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/** ##skip -*- mode:c; style:ruby; coding: utf-8 -*-
insns.def - YARV instruction definitions
$Author: $
created at: 04/01/01 01:17:55 JST
Copyright (C) 2004-2007 Koichi Sasada
*/
/** ##skip
instruction comment
@c: category
@e: english description
@j: japanese description
instruction form:
DEFINE_INSN
instruction_name
(instruction_operands, ..)
(pop_values, ..)
(return value)
{
.. // insn body
}
*/
/**
@c nop
@e nop
@j nop
*/
DEFINE_INSN
nop
()
()
()
{
/* none */
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with variables */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c variable
@e Get local variable (pointed by `idx' and `level').
'level' indicates the nesting depth from the current block.
@j level, idx
level
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getlocal
(lindex_t idx, rb_num_t level)
()
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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val = *(vm_get_ep(GET_EP(), level) - idx);
RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC(lvar_get);
(void)RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC_IF(lvar_get_dynamic, level > 0);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Set a local variable (pointed to by 'idx') as val.
'level' indicates the nesting depth from the current block.
@j level, idx val
level
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setlocal
(lindex_t idx, rb_num_t level)
(VALUE val)
()
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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vm_env_write(vm_get_ep(GET_EP(), level), -(int)idx, val);
RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC(lvar_set);
(void)RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC_IF(lvar_set_dynamic, level > 0);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Get a block parameter.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getblockparam
(lindex_t idx, rb_num_t level)
()
(VALUE val)
{
const VALUE *ep = vm_get_ep(GET_EP(), level);
VM_ASSERT(VM_ENV_LOCAL_P(ep));
if (!VM_ENV_FLAGS(ep, VM_FRAME_FLAG_MODIFIED_BLOCK_PARAM)) {
val = rb_vm_bh_to_procval(ec, VM_ENV_BLOCK_HANDLER(ep));
vm_env_write(ep, -(int)idx, val);
VM_ENV_FLAGS_SET(ep, VM_FRAME_FLAG_MODIFIED_BLOCK_PARAM);
}
else {
val = *(ep - idx);
RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC(lvar_get);
(void)RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC_IF(lvar_get_dynamic, level > 0);
}
}
/**
@c variable
@e Set block parameter.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setblockparam
(lindex_t idx, rb_num_t level)
(VALUE val)
()
{
const VALUE *ep = vm_get_ep(GET_EP(), level);
VM_ASSERT(VM_ENV_LOCAL_P(ep));
vm_env_write(ep, -(int)idx, val);
RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC(lvar_set);
(void)RB_DEBUG_COUNTER_INC_IF(lvar_set_dynamic, level > 0);
VM_ENV_FLAGS_SET(ep, VM_FRAME_FLAG_MODIFIED_BLOCK_PARAM);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Get value of special local variable ($~, $_, ..).
@j $~, $_, ...
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getspecial
(rb_num_t key, rb_num_t type)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = vm_getspecial(ec, GET_LEP(), key, type);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Set value of special local variable ($~, $_, ...) to obj.
@j $~, $_, ...
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setspecial
(rb_num_t key)
(VALUE obj)
()
{
lep_svar_set(ec, GET_LEP(), key, obj);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Get value of instance variable id of self.
@j self id
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getinstancevariable
(ID id, IC ic)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = vm_getinstancevariable(GET_SELF(), id, ic);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Set value of instance variable id of self to val.
@j self id val
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setinstancevariable
(ID id, IC ic)
(VALUE val)
()
{
vm_setinstancevariable(GET_SELF(), id, val, ic);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Get value of class variable id of klass as val.
@j id
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getclassvariable
(ID id)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = rb_cvar_get(vm_get_cvar_base(rb_vm_get_cref(GET_EP()), GET_CFP()), id);
}
/**
@c variable
@e Set value of class variable id of klass as val.
@j klass id val
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setclassvariable
(ID id)
(VALUE val)
()
{
vm_ensure_not_refinement_module(GET_SELF());
rb_cvar_set(vm_get_cvar_base(rb_vm_get_cref(GET_EP()), GET_CFP()), id, val);
}
/**
@c variable
@e
Get constant variable id. If klass is Qnil, constants
are searched in the current scope. If klass is Qfalse, constants
are searched as top level constants. Otherwise, get constant under klass
class or module.
@j id
klass Qnil
Qfalse
klass
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getconstant
(ID id)
(VALUE klass)
(VALUE val)
{
val = vm_get_ev_const(ec, klass, id, 0);
}
/**
@c variable
@e
Set constant variable id. If klass is Qfalse, constant
is able to access in this scope. if klass is Qnil, set
top level constant. otherwise, set constant under klass
class or module.
@j id val
klass Qfalse id
Qnil
klass
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setconstant
(ID id)
(VALUE val, VALUE cbase)
()
{
vm_check_if_namespace(cbase);
vm_ensure_not_refinement_module(GET_SELF());
rb_const_set(cbase, id, val);
}
/**
@c variable
@e get global variable id.
@j id
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getglobal
(GENTRY entry)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = GET_GLOBAL((VALUE)entry);
}
/**
@c variable
@e set global variable id as val.
@j id
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setglobal
(GENTRY entry)
(VALUE val)
()
{
SET_GLOBAL((VALUE)entry, val);
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with values */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c put
@e put nil to stack.
@j nil
*/
DEFINE_INSN
putnil
()
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = Qnil;
}
/**
@c put
@e put self.
@j self
*/
DEFINE_INSN
putself
()
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = GET_SELF();
}
/**
@c put
@e put some object.
i.e. Fixnum, true, false, nil, and so on.
@j val
i.e. Fixnum, true, false, nil, and so on.
*/
DEFINE_INSN
putobject
(VALUE val)
()
(VALUE val)
{
/* */
}
/**
@c put
@e put special object. "value_type" is for expansion.
