1 .. role:: raw-html(raw) 2 :format: html 3 4 ======================== 5 LLVM Bitcode File Format 6 ======================== 7 8 .. contents:: 9 :local: 10 11 Abstract 12 ======== 13 14 This document describes the LLVM bitstream file format and the encoding of the 15 LLVM IR into it. 16 17 Overview 18 ======== 19 20 What is commonly known as the LLVM bitcode file format (also, sometimes 21 anachronistically known as bytecode) is actually two things: a `bitstream 22 container format`_ and an `encoding of LLVM IR`_ into the container format. 23 24 The bitstream format is an abstract encoding of structured data, very similar to 25 XML in some ways. Like XML, bitstream files contain tags, and nested 26 structures, and you can parse the file without having to understand the tags. 27 Unlike XML, the bitstream format is a binary encoding, and unlike XML it 28 provides a mechanism for the file to self-describe "abbreviations", which are 29 effectively size optimizations for the content. 30 31 LLVM IR files may be optionally embedded into a `wrapper`_ structure that makes 32 it easy to embed extra data along with LLVM IR files. 33 34 This document first describes the LLVM bitstream format, describes the wrapper 35 format, then describes the record structure used by LLVM IR files. 36 37 .. _bitstream container format: 38 39 Bitstream Format 40 ================ 41 42 The bitstream format is literally a stream of bits, with a very simple 43 structure. This structure consists of the following concepts: 44 45 * A "`magic number`_" that identifies the contents of the stream. 46 47 * Encoding `primitives`_ like variable bit-rate integers. 48 49 * `Blocks`_, which define nested content. 50 51 * `Data Records`_, which describe entities within the file. 52 53 * Abbreviations, which specify compression optimizations for the file. 54 55 Note that the :doc:`llvm-bcanalyzer <CommandGuide/llvm-bcanalyzer>` tool can be 56 used to dump and inspect arbitrary bitstreams, which is very useful for 57 understanding the encoding. 58 59 .. _magic number: 60 61 Magic Numbers 62 ------------- 63 64 The first two bytes of a bitcode file are 'BC' (``0x42``, ``0x43``). The second 65 two bytes are an application-specific magic number. Generic bitcode tools can 66 look at only the first two bytes to verify the file is bitcode, while 67 application-specific programs will want to look at all four. 68 69 .. _primitives: 70 71 Primitives 72 ---------- 73 74 A bitstream literally consists of a stream of bits, which are read in order 75 starting with the least significant bit of each byte. The stream is made up of 76 a number of primitive values that encode a stream of unsigned integer values. 77 These integers are encoded in two ways: either as `Fixed Width Integers`_ or as 78 `Variable Width Integers`_. 79 80 .. _Fixed Width Integers: 81 .. _fixed-width value: 82 83 Fixed Width Integers 84 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 85 86 Fixed-width integer values have their low bits emitted directly to the file. 87 For example, a 3-bit integer value encodes 1 as 001. Fixed width integers are 88 used when there are a well-known number of options for a field. For example, 89 boolean values are usually encoded with a 1-bit wide integer. 90 91 .. _Variable Width Integers: 92 .. _Variable Width Integer: 93 .. _variable-width value: 94 95 Variable Width Integers 96 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 97 98 Variable-width integer (VBR) values encode values of arbitrary size, optimizing 99 for the case where the values are small. Given a 4-bit VBR field, any 3-bit 100 value (0 through 7) is encoded directly, with the high bit set to zero. Values 101 larger than N-1 bits emit their bits in a series of N-1 bit chunks, where all 102 but the last set the high bit. 103 104 For example, the value 27 (0x1B) is encoded as 1011 0011 when emitted as a vbr4 105 value. The first set of four bits indicates the value 3 (011) with a 106 continuation piece (indicated by a high bit of 1). The next word indicates a 107 value of 24 (011 << 3) with no continuation. The sum (3+24) yields the value 108 27. 109 110 .. _char6-encoded value: 111 112 6-bit characters 113 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 114 115 6-bit characters encode common characters into a fixed 6-bit field. They 116 represent the following characters with the following 6-bit values: 117 118 :: 119 120 'a' .. 'z' --- 0 .. 25 121 'A' .. 'Z' --- 26 .. 51 122 '0' .. '9' --- 52 .. 61 123 '.' --- 62 124 '_' --- 63 125 126 This encoding is only suitable for encoding characters and strings that consist 127 only of the above characters. It is completely incapable of encoding characters 128 not in the set. 129 130 Word Alignment 131 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 132 133 Occasionally, it is useful to emit zero bits until the bitstream is a multiple 134 of 32 bits. This ensures that the bit position in the stream can be represented 135 as a multiple of 32-bit words. 136 137 Abbreviation IDs 138 ---------------- 139 140 A bitstream is a sequential series of `Blocks`_ and `Data Records`_. Both of 141 these start with an abbreviation ID encoded as a fixed-bitwidth field. The 142 width is specified by the current block, as described below. The value of the 143 abbreviation ID specifies either a builtin ID (which have special meanings, 144 defined below) or one of the abbreviation IDs defined for the current block by 145 the stream itself. 