Bill Wendling | 0ca9927 | 2012-06-28 08:43:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | .. _bitcode_format: |
| 2 | |
| 3 | .. role:: raw-html(raw) |
| 4 | :format: html |
| 5 | |
| 6 | ======================== |
| 7 | LLVM Bitcode File Format |
| 8 | ======================== |
| 9 | |
| 10 | .. contents:: |
| 11 | :local: |
| 12 | |
| 13 | Abstract |
| 14 | ======== |
| 15 | |
| 16 | This document describes the LLVM bitstream file format and the encoding of the |
| 17 | LLVM IR into it. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | Overview |
| 20 | ======== |
| 21 | |
| 22 | What is commonly known as the LLVM bitcode file format (also, sometimes |
| 23 | anachronistically known as bytecode) is actually two things: a `bitstream |
| 24 | container format`_ and an `encoding of LLVM IR`_ into the container format. |
| 25 | |
| 26 | The bitstream format is an abstract encoding of structured data, very similar to |
| 27 | XML in some ways. Like XML, bitstream files contain tags, and nested |
| 28 | structures, and you can parse the file without having to understand the tags. |
| 29 | Unlike XML, the bitstream format is a binary encoding, and unlike XML it |
| 30 | provides a mechanism for the file to self-describe "abbreviations", which are |
| 31 | effectively size optimizations for the content. |
| 32 | |
| 33 | LLVM IR files may be optionally embedded into a `wrapper`_ structure that makes |
| 34 | it easy to embed extra data along with LLVM IR files. |
| 35 | |
| 36 | This document first describes the LLVM bitstream format, describes the wrapper |
| 37 | format, then describes the record structure used by LLVM IR files. |
| 38 | |
| 39 | .. _bitstream container format: |
| 40 | |
| 41 | Bitstream Format |
| 42 | ================ |
| 43 | |
| 44 | The bitstream format is literally a stream of bits, with a very simple |
| 45 | structure. This structure consists of the following concepts: |
| 46 | |
| 47 | * A "`magic number`_" that identifies the contents of the stream. |
| 48 | |
| 49 | * Encoding `primitives`_ like variable bit-rate integers. |
| 50 | |
| 51 | * `Blocks`_, which define nested content. |
| 52 | |
| 53 | * `Data Records`_, which describe entities within the file. |
| 54 | |
| 55 | * Abbreviations, which specify compression optimizations for the file. |
| 56 | |
Joe Abbey | 8162cf4 | 2012-11-20 17:51:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame^] | 57 | Note that the :doc:`llvm-bcanalyzer <CommandGuide/llvm-bcanalyzer>` |
| 58 | tool can be used to dump and inspect arbitrary bitstreams, which is very useful |
| 59 | for understanding the encoding. |
Bill Wendling | 0ca9927 | 2012-06-28 08:43:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 60 | |
| 61 | .. _magic number: |
| 62 | |
| 63 | Magic Numbers |
| 64 | ------------- |
| 65 | |
| 66 | The first two bytes of a bitcode file are 'BC' (``0x42``, ``0x43``). The second |
| 67 | two bytes are an application-specific magic number. Generic bitcode tools can |
| 68 | look at only the first two bytes to verify the file is bitcode, while |
| 69 | application-specific programs will want to look at all four. |
| 70 | |
| 71 | .. _primitives: |
| 72 | |
| 73 | Primitives |
| 74 | ---------- |
| 75 | |
| 76 | A bitstream literally consists of a stream of bits, which are read in order |
| 77 | starting with the least significant bit of each byte. The stream is made up of |
| 78 | a number of primitive values that encode a stream of unsigned integer values. |
| 79 | These integers are encoded in two ways: either as `Fixed Width Integers`_ or as |
| 80 | `Variable Width Integers`_. |
| 81 | |
| 82 | .. _Fixed Width Integers: |
| 83 | .. _fixed-width value: |
| 84 | |
| 85 | Fixed Width Integers |
| 86 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 87 | |
| 88 | Fixed-width integer values have their low bits emitted directly to the file. |
| 89 | For example, a 3-bit integer value encodes 1 as 001. Fixed width integers are |
| 90 | used when there are a well-known number of options for a field. For example, |
| 91 | boolean values are usually encoded with a 1-bit wide integer. |
| 92 | |
| 93 | .. _Variable Width Integers: |
| 94 | .. _Variable Width Integer: |
| 95 | .. _variable-width value: |
| 96 | |
| 97 | Variable Width Integers |
| 98 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 99 | |
| 100 | Variable-width integer (VBR) values encode values of arbitrary size, optimizing |
| 101 | for the case where the values are small. Given a 4-bit VBR field, any 3-bit |
| 102 | value (0 through 7) is encoded directly, with the high bit set to zero. Values |
| 103 | larger than N-1 bits emit their bits in a series of N-1 bit chunks, where all |
| 104 | but the last set the high bit. |
| 105 | |
| 106 | For example, the value 27 (0x1B) is encoded as 1011 0011 when emitted as a vbr4 |
| 107 | value. The first set of four bits indicates the value 3 (011) with a |
| 108 | continuation piece (indicated by a high bit of 1). The next word indicates a |
| 109 | value of 24 (011 << 3) with no continuation. The sum (3+24) yields the value |
| 110 | 27. |
| 111 | |
| 112 | .. _char6-encoded value: |
| 113 | |
| 114 | 6-bit characters |
| 115 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 116 | |
| 117 | 6-bit characters encode common characters into a fixed 6-bit field. They |
| 118 | represent the following characters with the following 6-bit values: |
| 119 | |
| 120 | :: |
| 121 | |
| 122 | 'a' .. 'z' --- 0 .. 25 |
| 123 | 'A' .. 'Z' --- 26 .. 51 |
| 124 | '0' .. '9' --- 52 .. 61 |
| 125 | '.' --- 62 |
| 126 | '_' --- 63 |
| 127 | |
| 128 | This encoding is only suitable for encoding characters and strings that consist |
| 129 | only of the above characters. It is completely incapable of encoding characters |
| 130 | not in the set. |
| 131 | |
| 132 | Word Alignment |
| 133 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 134 | |
| 135 | Occasionally, it is useful to emit zero bits until the bitstream is a multiple |
| 136 | of 32 bits. This ensures that the bit position in the stream can be represented |
| 137 | as a multiple of 32-bit words. |
| 138 | |
| 139 | Abbreviation IDs |
| 140 | ---------------- |
| 141 | |
