of a mode wider than @var{m}.
2775
2776@findex ss_truncate
2777@item (ss_truncate:@var{m} @var{x})
2778Represents the result of truncating the value @var{x}
2779to machine mode @var{m}, using signed saturation in the case of
2780overflow.  Both @var{m} and the mode of @var{x} must be fixed-point
2781modes.
2782
2783@findex us_truncate
2784@item (us_truncate:@var{m} @var{x})
2785Represents the result of truncating the value @var{x}
2786to machine mode @var{m}, using unsigned saturation in the case of
2787overflow.  Both @var{m} and the mode of @var{x} must be fixed-point
2788modes.
2789
2790@findex float_truncate
2791@item (float_truncate:@var{m} @var{x})
2792Represents the result of truncating the value @var{x}
2793to machine mode @var{m}.  @var{m} must be a floating point mode
2794and @var{x} a floating point value of a mode wider than @var{m}.
2795
2796@findex float
2797@item (float:@var{m} @var{x})
2798Represents the result of converting fixed point value @var{x},
2799regarded as signed, to floating point mode @var{m}.
2800
2801@findex unsigned_float
2802@item (unsigned_float:@var{m} @var{x})
2803Represents the result of converting fixed point value @var{x},
2804regarded as unsigned, to floating point mode @var{m}.
2805
2806@findex fix
2807@item (fix:@var{m} @var{x})
2808When @var{m} is a floating-point mode, represents the result of
2809converting floating point value @var{x} (valid for mode @var{m}) to an
2810integer, still represented in floating point mode @var{m}, by rounding
2811towards zero.
2812
2813When @var{m} is a fixed-point mode, represents the result of
2814converting floating point value @var{x} to mode @var{m}, regarded as
2815signed.  How rounding is done is not specified, so this operation may
2816be used validly in compiling C code only for integer-valued operands.
2817
2818@findex unsigned_fix
2819@item (unsigned_fix:@var{m} @var{x})
2820Represents the result of converting floating point value @var{x} to
2821fixed point mode @var{m}, regarded as unsigned.  How rounding is done
2822is not specified.
2823
2824@findex fract_convert
2825@item (fract_convert:@var{m} @var{x})
2826Represents the result of converting fixed-point value @var{x} to
2827fixed-point mode @var{m}, signed integer value @var{x} to
2828fixed-point mode @var{m}, floating-point value @var{x} to
2829fixed-point mode @var{m}, fixed-point value @var{x} to integer mode @var{m}
2830regarded as signed, or fixed-point value @var{x} to floating-point mode @var{m}.
2831When overflows or underflows happen, the results are undefined.
2832
2833@findex sat_fract
2834@item (sat_fract:@var{m} @var{x})
2835Represents the result of converting fixed-point value @var{x} to
2836fixed-point mode @var{m}, signed integer value @var{x} to
2837fixed-point mode @var{m}, or floating-point value @var{x} to
2838fixed-point mode @var{m}.
2839When overflows or underflows happen, the results are saturated to the
2840maximum or the minimum.
2841
2842@findex unsigned_fract_convert
2843@item (unsigned_fract_convert:@var{m} @var{x})
2844Represents the result of converting fixed-point value @var{x} to
2845integer mode @var{m} regarded as unsigned, or unsigned integer value @var{x} to
2846fixed-point mode @var{m}.
2847When overflows or underflows happen, the results are undefined.
2848
2849@findex unsigned_sat_fract
2850@item (unsigned_sat_fract:@var{m} @var{x})
2851Represents the result of converting unsigned integer value @var{x} to
2852fixed-point mode @var{m}.
2853When overflows or underflows happen, the results are saturated to the
2854maximum or the minimum.
2855@end table
2856
2857@node RTL Declarations
2858@section Declarations
2859@cindex RTL declarations
2860@cindex declarations, RTL
2861
2862Declaration expression codes do not represent arithmetic operations
2863but rather state assertions about their operands.
2864
2865@table @code
2866@findex strict_low_part
2867@cindex @code{subreg}, in @code{strict_low_part}
2868@item (strict_low_part (subreg:@var{m} (reg:@var{n} @var{r}) 0))
2869This expression code is used in only one context: as the destination operand of a
2870@code{set} expression.  In addition, the operand of this expression
2871must be a non-paradoxical @code{subreg} expression.
2872
2873The presence of @code{strict_low_part} says that the part of the
2874register which is meaningful in mode @var{n}, but is not part of
2875mode @var{m}, is not to be altered.  Normally, an assignment to such
2876a subreg is allowed to have undefined effects on the rest of the
2877register when @var{m} is less than a word.
2878@end table
2879
2880@node Side Effects
2881@section Side Effect Expressions
2882@cindex RTL side effect expressions
2883
2884The expression codes described so far represent values, not actions.
2885But machine instructions never produce values; they are meaningful
2886only for their side effects on the state of the machine.  Special
2887expression codes are used to represent side effects.
2888
2889The body of an instruction is always one of these side effect codes;
2890the codes described above, which represent values, appear only as
2891the operands of these.
2892
2893@table @code
2894@findex set
2895@item (set @var{lval} @var{x})
2896Represents the action of storing the value of @var{x} into the place
2897represented by @var{lval}.  @var{lval} must be an expression
2898representing a place that can be stored in: @code{reg} (or @code{subreg},
2899@code{strict_low_part} or @code{zero_extract}), @code{mem}, @code{pc},
2900@code{parallel}, or @code{cc0}.
2901
2902If @var{lval} is a @code{reg}, @code{subreg} or @code{mem}, it has a
2903machine mode; then @var{x} must be valid for that mode.
2904
2905If @var{lval} is a @code{reg} whose machine mode is less than the full
2906width of the register, then it means that the part of the register
2907specified by the machine mode is given the specified value and the
2908rest of the register receives an undefined value.  Likewise, if
2909@var{lval} is a @code{subreg} whose machine mode is narrower than
2910the mode of the register, the rest of the register can be changed in
2911an undefined way.
2912
2913If @var{lval} is a @code{strict_low_part} of a subreg, then the part
2914of the register specified by the machine mode of the @code{subreg} is
2915given the value @var{x} and the rest of the register is not changed.
2916
2917If @var{lval} is a @code{zero_extract}, then the referenced part of
2918the bit-field (a memory or register reference) specified by the
2919@code{zero_extract} is given the value @var{x} and the rest of the
2920bit-field is not changed.  Note that @code{sign_extract} can not
2921appear in @var{lval}.
2922
2923If @var{lval} is @code{(cc0)}, it has no machine mode, and @var{x} may
2924be either a @code{compare} expression or a value that may have any mode.
2925The latter case represents a ``test'' instruction.  The expression
2926@code{(set (cc0) (reg:@var{m} @var{n}))} is equivalent to
2927@code{(set (cc0) (compare (reg:@var{m} @var{n}) (const_int 0)))}.
2928Use the former expression to save space during the compilation.
2929
2930If @var{lval} is a @code{parallel}, it is used to represent the case of
2931a function returning a structure in multiple registers.  Each element
2932of the @code{parallel} is an @code{expr_list} whose first operand is a
2933@code{reg} and whose second operand is a @code{const_int} representing the
2934offset (in bytes) into the structure at which the data in that register
2935corresponds.  The first element may be null to indicate that the structure
2936is also passed partly in memory.
2937
2938@cindex jump instructions and @code{set}
2939@cindex @code{if_then_else} usage
2940If @var{lval} is @code{(pc)}, we have a jump instruction, and the
2941possibilities for @var{x} are very limited.  It may be a
2942@code{label_ref} expression (unconditional jump).  It may be an
2943@code{if_then_else} (conditional jump), in which case either the
2944second or the third operand must be @code{(pc)} (for the case which
2945does not jump) and the other of the two must be a @code{label_ref}
2946(for the case which does jump).  @var{x} may also be a @code{mem} or
2947@code{(plus:SI (pc) @var{y})}, where @var{y} may be a @code{reg} or a
2948@code{mem}; these unusual patterns are used to represent jumps through
2949branch tables.
2950
2951If @var{lval} is neither @code{(cc0)} nor @code{(pc)}, the mode of
2952@var{lval} must not be @code{VOIDmode} and the mode of @var{x} must be
2953valid for the mode of @var{lval}.
