Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell98 |
An architecture independent description of a register. This needs to stay architecture independent because it is used by NCGMonad and the register allocators, which are shared by all architectures.
- type RegNo = Int
- data Reg
- regPair :: RegNo -> RegNo -> Reg
- regSingle :: RegNo -> Reg
- isRealReg :: Reg -> Bool
- takeRealReg :: Reg -> Maybe RealReg
- isVirtualReg :: Reg -> Bool
- takeVirtualReg :: Reg -> Maybe VirtualReg
- data VirtualReg
- renameVirtualReg :: Unique -> VirtualReg -> VirtualReg
- classOfVirtualReg :: VirtualReg -> RegClass
- getHiVirtualRegFromLo :: VirtualReg -> VirtualReg
- getHiVRegFromLo :: Reg -> Reg
- data RealReg
- = RealRegSingle !RegNo
- | RealRegPair !RegNo !RegNo
- regNosOfRealReg :: RealReg -> [RegNo]
- realRegsAlias :: RealReg -> RealReg -> Bool
- liftPatchFnToRegReg :: (VirtualReg -> RealReg) -> Reg -> Reg
Documentation
A register, either virtual or real
takeRealReg :: Reg -> Maybe RealReg Source
isVirtualReg :: Reg -> Bool Source
takeVirtualReg :: Reg -> Maybe VirtualReg Source
data VirtualReg Source
renameVirtualReg :: Unique -> VirtualReg -> VirtualReg Source
getHiVRegFromLo :: Reg -> Reg Source
RealRegs are machine regs which are available for allocation, in the usual way. We know what class they are, because that's part of the processor's architecture.
RealRegPairs are pairs of real registers that are allocated together to hold a larger value, such as with Double regs on SPARC.
regNosOfRealReg :: RealReg -> [RegNo] Source
realRegsAlias :: RealReg -> RealReg -> Bool Source
liftPatchFnToRegReg :: (VirtualReg -> RealReg) -> Reg -> Reg Source
The patch function supplied by the allocator maps VirtualReg to RealReg regs, but sometimes we want to apply it to plain old Reg.