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c896fe29 FB |
1 | Tiny Code Generator - Fabrice Bellard. |
2 | ||
3 | 1) Introduction | |
4 | ||
5 | TCG (Tiny Code Generator) began as a generic backend for a C | |
6 | compiler. It was simplified to be used in QEMU. It also has its roots | |
7 | in the QOP code generator written by Paul Brook. | |
8 | ||
9 | 2) Definitions | |
10 | ||
bf28a69e PB |
11 | TCG receives RISC-like "TCG ops" and performs some optimizations on them, |
12 | including liveness analysis and trivial constant expression | |
13 | evaluation. TCG ops are then implemented in the host CPU back end, | |
14 | also known as the TCG "target". | |
15 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
16 | The TCG "target" is the architecture for which we generate the |
17 | code. It is of course not the same as the "target" of QEMU which is | |
18 | the emulated architecture. As TCG started as a generic C backend used | |
19 | for cross compiling, it is assumed that the TCG target is different | |
20 | from the host, although it is never the case for QEMU. | |
21 | ||
294e4669 CWR |
22 | In this document, we use "guest" to specify what architecture we are |
23 | emulating; "target" always means the TCG target, the machine on which | |
24 | we are running QEMU. | |
25 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
26 | A TCG "function" corresponds to a QEMU Translated Block (TB). |
27 | ||
0a6b7b78 FB |
28 | A TCG "temporary" is a variable only live in a basic |
29 | block. Temporaries are allocated explicitly in each function. | |
c896fe29 | 30 | |
0a6b7b78 FB |
31 | A TCG "local temporary" is a variable only live in a function. Local |
32 | temporaries are allocated explicitly in each function. | |
33 | ||
34 | A TCG "global" is a variable which is live in all the functions | |
35 | (equivalent of a C global variable). They are defined before the | |
36 | functions defined. A TCG global can be a memory location (e.g. a QEMU | |
37 | CPU register), a fixed host register (e.g. the QEMU CPU state pointer) | |
38 | or a memory location which is stored in a register outside QEMU TBs | |
39 | (not implemented yet). | |
c896fe29 FB |
40 | |
41 | A TCG "basic block" corresponds to a list of instructions terminated | |
42 | by a branch instruction. | |
43 | ||
20022fa1 RH |
44 | An operation with "undefined behavior" may result in a crash. |
45 | ||
46 | An operation with "unspecified behavior" shall not crash. However, | |
47 | the result may be one of several possibilities so may be considered | |
48 | an "undefined result". | |
49 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
50 | 3) Intermediate representation |
51 | ||
52 | 3.1) Introduction | |
53 | ||
0a6b7b78 FB |
54 | TCG instructions operate on variables which are temporaries, local |
55 | temporaries or globals. TCG instructions and variables are strongly | |
56 | typed. Two types are supported: 32 bit integers and 64 bit | |
57 | integers. Pointers are defined as an alias to 32 bit or 64 bit | |
58 | integers depending on the TCG target word size. | |
c896fe29 FB |
59 | |
60 | Each instruction has a fixed number of output variable operands, input | |
61 | variable operands and always constant operands. | |
62 | ||
63 | The notable exception is the call instruction which has a variable | |
64 | number of outputs and inputs. | |
65 | ||
0a6b7b78 FB |
66 | In the textual form, output operands usually come first, followed by |
67 | input operands, followed by constant operands. The output type is | |
68 | included in the instruction name. Constants are prefixed with a '$'. | |
c896fe29 FB |
69 | |
70 | add_i32 t0, t1, t2 (t0 <- t1 + t2) | |
71 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
72 | 3.2) Assumptions |
73 | ||
74 | * Basic blocks | |
75 | ||
76 | - Basic blocks end after branches (e.g. brcond_i32 instruction), | |
77 | goto_tb and exit_tb instructions. | |
86e840ee AJ |
78 | - Basic blocks start after the end of a previous basic block, or at a |
79 | set_label instruction. | |
c896fe29 | 80 | |
0a6b7b78 FB |
81 | After the end of a basic block, the content of temporaries is |
82 | destroyed, but local temporaries and globals are preserved. | |
c896fe29 FB |
83 | |
84 | * Floating point types are not supported yet | |
85 | ||