| 142 | A bitstream is a sequential series of `Blocks`_ and `Data Records`_. Both of |
| 143 | these start with an abbreviation ID encoded as a fixed-bitwidth field. The |
| 144 | width is specified by the current block, as described below. The value of the |
| 145 | abbreviation ID specifies either a builtin ID (which have special meanings, |
| 146 | defined below) or one of the abbreviation IDs defined for the current block by |
| 147 | the stream itself. |
| 148 | |
| 149 | The set of builtin abbrev IDs is: |
| 150 | |
| 151 | * 0 - `END_BLOCK`_ --- This abbrev ID marks the end of the current block. |
| 152 | |
| 153 | * 1 - `ENTER_SUBBLOCK`_ --- This abbrev ID marks the beginning of a new |
| 154 | block. |
| 155 | |
| 156 | * 2 - `DEFINE_ABBREV`_ --- This defines a new abbreviation. |
| 157 | |
| 158 | * 3 - `UNABBREV_RECORD`_ --- This ID specifies the definition of an |
| 159 | unabbreviated record. |
| 160 | |
| 161 | Abbreviation IDs 4 and above are defined by the stream itself, and specify an |
| 162 | `abbreviated record encoding`_. |
| 163 | |
| 164 | .. _Blocks: |
| 165 | |
| 166 | Blocks |
| 167 | ------ |
| 168 | |
| 169 | Blocks in a bitstream denote nested regions of the stream, and are identified by |
| 170 | a content-specific id number (for example, LLVM IR uses an ID of 12 to represent |
| 171 | function bodies). Block IDs 0-7 are reserved for `standard blocks`_ whose |
| 172 | meaning is defined by Bitcode; block IDs 8 and greater are application |
| 173 | specific. Nested blocks capture the hierarchical structure of the data encoded |
| 174 | in it, and various properties are associated with blocks as the file is parsed. |
| 175 | Block definitions allow the reader to efficiently skip blocks in constant time |
| 176 | if the reader wants a summary of blocks, or if it wants to efficiently skip data |
| 177 | it does not understand. The LLVM IR reader uses this mechanism to skip function |
| 178 | bodies, lazily reading them on demand. |
| 179 | |
| 180 | When reading and encoding the stream, several properties are maintained for the |
| 181 | block. In particular, each block maintains: |
| 182 | |
| 183 | #. A current abbrev id width. This value starts at 2 at the beginning of the |
| 184 | stream, and is set every time a block record is entered. The block entry |
| 185 | specifies the abbrev id width for the body of the block. |
| 186 | |
| 187 | #. A set of abbreviations. Abbreviations may be defined within a block, in |
| 188 | which case they are only defined in that block (neither subblocks nor |
| 189 | enclosing blocks see the abbreviation). Abbreviations can also be defined |
| 190 | inside a `BLOCKINFO`_ block, in which case they are defined in all blocks |
| 191 | that match the ID that the ``BLOCKINFO`` block is describing. |
| 192 | |
| 193 | As sub blocks are entered, these properties are saved and the new sub-block has |
| 194 | its own set of abbreviations, and its own abbrev id width. When a sub-block is |
| 195 | popped, the saved values are restored. |
| 196 | |
| 197 | .. _ENTER_SUBBLOCK: |
| 198 | |
| 199 | ENTER_SUBBLOCK Encoding |
| 200 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 201 | |
| 202 | :raw-html:`<tt>` |
| 203 | [ENTER_SUBBLOCK, blockid\ :sub:`vbr8`, newabbrevlen\ :sub:`vbr4`, <align32bits>, blocklen_32] |
| 204 | :raw-html:`</tt>` |
| 205 | |
| 206 | The ``ENTER_SUBBLOCK`` abbreviation ID specifies the start of a new block |
| 207 | record. The ``blockid`` value is encoded as an 8-bit VBR identifier, and |
| 208 | indicates the type of block being entered, which can be a `standard block`_ or |
| 209 | an application-specific block. The ``newabbrevlen`` value is a 4-bit VBR, which |
| 210 | specifies the abbrev id width for the sub-block. The ``blocklen`` value is a |
| 211 | 32-bit aligned value that specifies the size of the subblock in 32-bit |
| 212 | words. This value allows the reader to skip over the entire block in one jump. |
| 213 | |
| 214 | .. _END_BLOCK: |
| 215 | |
| 216 | END_BLOCK Encoding |
| 217 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 218 | |
| 219 | ``[END_BLOCK, <align32bits>]`` |
| 220 | |
| 221 | The ``END_BLOCK`` abbreviation ID specifies the end of the current block record. |
| 222 | Its end is aligned to 32-bits to ensure that the size of the block is an even |
| 223 | multiple of 32-bits. |
| 224 | |
| 225 | .. _Data Records: |
| 226 | |
| 227 | Data Records |
| 228 | ------------ |
| 229 | |
| 230 | Data records consist of a record code and a number of (up to) 64-bit integer |
| 231 | values. The interpretation of the code and values is application specific and |
| 232 | may vary between different block types. Records can be encoded either using an |
| 233 | unabbrev record, or with an abbreviation. In the LLVM IR format, for example, |
| 234 | there is a record which encodes the target triple of a module. The code is |
| 235 | ``MODULE_CODE_TRIPLE``, and the values of the record are the ASCII codes for the |
| 236 | characters in the string. |
| 237 | |
| 238 | .. _UNABBREV_RECORD: |
| 239 | |
| 240 | UNABBREV_RECORD Encoding |
| 241 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 242 | |
| 243 | :raw-html:`<tt>` |
| 244 | [UNABBREV_RECORD, code\ :sub:`vbr6`, numops\ :sub:`vbr6`, op0\ :sub:`vbr6`, op1\ :sub:`vbr6`, ...] |
| 245 | :raw-html:`</tt>` |
| 246 | |
| 247 | An ``UNABBREV_RECORD`` provides a default fallback encoding, which is both |
| 248 | completely general and extremely inefficient. It can describe an arbitrary |
| 249 | record by emitting the code and operands as VBRs. |
| 250 | |
| 251 | For example, emitting an LLVM IR target triple as an unabbreviated record |
| 252 | requires emitting the ``UNABBREV_RECORD`` abbrevid, a vbr6 for the |
| 253 | ``MODULE_CODE_TRIPLE`` code, a vbr6 for the length of the string, which is equal |
| 254 | to the number of operands, and a vbr6 for each character. Because there are no |
| 255 | letters with values less than 32, each letter would need to be emitted as at |
| 256 | least a two-part VBR, which means that each letter would require at least 12 |
| 257 | bits. This is not an efficient encoding, but it is fully general. |
| 258 | |
| 259 | .. _abbreviated record encoding: |
| 260 | |
| 261 | Abbreviated Record Encoding |