2954
2955@findex SET_DEST
2956@findex SET_SRC
2957@var{lval} is customarily accessed with the @code{SET_DEST} macro and
2958@var{x} with the @code{SET_SRC} macro.
2959
2960@findex return
2961@item (return)
2962As the sole expression in a pattern, represents a return from the
2963current function, on machines where this can be done with one
2964instruction, such as VAXen.  On machines where a multi-instruction
2965``epilogue'' must be executed in order to return from the function,
2966returning is done by jumping to a label which precedes the epilogue, and
2967the @code{return} expression code is never used.
2968
2969Inside an @code{if_then_else} expression, represents the value to be
2970placed in @code{pc} to return to the caller.
2971
2972Note that an insn pattern of @code{(return)} is logically equivalent to
2973@code{(set (pc) (return))}, but the latter form is never used.
2974
2975@findex simple_return
2976@item (simple_return)
2977Like @code{(return)}, but truly represents only a function return, while
2978@code{(return)} may represent an insn that also performs other functions
2979of the function epilogue.  Like @code{(return)}, this may also occur in
2980conditional jumps.
2981
2982@findex call
2983@item (call @var{function} @var{nargs})
2984Represents a function call.  @var{function} is a @code{mem} expression
2985whose address is the address of the function to be called.
2986@var{nargs} is an expression which can be used for two purposes: on
2987some machines it represents the number of bytes of stack argument; on
2988others, it represents the number of argument registers.
2989
2990Each machine has a standard machine mode which @var{function} must
2991have.  The machine description defines macro @code{FUNCTION_MODE} to
2992expand into the requisite mode name.  The purpose of this mode is to
2993specify what kind of addressing is allowed, on machines where the
2994allowed kinds of addressing depend on the machine mode being
2995addressed.
2996
2997@findex clobber
2998@item (clobber @var{x})
2999Represents the storing or possible storing of an unpredictable,
3000undescribed value into @var{x}, which must be a @code{reg},
3001@code{scratch}, @code{parallel} or @code{mem} expression.
3002
3003One place this is used is in string instructions that store standard
3004values into particular hard registers.  It may not be worth the
3005trouble to describe the values that are stored, but it is essential to
3006inform the compiler that the registers will be altered, lest it
3007attempt to keep data in them across the string instruction.
3008
3009If @var{x} is @code{(mem:BLK (const_int 0))} or
3010@code{(mem:BLK (scratch))}, it means that all memory
3011locations must be presumed clobbered.  If @var{x} is a @code{parallel},
3012it has the same meaning as a @code{parallel} in a @code{set} expression.
3013
3014Note that the machine description classifies certain hard registers as
3015``call-clobbered''.  All function call instructions are assumed by
3016default to clobber these registers, so there is no need to use
3017@code{clobber} expressions to indicate this fact.  Also, each function
3018call is assumed to have the potential to alter any memory location,
3019unless the function is declared @code{const}.
3020
3021If the last group of expressions in a @code{parallel} are each a
3022@code{clobber} expression whose arguments are @code{reg} or
3023@code{match_scratch} (@pxref{RTL Template}) expressions, the combiner
3024phase can add the appropriate @code{clobber} expressions to an insn it
3025has constructed when doing so will cause a pattern to be matched.
3026
3027This feature can be used, for example, on a machine that whose multiply
3028and add instructions don't use an MQ register but which has an
3029add-accumulate instruction that does clobber the MQ register.  Similarly,
3030a combined instruction might require a temporary register while the
3031constituent instructions might not.
3032
3033When a @code{clobber} expression for a register appears inside a
3034@code{parallel} with other side effects, the register allocator
3035guarantees that the register is unoccupied both before and after that
3036insn if it is a hard register clobber.  For pseudo-register clobber,
3037the register allocator and the reload pass do not assign the same hard
3038register to the clobber and the input operands if there is an insn
3039alternative containing the @samp{&} constraint (@pxref{Modifiers}) for
3040the clobber and the hard register is in register classes of the
3041clobber in the alternative.  You can clobber either a specific hard
3042register, a pseudo register, or a @code{scratch} expression; in the
3043latter two cases, GCC will allocate a hard register that is available
3044there for use as a temporary.
3045
3046For instructions that require a temporary register, you should use
3047@code{scratch} instead of a pseudo-register because this will allow the
3048combiner phase to add the @code{clobber} when required.  You do this by
3049coding (@code{clobber} (@code{match_scratch} @dots{})).  If you do
3050clobber a pseudo register, use one which appears nowhere else---generate
3051a new one each time.  Otherwise, you may confuse CSE@.
3052
3053There is one other known use for clobbering a pseudo register in a
3054@code{parallel}: when one of the input operands of the insn is also
3055clobbered by the insn.  In this case, using the same pseudo register in
3056the clobber and elsewhere in the insn produces the expected results.
3057
3058@findex use
3059@item (use @var{x})
3060Represents the use of the value of @var{x}.  It indicates that the
3061value in @var{x} at this point in the program is needed, even though
3062it may not be apparent why this is so.  Therefore, the compiler will
3063not attempt to delete previous instructions whose only effect is to
3064store a value in @var{x}.  @var{x} must be a @code{reg} expression.
3065
3066In some situations, it may be tempting to add a @code{use} of a
3067register in a @code{parallel} to describe a situation where the value
3068of a special register will modify the behavior of the instruction.
3069A hypothetical example might be a pattern for an addition that can
3070either wrap around or use saturating addition depending on the value
3071of a special control register:
3072
3073@smallexample
3074(parallel [(set (reg:SI 2) (unspec:SI [(reg:SI 3)
3075                                       (reg:SI 4)] 0))
3076           (use (reg:SI 1))])
3077@end smallexample
3078
3079@noindent
3080
3081This will not work, several of the optimizers only look at expressions
3082locally; it is very likely that if you have multiple insns with
3083identical inputs to the @code{unspec}, they will be optimized away even
3084if register 1 changes in between.
3085
3086This means that @code{use} can @emph{only} be used to describe
3087that the register is live.  You should think twice before adding
3088@code{use} statements, more often you will want to use @code{unspec}
3089instead.  The @code{use} RTX is most commonly useful to describe that
3090a fixed register is implicitly used in an insn.  It is also safe to use
3091in patterns where the compiler knows for other reasons that the result
3092of the whole pattern is variable, such as @samp{movmem@var{m}} or
3093@samp{call} patterns.
3094
3095During the reload phase, an insn that has a @code{use} as pattern
3096can carry a reg_equal note.  These @code{use} insns will be deleted
3097before the reload phase exits.
3098
3099During the delayed branch scheduling phase, @var{x} may be an insn.
3100This indicates that @var{x} previously was located at this place in the
3101code and its data dependencies need to be taken into account.  These
3102@code{use} insns will be deleted before the delayed branch scheduling
3103phase exits.
3104
3105@findex parallel
3106@item (parallel [@var{x0} @var{x1} @dots{}])
3107Represents several side effects performed in parallel.  The square
3108brackets stand for a vector; the operand of @code{parallel} is a
3109vector of expressions.  @var{x0}, @var{x1} and so on are individual
3110side effect expressions---expressions of code @code{set}, @code{call},
3111@code{return}, @code{simple_return}, @code{clobber} or @code{use}.
3112
3113``In parallel'' means that first all the values used in the individual
3114side-effects are computed, and second all the actual side-effects are
3115performed.  For example,
3116
3117@smallexample
3118(parallel [(set (reg:SI 1) (mem:SI (reg:SI 1)))
3119           (set (mem:SI (reg:SI 1)) (reg:SI 1))])
3120@end smallexample
3121
3122@noindent
3123says unambiguously that the values of hard register 1 and the memory
3124location addressed by it are interchanged.  In both places where
3125@code{(reg:SI 1)} appears as a memory address it refers to the value
3126in register 1 @emph{before} the execution of the insn.
3127
3128It follows that it is @emph{incorrect} to use @code{parallel} and
3129expect the result of one @code{set} to be available for the next one.