86 | * Pointers: depending on the TCG target, pointer size is 32 bit or 64 | |
87 | bit. The type TCG_TYPE_PTR is an alias to TCG_TYPE_I32 or | |
88 | TCG_TYPE_I64. | |
89 | ||
90 | * Helpers: | |
91 | ||
92 | Using the tcg_gen_helper_x_y it is possible to call any function | |
aa95e3a5 | 93 | taking i32, i64 or pointer types. By default, before calling a helper, |
a3f5054b | 94 | all globals are stored at their canonical location and it is assumed |
78505279 AJ |
95 | that the function can modify them. By default, the helper is allowed to |
96 | modify the CPU state or raise an exception. | |
97 | ||
98 | This can be overridden using the following function modifiers: | |
99 | - TCG_CALL_NO_READ_GLOBALS means that the helper does not read globals, | |
100 | either directly or via an exception. They will not be saved to their | |
101 | canonical locations before calling the helper. | |
102 | - TCG_CALL_NO_WRITE_GLOBALS means that the helper does not modify any globals. | |
103 | They will only be saved to their canonical location before calling helpers, | |
2bc89637 | 104 | but they won't be reloaded afterwards. |
78505279 AJ |
105 | - TCG_CALL_NO_SIDE_EFFECTS means that the call to the function is removed if |
106 | the return value is not used. | |
107 | ||
108 | Note that TCG_CALL_NO_READ_GLOBALS implies TCG_CALL_NO_WRITE_GLOBALS. | |
c896fe29 FB |
109 | |
110 | On some TCG targets (e.g. x86), several calling conventions are | |
111 | supported. | |
112 | ||
113 | * Branches: | |
114 | ||
626cd050 | 115 | Use the instruction 'br' to jump to a label. |
c896fe29 FB |
116 | |
117 | 3.3) Code Optimizations | |
118 | ||
119 | When generating instructions, you can count on at least the following | |
120 | optimizations: | |
121 | ||
122 | - Single instructions are simplified, e.g. | |
123 | ||
124 | and_i32 t0, t0, $0xffffffff | |
125 | ||
126 | is suppressed. | |
127 | ||
128 | - A liveness analysis is done at the basic block level. The | |
0a6b7b78 | 129 | information is used to suppress moves from a dead variable to |
c896fe29 FB |
130 | another one. It is also used to remove instructions which compute |
131 | dead results. The later is especially useful for condition code | |
9804c8e2 | 132 | optimization in QEMU. |
c896fe29 FB |
133 | |
134 | In the following example: | |
135 | ||
136 | add_i32 t0, t1, t2 | |
137 | add_i32 t0, t0, $1 | |
138 | mov_i32 t0, $1 | |
139 | ||
140 | only the last instruction is kept. | |
141 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
142 | 3.4) Instruction Reference |
143 | ||
144 | ********* Function call | |
145 | ||
146 | * call <ret> <params> ptr | |
147 | ||
148 | call function 'ptr' (pointer type) | |
149 | ||
150 | <ret> optional 32 bit or 64 bit return value | |
151 | <params> optional 32 bit or 64 bit parameters | |
152 | ||
153 | ********* Jumps/Labels | |
154 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
155 | * set_label $label |
156 | ||
157 | Define label 'label' at the current program point. | |
158 | ||
159 | * br $label | |
160 | ||
161 | Jump to label. | |
162 | ||
5a696f6a | 163 | * brcond_i32/i64 t0, t1, cond, label |
c896fe29 FB |
164 | |
165 | Conditional jump if t0 cond t1 is true. cond can be: | |
166 | TCG_COND_EQ | |
167 | TCG_COND_NE | |
168 | TCG_COND_LT /* signed */ | |
169 | TCG_COND_GE /* signed */ | |
170 | TCG_COND_LE /* signed */ | |
171 | TCG_COND_GT /* signed */ | |
172 | TCG_COND_LTU /* unsigned */ | |
173 | TCG_COND_GEU /* unsigned */ | |
174 | TCG_COND_LEU /* unsigned */ | |
175 | TCG_COND_GTU /* unsigned */ | |
176 | ||
177 | ********* Arithmetic | |
178 | ||
179 | * add_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
180 | ||
181 | t0=t1+t2 | |
182 | ||
183 | * sub_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
184 | ||
185 | t0=t1-t2 | |
186 | ||
390efc54 PB |
187 | * neg_i32/i64 t0, t1 |
188 | ||
189 | t0=-t1 (two's complement) | |
190 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
191 | * mul_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 |
192 | ||
193 | t0=t1*t2 | |
194 | ||
195 | * div_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
196 | ||
197 | t0=t1/t2 (signed). Undefined behavior if division by zero or overflow. | |
198 | ||
199 | * divu_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
200 | ||
201 | t0=t1/t2 (unsigned). Undefined behavior if division by zero. | |