| 262 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 263 | |
| 264 | ``[<abbrevid>, fields...]`` |
| 265 | |
| 266 | An abbreviated record is a abbreviation id followed by a set of fields that are |
| 267 | encoded according to the `abbreviation definition`_. This allows records to be |
| 268 | encoded significantly more densely than records encoded with the |
| 269 | `UNABBREV_RECORD`_ type, and allows the abbreviation types to be specified in |
| 270 | the stream itself, which allows the files to be completely self describing. The |
| 271 | actual encoding of abbreviations is defined below. |
| 272 | |
| 273 | The record code, which is the first field of an abbreviated record, may be |
| 274 | encoded in the abbreviation definition (as a literal operand) or supplied in the |
| 275 | abbreviated record (as a Fixed or VBR operand value). |
| 276 | |
| 277 | .. _abbreviation definition: |
| 278 | |
| 279 | Abbreviations |
| 280 | ------------- |
| 281 | |
| 282 | Abbreviations are an important form of compression for bitstreams. The idea is |
| 283 | to specify a dense encoding for a class of records once, then use that encoding |
| 284 | to emit many records. It takes space to emit the encoding into the file, but |
| 285 | the space is recouped (hopefully plus some) when the records that use it are |
| 286 | emitted. |
| 287 | |
| 288 | Abbreviations can be determined dynamically per client, per file. Because the |
| 289 | abbreviations are stored in the bitstream itself, different streams of the same |
| 290 | format can contain different sets of abbreviations according to the needs of the |
| 291 | specific stream. As a concrete example, LLVM IR files usually emit an |
| 292 | abbreviation for binary operators. If a specific LLVM module contained no or |
| 293 | few binary operators, the abbreviation does not need to be emitted. |
| 294 | |
| 295 | .. _DEFINE_ABBREV: |
| 296 | |
| 297 | DEFINE_ABBREV Encoding |
| 298 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 299 | |
| 300 | :raw-html:`<tt>` |
| 301 | [DEFINE_ABBREV, numabbrevops\ :sub:`vbr5`, abbrevop0, abbrevop1, ...] |
| 302 | :raw-html:`</tt>` |
| 303 | |
| 304 | A ``DEFINE_ABBREV`` record adds an abbreviation to the list of currently defined |
| 305 | abbreviations in the scope of this block. This definition only exists inside |
| 306 | this immediate block --- it is not visible in subblocks or enclosing blocks. |
| 307 | Abbreviations are implicitly assigned IDs sequentially starting from 4 (the |
| 308 | first application-defined abbreviation ID). Any abbreviations defined in a |
| 309 | ``BLOCKINFO`` record for the particular block type receive IDs first, in order, |
| 310 | followed by any abbreviations defined within the block itself. Abbreviated data |
| 311 | records reference this ID to indicate what abbreviation they are invoking. |
| 312 | |
| 313 | An abbreviation definition consists of the ``DEFINE_ABBREV`` abbrevid followed |
| 314 | by a VBR that specifies the number of abbrev operands, then the abbrev operands |
| 315 | themselves. Abbreviation operands come in three forms. They all start with a |
| 316 | single bit that indicates whether the abbrev operand is a literal operand (when |
| 317 | the bit is 1) or an encoding operand (when the bit is 0). |
| 318 | |
| 319 | #. Literal operands --- :raw-html:`<tt>` [1\ :sub:`1`, litvalue\ |
| 320 | :sub:`vbr8`] :raw-html:`</tt>` --- Literal operands specify that the value in |
| 321 | the result is always a single specific value. This specific value is emitted |
| 322 | as a vbr8 after the bit indicating that it is a literal operand. |
| 323 | |
| 324 | #. Encoding info without data --- :raw-html:`<tt>` [0\ :sub:`1`, encoding\ |
| 325 | :sub:`3`] :raw-html:`</tt>` --- Operand encodings that do not have extra data |
| 326 | are just emitted as their code. |
| 327 | |
| 328 | #. Encoding info with data --- :raw-html:`<tt>` [0\ :sub:`1`, encoding\ |
| 329 | :sub:`3`, value\ :sub:`vbr5`] :raw-html:`</tt>` --- Operand encodings that do |
| 330 | have extra data are emitted as their code, followed by the extra data. |
| 331 | |
| 332 | The possible operand encodings are: |
| 333 | |
| 334 | * Fixed (code 1): The field should be emitted as a `fixed-width value`_, whose |
| 335 | width is specified by the operand's extra data. |
| 336 | |
| 337 | * VBR (code 2): The field should be emitted as a `variable-width value`_, whose |
| 338 | width is specified by the operand's extra data. |
| 339 | |
| 340 | * Array (code 3): This field is an array of values. The array operand has no |
| 341 | extra data, but expects another operand to follow it, indicating the element |
| 342 | type of the array. When reading an array in an abbreviated record, the first |
| 343 | integer is a vbr6 that indicates the array length, followed by the encoded |
| 344 | elements of the array. An array may only occur as the last operand of an |
| 345 | abbreviation (except for the one final operand that gives the array's |
| 346 | type). |
| 347 | |
| 348 | * Char6 (code 4): This field should be emitted as a `char6-encoded value`_. |
| 349 | This operand type takes no extra data. Char6 encoding is normally used as an |
| 350 | array element type. |
| 351 | |
| 352 | * Blob (code 5): This field is emitted as a vbr6, followed by padding to a |
| 353 | 32-bit boundary (for alignment) and an array of 8-bit objects. The array of |
| 354 | bytes is further followed by tail padding to ensure that its total length is a |
| 355 | multiple of 4 bytes. This makes it very efficient for the reader to decode |
| 356 | the data without having to make a copy of it: it can use a pointer to the data |
| 357 | in the mapped in file and poke directly at it. A blob may only occur as the |
| 358 | last operand of an abbreviation. |
| 359 | |
| 360 | For example, target triples in LLVM modules are encoded as a record of the form |
| 361 | ``[TRIPLE, 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd']``. Consider if the bitstream emitted the |
| 362 | following abbrev entry: |
| 363 | |
| 364 | :: |
| 365 | |
| 366 | [0, Fixed, 4] |
| 367 | [0, Array] |
| 368 | [0, Char6] |
| 369 | |
| 370 | When emitting a record with this abbreviation, the above entry would be emitted |
