Mercurial > hg > graal-compiler
view graal/GraalCompiler/src/com/sun/c1x/package-info.java @ 2613:2523de4d378e
merge
author | Lukas Stadler <lukas.stadler@jku.at> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 09 May 2011 10:53:30 +0200 |
parents | 16b9a8b5ad39 |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
/* * Copyright (c) 2010, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. * * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that * accompanied this code). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. */ /** * The top-level package in C1X containing options, metrics, timers and the main compiler class * {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XCompiler}. * * <H2>{@code C1XCompiler} Overview</H2> * * C1X is intended to be used with multiple JVM's so makes no use of or reference to classes for a specific JVM, for * example Maxine. * * The compiler is represented by the class {@code C1XCompiler}. {@code C1XCompiler} binds a specific target * architecture and JVM interface to produce a usable compiler object. There are * two variants of {@code compileMethod}, one of which is used when doing <i>on stack replacement</i> (OSR), discussed * later. The main variant takes {@link com.sun.cri.ri.RiMethod} and {@link com.sun.cri.xir.RiXirGenerator} arguments. * {@code RiMethod} is C1X's representation of a Java method and {@code RiXirGenerator} represents the interface through * which the compiler requests the XIR for a given bytecode from the runtime system. * * <H3>The C1X Compilation Process</H3> * * {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XCompiler#compileMethod} creates a {@link C1XCompilation} instance and then returns the result of calling its * {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XCompilation#compile} method. The {@code C1XCompilation} instance records whether {@code compileMethod} was invoked with * the OSR variant, which is used later in the IR generation. * <p> * While there is only one {@code C1XCompiler} instance, there may be several compilations proceeding concurrently, each of * which is represented by a unique {@code C1XCompilation} instance. The static method {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XCompilation#current}} returns the * {@code C1XCompilation} instance associated with the current thread, and is managed using a {@link java.lang.ThreadLocal} variable. It * is used when assigning the unique id that is used for tracing output to an HIR node. Each {@code C1XCompilation} instance * has an associated {@link com.sun.cri.ci.CiStatistics} object that accumulates information about the compilation process, but is also * used as a generator of, for example, basic block identifiers. * <p> * The compilation begins by calling {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XCompilation#emitHIR}, which creates the high-level intermediate representation (HIR) from the * bytecodes of the method. The HIR is managed by the {@link com.sun.c1x.graph.IR} class, an instance of which is created by * {@code emitHR}, which then calls the {{@link com.sun.c1x.graph.IR#build}} method and returns the result. The {@code C1XCompilation} and {@code IR} * instances are are bi-directionally linked. * * <H3>Supported backends</H3> * * <ul> * <li>AMD64/x64 with SSE2</li> * </ul> * * <H2>Notes and Todos</H2> This is a collection of notes about the C1X compiler, including future directions, * refactorings, missing features, broken features, etc. * * * <h3>Anticipated Refactorings</h3> * * <ul> * <li> * The HIR nodes {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.UnsafePrefetch}, {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.UnsafePutObject}, etc should be replaced by uses of the newer * {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.LoadPointer} and {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.StorePointer} nodes. Currently, the unsafe nodes are only generated by * the creation of an OSR entry. Benefit: reduce the number of different IR nodes.</li> * * <li> * Add a field to optionally store an {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.Info} object for each HIR node, and remove the * {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.Instruction#exceptionHandlers} field, the {@link com.sun.c1x.ir.Instruction#bci} field, and any fields to store the Java * frame state in subclasses. Benefit: saves space if most HIR nodes do not have exception handlers, a bci or Java frame * state. Removes virtual dispatch on accessing debug information for nodes. Allows any node, regardless of its type, to * have info attached.</li> * * <li> * Migrate all HIR nodes to use the immutable {@link com.sun.c1x.value.FrameStateInfo} for debugging information. The {@link com.sun.c1x.value.FrameState} * class is mutable and used throughout graph building. Benefit: {@code FrameStateInfo} would save both total space in * the IR graph prevent many bugs due to the mutability of {@code FrameState}.</li> * * <li> * Move the {@code FrameState} class to an inner class, or combine entirely, with the {@link com.sun.c1x.graph.GraphBuilder} class. After * the introduction of the {@code FrameStateInfo} into HIR nodes, the mutable value stack should only need to be * accessed from the graph builder.