1=================================== 2TableGen Backend Developer's Guide 3=================================== 4 5.. sectnum:: 6 7.. contents:: 8 :local: 9 10Introduction 11============ 12 13The purpose of TableGen is to generate complex output files based on 14information from source files that are significantly easier to code than the 15output files would be, and also easier to maintain and modify over time. The 16information is coded in a declarative style involving classes and records, 17which are then processed by TableGen. The internalized records are passed on 18to various backends, which extract information from a subset of the records 19and generate an output file. These output files are typically ``.inc`` files 20for C++, but may be any type of file that the backend developer needs. 21 22This document is a guide to writing a backend for TableGen. It is not a 23complete reference manual, but rather a guide to using the facilities 24provided by TableGen for the backends. For a complete reference to the 25various data structures and functions involved, see the primary TableGen 26header file (``record.h``) and/or the Doxygen documentation. 27 28This document assumes that you have read the :doc:`TableGen Programmer's 29Reference <./ProgRef>`, which provides a detailed reference for coding 30TableGen source files. For a description of the existing backends, see 31:doc:`TableGen BackEnds <./BackEnds>`. 32 33Data Structures 34=============== 35 36The following sections describe the data structures that contain the classes 37and records that are collected from the TableGen source files by the 38TableGen parser. Note that the term *class* refers to an abstract record 39class, while the term *record* refers to a concrete record. 40 41Unless otherwise noted, functions associated with classes are instance 42functions. 43 44``RecordKeeper`` 45---------------- 46 47An instance of the ``RecordKeeper`` class acts as the container for all the 48classes and records parsed and collected by TableGen. The ``RecordKeeper`` 49instance is passed to the backend when it is invoked by TableGen. This class 50is usually abbreviated ``RK``. 51 52There are two maps in the recordkeeper, one for classes and one for records 53(the latter often referred to as *defs*). Each map maps the class or record 54name to an instance of the ``Record`` class (see `Record`_), which contains 55all the information about that class or record. 56 57In addition to the two maps, the ``RecordKeeper`` instance contains: 58 59* A map that maps the names of global variables to their values. 60 Global variables are defined in TableGen files with outer 61 ``defvar`` statements. 62 63* A counter for naming anonymous records. 64 65The ``RecordKeeper`` class provides a few useful functions. 66 67* Functions to get the complete class and record maps. 68 69* Functions to get a subset of the records based on their parent classes. 70 71* Functions to get individual classes, records, and globals, by name. 72 73A ``RecordKeeper`` instance can be printed to an output stream with the ``<<`` 74operator. 75 76``Record`` 77---------- 78 79Each class or record built by TableGen is represented by an instance of 80the ``Record`` class. The ``RecordKeeper`` instance contains one map for the 81classes and one for the records. The primary data members of a record are 82the record name, the vector of field names and their values, and the vector of 83superclasses of the record. 84 85The record name is stored as a pointer to an ``Init`` (see `Init`_), which 86is a class whose instances hold TableGen values (sometimes referred to as 87*initializers*). The field names and values are stored in a vector of 88``RecordVal`` instances (see `RecordVal`_), each of which contains both the 89field name and its value. The superclass vector contains a sequence of 90pairs, with each pair including the superclass record and its source 91file location. 92 93In addition to those members, a ``Record`` instance contains: 94 95* A vector of source file locations that includes the record definition 96 itself, plus the locations of any multiclasses involved in its definition. 97 98* For a class record, a vector of the class's template arguments. 99 100* An instance of ``DefInit`` (see `DefInit`_) corresponding to this record. 101 102* A unique record ID. 103 104* A boolean that specifies whether this is a class definition. 105 106* A boolean that specifies whether this is an anonymous record. 107 108The ``Record`` class provides many useful functions. 109 110* Functions to get the record name, fields, source file locations, 111 template arguments, and unique ID. 112 113* Functions to get all the record's superclasses or just its direct 114 superclasses. 115 116* Functions to get a particular field value by specifying its name in various 117 forms, and returning its value in various forms 118 (see `Getting Record Names and Fields`_). 