| 371 | as: |
| 372 | |
| 373 | :raw-html:`<tt><blockquote>` |
| 374 | [4\ :sub:`abbrevwidth`, 2\ :sub:`4`, 4\ :sub:`vbr6`, 0\ :sub:`6`, 1\ :sub:`6`, 2\ :sub:`6`, 3\ :sub:`6`] |
| 375 | :raw-html:`</blockquote></tt>` |
| 376 | |
| 377 | These values are: |
| 378 | |
| 379 | #. The first value, 4, is the abbreviation ID for this abbreviation. |
| 380 | |
| 381 | #. The second value, 2, is the record code for ``TRIPLE`` records within LLVM IR |
| 382 | file ``MODULE_BLOCK`` blocks. |
| 383 | |
| 384 | #. The third value, 4, is the length of the array. |
| 385 | |
| 386 | #. The rest of the values are the char6 encoded values for ``"abcd"``. |
| 387 | |
| 388 | With this abbreviation, the triple is emitted with only 37 bits (assuming a |
| 389 | abbrev id width of 3). Without the abbreviation, significantly more space would |
| 390 | be required to emit the target triple. Also, because the ``TRIPLE`` value is |
| 391 | not emitted as a literal in the abbreviation, the abbreviation can also be used |
| 392 | for any other string value. |
| 393 | |
| 394 | .. _standard blocks: |
| 395 | .. _standard block: |
| 396 | |
| 397 | Standard Blocks |
| 398 | --------------- |
| 399 | |
| 400 | In addition to the basic block structure and record encodings, the bitstream |
| 401 | also defines specific built-in block types. These block types specify how the |
| 402 | stream is to be decoded or other metadata. In the future, new standard blocks |
| 403 | may be added. Block IDs 0-7 are reserved for standard blocks. |
| 404 | |
| 405 | .. _BLOCKINFO: |
| 406 | |
| 407 | #0 - BLOCKINFO Block |
| 408 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 409 | |
| 410 | The ``BLOCKINFO`` block allows the description of metadata for other blocks. |
| 411 | The currently specified records are: |
| 412 | |
| 413 | :: |
| 414 | |
| 415 | [SETBID (#1), blockid] |
| 416 | [DEFINE_ABBREV, ...] |
| 417 | [BLOCKNAME, ...name...] |
| 418 | [SETRECORDNAME, RecordID, ...name...] |
| 419 | |
| 420 | The ``SETBID`` record (code 1) indicates which block ID is being described. |
| 421 | ``SETBID`` records can occur multiple times throughout the block to change which |
| 422 | block ID is being described. There must be a ``SETBID`` record prior to any |
| 423 | other records. |
| 424 | |
| 425 | Standard ``DEFINE_ABBREV`` records can occur inside ``BLOCKINFO`` blocks, but |
| 426 | unlike their occurrence in normal blocks, the abbreviation is defined for blocks |
| 427 | matching the block ID we are describing, *not* the ``BLOCKINFO`` block |
| 428 | itself. The abbreviations defined in ``BLOCKINFO`` blocks receive abbreviation |
| 429 | IDs as described in `DEFINE_ABBREV`_. |
| 430 | |
| 431 | The ``BLOCKNAME`` record (code 2) can optionally occur in this block. The |
| 432 | elements of the record are the bytes of the string name of the block. |
| 433 | llvm-bcanalyzer can use this to dump out bitcode files symbolically. |
| 434 | |
| 435 | The ``SETRECORDNAME`` record (code 3) can also optionally occur in this block. |
| 436 | The first operand value is a record ID number, and the rest of the elements of |
| 437 | the record are the bytes for the string name of the record. llvm-bcanalyzer can |
| 438 | use this to dump out bitcode files symbolically. |
| 439 | |
| 440 | Note that although the data in ``BLOCKINFO`` blocks is described as "metadata," |
| 441 | the abbreviations they contain are essential for parsing records from the |
| 442 | corresponding blocks. It is not safe to skip them. |
| 443 | |
| 444 | .. _wrapper: |
| 445 | |
| 446 | Bitcode Wrapper Format |
| 447 | ====================== |
| 448 | |
| 449 | Bitcode files for LLVM IR may optionally be wrapped in a simple wrapper |
| 450 | structure. This structure contains a simple header that indicates the offset |
| 451 | and size of the embedded BC file. This allows additional information to be |
| 452 | stored alongside the BC file. The structure of this file header is: |
| 453 | |
| 454 | :raw-html:`<tt><blockquote>` |
| 455 | [Magic\ :sub:`32`, Version\ :sub:`32`, Offset\ :sub:`32`, Size\ :sub:`32`, CPUType\ :sub:`32`] |
| 456 | :raw-html:`</blockquote></tt>` |
| 457 | |
| 458 | Each of the fields are 32-bit fields stored in little endian form (as with the |
| 459 | rest of the bitcode file fields). The Magic number is always ``0x0B17C0DE`` and |
| 460 | the version is currently always ``0``. The Offset field is the offset in bytes |
| 461 | to the start of the bitcode stream in the file, and the Size field is the size |
| 462 | in bytes of the stream. CPUType is a target-specific value that can be used to |
| 463 | encode the CPU of the target. |
| 464 | |
| 465 | .. _encoding of LLVM IR: |
| 466 | |
| 467 | LLVM IR Encoding |
| 468 | ================ |
| 469 | |
| 470 | LLVM IR is encoded into a bitstream by defining blocks and records. It uses |
| 471 | blocks for things like constant pools, functions, symbol tables, etc. It uses |
| 472 | records for things like instructions, global variable descriptors, type |
| 473 | descriptions, etc. This document does not describe the set of abbreviations |
| 474 | that the writer uses, as these are fully self-described in the file, and the |
| 475 | reader is not allowed to build in any knowledge of this. |
| 476 | |
| 477 | Basics |
| 478 | ------ |
| 479 | |
| 480 | LLVM IR Magic Number |
| 481 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 482 | |
| 483 | The magic number for LLVM IR files is: |
| 484 | |
| 485 | :raw-html:`<tt><blockquote>` |
| 486 | [0x0\ :sub:`4`, 0xC\ :sub:`4`, 0xE\ :sub:`4`, 0xD\ :sub:`4`] |
| 487 | :raw-html:`</blockquote></tt>` |
| 488 | |
| 489 | When combined with the bitcode magic number and viewed as bytes, this is |
| 490 | ``"BC 0xC0DE"``. |
| 491 | |
Jan Wen Voung | 780c798 | 2012-10-12 18:13:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 492 | .. _Signed VBRs: |
| 493 | |
Bill Wendling | 0ca9927 | 2012-06-28 08:43:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 494 | Signed VBRs |
| 495 | ^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 496 | |
| 497 | `Variable Width Integer`_ encoding is an efficient way to encode arbitrary sized |
| 498 | unsigned values, but is an extremely inefficient for encoding signed values, as |