146 147 The set of builtin abbrev IDs is: 148 149 * 0 - `END_BLOCK`_ --- This abbrev ID marks the end of the current block. 150 151 * 1 - `ENTER_SUBBLOCK`_ --- This abbrev ID marks the beginning of a new 152 block. 153 154 * 2 - `DEFINE_ABBREV`_ --- This defines a new abbreviation. 155 156 * 3 - `UNABBREV_RECORD`_ --- This ID specifies the definition of an 157 unabbreviated record. 158 159 Abbreviation IDs 4 and above are defined by the stream itself, and specify an 160 `abbreviated record encoding`_. 161 162 .. _Blocks: 163 164 Blocks 165 ------ 166 167 Blocks in a bitstream denote nested regions of the stream, and are identified by 168 a content-specific id number (for example, LLVM IR uses an ID of 12 to represent 169 function bodies). Block IDs 0-7 are reserved for `standard blocks`_ whose 170 meaning is defined by Bitcode; block IDs 8 and greater are application 171 specific. Nested blocks capture the hierarchical structure of the data encoded 172 in it, and various properties are associated with blocks as the file is parsed. 173 Block definitions allow the reader to efficiently skip blocks in constant time 174 if the reader wants a summary of blocks, or if it wants to efficiently skip data 175 it does not understand. The LLVM IR reader uses this mechanism to skip function 176 bodies, lazily reading them on demand. 177 178 When reading and encoding the stream, several properties are maintained for the 179 block. In particular, each block maintains: 180 181 #. A current abbrev id width. This value starts at 2 at the beginning of the 182 stream, and is set every time a block record is entered. The block entry 183 specifies the abbrev id width for the body of the block. 184 185 #. A set of abbreviations. Abbreviations may be defined within a block, in 186 which case they are only defined in that block (neither subblocks nor 187 enclosing blocks see the abbreviation). Abbreviations can also be defined 188 inside a `BLOCKINFO`_ block, in which case they are defined in all blocks 189 that match the ID that the ``BLOCKINFO`` block is describing. 190 191 As sub blocks are entered, these properties are saved and the new sub-block has 192 its own set of abbreviations, and its own abbrev id width. When a sub-block is 193 popped, the saved values are restored. 194 195 .. _ENTER_SUBBLOCK: 196 197 ENTER_SUBBLOCK Encoding 198 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 199 200 :raw-html:`<tt>` 201 [ENTER_SUBBLOCK, blockid\ :sub:`vbr8`, newabbrevlen\ :sub:`vbr4`, <align32bits>, blocklen_32] 202 :raw-html:`</tt>` 203 204 The ``ENTER_SUBBLOCK`` abbreviation ID specifies the start of a new block 205 record. The ``blockid`` value is encoded as an 8-bit VBR identifier, and 206 indicates the type of block being entered, which can be a `standard block`_ or 207 an application-specific block. The ``newabbrevlen`` value is a 4-bit VBR, which 208 specifies the abbrev id width for the sub-block. The ``blocklen`` value is a 209 32-bit aligned value that specifies the size of the subblock in 32-bit 210 words. This value allows the reader to skip over the entire block in one jump. 211 212 .. _END_BLOCK: 213 214 END_BLOCK Encoding 215 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 216 217 ``[END_BLOCK, <align32bits>]`` 218 219 The ``END_BLOCK`` abbreviation ID specifies the end of the current block record. 220 Its end is aligned to 32-bits to ensure that the size of the block is an even 221 multiple of 32-bits. 222 223 .. _Data Records: 224 225 Data Records 226 ------------ 227 228 Data records consist of a record code and a number of (up to) 64-bit integer 229 values. The interpretation of the code and values is application specific and 230 may vary between different block types. Records can be encoded either using an 231 unabbrev record, or with an abbreviation. In the LLVM IR format, for example, 232 there is a record which encodes the target triple of a module. The code is 233 ``MODULE_CODE_TRIPLE``, and the values of the record are the ASCII codes for the 234 characters in the string. 235 236 .. _UNABBREV_RECORD: 237 238 UNABBREV_RECORD Encoding 239 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 240 241 :raw-html:`<tt>` 242 [UNABBREV_RECORD, code\ :sub:`vbr6`, numops\ :sub:`vbr6`, op0\ :sub:`vbr6`, op1\ :sub:`vbr6`, ...] 243 :raw-html:`</tt>` 244 245 An ``UNABBREV_RECORD`` provides a default fallback encoding, which is both 246 completely general and extremely inefficient. It can describe an arbitrary 247 record by emitting the code and operands as VBRs. 248 249 For example, emitting an LLVM IR target triple as an unabbreviated record 250 requires emitting the ``UNABBREV_RECORD`` abbrevid, a vbr6 for the 251 ``MODULE_CODE_TRIPLE`` code, a vbr6 for the length of the string, which is equal 252 to the number of operands, and a vbr6 for each character. Because there are no 253 letters with values less than 32, each letter would need to be emitted as at 254 least a two-part VBR, which means that each letter would require at least 12 255 bits. This is not an efficient encoding, but it is fully general. 256 257 .. _abbreviated record encoding: 258 259 Abbreviated Record Encoding 260 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 261 262 ``[<abbrevid>, fields...]