119 120* Boolean functions to check the various attributes of the record. 121 122A ``Record`` instance can be printed to an output stream with the ``<<`` 123operator. 124 125 126``RecordVal`` 127------------- 128 129Each field of a record is stored in an instance of the ``RecordVal`` class. 130The ``Record`` instance includes a vector of these value instances. A 131``RecordVal`` instance contains the name of the field, stored in an ``Init`` 132instance. It also contains the value of the field, likewise stored in an 133``Init``. (A better name for this class might be ``RecordField``.) 134 135In addition to those primary members, the ``RecordVal`` has other data members. 136 137* The source file location of the field definition. 138 139* The type of the field, stored as an instance 140 of the ``RecTy`` class (see `RecTy`_). 141 142The ``RecordVal`` class provides some useful functions. 143 144* Functions to get the name of the field in various forms. 145 146* A function to get the type of the field. 147 148* A function to get the value of the field. 149 150* A function to get the source file location. 151 152Note that field values are more easily obtained directly from the ``Record`` 153instance (see `Record`_). 154 155A ``RecordVal`` instance can be printed to an output stream with the ``<<`` 156operator. 157 158``RecTy`` 159--------- 160 161The ``RecTy`` class is used to represent the types of field values. It is 162the base class for a series of subclasses, one for each of the 163available field types. The ``RecTy`` class has one data member that is an 164enumerated type specifying the specific type of field value. (A better 165name for this class might be ``FieldTy``.) 166 167The ``RecTy`` class provides a few useful functions. 168 169* A virtual function to get the type name as a string. 170 171* A virtual function to check whether all the values of this type can 172 be converted to another given type. 173 174* A virtual function to check whether this type is a subtype of 175 another given type. 176 177* A function to get the corresponding ``list`` 178 type for lists with elements of this type. For example, the function 179 returns the ``list<int>`` type when called with the ``int`` type. 180 181The subclasses that inherit from ``RecTy`` are 182``BitRecTy``, 183``BitsRecTy``, 184``CodeRecTy``, 185``DagRecTy``, 186``IntRecTy``, 187``ListRecTy``, 188``RecordRecTy``, and 189``StringRecTy``. 190Some of these classes have additional members that 191are described in the following subsections. 192 193*All* of the classes derived from ``RecTy`` provide the ``get()`` function. 194It returns an instance of ``Recty`` corresponding to the derived class. 195Some of the ``get()`` functions require an argument to 196specify which particular variant of the type is desired. These arguments are 197described in the following subsections. 198 199A ``RecTy`` instance can be printed to an output stream with the ``<<`` 200operator. 201 202.. warning:: 203 It is not specified whether there is a single ``RecTy`` instance of a 204 particular type or multiple instances. 205 206 207``BitsRecTy`` 208~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 209 210This class includes a data member with the size of the ``bits`` value and a 211function to get that size. 212 213The ``get()`` function takes the length of the sequence, *n*, and returns the 214``BitsRecTy`` type corresponding to ``bits<``\ *n*\ ``>``. 215 216``ListRecTy`` 217~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 218 219This class includes a data member that specifies the type of the list's 220elements and a function to get that type. 221 222The ``get()`` function takes the ``RecTy`` *type* of the list members and 223returns the ``ListRecTy`` type corresponding to ``list<``\ *type*\ ``>``. 224 225 226``RecordRecTy`` 227~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 228 229This class includes data members that contain the list of parent classes of 230this record. It also provides a function to obtain the array of classes and 231two functions to get the iterator ``begin()`` and ``end()`` values. The 232class defines a type for the return values of the latter two functions. 233 234.. code-block:: text 235 236 using const_record_iterator = Record * const *; 237 238The ``get()`` function takes an ``ArrayRef`` of pointers to the ``Record`` 239instances of the *direct* superclasses of the record and returns the ``RecordRecTy`` 240corresponding to the record inheriting from those superclasses. 241 242``Init`` 243-------- 244 245The ``Init`` class is used to represent TableGen values. The name derives 246from *initialization value*. This class should not be confused with the 247``RecordVal`` class, which represents record fields, both their names and 248values. The ``Init`` class is the base class for a series of subclasses, one 249for each of the available value types. The primary data member of ``Init`` 250is an enumerated type that represents the specific type of the value. 