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path: root/src/jib/jib_util.ml
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2019-05-08SMT: Add reals and strings to SMT backendAlasdair Armstrong
Jib_compile now has an option that lets it generate real value literals (VL_real), which we don't want for backends (i.e. C), which don't support them. Reals are encoded as actual reals in SMT, as there isn't really any nice way to encode them as bitvectors. Currently we just have the pure real functions, functions between integers and reals (i.e. floor, to_real, etc) are not supported for now. Strings are likewise encoded as SMTLIB strings, for similar reasons. Jib_smt has ctx.use_real and ctx.use_string which are set when we generate anything real or string related, so we can keep the logic as Arrays+Bitvectors for most Sail that doesn't require either.
2019-05-07Move parser combinators shared by property and model parsing to separate fileAlasdair Armstrong
2019-05-03Jib: Optimize set_slice for ARM v8.5Alasdair Armstrong
2019-05-03Jib: Fix optimizations for SMT IR changesAlasdair Armstrong
Fixes C backend optimizations that were disabled due to changes in the IR while working on the SMT generation. Also add a -Oaarch64_fast option that optimizes any integer within a struct to be an int64_t, which is safe for the ARM v8.5 spec and improves performance significantly (reduces Linux boot times by 4-5 minutes). Eventually this should probably be a directive that can be attached to any arbitrary struct/type. Fixes the -c_specialize option for ARM v8.5. However this only gives a very small performance improvment for a very large increase in compilation time however.
2019-05-01SMT: Fix some C optimisations that were disabledAlasdair Armstrong
Need to get these working again before we can thing about merging back into sail2
2019-05-01Jib: Refactor V_callAlasdair Armstrong
Get rid of separate V_op and V_unary constructors. jib.ott now defines the valid operations for V_call including zero/sign extension, in such a way that the operation ctyp can be inferred. Overall this makes the IR less ad-hoc, and means we can share more code between SMT and C. string_of_cval no longer used by c_backend, which now uses sgen_cval following other sgen_ functions in the code generator, meaning string_of_cval doesn't have to produce valid C code anymore and so can be used for backend-agnostic debug and error messages.
2019-04-17SMT: Support register referencesAlasdair Armstrong
2019-04-17SMT: Unroll simple foreach loopsAlasdair Armstrong
2019-04-16SMT: Fix inlining issuesAlasdair Armstrong
2019-04-16SMT: Add struct value literalsAlasdair
Generates much better SMT that assigning each field one-by-one starting with an undefined struct.
2019-04-15Add more SMT builtinsThomas Bauereiss
2019-04-09SMT: Refactor Jib values to make inlining workAlasdair Armstrong
Had to change the hundreds and hundreds of places such values were used. However this now lets us automatically prove cheri-concentrate properties. Such as showing function prop_cap_round_trip(cap: bits(128)) -> bool = { let cap_rt = capToBits(capBitsToCapability(true, cap)); cap == cap_rt } is always true.
2019-04-09SMT: Experimental Jib->SMT translationAlasdair Armstrong
Currently only works with CVC4, test cases are in test/smt. Can prove that RISC-V add instruction actually adds values in registers and that's about it for now.
2019-04-06Various bugfixes and improvementsAlasdair
- Rename DeIid to Operator. It corresponds to operator <string> in the syntax. The previous name is from when it was called deinfix in sail1. - Removed things that weren't actually common from pretty_print_common.ml, e.g. printing identifiers is backend specific. The doc_id function here was only used for a very specific use case in pretty_print_lem, so I simplified it and renamed it to doc_sia_id, as it is always used for a SIA.Id whatever that is. - There is some support for anonymous records in constructors, e.g. union Foo ('a : Type) = { MkFoo : { field1 : 'a, field2 : int } } somewhat similar to the enum syntax in Rust. I'm not sure when this was added, but there were a few odd things about it. It was desugared in the preprocessor, rather than initial_check, and the desugaring generated incorrect code for polymorphic anonymous records as above. I moved the code to initial_check, so the pre-processor now just deals with pre-processor things and not generating types, and I fixed the code to work with polymorphic types. This revealed some issues in the C backend w.r.t. polymorphic structs, which is the bulk of this commit. I also added some tests for this feature. - OCaml backend can now generate a valid string_of function for polymorphic structs, previously this would cause the ocaml to fail to compile. - Some cleanup in the Sail ott definition - Add support for E_var in interpreter previously this would just cause the interpreter to fail
2019-04-05Fix: Don't remove uncalled polymorphic constructors if they are matched uponAlasdair Armstrong
Previously the specialization would remove any polymorphic union constructor that was never created anywhere in the specification. While this wasn't usually problematic, it does leave an edge case where such a constructor could be matched upon in a pattern, and then the resulting match would fail to compile as it would be matching on a constructor kind that doesn't exists. This should fix that issue by chaging the V_ctor_kind value into an F_ctor_kind fragment. Previously a polymorphic constructor-kind would have been represented by its mangled name, e.g. V_ctor_kind "zSome_unit" would now be represented as V_ctor_kind ("Some", unifiers, ty) where ty is a monomorphic version of the original constructor's type such that ctyp_unify original_ty ty = unifiers and the mangled name we generate is zencode_string ("Some_" ^ string_of_list "_" string_of_ctyp unifiers)
2019-04-01C: Add identifier to end instructionAlasdair
Allows us to track the last version of the return variable when the AST in in SSA form.