202 | ||
203 | * rem_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
204 | ||
205 | t0=t1%t2 (signed). Undefined behavior if division by zero or overflow. | |
206 | ||
207 | * remu_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
208 | ||
209 | t0=t1%t2 (unsigned). Undefined behavior if division by zero. | |
210 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
211 | ********* Logical |
212 | ||
5e85404a AJ |
213 | * and_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 |
214 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
215 | t0=t1&t2 |
216 | ||
217 | * or_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
218 | ||
219 | t0=t1|t2 | |
220 | ||
221 | * xor_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
222 | ||
223 | t0=t1^t2 | |
224 | ||
0a6b7b78 FB |
225 | * not_i32/i64 t0, t1 |
226 | ||
227 | t0=~t1 | |
228 | ||
f24cb33e AJ |
229 | * andc_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 |
230 | ||
231 | t0=t1&~t2 | |
232 | ||
233 | * eqv_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
234 | ||
8d625cf1 | 235 | t0=~(t1^t2), or equivalently, t0=t1^~t2 |
f24cb33e AJ |
236 | |
237 | * nand_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
238 | ||
239 | t0=~(t1&t2) | |
240 | ||
241 | * nor_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
242 | ||
243 | t0=~(t1|t2) | |
244 | ||
245 | * orc_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
246 | ||
247 | t0=t1|~t2 | |
248 | ||
0e28d006 RH |
249 | * clz_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 |
250 | ||
251 | t0 = t1 ? clz(t1) : t2 | |
252 | ||
253 | * ctz_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
254 | ||
255 | t0 = t1 ? ctz(t1) : t2 | |
256 | ||
8d30f047 RH |
257 | * ctpop_i32/i64 t0, t1 |
258 | ||
259 | t0 = number of bits set in t1 | |
260 | With "ctpop" short for "count population", matching | |
261 | the function name used in include/qemu/host-utils.h. | |
262 | ||
15824571 | 263 | ********* Shifts/Rotates |
c896fe29 FB |
264 | |
265 | * shl_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
266 | ||
20022fa1 | 267 | t0=t1 << t2. Unspecified behavior if t2 < 0 or t2 >= 32 (resp 64) |
c896fe29 FB |
268 | |
269 | * shr_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
270 | ||
20022fa1 | 271 | t0=t1 >> t2 (unsigned). Unspecified behavior if t2 < 0 or t2 >= 32 (resp 64) |
c896fe29 FB |
272 | |
273 | * sar_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
274 | ||
20022fa1 | 275 | t0=t1 >> t2 (signed). Unspecified behavior if t2 < 0 or t2 >= 32 (resp 64) |
c896fe29 | 276 | |
15824571 AJ |
277 | * rotl_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 |
278 | ||
20022fa1 RH |
279 | Rotation of t2 bits to the left. |
280 | Unspecified behavior if t2 < 0 or t2 >= 32 (resp 64) | |
15824571 AJ |
281 | |
282 | * rotr_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
283 | ||
20022fa1 RH |
284 | Rotation of t2 bits to the right. |
285 | Unspecified behavior if t2 < 0 or t2 >= 32 (resp 64) | |
15824571 | 286 | |
c896fe29 FB |
287 | ********* Misc |
288 | ||
289 | * mov_i32/i64 t0, t1 | |
290 | ||
291 | t0 = t1 | |
292 | ||
293 | Move t1 to t0 (both operands must have the same type). | |
294 | ||
295 | * ext8s_i32/i64 t0, t1 | |
86831435 | 296 | ext8u_i32/i64 t0, t1 |
c896fe29 | 297 | ext16s_i32/i64 t0, t1 |
86831435 | 298 | ext16u_i32/i64 t0, t1 |
c896fe29 | 299 | ext32s_i64 t0, t1 |
86831435 | 300 | ext32u_i64 t0, t1 |
c896fe29 | 301 | |
86831435 | 302 | 8, 16 or 32 bit sign/zero extension (both operands must have the same type) |
c896fe29 | 303 | |
587195bd | 304 | * bswap16_i32/i64 t0, t1, flags |
c896fe29 | 305 | |
587195bd RH |
306 | 16 bit byte swap on the low bits of a 32/64 bit input. |
307 | If flags & TCG_BSWAP_IZ, then t1 is known to be zero-extended from bit 15. | |
308 | If flags & TCG_BSWAP_OZ, then t0 will be zero-extended from bit 15. | |
309 | If flags & TCG_BSWAP_OS, then t0 will be sign-extended from bit 15. | |
310 | If neither TCG_BSWAP_OZ nor TCG_BSWAP_OS are set, then the bits of | |
311 | t0 above bit 15 may contain any value. | |
c896fe29 | 312 | |
587195bd | 313 | * bswap32_i64 t0, t1, flags |
c896fe29 | 314 | |
587195bd RH |
315 | 32 bit byte swap on a 64-bit value. The flags are the same as for bswap16, |
316 | except they apply from bit 31 instead of bit 15. | |
