1 ==============================
2 LLVM Language Reference Manual
3 ==============================
12 This document is a reference manual for the LLVM assembly language. LLVM
13 is a Static Single Assignment (SSA) based representation that provides
14 type safety, low-level operations, flexibility, and the capability of
15 representing 'all' high-level languages cleanly. It is the common code
16 representation used throughout all phases of the LLVM compilation
22 The LLVM code representation is designed to be used in three different
23 forms: as an in-memory compiler IR, as an on-disk bitcode representation
24 (suitable for fast loading by a Just-In-Time compiler), and as a human
25 readable assembly language representation. This allows LLVM to provide a
26 powerful intermediate representation for efficient compiler
27 transformations and analysis, while providing a natural means to debug
28 and visualize the transformations. The three different forms of LLVM are
29 all equivalent. This document describes the human readable
30 representation and notation.
32 The LLVM representation aims to be light-weight and low-level while
33 being expressive, typed, and extensible at the same time. It aims to be
34 a "universal IR" of sorts, by being at a low enough level that
35 high-level ideas may be cleanly mapped to it (similar to how
36 microprocessors are "universal IR's", allowing many source languages to
37 be mapped to them). By providing type information, LLVM can be used as
38 the target of optimizations: for example, through pointer analysis, it
39 can be proven that a C automatic variable is never accessed outside of
40 the current function, allowing it to be promoted to a simple SSA value
41 instead of a memory location.
48 It is important to note that this document describes 'well formed' LLVM
49 assembly language. There is a difference between what the parser accepts
50 and what is considered 'well formed'. For example, the following
51 instruction is syntactically okay, but not well formed:
57 because the definition of ``%x`` does not dominate all of its uses. The
58 LLVM infrastructure provides a verification pass that may be used to
59 verify that an LLVM module is well formed. This pass is automatically
60 run by the parser after parsing input assembly and by the optimizer
61 before it outputs bitcode. The violations pointed out by the verifier
62 pass indicate bugs in transformation passes or input to the parser.
69 LLVM identifiers come in two basic types: global and local. Global
70 identifiers (functions, global variables) begin with the ``'@'``
71 character. Local identifiers (register names, types) begin with the
72 ``'%'`` character. Additionally, there are three different formats for
73 identifiers, for different purposes:
75 #. Named values are represented as a string of characters with their
76 prefix. For example, ``%foo``, ``@DivisionByZero``,
77 ``%a.really.long.identifier``. The actual regular expression used is
78 '``[%@][a-zA-Z$._][a-zA-Z$._0-9]*``'. Identifiers which require other
79 characters in their names can be surrounded with quotes. Special
80 characters may be escaped using ``"\xx"`` where ``xx`` is the ASCII
81 code for the character in hexadecimal. In this way, any character can
82 be used in a name value, even quotes themselves.
83 #. Unnamed values are represented as an unsigned numeric value with
84 their prefix. For example, ``%12``, ``@2``, ``%44``.
85 #. Constants, which are described in the section Constants_ below.
87 LLVM requires that values start with a prefix for two reasons: Compilers
88 don't need to worry about name clashes with reserved words, and the set
89 of reserved words may be expanded in the future without penalty.
90 Additionally, unnamed identifiers allow a compiler to quickly come up
91 with a temporary variable without having to avoid symbol table
94 Reserved words in LLVM are very similar to reserved words in other
95 languages. There are keywords for different opcodes ('``add``',
96 '``bitcast``', '``ret``', etc...), for primitive type names ('``void``',
97 '``i32``', etc...), and others. These reserved words cannot conflict
98 with variable names, because none of them start with a prefix character
101 Here is an example of LLVM code to multiply the integer variable
108 %result = mul i32 %X, 8
110 After strength reduction:
114 %result = shl i32 %X, 3
120 %0 = add i32 %X, %X ; yields {i32}:%0
121 %1 = add i32 %0, %0 ; yields {i32}:%1
122 %result = add i32 %1, %1
124 This last way of multiplying ``%X`` by 8 illustrates several important
125 lexical features of LLVM:
127 #. Comments are delimited with a '``;``' and go until the end of line.
128 #. Unnamed temporaries are created when the result of a computation is
129 not assigned to a named value.
130 #. Unnamed temporaries are numbered sequentially (using a per-function
131 incrementing counter, starting with 0). Note that basic blocks are
132 included in this numbering. For example, if the entry basic block is not
133 given a label name, then it will get number 0.
135 It also shows a convention that we follow in this document. When
136 demonstrating instructions, we will follow an instruction with a comment
137 that defines the type and name of value produced.
145 LLVM programs are composed of ``Module``'s, each of which is a
146 translation unit of the input programs. Each module consists of
147 functions, global variables, and symbol table entries. Modules may be
148 combined together with the LLVM linker, which merges function (and
149 global variable) definitions, resolves forward declarations, and merges
150 symbol table entries. Here is an example of the "hello world" module:
154 ; Declare the string constant as a global constant.
155 @.str = private unnamed_addr constant [13 x i8] c"hello world\0A\00"
157 ; External declaration of the puts function
158 declare i32 @puts(i8* nocapture) nounwind
160 ; Definition of main function
161 define i32 @main() { ; i32()*
162 ; Convert [13 x i8]* to i8 *...
163 %cast210 = getelementptr [13 x i8]* @.str, i64 0, i64 0
165 ; Call puts function to write out the string to stdout.
166 call i32 @puts(i8* %cast210)
171 !1 = metadata !{i32 42}
174 This example is made up of a :ref:`global variable <globalvars>` named
175 "``.str``", an external declaration of the "``puts``" function, a
176 :ref:`function definition <functionstructure>` for "``main``" and
177 :ref:`named metadata <namedmetadatastructure>` "``foo``".
179 In general, a module is made up of a list of global values (where both
180 functions and global variables are global values). Global values are
181 represented by a pointer to a memory location (in this case, a pointer
182 to an array of char, and a pointer to a function), and have one of the
183 following :ref:`linkage types <linkage>`.
190 All Global Variables and Functions have one of the following types of
194 Global values with "``private``" linkage are only directly
195 accessible by objects in the current module. In particular, linking
196 code into a module with an private global value may cause the
197 private to be renamed as necessary to avoid collisions. Because the
198 symbol is private to the module, all references can be updated. This
199 doesn't show up in any symbol table in the object file.
201 Similar to ``private``, but the symbol is passed through the
202 assembler and evaluated by the linker. Unlike normal strong symbols,
203 they are removed by the linker from the final linked image
204 (executable or dynamic library).
205 ``linker_private_weak``
206 Similar to "``linker_private``", but the symbol is weak. Note that
207 ``linker_private_weak`` symbols are subject to coalescing by the
208 linker. The symbols are removed by the linker from the final linked
209 image (executable or dynamic library).
211 Similar to private, but the value shows as a local symbol
212 (``STB_LOCAL`` in the case of ELF) in the object file. This
213 corresponds to the notion of the '``static``' keyword in C.
214 ``available_externally``
215 Globals with "``available_externally``" linkage are never emitted
216 into the object file corresponding to the LLVM module. They exist to
217 allow inlining and other optimizations to take place given knowledge
218 of the definition of the global, which is known to be somewhere
219 outside the module. Globals with ``available_externally`` linkage
220 are allowed to be discarded at will, and are otherwise the same as
221 ``linkonce_odr``. This linkage type is only allowed on definitions,
224 Globals with "``linkonce``" linkage are merged with other globals of
225 the same name when linkage occurs. This can be used to implement
226 some forms of inline functions, templates, or other code which must
227 be generated in each translation unit that uses it, but where the
228 body may be overridden with a more definitive definition later.
229 Unreferenced ``linkonce`` globals are allowed to be discarded. Note
230 that ``linkonce`` linkage does not actually allow the optimizer to
231 inline the body of this function into callers because it doesn't
232 know if this definition of the function is the definitive definition
233 within the program or whether it will be overridden by a stronger
234 definition. To enable inlining and other optimizations, use
235 "``linkonce_odr``" linkage.
237 "``weak``" linkage has the same merging semantics as ``linkonce``
238 linkage, except that unreferenced globals with ``weak`` linkage may
239 not be discarded. This is used for globals that are declared "weak"
242 "``common``" linkage is most similar to "``weak``" linkage, but they
243 are used for tentative definitions in C, such as "``int X;``" at
244 global scope. Symbols with "``common``" linkage are merged in the
245 same way as ``weak symbols``, and they may not be deleted if
246 unreferenced. ``common`` symbols may not have an explicit section,
247 must have a zero initializer, and may not be marked
248 ':ref:`constant <globalvars>`'. Functions and aliases may not have
251 .. _linkage_appending:
254 "``appending``" linkage may only be applied to global variables of
255 pointer to array type. When two global variables with appending
256 linkage are linked together, the two global arrays are appended
257 together. This is the LLVM, typesafe, equivalent of having the
258 system linker append together "sections" with identical names when
261 The semantics of this linkage follow the ELF object file model: the
262 symbol is weak until linked, if not linked, the symbol becomes null
263 instead of being an undefined reference.
264 ``linkonce_odr``, ``weak_odr``
265 Some languages allow differing globals to be merged, such as two
266 functions with different semantics. Other languages, such as
267 ``C++``, ensure that only equivalent globals are ever merged (the
268 "one definition rule" --- "ODR"). Such languages can use the
269 ``linkonce_odr`` and ``weak_odr`` linkage types to indicate that the
270 global will only be merged with equivalent globals. These linkage
271 types are otherwise the same as their non-``odr`` versions.
273 If none of the above identifiers are used, the global is externally
274 visible, meaning that it participates in linkage and can be used to
275 resolve external symbol references.
277 The next two types of linkage are targeted for Microsoft Windows
278 platform only. They are designed to support importing (exporting)
279 symbols from (to) DLLs (Dynamic Link Libraries).
282 "``dllimport``" linkage causes the compiler to reference a function
283 or variable via a global pointer to a pointer that is set up by the
284 DLL exporting the symbol. On Microsoft Windows targets, the pointer
285 name is formed by combining ``__imp_`` and the function or variable
288 "``dllexport``" linkage causes the compiler to provide a global
289 pointer to a pointer in a DLL, so that it can be referenced with the
290 ``dllimport`` attribute. On Microsoft Windows targets, the pointer
291 name is formed by combining ``__imp_`` and the function or variable
292 name. Since this linkage exists for defining a dll interface, the
293 compiler, assembler and linker know it is externally referenced and
294 must refrain from deleting the symbol.
296 It is illegal for a function *declaration* to have any linkage type
297 other than ``external``, ``dllimport`` or ``extern_weak``.
304 LLVM :ref:`functions <functionstructure>`, :ref:`calls <i_call>` and
305 :ref:`invokes <i_invoke>` can all have an optional calling convention
306 specified for the call. The calling convention of any pair of dynamic
307 caller/callee must match, or the behavior of the program is undefined.
308 The following calling conventions are supported by LLVM, and more may be
311 "``ccc``" - The C calling convention
312 This calling convention (the default if no other calling convention
313 is specified) matches the target C calling conventions. This calling
314 convention supports varargs function calls and tolerates some
315 mismatch in the declared prototype and implemented declaration of
316 the function (as does normal C).
317 "``fastcc``" - The fast calling convention
318 This calling convention attempts to make calls as fast as possible
319 (e.g. by passing things in registers). This calling convention
320 allows the target to use whatever tricks it wants to produce fast
321 code for the target, without having to conform to an externally
322 specified ABI (Application Binary Interface). `Tail calls can only
323 be optimized when this, the GHC or the HiPE convention is
324 used. <CodeGenerator.html#id80>`_ This calling convention does not
325 support varargs and requires the prototype of all callees to exactly
326 match the prototype of the function definition.
327 "``coldcc``" - The cold calling convention
328 This calling convention attempts to make code in the caller as
329 efficient as possible under the assumption that the call is not
330 commonly executed. As such, these calls often preserve all registers
331 so that the call does not break any live ranges in the caller side.
332 This calling convention does not support varargs and requires the
333 prototype of all callees to exactly match the prototype of the
335 "``cc 10``" - GHC convention
336 This calling convention has been implemented specifically for use by
337 the `Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC) <http://www.haskell.org/ghc>`_.
338 It passes everything in registers, going to extremes to achieve this
339 by disabling callee save registers. This calling convention should
340 not be used lightly but only for specific situations such as an
341 alternative to the *register pinning* performance technique often
342 used when implementing functional programming languages. At the
343 moment only X86 supports this convention and it has the following
346 - On *X86-32* only supports up to 4 bit type parameters. No
347 floating point types are supported.
348 - On *X86-64* only supports up to 10 bit type parameters and 6
349 floating point parameters.
351 This calling convention supports `tail call
352 optimization <CodeGenerator.html#id80>`_ but requires both the
353 caller and callee are using it.
354 "``cc 11``" - The HiPE calling convention
355 This calling convention has been implemented specifically for use by
356 the `High-Performance Erlang
357 (HiPE) <http://www.it.uu.se/research/group/hipe/>`_ compiler, *the*
358 native code compiler of the `Ericsson's Open Source Erlang/OTP
359 system <http://www.erlang.org/download.shtml>`_. It uses more
360 registers for argument passing than the ordinary C calling
361 convention and defines no callee-saved registers. The calling
362 convention properly supports `tail call
363 optimization <CodeGenerator.html#id80>`_ but requires that both the
364 caller and the callee use it. It uses a *register pinning*
365 mechanism, similar to GHC's convention, for keeping frequently
366 accessed runtime components pinned to specific hardware registers.
367 At the moment only X86 supports this convention (both 32 and 64
369 "``webkit_jscc``" - WebKit's JavaScript calling convention
370 This calling convention has been implemented for `WebKit FTL JIT
371 <https://trac.webkit.org/wiki/FTLJIT>`_. It passes arguments on the
372 stack right to left (as cdecl does), and returns a value in the
373 platform's customary return register.
374 "``anyregcc``" - Dynamic calling convention for code patching
375 This is a special convention that supports patching an arbitrary code
376 sequence in place of a call site. This convention forces the call
377 arguments into registers but allows them to be dynamcially
378 allocated. This can currently only be used with calls to
379 llvm.experimental.patchpoint because only this intrinsic records
380 the location of its arguments in a side table. See :doc:`StackMaps`.
381 "``cc <n>``" - Numbered convention
382 Any calling convention may be specified by number, allowing
383 target-specific calling conventions to be used. Target specific
384 calling conventions start at 64.
386 More calling conventions can be added/defined on an as-needed basis, to
387 support Pascal conventions or any other well-known target-independent
390 .. _visibilitystyles:
395 All Global Variables and Functions have one of the following visibility
398 "``default``" - Default style
399 On targets that use the ELF object file format, default visibility
400 means that the declaration is visible to other modules and, in
401 shared libraries, means that the declared entity may be overridden.
402 On Darwin, default visibility means that the declaration is visible
403 to other modules. Default visibility corresponds to "external
404 linkage" in the language.
405 "``hidden``" - Hidden style
406 Two declarations of an object with hidden visibility refer to the
407 same object if they are in the same shared object. Usually, hidden
408 visibility indicates that the symbol will not be placed into the
409 dynamic symbol table, so no other module (executable or shared
410 library) can reference it directly.
411 "``protected``" - Protected style
412 On ELF, protected visibility indicates that the symbol will be
413 placed in the dynamic symbol table, but that references within the
414 defining module will bind to the local symbol. That is, the symbol
415 cannot be overridden by another module.
422 LLVM IR allows you to specify name aliases for certain types. This can
423 make it easier to read the IR and make the IR more condensed
424 (particularly when recursive types are involved). An example of a name
429 %mytype = type { %mytype*, i32 }
431 You may give a name to any :ref:`type <typesystem>` except
432 ":ref:`void <t_void>`". Type name aliases may be used anywhere a type is
433 expected with the syntax "%mytype".
435 Note that type names are aliases for the structural type that they
436 indicate, and that you can therefore specify multiple names for the same
437 type. This often leads to confusing behavior when dumping out a .ll
438 file. Since LLVM IR uses structural typing, the name is not part of the
439 type. When printing out LLVM IR, the printer will pick *one name* to
440 render all types of a particular shape. This means that if you have code
441 where two different source types end up having the same LLVM type, that
442 the dumper will sometimes print the "wrong" or unexpected type. This is
443 an important design point and isn't going to change.
450 Global variables define regions of memory allocated at compilation time
453 Global variables definitions must be initialized, may have an explicit section
454 to be placed in, and may have an optional explicit alignment specified.
456 Global variables in other translation units can also be declared, in which
457 case they don't have an initializer.
459 A variable may be defined as ``thread_local``, which means that it will
460 not be shared by threads (each thread will have a separated copy of the
461 variable). Not all targets support thread-local variables. Optionally, a
462 TLS model may be specified:
465 For variables that are only used within the current shared library.
467 For variables in modules that will not be loaded dynamically.
469 For variables defined in the executable and only used within it.
471 The models correspond to the ELF TLS models; see `ELF Handling For
472 Thread-Local Storage <http://people.redhat.com/drepper/tls.pdf>`_ for
473 more information on under which circumstances the different models may
474 be used. The target may choose a different TLS model if the specified
475 model is not supported, or if a better choice of model can be made.
477 A variable may be defined as a global ``constant``, which indicates that
478 the contents of the variable will **never** be modified (enabling better
479 optimization, allowing the global data to be placed in the read-only
480 section of an executable, etc). Note that variables that need runtime
481 initialization cannot be marked ``constant`` as there is a store to the
484 LLVM explicitly allows *declarations* of global variables to be marked
485 constant, even if the final definition of the global is not. This
486 capability can be used to enable slightly better optimization of the
487 program, but requires the language definition to guarantee that
488 optimizations based on the 'constantness' are valid for the translation
489 units that do not include the definition.
491 As SSA values, global variables define pointer values that are in scope
492 (i.e. they dominate) all basic blocks in the program. Global variables
493 always define a pointer to their "content" type because they describe a
494 region of memory, and all memory objects in LLVM are accessed through
497 Global variables can be marked with ``unnamed_addr`` which indicates
498 that the address is not significant, only the content. Constants marked
499 like this can be merged with other constants if they have the same
500 initializer. Note that a constant with significant address *can* be
501 merged with a ``unnamed_addr`` constant, the result being a constant
502 whose address is significant.
