xref: /netbsd-src/external/gpl3/gcc.old/dist/gcc/doc/generic.texi (revision fb5eed702691094bd687fbf1ded189c87457cd35)
1@c Copyright (C) 2004-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
2@c This is part of the GCC manual.
3@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
4
5@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
6@c GENERIC
7@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
8
9@node GENERIC
10@chapter GENERIC
11@cindex GENERIC
12
13The purpose of GENERIC is simply to provide a
14language-independent way of representing an entire function in
15trees.  To this end, it was necessary to add a few new tree codes
16to the back end, but almost everything was already there.  If you
17can express it with the codes in @code{gcc/tree.def}, it's
18GENERIC@.
19
20Early on, there was a great deal of debate about how to think
21about statements in a tree IL@.  In GENERIC, a statement is
22defined as any expression whose value, if any, is ignored.  A
23statement will always have @code{TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS} set (or it
24will be discarded), but a non-statement expression may also have
25side effects.  A @code{CALL_EXPR}, for instance.
26
27It would be possible for some local optimizations to work on the
28GENERIC form of a function; indeed, the adapted tree inliner
29works fine on GENERIC, but the current compiler performs inlining
30after lowering to GIMPLE (a restricted form described in the next
31section). Indeed, currently the frontends perform this lowering
32before handing off to @code{tree_rest_of_compilation}, but this
33seems inelegant.
34
35@menu
36* Deficiencies::                Topics net yet covered in this document.
37* Tree overview::               All about @code{tree}s.
38* Types::                       Fundamental and aggregate types.
39* Declarations::                Type declarations and variables.
40* Attributes::                  Declaration and type attributes.
41* Expressions: Expression trees.            Operating on data.
42* Statements::                  Control flow and related trees.
43* Functions::           	Function bodies, linkage, and other aspects.
44* Language-dependent trees::    Topics and trees specific to language front ends.
45* C and C++ Trees::     	Trees specific to C and C++.
46* Java Trees:: 	                Trees specific to Java.
47@end menu
48
49@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
50@c Deficiencies
51@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
52
53@node Deficiencies
54@section Deficiencies
55
56@c The spelling of "incomplet" and "incorrekt" below is intentional.
57There are many places in which this document is incomplet and incorrekt.
58It is, as of yet, only @emph{preliminary} documentation.
59
60@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
61@c Overview
62@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
63
64@node Tree overview
65@section Overview
66@cindex tree
67@findex TREE_CODE
68
69The central data structure used by the internal representation is the
70@code{tree}.  These nodes, while all of the C type @code{tree}, are of
71many varieties.  A @code{tree} is a pointer type, but the object to
72which it points may be of a variety of types.  From this point forward,
73we will refer to trees in ordinary type, rather than in @code{this
74font}, except when talking about the actual C type @code{tree}.
75
76You can tell what kind of node a particular tree is by using the
77@code{TREE_CODE} macro.  Many, many macros take trees as input and
78return trees as output.  However, most macros require a certain kind of
79tree node as input.  In other words, there is a type-system for trees,
80but it is not reflected in the C type-system.
81
82For safety, it is useful to configure GCC with @option{--enable-checking}.
83Although this results in a significant performance penalty (since all
84tree types are checked at run-time), and is therefore inappropriate in a
85release version, it is extremely helpful during the development process.
86
87Many macros behave as predicates.  Many, although not all, of these
88predicates end in @samp{_P}.  Do not rely on the result type of these
89macros being of any particular type.  You may, however, rely on the fact
90that the type can be compared to @code{0}, so that statements like
91@smallexample
92if (TEST_P (t) && !TEST_P (y))
93  x = 1;
94@end smallexample
95@noindent
96and
97@smallexample
98int i = (TEST_P (t) != 0);
99@end smallexample
100@noindent
101are legal.  Macros that return @code{int} values now may be changed to
102return @code{tree} values, or other pointers in the future.  Even those
103that continue to return @code{int} may return multiple nonzero codes
104where previously they returned only zero and one.  Therefore, you should
105not write code like
106@smallexample
107if (TEST_P (t) == 1)
108@end smallexample
109@noindent
110as this code is not guaranteed to work correctly in the future.
111
112You should not take the address of values returned by the macros or
113functions described here.  In particular, no guarantee is given that the
114values are lvalues.
115
116In general, the names of macros are all in uppercase, while the names of
117functions are entirely in lowercase.  There are rare exceptions to this
118rule.  You should assume that any macro or function whose name is made
119up entirely of uppercase letters may evaluate its arguments more than
120once.  You may assume that a macro or function whose name is made up
121entirely of lowercase letters will evaluate its arguments only once.
122
123The @code{error_mark_node} is a special tree.  Its tree code is
124@code{ERROR_MARK}, but since there is only ever one node with that code,
125the usual practice is to compare the tree against
126@code{error_mark_node}.  (This test is just a test for pointer
127equality.)  If an error has occurred during front-end processing the
128flag @code{errorcount} will be set.  If the front end has encountered
129code it cannot handle, it will issue a message to the user and set
130@code{sorrycount}.  When these flags are set, any macro or function
131which normally returns a tree of a particular kind may instead return
132the @code{error_mark_node}.  Thus, if you intend to do any processing of
133erroneous code, you must be prepared to deal with the
134@code{error_mark_node}.
135
136Occasionally, a particular tree slot (like an operand to an expression,
137or a particular field in a declaration) will be referred to as
138``reserved for the back end''.  These slots are used to store RTL when
139the tree is converted to RTL for use by the GCC back end.  However, if
140that process is not taking place (e.g., if the front end is being hooked
141up to an intelligent editor), then those slots may be used by the
142back end presently in use.
143
144If you encounter situations that do not match this documentation, such
145as tree nodes of types not mentioned here, or macros documented to
146return entities of a particular kind that instead return entities of
147some different kind, you have found a bug, either in the front end or in
148the documentation.  Please report these bugs as you would any other
149bug.
150
151@menu
152* Macros and Functions::Macros and functions that can be used with all trees.
153* Identifiers::         The names of things.
154* Containers::          Lists and vectors.
155@end menu
156
157@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
158@c Trees
159@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
160
161@node Macros and Functions
162@subsection Trees
163@cindex tree
164@findex TREE_CHAIN
165@findex TREE_TYPE
166
167All GENERIC trees have two fields in common.  First, @code{TREE_CHAIN}
168is a pointer that can be used as a singly-linked list to other trees.
169The other is @code{TREE_TYPE}.  Many trees store the type of an
170expression or declaration in this field.
171
172These are some other functions for handling trees:
173
174@ftable @code
175
176@item tree_size
177Return the number of bytes a tree takes.
178
179@item build0
180@itemx build1
181@itemx build2
182@itemx build3
183@itemx build4
184@itemx build5
185@itemx build6
186
187These functions build a tree and supply values to put in each
188parameter.  The basic signature is @samp{@w{code, type, [operands]}}.
189@code{code} is the @code{TREE_CODE}, and @code{type} is a tree
190representing the @code{TREE_TYPE}.  These are followed by the
191operands, each of which is also a tree.
192
193@end ftable
194
195
196@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
197@c Identifiers
198@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
199
200@node Identifiers
201@subsection Identifiers
202@cindex identifier
203@cindex name
204@tindex IDENTIFIER_NODE
205
206An @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} represents a slightly more general concept
207than the standard C or C++ concept of identifier.  In particular, an
208@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} may contain a @samp{$}, or other extraordinary
209characters.
210
211There are never two distinct @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}s representing the
212same identifier.  Therefore, you may use pointer equality to compare
213@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}s, rather than using a routine like
214@code{strcmp}.  Use @code{get_identifier} to obtain the unique
215@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} for a supplied string.
216
217You can use the following macros to access identifiers:
218@ftable @code
219@item IDENTIFIER_POINTER
220The string represented by the identifier, represented as a
221@code{char*}.  This string is always @code{NUL}-terminated, and contains
222no embedded @code{NUL} characters.
223
224@item IDENTIFIER_LENGTH
225The length of the string returned by @code{IDENTIFIER_POINTER}, not
226including the trailing @code{NUL}.  This value of
227@code{IDENTIFIER_LENGTH (x)} is always the same as @code{strlen
228(IDENTIFIER_POINTER (x))}.
229
230@item IDENTIFIER_OPNAME_P
231This predicate holds if the identifier represents the name of an
232overloaded operator.  In this case, you should not depend on the
233contents of either the @code{IDENTIFIER_POINTER} or the
234@code{IDENTIFIER_LENGTH}.
235
236@item IDENTIFIER_TYPENAME_P
237This predicate holds if the identifier represents the name of a
238user-defined conversion operator.  In this case, the @code{TREE_TYPE} of
239the @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} holds the type to which the conversion
240operator converts.
241
242@end ftable
243
244@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
245@c Containers
246@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
247
248@node Containers
249@subsection Containers
250@cindex container
251@cindex list
252@cindex vector
253@tindex TREE_LIST
254@tindex TREE_VEC
255@findex TREE_PURPOSE
256@findex TREE_VALUE
257@findex TREE_VEC_LENGTH
258@findex TREE_VEC_ELT
259
260Two common container data structures can be represented directly with
261tree nodes.  A @code{TREE_LIST} is a singly linked list containing two
262trees per node.  These are the @code{TREE_PURPOSE} and @code{TREE_VALUE}
263of each node.  (Often, the @code{TREE_PURPOSE} contains some kind of
264tag, or additional information, while the @code{TREE_VALUE} contains the
265majority of the payload.  In other cases, the @code{TREE_PURPOSE} is
266simply @code{NULL_TREE}, while in still others both the
267@code{TREE_PURPOSE} and @code{TREE_VALUE} are of equal stature.)  Given
268one @code{TREE_LIST} node, the next node is found by following the
269@code{TREE_CHAIN}.  If the @code{TREE_CHAIN} is @code{NULL_TREE}, then
270you have reached the end of the list.
271
272A @code{TREE_VEC} is a simple vector.  The @code{TREE_VEC_LENGTH} is an
273integer (not a tree) giving the number of nodes in the vector.  The
274nodes themselves are accessed using the @code{TREE_VEC_ELT} macro, which
275takes two arguments.  The first is the @code{TREE_VEC} in question; the
276second is an integer indicating which element in the vector is desired.
277The elements are indexed from zero.
278
279@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
280@c Types
281@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
282
283@node Types
284@section Types
285@cindex type
286@cindex pointer
287@cindex reference
288@cindex fundamental type
289@cindex array
290@tindex VOID_TYPE
291@tindex INTEGER_TYPE
292@tindex TYPE_MIN_VALUE
293@tindex TYPE_MAX_VALUE
294@tindex REAL_TYPE
295@tindex FIXED_POINT_TYPE
296@tindex COMPLEX_TYPE
297@tindex ENUMERAL_TYPE
298@tindex BOOLEAN_TYPE
299@tindex POINTER_TYPE
300@tindex REFERENCE_TYPE
301@tindex FUNCTION_TYPE
302@tindex METHOD_TYPE
303@tindex ARRAY_TYPE
304@tindex RECORD_TYPE
305@tindex UNION_TYPE
306@tindex UNKNOWN_TYPE
307@tindex OFFSET_TYPE
308@findex TYPE_UNQUALIFIED
309@findex TYPE_QUAL_CONST
310@findex TYPE_QUAL_VOLATILE
311@findex TYPE_QUAL_RESTRICT
312@findex TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT
313@cindex qualified type
314@findex TYPE_SIZE
315@findex TYPE_ALIGN
316@findex TYPE_PRECISION
317@findex TYPE_ARG_TYPES
318@findex TYPE_METHOD_BASETYPE
319@findex TYPE_OFFSET_BASETYPE
320@findex TREE_TYPE
321@findex TYPE_CONTEXT
322@findex TYPE_NAME
323@findex TYPENAME_TYPE_FULLNAME
324@findex TYPE_FIELDS
325@findex TYPE_CANONICAL
326@findex TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P
327@findex SET_TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY
328
329All types have corresponding tree nodes.  However, you should not assume
330that there is exactly one tree node corresponding to each type.  There
331are often multiple nodes corresponding to the same type.
332
333For the most part, different kinds of types have different tree codes.
334(For example, pointer types use a @code{POINTER_TYPE} code while arrays
335use an @code{ARRAY_TYPE} code.)  However, pointers to member functions
336use the @code{RECORD_TYPE} code.  Therefore, when writing a
337@code{switch} statement that depends on the code associated with a
338particular type, you should take care to handle pointers to member
339functions under the @code{RECORD_TYPE} case label.
340
341The following functions and macros deal with cv-qualification of types:
342@ftable @code
343@item TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT
344This macro returns the unqualified version of a type.  It may be applied
345to an unqualified type, but it is not always the identity function in
346that case.
347@end ftable
348
349A few other macros and functions are usable with all types:
350@ftable @code
351@item TYPE_SIZE
352The number of bits required to represent the type, represented as an
353@code{INTEGER_CST}.  For an incomplete type, @code{TYPE_SIZE} will be
354@code{NULL_TREE}.
355
356@item TYPE_ALIGN
357The alignment of the type, in bits, represented as an @code{int}.
358
359@item TYPE_NAME
360This macro returns a declaration (in the form of a @code{TYPE_DECL}) for
361the type.  (Note this macro does @emph{not} return an
362@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}, as you might expect, given its name!)  You can
363look at the @code{DECL_NAME} of the @code{TYPE_DECL} to obtain the
364actual name of the type.  The @code{TYPE_NAME} will be @code{NULL_TREE}
365for a type that is not a built-in type, the result of a typedef, or a
366named class type.
367
368@item TYPE_CANONICAL
369This macro returns the ``canonical'' type for the given type
370node. Canonical types are used to improve performance in the C++ and
371Objective-C++ front ends by allowing efficient comparison between two
372type nodes in @code{same_type_p}: if the @code{TYPE_CANONICAL} values
373of the types are equal, the types are equivalent; otherwise, the types
374are not equivalent. The notion of equivalence for canonical types is
375the same as the notion of type equivalence in the language itself. For
376instance,
377
378When @code{TYPE_CANONICAL} is @code{NULL_TREE}, there is no canonical
379type for the given type node. In this case, comparison between this
380type and any other type requires the compiler to perform a deep,
381``structural'' comparison to see if the two type nodes have the same
382form and properties.
383
384The canonical type for a node is always the most fundamental type in
385the equivalence class of types. For instance, @code{int} is its own
386canonical type. A typedef @code{I} of @code{int} will have @code{int}
387as its canonical type. Similarly, @code{I*}@ and a typedef @code{IP}@
388(defined to @code{I*}) will has @code{int*} as their canonical
389type. When building a new type node, be sure to set
390@code{TYPE_CANONICAL} to the appropriate canonical type. If the new
391type is a compound type (built from other types), and any of those
392other types require structural equality, use
393@code{SET_TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY} to ensure that the new type also
394requires structural equality. Finally, if for some reason you cannot
395guarantee that @code{TYPE_CANONICAL} will point to the canonical type,
396use @code{SET_TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY} to make sure that the new
397type--and any type constructed based on it--requires structural
398equality. If you suspect that the canonical type system is
399miscomparing types, pass @code{--param verify-canonical-types=1} to
400the compiler or configure with @code{--enable-checking} to force the
401compiler to verify its canonical-type comparisons against the
402structural comparisons; the compiler will then print any warnings if
403the canonical types miscompare.
404
405@item TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY_P
406This predicate holds when the node requires structural equality
407checks, e.g., when @code{TYPE_CANONICAL} is @code{NULL_TREE}.
408
409@item SET_TYPE_STRUCTURAL_EQUALITY
410This macro states that the type node it is given requires structural
411equality checks, e.g., it sets @code{TYPE_CANONICAL} to
412@code{NULL_TREE}.
413
414@item same_type_p
415This predicate takes two types as input, and holds if they are the same
416type.  For example, if one type is a @code{typedef} for the other, or
417both are @code{typedef}s for the same type.  This predicate also holds if
418the two trees given as input are simply copies of one another; i.e.,
419there is no difference between them at the source level, but, for
420whatever reason, a duplicate has been made in the representation.  You
421should never use @code{==} (pointer equality) to compare types; always
422use @code{same_type_p} instead.
423@end ftable
424
425Detailed below are the various kinds of types, and the macros that can
426be used to access them.  Although other kinds of types are used
427elsewhere in G++, the types described here are the only ones that you
428will encounter while examining the intermediate representation.
429
430@table @code
431@item VOID_TYPE
432Used to represent the @code{void} type.
433
434@item INTEGER_TYPE
435Used to represent the various integral types, including @code{char},
436@code{short}, @code{int}, @code{long}, and @code{long long}.  This code
437is not used for enumeration types, nor for the @code{bool} type.
438The @code{TYPE_PRECISION} is the number of bits used in
439the representation, represented as an @code{unsigned int}.  (Note that
440in the general case this is not the same value as @code{TYPE_SIZE};
441suppose that there were a 24-bit integer type, but that alignment
442requirements for the ABI required 32-bit alignment.  Then,
443@code{TYPE_SIZE} would be an @code{INTEGER_CST} for 32, while
444@code{TYPE_PRECISION} would be 24.)  The integer type is unsigned if
445@code{TYPE_UNSIGNED} holds; otherwise, it is signed.
446
447The @code{TYPE_MIN_VALUE} is an @code{INTEGER_CST} for the smallest
448integer that may be represented by this type.  Similarly, the
449@code{TYPE_MAX_VALUE} is an @code{INTEGER_CST} for the largest integer
450that may be represented by this type.
451
452@item REAL_TYPE
453Used to represent the @code{float}, @code{double}, and @code{long
454double} types.  The number of bits in the floating-point representation
455is given by @code{TYPE_PRECISION}, as in the @code{INTEGER_TYPE} case.
456
457@item FIXED_POINT_TYPE
458Used to represent the @code{short _Fract}, @code{_Fract}, @code{long
459_Fract}, @code{long long _Fract}, @code{short _Accum}, @code{_Accum},
460@code{long _Accum}, and @code{long long _Accum} types.  The number of bits
461in the fixed-point representation is given by @code{TYPE_PRECISION},
462as in the @code{INTEGER_TYPE} case.  There may be padding bits, fractional
463bits and integral bits.  The number of fractional bits is given by
464@code{TYPE_FBIT}, and the number of integral bits is given by @code{TYPE_IBIT}.
465The fixed-point type is unsigned if @code{TYPE_UNSIGNED} holds; otherwise,
466it is signed.
467The fixed-point type is saturating if @code{TYPE_SATURATING} holds; otherwise,
468it is not saturating.
469
470@item COMPLEX_TYPE
471Used to represent GCC built-in @code{__complex__} data types.  The
472@code{TREE_TYPE} is the type of the real and imaginary parts.
