Changeset 6250a312
- Timestamp:
- May 10, 2017, 5:00:47 PM (8 years ago)
- Branches:
- ADT, aaron-thesis, arm-eh, ast-experimental, cleanup-dtors, deferred_resn, demangler, enum, forall-pointer-decay, jacob/cs343-translation, jenkins-sandbox, master, new-ast, new-ast-unique-expr, new-env, no_list, persistent-indexer, pthread-emulation, qualifiedEnum, resolv-new, with_gc
- Children:
- 8514fe19, dbfb35d
- Parents:
- 0f9bef3 (diff), 29cf9c8 (diff)
Note: this is a merge changeset, the changes displayed below correspond to the merge itself.
Use the(diff)
links above to see all the changes relative to each parent. - Files:
-
- 23 added
- 4 deleted
- 44 edited
Legend:
- Unmodified
- Added
- Removed
-
Jenkins/FullBuild
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 9 9 10 10 try { 11 // Prevent the build from exceeding 30 minutes12 timeout(60) {11 //Wrap build to add timestamp to command line 12 wrap([$class: 'TimestamperBuildWrapper']) { 13 13 14 //Wrap build to add timestamp to command line 15 wrap([$class: 'TimestamperBuildWrapper']) { 14 stage('Build') { 16 15 17 stage 'Build'16 results = [null, null] 18 17 19 results = [null, null] 18 parallel ( 19 gcc_6_x64: { trigger_build( 'gcc-6', 'x64', true ) }, 20 gcc_6_x86: { trigger_build( 'gcc-6', 'x86', true ) }, 21 gcc_5_x64: { trigger_build( 'gcc-5', 'x64', false ) }, 22 gcc_5_x86: { trigger_build( 'gcc-5', 'x86', false ) }, 23 gcc_4_x64: { trigger_build( 'gcc-4.9', 'x64', false ) }, 24 gcc_4_x86: { trigger_build( 'gcc-4.9', 'x86', false ) }, 25 clang_x64: { trigger_build( 'clang', 'x64', false ) }, 26 clang_x86: { trigger_build( 'clang', 'x86', false ) }, 27 ) 28 } 20 29 21 parallel ( 22 gcc_6_x64: { trigger_build( 'gcc-6', 'x64', true ) }, 23 gcc_6_x86: { trigger_build( 'gcc-6', 'x86', true ) }, 24 gcc_5_x64: { trigger_build( 'gcc-5', 'x64', false ) }, 25 gcc_5_x86: { trigger_build( 'gcc-5', 'x86', false ) }, 26 gcc_4_x64: { trigger_build( 'gcc-4.9', 'x64', false ) }, 27 gcc_4_x86: { trigger_build( 'gcc-4.9', 'x86', false ) }, 28 clang_x64: { trigger_build( 'clang', 'x64', false ) }, 29 clang_x86: { trigger_build( 'clang', 'x86', false ) }, 30 ) 31 32 //Push latest changes to do-lang repo 33 push_build() 34 } 30 //Push latest changes to do-lang repo 31 push_build() 35 32 } 36 33 } … … 99 96 def push_build() { 100 97 //Don't use the build_stage function which outputs the compiler 101 stage 'Push'98 stage('Push') { 102 99 103 100 status_prefix = 'Push' … … 122 119 //sh "GIT_SSH_COMMAND=\"ssh -v\" git push DoLang ${gitRefNewValue}:master" 123 120 echo('BUILD NOT PUSH SINCE DO-LANG SERVER WAS DOWN') 121 } 124 122 } 125 123 -
Jenkinsfile
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 28 28 wrap([$class: 'TimestamperBuildWrapper']) { 29 29 30 //Prevent the build from exceeding 60 minutes 31 timeout(60) { 32 33 notify_server() 34 35 prepare_build() 36 37 checkout() 38 39 build() 40 41 test() 42 43 benchmark() 44 45 clean() 46 47 build_doc() 48 49 publish() 50 51 notify_server() 52 } 30 notify_server() 31 32 prepare_build() 33 34 checkout() 35 36 build() 37 38 test() 39 40 benchmark() 41 42 clean() 43 44 build_doc() 45 46 publish() 47 48 notify_server() 53 49 } 54 50 } … … 89 85 def collect_git_info() { 90 86 87 checkout scm 88 91 89 //create the temporary output directory in case it doesn't already exist 92 90 def out_dir = pwd tmp: true … … 95 93 //parse git logs to find what changed 96 94 gitRefName = env.BRANCH_NAME 97 dir("../${gitRefName}@script") { 98 sh "git reflog > ${out_dir}/GIT_COMMIT" 99 } 95 sh "git reflog > ${out_dir}/GIT_COMMIT" 100 96 git_reflog = readFile("${out_dir}/GIT_COMMIT") 101 97 gitRefOldValue = (git_reflog =~ /moving from (.+) to (.+)/)[0][1] … … 170 166 } 171 167 172 def build_stage(String name ) {168 def build_stage(String name, Closure block ) { 173 169 stage_name = name 174 stage name170 stage(name, block) 175 171 } 176 172 … … 245 241 //Compilation script is done here but environnement set-up and error handling is done in main loop 246 242 def checkout() { 247 build_stage 'Checkout'243 build_stage('Checkout') { 248 244 //checkout the source code and clean the repo 249 245 checkout scm … … 254 250 //Reset the git repo so no local changes persist 255 251 sh 'git reset --hard' 252 } 256 253 } 257 254 258 255 def build() { 259 build_stage 'Build'256 build_stage('Build') { 260 257 261 258 def install_dir = pwd tmp: true … … 269 266 //Compile the project 270 267 sh 'make -j 8 --no-print-directory V=0 install' 268 } 271 269 } 272 270 273 271 def test() { 274 build_stage 'Test'272 build_stage('Test') { 275 273 276 274 //Run the tests from the tests directory 277 275 if ( do_alltests ) { 278 sh 'make -C src/tests all-tests debug=yes '279 sh 'make -C src/tests all-tests debug=no '276 sh 'make -C src/tests all-tests debug=yes --no-print-directory' 277 sh 'make -C src/tests all-tests debug=no --no-print-directory' 280 278 } 281 279 else { 282 sh 'make -C src/tests' 283 } 280 sh 'make -C src/tests --no-print-directory' 281 } 282 } 284 283 } 285 284 286 285 def benchmark() { 287 build_stage 'Benchmark'286 build_stage('Benchmark') { 288 287 289 288 if( !do_benchmark ) return … … 294 293 //Append bench results 295 294 sh 'make -C src/benchmark --no-print-directory csv-data >> bench.csv' 295 } 296 296 } 297 297 298 298 def clean() { 299 build_stage 'Cleanup'299 build_stage('Cleanup') { 300 300 301 301 //do a maintainer-clean to make sure we need to remake from scratch 302 302 sh 'make maintainer-clean > /dev/null' 303 } 303 304 } 304 305 305 306 def build_doc() { 306 build_stage 'Documentation'307 build_stage('Documentation') { 307 308 308 309 if( !do_doc ) return … … 315 316 make_doc() 316 317 } 318 } 317 319 } 318 320 319 321 def publish() { 320 build_stage 'Publish'322 build_stage('Publish') { 321 323 322 324 if( !do_publish ) return … … 324 326 //Then publish the results 325 327 sh 'curl --silent --data @bench.csv http://plg2:8082/jenkins/publish > /dev/null || true' 328 } 326 329 } 327 330 … … 371 374 """ 372 375 373 def email_to = "pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca, rschlunt@uwaterloo.ca, a3moss@uwaterloo.ca, tdelisle@uwaterloo.ca, brice.dobry@huawei.com "376 def email_to = "pabuhr@uwaterloo.ca, rschlunt@uwaterloo.ca, a3moss@uwaterloo.ca, tdelisle@uwaterloo.ca, brice.dobry@huawei.com, ajbeach@edu.uwaterloo.ca" 374 377 375 378 //send email notification -
doc/rob_thesis/cfa-format.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 1 \usepackage{xcolor}2 \usepackage{listings}1 % \usepackage{xcolor} 2 % \usepackage{listings} 3 3 % \usepackage{booktabs} 4 4 % \usepackage{array} … … 103 103 104 104 \renewcommand{\ttdefault}{pcr} 105 106 \newcommand{\basicstylesmall}{\scriptsize\ttfamily\color{basicCol}} 105 107 106 108 \lstdefinestyle{defaultStyle}{ … … 131 133 style=defaultStyle 132 134 } 133 \lstMakeShortInline[basewidth=0.5em,breaklines=true,b asicstyle=\normalsize\ttfamily\color{basicCol}]@ % single-character for \lstinline135 \lstMakeShortInline[basewidth=0.5em,breaklines=true,breakatwhitespace,basicstyle=\normalsize\ttfamily\color{basicCol}]@ % single-character for \lstinline 134 136 135 137 \lstnewenvironment{cfacode}[1][]{ … … 195 197 \newcommand{\one}{\lstinline{one_t}\xspace} 196 198 \newcommand{\ateq}{\lstinline{\@=}\xspace} 199 200 \newenvironment{newtext}{\color{red}}{\ignorespacesafterend} 197 201 198 202 % \lstset{ % -
doc/rob_thesis/conclusions.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 6 6 On the surface, the work may appear as a rehash of similar mechanisms in \CC. 7 7 However, every added feature is different than its \CC counterpart, often with extended functionality, better integration with C and its programmers, and always supports separate compilation. 8 All of these new features are being used by the \CFA development-team to build the \CFA runtime system. 8 All of these new features are being used extensively by the \CFA development-team to build the \CFA runtime system. 9 In particular, the concurrency system is built on top of RAII, library functions @new@ and @delete@ are used to manage dynamically allocated objects, and tuples are used to provide uniform interfaces to C library routines such as @div@ and @remquo@. 9 10 10 11 \section{Constructors and Destructors} … … 245 246 That is, structure fields can be accessed and modified by any block of code without restriction, so while it is possible to ensure that an object is initially set to a valid state, it is not possible to ensure that it remains in a consistent state throughout its lifetime. 246 247 A popular technique for ensuring consistency in object-oriented programming languages is to provide access modifiers such as @private@, which provides compile-time checks that only privileged code accesses private data. 247 This approach could be added to \CFA, but it requires an idiomatic way of specifying what code is privileged .248 This approach could be added to \CFA, but it requires an idiomatic way of specifying what code is privileged and what data is protected. 248 249 One possibility is to tie access control into an eventual module system. 250 251 \begin{sloppypar} 252 The current implementation of implicit subobject-construction is currently an all-or-nothing check. 253 That is, if a subobject is conditionally constructed, \eg within an if-statement, no implicit constructors for that object are added. 254 \begin{cfacode} 255 struct A { ... }; 256 void ?{}(A * a) { ... } 257 258 struct B { 259 A a; 260 }; 261 void ?{}(B * b) { 262 if (...) { 263 (&b->a){}; // explicitly constructed 264 } // does not construct in else case 265 } 266 \end{cfacode} 267 This behaviour is unsafe and breaks the guarantee that constructors fully initialize objects. 268 This situation should be properly handled, either by examining all paths and inserting implicit constructor calls only in the paths missing construction, or by emitting an error or warning. 269 \end{sloppypar} 249 270 250 271 \subsection{Tuples} … … 252 273 This feature ties nicely into named tuples, as seen in D and Swift. 253 274 254 Currently, tuple flattening and structuring conversions are 0-cost .275 Currently, tuple flattening and structuring conversions are 0-cost conversions in the resolution algorithm. 255 276 This makes tuples conceptually very simple to work with, but easily causes unnecessary ambiguity in situations where the type system should be able to differentiate between alternatives. 256 277 Adding an appropriate cost function to tuple conversions will allow tuples to interact with the rest of the programming language more cohesively. -
doc/rob_thesis/ctordtor.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 6 6 % doesn't seem possible to do this without allowing ttype on generic structs? 7 7 8 Since \CFA is a true systems language, it does not provide a garbage collector. 9 As well, \CFA is not an object-oriented programming language, \ie, structures cannot have routine members. 8 Since \CFA is a true systems language, it does not require a garbage collector. 9 As well, \CFA is not an object-oriented programming language, \ie, structures cannot have methods. 10 While structures can have function pointer members, this is different from methods, since methods have implicit access to structure members and methods cannot be reassigned. 10 11 Nevertheless, one important goal is to reduce programming complexity and increase safety. 11 12 To that end, \CFA provides support for implicit pre/post-execution of routines for objects, via constructors and destructors. … … 32 33 The key difference between assignment and initialization being that assignment occurs on a live object (\ie, an object that contains data). 33 34 It is important to note that this means @x@ could have been used uninitialized prior to being assigned, while @y@ could not be used uninitialized. 34 Use of uninitialized variables yields undefined behaviour , which is a common source of errors in C programs.35 Use of uninitialized variables yields undefined behaviour \cite[p.~558]{C11}, which is a common source of errors in C programs. 35 36 36 37 Initialization of a declaration is strictly optional, permitting uninitialized variables to exist. … … 70 71 int x2 = opaque_get(x, 2); 71 72 \end{cfacode} 72 This pattern is cumbersome to use since every access becomes a function call .73 This pattern is cumbersome to use since every access becomes a function call, requiring awkward syntax and a performance cost. 73 74 While useful in some situations, this compromise is too restrictive. 74 75 Furthermore, even with this idiom it is easy to make mistakes, such as forgetting to destroy an object or destroying it multiple times. 75 76 76 77 A constructor provides a way of ensuring that the necessary aspects of object initialization is performed, from setting up invariants to providing compile- and run-time checks for appropriate initialization parameters. 77 This goal is achieved through a guarantee that a constructor is called implicitly after every object is allocated from a type with associated constructors, as part of an object's definition.78 Since a constructor is called on every object of a managed type, it is impossibleto forget to initialize such objects, as long as all constructors perform some sensible form of initialization.78 This goal is achieved through a \emph{guarantee} that a constructor is called \emph{implicitly} after every object is allocated from a type with associated constructors, as part of an object's \emph{definition}. 79 Since a constructor is called on every object of a managed type, it is \emph{impossible} to forget to initialize such objects, as long as all constructors perform some sensible form of initialization. 79 80 80 81 In \CFA, a constructor is a function with the name @?{}@. … … 114 115 In other words, a default constructor is a constructor that takes a single argument: the @this@ parameter. 115 116 116 In \CFA, a destructor is a function much like a constructor, except that its name is \lstinline!^?{}! and it takes only one argument.117 In \CFA, a destructor is a function much like a constructor, except that its name is \lstinline!^?{}! \footnote{Originally, the name @~?{}@ was chosen for destructors, to provide familiarity to \CC programmers. Unforunately, this name causes parsing conflicts with the bitwise-not operator when used with operator syntax (see section \ref{sub:syntax}.)} and it takes only one argument. 