504 A global variable may be declared to reside in a target-specific
505 numbered address space. For targets that support them, address spaces
506 may affect how optimizations are performed and/or what target
507 instructions are used to access the variable. The default address space
508 is zero. The address space qualifier must precede any other attributes.
510 LLVM allows an explicit section to be specified for globals. If the
511 target supports it, it will emit globals to the section specified.
513 By default, global initializers are optimized by assuming that global
514 variables defined within the module are not modified from their
515 initial values before the start of the global initializer. This is
516 true even for variables potentially accessible from outside the
517 module, including those with external linkage or appearing in
518 ``@llvm.used`` or dllexported variables. This assumption may be suppressed
519 by marking the variable with ``externally_initialized``.
521 An explicit alignment may be specified for a global, which must be a
522 power of 2. If not present, or if the alignment is set to zero, the
523 alignment of the global is set by the target to whatever it feels
524 convenient. If an explicit alignment is specified, the global is forced
525 to have exactly that alignment. Targets and optimizers are not allowed
526 to over-align the global if the global has an assigned section. In this
527 case, the extra alignment could be observable: for example, code could
528 assume that the globals are densely packed in their section and try to
529 iterate over them as an array, alignment padding would break this
532 For example, the following defines a global in a numbered address space
533 with an initializer, section, and alignment:
537 @G = addrspace(5) constant float 1.0, section "foo", align 4
539 The following example just declares a global variable
543 @G = external global i32
545 The following example defines a thread-local global with the
546 ``initialexec`` TLS model:
550 @G = thread_local(initialexec) global i32 0, align 4
552 .. _functionstructure:
557 LLVM function definitions consist of the "``define``" keyword, an
558 optional :ref:`linkage type <linkage>`, an optional :ref:`visibility
559 style <visibility>`, an optional :ref:`calling convention <callingconv>`,
560 an optional ``unnamed_addr`` attribute, a return type, an optional
561 :ref:`parameter attribute <paramattrs>` for the return type, a function
562 name, a (possibly empty) argument list (each with optional :ref:`parameter
563 attributes <paramattrs>`), optional :ref:`function attributes <fnattrs>`,
564 an optional section, an optional alignment, an optional :ref:`garbage
565 collector name <gc>`, an optional :ref:`prefix <prefixdata>`, an opening
566 curly brace, a list of basic blocks, and a closing curly brace.
568 LLVM function declarations consist of the "``declare``" keyword, an
569 optional :ref:`linkage type <linkage>`, an optional :ref:`visibility
570 style <visibility>`, an optional :ref:`calling convention <callingconv>`,
571 an optional ``unnamed_addr`` attribute, a return type, an optional
572 :ref:`parameter attribute <paramattrs>` for the return type, a function
573 name, a possibly empty list of arguments, an optional alignment, an optional
574 :ref:`garbage collector name <gc>` and an optional :ref:`prefix <prefixdata>`.
576 A function definition contains a list of basic blocks, forming the CFG (Control
577 Flow Graph) for the function. Each basic block may optionally start with a label
578 (giving the basic block a symbol table entry), contains a list of instructions,
579 and ends with a :ref:`terminator <terminators>` instruction (such as a branch or
580 function return). If an explicit label is not provided, a block is assigned an
581 implicit numbered label, using the next value from the same counter as used for
582 unnamed temporaries (:ref:`see above<identifiers>`). For example, if a function
583 entry block does not have an explicit label, it will be assigned label "%0",
584 then the first unnamed temporary in that block will be "%1", etc.
586 The first basic block in a function is special in two ways: it is
587 immediately executed on entrance to the function, and it is not allowed
588 to have predecessor basic blocks (i.e. there can not be any branches to
589 the entry block of a function). Because the block can have no
590 predecessors, it also cannot have any :ref:`PHI nodes <i_phi>`.
592 LLVM allows an explicit section to be specified for functions. If the
593 target supports it, it will emit functions to the section specified.
595 An explicit alignment may be specified for a function. If not present,
596 or if the alignment is set to zero, the alignment of the function is set
597 by the target to whatever it feels convenient. If an explicit alignment
598 is specified, the function is forced to have at least that much
599 alignment. All alignments must be a power of 2.
601 If the ``unnamed_addr`` attribute is given, the address is know to not
602 be significant and two identical functions can be merged.
606 define [linkage] [visibility]
608 <ResultType> @<FunctionName> ([argument list])
609 [fn Attrs] [section "name"] [align N]
610 [gc] [prefix Constant] { ... }
617 Aliases act as "second name" for the aliasee value (which can be either
618 function, global variable, another alias or bitcast of global value).
619 Aliases may have an optional :ref:`linkage type <linkage>`, and an optional
620 :ref:`visibility style <visibility>`.
624 @<Name> = alias [Linkage] [Visibility] <AliaseeTy> @<Aliasee>
626 The linkage must be one of ``private``, ``linker_private``,
627 ``linker_private_weak``, ``internal``, ``linkonce``, ``weak``,
628 ``linkonce_odr``, ``weak_odr``, ``external``. Note that some system linkers
629 might not correctly handle dropping a weak symbol that is aliased by a non-weak
632 .. _namedmetadatastructure:
637 Named metadata is a collection of metadata. :ref:`Metadata
638 nodes <metadata>` (but not metadata strings) are the only valid
639 operands for a named metadata.
643 ; Some unnamed metadata nodes, which are referenced by the named metadata.
644 !0 = metadata !{metadata !"zero"}
645 !1 = metadata !{metadata !"one"}
646 !2 = metadata !{metadata !"two"}
648 !name = !{!0, !1, !2}
655 The return type and each parameter of a function type may have a set of
656 *parameter attributes* associated with them. Parameter attributes are
657 used to communicate additional information about the result or
658 parameters of a function. Parameter attributes are considered to be part
659 of the function, not of the function type, so functions with different
660 parameter attributes can have the same function type.
662 Parameter attributes are simple keywords that follow the type specified.
663 If multiple parameter attributes are needed, they are space separated.
668 declare i32 @printf(i8* noalias nocapture, ...)
669 declare i32 @atoi(i8 zeroext)
670 declare signext i8 @returns_signed_char()
672 Note that any attributes for the function result (``nounwind``,
673 ``readonly``) come immediately after the argument list.
675 Currently, only the following parameter attributes are defined:
678 This indicates to the code generator that the parameter or return
679 value should be zero-extended to the extent required by the target's
680 ABI (which is usually 32-bits, but is 8-bits for a i1 on x86-64) by
681 the caller (for a parameter) or the callee (for a return value).
683 This indicates to the code generator that the parameter or return
684 value should be sign-extended to the extent required by the target's
685 ABI (which is usually 32-bits) by the caller (for a parameter) or
686 the callee (for a return value).
688 This indicates that this parameter or return value should be treated
689 in a special target-dependent fashion during while emitting code for
690 a function call or return (usually, by putting it in a register as
691 opposed to memory, though some targets use it to distinguish between
692 two different kinds of registers). Use of this attribute is
695 This indicates that the pointer parameter should really be passed by
696 value to the function. The attribute implies that a hidden copy of
697 the pointee is made between the caller and the callee, so the callee
698 is unable to modify the value in the caller. This attribute is only
699 valid on LLVM pointer arguments. It is generally used to pass
700 structs and arrays by value, but is also valid on pointers to
701 scalars. The copy is considered to belong to the caller not the
702 callee (for example, ``readonly`` functions should not write to
703 ``byval`` parameters). This is not a valid attribute for return
706 The byval attribute also supports specifying an alignment with the
707 align attribute. It indicates the alignment of the stack slot to
708 form and the known alignment of the pointer specified to the call
709 site. If the alignment is not specified, then the code generator
710 makes a target-specific assumption.
716 .. Warning:: This feature is unstable and not fully implemented.
718 The ``inalloca`` argument attribute allows the caller to get the
719 address of an outgoing argument to a ``call`` or ``invoke`` before
720 it executes. It is similar to ``byval`` in that it is used to pass
721 arguments by value, but it guarantees that the argument will not be
724 To be :ref:`well formed <wellformed>`, the caller must pass in an
725 alloca value into an ``inalloca`` parameter, and an alloca may be
726 used as an ``inalloca`` argument at most once. The attribute can
727 only be applied to parameters that would be passed in memory and not
728 registers. The ``inalloca`` attribute cannot be used in conjunction
729 with other attributes that affect argument storage, like ``inreg``,
730 ``nest``, ``sret``, or ``byval``. The ``inalloca`` stack space is
731 considered to be clobbered by any call that uses it, so any
732 ``inalloca`` parameters cannot be marked ``readonly``.
734 Allocas passed with ``inalloca`` to a call must be in the opposite
735 order of the parameter list, meaning that the rightmost argument
736 must be allocated first. If a call has inalloca arguments, no other
737 allocas can occur between the first alloca used by the call and the
738 call site, unless they are are cleared by calls to
739 :ref:`llvm.stackrestore <int_stackrestore>`. Violating these rules
740 results in undefined behavior at runtime.
742 See :doc:`InAlloca` for more information on how to use this
746 This indicates that the pointer parameter specifies the address of a
747 structure that is the return value of the function in the source
748 program. This pointer must be guaranteed by the caller to be valid:
749 loads and stores to the structure may be assumed by the callee
750 not to trap and to be properly aligned. This may only be applied to
751 the first parameter. This is not a valid attribute for return
754 This indicates that pointer values :ref:`based <pointeraliasing>` on
755 the argument or return value do not alias pointer values which are
756 not *based* on it, ignoring certain "irrelevant" dependencies. For a
757 call to the parent function, dependencies between memory references
758 from before or after the call and from those during the call are
759 "irrelevant" to the ``noalias`` keyword for the arguments and return
760 value used in that call. The caller shares the responsibility with
761 the callee for ensuring that these requirements are met. For further
762 details, please see the discussion of the NoAlias response in `alias
763 analysis <AliasAnalysis.html#MustMayNo>`_.
765 Note that this definition of ``noalias`` is intentionally similar
766 to the definition of ``restrict`` in C99 for function arguments,
767 though it is slightly weaker.
769 For function return values, C99's ``restrict`` is not meaningful,
770 while LLVM's ``noalias`` is.
772 This indicates that the callee does not make any copies of the
773 pointer that outlive the callee itself. This is not a valid
774 attribute for return values.
779 This indicates that the pointer parameter can be excised using the
780 :ref:`trampoline intrinsics <int_trampoline>`. This is not a valid
781 attribute for return values and can only be applied to one parameter.
784 This indicates that the function always returns the argument as its return
785 value. This is an optimization hint to the code generator when generating
786 the caller, allowing tail call optimization and omission of register saves
787 and restores in some cases; it is not checked or enforced when generating
788 the callee. The parameter and the function return type must be valid
789 operands for the :ref:`bitcast instruction <i_bitcast>`. This is not a
790 valid attribute for return values and can only be applied to one parameter.
794 Garbage Collector Names
795 -----------------------
797 Each function may specify a garbage collector name, which is simply a
802 define void @f() gc "name" { ... }
804 The compiler declares the supported values of *name*. Specifying a
805 collector which will cause the compiler to alter its output in order to
806 support the named garbage collection algorithm.
813 Prefix data is data associated with a function which the code generator
814 will emit immediately before the function body. The purpose of this feature
815 is to allow frontends to associate language-specific runtime metadata with
816 specific functions and make it available through the function pointer while
817 still allowing the function pointer to be called. To access the data for a
818 given function, a program may bitcast the function pointer to a pointer to
819 the constant's type. This implies that the IR symbol points to the start
822 To maintain the semantics of ordinary function calls, the prefix data must
823 have a particular format. Specifically, it must begin with a sequence of
824 bytes which decode to a sequence of machine instructions, valid for the
825 module's target, which transfer control to the point immediately succeeding
826 the prefix data, without performing any other visible action. This allows
827 the inliner and other passes to reason about the semantics of the function
828 definition without needing to reason about the prefix data. Obviously this
829 makes the format of the prefix data highly target dependent.
831 Prefix data is laid out as if it were an initializer for a global variable
832 of the prefix data's type. No padding is automatically placed between the
833 prefix data and the function body. If padding is required, it must be part
836 A trivial example of valid prefix data for the x86 architecture is ``i8 144``,
837 which encodes the ``nop`` instruction:
841 define void @f() prefix i8 144 { ... }
843 Generally prefix data can be formed by encoding a relative branch instruction
844 which skips the metadata, as in this example of valid prefix data for the
845 x86_64 architecture, where the first two bytes encode ``jmp .+10``:
849 %0 = type <{ i8, i8, i8* }>
851 define void @f() prefix %0 <{ i8 235, i8 8, i8* @md}> { ... }
853 A function may have prefix data but no body. This has similar semantics
854 to the ``available_externally`` linkage in that the data may be used by the
855 optimizers but will not be emitted in the object file.
862 Attribute groups are groups of attributes that are referenced by objects within
863 the IR. They are important for keeping ``.ll`` files readable, because a lot of
864 functions will use the same set of attributes. In the degenerative case of a
865 ``.ll`` file that corresponds to a single ``.c`` file, the single attribute
866 group will capture the important command line flags used to build that file.
868 An attribute group is a module-level object. To use an attribute group, an
869 object references the attribute group's ID (e.g. ``#37``). An object may refer
870 to more than one attribute group. In that situation, the attributes from the
871 different groups are merged.
873 Here is an example of attribute groups for a function that should always be
874 inlined, has a stack alignment of 4, and which shouldn't use SSE instructions:
878 ; Target-independent attributes:
879 attributes #0 = { alwaysinline alignstack=4 }
881 ; Target-dependent attributes:
882 attributes #1 = { "no-sse" }
884 ; Function @f has attributes: alwaysinline, alignstack=4, and "no-sse".
885 define void @f() #0 #1 { ... }
892 Function attributes are set to communicate additional information about
893 a function. Function attributes are considered to be part of the
894 function, not of the function type, so functions with different function
895 attributes can have the same function type.
897 Function attributes are simple keywords that follow the type specified.
898 If multiple attributes are needed, they are space separated. For
903 define void @f() noinline { ... }
904 define void @f() alwaysinline { ... }
905 define void @f() alwaysinline optsize { ... }
906 define void @f() optsize { ... }
909 This attribute indicates that, when emitting the prologue and
910 epilogue, the backend should forcibly align the stack pointer.
911 Specify the desired alignment, which must be a power of two, in
914 This attribute indicates that the inliner should attempt to inline
915 this function into callers whenever possible, ignoring any active
916 inlining size threshold for this caller.
918 This indicates that the callee function at a call site should be
919 recognized as a built-in function, even though the function's declaration
920 uses the ``nobuiltin`` attribute. This is only valid at call sites for
921 direct calls to functions which are declared with the ``nobuiltin``
924 This attribute indicates that this function is rarely called. When
925 computing edge weights, basic blocks post-dominated by a cold
926 function call are also considered to be cold; and, thus, given low
929 This attribute indicates that the source code contained a hint that
930 inlining this function is desirable (such as the "inline" keyword in
931 C/C++). It is just a hint; it imposes no requirements on the
934 This attribute suggests that optimization passes and code generator
935 passes make choices that keep the code size of this function as small
936 as possible and perform optimizations that may sacrifice runtime
937 performance in order to minimize the size of the generated code.
939 This attribute disables prologue / epilogue emission for the
940 function. This can have very system-specific consequences.
942 This indicates that the callee function at a call site is not recognized as
943 a built-in function. LLVM will retain the original call and not replace it
944 with equivalent code based on the semantics of the built-in function, unless
945 the call site uses the ``builtin`` attribute. This is valid at call sites
946 and on function declarations and definitions.
948 This attribute indicates that calls to the function cannot be
949 duplicated. A call to a ``noduplicate`` function may be moved
950 within its parent function, but may not be duplicated within
953 A function containing a ``noduplicate`` call may still
954 be an inlining candidate, provided that the call is not
955 duplicated by inlining. That implies that the function has
956 internal linkage and only has one call site, so the original
957 call is dead after inlining.
959 This attributes disables implicit floating point instructions.
961 This attribute indicates that the inliner should never inline this
962 function in any situation. This attribute may not be used together
963 with the ``alwaysinline`` attribute.
965 This attribute suppresses lazy symbol binding for the function. This
966 may make calls to the function faster, at the cost of extra program
967 startup time if the function is not called during program startup.
969 This attribute indicates that the code generator should not use a
970 red zone, even if the target-specific ABI normally permits it.
972 This function attribute indicates that the function never returns
973 normally. This produces undefined behavior at runtime if the
974 function ever does dynamically return.
976 This function attribute indicates that the function never returns
977 with an unwind or exceptional control flow. If the function does
978 unwind, its runtime behavior is undefined.
980 This function attribute indicates that the function is not optimized
981 by any optimization or code generator passes with the
982 exception of interprocedural optimization passes.
983 This attribute cannot be used together with the ``alwaysinline``
984 attribute; this attribute is also incompatible
985 with the ``minsize`` attribute and the ``optsize`` attribute.
987 This attribute requires the ``noinline`` attribute to be specified on
988 the function as well, so the function is never inlined into any caller.
989 Only functions with the ``alwaysinline`` attribute are valid
990 candidates for inlining into the body of this function.
992 This attribute suggests that optimization passes and code generator
993 passes make choices that keep the code size of this function low,
994 and otherwise do optimizations specifically to reduce code size as
995 long as they do not significantly impact runtime performance.
997 On a function, this attribute indicates that the function computes its
998 result (or decides to unwind an exception) based strictly on its arguments,
999 without dereferencing any pointer arguments or otherwise accessing
1000 any mutable state (e.g. memory, control registers, etc) visible to
1001 caller functions. It does not write through any pointer arguments
1002 (including ``byval`` arguments) and never changes any state visible
1003 to callers. This means that it cannot unwind exceptions by calling
1004 the ``C++`` exception throwing methods.
1006 On an argument, this attribute indicates that the function does not
1007 dereference that pointer argument, even though it may read or write the
1008 memory that the pointer points to if accessed through other pointers.
