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     13 
     14 <h1>Kaleidoscope: Adding JIT and Optimizer Support</h1>
     15 
     16 <ul>
     17 <li><a href="index.html">Up to Tutorial Index</a></li>
     18 <li>Chapter 4
     19   <ol>
     20     <li><a href="#intro">Chapter 4 Introduction</a></li>
     21     <li><a href="#trivialconstfold">Trivial Constant Folding</a></li>
     22     <li><a href="#optimizerpasses">LLVM Optimization Passes</a></li>
     23     <li><a href="#jit">Adding a JIT Compiler</a></li>
     24     <li><a href="#code">Full Code Listing</a></li>
     25   </ol>
     26 </li>
     27 <li><a href="LangImpl5.html">Chapter 5</a>: Extending the Language: Control 
     28 Flow</li>
     29 </ul>
     30 
     31 <div class="doc_author">
     32   <p>Written by <a href="mailto:sabre (a] nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a></p>
     33 </div>
     34 
     35 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
     36 <h2><a name="intro">Chapter 4 Introduction</a></h2>
     37 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
     38 
     39 <div>
     40 
     41 <p>Welcome to Chapter 4 of the "<a href="index.html">Implementing a language
     42 with LLVM</a>" tutorial.  Chapters 1-3 described the implementation of a simple
     43 language and added support for generating LLVM IR.  This chapter describes
     44 two new techniques: adding optimizer support to your language, and adding JIT
     45 compiler support.  These additions will demonstrate how to get nice, efficient code 
     46 for the Kaleidoscope language.</p>
     47 
     48 </div>
     49 
     50 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
     51 <h2><a name="trivialconstfold">Trivial Constant Folding</a></h2>
     52 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
     53 
     54 <div>
     55 
     56 <p>
     57 Our demonstration for Chapter 3 is elegant and easy to extend.  Unfortunately,
     58 it does not produce wonderful code.  The IRBuilder, however, does give us
     59 obvious optimizations when compiling simple code:</p>
     60 
     61 <div class="doc_code">
     62 <pre>
     63 ready&gt; <b>def test(x) 1+2+x;</b>
     64 Read function definition:
     65 define double @test(double %x) {
     66 entry:
     67         %addtmp = fadd double 3.000000e+00, %x
     68         ret double %addtmp
     69 }
     70 </pre>
     71 </div>
     72 
     73 <p>This code is not a literal transcription of the AST built by parsing the 
     74 input. That would be:
     75 
     76 <div class="doc_code">
     77 <pre>
     78 ready&gt; <b>def test(x) 1+2+x;</b>
     79 Read function definition:
     80 define double @test(double %x) {
     81 entry:
     82         %addtmp = fadd double 2.000000e+00, 1.000000e+00
     83         %addtmp1 = fadd double %addtmp, %x
     84         ret double %addtmp1
     85 }
     86 </pre>
     87 </div>
     88 
     89 <p>Constant folding, as seen above, in particular, is a very common and very
     90 important optimization: so much so that many language implementors implement
     91 constant folding support in their AST representation.</p>
     92 
     93 <p>With LLVM, you don't need this support in the AST.  Since all calls to build 
     94 LLVM IR go through the LLVM IR builder, the builder itself checked to see if 
     95 there was a constant folding opportunity when you call it.  If so, it just does 
     96 the constant fold and return the constant instead of creating an instruction.
     97 
     98 <p>Well, that was easy :).  In practice, we recommend always using
     99 <tt>IRBuilder</tt> when generating code like this.  It has no
    100 "syntactic overhead" for its use (you don't have to uglify your compiler with
    101 constant checks everywhere) and it can dramatically reduce the amount of
    102 LLVM IR that is generated in some cases (particular for languages with a macro
    103 preprocessor or that use a lot of constants).</p>
    104 
    105 <p>On the other hand, the <tt>IRBuilder</tt> is limited by the fact
    106 that it does all of its analysis inline with the code as it is built.  If you
    107 take a slightly more complex example:</p>
    108 
    109 <div class="doc_code">
    110 <pre>
    111 ready&gt; <b>def test(x) (1+2+x)*(x+(1+2));</b>
    112 ready> Read function definition:
    113 define double @test(double %x) {
    114 entry:
    115         %addtmp = fadd double 3.000000e+00, %x
    116         %addtmp1 = fadd double %x, 3.000000e+00
    117         %multmp = fmul double %addtmp, %addtmp1
    118         ret double %multmp
    119 }
    120 </pre>
    121 </div>
    122 
    123 <p>In this case, the LHS and RHS of the multiplication are the same value.  We'd
    124 really like to see this generate "<tt>tmp = x+3; result = tmp*tmp;</tt>" instead
    125 of computing "<tt>x+3</tt>" twice.</p>
    126 
    127 <p>Unfortunately, no amount of local analysis will be able to detect and correct
    128 this.  This requires two transformations: reassociation of expressions (to 
    129 make the add's lexically identical) and Common Subexpression Elimination (CSE)
    130 to  delete the redundant add instruction.  Fortunately, LLVM provides a broad
    131 range of optimizations that you can use, in the form of "passes".</p>
    132 
    133 </div>
    134 
    135 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    136 <h2><a name="optimizerpasses">LLVM Optimization Passes</a></h2>
    137 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    138 
    139 <div>
    140 
    141 <p>LLVM provides many optimization passes, which do many different sorts of
    142 things and have different tradeoffs.  Unlike other systems, LLVM doesn't hold
    143 to the mistaken notion that one set of optimizations is right for all languages
    144 and for all situations.  LLVM allows a compiler implementor to make complete
    145 decisions about what optimizations to use, in which order, and in what
    146 situation.</p>
    147 
    148 <p>As a concrete example, LLVM supports both "whole module" passes, which look
    149 across as large of body of code as they can (often a whole file, but if run 
    150 at link time, this can be a substantial portion of the whole program).  It also
    151 supports and includes "per-function" passes which just operate on a single
    152 function at a time, without looking at other functions.  For more information
    153 on passes and how they are run, see the <a href="../WritingAnLLVMPass.html">How
    154 to Write a Pass</a> document and the <a href="../Passes.html">List of LLVM 
    155 Passes</a>.</p>
    156 
    157 <p>For Kaleidoscope, we are currently generating functions on the fly, one at
    158 a time, as the user types them in.  We aren't shooting for the ultimate
    159 optimization experience in this setting, but we also want to catch the easy and
    160 quick stuff where possible.  As such, we will choose to run a few per-function
    161 optimizations as the user types the function in.  If we wanted to make a "static
    162 Kaleidoscope compiler", we would use exactly the code we have now, except that
    163 we would defer running the optimizer until the entire file has been parsed.</p>
    164 
    165 <p>In order to get per-function optimizations going, we need to set up a
    166 <a href="../WritingAnLLVMPass.html#passmanager">FunctionPassManager</a> to hold and
    167 organize the LLVM optimizations that we want to run.  Once we have that, we can
    168 add a set of optimizations to run.  The code looks like this:</p>
    169 
    170 <div class="doc_code">
    171 <pre>
    172   FunctionPassManager OurFPM(TheModule);
    173 
    174   // Set up the optimizer pipeline.  Start with registering info about how the
    175   // target lays out data structures.
