1@c Copyright (C) 2009-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 2@c Free Software Foundation, Inc. 3@c This is part of the GCC manual. 4@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi. 5 6@node Plugins 7@chapter Plugins 8@cindex Plugins 9 10GCC plugins are loadable modules that provide extra features to the 11compiler. Like GCC itself they can be distributed in source and 12binary forms. 13 14GCC plugins provide developers with a rich subset of 15the GCC API to allow them to extend GCC as they see fit. 16Whether it is writing an additional optimization pass, 17transforming code, or analyzing information, plugins 18can be quite useful. 19 20@menu 21* Plugins loading:: How can we load plugins. 22* Plugin API:: The APIs for plugins. 23* Plugins pass:: How a plugin interact with the pass manager. 24* Plugins GC:: How a plugin Interact with GCC Garbage Collector. 25* Plugins description:: Giving information about a plugin itself. 26* Plugins attr:: Registering custom attributes or pragmas. 27* Plugins recording:: Recording information about pass execution. 28* Plugins gate:: Controlling which passes are being run. 29* Plugins tracking:: Keeping track of available passes. 30* Plugins building:: How can we build a plugin. 31@end menu 32 33@node Plugins loading 34@section Loading Plugins 35 36Plugins are supported on platforms that support @option{-ldl 37-rdynamic}. They are loaded by the compiler using @code{dlopen} 38and invoked at pre-determined locations in the compilation 39process. 40 41Plugins are loaded with 42 43@option{-fplugin=/path/to/@var{name}.so} @option{-fplugin-arg-@var{name}-@var{key1}[=@var{value1}]} 44 45The plugin arguments are parsed by GCC and passed to respective 46plugins as key-value pairs. Multiple plugins can be invoked by 47specifying multiple @option{-fplugin} arguments. 48 49A plugin can be simply given by its short name (no dots or 50slashes). When simply passing @option{-fplugin=@var{name}}, the plugin is 51loaded from the @file{plugin} directory, so @option{-fplugin=@var{name}} is 52the same as @option{-fplugin=`gcc -print-file-name=plugin`/@var{name}.so}, 53using backquote shell syntax to query the @file{plugin} directory. 54 55@node Plugin API 56@section Plugin API 57 58Plugins are activated by the compiler at specific events as defined in 59@file{gcc-plugin.h}. For each event of interest, the plugin should 60call @code{register_callback} specifying the name of the event and 61address of the callback function that will handle that event. 62 63The header @file{gcc-plugin.h} must be the first gcc header to be included. 64 65@subsection Plugin license check 66 67Every plugin should define the global symbol @code{plugin_is_GPL_compatible} 68to assert that it has been licensed under a GPL-compatible license. 69If this symbol does not exist, the compiler will emit a fatal error 70and exit with the error message: 71 72@smallexample 73fatal error: plugin @var{name} is not licensed under a GPL-compatible license 74@var{name}: undefined symbol: plugin_is_GPL_compatible 75compilation terminated 76@end smallexample 77 78The declared type of the symbol should be int, to match a forward declaration 79in @file{gcc-plugin.h} that suppresses C++ mangling. It does not need to be in 80any allocated section, though. The compiler merely asserts that 81the symbol exists in the global scope. Something like this is enough: 82 83@smallexample 84int plugin_is_GPL_compatible; 85@end smallexample 86 87@subsection Plugin initialization 88 89Every plugin should export a function called @code{plugin_init} that 90is called right after the plugin is loaded. This function is 91responsible for registering all the callbacks required by the plugin 92and do any other required initialization. 93 94This function is called from @code{compile_file} right before invoking 95the parser. The arguments to @code{plugin_init} are: 96 97@itemize @bullet 98@item @code{plugin_info}: Plugin invocation information. 