1010 On a function, this attribute indicates that the function does not write
1011 through any pointer arguments (including ``byval`` arguments) or otherwise
1012 modify any state (e.g. memory, control registers, etc) visible to
1013 caller functions. It may dereference pointer arguments and read
1014 state that may be set in the caller. A readonly function always
1015 returns the same value (or unwinds an exception identically) when
1016 called with the same set of arguments and global state. It cannot
1017 unwind an exception by calling the ``C++`` exception throwing
1020 On an argument, this attribute indicates that the function does not write
1021 through this pointer argument, even though it may write to the memory that
1022 the pointer points to.
1024 This attribute indicates that this function can return twice. The C
1025 ``setjmp`` is an example of such a function. The compiler disables
1026 some optimizations (like tail calls) in the caller of these
1028 ``sanitize_address``
1029 This attribute indicates that AddressSanitizer checks
1030 (dynamic address safety analysis) are enabled for this function.
1032 This attribute indicates that MemorySanitizer checks (dynamic detection
1033 of accesses to uninitialized memory) are enabled for this function.
1035 This attribute indicates that ThreadSanitizer checks
1036 (dynamic thread safety analysis) are enabled for this function.
1038 This attribute indicates that the function should emit a stack
1039 smashing protector. It is in the form of a "canary" --- a random value
1040 placed on the stack before the local variables that's checked upon
1041 return from the function to see if it has been overwritten. A
1042 heuristic is used to determine if a function needs stack protectors
1043 or not. The heuristic used will enable protectors for functions with:
1045 - Character arrays larger than ``ssp-buffer-size`` (default 8).
1046 - Aggregates containing character arrays larger than ``ssp-buffer-size``.
1047 - Calls to alloca() with variable sizes or constant sizes greater than
1048 ``ssp-buffer-size``.
1050 If a function that has an ``ssp`` attribute is inlined into a
1051 function that doesn't have an ``ssp`` attribute, then the resulting
1052 function will have an ``ssp`` attribute.
1054 This attribute indicates that the function should *always* emit a
1055 stack smashing protector. This overrides the ``ssp`` function
1058 If a function that has an ``sspreq`` attribute is inlined into a
1059 function that doesn't have an ``sspreq`` attribute or which has an
1060 ``ssp`` or ``sspstrong`` attribute, then the resulting function will have
1061 an ``sspreq`` attribute.
1063 This attribute indicates that the function should emit a stack smashing
1064 protector. This attribute causes a strong heuristic to be used when
1065 determining if a function needs stack protectors. The strong heuristic
1066 will enable protectors for functions with:
1068 - Arrays of any size and type
1069 - Aggregates containing an array of any size and type.
1070 - Calls to alloca().
1071 - Local variables that have had their address taken.
1073 This overrides the ``ssp`` function attribute.
1075 If a function that has an ``sspstrong`` attribute is inlined into a
1076 function that doesn't have an ``sspstrong`` attribute, then the
1077 resulting function will have an ``sspstrong`` attribute.
1079 This attribute indicates that the ABI being targeted requires that
1080 an unwind table entry be produce for this function even if we can
1081 show that no exceptions passes by it. This is normally the case for
1082 the ELF x86-64 abi, but it can be disabled for some compilation
1087 Module-Level Inline Assembly
1088 ----------------------------
1090 Modules may contain "module-level inline asm" blocks, which corresponds
1091 to the GCC "file scope inline asm" blocks. These blocks are internally
1092 concatenated by LLVM and treated as a single unit, but may be separated
1093 in the ``.ll`` file if desired. The syntax is very simple:
1095 .. code-block:: llvm
1097 module asm "inline asm code goes here"
1098 module asm "more can go here"
1100 The strings can contain any character by escaping non-printable
1101 characters. The escape sequence used is simply "\\xx" where "xx" is the
1102 two digit hex code for the number.
1104 The inline asm code is simply printed to the machine code .s file when
1105 assembly code is generated.
1107 .. _langref_datalayout:
1112 A module may specify a target specific data layout string that specifies
1113 how data is to be laid out in memory. The syntax for the data layout is
1116 .. code-block:: llvm
1118 target datalayout = "layout specification"
1120 The *layout specification* consists of a list of specifications
1121 separated by the minus sign character ('-'). Each specification starts
1122 with a letter and may include other information after the letter to
1123 define some aspect of the data layout. The specifications accepted are
1127 Specifies that the target lays out data in big-endian form. That is,
1128 the bits with the most significance have the lowest address
1131 Specifies that the target lays out data in little-endian form. That
1132 is, the bits with the least significance have the lowest address
1135 Specifies the natural alignment of the stack in bits. Alignment
1136 promotion of stack variables is limited to the natural stack
1137 alignment to avoid dynamic stack realignment. The stack alignment
1138 must be a multiple of 8-bits. If omitted, the natural stack
1139 alignment defaults to "unspecified", which does not prevent any
1140 alignment promotions.
1141 ``p[n]:<size>:<abi>:<pref>``
1142 This specifies the *size* of a pointer and its ``<abi>`` and
1143 ``<pref>``\erred alignments for address space ``n``. All sizes are in
1144 bits. Specifying the ``<pref>`` alignment is optional. If omitted, the
1145 preceding ``:`` should be omitted too. The address space, ``n`` is
1146 optional, and if not specified, denotes the default address space 0.
1147 The value of ``n`` must be in the range [1,2^23).
1148 ``i<size>:<abi>:<pref>``
1149 This specifies the alignment for an integer type of a given bit
1150 ``<size>``. The value of ``<size>`` must be in the range [1,2^23).
1151 ``v<size>:<abi>:<pref>``
1152 This specifies the alignment for a vector type of a given bit
1154 ``f<size>:<abi>:<pref>``
1155 This specifies the alignment for a floating point type of a given bit
1156 ``<size>``. Only values of ``<size>`` that are supported by the target
1157 will work. 32 (float) and 64 (double) are supported on all targets; 80
1158 or 128 (different flavors of long double) are also supported on some
1160 ``a<size>:<abi>:<pref>``
1161 This specifies the alignment for an aggregate type of a given bit
1163 ``s<size>:<abi>:<pref>``
1164 This specifies the alignment for a stack object of a given bit
1166 ``n<size1>:<size2>:<size3>...``
1167 This specifies a set of native integer widths for the target CPU in
1168 bits. For example, it might contain ``n32`` for 32-bit PowerPC,
1169 ``n32:64`` for PowerPC 64, or ``n8:16:32:64`` for X86-64. Elements of
1170 this set are considered to support most general arithmetic operations
1173 When constructing the data layout for a given target, LLVM starts with a
1174 default set of specifications which are then (possibly) overridden by
1175 the specifications in the ``datalayout`` keyword. The default
1176 specifications are given in this list:
1178 - ``E`` - big endian
1179 - ``p:64:64:64`` - 64-bit pointers with 64-bit alignment.
1180 - ``p[n]:64:64:64`` - Other address spaces are assumed to be the
1181 same as the default address space.
1182 - ``S0`` - natural stack alignment is unspecified
1183 - ``i1:8:8`` - i1 is 8-bit (byte) aligned
1184 - ``i8:8:8`` - i8 is 8-bit (byte) aligned
1185 - ``i16:16:16`` - i16 is 16-bit aligned
1186 - ``i32:32:32`` - i32 is 32-bit aligned
1187 - ``i64:32:64`` - i64 has ABI alignment of 32-bits but preferred
1188 alignment of 64-bits
1189 - ``f16:16:16`` - half is 16-bit aligned
1190 - ``f32:32:32`` - float is 32-bit aligned
1191 - ``f64:64:64`` - double is 64-bit aligned
1192 - ``f128:128:128`` - quad is 128-bit aligned
1193 - ``v64:64:64`` - 64-bit vector is 64-bit aligned
1194 - ``v128:128:128`` - 128-bit vector is 128-bit aligned
1195 - ``a:0:64`` - aggregates are 64-bit aligned
1197 When LLVM is determining the alignment for a given type, it uses the
1200 #. If the type sought is an exact match for one of the specifications,
1201 that specification is used.
1202 #. If no match is found, and the type sought is an integer type, then
1203 the smallest integer type that is larger than the bitwidth of the
1204 sought type is used. If none of the specifications are larger than
1205 the bitwidth then the largest integer type is used. For example,
1206 given the default specifications above, the i7 type will use the
1207 alignment of i8 (next largest) while both i65 and i256 will use the
1208 alignment of i64 (largest specified).
1209 #. If no match is found, and the type sought is a vector type, then the
1210 largest vector type that is smaller than the sought vector type will
1211 be used as a fall back. This happens because <128 x double> can be
1212 implemented in terms of 64 <2 x double>, for example.
1214 The function of the data layout string may not be what you expect.
1215 Notably, this is not a specification from the frontend of what alignment
1216 the code generator should use.
1218 Instead, if specified, the target data layout is required to match what
1219 the ultimate *code generator* expects. This string is used by the
1220 mid-level optimizers to improve code, and this only works if it matches
1221 what the ultimate code generator uses. If you would like to generate IR
1222 that does not embed this target-specific detail into the IR, then you
1223 don't have to specify the string. This will disable some optimizations
1224 that require precise layout information, but this also prevents those
1225 optimizations from introducing target specificity into the IR.
1232 A module may specify a target triple string that describes the target
1233 host. The syntax for the target triple is simply:
1235 .. code-block:: llvm
1237 target triple = "x86_64-apple-macosx10.7.0"
1239 The *target triple* string consists of a series of identifiers delimited
1240 by the minus sign character ('-'). The canonical forms are:
1244 ARCHITECTURE-VENDOR-OPERATING_SYSTEM
1245 ARCHITECTURE-VENDOR-OPERATING_SYSTEM-ENVIRONMENT
1247 This information is passed along to the backend so that it generates
1248 code for the proper architecture. It's possible to override this on the
1249 command line with the ``-mtriple`` command line option.
1251 .. _pointeraliasing:
1253 Pointer Aliasing Rules
1254 ----------------------
1256 Any memory access must be done through a pointer value associated with
1257 an address range of the memory access, otherwise the behavior is
1258 undefined. Pointer values are associated with address ranges according
1259 to the following rules:
1261 - A pointer value is associated with the addresses associated with any
1262 value it is *based* on.
1263 - An address of a global variable is associated with the address range
1264 of the variable's storage.
1265 - The result value of an allocation instruction is associated with the
1266 address range of the allocated storage.
1267 - A null pointer in the default address-space is associated with no
1269 - An integer constant other than zero or a pointer value returned from
1270 a function not defined within LLVM may be associated with address
1271 ranges allocated through mechanisms other than those provided by
1272 LLVM. Such ranges shall not overlap with any ranges of addresses
1273 allocated by mechanisms provided by LLVM.
1275 A pointer value is *based* on another pointer value according to the
1278 - A pointer value formed from a ``getelementptr`` operation is *based*
1279 on the first operand of the ``getelementptr``.
1280 - The result value of a ``bitcast`` is *based* on the operand of the
1282 - A pointer value formed by an ``inttoptr`` is *based* on all pointer
1283 values that contribute (directly or indirectly) to the computation of
1284 the pointer's value.
1285 - The "*based* on" relationship is transitive.
1287 Note that this definition of *"based"* is intentionally similar to the
1288 definition of *"based"* in C99, though it is slightly weaker.
1290 LLVM IR does not associate types with memory. The result type of a
1291 ``load`` merely indicates the size and alignment of the memory from
1292 which to load, as well as the interpretation of the value. The first
1293 operand type of a ``store`` similarly only indicates the size and
1294 alignment of the store.
1296 Consequently, type-based alias analysis, aka TBAA, aka
1297 ``-fstrict-aliasing``, is not applicable to general unadorned LLVM IR.
1298 :ref:`Metadata <metadata>` may be used to encode additional information
1299 which specialized optimization passes may use to implement type-based
1304 Volatile Memory Accesses
1305 ------------------------
1307 Certain memory accesses, such as :ref:`load <i_load>`'s,
1308 :ref:`store <i_store>`'s, and :ref:`llvm.memcpy <int_memcpy>`'s may be
1309 marked ``volatile``. The optimizers must not change the number of
1310 volatile operations or change their order of execution relative to other
1311 volatile operations. The optimizers *may* change the order of volatile
1312 operations relative to non-volatile operations. This is not Java's
1313 "volatile" and has no cross-thread synchronization behavior.
1315 IR-level volatile loads and stores cannot safely be optimized into
1316 llvm.memcpy or llvm.memmove intrinsics even when those intrinsics are
1317 flagged volatile. Likewise, the backend should never split or merge
1318 target-legal volatile load/store instructions.
1320 .. admonition:: Rationale
1322 Platforms may rely on volatile loads and stores of natively supported
1323 data width to be executed as single instruction. For example, in C
1324 this holds for an l-value of volatile primitive type with native
1325 hardware support, but not necessarily for aggregate types. The
1326 frontend upholds these expectations, which are intentionally
1327 unspecified in the IR. The rules above ensure that IR transformation
1328 do not violate the frontend's contract with the language.
1332 Memory Model for Concurrent Operations
1333 --------------------------------------
1335 The LLVM IR does not define any way to start parallel threads of
1336 execution or to register signal handlers. Nonetheless, there are
1337 platform-specific ways to create them, and we define LLVM IR's behavior
1338 in their presence. This model is inspired by the C++0x memory model.
1340 For a more informal introduction to this model, see the :doc:`Atomics`.
1342 We define a *happens-before* partial order as the least partial order
1345 - Is a superset of single-thread program order, and
1346 - When a *synchronizes-with* ``b``, includes an edge from ``a`` to
1347 ``b``. *Synchronizes-with* pairs are introduced by platform-specific
1348 techniques, like pthread locks, thread creation, thread joining,
1349 etc., and by atomic instructions. (See also :ref:`Atomic Memory Ordering
1350 Constraints <ordering>`).
1352 Note that program order does not introduce *happens-before* edges
1353 between a thread and signals executing inside that thread.
1355 Every (defined) read operation (load instructions, memcpy, atomic
1356 loads/read-modify-writes, etc.) R reads a series of bytes written by
1357 (defined) write operations (store instructions, atomic
1358 stores/read-modify-writes, memcpy, etc.). For the purposes of this
1359 section, initialized globals are considered to have a write of the
1360 initializer which is atomic and happens before any other read or write
1361 of the memory in question. For each byte of a read R, R\ :sub:`byte`
1362 may see any write to the same byte, except:
1364 - If write\ :sub:`1` happens before write\ :sub:`2`, and
1365 write\ :sub:`2` happens before R\ :sub:`byte`, then
1366 R\ :sub:`byte` does not see write\ :sub:`1`.
1367 - If R\ :sub:`byte` happens before write\ :sub:`3`, then
1368 R\ :sub:`byte` does not see write\ :sub:`3`.
1370 Given that definition, R\ :sub:`byte` is defined as follows:
1372 - If R is volatile, the result is target-dependent. (Volatile is
1373 supposed to give guarantees which can support ``sig_atomic_t`` in
1374 C/C++, and may be used for accesses to addresses which do not behave
1375 like normal memory. It does not generally provide cross-thread
1377 - Otherwise, if there is no write to the same byte that happens before
1378 R\ :sub:`byte`, R\ :sub:`byte` returns ``undef`` for that byte.
1379 - Otherwise, if R\ :sub:`byte` may see exactly one write,
1380 R\ :sub:`byte` returns the value written by that write.
1381 - Otherwise, if R is atomic, and all the writes R\ :sub:`byte` may
1382 see are atomic, it chooses one of the values written. See the :ref:`Atomic
1383 Memory Ordering Constraints <ordering>` section for additional
1384 constraints on how the choice is made.
1385 - Otherwise R\ :sub:`byte` returns ``undef``.
1387 R returns the value composed of the series of bytes it read. This
1388 implies that some bytes within the value may be ``undef`` **without**
1389 the entire value being ``undef``. Note that this only defines the
1390 semantics of the operation; it doesn't mean that targets will emit more
1391 than one instruction to read the series of bytes.
1393 Note that in cases where none of the atomic intrinsics are used, this
1394 model places only one restriction on IR transformations on top of what
1395 is required for single-threaded execution: introducing a store to a byte
1396 which might not otherwise be stored is not allowed in general.
1397 (Specifically, in the case where another thread might write to and read
1398 from an address, introducing a store can change a load that may see
1399 exactly one write into a load that may see multiple writes.)
1403 Atomic Memory Ordering Constraints
1404 ----------------------------------
1406 Atomic instructions (:ref:`cmpxchg <i_cmpxchg>`,
1407 :ref:`atomicrmw <i_atomicrmw>`, :ref:`fence <i_fence>`,
1408 :ref:`atomic load <i_load>`, and :ref:`atomic store <i_store>`) take
1409 an ordering parameter that determines which other atomic instructions on
1410 the same address they *synchronize with*. These semantics are borrowed
1411 from Java and C++0x, but are somewhat more colloquial. If these
1412 descriptions aren't precise enough, check those specs (see spec
1413 references in the :doc:`atomics guide <Atomics>`).
1414 :ref:`fence <i_fence>` instructions treat these orderings somewhat
1415 differently since they don't take an address. See that instruction's
1416 documentation for details.
1418 For a simpler introduction to the ordering constraints, see the
1422 The set of values that can be read is governed by the happens-before
1423 partial order. A value cannot be read unless some operation wrote
1424 it. This is intended to provide a guarantee strong enough to model
1425 Java's non-volatile shared variables. This ordering cannot be
1426 specified for read-modify-write operations; it is not strong enough
1427 to make them atomic in any interesting way.
1429 In addition to the guarantees of ``unordered``, there is a single
1430 total order for modifications by ``monotonic`` operations on each
1431 address. All modification orders must be compatible with the
1432 happens-before order. There is no guarantee that the modification
1433 orders can be combined to a global total order for the whole program
1434 (and this often will not be possible). The read in an atomic
1435 read-modify-write operation (:ref:`cmpxchg <i_cmpxchg>` and
1436 :ref:`atomicrmw <i_atomicrmw>`) reads the value in the modification
1437 order immediately before the value it writes. If one atomic read
1438 happens before another atomic read of the same address, the later
1439 read must see the same value or a later value in the address's
1440 modification order. This disallows reordering of ``monotonic`` (or
1441 stronger) operations on the same address. If an address is written
1442 ``monotonic``-ally by one thread, and other threads ``monotonic``-ally
1443 read that address repeatedly, the other threads must eventually see
1444 the write. This corresponds to the C++0x/C1x
1445 ``memory_order_relaxed``.