| 499 | signed values are otherwise treated as maximally large unsigned values. |
| 500 | |
| 501 | As such, signed VBR values of a specific width are emitted as follows: |
| 502 | |
| 503 | * Positive values are emitted as VBRs of the specified width, but with their |
| 504 | value shifted left by one. |
| 505 | |
| 506 | * Negative values are emitted as VBRs of the specified width, but the negated |
| 507 | value is shifted left by one, and the low bit is set. |
| 508 | |
| 509 | With this encoding, small positive and small negative values can both be emitted |
| 510 | efficiently. Signed VBR encoding is used in ``CST_CODE_INTEGER`` and |
| 511 | ``CST_CODE_WIDE_INTEGER`` records within ``CONSTANTS_BLOCK`` blocks. |
Jan Wen Voung | 780c798 | 2012-10-12 18:13:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 512 | It is also used for phi instruction operands in `MODULE_CODE_VERSION`_ 1. |
Bill Wendling | 0ca9927 | 2012-06-28 08:43:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 513 | |
| 514 | LLVM IR Blocks |
| 515 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 516 | |
| 517 | LLVM IR is defined with the following blocks: |
| 518 | |
| 519 | * 8 --- `MODULE_BLOCK`_ --- This is the top-level block that contains the entire |
| 520 | module, and describes a variety of per-module information. |
| 521 | |
| 522 | * 9 --- `PARAMATTR_BLOCK`_ --- This enumerates the parameter attributes. |
| 523 | |
| 524 | * 10 --- `TYPE_BLOCK`_ --- This describes all of the types in the module. |
| 525 | |
| 526 | * 11 --- `CONSTANTS_BLOCK`_ --- This describes constants for a module or |
| 527 | function. |
| 528 | |
| 529 | * 12 --- `FUNCTION_BLOCK`_ --- This describes a function body. |
| 530 | |
| 531 | * 13 --- `TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ --- This describes the type symbol table. |
| 532 | |
| 533 | * 14 --- `VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ --- This describes a value symbol table. |
| 534 | |
| 535 | * 15 --- `METADATA_BLOCK`_ --- This describes metadata items. |
| 536 | |
| 537 | * 16 --- `METADATA_ATTACHMENT`_ --- This contains records associating metadata |
| 538 | with function instruction values. |
| 539 | |
| 540 | .. _MODULE_BLOCK: |
| 541 | |
| 542 | MODULE_BLOCK Contents |
| 543 | --------------------- |
| 544 | |
| 545 | The ``MODULE_BLOCK`` block (id 8) is the top-level block for LLVM bitcode files, |
| 546 | and each bitcode file must contain exactly one. In addition to records |
| 547 | (described below) containing information about the module, a ``MODULE_BLOCK`` |
| 548 | block may contain the following sub-blocks: |
| 549 | |
| 550 | * `BLOCKINFO`_ |
| 551 | * `PARAMATTR_BLOCK`_ |
| 552 | * `TYPE_BLOCK`_ |
| 553 | * `TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ |
| 554 | * `VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ |
| 555 | * `CONSTANTS_BLOCK`_ |
| 556 | * `FUNCTION_BLOCK`_ |
| 557 | * `METADATA_BLOCK`_ |
| 558 | |
Jan Wen Voung | 780c798 | 2012-10-12 18:13:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 559 | .. _MODULE_CODE_VERSION: |
| 560 | |
Bill Wendling | 0ca9927 | 2012-06-28 08:43:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 561 | MODULE_CODE_VERSION Record |
| 562 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 563 | |
| 564 | ``[VERSION, version#]`` |
| 565 | |
| 566 | The ``VERSION`` record (code 1) contains a single value indicating the format |
Jan Wen Voung | 0919f22 | 2012-10-15 16:47:58 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 567 | version. Versions 0 and 1 are supported at this time. The difference between |
Jan Wen Voung | 780c798 | 2012-10-12 18:13:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 568 | version 0 and 1 is in the encoding of instruction operands in |
| 569 | each `FUNCTION_BLOCK`_. |
| 570 | |
| 571 | In version 0, each value defined by an instruction is assigned an ID |
| 572 | unique to the function. Function-level value IDs are assigned starting from |
| 573 | ``NumModuleValues`` since they share the same namespace as module-level |
| 574 | values. The value enumerator resets after each function. When a value is |
| 575 | an operand of an instruction, the value ID is used to represent the operand. |
| 576 | For large functions or large modules, these operand values can be large. |
| 577 | |
| 578 | The encoding in version 1 attempts to avoid large operand values |
| 579 | in common cases. Instead of using the value ID directly, operands are |
| 580 | encoded as relative to the current instruction. Thus, if an operand |
| 581 | is the value defined by the previous instruction, the operand |
| 582 | will be encoded as 1. |
| 583 | |
| 584 | For example, instead of |
| 585 | |
| 586 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 587 | |
| 588 | #n = load #n-1 |
| 589 | #n+1 = icmp eq #n, #const0 |
| 590 | br #n+1, label #(bb1), label #(bb2) |
| 591 | |
| 592 | version 1 will encode the instructions as |
| 593 | |
| 594 | .. code-block:: llvm |
| 595 | |
| 596 | #n = load #1 |
| 597 | #n+1 = icmp eq #1, (#n+1)-#const0 |
| 598 | br #1, label #(bb1), label #(bb2) |
| 599 | |
| 600 | Note in the example that operands which are constants also use |
| 601 | the relative encoding, while operands like basic block labels |
| 602 | do not use the relative encoding. |
| 603 | |
| 604 | Forward references will result in a negative value. |
| 605 | This can be inefficient, as operands are normally encoded |
| 606 | as unsigned VBRs. However, forward references are rare, except in the |
| 607 | case of phi instructions. For phi instructions, operands are encoded as |
| 608 | `Signed VBRs`_ to deal with forward references. |
| 609 | |
Bill Wendling | 0ca9927 | 2012-06-28 08:43:12 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 610 | |
| 611 | MODULE_CODE_TRIPLE Record |
| 612 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 613 | |
| 614 | ``[TRIPLE, ...string...]`` |
| 615 | |
| 616 | The ``TRIPLE`` record (code 2) contains a variable number of values representing |
| 617 | the bytes of the ``target triple`` specification string. |
| 618 | |
| 619 | MODULE_CODE_DATALAYOUT Record |
| 620 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 621 | |
| 622 | ``[DATALAYOUT, ...string...]`` |