473
474@item ENUMERAL_TYPE
475Used to represent an enumeration type.  The @code{TYPE_PRECISION} gives
476(as an @code{int}), the number of bits used to represent the type.  If
477there are no negative enumeration constants, @code{TYPE_UNSIGNED} will
478hold.  The minimum and maximum enumeration constants may be obtained
479with @code{TYPE_MIN_VALUE} and @code{TYPE_MAX_VALUE}, respectively; each
480of these macros returns an @code{INTEGER_CST}.
481
482The actual enumeration constants themselves may be obtained by looking
483at the @code{TYPE_VALUES}.  This macro will return a @code{TREE_LIST},
484containing the constants.  The @code{TREE_PURPOSE} of each node will be
485an @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} giving the name of the constant; the
486@code{TREE_VALUE} will be an @code{INTEGER_CST} giving the value
487assigned to that constant.  These constants will appear in the order in
488which they were declared.  The @code{TREE_TYPE} of each of these
489constants will be the type of enumeration type itself.
490
491@item BOOLEAN_TYPE
492Used to represent the @code{bool} type.
493
494@item POINTER_TYPE
495Used to represent pointer types, and pointer to data member types.  The
496@code{TREE_TYPE} gives the type to which this type points.
497
498@item REFERENCE_TYPE
499Used to represent reference types.  The @code{TREE_TYPE} gives the type
500to which this type refers.
501
502@item FUNCTION_TYPE
503Used to represent the type of non-member functions and of static member
504functions.  The @code{TREE_TYPE} gives the return type of the function.
505The @code{TYPE_ARG_TYPES} are a @code{TREE_LIST} of the argument types.
506The @code{TREE_VALUE} of each node in this list is the type of the
507corresponding argument; the @code{TREE_PURPOSE} is an expression for the
508default argument value, if any.  If the last node in the list is
509@code{void_list_node} (a @code{TREE_LIST} node whose @code{TREE_VALUE}
510is the @code{void_type_node}), then functions of this type do not take
511variable arguments.  Otherwise, they do take a variable number of
512arguments.
513
514Note that in C (but not in C++) a function declared like @code{void f()}
515is an unprototyped function taking a variable number of arguments; the
516@code{TYPE_ARG_TYPES} of such a function will be @code{NULL}.
517
518@item METHOD_TYPE
519Used to represent the type of a non-static member function.  Like a
520@code{FUNCTION_TYPE}, the return type is given by the @code{TREE_TYPE}.
521The type of @code{*this}, i.e., the class of which functions of this
522type are a member, is given by the @code{TYPE_METHOD_BASETYPE}.  The
523@code{TYPE_ARG_TYPES} is the parameter list, as for a
524@code{FUNCTION_TYPE}, and includes the @code{this} argument.
525
526@item ARRAY_TYPE
527Used to represent array types.  The @code{TREE_TYPE} gives the type of
528the elements in the array.  If the array-bound is present in the type,
529the @code{TYPE_DOMAIN} is an @code{INTEGER_TYPE} whose
530@code{TYPE_MIN_VALUE} and @code{TYPE_MAX_VALUE} will be the lower and
531upper bounds of the array, respectively.  The @code{TYPE_MIN_VALUE} will
532always be an @code{INTEGER_CST} for zero, while the
533@code{TYPE_MAX_VALUE} will be one less than the number of elements in
534the array, i.e., the highest value which may be used to index an element
535in the array.
536
537@item RECORD_TYPE
538Used to represent @code{struct} and @code{class} types, as well as
539pointers to member functions and similar constructs in other languages.
540@code{TYPE_FIELDS} contains the items contained in this type, each of
541which can be a @code{FIELD_DECL}, @code{VAR_DECL}, @code{CONST_DECL}, or
542@code{TYPE_DECL}.  You may not make any assumptions about the ordering
543of the fields in the type or whether one or more of them overlap.
544
545@item UNION_TYPE
546Used to represent @code{union} types.  Similar to @code{RECORD_TYPE}
547except that all @code{FIELD_DECL} nodes in @code{TYPE_FIELD} start at
548bit position zero.
549
550@item QUAL_UNION_TYPE
551Used to represent part of a variant record in Ada.  Similar to
552@code{UNION_TYPE} except that each @code{FIELD_DECL} has a
553@code{DECL_QUALIFIER} field, which contains a boolean expression that
554indicates whether the field is present in the object.  The type will only
555have one field, so each field's @code{DECL_QUALIFIER} is only evaluated
556if none of the expressions in the previous fields in @code{TYPE_FIELDS}
557are nonzero.  Normally these expressions will reference a field in the
558outer object using a @code{PLACEHOLDER_EXPR}.
559
560@item LANG_TYPE
561This node is used to represent a language-specific type.  The front
562end must handle it.
563
564@item OFFSET_TYPE
565This node is used to represent a pointer-to-data member.  For a data
566member @code{X::m} the @code{TYPE_OFFSET_BASETYPE} is @code{X} and the
567@code{TREE_TYPE} is the type of @code{m}.
568
569@end table
570
571There are variables whose values represent some of the basic types.
572These include:
573@table @code
574@item void_type_node
575A node for @code{void}.
576
577@item integer_type_node
578A node for @code{int}.
579
580@item unsigned_type_node.
581A node for @code{unsigned int}.
582
583@item char_type_node.
584A node for @code{char}.
585@end table
586@noindent
587It may sometimes be useful to compare one of these variables with a type
588in hand, using @code{same_type_p}.
589
590@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
591@c Declarations
592@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
593
594@node Declarations
595@section Declarations
596@cindex declaration
597@cindex variable
598@cindex type declaration
599@tindex LABEL_DECL
600@tindex CONST_DECL
601@tindex TYPE_DECL
602@tindex VAR_DECL
603@tindex PARM_DECL
604@tindex DEBUG_EXPR_DECL
605@tindex FIELD_DECL
606@tindex NAMESPACE_DECL
607@tindex RESULT_DECL
608@tindex TEMPLATE_DECL
609@tindex THUNK_DECL
610@findex THUNK_DELTA
611@findex DECL_INITIAL
612@findex DECL_SIZE
613@findex DECL_ALIGN
614@findex DECL_EXTERNAL
615
616This section covers the various kinds of declarations that appear in the
617internal representation, except for declarations of functions
618(represented by @code{FUNCTION_DECL} nodes), which are described in
619@ref{Functions}.
620
621@menu
622* Working with declarations::  Macros and functions that work on
623declarations.
624* Internal structure:: How declaration nodes are represented.
625@end menu
626
627@node Working with declarations
628@subsection Working with declarations
629
630Some macros can be used with any kind of declaration.  These include:
631@ftable @code
632@item DECL_NAME
633This macro returns an @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} giving the name of the
634entity.
635
636@item TREE_TYPE
637This macro returns the type of the entity declared.
638
639@item EXPR_FILENAME
640This macro returns the name of the file in which the entity was
641declared, as a @code{char*}.  For an entity declared implicitly by the
642compiler (like @code{__builtin_memcpy}), this will be the string
643@code{"<internal>"}.
644
645@item EXPR_LINENO
646This macro returns the line number at which the entity was declared, as
647an @code{int}.
648
649@item DECL_ARTIFICIAL
650This predicate holds if the declaration was implicitly generated by the
651compiler.  For example, this predicate will hold of an implicitly
652declared member function, or of the @code{TYPE_DECL} implicitly
653generated for a class type.  Recall that in C++ code like:
654@smallexample
655struct S @{@};
656@end smallexample
657@noindent
658is roughly equivalent to C code like:
659@smallexample
660struct S @{@};
661typedef struct S S;
662@end smallexample
663The implicitly generated @code{typedef} declaration is represented by a
664@code{TYPE_DECL} for which @code{DECL_ARTIFICIAL} holds.
665
666@end ftable
667
668The various kinds of declarations include:
669@table @code
670@item LABEL_DECL
671These nodes are used to represent labels in function bodies.  For more
672information, see @ref{Functions}.  These nodes only appear in block
673scopes.
674
675@item CONST_DECL
676These nodes are used to represent enumeration constants.  The value of
677the constant is given by @code{DECL_INITIAL} which will be an
678@code{INTEGER_CST} with the same type as the @code{TREE_TYPE} of the
679@code{CONST_DECL}, i.e., an @code{ENUMERAL_TYPE}.
680
681@item RESULT_DECL
682These nodes represent the value returned by a function.  When a value is
683assigned to a @code{RESULT_DECL}, that indicates that the value should
684be returned, via bitwise copy, by the function.  You can use
685@code{DECL_SIZE} and @code{DECL_ALIGN} on a @code{RESULT_DECL}, just as
686with a @code{VAR_DECL}.
687
688@item TYPE_DECL
689These nodes represent @code{typedef} declarations.  The @code{TREE_TYPE}
690is the type declared to have the name given by @code{DECL_NAME}.  In
691some cases, there is no associated name.
692
693@item VAR_DECL
694These nodes represent variables with namespace or block scope, as well
695as static data members.  The @code{DECL_SIZE} and @code{DECL_ALIGN} are
696analogous to @code{TYPE_SIZE} and @code{TYPE_ALIGN}.  For a declaration,
697you should always use the @code{DECL_SIZE} and @code{DECL_ALIGN} rather
698than the @code{TYPE_SIZE} and @code{TYPE_ALIGN} given by the
699@code{TREE_TYPE}, since special attributes may have been applied to the
700variable to give it a particular size and alignment.  You may use the
701predicates @code{DECL_THIS_STATIC} or @code{DECL_THIS_EXTERN} to test
702whether the storage class specifiers @code{static} or @code{extern} were
703used to declare a variable.
704
705If this variable is initialized (but does not require a constructor),
706the @code{DECL_INITIAL} will be an expression for the initializer.  The
707initializer should be evaluated, and a bitwise copy into the variable
708performed.  If the @code{DECL_INITIAL} is the @code{error_mark_node},
709there is an initializer, but it is given by an explicit statement later
710in the code; no bitwise copy is required.
711
712GCC provides an extension that allows either automatic variables, or
713global variables, to be placed in particular registers.  This extension
714is being used for a particular @code{VAR_DECL} if @code{DECL_REGISTER}
715holds for the @code{VAR_DECL}, and if @code{DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME} is not
716equal to @code{DECL_NAME}.  In that case, @code{DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME} is
717the name of the register into which the variable will be placed.
718
719@item PARM_DECL
720Used to represent a parameter to a function.  Treat these nodes
721similarly to @code{VAR_DECL} nodes.  These nodes only appear in the
722@code{DECL_ARGUMENTS} for a @code{FUNCTION_DECL}.
723
724The @code{DECL_ARG_TYPE} for a @code{PARM_DECL} is the type that will
725actually be used when a value is passed to this function.  It may be a
726wider type than the @code{TREE_TYPE} of the parameter; for example, the
727ordinary type might be @code{short} while the @code{DECL_ARG_TYPE} is
728@code{int}.
729
730@item DEBUG_EXPR_DECL
731Used to represent an anonymous debug-information temporary created to
732hold an expression as it is optimized away, so that its value can be
733referenced in debug bind statements.
734
735@item FIELD_DECL
736These nodes represent non-static data members.  The @code{DECL_SIZE} and
737@code{DECL_ALIGN} behave as for @code{VAR_DECL} nodes.
738The position of the field within the parent record is specified by a
739combination of three attributes.  @code{DECL_FIELD_OFFSET} is the position,
740counting in bytes, of the @code{DECL_OFFSET_ALIGN}-bit sized word containing
741the bit of the field closest to the beginning of the structure.
742@code{DECL_FIELD_BIT_OFFSET} is the bit offset of the first bit of the field
743within this word; this may be nonzero even for fields that are not bit-fields,
744since @code{DECL_OFFSET_ALIGN} may be greater than the natural alignment
745of the field's type.
746
747If @code{DECL_C_BIT_FIELD} holds, this field is a bit-field.  In a bit-field,
748@code{DECL_BIT_FIELD_TYPE} also contains the type that was originally
749specified for it, while DECL_TYPE may be a modified type with lesser precision,
750according to the size of the bit field.
751
752@item NAMESPACE_DECL
753Namespaces provide a name hierarchy for other declarations.  They
754appear in the @code{DECL_CONTEXT} of other @code{_DECL} nodes.
755
756@end table
757
758@node Internal structure
759@subsection Internal structure
760
761@code{DECL} nodes are represented internally as a hierarchy of
762structures.
763
764@menu
765* Current structure hierarchy::  The current DECL node structure
766hierarchy.
767* Adding new DECL node types:: How to add a new DECL node to a
768frontend.
769@end menu
770
771@node Current structure hierarchy
772@subsubsection Current structure hierarchy
773
774@table @code
775
776@item struct tree_decl_minimal
777This is the minimal structure to inherit from in order for common
778@code{DECL} macros to work.  The fields it contains are a unique ID,
779source location, context, and name.
780
781@item struct tree_decl_common
782This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_minimal}.  It
783contains fields that most @code{DECL} nodes need, such as a field to
784store alignment, machine mode, size, and attributes.
785
786@item struct tree_field_decl
787This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_common}.  It is
788used to represent @code{FIELD_DECL}.
789
790@item struct tree_label_decl
791This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_common}.  It is
792used to represent @code{LABEL_DECL}.
793
794@item struct tree_translation_unit_decl
795This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_common}.  It is
796used to represent @code{TRANSLATION_UNIT_DECL}.
797
798@item struct tree_decl_with_rtl
799This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_common}.  It
800contains a field to store the low-level RTL associated with a
801@code{DECL} node.
802
803@item struct tree_result_decl
804This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_with_rtl}.  It is
805used to represent @code{RESULT_DECL}.
806
807@item struct tree_const_decl
808This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_with_rtl}.  It is
809used to represent @code{CONST_DECL}.
810
811@item struct tree_parm_decl
812This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_with_rtl}.  It is
813used to represent @code{PARM_DECL}.
814
815@item struct tree_decl_with_vis
816This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_with_rtl}.  It
817contains fields necessary to store visibility information, as well as
818a section name and assembler name.
819
820@item struct tree_var_decl
821This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_with_vis}.  It is
822used to represent @code{VAR_DECL}.
823
824@item struct tree_function_decl
825This structure inherits from @code{struct tree_decl_with_vis}.  It is
826used to represent @code{FUNCTION_DECL}.
827
828@end table
829@node Adding new DECL node types
830@subsubsection Adding new DECL node types
831
832Adding a new @code{DECL} tree consists of the following steps
833
834@table @asis
835
836@item Add a new tree code for the @code{DECL} node
837For language specific @code{DECL} nodes, there is a @file{.def} file
838in each frontend directory where the tree code should be added.
839For @code{DECL} nodes that are part of the middle-end, the code should
840be added to @file{tree.def}.
841
842@item Create a new structure type for the @code{DECL} node
843These structures should inherit from one of the existing structures in
844the language hierarchy by using that structure as the first member.
845
846@smallexample
847struct tree_foo_decl
848@{
849   struct tree_decl_with_vis common;
850@}
851@end smallexample
852
853Would create a structure name @code{tree_foo_decl} that inherits from
854@code{struct tree_decl_with_vis}.
855
856For language specific @code{DECL} nodes, this new structure type
857should go in the appropriate @file{.h} file.
858For @code{DECL} nodes that are part of the middle-end, the structure
859type should go in @file{tree.h}.
860
861@item Add a member to the tree structure enumerator for the node
862For garbage collection and dynamic checking purposes, each @code{DECL}
863node structure type is required to have a unique enumerator value
864specified with it.
865For language specific @code{DECL} nodes, this new enumerator value
866should go in the appropriate @file{.def} file.
867For @code{DECL} nodes that are part of the middle-end, the enumerator
868values are specified in @file{treestruct.def}.
869
870@item Update @code{union tree_node}
871In order to make your new structure type usable, it must be added to
872@code{union tree_node}.
873For language specific @code{DECL} nodes, a new entry should be added
874to the appropriate @file{.h} file of the form
875@smallexample
876  struct tree_foo_decl GTY ((tag ("TS_VAR_DECL"))) foo_decl;
877@end smallexample
878For @code{DECL} nodes that are part of the middle-end, the additional
879member goes directly into @code{union tree_node} in @file{tree.h}.
880
881@item Update dynamic checking info
882In order to be able to check whether accessing a named portion of
883@code{union tree_node} is legal, and whether a certain @code{DECL} node
884contains one of the enumerated @code{DECL} node structures in the
885hierarchy, a simple lookup table is used.
886This lookup table needs to be kept up to date with the tree structure
887hierarchy, or else checking and containment macros will fail
888inappropriately.
889
890For language specific @code{DECL} nodes, their is an @code{init_ts}
891function in an appropriate @file{.c} file, which initializes the lookup
892table.
893Code setting up the table for new @code{DECL} nodes should be added
894there.
895For each @code{DECL} tree code and enumerator value representing a
896member of the inheritance  hierarchy, the table should contain 1 if
897that tree code inherits (directly or indirectly) from that member.
898Thus, a @code{FOO_DECL} node derived from @code{struct decl_with_rtl},
899and enumerator value @code{TS_FOO_DECL}, would be set up as follows
900@smallexample
901tree_contains_struct[FOO_DECL][TS_FOO_DECL] = 1;
902tree_contains_struct[FOO_DECL][TS_DECL_WRTL] = 1;
903tree_contains_struct[FOO_DECL][TS_DECL_COMMON] = 1;
904tree_contains_struct[FOO_DECL][TS_DECL_MINIMAL] = 1;
905@end smallexample
906
907For @code{DECL} nodes that are part of the middle-end, the setup code
908goes into @file{tree.c}.
909
910@item Add macros to access any new fields and flags
911
912Each added field or flag should have a macro that is used to access
913it, that performs appropriate checking to ensure only the right type of
914@code{DECL} nodes access the field.
915
916These macros generally take the following form
917@smallexample
918#define FOO_DECL_FIELDNAME(NODE) FOO_DECL_CHECK(NODE)->foo_decl.fieldname
919@end smallexample
920However, if the structure is simply a base class for further
921structures, something like the following should be used
922@smallexample
923#define BASE_STRUCT_CHECK(T) CONTAINS_STRUCT_CHECK(T, TS_BASE_STRUCT)
924#define BASE_STRUCT_FIELDNAME(NODE) \
925   (BASE_STRUCT_CHECK(NODE)->base_struct.fieldname
926@end smallexample
927
928Reading them from the generated @file{all-tree.def} file (which in
929turn includes all the @file{tree.def} files), @file{gencheck.c} is
930used during GCC's build to generate the @code{*_CHECK} macros for all
931tree codes.