251 252The ``Init`` class provides a few useful functions. 253 254* A function to get the type enumerator. 255 256* A boolean virtual function to determine whether a value is completely 257 specified; that is, has no uninitialized subvalues. 258 259* Virtual functions to get the value as a string. 260 261* Virtual functions to cast the value to other types, implement the bit 262 range feature of TableGen, and implement the list slice feature. 263 264* A virtual function to get a particular bit of the value. 265 266The subclasses that inherit directly from ``Init`` are 267``UnsetInit`` and ``TypedInit``. 268 269An ``Init`` instance can be printed to an output stream with the ``<<`` 270operator. 271 272.. warning:: 273 It is not specified whether two separate initialization values with 274 the same underlying type and value (e.g., two strings with the value 275 "Hello") are represented by two ``Init``\ s or share the same ``Init``. 276 277``UnsetInit`` 278~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 279 280This class, a subclass of ``Init``, represents the unset (uninitialized) 281value. The static function ``get()`` can be used to obtain the singleton 282``Init`` of this type. 283 284 285``TypedInit`` 286~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 287 288This class, a subclass of ``Init``, acts as the parent class of the classes 289that represent specific value types (except for the unset value). These 290classes include ``BitInit``, ``BitsInit``, ``DagInit``, ``DefInit``, 291``IntInit``, ``ListInit``, and ``StringInit``. (There are additional derived 292types used by the TableGen parser.) 293 294This class includes a data member that specifies the ``RecTy`` type of the 295value. It provides a function to get that ``RecTy`` type. 296 297``BitInit`` 298~~~~~~~~~~~ 299 300The ``BitInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 301represent the possible values of a bit: 0 or 1. It includes a data member 302that contains the bit. 303 304*All* of the classes derived from ``TypedInit`` provide the following functions. 305 306* A static function named ``get()`` that returns an ``Init`` representing 307 the specified value(s). In the case of ``BitInit``, ``get(true)`` returns 308 an instance of ``BitInit`` representing true, while ``get(false)`` returns 309 an instance 310 representing false. As noted above, it is not specified whether there 311 is exactly one or more than one ``BitInit`` representing true (or false). 312 313* A function named ``GetValue()`` that returns the value of the instance 314 in a more direct form, in this case as a ``bool``. 315 316``BitsInit`` 317~~~~~~~~~~~~ 318 319The ``BitsInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 320represent sequences of bits, from high-order to low-order. It includes a 321data member with the length of the sequence and a vector of pointers to 322``Init`` instances, one per bit. 323 324The class provides the usual ``get()`` function. It does not provide the 325``getValue()`` function. 326 327The class provides the following additional functions. 328 329* A function to get the number of bits in the sequence. 330 331* A function that gets a bit specified by an integer index. 332 333``DagInit`` 334~~~~~~~~~~~ 335 336The ``DagInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 337represent the possible direct acyclic graphs (``dag``). 338 339The class includes a pointer to an ``Init`` for the DAG operator and a 340pointer to a ``StringInit`` for the operator name. It includes the count of 341DAG operands and the count of operand names. Finally, it includes a vector of 342pointers to ``Init`` instances for the operands and another to 343``StringInit`` instances for the operand names. 344(The DAG operands are also referred to as *arguments*.) 345 346The class provides two forms of the usual ``get()`` function. It does not 347provide the usual ``getValue()`` function. 348 349The class provides many additional functions: 350 351* Functions to get the operator in various forms and to get the 352 operator name in various forms. 353 354* Functions to determine whether there are any operands and to get the 355 number of operands. 356 357* Functions to the get the operands, both individually and together. 358 359* Functions to determine whether there are any names and to 360 get the number of names 361 362* Functions to the get the names, both individually and together. 363 364* Functions to get the operand iterator ``begin()`` and ``end()`` values. 365 366* Functions to get the name iterator ``begin()`` and ``end()`` values. 367 368The class defines two types for the return values of the operand and name 369iterators. 