| 623 | |
| 624 | The ``DATALAYOUT`` record (code 3) contains a variable number of values |
| 625 | representing the bytes of the ``target datalayout`` specification string. |
| 626 | |
| 627 | MODULE_CODE_ASM Record |
| 628 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 629 | |
| 630 | ``[ASM, ...string...]`` |
| 631 | |
| 632 | The ``ASM`` record (code 4) contains a variable number of values representing |
| 633 | the bytes of ``module asm`` strings, with individual assembly blocks separated |
| 634 | by newline (ASCII 10) characters. |
| 635 | |
| 636 | .. _MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME: |
| 637 | |
| 638 | MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME Record |
| 639 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 640 | |
| 641 | ``[SECTIONNAME, ...string...]`` |
| 642 | |
| 643 | The ``SECTIONNAME`` record (code 5) contains a variable number of values |
| 644 | representing the bytes of a single section name string. There should be one |
| 645 | ``SECTIONNAME`` record for each section name referenced (e.g., in global |
| 646 | variable or function ``section`` attributes) within the module. These records |
| 647 | can be referenced by the 1-based index in the *section* fields of ``GLOBALVAR`` |
| 648 | or ``FUNCTION`` records. |
| 649 | |
| 650 | MODULE_CODE_DEPLIB Record |
| 651 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 652 | |
| 653 | ``[DEPLIB, ...string...]`` |
| 654 | |
| 655 | The ``DEPLIB`` record (code 6) contains a variable number of values representing |
| 656 | the bytes of a single dependent library name string, one of the libraries |
| 657 | mentioned in a ``deplibs`` declaration. There should be one ``DEPLIB`` record |
| 658 | for each library name referenced. |
| 659 | |
| 660 | MODULE_CODE_GLOBALVAR Record |
| 661 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 662 | |
| 663 | ``[GLOBALVAR, pointer type, isconst, initid, linkage, alignment, section, visibility, threadlocal, unnamed_addr]`` |
| 664 | |
| 665 | The ``GLOBALVAR`` record (code 7) marks the declaration or definition of a |
| 666 | global variable. The operand fields are: |
| 667 | |
| 668 | * *pointer type*: The type index of the pointer type used to point to this |
| 669 | global variable |
| 670 | |
| 671 | * *isconst*: Non-zero if the variable is treated as constant within the module, |
| 672 | or zero if it is not |
| 673 | |
| 674 | * *initid*: If non-zero, the value index of the initializer for this variable, |
| 675 | plus 1. |
| 676 | |
| 677 | .. _linkage type: |
| 678 | |
| 679 | * *linkage*: An encoding of the linkage type for this variable: |
| 680 | * ``external``: code 0 |
| 681 | * ``weak``: code 1 |
| 682 | * ``appending``: code 2 |
| 683 | * ``internal``: code 3 |
| 684 | * ``linkonce``: code 4 |
| 685 | * ``dllimport``: code 5 |
| 686 | * ``dllexport``: code 6 |
| 687 | * ``extern_weak``: code 7 |
| 688 | * ``common``: code 8 |
| 689 | * ``private``: code 9 |
| 690 | * ``weak_odr``: code 10 |
| 691 | * ``linkonce_odr``: code 11 |
| 692 | * ``available_externally``: code 12 |
| 693 | * ``linker_private``: code 13 |
| 694 | |
| 695 | * alignment*: The logarithm base 2 of the variable's requested alignment, plus 1 |
| 696 | |
| 697 | * *section*: If non-zero, the 1-based section index in the table of |
| 698 | `MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME`_ entries. |
| 699 | |
| 700 | .. _visibility: |
| 701 | |
| 702 | * *visibility*: If present, an encoding of the visibility of this variable: |
| 703 | * ``default``: code 0 |
| 704 | * ``hidden``: code 1 |
| 705 | * ``protected``: code 2 |
| 706 | |
| 707 | * *threadlocal*: If present, an encoding of the thread local storage mode of the |
| 708 | variable: |
| 709 | * ``not thread local``: code 0 |
| 710 | * ``thread local; default TLS model``: code 1 |
| 711 | * ``localdynamic``: code 2 |
| 712 | * ``initialexec``: code 3 |
| 713 | * ``localexec``: code 4 |
| 714 | |
| 715 | * *unnamed_addr*: If present and non-zero, indicates that the variable has |
| 716 | ``unnamed_addr`` |
| 717 | |
| 718 | .. _FUNCTION: |
| 719 | |
| 720 | MODULE_CODE_FUNCTION Record |
| 721 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 722 | |
| 723 | ``[FUNCTION, type, callingconv, isproto, linkage, paramattr, alignment, section, visibility, gc]`` |
| 724 | |
| 725 | The ``FUNCTION`` record (code 8) marks the declaration or definition of a |
| 726 | function. The operand fields are: |
| 727 | |
| 728 | * *type*: The type index of the function type describing this function |
| 729 | |
| 730 | * *callingconv*: The calling convention number: |
| 731 | * ``ccc``: code 0 |
| 732 | * ``fastcc``: code 8 |
| 733 | * ``coldcc``: code 9 |
| 734 | * ``x86_stdcallcc``: code 64 |
| 735 | * ``x86_fastcallcc``: code 65 |
| 736 | * ``arm_apcscc``: code 66 |
| 737 | * ``arm_aapcscc``: code 67 |
| 738 | * ``arm_aapcs_vfpcc``: code 68 |
| 739 | |
| 740 | * isproto*: Non-zero if this entry represents a declaration rather than a |
| 741 | definition |
| 742 | |
| 743 | * *linkage*: An encoding of the `linkage type`_ for this function |
| 744 | |
| 745 | * *paramattr*: If nonzero, the 1-based parameter attribute index into the table |
| 746 | of `PARAMATTR_CODE_ENTRY`_ entries. |
| 747 | |
| 748 | * *alignment*: The logarithm base 2 of the function's requested alignment, plus |
| 749 | 1 |
| 750 | |
| 751 | * *section*: If non-zero, the 1-based section index in the table of |
| 752 | `MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME`_ entries. |
| 753 | |
| 754 | * *visibility*: An encoding of the `visibility`_ of this function |
| 755 | |
| 756 | * *gc*: If present and nonzero, the 1-based garbage collector index in the table |
| 757 | of `MODULE_CODE_GCNAME`_ entries. |
| 758 | |
| 759 | * *unnamed_addr*: If present and non-zero, indicates that the function has |
| 760 | ``unnamed_addr`` |
| 761 | |
| 762 | MODULE_CODE_ALIAS Record |
| 763 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 764 | |
| 765 | ``[ALIAS, alias type, aliasee val#, linkage, visibility]`` |
| 766 | |
| 767 | The ``ALIAS`` record (code 9) marks the definition of an alias. The operand |
| 768 | fields are |
| 769 | |
| 770 | * *alias type*: The type index of the alias |