932
933@end table
934
935
936@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
937@c Attributes
938@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
939@node Attributes
940@section Attributes in trees
941@cindex attributes
942
943Attributes, as specified using the @code{__attribute__} keyword, are
944represented internally as a @code{TREE_LIST}.  The @code{TREE_PURPOSE}
945is the name of the attribute, as an @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}.  The
946@code{TREE_VALUE} is a @code{TREE_LIST} of the arguments of the
947attribute, if any, or @code{NULL_TREE} if there are no arguments; the
948arguments are stored as the @code{TREE_VALUE} of successive entries in
949the list, and may be identifiers or expressions.  The @code{TREE_CHAIN}
950of the attribute is the next attribute in a list of attributes applying
951to the same declaration or type, or @code{NULL_TREE} if there are no
952further attributes in the list.
953
954Attributes may be attached to declarations and to types; these
955attributes may be accessed with the following macros.  All attributes
956are stored in this way, and many also cause other changes to the
957declaration or type or to other internal compiler data structures.
958
959@deftypefn {Tree Macro} tree DECL_ATTRIBUTES (tree @var{decl})
960This macro returns the attributes on the declaration @var{decl}.
961@end deftypefn
962
963@deftypefn {Tree Macro} tree TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (tree @var{type})
964This macro returns the attributes on the type @var{type}.
965@end deftypefn
966
967
968@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
969@c Expressions
970@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
971
972@node Expression trees
973@section Expressions
974@cindex expression
975@findex TREE_TYPE
976@findex TREE_OPERAND
977
978The internal representation for expressions is for the most part quite
979straightforward.  However, there are a few facts that one must bear in
980mind.  In particular, the expression ``tree'' is actually a directed
981acyclic graph.  (For example there may be many references to the integer
982constant zero throughout the source program; many of these will be
983represented by the same expression node.)  You should not rely on
984certain kinds of node being shared, nor should you rely on certain kinds of
985nodes being unshared.
986
987The following macros can be used with all expression nodes:
988
989@ftable @code
990@item TREE_TYPE
991Returns the type of the expression.  This value may not be precisely the
992same type that would be given the expression in the original program.
993@end ftable
994
995In what follows, some nodes that one might expect to always have type
996@code{bool} are documented to have either integral or boolean type.  At
997some point in the future, the C front end may also make use of this same
998intermediate representation, and at this point these nodes will
999certainly have integral type.  The previous sentence is not meant to
1000imply that the C++ front end does not or will not give these nodes
1001integral type.
1002
1003Below, we list the various kinds of expression nodes.  Except where
1004noted otherwise, the operands to an expression are accessed using the
1005@code{TREE_OPERAND} macro.  For example, to access the first operand to
1006a binary plus expression @code{expr}, use:
1007
1008@smallexample
1009TREE_OPERAND (expr, 0)
1010@end smallexample
1011@noindent
1012
1013As this example indicates, the operands are zero-indexed.
1014
1015
1016@menu
1017* Constants: Constant expressions.
1018* Storage References::
1019* Unary and Binary Expressions::
1020* Vectors::
1021@end menu
1022
1023@node Constant expressions
1024@subsection Constant expressions
1025@tindex INTEGER_CST
1026@findex tree_int_cst_lt
1027@findex tree_int_cst_equal
1028@tindex tree_fits_uhwi_p
1029@tindex tree_fits_shwi_p
1030@tindex tree_to_uhwi
1031@tindex tree_to_shwi
1032@tindex TREE_INT_CST_NUNITS
1033@tindex TREE_INT_CST_ELT
1034@tindex TREE_INT_CST_LOW
1035@tindex REAL_CST
1036@tindex FIXED_CST
1037@tindex COMPLEX_CST
1038@tindex VECTOR_CST
1039@tindex STRING_CST
1040@tindex POLY_INT_CST
1041@findex TREE_STRING_LENGTH
1042@findex TREE_STRING_POINTER
1043
1044The table below begins with constants, moves on to unary expressions,
1045then proceeds to binary expressions, and concludes with various other
1046kinds of expressions:
1047
1048@table @code
1049@item INTEGER_CST
1050These nodes represent integer constants.  Note that the type of these
1051constants is obtained with @code{TREE_TYPE}; they are not always of type
1052@code{int}.  In particular, @code{char} constants are represented with
1053@code{INTEGER_CST} nodes.  The value of the integer constant @code{e} is
1054represented in an array of HOST_WIDE_INT.   There are enough elements
1055in the array to represent the value without taking extra elements for
1056redundant 0s or -1.  The number of elements used to represent @code{e}
1057is available via @code{TREE_INT_CST_NUNITS}. Element @code{i} can be
1058extracted by using @code{TREE_INT_CST_ELT (e, i)}.
1059@code{TREE_INT_CST_LOW} is a shorthand for @code{TREE_INT_CST_ELT (e, 0)}.
1060
1061The functions @code{tree_fits_shwi_p} and @code{tree_fits_uhwi_p}
1062can be used to tell if the value is small enough to fit in a
1063signed HOST_WIDE_INT or an unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT respectively.
1064The value can then be extracted using @code{tree_to_shwi} and
1065@code{tree_to_uhwi}.
1066
1067@item REAL_CST
1068
1069FIXME: Talk about how to obtain representations of this constant, do
1070comparisons, and so forth.
1071
1072@item FIXED_CST
1073
1074These nodes represent fixed-point constants.  The type of these constants
1075is obtained with @code{TREE_TYPE}.  @code{TREE_FIXED_CST_PTR} points to
1076a @code{struct fixed_value};  @code{TREE_FIXED_CST} returns the structure
1077itself.  @code{struct fixed_value} contains @code{data} with the size of two
1078@code{HOST_BITS_PER_WIDE_INT} and @code{mode} as the associated fixed-point
1079machine mode for @code{data}.
1080
1081@item COMPLEX_CST
1082These nodes are used to represent complex number constants, that is a
1083@code{__complex__} whose parts are constant nodes.  The
1084@code{TREE_REALPART} and @code{TREE_IMAGPART} return the real and the
1085imaginary parts respectively.
1086
1087@item VECTOR_CST
1088These nodes are used to represent vector constants.  Each vector
1089constant @var{v} is treated as a specific instance of an arbitrary-length
1090sequence that itself contains @samp{VECTOR_CST_NPATTERNS (@var{v})}
1091interleaved patterns.  Each pattern has the form:
1092
1093@smallexample
1094@{ @var{base0}, @var{base1}, @var{base1} + @var{step}, @var{base1} + @var{step} * 2, @dots{} @}
1095@end smallexample
1096
1097The first three elements in each pattern are enough to determine the
1098values of the other elements.  However, if all @var{step}s are zero,
1099only the first two elements are needed.  If in addition each @var{base1}
1100is equal to the corresponding @var{base0}, only the first element in
1101each pattern is needed.  The number of encoded elements per pattern
1102is given by @samp{VECTOR_CST_NELTS_PER_PATTERN (@var{v})}.
1103
1104For example, the constant:
1105
1106@smallexample
1107@{ 0, 1, 2, 6, 3, 8, 4, 10, 5, 12, 6, 14, 7, 16, 8, 18 @}
1108@end smallexample
1109
1110is interpreted as an interleaving of the sequences:
1111
1112@smallexample
1113@{ 0, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 @}
1114@{ 1, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 @}
1115@end smallexample
1116
1117where the sequences are represented by the following patterns:
1118
1119@smallexample
1120@var{base0} == 0, @var{base1} == 2, @var{step} == 1
1121@var{base0} == 1, @var{base1} == 6, @var{step} == 2
1122@end smallexample
1123
1124In this case:
1125
1126@smallexample
1127VECTOR_CST_NPATTERNS (@var{v}) == 2
1128VECTOR_CST_NELTS_PER_PATTERN (@var{v}) == 3
1129@end smallexample
1130
1131The vector is therefore encoded using the first 6 elements
1132(@samp{@{ 0, 1, 2, 6, 3, 8 @}}), with the remaining 10 elements
1133being implicit extensions of them.
1134
1135Sometimes this scheme can create two possible encodings of the same
1136vector.  For example @{ 0, 1 @} could be seen as two patterns with
1137one element each or one pattern with two elements (@var{base0} and
1138@var{base1}).  The canonical encoding is always the one with the
1139fewest patterns or (if both encodings have the same number of
1140petterns) the one with the fewest encoded elements.
1141
1142@samp{vector_cst_encoding_nelts (@var{v})} gives the total number of
1143encoded elements in @var{v}, which is 6 in the example above.
1144@code{VECTOR_CST_ENCODED_ELTS (@var{v})} gives a pointer to the elements
1145encoded in @var{v} and @code{VECTOR_CST_ENCODED_ELT (@var{v}, @var{i})}
1146accesses the value of encoded element @var{i}.
1147
1148@samp{VECTOR_CST_DUPLICATE_P (@var{v})} is true if @var{v} simply contains
1149repeated instances of @samp{VECTOR_CST_NPATTERNS (@var{v})} values.  This is
1150a shorthand for testing @samp{VECTOR_CST_NELTS_PER_PATTERN (@var{v}) == 1}.
1151
1152@samp{VECTOR_CST_STEPPED_P (@var{v})} is true if at least one
1153pattern in @var{v} has a nonzero step.  This is a shorthand for
1154testing @samp{VECTOR_CST_NELTS_PER_PATTERN (@var{v}) == 3}.
1155
1156The utility function @code{vector_cst_elt} gives the value of an
1157arbitrary index as a @code{tree}.  @code{vector_cst_int_elt} gives
1158the same value as a @code{wide_int}.
1159
1160@item STRING_CST
1161These nodes represent string-constants.  The @code{TREE_STRING_LENGTH}
1162returns the length of the string, as an @code{int}.  The
1163@code{TREE_STRING_POINTER} is a @code{char*} containing the string
1164itself.  The string may not be @code{NUL}-terminated, and it may contain
1165embedded @code{NUL} characters.  Therefore, the
1166@code{TREE_STRING_LENGTH} includes the trailing @code{NUL} if it is
1167present.
1168
1169For wide string constants, the @code{TREE_STRING_LENGTH} is the number
1170of bytes in the string, and the @code{TREE_STRING_POINTER}
1171points to an array of the bytes of the string, as represented on the
1172target system (that is, as integers in the target endianness).  Wide and
1173non-wide string constants are distinguished only by the @code{TREE_TYPE}
1174of the @code{STRING_CST}.
1175
1176FIXME: The formats of string constants are not well-defined when the
1177target system bytes are not the same width as host system bytes.
1178
1179@item POLY_INT_CST
1180These nodes represent invariants that depend on some target-specific
1181runtime parameters.  They consist of @code{NUM_POLY_INT_COEFFS}
1182coefficients, with the first coefficient being the constant term and
1183the others being multipliers that are applied to the runtime parameters.
1184
1185@code{POLY_INT_CST_ELT (@var{x}, @var{i})} references coefficient number
1186@var{i} of @code{POLY_INT_CST} node @var{x}.  Each coefficient is an
1187@code{INTEGER_CST}.
1188
1189@end table
1190
1191@node Storage References
1192@subsection References to storage
1193@tindex ADDR_EXPR
1194@tindex INDIRECT_REF
1195@tindex MEM_REF
1196@tindex ARRAY_REF
1197@tindex ARRAY_RANGE_REF
1198@tindex TARGET_MEM_REF
1199@tindex COMPONENT_REF
1200
1201@table @code
1202@item ARRAY_REF
1203These nodes represent array accesses.  The first operand is the array;
1204the second is the index.  To calculate the address of the memory
1205accessed, you must scale the index by the size of the type of the array
1206elements.  The type of these expressions must be the type of a component of
1207the array.  The third and fourth operands are used after gimplification
1208to represent the lower bound and component size but should not be used
1209directly; call @code{array_ref_low_bound} and @code{array_ref_element_size}
1210instead.
1211
1212@item ARRAY_RANGE_REF
1213These nodes represent access to a range (or ``slice'') of an array.  The
1214operands are the same as that for @code{ARRAY_REF} and have the same
1215meanings.  The type of these expressions must be an array whose component
1216type is the same as that of the first operand.  The range of that array
1217type determines the amount of data these expressions access.
1218
1219@item TARGET_MEM_REF
1220These nodes represent memory accesses whose address directly map to
1221an addressing mode of the target architecture.  The first argument
1222is @code{TMR_SYMBOL} and must be a @code{VAR_DECL} of an object with
1223a fixed address.  The second argument is @code{TMR_BASE} and the
1224third one is @code{TMR_INDEX}.  The fourth argument is
1225@code{TMR_STEP} and must be an @code{INTEGER_CST}.  The fifth
1226argument is @code{TMR_OFFSET} and must be an @code{INTEGER_CST}.
1227Any of the arguments may be NULL if the appropriate component
1228does not appear in the address.  Address of the @code{TARGET_MEM_REF}
1229is determined in the following way.
1230
1231@smallexample
1232&TMR_SYMBOL + TMR_BASE + TMR_INDEX * TMR_STEP + TMR_OFFSET
1233@end smallexample
1234
1235The sixth argument is the reference to the original memory access, which
1236is preserved for the purposes of the RTL alias analysis.  The seventh
1237argument is a tag representing the results of tree level alias analysis.
1238
1239@item ADDR_EXPR
1240These nodes are used to represent the address of an object.  (These
1241expressions will always have pointer or reference type.)  The operand may
1242be another expression, or it may be a declaration.
1243
1244As an extension, GCC allows users to take the address of a label.  In
1245this case, the operand of the @code{ADDR_EXPR} will be a
1246@code{LABEL_DECL}.  The type of such an expression is @code{void*}.
1247
1248If the object addressed is not an lvalue, a temporary is created, and
1249the address of the temporary is used.
1250
1251@item INDIRECT_REF
1252These nodes are used to represent the object pointed to by a pointer.
1253The operand is the pointer being dereferenced; it will always have
1254pointer or reference type.
1255
1256@item MEM_REF
1257These nodes are used to represent the object pointed to by a pointer
1258offset by a constant.
1259The first operand is the pointer being dereferenced; it will always have
1260pointer or reference type.  The second operand is a pointer constant.
1261Its type is specifying the type to be used for type-based alias analysis.
1262
1263@item COMPONENT_REF
1264These nodes represent non-static data member accesses.  The first
1265operand is the object (rather than a pointer to it); the second operand
1266is the @code{FIELD_DECL} for the data member.  The third operand represents
1267the byte offset of the field, but should not be used directly; call
1268@code{component_ref_field_offset} instead.
1269
1270
1271@end table
1272
1273@node Unary and Binary Expressions
1274@subsection Unary and Binary Expressions
1275@tindex NEGATE_EXPR
1276@tindex ABS_EXPR
1277@tindex ABSU_EXPR
1278@tindex BIT_NOT_EXPR
1279@tindex TRUTH_NOT_EXPR
1280@tindex PREDECREMENT_EXPR
1281@tindex PREINCREMENT_EXPR
1282@tindex POSTDECREMENT_EXPR
1283@tindex POSTINCREMENT_EXPR
1284@tindex FIX_TRUNC_EXPR
1285@tindex FLOAT_EXPR
1286@tindex COMPLEX_EXPR
1287@tindex CONJ_EXPR
1288@tindex REALPART_EXPR
1289@tindex IMAGPART_EXPR
1290@tindex NON_LVALUE_EXPR
1291@tindex NOP_EXPR
1292@tindex CONVERT_EXPR
1293@tindex FIXED_CONVERT_EXPR
1294@tindex THROW_EXPR
1295@tindex LSHIFT_EXPR
1296@tindex RSHIFT_EXPR
1297@tindex BIT_IOR_EXPR
1298@tindex BIT_XOR_EXPR
1299@tindex BIT_AND_EXPR
1300@tindex TRUTH_ANDIF_EXPR
1301@tindex TRUTH_ORIF_EXPR
1302@tindex TRUTH_AND_EXPR
1303@tindex TRUTH_OR_EXPR
1304@tindex TRUTH_XOR_EXPR
1305@tindex POINTER_PLUS_EXPR
1306@tindex POINTER_DIFF_EXPR
1307@tindex PLUS_EXPR
1308@tindex MINUS_EXPR
1309@tindex MULT_EXPR
1310@tindex MULT_HIGHPART_EXPR
1311@tindex RDIV_EXPR
1312@tindex TRUNC_DIV_EXPR
1313@tindex FLOOR_DIV_EXPR
1314@tindex CEIL_DIV_EXPR
1315@tindex ROUND_DIV_EXPR
1316@tindex TRUNC_MOD_EXPR
1317@tindex FLOOR_MOD_EXPR
1318@tindex CEIL_MOD_EXPR
1319@tindex ROUND_MOD_EXPR
1320@tindex EXACT_DIV_EXPR
1321@tindex LT_EXPR
1322@tindex LE_EXPR
1323@tindex GT_EXPR
1324@tindex GE_EXPR
1325@tindex EQ_EXPR
1326@tindex NE_EXPR
1327@tindex ORDERED_EXPR
1328@tindex UNORDERED_EXPR
1329@tindex UNLT_EXPR
1330@tindex UNLE_EXPR
1331@tindex UNGT_EXPR
1332@tindex UNGE_EXPR
1333@tindex UNEQ_EXPR
1334@tindex LTGT_EXPR
1335@tindex MODIFY_EXPR
1336@tindex INIT_EXPR
1337@tindex COMPOUND_EXPR
1338@tindex COND_EXPR
1339@tindex CALL_EXPR
1340@tindex STMT_EXPR
1341@tindex BIND_EXPR
1342@tindex LOOP_EXPR
1343@tindex EXIT_EXPR
1344@tindex CLEANUP_POINT_EXPR
1345@tindex CONSTRUCTOR
1346@tindex COMPOUND_LITERAL_EXPR
1347@tindex SAVE_EXPR
1348@tindex TARGET_EXPR
1349@tindex VA_ARG_EXPR
1350@tindex ANNOTATE_EXPR
1351
1352@table @code
1353@item NEGATE_EXPR
1354These nodes represent unary negation of the single operand, for both
1355integer and floating-point types.  The type of negation can be
1356determined by looking at the type of the expression.
1357
1358The behavior of this operation on signed arithmetic overflow is
1359controlled by the @code{flag_wrapv} and @code{flag_trapv} variables.
1360
1361@item ABS_EXPR
1362These nodes represent the absolute value of the single operand, for
1363both integer and floating-point types.  This is typically used to
1364implement the @code{abs}, @code{labs} and @code{llabs} builtins for
1365integer types, and the @code{fabs}, @code{fabsf} and @code{fabsl}
1366builtins for floating point types.  The type of abs operation can
1367be determined by looking at the type of the expression.
1368
1369This node is not used for complex types.  To represent the modulus
1370or complex abs of a complex value, use the @code{BUILT_IN_CABS},
1371@code{BUILT_IN_CABSF} or @code{BUILT_IN_CABSL} builtins, as used
1372to implement the C99 @code{cabs}, @code{cabsf} and @code{cabsl}
1373built-in functions.