</li> * * </ul> * * <h3>Missing or incomplete features</h3> * * There are some features of C1 that were not ported forward or finished given the time constraints for the C1X port. A * list appears below. * * <ul> * <li> * Deoptimization metadata. The locations of all local variables and stack values are not communicated back to the * runtime system through the {@link com.sun.cri.ci.CiDebugInfo} class yet. Such values are known to the register allocator, and there * vestigial logic to compute them still there in the * {@link com.sun.c1x.alloc.LinearScan#computeDebugInfo} method. To complete this metadata, the * {@link com.sun.c1x.alloc.LinearScan} class must implement the {@link ValueLocator} interface and pass it to the * {@link com.sun.c1x.lir.LIRDebugInfo#createFrame} method after register allocation. The * resulting debug info will be fed back to the runtime system by the existing logic that calls * {@link com.sun.cri.ci.CiTargetMethod#recordCall(int, Object, CiDebugInfo, boolean)} and other methods. Obviously the runtime * system will need to encode this metadata in a dense format, because it is huge.</li> * * * <li> * Tiered compilation support. C1 supported the ability to add instrumentation to branches, invocations, and checkcasts * in order to feed profile information to the C2 compiler in a tiered compilation setup. It relied on adding some * information to the HIR nodes that represent these operations ({@link Invoke}, {@link CheckCast}, etc). All of this * logic was removed to simplify both the front end and back end in anticipation of designing a future instrumentation * API. XIR should be general enough to allow instrumentation code to be added to invocation and checkcast sites, but * currently has no support for adding code at branches. * * </li> * * <li> * SPARC and other architecture support. There pretty well-delineated separation between the architecture-independent * part of LIR backend and the architecture-dependent, but the only implementation that current exists is the X86 * backend ({@link com.sun.c1x.target.amd64.AMD64Backend}, {@link com.sun.c1x.target.amd64.AMD64LIRGenerator}, {@link com.sun.c1x.target.amd64.AMD64LIRAssembler}, etc).</li> * * <li> * XIR for safepoints. The C1X backend should use XIR to get the code for safepoints, but currently it still uses the * handwritten logic (currently only compatible with Maxine).</li> * * </ul> * * <h3>Untested features</h3> * * <ul> * * <li> * Reference map for outgoing overflow arguments. If a C1X method calls another method that has overflow arguments, it * is not clear if the outgoing overflow argument area, which may contain references, has the appropriate bits set in * the reference map for the C1X method's frame. Such arguments may be live in the called method.</li> * * <li> * Although it should work, inlining synchronized methods or methods with exception handlers hasn't been tested.</li> * <li> * On-stack replacement. C1X retains all of the special logic for performing an OSR compilation. This is basically a * compilation with a second entrypoint for entry from the interpreter. However, the generation of a runtime-specific * entry sequence was never tested.</li> * * <li> * {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XIntrinsic Intrinsification} is the mechanism by which the compiler recognizes calls to special JDK or * runtime methods and replaces them with custom code. It is enabled by the {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XOptions#OptIntrinsify} compiler * option. The C1X backend has never been tested with intrinsified arithmetic or floating point operations. For best * performance, it should generate specialized machine code for arithmetic and floating point, perhaps using global * stubs for complex floating point operations. <br> * <i>Note</i>: Folding of special intrinsified methods is supported, tested, and working. The runtime system may * register methods to be folded by using the * {@link com.sun.c1x.C1XIntrinsic#registerFoldableMethod(RiMethod, java.lang.reflect.Method)} call. When the compiler encounters a * call to such a registered method where the parameters are all constants, it invokes the supplied method with * reflection. If the reflective call produces a value and does not throw an exception, C1X replaces the call to the * method with the result.</li> * </ul> * * <h3>Broken features</h3> * * <ul> * <li> * {@link com.sun.c1x.opt.LoopPeeler Loop peeling} was written by Marcelo Cintra near the end of his internship. It was never completed * and should be considered broken. It only remains as a sketch of how loop peeling would be implemented in C1X, or in * case he would finish the implementation and test it.</li> * * <li> * Calls to global stubs should allocate space on the caller's stack. On AMD64 currently, calls to global stubs poke the * arguments onto the stack below the RSP (i.e. in the callee's stack). While normally this code sequence is * uninterruptible and works fine in the VM, signal handlers triggered when debugging or inspecting this code sequence * may destroy these values when the OS calls the signal handler. This requires knowing which global stubs are called * before finalizing the frame size; currently only the calls to * {@link com.sun.c1x.target.amd64.AMD64MacroAssembler#callRuntimeCalleeSaved} * do not fit this pattern. This needs to be fixed so that all global stubs that are called by the assembled code are * known before beginning assembling. The {@link com.sun.c1x.target.amd64.AMD64GlobalStubEmitter} controls how the global stubs accept their * parameters. See {@link com.sun.c1x.target.amd64.AMD64GlobalStubEmitter#callerFrameContainsArguments} and its usages. * * </li> * </ul> */ package com.sun.c1x;