    176   OurFPM.add(new TargetData(*TheExecutionEngine->getTargetData()));
    177   // Provide basic AliasAnalysis support for GVN.
    178   OurFPM.add(createBasicAliasAnalysisPass());
    179   // Do simple "peephole" optimizations and bit-twiddling optzns.
    180   OurFPM.add(createInstructionCombiningPass());
    181   // Reassociate expressions.
    182   OurFPM.add(createReassociatePass());
    183   // Eliminate Common SubExpressions.
    184   OurFPM.add(createGVNPass());
    185   // Simplify the control flow graph (deleting unreachable blocks, etc).
    186   OurFPM.add(createCFGSimplificationPass());
    187 
    188   OurFPM.doInitialization();
    189 
    190   // Set the global so the code gen can use this.
    191   TheFPM = &amp;OurFPM;
    192 
    193   // Run the main "interpreter loop" now.
    194   MainLoop();
    195 </pre>
    196 </div>
    197 
    198 <p>This code defines a <tt>FunctionPassManager</tt>, "<tt>OurFPM</tt>".  It
    199 requires a pointer to the <tt>Module</tt> to construct itself.  Once it is set
    200 up, we use a series of "add" calls to add a bunch of LLVM passes.  The first
    201 pass is basically boilerplate, it adds a pass so that later optimizations know
    202 how the data structures in the program are laid out.  The
    203 "<tt>TheExecutionEngine</tt>" variable is related to the JIT, which we will get
    204 to in the next section.</p>
    205 
    206 <p>In this case, we choose to add 4 optimization passes.  The passes we chose
    207 here are a pretty standard set of "cleanup" optimizations that are useful for
    208 a wide variety of code.  I won't delve into what they do but, believe me,
    209 they are a good starting place :).</p>
    210 
    211 <p>Once the PassManager is set up, we need to make use of it.  We do this by
    212 running it after our newly created function is constructed (in 
    213 <tt>FunctionAST::Codegen</tt>), but before it is returned to the client:</p>
    214 
    215 <div class="doc_code">
    216 <pre>
    217   if (Value *RetVal = Body->Codegen()) {
    218     // Finish off the function.
    219     Builder.CreateRet(RetVal);
    220 
    221     // Validate the generated code, checking for consistency.
    222     verifyFunction(*TheFunction);
    223 
    224     <b>// Optimize the function.
    225     TheFPM-&gt;run(*TheFunction);</b>
    226     
    227     return TheFunction;
    228   }
    229 </pre>
    230 </div>
    231 
    232 <p>As you can see, this is pretty straightforward.  The 
    233 <tt>FunctionPassManager</tt> optimizes and updates the LLVM Function* in place,
    234 improving (hopefully) its body.  With this in place, we can try our test above
    235 again:</p>
    236 
    237 <div class="doc_code">
    238 <pre>
    239 ready&gt; <b>def test(x) (1+2+x)*(x+(1+2));</b>
    240 ready> Read function definition:
    241 define double @test(double %x) {
    242 entry:
    243         %addtmp = fadd double %x, 3.000000e+00
    244         %multmp = fmul double %addtmp, %addtmp
    245         ret double %multmp
    246 }
    247 </pre>
    248 </div>
    249 
    250 <p>As expected, we now get our nicely optimized code, saving a floating point
    251 add instruction from every execution of this function.</p>
    252 
    253 <p>LLVM provides a wide variety of optimizations that can be used in certain
    254 circumstances.  Some <a href="../Passes.html">documentation about the various 
    255 passes</a> is available, but it isn't very complete.  Another good source of
    256 ideas can come from looking at the passes that <tt>Clang</tt> runs to get
    257 started.  The "<tt>opt</tt>" tool allows you to experiment with passes from the
    258 command line, so you can see if they do anything.</p>
    259 
    260 <p>Now that we have reasonable code coming out of our front-end, lets talk about
    261 executing it!</p>
    262 
    263 </div>
    264 
    265 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    266 <h2><a name="jit">Adding a JIT Compiler</a></h2>
    267 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    268 
    269 <div>
    270 
    271 <p>Code that is available in LLVM IR can have a wide variety of tools 
    272 applied to it.  For example, you can run optimizations on it (as we did above),
    273 you can dump it out in textual or binary forms, you can compile the code to an
    274 assembly file (.s) for some target, or you can JIT compile it.  The nice thing
    275 about the LLVM IR representation is that it is the "common currency" between
    276 many different parts of the compiler.