1374
1375@item ABSU_EXPR
1376These nodes represent the absolute value of the single operand in
1377equivalent unsigned type such that @code{ABSU_EXPR} of TYPE_MIN is
1378well defined.
1379
1380@item BIT_NOT_EXPR
1381These nodes represent bitwise complement, and will always have integral
1382type.  The only operand is the value to be complemented.
1383
1384@item TRUTH_NOT_EXPR
1385These nodes represent logical negation, and will always have integral
1386(or boolean) type.  The operand is the value being negated.  The type
1387of the operand and that of the result are always of @code{BOOLEAN_TYPE}
1388or @code{INTEGER_TYPE}.
1389
1390@item PREDECREMENT_EXPR
1391@itemx PREINCREMENT_EXPR
1392@itemx POSTDECREMENT_EXPR
1393@itemx POSTINCREMENT_EXPR
1394These nodes represent increment and decrement expressions.  The value of
1395the single operand is computed, and the operand incremented or
1396decremented.  In the case of @code{PREDECREMENT_EXPR} and
1397@code{PREINCREMENT_EXPR}, the value of the expression is the value
1398resulting after the increment or decrement; in the case of
1399@code{POSTDECREMENT_EXPR} and @code{POSTINCREMENT_EXPR} is the value
1400before the increment or decrement occurs.  The type of the operand, like
1401that of the result, will be either integral, boolean, or floating-point.
1402
1403@item FIX_TRUNC_EXPR
1404These nodes represent conversion of a floating-point value to an
1405integer.  The single operand will have a floating-point type, while
1406the complete expression will have an integral (or boolean) type.  The
1407operand is rounded towards zero.
1408
1409@item FLOAT_EXPR
1410These nodes represent conversion of an integral (or boolean) value to a
1411floating-point value.  The single operand will have integral type, while
1412the complete expression will have a floating-point type.
1413
1414FIXME: How is the operand supposed to be rounded?  Is this dependent on
1415@option{-mieee}?
1416
1417@item COMPLEX_EXPR
1418These nodes are used to represent complex numbers constructed from two
1419expressions of the same (integer or real) type.  The first operand is the
1420real part and the second operand is the imaginary part.
1421
1422@item CONJ_EXPR
1423These nodes represent the conjugate of their operand.
1424
1425@item REALPART_EXPR
1426@itemx IMAGPART_EXPR
1427These nodes represent respectively the real and the imaginary parts
1428of complex numbers (their sole argument).
1429
1430@item NON_LVALUE_EXPR
1431These nodes indicate that their one and only operand is not an lvalue.
1432A back end can treat these identically to the single operand.
1433
1434@item NOP_EXPR
1435These nodes are used to represent conversions that do not require any
1436code-generation.  For example, conversion of a @code{char*} to an
1437@code{int*} does not require any code be generated; such a conversion is
1438represented by a @code{NOP_EXPR}.  The single operand is the expression
1439to be converted.  The conversion from a pointer to a reference is also
1440represented with a @code{NOP_EXPR}.
1441
1442@item CONVERT_EXPR
1443These nodes are similar to @code{NOP_EXPR}s, but are used in those
1444situations where code may need to be generated.  For example, if an
1445@code{int*} is converted to an @code{int} code may need to be generated
1446on some platforms.  These nodes are never used for C++-specific
1447conversions, like conversions between pointers to different classes in
1448an inheritance hierarchy.  Any adjustments that need to be made in such
1449cases are always indicated explicitly.  Similarly, a user-defined
1450conversion is never represented by a @code{CONVERT_EXPR}; instead, the
1451function calls are made explicit.
1452
1453@item FIXED_CONVERT_EXPR
1454These nodes are used to represent conversions that involve fixed-point
1455values.  For example, from a fixed-point value to another fixed-point value,
1456from an integer to a fixed-point value, from a fixed-point value to an
1457integer, from a floating-point value to a fixed-point value, or from
1458a fixed-point value to a floating-point value.
1459
1460@item LSHIFT_EXPR
1461@itemx RSHIFT_EXPR
1462These nodes represent left and right shifts, respectively.  The first
1463operand is the value to shift; it will always be of integral type.  The
1464second operand is an expression for the number of bits by which to
1465shift.  Right shift should be treated as arithmetic, i.e., the
1466high-order bits should be zero-filled when the expression has unsigned
1467type and filled with the sign bit when the expression has signed type.
1468Note that the result is undefined if the second operand is larger
1469than or equal to the first operand's type size. Unlike most nodes, these
1470can have a vector as first operand and a scalar as second operand.
1471
1472
1473@item BIT_IOR_EXPR
1474@itemx BIT_XOR_EXPR
1475@itemx BIT_AND_EXPR
1476These nodes represent bitwise inclusive or, bitwise exclusive or, and
1477bitwise and, respectively.  Both operands will always have integral
1478type.
1479
1480@item TRUTH_ANDIF_EXPR
1481@itemx TRUTH_ORIF_EXPR
1482These nodes represent logical ``and'' and logical ``or'', respectively.
1483These operators are not strict; i.e., the second operand is evaluated
1484only if the value of the expression is not determined by evaluation of
1485the first operand.  The type of the operands and that of the result are
1486always of @code{BOOLEAN_TYPE} or @code{INTEGER_TYPE}.
1487
1488@item TRUTH_AND_EXPR
1489@itemx TRUTH_OR_EXPR
1490@itemx TRUTH_XOR_EXPR
1491These nodes represent logical and, logical or, and logical exclusive or.
1492They are strict; both arguments are always evaluated.  There are no
1493corresponding operators in C or C++, but the front end will sometimes
1494generate these expressions anyhow, if it can tell that strictness does
1495not matter.  The type of the operands and that of the result are
1496always of @code{BOOLEAN_TYPE} or @code{INTEGER_TYPE}.
1497
1498@item POINTER_PLUS_EXPR
1499This node represents pointer arithmetic.  The first operand is always
1500a pointer/reference type.  The second operand is always an unsigned
1501integer type compatible with sizetype.  This and POINTER_DIFF_EXPR are
1502the only binary arithmetic operators that can operate on pointer types.
1503
1504@item POINTER_DIFF_EXPR
1505This node represents pointer subtraction.  The two operands always
1506have pointer/reference type.  It returns a signed integer of the same
1507precision as the pointers.  The behavior is undefined if the difference
1508of the two pointers, seen as infinite precision non-negative integers,
1509does not fit in the result type.  The result does not depend on the
1510pointer type, it is not divided by the size of the pointed-to type.
1511
1512@item PLUS_EXPR
1513@itemx MINUS_EXPR
1514@itemx MULT_EXPR
1515These nodes represent various binary arithmetic operations.
1516Respectively, these operations are addition, subtraction (of the second
1517operand from the first) and multiplication.  Their operands may have
1518either integral or floating type, but there will never be case in which
1519one operand is of floating type and the other is of integral type.
1520
1521The behavior of these operations on signed arithmetic overflow is
1522controlled by the @code{flag_wrapv} and @code{flag_trapv} variables.
1523
1524@item MULT_HIGHPART_EXPR
1525This node represents the ``high-part'' of a widening multiplication.
1526For an integral type with @var{b} bits of precision, the result is
1527the most significant @var{b} bits of the full @math{2@var{b}} product.
1528
1529@item RDIV_EXPR
1530This node represents a floating point division operation.
1531
1532@item TRUNC_DIV_EXPR
1533@itemx FLOOR_DIV_EXPR
1534@itemx CEIL_DIV_EXPR
1535@itemx ROUND_DIV_EXPR
1536These nodes represent integer division operations that return an integer
1537result.  @code{TRUNC_DIV_EXPR} rounds towards zero, @code{FLOOR_DIV_EXPR}
1538rounds towards negative infinity, @code{CEIL_DIV_EXPR} rounds towards
1539positive infinity and @code{ROUND_DIV_EXPR} rounds to the closest integer.
1540Integer division in C and C++ is truncating, i.e.@: @code{TRUNC_DIV_EXPR}.
1541
1542The behavior of these operations on signed arithmetic overflow, when
1543dividing the minimum signed integer by minus one, is controlled by the
1544@code{flag_wrapv} and @code{flag_trapv} variables.
1545
1546@item TRUNC_MOD_EXPR
1547@itemx FLOOR_MOD_EXPR
1548@itemx CEIL_MOD_EXPR
1549@itemx ROUND_MOD_EXPR
1550These nodes represent the integer remainder or modulus operation.
1551The integer modulus of two operands @code{a} and @code{b} is
1552defined as @code{a - (a/b)*b} where the division calculated using
1553the corresponding division operator.  Hence for @code{TRUNC_MOD_EXPR}
1554this definition assumes division using truncation towards zero, i.e.@:
1555@code{TRUNC_DIV_EXPR}.  Integer remainder in C and C++ uses truncating
1556division, i.e.@: @code{TRUNC_MOD_EXPR}.
1557
1558@item EXACT_DIV_EXPR
1559The @code{EXACT_DIV_EXPR} code is used to represent integer divisions where
1560the numerator is known to be an exact multiple of the denominator.  This
1561allows the backend to choose between the faster of @code{TRUNC_DIV_EXPR},
1562@code{CEIL_DIV_EXPR} and @code{FLOOR_DIV_EXPR} for the current target.
1563
1564@item LT_EXPR
1565@itemx LE_EXPR
1566@itemx GT_EXPR
1567@itemx GE_EXPR
1568@itemx EQ_EXPR
1569@itemx NE_EXPR
1570These nodes represent the less than, less than or equal to, greater
1571than, greater than or equal to, equal, and not equal comparison
1572operators.  The first and second operands will either be both of integral
1573type, both of floating type or both of vector type.  The result type of
1574these expressions will always be of integral, boolean or signed integral
1575vector type.  These operations return the result type's zero value for
1576false, the result type's one value for true, and a vector whose elements
1577are zero (false) or minus one (true) for vectors.
1578
1579For floating point comparisons, if we honor IEEE NaNs and either operand
1580is NaN, then @code{NE_EXPR} always returns true and the remaining operators
1581always return false.  On some targets, comparisons against an IEEE NaN,
1582other than equality and inequality, may generate a floating point exception.
1583
1584@item ORDERED_EXPR
1585@itemx UNORDERED_EXPR
1586These nodes represent non-trapping ordered and unordered comparison
1587operators.  These operations take two floating point operands and
1588determine whether they are ordered or unordered relative to each other.
1589If either operand is an IEEE NaN, their comparison is defined to be
1590unordered, otherwise the comparison is defined to be ordered.  The
1591result type of these expressions will always be of integral or boolean
1592type.  These operations return the result type's zero value for false,
1593and the result type's one value for true.
1594
1595@item UNLT_EXPR
1596@itemx UNLE_EXPR
1597@itemx UNGT_EXPR
1598@itemx UNGE_EXPR
1599@itemx UNEQ_EXPR
1600@itemx LTGT_EXPR
1601These nodes represent the unordered comparison operators.
1602These operations take two floating point operands and determine whether
1603the operands are unordered or are less than, less than or equal to,
1604greater than, greater than or equal to, or equal respectively.  For
1605example, @code{UNLT_EXPR} returns true if either operand is an IEEE
1606NaN or the first operand is less than the second.  With the possible
1607exception of @code{LTGT_EXPR}, all of these operations are guaranteed
1608not to generate a floating point exception.  The result
1609type of these expressions will always be of integral or boolean type.
1610These operations return the result type's zero value for false,
1611and the result type's one value for true.
1612
1613@item MODIFY_EXPR
1614These nodes represent assignment.  The left-hand side is the first
1615operand; the right-hand side is the second operand.  The left-hand side
1616will be a @code{VAR_DECL}, @code{INDIRECT_REF}, @code{COMPONENT_REF}, or
1617other lvalue.
1618
1619These nodes are used to represent not only assignment with @samp{=} but
1620also compound assignments (like @samp{+=}), by reduction to @samp{=}
1621assignment.  In other words, the representation for @samp{i += 3} looks
1622just like that for @samp{i = i + 3}.
1623
1624@item INIT_EXPR
1625These nodes are just like @code{MODIFY_EXPR}, but are used only when a
1626variable is initialized, rather than assigned to subsequently.  This
1627means that we can assume that the target of the initialization is not
1628used in computing its own value; any reference to the lhs in computing
1629the rhs is undefined.
1630
1631@item COMPOUND_EXPR
1632These nodes represent comma-expressions.  The first operand is an
1633expression whose value is computed and thrown away prior to the
1634evaluation of the second operand.  The value of the entire expression is
1635the value of the second operand.
1636
1637@item COND_EXPR
1638These nodes represent @code{?:} expressions.  The first operand
1639is of boolean or integral type.  If it evaluates to a nonzero value,
1640the second operand should be evaluated, and returned as the value of the
1641expression.  Otherwise, the third operand is evaluated, and returned as
1642the value of the expression.
1643
1644The second operand must have the same type as the entire expression,
1645unless it unconditionally throws an exception or calls a noreturn
1646function, in which case it should have void type.  The same constraints
1647apply to the third operand.  This allows array bounds checks to be
1648represented conveniently as @code{(i >= 0 && i < 10) ? i : abort()}.
1649
1650As a GNU extension, the C language front-ends allow the second
1651operand of the @code{?:} operator may be omitted in the source.
1652For example, @code{x ? : 3} is equivalent to @code{x ? x : 3},
1653assuming that @code{x} is an expression without side effects.
1654In the tree representation, however, the second operand is always
1655present, possibly protected by @code{SAVE_EXPR} if the first
1656argument does cause side effects.
1657
1658@item CALL_EXPR
1659These nodes are used to represent calls to functions, including
1660non-static member functions.  @code{CALL_EXPR}s are implemented as
1661expression nodes with a variable number of operands.  Rather than using
1662@code{TREE_OPERAND} to extract them, it is preferable to use the
1663specialized accessor macros and functions that operate specifically on
1664@code{CALL_EXPR} nodes.
1665
1666@code{CALL_EXPR_FN} returns a pointer to the
1667function to call; it is always an expression whose type is a
1668@code{POINTER_TYPE}.
1669
1670The number of arguments to the call is returned by @code{call_expr_nargs},
1671while the arguments themselves can be accessed with the @code{CALL_EXPR_ARG}
1672macro.  The arguments are zero-indexed and numbered left-to-right.
1673You can iterate over the arguments using @code{FOR_EACH_CALL_EXPR_ARG}, as in:
1674
1675@smallexample
1676tree call, arg;
1677call_expr_arg_iterator iter;
1678FOR_EACH_CALL_EXPR_ARG (arg, iter, call)
1679  /* arg is bound to successive arguments of call.  */
1680  @dots{};
1681@end smallexample
1682
1683For non-static
1684member functions, there will be an operand corresponding to the
1685@code{this} pointer.  There will always be expressions corresponding to
1686all of the arguments, even if the function is declared with default
1687arguments and some arguments are not explicitly provided at the call
1688sites.
1689
1690@code{CALL_EXPR}s also have a @code{CALL_EXPR_STATIC_CHAIN} operand that
1691is used to implement nested functions.  This operand is otherwise null.
1692
1693@item CLEANUP_POINT_EXPR
1694These nodes represent full-expressions.  The single operand is an
1695expression to evaluate.  Any destructor calls engendered by the creation
1696of temporaries during the evaluation of that expression should be
1697performed immediately after the expression is evaluated.
1698
1699@item CONSTRUCTOR
1700These nodes represent the brace-enclosed initializers for a structure or an
1701array.  They contain a sequence of component values made out of a vector of
1702constructor_elt, which is a (@code{INDEX}, @code{VALUE}) pair.
1703
1704If the @code{TREE_TYPE} of the @code{CONSTRUCTOR} is a @code{RECORD_TYPE},
1705@code{UNION_TYPE} or @code{QUAL_UNION_TYPE} then the @code{INDEX} of each
1706node in the sequence will be a @code{FIELD_DECL} and the @code{VALUE} will
1707be the expression used to initialize that field.
1708
1709If the @code{TREE_TYPE} of the @code{CONSTRUCTOR} is an @code{ARRAY_TYPE},
1710then the @code{INDEX} of each node in the sequence will be an
1711@code{INTEGER_CST} or a @code{RANGE_EXPR} of two @code{INTEGER_CST}s.
1712A single @code{INTEGER_CST} indicates which element of the array is being
1713assigned to.  A @code{RANGE_EXPR} indicates an inclusive range of elements
1714to initialize.  In both cases the @code{VALUE} is the corresponding
1715initializer.  It is re-evaluated for each element of a
1716@code{RANGE_EXPR}.  If the @code{INDEX} is @code{NULL_TREE}, then
1717the initializer is for the next available array element.
1718
1719In the front end, you should not depend on the fields appearing in any
1720particular order.  However, in the middle end, fields must appear in
1721declaration order.  You should not assume that all fields will be
1722represented.  Unrepresented fields will be cleared (zeroed), unless the
1723CONSTRUCTOR_NO_CLEARING flag is set, in which case their value becomes
1724undefined.
1725
1726@item COMPOUND_LITERAL_EXPR
1727@findex COMPOUND_LITERAL_EXPR_DECL_EXPR
1728@findex COMPOUND_LITERAL_EXPR_DECL
1729These nodes represent ISO C99 compound literals.  The
1730@code{COMPOUND_LITERAL_EXPR_DECL_EXPR} is a @code{DECL_EXPR}
1731containing an anonymous @code{VAR_DECL} for
1732the unnamed object represented by the compound literal; the
1733@code{DECL_INITIAL} of that @code{VAR_DECL} is a @code{CONSTRUCTOR}
1734representing the brace-enclosed list of initializers in the compound
1735literal.  That anonymous @code{VAR_DECL} can also be accessed directly
1736by the @code{COMPOUND_LITERAL_EXPR_DECL} macro.
1737
1738@item SAVE_EXPR
1739
1740A @code{SAVE_EXPR} represents an expression (possibly involving
1741side effects) that is used more than once.  The side effects should
1742occur only the first time the expression is evaluated.  Subsequent uses
1743should just reuse the computed value.  The first operand to the
1744@code{SAVE_EXPR} is the expression to evaluate.  The side effects should
1745be executed where the @code{SAVE_EXPR} is first encountered in a
1746depth-first preorder traversal of the expression tree.
1747
1748@item TARGET_EXPR
1749A @code{TARGET_EXPR} represents a temporary object.  The first operand
1750is a @code{VAR_DECL} for the temporary variable.  The second operand is
1751the initializer for the temporary.  The initializer is evaluated and,
1752if non-void, copied (bitwise) into the temporary.  If the initializer
1753is void, that means that it will perform the initialization itself.
1754
1755Often, a @code{TARGET_EXPR} occurs on the right-hand side of an
1756assignment, or as the second operand to a comma-expression which is
1757itself the right-hand side of an assignment, etc.  In this case, we say
1758that the @code{TARGET_EXPR} is ``normal''; otherwise, we say it is
1759``orphaned''.  For a normal @code{TARGET_EXPR} the temporary variable
1760should be treated as an alias for the left-hand side of the assignment,
1761rather than as a new temporary variable.