99@item @code{version}: GCC version. 100@end itemize 101 102The @code{plugin_info} struct is defined as follows: 103 104@smallexample 105struct plugin_name_args 106@{ 107 char *base_name; /* Short name of the plugin 108 (filename without .so suffix). */ 109 const char *full_name; /* Path to the plugin as specified with 110 -fplugin=. */ 111 int argc; /* Number of arguments specified with 112 -fplugin-arg-.... */ 113 struct plugin_argument *argv; /* Array of ARGC key-value pairs. */ 114 const char *version; /* Version string provided by plugin. */ 115 const char *help; /* Help string provided by plugin. */ 116@} 117@end smallexample 118 119If initialization fails, @code{plugin_init} must return a non-zero 120value. Otherwise, it should return 0. 121 122The version of the GCC compiler loading the plugin is described by the 123following structure: 124 125@smallexample 126struct plugin_gcc_version 127@{ 128 const char *basever; 129 const char *datestamp; 130 const char *devphase; 131 const char *revision; 132 const char *configuration_arguments; 133@}; 134@end smallexample 135 136The function @code{plugin_default_version_check} takes two pointers to 137such structure and compare them field by field. It can be used by the 138plugin's @code{plugin_init} function. 139 140The version of GCC used to compile the plugin can be found in the symbol 141@code{gcc_version} defined in the header @file{plugin-version.h}. The 142recommended version check to perform looks like 143 144@smallexample 145#include "plugin-version.h" 146... 147 148int 149plugin_init (struct plugin_name_args *plugin_info, 150 struct plugin_gcc_version *version) 151@{ 152 if (!plugin_default_version_check (version, &gcc_version)) 153 return 1; 154 155@} 156@end smallexample 157 158but you can also check the individual fields if you want a less strict check. 159 160@subsection Plugin callbacks 161 162Callback functions have the following prototype: 163 164@smallexample 165/* The prototype for a plugin callback function. 166 gcc_data - event-specific data provided by GCC 167 user_data - plugin-specific data provided by the plug-in. */ 168typedef void (*plugin_callback_func)(void *gcc_data, void *user_data); 169@end smallexample 170 171Callbacks can be invoked at the following pre-determined events: 172 173 174@smallexample 175enum plugin_event 176@{ 177 PLUGIN_PASS_MANAGER_SETUP, /* To hook into pass manager. */ 178 PLUGIN_FINISH_TYPE, /* After finishing parsing a type. */ 179 PLUGIN_FINISH_DECL, /* After finishing parsing a declaration. */ 180 PLUGIN_FINISH_UNIT, /* Useful for summary processing. */ 181 PLUGIN_PRE_GENERICIZE, /* Allows to see low level AST in C and C++ frontends. */ 182 PLUGIN_FINISH, /* Called before GCC exits. */ 183 PLUGIN_INFO, /* Information about the plugin. */ 184 PLUGIN_GGC_START, /* Called at start of GCC Garbage Collection. */ 185 PLUGIN_GGC_MARKING, /* Extend the GGC marking. */ 186 PLUGIN_GGC_END, /* Called at end of GGC. */ 187 PLUGIN_REGISTER_GGC_ROOTS, /* Register an extra GGC root table. */ 188 PLUGIN_ATTRIBUTES, /* Called during attribute registration */ 189 PLUGIN_START_UNIT, /* Called before processing a translation unit. */ 190 PLUGIN_PRAGMAS, /* Called during pragma registration. */ 191 /* Called before first pass from all_passes. */ 192 PLUGIN_ALL_PASSES_START, 193 /* Called after last pass from all_passes. */ 194 PLUGIN_ALL_PASSES_END, 195 /* Called before first ipa pass. */ 196 PLUGIN_ALL_IPA_PASSES_START, 197 /* Called after last ipa pass. */ 198 PLUGIN_ALL_IPA_PASSES_END, 199 /* Allows to override pass gate decision for current_pass. */ 200 PLUGIN_OVERRIDE_GATE, 201 /* Called before executing a pass. */ 202 PLUGIN_PASS_EXECUTION, 203 /* Called before executing subpasses of a GIMPLE_PASS in 204 execute_ipa_pass_list. */ 205 PLUGIN_EARLY_GIMPLE_PASSES_START, 206 /* Called after executing subpasses of a GIMPLE_PASS in 207 execute_ipa_pass_list. */ 208 PLUGIN_EARLY_GIMPLE_PASSES_END, 209 /* Called when a pass is first instantiated. */ 210 PLUGIN_NEW_PASS, 211/* Called when a file is #include-d or given via the #line directive. 