c896fe29 | 317 | |
587195bd RH |
318 | * bswap32_i32 t0, t1, flags |
319 | * bswap64_i64 t0, t1, flags | |
c896fe29 | 320 | |
587195bd RH |
321 | 32/64 bit byte swap. The flags are ignored, but still present |
322 | for consistency with the other bswap opcodes. | |
c896fe29 | 323 | |
5ff9d6a4 FB |
324 | * discard_i32/i64 t0 |
325 | ||
326 | Indicate that the value of t0 won't be used later. It is useful to | |
327 | force dead code elimination. | |
328 | ||
3a34dfd7 | 329 | * deposit_i32/i64 dest, t1, t2, pos, len |
b7767f0f RH |
330 | |
331 | Deposit T2 as a bitfield into T1, placing the result in DEST. | |
3a34dfd7 | 332 | The bitfield is described by POS/LEN, which are immediate values: |
b7767f0f RH |
333 | |
334 | LEN - the length of the bitfield | |
335 | POS - the position of the first bit, counting from the LSB | |
336 | ||
7ec8bab3 RH |
337 | For example, "deposit_i32 dest, t1, t2, 8, 4" indicates a 4-bit field |
338 | at bit 8. This operation would be equivalent to | |
b7767f0f RH |
339 | |
340 | dest = (t1 & ~0x0f00) | ((t2 << 8) & 0x0f00) | |
341 | ||
7ec8bab3 RH |
342 | * extract_i32/i64 dest, t1, pos, len |
343 | * sextract_i32/i64 dest, t1, pos, len | |
344 | ||
345 | Extract a bitfield from T1, placing the result in DEST. | |
346 | The bitfield is described by POS/LEN, which are immediate values, | |
347 | as above for deposit. For extract_*, the result will be extended | |
348 | to the left with zeros; for sextract_*, the result will be extended | |
349 | to the left with copies of the bitfield sign bit at pos + len - 1. | |
350 | ||
351 | For example, "sextract_i32 dest, t1, 8, 4" indicates a 4-bit field | |
352 | at bit 8. This operation would be equivalent to | |
353 | ||
354 | dest = (t1 << 20) >> 28 | |
355 | ||
356 | (using an arithmetic right shift). | |
357 | ||
fce1296f RH |
358 | * extract2_i32/i64 dest, t1, t2, pos |
359 | ||
360 | For N = {32,64}, extract an N-bit quantity from the concatenation | |
361 | of t2:t1, beginning at pos. The tcg_gen_extract2_{i32,i64} expander | |
362 | accepts 0 <= pos <= N as inputs. The backend code generator will | |
363 | not see either 0 or N as inputs for these opcodes. | |
364 | ||
609ad705 | 365 | * extrl_i64_i32 t0, t1 |
4bb7a41e | 366 | |
609ad705 RH |
367 | For 64-bit hosts only, extract the low 32-bits of input T1 and place it |
368 | into 32-bit output T0. Depending on the host, this may be a simple move, | |
369 | or may require additional canonicalization. | |
370 | ||
371 | * extrh_i64_i32 t0, t1 | |
372 | ||
373 | For 64-bit hosts only, extract the high 32-bits of input T1 and place it | |
374 | into 32-bit output T0. Depending on the host, this may be a simple shift, | |
375 | or may require additional canonicalization. | |
b7767f0f | 376 | |
be210acb RH |
377 | ********* Conditional moves |
378 | ||
5a696f6a | 379 | * setcond_i32/i64 dest, t1, t2, cond |
be210acb RH |
380 | |
381 | dest = (t1 cond t2) | |
382 | ||
383 | Set DEST to 1 if (T1 cond T2) is true, otherwise set to 0. | |
384 | ||
5a696f6a | 385 | * movcond_i32/i64 dest, c1, c2, v1, v2, cond |
ffc5ea09 RH |
386 | |
387 | dest = (c1 cond c2 ? v1 : v2) | |
388 | ||
389 | Set DEST to V1 if (C1 cond C2) is true, otherwise set to V2. | |
390 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
391 | ********* Type conversions |
392 | ||
393 | * ext_i32_i64 t0, t1 | |
394 | Convert t1 (32 bit) to t0 (64 bit) and does sign extension | |
395 | ||
396 | * extu_i32_i64 t0, t1 | |
397 | Convert t1 (32 bit) to t0 (64 bit) and does zero extension | |
398 | ||
399 | * trunc_i64_i32 t0, t1 | |
400 | Truncate t1 (64 bit) to t0 (32 bit) | |
401 | ||
36aa55dc PB |
402 | * concat_i32_i64 t0, t1, t2 |
403 | Construct t0 (64-bit) taking the low half from t1 (32 bit) and the high half | |
404 | from t2 (32 bit). | |
405 | ||
945ca823 BS |
406 | * concat32_i64 t0, t1, t2 |
407 | Construct t0 (64-bit) taking the low half from t1 (64 bit) and the high half | |
408 | from t2 (64 bit). | |
409 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
410 | ********* Load/Store |
411 | ||
412 | * ld_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
413 | ld8s_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
414 | ld8u_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
415 | ld16s_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