`` 263 264 An abbreviated record is a abbreviation id followed by a set of fields that are 265 encoded according to the `abbreviation definition`_. This allows records to be 266 encoded significantly more densely than records encoded with the 267 `UNABBREV_RECORD`_ type, and allows the abbreviation types to be specified in 268 the stream itself, which allows the files to be completely self describing. The 269 actual encoding of abbreviations is defined below. 270 271 The record code, which is the first field of an abbreviated record, may be 272 encoded in the abbreviation definition (as a literal operand) or supplied in the 273 abbreviated record (as a Fixed or VBR operand value). 274 275 .. _abbreviation definition: 276 277 Abbreviations 278 ------------- 279 280 Abbreviations are an important form of compression for bitstreams. The idea is 281 to specify a dense encoding for a class of records once, then use that encoding 282 to emit many records. It takes space to emit the encoding into the file, but 283 the space is recouped (hopefully plus some) when the records that use it are 284 emitted. 285 286 Abbreviations can be determined dynamically per client, per file. Because the 287 abbreviations are stored in the bitstream itself, different streams of the same 288 format can contain different sets of abbreviations according to the needs of the 289 specific stream. As a concrete example, LLVM IR files usually emit an 290 abbreviation for binary operators. If a specific LLVM module contained no or 291 few binary operators, the abbreviation does not need to be emitted. 292 293 .. _DEFINE_ABBREV: 294 295 DEFINE_ABBREV Encoding 296 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 297 298 :raw-html:`<tt>` 299 [DEFINE_ABBREV, numabbrevops\ :sub:`vbr5`, abbrevop0, abbrevop1, ...] 300 :raw-html:`</tt>` 301 302 A ``DEFINE_ABBREV`` record adds an abbreviation to the list of currently defined 303 abbreviations in the scope of this block. This definition only exists inside 304 this immediate block --- it is not visible in subblocks or enclosing blocks. 305 Abbreviations are implicitly assigned IDs sequentially starting from 4 (the 306 first application-defined abbreviation ID). Any abbreviations defined in a 307 ``BLOCKINFO`` record for the particular block type receive IDs first, in order, 308 followed by any abbreviations defined within the block itself. Abbreviated data 309 records reference this ID to indicate what abbreviation they are invoking. 310 311 An abbreviation definition consists of the ``DEFINE_ABBREV`` abbrevid followed 312 by a VBR that specifies the number of abbrev operands, then the abbrev operands 313 themselves. Abbreviation operands come in three forms. They all start with a 314 single bit that indicates whether the abbrev operand is a literal operand (when 315 the bit is 1) or an encoding operand (when the bit is 0). 316 317 #. Literal operands --- :raw-html:`<tt>` [1\ :sub:`1`, litvalue\ 318 :sub:`vbr8`] :raw-html:`</tt>` --- Literal operands specify that the value in 319 the result is always a single specific value. This specific value is emitted 320 as a vbr8 after the bit indicating that it is a literal operand. 321 322 #. Encoding info without data --- :raw-html:`<tt>` [0\ :sub:`1`, encoding\ 323 :sub:`3`] :raw-html:`</tt>` --- Operand encodings that do not have extra data 324 are just emitted as their code. 325 326 #. Encoding info with data --- :raw-html:`<tt>` [0\ :sub:`1`, encoding\ 327 :sub:`3`, value\ :sub:`vbr5`] :raw-html:`</tt>` --- Operand encodings that do 328 have extra data are emitted as their code, followed by the extra data. 329 330 The possible operand encodings are: 331 332 * Fixed (code 1): The field should be emitted as a `fixed-width value`_, whose 333 width is specified by the operand's extra data. 334 335 * VBR (code 2): The field should be emitted as a `variable-width value`_, whose 336 width is specified by the operand's extra data. 337 338 * Array (code 3): This field is an array of values. The array operand has no 339 extra data, but expects another operand to follow it, indicating the element 340 type of the array. When reading an array in an abbreviated record, the first 341 integer is a vbr6 that indicates the array length, followed by the encoded 342 elements of the array. An array may only occur as the last operand of an 343 abbreviation (except for the one final operand that gives the array's 344 type). 345 346 * Char6 (code 4): This field should be emitted as a `char6-encoded value`_. 347 This operand type takes no extra data. Char6 encoding is normally used as an 348 array element type. 349 350 * Blob (code 5): This field is emitted as a vbr6, followed by padding to a 351 32-bit boundary (for alignment) and an array of 8-bit objects. The array of 352 bytes is further followed by tail padding to ensure that its total length is a 353 multiple of 4 bytes. This makes it very efficient for the reader to decode 354 the data without having to make a copy of it: it can use a pointer to the data 355 in the mapped in file and poke directly at it. A blob may only occur as the 356 last operand of an abbreviation. 