| 771 | |
| 772 | * *aliasee val#*: The value index of the aliased value |
| 773 | |
| 774 | * *linkage*: An encoding of the `linkage type`_ for this alias |
| 775 | |
| 776 | * *visibility*: If present, an encoding of the `visibility`_ of the alias |
| 777 | |
| 778 | MODULE_CODE_PURGEVALS Record |
| 779 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 780 | |
| 781 | ``[PURGEVALS, numvals]`` |
| 782 | |
| 783 | The ``PURGEVALS`` record (code 10) resets the module-level value list to the |
| 784 | size given by the single operand value. Module-level value list items are added |
| 785 | by ``GLOBALVAR``, ``FUNCTION``, and ``ALIAS`` records. After a ``PURGEVALS`` |
| 786 | record is seen, new value indices will start from the given *numvals* value. |
| 787 | |
| 788 | .. _MODULE_CODE_GCNAME: |
| 789 | |
| 790 | MODULE_CODE_GCNAME Record |
| 791 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 792 | |
| 793 | ``[GCNAME, ...string...]`` |
| 794 | |
| 795 | The ``GCNAME`` record (code 11) contains a variable number of values |
| 796 | representing the bytes of a single garbage collector name string. There should |
| 797 | be one ``GCNAME`` record for each garbage collector name referenced in function |
| 798 | ``gc`` attributes within the module. These records can be referenced by 1-based |
| 799 | index in the *gc* fields of ``FUNCTION`` records. |
| 800 | |
| 801 | .. _PARAMATTR_BLOCK: |
| 802 | |
| 803 | PARAMATTR_BLOCK Contents |
| 804 | ------------------------ |
| 805 | |
| 806 | The ``PARAMATTR_BLOCK`` block (id 9) contains a table of entries describing the |
| 807 | attributes of function parameters. These entries are referenced by 1-based index |
| 808 | in the *paramattr* field of module block `FUNCTION`_ records, or within the |
| 809 | *attr* field of function block ``INST_INVOKE`` and ``INST_CALL`` records. |
| 810 | |
| 811 | Entries within ``PARAMATTR_BLOCK`` are constructed to ensure that each is unique |
| 812 | (i.e., no two indicies represent equivalent attribute lists). |
| 813 | |
| 814 | .. _PARAMATTR_CODE_ENTRY: |
| 815 | |
| 816 | PARAMATTR_CODE_ENTRY Record |
| 817 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 818 | |
| 819 | ``[ENTRY, paramidx0, attr0, paramidx1, attr1...]`` |
| 820 | |
| 821 | The ``ENTRY`` record (code 1) contains an even number of values describing a |
| 822 | unique set of function parameter attributes. Each *paramidx* value indicates |
| 823 | which set of attributes is represented, with 0 representing the return value |
| 824 | attributes, 0xFFFFFFFF representing function attributes, and other values |
| 825 | representing 1-based function parameters. Each *attr* value is a bitmap with the |
| 826 | following interpretation: |
| 827 | |
| 828 | * bit 0: ``zeroext`` |
| 829 | * bit 1: ``signext`` |
| 830 | * bit 2: ``noreturn`` |
| 831 | * bit 3: ``inreg`` |
| 832 | * bit 4: ``sret`` |
| 833 | * bit 5: ``nounwind`` |
| 834 | * bit 6: ``noalias`` |
| 835 | * bit 7: ``byval`` |
| 836 | * bit 8: ``nest`` |
| 837 | * bit 9: ``readnone`` |
| 838 | * bit 10: ``readonly`` |
| 839 | * bit 11: ``noinline`` |
| 840 | * bit 12: ``alwaysinline`` |
| 841 | * bit 13: ``optsize`` |
| 842 | * bit 14: ``ssp`` |
| 843 | * bit 15: ``sspreq`` |
| 844 | * bits 16-31: ``align n`` |
| 845 | * bit 32: ``nocapture`` |
| 846 | * bit 33: ``noredzone`` |
| 847 | * bit 34: ``noimplicitfloat`` |
| 848 | * bit 35: ``naked`` |
| 849 | * bit 36: ``inlinehint`` |
| 850 | * bits 37-39: ``alignstack n``, represented as the logarithm |
| 851 | base 2 of the requested alignment, plus 1 |
| 852 | |
| 853 | .. _TYPE_BLOCK: |
| 854 | |
| 855 | TYPE_BLOCK Contents |
| 856 | ------------------- |
| 857 | |
| 858 | The ``TYPE_BLOCK`` block (id 10) contains records which constitute a table of |
| 859 | type operator entries used to represent types referenced within an LLVM |
| 860 | module. Each record (with the exception of `NUMENTRY`_) generates a single type |
| 861 | table entry, which may be referenced by 0-based index from instructions, |
| 862 | constants, metadata, type symbol table entries, or other type operator records. |
| 863 | |
| 864 | Entries within ``TYPE_BLOCK`` are constructed to ensure that each entry is |
| 865 | unique (i.e., no two indicies represent structurally equivalent types). |
| 866 | |
| 867 | .. _TYPE_CODE_NUMENTRY: |
| 868 | .. _NUMENTRY: |
| 869 | |
| 870 | TYPE_CODE_NUMENTRY Record |
| 871 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 872 | |
| 873 | ``[NUMENTRY, numentries]`` |
| 874 | |
| 875 | The ``NUMENTRY`` record (code 1) contains a single value which indicates the |
| 876 | total number of type code entries in the type table of the module. If present, |
| 877 | ``NUMENTRY`` should be the first record in the block. |
| 878 | |
| 879 | TYPE_CODE_VOID Record |
| 880 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 881 | |
| 882 | ``[VOID]`` |
| 883 | |
| 884 | The ``VOID`` record (code 2) adds a ``void`` type to the type table. |
| 885 | |
| 886 | TYPE_CODE_HALF Record |
| 887 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 888 | |
| 889 | ``[HALF]`` |
| 890 | |
| 891 | The ``HALF`` record (code 10) adds a ``half`` (16-bit floating point) type to |
| 892 | the type table. |
| 893 | |
| 894 | TYPE_CODE_FLOAT Record |
| 895 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 896 | |
| 897 | ``[FLOAT]`` |
| 898 | |
| 899 | The ``FLOAT`` record (code 3) adds a ``float`` (32-bit floating point) type to |
| 900 | the type table. |
| 901 | |
| 902 | TYPE_CODE_DOUBLE Record |
| 903 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 904 | |
| 905 | ``[DOUBLE]`` |
| 906 | |
| 907 | The ``DOUBLE`` record (code 4) adds a ``double`` (64-bit floating point) type to |
| 908 | the type table. |
| 909 | |
| 910 | TYPE_CODE_LABEL Record |
| 911 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 912 | |
| 913 | ``[LABEL]`` |
| 914 | |
| 915 | The ``LABEL`` record (code 5) adds a ``label`` type to the type table. |
| 916 | |
| 917 | TYPE_CODE_OPAQUE Record |
| 918 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 919 | |
| 920 | ``[OPAQUE]`` |
| 921 | |
| 922 | The ``OPAQUE`` record (code 6) adds an ``opaque`` type to the type table. Note |
| 923 | that distinct ``opaque`` types are not unified. |