@j val
value_type
*/
DEFINE_INSN
putspecialobject
(rb_num_t value_type)
()
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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enum vm_special_object_type type;
type = (enum vm_special_object_type)value_type;
val = vm_get_special_object(GET_EP(), type);
}
/**
@c put
@e put iseq value.
@j iseq
*/
DEFINE_INSN
putiseq
(ISEQ iseq)
()
(VALUE ret)
{
2015-07-21 18:52:59 -04:00
ret = (VALUE)iseq;
}
/**
@c put
@e put string val. string will be copied.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
putstring
(VALUE str)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = rb_str_resurrect(str);
}
/**
@c put
@e put concatenate strings
@j n
*/
DEFINE_INSN
concatstrings
(rb_num_t num)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - num;
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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val = rb_str_concat_literals(num, STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(num));
POPN(num);
}
/**
@c put
@e push the result of to_s.
@j to_s
*/
DEFINE_INSN
tostring
()
(VALUE val, VALUE str)
(VALUE val)
{
VALUE rb_obj_as_string_result(VALUE str, VALUE obj);
val = rb_obj_as_string_result(str, val);
}
/**
@c put
@e Freeze (dynamically) created strings. if debug_info is given, set it.
@j freeze debug_info
*/
DEFINE_INSN
freezestring
(VALUE debug_info)
(VALUE str)
(VALUE str)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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vm_freezestring(str, debug_info);
}
/**
@c put
@e compile str to Regexp and push it.
opt is the option for the Regexp.
@j str
opt
*/
DEFINE_INSN
toregexp
(rb_num_t opt, rb_num_t cnt)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - cnt;
{
VALUE rb_reg_new_ary(VALUE ary, int options);
VALUE rb_ary_tmp_new_from_values(VALUE, long, const VALUE *);
const VALUE ary = rb_ary_tmp_new_from_values(0, cnt, STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(cnt));
POPN(cnt);
val = rb_reg_new_ary(ary, (int)opt);
rb_ary_clear(ary);
}
/**
@c put
@e intern str to Symbol and push it.
@j str
*/
DEFINE_INSN
intern
()
(VALUE str)
(VALUE sym)
{
sym = rb_str_intern(str);
}
/**
@c put
@e put new array initialized with num values on the stack.
@j num
*/
DEFINE_INSN
newarray
(rb_num_t num)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - num;
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = rb_ary_new4(num, STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(num));
POPN(num);
}
/**
@c put
@e dup array
@j ary dup
*/
DEFINE_INSN
duparray
(VALUE ary)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = rb_ary_resurrect(ary);
}
/**
@c put
@e if TOS is an array expand, expand it to num objects.
if the number of the array is less than num, push nils to fill.
if it is greater than num, exceeding elements are dropped.
unless TOS is an array, push num - 1 nils.
if flags is non-zero, push the array of the rest elements.
flag: 0x01 - rest args array
flag: 0x02 - for postarg
flag: 0x04 - reverse?
@j
num以下ならば nil num以上なら
num以上の要素は切り捨てる
num - 1 nil
flag
flag: 0x01 -
flag: 0x02 - postarg
flag: 0x04 - reverse?
*/
DEFINE_INSN
expandarray
(rb_num_t num, rb_num_t flag)
(..., VALUE ary)
(...) // inc += num - 1 + (flag & 1 ? 1 : 0);
{
vm_expandarray(GET_CFP(), ary, num, (int)flag);
}
/**
@c put
@e concat two arrays
@j ary1, ary2
*/
DEFINE_INSN
concatarray
()
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
(VALUE ary1, VALUE ary2)
(VALUE ary)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
ary = vm_concat_array(ary1, ary2);
}
/**
@c put
@e call to_a on array ary to splat
@j splat ary to_a
*/
DEFINE_INSN
splatarray
(VALUE flag)
(VALUE ary)
(VALUE obj)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
obj = vm_splat_array(flag, ary);
}
/**
@c put
@e put new Hash from n elements. n must be an even number.
@j n
n 2
*/
DEFINE_INSN
newhash
(rb_num_t num)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - num;
{
RUBY_DTRACE_CREATE_HOOK(HASH, num);
* probes.d: add DTrace probe declarations. [ruby-core:27448] * array.c (empty_ary_alloc, ary_new): added array create DTrace probe. * compile.c (rb_insns_name): allowing DTrace probes to access instruction sequence name. * Makefile.in: translate probes.d file to appropriate header file. * common.mk: declare dependencies on the DTrace header. * configure.in: add a test for existence of DTrace. * eval.c (setup_exception): add a probe for when an exception is raised. * gc.c: Add DTrace probes for mark begin and end, and sweep begin and end. * hash.c (empty_hash_alloc): Add a probe for hash allocation. * insns.def: Add probes for function entry and return. * internal.h: function declaration for compile.c change. * load.c (rb_f_load): add probes for `load` entry and exit, require entry and exit, and wrapping search_required for load path search. * object.c (rb_obj_alloc): added a probe for general object creation. * parse.y (yycompile0): added a probe around parse and compile phase. * string.c (empty_str_alloc, str_new): DTrace probes for string allocation. * test/dtrace/*: tests for DTrace probes. * vm.c (vm_invoke_proc): add probes for function return on exception raise, hash create, and instruction sequence execution. * vm_core.h: add probe declarations for function entry and exit. * vm_dump.c: add probes header file. * vm_eval.c (vm_call0_cfunc, vm_call0_cfunc_with_frame): add probe on function entry and return. * vm_exec.c: expose instruction number to instruction name function. * vm_insnshelper.c: add function entry and exit probes for cfunc methods. * vm_insnhelper.h: vm usage information is always collected, so uncomment the functions. 12 19:14:50 2012 Akinori MUSHA <knu@iDaemons.org> * configure.in (isinf, isnan): isinf() and isnan() are macros on DragonFly which cannot be found by AC_REPLACE_FUNCS(). This workaround enforces the fact that they exist on DragonFly. 12 15:59:38 2012 Shugo Maeda <shugo@ruby-lang.org> * vm_core.h (rb_call_info_t::refinements), compile.c (new_callinfo), vm_insnhelper.c (vm_search_method): revert r37616 because it's too slow. [ruby-dev:46477] * test/ruby/test_refinement.rb (test_inline_method_cache): skip the test until the bug is fixed efficiently. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@37631 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2012-11-12 16:52:12 -05:00
val = rb_hash_new_with_size(num / 2);
if (num) {
rb_hash_bulk_insert(num, STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(num), val);
}
POPN(num);
}
/**
@c put
@e put new Range object.(Range.new(low, high, flag))
@j Range.new(low, high, flag)
*/
DEFINE_INSN
newrange
(rb_num_t flag)
(VALUE low, VALUE high)
(VALUE val)
{
val = rb_range_new(low, high, (int)flag);
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with stack operation */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c stack
@e pop from stack.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
pop
()
(VALUE val)
()
{
(void)val;
/* none */
}
/**
@c stack
@e duplicate stack top.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
dup
()
(VALUE val)
(VALUE val1, VALUE val2)
{
val1 = val2 = val;
}
/**
@c stack
@e duplicate stack top n elements
@j n
*/
DEFINE_INSN
dupn
(rb_num_t n)
(...)