357 358 For example, target triples in LLVM modules are encoded as a record of the form 359 ``[TRIPLE, 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd']``. Consider if the bitstream emitted the 360 following abbrev entry: 361 362 :: 363 364 [0, Fixed, 4] 365 [0, Array] 366 [0, Char6] 367 368 When emitting a record with this abbreviation, the above entry would be emitted 369 as: 370 371 :raw-html:`<tt><blockquote>` 372 [4\ :sub:`abbrevwidth`, 2\ :sub:`4`, 4\ :sub:`vbr6`, 0\ :sub:`6`, 1\ :sub:`6`, 2\ :sub:`6`, 3\ :sub:`6`] 373 :raw-html:`</blockquote></tt>` 374 375 These values are: 376 377 #. The first value, 4, is the abbreviation ID for this abbreviation. 378 379 #. The second value, 2, is the record code for ``TRIPLE`` records within LLVM IR 380 file ``MODULE_BLOCK`` blocks. 381 382 #. The third value, 4, is the length of the array. 383 384 #. The rest of the values are the char6 encoded values for ``"abcd"``. 385 386 With this abbreviation, the triple is emitted with only 37 bits (assuming a 387 abbrev id width of 3). Without the abbreviation, significantly more space would 388 be required to emit the target triple. Also, because the ``TRIPLE`` value is 389 not emitted as a literal in the abbreviation, the abbreviation can also be used 390 for any other string value. 391 392 .. _standard blocks: 393 .. _standard block: 394 395 Standard Blocks 396 --------------- 397 398 In addition to the basic block structure and record encodings, the bitstream 399 also defines specific built-in block types. These block types specify how the 400 stream is to be decoded or other metadata. In the future, new standard blocks 401 may be added. Block IDs 0-7 are reserved for standard blocks. 402 403 .. _BLOCKINFO: 404 405 #0 - BLOCKINFO Block 406 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 407 408 The ``BLOCKINFO`` block allows the description of metadata for other blocks. 409 The currently specified records are: 410 411 :: 412 413 [SETBID (#1), blockid] 414 [DEFINE_ABBREV, ...] 415 [BLOCKNAME, ...name...] 416 [SETRECORDNAME, RecordID, ...name...] 417 418 The ``SETBID`` record (code 1) indicates which block ID is being described. 419 ``SETBID`` records can occur multiple times throughout the block to change which 420 block ID is being described. There must be a ``SETBID`` record prior to any 421 other records. 422 423 Standard ``DEFINE_ABBREV`` records can occur inside ``BLOCKINFO`` blocks, but 424 unlike their occurrence in normal blocks, the abbreviation is defined for blocks 425 matching the block ID we are describing, *not* the ``BLOCKINFO`` block 426 itself. The abbreviations defined in ``BLOCKINFO`` blocks receive abbreviation 427 IDs as described in `DEFINE_ABBREV`_. 428 429 The ``BLOCKNAME`` record (code 2) can optionally occur in this block. The 430 elements of the record are the bytes of the string name of the block. 431 llvm-bcanalyzer can use this to dump out bitcode files symbolically. 432 433 The ``SETRECORDNAME`` record (code 3) can also optionally occur in this block. 434 The first operand value is a record ID number, and the rest of the elements of 435 the record are the bytes for the string name of the record. llvm-bcanalyzer can 436 use this to dump out bitcode files symbolically. 437 438 Note that although the data in ``BLOCKINFO`` blocks is described as "metadata," 439 the abbreviations they contain are essential for parsing records from the 440 corresponding blocks. It is not safe to skip them. 441 442 .. _wrapper: 443 444 Bitcode Wrapper Format 445 ====================== 446 447 Bitcode files for LLVM IR may optionally be wrapped in a simple wrapper 448 structure. This structure contains a simple header that indicates the offset 449 and size of the embedded BC file. This allows additional information to be 450 stored alongside the BC file. The structure of this file header is: 451 452 :raw-html:`<tt><blockquote>` 453 [Magic\ :sub:`32`, Version\ :sub:`32`, Offset\ :sub:`32`, Size\ :sub:`32`, CPUType\ :sub:`32`] 454 :raw-html:`</blockquote></tt>` 455 456 Each of the fields are 32-bit fields stored in little endian form (as with the 457 rest of the bitcode file fields). The Magic number is always ``0x0B17C0DE`` and 458 the version is currently always ``0``. The Offset field is the offset in bytes 459 to the start of the bitcode stream in the file, and the Size field is the size 460 in bytes of the stream. CPUType is a target-specific value that can be used to 461 encode the CPU of the target. 462 463 .. _encoding of LLVM IR: 464 465 LLVM IR Encoding 466 ================ 467 468 LLVM IR is encoded into a bitstream by defining blocks and records. It uses 469 blocks for things like constant pools, functions, symbol tables, etc. It uses 470 records for things like instructions, global variable descriptors, type 471 descriptions, etc. This document does not describe the set of abbreviations 472 that the writer uses, as these are fully self-described in the file, and the 473 reader is not allowed to build in any knowledge of this. 474 475 Basics 476 ------ 477 478 LLVM IR Magic Number 479 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 480 481 The magic number for LLVM IR files is: 482 483 :raw-html:`<tt><blockquote>` 484 [0x0\ :sub:`4`, 0xC\ :sub:`4`, 0xE\ :sub:`4`, 0xD\ :sub:`4`] 485 :raw-html:`</blockquote></tt>` 486 487 When combined with the bitcode magic number and viewed as bytes, this is 488 ``"BC 0xC0DE"``. 489 490 .. _Signed VBRs: 491 492 Signed VBRs 493 ^^^^^^^^^^^ 494 495 `Variable Width Integer`_ encoding is an efficient way to encode arbitrary sized 496 unsigned values, but is an extremely inefficient for encoding signed values, as 497 signed values are otherwise treated as maximally large unsigned values. 