3130For example, people sometimes attempt to represent a jump-if-zero
3131instruction this way:
3132
3133@smallexample
3134(parallel [(set (cc0) (reg:SI 34))
3135           (set (pc) (if_then_else
3136                        (eq (cc0) (const_int 0))
3137                        (label_ref @dots{})
3138                        (pc)))])
3139@end smallexample
3140
3141@noindent
3142But this is incorrect, because it says that the jump condition depends
3143on the condition code value @emph{before} this instruction, not on the
3144new value that is set by this instruction.
3145
3146@cindex peephole optimization, RTL representation
3147Peephole optimization, which takes place together with final assembly
3148code output, can produce insns whose patterns consist of a @code{parallel}
3149whose elements are the operands needed to output the resulting
3150assembler code---often @code{reg}, @code{mem} or constant expressions.
3151This would not be well-formed RTL at any other stage in compilation,
3152but it is OK then because no further optimization remains to be done.
3153However, the definition of the macro @code{NOTICE_UPDATE_CC}, if
3154any, must deal with such insns if you define any peephole optimizations.
3155
3156@findex cond_exec
3157@item (cond_exec [@var{cond} @var{expr}])
3158Represents a conditionally executed expression.  The @var{expr} is
3159executed only if the @var{cond} is nonzero.  The @var{cond} expression
3160must not have side-effects, but the @var{expr} may very well have
3161side-effects.
3162
3163@findex sequence
3164@item (sequence [@var{insns} @dots{}])
3165Represents a sequence of insns.  If a @code{sequence} appears in the
3166chain of insns, then each of the @var{insns} that appears in the sequence
3167must be suitable for appearing in the chain of insns, i.e. must satisfy
3168the @code{INSN_P} predicate.
3169
3170After delay-slot scheduling is completed, an insn and all the insns that
3171reside in its delay slots are grouped together into a @code{sequence}.
3172The insn requiring the delay slot is the first insn in the vector;
3173subsequent insns are to be placed in the delay slot.
3174
3175@code{INSN_ANNULLED_BRANCH_P} is set on an insn in a delay slot to
3176indicate that a branch insn should be used that will conditionally annul
3177the effect of the insns in the delay slots.  In such a case,
3178@code{INSN_FROM_TARGET_P} indicates that the insn is from the target of
3179the branch and should be executed only if the branch is taken; otherwise
3180the insn should be executed only if the branch is not taken.
3181@xref{Delay Slots}.
3182
3183Some back ends also use @code{sequence} objects for purposes other than
3184delay-slot groups.  This is not supported in the common parts of the
3185compiler, which treat such sequences as delay-slot groups.
3186
3187DWARF2 Call Frame Address (CFA) adjustments are sometimes also expressed
3188using @code{sequence} objects as the value of a @code{RTX_FRAME_RELATED_P}
3189note.  This only happens if the CFA adjustments cannot be easily derived
3190from the pattern of the instruction to which the note is attached.  In
3191such cases, the value of the note is used instead of best-guesing the
3192semantics of the instruction.  The back end can attach notes containing
3193a @code{sequence} of @code{set} patterns that express the effect of the
3194parent instruction.
3195@end table
3196
3197These expression codes appear in place of a side effect, as the body of
3198an insn, though strictly speaking they do not always describe side
3199effects as such:
3200
3201@table @code
3202@findex asm_input
3203@item (asm_input @var{s})
3204Represents literal assembler code as described by the string @var{s}.
3205
3206@findex unspec
3207@findex unspec_volatile
3208@item (unspec [@var{operands} @dots{}] @var{index})
3209@itemx (unspec_volatile [@var{operands} @dots{}] @var{index})
3210Represents a machine-specific operation on @var{operands}.  @var{index}
3211selects between multiple machine-specific operations.
3212@code{unspec_volatile} is used for volatile operations and operations
3213that may trap; @code{unspec} is used for other operations.
3214
3215These codes may appear inside a @code{pattern} of an
3216insn, inside a @code{parallel}, or inside an expression.
3217
3218@findex addr_vec
3219@item (addr_vec:@var{m} [@var{lr0} @var{lr1} @dots{}])
3220Represents a table of jump addresses.  The vector elements @var{lr0},
3221etc., are @code{label_ref} expressions.  The mode @var{m} specifies
3222how much space is given to each address; normally @var{m} would be
3223@code{Pmode}.
3224
3225@findex addr_diff_vec
3226@item (addr_diff_vec:@var{m} @var{base} [@var{lr0} @var{lr1} @dots{}] @var{min} @var{max} @var{flags})
3227Represents a table of jump addresses expressed as offsets from
3228@var{base}.  The vector elements @var{lr0}, etc., are @code{label_ref}
3229expressions and so is @var{base}.  The mode @var{m} specifies how much
3230space is given to each address-difference.  @var{min} and @var{max}
3231are set up by branch shortening and hold a label with a minimum and a
3232maximum address, respectively.  @var{flags} indicates the relative
3233position of @var{base}, @var{min} and @var{max} to the containing insn
3234and of @var{min} and @var{max} to @var{base}.  See rtl.def for details.
3235
3236@findex prefetch
3237@item (prefetch:@var{m} @var{addr} @var{rw} @var{locality})
3238Represents prefetch of memory at address @var{addr}.
3239Operand @var{rw} is 1 if the prefetch is for data to be written, 0 otherwise;
3240targets that do not support write prefetches should treat this as a normal
3241prefetch.
3242Operand @var{locality} specifies the amount of temporal locality; 0 if there
3243is none or 1, 2, or 3 for increasing levels of temporal locality;
3244targets that do not support locality hints should ignore this.
3245
3246This insn is used to minimize cache-miss latency by moving data into a
3247cache before it is accessed.  It should use only non-faulting data prefetch
3248instructions.
3249@end table
3250
3251@node Incdec
3252@section Embedded Side-Effects on Addresses
3253@cindex RTL preincrement
3254@cindex RTL postincrement
3255@cindex RTL predecrement
3256@cindex RTL postdecrement
3257
3258Six special side-effect expression codes appear as memory addresses.
3259
3260@table @code
3261@findex pre_dec
3262@item (pre_dec:@var{m} @var{x})
3263Represents the side effect of decrementing @var{x} by a standard
3264amount and represents also the value that @var{x} has after being
3265decremented.  @var{x} must be a @code{reg} or @code{mem}, but most
3266machines allow only a @code{reg}.  @var{m} must be the machine mode
3267for pointers on the machine in use.  The amount @var{x} is decremented
3268by is the length in bytes of the machine mode of the containing memory
3269reference of which this expression serves as the address.  Here is an
3270example of its use:
3271
3272@smallexample
3273(mem:DF (pre_dec:SI (reg:SI 39)))
3274@end smallexample
3275
3276@noindent
3277This says to decrement pseudo register 39 by the length of a @code{DFmode}
3278value and use the result to address a @code{DFmode} value.
3279
3280@findex pre_inc
3281@item (pre_inc:@var{m} @var{x})
3282Similar, but specifies incrementing @var{x} instead of decrementing it.
3283
3284@findex post_dec
3285@item (post_dec:@var{m} @var{x})
3286Represents the same side effect as @code{pre_dec} but a different
3287value.  The value represented here is the value @var{x} has @i{before}
3288being decremented.
3289
3290@findex post_inc
3291@item (post_inc:@var{m} @var{x})
3292Similar, but specifies incrementing @var{x} instead of decrementing it.
3293
3294@findex post_modify
3295@item (post_modify:@var{m} @var{x} @var{y})
3296
3297Represents the side effect of setting @var{x} to @var{y} and
3298represents @var{x} before @var{x} is modified.  @var{x} must be a
3299@code{reg} or @code{mem}, but most machines allow only a @code{reg}.
3300@var{m} must be the machine mode for pointers on the machine in use.
3301
3302The expression @var{y} must be one of three forms:
3303@code{(plus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{z})},
3304@code{(minus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{z})}, or
3305@code{(plus:@var{m} @var{x} @var{i})},
3306where @var{z} is an index register and @var{i} is a constant.
3307
3308Here is an example of its use:
3309
3310@smallexample
3311(mem:SF (post_modify:SI (reg:SI 42) (plus (reg:SI 42)
3312                                          (reg:SI 48))))
3313@end smallexample
3314
3315This says to modify pseudo register 42 by adding the contents of pseudo
3316register 48 to it, after the use of what ever 42 points to.