117 118 A destructor for the @Array@ type can be defined as: 118 119 \begin{cfacode} … … 135 136 On line 2, @z@ is initialized with the value of @x@, while on line 3, @y@ is assigned the value of @x@. 136 137 The key distinction between initialization and assignment is that a value to be initialized does not hold any meaningful values, whereas an object to be assigned might. 137 In particular, these cases cannot be handled the same way because in the former case @z@ does not currently own an array, while @y@ does. 138 In particular, these cases cannot be handled the same way because in the former case @z@ has no array, while @y@ does. 139 A \emph{copy constructor} is used to perform initialization using another object of the same type. 138 140 139 141 \begin{cfacode}[emph={other}, emphstyle=\color{red}] … … 151 153 } 152 154 \end{cfacode} 153 The two functions above handle the se cases.154 The first function is called a \emph{copy constructor}, because it constructs its argument by copying the values from another object of the same type.155 The two functions above handle the cases of initialization and assignment. 156 The first function is called a copy constructor, because it constructs its argument by copying the values from another object of the same type. 155 157 The second function is the standard copy-assignment operator. 158 \CFA does not currently have the concept of reference types, so the most appropriate type for the source object in copy constructors and assignment operators is a value type. 159 Appropriate care is taken in the implementation to avoid recursive calls to the copy constructor. 156 160 The four functions (default constructor, destructor, copy constructor, and assignment operator) are special in that they safely control the state of most objects. 157 161 … … 216 220 A * y = malloc(); // copy construct: ?{}(&y, malloc()) 217 221 222 ^?{}(&x); // explicit destroy x, in different order 218 223 ?{}(&x); // explicit construct x, second construction 224 ^?{}(y); // explicit destroy y 219 225 ?{}(y, x); // explit construct y from x, second construction 220 ^?{}(&x); // explicit destroy x, in different order221 ^?{}(y); // explicit destroy y222 226 223 227 // implicit ^?{}(&y); … … 279 283 \end{cfacode} 280 284 In this example, @malloc@ dynamically allocates storage and initializes it using a constructor, all before assigning it into the variable @x@. 285 Intuitively, the expression-resolver determines that @malloc@ returns some type @T *@, as does the constructor expression since it returns the type of its argument. 286 This type flows outwards to the declaration site where the expected type is known to be @X *@, thus the first argument to the constructor must be @X *@, narrowing the search space. 287 281 288 If this extension is not present, constructing dynamically allocated objects is much more cumbersome, requiring separate initialization of the pointer and initialization of the pointed-to memory. 282 289 \begin{cfacode} … … 300 307 It should be noted that this technique is not exclusive to @malloc@, and allows a user to write a custom allocator that can be idiomatically used in much the same way as a constructed @malloc@ call. 301 308 302 It should be noted that while it is possible to use operator syntax with destructors, destructors invalidate their argument, thus operator syntax with destructors is a statement and does not produce a value.309 While it is possible to use operator syntax with destructors, destructors invalidate their argument, thus operator syntax with destructors is void-typed expression. 303 310 304 311 \subsection{Function Generation} … … 308 315 If the translator can expect these functions to exist, then it can unconditionally attempt to resolve them. 309 316 Moreover, the existence of a standard interface allows polymorphic code to interoperate with new types seamlessly. 317 While automatic generation of assignment functions is present in previous versions of \CFA, the the implementation has been largely rewritten to accomodate constructors and destructors. 310 318 311 319 To mimic the behaviour of standard C, the default constructor and destructor for all of the basic types and for all pointer types are defined to do nothing, while the copy constructor and assignment operator perform a bitwise copy of the source parameter (as in \CC). 320 This default is intended to maintain backwards compatibility and performance, by not imposing unexpected operations for a C programmer, as a zero-default behaviour would. 321 However, it is possible for a user to define such constructors so that variables are safely zeroed by default, if desired. 322 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% line width %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% 323 \begin{cfacode} 324 void ?{}(int * i) { *i = 0; } 325 forall(dtype T) void ?{}(T ** p) { *p = 0; } // any pointer type 326 void f() { 327 int x; // initialized to 0 328 int * p; // initialized to 0 329 } 330 \end{cfacode} 331 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% line width %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% 312 332 313 333 There are several options for user-defined types: structures, unions, and enumerations. 314 334 To aid in ease of use, the standard set of four functions is automatically generated for a user-defined type after its definition is completed. 315 335 By auto-generating these functions, it is ensured that legacy C code continues to work correctly in every context where \CFA expects these functions to exist, since they are generated for every complete type. 336 As well, these functions are always generated, since they may be needed by polymorphic functions. 337 With that said, the generated functions are not called implicitly unless they are non-trivial, and are never exported, making it simple for the optimizer to strip them away when they are not used. 316 338 317 339 The generated functions for enumerations are the simplest. … … 338 360 } 339 361 \end{cfacode} 340 In the future, \CFA will introduce strongly-typed enumerations, like those in \CC .362 In the future, \CFA will introduce strongly-typed enumerations, like those in \CC, wherein enumerations create a new type distinct from @int@ so that integral values require an explicit cast to be stored in an enumeration variable. 341 363 The existing generated routines are sufficient to express this restriction, since they are currently set up to take in values of that enumeration type. 342 364 Changes related to this feature only need to affect the expression resolution phase, where more strict rules will be applied to prevent implicit conversions from integral types to enumeration types, but should continue to permit conversions from enumeration types to @int@. … … 492 514 In addition to freedom, \ateq provides a simple path for migrating legacy C code to \CFA, in that objects can be moved from C-style initialization to \CFA gradually and individually. 493 515 It is worth noting that the use of unmanaged objects can be tricky to get right, since there is no guarantee that the proper invariants are established on an unmanaged object. 494 It is recommended that most objects be managed by sensible constructors and destructors, except where absolutely necessary .516 It is recommended that most objects be managed by sensible constructors and destructors, except where absolutely necessary, such as memory-mapped devices, trigger devices, I/O controllers, etc. 495 517 496 518 When a user declares any constructor or destructor, the corresponding intrinsic/generated function and all field constructors for that type are hidden, so that they are not found during expression resolution until the user-defined function goes out of scope. … … 545 567 \end{cfacode} 546 568 However, if the translator sees a sub-object used within the body of a constructor, but does not see a constructor call that uses the sub-object as the target of a constructor, then the translator assumes the object is to be implicitly constructed (copy constructed in a copy constructor and default constructed in any other constructor). 569 To override this rule, \ateq can be used to force the translator to trust the programmer's discretion. 570 This form of \ateq is not yet implemented. 547 571 \begin{cfacode} 548 572 void ?{}(A * a) { … … 556 580 } 557 581 582 void ?{}(A * a, int x) { 583 // object forwarded to another constructor, 584 // does not implicitly construct any members 585 (&a){}; 586 } 587 558 588 void ^?{}(A * a) { 559 589 ^(&a->x){}; // explicit destructor call 560 590 } // z, y, w implicitly destructed, in this order 561 591 \end{cfacode} 562 If at any point, the @this@ parameter is passed directly as the target of another constructor, then it is assumed that constructor handles the initialization of all of the object's members and no implicit constructor calls are added. 563 To override this rule, \ateq can be used to force the translator to trust the programmer's discretion. 564 This form of \ateq is not yet implemented. 592 If at any point, the @this@ parameter is passed directly as the target of another constructor, then it is assumed the other constructor handles the initialization of all of the object's members and no implicit constructor calls are added to the current constructor. 565 593 566 594 Despite great effort, some forms of C syntax do not work well with constructors in \CFA. … … 619 647 The body of @A@ has been omitted, since only the constructor interfaces are important. 620 648 621 It should be noted that unmanaged objects can still make use of designations and nested initializers in \CFA.649 It should be noted that unmanaged objects, i.e. objects that have only trivial constructors, can still make use of designations and nested initializers in \CFA. 622 650 It is simple to overcome this limitation for managed objects by making use of compound literals, so that the arguments to the constructor call are explicitly typed. 651 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% line width %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% 652 \begin{cfacode} 653 struct B { int x; }; 654 struct C { int y; }; 655 struct A { B b; C c; }; 656 void ?{}(A *, B); 657 void ?{}(A *, C); 658 659 A a = { 660 (C){ 10 } // disambiguate with compound literal 661 }; 662 \end{cfacode} 663 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% line width %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% 623 664 624 665 \subsection{Implicit Destructors} … … 744 785 \end{cfacode} 745 786 787 While \CFA supports the GCC computed-goto extension, the behaviour of managed objects in combination with computed-goto is undefined. 788 \begin{cfacode} 789 void f(int val) { 790 void * l = val == 0 ? &&L1 : &&L2; 791 { 792 A x; 793 L1: ; 794 goto *l; // branches differently depending on argument 795 } 796 L2: ; 797 } 798 \end{cfacode} 799 Likewise, destructors are not executed at scope-exit due to a computed-goto in \CC, as of g++ version 6.2. 800 746 801 \subsection{Implicit Copy Construction} 747 802 \label{s:implicit_copy_construction} … … 750 805 Exempt from these rules are intrinsic and built-in functions. 751 806 It should be noted that unmanaged objects are subject to copy constructor calls when passed as arguments to a function or when returned from a function, since they are not the \emph{target} of the copy constructor call. 752 That is, since the parameter is not marked as an unmanaged object using \ateq, it is becopy constructed if it is returned by value or passed as an argument to another function, so to guarantee consistent behaviour, unmanaged objects must be copy constructed when passed as arguments.807 That is, since the parameter is not marked as an unmanaged object using \ateq, it is copy constructed if it is returned by value or passed as an argument to another function, so to guarantee consistent behaviour, unmanaged objects must be copy constructed when passed as arguments. 753 808 These semantics are important to bear in mind when using unmanaged objects, and could produce unexpected results when mixed with objects that are explicitly constructed. 754 809 \begin{cfacode} 755 struct A ;810 struct A { ... }; 756 811 void ?{}(A *); 757 812 void ?{}(A *, A); … … 810 865 It should be noted that reference types will allow specifying that a value does not need to be copied, however reference types do not provide a means of preventing implicit copy construction from uses of the reference, so the problem is still present when passing or returning the reference by value. 811 866 867 Adding implicit copy construction imposes the additional runtime cost of the copy constructor for every argument and return value in a function call. 868 This cost is necessary to maintain appropriate value semantics when calling a function. 869 In the future, return-value-optimization (RVO) can be implemented for \CFA to elide unnecessary copy construction and destruction of temporary objects. 870 This cost is not present for types with trivial copy constructors and destructors. 871 812 872 A known issue with this implementation is that the argument and return value temporaries are not guaranteed to have the same address for their entire lifetimes. 813 873 In the previous example, since @_retval_f@ is allocated and constructed in @f@, then returned by value, the internal data is bitwise copied into the caller's stack frame. … … 908 968 \subsection{Array Initialization} 909 969 Arrays are a special case in the C type-system. 910 C arrays do not carry around their size, making it impossible to write a standalone \CFA function that constructs or destructs an arraywhile maintaining the standard interface for constructors and destructors.970 Type checking largely ignores size information for C arrays, making it impossible to write a standalone \CFA function that constructs or destructs an array, while maintaining the standard interface for constructors and destructors. 911 971 Instead, \CFA defines the initialization and destruction of an array recursively. 912 972 That is, when an array is defined, each of its elements is constructed in order from element 0 up to element $n-1$. … … 1147 1207 \end{cfacode} 1148 1208 1209 This implementation comes at the runtime cost of an additional branch for every @static@ local variable, each time the function is called. 