1762
1763The third operand to the @code{TARGET_EXPR}, if present, is a
1764cleanup-expression (i.e., destructor call) for the temporary.  If this
1765expression is orphaned, then this expression must be executed when the
1766statement containing this expression is complete.  These cleanups must
1767always be executed in the order opposite to that in which they were
1768encountered.  Note that if a temporary is created on one branch of a
1769conditional operator (i.e., in the second or third operand to a
1770@code{COND_EXPR}), the cleanup must be run only if that branch is
1771actually executed.
1772
1773@item VA_ARG_EXPR
1774This node is used to implement support for the C/C++ variable argument-list
1775mechanism.  It represents expressions like @code{va_arg (ap, type)}.
1776Its @code{TREE_TYPE} yields the tree representation for @code{type} and
1777its sole argument yields the representation for @code{ap}.
1778
1779@item ANNOTATE_EXPR
1780This node is used to attach markers to an expression. The first operand
1781is the annotated expression, the second is an @code{INTEGER_CST} with
1782a value from @code{enum annot_expr_kind}, the third is an @code{INTEGER_CST}.
1783@end table
1784
1785
1786@node Vectors
1787@subsection Vectors
1788@tindex VEC_DUPLICATE_EXPR
1789@tindex VEC_SERIES_EXPR
1790@tindex VEC_LSHIFT_EXPR
1791@tindex VEC_RSHIFT_EXPR
1792@tindex VEC_WIDEN_MULT_HI_EXPR
1793@tindex VEC_WIDEN_MULT_LO_EXPR
1794@tindex VEC_UNPACK_HI_EXPR
1795@tindex VEC_UNPACK_LO_EXPR
1796@tindex VEC_UNPACK_FLOAT_HI_EXPR
1797@tindex VEC_UNPACK_FLOAT_LO_EXPR
1798@tindex VEC_UNPACK_FIX_TRUNC_HI_EXPR
1799@tindex VEC_UNPACK_FIX_TRUNC_LO_EXPR
1800@tindex VEC_PACK_TRUNC_EXPR
1801@tindex VEC_PACK_SAT_EXPR
1802@tindex VEC_PACK_FIX_TRUNC_EXPR
1803@tindex VEC_PACK_FLOAT_EXPR
1804@tindex VEC_COND_EXPR
1805@tindex SAD_EXPR
1806
1807@table @code
1808@item VEC_DUPLICATE_EXPR
1809This node has a single operand and represents a vector in which every
1810element is equal to that operand.
1811
1812@item VEC_SERIES_EXPR
1813This node represents a vector formed from a scalar base and step,
1814given as the first and second operands respectively.  Element @var{i}
1815of the result is equal to @samp{@var{base} + @var{i}*@var{step}}.
1816
1817This node is restricted to integral types, in order to avoid
1818specifying the rounding behavior for floating-point types.
1819
1820@item VEC_LSHIFT_EXPR
1821@itemx VEC_RSHIFT_EXPR
1822These nodes represent whole vector left and right shifts, respectively.
1823The first operand is the vector to shift; it will always be of vector type.
1824The second operand is an expression for the number of bits by which to
1825shift.  Note that the result is undefined if the second operand is larger
1826than or equal to the first operand's type size.
1827
1828@item VEC_WIDEN_MULT_HI_EXPR
1829@itemx VEC_WIDEN_MULT_LO_EXPR
1830These nodes represent widening vector multiplication of the high and low
1831parts of the two input vectors, respectively.  Their operands are vectors
1832that contain the same number of elements (@code{N}) of the same integral type.
1833The result is a vector that contains half as many elements, of an integral type
1834whose size is twice as wide.  In the case of @code{VEC_WIDEN_MULT_HI_EXPR} the
1835high @code{N/2} elements of the two vector are multiplied to produce the
1836vector of @code{N/2} products. In the case of @code{VEC_WIDEN_MULT_LO_EXPR} the
1837low @code{N/2} elements of the two vector are multiplied to produce the
1838vector of @code{N/2} products.
1839
1840@item VEC_UNPACK_HI_EXPR
1841@itemx VEC_UNPACK_LO_EXPR
1842These nodes represent unpacking of the high and low parts of the input vector,
1843respectively.  The single operand is a vector that contains @code{N} elements
1844of the same integral or floating point type.  The result is a vector
1845that contains half as many elements, of an integral or floating point type
1846whose size is twice as wide.  In the case of @code{VEC_UNPACK_HI_EXPR} the
1847high @code{N/2} elements of the vector are extracted and widened (promoted).
1848In the case of @code{VEC_UNPACK_LO_EXPR} the low @code{N/2} elements of the
1849vector are extracted and widened (promoted).
1850
1851@item VEC_UNPACK_FLOAT_HI_EXPR
1852@itemx VEC_UNPACK_FLOAT_LO_EXPR
1853These nodes represent unpacking of the high and low parts of the input vector,
1854where the values are converted from fixed point to floating point.  The
1855single operand is a vector that contains @code{N} elements of the same
1856integral type.  The result is a vector that contains half as many elements
1857of a floating point type whose size is twice as wide.  In the case of
1858@code{VEC_UNPACK_FLOAT_HI_EXPR} the high @code{N/2} elements of the vector are
1859extracted, converted and widened.  In the case of @code{VEC_UNPACK_FLOAT_LO_EXPR}
1860the low @code{N/2} elements of the vector are extracted, converted and widened.
1861
1862@item VEC_UNPACK_FIX_TRUNC_HI_EXPR
1863@itemx VEC_UNPACK_FIX_TRUNC_LO_EXPR
1864These nodes represent unpacking of the high and low parts of the input vector,
1865where the values are truncated from floating point to fixed point.  The
1866single operand is a vector that contains @code{N} elements of the same
1867floating point type.  The result is a vector that contains half as many
1868elements of an integral type whose size is twice as wide.  In the case of
1869@code{VEC_UNPACK_FIX_TRUNC_HI_EXPR} the high @code{N/2} elements of the
1870vector are extracted and converted with truncation.  In the case of
1871@code{VEC_UNPACK_FIX_TRUNC_LO_EXPR} the low @code{N/2} elements of the
1872vector are extracted and converted with truncation.
1873
1874@item VEC_PACK_TRUNC_EXPR
1875This node represents packing of truncated elements of the two input vectors
1876into the output vector.  Input operands are vectors that contain the same
1877number of elements of the same integral or floating point type.  The result
1878is a vector that contains twice as many elements of an integral or floating
1879point type whose size is half as wide. The elements of the two vectors are
1880demoted and merged (concatenated) to form the output vector.
1881
1882@item VEC_PACK_SAT_EXPR
1883This node represents packing of elements of the two input vectors into the
1884output vector using saturation.  Input operands are vectors that contain
1885the same number of elements of the same integral type.  The result is a
1886vector that contains twice as many elements of an integral type whose size
1887is half as wide.  The elements of the two vectors are demoted and merged
1888(concatenated) to form the output vector.
1889
1890@item VEC_PACK_FIX_TRUNC_EXPR
1891This node represents packing of elements of the two input vectors into the
1892output vector, where the values are converted from floating point
1893to fixed point.  Input operands are vectors that contain the same number
1894of elements of a floating point type.  The result is a vector that contains
1895twice as many elements of an integral type whose size is half as wide.  The
1896elements of the two vectors are merged (concatenated) to form the output
1897vector.
1898
1899@item VEC_PACK_FLOAT_EXPR
1900This node represents packing of elements of the two input vectors into the
1901output vector, where the values are converted from fixed point to floating
1902point.  Input operands are vectors that contain the same number of elements
1903of an integral type.  The result is a vector that contains twice as many
1904elements of floating point type whose size is half as wide.  The elements of
1905the two vectors are merged (concatenated) to form the output vector.
1906
1907@item VEC_COND_EXPR
1908These nodes represent @code{?:} expressions.  The three operands must be
1909vectors of the same size and number of elements.  The second and third
1910operands must have the same type as the entire expression.  The first
1911operand is of signed integral vector type.  If an element of the first
1912operand evaluates to a zero value, the corresponding element of the
1913result is taken from the third operand. If it evaluates to a minus one
1914value, it is taken from the second operand. It should never evaluate to
1915any other value currently, but optimizations should not rely on that
1916property. In contrast with a @code{COND_EXPR}, all operands are always
1917evaluated.
1918
1919@item SAD_EXPR
1920This node represents the Sum of Absolute Differences operation.  The three
1921operands must be vectors of integral types.  The first and second operand
1922must have the same type.  The size of the vector element of the third
1923operand must be at lease twice of the size of the vector element of the
1924first and second one.  The SAD is calculated between the first and second
1925operands, added to the third operand, and returned.
1926
1927@end table
1928
1929
1930@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1931@c Statements
1932@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
1933
1934@node Statements
1935@section Statements
1936@cindex Statements
1937
1938Most statements in GIMPLE are assignment statements, represented by
1939@code{GIMPLE_ASSIGN}.  No other C expressions can appear at statement level;
1940a reference to a volatile object is converted into a
1941@code{GIMPLE_ASSIGN}.
1942
1943There are also several varieties of complex statements.
1944
1945@menu
1946* Basic Statements::
1947* Blocks::
1948* Statement Sequences::
1949* Empty Statements::
1950* Jumps::
1951* Cleanups::
1952* OpenMP::
1953* OpenACC::
1954@end menu
1955
1956@node Basic Statements
1957@subsection Basic Statements
1958@cindex Basic Statements
1959
1960@table @code
1961@item ASM_EXPR
1962
1963Used to represent an inline assembly statement.  For an inline assembly
1964statement like:
1965@smallexample
1966asm ("mov x, y");
1967@end smallexample
1968The @code{ASM_STRING} macro will return a @code{STRING_CST} node for
1969@code{"mov x, y"}.  If the original statement made use of the
1970extended-assembly syntax, then @code{ASM_OUTPUTS},
1971@code{ASM_INPUTS}, and @code{ASM_CLOBBERS} will be the outputs, inputs,
1972and clobbers for the statement, represented as @code{STRING_CST} nodes.
1973The extended-assembly syntax looks like:
1974@smallexample
1975asm ("fsinx %1,%0" : "=f" (result) : "f" (angle));
1976@end smallexample
1977The first string is the @code{ASM_STRING}, containing the instruction
1978template.  The next two strings are the output and inputs, respectively;
1979this statement has no clobbers.  As this example indicates, ``plain''
1980assembly statements are merely a special case of extended assembly
1981statements; they have no cv-qualifiers, outputs, inputs, or clobbers.
1982All of the strings will be @code{NUL}-terminated, and will contain no
1983embedded @code{NUL}-characters.
1984
1985If the assembly statement is declared @code{volatile}, or if the
1986statement was not an extended assembly statement, and is therefore
1987implicitly volatile, then the predicate @code{ASM_VOLATILE_P} will hold
1988of the @code{ASM_EXPR}.
1989
1990@item DECL_EXPR
1991
1992Used to represent a local declaration.  The @code{DECL_EXPR_DECL} macro
1993can be used to obtain the entity declared.  This declaration may be a
1994@code{LABEL_DECL}, indicating that the label declared is a local label.
1995(As an extension, GCC allows the declaration of labels with scope.)  In
1996C, this declaration may be a @code{FUNCTION_DECL}, indicating the
1997use of the GCC nested function extension.  For more information,
1998@pxref{Functions}.
1999
2000@item LABEL_EXPR
2001
2002Used to represent a label.  The @code{LABEL_DECL} declared by this
2003statement can be obtained with the @code{LABEL_EXPR_LABEL} macro.  The
2004@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} giving the name of the label can be obtained from
2005the @code{LABEL_DECL} with @code{DECL_NAME}.
2006
2007@item GOTO_EXPR
2008
2009Used to represent a @code{goto} statement.  The @code{GOTO_DESTINATION} will
2010usually be a @code{LABEL_DECL}.  However, if the ``computed goto'' extension
2011has been used, the @code{GOTO_DESTINATION} will be an arbitrary expression
2012indicating the destination.  This expression will always have pointer type.
2013
2014@item RETURN_EXPR
2015
2016Used to represent a @code{return} statement.  Operand 0 represents the
2017value to return.  It should either be the @code{RESULT_DECL} for the
2018containing function, or a @code{MODIFY_EXPR} or @code{INIT_EXPR}
2019setting the function's @code{RESULT_DECL}.  It will be
2020@code{NULL_TREE} if the statement was just
2021@smallexample
2022return;
2023@end smallexample
2024
2025@item LOOP_EXPR
2026These nodes represent ``infinite'' loops.  The @code{LOOP_EXPR_BODY}
2027represents the body of the loop.  It should be executed forever, unless
2028an @code{EXIT_EXPR} is encountered.
2029
2030@item EXIT_EXPR
2031These nodes represent conditional exits from the nearest enclosing
2032@code{LOOP_EXPR}.  The single operand is the condition; if it is
2033nonzero, then the loop should be exited.  An @code{EXIT_EXPR} will only
2034appear within a @code{LOOP_EXPR}.
2035
2036@item SWITCH_STMT
2037
2038Used to represent a @code{switch} statement.  The @code{SWITCH_STMT_COND}
2039is the expression on which the switch is occurring.  See the documentation
2040for an @code{IF_STMT} for more information on the representation used
2041for the condition.  The @code{SWITCH_STMT_BODY} is the body of the switch
2042statement.   The @code{SWITCH_STMT_TYPE} is the original type of switch
2043expression as given in the source, before any compiler conversions.
2044
2045@item CASE_LABEL_EXPR
2046
2047Use to represent a @code{case} label, range of @code{case} labels, or a
2048@code{default} label.  If @code{CASE_LOW} is @code{NULL_TREE}, then this is a
2049@code{default} label.  Otherwise, if @code{CASE_HIGH} is @code{NULL_TREE}, then
2050this is an ordinary @code{case} label.  In this case, @code{CASE_LOW} is
2051an expression giving the value of the label.  Both @code{CASE_LOW} and
2052@code{CASE_HIGH} are @code{INTEGER_CST} nodes.  These values will have
2053the same type as the condition expression in the switch statement.
2054
2055Otherwise, if both @code{CASE_LOW} and @code{CASE_HIGH} are defined, the
2056statement is a range of case labels.  Such statements originate with the
2057extension that allows users to write things of the form:
2058@smallexample
2059case 2 ... 5:
2060@end smallexample
2061The first value will be @code{CASE_LOW}, while the second will be
2062@code{CASE_HIGH}.
2063
2064@item DEBUG_BEGIN_STMT
2065
2066Marks the beginning of a source statement, for purposes of debug
2067information generation.
2068
2069@end table
2070
2071
2072@node Blocks
2073@subsection Blocks
2074@cindex Blocks
2075
2076Block scopes and the variables they declare in GENERIC are
2077expressed using the @code{BIND_EXPR} code, which in previous
2078versions of GCC was primarily used for the C statement-expression
2079extension.
2080
2081Variables in a block are collected into @code{BIND_EXPR_VARS} in
2082declaration order through their @code{TREE_CHAIN} field.  Any runtime
2083initialization is moved out of @code{DECL_INITIAL} and into a
2084statement in the controlled block.  When gimplifying from C or C++,
2085this initialization replaces the @code{DECL_STMT}.  These variables
2086will never require cleanups.  The scope of these variables is just the
2087body
2088
2089Variable-length arrays (VLAs) complicate this process, as their size
2090often refers to variables initialized earlier in the block and their
2091initialization involves an explicit stack allocation.  To handle this,
2092we add an indirection and replace them with a pointer to stack space
2093allocated by means of @code{alloca}.  In most cases, we also arrange
2094for this space to be reclaimed when the enclosing @code{BIND_EXPR} is
2095exited, the exception to this being when there is an explicit call to
2096@code{alloca} in the source code, in which case the stack is left
2097depressed on exit of the @code{BIND_EXPR}.
2098
2099A C++ program will usually contain more @code{BIND_EXPR}s than
2100there are syntactic blocks in the source code, since several C++
2101constructs have implicit scopes associated with them.  On the
2102other hand, although the C++ front end uses pseudo-scopes to
2103handle cleanups for objects with destructors, these don't
2104translate into the GIMPLE form; multiple declarations at the same
2105level use the same @code{BIND_EXPR}.
2106
2107@node Statement Sequences
2108@subsection Statement Sequences
2109@cindex Statement Sequences
2110
2111Multiple statements at the same nesting level are collected into
2112a @code{STATEMENT_LIST}.  Statement lists are modified and
2113traversed using the interface in @samp{tree-iterator.h}.
2114
2115@node Empty Statements
2116@subsection Empty Statements
2117@cindex Empty Statements
2118
2119Whenever possible, statements with no effect are discarded.  But
2120if they are nested within another construct which cannot be
2121discarded for some reason, they are instead replaced with an
2122empty statement, generated by @code{build_empty_stmt}.
2123Initially, all empty statements were shared, after the pattern of
2124the Java front end, but this caused a lot of trouble in practice.
2125
2126An empty statement is represented as @code{(void)0}.
2127
2128@node Jumps
2129@subsection Jumps
2130@cindex Jumps
2131
2132Other jumps are expressed by either @code{GOTO_EXPR} or
2133@code{RETURN_EXPR}.
2134
2135The operand of a @code{GOTO_EXPR} must be either a label or a
2136variable containing the address to jump to.
2137
2138The operand of a @code{RETURN_EXPR} is either @code{NULL_TREE},
2139@code{RESULT_DECL}, or a @code{MODIFY_EXPR} which sets the return
2140value.  It would be nice to move the @code{MODIFY_EXPR} into a
2141separate statement, but the special return semantics in
2142@code{expand_return} make that difficult.  It may still happen in
2143the future, perhaps by moving most of that logic into
2144@code{expand_assignment}.
2145
2146@node Cleanups
2147@subsection Cleanups
2148@cindex Cleanups
2149
2150Destructors for local C++ objects and similar dynamic cleanups are
2151represented in GIMPLE by a @code{TRY_FINALLY_EXPR}.
2152@code{TRY_FINALLY_EXPR} has two operands, both of which are a sequence
2153of statements to execute.  The first sequence is executed.  When it
2154completes the second sequence is executed.
2155
2156The first sequence may complete in the following ways:
2157
2158@enumerate
2159
2160@item Execute the last statement in the sequence and fall off the
2161end.
2162
2163@item Execute a goto statement (@code{GOTO_EXPR}) to an ordinary
2164label outside the sequence.
2165
2166@item Execute a return statement (@code{RETURN_EXPR}).
2167
2168@item Throw an exception.  This is currently not explicitly represented in
2169GIMPLE.