370 371.. code-block:: text 372 373 using const_arg_iterator = SmallVectorImpl<Init*>::const_iterator; 374 using const_name_iterator = SmallVectorImpl<StringInit*>::const_iterator; 375 376 377``DefInit`` 378~~~~~~~~~~~ 379 380The ``DefInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 381represent the records that were collected by TableGen. It includes a data 382member that is a pointer to the record's ``Record`` instance. 383 384The class provides the usual ``get()`` function. It does not provide 385``getValue()``. Instead, it provides ``getDef()``, which returns the 386``Record`` instance. 387 388``IntInit`` 389~~~~~~~~~~~ 390 391The ``IntInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 392represent the possible values of a 64-bit integer. It includes a data member 393that contains the integer. 394 395The class provides the usual ``get()`` and ``getValue()`` functions. The 396latter function returns the integer as an ``int64_t``. 397 398The class also provides a function, ``getBit()``, to obtain a specified bit 399of the integer value. 400 401``ListInit`` 402~~~~~~~~~~~~ 403 404The ``ListInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 405represent lists of elements of some type. It includes a data member with the 406length of the list and a vector of pointers to ``Init`` instances, one per 407element. 408 409The class provides the usual ``get()`` and ``getValues()`` functions. The 410latter function returns an ``ArrayRef`` of the vector of pointers to ``Init`` 411instances. 412 413The class provides these additional functions. 414 415* A function to get the element type. 416 417* Functions to get the length of the vector and to determine whether 418 it is empty. 419 420* Functions to get an element specified by an integer index and return 421 it in various forms. 422 423* Functions to get the iterator ``begin()`` and ``end()`` values. The 424 class defines a type for the return type of these two functions. 425 426.. code-block:: text 427 428 using const_iterator = Init *const *; 429 430 431``StringInit`` 432~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 433 434The ``StringInit`` class is a subclass of ``TypedInit``. Its instances 435represent arbitrary-length strings. It includes a data member 436that contains a ``StringRef`` of the value. 437 438The class provides the usual ``get()`` and ``getValue()`` functions. The 439latter function returns the ``StringRef``. 440 441Creating a New Backend 442====================== 443 444The following steps are required to create a new backend for TableGen. 445 446#. Invent a name for your backend C++ file, say ``GenAddressModes``. 447 448#. Write the new backend, using the file ``TableGenBackendSkeleton.cpp`` 449 as a starting point. 450 451#. Determine which instance of TableGen requires the new backend. There is 452 one instance for Clang and another for LLVM. Or you may be building 453 your own instance. 454 455#. Add your backend C++ file to the appropriate ``CMakeLists.txt`` file so 456 that it will be built. 457 458#. Add your C++ file to the system. 459 460The Backend Skeleton 461==================== 462 463The file ``TableGenBackendSkeleton.cpp`` provides a skeleton C++ translation 464unit for writing a new TableGen backend. Here are a few notes on the file. 465 466* The list of includes is the minimal list required by most backends. 467 468* As with all LLVM C++ files, it has a ``using namespace llvm;`` statement. 469 It also has an anonymous namespace that contains all the file-specific 470 data structure definitions, along with the class embodying the emitter 471 data members and functions. Continuing with the ``GenAddressModes`` example, 472 this class is named ``AddressModesEmitter``. 473 474* The constructor for the emitter class accepts a ``RecordKeeper`` reference, 475 typically named ``RK``. The ``RecordKeeper`` reference is saved in a data 476 member so that records can be obtained from it. This data member is usually 477 named ``Records``. 478 479* One function is named ``run``. It is invoked by the backend's "main 480 function" to collect records and emit the output file. It accepts an instance 481 of the ``raw_ostream`` class, typically named ``OS``. The output file is 482 emitted by writing to this stream. 483 484* The ``run`` function should use the ``emitSourceFileHeader`` helper function 485 to include a standard header in the emitted file. 486 487* Register the class or the function as the command line option 488 with ``llvm/TableGen/TableGenBackend.h``. 489 490 * Use ``llvm::TableGen::Emitter::OptClass<AddressModesEmitter>`` 491 if the class has the constructor ``(RK)`` and 492 the method ``run(OS)``. 493 494 * Otherwise, use ``llvm::TableGen::Emitter::Opt``. 