212 This could happen many times. The event data is the included file path, 213 as a const char* pointer. */ 214 PLUGIN_INCLUDE_FILE, 215 216 PLUGIN_EVENT_FIRST_DYNAMIC /* Dummy event used for indexing callback 217 array. */ 218@}; 219@end smallexample 220 221In addition, plugins can also look up the enumerator of a named event, 222and / or generate new events dynamically, by calling the function 223@code{get_named_event_id}. 224 225To register a callback, the plugin calls @code{register_callback} with 226the arguments: 227 228@itemize 229@item @code{char *name}: Plugin name. 230@item @code{int event}: The event code. 231@item @code{plugin_callback_func callback}: The function that handles @code{event}. 232@item @code{void *user_data}: Pointer to plugin-specific data. 233@end itemize 234 235For the @i{PLUGIN_PASS_MANAGER_SETUP}, @i{PLUGIN_INFO}, and 236@i{PLUGIN_REGISTER_GGC_ROOTS} pseudo-events the @code{callback} should be null, 237and the @code{user_data} is specific. 238 239When the @i{PLUGIN_PRAGMAS} event is triggered (with a null pointer as 240data from GCC), plugins may register their own pragmas. Notice that 241pragmas are not available from @file{lto1}, so plugins used with 242@code{-flto} option to GCC during link-time optimization cannot use 243pragmas and do not even see functions like @code{c_register_pragma} or 244@code{pragma_lex}. 245 246The @i{PLUGIN_INCLUDE_FILE} event, with a @code{const char*} file path as 247GCC data, is triggered for processing of @code{#include} or 248@code{#line} directives. 249 250The @i{PLUGIN_FINISH} event is the last time that plugins can call GCC 251functions, notably emit diagnostics with @code{warning}, @code{error} 252etc. 253 254 255@node Plugins pass 256@section Interacting with the pass manager 257 258There needs to be a way to add/reorder/remove passes dynamically. This 259is useful for both analysis plugins (plugging in after a certain pass 260such as CFG or an IPA pass) and optimization plugins. 261 262Basic support for inserting new passes or replacing existing passes is 263provided. A plugin registers a new pass with GCC by calling 264@code{register_callback} with the @code{PLUGIN_PASS_MANAGER_SETUP} 265event and a pointer to a @code{struct register_pass_info} object defined as follows 266 267@smallexample 268enum pass_positioning_ops 269@{ 270 PASS_POS_INSERT_AFTER, // Insert after the reference pass. 271 PASS_POS_INSERT_BEFORE, // Insert before the reference pass. 272 PASS_POS_REPLACE // Replace the reference pass. 273@}; 274 275struct register_pass_info 276@{ 277 struct opt_pass *pass; /* New pass provided by the plugin. */ 278 const char *reference_pass_name; /* Name of the reference pass for hooking 279 up the new pass. */ 280 int ref_pass_instance_number; /* Insert the pass at the specified 281 instance number of the reference pass. */ 282 /* Do it for every instance if it is 0. */ 283 enum pass_positioning_ops pos_op; /* how to insert the new pass. */ 284@}; 285 286 287/* Sample plugin code that registers a new pass. */ 288int 289plugin_init (struct plugin_name_args *plugin_info, 290 struct plugin_gcc_version *version) 291@{ 292 struct register_pass_info pass_info; 293 294 ... 295 296 /* Code to fill in the pass_info object with new pass information. */ 297 298 ... 299 300 /* Register the new pass. */ 301 register_callback (plugin_info->base_name, PLUGIN_PASS_MANAGER_SETUP, NULL, &pass_info); 302 303 ... 304@} 305@end smallexample 306 307 308@node Plugins GC 309@section Interacting with the GCC Garbage Collector 310 311Some plugins may want to be informed when GGC (the GCC Garbage 312Collector) is running. They can register callbacks for the 313@code{PLUGIN_GGC_START} and @code{PLUGIN_GGC_END} events (for which 314the callback is called with a null @code{gcc_data}) to be notified of 315the start or end of the GCC garbage collection. 