    277 </p>
    278 
    279 <p>In this section, we'll add JIT compiler support to our interpreter.  The
    280 basic idea that we want for Kaleidoscope is to have the user enter function
    281 bodies as they do now, but immediately evaluate the top-level expressions they
    282 type in.  For example, if they type in "1 + 2;", we should evaluate and print
    283 out 3.  If they define a function, they should be able to call it from the 
    284 command line.</p>
    285 
    286 <p>In order to do this, we first declare and initialize the JIT.  This is done
    287 by adding a global variable and a call in <tt>main</tt>:</p>
    288 
    289 <div class="doc_code">
    290 <pre>
    291 <b>static ExecutionEngine *TheExecutionEngine;</b>
    292 ...
    293 int main() {
    294   ..
    295   <b>// Create the JIT.  This takes ownership of the module.
    296   TheExecutionEngine = EngineBuilder(TheModule).create();</b>
    297   ..
    298 }
    299 </pre>
    300 </div>
    301 
    302 <p>This creates an abstract "Execution Engine" which can be either a JIT
    303 compiler or the LLVM interpreter.  LLVM will automatically pick a JIT compiler
    304 for you if one is available for your platform, otherwise it will fall back to
    305 the interpreter.</p>
    306 
    307 <p>Once the <tt>ExecutionEngine</tt> is created, the JIT is ready to be used.
    308 There are a variety of APIs that are useful, but the simplest one is the
    309 "<tt>getPointerToFunction(F)</tt>" method.  This method JIT compiles the
    310 specified LLVM Function and returns a function pointer to the generated machine
    311 code.  In our case, this means that we can change the code that parses a
    312 top-level expression to look like this:</p>
    313 
    314 <div class="doc_code">
    315 <pre>
    316 static void HandleTopLevelExpression() {
    317   // Evaluate a top-level expression into an anonymous function.
    318   if (FunctionAST *F = ParseTopLevelExpr()) {
    319     if (Function *LF = F-&gt;Codegen()) {
    320       LF->dump();  // Dump the function for exposition purposes.
    321     
    322       <b>// JIT the function, returning a function pointer.
    323       void *FPtr = TheExecutionEngine-&gt;getPointerToFunction(LF);
    324       
    325       // Cast it to the right type (takes no arguments, returns a double) so we
    326       // can call it as a native function.
    327       double (*FP)() = (double (*)())(intptr_t)FPtr;
    328       fprintf(stderr, "Evaluated to %f\n", FP());</b>
    329     }
    330 </pre>
    331 </div>
    332 
    333 <p>Recall that we compile top-level expressions into a self-contained LLVM
    334 function that takes no arguments and returns the computed double.  Because the 
    335 LLVM JIT compiler matches the native platform ABI, this means that you can just
    336 cast the result pointer to a function pointer of that type and call it directly.
    337 This means, there is no difference between JIT compiled code and native machine
    338 code that is statically linked into your application.</p>
    339 
    340 <p>With just these two changes, lets see how Kaleidoscope works now!</p>
    341 
    342 <div class="doc_code">
    343 <pre>
    344 ready&gt; <b>4+5;</b>
    345 Read top-level expression:
    346 define double @0() {
    347 entry:
    348   ret double 9.000000e+00
    349 }
    350 
    351 <em>Evaluated to 9.000000</em>
    352 </pre>
    353 </div>
    354 
    355 <p>Well this looks like it is basically working.  The dump of the function
    356 shows the "no argument function that always returns double" that we synthesize
    357 for each top-level expression that is typed in.  This demonstrates very basic
    358 functionality, but can we do more?</p>
    359 
    360 <div class="doc_code">
    361 <pre>
    362 ready&gt; <b>def testfunc(x y) x + y*2; </b> 
    363 Read function definition:
    364 define double @testfunc(double %x, double %y) {
    365 entry:
    366   %multmp = fmul double %y, 2.000000e+00
    367   %addtmp = fadd double %multmp, %x
    368   ret double %addtmp
    369 }
    370 
    371 ready&gt; <b>testfunc(4, 10);</b>
    372 Read top-level expression:
    373 define double @1() {
    374 entry:
    375   %calltmp = call double @testfunc(double 4.000000e+00, double 1.000000e+01)
    376   ret double %calltmp
    377 }
    378 
    379 <em>Evaluated to 24.000000</em>
    380 </pre>
    381 </div>
    382 
    383 <p>This illustrates that we can now call user code, but there is something a bit
    384 subtle going on here.  Note that we only invoke the JIT on the anonymous
    385 functions that <em>call testfunc</em>, but we never invoked it
    386 on <em>testfunc</em> itself.  What actually happened here is that the JIT
    387 scanned for all non-JIT'd functions transitively called from the anonymous
    388 function and compiled all of them before returning
    389 from <tt>getPointerToFunction()</tt>.</p>
    390 
    391 <p>The JIT provides a number of other more advanced interfaces for things like
    392 freeing allocated machine code, rejit'ing functions to update them, etc.