1210 Since initializers are not required to be compile-time constant expressions, they can involve global variables, function arguments, function calls, etc. 1211 As a direct consequence, @static@ local variables cannot be initialized with an attribute-constructor routines like global variables can. 1212 However, in the case where the variable is unmanaged and has a compile-time constant initializer, a C-compliant initializer is generated and the additional cost is not present. 1213 \CC shares the same semantics for its @static@ local variables. 1214 1149 1215 \subsection{Polymorphism} 1150 1216 As mentioned in section \ref{sub:polymorphism}, \CFA currently has 3 type-classes that are used to designate polymorphic data types: @otype@, @dtype@, and @ftype@. … … 1172 1238 These additions allow @f@'s body to create and destroy objects of type @T@, and pass objects of type @T@ as arguments to other functions, following the normal \CFA rules. 1173 1239 A point of note here is that objects can be missing default constructors (and eventually other functions through deleted functions), so it is important for \CFA programmers to think carefully about the operations needed by their function, as to not over-constrain the acceptable parameter types and prevent potential reuse. 1240 1241 These additional assertion parameters impose a runtime cost on all managed temporary objects created in polymorphic code, even those with trivial constructors and destructors. 1242 This cost is necessary because polymorphic code does not know the actual type at compile-time, due to separate compilation. 1243 Since trivial constructors and destructors either do not perform operations or are simply bit-wise copy operations, the imposed cost is essentially the cost of the function calls. 1244 1245 \section{Summary} 1246 1247 When creating a new object of a managed type, it is guaranteed that a constructor is be called to initialize the object at its definition point, and is destructed when the object's lifetime ends. 1248 Destructors are called in the reverse order of construction. 1249 1250 Every argument passed to a function is copy constructed into a temporary object that is passed by value to the functions and destructed at the end of the statement. 1251 Function return values are copy constructed inside the function at the return statement, passed by value to the call-site, and destructed at the call-site at the end of the statement. 1252 1253 Every complete object type has a default constructor, copy constructor, assignment operator, and destructor. 1254 To accomplish this, these functions are generated as appropriate for new types. 1255 User-defined functions shadow built-in and automatically generated functions, so it is possible to specialize the behaviour of a type. 1256 Furthermore, default constructors and aggregate field constructors are hidden when \emph{any} constructor is defined. 1257 1258 Objects dynamically allocated with @malloc@, \ateq objects, and objects with only trivial constructors and destructors are unmanaged. 1259 Unmanaged objects are never the target of an implicit constructor or destructor call. -
doc/rob_thesis/intro.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 19 19 Unfortunately, \CC is actively diverging from C, so incremental additions require significant effort and training, coupled with multiple legacy design-choices that cannot be updated. 20 20 21 The remainder of this section describes some of the important new features that currently exist in \CFA, to give the reader the necessary context in which the new features presented in this thesis must dovetail. 21 The current implementation of \CFA is a source-to-source translator from \CFA to GNU C \cite{GCCExtensions}. 22 23 The remainder of this section describes some of the important features that currently exist in \CFA, to give the reader the necessary context in which the new features presented in this thesis must dovetail. 22 24 23 25 \subsection{C Background} 24 26 \label{sub:c_background} 27 In the context of this work, the term \emph{object} refers to a region of data storage in the execution environment, the contents of which can represent values \cite[p.~6]{C11}. 28 25 29 One of the lesser-known features of standard C is \emph{designations}. 26 30 Designations are similar to named parameters in languages such as Python and Scala, except that they only apply to aggregate initializers. 31 Note that in \CFA, designations use a colon separator, rather than an equals sign as in C, because this syntax is one of the few places that conflicts with the new language features. 27 32 \begin{cfacode} 28 33 struct A { … … 43 48 Later initializers override earlier initializers, so a sub-object for which there is more than one initializer is only initialized by its last initializer. 44 49 These semantics can be seen in the initialization of @a0@, where @x@ is designated twice, and thus initialized to @8@. 45 Note that in \CFA, designations use a colon separator, rather than an equals sign as in C, because this syntax is one of the few places that conflicts with the new language features.46 50 47 51 C also provides \emph{compound literal} expressions, which provide a first-class mechanism for creating unnamed objects. … … 57 61 Compound literals create an unnamed object, and result in an lvalue, so it is legal to assign a value into a compound literal or to take its address \cite[p.~86]{C11}. 58 62 Syntactically, compound literals look like a cast operator followed by a brace-enclosed initializer, but semantically are different from a C cast, which only applies basic conversions and coercions and is never an lvalue. 63 64 The \CFA translator makes use of several GNU C extensions, including \emph{nested functions} and \emph{attributes}. 65 Nested functions make it possible to access data that is lexically in scope in the nested function's body. 66 \begin{cfacode} 67 int f() { 68 int x = 0; 69 void g() { 70 x++; 71 } 72 g(); // changes x 73 } 74 \end{cfacode} 75 Nested functions come with the usual C caveat that they should not leak into the containing environment, since they are only valid as long as the containing function's stack frame is active. 76 77 Attributes make it possible to inform the compiler of certain properties of the code. 78 For example, a function can be marked as deprecated, so that legacy APIs can be identified and slowly removed, or as \emph{hot}, so that the compiler knows the function is called frequently and should be aggresively optimized. 79 \begin{cfacode} 80 __attribute__((deprecated("foo is deprecated, use bar instead"))) 81 void foo(); 82 __attribute__((hot)) void bar(); // heavily optimized 83 84 foo(); // warning 85 bar(); 86 \end{cfacode} 59 87 60 88 \subsection{Overloading} … … 64 92 C provides a small amount of built-in overloading, \eg + is overloaded for the basic types. 65 93 Like in \CC, \CFA allows user-defined overloading based both on the number of parameters and on the types of parameters. 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 94 \begin{cfacode} 95 void f(void); // (1) 96 void f(int); // (2) 97 void f(char); // (3) 98 99 f('A'); // selects (3) 100 \end{cfacode} 73 101 In this case, there are three @f@ procedures, where @f@ takes either 0 or 1 arguments, and if an argument is provided then it may be of type @int@ or of type @char@. 74 102 Exactly which procedure is executed depends on the number and types of arguments passed. 75 103 If there is no exact match available, \CFA attempts to find a suitable match by examining the C built-in conversion heuristics. 76 \begin{cfacode} 77 void g(long long); 78 79 g(12345); 80 \end{cfacode} 104 The \CFA expression resolution algorithm uses a cost function to determine the interpretation that uses the fewest conversions and polymorphic type bindings. 105 \begin{cfacode} 106 void g(long long); 107 108 g(12345); 109 \end{cfacode} 81 110 In the above example, there is only one instance of @g@, which expects a single parameter of type @long long@. 82 111 Here, the argument provided has type @int@, but since all possible values of type @int@ can be represented by a value of type @long long@, there is a safe conversion from @int@ to @long long@, and so \CFA calls the provided @g@ routine. 83 112 113 Overloading solves the problem present in C where there can only be one function with a given name, requiring multiple names for functions that perform the same operation but take in different types. 114 This can be seen in the example of the absolute value functions C: 115 \begin{cfacode} 116 // stdlib.h 117 int abs(int); 118 long int labs(long int); 119 long long int llabs(long long int); 120 \end{cfacode} 121 In \CFA, the functions @labs@ and @llabs@ are replaced by appropriate overloads of @abs@. 122 84 123 In addition to this form of overloading, \CFA also allows overloading based on the number and types of \emph{return} values. 85 124 This extension is a feature that is not available in \CC, but is available in other programming languages such as Ada \cite{Ada95}. 86 87 88 89 90 91 125 \begin{cfacode} 126 int g(); // (1) 127 double g(); // (2) 128 129 int x = g(); // selects (1) 130 \end{cfacode} 92 131 Here, the only difference between the signatures of the different versions of @g@ is in the return values. 93 132 The result context is used to select an appropriate routine definition. 94 133 In this case, the result of @g@ is assigned into a variable of type @int@, so \CFA prefers the routine that returns a single @int@, because it is an exact match. 134 135 Return-type overloading solves similar problems to parameter-list overloading, in that multiple functions that perform similar operations can have the same, but produce different values. 136 One use case for this feature is to provide two versions of the @bsearch@ routine: 137 \begin{cfacode} 138 forall(otype T | { int ?<?( T, T ); }) 139 T * bsearch(T key, const T * arr, size_t dimension) { 140 int comp(const void * t1, const void * t2) { 141 return *(T *)t1 < *(T *)t2 ? -1 : *(T *)t2 < *(T *)t1 ? 1 : 0; 142 } 143 return (T *)bsearch(&key, arr, dimension, sizeof(T), comp); 144 } 145 forall(otype T | { int ?<?( T, T ); }) 146 unsigned int bsearch(T key, const T * arr, size_t dimension) { 147 T *result = bsearch(key, arr, dimension); 148 // pointer subtraction includes sizeof(T) 149 return result ? result - arr : dimension; 150 } 151 double key = 5.0; 152 double vals[10] = { /* 10 floating-point values */ }; 153 154 double * val = bsearch( 5.0, vals, 10 ); // selection based on return type 155 int posn = bsearch( 5.0, vals, 10 ); 156 \end{cfacode} 157 The first version provides a thin wrapper around the C @bsearch@ routine, converting untyped @void *@ to the polymorphic type @T *@, allowing the \CFA compiler to catch errors when the type of @key@, @arr@, and the target at the call-site do not agree. 158 The second version provides an alternate return of the index in the array of the selected element, rather than its address. 95 159 96 160 There are times when a function should logically return multiple values. … … 145 209 146 210 An extra quirk introduced by multiple return values is in the resolution of function calls. 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 211 \begin{cfacode} 212 int f(); // (1) 213 [int, int] f(); // (2) 214 215 void g(int, int); 216 217 int x, y; 218 [x, y] = f(); // selects (2) 219 g(f()); // selects (2) 220 \end{cfacode} 157 221 In this example, the only possible call to @f@ that can produce the two @int@s required for assigning into the variables @x@ and @y@ is the second option. 158 222 A similar reasoning holds calling the function @g@. 223 224 This duality between aggregation and aliasing can be seen in the C standard library in the @div@ and @remquo@ functions, which return the quotient and remainder for a division of integer and floating-point values, respectively. 225 \begin{cfacode} 226 typedef struct { int quo, rem; } div_t; // from stdlib.h 227 div_t div( int num, int den ); 228 double remquo( double num, double den, int * quo ); 229 div_t qr = div( 13, 5 ); // return quotient/remainder aggregate 230 int q; 231 double r = remquo( 13.5, 5.2, &q ); // return remainder, alias quotient 232 \end{cfacode} 233 @div@ aggregates the quotient/remainder in a structure, while @remquo@ aliases a parameter to an argument. 234 Alternatively, a programming language can directly support returning multiple values, \eg in \CFA: 235 \begin{lstlisting} 236 [int, int] div(int num, int den); // return two integers 237 [double, double] div( double num, double den ); // return two doubles 238 int q, r; // overloaded variable names 239 double q, r; 240 [q, r] = div(13, 5); // select appropriate div and q, r 241 [q, r] = div(13.5, 5.2); 242 \end{lstlisting} 159 243 160 244 In \CFA, overloading also applies to operator names, known as \emph{operator overloading}. 161 245 Similar to function overloading, a single operator is given multiple meanings by defining new versions of the operator with different signatures. 162 246 In \CC, this can be done as follows 163 164 165 intoperator+(A x, A y);166 167 247 \begin{cppcode} 248 struct A { int i; }; 249 A operator+(A x, A y); 250 bool operator<(A x, A y); 251 \end{cppcode} 168 252 169 253 In \CFA, the same example can be written as follows. 170 171 172 int?+?(A x, A y); // '?'s represent operands173 bool?<?(A x, A y);174 254 \begin{cfacode} 255 struct A { int i; }; 256 A ?+?(A x, A y); // '?'s represent operands 257 int ?<?(A x, A y); 258 \end{cfacode} 175 259 Notably, the only difference is syntax. 176 260 Most of the operators supported by \CC for operator overloading are also supported in \CFA. … … 179 263 Finally, \CFA also permits overloading variable identifiers. 180 264 This feature is not available in \CC. 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 265 \begin{cfacode} 266 struct Rational { int numer, denom; }; 267 int x = 3; // (1) 268 double x = 1.27; // (2) 269 Rational x = { 4, 11 }; // (3) 270 271 void g(double); 272 273 x += 1; // chooses (1) 274 g(x); // chooses (2) 275 Rational y = x; // chooses (3) 276 \end{cfacode} 193 277 In this example, there are three definitions of the variable @x@. 194 278 Based on the context, \CFA attempts to choose the variable whose type best matches the expression context. … … 208 292 Due to these rewrite rules, the values @0@ and @1@ have the types \zero and \one in \CFA, which allow for overloading various operations that connect to @0@ and @1@ \footnote{In the original design of \CFA, @0@ and @1@ were overloadable names \cite[p.