(...) // inc += n;
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
void *dst = GET_SP();
void *src = STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(n);
INC_SP(n); /* alloca */
MEMCPY(dst, src, VALUE, n);
}
/**
@c stack
@e swap top 2 vals
@j 2
*/
DEFINE_INSN
swap
()
(VALUE val, VALUE obj)
(VALUE obj, VALUE val)
{
/* none */
}
/**
@c stack
@e reverse stack top N order.
@j n
*/
DEFINE_INSN
reverse
(rb_num_t n)
(...)
(...) // inc += 0;
{
rb_num_t i;
VALUE *sp = STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(n);
for (i=0; i<n/2; i++) {
VALUE v0 = sp[i];
VALUE v1 = TOPN(i);
sp[i] = v1;
TOPN(i) = v0;
}
}
/**
@c stack
@e for stack caching.
@j 調
*/
DEFINE_INSN
reput
()
(..., VALUE val)
(VALUE val) // inc += 0;
{
/* none */
}
/**
@c stack
@e get nth stack value from stack top
@j n
*/
DEFINE_INSN
topn
(rb_num_t n)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1;
{
val = TOPN(n);
}
/**
@c stack
@e set Nth stack entry to stack top
@j n
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setn
(rb_num_t n)
(..., VALUE val)
(VALUE val) // inc += 0
{
TOPN(n-1) = val;
}
/**
@c stack
@e empty current stack
@j current stack
*/
DEFINE_INSN
adjuststack
(rb_num_t n)
(...)
(...) // inc -= n
{
DEC_SP(n);
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with setting */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c setting
@e defined?
@j defined?
*/
DEFINE_INSN
defined
(rb_num_t op_type, VALUE obj, VALUE needstr)
(VALUE v)
(VALUE val)
{
val = vm_defined(ec, GET_CFP(), op_type, obj, needstr, v);
}
/**
@c setting
@e check `target' matches `pattern'.
`flag & VM_CHECKMATCH_TYPE_MASK' describe how to check pattern.
VM_CHECKMATCH_TYPE_WHEN: ignore target and check pattern is truthy.
VM_CHECKMATCH_TYPE_CASE: check `patten === target'.
VM_CHECKMATCH_TYPE_RESCUE: check `pattern.kind_op?(Module) && pattern == target'.
if `flag & VM_CHECKMATCH_ARRAY' is not 0, then `patten' is array of patterns.
@j see above comments.
*/
DEFINE_INSN
checkmatch
(rb_num_t flag)
(VALUE target, VALUE pattern)
(VALUE result)
{
result = vm_check_match(target, pattern, flag);
}
* rewrite method/block parameter fitting logic to optimize keyword arguments/parameters and a splat argument. [Feature #10440] (Details are described in this ticket) Most of complex part is moved to vm_args.c. Now, ISeq#to_a does not catch up new instruction format. * vm_core.h: change iseq data structures. * introduce rb_call_info_kw_arg_t to represent keyword arguments. * add rb_call_info_t::kw_arg. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_post_len to rb_iseq_t::arg_post_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keywords to arg_keyword_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_bits. to represent keyword bitmap parameter index. This bitmap parameter shows that which keyword parameters are given or not given (0 for given). It is refered by `checkkeyword' instruction described bellow. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_check to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_rest to represent keyword rest parameter index. * add rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_default_values to represent default keyword values. * rename VM_CALL_ARGS_SKIP_SETUP to VM_CALL_ARGS_SIMPLE to represent (ci->flag & (SPLAT|BLOCKARG)) && ci->blockiseq == NULL && ci->kw_arg == NULL. * vm_insnhelper.c, vm_args.c: rewrite with refactoring. * rewrite splat argument code. * rewrite keyword arguments/parameters code. * merge method and block parameter fitting code into one code base. * vm.c, vm_eval.c: catch up these changes. * compile.c (new_callinfo): callinfo requires kw_arg parameter. * compile.c (compile_array_): check the last argument Hash object or not. If Hash object and all keys are Symbol literals, they are compiled to keyword arguments. * insns.def (checkkeyword): add new instruction. This instruction check the availability of corresponding keyword. For example, a method "def foo k1: 'v1'; end" is cimpiled to the following instructions. 0000 checkkeyword 2, 0 # check k1 is given. 0003 branchif 9 # if given, jump to address #9 0005 putstring "v1" 0007 setlocal_OP__WC__0 3 # k1 = 'v1' 0009 trace 8 0011 putnil 0012 trace 16 0014 leave * insns.def (opt_send_simple): removed and add new instruction "opt_send_without_block". * parse.y (new_args_tail_gen): reorder variables. Before this patch, a method "def foo(k1: 1, kr1:, k2: 2, **krest, &b)" has parameter variables "k1, kr1, k2, &b, internal_id, krest", but this patch reorders to "kr1, k1, k2, internal_id, krest, &b". (locate a block variable at last) * parse.y (vtable_pop): added. This function remove latest `n' variables from vtable. * iseq.c: catch up iseq data changes. * proc.c: ditto. * class.c (keyword_error): export as rb_keyword_error(). * common.mk: depend vm_args.c for vm.o. * hash.c (rb_hash_has_key): export. * internal.h: ditto. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@48239 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2014-11-02 13:02:55 -05:00