    393 However, even with this simple code, we get some surprisingly powerful
    394 capabilities - check this out (I removed the dump of the anonymous functions,
    395 you should get the idea by now :) :</p>
    396 
    397 <div class="doc_code">
    398 <pre>
    399 ready&gt; <b>extern sin(x);</b>
    400 Read extern: 
    401 declare double @sin(double)
    402 
    403 ready&gt; <b>extern cos(x);</b>
    404 Read extern: 
    405 declare double @cos(double)
    406 
    407 ready&gt; <b>sin(1.0);</b>
    408 Read top-level expression:
    409 define double @2() {
    410 entry:
    411   ret double 0x3FEAED548F090CEE
    412 }
    413 
    414 <em>Evaluated to 0.841471</em>
    415 
    416 ready&gt; <b>def foo(x) sin(x)*sin(x) + cos(x)*cos(x);</b>
    417 Read function definition:
    418 define double @foo(double %x) {
    419 entry:
    420   %calltmp = call double @sin(double %x)
    421   %multmp = fmul double %calltmp, %calltmp
    422   %calltmp2 = call double @cos(double %x)
    423   %multmp4 = fmul double %calltmp2, %calltmp2
    424   %addtmp = fadd double %multmp, %multmp4
    425   ret double %addtmp
    426 }
    427 
    428 ready&gt; <b>foo(4.0);</b>
    429 Read top-level expression:
    430 define double @3() {
    431 entry:
    432   %calltmp = call double @foo(double 4.000000e+00)
    433   ret double %calltmp
    434 }
    435 
    436 <em>Evaluated to 1.000000</em>
    437 </pre>
    438 </div>
    439 
    440 <p>Whoa, how does the JIT know about sin and cos?  The answer is surprisingly
    441 simple: in this
    442 example, the JIT started execution of a function and got to a function call.  It
    443 realized that the function was not yet JIT compiled and invoked the standard set
    444 of routines to resolve the function.  In this case, there is no body defined
    445 for the function, so the JIT ended up calling "<tt>dlsym("sin")</tt>" on the
    446 Kaleidoscope process itself.
    447 Since "<tt>sin</tt>" is defined within the JIT's address space, it simply
    448 patches up calls in the module to call the libm version of <tt>sin</tt>
    449 directly.</p>
    450 
    451 <p>The LLVM JIT provides a number of interfaces (look in the 
    452 <tt>ExecutionEngine.h</tt> file) for controlling how unknown functions get
    453 resolved.  It allows you to establish explicit mappings between IR objects and
    454 addresses (useful for LLVM global variables that you want to map to static
    455 tables, for example), allows you to dynamically decide on the fly based on the
    456 function name, and even allows you to have the JIT compile functions lazily the
    457 first time they're called.</p>
    458 
    459 <p>One interesting application of this is that we can now extend the language
    460 by writing arbitrary C++ code to implement operations.  For example, if we add:
    461 </p>
    462 
    463 <div class="doc_code">
    464 <pre>
    465 /// putchard - putchar that takes a double and returns 0.
    466 extern "C" 
    467 double putchard(double X) {
    468   putchar((char)X);
    469   return 0;
    470 }
    471 </pre>
    472 </div>
    473 
    474 <p>Now we can produce simple output to the console by using things like:
    475 "<tt>extern putchard(x); putchard(120);</tt>", which prints a lowercase 'x' on
    476 the console (120 is the ASCII code for 'x').  Similar code could be used to 
    477 implement file I/O, console input, and many other capabilities in
    478 Kaleidoscope.</p>
    479 
    480 <p>This completes the JIT and optimizer chapter of the Kaleidoscope tutorial. At
    481 this point, we can compile a non-Turing-complete programming language, optimize
    482 and JIT compile it in a user-driven way.  Next up we'll look into <a 
    483 href="LangImpl5.html">extending the language with control flow constructs</a>,
    484 tackling some interesting LLVM IR issues along the way.</p>
    485 
    486 </div>
    487 
    488 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    489 <h2><a name="code">Full Code Listing</a></h2>
    490 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    491 
    492 <div>
    493 
    494 <p>
    495 Here is the complete code listing for our running example, enhanced with the
    496 LLVM JIT and optimizer.  To build this example, use:
    497 </p>
    498 
    499 <div class="doc_code">
    500 <pre>
    501 # Compile
    502 clang++ -g toy.cpp `llvm-config --cppflags --ldflags --libs core jit native` -O3 -o toy
    503 # Run
    504 ./toy
    505 </pre>
    506 </div>
    507 
    508 <p>
    509 If you are compiling this on Linux, make sure to add the "-rdynamic" option 
    510 as well.  This makes sure that the external functions are resolved properly 
    511 at runtime.</p>
    512 
    513 <p>Here is the code:</p>
    514 
    515 <div class="doc_code">
    516 <pre>
    517 #include "llvm/DerivedTypes.h"
    518 #include "llvm/ExecutionEngine/ExecutionEngine.h"
    519 #include "llvm/ExecutionEngine/JIT.h"
    520 #include "llvm/IRBuilder.h"
    521 #include "llvm/LLVMContext.h"
    522 #include "llvm/Module.h"
    523 #include "llvm/PassManager.h"
    524 #include "llvm/Analysis/Verifier.h"
    525 #include "llvm/Analysis/Passes.h"
    526 #include "llvm/Target/TargetData.h"
    527 #include "llvm/Transforms/Scalar.h"
    528 #include "llvm/Support/TargetSelect.h"
    529 #include &lt;cstdio&gt;
    530 #include &lt;string&gt;
    531 #include &lt;map&gt;
    532 #include &lt;vector&gt;
    533 using namespace llvm;
    534 
    535 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    536 // Lexer
    537 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    538 
    539 // The lexer returns tokens [0-255] if it is an unknown character, otherwise one
    540 // of these for known things.
