llvm-for-llvmta/include/llvm/IR/AbstractCallSite.h

248 lines
9.5 KiB
C++

//===- AbstractCallSite.h - Abstract call sites -----------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file defines the AbstractCallSite class, which is a is a wrapper that
// allows treating direct, indirect, and callback calls the same.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_IR_ABSTRACTCALLSITE_H
#define LLVM_IR_ABSTRACTCALLSITE_H
#include "llvm/IR/Function.h"
#include "llvm/IR/InstrTypes.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Instruction.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Use.h"
#include "llvm/IR/User.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Value.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Casting.h"
#include <cassert>
namespace llvm {
/// AbstractCallSite
///
/// An abstract call site is a wrapper that allows to treat direct,
/// indirect, and callback calls the same. If an abstract call site
/// represents a direct or indirect call site it behaves like a stripped
/// down version of a normal call site object. The abstract call site can
/// also represent a callback call, thus the fact that the initially
/// called function (=broker) may invoke a third one (=callback callee).
/// In this case, the abstract call site hides the middle man, hence the
/// broker function. The result is a representation of the callback call,
/// inside the broker, but in the context of the original call to the broker.
///
/// There are up to three functions involved when we talk about callback call
/// sites. The caller (1), which invokes the broker function. The broker
/// function (2), that will invoke the callee zero or more times. And finally
/// the callee (3), which is the target of the callback call.
///
/// The abstract call site will handle the mapping from parameters to arguments
/// depending on the semantic of the broker function. However, it is important
/// to note that the mapping is often partial. Thus, some arguments of the
/// call/invoke instruction are mapped to parameters of the callee while others
/// are not.
class AbstractCallSite {
public:
/// The encoding of a callback with regards to the underlying instruction.
struct CallbackInfo {
/// For direct/indirect calls the parameter encoding is empty. If it is not,
/// the abstract call site represents a callback. In that case, the first
/// element of the encoding vector represents which argument of the call
/// site CB is the callback callee. The remaining elements map parameters
/// (identified by their position) to the arguments that will be passed
/// through (also identified by position but in the call site instruction).
///
/// NOTE that we use LLVM argument numbers (starting at 0) and not
/// clang/source argument numbers (starting at 1). The -1 entries represent
/// unknown values that are passed to the callee.
using ParameterEncodingTy = SmallVector<int, 0>;
ParameterEncodingTy ParameterEncoding;
};
private:
/// The underlying call site:
/// caller -> callee, if this is a direct or indirect call site
/// caller -> broker function, if this is a callback call site
CallBase *CB;
/// The encoding of a callback with regards to the underlying instruction.
CallbackInfo CI;
public:
/// Sole constructor for abstract call sites (ACS).
///
/// An abstract call site can only be constructed through a llvm::Use because
/// each operand (=use) of an instruction could potentially be a different
/// abstract call site. Furthermore, even if the value of the llvm::Use is the
/// same, and the user is as well, the abstract call sites might not be.
///
/// If a use is not associated with an abstract call site the constructed ACS
/// will evaluate to false if converted to a boolean.
///
/// If the use is the callee use of a call or invoke instruction, the
/// constructed abstract call site will behave as a llvm::CallSite would.
///
/// If the use is not a callee use of a call or invoke instruction, the
/// callback metadata is used to determine the argument <-> parameter mapping
/// as well as the callee of the abstract call site.
AbstractCallSite(const Use *U);
/// Add operand uses of \p CB that represent callback uses into
/// \p CallbackUses.
///
/// All uses added to \p CallbackUses can be used to create abstract call
/// sites for which AbstractCallSite::isCallbackCall() will return true.
static void getCallbackUses(const CallBase &CB,
SmallVectorImpl<const Use *> &CallbackUses);
/// Conversion operator to conveniently check for a valid/initialized ACS.
explicit operator bool() const { return CB != nullptr; }
/// Return the underlying instruction.