/**
@c setting
@e check keywords are specified or not.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
checkkeyword
(lindex_t kw_bits_index, rb_num_t keyword_index)
()
(VALUE ret)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
ret = vm_check_keyword(kw_bits_index, keyword_index, GET_EP());
* rewrite method/block parameter fitting logic to optimize keyword arguments/parameters and a splat argument. [Feature #10440] (Details are described in this ticket) Most of complex part is moved to vm_args.c. Now, ISeq#to_a does not catch up new instruction format. * vm_core.h: change iseq data structures. * introduce rb_call_info_kw_arg_t to represent keyword arguments. * add rb_call_info_t::kw_arg. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_post_len to rb_iseq_t::arg_post_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keywords to arg_keyword_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_bits. to represent keyword bitmap parameter index. This bitmap parameter shows that which keyword parameters are given or not given (0 for given). It is refered by `checkkeyword' instruction described bellow. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_check to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_rest to represent keyword rest parameter index. * add rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_default_values to represent default keyword values. * rename VM_CALL_ARGS_SKIP_SETUP to VM_CALL_ARGS_SIMPLE to represent (ci->flag & (SPLAT|BLOCKARG)) && ci->blockiseq == NULL && ci->kw_arg == NULL. * vm_insnhelper.c, vm_args.c: rewrite with refactoring. * rewrite splat argument code. * rewrite keyword arguments/parameters code. * merge method and block parameter fitting code into one code base. * vm.c, vm_eval.c: catch up these changes. * compile.c (new_callinfo): callinfo requires kw_arg parameter. * compile.c (compile_array_): check the last argument Hash object or not. If Hash object and all keys are Symbol literals, they are compiled to keyword arguments. * insns.def (checkkeyword): add new instruction. This instruction check the availability of corresponding keyword. For example, a method "def foo k1: 'v1'; end" is cimpiled to the following instructions. 0000 checkkeyword 2, 0 # check k1 is given. 0003 branchif 9 # if given, jump to address #9 0005 putstring "v1" 0007 setlocal_OP__WC__0 3 # k1 = 'v1' 0009 trace 8 0011 putnil 0012 trace 16 0014 leave * insns.def (opt_send_simple): removed and add new instruction "opt_send_without_block". * parse.y (new_args_tail_gen): reorder variables. Before this patch, a method "def foo(k1: 1, kr1:, k2: 2, **krest, &b)" has parameter variables "k1, kr1, k2, &b, internal_id, krest", but this patch reorders to "kr1, k1, k2, internal_id, krest, &b". (locate a block variable at last) * parse.y (vtable_pop): added. This function remove latest `n' variables from vtable. * iseq.c: catch up iseq data changes. * proc.c: ditto. * class.c (keyword_error): export as rb_keyword_error(). * common.mk: depend vm_args.c for vm.o. * hash.c (rb_hash_has_key): export. * internal.h: ditto. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@48239 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2014-11-02 13:02:55 -05:00
}
/**
@c setting
@e trace
@j trace
*/
DEFINE_INSN
trace
(rb_num_t nf)
()
()
{
rb_event_flag_t flag = (rb_event_flag_t)nf;
vm_dtrace(flag, ec);
EXEC_EVENT_HOOK(ec, flag, GET_SELF(), 0, 0, 0 /* id and klass are resolved at callee */,
(flag & (RUBY_EVENT_RETURN | RUBY_EVENT_B_RETURN)) ? TOPN(0) : Qundef);
}
/**
@c setting
@e trace
@j trace
*/
DEFINE_INSN
trace2
(rb_num_t nf, VALUE data)
()
()
{
rb_event_flag_t flag = (rb_event_flag_t)nf;
vm_dtrace(flag, ec);
EXEC_EVENT_HOOK(ec, flag, GET_SELF(), 0, 0, 0 /* id and klass are resolved at callee */, data);
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with control flow 1: class/module */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c class/module
@e
enter class definition scope. if super is Qfalse, and class
"klass" is defined, it's redefine. otherwise, define "klass" class.