    541 enum Token {
    542   tok_eof = -1,
    543 
    544   // commands
    545   tok_def = -2, tok_extern = -3,
    546 
    547   // primary
    548   tok_identifier = -4, tok_number = -5
    549 };
    550 
    551 static std::string IdentifierStr;  // Filled in if tok_identifier
    552 static double NumVal;              // Filled in if tok_number
    553 
    554 /// gettok - Return the next token from standard input.
    555 static int gettok() {
    556   static int LastChar = ' ';
    557 
    558   // Skip any whitespace.
    559   while (isspace(LastChar))
    560     LastChar = getchar();
    561 
    562   if (isalpha(LastChar)) { // identifier: [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9]*
    563     IdentifierStr = LastChar;
    564     while (isalnum((LastChar = getchar())))
    565       IdentifierStr += LastChar;
    566 
    567     if (IdentifierStr == "def") return tok_def;
    568     if (IdentifierStr == "extern") return tok_extern;
    569     return tok_identifier;
    570   }
    571 
    572   if (isdigit(LastChar) || LastChar == '.') {   // Number: [0-9.]+
    573     std::string NumStr;
    574     do {
    575       NumStr += LastChar;
    576       LastChar = getchar();
    577     } while (isdigit(LastChar) || LastChar == '.');
    578 
    579     NumVal = strtod(NumStr.c_str(), 0);
    580     return tok_number;
    581   }
    582 
    583   if (LastChar == '#') {
    584     // Comment until end of line.
    585     do LastChar = getchar();
    586     while (LastChar != EOF &amp;&amp; LastChar != '\n' &amp;&amp; LastChar != '\r');
    587     
    588     if (LastChar != EOF)
    589       return gettok();
    590   }
    591   
    592   // Check for end of file.  Don't eat the EOF.
    593   if (LastChar == EOF)
    594     return tok_eof;
    595 
    596   // Otherwise, just return the character as its ascii value.
    597   int ThisChar = LastChar;
    598   LastChar = getchar();
    599   return ThisChar;
    600 }
    601 
    602 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    603 // Abstract Syntax Tree (aka Parse Tree)
    604 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    605 
    606 /// ExprAST - Base class for all expression nodes.
    607 class ExprAST {
    608 public:
    609   virtual ~ExprAST() {}
    610   virtual Value *Codegen() = 0;
    611 };
    612 
    613 /// NumberExprAST - Expression class for numeric literals like "1.0".
    614 class NumberExprAST : public ExprAST {
    615   double Val;
    616 public:
    617   NumberExprAST(double val) : Val(val) {}
    618   virtual Value *Codegen();
    619 };
    620 
    621 /// VariableExprAST - Expression class for referencing a variable, like "a".
    622 class VariableExprAST : public ExprAST {
    623   std::string Name;
    624 public:
    625   VariableExprAST(const std::string &amp;name) : Name(name) {}
    626   virtual Value *Codegen();
    627 };
    628 
    629 /// BinaryExprAST - Expression class for a binary operator.
    630 class BinaryExprAST : public ExprAST {
    631   char Op;
    632   ExprAST *LHS, *RHS;
    633 public:
    634   BinaryExprAST(char op, ExprAST *lhs, ExprAST *rhs) 
    635     : Op(op), LHS(lhs), RHS(rhs) {}
    636   virtual Value *Codegen();
    637 };
    638 
    639 /// CallExprAST - Expression class for function calls.
    640 class CallExprAST : public ExprAST {
    641   std::string Callee;
    642   std::vector&lt;ExprAST*&gt; Args;
    643 public:
    644   CallExprAST(const std::string &amp;callee, std::vector&lt;ExprAST*&gt; &amp;args)
    645     : Callee(callee), Args(args) {}
    646   virtual Value *Codegen();
    647 };
    648 
    649 /// PrototypeAST - This class represents the "prototype" for a function,
    650 /// which captures its name, and its argument names (thus implicitly the number
    651 /// of arguments the function takes).
    652 class PrototypeAST {
    653   std::string Name;
    654   std::vector&lt;std::string&gt; Args;
    655 public:
    656   PrototypeAST(const std::string &amp;name, const std::vector&lt;std::string&gt; &amp;args)
    657     : Name(name), Args(args) {}
    658   
    659   Function *Codegen();
    660 };
    661 
    662 /// FunctionAST - This class represents a function definition itself.
    663 class FunctionAST {
    664   PrototypeAST *Proto;
    665   ExprAST *Body;
    666 public:
    667   FunctionAST(PrototypeAST *proto, ExprAST *body)
    668     : Proto(proto), Body(body) {}
    669   
    670   Function *Codegen();
    671 };
    672 
    673 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    674 // Parser
    675 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    676 
    677 /// CurTok/getNextToken - Provide a simple token buffer.  CurTok is the current
    678 /// token the parser is looking at.  getNextToken reads another token from the
    679 /// lexer and updates CurTok with its results.
    680 static int CurTok;
    681 static int getNextToken() {
    682   return CurTok = gettok();
    683 }
    684 
    685 /// BinopPrecedence - This holds the precedence for each binary operator that is
    686 /// defined.
    687 static std::map&lt;char, int&gt; BinopPrecedence;
    688 
    689 /// GetTokPrecedence - Get the precedence of the pending binary operator token.
    690 static int GetTokPrecedence() {
    691   if (!isascii(CurTok))
    692     return -1;
    693   
    694   // Make sure it's a declared binop.