CallBase *getInstruction() const { return CB; }
/// Return true if this ACS represents a direct call.
bool isDirectCall() const {
return !isCallbackCall() && !CB->isIndirectCall();
}
/// Return true if this ACS represents an indirect call.
bool isIndirectCall() const {
return !isCallbackCall() && CB->isIndirectCall();
}
/// Return true if this ACS represents a callback call.
bool isCallbackCall() const {
// For a callback call site the callee is ALWAYS stored first in the
// transitive values vector. Thus, a non-empty vector indicates a callback.
return !CI.ParameterEncoding.empty();
}
/// Return true if @p UI is the use that defines the callee of this ACS.
bool isCallee(Value::const_user_iterator UI) const {
return isCallee(&UI.getUse());
}
/// Return true if @p U is the use that defines the callee of this ACS.
bool isCallee(const Use *U) const {
if (isDirectCall())
return CB->isCallee(U);
assert(!CI.ParameterEncoding.empty() &&
"Callback without parameter encoding!");
// If the use is actually in a constant cast expression which itself
// has only one use, we look through the constant cast expression.
if (auto *CE = dyn_cast<ConstantExpr>(U->getUser()))
if (CE->hasOneUse() && CE->isCast())
U = &*CE->use_begin();
return (int)CB->getArgOperandNo(U) == CI.ParameterEncoding[0];
}
/// Return the number of parameters of the callee.
unsigned getNumArgOperands() const {
if (isDirectCall())
return CB->getNumArgOperands();
// Subtract 1 for the callee encoding.
return CI.ParameterEncoding.size() - 1;
}
/// Return the operand index of the underlying instruction associated with @p
/// Arg.
int getCallArgOperandNo(Argument &Arg) const {
return getCallArgOperandNo(Arg.getArgNo());
}
/// Return the operand index of the underlying instruction associated with
/// the function parameter number @p ArgNo or -1 if there is none.
int getCallArgOperandNo(unsigned ArgNo) const {
if (isDirectCall())
return ArgNo;
// Add 1 for the callee encoding.
return CI.ParameterEncoding[ArgNo + 1];
}
/// Return the operand of the underlying instruction associated with @p Arg.
Value *getCallArgOperand(Argument &Arg) const {
return getCallArgOperand(Arg.getArgNo());
}
/// Return the operand of the underlying instruction associated with the
/// function parameter number @p ArgNo or nullptr if there is none.
Value *getCallArgOperand(unsigned ArgNo) const {
if (isDirectCall())
return CB->getArgOperand(ArgNo);
// Add 1 for the callee encoding.
return CI.ParameterEncoding[ArgNo + 1] >= 0
? CB->getArgOperand(CI.ParameterEncoding[ArgNo + 1])
: nullptr;
}
/// Return the operand index of the underlying instruction associated with the
/// callee of this ACS. Only valid for callback calls!
int getCallArgOperandNoForCallee() const {
assert(isCallbackCall());
assert(CI.ParameterEncoding.size() && CI.ParameterEncoding[0] >= 0);
return CI.ParameterEncoding[0];
}
/// Return the use of the callee value in the underlying instruction. Only
/// valid for callback calls!
const Use &getCalleeUseForCallback() const {
int CalleeArgIdx = getCallArgOperandNoForCallee();
assert(CalleeArgIdx >= 0 &&
unsigned(CalleeArgIdx) < getInstruction()->getNumOperands());
return getInstruction()->getOperandUse(CalleeArgIdx);
}
/// Return the pointer to function that is being called.
Value *getCalledOperand() const {
if (isDirectCall())
return CB->getCalledOperand();
return CB->getArgOperand(getCallArgOperandNoForCallee());
}
/// Return the function being called if this is a direct call, otherwise
/// return null (if it's an indirect call).
Function *getCalledFunction() const {
Value *V = getCalledOperand();
return V ? dyn_cast<Function>(V->stripPointerCasts()) : nullptr;
}
};
/// Apply function Func to each CB's callback call site.
template <typename UnaryFunction>
void forEachCallbackCallSite(const CallBase &CB, UnaryFunction Func) {
SmallVector<const Use *, 4u> CallbackUses;
AbstractCallSite::getCallbackUses(CB, CallbackUses);
for (const Use *U : CallbackUses) {
AbstractCallSite ACS(U);
assert(ACS && ACS.isCallbackCall() && "must be a callback call");
Func(ACS);
}
}
/// Apply function Func to each CB's callback function.
template <typename UnaryFunction>
void forEachCallbackFunction(const CallBase &CB, UnaryFunction Func) {
forEachCallbackCallSite(CB, [&Func](AbstractCallSite &ACS) {
if (Function *Callback = ACS.getCalledFunction())
Func(Callback);
});
}
} // end namespace llvm
#endif // LLVM_IR_ABSTRACTCALLSITE_H