3317
3318@findex pre_modify
3319@item (pre_modify:@var{m} @var{x} @var{expr})
3320Similar except side effects happen before the use.
3321@end table
3322
3323These embedded side effect expressions must be used with care.  Instruction
3324patterns may not use them.  Until the @samp{flow} pass of the compiler,
3325they may occur only to represent pushes onto the stack.  The @samp{flow}
3326pass finds cases where registers are incremented or decremented in one
3327instruction and used as an address shortly before or after; these cases are
3328then transformed to use pre- or post-increment or -decrement.
3329
3330If a register used as the operand of these expressions is used in
3331another address in an insn, the original value of the register is used.
3332Uses of the register outside of an address are not permitted within the
3333same insn as a use in an embedded side effect expression because such
3334insns behave differently on different machines and hence must be treated
3335as ambiguous and disallowed.
3336
3337An instruction that can be represented with an embedded side effect
3338could also be represented using @code{parallel} containing an additional
3339@code{set} to describe how the address register is altered.  This is not
3340done because machines that allow these operations at all typically
3341allow them wherever a memory address is called for.  Describing them as
3342additional parallel stores would require doubling the number of entries
3343in the machine description.
3344
3345@node Assembler
3346@section Assembler Instructions as Expressions
3347@cindex assembler instructions in RTL
3348
3349@cindex @code{asm_operands}, usage
3350The RTX code @code{asm_operands} represents a value produced by a
3351user-specified assembler instruction.  It is used to represent
3352an @code{asm} statement with arguments.  An @code{asm} statement with
3353a single output operand, like this:
3354
3355@smallexample
3356asm ("foo %1,%2,%0" : "=a" (outputvar) : "g" (x + y), "di" (*z));
3357@end smallexample
3358
3359@noindent
3360is represented using a single @code{asm_operands} RTX which represents
3361the value that is stored in @code{outputvar}:
3362
3363@smallexample
3364(set @var{rtx-for-outputvar}
3365     (asm_operands "foo %1,%2,%0" "a" 0
3366                   [@var{rtx-for-addition-result} @var{rtx-for-*z}]
3367                   [(asm_input:@var{m1} "g")
3368                    (asm_input:@var{m2} "di")]))
3369@end smallexample
3370
3371@noindent
3372Here the operands of the @code{asm_operands} RTX are the assembler
3373template string, the output-operand's constraint, the index-number of the
3374output operand among the output operands specified, a vector of input
3375operand RTX's, and a vector of input-operand modes and constraints.  The
3376mode @var{m1} is the mode of the sum @code{x+y}; @var{m2} is that of
3377@code{*z}.
3378
3379When an @code{asm} statement has multiple output values, its insn has
3380several such @code{set} RTX's inside of a @code{parallel}.  Each @code{set}
3381contains an @code{asm_operands}; all of these share the same assembler
3382template and vectors, but each contains the constraint for the respective
3383output operand.  They are also distinguished by the output-operand index
3384number, which is 0, 1, @dots{} for successive output operands.
3385
3386@node Debug Information
3387@section Variable Location Debug Information in RTL
3388@cindex Variable Location Debug Information in RTL
3389
3390Variable tracking relies on @code{MEM_EXPR} and @code{REG_EXPR}
3391annotations to determine what user variables memory and register
3392references refer to.
3393
3394Variable tracking at assignments uses these notes only when they refer
3395to variables that live at fixed locations (e.g., addressable
3396variables, global non-automatic variables).  For variables whose
3397location may vary, it relies on the following types of notes.
3398
3399@table @code
3400@findex var_location
3401@item (var_location:@var{mode} @var{var} @var{exp} @var{stat})
3402Binds variable @code{var}, a tree, to value @var{exp}, an RTL
3403expression.  It appears only in @code{NOTE_INSN_VAR_LOCATION} and
3404@code{DEBUG_INSN}s, with slightly different meanings.  @var{mode}, if
3405present, represents the mode of @var{exp}, which is useful if it is a
3406modeless expression.  @var{stat} is only meaningful in notes,
3407indicating whether the variable is known to be initialized or
3408uninitialized.
3409
3410@findex debug_expr
3411@item (debug_expr:@var{mode} @var{decl})
3412Stands for the value bound to the @code{DEBUG_EXPR_DECL} @var{decl},
3413that points back to it, within value expressions in
3414@code{VAR_LOCATION} nodes.
3415
3416@end table
3417
3418@node Insns
3419@section Insns
3420@cindex insns
3421
3422The RTL representation of the code for a function is a doubly-linked
3423chain of objects called @dfn{insns}.  Insns are expressions with
3424special codes that are used for no other purpose.  Some insns are
3425actual instructions; others represent dispatch tables for @code{switch}
3426statements; others represent labels to jump to or various sorts of
3427declarative information.
3428
3429In addition to its own specific data, each insn must have a unique
3430id-number that distinguishes it from all other insns in the current
3431function (after delayed branch scheduling, copies of an insn with the
3432same id-number may be present in multiple places in a function, but
3433these copies will always be identical and will only appear inside a
3434@code{sequence}), and chain pointers to the preceding and following
3435insns.  These three fields occupy the same position in every insn,
3436independent of the expression code of the insn.  They could be accessed
3437with @code{XEXP} and @code{XINT}, but instead three special macros are
3438always used:
3439
3440@table @code
3441@findex INSN_UID
3442@item INSN_UID (@var{i})
3443Accesses the unique id of insn @var{i}.
3444
3445@findex PREV_INSN
3446@item PREV_INSN (@var{i})
3447Accesses the chain pointer to the insn preceding @var{i}.
3448If @var{i} is the first insn, this is a null pointer.
3449
3450@findex NEXT_INSN
3451@item NEXT_INSN (@var{i})
3452Accesses the chain pointer to the insn following @var{i}.
3453If @var{i} is the last insn, this is a null pointer.
3454@end table
3455
3456@findex get_insns
3457@findex get_last_insn
3458The first insn in the chain is obtained by calling @code{get_insns}; the
3459last insn is the result of calling @code{get_last_insn}.  Within the
3460chain delimited by these insns, the @code{NEXT_INSN} and
3461@code{PREV_INSN} pointers must always correspond: if @var{insn} is not
3462the first insn,
3463
3464@smallexample
3465NEXT_INSN (PREV_INSN (@var{insn})) == @var{insn}
3466@end smallexample
3467
3468@noindent
3469is always true and if @var{insn} is not the last insn,
3470
3471@smallexample
3472PREV_INSN (NEXT_INSN (@var{insn})) == @var{insn}
3473@end smallexample
3474
3475@noindent
3476is always true.
3477
3478After delay slot scheduling, some of the insns in the chain might be
3479@code{sequence} expressions, which contain a vector of insns.  The value
3480of @code{NEXT_INSN} in all but the last of these insns is the next insn
3481in the vector; the value of @code{NEXT_INSN} of the last insn in the vector
3482is the same as the value of @code{NEXT_INSN} for the @code{sequence} in
3483which it is contained.  Similar rules apply for @code{PREV_INSN}.
3484
3485This means that the above invariants are not necessarily true for insns
3486inside @code{sequence} expressions.  Specifically, if @var{insn} is the
3487first insn in a @code{sequence}, @code{NEXT_INSN (PREV_INSN (@var{insn}))}
3488is the insn containing the @code{sequence} expression, as is the value
3489of @code{PREV_INSN (NEXT_INSN (@var{insn}))} if @var{insn} is the last
3490insn in the @code{sequence} expression.  You can use these expressions
3491to find the containing @code{sequence} expression.
3492
3493Every insn has one of the following expression codes:
3494
3495@table @code
3496@findex insn
3497@item insn
3498The expression code @code{insn} is used for instructions that do not jump
3499and do not do function calls.  @code{sequence} expressions are always
3500contained in insns with code @code{insn} even if one of those insns
3501should jump or do function calls.
3502
3503Insns with code @code{insn} have four additional fields beyond the three
3504mandatory ones listed above.  These four are described in a table below.
3505
3506@findex jump_insn
3507@item jump_insn
3508The expression code @code{jump_insn} is used for instructions that may
3509jump (or, more generally, may contain @code{label_ref} expressions to
3510which @code{pc} can be set in that instruction).  If there is an
3511instruction to return from the current function, it is recorded as a
3512@code{jump_insn}.