~7]{cforall}.}. 209 293 The types \zero and \one have special built-in implicit conversions to the various integral types, and a conversion to pointer types for @0@, which allows standard C code involving @0@ and @1@ to work as normal. 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 294 \begin{cfacode} 295 // lvalue is similar to returning a reference in C++ 296 lvalue Rational ?+=?(Rational *a, Rational b); 297 Rational ?=?(Rational * dst, zero_t) { 298 return *dst = (Rational){ 0, 1 }; 299 } 300 301 Rational sum(Rational *arr, int n) { 302 Rational r; 303 r = 0; // use rational-zero_t assignment 304 for (; n > 0; n--) { 305 r += arr[n-1]; 306 } 307 return r; 308 } 309 \end{cfacode} 226 310 This function takes an array of @Rational@ objects and produces the @Rational@ representing the sum of the array. 227 311 Note the use of an overloaded assignment operator to set an object of type @Rational@ to an appropriate @0@ value. … … 232 316 In particular, \CFA supports the notion of parametric polymorphism. 233 317 Parametric polymorphism allows a function to be written generically, for all values of all types, without regard to the specifics of a particular type. 234 For example, in \CC, the simple identity function for all types can be written as 235 236 237 238 239 \CC uses the template mechanism to support parametric polymorphism. In \CFA, an equivalent function can be written as 240 241 242 243 318 For example, in \CC, the simple identity function for all types can be written as: 319 \begin{cppcode} 320 template<typename T> 321 T identity(T x) { return x; } 322 \end{cppcode} 323 \CC uses the template mechanism to support parametric polymorphism. In \CFA, an equivalent function can be written as: 324 \begin{cfacode} 325 forall(otype T) 326 T identity(T x) { return x; } 327 \end{cfacode} 244 328 Once again, the only visible difference in this example is syntactic. 245 329 Fundamental differences can be seen by examining more interesting examples. 246 In \CC, a generic sum function is written as follows 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 330 In \CC, a generic sum function is written as follows: 331 \begin{cppcode} 332 template<typename T> 333 T sum(T *arr, int n) { 334 T t; // default construct => 0 335 for (; n > 0; n--) t += arr[n-1]; 336 return t; 337 } 338 \end{cppcode} 255 339 Here, the code assumes the existence of a default constructor, assignment operator, and an addition operator over the provided type @T@. 256 340 If any of these required operators are not available, the \CC compiler produces an error message stating which operators could not be found. 257 341 258 A similar sum function can be written in \CFA as follows 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 342 A similar sum function can be written in \CFA as follows: 343 \begin{cfacode} 344 forall(otype T | **R**{ T ?=?(T *, zero_t); T ?+=?(T *, T); }**R**) 345 T sum(T *arr, int n) { 346 T t = 0; 347 for (; n > 0; n--) t = t += arr[n-1]; 348 return t; 349 } 350 \end{cfacode} 267 351 The first thing to note here is that immediately following the declaration of @otype T@ is a list of \emph{type assertions} that specify restrictions on acceptable choices of @T@. 268 352 In particular, the assertions above specify that there must be an assignment from \zero to @T@ and an addition assignment operator from @T@ to @T@. 269 353 The existence of an assignment operator from @T@ to @T@ and the ability to create an object of type @T@ are assumed implicitly by declaring @T@ with the @otype@ type-class. 270 354 In addition to @otype@, there are currently two other type-classes. 355 356 @dtype@, short for \emph{data type}, serves as the top type for object types; any object type, complete or incomplete, can be bound to a @dtype@ type variable. 357 To contrast, @otype@, short for \emph{object type}, is a @dtype@ with known size, alignment, and an assignment operator, and thus bind only to complete object types. 358 With this extra information, complete objects can be used in polymorphic code in the same way they are used in monomorphic code, providing familiarity and ease of use. 359 The third type-class is @ftype@, short for \emph{function type}, matching only function types. 271 360 The three type parameter kinds are summarized in \autoref{table:types} 272 361 … … 275 364 \begin{tabular}{|c||c|c|c||c|c|c|} 276 365 \hline 277 name & object type & incomplete type & function type & can assign value& can create & has size \\ \hline366 name & object type & incomplete type & function type & can assign & can create & has size \\ \hline 278 367 @otype@ & X & & & X & X & X \\ \hline 279 368 @dtype@ & X & X & & & & \\ \hline … … 288 377 In contrast, the explicit nature of assertions allows \CFA's polymorphic functions to be separately compiled, as the function prototype states all necessary requirements separate from the implementation. 289 378 For example, the prototype for the previous sum function is 290 291 292 293 379 \begin{cfacode} 380 forall(otype T | **R**{ T ?=?(T *, zero_t); T ?+=?(T *, T); }**R**) 381 T sum(T *arr, int n); 382 \end{cfacode} 294 383 With this prototype, a caller in another translation unit knows all of the constraints on @T@, and thus knows all of the operations that need to be made available to @sum@. 295 384 296 385 In \CFA, a set of assertions can be factored into a \emph{trait}. 297 386 \begin{cfacode} 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 387 trait Addable(otype T) { 388 T ?+?(T, T); 389 T ++?(T); 390 T ?++(T); 391 } 392 forall(otype T | Addable(T)) void f(T); 393 forall(otype T | Addable(T) | { T --?(T); }) T g(T); 394 forall(otype T, U | Addable(T) | { T ?/?(T, U); }) U h(T, U); 306 395 \end{cfacode} 307 396 This capability allows specifying the same set of assertions in multiple locations, without the repetition and likelihood of mistakes that come with manually writing them out for each function declaration. 308 397 309 An interesting application of return-type resolution and polymorphism is a type-safeversion of @malloc@.398 An interesting application of return-type resolution and polymorphism is a polymorphic version of @malloc@. 310 399 \begin{cfacode} 311 400 forall(dtype T | sized(T)) … … 321 410 The built-in trait @sized@ ensures that size and alignment information for @T@ is available in the body of @malloc@ through @sizeof@ and @_Alignof@ expressions respectively. 322 411 In calls to @malloc@, the type @T@ is bound based on call-site information, allowing \CFA code to allocate memory without the potential for errors introduced by manually specifying the size of the allocated block. 412 413 \subsection{Planned Features} 414 415 One of the planned features \CFA is \emph{reference types}. 416 At a high level, the current proposal is to add references as a way to cleanup pointer syntax. 417 With references, it will be possible to store any address, as with a pointer, with the key difference being that references are automatically dereferenced. 418 \begin{cfacode} 419 int x = 0; 420 int * p = &x; // needs & 421 int & ref = x; // no & 422 423 printf("%d %d\n", *p, ref); // pointer needs *, ref does not 424 \end{cfacode} 425 426 It is possible to add new functions or shadow existing functions for the duration of a scope, using normal C scoping rules. 427 One application of this feature is to reverse the order of @qsort@. 428 \begin{cfacode} 429 forall(otype T | { int ?<?( T, T ); }) 430 void qsort(const T * arr, size_t size) { 431 int comp(const void * t1, const void * t2) { 432 return *(T *)t1 < *(T *)t2 ? -1 : *(T *)t2 < *(T *)t1 ? 1 : 0; 433 } 434 qsort(arr, dimension, sizeof(T), comp); 435 436 } 437 double vals[10] = { ... }; 438 qsort(vals, 10); // ascending order 439 { 440 int ?<?(double x, double y) { // locally override behaviour 441 return x > y; 442 } 443 qsort(vals, 10); // descending sort 444 } 445 \end{cfacode} 446 Currently, there is no way to \emph{remove} a function from consideration from the duration of a scope. 447 For example, it may be desirable to eliminate assignment from a scope, to reduce accidental mutation. 448 To address this desire, \emph{deleted functions} are a planned feature for \CFA. 449 \begin{cfacode} 450 forall(otype T) void f(T *); 451 452 int x = 0; 453 f(&x); // might modify x 454 { 455 int ?=?(int *, int) = delete; 456 f(&x); // error, no assignment for int 457 } 458 \end{cfacode} 459 Now, if the deleted function is chosen as the best match, the expression resolver emits an error. 323 460 324 461 \section{Invariants} … … 450 587 \end{javacode} 451 588 In Java 7, a new \emph{try-with-resources} construct was added to alleviate most of the pain of working with resources, but ultimately it still places the burden squarely on the user rather than on the library designer. 452 Furthermore, for complete safety this pattern requires nested objects to be declared separately, otherwise resources that can throw an exception on close can leak nested resources \ cite{TryWithResources}.589 Furthermore, for complete safety this pattern requires nested objects to be declared separately, otherwise resources that can throw an exception on close can leak nested resources \footnote{Since close is only guaranteed to be called on objects declared in the try-list and not objects passed as constructor parameters, the @B@ object may not be closed in @new A(new B())@ if @A@'s close raises an exception.} \cite{TryWithResources}. 453 590 \begin{javacode} 454 591 public void write(String filename, String msg) throws Exception { … … 521 658 % these are declared in the struct, so they're closer to C++ than to CFA, at least syntactically. Also do not allow for default constructors 522 659 % D has a GC, which already makes the situation quite different from C/C++ 523 The programming language , D,also manages resources with constructors and destructors \cite{D}.524 In D, @struct@s are stack allocat edand managed via scoping like in \CC, whereas @class@es are managed automatically by the garbage collector.660 The programming language D also manages resources with constructors and destructors \cite{D}. 661 In D, @struct@s are stack allocatable and managed via scoping like in \CC, whereas @class@es are managed automatically by the garbage collector. 525 662 Like Java, using the garbage collector means that destructors are called indeterminately, requiring the use of finally statements to ensure dynamically allocated resources that are not managed by the garbage collector, such as open files, are cleaned up. 526 663 Since D supports RAII, it is possible to use the same techniques as in \CC to ensure that resources are released in a timely manner. … … 755 892 756 893 Type-safe variadic functions are added to \CFA and discussed in Chapter 4. 894 895 \section{Contributions} 896 \label{s:contributions} 897 898 No prior work on constructors or destructors had been done for \CFA. 899 I did both the design and implementation work. 900 While the overall design is based on constructors and destructors in object-oriented C++, it had to be re-engineered into non-object-oriented \CFA. 901 I also had to make changes to the \CFA expression-resolver to integrate constructors and destructors into the type system. 902 903 Prior work on the design of tuples for \CFA was done by Till, and some initial implementation work by Esteves. 904 I largely took the Till design but added tuple indexing, which exists in a number of programming languages with tuples, simplified the implicit tuple conversions, and integrated with the \CFA polymorphism and assertion satisfaction model. 905 I did a new implementation of tuples, and extensively 906 augmented initial work by Bilson to incorporate tuples into the \CFA expression-resolver and type-unifier. 907 908 No prior work on variadic functions had been done for \CFA. 909 I did both the design and implementation work. 910 While the overall design is based on variadic templates in C++, my design is novel in the way it is incorporated into the \CFA polymorphism model, and is engineered into \CFA so it dovetails with tuples. -
doc/rob_thesis/thesis-frontpgs.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 86 86 %\newpage 87 87 88 % %A C K N O W L E D G E M E N T S89 % %-------------------------------88 % A C K N O W L E D G E M E N T S 89 % ------------------------------- 90 90 91 %\begin{center}\textbf{Acknowledgements}\end{center}91 \begin{center}\textbf{Acknowledgements}\end{center} 92 92 93 % % I would like to thank all the little people who made this possible. 94 % TODO 95 % \cleardoublepage 96 % %\newpage 93 I would like to thank my supervisor, Professor Peter Buhr, for all of his help, including reading the many drafts of this thesis and providing guidance throughout my degree. 94 This work would not have been as enjoyable, nor would it have been as strong without Peter's knowledge, help, and encouragement. 95 96 I would like to thank my readers, Professors Gregor Richards and Patrick Lam for all of their helpful feedback. 97 98 Thanks to Aaron Moss and Thierry Delisle for many helpful discussions, both work-related and not, and for all of the work they have put into the \CFA project. 99 This thesis would not have been the same without their efforts. 100 101 I thank Glen Ditchfield and Richard Bilson, for all of their help with both the design and implementation of \CFA. 102 103 I thank my partner, Erin Blackmere, for all of her love and support. 104 Without her, I would not be who I am today. 105 106 Thanks to my parents, Bob and Jackie Schluntz, for their love and support throughout my life, and for always encouraging me to be my best. 107 108 Thanks to my best friends, Travis Bartlett, Abraham Dubrisingh, and Kevin Wu, whose companionship is always appreciated. 109 The time we've spent together over the past 4 years has always kept me entertained. 110 An extra shout-out to Kaleb Alway, Max Bardakov, Ten Bradley, and Ed Lee, with whom I've shared many a great meal; thank you for being my friend. 111 112 Finally, I would like to acknowledge financial support in the form of a David R. Cheriton Graduate Scholarship and a corporate partnership with Huawei Ltd. 113 114 \cleardoublepage 115 %\newpage 97 116 98 117 % % D E D I C A T I O N -
