76 lines
3 KiB
Plaintext
76 lines
3 KiB
Plaintext
.bp
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.NH 1
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Compact assembly generation
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.NH 2
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Introduction
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.PP
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The "Compact Assembly generation phase" (CA) transforms the
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intermediate code of the optimizer into EM code in
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Compact Assembly Language (CAL) format.
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In the intermediate code, all program entities
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(such as procedures, labels, global variables)
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are denoted by a unique identifying number (see 3.5).
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In the CAL output of the optimizer these numbers have to
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be replaced by normal identifiers (strings).
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The original identifiers of the input program are used whenever possible.
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Recall that the IC phase generates two files that can be
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used to map unique identifying numbers to procedure names and
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global variable names.
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For instruction labels CA always generates new names.
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The reasons for doing so are:
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.IP -
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instruction labels are only visible inside one procedure, so they can
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not be referenced in other modules
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.IP -
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the names are not very suggestive anyway, as they must be integer numbers
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.IP -
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the optimizer considerably changes the control structure of the program,
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so there is really no one to one mapping of instruction labels in
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the input and the output program.
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.LP
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As the optimizer combines all input modules into one module,
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visibility problems may occur.
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Two modules M1 and M2 can both define an identifier X (provided that
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X is not externally visible in any of these modules).
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If M1 and M2 are combined into one module M, two distinct
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entities with the same name would exist in M, which
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is not allowed.
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.[~[
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tanenbaum machine architecture
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.], section 11.1.4.3]
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In these cases, CA invents a new unique name for one of the entities.
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.NH 2
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Implementation
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.PP
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CA first reads the files containing the procedure and global variable names
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and stores the names in two tables.
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It scans these tables to make sure that all names are different.
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Subsequently it reads the EM text, one procedure at a time,
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and outputs it in CAL format.
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The major part of the code that does the latter transformation
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is adapted from the EM Peephole Optimizer.
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.PP
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The main problem of the implementation of CA is to
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assure that the visibility rules are obeyed.
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If an identifier must be externally visible (i.e.
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it was externally visible in the input program)
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and the identifier is defined (in the output program) before
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being referenced,
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an EXA or EXP pseudo must be generated for it.
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(Note that the optimizer may change the order of definitions and
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references, so some pseudos may be needed that were not
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present in the input program).
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On the other hand, an identifier may be only internally visible.
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If such an identifier is referenced before being defined,
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an INA or INP pseudo must be emitted prior to its first reference.
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.UH
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Acknowledgements
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.PP
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The author would like to thank Andy Tanenbaum for his guidance,
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Duk Bekema for implementing the Common Subexpression Elimination phase
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and writing the initial documentation of that phase,
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Dick Grune for reading the manuscript of this report
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and Ceriel Jacobs, Ed Keizer, Martin Kersten, Hans van Staveren
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and the members of the S.T.W. user's group for their
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interest and assistance.
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