495 496All the examples in the remainder of this document will assume the naming 497conventions used in the skeleton file. 498 499Getting Classes 500=============== 501 502The ``RecordKeeper`` class provides two functions for getting the 503``Record`` instances for classes defined in the TableGen files. 504 505* ``getClasses()`` returns a ``RecordMap`` reference for all the classes. 506 507* ``getClass(``\ *name*\ ``)`` returns a ``Record`` reference for the named 508 class. 509 510If you need to iterate over all the class records: 511 512.. code-block:: text 513 514 for (auto ClassPair : Records.getClasses()) { 515 Record *ClassRec = ClassPair.second.get(); 516 ... 517 } 518 519``ClassPair.second`` gets the class's ``unique_ptr``, then ``.get()`` gets the 520class ``Record`` itself. 521 522 523Getting Records 524=============== 525 526The ``RecordKeeper`` class provides four functions for getting the 527``Record`` instances for concrete records defined in the TableGen files. 528 529* ``getDefs()`` returns a ``RecordMap`` reference for all the concrete 530 records. 531 532* ``getDef(``\ *name*\ ``)`` returns a ``Record`` reference for the named 533 concrete record. 534 535* ``getAllDerivedDefinitions(``\ *classname*\ ``)`` returns a vector of 536 ``Record`` references for the concrete records that derive from the 537 given class. 538 539* ``getAllDerivedDefinitions(``\ *classnames*\ ``)`` returns 540 a vector of ``Record`` references for the concrete records that derive from 541 *all* of the given classes. 542 543This statement obtains all the records that derive from the ``Attribute`` 544class and iterates over them. 545 546.. code-block:: text 547 548 auto AttrRecords = Records.getAllDerivedDefinitions("Attribute"); 549 for (Record *AttrRec : AttrRecords) { 550 ... 551 } 552 553Getting Record Names and Fields 554=============================== 555 556As described above (see `Record`_), there are multiple functions that 557return the name of a record. One particularly useful one is 558``getNameInitAsString()``, which returns the name as a ``std::string``. 559 560There are also multiple functions that return the fields of a record. To 561obtain and iterate over all the fields: 562 563.. code-block:: text 564 565 for (const RecordVal &Field : SomeRec->getValues()) { 566 ... 567 } 568 569You will recall that ``RecordVal`` is the class whose instances contain 570information about the fields in records. 571 572The ``getValue()`` function returns the ``RecordVal`` instance for a field 573specified by name. There are multiple overloaded functions, some taking a 574``StringRef`` and others taking a ``const Init *``. Some functions return a 575``RecordVal *`` and others return a ``const RecordVal *``. If the field does 576not exist, a fatal error message is printed. 577 578More often than not, you are interested in the value of the field, not all 579the information in the ``RecordVal``. There is a large set of functions that 580take a field name in some form and return its value. One function, 581``getValueInit``, returns the value as an ``Init *``. Another function, 582``isValueUnset``, returns a boolean specifying whether the value is unset 583(uninitialized). 584 585Most of the functions return the value in some more useful form. For 586example: 587 588.. code-block:: text 589 590 std::vector<int64_t> RegCosts = 591 SomeRec->getValueAsListOfInts("RegCosts"); 592 593The field ``RegCosts`` is assumed to be a list of integers. That list is 594returned as a ``std::vector`` of 64-bit integers. If the field is not a list 595of integers, a fatal error message is printed. 596 597Here is a function that returns a field value as a ``Record``, but returns 598null if the field does not exist. 599 600.. code-block:: text 601 602 if (Record *BaseRec = SomeRec->getValueAsOptionalDef(BaseFieldName)) { 603 ... 604 } 605 606The field is assumed to have another record as its value. That record is returned 607as a pointer to a ``Record``. If the field does not exist or is unset, the 608functions returns null. 609 610Getting Record Superclasses 611=========================== 612 613The ``Record`` class provides a function to obtain the superclasses of a 614record. It is named ``getSuperClasses`` and returns an ``ArrayRef`` of an 615array of ``std::pair`` pairs. The superclasses are in post-order: the order 616in which the superclasses were visited while copying their fields into the 617record. Each pair consists of a pointer to the ``Record`` instance for a 618superclass record and an instance of the ``SMRange`` class. The range 619indicates the source file locations of the beginning and end of the class 620definition. 621 622This example obtains the superclasses of the ``Prototype`` record and then 623iterates over the pairs in the returned array. 624 625.. code-block:: text 626 627 ArrayRef<std::pair<const Record *, SMRange>> 628 Superclasses = Prototype->getSuperClasses(); 629 for (const auto &SuperPair : Superclasses) { 630 ... 