@j
super Qfalse klassクラスが定義されていれば再定義である
klass
*/
DEFINE_INSN
defineclass
(ID id, ISEQ class_iseq, rb_num_t flags)
(VALUE cbase, VALUE super)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
VALUE klass = vm_find_or_create_class_by_id(id, flags, cbase, super);
* introduce new ISeq binary format serializer/de-serializer and a pre-compilation/runtime loader sample. [Feature #11788] * iseq.c: add new methods: * RubyVM::InstructionSequence#to_binary_format(extra_data = nil) * RubyVM::InstructionSequence.from_binary_format(binary) * RubyVM::InstructionSequence.from_binary_format_extra_data(binary) * compile.c: implement body of this new feature. * load.c (rb_load_internal0), iseq.c (rb_iseq_load_iseq): call RubyVM::InstructionSequence.load_iseq(fname) with loading script name if this method is defined. We can return any ISeq object as a result value. Otherwise loading will be continue as usual. This interface is not matured and is not extensible. So that we don't guarantee the future compatibility of this method. Basically, you should'nt use this method. * iseq.h: move ISEQ_MAJOR/MINOR_VERSION (and some definitions) from iseq.c. * encoding.c (rb_data_is_encoding), internal.h: added. * vm_core.h: add several supports for lazy load. * add USE_LAZY_LOAD macro to specify enable or disable of this feature. * add several fields to rb_iseq_t. * introduce new macro rb_iseq_check(). * insns.def: some check for lazy loading feature. * vm_insnhelper.c: ditto. * proc.c: ditto. * vm.c: ditto. * test/lib/iseq_loader_checker.rb: enabled iff suitable environment variables are provided. * test/runner.rb: enable lib/iseq_loader_checker.rb. * sample/iseq_loader.rb: add sample compiler and loader. $ ruby sample/iseq_loader.rb [dir] will compile all ruby scripts in [dir]. With default setting, this compile creates *.rb.yarb files in same directory of target .rb scripts. $ ruby -r sample/iseq_loader.rb [app] will run with enable to load compiled binary data. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@52949 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2015-12-08 08:58:50 -05:00
rb_iseq_check(class_iseq);
/* enter scope */
vm_push_frame(ec, class_iseq, VM_FRAME_MAGIC_CLASS | VM_ENV_FLAG_LOCAL, klass,
GET_BLOCK_HANDLER(),
(VALUE)vm_cref_push(ec, klass, NULL, FALSE),
2015-07-21 18:52:59 -04:00
class_iseq->body->iseq_encoded, GET_SP(),
class_iseq->body->local_table_size,
* introduce new ISeq binary format serializer/de-serializer and a pre-compilation/runtime loader sample. [Feature #11788] * iseq.c: add new methods: * RubyVM::InstructionSequence#to_binary_format(extra_data = nil) * RubyVM::InstructionSequence.from_binary_format(binary) * RubyVM::InstructionSequence.from_binary_format_extra_data(binary) * compile.c: implement body of this new feature. * load.c (rb_load_internal0), iseq.c (rb_iseq_load_iseq): call RubyVM::InstructionSequence.load_iseq(fname) with loading script name if this method is defined. We can return any ISeq object as a result value. Otherwise loading will be continue as usual. This interface is not matured and is not extensible. So that we don't guarantee the future compatibility of this method. Basically, you should'nt use this method. * iseq.h: move ISEQ_MAJOR/MINOR_VERSION (and some definitions) from iseq.c. * encoding.c (rb_data_is_encoding), internal.h: added. * vm_core.h: add several supports for lazy load. * add USE_LAZY_LOAD macro to specify enable or disable of this feature. * add several fields to rb_iseq_t. * introduce new macro rb_iseq_check(). * insns.def: some check for lazy loading feature. * vm_insnhelper.c: ditto. * proc.c: ditto. * vm.c: ditto. * test/lib/iseq_loader_checker.rb: enabled iff suitable environment variables are provided. * test/runner.rb: enable lib/iseq_loader_checker.rb. * sample/iseq_loader.rb: add sample compiler and loader. $ ruby sample/iseq_loader.rb [dir] will compile all ruby scripts in [dir]. With default setting, this compile creates *.rb.yarb files in same directory of target .rb scripts. $ ruby -r sample/iseq_loader.rb [app] will run with enable to load compiled binary data. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@52949 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2015-12-08 08:58:50 -05:00
class_iseq->body->stack_max);
RESTORE_REGS();
NEXT_INSN();
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with control flow 2: method/iterator */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c method/iterator
@e invoke method.
@j ci
*/
DEFINE_INSN
send
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc, ISEQ blockiseq)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += - (int)(ci->orig_argc + ((ci->flag & VM_CALL_ARGS_BLOCKARG) ? 1 : 0));
{
struct rb_calling_info calling;
vm_caller_setup_arg_block(ec, reg_cfp, &calling, ci, blockiseq, FALSE);
vm_search_method(ci, cc, calling.recv = TOPN(calling.argc = ci->orig_argc));
CALL_METHOD(&calling, ci, cc);
}
DEFINE_INSN
opt_str_freeze
(VALUE str)
()
(VALUE val)
{
if (BASIC_OP_UNREDEFINED_P(BOP_FREEZE, STRING_REDEFINED_OP_FLAG)) {
val = str;
}
else {
val = rb_funcall(rb_str_resurrect(str), idFreeze, 0);
}
}
DEFINE_INSN
opt_str_uminus
(VALUE str)
()
(VALUE val)
{
if (BASIC_OP_UNREDEFINED_P(BOP_UMINUS, STRING_REDEFINED_OP_FLAG)) {
val = str;
}
else {
val = rb_funcall(rb_str_resurrect(str), idUMinus, 0);
}
}
DEFINE_INSN
opt_newarray_max
(rb_num_t num)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - num;
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_newarray_max(num, STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(num));
POPN(num);
}
DEFINE_INSN
opt_newarray_min
(rb_num_t num)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - num;
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_newarray_min(num, STACK_ADDR_FROM_TOP(num));
POPN(num);
}
/**
@c optimize
