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- <title>Looping Patterns (GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) Internals)</title>
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- <a name="Looping-Patterns"></a>
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- <p>
- Next: <a href="Insn-Canonicalizations.html#Insn-Canonicalizations" accesskey="n" rel="next">Insn Canonicalizations</a>, Previous: <a href="Jump-Patterns.html#Jump-Patterns" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Jump Patterns</a>, Up: <a href="Machine-Desc.html#Machine-Desc" accesskey="u" rel="up">Machine Desc</a> [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
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- <a name="Defining-Looping-Instruction-Patterns"></a>
- <h3 class="section">17.13 Defining Looping Instruction Patterns</h3>
- <a name="index-looping-instruction-patterns"></a>
- <a name="index-defining-looping-instruction-patterns"></a>
-
- <p>Some machines have special jump instructions that can be utilized to
- make loops more efficient. A common example is the 68000 ‘<samp>dbra</samp>’
- instruction which performs a decrement of a register and a branch if the
- result was greater than zero. Other machines, in particular digital
- signal processors (DSPs), have special block repeat instructions to
- provide low-overhead loop support. For example, the TI TMS320C3x/C4x
- DSPs have a block repeat instruction that loads special registers to
- mark the top and end of a loop and to count the number of loop
- iterations. This avoids the need for fetching and executing a
- ‘<samp>dbra</samp>’-like instruction and avoids pipeline stalls associated with
- the jump.
- </p>
- <p>GCC has two special named patterns to support low overhead looping.
- They are ‘<samp>doloop_begin</samp>’ and ‘<samp>doloop_end</samp>’. These are emitted
- by the loop optimizer for certain well-behaved loops with a finite
- number of loop iterations using information collected during strength
- reduction.
- </p>
- <p>The ‘<samp>doloop_end</samp>’ pattern describes the actual looping instruction
- (or the implicit looping operation) and the ‘<samp>doloop_begin</samp>’ pattern
- is an optional companion pattern that can be used for initialization
- needed for some low-overhead looping instructions.
- </p>
- <p>Note that some machines require the actual looping instruction to be
- emitted at the top of the loop (e.g., the TMS320C3x/C4x DSPs). Emitting
- the true RTL for a looping instruction at the top of the loop can cause
- problems with flow analysis. So instead, a dummy <code>doloop</code> insn is
- emitted at the end of the loop. The machine dependent reorg pass checks
- for the presence of this <code>doloop</code> insn and then searches back to
- the top of the loop, where it inserts the true looping insn (provided
- there are no instructions in the loop which would cause problems). Any
- additional labels can be emitted at this point. In addition, if the
- desired special iteration counter register was not allocated, this
- machine dependent reorg pass could emit a traditional compare and jump
- instruction pair.
- </p>
- <p>For the ‘<samp>doloop_end</samp>’ pattern, the loop optimizer allocates an
- additional pseudo register as an iteration counter. This pseudo
- register cannot be used within the loop (i.e., general induction
- variables cannot be derived from it), however, in many cases the loop
- induction variable may become redundant and removed by the flow pass.
- </p>
- <p>The ‘<samp>doloop_end</samp>’ pattern must have a specific structure to be
- handled correctly by GCC. The example below is taken (slightly
- simplified) from the PDP-11 target:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">(define_expand "doloop_end"
- [(parallel [(set (pc)
- (if_then_else
- (ne (match_operand:HI 0 "nonimmediate_operand" "+r,!m")
- (const_int 1))
- (label_ref (match_operand 1 "" ""))
- (pc)))
- (set (match_dup 0)
- (plus:HI (match_dup 0)
- (const_int -1)))])]
- ""
- "{
- if (GET_MODE (operands[0]) != HImode)
- FAIL;
- }")
-
- (define_insn "doloop_end_insn"
- [(set (pc)
- (if_then_else
- (ne (match_operand:HI 0 "nonimmediate_operand" "+r,!m")
- (const_int 1))
- (label_ref (match_operand 1 "" ""))
- (pc)))
- (set (match_dup 0)
- (plus:HI (match_dup 0)
- (const_int -1)))]
- ""
-
- {
- if (which_alternative == 0)
- return "sob %0,%l1";
-
- /* emulate sob */
- output_asm_insn ("dec %0", operands);
- return "bne %l1";
- })
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>The first part of the pattern describes the branch condition. GCC
- supports three cases for the way the target machine handles the loop
- counter:
- </p><ul>
- <li> Loop terminates when the loop register decrements to zero. This
- is represented by a <code>ne</code> comparison of the register (its old value)
- with constant 1 (as in the example above).
- </li><li> Loop terminates when the loop register decrements to -1.
- This is represented by a <code>ne</code> comparison of the register with
- constant zero.
- </li><li> Loop terminates when the loop register decrements to a negative
- value. This is represented by a <code>ge</code> comparison of the register
- with constant zero. For this case, GCC will attach a <code>REG_NONNEG</code>
- note to the <code>doloop_end</code> insn if it can determine that the register
- will be non-negative.
- </li></ul>
-
- <p>Since the <code>doloop_end</code> insn is a jump insn that also has an output,
- the reload pass does not handle the output operand. Therefore, the
- constraint must allow for that operand to be in memory rather than a
- register. In the example shown above, that is handled (in the
- <code>doloop_end_insn</code> pattern) by using a loop instruction sequence
- that can handle memory operands when the memory alternative appears.
- </p>
- <p>GCC does not check the mode of the loop register operand when generating
- the <code>doloop_end</code> pattern. If the pattern is only valid for some
- modes but not others, the pattern should be a <code>define_expand</code>
- pattern that checks the operand mode in the preparation code, and issues
- <code>FAIL</code> if an unsupported mode is found. The example above does
- this, since the machine instruction to be used only exists for
- <code>HImode</code>.
- </p>
- <p>If the <code>doloop_end</code> pattern is a <code>define_expand</code>, there must
- also be a <code>define_insn</code> or <code>define_insn_and_split</code> matching
- the generated pattern. Otherwise, the compiler will fail during loop
- optimization.
- </p>
- <hr>
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- <p>
- Next: <a href="Insn-Canonicalizations.html#Insn-Canonicalizations" accesskey="n" rel="next">Insn Canonicalizations</a>, Previous: <a href="Jump-Patterns.html#Jump-Patterns" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Jump Patterns</a>, Up: <a href="Machine-Desc.html#Machine-Desc" accesskey="u" rel="up">Machine Desc</a> [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
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