doc/rob_thesis/thesis.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 118 118 \usepackage[pdftex]{graphicx} % For including graphics N.B. pdftex graphics driver 119 119 120 \usepackage{xcolor} 121 \usepackage{listings} 122 120 123 \input{cfa-format.tex} 121 124 … … 138 141 pdftitle={Resource Management and Tuples in \CFA}, % title: CHANGE THIS TEXT! 139 142 pdfauthor={Rob Schluntz}, % author: CHANGE THIS TEXT! and uncomment this line 140 % pdfsubject={Subject}, % subject: CHANGE THIS TEXT! and uncomment this line143 pdfsubject={Programming Languages}, % subject: CHANGE THIS TEXT! and uncomment this line 141 144 % pdfkeywords={keyword1} {key2} {key3}, % list of keywords, and uncomment this line if desired 142 145 pdfnewwindow=true, % links in new window -
doc/rob_thesis/tuples.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 161 161 \end{cfacode} 162 162 163 \begin{sloppypar} 163 164 In addition to variables of tuple type, it is also possible to have pointers to tuples, and arrays of tuples. 164 Tuple types can be composed of any types, except for array types, since array s do not carry their size around, which makes tuple assignment difficult when a tuple contains an array.165 Tuple types can be composed of any types, except for array types, since array assignment is disallowed, which makes tuple assignment difficult when a tuple contains an array. 165 166 \begin{cfacode} 166 167 [double, int] di; … … 169 170 \end{cfacode} 170 171 This examples declares a variable of type @[double, int]@, a variable of type pointer to @[double, int]@, and an array of ten @[double, int]@. 172 \end{sloppypar} 171 173 172 174 \subsection{Tuple Indexing} … … 212 214 The flexible structure of tuples permits a simple and expressive function-call syntax to work seamlessly with both single- and multiple-return-value functions, and with any number of arguments of arbitrarily complex structure. 213 215 214 In \KWC \cite{Buhr94a,Till89}, a precursor to \CFA,there were 4 tuple coercions: opening, closing, flattening, and structuring.216 In \KWC \cite{Buhr94a,Till89}, there were 4 tuple coercions: opening, closing, flattening, and structuring. 215 217 Opening coerces a tuple value into a tuple of values, while closing converts a tuple of values into a single tuple value. 216 218 Flattening coerces a nested tuple into a flat tuple, \ie it takes a tuple with tuple components and expands it into a tuple with only non-tuple components. … … 218 220 219 221 In \CFA, the design has been simplified to require only the two conversions previously described, which trigger only in function call and return situations. 222 This simplification is a primary contribution of this thesis to the design of tuples in \CFA. 220 223 Specifically, the expression resolution algorithm examines all of the possible alternatives for an expression to determine the best match. 221 224 In resolving a function call expression, each combination of function value and list of argument alternatives is examined. … … 254 257 Let $L_i$ for $i$ in $[0, n)$ represent each component of the flattened left side, $R_i$ represent each component of the flattened right side of a multiple assignment, and $R$ represent the right side of a mass assignment. 255 258 256 For a multiple assignment to be valid, both tuples must have the same number of elements when flattened. Multiple assignment assigns $R_i$ to $L_i$ for each $i$. 259 For a multiple assignment to be valid, both tuples must have the same number of elements when flattened. 260 For example, the following is invalid because the number of components on the left does not match the number of components on the right. 261 \begin{cfacode} 262 [int, int] x, y, z; 263 [x, y] = z; // multiple assignment, invalid 4 != 2 264 \end{cfacode} 265 Multiple assignment assigns $R_i$ to $L_i$ for each $i$. 257 266 That is, @?=?(&$L_i$, $R_i$)@ must be a well-typed expression. 258 267 In the previous example, @[x, y] = z@, @z@ is flattened into @z.0, z.1@, and the assignments @x = z.0@ and @y = z.1@ happen. … … 265 274 266 275 Both kinds of tuple assignment have parallel semantics, such that each value on the left side and right side is evaluated \emph{before} any assignments occur. 267 As a result, it is possible to swap the values in two variables without explicitly creating any temporary variables or calling a function ,276 As a result, it is possible to swap the values in two variables without explicitly creating any temporary variables or calling a function. 268 277 \begin{cfacode} 269 278 int x = 10, y = 20; … … 296 305 \subsection{Tuple Construction} 297 306 Tuple construction and destruction follow the same rules and semantics as tuple assignment, except that in the case where there is no right side, the default constructor or destructor is called on each component of the tuple. 307 As constructors and destructors did not exist in previous versions of \CFA or in \KWC, this is a primary contribution of this thesis to the design of tuples. 298 308 \begin{cfacode} 299 309 struct S; … … 433 443 \section{Casting} 434 444 In C, the cast operator is used to explicitly convert between types. 435 In \CFA, the cast operator has a secondary use, which is type ascription, since it force the expression resolution algorithm to choose the lowest cost conversion to the target type.445 In \CFA, the cast operator has a secondary use, which is type ascription, since it forces the expression resolution algorithm to choose the lowest cost conversion to the target type. 436 446 That is, a cast can be used to select the type of an expression when it is ambiguous, as in the call to an overloaded function. 437 447 \begin{cfacode} … … 487 497 \section{Polymorphism} 488 498 Due to the implicit flattening and structuring conversions involved in argument passing, @otype@ and @dtype@ parameters are restricted to matching only with non-tuple types. 499 The integration of polymorphism, type assertions, and monomorphic specialization of tuple-assertions are a primary contribution of this thesis to the design of tuples. 489 500 \begin{cfacode} 490 501 forall(otype T, dtype U) … … 524 535 It is also important to note that these calls could be disambiguated if the function return types were different, as they likely would be for a reasonable implementation of @?+?@, since the return type is used in overload resolution. 525 536 Still, these semantics are a deficiency of the current argument matching algorithm, and depending on the function, differing return values may not always be appropriate. 526 These issues could be rectified by applying an appropriate co st to the structuring and flattening conversions, which are currently 0-cost conversions.537 These issues could be rectified by applying an appropriate conversion cost to the structuring and flattening conversions, which are currently 0-cost conversions in the expression resolver. 527 538 Care would be needed in this case to ensure that exact matches do not incur such a cost. 528 539 \begin{cfacode} … … 559 570 \section{Implementation} 560 571 Tuples are implemented in the \CFA translator via a transformation into generic types. 572 Generic types are an independent contribution developed at the same time. 573 The transformation into generic types and the generation of tuple-specific code are primary contributions of this thesis to tuples. 574 561 575 The first time an $N$-tuple is seen for each $N$ in a scope, a generic type with $N$ type parameters is generated. 562 576 For example, -
doc/rob_thesis/variadic.tex
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 5 5 \section{Design Criteria} % TODO: better section name??? 6 6 C provides variadic functions through the manipulation of @va_list@ objects. 7 Avariadic function is one which contains at least one parameter, followed by @...@ as the last token in the parameter list.8 In particular, some form of \emph{argument descriptor} is needed to inform the function of the number of arguments and their types.7 In C, a variadic function is one which contains at least one parameter, followed by @...@ as the last token in the parameter list. 8 In particular, some form of \emph{argument descriptor} or \emph{sentinel value} is needed to inform the function of the number of arguments and their types. 9 9 Two common argument descriptors are format strings or counter parameters. 10 It is important to note that both of these mechanisms are inherently redundant, because they require the user to explicitly specify information that the compiler already knows .10 It is important to note that both of these mechanisms are inherently redundant, because they require the user to explicitly specify information that the compiler already knows \footnote{While format specifiers can convey some information the compiler does not know, such as whether to print a number in decimal or hexadecimal, the number of arguments is wholly redundant.}. 11 11 This required repetition is error prone, because it is easy for the user to add or remove arguments without updating the argument descriptor. 12 12 In addition, C requires the programmer to hard code all of the possible expected types. … … 152 152 That is to say, the programmer who writes @sum@ does not need full program knowledge of every possible data type, unlike what is necessary to write an equivalent function using the standard C mechanisms. 153 153 154 \begin{sloppypar} 154 155 Going one last step, it is possible to achieve full generality in \CFA, allowing the summation of arbitrary lists of summable types. 155 156 \begin{cfacode} … … 170 171 \end{cfacode} 171 172 The \CFA translator requires adding explicit @double ?+?(int, double)@ and @double ?+?(double, int)@ functions for this call to work, since implicit conversions are not supported for assertions. 173 \end{sloppypar} 172 174 173 175 A notable limitation of this approach is that it heavily relies on recursive assertions. … … 226 228 In the call to @new@, @Array@ is selected to match @T@, and @Params@ is expanded to match @[int, int, int, int]@. To satisfy the assertions, a constructor with an interface compatible with @void ?{}(Array *, int, int, int)@ must exist in the current scope. 227 229 228 The @new@ function provides the combination of type-safe@malloc@ with a constructor call, so that it becomes impossible to forget to construct dynamically-allocated objects.230 The @new@ function provides the combination of polymorphic @malloc@ with a constructor call, so that it becomes impossible to forget to construct dynamically-allocated objects. 229 231 This approach provides the type-safety of @new@ in \CC, without the need to specify the allocated type, thanks to return-type inference. 230 232 -
src/CodeGen/CodeGenerator.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 9 9 // Author : Richard C. Bilson 10 10 // Created On : Mon May 18 07:44:20 2015 11 // Last Modified By : Peter A. Buhr12 // Last Modified On : T hu Mar 30 16:38:01201713 // Update Count : 48 211 // Last Modified By : Andrew Beach 12 // Last Modified On : Tus May 9 16:50:00 2017 13 // Update Count : 484 14 14 // 15 15 … … 41 41 namespace CodeGen { 42 42 int CodeGenerator::tabsize = 4; 43 44 // Pseudo Function: output << lineDirective(currentNode); 45 struct lineDirective { 46 CodeLocation const & loc; 47 lineDirective(CodeLocation const & location) : loc(location) {} 48 lineDirective(BaseSyntaxNode const * node) : loc(node->location) {} 49 }; 50 std::ostream & operator<<(std::ostream & out, lineDirective const & ld) { 51 if (ld.loc.isSet()) 52 return out << "\n# " << ld.loc.linenumber << " \"" 53 << ld.loc.filename << "\"\n"; 54 return out << "\n// Unset Location\n"; 55 } 43 56 44 57 // the kinds of statements that would ideally be followed by whitespace … … 128 141 129 142 130 // *** Declarations143 // *** Declarations 131 144 void CodeGenerator::visit( FunctionDecl * functionDecl ) { 145 output << lineDirective( functionDecl ); 146 132 147 extension( functionDecl ); 133 148 genAttributes( functionDecl->get_attributes() ); … … 153 168 } 154 169 170 output << lineDirective( objectDecl ); 171 155 172 extension( objectDecl ); 156 173 genAttributes( objectDecl->get_attributes() ); … … 192 209 cur_indent += CodeGenerator::tabsize; 193 210 for ( std::list< Declaration* >::iterator i = memb.begin(); i != memb.end(); i++ ) { 194 output << indent;211 output << lineDirective( *i ) << indent; 195 212 (*i)->accept( *this ); 196 213 output << ";" << endl; … … 204 221 205 222 void CodeGenerator::visit( StructDecl * structDecl ) { 223 output << lineDirective( structDecl ); 224 206 225 extension( structDecl ); 207 226 handleAggregate( structDecl, "struct " ); … … 209 228 210 229 void CodeGenerator::visit( UnionDecl * unionDecl ) { 230 output << lineDirective( unionDecl ); 231 211 232 extension( unionDecl ); 212 233 handleAggregate( unionDecl, "union " ); … … 215 236 void CodeGenerator::visit( EnumDecl * enumDecl ) { 216 237 extension( enumDecl ); 238 output << lineDirective ( enumDecl ); 217 239 output << "enum "; 218 240 genAttributes( enumDecl->get_attributes() ); … … 230 252 ObjectDecl * obj = dynamic_cast< ObjectDecl* >( *i ); 231 253 assert( obj ); 232 output << indent << mangleName( obj );254 output << lineDirective( obj ) << indent << mangleName( obj ); 233 255 if ( obj->get_init() ) { 234 256 output << " = "; … … 248 270 void CodeGenerator::visit( TypedefDecl * typeDecl ) { 249 271 assertf( ! genC, "Typedefs are removed and substituted in earlier passes." ); 272 output << lineDirective( typeDecl ); 250 273 output << "typedef "; 251 274 output << genType( typeDecl->get_base(), typeDecl->get_name(), pretty, genC ) << endl; … … 262 285 } // if 263 286 } else { 264 output << typeDecl->typeString() << " " << typeDecl->get_name(); 287 output << typeDecl->genTypeString() << " " << typeDecl->get_name(); 288 if ( typeDecl->get_kind() != TypeDecl::Any && typeDecl->get_sized() ) { 289 output << " | sized(" << typeDecl->get_name() << ")"; 290 } 265 291 if ( ! typeDecl->get_assertions().empty() ) { 266 292 output << " | { "; … … 316 342 } 317 343 318 // *** Expressions344 // *** Expressions 319 345 void CodeGenerator::visit( ApplicationExpr * applicationExpr ) { 320 346 extension( applicationExpr ); … … 719 745 void CodeGenerator::visit( StmtExpr * stmtExpr ) { 720 746 std::list< Statement * > & stmts = stmtExpr->get_statements()->get_kids(); 721 output << "({" << std::endl;747 output << lineDirective( stmtExpr) << "({" << std::endl; 722 748 cur_indent += CodeGenerator::tabsize; 723 749 unsigned int numStmts = stmts.size(); 724 750 unsigned int i = 0; 725 751 for ( Statement * stmt : stmts ) { 726 output << indent << printLabels( stmt->get_labels() ); 752 output << lineDirective( stmt ) << indent; 753 output << printLabels( stmt->get_labels() ); 727 754 if ( i+1 == numStmts ) { 728 755 // last statement in a statement expression needs to be handled specially - … … 746 773 } 747 774 748 // *** Statements775 // *** Statements 749 776 void CodeGenerator::visit( CompoundStmt * compoundStmt ) { 750 777 std::list<Statement*> ks = compoundStmt->get_kids(); … … 769 796 void CodeGenerator::visit( ExprStmt * exprStmt ) { 770 797 assert( exprStmt ); 771 // cast the top-level expression to void to reduce gcc warnings. 772 Expression * expr = new CastExpr( exprStmt->get_expr() ); 798 Expression * expr = exprStmt->get_expr(); 799 if ( genC ) { 800 // cast the top-level expression to void to reduce gcc warnings. 801 expr = new CastExpr( expr ); 802 } 773 803 expr->accept( *this ); 774 804 output << ";"; … … 807 837 808 838 void CodeGenerator::visit( IfStmt * ifStmt ) { 839 output << lineDirective( ifStmt ); 809 840 output << "if ( "; 810 841 ifStmt->get_condition()->accept( *this ); … … 820 851 821 852 void CodeGenerator::visit( SwitchStmt * switchStmt ) { 853 output << lineDirective( switchStmt ); 822 854 output << "switch ( " ; 823 855 switchStmt->get_condition()->accept( *this ); … … 832 864 833 865 void CodeGenerator::visit( CaseStmt * caseStmt ) { 866 output << lineDirective( caseStmt ); 834 867 output << indent; 835 868 if ( caseStmt->isDefault()) { -