498 499 As such, signed VBR values of a specific width are emitted as follows: 500 501 * Positive values are emitted as VBRs of the specified width, but with their 502 value shifted left by one. 503 504 * Negative values are emitted as VBRs of the specified width, but the negated 505 value is shifted left by one, and the low bit is set. 506 507 With this encoding, small positive and small negative values can both be emitted 508 efficiently. Signed VBR encoding is used in ``CST_CODE_INTEGER`` and 509 ``CST_CODE_WIDE_INTEGER`` records within ``CONSTANTS_BLOCK`` blocks. 510 It is also used for phi instruction operands in `MODULE_CODE_VERSION`_ 1. 511 512 LLVM IR Blocks 513 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 514 515 LLVM IR is defined with the following blocks: 516 517 * 8 --- `MODULE_BLOCK`_ --- This is the top-level block that contains the entire 518 module, and describes a variety of per-module information. 519 520 * 9 --- `PARAMATTR_BLOCK`_ --- This enumerates the parameter attributes. 521 522 * 10 --- `TYPE_BLOCK`_ --- This describes all of the types in the module. 523 524 * 11 --- `CONSTANTS_BLOCK`_ --- This describes constants for a module or 525 function. 526 527 * 12 --- `FUNCTION_BLOCK`_ --- This describes a function body. 528 529 * 13 --- `TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ --- This describes the type symbol table. 530 531 * 14 --- `VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ --- This describes a value symbol table. 532 533 * 15 --- `METADATA_BLOCK`_ --- This describes metadata items. 534 535 * 16 --- `METADATA_ATTACHMENT`_ --- This contains records associating metadata 536 with function instruction values. 537 538 .. _MODULE_BLOCK: 539 540 MODULE_BLOCK Contents 541 --------------------- 542 543 The ``MODULE_BLOCK`` block (id 8) is the top-level block for LLVM bitcode files, 544 and each bitcode file must contain exactly one. In addition to records 545 (described below) containing information about the module, a ``MODULE_BLOCK`` 546 block may contain the following sub-blocks: 547 548 * `BLOCKINFO`_ 549 * `PARAMATTR_BLOCK`_ 550 * `TYPE_BLOCK`_ 551 * `TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ 552 * `VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ 553 * `CONSTANTS_BLOCK`_ 554 * `FUNCTION_BLOCK`_ 555 * `METADATA_BLOCK`_ 556 557 .. _MODULE_CODE_VERSION: 558 559 MODULE_CODE_VERSION Record 560 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 561 562 ``[VERSION, version#]`` 563 564 The ``VERSION`` record (code 1) contains a single value indicating the format 565 version. Versions 0 and 1 are supported at this time. The difference between 566 version 0 and 1 is in the encoding of instruction operands in 567 each `FUNCTION_BLOCK`_. 568 569 In version 0, each value defined by an instruction is assigned an ID 570 unique to the function. Function-level value IDs are assigned starting from 571 ``NumModuleValues`` since they share the same namespace as module-level 572 values. The value enumerator resets after each function. When a value is 573 an operand of an instruction, the value ID is used to represent the operand. 574 For large functions or large modules, these operand values can be large. 575 576 The encoding in version 1 attempts to avoid large operand values 577 in common cases. Instead of using the value ID directly, operands are 578 encoded as relative to the current instruction. Thus, if an operand 579 is the value defined by the previous instruction, the operand 580 will be encoded as 1. 581 582 For example, instead of 583 584 .. code-block:: llvm 585 586 #n = load #n-1 587 #n+1 = icmp eq #n, #const0 588 br #n+1, label #(bb1), label #(bb2) 589 590 version 1 will encode the instructions as 591 592 .. code-block:: llvm 593 594 #n = load #1 595 #n+1 = icmp eq #1, (#n+1)-#const0 596 br #1, label #(bb1), label #(bb2) 597 598 Note in the example that operands which are constants also use 599 the relative encoding, while operands like basic block labels 600 do not use the relative encoding. 601 602 Forward references will result in a negative value. 603 This can be inefficient, as operands are normally encoded 604 as unsigned VBRs. However, forward references are rare, except in the 605 case of phi instructions. For phi instructions, operands are encoded as 606 `Signed VBRs`_ to deal with forward references. 607 608 609 MODULE_CODE_TRIPLE Record 610 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 611 612 ``[TRIPLE, ...string...]`` 613 614 The ``TRIPLE`` record (code 2) contains a variable number of values representing 615 the bytes of the ``target triple`` specification string. 616 617 MODULE_CODE_DATALAYOUT Record 618 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 619 620 ``[DATALAYOUT, ...string...]`` 621 622 The ``DATALAYOUT`` record (code 3) contains a variable number of values 623 representing the bytes of the ``target datalayout`` specification string. 624 625 MODULE_CODE_ASM Record 626 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 627 628 ``[ASM, ...string...]`` 629 630 The ``ASM`` record (code 4) contains a variable number of values representing 631 the bytes of ``module asm`` strings, with individual assembly blocks separated 632 by newline (ASCII 10) characters. 