631 } 632 633The ``Record`` class also provides a function, ``getDirectSuperClasses``, to 634append the *direct* superclasses of a record to a given vector of type 635``SmallVectorImpl<Record *>``. 636 637Emitting Text to the Output Stream 638================================== 639 640The ``run`` function is passed a ``raw_ostream`` to which it prints the 641output file. By convention, this stream is saved in the emitter class member 642named ``OS``, although some ``run`` functions are simple and just use the 643stream without saving it. The output can be produced by writing values 644directly to the output stream, or by using the ``std::format()`` or 645``llvm::formatv()`` functions. 646 647.. code-block:: text 648 649 OS << "#ifndef " << NodeName << "\n"; 650 651 OS << format("0x%0*x, ", Digits, Value); 652 653Instances of the following classes can be printed using the ``<<`` operator: 654``RecordKeeper``, 655``Record``, 656``RecTy``, 657``RecordVal``, and 658``Init``. 659 660The helper function ``emitSourceFileHeader()`` prints the header comment 661that should be included at the top of every output file. A call to it is 662included in the skeleton backend file ``TableGenBackendSkeleton.cpp``. 663 664Printing Error Messages 665======================= 666 667TableGen records are often derived from multiple classes and also often 668defined through a sequence of multiclasses. Because of this, it can be 669difficult for backends to report clear error messages with accurate source 670file locations. To make error reporting easier, five error reporting 671functions are provided, each with four overloads. 672 673* ``PrintWarning`` prints a message tagged as a warning. 674 675* ``PrintError`` prints a message tagged as an error. 676 677* ``PrintFatalError`` prints a message tagged as an error and then terminates. 678 679* ``PrintNote`` prints a note. It is often used after one of the previous 680 functions to provide more information. 681 682* ``PrintFatalNote`` prints a note and then terminates. 683 684Each of these five functions is overloaded four times. 685 686* ``PrintError(const Twine &Msg)``: 687 Prints the message with no source file location. 688 689* ``PrintError(ArrayRef<SMLoc> ErrorLoc, const Twine &Msg)``: 690 Prints the message followed by the specified source line, 691 along with a pointer to the item in error. The array of 692 source file locations is typically taken from a ``Record`` instance. 693 694* ``PrintError(const Record *Rec, const Twine &Msg)``: 695 Prints the message followed by the source line associated with the 696 specified record (see `Record`_). 697 698* ``PrintError(const RecordVal *RecVal, const Twine &Msg)``: 699 Prints the message followed by the source line associated with the 700 specified record field (see `RecordVal`_). 701 702Using these functions, the goal is to produce the most specific error report 703possible. 704 705Debugging Tools 706=============== 707 708TableGen provides some tools to aid in debugging backends. 709 710The ``PrintRecords`` Backend 711---------------------------- 712 713The TableGen command option ``--print-records`` invokes a simple backend 714that prints all the classes and records defined in the source files. This is 715the default backend option. The format of the output is guaranteed to be 716constant over time, so that the output can be compared in tests. The output 717looks like this: 718 719.. code-block:: text 720 721 ------------- Classes ----------------- 722 ... 723 class XEntry<string XEntry:str = ?, int XEntry:val1 = ?> { // XBase 724 string Str = XEntry:str; 725 bits<8> Val1 = { !cast<bits<8>>(XEntry:val1){7}, ... }; 726 bit Val3 = 1; 727 } 728 ... 729 ------------- Defs ----------------- 730 def ATable { // GenericTable 731 string FilterClass = "AEntry"; 732 string CppTypeName = "AEntry"; 733 list<string> Fields = ["Str", "Val1", "Val2"]; 734 list<string> PrimaryKey = ["Val1", "Val2"]; 735 string PrimaryKeyName = "lookupATableByValues"; 736 bit PrimaryKeyEarlyOut = 0; 737 } 738 ... 739 def anonymous_0 { // AEntry 740 string Str = "Bob"; 741 bits<8> Val1 = { 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1 }; 742 bits<10> Val2 = { 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1 }; 743 } 744 745Classes are shown with their template arguments, parent classes (following 746``//``), and fields. Records are shown with their parent classes and 747fields. Note that anonymous records are named ``anonymous_0``, 748``anonymous_1``, etc. 749 750The ``PrintDetailedRecords`` Backend 751------------------------------------ 752 753The TableGen command option ``--print-detailed-records`` invokes a backend 754that prints all the global variables, classes, and records defined in the 755source files. The format of the output is *not* guaranteed to be constant 756over time. The output looks like this. 757 758.. code-block:: text 759 760 DETAILED RECORDS for file llvm-project\llvm\lib\target\arc\arc.td 761 762 -------------------- Global Variables (5) -------------------- 763 764 AMDGPUBufferIntrinsics = [int_amdgcn_s_buffer_load, ... 