416 | ld16u_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
417 | ld32s_i64 t0, t1, offset | |
418 | ld32u_i64 t0, t1, offset | |
419 | ||
420 | t0 = read(t1 + offset) | |
421 | Load 8, 16, 32 or 64 bits with or without sign extension from host memory. | |
422 | offset must be a constant. | |
423 | ||
424 | * st_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
425 | st8_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
426 | st16_i32/i64 t0, t1, offset | |
427 | st32_i64 t0, t1, offset | |
428 | ||
429 | write(t0, t1 + offset) | |
430 | Write 8, 16, 32 or 64 bits to host memory. | |
431 | ||
b202d41e AJ |
432 | All this opcodes assume that the pointed host memory doesn't correspond |
433 | to a global. In the latter case the behaviour is unpredictable. | |
434 | ||
d7156f7c RH |
435 | ********* Multiword arithmetic support |
436 | ||
437 | * add2_i32/i64 t0_low, t0_high, t1_low, t1_high, t2_low, t2_high | |
438 | * sub2_i32/i64 t0_low, t0_high, t1_low, t1_high, t2_low, t2_high | |
439 | ||
440 | Similar to add/sub, except that the double-word inputs T1 and T2 are | |
441 | formed from two single-word arguments, and the double-word output T0 | |
442 | is returned in two single-word outputs. | |
443 | ||
444 | * mulu2_i32/i64 t0_low, t0_high, t1, t2 | |
445 | ||
446 | Similar to mul, except two unsigned inputs T1 and T2 yielding the full | |
447 | double-word product T0. The later is returned in two single-word outputs. | |
448 | ||
4d3203fd RH |
449 | * muls2_i32/i64 t0_low, t0_high, t1, t2 |
450 | ||
451 | Similar to mulu2, except the two inputs T1 and T2 are signed. | |
452 | ||
d1030212 RH |
453 | * mulsh_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 |
454 | * muluh_i32/i64 t0, t1, t2 | |
455 | ||
456 | Provide the high part of a signed or unsigned multiply, respectively. | |
457 | If mulu2/muls2 are not provided by the backend, the tcg-op generator | |
458 | can obtain the same results can be obtained by emitting a pair of | |
459 | opcodes, mul+muluh/mulsh. | |
460 | ||
f65e19bc PK |
461 | ********* Memory Barrier support |
462 | ||
463 | * mb <$arg> | |
464 | ||
465 | Generate a target memory barrier instruction to ensure memory ordering as being | |
466 | enforced by a corresponding guest memory barrier instruction. The ordering | |
467 | enforced by the backend may be stricter than the ordering required by the guest. | |
468 | It cannot be weaker. This opcode takes a constant argument which is required to | |
469 | generate the appropriate barrier instruction. The backend should take care to | |
470 | emit the target barrier instruction only when necessary i.e., for SMP guests and | |
471 | when MTTCG is enabled. | |
472 | ||
473 | The guest translators should generate this opcode for all guest instructions | |
474 | which have ordering side effects. | |
475 | ||
29f23167 | 476 | Please see docs/devel/atomics.rst for more information on memory barriers. |
f65e19bc | 477 | |
294e4669 | 478 | ********* 64-bit guest on 32-bit host support |
a38e609c RH |
479 | |
480 | The following opcodes are internal to TCG. Thus they are to be implemented by | |
481 | 32-bit host code generators, but are not to be emitted by guest translators. | |
482 | They are emitted as needed by inline functions within "tcg-op.h". | |
483 | ||
5a696f6a | 484 | * brcond2_i32 t0_low, t0_high, t1_low, t1_high, cond, label |
a38e609c RH |
485 | |
486 | Similar to brcond, except that the 64-bit values T0 and T1 | |
487 | are formed from two 32-bit arguments. | |
488 | ||
5a696f6a | 489 | * setcond2_i32 dest, t1_low, t1_high, t2_low, t2_high, cond |
be210acb RH |
490 | |
491 | Similar to setcond, except that the 64-bit values T1 and T2 are | |
492 | formed from two 32-bit arguments. The result is a 32-bit value. | |
493 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
494 | ********* QEMU specific operations |
495 | ||
759c90ba | 496 | * exit_tb t0 |
c896fe29 FB |
497 | |
498 | Exit the current TB and return the value t0 (word type). | |
499 | ||
500 | * goto_tb index | |
501 | ||
502 | Exit the current TB and jump to the TB index 'index' (constant) if the | |
503 | current TB was linked to this TB. Otherwise execute the next | |
9bacf414 MF |
504 | instructions. Only indices 0 and 1 are valid and tcg_gen_goto_tb may be issued |