2170
2171@end enumerate
2172
2173The second sequence is not executed if the first sequence completes by
2174calling @code{setjmp} or @code{exit} or any other function that does
2175not return.  The second sequence is also not executed if the first
2176sequence completes via a non-local goto or a computed goto (in general
2177the compiler does not know whether such a goto statement exits the
2178first sequence or not, so we assume that it doesn't).
2179
2180After the second sequence is executed, if it completes normally by
2181falling off the end, execution continues wherever the first sequence
2182would have continued, by falling off the end, or doing a goto, etc.
2183
2184@code{TRY_FINALLY_EXPR} complicates the flow graph, since the cleanup
2185needs to appear on every edge out of the controlled block; this
2186reduces the freedom to move code across these edges.  Therefore, the
2187EH lowering pass which runs before most of the optimization passes
2188eliminates these expressions by explicitly adding the cleanup to each
2189edge.  Rethrowing the exception is represented using @code{RESX_EXPR}.
2190
2191@node OpenMP
2192@subsection OpenMP
2193@tindex OMP_PARALLEL
2194@tindex OMP_FOR
2195@tindex OMP_SECTIONS
2196@tindex OMP_SINGLE
2197@tindex OMP_SECTION
2198@tindex OMP_MASTER
2199@tindex OMP_ORDERED
2200@tindex OMP_CRITICAL
2201@tindex OMP_RETURN
2202@tindex OMP_CONTINUE
2203@tindex OMP_ATOMIC
2204@tindex OMP_CLAUSE
2205
2206All the statements starting with @code{OMP_} represent directives and
2207clauses used by the OpenMP API @w{@uref{https://www.openmp.org}}.
2208
2209@table @code
2210@item OMP_PARALLEL
2211
2212Represents @code{#pragma omp parallel [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}. It
2213has four operands:
2214
2215Operand @code{OMP_PARALLEL_BODY} is valid while in GENERIC and
2216High GIMPLE forms.  It contains the body of code to be executed
2217by all the threads.  During GIMPLE lowering, this operand becomes
2218@code{NULL} and the body is emitted linearly after
2219@code{OMP_PARALLEL}.
2220
2221Operand @code{OMP_PARALLEL_CLAUSES} is the list of clauses
2222associated with the directive.
2223
2224Operand @code{OMP_PARALLEL_FN} is created by
2225@code{pass_lower_omp}, it contains the @code{FUNCTION_DECL}
2226for the function that will contain the body of the parallel
2227region.
2228
2229Operand @code{OMP_PARALLEL_DATA_ARG} is also created by
2230@code{pass_lower_omp}. If there are shared variables to be
2231communicated to the children threads, this operand will contain
2232the @code{VAR_DECL} that contains all the shared values and
2233variables.
2234
2235@item OMP_FOR
2236
2237Represents @code{#pragma omp for [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.  It has
2238six operands:
2239
2240Operand @code{OMP_FOR_BODY} contains the loop body.
2241
2242Operand @code{OMP_FOR_CLAUSES} is the list of clauses
2243associated with the directive.
2244
2245Operand @code{OMP_FOR_INIT} is the loop initialization code of
2246the form @code{VAR = N1}.
2247
2248Operand @code{OMP_FOR_COND} is the loop conditional expression
2249of the form @code{VAR @{<,>,<=,>=@} N2}.
2250
2251Operand @code{OMP_FOR_INCR} is the loop index increment of the
2252form @code{VAR @{+=,-=@} INCR}.
2253
2254Operand @code{OMP_FOR_PRE_BODY} contains side effect code from
2255operands @code{OMP_FOR_INIT}, @code{OMP_FOR_COND} and
2256@code{OMP_FOR_INC}.  These side effects are part of the
2257@code{OMP_FOR} block but must be evaluated before the start of
2258loop body.
2259
2260The loop index variable @code{VAR} must be a signed integer variable,
2261which is implicitly private to each thread.  Bounds
2262@code{N1} and @code{N2} and the increment expression
2263@code{INCR} are required to be loop invariant integer
2264expressions that are evaluated without any synchronization. The
2265evaluation order, frequency of evaluation and side effects are
2266unspecified by the standard.
2267
2268@item OMP_SECTIONS
2269
2270Represents @code{#pragma omp sections [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2271
2272Operand @code{OMP_SECTIONS_BODY} contains the sections body,
2273which in turn contains a set of @code{OMP_SECTION} nodes for
2274each of the concurrent sections delimited by @code{#pragma omp
2275section}.
2276
2277Operand @code{OMP_SECTIONS_CLAUSES} is the list of clauses
2278associated with the directive.
2279
2280@item OMP_SECTION
2281
2282Section delimiter for @code{OMP_SECTIONS}.
2283
2284@item OMP_SINGLE
2285
2286Represents @code{#pragma omp single}.
2287
2288Operand @code{OMP_SINGLE_BODY} contains the body of code to be
2289executed by a single thread.
2290
2291Operand @code{OMP_SINGLE_CLAUSES} is the list of clauses
2292associated with the directive.
2293
2294@item OMP_MASTER
2295
2296Represents @code{#pragma omp master}.
2297
2298Operand @code{OMP_MASTER_BODY} contains the body of code to be
2299executed by the master thread.
2300
2301@item OMP_ORDERED
2302
2303Represents @code{#pragma omp ordered}.
2304
2305Operand @code{OMP_ORDERED_BODY} contains the body of code to be
2306executed in the sequential order dictated by the loop index
2307variable.
2308
2309@item OMP_CRITICAL
2310
2311Represents @code{#pragma omp critical [name]}.
2312
2313Operand @code{OMP_CRITICAL_BODY} is the critical section.
2314
2315Operand @code{OMP_CRITICAL_NAME} is an optional identifier to
2316label the critical section.
2317
2318@item OMP_RETURN
2319
2320This does not represent any OpenMP directive, it is an artificial
2321marker to indicate the end of the body of an OpenMP@. It is used
2322by the flow graph (@code{tree-cfg.c}) and OpenMP region
2323building code (@code{omp-low.c}).
2324
2325@item OMP_CONTINUE
2326
2327Similarly, this instruction does not represent an OpenMP
2328directive, it is used by @code{OMP_FOR} (and similar codes) as well as
2329@code{OMP_SECTIONS} to mark the place where the code needs to
2330loop to the next iteration, or the next section, respectively.
2331
2332In some cases, @code{OMP_CONTINUE} is placed right before
2333@code{OMP_RETURN}.  But if there are cleanups that need to
2334occur right after the looping body, it will be emitted between
2335@code{OMP_CONTINUE} and @code{OMP_RETURN}.
2336
2337@item OMP_ATOMIC
2338
2339Represents @code{#pragma omp atomic}.
2340
2341Operand 0 is the address at which the atomic operation is to be
2342performed.
2343
2344Operand 1 is the expression to evaluate.  The gimplifier tries
2345three alternative code generation strategies.  Whenever possible,
2346an atomic update built-in is used.  If that fails, a
2347compare-and-swap loop is attempted.  If that also fails, a
2348regular critical section around the expression is used.
2349
2350@item OMP_CLAUSE
2351
2352Represents clauses associated with one of the @code{OMP_} directives.
2353Clauses are represented by separate subcodes defined in
2354@file{tree.h}.  Clauses codes can be one of:
2355@code{OMP_CLAUSE_PRIVATE}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_SHARED},
2356@code{OMP_CLAUSE_FIRSTPRIVATE},
2357@code{OMP_CLAUSE_LASTPRIVATE}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_COPYIN},
2358@code{OMP_CLAUSE_COPYPRIVATE}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_IF},
2359@code{OMP_CLAUSE_NUM_THREADS}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_SCHEDULE},
2360@code{OMP_CLAUSE_NOWAIT}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_ORDERED},
2361@code{OMP_CLAUSE_DEFAULT}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_REDUCTION},
2362@code{OMP_CLAUSE_COLLAPSE}, @code{OMP_CLAUSE_UNTIED},
2363@code{OMP_CLAUSE_FINAL}, and @code{OMP_CLAUSE_MERGEABLE}.  Each code
2364represents the corresponding OpenMP clause.
2365
2366Clauses associated with the same directive are chained together
2367via @code{OMP_CLAUSE_CHAIN}. Those clauses that accept a list
2368of variables are restricted to exactly one, accessed with
2369@code{OMP_CLAUSE_VAR}.  Therefore, multiple variables under the
2370same clause @code{C} need to be represented as multiple @code{C} clauses
2371chained together.  This facilitates adding new clauses during
2372compilation.
2373
2374@end table
2375
2376@node OpenACC
2377@subsection OpenACC
2378@tindex OACC_CACHE
2379@tindex OACC_DATA
2380@tindex OACC_DECLARE
2381@tindex OACC_ENTER_DATA
2382@tindex OACC_EXIT_DATA
2383@tindex OACC_HOST_DATA
2384@tindex OACC_KERNELS
2385@tindex OACC_LOOP
2386@tindex OACC_PARALLEL
2387@tindex OACC_UPDATE
2388
2389All the statements starting with @code{OACC_} represent directives and
2390clauses used by the OpenACC API @w{@uref{https://www.openacc.org}}.
2391
2392@table @code
2393@item OACC_CACHE
2394
2395Represents @code{#pragma acc cache (var @dots{})}.
2396
2397@item OACC_DATA
2398
2399Represents @code{#pragma acc data [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2400
2401@item OACC_DECLARE
2402
2403Represents @code{#pragma acc declare [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2404
2405@item OACC_ENTER_DATA
2406
2407Represents @code{#pragma acc enter data [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2408
2409@item OACC_EXIT_DATA
2410
2411Represents @code{#pragma acc exit data [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2412
2413@item OACC_HOST_DATA
2414
2415Represents @code{#pragma acc host_data [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2416
2417@item OACC_KERNELS
2418
2419Represents @code{#pragma acc kernels [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2420
2421@item OACC_LOOP
2422
2423Represents @code{#pragma acc loop [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2424
2425See the description of the @code{OMP_FOR} code.
2426
2427@item OACC_PARALLEL
2428
2429Represents @code{#pragma acc parallel [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2430
2431@item OACC_UPDATE
2432
2433Represents @code{#pragma acc update [clause1 @dots{} clauseN]}.
2434
2435@end table
2436
2437@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2438@c Functions
2439@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2440
2441@node Functions
2442@section Functions
2443@cindex function
2444@tindex FUNCTION_DECL
2445
2446A function is represented by a @code{FUNCTION_DECL} node.  It stores
2447the basic pieces of the function such as body, parameters, and return
2448type as well as information on the surrounding context, visibility,
2449and linkage.
2450
2451@menu
2452* Function Basics::     Function names, body, and parameters.
2453* Function Properties:: Context, linkage, etc.
2454@end menu
2455
2456@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2457@c Function Basics
2458@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2459
2460@node Function Basics
2461@subsection Function Basics
2462@findex DECL_NAME
2463@findex DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME
2464@findex TREE_PUBLIC
2465@findex DECL_ARTIFICIAL
2466@findex DECL_FUNCTION_SPECIFIC_TARGET
2467@findex DECL_FUNCTION_SPECIFIC_OPTIMIZATION
2468
2469A function has four core parts: the name, the parameters, the result,
2470and the body.  The following macros and functions access these parts
2471of a @code{FUNCTION_DECL} as well as other basic features:
2472@ftable @code
2473@item DECL_NAME
2474This macro returns the unqualified name of the function, as an
2475@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}.  For an instantiation of a function template,
2476the @code{DECL_NAME} is the unqualified name of the template, not
2477something like @code{f<int>}.  The value of @code{DECL_NAME} is
2478undefined when used on a constructor, destructor, overloaded operator,
2479or type-conversion operator, or any function that is implicitly
2480generated by the compiler.  See below for macros that can be used to
2481distinguish these cases.
2482
2483@item DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME
2484This macro returns the mangled name of the function, also an
2485@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}.  This name does not contain leading underscores
2486on systems that prefix all identifiers with underscores.  The mangled
2487name is computed in the same way on all platforms; if special processing
2488is required to deal with the object file format used on a particular
2489platform, it is the responsibility of the back end to perform those
2490modifications.  (Of course, the back end should not modify
2491@code{DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME} itself.)
2492
2493Using @code{DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME} will cause additional memory to be
2494allocated (for the mangled name of the entity) so it should be used
2495only when emitting assembly code.  It should not be used within the
2496optimizers to determine whether or not two declarations are the same,
2497even though some of the existing optimizers do use it in that way.
2498These uses will be removed over time.
2499
2500@item DECL_ARGUMENTS
2501This macro returns the @code{PARM_DECL} for the first argument to the
2502function.  Subsequent @code{PARM_DECL} nodes can be obtained by
2503following the @code{TREE_CHAIN} links.
2504
2505@item DECL_RESULT
2506This macro returns the @code{RESULT_DECL} for the function.
2507
2508@item DECL_SAVED_TREE
2509This macro returns the complete body of the function.
2510
2511@item TREE_TYPE
2512This macro returns the @code{FUNCTION_TYPE} or @code{METHOD_TYPE} for
2513the function.
2514
2515@item DECL_INITIAL
2516A function that has a definition in the current translation unit will
2517have a non-@code{NULL} @code{DECL_INITIAL}.  However, back ends should not make
2518use of the particular value given by @code{DECL_INITIAL}.
2519
2520It should contain a tree of @code{BLOCK} nodes that mirrors the scopes
2521that variables are bound in the function.  Each block contains a list
2522of decls declared in a basic block, a pointer to a chain of blocks at
2523the next lower scope level, then a pointer to the next block at the
2524same level and a backpointer to the parent @code{BLOCK} or
2525@code{FUNCTION_DECL}.  So given a function as follows:
2526
2527@smallexample
2528void foo()
2529@{
2530  int a;
2531  @{
2532    int b;
2533  @}
2534  int c;
2535@}
2536@end smallexample
2537
2538you would get the following:
2539
2540@smallexample
2541tree foo = FUNCTION_DECL;
2542tree decl_a = VAR_DECL;
2543tree decl_b = VAR_DECL;
2544tree decl_c = VAR_DECL;
2545tree block_a = BLOCK;
2546tree block_b = BLOCK;
2547tree block_c = BLOCK;
2548BLOCK_VARS(block_a) = decl_a;
2549BLOCK_SUBBLOCKS(block_a) = block_b;
2550BLOCK_CHAIN(block_a) = block_c;
2551BLOCK_SUPERCONTEXT(block_a) = foo;
2552BLOCK_VARS(block_b) = decl_b;
2553BLOCK_SUPERCONTEXT(block_b) = block_a;
2554BLOCK_VARS(block_c) = decl_c;
2555BLOCK_SUPERCONTEXT(block_c) = foo;
2556DECL_INITIAL(foo) = block_a;
2557@end smallexample
2558
2559@end ftable
2560
2561@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2562@c Function Properties
2563@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2564
2565@node Function Properties
2566@subsection Function Properties
2567@cindex function properties
2568@cindex statements
2569
2570To determine the scope of a function, you can use the
2571@code{DECL_CONTEXT} macro.  This macro will return the class
2572(either a @code{RECORD_TYPE} or a @code{UNION_TYPE}) or namespace (a
2573@code{NAMESPACE_DECL}) of which the function is a member.  For a virtual
2574function, this macro returns the class in which the function was
2575actually defined, not the base class in which the virtual declaration
2576occurred.
2577
2578In C, the @code{DECL_CONTEXT} for a function maybe another function.
2579This representation indicates that the GNU nested function extension
2580is in use.  For details on the semantics of nested functions, see the
2581GCC Manual.  The nested function can refer to local variables in its
2582containing function.  Such references are not explicitly marked in the
2583tree structure; back ends must look at the @code{DECL_CONTEXT} for the
2584referenced @code{VAR_DECL}.  If the @code{DECL_CONTEXT} for the
2585referenced @code{VAR_DECL} is not the same as the function currently
2586being processed, and neither @code{DECL_EXTERNAL} nor
2587@code{TREE_STATIC} hold, then the reference is to a local variable in
2588a containing function, and the back end must take appropriate action.
2589
2590@ftable @code
2591@item DECL_EXTERNAL
2592This predicate holds if the function is undefined.
2593
2594@item TREE_PUBLIC
2595This predicate holds if the function has external linkage.
2596
2597@item TREE_STATIC
2598This predicate holds if the function has been defined.
2599
2600@item TREE_THIS_VOLATILE
2601This predicate holds if the function does not return normally.
2602
2603@item TREE_READONLY
2604This predicate holds if the function can only read its arguments.
2605
2606@item DECL_PURE_P
2607This predicate holds if the function can only read its arguments, but
2608may also read global memory.
2609
2610@item DECL_VIRTUAL_P
2611This predicate holds if the function is virtual.
2612
2613@item DECL_ARTIFICIAL
2614This macro holds if the function was implicitly generated by the
2615compiler, rather than explicitly declared.  In addition to implicitly
2616generated class member functions, this macro holds for the special
2617functions created to implement static initialization and destruction, to
2618compute run-time type information, and so forth.
2619
2620@item DECL_FUNCTION_SPECIFIC_TARGET
2621This macro returns a tree node that holds the target options that are
2622to be used to compile this particular function or @code{NULL_TREE} if
2623the function is to be compiled with the target options specified on
2624the command line.
2625
2626@item DECL_FUNCTION_SPECIFIC_OPTIMIZATION
2627This macro returns a tree node that holds the optimization options
2628that are to be used to compile this particular function or
2629@code{NULL_TREE} if the function is to be compiled with the
2630optimization options specified on the command line.
2631
2632@end ftable
2633
2634@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2635@c Language-dependent trees
2636@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2637
2638@node Language-dependent trees
2639@section Language-dependent trees
2640@cindex language-dependent trees
2641
2642Front ends may wish to keep some state associated with various GENERIC
2643trees while parsing.  To support this, trees provide a set of flags
2644that may be used by the front end.  They are accessed using
2645@code{TREE_LANG_FLAG_n} where @samp{n} is currently 0 through 6.
2646
2647If necessary, a front end can use some language-dependent tree
2648codes in its GENERIC representation, so long as it provides a
2649hook for converting them to GIMPLE and doesn't expect them to
2650work with any (hypothetical) optimizers that run before the
2651conversion to GIMPLE@. The intermediate representation used while
2652parsing C and C++ looks very little like GENERIC, but the C and
2653C++ gimplifier hooks are perfectly happy to take it as input and
2654spit out GIMPLE@.
2655
2656
2657
2658@node C and C++ Trees
2659@section C and C++ Trees
2660
2661This section documents the internal representation used by GCC to
2662represent C and C++ source programs.  When presented with a C or C++
2663source program, GCC parses the program, performs semantic analysis
2664(including the generation of error messages), and then produces the
2665internal representation described here.  This representation contains a
2666complete representation for the entire translation unit provided as
2667input to the front end.  This representation is then typically processed
2668by a code-generator in order to produce machine code, but could also be
2669used in the creation of source browsers, intelligent editors, automatic
2670documentation generators, interpreters, and any other programs needing
2671the ability to process C or C++ code.