3513
3514@findex JUMP_LABEL
3515@code{jump_insn} insns have the same extra fields as @code{insn} insns,
3516accessed in the same way and in addition contain a field
3517@code{JUMP_LABEL} which is defined once jump optimization has completed.
3518
3519For simple conditional and unconditional jumps, this field contains
3520the @code{code_label} to which this insn will (possibly conditionally)
3521branch.  In a more complex jump, @code{JUMP_LABEL} records one of the
3522labels that the insn refers to; other jump target labels are recorded
3523as @code{REG_LABEL_TARGET} notes.  The exception is @code{addr_vec}
3524and @code{addr_diff_vec}, where @code{JUMP_LABEL} is @code{NULL_RTX}
3525and the only way to find the labels is to scan the entire body of the
3526insn.
3527
3528Return insns count as jumps, but since they do not refer to any
3529labels, their @code{JUMP_LABEL} is @code{NULL_RTX}.
3530
3531@findex call_insn
3532@item call_insn
3533The expression code @code{call_insn} is used for instructions that may do
3534function calls.  It is important to distinguish these instructions because
3535they imply that certain registers and memory locations may be altered
3536unpredictably.
3537
3538@findex CALL_INSN_FUNCTION_USAGE
3539@code{call_insn} insns have the same extra fields as @code{insn} insns,
3540accessed in the same way and in addition contain a field
3541@code{CALL_INSN_FUNCTION_USAGE}, which contains a list (chain of
3542@code{expr_list} expressions) containing @code{use}, @code{clobber} and
3543sometimes @code{set} expressions that denote hard registers and
3544@code{mem}s used or clobbered by the called function.
3545
3546A @code{mem} generally points to a stack slot in which arguments passed
3547to the libcall by reference (@pxref{Register Arguments,
3548TARGET_PASS_BY_REFERENCE}) are stored.  If the argument is
3549caller-copied (@pxref{Register Arguments, TARGET_CALLEE_COPIES}),
3550the stack slot will be mentioned in @code{clobber} and @code{use}
3551entries; if it's callee-copied, only a @code{use} will appear, and the
3552@code{mem} may point to addresses that are not stack slots.
3553
3554Registers occurring inside a @code{clobber} in this list augment
3555registers specified in @code{CALL_USED_REGISTERS} (@pxref{Register
3556Basics}).
3557
3558If the list contains a @code{set} involving two registers, it indicates
3559that the function returns one of its arguments.  Such a @code{set} may
3560look like a no-op if the same register holds the argument and the return
3561value.
3562
3563@findex code_label
3564@findex CODE_LABEL_NUMBER
3565@item code_label
3566A @code{code_label} insn represents a label that a jump insn can jump
3567to.  It contains two special fields of data in addition to the three
3568standard ones.  @code{CODE_LABEL_NUMBER} is used to hold the @dfn{label
3569number}, a number that identifies this label uniquely among all the
3570labels in the compilation (not just in the current function).
3571Ultimately, the label is represented in the assembler output as an
3572assembler label, usually of the form @samp{L@var{n}} where @var{n} is
3573the label number.
3574
3575When a @code{code_label} appears in an RTL expression, it normally
3576appears within a @code{label_ref} which represents the address of
3577the label, as a number.
3578
3579Besides as a @code{code_label}, a label can also be represented as a
3580@code{note} of type @code{NOTE_INSN_DELETED_LABEL}.
3581
3582@findex LABEL_NUSES
3583The field @code{LABEL_NUSES} is only defined once the jump optimization
3584phase is completed.  It contains the number of times this label is
3585referenced in the current function.
3586
3587@findex LABEL_KIND
3588@findex SET_LABEL_KIND
3589@findex LABEL_ALT_ENTRY_P
3590@cindex alternate entry points
3591The field @code{LABEL_KIND} differentiates four different types of
3592labels: @code{LABEL_NORMAL}, @code{LABEL_STATIC_ENTRY},
3593@code{LABEL_GLOBAL_ENTRY}, and @code{LABEL_WEAK_ENTRY}.  The only labels
3594that do not have type @code{LABEL_NORMAL} are @dfn{alternate entry
3595points} to the current function.  These may be static (visible only in
3596the containing translation unit), global (exposed to all translation
3597units), or weak (global, but can be overridden by another symbol with the
3598same name).
3599
3600Much of the compiler treats all four kinds of label identically.  Some
3601of it needs to know whether or not a label is an alternate entry point;
3602for this purpose, the macro @code{LABEL_ALT_ENTRY_P} is provided.  It is
3603equivalent to testing whether @samp{LABEL_KIND (label) == LABEL_NORMAL}.
3604The only place that cares about the distinction between static, global,
3605and weak alternate entry points, besides the front-end code that creates
3606them, is the function @code{output_alternate_entry_point}, in
3607@file{final.c}.
3608
3609To set the kind of a label, use the @code{SET_LABEL_KIND} macro.
3610
3611@findex jump_table_data
3612@item jump_table_data
3613A @code{jump_table_data} insn is a placeholder for the jump-table data
3614of a @code{casesi} or @code{tablejump} insn.  They are placed after
3615a @code{tablejump_p} insn.  A @code{jump_table_data} insn is not part o
3616a basic blockm but it is associated with the basic block that ends with
3617the @code{tablejump_p} insn.  The @code{PATTERN} of a @code{jump_table_data}
3618is always either an @code{addr_vec} or an @code{addr_diff_vec}, and a
3619@code{jump_table_data} insn is always preceded by a @code{code_label}.
3620The @code{tablejump_p} insn refers to that @code{code_label} via its
3621@code{JUMP_LABEL}.
3622
3623@findex barrier
3624@item barrier
3625Barriers are placed in the instruction stream when control cannot flow
3626past them.  They are placed after unconditional jump instructions to
3627indicate that the jumps are unconditional and after calls to
3628@code{volatile} functions, which do not return (e.g., @code{exit}).
3629They contain no information beyond the three standard fields.
3630
3631@findex note
3632@findex NOTE_LINE_NUMBER
3633@findex NOTE_SOURCE_FILE
3634@item note
3635@code{note} insns are used to represent additional debugging and
3636declarative information.  They contain two nonstandard fields, an
3637integer which is accessed with the macro @code{NOTE_LINE_NUMBER} and a
3638string accessed with @code{NOTE_SOURCE_FILE}.
3639
3640If @code{NOTE_LINE_NUMBER} is positive, the note represents the
3641position of a source line and @code{NOTE_SOURCE_FILE} is the source file name
3642that the line came from.  These notes control generation of line
3643number data in the assembler output.
3644
3645Otherwise, @code{NOTE_LINE_NUMBER} is not really a line number but a
3646code with one of the following values (and @code{NOTE_SOURCE_FILE}
3647must contain a null pointer):
3648
3649@table @code
3650@findex NOTE_INSN_DELETED
3651@item NOTE_INSN_DELETED
3652Such a note is completely ignorable.  Some passes of the compiler
3653delete insns by altering them into notes of this kind.
3654
3655@findex NOTE_INSN_DELETED_LABEL
3656@item NOTE_INSN_DELETED_LABEL
3657This marks what used to be a @code{code_label}, but was not used for other
3658purposes than taking its address and was transformed to mark that no
3659code jumps to it.
3660
3661@findex NOTE_INSN_BLOCK_BEG
3662@findex NOTE_INSN_BLOCK_END
3663@item NOTE_INSN_BLOCK_BEG
3664@itemx NOTE_INSN_BLOCK_END
3665These types of notes indicate the position of the beginning and end
3666of a level of scoping of variable names.  They control the output
3667of debugging information.
3668
3669@findex NOTE_INSN_EH_REGION_BEG
3670@findex NOTE_INSN_EH_REGION_END
3671@item NOTE_INSN_EH_REGION_BEG
3672@itemx NOTE_INSN_EH_REGION_END
3673These types of notes indicate the position of the beginning and end of a
3674level of scoping for exception handling.  @code{NOTE_EH_HANDLER}
3675identifies which region is associated with these notes.
3676
3677@findex NOTE_INSN_FUNCTION_BEG
3678@item NOTE_INSN_FUNCTION_BEG
3679Appears at the start of the function body, after the function
3680prologue.