505 | at most once with each slot index per TB. | |
c896fe29 | 506 | |
cedbcb01 EC |
507 | * lookup_and_goto_ptr tb_addr |
508 | ||
509 | Look up a TB address ('tb_addr') and jump to it if valid. If not valid, | |
510 | jump to the TCG epilogue to go back to the exec loop. | |
511 | ||
512 | This operation is optional. If the TCG backend does not implement the | |
513 | goto_ptr opcode, emitting this op is equivalent to emitting exit_tb(0). | |
514 | ||
f713d6ad RH |
515 | * qemu_ld_i32/i64 t0, t1, flags, memidx |
516 | * qemu_st_i32/i64 t0, t1, flags, memidx | |
07ce0b05 | 517 | * qemu_st8_i32 t0, t1, flags, memidx |
f713d6ad RH |
518 | |
519 | Load data at the guest address t1 into t0, or store data in t0 at guest | |
520 | address t1. The _i32/_i64 size applies to the size of the input/output | |
521 | register t0 only. The address t1 is always sized according to the guest, | |
522 | and the width of the memory operation is controlled by flags. | |
523 | ||
524 | Both t0 and t1 may be split into little-endian ordered pairs of registers | |
525 | if dealing with 64-bit quantities on a 32-bit host. | |
526 | ||
527 | The memidx selects the qemu tlb index to use (e.g. user or kernel access). | |
14776ab5 | 528 | The flags are the MemOp bits, selecting the sign, width, and endianness |
f713d6ad RH |
529 | of the memory access. |
530 | ||
531 | For a 32-bit host, qemu_ld/st_i64 is guaranteed to only be used with a | |
532 | 64-bit memory access specified in flags. | |
533 | ||
07ce0b05 RH |
534 | For i386, qemu_st8_i32 is exactly like qemu_st_i32, except the size of |
535 | the memory operation is known to be 8-bit. This allows the backend to | |
536 | provide a different set of register constraints. | |
537 | ||
d2fd745f RH |
538 | ********* Host vector operations |
539 | ||
540 | All of the vector ops have two parameters, TCGOP_VECL & TCGOP_VECE. | |
541 | The former specifies the length of the vector in log2 64-bit units; the | |
542 | later specifies the length of the element (if applicable) in log2 8-bit units. | |
543 | E.g. VECL=1 -> 64 << 1 -> v128, and VECE=2 -> 1 << 2 -> i32. | |
544 | ||
545 | * mov_vec v0, v1 | |
546 | * ld_vec v0, t1 | |
547 | * st_vec v0, t1 | |
548 | ||
549 | Move, load and store. | |
550 | ||
551 | * dup_vec v0, r1 | |
552 | ||
553 | Duplicate the low N bits of R1 into VECL/VECE copies across V0. | |
554 | ||
555 | * dupi_vec v0, c | |
556 | ||
557 | Similarly, for a constant. | |
558 | Smaller values will be replicated to host register size by the expanders. | |
559 | ||
560 | * dup2_vec v0, r1, r2 | |
561 | ||
562 | Duplicate r2:r1 into VECL/64 copies across V0. This opcode is | |
563 | only present for 32-bit hosts. | |
564 | ||
565 | * add_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
566 | ||
567 | v0 = v1 + v2, in elements across the vector. | |
568 | ||
569 | * sub_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
570 | ||
571 | Similarly, v0 = v1 - v2. | |
572 | ||
3774030a RH |
573 | * mul_vec v0, v1, v2 |
574 | ||
575 | Similarly, v0 = v1 * v2. | |
576 | ||
d2fd745f RH |
577 | * neg_vec v0, v1 |
578 | ||
579 | Similarly, v0 = -v1. | |
580 | ||
bcefc902 RH |
581 | * abs_vec v0, v1 |
582 | ||
583 | Similarly, v0 = v1 < 0 ? -v1 : v1, in elements across the vector. | |
584 | ||
dd0a0fcd RH |
585 | * smin_vec: |
586 | * umin_vec: | |
587 | ||
588 | Similarly, v0 = MIN(v1, v2), for signed and unsigned element types. | |
589 | ||
590 | * smax_vec: | |
591 | * umax_vec: | |
592 | ||
593 | Similarly, v0 = MAX(v1, v2), for signed and unsigned element types. | |
594 | ||
8afaf050 RH |
595 | * ssadd_vec: |
596 | * sssub_vec: | |
597 | * usadd_vec: | |
598 | * ussub_vec: | |
599 | ||
600 | Signed and unsigned saturating addition and subtraction. If the true | |
601 | result is not representable within the element type, the element is | |
602 | set to the minimum or maximum value for the type. | |
603 | ||
d2fd745f RH |
604 | * and_vec v0, v1, v2 |
605 | * or_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
606 | * xor_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
607 | * andc_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
608 | * orc_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
609 | * not_vec v0, v1 | |
610 | ||
1d349821 | 611 | Similarly, logical operations with and without complement. |