| 924 | |
| 925 | TYPE_CODE_INTEGER Record |
| 926 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 927 | |
| 928 | ``[INTEGER, width]`` |
| 929 | |
| 930 | The ``INTEGER`` record (code 7) adds an integer type to the type table. The |
| 931 | single *width* field indicates the width of the integer type. |
| 932 | |
| 933 | TYPE_CODE_POINTER Record |
| 934 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 935 | |
| 936 | ``[POINTER, pointee type, address space]`` |
| 937 | |
| 938 | The ``POINTER`` record (code 8) adds a pointer type to the type table. The |
| 939 | operand fields are |
| 940 | |
| 941 | * *pointee type*: The type index of the pointed-to type |
| 942 | |
| 943 | * *address space*: If supplied, the target-specific numbered address space where |
| 944 | the pointed-to object resides. Otherwise, the default address space is zero. |
| 945 | |
| 946 | TYPE_CODE_FUNCTION Record |
| 947 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 948 | |
| 949 | ``[FUNCTION, vararg, ignored, retty, ...paramty... ]`` |
| 950 | |
| 951 | The ``FUNCTION`` record (code 9) adds a function type to the type table. The |
| 952 | operand fields are |
| 953 | |
| 954 | * *vararg*: Non-zero if the type represents a varargs function |
| 955 | |
| 956 | * *ignored*: This value field is present for backward compatibility only, and is |
| 957 | ignored |
| 958 | |
| 959 | * *retty*: The type index of the function's return type |
| 960 | |
| 961 | * *paramty*: Zero or more type indices representing the parameter types of the |
| 962 | function |
| 963 | |
| 964 | TYPE_CODE_STRUCT Record |
| 965 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 966 | |
| 967 | ``[STRUCT, ispacked, ...eltty...]`` |
| 968 | |
| 969 | The ``STRUCT`` record (code 10) adds a struct type to the type table. The |
| 970 | operand fields are |
| 971 | |
| 972 | * *ispacked*: Non-zero if the type represents a packed structure |
| 973 | |
| 974 | * *eltty*: Zero or more type indices representing the element types of the |
| 975 | structure |
| 976 | |
| 977 | TYPE_CODE_ARRAY Record |
| 978 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 979 | |
| 980 | ``[ARRAY, numelts, eltty]`` |
| 981 | |
| 982 | The ``ARRAY`` record (code 11) adds an array type to the type table. The |
| 983 | operand fields are |
| 984 | |
| 985 | * *numelts*: The number of elements in arrays of this type |
| 986 | |
| 987 | * *eltty*: The type index of the array element type |
| 988 | |
| 989 | TYPE_CODE_VECTOR Record |
| 990 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 991 | |
| 992 | ``[VECTOR, numelts, eltty]`` |
| 993 | |
| 994 | The ``VECTOR`` record (code 12) adds a vector type to the type table. The |
| 995 | operand fields are |
| 996 | |
| 997 | * *numelts*: The number of elements in vectors of this type |
| 998 | |
| 999 | * *eltty*: The type index of the vector element type |
| 1000 | |
| 1001 | TYPE_CODE_X86_FP80 Record |
| 1002 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1003 | |
| 1004 | ``[X86_FP80]`` |
| 1005 | |
| 1006 | The ``X86_FP80`` record (code 13) adds an ``x86_fp80`` (80-bit floating point) |
| 1007 | type to the type table. |
| 1008 | |
| 1009 | TYPE_CODE_FP128 Record |
| 1010 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1011 | |
| 1012 | ``[FP128]`` |
| 1013 | |
| 1014 | The ``FP128`` record (code 14) adds an ``fp128`` (128-bit floating point) type |
| 1015 | to the type table. |
| 1016 | |
| 1017 | TYPE_CODE_PPC_FP128 Record |
| 1018 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1019 | |
| 1020 | ``[PPC_FP128]`` |
| 1021 | |
| 1022 | The ``PPC_FP128`` record (code 15) adds a ``ppc_fp128`` (128-bit floating point) |
| 1023 | type to the type table. |
| 1024 | |
| 1025 | TYPE_CODE_METADATA Record |
| 1026 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1027 | |
| 1028 | ``[METADATA]`` |
| 1029 | |
| 1030 | The ``METADATA`` record (code 16) adds a ``metadata`` type to the type table. |
| 1031 | |
| 1032 | .. _CONSTANTS_BLOCK: |
| 1033 | |
| 1034 | CONSTANTS_BLOCK Contents |
| 1035 | ------------------------ |
| 1036 | |
| 1037 | The ``CONSTANTS_BLOCK`` block (id 11) ... |
| 1038 | |
| 1039 | .. _FUNCTION_BLOCK: |
| 1040 | |
| 1041 | FUNCTION_BLOCK Contents |
| 1042 | ----------------------- |
| 1043 | |
| 1044 | The ``FUNCTION_BLOCK`` block (id 12) ... |
| 1045 | |
| 1046 | In addition to the record types described below, a ``FUNCTION_BLOCK`` block may |
| 1047 | contain the following sub-blocks: |
| 1048 | |
| 1049 | * `CONSTANTS_BLOCK`_ |
| 1050 | * `VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ |
| 1051 | * `METADATA_ATTACHMENT`_ |
| 1052 | |
| 1053 | .. _TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK: |
| 1054 | |
| 1055 | TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK Contents |
| 1056 | -------------------------- |
| 1057 | |
| 1058 | The ``TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`` block (id 13) contains entries which map between |
| 1059 | module-level named types and their corresponding type indices. |
| 1060 | |
| 1061 | .. _TST_CODE_ENTRY: |
| 1062 | |
| 1063 | TST_CODE_ENTRY Record |
| 1064 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1065 | |
| 1066 | ``[ENTRY, typeid, ...string...]`` |
| 1067 | |
| 1068 | The ``ENTRY`` record (code 1) contains a variable number of values, with the |
| 1069 | first giving the type index of the designated type, and the remaining values |
| 1070 | giving the character codes of the type name. Each entry corresponds to a single |
| 1071 | named type. |
| 1072 | |
| 1073 | .. _VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK: |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK Contents |
| 1076 | --------------------------- |
| 1077 | |
| 1078 | The ``VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`` block (id 14) ... |
| 1079 | |
| 1080 | .. _METADATA_BLOCK: |
| 1081 | |
| 1082 | METADATA_BLOCK Contents |
| 1083 | ----------------------- |
| 1084 | |
| 1085 | The ``METADATA_BLOCK`` block (id 15) ... |
| 1086 | |
| 1087 | .. _METADATA_ATTACHMENT: |
| 1088 | |
| 1089 | METADATA_ATTACHMENT Contents |
| 1090 | ---------------------------- |
| 1091 | |
| 1092 | The ``METADATA_ATTACHMENT`` block (id 16) ... |