633 634 .. _MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME: 635 636 MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME Record 637 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 638 639 ``[SECTIONNAME, ...string...]`` 640 641 The ``SECTIONNAME`` record (code 5) contains a variable number of values 642 representing the bytes of a single section name string. There should be one 643 ``SECTIONNAME`` record for each section name referenced (e.g., in global 644 variable or function ``section`` attributes) within the module. These records 645 can be referenced by the 1-based index in the *section* fields of ``GLOBALVAR`` 646 or ``FUNCTION`` records. 647 648 MODULE_CODE_DEPLIB Record 649 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 650 651 ``[DEPLIB, ...string...]`` 652 653 The ``DEPLIB`` record (code 6) contains a variable number of values representing 654 the bytes of a single dependent library name string, one of the libraries 655 mentioned in a ``deplibs`` declaration. There should be one ``DEPLIB`` record 656 for each library name referenced. 657 658 MODULE_CODE_GLOBALVAR Record 659 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 660 661 ``[GLOBALVAR, pointer type, isconst, initid, linkage, alignment, section, visibility, threadlocal, unnamed_addr, dllstorageclass]`` 662 663 The ``GLOBALVAR`` record (code 7) marks the declaration or definition of a 664 global variable. The operand fields are: 665 666 * *pointer type*: The type index of the pointer type used to point to this 667 global variable 668 669 * *isconst*: Non-zero if the variable is treated as constant within the module, 670 or zero if it is not 671 672 * *initid*: If non-zero, the value index of the initializer for this variable, 673 plus 1. 674 675 .. _linkage type: 676 677 * *linkage*: An encoding of the linkage type for this variable: 678 * ``external``: code 0 679 * ``weak``: code 1 680 * ``appending``: code 2 681 * ``internal``: code 3 682 * ``linkonce``: code 4 683 * ``dllimport``: code 5 684 * ``dllexport``: code 6 685 * ``extern_weak``: code 7 686 * ``common``: code 8 687 * ``private``: code 9 688 * ``weak_odr``: code 10 689 * ``linkonce_odr``: code 11 690 * ``available_externally``: code 12 691 * deprecated : code 13 692 * deprecated : code 14 693 694 * alignment*: The logarithm base 2 of the variable's requested alignment, plus 1 695 696 * *section*: If non-zero, the 1-based section index in the table of 697 `MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME`_ entries. 698 699 .. _visibility: 700 701 * *visibility*: If present, an encoding of the visibility of this variable: 702 * ``default``: code 0 703 * ``hidden``: code 1 704 * ``protected``: code 2 705 706 * *threadlocal*: If present, an encoding of the thread local storage mode of the 707 variable: 708 * ``not thread local``: code 0 709 * ``thread local; default TLS model``: code 1 710 * ``localdynamic``: code 2 711 * ``initialexec``: code 3 712 * ``localexec``: code 4 713 714 * *unnamed_addr*: If present and non-zero, indicates that the variable has 715 ``unnamed_addr`` 716 717 .. _dllstorageclass: 718 719 * *dllstorageclass*: If present, an encoding of the DLL storage class of this variable: 720 721 * ``default``: code 0 722 * ``dllimport``: code 1 723 * ``dllexport``: code 2 724 725 .. _FUNCTION: 726 727 MODULE_CODE_FUNCTION Record 728 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 729 730 ``[FUNCTION, type, callingconv, isproto, linkage, paramattr, alignment, section, visibility, gc, prefix, dllstorageclass]`` 731 732 The ``FUNCTION`` record (code 8) marks the declaration or definition of a 733 function. The operand fields are: 734 735 * *type*: The type index of the function type describing this function 736 737 * *callingconv*: The calling convention number: 738 * ``ccc``: code 0 739 * ``fastcc``: code 8 740 * ``coldcc``: code 9 741 * ``webkit_jscc``: code 12 742 * ``anyregcc``: code 13 743 * ``preserve_mostcc``: code 14 744 * ``preserve_allcc``: code 15 745 * ``x86_stdcallcc``: code 64 746 * ``x86_fastcallcc``: code 65 747 * ``arm_apcscc``: code 66 748 * ``arm_aapcscc``: code 67 749 * ``arm_aapcs_vfpcc``: code 68 750 751 * isproto*: Non-zero if this entry represents a declaration rather than a 752 definition 753 754 * *linkage*: An encoding of the `linkage type`_ for this function 755 756 * *paramattr*: If nonzero, the 1-based parameter attribute index into the table 757 of `PARAMATTR_CODE_ENTRY`_ entries. 758 759 * *alignment*: The logarithm base 2 of the function's requested alignment, plus 760 1 761 762 * *section*: If non-zero, the 1-based section index in the table of 763 `MODULE_CODE_SECTIONNAME`_ entries. 764 765 * *visibility*: An encoding of the `visibility`_ of this function 766 767 * *gc*: If present and nonzero, the 1-based garbage collector index in the table 768 of `MODULE_CODE_GCNAME`_ entries. 769 770 * *unnamed_addr*: If present and non-zero, indicates that the function has 771 ``unnamed_addr`` 772 773 * *prefix*: If non-zero, the value index of the prefix data for this function, 774 plus 1. 