1447 In addition to the guarantees of ``monotonic``, a
1448 *synchronizes-with* edge may be formed with a ``release`` operation.
1449 This is intended to model C++'s ``memory_order_acquire``.
1451 In addition to the guarantees of ``monotonic``, if this operation
1452 writes a value which is subsequently read by an ``acquire``
1453 operation, it *synchronizes-with* that operation. (This isn't a
1454 complete description; see the C++0x definition of a release
1455 sequence.) This corresponds to the C++0x/C1x
1456 ``memory_order_release``.
1457 ``acq_rel`` (acquire+release)
1458 Acts as both an ``acquire`` and ``release`` operation on its
1459 address. This corresponds to the C++0x/C1x ``memory_order_acq_rel``.
1460 ``seq_cst`` (sequentially consistent)
1461 In addition to the guarantees of ``acq_rel`` (``acquire`` for an
1462 operation which only reads, ``release`` for an operation which only
1463 writes), there is a global total order on all
1464 sequentially-consistent operations on all addresses, which is
1465 consistent with the *happens-before* partial order and with the
1466 modification orders of all the affected addresses. Each
1467 sequentially-consistent read sees the last preceding write to the
1468 same address in this global order. This corresponds to the C++0x/C1x
1469 ``memory_order_seq_cst`` and Java volatile.
1473 If an atomic operation is marked ``singlethread``, it only *synchronizes
1474 with* or participates in modification and seq\_cst total orderings with
1475 other operations running in the same thread (for example, in signal
1483 LLVM IR floating-point binary ops (:ref:`fadd <i_fadd>`,
1484 :ref:`fsub <i_fsub>`, :ref:`fmul <i_fmul>`, :ref:`fdiv <i_fdiv>`,
1485 :ref:`frem <i_frem>`) have the following flags that can set to enable
1486 otherwise unsafe floating point operations
1489 No NaNs - Allow optimizations to assume the arguments and result are not
1490 NaN. Such optimizations are required to retain defined behavior over
1491 NaNs, but the value of the result is undefined.
1494 No Infs - Allow optimizations to assume the arguments and result are not
1495 +/-Inf. Such optimizations are required to retain defined behavior over
1496 +/-Inf, but the value of the result is undefined.
1499 No Signed Zeros - Allow optimizations to treat the sign of a zero
1500 argument or result as insignificant.
1503 Allow Reciprocal - Allow optimizations to use the reciprocal of an
1504 argument rather than perform division.
1507 Fast - Allow algebraically equivalent transformations that may
1508 dramatically change results in floating point (e.g. reassociate). This
1509 flag implies all the others.
1516 The LLVM type system is one of the most important features of the
1517 intermediate representation. Being typed enables a number of
1518 optimizations to be performed on the intermediate representation
1519 directly, without having to do extra analyses on the side before the
1520 transformation. A strong type system makes it easier to read the
1521 generated code and enables novel analyses and transformations that are
1522 not feasible to perform on normal three address code representations.
1532 The void type does not represent any value and has no size.
1550 The function type can be thought of as a function signature. It consists of a
1551 return type and a list of formal parameter types. The return type of a function
1552 type is a void type or first class type --- except for :ref:`label <t_label>`
1553 and :ref:`metadata <t_metadata>` types.
1559 <returntype> (<parameter list>)
1561 ...where '``<parameter list>``' is a comma-separated list of type
1562 specifiers. Optionally, the parameter list may include a type ``...``, which
1563 indicates that the function takes a variable number of arguments. Variable
1564 argument functions can access their arguments with the :ref:`variable argument
1565 handling intrinsic <int_varargs>` functions. '``<returntype>``' is any type
1566 except :ref:`label <t_label>` and :ref:`metadata <t_metadata>`.
1570 +---------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1571 | ``i32 (i32)`` | function taking an ``i32``, returning an ``i32`` |
1572 +---------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1573 | ``float (i16, i32 *) *`` | :ref:`Pointer <t_pointer>` to a function that takes an ``i16`` and a :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` to ``i32``, returning ``float``. |
1574 +---------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1575 | ``i32 (i8*, ...)`` | A vararg function that takes at least one :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` to ``i8`` (char in C), which returns an integer. This is the signature for ``printf`` in LLVM. |
1576 +---------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1577 | ``{i32, i32} (i32)`` | A function taking an ``i32``, returning a :ref:`structure <t_struct>` containing two ``i32`` values |
1578 +---------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1585 The :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` types are perhaps the most important.
1586 Values of these types are the only ones which can be produced by
1594 These are the types that are valid in registers from CodeGen's perspective.
1603 The integer type is a very simple type that simply specifies an
1604 arbitrary bit width for the integer type desired. Any bit width from 1
1605 bit to 2\ :sup:`23`\ -1 (about 8 million) can be specified.
1613 The number of bits the integer will occupy is specified by the ``N``
1619 +----------------+------------------------------------------------+
1620 | ``i1`` | a single-bit integer. |
1621 +----------------+------------------------------------------------+
1622 | ``i32`` | a 32-bit integer. |
1623 +----------------+------------------------------------------------+
1624 | ``i1942652`` | a really big integer of over 1 million bits. |
1625 +----------------+------------------------------------------------+
1629 Floating Point Types
1630 """"""""""""""""""""
1639 - 16-bit floating point value
1642 - 32-bit floating point value
1645 - 64-bit floating point value
1648 - 128-bit floating point value (112-bit mantissa)
1651 - 80-bit floating point value (X87)
1654 - 128-bit floating point value (two 64-bits)
1663 The x86mmx type represents a value held in an MMX register on an x86
1664 machine. The operations allowed on it are quite limited: parameters and
1665 return values, load and store, and bitcast. User-specified MMX
1666 instructions are represented as intrinsic or asm calls with arguments
1667 and/or results of this type. There are no arrays, vectors or constants
1684 The pointer type is used to specify memory locations. Pointers are
1685 commonly used to reference objects in memory.
1687 Pointer types may have an optional address space attribute defining the
1688 numbered address space where the pointed-to object resides. The default
1689 address space is number zero. The semantics of non-zero address spaces
1690 are target-specific.
1692 Note that LLVM does not permit pointers to void (``void*``) nor does it
1693 permit pointers to labels (``label*``). Use ``i8*`` instead.
1703 +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1704 | ``[4 x i32]*`` | A :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` to :ref:`array <t_array>` of four ``i32`` values. |
1705 +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1706 | ``i32 (i32*) *`` | A :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` to a :ref:`function <t_function>` that takes an ``i32*``, returning an ``i32``. |
1707 +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1708 | ``i32 addrspace(5)*`` | A :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` to an ``i32`` value that resides in address space #5. |
1709 +-------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1718 A vector type is a simple derived type that represents a vector of
1719 elements. Vector types are used when multiple primitive data are
1720 operated in parallel using a single instruction (SIMD). A vector type
1721 requires a size (number of elements) and an underlying primitive data
1722 type. Vector types are considered :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>`.
1728 < <# elements> x <elementtype> >
1730 The number of elements is a constant integer value larger than 0;
1731 elementtype may be any integer or floating point type, or a pointer to
1732 these types. Vectors of size zero are not allowed.
1736 +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1737 | ``<4 x i32>`` | Vector of 4 32-bit integer values. |
1738 +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1739 | ``<8 x float>`` | Vector of 8 32-bit floating-point values. |
1740 +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1741 | ``<2 x i64>`` | Vector of 2 64-bit integer values. |
1742 +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1743 | ``<4 x i64*>`` | Vector of 4 pointers to 64-bit integer values. |
1744 +-------------------+--------------------------------------------------+
1753 The label type represents code labels.
1768 The metadata type represents embedded metadata. No derived types may be
1769 created from metadata except for :ref:`function <t_function>` arguments.
1782 Aggregate Types are a subset of derived types that can contain multiple
1783 member types. :ref:`Arrays <t_array>` and :ref:`structs <t_struct>` are
1784 aggregate types. :ref:`Vectors <t_vector>` are not considered to be
1794 The array type is a very simple derived type that arranges elements
1795 sequentially in memory. The array type requires a size (number of
1796 elements) and an underlying data type.
1802 [<# elements> x <elementtype>]
1804 The number of elements is a constant integer value; ``elementtype`` may
1805 be any type with a size.
1809 +------------------+--------------------------------------+
1810 | ``[40 x i32]`` | Array of 40 32-bit integer values. |
1811 +------------------+--------------------------------------+
1812 | ``[41 x i32]`` | Array of 41 32-bit integer values. |
1813 +------------------+--------------------------------------+
1814 | ``[4 x i8]`` | Array of 4 8-bit integer values. |
1815 +------------------+--------------------------------------+
1817 Here are some examples of multidimensional arrays:
1819 +-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
1820 | ``[3 x [4 x i32]]`` | 3x4 array of 32-bit integer values. |
1821 +-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
1822 | ``[12 x [10 x float]]`` | 12x10 array of single precision floating point values. |
1823 +-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
1824 | ``[2 x [3 x [4 x i16]]]`` | 2x3x4 array of 16-bit integer values. |
1825 +-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+
1827 There is no restriction on indexing beyond the end of the array implied
1828 by a static type (though there are restrictions on indexing beyond the
1829 bounds of an allocated object in some cases). This means that
1830 single-dimension 'variable sized array' addressing can be implemented in
1831 LLVM with a zero length array type. An implementation of 'pascal style
1832 arrays' in LLVM could use the type "``{ i32, [0 x float]}``", for
1842 The structure type is used to represent a collection of data members
1843 together in memory. The elements of a structure may be any type that has
1846 Structures in memory are accessed using '``load``' and '``store``' by
1847 getting a pointer to a field with the '``getelementptr``' instruction.
1848 Structures in registers are accessed using the '``extractvalue``' and
1849 '``insertvalue``' instructions.
1851 Structures may optionally be "packed" structures, which indicate that
1852 the alignment of the struct is one byte, and that there is no padding
1853 between the elements. In non-packed structs, padding between field types
1854 is inserted as defined by the DataLayout string in the module, which is
1855 required to match what the underlying code generator expects.
1857 Structures can either be "literal" or "identified". A literal structure
1858 is defined inline with other types (e.g. ``{i32, i32}*``) whereas
1859 identified types are always defined at the top level with a name.
1860 Literal types are uniqued by their contents and can never be recursive
1861 or opaque since there is no way to write one. Identified types can be
1862 recursive, can be opaqued, and are never uniqued.
1868 %T1 = type { <type list> } ; Identified normal struct type
1869 %T2 = type <{ <type list> }> ; Identified packed struct type
1873 +------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1874 | ``{ i32, i32, i32 }`` | A triple of three ``i32`` values |
1875 +------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1876 | ``{ float, i32 (i32) * }`` | A pair, where the first element is a ``float`` and the second element is a :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` to a :ref:`function <t_function>` that takes an ``i32``, returning an ``i32``. |
1877 +------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1878 | ``<{ i8, i32 }>`` | A packed struct known to be 5 bytes in size. |
1879 +------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
1883 Opaque Structure Types
1884 """"""""""""""""""""""
1888 Opaque structure types are used to represent named structure types that
1889 do not have a body specified. This corresponds (for example) to the C
1890 notion of a forward declared structure.
1901 +--------------+-------------------+
1902 | ``opaque`` | An opaque type. |
1903 +--------------+-------------------+
1908 LLVM has several different basic types of constants. This section
1909 describes them all and their syntax.
1914 **Boolean constants**
1915 The two strings '``true``' and '``false``' are both valid constants
1917 **Integer constants**
1918 Standard integers (such as '4') are constants of the
1919 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` type. Negative numbers may be used with
1921 **Floating point constants**
1922 Floating point constants use standard decimal notation (e.g.
1923 123.421), exponential notation (e.g. 1.23421e+2), or a more precise
1924 hexadecimal notation (see below). The assembler requires the exact
1925 decimal value of a floating-point constant. For example, the
1926 assembler accepts 1.25 but rejects 1.3 because 1.3 is a repeating
1927 decimal in binary. Floating point constants must have a :ref:`floating
1928 point <t_floating>` type.
1929 **Null pointer constants**
1930 The identifier '``null``' is recognized as a null pointer constant
1931 and must be of :ref:`pointer type <t_pointer>`.
1933 The one non-intuitive notation for constants is the hexadecimal form of
1934 floating point constants. For example, the form
1935 '``double 0x432ff973cafa8000``' is equivalent to (but harder to read
1936 than) '``double 4.5e+15``'. The only time hexadecimal floating point
1937 constants are required (and the only time that they are generated by the
1938 disassembler) is when a floating point constant must be emitted but it
1939 cannot be represented as a decimal floating point number in a reasonable
1940 number of digits. For example, NaN's, infinities, and other special
1941 values are represented in their IEEE hexadecimal format so that assembly
1942 and disassembly do not cause any bits to change in the constants.
1944 When using the hexadecimal form, constants of types half, float, and
1945 double are represented using the 16-digit form shown above (which
1946 matches the IEEE754 representation for double); half and float values
1947 must, however, be exactly representable as IEEE 754 half and single
1948 precision, respectively. Hexadecimal format is always used for long
1949 double, and there are three forms of long double. The 80-bit format used
1950 by x86 is represented as ``0xK`` followed by 20 hexadecimal digits. The
1951 128-bit format used by PowerPC (two adjacent doubles) is represented by
1952 ``0xM`` followed by 32 hexadecimal digits. The IEEE 128-bit format is
1953 represented by ``0xL`` followed by 32 hexadecimal digits. Long doubles
1954 will only work if they match the long double format on your target.
1955 The IEEE 16-bit format (half precision) is represented by ``0xH``
1956 followed by 4 hexadecimal digits. All hexadecimal formats are big-endian
1957 (sign bit at the left).
1959 There are no constants of type x86mmx.
1961 .. _complexconstants:
1966 Complex constants are a (potentially recursive) combination of simple
1967 constants and smaller complex constants.
1969 **Structure constants**
1970 Structure constants are represented with notation similar to
1971 structure type definitions (a comma separated list of elements,
1972 surrounded by braces (``{}``)). For example:
1973 "``{ i32 4, float 17.0, i32* @G }``", where "``@G``" is declared as
1974 "``@G = external global i32``". Structure constants must have
1975 :ref:`structure type <t_struct>`, and the number and types of elements
1976 must match those specified by the type.
1978 Array constants are represented with notation similar to array type
1979 definitions (a comma separated list of elements, surrounded by
1980 square brackets (``[]``)). For example:
1981 "``[ i32 42, i32 11, i32 74 ]``". Array constants must have
1982 :ref:`array type <t_array>`, and the number and types of elements must
1983 match those specified by the type.
1984 **Vector constants**
1985 Vector constants are represented with notation similar to vector
1986 type definitions (a comma separated list of elements, surrounded by
1987 less-than/greater-than's (``<>``)). For example:
1988 "``< i32 42, i32 11, i32 74, i32 100 >``". Vector constants
1989 must have :ref:`vector type <t_vector>`, and the number and types of
1990 elements must match those specified by the type.
1991 **Zero initialization**
1992 The string '``zeroinitializer``' can be used to zero initialize a
1993 value to zero of *any* type, including scalar and
1994 :ref:`aggregate <t_aggregate>` types. This is often used to avoid
1995 having to print large zero initializers (e.g. for large arrays) and
1996 is always exactly equivalent to using explicit zero initializers.
1998 A metadata node is a structure-like constant with :ref:`metadata
1999 type <t_metadata>`. For example:
2000 "``metadata !{ i32 0, metadata !"test" }``". Unlike other
2001 constants that are meant to be interpreted as part of the
2002 instruction stream, metadata is a place to attach additional
2003 information such as debug info.
2005 Global Variable and Function Addresses
2006 --------------------------------------
2008 The addresses of :ref:`global variables <globalvars>` and
2009 :ref:`functions <functionstructure>` are always implicitly valid
2010 (link-time) constants. These constants are explicitly referenced when
2011 the :ref:`identifier for the global <identifiers>` is used and always have
2012 :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` type. For example, the following is a legal LLVM
2015 .. code-block:: llvm
2019 @Z = global [2 x i32*] [ i32* @X, i32* @Y ]
2026 The string '``undef``' can be used anywhere a constant is expected, and
2027 indicates that the user of the value may receive an unspecified
2028 bit-pattern. Undefined values may be of any type (other than '``label``'
2029 or '``void``') and be used anywhere a constant is permitted.
2031 Undefined values are useful because they indicate to the compiler that
2032 the program is well defined no matter what value is used. This gives the
2033 compiler more freedom to optimize. Here are some examples of
2034 (potentially surprising) transformations that are valid (in pseudo IR):
2036 .. code-block:: llvm
2046 This is safe because all of the output bits are affected by the undef
2047 bits. Any output bit can have a zero or one depending on the input bits.
2049 .. code-block:: llvm
2060 These logical operations have bits that are not always affected by the
2061 input. For example, if ``%X`` has a zero bit, then the output of the
2062 '``and``' operation will always be a zero for that bit, no matter what
2063 the corresponding bit from the '``undef``' is. As such, it is unsafe to
2064 optimize or assume that the result of the '``and``' is '``undef``'.
2065 However, it is safe to assume that all bits of the '``undef``' could be
2066 0, and optimize the '``and``' to 0. Likewise, it is safe to assume that
2067 all the bits of the '``undef``' operand to the '``or``' could be set,
2068 allowing the '``or``' to be folded to -1.
2070 .. code-block:: llvm
2072 %A = select undef, %X, %Y
2073 %B = select undef, 42, %Y
2074 %C = select %X, %Y, undef
2084 This set of examples shows that undefined '``select``' (and conditional
2085 branch) conditions can go *either way*, but they have to come from one
2086 of the two operands. In the ``%A`` example, if ``%X`` and ``%Y`` were
2087 both known to have a clear low bit, then ``%A`` would have to have a
2088 cleared low bit. However, in the ``%C`` example, the optimizer is
2089 allowed to assume that the '``undef``' operand could be the same as
2090 ``%Y``, allowing the whole '``select``' to be eliminated.