    695   int TokPrec = BinopPrecedence[CurTok];
    696   if (TokPrec &lt;= 0) return -1;
    697   return TokPrec;
    698 }
    699 
    700 /// Error* - These are little helper functions for error handling.
    701 ExprAST *Error(const char *Str) { fprintf(stderr, "Error: %s\n", Str);return 0;}
    702 PrototypeAST *ErrorP(const char *Str) { Error(Str); return 0; }
    703 FunctionAST *ErrorF(const char *Str) { Error(Str); return 0; }
    704 
    705 static ExprAST *ParseExpression();
    706 
    707 /// identifierexpr
    708 ///   ::= identifier
    709 ///   ::= identifier '(' expression* ')'
    710 static ExprAST *ParseIdentifierExpr() {
    711   std::string IdName = IdentifierStr;
    712   
    713   getNextToken();  // eat identifier.
    714   
    715   if (CurTok != '(') // Simple variable ref.
    716     return new VariableExprAST(IdName);
    717   
    718   // Call.
    719   getNextToken();  // eat (
    720   std::vector&lt;ExprAST*&gt; Args;
    721   if (CurTok != ')') {
    722     while (1) {
    723       ExprAST *Arg = ParseExpression();
    724       if (!Arg) return 0;
    725       Args.push_back(Arg);
    726 
    727       if (CurTok == ')') break;
    728 
    729       if (CurTok != ',')
    730         return Error("Expected ')' or ',' in argument list");
    731       getNextToken();
    732     }
    733   }
    734 
    735   // Eat the ')'.
    736   getNextToken();
    737   
    738   return new CallExprAST(IdName, Args);
    739 }
    740 
    741 /// numberexpr ::= number
    742 static ExprAST *ParseNumberExpr() {
    743   ExprAST *Result = new NumberExprAST(NumVal);
    744   getNextToken(); // consume the number
    745   return Result;
    746 }
    747 
    748 /// parenexpr ::= '(' expression ')'
    749 static ExprAST *ParseParenExpr() {
    750   getNextToken();  // eat (.
    751   ExprAST *V = ParseExpression();
    752   if (!V) return 0;
    753   
    754   if (CurTok != ')')
    755     return Error("expected ')'");
    756   getNextToken();  // eat ).
    757   return V;
    758 }
    759 
    760 /// primary
    761 ///   ::= identifierexpr
    762 ///   ::= numberexpr
    763 ///   ::= parenexpr
    764 static ExprAST *ParsePrimary() {
    765   switch (CurTok) {
    766   default: return Error("unknown token when expecting an expression");
    767   case tok_identifier: return ParseIdentifierExpr();
    768   case tok_number:     return ParseNumberExpr();
    769   case '(':            return ParseParenExpr();
    770   }
    771 }
    772 
    773 /// binoprhs
    774 ///   ::= ('+' primary)*
    775 static ExprAST *ParseBinOpRHS(int ExprPrec, ExprAST *LHS) {
    776   // If this is a binop, find its precedence.
    777   while (1) {
    778     int TokPrec = GetTokPrecedence();
    779     
    780     // If this is a binop that binds at least as tightly as the current binop,
    781     // consume it, otherwise we are done.
    782     if (TokPrec &lt; ExprPrec)
    783       return LHS;
    784     
    785     // Okay, we know this is a binop.
    786     int BinOp = CurTok;
    787     getNextToken();  // eat binop
    788     
    789     // Parse the primary expression after the binary operator.
    790     ExprAST *RHS = ParsePrimary();
    791     if (!RHS) return 0;
    792     
    793     // If BinOp binds less tightly with RHS than the operator after RHS, let
    794     // the pending operator take RHS as its LHS.
    795     int NextPrec = GetTokPrecedence();
    796     if (TokPrec &lt; NextPrec) {
    797       RHS = ParseBinOpRHS(TokPrec+1, RHS);
    798       if (RHS == 0) return 0;
    799     }
    800     
    801     // Merge LHS/RHS.
    802     LHS = new BinaryExprAST(BinOp, LHS, RHS);
    803   }
    804 }
    805 
    806 /// expression
    807 ///   ::= primary binoprhs
    808 ///
    809 static ExprAST *ParseExpression() {
    810   ExprAST *LHS = ParsePrimary();
    811   if (!LHS) return 0;
    812   
    813   return ParseBinOpRHS(0, LHS);
    814 }
    815 
    816 /// prototype
    817 ///   ::= id '(' id* ')'
    818 static PrototypeAST *ParsePrototype() {
    819   if (CurTok != tok_identifier)
    820     return ErrorP("Expected function name in prototype");
    821 
    822   std::string FnName = IdentifierStr;
    823   getNextToken();
    824   
    825   if (CurTok != '(')
    826     return ErrorP("Expected '(' in prototype");
    827   
    828   std::vector&lt;std::string&gt; ArgNames;
    829   while (getNextToken() == tok_identifier)
    830     ArgNames.push_back(IdentifierStr);
    831   if (CurTok != ')')
    832     return ErrorP("Expected ')' in prototype");
    833   
    834   // success.
    835   getNextToken();  // eat ')'.
    836   
    837   return new PrototypeAST(FnName, ArgNames);
    838 }
    839 
    840 /// definition ::= 'def' prototype expression
    841 static FunctionAST *ParseDefinition() {
    842   getNextToken();  // eat def.
    843   PrototypeAST *Proto = ParsePrototype();
    844   if (Proto == 0) return 0;
    845 
    846   if (ExprAST *E = ParseExpression())
    847     return new FunctionAST(Proto, E);
    848   return 0;
    849 }
    850 
    851 /// toplevelexpr ::= expression
    852 static FunctionAST *ParseTopLevelExpr() {
    853   if (ExprAST *E = ParseExpression()) {
    854     // Make an anonymous proto.