src/CodeGen/Generate.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 22 22 #include "SynTree/Declaration.h" 23 23 #include "CodeGenerator.h" 24 #include "Tuples/Tuples.h" 24 #include "GenType.h" 25 #include "SynTree/SynTree.h" 26 #include "SynTree/Type.h" 27 #include "SynTree/BaseSyntaxNode.h" 28 // #include "Tuples/Tuples.h" 25 29 26 30 using namespace std; … … 39 43 } // for 40 44 } 45 46 void generate( BaseSyntaxNode * node, std::ostream & os ) { 47 if ( Type * type = dynamic_cast< Type * >( node ) ) { 48 os << CodeGen::genPrettyType( type, "" ); 49 } else { 50 CodeGen::CodeGenerator cgv( os, true, false ); 51 node->accept( cgv ); 52 } 53 os << std::endl; 54 } 41 55 } // namespace CodeGen 42 56 -
src/CodeGen/Generate.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 25 25 /// Generates code. doIntrinsics determines if intrinsic functions are printed, pretty formats output nicely (e.g., uses unmangled names, etc.), generateC is true when the output must consist only of C code (allows some assertions, etc.) 26 26 void generate( std::list< Declaration* > translationUnit, std::ostream &os, bool doIntrinsics, bool pretty, bool generateC = false ); 27 28 /// Generate code for a single node -- helpful for debugging in gdb 29 void generate( BaseSyntaxNode * node, std::ostream & os ); 27 30 } // namespace CodeGen 28 31 -
src/CodeTools/module.mk
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 15 15 ############################################################################### 16 16 17 SRC += CodeTools/DeclStats.cc 17 SRC += CodeTools/DeclStats.cc \ 18 CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc -
src/Common/utility.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 9 9 // Author : Richard C. Bilson 10 10 // Created On : Mon May 18 07:44:20 2015 11 // Last Modified By : Peter A. Buhr12 // Last Modified On : Wed Dec 14 21:25:25 201613 // Update Count : 3 111 // Last Modified By : Andrew Beach 12 // Last Modified On : Fri May 5 11:03:00 2017 13 // Update Count : 32 14 14 // 15 15 … … 322 322 std::string filename; 323 323 324 CodeLocation() 324 /// Create a new unset CodeLocation. 325 CodeLocation() 325 326 : linenumber( -1 ) 326 327 , filename("") 327 328 {} 328 329 330 /// Create a new CodeLocation with the given values. 329 331 CodeLocation( const char* filename, int lineno ) 330 332 : linenumber( lineno ) 331 333 , filename(filename ? filename : "") 332 334 {} 335 336 bool isSet () const { 337 return -1 != linenumber; 338 } 339 340 bool isUnset () const { 341 return !isSet(); 342 } 343 344 void unset () { 345 linenumber = -1; 346 filename = ""; 347 } 348 349 // Use field access for set. 333 350 }; 334 351 335 352 inline std::string to_string( const CodeLocation& location ) { 336 return location. linenumber >= 0? location.filename + ":" + std::to_string(location.linenumber) + " " : "";353 return location.isSet() ? location.filename + ":" + std::to_string(location.linenumber) + " " : ""; 337 354 } 338 355 #endif // _UTILITY_H -
src/Concurrency/Keywords.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 246 246 //============================================================================================= 247 247 void ConcurrentSueKeyword::visit(StructDecl * decl) { 248 Visitor::visit(decl); 248 249 if( decl->get_name() == type_name ) { 249 250 assert( !type_decl ); … … 385 386 //============================================================================================= 386 387 void MutexKeyword::visit(FunctionDecl* decl) { 388 Visitor::visit(decl); 389 387 390 std::list<DeclarationWithType*> mutexArgs = findMutexArgs( decl ); 388 391 if( mutexArgs.empty() ) return; … … 402 405 403 406 void MutexKeyword::visit(StructDecl* decl) { 407 Visitor::visit(decl); 408 404 409 if( decl->get_name() == "monitor_desc" ) { 405 410 assert( !monitor_decl ); … … 504 509 //============================================================================================= 505 510 void ThreadStarter::visit(FunctionDecl * decl) { 511 Visitor::visit(decl); 512 506 513 if( ! InitTweak::isConstructor(decl->get_name()) ) return; 507 514 -
src/GenPoly/InstantiateGeneric.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 233 233 } else { 234 234 // normalize possibly dtype-static parameter type 235 out.push_back( new TypeExpr{ 235 out.push_back( new TypeExpr{ 236 236 ScrubTyVars::scrubAll( paramType->get_type()->clone() ) } ); 237 237 gt |= genericType::concrete; … … 369 369 DeclMutator::addDeclaration( concDecl ); 370 370 insert( inst, typeSubs, concDecl ); 371 concDecl->acceptMutator( *this ); // recursively instantiate members 371 372 } 372 373 StructInstType *newInst = new StructInstType( inst->get_qualifiers(), concDecl->get_name() ); … … 423 424 DeclMutator::addDeclaration( concDecl ); 424 425 insert( inst, typeSubs, concDecl ); 426 concDecl->acceptMutator( *this ); // recursively instantiate members 425 427 } 426 428 UnionInstType *newInst = new UnionInstType( inst->get_qualifiers(), concDecl->get_name() ); -
src/GenPoly/PolyMutator.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 50 50 51 51 Statement * PolyMutator::mutateStatement( Statement *stmt ) { 52 // don't want statements from outer CompoundStmts to be added to this CompoundStmt 53 ValueGuard< std::list< Statement* > > oldStmtsToAdd( stmtsToAdd ); 54 ValueGuard< std::list< Statement* > > oldStmtsToAddAfter( stmtsToAddAfter ); 55 ValueGuard< TypeSubstitution * > oldEnv( env ); 56 stmtsToAdd.clear(); 57 stmtsToAddAfter.clear(); 58 52 59 Statement *newStmt = maybeMutate( stmt, *this ); 53 60 if ( ! stmtsToAdd.empty() || ! stmtsToAddAfter.empty() ) { … … 83 90 84 91 Statement * PolyMutator::mutate(IfStmt *ifStmt) { 92 ifStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( ifStmt->get_condition() ) ); 85 93 ifStmt->set_thenPart( mutateStatement( ifStmt->get_thenPart() ) ); 86 94 ifStmt->set_elsePart( mutateStatement( ifStmt->get_elsePart() ) ); 87 ifStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( ifStmt->get_condition() ) );88 95 return ifStmt; 89 96 } 90 97 91 98 Statement * PolyMutator::mutate(WhileStmt *whileStmt) { 99 whileStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( whileStmt->get_condition() ) ); 92 100 whileStmt->set_body( mutateStatement( whileStmt->get_body() ) ); 93 whileStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( whileStmt->get_condition() ) );94 101 return whileStmt; 95 102 } 96 103 97 104 Statement * PolyMutator::mutate(ForStmt *forStmt) { 98 forStmt->set_body( mutateStatement( forStmt->get_body() ) );99 105 mutateAll( forStmt->get_initialization(), *this ); 100 106 forStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( forStmt->get_condition() ) ); 101 107 forStmt->set_increment( mutateExpression( forStmt->get_increment() ) ); 108 forStmt->set_body( mutateStatement( forStmt->get_body() ) ); 102 109 return forStmt; 103 110 } 104 111 105 112 Statement * PolyMutator::mutate(SwitchStmt *switchStmt) { 113 switchStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( switchStmt->get_condition() ) ); 106 114 mutateStatementList( switchStmt->get_statements() ); 107 switchStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( switchStmt->get_condition() ) );108 115 return switchStmt; 109 116 } 110 117 111 118 Statement * PolyMutator::mutate(CaseStmt *caseStmt) { 119 caseStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( caseStmt->get_condition() ) ); 112 120 mutateStatementList( caseStmt->get_statements() ); 113 caseStmt->set_condition( mutateExpression( caseStmt->get_condition() ) );114 121 return caseStmt; 115 122 } -
src/Makefile.in
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 108 108 CodeGen/driver_cfa_cpp-OperatorTable.$(OBJEXT) \ 109 109 CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-DeclStats.$(OBJEXT) \ 110 CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.$(OBJEXT) \ 110 111 Concurrency/driver_cfa_cpp-Keywords.$(OBJEXT) \ 111 112 Common/driver_cfa_cpp-SemanticError.$(OBJEXT) \ … … 388 389 CodeGen/FixNames.cc CodeGen/FixMain.cc \ 389 390 CodeGen/OperatorTable.cc CodeTools/DeclStats.cc \ 390 Concurrency/Keywords.cc Common/SemanticError.cc \ 391 Common/UniqueName.cc Common/DebugMalloc.cc Common/Assert.cc \ 391 CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc Concurrency/Keywords.cc \ 392 Common/SemanticError.cc Common/UniqueName.cc \ 393 Common/DebugMalloc.cc Common/Assert.cc \ 392 394 ControlStruct/LabelGenerator.cc ControlStruct/LabelFixer.cc \ 393 395 ControlStruct/MLEMutator.cc ControlStruct/Mutate.cc \ … … 545 547 @: > CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/$(am__dirstamp) 546 548 CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-DeclStats.$(OBJEXT): \ 549 CodeTools/$(am__dirstamp) CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/$(am__dirstamp) 550 CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.$(OBJEXT): \ 547 551 CodeTools/$(am__dirstamp) CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/$(am__dirstamp) 548 552 Concurrency/$(am__dirstamp): … … 843 847 -rm -f CodeGen/driver_cfa_cpp-OperatorTable.$(OBJEXT) 844 848 -rm -f CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-DeclStats.$(OBJEXT) 849 -rm -f CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.$(OBJEXT) 845 850 -rm -f Common/driver_cfa_cpp-Assert.$(OBJEXT) 846 851 -rm -f Common/driver_cfa_cpp-DebugMalloc.$(OBJEXT) … … 954 959 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__include@ @am__quote@CodeGen/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-OperatorTable.Po@am__quote@ 955 960 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__include@ @am__quote@CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-DeclStats.Po@am__quote@ 961 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__include@ @am__quote@CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Po@am__quote@ 956 962 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__include@ @am__quote@Common/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-Assert.Po@am__quote@ 957 963 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__include@ @am__quote@Common/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-DebugMalloc.Po@am__quote@ … … 1195 1201 @am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ $(AM_V_CXX@am__nodep@)$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(driver_cfa_cpp_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -c -o CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-DeclStats.obj `if test -f 'CodeTools/DeclStats.cc'; then $(CYGPATH_W) 'CodeTools/DeclStats.cc'; else $(CYGPATH_W) '$(srcdir)/CodeTools/DeclStats.cc'; fi` 1196 1202 1203 CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.o: CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc 1204 @am__fastdepCXX_TRUE@ $(AM_V_CXX)$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(driver_cfa_cpp_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -MT CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.o -MD -MP -MF CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Tpo -c -o CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.o `test -f 'CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc' || echo '$(srcdir)/'`CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc 1205 @am__fastdepCXX_TRUE@ $(AM_V_at)$(am__mv) CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Tpo CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Po 1206 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ $(AM_V_CXX)source='CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc' object='CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.o' libtool=no @AMDEPBACKSLASH@ 1207 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ DEPDIR=$(DEPDIR) $(CXXDEPMODE) $(depcomp) @AMDEPBACKSLASH@ 1208 @am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ $(AM_V_CXX@am__nodep@)$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(driver_cfa_cpp_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -c -o CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.o `test -f 'CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc' || echo '$(srcdir)/'`CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc 1209 1210 CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.obj: CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc 1211 @am__fastdepCXX_TRUE@ $(AM_V_CXX)$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(driver_cfa_cpp_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -MT CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.obj -MD -MP -MF CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Tpo -c -o CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.obj `if test -f 'CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc'; then $(CYGPATH_W) 'CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc'; else $(CYGPATH_W) '$(srcdir)/CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc'; fi` 1212 @am__fastdepCXX_TRUE@ $(AM_V_at)$(am__mv) CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Tpo CodeTools/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.Po 1213 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ $(AM_V_CXX)source='CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc' object='CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.obj' libtool=no @AMDEPBACKSLASH@ 1214 @AMDEP_TRUE@@am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ DEPDIR=$(DEPDIR) $(CXXDEPMODE) $(depcomp) @AMDEPBACKSLASH@ 1215 @am__fastdepCXX_FALSE@ $(AM_V_CXX@am__nodep@)$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(driver_cfa_cpp_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -c -o CodeTools/driver_cfa_cpp-TrackLoc.obj `if test -f 'CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc'; then $(CYGPATH_W) 'CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc'; else $(CYGPATH_W) '$(srcdir)/CodeTools/TrackLoc.cc'; fi` 1216 1197 1217 Concurrency/driver_cfa_cpp-Keywords.o: Concurrency/Keywords.cc 1198 1218 @am__fastdepCXX_TRUE@ $(AM_V_CXX)$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(driver_cfa_cpp_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -MT Concurrency/driver_cfa_cpp-Keywords.o -MD -MP -MF Concurrency/$(DEPDIR)/driver_cfa_cpp-Keywords.Tpo -c -o Concurrency/driver_cfa_cpp-Keywords.o `test -f 'Concurrency/Keywords.cc' || echo '$(srcdir)/'`Concurrency/Keywords.cc -