* rewrite method/block parameter fitting logic to optimize keyword arguments/parameters and a splat argument. [Feature #10440] (Details are described in this ticket) Most of complex part is moved to vm_args.c. Now, ISeq#to_a does not catch up new instruction format. * vm_core.h: change iseq data structures. * introduce rb_call_info_kw_arg_t to represent keyword arguments. * add rb_call_info_t::kw_arg. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_post_len to rb_iseq_t::arg_post_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keywords to arg_keyword_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_bits. to represent keyword bitmap parameter index. This bitmap parameter shows that which keyword parameters are given or not given (0 for given). It is refered by `checkkeyword' instruction described bellow. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_check to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_rest to represent keyword rest parameter index. * add rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_default_values to represent default keyword values. * rename VM_CALL_ARGS_SKIP_SETUP to VM_CALL_ARGS_SIMPLE to represent (ci->flag & (SPLAT|BLOCKARG)) && ci->blockiseq == NULL && ci->kw_arg == NULL. * vm_insnhelper.c, vm_args.c: rewrite with refactoring. * rewrite splat argument code. * rewrite keyword arguments/parameters code. * merge method and block parameter fitting code into one code base. * vm.c, vm_eval.c: catch up these changes. * compile.c (new_callinfo): callinfo requires kw_arg parameter. * compile.c (compile_array_): check the last argument Hash object or not. If Hash object and all keys are Symbol literals, they are compiled to keyword arguments. * insns.def (checkkeyword): add new instruction. This instruction check the availability of corresponding keyword. For example, a method "def foo k1: 'v1'; end" is cimpiled to the following instructions. 0000 checkkeyword 2, 0 # check k1 is given. 0003 branchif 9 # if given, jump to address #9 0005 putstring "v1" 0007 setlocal_OP__WC__0 3 # k1 = 'v1' 0009 trace 8 0011 putnil 0012 trace 16 0014 leave * insns.def (opt_send_simple): removed and add new instruction "opt_send_without_block". * parse.y (new_args_tail_gen): reorder variables. Before this patch, a method "def foo(k1: 1, kr1:, k2: 2, **krest, &b)" has parameter variables "k1, kr1, k2, &b, internal_id, krest", but this patch reorders to "kr1, k1, k2, internal_id, krest, &b". (locate a block variable at last) * parse.y (vtable_pop): added. This function remove latest `n' variables from vtable. * iseq.c: catch up iseq data changes. * proc.c: ditto. * class.c (keyword_error): export as rb_keyword_error(). * common.mk: depend vm_args.c for vm.o. * hash.c (rb_hash_has_key): export. * internal.h: ditto. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@48239 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2014-11-02 13:02:55 -05:00
@e Invoke method without block
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
* rewrite method/block parameter fitting logic to optimize keyword arguments/parameters and a splat argument. [Feature #10440] (Details are described in this ticket) Most of complex part is moved to vm_args.c. Now, ISeq#to_a does not catch up new instruction format. * vm_core.h: change iseq data structures. * introduce rb_call_info_kw_arg_t to represent keyword arguments. * add rb_call_info_t::kw_arg. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_post_len to rb_iseq_t::arg_post_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keywords to arg_keyword_num. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_bits. to represent keyword bitmap parameter index. This bitmap parameter shows that which keyword parameters are given or not given (0 for given). It is refered by `checkkeyword' instruction described bellow. * rename rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_check to rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_rest to represent keyword rest parameter index. * add rb_iseq_t::arg_keyword_default_values to represent default keyword values. * rename VM_CALL_ARGS_SKIP_SETUP to VM_CALL_ARGS_SIMPLE to represent (ci->flag & (SPLAT|BLOCKARG)) && ci->blockiseq == NULL && ci->kw_arg == NULL. * vm_insnhelper.c, vm_args.c: rewrite with refactoring. * rewrite splat argument code. * rewrite keyword arguments/parameters code. * merge method and block parameter fitting code into one code base. * vm.c, vm_eval.c: catch up these changes. * compile.c (new_callinfo): callinfo requires kw_arg parameter. * compile.c (compile_array_): check the last argument Hash object or not. If Hash object and all keys are Symbol literals, they are compiled to keyword arguments. * insns.def (checkkeyword): add new instruction. This instruction check the availability of corresponding keyword. For example, a method "def foo k1: 'v1'; end" is cimpiled to the following instructions. 0000 checkkeyword 2, 0 # check k1 is given. 0003 branchif 9 # if given, jump to address #9 0005 putstring "v1" 0007 setlocal_OP__WC__0 3 # k1 = 'v1' 0009 trace 8 0011 putnil 0012 trace 16 0014 leave * insns.def (opt_send_simple): removed and add new instruction "opt_send_without_block". * parse.y (new_args_tail_gen): reorder variables. Before this patch, a method "def foo(k1: 1, kr1:, k2: 2, **krest, &b)" has parameter variables "k1, kr1, k2, &b, internal_id, krest", but this patch reorders to "kr1, k1, k2, internal_id, krest, &b". (locate a block variable at last) * parse.y (vtable_pop): added. This function remove latest `n' variables from vtable. * iseq.c: catch up iseq data changes. * proc.c: ditto. * class.c (keyword_error): export as rb_keyword_error(). * common.mk: depend vm_args.c for vm.o. * hash.c (rb_hash_has_key): export. * internal.h: ditto. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@48239 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2014-11-02 13:02:55 -05:00
opt_send_without_block
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += -ci->orig_argc;
{
struct rb_calling_info calling;
calling.block_handler = VM_BLOCK_HANDLER_NONE;
vm_search_method(ci, cc, calling.recv = TOPN(calling.argc = ci->orig_argc));
CALL_METHOD(&calling, ci, cc);
}
/**
@c method/iterator
@e super(args) # args.size => num
@j super ci
*/
DEFINE_INSN
invokesuper
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc, ISEQ blockiseq)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += - (int)(ci->orig_argc + ((ci->flag & VM_CALL_ARGS_BLOCKARG) ? 1 : 0));
{
struct rb_calling_info calling;
calling.argc = ci->orig_argc;
vm_caller_setup_arg_block(ec, reg_cfp, &calling, ci, blockiseq, TRUE);
calling.recv = GET_SELF();
vm_search_super_method(ec, GET_CFP(), &calling, ci, cc);
CALL_METHOD(&calling, ci, cc);
}
/**
@c method/iterator
@e yield(args)
@j yield
*/
DEFINE_INSN
invokeblock
(CALL_INFO ci)
(...)