3681
3682@findex NOTE_INSN_VAR_LOCATION
3683@findex NOTE_VAR_LOCATION
3684@item NOTE_INSN_VAR_LOCATION
3685This note is used to generate variable location debugging information.
3686It indicates that the user variable in its @code{VAR_LOCATION} operand
3687is at the location given in the RTL expression, or holds a value that
3688can be computed by evaluating the RTL expression from that static
3689point in the program up to the next such note for the same user
3690variable.
3691
3692@end table
3693
3694These codes are printed symbolically when they appear in debugging dumps.
3695
3696@findex debug_insn
3697@findex INSN_VAR_LOCATION
3698@item debug_insn
3699The expression code @code{debug_insn} is used for pseudo-instructions
3700that hold debugging information for variable tracking at assignments
3701(see @option{-fvar-tracking-assignments} option).  They are the RTL
3702representation of @code{GIMPLE_DEBUG} statements
3703(@ref{@code{GIMPLE_DEBUG}}), with a @code{VAR_LOCATION} operand that
3704binds a user variable tree to an RTL representation of the
3705@code{value} in the corresponding statement.  A @code{DEBUG_EXPR} in
3706it stands for the value bound to the corresponding
3707@code{DEBUG_EXPR_DECL}.
3708
3709Throughout optimization passes, binding information is kept in
3710pseudo-instruction form, so that, unlike notes, it gets the same
3711treatment and adjustments that regular instructions would.  It is the
3712variable tracking pass that turns these pseudo-instructions into var
3713location notes, analyzing control flow, value equivalences and changes
3714to registers and memory referenced in value expressions, propagating
3715the values of debug temporaries and determining expressions that can
3716be used to compute the value of each user variable at as many points
3717(ranges, actually) in the program as possible.
3718
3719Unlike @code{NOTE_INSN_VAR_LOCATION}, the value expression in an
3720@code{INSN_VAR_LOCATION} denotes a value at that specific point in the
3721program, rather than an expression that can be evaluated at any later
3722point before an overriding @code{VAR_LOCATION} is encountered.  E.g.,
3723if a user variable is bound to a @code{REG} and then a subsequent insn
3724modifies the @code{REG}, the note location would keep mapping the user
3725variable to the register across the insn, whereas the insn location
3726would keep the variable bound to the value, so that the variable
3727tracking pass would emit another location note for the variable at the
3728point in which the register is modified.
3729
3730@end table
3731
3732@cindex @code{TImode}, in @code{insn}
3733@cindex @code{HImode}, in @code{insn}
3734@cindex @code{QImode}, in @code{insn}
3735The machine mode of an insn is normally @code{VOIDmode}, but some
3736phases use the mode for various purposes.
3737
3738The common subexpression elimination pass sets the mode of an insn to
3739@code{QImode} when it is the first insn in a block that has already
3740been processed.
3741
3742The second Haifa scheduling pass, for targets that can multiple issue,
3743sets the mode of an insn to @code{TImode} when it is believed that the
3744instruction begins an issue group.  That is, when the instruction
3745cannot issue simultaneously with the previous.  This may be relied on
3746by later passes, in particular machine-dependent reorg.
3747
3748Here is a table of the extra fields of @code{insn}, @code{jump_insn}
3749and @code{call_insn} insns:
3750
3751@table @code
3752@findex PATTERN
3753@item PATTERN (@var{i})
3754An expression for the side effect performed by this insn.  This must
3755be one of the following codes: @code{set}, @code{call}, @code{use},
3756@code{clobber}, @code{return}, @code{simple_return}, @code{asm_input},
3757@code{asm_output}, @code{addr_vec}, @code{addr_diff_vec},
3758@code{trap_if}, @code{unspec}, @code{unspec_volatile},
3759@code{parallel}, @code{cond_exec}, or @code{sequence}.  If it is a
3760@code{parallel}, each element of the @code{parallel} must be one these
3761codes, except that @code{parallel} expressions cannot be nested and
3762@code{addr_vec} and @code{addr_diff_vec} are not permitted inside a
3763@code{parallel} expression.
3764
3765@findex INSN_CODE
3766@item INSN_CODE (@var{i})
3767An integer that says which pattern in the machine description matches
3768this insn, or @minus{}1 if the matching has not yet been attempted.
3769
3770Such matching is never attempted and this field remains @minus{}1 on an insn
3771whose pattern consists of a single @code{use}, @code{clobber},
3772@code{asm_input}, @code{addr_vec} or @code{addr_diff_vec} expression.
3773
3774@findex asm_noperands
3775Matching is also never attempted on insns that result from an @code{asm}
3776statement.  These contain at least one @code{asm_operands} expression.
3777The function @code{asm_noperands} returns a non-negative value for
3778such insns.
3779
3780In the debugging output, this field is printed as a number followed by
3781a symbolic representation that locates the pattern in the @file{md}
3782file as some small positive or negative offset from a named pattern.
3783
3784@findex LOG_LINKS
3785@item LOG_LINKS (@var{i})
3786A list (chain of @code{insn_list} expressions) giving information about
3787dependencies between instructions within a basic block.  Neither a jump
3788nor a label may come between the related insns.  These are only used by
3789the schedulers and by combine.  This is a deprecated data structure.
3790Def-use and use-def chains are now preferred.
3791
3792@findex REG_NOTES
3793@item REG_NOTES (@var{i})
3794A list (chain of @code{expr_list}, @code{insn_list} and @code{int_list}
3795expressions) giving miscellaneous information about the insn.  It is often
3796information pertaining to the registers used in this insn.
3797@end table
3798
3799The @code{LOG_LINKS} field of an insn is a chain of @code{insn_list}
3800expressions.  Each of these has two operands: the first is an insn,
3801and the second is another @code{insn_list} expression (the next one in
3802the chain).  The last @code{insn_list} in the chain has a null pointer
3803as second operand.  The significant thing about the chain is which
3804insns appear in it (as first operands of @code{insn_list}
3805expressions).  Their order is not significant.
3806
3807This list is originally set up by the flow analysis pass; it is a null
3808pointer until then.  Flow only adds links for those data dependencies
3809which can be used for instruction combination.  For each insn, the flow
3810analysis pass adds a link to insns which store into registers values
3811that are used for the first time in this insn.
3812
3813The @code{REG_NOTES} field of an insn is a chain similar to the
3814@code{LOG_LINKS} field but it includes @code{expr_list} and @code{int_list}
3815expressions in addition to @code{insn_list} expressions.  There are several
3816kinds of register notes, which are distinguished by the machine mode, which
3817in a register note is really understood as being an @code{enum reg_note}.
3818The first operand @var{op} of the note is data whose meaning depends on
3819the kind of note.
3820
3821@findex REG_NOTE_KIND
3822@findex PUT_REG_NOTE_KIND
3823The macro @code{REG_NOTE_KIND (@var{x})} returns the kind of
3824register note.  Its counterpart, the macro @code{PUT_REG_NOTE_KIND
3825(@var{x}, @var{newkind})} sets the register note type of @var{x} to be
3826@var{newkind}.
3827
3828Register notes are of three classes: They may say something about an
3829input to an insn, they may say something about an output of an insn, or
3830they may create a linkage between two insns.  There are also a set
3831of values that are only used in @code{LOG_LINKS}.
3832
3833These register notes annotate inputs to an insn:
3834
3835@table @code
3836@findex REG_DEAD
3837@item REG_DEAD
3838The value in @var{op} dies in this insn; that is to say, altering the
3839value immediately after this insn would not affect the future behavior
3840of the program.
3841
3842It does not follow that the register @var{op} has no useful value after
3843this insn since @var{op} is not necessarily modified by this insn.
3844Rather, no subsequent instruction uses the contents of @var{op}.
3845
3846@findex REG_UNUSED
3847@item REG_UNUSED
3848The register @var{op} being set by this insn will not be used in a
3849subsequent insn.  This differs from a @code{REG_DEAD} note, which
3850indicates that the value in an input will not be used subsequently.
3851These two notes are independent; both may be present for the same
3852register.
3853
3854@findex REG_INC
3855@item REG_INC
3856The register @var{op} is incremented (or decremented; at this level
3857there is no distinction) by an embedded side effect inside this insn.