src/Parser/parser.yy
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 393 393 | '(' compound_statement ')' // GCC, lambda expression 394 394 { $$ = new ExpressionNode( build_valexpr( $2 ) ); } 395 | primary_expression '{' argument_expression_list '}' // CFA 396 { 397 Token fn; 398 fn.str = new std::string( "?{}" ); // location undefined - use location of '{'? 399 $$ = new ExpressionNode( new ConstructorExpr( build_func( new ExpressionNode( build_varref( fn ) ), (ExpressionNode *)( $1 )->set_last( $3 ) ) ) ); 400 } 395 401 ; 396 402 … … 425 431 | '(' type_name_no_function ')' '{' initializer_list comma_opt '}' // C99, compound-literal 426 432 { $$ = new ExpressionNode( build_compoundLiteral( $2, new InitializerNode( $5, true ) ) ); } 427 | postfix_expression '{' argument_expression_list '}' // CFA433 | '^' primary_expression '{' argument_expression_list '}' // CFA 428 434 { 429 435 Token fn; 430 fn.str = new st d::string( "?{}" ); // location undefined - use location of '{'?431 $$ = new ExpressionNode( new ConstructorExpr( build_func( new ExpressionNode( build_varref( fn ) ), (ExpressionNode *)( $1 )->set_last( $3 )) ) );436 fn.str = new string( "^?{}" ); // location undefined 437 $$ = new ExpressionNode( build_func( new ExpressionNode( build_varref( fn ) ), (ExpressionNode *)( $2 )->set_last( $4 ) ) ); 432 438 } 433 439 ; … … 730 736 | exception_statement 731 737 | asm_statement 732 | '^' postfix_expression '{' argument_expression_list '}' ';' // CFA733 {734 Token fn;735 fn.str = new string( "^?{}" ); // location undefined736 $$ = new StatementNode( build_expr( new ExpressionNode( build_func( new ExpressionNode( build_varref( fn ) ), (ExpressionNode *)( $2 )->set_last( $4 ) ) ) ) );737 }738 ;739 738 740 739 labeled_statement: -
src/ResolvExpr/AlternativeFinder.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 766 766 } // if 767 767 } // for 768 // function may return struct or union value, in which case we need to add alternatives for implicit conversions to each of the anonymous members 768 769 candidates.clear(); 770 candidates.splice( candidates.end(), alternatives ); 771 772 findMinCost( candidates.begin(), candidates.end(), std::back_inserter( alternatives ) ); 773 774 // function may return struct or union value, in which case we need to add alternatives for implicit 775 // conversions to each of the anonymous members, must happen after findMinCost since anon conversions 776 // are never the cheapest expression 769 777 for ( const Alternative & alt : alternatives ) { 770 778 addAnonConversions( alt ); 771 779 } 772 773 candidates.clear();774 candidates.splice( candidates.end(), alternatives );775 776 findMinCost( candidates.begin(), candidates.end(), std::back_inserter( alternatives ) );777 780 778 781 if ( alternatives.empty() && targetType && ! targetType->isVoid() ) { -
src/SymTab/Validate.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 240 240 ReturnTypeFixer::fix( translationUnit ); // must happen before autogen 241 241 acceptAll( translationUnit, lrt ); // must happen before autogen, because sized flag needs to propagate to generated functions 242 acceptAll( translationUnit, epc ); // must happen before VerifyCtorDtorAssign, because void return objects should not exist 243 VerifyCtorDtorAssign::verify( translationUnit ); // must happen before autogen, because autogen examines existing ctor/dtors 242 244 Concurrency::applyKeywords( translationUnit ); 243 245 autogenerateRoutines( translationUnit ); // moved up, used to be below compoundLiteral - currently needs EnumAndPointerDecayPass 244 246 Concurrency::implementMutexFuncs( translationUnit ); 245 247 Concurrency::implementThreadStarter( translationUnit ); 246 acceptAll( translationUnit, epc );247 248 ReturnChecker::checkFunctionReturns( translationUnit ); 248 249 compoundliteral.mutateDeclarationList( translationUnit ); 249 250 acceptAll( translationUnit, pass3 ); 250 VerifyCtorDtorAssign::verify( translationUnit );251 251 ArrayLength::computeLength( translationUnit ); 252 252 } … … 817 817 throw SemanticError( "Constructors, destructors, and assignment functions require at least one parameter ", funcDecl ); 818 818 } 819 if ( ! dynamic_cast< PointerType * >( params.front()->get_type() ) ) { 819 PointerType * ptrType = dynamic_cast< PointerType * >( params.front()->get_type() ); 820 if ( ! ptrType || ptrType->is_array() ) { 820 821 throw SemanticError( "First parameter of a constructor, destructor, or assignment function must be a pointer ", funcDecl ); 821 822 } -
src/SynTree/BaseSyntaxNode.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 18 18 19 19 #include "Common/utility.h" 20 #include "Visitor.h" 20 21 21 22 class BaseSyntaxNode { 22 23 public: 23 24 CodeLocation location; 25 26 virtual void accept( Visitor & v ) = 0; // temporary -- needs to be here so that BaseSyntaxNode is polymorphic and can be dynamic_cast 24 27 }; 25 28 -
src/SynTree/Declaration.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 204 204 205 205 virtual std::string typeString() const; 206 virtual std::string genTypeString() const; 206 207 207 208 virtual TypeDecl *clone() const { return new TypeDecl( *this ); } -
src/SynTree/PointerType.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 5 5 // file "LICENCE" distributed with Cforall. 6 6 // 7 // PointerType.cc -- 7 // PointerType.cc -- 8 8 // 9 9 // Author : Richard C. Bilson … … 38 38 void PointerType::print( std::ostream &os, int indent ) const { 39 39 Type::print( os, indent ); 40 os << "pointer to "; 41 if ( isStatic ) { 42 os << "static "; 43 } // if 44 if ( isVarLen ) { 45 os << "variable length array of "; 46 } else if ( dimension ) { 47 os << "array of "; 48 dimension->print( os, indent ); 49 } // if 40 if ( ! is_array() ) { 41 os << "pointer to "; 42 } else { 43 os << "decayed "; 44 if ( isStatic ) { 45 os << "static "; 46 } // if 47 if ( isVarLen ) { 48 os << "variable length array of "; 49 } else if ( dimension ) { 50 os << "array of "; 51 dimension->print( os, indent ); 52 os << " "; 53 } // if 54 } 50 55 if ( base ) { 51 56 base->print( os, indent ); -
src/SynTree/SynTree.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 21 21 #include <map> 22 22 #include <iostream> 23 24 class BaseSyntaxNode; 23 25 24 26 class Declaration; -
src/SynTree/Type.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 247 247 void set_isStatic( bool newValue ) { isStatic = newValue; } 248 248 249 bool is_array() const { return isStatic || isVarLen || dimension; } 250 249 251 virtual PointerType *clone() const { return new PointerType( *this ); } 250 252 virtual void accept( Visitor & v ) { v.visit( this ); } -
src/SynTree/TypeDecl.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 29 29 } 30 30 31 std::string TypeDecl::genTypeString() const { 32 static const std::string kindNames[] = { "otype", "dtype", "ftype", "ttype" }; 33 return kindNames[ kind ]; 34 } 35 31 36 std::ostream & operator<<( std::ostream & os, const TypeDecl::Data & data ) { 32 37 return os << data.kind << ", " << data.isComplete; -
src/SynTree/Visitor.h
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 9 9 // Author : Richard C. Bilson 10 10 // Created On : Mon May 18 07:44:20 2015 11 // Last Modified By : Peter A. Buhr12 // Last Modified On : Thu Feb 9 14:23:24201711 // Last Modified By : Andrew Beach 12 // Last Modified On : Wed May 3 08:58:00 2017 13 13 // Update Count : 10 14 14 // … … 26 26 virtual ~Visitor(); 27 27 public: 28 // visit: Default implementation of all functions visits the children 29 // of the given syntax node, but performs no other action. 30 28 31 virtual void visit( ObjectDecl *objectDecl ); 29 32 virtual void visit( FunctionDecl *functionDecl ); -
src/benchmark/CorCtxSwitch.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 3 3 #include <thread> 4 4 5 #include <unistd.h> // sysconf 6 #include <sys/times.h> // times 7 #include <time.h> 5 #include "bench.h" 8 6 9 inline unsigned long long int Time() { 10 timespec ts; 11 clock_gettime( 12 #if defined( __linux__ ) 13 CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID, 14 #elif defined( __freebsd__ ) 15 CLOCK_PROF, 16 #elif defined( __solaris__ ) 17 CLOCK_HIGHRES, 18 #else 19 #error uC++ : internal error, unsupported architecture 20 #endif 21 &ts ); 22 return 1000000000LL * ts.tv_sec + ts.tv_nsec; 23 } // Time 24 25 struct GreatSuspender { 26 coroutine_desc __cor; 27 }; 28 29 DECL_COROUTINE(GreatSuspender); 7 coroutine GreatSuspender {}; 30 8 31 9 void ?{}( GreatSuspender * this ) { … … 46 24 } 47 25 48 #ifndef N49 #define N 10000000050 #endif51 52 26 int main() { 53 27 const unsigned int NoOfTimes = N; -
src/benchmark/Makefile.am
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 44 44 @rm -f ./a.out 45 45 46 sched-int: 47 ${CC} ${AM_CFLAGS} ${CFLAGS} ${ccflags} @CFA_FLAGS@ -nodebug -lrt -DN=10000000 SchedInt.c 48 @for number in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10; do \ 49 ./a.out ; \ 50 done 51 @rm -f ./a.out 52 53 monitor: 54 ${CC} ${AM_CFLAGS} ${CFLAGS} ${ccflags} @CFA_FLAGS@ -nodebug -lrt -DN=10000000 Monitor.c 55 @for number in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10; do \ 56 ./a.out ; \ 57 done 58 @rm -f ./a.out 59 46 60 csv-data: 47 61 @${CC} ${AM_CFLAGS} ${CFLAGS} ${ccflags} @CFA_FLAGS@ -nodebug -lrt -quiet -DN=10000000 csv-data.c -
src/benchmark/Makefile.in
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 492 492 @rm -f ./a.out 493 493 494 sched-int: 495 ${CC} ${AM_CFLAGS} ${CFLAGS} ${ccflags} @CFA_FLAGS@ -nodebug -lrt -DN=10000000 SchedInt.c 496 @for number in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10; do \ 497 ./a.out ; \ 498 done 499 @rm -f ./a.out 500 501 monitor: 502 ${CC} ${AM_CFLAGS} ${CFLAGS} ${ccflags} @CFA_FLAGS@ -nodebug -lrt -DN=10000000 Monitor.c 503 @for number in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10; do \ 504 ./a.out ; \ 505 done 506 @rm -f ./a.out 507 494 508 csv-data: 495 509 @${CC} ${AM_CFLAGS} ${CFLAGS} ${ccflags} @CFA_FLAGS@ -nodebug -lrt -quiet -DN=10000000 csv-data.c -
src/benchmark/ThrdCtxSwitch.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 3 3 #include <thread> 4 4 5 #include <unistd.h> // sysconf 6 #include <sys/times.h> // times 7 #include <time.h> 8 9 inline unsigned long long int Time() { 10 timespec ts; 11 clock_gettime( 12 #if defined( __linux__ ) 13 CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID, 14 #elif defined( __freebsd__ ) 15 CLOCK_PROF, 16 #elif defined( __solaris__ ) 17 CLOCK_HIGHRES, 18 #else 19 #error uC++ : internal error, unsupported architecture 20 #endif 21 &ts ); 22 return 1000000000LL * ts.tv_sec + ts.tv_nsec; 23 } // Time 24 25 #ifndef N 26 #define N 100000000 27 #endif 5 #include "bench.h" 28 6 29 7 int main() { -
src/benchmark/bench.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 4 4 #include <thread> 5 5 6 #include <unistd.h> // sysconf 7 #include <sys/times.h> // times 8 #include <time.h> 9 10 inline unsigned long long int Time() { 11 timespec ts; 12 clock_gettime( 13 #if defined( __linux__ ) 14 CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID, 15 #elif defined( __freebsd__ ) 16 CLOCK_PROF, 17 #elif defined( __solaris__ ) 18 CLOCK_HIGHRES, 19 #else 20 #error uC++ : internal error, unsupported architecture 21 #endif 22 &ts ); 23 return 1000000000LL * ts.tv_sec + ts.tv_nsec; 24 } // Time 6 #include "bench.h" 25 7 26 8 //======================================= … … 86 68 //======================================= 87 69 88 struct CoroutineDummy { coroutine_desc __cor; }; 89 DECL_COROUTINE(CoroutineDummy); 70 coroutine CoroutineDummy {}; 90 71 void main(CoroutineDummy * this) {} 91 72 … … 117 98 } 118 99 119 structCoroutineResume {100 coroutine CoroutineResume { 120 101 int N; 121 coroutine_desc __cor;122 102 }; 123 124 DECL_COROUTINE(CoroutineResume);125 103 126 104 void ?{}(CoroutineResume* this, int N) { … … 150 128 //======================================= 151 129 152 struct ThreadDummy { thread_desc __thrd; }; 153 DECL_THREAD(ThreadDummy); 130 thread ThreadDummy {}; 154 131 void main(ThreadDummy * this) {} 155 132 … … 177 154 } 178 155 179 structContextSwitch {156 thread ContextSwitch { 180 157 int N; 181 158 long long result; 182 thread_desc __thrd;183 159 }; 184 185 DECL_THREAD(ContextSwitch);186 160 187 161 void main(ContextSwitch * this) { … … 241 215 DynamicTaskCreateDelete( NoOfTimes ); 242 216 { 243 scoped(ContextSwitch)dummy = { (int)NoOfTimes }; // context switch217 ContextSwitch dummy = { (int)NoOfTimes }; // context switch 244 218 } 245 219 sout | "\t" | endl; -