2672
2673This section explains the internal representation.  In particular, it
2674documents the internal representation for C and C++ source
2675constructs, and the macros, functions, and variables that can be used to
2676access these constructs.  The C++ representation is largely a superset
2677of the representation used in the C front end.  There is only one
2678construct used in C that does not appear in the C++ front end and that
2679is the GNU ``nested function'' extension.  Many of the macros documented
2680here do not apply in C because the corresponding language constructs do
2681not appear in C@.
2682
2683The C and C++ front ends generate a mix of GENERIC trees and ones
2684specific to C and C++.  These language-specific trees are higher-level
2685constructs than the ones in GENERIC to make the parser's job easier.
2686This section describes those trees that aren't part of GENERIC as well
2687as aspects of GENERIC trees that are treated in a language-specific
2688manner.
2689
2690If you are developing a ``back end'', be it is a code-generator or some
2691other tool, that uses this representation, you may occasionally find
2692that you need to ask questions not easily answered by the functions and
2693macros available here.  If that situation occurs, it is quite likely
2694that GCC already supports the functionality you desire, but that the
2695interface is simply not documented here.  In that case, you should ask
2696the GCC maintainers (via mail to @email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org}) about
2697documenting the functionality you require.  Similarly, if you find
2698yourself writing functions that do not deal directly with your back end,
2699but instead might be useful to other people using the GCC front end, you
2700should submit your patches for inclusion in GCC@.
2701
2702@menu
2703* Types for C++::               Fundamental and aggregate types.
2704* Namespaces::                  Namespaces.
2705* Classes::                     Classes.
2706* Functions for C++::           Overloading and accessors for C++.
2707* Statements for C++::          Statements specific to C and C++.
2708* C++ Expressions::    From @code{typeid} to @code{throw}.
2709@end menu
2710
2711@node Types for C++
2712@subsection Types for C++
2713@tindex UNKNOWN_TYPE
2714@tindex TYPENAME_TYPE
2715@tindex TYPEOF_TYPE
2716@findex cp_type_quals
2717@findex TYPE_UNQUALIFIED
2718@findex TYPE_QUAL_CONST
2719@findex TYPE_QUAL_VOLATILE
2720@findex TYPE_QUAL_RESTRICT
2721@findex TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT
2722@cindex qualified type
2723@findex TYPE_SIZE
2724@findex TYPE_ALIGN
2725@findex TYPE_PRECISION
2726@findex TYPE_ARG_TYPES
2727@findex TYPE_METHOD_BASETYPE
2728@findex TYPE_PTRDATAMEM_P
2729@findex TYPE_OFFSET_BASETYPE
2730@findex TREE_TYPE
2731@findex TYPE_CONTEXT
2732@findex TYPE_NAME
2733@findex TYPENAME_TYPE_FULLNAME
2734@findex TYPE_FIELDS
2735@findex TYPE_PTROBV_P
2736
2737In C++, an array type is not qualified; rather the type of the array
2738elements is qualified.  This situation is reflected in the intermediate
2739representation.  The macros described here will always examine the
2740qualification of the underlying element type when applied to an array
2741type.  (If the element type is itself an array, then the recursion
2742continues until a non-array type is found, and the qualification of this
2743type is examined.)  So, for example, @code{CP_TYPE_CONST_P} will hold of
2744the type @code{const int ()[7]}, denoting an array of seven @code{int}s.
2745
2746The following functions and macros deal with cv-qualification of types:
2747@ftable @code
2748@item cp_type_quals
2749This function returns the set of type qualifiers applied to this type.
2750This value is @code{TYPE_UNQUALIFIED} if no qualifiers have been
2751applied.  The @code{TYPE_QUAL_CONST} bit is set if the type is
2752@code{const}-qualified.  The @code{TYPE_QUAL_VOLATILE} bit is set if the
2753type is @code{volatile}-qualified.  The @code{TYPE_QUAL_RESTRICT} bit is
2754set if the type is @code{restrict}-qualified.
2755
2756@item CP_TYPE_CONST_P
2757This macro holds if the type is @code{const}-qualified.
2758
2759@item CP_TYPE_VOLATILE_P
2760This macro holds if the type is @code{volatile}-qualified.
2761
2762@item CP_TYPE_RESTRICT_P
2763This macro holds if the type is @code{restrict}-qualified.
2764
2765@item CP_TYPE_CONST_NON_VOLATILE_P
2766This predicate holds for a type that is @code{const}-qualified, but
2767@emph{not} @code{volatile}-qualified; other cv-qualifiers are ignored as
2768well: only the @code{const}-ness is tested.
2769
2770@end ftable
2771
2772A few other macros and functions are usable with all types:
2773@ftable @code
2774@item TYPE_SIZE
2775The number of bits required to represent the type, represented as an
2776@code{INTEGER_CST}.  For an incomplete type, @code{TYPE_SIZE} will be
2777@code{NULL_TREE}.
2778
2779@item TYPE_ALIGN
2780The alignment of the type, in bits, represented as an @code{int}.
2781
2782@item TYPE_NAME
2783This macro returns a declaration (in the form of a @code{TYPE_DECL}) for
2784the type.  (Note this macro does @emph{not} return an
2785@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE}, as you might expect, given its name!)  You can
2786look at the @code{DECL_NAME} of the @code{TYPE_DECL} to obtain the
2787actual name of the type.  The @code{TYPE_NAME} will be @code{NULL_TREE}
2788for a type that is not a built-in type, the result of a typedef, or a
2789named class type.
2790
2791@item CP_INTEGRAL_TYPE
2792This predicate holds if the type is an integral type.  Notice that in
2793C++, enumerations are @emph{not} integral types.
2794
2795@item ARITHMETIC_TYPE_P
2796This predicate holds if the type is an integral type (in the C++ sense)
2797or a floating point type.
2798
2799@item CLASS_TYPE_P
2800This predicate holds for a class-type.
2801
2802@item TYPE_BUILT_IN
2803This predicate holds for a built-in type.
2804
2805@item TYPE_PTRDATAMEM_P
2806This predicate holds if the type is a pointer to data member.
2807
2808@item TYPE_PTR_P
2809This predicate holds if the type is a pointer type, and the pointee is
2810not a data member.
2811
2812@item TYPE_PTRFN_P
2813This predicate holds for a pointer to function type.
2814
2815@item TYPE_PTROB_P
2816This predicate holds for a pointer to object type.  Note however that it
2817does not hold for the generic pointer to object type @code{void *}.  You
2818may use @code{TYPE_PTROBV_P} to test for a pointer to object type as
2819well as @code{void *}.
2820
2821@end ftable
2822
2823The table below describes types specific to C and C++ as well as
2824language-dependent info about GENERIC types.
2825
2826@table @code
2827
2828@item POINTER_TYPE
2829Used to represent pointer types, and pointer to data member types.  If
2830@code{TREE_TYPE}
2831is a pointer to data member type, then @code{TYPE_PTRDATAMEM_P} will hold.
2832For a pointer to data member type of the form @samp{T X::*},
2833@code{TYPE_PTRMEM_CLASS_TYPE} will be the type @code{X}, while
2834@code{TYPE_PTRMEM_POINTED_TO_TYPE} will be the type @code{T}.
2835
2836@item RECORD_TYPE
2837Used to represent @code{struct} and @code{class} types in C and C++.  If
2838@code{TYPE_PTRMEMFUNC_P} holds, then this type is a pointer-to-member
2839type.  In that case, the @code{TYPE_PTRMEMFUNC_FN_TYPE} is a
2840@code{POINTER_TYPE} pointing to a @code{METHOD_TYPE}.  The
2841@code{METHOD_TYPE} is the type of a function pointed to by the
2842pointer-to-member function.  If @code{TYPE_PTRMEMFUNC_P} does not hold,
2843this type is a class type.  For more information, @pxref{Classes}.
2844
2845@item UNKNOWN_TYPE
2846This node is used to represent a type the knowledge of which is
2847insufficient for a sound processing.
2848
2849@item TYPENAME_TYPE
2850Used to represent a construct of the form @code{typename T::A}.  The
2851@code{TYPE_CONTEXT} is @code{T}; the @code{TYPE_NAME} is an
2852@code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} for @code{A}.  If the type is specified via a
2853template-id, then @code{TYPENAME_TYPE_FULLNAME} yields a
2854@code{TEMPLATE_ID_EXPR}.  The @code{TREE_TYPE} is non-@code{NULL} if the
2855node is implicitly generated in support for the implicit typename
2856extension; in which case the @code{TREE_TYPE} is a type node for the
2857base-class.
2858
2859@item TYPEOF_TYPE
2860Used to represent the @code{__typeof__} extension.  The
2861@code{TYPE_FIELDS} is the expression the type of which is being
2862represented.
2863
2864@end table
2865
2866
2867@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2868@c Namespaces
2869@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2870
2871@node Namespaces
2872@subsection Namespaces
2873@cindex namespace, scope
2874@tindex NAMESPACE_DECL
2875
2876The root of the entire intermediate representation is the variable
2877@code{global_namespace}.  This is the namespace specified with @code{::}
2878in C++ source code.  All other namespaces, types, variables, functions,
2879and so forth can be found starting with this namespace.
2880
2881However, except for the fact that it is distinguished as the root of the
2882representation, the global namespace is no different from any other
2883namespace.  Thus, in what follows, we describe namespaces generally,
2884rather than the global namespace in particular.
2885
2886A namespace is represented by a @code{NAMESPACE_DECL} node.
2887
2888The following macros and functions can be used on a @code{NAMESPACE_DECL}:
2889
2890@ftable @code
2891@item DECL_NAME
2892This macro is used to obtain the @code{IDENTIFIER_NODE} corresponding to
2893the unqualified name of the name of the namespace (@pxref{Identifiers}).
2894The name of the global namespace is @samp{::}, even though in C++ the
2895global namespace is unnamed.  However, you should use comparison with
2896@code{global_namespace}, rather than @code{DECL_NAME} to determine
2897whether or not a namespace is the global one.  An unnamed namespace
2898will have a @code{DECL_NAME} equal to @code{anonymous_namespace_name}.
2899Within a single translation unit, all unnamed namespaces will have the
2900same name.
2901
2902@item DECL_CONTEXT
2903This macro returns the enclosing namespace.  The @code{DECL_CONTEXT} for
2904the @code{global_namespace} is @code{NULL_TREE}.
2905
2906@item DECL_NAMESPACE_ALIAS
2907If this declaration is for a namespace alias, then
2908@code{DECL_NAMESPACE_ALIAS} is the namespace for which this one is an
2909alias.
2910
2911Do not attempt to use @code{cp_namespace_decls} for a namespace which is
2912an alias.  Instead, follow @code{DECL_NAMESPACE_ALIAS} links until you
2913reach an ordinary, non-alias, namespace, and call
2914@code{cp_namespace_decls} there.
2915
2916@item DECL_NAMESPACE_STD_P
2917This predicate holds if the namespace is the special @code{::std}
2918namespace.
2919
2920@item cp_namespace_decls
2921This function will return the declarations contained in the namespace,
2922including types, overloaded functions, other namespaces, and so forth.
2923If there are no declarations, this function will return
2924@code{NULL_TREE}.  The declarations are connected through their
2925@code{TREE_CHAIN} fields.
2926
2927Although most entries on this list will be declarations,
2928@code{TREE_LIST} nodes may also appear.  In this case, the
2929@code{TREE_VALUE} will be an @code{OVERLOAD}.  The value of the
2930@code{TREE_PURPOSE} is unspecified; back ends should ignore this value.
2931As with the other kinds of declarations returned by
2932@code{cp_namespace_decls}, the @code{TREE_CHAIN} will point to the next
2933declaration in this list.
2934
2935For more information on the kinds of declarations that can occur on this
2936list, @xref{Declarations}.  Some declarations will not appear on this
2937list.  In particular, no @code{FIELD_DECL}, @code{LABEL_DECL}, or
2938@code{PARM_DECL} nodes will appear here.
2939
2940This function cannot be used with namespaces that have
2941@code{DECL_NAMESPACE_ALIAS} set.
2942
2943@end ftable
2944
2945@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2946@c Classes
2947@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
2948
2949@node Classes
2950@subsection Classes
2951@cindex class, scope
2952@tindex RECORD_TYPE
2953@tindex UNION_TYPE
2954@findex CLASSTYPE_DECLARED_CLASS
2955@findex TYPE_BINFO
2956@findex BINFO_TYPE
2957@findex TYPE_FIELDS
2958@findex TYPE_VFIELD
2959
2960Besides namespaces, the other high-level scoping construct in C++ is the
2961class.  (Throughout this manual the term @dfn{class} is used to mean the
2962types referred to in the ANSI/ISO C++ Standard as classes; these include
2963types defined with the @code{class}, @code{struct}, and @code{union}
2964keywords.)
2965
2966A class type is represented by either a @code{RECORD_TYPE} or a
2967@code{UNION_TYPE}.  A class declared with the @code{union} tag is
2968represented by a @code{UNION_TYPE}, while classes declared with either
2969the @code{struct} or the @code{class} tag are represented by
2970@code{RECORD_TYPE}s.  You can use the @code{CLASSTYPE_DECLARED_CLASS}
2971macro to discern whether or not a particular type is a @code{class} as
2972opposed to a @code{struct}.  This macro will be true only for classes
2973declared with the @code{class} tag.
2974
2975Almost all members are available on the @code{TYPE_FIELDS}
2976list.  Given one member, the next can be found by following the
2977@code{TREE_CHAIN}.  You should not depend in any way on the order in
2978which fields appear on this list.  All nodes on this list will be
2979@samp{DECL} nodes.  A @code{FIELD_DECL} is used to represent a non-static
2980data member, a @code{VAR_DECL} is used to represent a static data
2981member, and a @code{TYPE_DECL} is used to represent a type.  Note that
2982the @code{CONST_DECL} for an enumeration constant will appear on this
2983list, if the enumeration type was declared in the class.  (Of course,
2984the @code{TYPE_DECL} for the enumeration type will appear here as well.)
2985There are no entries for base classes on this list.  In particular,
2986there is no @code{FIELD_DECL} for the ``base-class portion'' of an
2987object.  If a function member is overloaded, each of the overloaded
2988functions appears; no @code{OVERLOAD} nodes appear on the @code{TYPE_FIELDS}
2989list.  Implicitly declared functions (including default constructors,
2990copy constructors, assignment operators, and destructors) will appear on
2991this list as well.
2992
2993The @code{TYPE_VFIELD} is a compiler-generated field used to point to
2994virtual function tables.  It may or may not appear on the
2995@code{TYPE_FIELDS} list.  However, back ends should handle the
2996@code{TYPE_VFIELD} just like all the entries on the @code{TYPE_FIELDS}
2997list.
2998
2999Every class has an associated @dfn{binfo}, which can be obtained with
3000@code{TYPE_BINFO}.  Binfos are used to represent base-classes.  The
3001binfo given by @code{TYPE_BINFO} is the degenerate case, whereby every
3002class is considered to be its own base-class.  The base binfos for a
3003particular binfo are held in a vector, whose length is obtained with
3004@code{BINFO_N_BASE_BINFOS}.  The base binfos themselves are obtained
3005with @code{BINFO_BASE_BINFO} and @code{BINFO_BASE_ITERATE}.  To add a
3006new binfo, use @code{BINFO_BASE_APPEND}.  The vector of base binfos can
3007be obtained with @code{BINFO_BASE_BINFOS}, but normally you do not need
3008to use that.  The class type associated with a binfo is given by
3009@code{BINFO_TYPE}.  It is not always the case that @code{BINFO_TYPE
3010(TYPE_BINFO (x))}, because of typedefs and qualified types.  Neither is
3011it the case that @code{TYPE_BINFO (BINFO_TYPE (y))} is the same binfo as
3012@code{y}.  The reason is that if @code{y} is a binfo representing a
3013base-class @code{B} of a derived class @code{D}, then @code{BINFO_TYPE
3014(y)} will be @code{B}, and @code{TYPE_BINFO (BINFO_TYPE (y))} will be
3015@code{B} as its own base-class, rather than as a base-class of @code{D}.
3016
3017The access to a base type can be found with @code{BINFO_BASE_ACCESS}.
3018This will produce @code{access_public_node}, @code{access_private_node}
3019or @code{access_protected_node}.  If bases are always public,
3020@code{BINFO_BASE_ACCESSES} may be @code{NULL}.
3021
3022@code{BINFO_VIRTUAL_P} is used to specify whether the binfo is inherited
3023virtually or not.  The other flags, @code{BINFO_FLAG_0} to
3024@code{BINFO_FLAG_6}, can be used for language specific use.
3025
3026The following macros can be used on a tree node representing a class-type.
3027
3028@ftable @code
3029@item LOCAL_CLASS_P
3030This predicate holds if the class is local class @emph{i.e.}@: declared
3031inside a function body.
3032
3033@item TYPE_POLYMORPHIC_P
3034This predicate holds if the class has at least one virtual function
3035(declared or inherited).
3036
3037@item TYPE_HAS_DEFAULT_CONSTRUCTOR
3038This predicate holds whenever its argument represents a class-type with
3039default constructor.
3040
3041@item CLASSTYPE_HAS_MUTABLE
3042@itemx TYPE_HAS_MUTABLE_P
3043These predicates hold for a class-type having a mutable data member.
3044
3045@item CLASSTYPE_NON_POD_P
3046This predicate holds only for class-types that are not PODs.
3047
3048@item TYPE_HAS_NEW_OPERATOR
3049This predicate holds for a class-type that defines
3050@code{operator new}.
3051
3052@item TYPE_HAS_ARRAY_NEW_OPERATOR
3053This predicate holds for a class-type for which
3054@code{operator new[]} is defined.
3055
3056@item TYPE_OVERLOADS_CALL_EXPR
3057This predicate holds for class-type for which the function call
3058@code{operator()} is overloaded.
3059
3060@item TYPE_OVERLOADS_ARRAY_REF
3061This predicate holds for a class-type that overloads
3062@code{operator[]}
3063
3064@item TYPE_OVERLOADS_ARROW
3065This predicate holds for a class-type for which @code{operator->} is
3066overloaded.
3067
3068@end ftable
3069
3070@node Functions for C++
3071@subsection Functions for C++
3072@cindex function
3073@tindex FUNCTION_DECL
3074@tindex OVERLOAD
3075@findex OVL_CURRENT
3076@findex OVL_NEXT
3077
3078A function is represented by a @code{FUNCTION_DECL} node.  A set of
3079overloaded functions is sometimes represented by an @code{OVERLOAD} node.