    855     PrototypeAST *Proto = new PrototypeAST("", std::vector&lt;std::string&gt;());
    856     return new FunctionAST(Proto, E);
    857   }
    858   return 0;
    859 }
    860 
    861 /// external ::= 'extern' prototype
    862 static PrototypeAST *ParseExtern() {
    863   getNextToken();  // eat extern.
    864   return ParsePrototype();
    865 }
    866 
    867 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    868 // Code Generation
    869 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    870 
    871 static Module *TheModule;
    872 static IRBuilder&lt;&gt; Builder(getGlobalContext());
    873 static std::map&lt;std::string, Value*&gt; NamedValues;
    874 static FunctionPassManager *TheFPM;
    875 
    876 Value *ErrorV(const char *Str) { Error(Str); return 0; }
    877 
    878 Value *NumberExprAST::Codegen() {
    879   return ConstantFP::get(getGlobalContext(), APFloat(Val));
    880 }
    881 
    882 Value *VariableExprAST::Codegen() {
    883   // Look this variable up in the function.
    884   Value *V = NamedValues[Name];
    885   return V ? V : ErrorV("Unknown variable name");
    886 }
    887 
    888 Value *BinaryExprAST::Codegen() {
    889   Value *L = LHS-&gt;Codegen();
    890   Value *R = RHS-&gt;Codegen();
    891   if (L == 0 || R == 0) return 0;
    892   
    893   switch (Op) {
    894   case '+': return Builder.CreateFAdd(L, R, "addtmp");
    895   case '-': return Builder.CreateFSub(L, R, "subtmp");
    896   case '*': return Builder.CreateFMul(L, R, "multmp");
    897   case '&lt;':
    898     L = Builder.CreateFCmpULT(L, R, "cmptmp");
    899     // Convert bool 0/1 to double 0.0 or 1.0
    900     return Builder.CreateUIToFP(L, Type::getDoubleTy(getGlobalContext()),
    901                                 "booltmp");
    902   default: return ErrorV("invalid binary operator");
    903   }
    904 }
    905 
    906 Value *CallExprAST::Codegen() {
    907   // Look up the name in the global module table.
    908   Function *CalleeF = TheModule-&gt;getFunction(Callee);
    909   if (CalleeF == 0)
    910     return ErrorV("Unknown function referenced");
    911   
    912   // If argument mismatch error.
    913   if (CalleeF-&gt;arg_size() != Args.size())
    914     return ErrorV("Incorrect # arguments passed");
    915 
    916   std::vector&lt;Value*&gt; ArgsV;
    917   for (unsigned i = 0, e = Args.size(); i != e; ++i) {
    918     ArgsV.push_back(Args[i]-&gt;Codegen());
    919     if (ArgsV.back() == 0) return 0;
    920   }
    921   
    922   return Builder.CreateCall(CalleeF, ArgsV, "calltmp");
    923 }
    924 
    925 Function *PrototypeAST::Codegen() {
    926   // Make the function type:  double(double,double) etc.
    927   std::vector&lt;Type*&gt; Doubles(Args.size(),
    928                              Type::getDoubleTy(getGlobalContext()));
    929   FunctionType *FT = FunctionType::get(Type::getDoubleTy(getGlobalContext()),
    930                                        Doubles, false);
    931   
    932   Function *F = Function::Create(FT, Function::ExternalLinkage, Name, TheModule);
    933   
    934   // If F conflicted, there was already something named 'Name'.  If it has a
    935   // body, don't allow redefinition or reextern.
    936   if (F-&gt;getName() != Name) {
    937     // Delete the one we just made and get the existing one.
    938     F-&gt;eraseFromParent();
    939     F = TheModule-&gt;getFunction(Name);
    940     
    941     // If F already has a body, reject this.
    942     if (!F-&gt;empty()) {
    943       ErrorF("redefinition of function");
    944       return 0;
    945     }
    946     
    947     // If F took a different number of args, reject.
    948     if (F-&gt;arg_size() != Args.size()) {
    949       ErrorF("redefinition of function with different # args");
    950       return 0;
    951     }
    952   }
    953   
    954   // Set names for all arguments.
    955   unsigned Idx = 0;
    956   for (Function::arg_iterator AI = F-&gt;arg_begin(); Idx != Args.size();
    957        ++AI, ++Idx) {
    958     AI-&gt;setName(Args[Idx]);
    959     
    960     // Add arguments to variable symbol table.
    961     NamedValues[Args[Idx]] = AI;
    962   }
    963   
    964   return F;
    965 }
    966 
    967 Function *FunctionAST::Codegen() {
    968   NamedValues.clear();
    969   
    970   Function *TheFunction = Proto-&gt;Codegen();
    971   if (TheFunction == 0)
    972     return 0;
    973   
    974   // Create a new basic block to start insertion into.
    975   BasicBlock *BB = BasicBlock::Create(getGlobalContext(), "entry", TheFunction);
    976   Builder.SetInsertPoint(BB);
    977   
    978   if (Value *RetVal = Body-&gt;Codegen()) {
    979     // Finish off the function.
    980     Builder.CreateRet(RetVal);
    981 
    982     // Validate the generated code, checking for consistency.
    983     verifyFunction(*TheFunction);
    984 
    985     // Optimize the function.
    986     TheFPM-&gt;run(*TheFunction);
    987     
    988     return TheFunction;
    989   }
    990   
    991   // Error reading body, remove function.