(VALUE val) // inc += 1 - ci->orig_argc;
{
struct rb_calling_info calling;
calling.argc = ci->orig_argc;
calling.block_handler = VM_BLOCK_HANDLER_NONE;
calling.recv = GET_SELF();
val = vm_invoke_block(ec, GET_CFP(), &calling, ci);
if (val == Qundef) {
RESTORE_REGS();
NEXT_INSN();
}
}
/**
@c method/iterator
@e return from this scope.
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
leave
()
(VALUE val)
(VALUE val)
{
if (OPT_CHECKED_RUN) {
const VALUE *const bp = vm_base_ptr(reg_cfp);
if (reg_cfp->sp != bp) {
vm_stack_consistency_error(ec, reg_cfp, bp);
}
}
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
if (vm_pop_frame(ec, GET_CFP(), GET_EP())) {
#if OPT_CALL_THREADED_CODE
rb_ec_thread_ptr(ec)->retval = val;
return 0;
#else
* vm_core.h: remove VM_FRAME_MAGIC_FINISH (finish frame type). Before this commit: `finish frame' was place holder which indicates that VM loop needs to return function. If a C method calls a Ruby methods (a method written by Ruby), then VM loop will be (re-)invoked. When the Ruby method returns, then also VM loop should be escaped. `finish frame' has only one instruction `finish', which returns VM loop function. VM loop function executes `finish' instruction, then VM loop function returns itself. With such mechanism, `leave' instruction (which returns one frame from current scope) doesn't need to check that this `leave' should also return from VM loop function. Strictly, one branch can be removed from `leave' instructon. Consideration: However, pushing the `finish frame' needs costs because it needs several memory accesses. The number of pushing `finish frame' is greater than I had assumed. Of course, pushing `finish frame' consumes additional control frame. Moreover, recent processors has good branch prediction, with which we can ignore such trivial checking. After this commit: Finally, I decide to remove `finish frame' and `finish' instruction. Some parts of VM depend on `finish frame', so the new frame flag VM_FRAME_FLAG_FINISH is introduced. If this frame should escape from VM function loop, then the result of VM_FRAME_TYPE_FINISH_P(cfp) is true. `leave' instruction checks this flag every time. I measured performance on it. However on my environments, it improves some benchmarks and slows some benchmarks down. Maybe it is because of C compiler optimization parameters. I'll re-visit here if this cause problems. * insns.def (leave, finish): remove finish instruction. * vm.c, vm_eval.c, vm_exec.c, vm_backtrace.c, vm_dump.c: apply above changes. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@36099 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2012-06-15 06:22:34 -04:00
return val;
#endif
* vm_core.h: remove VM_FRAME_MAGIC_FINISH (finish frame type). Before this commit: `finish frame' was place holder which indicates that VM loop needs to return function. If a C method calls a Ruby methods (a method written by Ruby), then VM loop will be (re-)invoked. When the Ruby method returns, then also VM loop should be escaped. `finish frame' has only one instruction `finish', which returns VM loop function. VM loop function executes `finish' instruction, then VM loop function returns itself. With such mechanism, `leave' instruction (which returns one frame from current scope) doesn't need to check that this `leave' should also return from VM loop function. Strictly, one branch can be removed from `leave' instructon. Consideration: However, pushing the `finish frame' needs costs because it needs several memory accesses. The number of pushing `finish frame' is greater than I had assumed. Of course, pushing `finish frame' consumes additional control frame. Moreover, recent processors has good branch prediction, with which we can ignore such trivial checking. After this commit: Finally, I decide to remove `finish frame' and `finish' instruction. Some parts of VM depend on `finish frame', so the new frame flag VM_FRAME_FLAG_FINISH is introduced. If this frame should escape from VM function loop, then the result of VM_FRAME_TYPE_FINISH_P(cfp) is true. `leave' instruction checks this flag every time. I measured performance on it. However on my environments, it improves some benchmarks and slows some benchmarks down. Maybe it is because of C compiler optimization parameters. I'll re-visit here if this cause problems. * insns.def (leave, finish): remove finish instruction. * vm.c, vm_eval.c, vm_exec.c, vm_backtrace.c, vm_dump.c: apply above changes. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@36099 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2012-06-15 06:22:34 -04:00
}
else {
RESTORE_REGS();
}
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with control flow 3: exception */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c exception
@e longjump
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
throw
(rb_num_t throw_state)
(VALUE throwobj)
(VALUE val)
{
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
val = vm_throw(ec, GET_CFP(), throw_state, throwobj);
THROW_EXCEPTION(val);
/* unreachable */
}
/**********************************************************/
/* deal with control flow 4: local jump */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c jump
@e set PC to (PC + dst).
@j PC (PC + dst)
*/
DEFINE_INSN
jump
(OFFSET dst)
()
()
{
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
JUMP(dst);
}
/**
@c jump
@e if val is not false or nil, set PC to (PC + dst).
@j val false nil PC (PC + dst)
*/
DEFINE_INSN
branchif
(OFFSET dst)
(VALUE val)
()
{
if (RTEST(val)) {
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
JUMP(dst);
}
}
/**
@c jump
@e if val is false or nil, set PC to (PC + dst).
@j val false nil PC (PC + dst)
*/
DEFINE_INSN
branchunless
(OFFSET dst)
(VALUE val)
()
{
if (!RTEST(val)) {
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
JUMP(dst);
}
}
/**
@c jump
@e if val is nil, set PC to (PC + dst).
@j val nil PC (PC + dst)
*/
DEFINE_INSN
branchnil
(OFFSET dst)
(VALUE val)
()
{
if (NIL_P(val)) {
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
JUMP(dst);
}
}
/**
@c jump
@e if val is type, set PC to (PC + dst).
