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mercury/compiler/wrap_blocks.m
Zoltan Somogyi 1c3bc03415 Make the system compiler with --warn-unused-imports.
Estimated hours taken: 2
Branches: main, release

Make the system compiler with --warn-unused-imports.

browser/*.m:
library/*.m:
compiler/*.m:
	Remove unnecesary imports as flagged by --warn-unused-imports.

	In some files, do some minor cleanup along the way.
2010-12-30 11:18:04 +00:00

111 lines
4.3 KiB
Mathematica

%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
% vim: ft=mercury ts=4 sw=4 et
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
% Copyright (C) 2001, 2003, 2005-2007, 2010 The University of Melbourne.
% This file may only be copied under the terms of the GNU General
% Public License - see the file COPYING in the Mercury distribution.
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
%
% File: wrap_blocks.m
% Author: zs.
%
% The optimizations in use_local_vars.m insert into instruction sequences
% references to temporary variables whose values need be preserved only within
% an extended basic block. The wrap_blocks pass looks for references to
% temporaries and introduces block instructions whenever it sees them. These
% block instructions go from the first reference to a temporary to the end of
% its extended basic block.
%
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
:- module ll_backend.wrap_blocks.
:- interface.
:- import_module ll_backend.llds.
:- import_module list.
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
:- pred wrap_blocks(list(instruction)::in, list(instruction)::out) is det.
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
:- implementation.
:- import_module ll_backend.opt_util.
:- import_module bool.
:- import_module int.
:- import_module require.
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
wrap_blocks(Instrs0, Instrs) :-
wrap_instrs(Instrs0, 0, 0, [], Instrs).
% R is the number of the highest numbered tempr variable seen so far;
% R = 0 means we haven't seen any temp variables. Similarly, F is the
% highest numbered tempf variable seen so far. RevSofar is a
% reversed list of instructions starting with the first instruction
% in this block that accesses a temp variable. Invariant: RevSofar
% is always empty if R = 0 and F = 0.
%
:- pred wrap_instrs(list(instruction)::in, int::in, int::in,
list(instruction)::in, list(instruction)::out) is det.
wrap_instrs([], R, F, RevSofar, []) :-
(
RevSofar = [_ | _],
unexpected(this_file, "procedure ends with fallthrough")
;
RevSofar = [],
( ( R > 0 ; F > 0 ) ->
unexpected(this_file, "procedure ends without closing block")
;
true
)
).
wrap_instrs([Instr0 | Instrs0], R0, F0, RevSofar, Instrs) :-
Instr0 = llds_instr(Uinstr0, _Comment0),
opt_util.count_temps_instr(Uinstr0, R0, R1, F0, F1),
( ( R1 > 0 ; F1 > 0) ->
% We must close the block before a label, since you can jump
% to a label from other blocks.
%
% Call instructions cannot fall through, but they cannot refer
% to the temp variables declared by the block either, so we
% close the block either just before or just after the call
% instruction. We close the block before the call instruction,
% because including it in the block causes the test case
% debugger/all_solutions to fail.
( ( Uinstr0 = label(_) ; Uinstr0 = llcall(_, _, _, _, _, _) ) ->
list.reverse(RevSofar, BlockInstrs),
wrap_instrs(Instrs0, 0, 0, [], Instrs1),
BlockInstr = llds_instr(block(R1, F1, BlockInstrs), ""),
Instrs = [BlockInstr, Instr0 | Instrs1]
; opt_util.can_instr_fall_through(Uinstr0) = no ->
list.reverse([Instr0 | RevSofar], BlockInstrs),
wrap_instrs(Instrs0, 0, 0, [], Instrs1),
BlockInstr = llds_instr(block(R1, F1, BlockInstrs), ""),
Instrs = [BlockInstr | Instrs1]
;
wrap_instrs(Instrs0, R1, F1, [Instr0 | RevSofar], Instrs)
)
;
wrap_instrs(Instrs0, 0, 0, [], Instrs1),
Instrs = [Instr0 | Instrs1]
).
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
:- func this_file = string.
this_file = "wrap_blocks.m".
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%
:- end_module wrap_blocks.
%-----------------------------------------------------------------------------%