    992   TheFunction-&gt;eraseFromParent();
    993   return 0;
    994 }
    995 
    996 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    997 // Top-Level parsing and JIT Driver
    998 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
    999 
   1000 static ExecutionEngine *TheExecutionEngine;
   1001 
   1002 static void HandleDefinition() {
   1003   if (FunctionAST *F = ParseDefinition()) {
   1004     if (Function *LF = F-&gt;Codegen()) {
   1005       fprintf(stderr, "Read function definition:");
   1006       LF-&gt;dump();
   1007     }
   1008   } else {
   1009     // Skip token for error recovery.
   1010     getNextToken();
   1011   }
   1012 }
   1013 
   1014 static void HandleExtern() {
   1015   if (PrototypeAST *P = ParseExtern()) {
   1016     if (Function *F = P-&gt;Codegen()) {
   1017       fprintf(stderr, "Read extern: ");
   1018       F-&gt;dump();
   1019     }
   1020   } else {
   1021     // Skip token for error recovery.
   1022     getNextToken();
   1023   }
   1024 }
   1025 
   1026 static void HandleTopLevelExpression() {
   1027   // Evaluate a top-level expression into an anonymous function.
   1028   if (FunctionAST *F = ParseTopLevelExpr()) {
   1029     if (Function *LF = F-&gt;Codegen()) {
   1030       fprintf(stderr, "Read top-level expression:");
   1031       LF->dump();
   1032 
   1033       // JIT the function, returning a function pointer.
   1034       void *FPtr = TheExecutionEngine-&gt;getPointerToFunction(LF);
   1035       
   1036       // Cast it to the right type (takes no arguments, returns a double) so we
   1037       // can call it as a native function.
   1038       double (*FP)() = (double (*)())(intptr_t)FPtr;
   1039       fprintf(stderr, "Evaluated to %f\n", FP());
   1040     }
   1041   } else {
   1042     // Skip token for error recovery.
   1043     getNextToken();
   1044   }
   1045 }
   1046 
   1047 /// top ::= definition | external | expression | ';'
   1048 static void MainLoop() {
   1049   while (1) {
   1050     fprintf(stderr, "ready&gt; ");
   1051     switch (CurTok) {
   1052     case tok_eof:    return;
   1053     case ';':        getNextToken(); break;  // ignore top-level semicolons.
   1054     case tok_def:    HandleDefinition(); break;
   1055     case tok_extern: HandleExtern(); break;
   1056     default:         HandleTopLevelExpression(); break;
   1057     }
   1058   }
   1059 }
   1060 
   1061 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
   1062 // "Library" functions that can be "extern'd" from user code.
   1063 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
   1064 
   1065 /// putchard - putchar that takes a double and returns 0.
   1066 extern "C" 
   1067 double putchard(double X) {
   1068   putchar((char)X);
   1069   return 0;
   1070 }
   1071 
   1072 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
   1073 // Main driver code.
   1074 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
   1075 
   1076 int main() {
   1077   InitializeNativeTarget();
   1078   LLVMContext &amp;Context = getGlobalContext();
   1079 
   1080   // Install standard binary operators.
   1081   // 1 is lowest precedence.
   1082   BinopPrecedence['&lt;'] = 10;
   1083   BinopPrecedence['+'] = 20;
   1084   BinopPrecedence['-'] = 20;
   1085   BinopPrecedence['*'] = 40;  // highest.
   1086 
   1087   // Prime the first token.
   1088   fprintf(stderr, "ready&gt; ");
   1089   getNextToken();
   1090 
   1091   // Make the module, which holds all the code.
   1092   TheModule = new Module("my cool jit", Context);
   1093 
   1094   // Create the JIT.  This takes ownership of the module.
   1095   std::string ErrStr;
   1096   TheExecutionEngine = EngineBuilder(TheModule).setErrorStr(&amp;ErrStr).create();
   1097   if (!TheExecutionEngine) {
   1098     fprintf(stderr, "Could not create ExecutionEngine: %s\n", ErrStr.c_str());
   1099     exit(1);
   1100   }
   1101 
   1102   FunctionPassManager OurFPM(TheModule);
   1103 
   1104   // Set up the optimizer pipeline.  Start with registering info about how the
   1105   // target lays out data structures.
   1106   OurFPM.add(new TargetData(*TheExecutionEngine-&gt;getTargetData()));
   1107   // Provide basic AliasAnalysis support for GVN.
   1108   OurFPM.add(createBasicAliasAnalysisPass());
   1109   // Do simple "peephole" optimizations and bit-twiddling optzns.
   1110   OurFPM.add(createInstructionCombiningPass());
   1111   // Reassociate expressions.
   1112   OurFPM.add(createReassociatePass());
   1113   // Eliminate Common SubExpressions.
   1114   OurFPM.add(createGVNPass());
   1115   // Simplify the control flow graph (deleting unreachable blocks, etc).
   1116   OurFPM.add(createCFGSimplificationPass());
   1117 
   1118   OurFPM.doInitialization();
   1119 
   1120   // Set the global so the code gen can use this.
   1121   TheFPM = &amp;OurFPM;
   1122 
   1123   // Run the main "interpreter loop" now.
   1124   MainLoop();
   1125 
   1126   TheFPM = 0;
   1127 
   1128   // Print out all of the generated code.
   1129   TheModule-&gt;dump();
   1130 
   1131   return 0;
   1132 }
   1133 </pre>
   1134 </div>
   1135 
   1136 <a href="LangImpl5.html">Next: Extending the language: control flow</a>
   1137 </div>
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   1147   <a href="mailto:sabre (a] nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a><br>
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