d2fd745f RH |
612 | Note that VECE is unused. |
613 | ||
d0ec9796 RH |
614 | * shli_vec v0, v1, i2 |
615 | * shls_vec v0, v1, s2 | |
616 | ||
617 | Shift all elements from v1 by a scalar i2/s2. I.e. | |
618 | ||
619 | for (i = 0; i < VECL/VECE; ++i) { | |
620 | v0[i] = v1[i] << s2; | |
621 | } | |
622 | ||
623 | * shri_vec v0, v1, i2 | |
624 | * sari_vec v0, v1, i2 | |
b0f7e744 | 625 | * rotli_vec v0, v1, i2 |
d0ec9796 RH |
626 | * shrs_vec v0, v1, s2 |
627 | * sars_vec v0, v1, s2 | |
628 | ||
b0f7e744 | 629 | Similarly for logical and arithmetic right shift, and left rotate. |
d0ec9796 RH |
630 | |
631 | * shlv_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
632 | ||
633 | Shift elements from v1 by elements from v2. I.e. | |
634 | ||
635 | for (i = 0; i < VECL/VECE; ++i) { | |
636 | v0[i] = v1[i] << v2[i]; | |
637 | } | |
638 | ||
639 | * shrv_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
640 | * sarv_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
5d0ceda9 RH |
641 | * rotlv_vec v0, v1, v2 |
642 | * rotrv_vec v0, v1, v2 | |
d0ec9796 | 643 | |
5d0ceda9 | 644 | Similarly for logical and arithmetic right shift, and rotates. |
d0ec9796 | 645 | |
212be173 RH |
646 | * cmp_vec v0, v1, v2, cond |
647 | ||
648 | Compare vectors by element, storing -1 for true and 0 for false. | |
649 | ||
38dc1294 RH |
650 | * bitsel_vec v0, v1, v2, v3 |
651 | ||
652 | Bitwise select, v0 = (v2 & v1) | (v3 & ~v1), across the entire vector. | |
653 | ||
f75da298 RH |
654 | * cmpsel_vec v0, c1, c2, v3, v4, cond |
655 | ||
656 | Select elements based on comparison results: | |
657 | for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) { | |
658 | v0[i] = (c1[i] cond c2[i]) ? v3[i] : v4[i]. | |
659 | } | |
660 | ||
f713d6ad | 661 | ********* |
c896fe29 FB |
662 | |
663 | Note 1: Some shortcuts are defined when the last operand is known to be | |
664 | a constant (e.g. addi for add, movi for mov). | |
665 | ||
666 | Note 2: When using TCG, the opcodes must never be generated directly | |
667 | as some of them may not be available as "real" opcodes. Always use the | |
668 | function tcg_gen_xxx(args). | |
669 | ||
670 | 4) Backend | |
671 | ||
139c1837 | 672 | tcg-target.h contains the target specific definitions. tcg-target.c.inc |
ce151109 PM |
673 | contains the target specific code; it is #included by tcg/tcg.c, rather |
674 | than being a standalone C file. | |
c896fe29 FB |
675 | |
676 | 4.1) Assumptions | |
677 | ||
678 | The target word size (TCG_TARGET_REG_BITS) is expected to be 32 bit or | |
679 | 64 bit. It is expected that the pointer has the same size as the word. | |
680 | ||
681 | On a 32 bit target, all 64 bit operations are converted to 32 bits. A | |
682 | few specific operations must be implemented to allow it (see add2_i32, | |
683 | sub2_i32, brcond2_i32). | |
684 | ||
cb8d4c8f | 685 | On a 64 bit target, the values are transferred between 32 and 64-bit |
870ad154 AJ |
686 | registers using the following ops: |
687 | - trunc_shr_i64_i32 | |
688 | - ext_i32_i64 | |
689 | - extu_i32_i64 | |
690 | ||
691 | They ensure that the values are correctly truncated or extended when | |
692 | moved from a 32-bit to a 64-bit register or vice-versa. Note that the | |
693 | trunc_shr_i64_i32 is an optional op. It is not necessary to implement | |
694 | it if all the following conditions are met: | |
695 | - 64-bit registers can hold 32-bit values | |
696 | - 32-bit values in a 64-bit register do not need to stay zero or | |
697 | sign extended | |
698 | - all 32-bit TCG ops ignore the high part of 64-bit registers | |
699 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
700 | Floating point operations are not supported in this version. A |
701 | previous incarnation of the code generator had full support of them, | |
702 | but it is better to concentrate on integer operations first. | |
703 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
704 | 4.2) Constraints |
705 | ||
706 | GCC like constraints are used to define the constraints of every | |
707 | instruction. Memory constraints are not supported in this | |
708 | version. Aliases are specified in the input operands as for GCC. | |
709 | ||
0c5f3c8d PB |
710 | The same register may be used for both an input and an output, even when |