316 317Some plugins may need to have GGC mark additional data. This can be 318done by registering a callback (called with a null @code{gcc_data}) 319for the @code{PLUGIN_GGC_MARKING} event. Such callbacks can call the 320@code{ggc_set_mark} routine, preferably through the @code{ggc_mark} macro 321(and conversely, these routines should usually not be used in plugins 322outside of the @code{PLUGIN_GGC_MARKING} event). Plugins that wish to hold 323weak references to gc data may also use this event to drop weak references when 324the object is about to be collected. The @code{ggc_marked_p} function can be 325used to tell if an object is marked, or is about to be collected. The 326@code{gt_clear_cache} overloads which some types define may also be of use in 327managing weak references. 328 329Some plugins may need to add extra GGC root tables, e.g. to handle their own 330@code{GTY}-ed data. This can be done with the @code{PLUGIN_REGISTER_GGC_ROOTS} 331pseudo-event with a null callback and the extra root table (of type @code{struct 332ggc_root_tab*}) as @code{user_data}. Running the 333 @code{gengtype -p @var{source-dir} @var{file-list} @var{plugin*.c} ...} 334utility generates these extra root tables. 335 336You should understand the details of memory management inside GCC 337before using @code{PLUGIN_GGC_MARKING} or @code{PLUGIN_REGISTER_GGC_ROOTS}. 338 339 340@node Plugins description 341@section Giving information about a plugin 342 343A plugin should give some information to the user about itself. This 344uses the following structure: 345 346@smallexample 347struct plugin_info 348@{ 349 const char *version; 350 const char *help; 351@}; 352@end smallexample 353 354Such a structure is passed as the @code{user_data} by the plugin's 355init routine using @code{register_callback} with the 356@code{PLUGIN_INFO} pseudo-event and a null callback. 357 358@node Plugins attr 359@section Registering custom attributes or pragmas 360 361For analysis (or other) purposes it is useful to be able to add custom 362attributes or pragmas. 363 364The @code{PLUGIN_ATTRIBUTES} callback is called during attribute 365registration. Use the @code{register_attribute} function to register 366custom attributes. 367 368@smallexample 369/* Attribute handler callback */ 370static tree 371handle_user_attribute (tree *node, tree name, tree args, 372 int flags, bool *no_add_attrs) 373@{ 374 return NULL_TREE; 375@} 376 377/* Attribute definition */ 378static struct attribute_spec user_attr = 379 @{ "user", 1, 1, false, false, false, handle_user_attribute, false @}; 380 381/* Plugin callback called during attribute registration. 382Registered with register_callback (plugin_name, PLUGIN_ATTRIBUTES, register_attributes, NULL) 383*/ 384static void 385register_attributes (void *event_data, void *data) 386@{ 387 warning (0, G_("Callback to register attributes")); 388 register_attribute (&user_attr); 389@} 390 391@end smallexample 392 393 394The @i{PLUGIN_PRAGMAS} callback is called once during pragmas 395registration. Use the @code{c_register_pragma}, 396@code{c_register_pragma_with_data}, 397@code{c_register_pragma_with_expansion}, 398@code{c_register_pragma_with_expansion_and_data} functions to register 399custom pragmas and their handlers (which often want to call 400@code{pragma_lex}) from @file{c-family/c-pragma.h}. 401 402@smallexample 403/* Plugin callback called during pragmas registration. Registered with 404 register_callback (plugin_name, PLUGIN_PRAGMAS, 405 register_my_pragma, NULL); 406*/ 407static void 408register_my_pragma (void *event_data, void *data) 409@{ 410 warning (0, G_("Callback to register pragmas")); 411 c_register_pragma ("GCCPLUGIN", "sayhello", handle_pragma_sayhello); 412@} 413@end smallexample 414 415It is suggested to pass @code{"GCCPLUGIN"} (or a short name identifying 416your plugin) as the ``space'' argument of your pragma. 