@j val type PC (PC + dst)
*/
DEFINE_INSN
branchiftype
(rb_num_t type, OFFSET dst)
(VALUE val)
()
{
if (TYPE(val) == (int)type) {
RUBY_VM_CHECK_INTS(ec);
JUMP(dst);
}
}
/**********************************************************/
/* for optimize */
/**********************************************************/
/**
@c optimize
@e push inline-cached value and go to dst if it is valid
@j dst
*/
DEFINE_INSN
getinlinecache
(OFFSET dst, IC ic)
()
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_ic_hit_p(ic, GET_EP());
if (val != Qnil) {
JUMP(dst);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e set inline cache
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
setinlinecache
(IC ic)
(VALUE val)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
vm_ic_update(ic, val, GET_EP());
}
/**
@c optimize
@e run iseq only once
@j once
*/
DEFINE_INSN
once
(ISEQ iseq, IC ic)
()
(VALUE val)
{
val = vm_once_dispatch(ec, iseq, ic);
}
/**
@c optimize
@e case dispatcher, jump by table if possible
@j case
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_case_dispatch
(CDHASH hash, OFFSET else_offset)
(..., VALUE key)
() // inc += -1;
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
OFFSET dst = vm_case_dispatch(hash, else_offset, key);
if (dst) {
JUMP(dst);
}
}
/** simple functions */
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X+Y.
@j X+Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_plus
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_plus(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X-Y.
@j X-Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_minus
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_minus(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X*Y.
@j X*Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_mult
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_mult(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X/Y.
@j X/Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_div
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_div(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X%Y.
@j X%Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_mod
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_mod(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X==Y.
@j X==Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_eq
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
val = opt_eq_func(recv, obj, ci, cc);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X!=Y.
@j X!=Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_neq
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc, CALL_INFO ci_eq, CALL_CACHE cc_eq)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_neq(ci, cc, ci_eq, cc_eq, recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X<Y.
@j X<Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_lt
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_lt(recv, obj);
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X<=Y.
@j X<=Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_le
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_le(recv, obj);
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X>Y.
@j X>Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_gt
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_gt(recv, obj);
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized X>=Y.
@j X>=Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_ge
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_ge(recv, obj);
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e <<
@j X<<Y
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_ltlt
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_ltlt(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e []
@j recv[obj]
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_aref
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_aref(recv, obj);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e recv[obj] = set
@j recv[obj] = set
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_aset
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv, VALUE obj, VALUE set)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_aset(recv, obj, set);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(obj);
PUSH(set);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e recv[str] = set
@j recv[str] = set
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_aset_with
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc, VALUE key)
(VALUE recv, VALUE val)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
VALUE tmp = vm_opt_aset_with(recv, key, val);
if (tmp != Qundef) {
val = tmp;
}
else {
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(rb_str_resurrect(key));
PUSH(val);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e recv[str]
@j recv[str]
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_aref_with
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc, VALUE key)
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_aref_with(recv, key);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
PUSH(rb_str_resurrect(key));
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized length
@j recv.length()
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_length
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_length(recv, BOP_LENGTH);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized size
@j recv.size()
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_size
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_length(recv, BOP_SIZE);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized empty?
@j recv.empty?()
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_empty_p
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_empty_p(recv);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized succ
@j recv.succ()
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_succ
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_succ(recv);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized not
@j recv.!()
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_not
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_not(ci, cc, recv);
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(recv);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(recv);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized regexp match
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_regexpmatch1
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
(VALUE recv)
(VALUE obj)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_regexpmatch1(recv, obj);
}
/**
@c optimize
@e optimized regexp match 2
@j 2
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_regexpmatch2
(CALL_INFO ci, CALL_CACHE cc)
(VALUE obj2, VALUE obj1)
(VALUE val)
{
split insns.def into functions Contemporary C compilers are good at function inlining. They fold multiple functions into one. However they are not yet smart enough to unfold a function into several ones. So generally speaking, it is wiser for a C programmer to manually split C functions whenever possible. That should make rooms for compilers to optimize at will. Before this changeset insns.def was converted into single HUGE function called vm_exec_core(). By moving each instruction's core into individual functions, generated C source code is reduced from 3,428 lines to 2,847 lines. Looking at the generated assembly however, it seems my compiler (gcc 6.2) is extraordinary smart so that it inlines almost all functions I introduced in this changeset back into that vm_exec_core. On my machine compiled machine binary of the function does not shrink very much in size (28,432 bytes to 26,816 bytes, according to nm(1)). I believe this change is zero-cost. Several benchmarks I exercised showed no significant difference beyond error mergin. For instance 3 repeated runs of optcarrot benchmark on my machine resulted in: before this: 28.330329285707490, 27.513378371065920, 29.40420215754537 after this: 27.107195867280414, 25.549324021385907, 30.31581919050884 in fps (greater==faster). ---- * internal.h (rb_obj_not_equal): used from vm_insnhelper.c * insns.def: move vast majority of lines into vm_insnhelper.c * vm_insnhelper.c: moved here. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@58390 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
2017-04-18 06:58:49 -04:00
val = vm_opt_regexpmatch2(obj2, obj1);
if (val == Qundef) {
/* other */
PUSH(obj2);
PUSH(obj1);
CALL_SIMPLE_METHOD(obj2);
}
}
/**
@c optimize
@e call native compiled method
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
opt_call_c_function
(rb_insn_func_t funcptr)
()
()
{
reg_cfp = (funcptr)(ec, reg_cfp);
if (reg_cfp == 0) {
VALUE err = ec->errinfo;
ec->errinfo = Qnil;
THROW_EXCEPTION(err);
}
RESTORE_REGS();
NEXT_INSN();
}
/**
@c joke
@e BLT
@j BLT
*/
DEFINE_INSN
bitblt
()
()
(VALUE ret)
{
ret = rb_str_new2("a bit of bacon, lettuce and tomato");
}
/**
@c joke
@e The Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything
@j
*/
DEFINE_INSN
answer
()
()
(VALUE ret)
{
ret = INT2FIX(42);
}