3858This means it appears in a @code{post_inc}, @code{pre_inc},
3859@code{post_dec} or @code{pre_dec} expression.
3860
3861@findex REG_NONNEG
3862@item REG_NONNEG
3863The register @var{op} is known to have a nonnegative value when this
3864insn is reached.  This is used so that decrement and branch until zero
3865instructions, such as the m68k dbra, can be matched.
3866
3867The @code{REG_NONNEG} note is added to insns only if the machine
3868description has a @samp{decrement_and_branch_until_zero} pattern.
3869
3870@findex REG_LABEL_OPERAND
3871@item REG_LABEL_OPERAND
3872This insn uses @var{op}, a @code{code_label} or a @code{note} of type
3873@code{NOTE_INSN_DELETED_LABEL}, but is not a @code{jump_insn}, or it
3874is a @code{jump_insn} that refers to the operand as an ordinary
3875operand.  The label may still eventually be a jump target, but if so
3876in an indirect jump in a subsequent insn.  The presence of this note
3877allows jump optimization to be aware that @var{op} is, in fact, being
3878used, and flow optimization to build an accurate flow graph.
3879
3880@findex REG_LABEL_TARGET
3881@item REG_LABEL_TARGET
3882This insn is a @code{jump_insn} but not an @code{addr_vec} or
3883@code{addr_diff_vec}.  It uses @var{op}, a @code{code_label} as a
3884direct or indirect jump target.  Its purpose is similar to that of
3885@code{REG_LABEL_OPERAND}.  This note is only present if the insn has
3886multiple targets; the last label in the insn (in the highest numbered
3887insn-field) goes into the @code{JUMP_LABEL} field and does not have a
3888@code{REG_LABEL_TARGET} note.  @xref{Insns, JUMP_LABEL}.
3889
3890@findex REG_CROSSING_JUMP
3891@item REG_CROSSING_JUMP
3892This insn is a branching instruction (either an unconditional jump or
3893an indirect jump) which crosses between hot and cold sections, which
3894could potentially be very far apart in the executable.  The presence
3895of this note indicates to other optimizations that this branching
3896instruction should not be ``collapsed'' into a simpler branching
3897construct.  It is used when the optimization to partition basic blocks
3898into hot and cold sections is turned on.
3899
3900@findex REG_SETJMP
3901@item REG_SETJMP
3902Appears attached to each @code{CALL_INSN} to @code{setjmp} or a
3903related function.
3904@end table
3905
3906The following notes describe attributes of outputs of an insn:
3907
3908@table @code
3909@findex REG_EQUIV
3910@findex REG_EQUAL
3911@item REG_EQUIV
3912@itemx REG_EQUAL
3913This note is only valid on an insn that sets only one register and
3914indicates that that register will be equal to @var{op} at run time; the
3915scope of this equivalence differs between the two types of notes.  The
3916value which the insn explicitly copies into the register may look
3917different from @var{op}, but they will be equal at run time.  If the
3918output of the single @code{set} is a @code{strict_low_part} expression,
3919the note refers to the register that is contained in @code{SUBREG_REG}
3920of the @code{subreg} expression.
3921
3922For @code{REG_EQUIV}, the register is equivalent to @var{op} throughout
3923the entire function, and could validly be replaced in all its
3924occurrences by @var{op}.  (``Validly'' here refers to the data flow of
3925the program; simple replacement may make some insns invalid.)  For
3926example, when a constant is loaded into a register that is never
3927assigned any other value, this kind of note is used.
3928
3929When a parameter is copied into a pseudo-register at entry to a function,
3930a note of this kind records that the register is equivalent to the stack
3931slot where the parameter was passed.  Although in this case the register
3932may be set by other insns, it is still valid to replace the register
3933by the stack slot throughout the function.
3934
3935A @code{REG_EQUIV} note is also used on an instruction which copies a
3936register parameter into a pseudo-register at entry to a function, if
3937there is a stack slot where that parameter could be stored.  Although
3938other insns may set the pseudo-register, it is valid for the compiler to
3939replace the pseudo-register by stack slot throughout the function,
3940provided the compiler ensures that the stack slot is properly
3941initialized by making the replacement in the initial copy instruction as
3942well.  This is used on machines for which the calling convention
3943allocates stack space for register parameters.  See
3944@code{REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE} in @ref{Stack Arguments}.
3945
3946In the case of @code{REG_EQUAL}, the register that is set by this insn
3947will be equal to @var{op} at run time at the end of this insn but not
3948necessarily elsewhere in the function.  In this case, @var{op}
3949is typically an arithmetic expression.  For example, when a sequence of
3950insns such as a library call is used to perform an arithmetic operation,
3951this kind of note is attached to the insn that produces or copies the
3952final value.
3953
3954These two notes are used in different ways by the compiler passes.
3955@code{REG_EQUAL} is used by passes prior to register allocation (such as
3956common subexpression elimination and loop optimization) to tell them how
3957to think of that value.  @code{REG_EQUIV} notes are used by register
3958allocation to indicate that there is an available substitute expression
3959(either a constant or a @code{mem} expression for the location of a
3960parameter on the stack) that may be used in place of a register if
3961insufficient registers are available.
3962
3963Except for stack homes for parameters, which are indicated by a
3964@code{REG_EQUIV} note and are not useful to the early optimization
3965passes and pseudo registers that are equivalent to a memory location
3966throughout their entire life, which is not detected until later in
3967the compilation, all equivalences are initially indicated by an attached
3968@code{REG_EQUAL} note.  In the early stages of register allocation, a
3969@code{REG_EQUAL} note is changed into a @code{REG_EQUIV} note if
3970@var{op} is a constant and the insn represents the only set of its
3971destination register.
3972
3973Thus, compiler passes prior to register allocation need only check for
3974@code{REG_EQUAL} notes and passes subsequent to register allocation
3975need only check for @code{REG_EQUIV} notes.
3976@end table
3977
3978These notes describe linkages between insns.  They occur in pairs: one
3979insn has one of a pair of notes that points to a second insn, which has
3980the inverse note pointing back to the first insn.
3981
3982@table @code
3983@findex REG_CC_SETTER
3984@findex REG_CC_USER
3985@item REG_CC_SETTER
3986@itemx REG_CC_USER
3987On machines that use @code{cc0}, the insns which set and use @code{cc0}
3988set and use @code{cc0} are adjacent.  However, when branch delay slot
3989filling is done, this may no longer be true.  In this case a
3990@code{REG_CC_USER} note will be placed on the insn setting @code{cc0} to
3991point to the insn using @code{cc0} and a @code{REG_CC_SETTER} note will
3992be placed on the insn using @code{cc0} to point to the insn setting
3993@code{cc0}.
3994@end table
3995
3996These values are only used in the @code{LOG_LINKS} field, and indicate
3997the type of dependency that each link represents.  Links which indicate
3998a data dependence (a read after write dependence) do not use any code,
3999they simply have mode @code{VOIDmode}, and are printed without any
4000descriptive text.
4001
4002@table @code
4003@findex REG_DEP_TRUE
4004@item REG_DEP_TRUE
4005This indicates a true dependence (a read after write dependence).
4006
4007@findex REG_DEP_OUTPUT
4008@item REG_DEP_OUTPUT
4009This indicates an output dependence (a write after write dependence).
4010
4011@findex REG_DEP_ANTI
4012@item REG_DEP_ANTI
4013This indicates an anti dependence (a write after read dependence).
4014
4015@end table
4016
4017These notes describe information gathered from gcov profile data.  They
4018are stored in the @code{REG_NOTES} field of an insn.
4019
4020@table @code
4021@findex REG_BR_PROB
4022@item REG_BR_PROB
4023This is used to specify the ratio of branches to non-branches of a
4024branch insn according to the profile data.  The note is represented
4025as an @code{int_list} expression whose integer value is between 0 and
4026REG_BR_PROB_BASE.  Larger values indicate a higher probability that
4027the branch will be taken.
4028
4029@findex REG_BR_PRED
4030@item REG_BR_PRED
4031These notes are found in JUMP insns after delayed branch scheduling
4032has taken place.  They indicate both the direction and the likelihood
4033of the JUMP@.  The format is a bitmask of ATTR_FLAG_* values.