765 AMDGPUImageDimAtomicIntrinsics = [int_amdgcn_image_atomic_swap_1d, ... 766 ... 767 -------------------- Classes (758) -------------------- 768 769 AMDGPUBufferLoad |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:879| 770 Template args: 771 LLVMType AMDGPUBufferLoad:data_ty = llvm_any_ty |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:879| 772 Superclasses: (SDPatternOperator) Intrinsic AMDGPURsrcIntrinsic 773 Fields: 774 list<SDNodeProperty> Properties = [SDNPMemOperand] |Intrinsics.td:348| 775 string LLVMName = "" |Intrinsics.td:343| 776 ... 777 -------------------- Records (12303) -------------------- 778 779 AMDGPUSample_lz_o |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:560| 780 Defm sequence: |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:584| |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:566| 781 Superclasses: AMDGPUSampleVariant 782 Fields: 783 string UpperCaseMod = "_LZ_O" |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:542| 784 string LowerCaseMod = "_lz_o" |IntrinsicsAMDGPU.td:543| 785 ... 786 787* Global variables defined with outer ``defvar`` statements are shown with 788 their values. 789 790* The classes are shown with their source location, template arguments, 791 superclasses, and fields. 792 793* The records are shown with their source location, ``defm`` sequence, 794 superclasses, and fields. 795 796Superclasses are shown in the order processed, with indirect superclasses in 797parentheses. Each field is shown with its value and the source location at 798which it was set. 799The ``defm`` sequence gives the locations of the ``defm`` statements that 800were involved in generating the record, in the order they were invoked. 801 802Timing TableGen Phases 803---------------------- 804 805TableGen provides a phase timing feature that produces a report of the time 806used by the various phases of parsing the source files and running the 807selected backend. This feature is enabled with the ``--time-phases`` option 808of the TableGen command. 809 810If the backend is *not* instrumented for timing, then a report such as the 811following is produced. This is the timing for the 812``--print-detailed-records`` backend run on the AMDGPU target. 813 814.. code-block:: text 815 816 ===-------------------------------------------------------------------------=== 817 TableGen Phase Timing 818 ===-------------------------------------------------------------------------=== 819 Total Execution Time: 101.0106 seconds (102.4819 wall clock) 820 821 ---User Time--- --System Time-- --User+System-- ---Wall Time--- --- Name --- 822 85.5197 ( 84.9%) 0.1560 ( 50.0%) 85.6757 ( 84.8%) 85.7009 ( 83.6%) Backend overall 823 15.1789 ( 15.1%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 15.1789 ( 15.0%) 15.1829 ( 14.8%) Parse, build records 824 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.1560 ( 50.0%) 0.1560 ( 0.2%) 1.5981 ( 1.6%) Write output 825 100.6986 (100.0%) 0.3120 (100.0%) 101.0106 (100.0%) 102.4819 (100.0%) Total 826 827Note that all the time for the backend is lumped under "Backend overall". 828 829If the backend is instrumented for timing, then its processing is 830divided into phases and each one timed separately. This is the timing for 831the ``--emit-dag-isel`` backend run on the AMDGPU target. 832 833.. code-block:: text 834 835 ===-------------------------------------------------------------------------=== 836 TableGen Phase Timing 837 ===-------------------------------------------------------------------------=== 838 Total Execution Time: 746.3868 seconds (747.1447 wall clock) 839 840 ---User Time--- --System Time-- --User+System-- ---Wall Time--- --- Name --- 841 657.7938 ( 88.1%) 0.1404 ( 90.0%) 657.9342 ( 88.1%) 658.6497 ( 88.2%) Emit matcher table 842 70.2317 ( 9.4%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 70.2317 ( 9.4%) 70.2700 ( 9.4%) Convert to matchers 843 14.8825 ( 2.0%) 0.0156 ( 10.0%) 14.8981 ( 2.0%) 14.9009 ( 2.0%) Parse, build records 844 2.1840 ( 0.3%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 2.1840 ( 0.3%) 2.1791 ( 0.3%) Sort patterns 845 1.1388 ( 0.2%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 1.1388 ( 0.2%) 1.1401 ( 0.2%) Optimize matchers 846 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.0000 ( 0.0%) 0.0050 ( 0.0%) Write output 847 746.2308 (100.0%) 0.1560 (100.0%) 746.3868 (100.0%) 747.1447 (100.0%) Total 848 849The backend has been divided into four phases and timed separately. 850 851If you want to instrument a backend, refer to the backend ``DAGISelEmitter.cpp`` 852and search for ``Records.startTimer``. 853