775 776 * *dllstorageclass*: An encoding of the `dllstorageclass`_ of this function 777 778 MODULE_CODE_ALIAS Record 779 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 780 781 ``[ALIAS, alias type, aliasee val#, linkage, visibility, dllstorageclass]`` 782 783 The ``ALIAS`` record (code 9) marks the definition of an alias. The operand 784 fields are 785 786 * *alias type*: The type index of the alias 787 788 * *aliasee val#*: The value index of the aliased value 789 790 * *linkage*: An encoding of the `linkage type`_ for this alias 791 792 * *visibility*: If present, an encoding of the `visibility`_ of the alias 793 794 * *dllstorageclass*: If present, an encoding of the `dllstorageclass`_ of the alias 795 796 MODULE_CODE_PURGEVALS Record 797 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 798 799 ``[PURGEVALS, numvals]`` 800 801 The ``PURGEVALS`` record (code 10) resets the module-level value list to the 802 size given by the single operand value. Module-level value list items are added 803 by ``GLOBALVAR``, ``FUNCTION``, and ``ALIAS`` records. After a ``PURGEVALS`` 804 record is seen, new value indices will start from the given *numvals* value. 805 806 .. _MODULE_CODE_GCNAME: 807 808 MODULE_CODE_GCNAME Record 809 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 810 811 ``[GCNAME, ...string...]`` 812 813 The ``GCNAME`` record (code 11) contains a variable number of values 814 representing the bytes of a single garbage collector name string. There should 815 be one ``GCNAME`` record for each garbage collector name referenced in function 816 ``gc`` attributes within the module. These records can be referenced by 1-based 817 index in the *gc* fields of ``FUNCTION`` records. 818 819 .. _PARAMATTR_BLOCK: 820 821 PARAMATTR_BLOCK Contents 822 ------------------------ 823 824 The ``PARAMATTR_BLOCK`` block (id 9) contains a table of entries describing the 825 attributes of function parameters. These entries are referenced by 1-based index 826 in the *paramattr* field of module block `FUNCTION`_ records, or within the 827 *attr* field of function block ``INST_INVOKE`` and ``INST_CALL`` records. 828 829 Entries within ``PARAMATTR_BLOCK`` are constructed to ensure that each is unique 830 (i.e., no two indicies represent equivalent attribute lists). 831 832 .. _PARAMATTR_CODE_ENTRY: 833 834 PARAMATTR_CODE_ENTRY Record 835 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 836 837 ``[ENTRY, paramidx0, attr0, paramidx1, attr1...]`` 838 839 The ``ENTRY`` record (code 1) contains an even number of values describing a 840 unique set of function parameter attributes. Each *paramidx* value indicates 841 which set of attributes is represented, with 0 representing the return value 842 attributes, 0xFFFFFFFF representing function attributes, and other values 843 representing 1-based function parameters. Each *attr* value is a bitmap with the 844 following interpretation: 845 846 * bit 0: ``zeroext`` 847 * bit 1: ``signext`` 848 * bit 2: ``noreturn`` 849 * bit 3: ``inreg`` 850 * bit 4: ``sret`` 851 * bit 5: ``nounwind`` 852 * bit 6: ``noalias`` 853 * bit 7: ``byval`` 854 * bit 8: ``nest`` 855 * bit 9: ``readnone`` 856 * bit 10: ``readonly`` 857 * bit 11: ``noinline`` 858 * bit 12: ``alwaysinline`` 859 * bit 13: ``optsize`` 860 * bit 14: ``ssp`` 861 * bit 15: ``sspreq`` 862 * bits 16-31: ``align n`` 863 * bit 32: ``nocapture`` 864 * bit 33: ``noredzone`` 865 * bit 34: ``noimplicitfloat`` 866 * bit 35: ``naked`` 867 * bit 36: ``inlinehint`` 868 * bits 37-39: ``alignstack n``, represented as the logarithm 869 base 2 of the requested alignment, plus 1 870 871 .. _TYPE_BLOCK: 872 873 TYPE_BLOCK Contents 874 ------------------- 875 876 The ``TYPE_BLOCK`` block (id 10) contains records which constitute a table of 877 type operator entries used to represent types referenced within an LLVM 878 module. Each record (with the exception of `NUMENTRY`_) generates a single type 879 table entry, which may be referenced by 0-based index from instructions, 880 constants, metadata, type symbol table entries, or other type operator records. 881 882 Entries within ``TYPE_BLOCK`` are constructed to ensure that each entry is 883 unique (i.e., no two indicies represent structurally equivalent types). 884 885 .. _TYPE_CODE_NUMENTRY: 886 .. _NUMENTRY: 887 888 TYPE_CODE_NUMENTRY Record 889 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 890 891 ``[NUMENTRY, numentries]`` 892 893 The ``NUMENTRY`` record (code 1) contains a single value which indicates the 894 total number of type code entries in the type table of the module. If present, 895 ``NUMENTRY`` should be the first record in the block. 896 897 TYPE_CODE_VOID Record 898 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 899 900 ``[VOID]`` 901 902 The ``VOID`` record (code 2) adds a ``void`` type to the type table. 903 904 TYPE_CODE_HALF Record 905 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 906 907 ``[HALF]`` 908 909 The ``HALF`` record (code 10) adds a ``half`` (16-bit floating point) type to 910 the type table. 911 912 TYPE_CODE_FLOAT Record 913 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 914 915 ``[FLOAT]`` 916 917 The ``FLOAT`` record (code 3) adds a ``float`` (32-bit floating point) type to 918 the type table. 919 920 TYPE_CODE_DOUBLE Record 921 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 922 923 ``[DOUBLE]`` 924 925 The ``DOUBLE`` record (code 4) adds a ``double`` (64-bit floating point) type to 926 the type table. 927 928 TYPE_CODE_LABEL Record 929 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 930 931 ``[LABEL]`` 932 933 The ``LABEL`` record (code 5) adds a ``label`` type to the type table. 934 935 TYPE_CODE_OPAQUE Record 936 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 937 938 ``[OPAQUE]`` 939 940 The ``OPAQUE`` record (code 6) adds an ``opaque`` type to the type table. Note 941 that distinct ``opaque`` types are not unified. 