4034
4035@findex REG_FRAME_RELATED_EXPR
4036@item REG_FRAME_RELATED_EXPR
4037This is used on an RTX_FRAME_RELATED_P insn wherein the attached expression
4038is used in place of the actual insn pattern.  This is done in cases where
4039the pattern is either complex or misleading.
4040@end table
4041
4042For convenience, the machine mode in an @code{insn_list} or
4043@code{expr_list} is printed using these symbolic codes in debugging dumps.
4044
4045@findex insn_list
4046@findex expr_list
4047The only difference between the expression codes @code{insn_list} and
4048@code{expr_list} is that the first operand of an @code{insn_list} is
4049assumed to be an insn and is printed in debugging dumps as the insn's
4050unique id; the first operand of an @code{expr_list} is printed in the
4051ordinary way as an expression.
4052
4053@node Calls
4054@section RTL Representation of Function-Call Insns
4055@cindex calling functions in RTL
4056@cindex RTL function-call insns
4057@cindex function-call insns
4058
4059Insns that call subroutines have the RTL expression code @code{call_insn}.
4060These insns must satisfy special rules, and their bodies must use a special
4061RTL expression code, @code{call}.
4062
4063@cindex @code{call} usage
4064A @code{call} expression has two operands, as follows:
4065
4066@smallexample
4067(call (mem:@var{fm} @var{addr}) @var{nbytes})
4068@end smallexample
4069
4070@noindent
4071Here @var{nbytes} is an operand that represents the number of bytes of
4072argument data being passed to the subroutine, @var{fm} is a machine mode
4073(which must equal as the definition of the @code{FUNCTION_MODE} macro in
4074the machine description) and @var{addr} represents the address of the
4075subroutine.
4076
4077For a subroutine that returns no value, the @code{call} expression as
4078shown above is the entire body of the insn, except that the insn might
4079also contain @code{use} or @code{clobber} expressions.
4080
4081@cindex @code{BLKmode}, and function return values
4082For a subroutine that returns a value whose mode is not @code{BLKmode},
4083the value is returned in a hard register.  If this register's number is
4084@var{r}, then the body of the call insn looks like this:
4085
4086@smallexample
4087(set (reg:@var{m} @var{r})
4088     (call (mem:@var{fm} @var{addr}) @var{nbytes}))
4089@end smallexample
4090
4091@noindent
4092This RTL expression makes it clear (to the optimizer passes) that the
4093appropriate register receives a useful value in this insn.
4094
4095When a subroutine returns a @code{BLKmode} value, it is handled by
4096passing to the subroutine the address of a place to store the value.
4097So the call insn itself does not ``return'' any value, and it has the
4098same RTL form as a call that returns nothing.
4099
4100On some machines, the call instruction itself clobbers some register,
4101for example to contain the return address.  @code{call_insn} insns
4102on these machines should have a body which is a @code{parallel}
4103that contains both the @code{call} expression and @code{clobber}
4104expressions that indicate which registers are destroyed.  Similarly,
4105if the call instruction requires some register other than the stack
4106pointer that is not explicitly mentioned in its RTL, a @code{use}
4107subexpression should mention that register.
4108
4109Functions that are called are assumed to modify all registers listed in
4110the configuration macro @code{CALL_USED_REGISTERS} (@pxref{Register
4111Basics}) and, with the exception of @code{const} functions and library
4112calls, to modify all of memory.
4113
4114Insns containing just @code{use} expressions directly precede the
4115@code{call_insn} insn to indicate which registers contain inputs to the
4116function.  Similarly, if registers other than those in
4117@code{CALL_USED_REGISTERS} are clobbered by the called function, insns
4118containing a single @code{clobber} follow immediately after the call to
4119indicate which registers.
4120
4121@node Sharing
4122@section Structure Sharing Assumptions
4123@cindex sharing of RTL components
4124@cindex RTL structure sharing assumptions
4125
4126The compiler assumes that certain kinds of RTL expressions are unique;
4127there do not exist two distinct objects representing the same value.
4128In other cases, it makes an opposite assumption: that no RTL expression
4129object of a certain kind appears in more than one place in the
4130containing structure.
4131
4132These assumptions refer to a single function; except for the RTL
4133objects that describe global variables and external functions,
4134and a few standard objects such as small integer constants,
4135no RTL objects are common to two functions.
4136
4137@itemize @bullet
4138@cindex @code{reg}, RTL sharing
4139@item
4140Each pseudo-register has only a single @code{reg} object to represent it,
4141and therefore only a single machine mode.
4142
4143@cindex symbolic label
4144@cindex @code{symbol_ref}, RTL sharing
4145@item
4146For any symbolic label, there is only one @code{symbol_ref} object
4147referring to it.
4148
4149@cindex @code{const_int}, RTL sharing
4150@item
4151All @code{const_int} expressions with equal values are shared.
4152
4153@cindex @code{pc}, RTL sharing
4154@item
4155There is only one @code{pc} expression.
4156
4157@cindex @code{cc0}, RTL sharing
4158@item
4159There is only one @code{cc0} expression.
4160
4161@cindex @code{const_double}, RTL sharing
4162@item
4163There is only one @code{const_double} expression with value 0 for
4164each floating point mode.  Likewise for values 1 and 2.
4165
4166@cindex @code{const_vector}, RTL sharing
4167@item
4168There is only one @code{const_vector} expression with value 0 for
4169each vector mode, be it an integer or a double constant vector.
4170
4171@cindex @code{label_ref}, RTL sharing
4172@cindex @code{scratch}, RTL sharing
4173@item
4174No @code{label_ref} or @code{scratch} appears in more than one place in
4175the RTL structure; in other words, it is safe to do a tree-walk of all
4176the insns in the function and assume that each time a @code{label_ref}
4177or @code{scratch} is seen it is distinct from all others that are seen.
4178
4179@cindex @code{mem}, RTL sharing
4180@item
4181Only one @code{mem} object is normally created for each static
4182variable or stack slot, so these objects are frequently shared in all
4183the places they appear.  However, separate but equal objects for these
4184variables are occasionally made.
4185
4186@cindex @code{asm_operands}, RTL sharing
4187@item
4188When a single @code{asm} statement has multiple output operands, a
4189distinct @code{asm_operands} expression is made for each output operand.
4190However, these all share the vector which contains the sequence of input
4191operands.  This sharing is used later on to test whether two
4192@code{asm_operands} expressions come from the same statement, so all
4193optimizations must carefully preserve the sharing if they copy the
4194vector at all.
4195
4196@item
4197No RTL object appears in more than one place in the RTL structure
4198except as described above.  Many passes of the compiler rely on this
4199by assuming that they can modify RTL objects in place without unwanted
4200side-effects on other insns.
4201
4202@findex unshare_all_rtl
4203@item
4204During initial RTL generation, shared structure is freely introduced.
4205After all the RTL for a function has been generated, all shared
4206structure is copied by @code{unshare_all_rtl} in @file{emit-rtl.c},
4207after which the above rules are guaranteed to be followed.
4208
4209@findex copy_rtx_if_shared
4210@item
4211During the combiner pass, shared structure within an insn can exist
4212temporarily.  However, the shared structure is copied before the
4213combiner is finished with the insn.  This is done by calling
4214@code{copy_rtx_if_shared}, which is a subroutine of
4215@code{unshare_all_rtl}.
4216@end itemize
4217
4218@node Reading RTL
4219@section Reading RTL
4220
4221To read an RTL object from a file, call @code{read_rtx}.  It takes one
4222argument, a stdio stream, and returns a single RTL object.  This routine
4223is defined in @file{read-rtl.c}.  It is not available in the compiler
4224itself, only the various programs that generate the compiler back end
4225from the machine description.
4226
4227People frequently have the idea of using RTL stored as text in a file as
4228an interface between a language front end and the bulk of GCC@.  This
4229idea is not feasible.
4230
4231GCC was designed to use RTL internally only.  Correct RTL for a given
4232program is very dependent on the particular target machine.  And the RTL
4233does not contain all the information about the program.
4234
4235The proper way to interface GCC to a new language front end is with
4236the ``tree'' data structure, described in the files @file{tree.h} and
4237@file{tree.def}.  The documentation for this structure (@pxref{GENERIC})
4238is incomplete.
4239