417 418Pragmas registered with @code{c_register_pragma_with_expansion} or 419@code{c_register_pragma_with_expansion_and_data} support 420preprocessor expansions. For example: 421 422@smallexample 423#define NUMBER 10 424#pragma GCCPLUGIN foothreshold (NUMBER) 425@end smallexample 426 427@node Plugins recording 428@section Recording information about pass execution 429 430The event PLUGIN_PASS_EXECUTION passes the pointer to the executed pass 431(the same as current_pass) as @code{gcc_data} to the callback. You can also 432inspect cfun to find out about which function this pass is executed for. 433Note that this event will only be invoked if the gate check (if 434applicable, modified by PLUGIN_OVERRIDE_GATE) succeeds. 435You can use other hooks, like @code{PLUGIN_ALL_PASSES_START}, 436@code{PLUGIN_ALL_PASSES_END}, @code{PLUGIN_ALL_IPA_PASSES_START}, 437@code{PLUGIN_ALL_IPA_PASSES_END}, @code{PLUGIN_EARLY_GIMPLE_PASSES_START}, 438and/or @code{PLUGIN_EARLY_GIMPLE_PASSES_END} to manipulate global state 439in your plugin(s) in order to get context for the pass execution. 440 441 442@node Plugins gate 443@section Controlling which passes are being run 444 445After the original gate function for a pass is called, its result 446- the gate status - is stored as an integer. 447Then the event @code{PLUGIN_OVERRIDE_GATE} is invoked, with a pointer 448to the gate status in the @code{gcc_data} parameter to the callback function. 449A nonzero value of the gate status means that the pass is to be executed. 450You can both read and write the gate status via the passed pointer. 451 452 453@node Plugins tracking 454@section Keeping track of available passes 455 456When your plugin is loaded, you can inspect the various 457pass lists to determine what passes are available. However, other 458plugins might add new passes. Also, future changes to GCC might cause 459generic passes to be added after plugin loading. 460When a pass is first added to one of the pass lists, the event 461@code{PLUGIN_NEW_PASS} is invoked, with the callback parameter 462@code{gcc_data} pointing to the new pass. 463 464 465@node Plugins building 466@section Building GCC plugins 467 468If plugins are enabled, GCC installs the headers needed to build a 469plugin (somewhere in the installation tree, e.g. under 470@file{/usr/local}). In particular a @file{plugin/include} directory 471is installed, containing all the header files needed to build plugins. 472 473On most systems, you can query this @code{plugin} directory by 474invoking @command{gcc -print-file-name=plugin} (replace if needed 475@command{gcc} with the appropriate program path). 476 477Inside plugins, this @code{plugin} directory name can be queried by 478calling @code{default_plugin_dir_name ()}. 479 480Plugins may know, when they are compiled, the GCC version for which 481@file{plugin-version.h} is provided. The constant macros 482@code{GCCPLUGIN_VERSION_MAJOR}, @code{GCCPLUGIN_VERSION_MINOR}, 483@code{GCCPLUGIN_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL}, @code{GCCPLUGIN_VERSION} are 484integer numbers, so a plugin could ensure it is built for GCC 4.7 with 485@smallexample 486#if GCCPLUGIN_VERSION != 4007 487#error this GCC plugin is for GCC 4.7 488#endif 489@end smallexample 490 491The following GNU Makefile excerpt shows how to build a simple plugin: 492 493@smallexample 494HOST_GCC=g++ 495TARGET_GCC=gcc 496PLUGIN_SOURCE_FILES= plugin1.c plugin2.cc 497GCCPLUGINS_DIR:= $(shell $(TARGET_GCC) -print-file-name=plugin) 498CXXFLAGS+= -I$(GCCPLUGINS_DIR)/include -fPIC -fno-rtti -O2 499 500plugin.so: $(PLUGIN_SOURCE_FILES) 501 $(HOST_GCC) -shared $(CXXFLAGS) $^ -o $@@ 502@end smallexample 503 504A single source file plugin may be built with @code{g++ -I`gcc 505-print-file-name=plugin`/include -fPIC -shared -fno-rtti -O2 plugin.c -o 506plugin.so}, using backquote shell syntax to query the @file{plugin} 507directory. 508 509When a plugin needs to use @command{gengtype}, be sure that both 510@file{gengtype} and @file{gtype.state} have the same version as the 511GCC for which the plugin is built. 512