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@@ -1,10 +1,63 @@
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+//! Macros shared throughout the compiler-builtins implementation
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+
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+/// The "main macro" used for defining intrinsics.
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+///
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+/// The compiler-builtins library is super platform-specific with tons of crazy
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+/// little tweaks for various platforms. As a result it *could* involve a lot fo
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+/// #[cfg] and macro soup, but the intention is that this macro alleviates a lof
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+/// of that complexity. Ideally this macro has all the weird ABI things
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+/// platforms need and elsewhere in this library it just looks like normal Rust
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+/// code.
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+///
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+/// This macro is structured to be invoked with a bunch of functions that looks
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+/// like:
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+///
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+/// intrinsics! {
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+/// pub extern "C" fn foo(a: i32) -> u32 {
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+/// // ...
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+/// }
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+///
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+/// #[nonstandard_attribute]
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+/// pub extern "C" fn bar(a: i32) -> u32 {
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+/// // ...
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+/// }
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+/// }
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+///
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+/// Each function is defined in a manner that looks like a normal Rust function.
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+/// The macro then accepts a few nonstandard attributes that can decorate
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+/// various functions. Each of the attributes is documented below with what it
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+/// can do, and each of them slightly tweaks how further expansion happens.
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+///
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+/// A quick overview of attributes supported right now are:
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+///
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+/// * `use_c_shim_if` - takes a #[cfg] directive and falls back to the
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+/// C-compiled version if `feature = "c"` is specified.
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+/// * `aapcs_on_arm` - forces the ABI of the function to be `"aapcs"` on ARM and
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+/// the specified ABI everywhere else.
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+/// * `unadjusted_on_win64` - like `aapcs_on_arm` this switches to the
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+/// `"unadjusted"` abi on Win64 and the specified abi elsewhere.
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+/// * `win64_128bit_abi_hack` - this attribute is used for 128-bit integer
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+/// intrinsics where the ABI is slightly tweaked on Windows platforms, but
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+/// it's a normal ABI elsewhere for returning a 128 bit integer.
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+/// * `arm_aeabi_alias` - handles the "aliasing" of various intrinsics on ARM
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+/// their otherwise typical names to other prefixed ones.
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+///
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macro_rules! intrinsics {
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() => ();
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- // Anything which has a `not(feature = "c")` we'll generate a shim function
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- // which calls out to the C function if the `c` feature is enabled.
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- // Otherwise if the `c` feature isn't enabled then we'll just have a normal
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- // intrinsic.
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+ // Right now there's a bunch of architecture-optimized intrinsics in the
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+ // stock compiler-rt implementation. Not all of these have been ported over
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+ // to Rust yet so when the `c` feature of this crate is enabled we fall back
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+ // to the architecture-specific versions which should be more optimized. The
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+ // purpose of this macro is to easily allow specifying this.
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+ //
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+ // The argument to `use_c_shim_if` is a `#[cfg]` directive which, when true,
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+ // will cause this crate's exported version of `$name` to just redirect to
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+ // the C implementation. No symbol named `$name` will be in the object file
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+ // for this crate itself.
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+ //
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+ // When the `#[cfg]` directive is false, or when the `c` feature is
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+ // disabled, the provided implementation is used instead.
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(
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#[use_c_shim_if($($cfg_clause:tt)*)]
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$(#[$($attr:tt)*])*
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@@ -97,8 +150,13 @@ macro_rules! intrinsics {
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intrinsics!($($rest)*);
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);
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- // Another attribute we recognize is an "abi hack" for win64 to get the 128
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- // bit calling convention correct.
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+ // Some intrinsics on win64 which return a 128-bit integer have an.. unusual
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+ // calling convention. That's managed here with this "abi hack" which alters
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+ // the generated symbol's ABI.
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+ //
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+ // This will still define a function in this crate with the given name and
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+ // signature, but the actual symbol for the intrinsic may have a slightly
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+ // different ABI on win64.
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(
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#[win64_128bit_abi_hack]
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$(#[$($attr:tt)*])*
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@@ -119,10 +177,10 @@ macro_rules! intrinsics {
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intrinsics! {
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pub extern $abi fn $name( $($argname: $ty),* )
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- -> ::macros::win64_abi_hack::U64x2
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+ -> ::macros::win64_128bit_abi_hack::U64x2
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{
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let e: $ret = super::$name($($argname),*);
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- ::macros::win64_abi_hack::U64x2::from(e)
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+ ::macros::win64_128bit_abi_hack::U64x2::from(e)
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}
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}
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}
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@@ -140,7 +198,8 @@ macro_rules! intrinsics {
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// A bunch of intrinsics on ARM are aliased in the standard compiler-rt
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// build under `__aeabi_*` aliases, and LLVM will call these instead of the
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- // original function. Handle that here
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+ // original function. The aliasing here is used to generate these symbols in
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+ // the object file.
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(
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#[arm_aeabi_alias = $alias:ident]
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$(#[$($attr:tt)*])*
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@@ -151,7 +210,6 @@ macro_rules! intrinsics {
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$($rest:tt)*
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) => (
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#[cfg(target_arch = "arm")]
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- $(#[$($attr)*])*
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pub extern $abi fn $name( $($argname: $ty),* ) -> $ret {
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$($body)*
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}
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@@ -180,6 +238,12 @@ macro_rules! intrinsics {
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intrinsics!($($rest)*);
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);
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+ // This is the final catch-all rule. At this point we just generate an
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+ // intrinsic with a conditional `#[no_mangle]` directive to avoid
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+ // interfereing with duplicate symbols and whatnot.
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+ //
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+ // After the intrinsic is defined we just continue with the rest of the
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+ // input we were given.
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(
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$(#[$($attr:tt)*])*
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pub extern $abi:tt fn $name:ident( $($argname:ident: $ty:ty),* ) -> $ret:ty {
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@@ -198,9 +262,10 @@ macro_rules! intrinsics {
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);
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}
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-// Hack for LLVM expectations for ABI on windows
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+// Hack for LLVM expectations for ABI on windows. This is used by the
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+// `#[win64_128bit_abi_hack]` attribute recognized above
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#[cfg(all(windows, target_pointer_width="64"))]
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-pub mod win64_abi_hack {
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+pub mod win64_128bit_abi_hack {
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#[repr(simd)]
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pub struct U64x2(u64, u64);
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