2019-03-21Jib: Add types to Phi functionsAlasdair Armstrong
Add a test case to ensure variable types in l-expressions remain the same with flow-sensitive constraints.
2019-03-19C: Some simplificationAlasdair Armstrong
Remove unused experimental optimizations
2019-03-19C: Inlining supportAlasdair Armstrong
Add a function Jib_optimize.inline which can inline functions. To make this more efficient, we can make identifiers unique on a per-function basis.
2019-03-15C: Wrap Jib identifiersAlasdair
Avoids duplication between l-expressions and expressions. Also means that special variables like current_exception and have_exception are treated normally by functions such as instr_reads and instr_writes etc. Furthermore we can now easily annotate Jib identifiers in ways that were not previously possible with plain sail ids.
2019-03-13C: Improve Jib IR, add SSA representationAlasdair Armstrong
Add a CL_void l-expression so we don't have redundant unit-typed variables everywhere, and add an optimization in Jib_optimize called optimize_unit which introduces these. Remove the basic control-flow graph in Jib_util and add a new mutable control-flow graph type in Jib_ssa which allows the IR to be converted into SSA form. The mutable graph allows for more efficient updates, and includes both back and forwards references making it much more convenient to traverse. Having an SSA representation should make some optimizations much simpler, and is also probably more natural for SMT generation where variables have to be defined once using declare-const anyway. Debug option -ddump_flow_graphs now outputs SSA'd graphs of the functions in a specification.
2019-03-09C: Fix miscompilation of constrained struct field accessAlasdair
For a Int-parameterised struct F('x: Int) = ... the optimizer would attempt to optimize field access in cases where 'x was known to constrain the types of the struct fields only locally. Which would create a type error in the generated C. Now we always use the type from the global struct type. However, we previously weren't using struct type quantifiers to optimize the field representation, which we now do. Also rename some utility functions to better match the List functions in the OCaml stdlib.
2019-03-08C: Refactor C backendAlasdair Armstrong
Main change is splitting apart the Sail->IR compilation stage and the C code generation and optimization phase. Rather than variously calling the intermediate language either bytecode (when it's not really) or simply IR, we give it a name: Jib (a type of Sail). Most of the types are still prefixed by c/C, and I don't think it's worth changing this. The various parts of the C backend are now in the src/jib/ subdirectory src/jib/anf.ml - Sail->ANF translation src/jib/jib_util.ml - various Jib AST processing and helper functions (formerly bytecode_util) src/jib/jib_compile.ml - Sail->Jib translation (using Sail->ANF) src/jib/c_backend.ml - Jib->C code generator and optimizations Further, bytecode.ott is now jib.ott and generates jib.ml (which still lives in src/ for now) The optimizations in c_backend.ml should eventually be moved in a separate jib_optimization file. The Sail->Jib compilation can be parameterised by two functions - one is a custom ANF->ANF optimization pass that can be specified on a per Jib backend basis, and the other is the rule for translating Sail types in Jib types. This can be more or less precise depending on how precise we want to be about bit-widths etc, i.e. we only care about <64 and >64 for C, but for SMT generation we would want to be as precise as possible. Additional improvements: The Jib IR is now agnostic about whether arguments are allocated on the heap vs the stack and this is handled by the C code generator. jib.ott now has some more comments explaining various parts of the Jib AST. A Set module and comparison function for ctyps is defined, and some functions now return ctyp sets rather than lists to avoid repeated work.