2092 .. code-block:: llvm
2094 %A = xor undef, undef
2111 This example points out that two '``undef``' operands are not
2112 necessarily the same. This can be surprising to people (and also matches
2113 C semantics) where they assume that "``X^X``" is always zero, even if
2114 ``X`` is undefined. This isn't true for a number of reasons, but the
2115 short answer is that an '``undef``' "variable" can arbitrarily change
2116 its value over its "live range". This is true because the variable
2117 doesn't actually *have a live range*. Instead, the value is logically
2118 read from arbitrary registers that happen to be around when needed, so
2119 the value is not necessarily consistent over time. In fact, ``%A`` and
2120 ``%C`` need to have the same semantics or the core LLVM "replace all
2121 uses with" concept would not hold.
2123 .. code-block:: llvm
2131 These examples show the crucial difference between an *undefined value*
2132 and *undefined behavior*. An undefined value (like '``undef``') is
2133 allowed to have an arbitrary bit-pattern. This means that the ``%A``
2134 operation can be constant folded to '``undef``', because the '``undef``'
2135 could be an SNaN, and ``fdiv`` is not (currently) defined on SNaN's.
2136 However, in the second example, we can make a more aggressive
2137 assumption: because the ``undef`` is allowed to be an arbitrary value,
2138 we are allowed to assume that it could be zero. Since a divide by zero
2139 has *undefined behavior*, we are allowed to assume that the operation
2140 does not execute at all. This allows us to delete the divide and all
2141 code after it. Because the undefined operation "can't happen", the
2142 optimizer can assume that it occurs in dead code.
2144 .. code-block:: llvm
2146 a: store undef -> %X
2147 b: store %X -> undef
2152 These examples reiterate the ``fdiv`` example: a store *of* an undefined
2153 value can be assumed to not have any effect; we can assume that the
2154 value is overwritten with bits that happen to match what was already
2155 there. However, a store *to* an undefined location could clobber
2156 arbitrary memory, therefore, it has undefined behavior.
2163 Poison values are similar to :ref:`undef values <undefvalues>`, however
2164 they also represent the fact that an instruction or constant expression
2165 which cannot evoke side effects has nevertheless detected a condition
2166 which results in undefined behavior.
2168 There is currently no way of representing a poison value in the IR; they
2169 only exist when produced by operations such as :ref:`add <i_add>` with
2172 Poison value behavior is defined in terms of value *dependence*:
2174 - Values other than :ref:`phi <i_phi>` nodes depend on their operands.
2175 - :ref:`Phi <i_phi>` nodes depend on the operand corresponding to
2176 their dynamic predecessor basic block.
2177 - Function arguments depend on the corresponding actual argument values
2178 in the dynamic callers of their functions.
2179 - :ref:`Call <i_call>` instructions depend on the :ref:`ret <i_ret>`
2180 instructions that dynamically transfer control back to them.
2181 - :ref:`Invoke <i_invoke>` instructions depend on the
2182 :ref:`ret <i_ret>`, :ref:`resume <i_resume>`, or exception-throwing
2183 call instructions that dynamically transfer control back to them.
2184 - Non-volatile loads and stores depend on the most recent stores to all
2185 of the referenced memory addresses, following the order in the IR
2186 (including loads and stores implied by intrinsics such as
2187 :ref:`@llvm.memcpy <int_memcpy>`.)
2188 - An instruction with externally visible side effects depends on the
2189 most recent preceding instruction with externally visible side
2190 effects, following the order in the IR. (This includes :ref:`volatile
2191 operations <volatile>`.)
2192 - An instruction *control-depends* on a :ref:`terminator
2193 instruction <terminators>` if the terminator instruction has
2194 multiple successors and the instruction is always executed when
2195 control transfers to one of the successors, and may not be executed
2196 when control is transferred to another.
2197 - Additionally, an instruction also *control-depends* on a terminator
2198 instruction if the set of instructions it otherwise depends on would
2199 be different if the terminator had transferred control to a different
2201 - Dependence is transitive.
2203 Poison Values have the same behavior as :ref:`undef values <undefvalues>`,
2204 with the additional affect that any instruction which has a *dependence*
2205 on a poison value has undefined behavior.
2207 Here are some examples:
2209 .. code-block:: llvm
2212 %poison = sub nuw i32 0, 1 ; Results in a poison value.
2213 %still_poison = and i32 %poison, 0 ; 0, but also poison.
2214 %poison_yet_again = getelementptr i32* @h, i32 %still_poison
2215 store i32 0, i32* %poison_yet_again ; memory at @h[0] is poisoned
2217 store i32 %poison, i32* @g ; Poison value stored to memory.
2218 %poison2 = load i32* @g ; Poison value loaded back from memory.
2220 store volatile i32 %poison, i32* @g ; External observation; undefined behavior.
2222 %narrowaddr = bitcast i32* @g to i16*
2223 %wideaddr = bitcast i32* @g to i64*
2224 %poison3 = load i16* %narrowaddr ; Returns a poison value.
2225 %poison4 = load i64* %wideaddr ; Returns a poison value.
2227 %cmp = icmp slt i32 %poison, 0 ; Returns a poison value.
2228 br i1 %cmp, label %true, label %end ; Branch to either destination.
2231 store volatile i32 0, i32* @g ; This is control-dependent on %cmp, so
2232 ; it has undefined behavior.
2236 %p = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ 1, %true ]
2237 ; Both edges into this PHI are
2238 ; control-dependent on %cmp, so this
2239 ; always results in a poison value.
2241 store volatile i32 0, i32* @g ; This would depend on the store in %true
2242 ; if %cmp is true, or the store in %entry
2243 ; otherwise, so this is undefined behavior.
2245 br i1 %cmp, label %second_true, label %second_end
2246 ; The same branch again, but this time the
2247 ; true block doesn't have side effects.
2254 store volatile i32 0, i32* @g ; This time, the instruction always depends
2255 ; on the store in %end. Also, it is
2256 ; control-equivalent to %end, so this is
2257 ; well-defined (ignoring earlier undefined
2258 ; behavior in this example).
2262 Addresses of Basic Blocks
2263 -------------------------
2265 ``blockaddress(@function, %block)``
2267 The '``blockaddress``' constant computes the address of the specified
2268 basic block in the specified function, and always has an ``i8*`` type.
2269 Taking the address of the entry block is illegal.
2271 This value only has defined behavior when used as an operand to the
2272 ':ref:`indirectbr <i_indirectbr>`' instruction, or for comparisons
2273 against null. Pointer equality tests between labels addresses results in
2274 undefined behavior --- though, again, comparison against null is ok, and
2275 no label is equal to the null pointer. This may be passed around as an
2276 opaque pointer sized value as long as the bits are not inspected. This
2277 allows ``ptrtoint`` and arithmetic to be performed on these values so
2278 long as the original value is reconstituted before the ``indirectbr``
2281 Finally, some targets may provide defined semantics when using the value
2282 as the operand to an inline assembly, but that is target specific.
2286 Constant Expressions
2287 --------------------
2289 Constant expressions are used to allow expressions involving other
2290 constants to be used as constants. Constant expressions may be of any
2291 :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` type and may involve any LLVM operation
2292 that does not have side effects (e.g. load and call are not supported).
2293 The following is the syntax for constant expressions:
2295 ``trunc (CST to TYPE)``
2296 Truncate a constant to another type. The bit size of CST must be
2297 larger than the bit size of TYPE. Both types must be integers.
2298 ``zext (CST to TYPE)``
2299 Zero extend a constant to another type. The bit size of CST must be
2300 smaller than the bit size of TYPE. Both types must be integers.
2301 ``sext (CST to TYPE)``
2302 Sign extend a constant to another type. The bit size of CST must be
2303 smaller than the bit size of TYPE. Both types must be integers.
2304 ``fptrunc (CST to TYPE)``
2305 Truncate a floating point constant to another floating point type.
2306 The size of CST must be larger than the size of TYPE. Both types
2307 must be floating point.
2308 ``fpext (CST to TYPE)``
2309 Floating point extend a constant to another type. The size of CST
2310 must be smaller or equal to the size of TYPE. Both types must be
2312 ``fptoui (CST to TYPE)``
2313 Convert a floating point constant to the corresponding unsigned
2314 integer constant. TYPE must be a scalar or vector integer type. CST
2315 must be of scalar or vector floating point type. Both CST and TYPE
2316 must be scalars, or vectors of the same number of elements. If the
2317 value won't fit in the integer type, the results are undefined.
2318 ``fptosi (CST to TYPE)``
2319 Convert a floating point constant to the corresponding signed
2320 integer constant. TYPE must be a scalar or vector integer type. CST
2321 must be of scalar or vector floating point type. Both CST and TYPE
2322 must be scalars, or vectors of the same number of elements. If the
2323 value won't fit in the integer type, the results are undefined.
2324 ``uitofp (CST to TYPE)``
2325 Convert an unsigned integer constant to the corresponding floating
2326 point constant. TYPE must be a scalar or vector floating point type.
2327 CST must be of scalar or vector integer type. Both CST and TYPE must
2328 be scalars, or vectors of the same number of elements. If the value
2329 won't fit in the floating point type, the results are undefined.
2330 ``sitofp (CST to TYPE)``
2331 Convert a signed integer constant to the corresponding floating
2332 point constant. TYPE must be a scalar or vector floating point type.
2333 CST must be of scalar or vector integer type. Both CST and TYPE must
2334 be scalars, or vectors of the same number of elements. If the value
2335 won't fit in the floating point type, the results are undefined.
2336 ``ptrtoint (CST to TYPE)``
2337 Convert a pointer typed constant to the corresponding integer
2338 constant. ``TYPE`` must be an integer type. ``CST`` must be of
2339 pointer type. The ``CST`` value is zero extended, truncated, or
2340 unchanged to make it fit in ``TYPE``.
2341 ``inttoptr (CST to TYPE)``
2342 Convert an integer constant to a pointer constant. TYPE must be a
2343 pointer type. CST must be of integer type. The CST value is zero
2344 extended, truncated, or unchanged to make it fit in a pointer size.
2345 This one is *really* dangerous!
2346 ``bitcast (CST to TYPE)``
2347 Convert a constant, CST, to another TYPE. The constraints of the
2348 operands are the same as those for the :ref:`bitcast
2349 instruction <i_bitcast>`.
2350 ``addrspacecast (CST to TYPE)``
2351 Convert a constant pointer or constant vector of pointer, CST, to another
2352 TYPE in a different address space. The constraints of the operands are the
2353 same as those for the :ref:`addrspacecast instruction <i_addrspacecast>`.
2354 ``getelementptr (CSTPTR, IDX0, IDX1, ...)``, ``getelementptr inbounds (CSTPTR, IDX0, IDX1, ...)``
2355 Perform the :ref:`getelementptr operation <i_getelementptr>` on
2356 constants. As with the :ref:`getelementptr <i_getelementptr>`
2357 instruction, the index list may have zero or more indexes, which are
2358 required to make sense for the type of "CSTPTR".
2359 ``select (COND, VAL1, VAL2)``
2360 Perform the :ref:`select operation <i_select>` on constants.
2361 ``icmp COND (VAL1, VAL2)``
2362 Performs the :ref:`icmp operation <i_icmp>` on constants.
2363 ``fcmp COND (VAL1, VAL2)``
2364 Performs the :ref:`fcmp operation <i_fcmp>` on constants.
2365 ``extractelement (VAL, IDX)``
2366 Perform the :ref:`extractelement operation <i_extractelement>` on
2368 ``insertelement (VAL, ELT, IDX)``
2369 Perform the :ref:`insertelement operation <i_insertelement>` on
2371 ``shufflevector (VEC1, VEC2, IDXMASK)``
2372 Perform the :ref:`shufflevector operation <i_shufflevector>` on
2374 ``extractvalue (VAL, IDX0, IDX1, ...)``
2375 Perform the :ref:`extractvalue operation <i_extractvalue>` on
2376 constants. The index list is interpreted in a similar manner as
2377 indices in a ':ref:`getelementptr <i_getelementptr>`' operation. At
2378 least one index value must be specified.
2379 ``insertvalue (VAL, ELT, IDX0, IDX1, ...)``
2380 Perform the :ref:`insertvalue operation <i_insertvalue>` on constants.
2381 The index list is interpreted in a similar manner as indices in a
2382 ':ref:`getelementptr <i_getelementptr>`' operation. At least one index
2383 value must be specified.
2384 ``OPCODE (LHS, RHS)``
2385 Perform the specified operation of the LHS and RHS constants. OPCODE
2386 may be any of the :ref:`binary <binaryops>` or :ref:`bitwise
2387 binary <bitwiseops>` operations. The constraints on operands are
2388 the same as those for the corresponding instruction (e.g. no bitwise
2389 operations on floating point values are allowed).
2396 Inline Assembler Expressions
2397 ----------------------------
2399 LLVM supports inline assembler expressions (as opposed to :ref:`Module-Level
2400 Inline Assembly <moduleasm>`) through the use of a special value. This
2401 value represents the inline assembler as a string (containing the
2402 instructions to emit), a list of operand constraints (stored as a
2403 string), a flag that indicates whether or not the inline asm expression
2404 has side effects, and a flag indicating whether the function containing
2405 the asm needs to align its stack conservatively. An example inline
2406 assembler expression is:
2408 .. code-block:: llvm
2410 i32 (i32) asm "bswap $0", "=r,r"
2412 Inline assembler expressions may **only** be used as the callee operand
2413 of a :ref:`call <i_call>` or an :ref:`invoke <i_invoke>` instruction.
2414 Thus, typically we have:
2416 .. code-block:: llvm
2418 %X = call i32 asm "bswap $0", "=r,r"(i32 %Y)
2420 Inline asms with side effects not visible in the constraint list must be
2421 marked as having side effects. This is done through the use of the
2422 '``sideeffect``' keyword, like so:
2424 .. code-block:: llvm
2426 call void asm sideeffect "eieio", ""()
2428 In some cases inline asms will contain code that will not work unless
2429 the stack is aligned in some way, such as calls or SSE instructions on
2430 x86, yet will not contain code that does that alignment within the asm.
2431 The compiler should make conservative assumptions about what the asm
2432 might contain and should generate its usual stack alignment code in the
2433 prologue if the '``alignstack``' keyword is present:
2435 .. code-block:: llvm
2437 call void asm alignstack "eieio", ""()
2439 Inline asms also support using non-standard assembly dialects. The
2440 assumed dialect is ATT. When the '``inteldialect``' keyword is present,
2441 the inline asm is using the Intel dialect. Currently, ATT and Intel are
2442 the only supported dialects. An example is:
2444 .. code-block:: llvm
2446 call void asm inteldialect "eieio", ""()
2448 If multiple keywords appear the '``sideeffect``' keyword must come
2449 first, the '``alignstack``' keyword second and the '``inteldialect``'
2455 The call instructions that wrap inline asm nodes may have a
2456 "``!srcloc``" MDNode attached to it that contains a list of constant
2457 integers. If present, the code generator will use the integer as the
2458 location cookie value when report errors through the ``LLVMContext``
2459 error reporting mechanisms. This allows a front-end to correlate backend
2460 errors that occur with inline asm back to the source code that produced
2463 .. code-block:: llvm
2465 call void asm sideeffect "something bad", ""(), !srcloc !42
2467 !42 = !{ i32 1234567 }
2469 It is up to the front-end to make sense of the magic numbers it places
2470 in the IR. If the MDNode contains multiple constants, the code generator
2471 will use the one that corresponds to the line of the asm that the error
2476 Metadata Nodes and Metadata Strings
2477 -----------------------------------
2479 LLVM IR allows metadata to be attached to instructions in the program
2480 that can convey extra information about the code to the optimizers and
2481 code generator. One example application of metadata is source-level
2482 debug information. There are two metadata primitives: strings and nodes.
2483 All metadata has the ``metadata`` type and is identified in syntax by a
2484 preceding exclamation point ('``!``').
2486 A metadata string is a string surrounded by double quotes. It can
2487 contain any character by escaping non-printable characters with
2488 "``\xx``" where "``xx``" is the two digit hex code. For example:
2491 Metadata nodes are represented with notation similar to structure
2492 constants (a comma separated list of elements, surrounded by braces and
2493 preceded by an exclamation point). Metadata nodes can have any values as
2494 their operand. For example:
2496 .. code-block:: llvm
2498 !{ metadata !"test\00", i32 10}
2500 A :ref:`named metadata <namedmetadatastructure>` is a collection of
2501 metadata nodes, which can be looked up in the module symbol table. For
2504 .. code-block:: llvm
2506 !foo = metadata !{!4, !3}
2508 Metadata can be used as function arguments. Here ``llvm.dbg.value``
2509 function is using two metadata arguments:
2511 .. code-block:: llvm
2513 call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata !24, i64 0, metadata !25)
2515 Metadata can be attached with an instruction. Here metadata ``!21`` is
2516 attached to the ``add`` instruction using the ``!dbg`` identifier:
2518 .. code-block:: llvm
2520 %indvar.next = add i64 %indvar, 1, !dbg !21
2522 More information about specific metadata nodes recognized by the
2523 optimizers and code generator is found below.
2528 In LLVM IR, memory does not have types, so LLVM's own type system is not
2529 suitable for doing TBAA. Instead, metadata is added to the IR to
2530 describe a type system of a higher level language. This can be used to
2531 implement typical C/C++ TBAA, but it can also be used to implement
2532 custom alias analysis behavior for other languages.
2534 The current metadata format is very simple. TBAA metadata nodes have up
2535 to three fields, e.g.:
2537 .. code-block:: llvm
2539 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !"an example type tree" }
2540 !1 = metadata !{ metadata !"int", metadata !0 }
2541 !2 = metadata !{ metadata !"float", metadata !0 }
2542 !3 = metadata !{ metadata !"const float", metadata !2, i64 1 }
2544 The first field is an identity field. It can be any value, usually a
2545 metadata string, which uniquely identifies the type. The most important
2546 name in the tree is the name of the root node. Two trees with different
2547 root node names are entirely disjoint, even if they have leaves with
2550 The second field identifies the type's parent node in the tree, or is
2551 null or omitted for a root node. A type is considered to alias all of
2552 its descendants and all of its ancestors in the tree. Also, a type is
2553 considered to alias all types in other trees, so that bitcode produced
2554 from multiple front-ends is handled conservatively.