3080
3081An @code{OVERLOAD} node is not a declaration, so none of the
3082@samp{DECL_} macros should be used on an @code{OVERLOAD}.  An
3083@code{OVERLOAD} node is similar to a @code{TREE_LIST}.  Use
3084@code{OVL_CURRENT} to get the function associated with an
3085@code{OVERLOAD} node; use @code{OVL_NEXT} to get the next
3086@code{OVERLOAD} node in the list of overloaded functions.  The macros
3087@code{OVL_CURRENT} and @code{OVL_NEXT} are actually polymorphic; you can
3088use them to work with @code{FUNCTION_DECL} nodes as well as with
3089overloads.  In the case of a @code{FUNCTION_DECL}, @code{OVL_CURRENT}
3090will always return the function itself, and @code{OVL_NEXT} will always
3091be @code{NULL_TREE}.
3092
3093To determine the scope of a function, you can use the
3094@code{DECL_CONTEXT} macro.  This macro will return the class
3095(either a @code{RECORD_TYPE} or a @code{UNION_TYPE}) or namespace (a
3096@code{NAMESPACE_DECL}) of which the function is a member.  For a virtual
3097function, this macro returns the class in which the function was
3098actually defined, not the base class in which the virtual declaration
3099occurred.
3100
3101If a friend function is defined in a class scope, the
3102@code{DECL_FRIEND_CONTEXT} macro can be used to determine the class in
3103which it was defined.  For example, in
3104@smallexample
3105class C @{ friend void f() @{@} @};
3106@end smallexample
3107@noindent
3108the @code{DECL_CONTEXT} for @code{f} will be the
3109@code{global_namespace}, but the @code{DECL_FRIEND_CONTEXT} will be the
3110@code{RECORD_TYPE} for @code{C}.
3111
3112
3113The following macros and functions can be used on a @code{FUNCTION_DECL}:
3114@ftable @code
3115@item DECL_MAIN_P
3116This predicate holds for a function that is the program entry point
3117@code{::code}.
3118
3119@item DECL_LOCAL_FUNCTION_P
3120This predicate holds if the function was declared at block scope, even
3121though it has a global scope.
3122
3123@item DECL_ANTICIPATED
3124This predicate holds if the function is a built-in function but its
3125prototype is not yet explicitly declared.
3126
3127@item DECL_EXTERN_C_FUNCTION_P
3128This predicate holds if the function is declared as an
3129`@code{extern "C"}' function.
3130
3131@item DECL_LINKONCE_P
3132This macro holds if multiple copies of this function may be emitted in
3133various translation units.  It is the responsibility of the linker to
3134merge the various copies.  Template instantiations are the most common
3135example of functions for which @code{DECL_LINKONCE_P} holds; G++
3136instantiates needed templates in all translation units which require them,
3137and then relies on the linker to remove duplicate instantiations.
3138
3139FIXME: This macro is not yet implemented.
3140
3141@item DECL_FUNCTION_MEMBER_P
3142This macro holds if the function is a member of a class, rather than a
3143member of a namespace.
3144
3145@item DECL_STATIC_FUNCTION_P
3146This predicate holds if the function a static member function.
3147
3148@item DECL_NONSTATIC_MEMBER_FUNCTION_P
3149This macro holds for a non-static member function.
3150
3151@item DECL_CONST_MEMFUNC_P
3152This predicate holds for a @code{const}-member function.
3153
3154@item DECL_VOLATILE_MEMFUNC_P
3155This predicate holds for a @code{volatile}-member function.
3156
3157@item DECL_CONSTRUCTOR_P
3158This macro holds if the function is a constructor.
3159
3160@item DECL_NONCONVERTING_P
3161This predicate holds if the constructor is a non-converting constructor.
3162
3163@item DECL_COMPLETE_CONSTRUCTOR_P
3164This predicate holds for a function which is a constructor for an object
3165of a complete type.
3166
3167@item DECL_BASE_CONSTRUCTOR_P
3168This predicate holds for a function which is a constructor for a base
3169class sub-object.
3170
3171@item DECL_COPY_CONSTRUCTOR_P
3172This predicate holds for a function which is a copy-constructor.
3173
3174@item DECL_DESTRUCTOR_P
3175This macro holds if the function is a destructor.
3176
3177@item DECL_COMPLETE_DESTRUCTOR_P
3178This predicate holds if the function is the destructor for an object a
3179complete type.
3180
3181@item DECL_OVERLOADED_OPERATOR_P
3182This macro holds if the function is an overloaded operator.
3183
3184@item DECL_CONV_FN_P
3185This macro holds if the function is a type-conversion operator.
3186
3187@item DECL_GLOBAL_CTOR_P
3188This predicate holds if the function is a file-scope initialization
3189function.
3190
3191@item DECL_GLOBAL_DTOR_P
3192This predicate holds if the function is a file-scope finalization
3193function.
3194
3195@item DECL_THUNK_P
3196This predicate holds if the function is a thunk.
3197
3198These functions represent stub code that adjusts the @code{this} pointer
3199and then jumps to another function.  When the jumped-to function
3200returns, control is transferred directly to the caller, without
3201returning to the thunk.  The first parameter to the thunk is always the
3202@code{this} pointer; the thunk should add @code{THUNK_DELTA} to this
3203value.  (The @code{THUNK_DELTA} is an @code{int}, not an
3204@code{INTEGER_CST}.)
3205
3206Then, if @code{THUNK_VCALL_OFFSET} (an @code{INTEGER_CST}) is nonzero
3207the adjusted @code{this} pointer must be adjusted again.  The complete
3208calculation is given by the following pseudo-code:
3209
3210@smallexample
3211this += THUNK_DELTA
3212if (THUNK_VCALL_OFFSET)
3213  this += (*((ptrdiff_t **) this))[THUNK_VCALL_OFFSET]
3214@end smallexample
3215
3216Finally, the thunk should jump to the location given
3217by @code{DECL_INITIAL}; this will always be an expression for the
3218address of a function.
3219
3220@item DECL_NON_THUNK_FUNCTION_P
3221This predicate holds if the function is @emph{not} a thunk function.
3222
3223@item GLOBAL_INIT_PRIORITY
3224If either @code{DECL_GLOBAL_CTOR_P} or @code{DECL_GLOBAL_DTOR_P} holds,
3225then this gives the initialization priority for the function.  The
3226linker will arrange that all functions for which
3227@code{DECL_GLOBAL_CTOR_P} holds are run in increasing order of priority
3228before @code{main} is called.  When the program exits, all functions for
3229which @code{DECL_GLOBAL_DTOR_P} holds are run in the reverse order.
3230
3231@item TYPE_RAISES_EXCEPTIONS
3232This macro returns the list of exceptions that a (member-)function can
3233raise.  The returned list, if non @code{NULL}, is comprised of nodes
3234whose @code{TREE_VALUE} represents a type.
3235
3236@item TYPE_NOTHROW_P
3237This predicate holds when the exception-specification of its arguments
3238is of the form `@code{()}'.
3239
3240@item DECL_ARRAY_DELETE_OPERATOR_P
3241This predicate holds if the function an overloaded
3242@code{operator delete[]}.
3243
3244@end ftable
3245
3246@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
3247@c Function Bodies
3248@c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
3249
3250@node Statements for C++
3251@subsection Statements for C++
3252@cindex statements
3253@tindex BREAK_STMT
3254@tindex CLEANUP_STMT
3255@findex CLEANUP_DECL
3256@findex CLEANUP_EXPR
3257@tindex CONTINUE_STMT
3258@tindex DECL_STMT
3259@findex DECL_STMT_DECL
3260@tindex DO_STMT
3261@findex DO_BODY
3262@findex DO_COND
3263@tindex EMPTY_CLASS_EXPR
3264@tindex EXPR_STMT
3265@findex EXPR_STMT_EXPR
3266@tindex FOR_STMT
3267@findex FOR_INIT_STMT
3268@findex FOR_COND
3269@findex FOR_EXPR
3270@findex FOR_BODY
3271@tindex HANDLER
3272@tindex IF_STMT
3273@findex IF_COND
3274@findex THEN_CLAUSE
3275@findex ELSE_CLAUSE
3276@tindex RETURN_STMT
3277@findex RETURN_EXPR
3278@tindex SUBOBJECT
3279@findex SUBOBJECT_CLEANUP
3280@tindex SWITCH_STMT
3281@findex SWITCH_COND
3282@findex SWITCH_BODY
3283@tindex TRY_BLOCK
3284@findex TRY_STMTS
3285@findex TRY_HANDLERS
3286@findex HANDLER_PARMS
3287@findex HANDLER_BODY
3288@findex USING_STMT
3289@tindex WHILE_STMT
3290@findex WHILE_BODY
3291@findex WHILE_COND
3292
3293A function that has a definition in the current translation unit will
3294have a non-@code{NULL} @code{DECL_INITIAL}.  However, back ends should not make
3295use of the particular value given by @code{DECL_INITIAL}.
3296
3297The @code{DECL_SAVED_TREE} macro will give the complete body of the
3298function.
3299
3300@subsubsection Statements
3301
3302There are tree nodes corresponding to all of the source-level
3303statement constructs, used within the C and C++ frontends.  These are
3304enumerated here, together with a list of the various macros that can
3305be used to obtain information about them.  There are a few macros that
3306can be used with all statements:
3307
3308@ftable @code
3309@item STMT_IS_FULL_EXPR_P
3310In C++, statements normally constitute ``full expressions''; temporaries
3311created during a statement are destroyed when the statement is complete.
3312However, G++ sometimes represents expressions by statements; these
3313statements will not have @code{STMT_IS_FULL_EXPR_P} set.  Temporaries
3314created during such statements should be destroyed when the innermost
3315enclosing statement with @code{STMT_IS_FULL_EXPR_P} set is exited.
3316
3317@end ftable
3318
3319Here is the list of the various statement nodes, and the macros used to
3320access them.  This documentation describes the use of these nodes in
3321non-template functions (including instantiations of template functions).
3322In template functions, the same nodes are used, but sometimes in
3323slightly different ways.
3324
3325Many of the statements have substatements.  For example, a @code{while}
3326loop will have a body, which is itself a statement.  If the substatement
3327is @code{NULL_TREE}, it is considered equivalent to a statement
3328consisting of a single @code{;}, i.e., an expression statement in which
3329the expression has been omitted.  A substatement may in fact be a list
3330of statements, connected via their @code{TREE_CHAIN}s.  So, you should
3331always process the statement tree by looping over substatements, like
3332this:
3333@smallexample
3334void process_stmt (stmt)
3335     tree stmt;
3336@{
3337  while (stmt)
3338    @{
3339      switch (TREE_CODE (stmt))
3340        @{
3341        case IF_STMT:
3342          process_stmt (THEN_CLAUSE (stmt));
3343          /* @r{More processing here.}  */
3344          break;
3345
3346        @dots{}
3347        @}
3348
3349      stmt = TREE_CHAIN (stmt);
3350    @}
3351@}
3352@end smallexample
3353In other words, while the @code{then} clause of an @code{if} statement
3354in C++ can be only one statement (although that one statement may be a
3355compound statement), the intermediate representation will sometimes use
3356several statements chained together.
3357
3358@table @code
3359@item BREAK_STMT
3360
3361Used to represent a @code{break} statement.  There are no additional
3362fields.
3363
3364@item CLEANUP_STMT
3365
3366Used to represent an action that should take place upon exit from the
3367enclosing scope.  Typically, these actions are calls to destructors for
3368local objects, but back ends cannot rely on this fact.  If these nodes
3369are in fact representing such destructors, @code{CLEANUP_DECL} will be
3370the @code{VAR_DECL} destroyed.  Otherwise, @code{CLEANUP_DECL} will be
3371@code{NULL_TREE}.  In any case, the @code{CLEANUP_EXPR} is the
3372expression to execute.  The cleanups executed on exit from a scope
3373should be run in the reverse order of the order in which the associated
3374@code{CLEANUP_STMT}s were encountered.
3375
3376@item CONTINUE_STMT
3377
3378Used to represent a @code{continue} statement.  There are no additional
3379fields.
3380
3381@item CTOR_STMT
3382
3383Used to mark the beginning (if @code{CTOR_BEGIN_P} holds) or end (if
3384@code{CTOR_END_P} holds of the main body of a constructor.  See also
3385@code{SUBOBJECT} for more information on how to use these nodes.
3386
3387@item DO_STMT
3388
3389Used to represent a @code{do} loop.  The body of the loop is given by
3390@code{DO_BODY} while the termination condition for the loop is given by
3391@code{DO_COND}.  The condition for a @code{do}-statement is always an
3392expression.
3393
3394@item EMPTY_CLASS_EXPR
3395
3396Used to represent a temporary object of a class with no data whose
3397address is never taken.  (All such objects are interchangeable.)  The
3398@code{TREE_TYPE} represents the type of the object.
3399
3400@item EXPR_STMT
3401
3402Used to represent an expression statement.  Use @code{EXPR_STMT_EXPR} to
3403obtain the expression.
3404
3405@item FOR_STMT
3406
3407Used to represent a @code{for} statement.  The @code{FOR_INIT_STMT} is
3408the initialization statement for the loop.  The @code{FOR_COND} is the
3409termination condition.  The @code{FOR_EXPR} is the expression executed
3410right before the @code{FOR_COND} on each loop iteration; often, this
3411expression increments a counter.  The body of the loop is given by
3412@code{FOR_BODY}.  Note that @code{FOR_INIT_STMT} and @code{FOR_BODY}
3413return statements, while @code{FOR_COND} and @code{FOR_EXPR} return
3414expressions.
3415
3416@item HANDLER
3417
3418Used to represent a C++ @code{catch} block.  The @code{HANDLER_TYPE}
3419is the type of exception that will be caught by this handler; it is
3420equal (by pointer equality) to @code{NULL} if this handler is for all
3421types.  @code{HANDLER_PARMS} is the @code{DECL_STMT} for the catch
3422parameter, and @code{HANDLER_BODY} is the code for the block itself.
3423
3424@item IF_STMT
3425
3426Used to represent an @code{if} statement.  The @code{IF_COND} is the
3427expression.
3428
3429If the condition is a @code{TREE_LIST}, then the @code{TREE_PURPOSE} is
3430a statement (usually a @code{DECL_STMT}).  Each time the condition is
3431evaluated, the statement should be executed.  Then, the
3432@code{TREE_VALUE} should be used as the conditional expression itself.
3433This representation is used to handle C++ code like this:
3434
3435C++ distinguishes between this and @code{COND_EXPR} for handling templates.
3436
3437@smallexample
3438if (int i = 7) @dots{}
3439@end smallexample
3440
3441where there is a new local variable (or variables) declared within the
3442condition.
3443
3444The @code{THEN_CLAUSE} represents the statement given by the @code{then}
3445condition, while the @code{ELSE_CLAUSE} represents the statement given
3446by the @code{else} condition.
3447
3448@item SUBOBJECT
3449
3450In a constructor, these nodes are used to mark the point at which a
3451subobject of @code{this} is fully constructed.  If, after this point, an
3452exception is thrown before a @code{CTOR_STMT} with @code{CTOR_END_P} set
3453is encountered, the @code{SUBOBJECT_CLEANUP} must be executed.  The
3454cleanups must be executed in the reverse order in which they appear.
3455
3456@item SWITCH_STMT
3457
3458Used to represent a @code{switch} statement.  The @code{SWITCH_STMT_COND}
3459is the expression on which the switch is occurring.  See the documentation
3460for an @code{IF_STMT} for more information on the representation used
3461for the condition.  The @code{SWITCH_STMT_BODY} is the body of the switch
3462statement.   The @code{SWITCH_STMT_TYPE} is the original type of switch
3463expression as given in the source, before any compiler conversions.
3464
3465@item TRY_BLOCK
3466Used to represent a @code{try} block.  The body of the try block is
3467given by @code{TRY_STMTS}.  Each of the catch blocks is a @code{HANDLER}
3468node.  The first handler is given by @code{TRY_HANDLERS}.  Subsequent
3469handlers are obtained by following the @code{TREE_CHAIN} link from one
3470handler to the next.  The body of the handler is given by
3471@code{HANDLER_BODY}.
3472
3473If @code{CLEANUP_P} holds of the @code{TRY_BLOCK}, then the
3474@code{TRY_HANDLERS} will not be a @code{HANDLER} node.  Instead, it will
3475be an expression that should be executed if an exception is thrown in
3476the try block.  It must rethrow the exception after executing that code.
3477And, if an exception is thrown while the expression is executing,
3478@code{terminate} must be called.
3479
3480@item USING_STMT
3481Used to represent a @code{using} directive.  The namespace is given by
3482@code{USING_STMT_NAMESPACE}, which will be a NAMESPACE_DECL@.  This node
3483is needed inside template functions, to implement using directives
3484during instantiation.
3485
3486@item WHILE_STMT
3487
3488Used to represent a @code{while} loop.  The @code{WHILE_COND} is the
3489termination condition for the loop.  See the documentation for an
3490@code{IF_STMT} for more information on the representation used for the
3491condition.
3492
3493The @code{WHILE_BODY} is the body of the loop.
3494
3495@end table
3496
3497@node C++ Expressions
3498@subsection C++ Expressions
3499
3500This section describes expressions specific to the C and C++ front
3501ends.
3502
3503@table @code
3504@item TYPEID_EXPR
3505
3506Used to represent a @code{typeid} expression.
3507
3508@item NEW_EXPR
3509@itemx VEC_NEW_EXPR
3510
3511Used to represent a call to @code{new} and @code{new[]} respectively.
3512
3513@item DELETE_EXPR
3514@itemx VEC_DELETE_EXPR
3515
3516Used to represent a call to @code{delete} and @code{delete[]} respectively.
3517
3518@item MEMBER_REF
3519
3520Represents a reference to a member of a class.
3521
3522@item THROW_EXPR
3523
3524Represents an instance of @code{throw} in the program.  Operand 0,
3525which is the expression to throw, may be @code{NULL_TREE}.
3526
3527
3528@item AGGR_INIT_EXPR
3529An @code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR} represents the initialization as the return
3530value of a function call, or as the result of a constructor.  An
3531@code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR} will only appear as a full-expression, or as the
3532second operand of a @code{TARGET_EXPR}.  @code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR}s have
3533a representation similar to that of @code{CALL_EXPR}s.  You can use
3534the @code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR_FN} and @code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR_ARG} macros to access
3535the function to call and the arguments to pass.
3536
3537If @code{AGGR_INIT_VIA_CTOR_P} holds of the @code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR}, then
3538the initialization is via a constructor call.  The address of the
3539@code{AGGR_INIT_EXPR_SLOT} operand, which is always a @code{VAR_DECL},
3540is taken, and this value replaces the first argument in the argument
3541list.
3542
3543In either case, the expression is void.
3544
3545
3546@end table
3547
3548
3549@node Java Trees
3550@section Java Trees
3551