src/benchmark/csv-data.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 1 1 #include <fstream> 2 #include <monitor> 2 3 #include <stdlib> 3 4 #include <thread> 4 5 5 extern "C" { 6 #include <unistd.h> // sysconf 7 #include <sys/times.h> // times 8 #include <time.h> 9 } 10 11 inline unsigned long long int Time() { 12 timespec ts; 13 clock_gettime( 14 #if defined( __linux__ ) 15 CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID, 16 #elif defined( __freebsd__ ) 17 CLOCK_PROF, 18 #elif defined( __solaris__ ) 19 CLOCK_HIGHRES, 20 #else 21 #error uC++ : internal error, unsupported architecture 22 #endif 23 &ts ); 24 return 1000000000LL * ts.tv_sec + ts.tv_nsec; 25 } // Time 26 27 struct GreatSuspender { 28 coroutine_desc __cor; 29 }; 30 31 DECL_COROUTINE(GreatSuspender); 6 #include "bench.h" 7 8 coroutine GreatSuspender {}; 32 9 33 10 void ?{}( GreatSuspender * this ) { … … 52 29 #endif 53 30 54 55 31 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 32 // coroutine context switch 56 33 long long int measure_coroutine() { 57 34 const unsigned int NoOfTimes = N; … … 71 48 } 72 49 50 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 51 // thread context switch 73 52 long long int measure_thread() { 74 53 const unsigned int NoOfTimes = N; … … 84 63 } 85 64 65 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 66 // single monitor entry 67 monitor mon_t {}; 68 void dummy( mon_t * mutex m ) {} 69 70 long long int measure_1_monitor_entry() { 71 const unsigned int NoOfTimes = N; 72 long long int StartTime, EndTime; 73 mon_t mon; 74 75 StartTime = Time(); 76 for ( volatile unsigned int i = 0; i < NoOfTimes; i += 1 ) { 77 dummy( &mon ); 78 } 79 EndTime = Time(); 80 81 return ( EndTime - StartTime ) / NoOfTimes; 82 } 83 84 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 85 // multi monitor entry 86 void dummy( mon_t * mutex m1, mon_t * mutex m2 ) {} 87 88 long long int measure_2_monitor_entry() { 89 const unsigned int NoOfTimes = N; 90 long long int StartTime, EndTime; 91 mon_t mon1, mon2; 92 93 StartTime = Time(); 94 for ( volatile unsigned int i = 0; i < NoOfTimes; i += 1 ) { 95 dummy( &mon1, &mon2 ); 96 } 97 EndTime = Time(); 98 99 return ( EndTime - StartTime ) / NoOfTimes; 100 } 101 102 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 103 // single internal sched entry 104 mon_t mon1; 105 106 condition cond1a; 107 condition cond1b; 108 109 thread thrd1a { long long int * out; }; 110 thread thrd1b {}; 111 112 void ?{}( thrd1a * this, long long int * out ) { 113 this->out = out; 114 } 115 116 void side1A( mon_t * mutex a, long long int * out ) { 117 long long int StartTime, EndTime; 118 119 StartTime = Time(); 120 for( int i = 0;; i++ ) { 121 signal(&cond1a); 122 if( i > N ) break; 123 wait(&cond1b); 124 } 125 EndTime = Time(); 126 127 *out = ( EndTime - StartTime ) / N; 128 } 129 130 void side1B( mon_t * mutex a ) { 131 for( int i = 0;; i++ ) { 132 signal(&cond1b); 133 if( i > N ) break; 134 wait(&cond1a); 135 } 136 } 137 138 void main( thrd1a * this ) { side1A( &mon1, this->out ); } 139 void main( thrd1b * this ) { side1B( &mon1 ); } 140 141 long long int measure_1_sched_int() { 142 long long int t; 143 { 144 thrd1a a = { &t }; 145 thrd1b b; 146 } 147 return t; 148 } 149 150 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 151 // multi internal sched entry 152 mon_t mon2; 153 154 condition cond2a; 155 condition cond2b; 156 157 thread thrd2a { long long int * out; }; 158 thread thrd2b {}; 159 160 void ?{}( thrd2a * this, long long int * out ) { 161 this->out = out; 162 } 163 164 void side2A( mon_t * mutex a, mon_t * mutex b, long long int * out ) { 165 long long int StartTime, EndTime; 166 167 StartTime = Time(); 168 for( int i = 0;; i++ ) { 169 signal(&cond2a); 170 if( i > N ) break; 171 wait(&cond2b); 172 } 173 EndTime = Time(); 174 175 *out = ( EndTime - StartTime ) / N; 176 } 177 178 void side2B( mon_t * mutex a, mon_t * mutex b ) { 179 for( int i = 0;; i++ ) { 180 signal(&cond2b); 181 if( i > N ) break; 182 wait(&cond2a); 183 } 184 } 185 186 void main( thrd2a * this ) { side2A( &mon1, &mon2, this->out ); } 187 void main( thrd2b * this ) { side2B( &mon1, &mon2 ); } 188 189 long long int measure_2_sched_int() { 190 long long int t; 191 { 192 thrd2a a = { &t }; 193 thrd2b b; 194 } 195 return t; 196 } 197 198 //----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 199 // main loop 86 200 int main() 87 201 { 88 sout | time(NULL) | ',' | measure_coroutine() | ',' | measure_thread() | endl; 89 } 202 sout | time(NULL) | ','; 203 sout | measure_coroutine() | ','; 204 sout | measure_thread() | ','; 205 sout | measure_1_monitor_entry() | ','; 206 sout | measure_2_monitor_entry() | ','; 207 sout | measure_1_sched_int() | ','; 208 sout | measure_2_sched_int() | endl; 209 } -
src/libcfa/concurrency/monitor
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 81 81 } 82 82 83 static inline void ^?{}( condition * this ) { 84 free( this->monitors ); 85 } 86 83 87 void wait( condition * this ); 84 88 void signal( condition * this ); -
src/libcfa/concurrency/monitor.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 17 17 #include "monitor" 18 18 19 #include <stdlib> 20 19 21 #include "kernel_private.h" 20 22 #include "libhdr.h" … … 130 132 this_thread()->current_monitors = this->prev_mntrs; 131 133 this_thread()->current_monitor_count = this->prev_count; 134 } 135 136 void debug_break() __attribute__(( noinline )) 137 { 138 132 139 } 133 140 … … 171 178 172 179 //Find the next thread(s) to run 173 unsigned short thread_count = count;180 unsigned short thread_count = 0; 174 181 thread_desc * threads[ count ]; 182 for(int i = 0; i < count; i++) { 183 threads[i] = 0; 184 } 185 186 debug_break(); 175 187 176 188 for( int i = 0; i < count; i++) { 177 189 thread_desc * new_owner = next_thread( this->monitors[i] ); 178 thread_count = insert_unique( threads, i, new_owner ); 179 } 190 thread_count = insert_unique( threads, thread_count, new_owner ); 191 } 192 193 debug_break(); 180 194 181 195 LIB_DEBUG_PRINT_SAFE("Will unblock: "); … … 339 353 LIB_DEBUG_PRINT_SAFE("Branding\n"); 340 354 assertf( thrd->current_monitors != NULL, "No current monitor to brand condition", thrd->current_monitors ); 341 this->monitors = thrd->current_monitors;342 355 this->monitor_count = thrd->current_monitor_count; 356 357 this->monitors = malloc( this->monitor_count * sizeof( *this->monitors ) ); 358 for( int i = 0; i < this->monitor_count; i++ ) { 359 this->monitors[i] = thrd->current_monitors[i]; 360 } 343 361 } 344 362 } 345 363 346 364 static inline unsigned short insert_unique( thread_desc ** thrds, unsigned short end, thread_desc * val ) { 347 for(int i = 0; i < end; i++) { 365 if( !val ) return end; 366 367 for(int i = 0; i <= end; i++) { 348 368 if( thrds[i] == val ) return end; 349 369 } -
src/libcfa/concurrency/thread.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 40 40 this->next = NULL; 41 41 42 this->current_monitors = NULL;43 this->current_monitor_count = 0;42 this->current_monitors = &this->mon; 43 this->current_monitor_count = 1; 44 44 } 45 45 -
src/libcfa/rational
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 12 12 // Created On : Wed Apr 6 17:56:25 2016 13 13 // Last Modified By : Peter A. Buhr 14 // Last Modified On : Wed May 4 14:11:45 201615 // Update Count : 1614 // Last Modified On : Mon May 1 08:25:06 2017 15 // Update Count : 33 16 16 // 17 17 18 #ifndef RATIONAL_H 18 19 #define RATIONAL_H … … 21 22 22 23 // implementation 24 typedef long int RationalImpl; 23 25 struct Rational { 24 long intnumerator, denominator; // invariant: denominator > 026 RationalImpl numerator, denominator; // invariant: denominator > 0 25 27 }; // Rational 26 28 … … 31 33 // constructors 32 34 void ?{}( Rational * r ); 33 void ?{}( Rational * r, long intn );34 void ?{}( Rational * r, long int n, long intd );35 void ?{}( Rational * r, RationalImpl n ); 36 void ?{}( Rational * r, RationalImpl n, RationalImpl d ); 35 37 36 // getter/setter for numerator/denominator 37 long int numerator( Rational r ); 38 long int numerator( Rational r, long int n ); 39 long int denominator( Rational r ); 40 long int denominator( Rational r, long int d ); 38 // getter for numerator/denominator 39 RationalImpl numerator( Rational r ); 40 RationalImpl denominator( Rational r ); 41 [ RationalImpl, RationalImpl ] ?=?( * [ RationalImpl, RationalImpl ] dest, Rational src ); 42 // setter for numerator/denominator 43 RationalImpl numerator( Rational r, RationalImpl n ); 44 RationalImpl denominator( Rational r, RationalImpl d ); 41 45 42 46 // comparison … … 57 61 // conversion 58 62 double widen( Rational r ); 59 Rational narrow( double f, long intmd );63 Rational narrow( double f, RationalImpl md ); 60 64 61 65 // I/O -
src/libcfa/rational.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 10 10 // Created On : Wed Apr 6 17:54:28 2016 11 11 // Last Modified By : Peter A. Buhr 12 // Last Modified On : Sat Jul 9 11:18:04 201613 // Update Count : 4012 // Last Modified On : Thu Apr 27 17:05:06 2017 13 // Update Count : 51 14 14 // 15 15 … … 30 30 // Calculate greatest common denominator of two numbers, the first of which may be negative. Used to reduce rationals. 31 31 // alternative: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_GCD_algorithm 32 static long int gcd( long int a, long intb ) {32 static RationalImpl gcd( RationalImpl a, RationalImpl b ) { 33 33 for ( ;; ) { // Euclid's algorithm 34 long intr = a % b;34 RationalImpl r = a % b; 35 35 if ( r == 0 ) break; 36 36 a = b; … … 40 40 } // gcd 41 41 42 static long int simplify( long int *n, long int*d ) {42 static RationalImpl simplify( RationalImpl *n, RationalImpl *d ) { 43 43 if ( *d == 0 ) { 44 44 serr | "Invalid rational number construction: denominator cannot be equal to 0." | endl; … … 56 56 } // rational 57 57 58 void ?{}( Rational * r, long intn ) {58 void ?{}( Rational * r, RationalImpl n ) { 59 59 r{ n, 1 }; 60 60 } // rational 61 61 62 void ?{}( Rational * r, long int n, long intd ) {63 long int t = simplify( &n, &d );// simplify62 void ?{}( Rational * r, RationalImpl n, RationalImpl d ) { 63 RationalImpl t = simplify( &n, &d ); // simplify 64 64 r->numerator = n / t; 65 65 r->denominator = d / t; … … 67 67 68 68 69 // getter /setterfor numerator/denominator70 71 long intnumerator( Rational r ) {69 // getter for numerator/denominator 70 71 RationalImpl numerator( Rational r ) { 72 72 return r.numerator; 73 73 } // numerator 74 74 75 long int numerator( Rational r, long int n ) { 76 long int prev = r.numerator; 77 long int t = gcd( abs( n ), r.denominator ); // simplify 75 RationalImpl denominator( Rational r ) { 76 return r.denominator; 77 } // denominator 78 79 [ RationalImpl, RationalImpl ] ?=?( * [ RationalImpl, RationalImpl ] dest, Rational src ) { 80 return *dest = src.[ numerator, denominator ]; 81 } 82 83 // setter for numerator/denominator 84 85 RationalImpl numerator( Rational r, RationalImpl n ) { 86 RationalImpl prev = r.numerator; 87 RationalImpl t = gcd( abs( n ), r.denominator ); // simplify 78 88 r.numerator = n / t; 79 89 r.denominator = r.denominator / t; … … 81 91 } // numerator 82 92 83 long int denominator( Rational r ) { 84 return r.denominator; 85 } // denominator 86 87 long int denominator( Rational r, long int d ) { 88 long int prev = r.denominator; 89 long int t = simplify( &r.numerator, &d ); // simplify 93 RationalImpl denominator( Rational r, RationalImpl d ) { 94 RationalImpl prev = r.denominator; 95 RationalImpl t = simplify( &r.numerator, &d ); // simplify 90 96 r.numerator = r.numerator / t; 91 97 r.denominator = d / t; … … 170 176 171 177 // http://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/numth/frap.c 172 Rational narrow( double f, long intmd ) {178 Rational narrow( double f, RationalImpl md ) { 173 179 if ( md <= 1 ) { // maximum fractional digits too small? 174 180 return (Rational){ f, 1}; // truncate fraction … … 176 182 177 183 // continued fraction coefficients 178 long intm00 = 1, m11 = 1, m01 = 0, m10 = 0;179 long intai, t;184 RationalImpl m00 = 1, m11 = 1, m01 = 0, m10 = 0; 185 RationalImpl ai, t; 180 186 181 187 // find terms until denom gets too big 182 188 for ( ;; ) { 183 ai = ( long int)f;189 ai = (RationalImpl)f; 184 190 if ( ! (m10 * ai + m11 <= md) ) break; 185 191 t = m00 * ai + m01; … … 202 208 forall( dtype istype | istream( istype ) ) 203 209 istype * ?|?( istype *is, Rational *r ) { 204 long intt;210 RationalImpl t; 205 211 is | &(r->numerator) | &(r->denominator); 206 212 t = simplify( &(r->numerator), &(r->denominator) ); -
src/main.cc
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 37 37 #include "CodeGen/FixMain.h" 38 38 #include "CodeTools/DeclStats.h" 39 #include "CodeTools/TrackLoc.h" 39 40 #include "ControlStruct/Mutate.h" 40 41 #include "SymTab/Validate.h" … … 308 309 } // if 309 310 311 CodeTools::fillLocations( translationUnit ); 310 312 CodeGen::generate( translationUnit, *output, ! noprotop, prettycodegenp, true ); 311 313 -
src/tests/Makefile.am
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 22 22 concurrent=yes 23 23 quick_test+= coroutine thread monitor 24 concurrent_test=coroutine thread monitor multi-monitor sched-int sched-extpreempt24 concurrent_test=coroutine thread monitor multi-monitor sched-int-disjoint sched-int-barge sched-int-wait sched-ext sched-ext-multi preempt 25 25 else 26 26 concurrent=no -
src/tests/Makefile.in
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 230 230 @BUILD_CONCURRENCY_TRUE@concurrent = yes 231 231 @BUILD_CONCURRENCY_FALSE@concurrent_test = 232 @BUILD_CONCURRENCY_TRUE@concurrent_test = coroutine thread monitor multi-monitor sched-int sched-ext preempt 233 TEST_FLAGS = $(if $(test), 2> .err/${@}.log, ) 232 @BUILD_CONCURRENCY_TRUE@concurrent_test = coroutine thread monitor multi-monitor sched-int-disjoint sched-int-barge sched-int-wait sched-ext sched-ext-multi preempt 234 233 235 234 # applies to both programs 236 235 EXTRA_FLAGS = 237 236 BUILD_FLAGS = -g -Wall -Wno-unused-function @CFA_FLAGS@ ${EXTRA_FLAGS} 237 TEST_FLAGS = $(if $(test), 2> .err/${@}.log, ) 238 238 fstream_test_SOURCES = fstream_test.c 239 239 vector_test_SOURCES = vector/vector_int.c vector/array.c vector/vector_test.c -
src/tests/rational.c
r0f9bef3 r6250a312 10 10 // Created On : Mon Mar 28 08:43:12 2016 11 11 // Last Modified By : Peter A. Buhr 12 // Last Modified On : Tue Jul 5 18:29:37 201613 // Update Count : 2512 // Last Modified On : Tue May 2 22:11:05 2017 13 // Update Count : 41 14 14 // 15 15 … … 36 36 b = (Rational){ -3, 2 }; 37 37 sout | a | b | endl; 38 sout | a == 1 | endl; 38 // sout | a == 1 | endl; // FIX ME 39 39 sout | a != b | endl; 40 40 sout | a < b | endl; … … 61 61 sout | narrow( 3.14159265358979, 256 ) | endl; 62 62 63 sout | "decompose" | endl; 64 RationalImpl n, d; 65 // [n, d] = a; 66 // sout | a | n | d | endl; 67 68 sout | "more tests" | endl; 63 69 Rational x = { 1, 2 }, y = { 2 }; 64 70 sout | x - y | endl;
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