2556 If the third field is present, it's an integer which if equal to 1
2557 indicates that the type is "constant" (meaning
2558 ``pointsToConstantMemory`` should return true; see `other useful
2559 AliasAnalysis methods <AliasAnalysis.html#OtherItfs>`_).
2561 '``tbaa.struct``' Metadata
2562 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2564 The :ref:`llvm.memcpy <int_memcpy>` is often used to implement
2565 aggregate assignment operations in C and similar languages, however it
2566 is defined to copy a contiguous region of memory, which is more than
2567 strictly necessary for aggregate types which contain holes due to
2568 padding. Also, it doesn't contain any TBAA information about the fields
2571 ``!tbaa.struct`` metadata can describe which memory subregions in a
2572 memcpy are padding and what the TBAA tags of the struct are.
2574 The current metadata format is very simple. ``!tbaa.struct`` metadata
2575 nodes are a list of operands which are in conceptual groups of three.
2576 For each group of three, the first operand gives the byte offset of a
2577 field in bytes, the second gives its size in bytes, and the third gives
2580 .. code-block:: llvm
2582 !4 = metadata !{ i64 0, i64 4, metadata !1, i64 8, i64 4, metadata !2 }
2584 This describes a struct with two fields. The first is at offset 0 bytes
2585 with size 4 bytes, and has tbaa tag !1. The second is at offset 8 bytes
2586 and has size 4 bytes and has tbaa tag !2.
2588 Note that the fields need not be contiguous. In this example, there is a
2589 4 byte gap between the two fields. This gap represents padding which
2590 does not carry useful data and need not be preserved.
2592 '``fpmath``' Metadata
2593 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2595 ``fpmath`` metadata may be attached to any instruction of floating point
2596 type. It can be used to express the maximum acceptable error in the
2597 result of that instruction, in ULPs, thus potentially allowing the
2598 compiler to use a more efficient but less accurate method of computing
2599 it. ULP is defined as follows:
2601 If ``x`` is a real number that lies between two finite consecutive
2602 floating-point numbers ``a`` and ``b``, without being equal to one
2603 of them, then ``ulp(x) = |b - a|``, otherwise ``ulp(x)`` is the
2604 distance between the two non-equal finite floating-point numbers
2605 nearest ``x``. Moreover, ``ulp(NaN)`` is ``NaN``.
2607 The metadata node shall consist of a single positive floating point
2608 number representing the maximum relative error, for example:
2610 .. code-block:: llvm
2612 !0 = metadata !{ float 2.5 } ; maximum acceptable inaccuracy is 2.5 ULPs
2614 '``range``' Metadata
2615 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2617 ``range`` metadata may be attached only to loads of integer types. It
2618 expresses the possible ranges the loaded value is in. The ranges are
2619 represented with a flattened list of integers. The loaded value is known
2620 to be in the union of the ranges defined by each consecutive pair. Each
2621 pair has the following properties:
2623 - The type must match the type loaded by the instruction.
2624 - The pair ``a,b`` represents the range ``[a,b)``.
2625 - Both ``a`` and ``b`` are constants.
2626 - The range is allowed to wrap.
2627 - The range should not represent the full or empty set. That is,
2630 In addition, the pairs must be in signed order of the lower bound and
2631 they must be non-contiguous.
2635 .. code-block:: llvm
2637 %a = load i8* %x, align 1, !range !0 ; Can only be 0 or 1
2638 %b = load i8* %y, align 1, !range !1 ; Can only be 255 (-1), 0 or 1
2639 %c = load i8* %z, align 1, !range !2 ; Can only be 0, 1, 3, 4 or 5
2640 %d = load i8* %z, align 1, !range !3 ; Can only be -2, -1, 3, 4 or 5
2642 !0 = metadata !{ i8 0, i8 2 }
2643 !1 = metadata !{ i8 255, i8 2 }
2644 !2 = metadata !{ i8 0, i8 2, i8 3, i8 6 }
2645 !3 = metadata !{ i8 -2, i8 0, i8 3, i8 6 }
2650 It is sometimes useful to attach information to loop constructs. Currently,
2651 loop metadata is implemented as metadata attached to the branch instruction
2652 in the loop latch block. This type of metadata refer to a metadata node that is
2653 guaranteed to be separate for each loop. The loop identifier metadata is
2654 specified with the name ``llvm.loop``.
2656 The loop identifier metadata is implemented using a metadata that refers to
2657 itself to avoid merging it with any other identifier metadata, e.g.,
2658 during module linkage or function inlining. That is, each loop should refer
2659 to their own identification metadata even if they reside in separate functions.
2660 The following example contains loop identifier metadata for two separate loop
2663 .. code-block:: llvm
2665 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !0 }
2666 !1 = metadata !{ metadata !1 }
2668 The loop identifier metadata can be used to specify additional per-loop
2669 metadata. Any operands after the first operand can be treated as user-defined
2670 metadata. For example the ``llvm.vectorizer.unroll`` metadata is understood
2671 by the loop vectorizer to indicate how many times to unroll the loop:
2673 .. code-block:: llvm
2675 br i1 %exitcond, label %._crit_edge, label %.lr.ph, !llvm.loop !0
2677 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !0, metadata !1 }
2678 !1 = metadata !{ metadata !"llvm.vectorizer.unroll", i32 2 }
2683 Metadata types used to annotate memory accesses with information helpful
2684 for optimizations are prefixed with ``llvm.mem``.
2686 '``llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access``' Metadata
2687 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2689 For a loop to be parallel, in addition to using
2690 the ``llvm.loop`` metadata to mark the loop latch branch instruction,
2691 also all of the memory accessing instructions in the loop body need to be
2692 marked with the ``llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access`` metadata. If there
2693 is at least one memory accessing instruction not marked with the metadata,
2694 the loop must be considered a sequential loop. This causes parallel loops to be
2695 converted to sequential loops due to optimization passes that are unaware of
2696 the parallel semantics and that insert new memory instructions to the loop
2699 Example of a loop that is considered parallel due to its correct use of
2700 both ``llvm.loop`` and ``llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access``
2701 metadata types that refer to the same loop identifier metadata.
2703 .. code-block:: llvm
2707 %0 = load i32* %arrayidx, align 4, !llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access !0
2709 store i32 %0, i32* %arrayidx4, align 4, !llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access !0
2711 br i1 %exitcond, label %for.end, label %for.body, !llvm.loop !0
2715 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !0 }
2717 It is also possible to have nested parallel loops. In that case the
2718 memory accesses refer to a list of loop identifier metadata nodes instead of
2719 the loop identifier metadata node directly:
2721 .. code-block:: llvm
2728 %0 = load i32* %arrayidx, align 4, !llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access !0
2730 store i32 %0, i32* %arrayidx4, align 4, !llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access !0
2732 br i1 %exitcond, label %inner.for.end, label %inner.for.body, !llvm.loop !1
2736 %0 = load i32* %arrayidx, align 4, !llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access !0
2738 store i32 %0, i32* %arrayidx4, align 4, !llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access !0
2740 br i1 %exitcond, label %outer.for.end, label %outer.for.body, !llvm.loop !2
2742 outer.for.end: ; preds = %for.body
2744 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !1, metadata !2 } ; a list of loop identifiers
2745 !1 = metadata !{ metadata !1 } ; an identifier for the inner loop
2746 !2 = metadata !{ metadata !2 } ; an identifier for the outer loop
2748 '``llvm.vectorizer``'
2749 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2751 Metadata prefixed with ``llvm.vectorizer`` is used to control per-loop
2752 vectorization parameters such as vectorization factor and unroll factor.
2754 ``llvm.vectorizer`` metadata should be used in conjunction with ``llvm.loop``
2755 loop identification metadata.
2757 '``llvm.vectorizer.unroll``' Metadata
2758 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2760 This metadata instructs the loop vectorizer to unroll the specified
2761 loop exactly ``N`` times.
2763 The first operand is the string ``llvm.vectorizer.unroll`` and the second
2764 operand is an integer specifying the unroll factor. For example:
2766 .. code-block:: llvm
2768 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !"llvm.vectorizer.unroll", i32 4 }
2770 Note that setting ``llvm.vectorizer.unroll`` to 1 disables unrolling of the
2773 If ``llvm.vectorizer.unroll`` is set to 0 then the amount of unrolling will be
2774 determined automatically.
2776 '``llvm.vectorizer.width``' Metadata
2777 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2779 This metadata sets the target width of the vectorizer to ``N``. Without
2780 this metadata, the vectorizer will choose a width automatically.
2781 Regardless of this metadata, the vectorizer will only vectorize loops if
2782 it believes it is valid to do so.
2784 The first operand is the string ``llvm.vectorizer.width`` and the second
2785 operand is an integer specifying the width. For example:
2787 .. code-block:: llvm
2789 !0 = metadata !{ metadata !"llvm.vectorizer.width", i32 4 }
2791 Note that setting ``llvm.vectorizer.width`` to 1 disables vectorization of the
2794 If ``llvm.vectorizer.width`` is set to 0 then the width will be determined
2797 Module Flags Metadata
2798 =====================
2800 Information about the module as a whole is difficult to convey to LLVM's
2801 subsystems. The LLVM IR isn't sufficient to transmit this information.
2802 The ``llvm.module.flags`` named metadata exists in order to facilitate
2803 this. These flags are in the form of key / value pairs --- much like a
2804 dictionary --- making it easy for any subsystem who cares about a flag to
2807 The ``llvm.module.flags`` metadata contains a list of metadata triplets.
2808 Each triplet has the following form:
2810 - The first element is a *behavior* flag, which specifies the behavior
2811 when two (or more) modules are merged together, and it encounters two
2812 (or more) metadata with the same ID. The supported behaviors are
2814 - The second element is a metadata string that is a unique ID for the
2815 metadata. Each module may only have one flag entry for each unique ID (not
2816 including entries with the **Require** behavior).
2817 - The third element is the value of the flag.
2819 When two (or more) modules are merged together, the resulting
2820 ``llvm.module.flags`` metadata is the union of the modules' flags. That is, for
2821 each unique metadata ID string, there will be exactly one entry in the merged
2822 modules ``llvm.module.flags`` metadata table, and the value for that entry will
2823 be determined by the merge behavior flag, as described below. The only exception
2824 is that entries with the *Require* behavior are always preserved.
2826 The following behaviors are supported:
2837 Emits an error if two values disagree, otherwise the resulting value
2838 is that of the operands.
2842 Emits a warning if two values disagree. The result value will be the
2843 operand for the flag from the first module being linked.
2847 Adds a requirement that another module flag be present and have a
2848 specified value after linking is performed. The value must be a
2849 metadata pair, where the first element of the pair is the ID of the
2850 module flag to be restricted, and the second element of the pair is
2851 the value the module flag should be restricted to. This behavior can
2852 be used to restrict the allowable results (via triggering of an
2853 error) of linking IDs with the **Override** behavior.
2857 Uses the specified value, regardless of the behavior or value of the
2858 other module. If both modules specify **Override**, but the values
2859 differ, an error will be emitted.
2863 Appends the two values, which are required to be metadata nodes.
2867 Appends the two values, which are required to be metadata
2868 nodes. However, duplicate entries in the second list are dropped
2869 during the append operation.
2871 It is an error for a particular unique flag ID to have multiple behaviors,
2872 except in the case of **Require** (which adds restrictions on another metadata
2873 value) or **Override**.
2875 An example of module flags:
2877 .. code-block:: llvm
2879 !0 = metadata !{ i32 1, metadata !"foo", i32 1 }
2880 !1 = metadata !{ i32 4, metadata !"bar", i32 37 }
2881 !2 = metadata !{ i32 2, metadata !"qux", i32 42 }
2882 !3 = metadata !{ i32 3, metadata !"qux",
2884 metadata !"foo", i32 1
2887 !llvm.module.flags = !{ !0, !1, !2, !3 }
2889 - Metadata ``!0`` has the ID ``!"foo"`` and the value '1'. The behavior
2890 if two or more ``!"foo"`` flags are seen is to emit an error if their
2891 values are not equal.
2893 - Metadata ``!1`` has the ID ``!"bar"`` and the value '37'. The
2894 behavior if two or more ``!"bar"`` flags are seen is to use the value
2897 - Metadata ``!2`` has the ID ``!"qux"`` and the value '42'. The
2898 behavior if two or more ``!"qux"`` flags are seen is to emit a
2899 warning if their values are not equal.
2901 - Metadata ``!3`` has the ID ``!"qux"`` and the value:
2905 metadata !{ metadata !"foo", i32 1 }
2907 The behavior is to emit an error if the ``llvm.module.flags`` does not
2908 contain a flag with the ID ``!"foo"`` that has the value '1' after linking is
2911 Objective-C Garbage Collection Module Flags Metadata
2912 ----------------------------------------------------
2914 On the Mach-O platform, Objective-C stores metadata about garbage
2915 collection in a special section called "image info". The metadata
2916 consists of a version number and a bitmask specifying what types of
2917 garbage collection are supported (if any) by the file. If two or more
2918 modules are linked together their garbage collection metadata needs to
2919 be merged rather than appended together.
2921 The Objective-C garbage collection module flags metadata consists of the
2922 following key-value pairs:
2931 * - ``Objective-C Version``
2932 - **[Required]** --- The Objective-C ABI version. Valid values are 1 and 2.
2934 * - ``Objective-C Image Info Version``
2935 - **[Required]** --- The version of the image info section. Currently
2938 * - ``Objective-C Image Info Section``
2939 - **[Required]** --- The section to place the metadata. Valid values are
2940 ``"__OBJC, __image_info, regular"`` for Objective-C ABI version 1, and
2941 ``"__DATA,__objc_imageinfo, regular, no_dead_strip"`` for
2942 Objective-C ABI version 2.
2944 * - ``Objective-C Garbage Collection``
2945 - **[Required]** --- Specifies whether garbage collection is supported or
2946 not. Valid values are 0, for no garbage collection, and 2, for garbage
2947 collection supported.
2949 * - ``Objective-C GC Only``
2950 - **[Optional]** --- Specifies that only garbage collection is supported.
2951 If present, its value must be 6. This flag requires that the
2952 ``Objective-C Garbage Collection`` flag have the value 2.
2954 Some important flag interactions:
2956 - If a module with ``Objective-C Garbage Collection`` set to 0 is
2957 merged with a module with ``Objective-C Garbage Collection`` set to
2958 2, then the resulting module has the
2959 ``Objective-C Garbage Collection`` flag set to 0.
2960 - A module with ``Objective-C Garbage Collection`` set to 0 cannot be
2961 merged with a module with ``Objective-C GC Only`` set to 6.
2963 Automatic Linker Flags Module Flags Metadata
2964 --------------------------------------------
2966 Some targets support embedding flags to the linker inside individual object
2967 files. Typically this is used in conjunction with language extensions which
2968 allow source files to explicitly declare the libraries they depend on, and have
2969 these automatically be transmitted to the linker via object files.
2971 These flags are encoded in the IR using metadata in the module flags section,
2972 using the ``Linker Options`` key. The merge behavior for this flag is required
2973 to be ``AppendUnique``, and the value for the key is expected to be a metadata
2974 node which should be a list of other metadata nodes, each of which should be a
2975 list of metadata strings defining linker options.
2977 For example, the following metadata section specifies two separate sets of
2978 linker options, presumably to link against ``libz`` and the ``Cocoa``
2981 !0 = metadata !{ i32 6, metadata !"Linker Options",
2983 metadata !{ metadata !"-lz" },
2984 metadata !{ metadata !"-framework", metadata !"Cocoa" } } }
2985 !llvm.module.flags = !{ !0 }
2987 The metadata encoding as lists of lists of options, as opposed to a collapsed
2988 list of options, is chosen so that the IR encoding can use multiple option
2989 strings to specify e.g., a single library, while still having that specifier be
2990 preserved as an atomic element that can be recognized by a target specific
2991 assembly writer or object file emitter.
2993 Each individual option is required to be either a valid option for the target's
2994 linker, or an option that is reserved by the target specific assembly writer or
2995 object file emitter. No other aspect of these options is defined by the IR.
2997 .. _intrinsicglobalvariables:
2999 Intrinsic Global Variables
3000 ==========================
3002 LLVM has a number of "magic" global variables that contain data that
3003 affect code generation or other IR semantics. These are documented here.
3004 All globals of this sort should have a section specified as
3005 "``llvm.metadata``". This section and all globals that start with
3006 "``llvm.``" are reserved for use by LLVM.
3010 The '``llvm.used``' Global Variable
3011 -----------------------------------
3013 The ``@llvm.used`` global is an array which has
3014 :ref:`appending linkage <linkage_appending>`. This array contains a list of
3015 pointers to named global variables, functions and aliases which may optionally
3016 have a pointer cast formed of bitcast or getelementptr. For example, a legal
3019 .. code-block:: llvm
3024 @llvm.used = appending global [2 x i8*] [
3026 i8* bitcast (i32* @Y to i8*)
3027 ], section "llvm.metadata"
3029 If a symbol appears in the ``@llvm.used`` list, then the compiler, assembler,
3030 and linker are required to treat the symbol as if there is a reference to the
3031 symbol that it cannot see (which is why they have to be named). For example, if
3032 a variable has internal linkage and no references other than that from the
3033 ``@llvm.used`` list, it cannot be deleted. This is commonly used to represent
3034 references from inline asms and other things the compiler cannot "see", and
3035 corresponds to "``attribute((used))``" in GNU C.
3037 On some targets, the code generator must emit a directive to the
3038 assembler or object file to prevent the assembler and linker from
3039 molesting the symbol.
3041 .. _gv_llvmcompilerused:
3043 The '``llvm.compiler.used``' Global Variable
3044 --------------------------------------------
3046 The ``@llvm.compiler.used`` directive is the same as the ``@llvm.used``
3047 directive, except that it only prevents the compiler from touching the
3048 symbol. On targets that support it, this allows an intelligent linker to
3049 optimize references to the symbol without being impeded as it would be
3052 This is a rare construct that should only be used in rare circumstances,
3053 and should not be exposed to source languages.