942 943 TYPE_CODE_INTEGER Record 944 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 945 946 ``[INTEGER, width]`` 947 948 The ``INTEGER`` record (code 7) adds an integer type to the type table. The 949 single *width* field indicates the width of the integer type. 950 951 TYPE_CODE_POINTER Record 952 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 953 954 ``[POINTER, pointee type, address space]`` 955 956 The ``POINTER`` record (code 8) adds a pointer type to the type table. The 957 operand fields are 958 959 * *pointee type*: The type index of the pointed-to type 960 961 * *address space*: If supplied, the target-specific numbered address space where 962 the pointed-to object resides. Otherwise, the default address space is zero. 963 964 TYPE_CODE_FUNCTION Record 965 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 966 967 ``[FUNCTION, vararg, ignored, retty, ...paramty... ]`` 968 969 The ``FUNCTION`` record (code 9) adds a function type to the type table. The 970 operand fields are 971 972 * *vararg*: Non-zero if the type represents a varargs function 973 974 * *ignored*: This value field is present for backward compatibility only, and is 975 ignored 976 977 * *retty*: The type index of the function's return type 978 979 * *paramty*: Zero or more type indices representing the parameter types of the 980 function 981 982 TYPE_CODE_STRUCT Record 983 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 984 985 ``[STRUCT, ispacked, ...eltty...]`` 986 987 The ``STRUCT`` record (code 10) adds a struct type to the type table. The 988 operand fields are 989 990 * *ispacked*: Non-zero if the type represents a packed structure 991 992 * *eltty*: Zero or more type indices representing the element types of the 993 structure 994 995 TYPE_CODE_ARRAY Record 996 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 997 998 ``[ARRAY, numelts, eltty]`` 999 1000 The ``ARRAY`` record (code 11) adds an array type to the type table. The 1001 operand fields are 1002 1003 * *numelts*: The number of elements in arrays of this type 1004 1005 * *eltty*: The type index of the array element type 1006 1007 TYPE_CODE_VECTOR Record 1008 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1009 1010 ``[VECTOR, numelts, eltty]`` 1011 1012 The ``VECTOR`` record (code 12) adds a vector type to the type table. The 1013 operand fields are 1014 1015 * *numelts*: The number of elements in vectors of this type 1016 1017 * *eltty*: The type index of the vector element type 1018 1019 TYPE_CODE_X86_FP80 Record 1020 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1021 1022 ``[X86_FP80]`` 1023 1024 The ``X86_FP80`` record (code 13) adds an ``x86_fp80`` (80-bit floating point) 1025 type to the type table. 1026 1027 TYPE_CODE_FP128 Record 1028 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1029 1030 ``[FP128]`` 1031 1032 The ``FP128`` record (code 14) adds an ``fp128`` (128-bit floating point) type 1033 to the type table. 1034 1035 TYPE_CODE_PPC_FP128 Record 1036 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1037 1038 ``[PPC_FP128]`` 1039 1040 The ``PPC_FP128`` record (code 15) adds a ``ppc_fp128`` (128-bit floating point) 1041 type to the type table. 1042 1043 TYPE_CODE_METADATA Record 1044 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1045 1046 ``[METADATA]`` 1047 1048 The ``METADATA`` record (code 16) adds a ``metadata`` type to the type table. 1049 1050 .. _CONSTANTS_BLOCK: 1051 1052 CONSTANTS_BLOCK Contents 1053 ------------------------ 1054 1055 The ``CONSTANTS_BLOCK`` block (id 11) ... 1056 1057 .. _FUNCTION_BLOCK: 1058 1059 FUNCTION_BLOCK Contents 1060 ----------------------- 1061 1062 The ``FUNCTION_BLOCK`` block (id 12) ... 1063 1064 In addition to the record types described below, a ``FUNCTION_BLOCK`` block may 1065 contain the following sub-blocks: 1066 1067 * `CONSTANTS_BLOCK`_ 1068 * `VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`_ 1069 * `METADATA_ATTACHMENT`_ 1070 1071 .. _TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK: 1072 1073 TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK Contents 1074 -------------------------- 1075 1076 The ``TYPE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`` block (id 13) contains entries which map between 1077 module-level named types and their corresponding type indices. 1078 1079 .. _TST_CODE_ENTRY: 1080 1081 TST_CODE_ENTRY Record 1082 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1083 1084 ``[ENTRY, typeid, ...string...]`` 1085 1086 The ``ENTRY`` record (code 1) contains a variable number of values, with the 1087 first giving the type index of the designated type, and the remaining values 1088 giving the character codes of the type name. Each entry corresponds to a single 1089 named type. 1090 1091 .. _VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK: 1092 1093 VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK Contents 1094 --------------------------- 1095 1096 The ``VALUE_SYMTAB_BLOCK`` block (id 14) ... 1097 1098 .. _METADATA_BLOCK: 1099 1100 METADATA_BLOCK Contents 1101 ----------------------- 1102 1103 The ``METADATA_BLOCK`` block (id 15) ... 1104 1105 .. _METADATA_ATTACHMENT: 1106 1107 METADATA_ATTACHMENT Contents 1108 ---------------------------- 1109 1110 The ``METADATA_ATTACHMENT`` block (id 16) ... 1111