711 | they are not explicitly aliased. If an op expands to multiple target | |
712 | instructions then care must be taken to avoid clobbering input values. | |
17280ff4 | 713 | GCC style "early clobber" outputs are supported, with '&'. |
0c5f3c8d | 714 | |
c896fe29 FB |
715 | A target can define specific register or constant constraints. If an |
716 | operation uses a constant input constraint which does not allow all | |
717 | constants, it must also accept registers in order to have a fallback. | |
17280ff4 RH |
718 | The constraint 'i' is defined generically to accept any constant. |
719 | The constraint 'r' is not defined generically, but is consistently | |
720 | used by each backend to indicate all registers. | |
c896fe29 FB |
721 | |
722 | The movi_i32 and movi_i64 operations must accept any constants. | |
723 | ||
724 | The mov_i32 and mov_i64 operations must accept any registers of the | |
725 | same type. | |
726 | ||
17280ff4 RH |
727 | The ld/st/sti instructions must accept signed 32 bit constant offsets. |
728 | This can be implemented by reserving a specific register in which to | |
729 | compute the address if the offset is too big. | |
c896fe29 FB |
730 | |
731 | The ld/st instructions must accept any destination (ld) or source (st) | |
732 | register. | |
733 | ||
17280ff4 RH |
734 | The sti instruction may fail if it cannot store the given constant. |
735 | ||
c896fe29 FB |
736 | 4.3) Function call assumptions |
737 | ||
738 | - The only supported types for parameters and return value are: 32 and | |
739 | 64 bit integers and pointer. | |
740 | - The stack grows downwards. | |
741 | - The first N parameters are passed in registers. | |
742 | - The next parameters are passed on the stack by storing them as words. | |
743 | - Some registers are clobbered during the call. | |
744 | - The function can return 0 or 1 value in registers. On a 32 bit | |
745 | target, functions must be able to return 2 values in registers for | |
746 | 64 bit return type. | |
747 | ||
86e840ee | 748 | 5) Recommended coding rules for best performance |
0a6b7b78 FB |
749 | |
750 | - Use globals to represent the parts of the QEMU CPU state which are | |
751 | often modified, e.g. the integer registers and the condition | |
752 | codes. TCG will be able to use host registers to store them. | |
753 | ||
754 | - Avoid globals stored in fixed registers. They must be used only to | |
755 | store the pointer to the CPU state and possibly to store a pointer | |
86e840ee | 756 | to a register window. |
0a6b7b78 FB |
757 | |
758 | - Use temporaries. Use local temporaries only when really needed, | |
759 | e.g. when you need to use a value after a jump. Local temporaries | |
760 | introduce a performance hit in the current TCG implementation: their | |
761 | content is saved to memory at end of each basic block. | |
762 | ||
763 | - Free temporaries and local temporaries when they are no longer used | |
764 | (tcg_temp_free). Since tcg_const_x() also creates a temporary, you | |
765 | should free it after it is used. Freeing temporaries does not yield | |
766 | a better generated code, but it reduces the memory usage of TCG and | |
767 | the speed of the translation. | |
768 | ||
294e4669 | 769 | - Don't hesitate to use helpers for complicated or seldom used guest |
aa95e3a5 | 770 | instructions. There is little performance advantage in using TCG to |
294e4669 | 771 | implement guest instructions taking more than about twenty TCG |
107a47cc PM |
772 | instructions. Note that this rule of thumb is more applicable to |
773 | helpers doing complex logic or arithmetic, where the C compiler has | |
774 | scope to do a good job of optimisation; it is less relevant where | |
775 | the instruction is mostly doing loads and stores, and in those cases | |
776 | inline TCG may still be faster for longer sequences. | |
777 | ||
778 | - The hard limit on the number of TCG instructions you can generate | |
294e4669 | 779 | per guest instruction is set by MAX_OP_PER_INSTR in exec-all.h -- |
107a47cc | 780 | you cannot exceed this without risking a buffer overrun. |
0a6b7b78 FB |
781 | |
782 | - Use the 'discard' instruction if you know that TCG won't be able to | |
783 | prove that a given global is "dead" at a given program point. The | |
294e4669 | 784 | x86 guest uses it to improve the condition codes optimisation. |