3055 .. _gv_llvmglobalctors:
3057 The '``llvm.global_ctors``' Global Variable
3058 -------------------------------------------
3060 .. code-block:: llvm
3062 %0 = type { i32, void ()* }
3063 @llvm.global_ctors = appending global [1 x %0] [%0 { i32 65535, void ()* @ctor }]
3065 The ``@llvm.global_ctors`` array contains a list of constructor
3066 functions and associated priorities. The functions referenced by this
3067 array will be called in ascending order of priority (i.e. lowest first)
3068 when the module is loaded. The order of functions with the same priority
3071 .. _llvmglobaldtors:
3073 The '``llvm.global_dtors``' Global Variable
3074 -------------------------------------------
3076 .. code-block:: llvm
3078 %0 = type { i32, void ()* }
3079 @llvm.global_dtors = appending global [1 x %0] [%0 { i32 65535, void ()* @dtor }]
3081 The ``@llvm.global_dtors`` array contains a list of destructor functions
3082 and associated priorities. The functions referenced by this array will
3083 be called in descending order of priority (i.e. highest first) when the
3084 module is loaded. The order of functions with the same priority is not
3087 Instruction Reference
3088 =====================
3090 The LLVM instruction set consists of several different classifications
3091 of instructions: :ref:`terminator instructions <terminators>`, :ref:`binary
3092 instructions <binaryops>`, :ref:`bitwise binary
3093 instructions <bitwiseops>`, :ref:`memory instructions <memoryops>`, and
3094 :ref:`other instructions <otherops>`.
3098 Terminator Instructions
3099 -----------------------
3101 As mentioned :ref:`previously <functionstructure>`, every basic block in a
3102 program ends with a "Terminator" instruction, which indicates which
3103 block should be executed after the current block is finished. These
3104 terminator instructions typically yield a '``void``' value: they produce
3105 control flow, not values (the one exception being the
3106 ':ref:`invoke <i_invoke>`' instruction).
3108 The terminator instructions are: ':ref:`ret <i_ret>`',
3109 ':ref:`br <i_br>`', ':ref:`switch <i_switch>`',
3110 ':ref:`indirectbr <i_indirectbr>`', ':ref:`invoke <i_invoke>`',
3111 ':ref:`resume <i_resume>`', and ':ref:`unreachable <i_unreachable>`'.
3115 '``ret``' Instruction
3116 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3123 ret <type> <value> ; Return a value from a non-void function
3124 ret void ; Return from void function
3129 The '``ret``' instruction is used to return control flow (and optionally
3130 a value) from a function back to the caller.
3132 There are two forms of the '``ret``' instruction: one that returns a
3133 value and then causes control flow, and one that just causes control
3139 The '``ret``' instruction optionally accepts a single argument, the
3140 return value. The type of the return value must be a ':ref:`first
3141 class <t_firstclass>`' type.
3143 A function is not :ref:`well formed <wellformed>` if it it has a non-void
3144 return type and contains a '``ret``' instruction with no return value or
3145 a return value with a type that does not match its type, or if it has a
3146 void return type and contains a '``ret``' instruction with a return
3152 When the '``ret``' instruction is executed, control flow returns back to
3153 the calling function's context. If the caller is a
3154 ":ref:`call <i_call>`" instruction, execution continues at the
3155 instruction after the call. If the caller was an
3156 ":ref:`invoke <i_invoke>`" instruction, execution continues at the
3157 beginning of the "normal" destination block. If the instruction returns
3158 a value, that value shall set the call or invoke instruction's return
3164 .. code-block:: llvm
3166 ret i32 5 ; Return an integer value of 5
3167 ret void ; Return from a void function
3168 ret { i32, i8 } { i32 4, i8 2 } ; Return a struct of values 4 and 2
3172 '``br``' Instruction
3173 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3180 br i1 <cond>, label <iftrue>, label <iffalse>
3181 br label <dest> ; Unconditional branch
3186 The '``br``' instruction is used to cause control flow to transfer to a
3187 different basic block in the current function. There are two forms of
3188 this instruction, corresponding to a conditional branch and an
3189 unconditional branch.
3194 The conditional branch form of the '``br``' instruction takes a single
3195 '``i1``' value and two '``label``' values. The unconditional form of the
3196 '``br``' instruction takes a single '``label``' value as a target.
3201 Upon execution of a conditional '``br``' instruction, the '``i1``'
3202 argument is evaluated. If the value is ``true``, control flows to the
3203 '``iftrue``' ``label`` argument. If "cond" is ``false``, control flows
3204 to the '``iffalse``' ``label`` argument.
3209 .. code-block:: llvm
3212 %cond = icmp eq i32 %a, %b
3213 br i1 %cond, label %IfEqual, label %IfUnequal
3221 '``switch``' Instruction
3222 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3229 switch <intty> <value>, label <defaultdest> [ <intty> <val>, label <dest> ... ]
3234 The '``switch``' instruction is used to transfer control flow to one of
3235 several different places. It is a generalization of the '``br``'
3236 instruction, allowing a branch to occur to one of many possible
3242 The '``switch``' instruction uses three parameters: an integer
3243 comparison value '``value``', a default '``label``' destination, and an
3244 array of pairs of comparison value constants and '``label``'s. The table
3245 is not allowed to contain duplicate constant entries.
3250 The ``switch`` instruction specifies a table of values and destinations.
3251 When the '``switch``' instruction is executed, this table is searched
3252 for the given value. If the value is found, control flow is transferred
3253 to the corresponding destination; otherwise, control flow is transferred
3254 to the default destination.
3259 Depending on properties of the target machine and the particular
3260 ``switch`` instruction, this instruction may be code generated in
3261 different ways. For example, it could be generated as a series of
3262 chained conditional branches or with a lookup table.
3267 .. code-block:: llvm
3269 ; Emulate a conditional br instruction
3270 %Val = zext i1 %value to i32
3271 switch i32 %Val, label %truedest [ i32 0, label %falsedest ]
3273 ; Emulate an unconditional br instruction
3274 switch i32 0, label %dest [ ]
3276 ; Implement a jump table:
3277 switch i32 %val, label %otherwise [ i32 0, label %onzero
3279 i32 2, label %ontwo ]
3283 '``indirectbr``' Instruction
3284 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3291 indirectbr <somety>* <address>, [ label <dest1>, label <dest2>, ... ]
3296 The '``indirectbr``' instruction implements an indirect branch to a
3297 label within the current function, whose address is specified by
3298 "``address``". Address must be derived from a
3299 :ref:`blockaddress <blockaddress>` constant.
3304 The '``address``' argument is the address of the label to jump to. The
3305 rest of the arguments indicate the full set of possible destinations
3306 that the address may point to. Blocks are allowed to occur multiple
3307 times in the destination list, though this isn't particularly useful.
3309 This destination list is required so that dataflow analysis has an
3310 accurate understanding of the CFG.
3315 Control transfers to the block specified in the address argument. All
3316 possible destination blocks must be listed in the label list, otherwise
3317 this instruction has undefined behavior. This implies that jumps to
3318 labels defined in other functions have undefined behavior as well.
3323 This is typically implemented with a jump through a register.
3328 .. code-block:: llvm
3330 indirectbr i8* %Addr, [ label %bb1, label %bb2, label %bb3 ]
3334 '``invoke``' Instruction
3335 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3342 <result> = invoke [cconv] [ret attrs] <ptr to function ty> <function ptr val>(<function args>) [fn attrs]
3343 to label <normal label> unwind label <exception label>
3348 The '``invoke``' instruction causes control to transfer to a specified
3349 function, with the possibility of control flow transfer to either the
3350 '``normal``' label or the '``exception``' label. If the callee function
3351 returns with the "``ret``" instruction, control flow will return to the
3352 "normal" label. If the callee (or any indirect callees) returns via the
3353 ":ref:`resume <i_resume>`" instruction or other exception handling
3354 mechanism, control is interrupted and continued at the dynamically
3355 nearest "exception" label.
3357 The '``exception``' label is a `landing
3358 pad <ExceptionHandling.html#overview>`_ for the exception. As such,
3359 '``exception``' label is required to have the
3360 ":ref:`landingpad <i_landingpad>`" instruction, which contains the
3361 information about the behavior of the program after unwinding happens,
3362 as its first non-PHI instruction. The restrictions on the
3363 "``landingpad``" instruction's tightly couples it to the "``invoke``"
3364 instruction, so that the important information contained within the
3365 "``landingpad``" instruction can't be lost through normal code motion.
3370 This instruction requires several arguments:
3372 #. The optional "cconv" marker indicates which :ref:`calling
3373 convention <callingconv>` the call should use. If none is
3374 specified, the call defaults to using C calling conventions.
3375 #. The optional :ref:`Parameter Attributes <paramattrs>` list for return
3376 values. Only '``zeroext``', '``signext``', and '``inreg``' attributes
3378 #. '``ptr to function ty``': shall be the signature of the pointer to
3379 function value being invoked. In most cases, this is a direct
3380 function invocation, but indirect ``invoke``'s are just as possible,
3381 branching off an arbitrary pointer to function value.
3382 #. '``function ptr val``': An LLVM value containing a pointer to a
3383 function to be invoked.
3384 #. '``function args``': argument list whose types match the function
3385 signature argument types and parameter attributes. All arguments must
3386 be of :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` type. If the function signature
3387 indicates the function accepts a variable number of arguments, the
3388 extra arguments can be specified.
3389 #. '``normal label``': the label reached when the called function
3390 executes a '``ret``' instruction.
3391 #. '``exception label``': the label reached when a callee returns via
3392 the :ref:`resume <i_resume>` instruction or other exception handling
3394 #. The optional :ref:`function attributes <fnattrs>` list. Only
3395 '``noreturn``', '``nounwind``', '``readonly``' and '``readnone``'
3396 attributes are valid here.
3401 This instruction is designed to operate as a standard '``call``'
3402 instruction in most regards. The primary difference is that it
3403 establishes an association with a label, which is used by the runtime
3404 library to unwind the stack.
3406 This instruction is used in languages with destructors to ensure that
3407 proper cleanup is performed in the case of either a ``longjmp`` or a
3408 thrown exception. Additionally, this is important for implementation of
3409 '``catch``' clauses in high-level languages that support them.
3411 For the purposes of the SSA form, the definition of the value returned
3412 by the '``invoke``' instruction is deemed to occur on the edge from the
3413 current block to the "normal" label. If the callee unwinds then no
3414 return value is available.
3419 .. code-block:: llvm
3421 %retval = invoke i32 @Test(i32 15) to label %Continue
3422 unwind label %TestCleanup ; {i32}:retval set
3423 %retval = invoke coldcc i32 %Testfnptr(i32 15) to label %Continue
3424 unwind label %TestCleanup ; {i32}:retval set
3428 '``resume``' Instruction
3429 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3436 resume <type> <value>
3441 The '``resume``' instruction is a terminator instruction that has no
3447 The '``resume``' instruction requires one argument, which must have the
3448 same type as the result of any '``landingpad``' instruction in the same
3454 The '``resume``' instruction resumes propagation of an existing
3455 (in-flight) exception whose unwinding was interrupted with a
3456 :ref:`landingpad <i_landingpad>` instruction.
3461 .. code-block:: llvm
3463 resume { i8*, i32 } %exn
3467 '``unreachable``' Instruction
3468 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3480 The '``unreachable``' instruction has no defined semantics. This
3481 instruction is used to inform the optimizer that a particular portion of
3482 the code is not reachable. This can be used to indicate that the code
3483 after a no-return function cannot be reached, and other facts.
3488 The '``unreachable``' instruction has no defined semantics.
3495 Binary operators are used to do most of the computation in a program.
3496 They require two operands of the same type, execute an operation on
3497 them, and produce a single value. The operands might represent multiple
3498 data, as is the case with the :ref:`vector <t_vector>` data type. The
3499 result value has the same type as its operands.
3501 There are several different binary operators:
3505 '``add``' Instruction
3506 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3513 <result> = add <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3514 <result> = add nuw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3515 <result> = add nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3516 <result> = add nuw nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3521 The '``add``' instruction returns the sum of its two operands.
3526 The two arguments to the '``add``' instruction must be
3527 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3528 arguments must have identical types.
3533 The value produced is the integer sum of the two operands.
3535 If the sum has unsigned overflow, the result returned is the
3536 mathematical result modulo 2\ :sup:`n`\ , where n is the bit width of
3539 Because LLVM integers use a two's complement representation, this
3540 instruction is appropriate for both signed and unsigned integers.
3542 ``nuw`` and ``nsw`` stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap",
3543 respectively. If the ``nuw`` and/or ``nsw`` keywords are present, the
3544 result value of the ``add`` is a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if
3545 unsigned and/or signed overflow, respectively, occurs.
3550 .. code-block:: llvm
3552 <result> = add i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 + %var
3556 '``fadd``' Instruction
3557 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3564 <result> = fadd [fast-math flags]* <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3569 The '``fadd``' instruction returns the sum of its two operands.
3574 The two arguments to the '``fadd``' instruction must be :ref:`floating
3575 point <t_floating>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of floating point values.
3576 Both arguments must have identical types.
3581 The value produced is the floating point sum of the two operands. This
3582 instruction can also take any number of :ref:`fast-math flags <fastmath>`,
3583 which are optimization hints to enable otherwise unsafe floating point
3589 .. code-block:: llvm
3591 <result> = fadd float 4.0, %var ; yields {float}:result = 4.0 + %var
3593 '``sub``' Instruction
3594 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3601 <result> = sub <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3602 <result> = sub nuw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3603 <result> = sub nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3604 <result> = sub nuw nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3609 The '``sub``' instruction returns the difference of its two operands.
3611 Note that the '``sub``' instruction is used to represent the '``neg``'
3612 instruction present in most other intermediate representations.
3617 The two arguments to the '``sub``' instruction must be
3618 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3619 arguments must have identical types.
3624 The value produced is the integer difference of the two operands.
3626 If the difference has unsigned overflow, the result returned is the
3627 mathematical result modulo 2\ :sup:`n`\ , where n is the bit width of
3630 Because LLVM integers use a two's complement representation, this
3631 instruction is appropriate for both signed and unsigned integers.
3633 ``nuw`` and ``nsw`` stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap",
3634 respectively. If the ``nuw`` and/or ``nsw`` keywords are present, the
3635 result value of the ``sub`` is a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if
3636 unsigned and/or signed overflow, respectively, occurs.
3641 .. code-block:: llvm
3643 <result> = sub i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 - %var
3644 <result> = sub i32 0, %val ; yields {i32}:result = -%var
3648 '``fsub``' Instruction
3649 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3656 <result> = fsub [fast-math flags]* <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3661 The '``fsub``' instruction returns the difference of its two operands.
3663 Note that the '``fsub``' instruction is used to represent the '``fneg``'
3664 instruction present in most other intermediate representations.
3669 The two arguments to the '``fsub``' instruction must be :ref:`floating
3670 point <t_floating>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of floating point values.
3671 Both arguments must have identical types.
3676 The value produced is the floating point difference of the two operands.
3677 This instruction can also take any number of :ref:`fast-math
3678 flags <fastmath>`, which are optimization hints to enable otherwise
3679 unsafe floating point optimizations:
3684 .. code-block:: llvm
3686 <result> = fsub float 4.0, %var ; yields {float}:result = 4.0 - %var
3687 <result> = fsub float -0.0, %val ; yields {float}:result = -%var
3689 '``mul``' Instruction
3690 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3697 <result> = mul <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3698 <result> = mul nuw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3699 <result> = mul nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3700 <result> = mul nuw nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3705 The '``mul``' instruction returns the product of its two operands.
3710 The two arguments to the '``mul``' instruction must be
3711 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3712 arguments must have identical types.
3717 The value produced is the integer product of the two operands.
3719 If the result of the multiplication has unsigned overflow, the result
3720 returned is the mathematical result modulo 2\ :sup:`n`\ , where n is the
3721 bit width of the result.
3723 Because LLVM integers use a two's complement representation, and the
3724 result is the same width as the operands, this instruction returns the
3725 correct result for both signed and unsigned integers. If a full product
3726 (e.g. ``i32`` * ``i32`` -> ``i64``) is needed, the operands should be
3727 sign-extended or zero-extended as appropriate to the width of the full
3730 ``nuw`` and ``nsw`` stand for "No Unsigned Wrap" and "No Signed Wrap",
3731 respectively. If the ``nuw`` and/or ``nsw`` keywords are present, the
3732 result value of the ``mul`` is a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if
3733 unsigned and/or signed overflow, respectively, occurs.
3738 .. code-block:: llvm
3740 <result> = mul i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 * %var
3744 '``fmul``' Instruction
3745 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3752 <result> = fmul [fast-math flags]* <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3757 The '``fmul``' instruction returns the product of its two operands.
3762 The two arguments to the '``fmul``' instruction must be :ref:`floating
3763 point <t_floating>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of floating point values.
3764 Both arguments must have identical types.
3769 The value produced is the floating point product of the two operands.
3770 This instruction can also take any number of :ref:`fast-math
3771 flags <fastmath>`, which are optimization hints to enable otherwise
3772 unsafe floating point optimizations:
3777 .. code-block:: llvm
3779 <result> = fmul float 4.0, %var ; yields {float}:result = 4.0 * %var
3781 '``udiv``' Instruction
3782 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3789 <result> = udiv <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3790 <result> = udiv exact <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3795 The '``udiv``' instruction returns the quotient of its two operands.
3800 The two arguments to the '``udiv``' instruction must be
3801 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3802 arguments must have identical types.
3807 The value produced is the unsigned integer quotient of the two operands.
3809 Note that unsigned integer division and signed integer division are
3810 distinct operations; for signed integer division, use '``sdiv``'.
3812 Division by zero leads to undefined behavior.
3814 If the ``exact`` keyword is present, the result value of the ``udiv`` is
3815 a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if %op1 is not a multiple of %op2 (as
3816 such, "((a udiv exact b) mul b) == a").
3821 .. code-block:: llvm
3823 <result> = udiv i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 / %var
3825 '``sdiv``' Instruction
3826 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3833 <result> = sdiv <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3834 <result> = sdiv exact <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3839 The '``sdiv``' instruction returns the quotient of its two operands.
3844 The two arguments to the '``sdiv``' instruction must be
3845 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3846 arguments must have identical types.
3851 The value produced is the signed integer quotient of the two operands
3852 rounded towards zero.
3854 Note that signed integer division and unsigned integer division are
3855 distinct operations; for unsigned integer division, use '``udiv``'.
3857 Division by zero leads to undefined behavior. Overflow also leads to
3858 undefined behavior; this is a rare case, but can occur, for example, by
3859 doing a 32-bit division of -2147483648 by -1.
3861 If the ``exact`` keyword is present, the result value of the ``sdiv`` is
3862 a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if the result would be rounded.
3867 .. code-block:: llvm
3869 <result> = sdiv i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 / %var
3873 '``fdiv``' Instruction
3874 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3881 <result> = fdiv [fast-math flags]* <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3886 The '``fdiv``' instruction returns the quotient of its two operands.
3891 The two arguments to the '``fdiv``' instruction must be :ref:`floating
3892 point <t_floating>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of floating point values.
3893 Both arguments must have identical types.
3898 The value produced is the floating point quotient of the two operands.
3899 This instruction can also take any number of :ref:`fast-math
3900 flags <fastmath>`, which are optimization hints to enable otherwise
3901 unsafe floating point optimizations:
3906 .. code-block:: llvm
3908 <result> = fdiv float 4.0, %var ; yields {float}:result = 4.0 / %var
3910 '``urem``' Instruction
3911 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3918 <result> = urem <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3923 The '``urem``' instruction returns the remainder from the unsigned
3924 division of its two arguments.
3929 The two arguments to the '``urem``' instruction must be
3930 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3931 arguments must have identical types.
3936 This instruction returns the unsigned integer *remainder* of a division.
3937 This instruction always performs an unsigned division to get the
3940 Note that unsigned integer remainder and signed integer remainder are
3941 distinct operations; for signed integer remainder, use '``srem``'.
3943 Taking the remainder of a division by zero leads to undefined behavior.
3948 .. code-block:: llvm
3950 <result> = urem i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 % %var
3952 '``srem``' Instruction
3953 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3960 <result> = srem <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
3965 The '``srem``' instruction returns the remainder from the signed
3966 division of its two operands. This instruction can also take
3967 :ref:`vector <t_vector>` versions of the values in which case the elements
3973 The two arguments to the '``srem``' instruction must be
3974 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
3975 arguments must have identical types.
3980 This instruction returns the *remainder* of a division (where the result
3981 is either zero or has the same sign as the dividend, ``op1``), not the
3982 *modulo* operator (where the result is either zero or has the same sign
3983 as the divisor, ``op2``) of a value. For more information about the
3984 difference, see `The Math
3985 Forum <http://mathforum.org/dr.math/problems/anne.4.28.99.html>`_. For a
3986 table of how this is implemented in various languages, please see
3988 operation <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modulo_operation>`_.
3990 Note that signed integer remainder and unsigned integer remainder are
3991 distinct operations; for unsigned integer remainder, use '``urem``'.
3993 Taking the remainder of a division by zero leads to undefined behavior.
3994 Overflow also leads to undefined behavior; this is a rare case, but can
3995 occur, for example, by taking the remainder of a 32-bit division of
3996 -2147483648 by -1. (The remainder doesn't actually overflow, but this
3997 rule lets srem be implemented using instructions that return both the
3998 result of the division and the remainder.)
4003 .. code-block:: llvm
4005 <result> = srem i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 % %var
4009 '``frem``' Instruction
4010 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4017 <result> = frem [fast-math flags]* <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4022 The '``frem``' instruction returns the remainder from the division of
4028 The two arguments to the '``frem``' instruction must be :ref:`floating
4029 point <t_floating>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of floating point values.
4030 Both arguments must have identical types.
4035 This instruction returns the *remainder* of a division. The remainder
4036 has the same sign as the dividend. This instruction can also take any
4037 number of :ref:`fast-math flags <fastmath>`, which are optimization hints
4038 to enable otherwise unsafe floating point optimizations:
4043 .. code-block:: llvm
4045 <result> = frem float 4.0, %var ; yields {float}:result = 4.0 % %var
4049 Bitwise Binary Operations
4050 -------------------------
4052 Bitwise binary operators are used to do various forms of bit-twiddling
4053 in a program. They are generally very efficient instructions and can
4054 commonly be strength reduced from other instructions. They require two
4055 operands of the same type, execute an operation on them, and produce a
4056 single value. The resulting value is the same type as its operands.
4058 '``shl``' Instruction
4059 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4066 <result> = shl <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4067 <result> = shl nuw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4068 <result> = shl nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4069 <result> = shl nuw nsw <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4074 The '``shl``' instruction returns the first operand shifted to the left
4075 a specified number of bits.
4080 Both arguments to the '``shl``' instruction must be the same
4081 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer type.
4082 '``op2``' is treated as an unsigned value.
4087 The value produced is ``op1`` \* 2\ :sup:`op2` mod 2\ :sup:`n`,
4088 where ``n`` is the width of the result. If ``op2`` is (statically or
4089 dynamically) negative or equal to or larger than the number of bits in
4090 ``op1``, the result is undefined. If the arguments are vectors, each
4091 vector element of ``op1`` is shifted by the corresponding shift amount
4094 If the ``nuw`` keyword is present, then the shift produces a :ref:`poison
4095 value <poisonvalues>` if it shifts out any non-zero bits. If the
4096 ``nsw`` keyword is present, then the shift produces a :ref:`poison
4097 value <poisonvalues>` if it shifts out any bits that disagree with the
4098 resultant sign bit. As such, NUW/NSW have the same semantics as they
4099 would if the shift were expressed as a mul instruction with the same
4100 nsw/nuw bits in (mul %op1, (shl 1, %op2)).
4105 .. code-block:: llvm
4107 <result> = shl i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}: 4 << %var
4108 <result> = shl i32 4, 2 ; yields {i32}: 16
4109 <result> = shl i32 1, 10 ; yields {i32}: 1024
4110 <result> = shl i32 1, 32 ; undefined
4111 <result> = shl <2 x i32> < i32 1, i32 1>, < i32 1, i32 2> ; yields: result=<2 x i32> < i32 2, i32 4>
4113 '``lshr``' Instruction
4114 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4121 <result> = lshr <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4122 <result> = lshr exact <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4127 The '``lshr``' instruction (logical shift right) returns the first
4128 operand shifted to the right a specified number of bits with zero fill.
4133 Both arguments to the '``lshr``' instruction must be the same
4134 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer type.
4135 '``op2``' is treated as an unsigned value.
4140 This instruction always performs a logical shift right operation. The
4141 most significant bits of the result will be filled with zero bits after
4142 the shift. If ``op2`` is (statically or dynamically) equal to or larger
4143 than the number of bits in ``op1``, the result is undefined. If the
4144 arguments are vectors, each vector element of ``op1`` is shifted by the
4145 corresponding shift amount in ``op2``.
4147 If the ``exact`` keyword is present, the result value of the ``lshr`` is
4148 a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if any of the bits shifted out are
4154 .. code-block:: llvm
4156 <result> = lshr i32 4, 1 ; yields {i32}:result = 2
4157 <result> = lshr i32 4, 2 ; yields {i32}:result = 1
4158 <result> = lshr i8 4, 3 ; yields {i8}:result = 0
4159 <result> = lshr i8 -2, 1 ; yields {i8}:result = 0x7F
4160 <result> = lshr i32 1, 32 ; undefined
4161 <result> = lshr <2 x i32> < i32 -2, i32 4>, < i32 1, i32 2> ; yields: result=<2 x i32> < i32 0x7FFFFFFF, i32 1>
4163 '``ashr``' Instruction
4164 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4171 <result> = ashr <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4172 <result> = ashr exact <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4177 The '``ashr``' instruction (arithmetic shift right) returns the first
4178 operand shifted to the right a specified number of bits with sign
4184 Both arguments to the '``ashr``' instruction must be the same
4185 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer type.
4186 '``op2``' is treated as an unsigned value.
4191 This instruction always performs an arithmetic shift right operation,
4192 The most significant bits of the result will be filled with the sign bit
4193 of ``op1``. If ``op2`` is (statically or dynamically) equal to or larger
4194 than the number of bits in ``op1``, the result is undefined. If the
4195 arguments are vectors, each vector element of ``op1`` is shifted by the
4196 corresponding shift amount in ``op2``.
4198 If the ``exact`` keyword is present, the result value of the ``ashr`` is
4199 a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if any of the bits shifted out are
4205 .. code-block:: llvm
4207 <result> = ashr i32 4, 1 ; yields {i32}:result = 2
4208 <result> = ashr i32 4, 2 ; yields {i32}:result = 1
4209 <result> = ashr i8 4, 3 ; yields {i8}:result = 0
4210 <result> = ashr i8 -2, 1 ; yields {i8}:result = -1
4211 <result> = ashr i32 1, 32 ; undefined
4212 <result> = ashr <2 x i32> < i32 -2, i32 4>, < i32 1, i32 3> ; yields: result=<2 x i32> < i32 -1, i32 0>
4214 '``and``' Instruction
4215 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4222 <result> = and <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4227 The '``and``' instruction returns the bitwise logical and of its two
4233 The two arguments to the '``and``' instruction must be
4234 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
4235 arguments must have identical types.
4240 The truth table used for the '``and``' instruction is:
4257 .. code-block:: llvm
4259 <result> = and i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 & %var
4260 <result> = and i32 15, 40 ; yields {i32}:result = 8
4261 <result> = and i32 4, 8 ; yields {i32}:result = 0
4263 '``or``' Instruction
4264 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4271 <result> = or <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4276 The '``or``' instruction returns the bitwise logical inclusive or of its
4282 The two arguments to the '``or``' instruction must be
4283 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
4284 arguments must have identical types.
4289 The truth table used for the '``or``' instruction is:
4308 <result> = or i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 | %var
4309 <result> = or i32 15, 40 ; yields {i32}:result = 47
4310 <result> = or i32 4, 8 ; yields {i32}:result = 12
4312 '``xor``' Instruction
4313 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4320 <result> = xor <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {ty}:result
4325 The '``xor``' instruction returns the bitwise logical exclusive or of
4326 its two operands. The ``xor`` is used to implement the "one's
4327 complement" operation, which is the "~" operator in C.
4332 The two arguments to the '``xor``' instruction must be
4333 :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of integer values. Both
4334 arguments must have identical types.
4339 The truth table used for the '``xor``' instruction is:
4356 .. code-block:: llvm
4358 <result> = xor i32 4, %var ; yields {i32}:result = 4 ^ %var
4359 <result> = xor i32 15, 40 ; yields {i32}:result = 39
4360 <result> = xor i32 4, 8 ; yields {i32}:result = 12
4361 <result> = xor i32 %V, -1 ; yields {i32}:result = ~%V
4366 LLVM supports several instructions to represent vector operations in a
4367 target-independent manner. These instructions cover the element-access
4368 and vector-specific operations needed to process vectors effectively.
4369 While LLVM does directly support these vector operations, many
4370 sophisticated algorithms will want to use target-specific intrinsics to
4371 take full advantage of a specific target.
4373 .. _i_extractelement:
4375 '``extractelement``' Instruction
4376 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4383 <result> = extractelement <n x <ty>> <val>, i32 <idx> ; yields <ty>
4388 The '``extractelement``' instruction extracts a single scalar element
4389 from a vector at a specified index.
4394 The first operand of an '``extractelement``' instruction is a value of
4395 :ref:`vector <t_vector>` type. The second operand is an index indicating
4396 the position from which to extract the element. The index may be a
4402 The result is a scalar of the same type as the element type of ``val``.
4403 Its value is the value at position ``idx`` of ``val``. If ``idx``
4404 exceeds the length of ``val``, the results are undefined.
4409 .. code-block:: llvm
4411 <result> = extractelement <4 x i32> %vec, i32 0 ; yields i32
4413 .. _i_insertelement:
4415 '``insertelement``' Instruction
4416 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4423 <result> = insertelement <n x <ty>> <val>, <ty> <elt>, i32 <idx> ; yields <n x <ty>>
4428 The '``insertelement``' instruction inserts a scalar element into a
4429 vector at a specified index.
4434 The first operand of an '``insertelement``' instruction is a value of
4435 :ref:`vector <t_vector>` type. The second operand is a scalar value whose
4436 type must equal the element type of the first operand. The third operand
4437 is an index indicating the position at which to insert the value. The
4438 index may be a variable.
4443 The result is a vector of the same type as ``val``. Its element values
4444 are those of ``val`` except at position ``idx``, where it gets the value
4445 ``elt``. If ``idx`` exceeds the length of ``val``, the results are
4451 .. code-block:: llvm
4453 <result> = insertelement <4 x i32> %vec, i32 1, i32 0 ; yields <4 x i32>
4455 .. _i_shufflevector:
4457 '``shufflevector``' Instruction
4458 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4465 <result> = shufflevector <n x <ty>> <v1>, <n x <ty>> <v2>, <m x i32> <mask> ; yields <m x <ty>>
4470 The '``shufflevector``' instruction constructs a permutation of elements
4471 from two input vectors, returning a vector with the same element type as
4472 the input and length that is the same as the shuffle mask.
4477 The first two operands of a '``shufflevector``' instruction are vectors
4478 with the same type. The third argument is a shuffle mask whose element
4479 type is always 'i32'. The result of the instruction is a vector whose
4480 length is the same as the shuffle mask and whose element type is the
4481 same as the element type of the first two operands.
4483 The shuffle mask operand is required to be a constant vector with either
4484 constant integer or undef values.
4489 The elements of the two input vectors are numbered from left to right
4490 across both of the vectors. The shuffle mask operand specifies, for each
4491 element of the result vector, which element of the two input vectors the
4492 result element gets. The element selector may be undef (meaning "don't
4493 care") and the second operand may be undef if performing a shuffle from
4499 .. code-block:: llvm
4501 <result> = shufflevector <4 x i32> %v1, <4 x i32> %v2,
4502 <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 4, i32 1, i32 5> ; yields <4 x i32>
4503 <result> = shufflevector <4 x i32> %v1, <4 x i32> undef,
4504 <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 1, i32 2, i32 3> ; yields <4 x i32> - Identity shuffle.
4505 <result> = shufflevector <8 x i32> %v1, <8 x i32> undef,
4506 <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 1, i32 2, i32 3> ; yields <4 x i32>
4507 <result> = shufflevector <4 x i32> %v1, <4 x i32> %v2,
4508 <8 x i32> <i32 0, i32 1, i32 2, i32 3, i32 4, i32 5, i32 6, i32 7 > ; yields <8 x i32>
4510 Aggregate Operations
4511 --------------------
4513 LLVM supports several instructions for working with
4514 :ref:`aggregate <t_aggregate>` values.
4518 '``extractvalue``' Instruction
4519 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4526 <result> = extractvalue <aggregate type> <val>, <idx>{, <idx>}*
4531 The '``extractvalue``' instruction extracts the value of a member field
4532 from an :ref:`aggregate <t_aggregate>` value.
4537 The first operand of an '``extractvalue``' instruction is a value of
4538 :ref:`struct <t_struct>` or :ref:`array <t_array>` type. The operands are
4539 constant indices to specify which value to extract in a similar manner
4540 as indices in a '``getelementptr``' instruction.
4542 The major differences to ``getelementptr`` indexing are:
4544 - Since the value being indexed is not a pointer, the first index is
4545 omitted and assumed to be zero.
4546 - At least one index must be specified.
4547 - Not only struct indices but also array indices must be in bounds.
4552 The result is the value at the position in the aggregate specified by
4558 .. code-block:: llvm
4560 <result> = extractvalue {i32, float} %agg, 0 ; yields i32
4564 '``insertvalue``' Instruction
4565 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4572 <result> = insertvalue <aggregate type> <val>, <ty> <elt>, <idx>{, <idx>}* ; yields <aggregate type>
4577 The '``insertvalue``' instruction inserts a value into a member field in
4578 an :ref:`aggregate <t_aggregate>` value.
4583 The first operand of an '``insertvalue``' instruction is a value of
4584 :ref:`struct <t_struct>` or :ref:`array <t_array>` type. The second operand is
4585 a first-class value to insert. The following operands are constant
4586 indices indicating the position at which to insert the value in a
4587 similar manner as indices in a '``extractvalue``' instruction. The value
4588 to insert must have the same type as the value identified by the
4594 The result is an aggregate of the same type as ``val``. Its value is
4595 that of ``val`` except that the value at the position specified by the
4596 indices is that of ``elt``.
4601 .. code-block:: llvm
4603 %agg1 = insertvalue {i32, float} undef, i32 1, 0 ; yields {i32 1, float undef}
4604 %agg2 = insertvalue {i32, float} %agg1, float %val, 1 ; yields {i32 1, float %val}
4605 %agg3 = insertvalue {i32, {float}} %agg1, float %val, 1, 0 ; yields {i32 1, float %val}
4609 Memory Access and Addressing Operations
4610 ---------------------------------------
4612 A key design point of an SSA-based representation is how it represents
4613 memory. In LLVM, no memory locations are in SSA form, which makes things
4614 very simple. This section describes how to read, write, and allocate
4619 '``alloca``' Instruction
4620 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4627 <result> = alloca <type>[, <ty> <NumElements>][, align <alignment>] ; yields {type*}:result
4632 The '``alloca``' instruction allocates memory on the stack frame of the
4633 currently executing function, to be automatically released when this
4634 function returns to its caller. The object is always allocated in the
4635 generic address space (address space zero).
4640 The '``alloca``' instruction allocates ``sizeof(<type>)*NumElements``
4641 bytes of memory on the runtime stack, returning a pointer of the
4642 appropriate type to the program. If "NumElements" is specified, it is
4643 the number of elements allocated, otherwise "NumElements" is defaulted
4644 to be one. If a constant alignment is specified, the value result of the
4645 allocation is guaranteed to be aligned to at least that boundary. If not
4646 specified, or if zero, the target can choose to align the allocation on
4647 any convenient boundary compatible with the type.
4649 '``type``' may be any sized type.
4654 Memory is allocated; a pointer is returned. The operation is undefined
4655 if there is insufficient stack space for the allocation. '``alloca``'d
4656 memory is automatically released when the function returns. The
4657 '``alloca``' instruction is commonly used to represent automatic
4658 variables that must have an address available. When the function returns
4659 (either with the ``ret`` or ``resume`` instructions), the memory is
4660 reclaimed. Allocating zero bytes is legal, but the result is undefined.
4661 The order in which memory is allocated (ie., which way the stack grows)
4667 .. code-block:: llvm
4669 %ptr = alloca i32 ; yields {i32*}:ptr
4670 %ptr = alloca i32, i32 4 ; yields {i32*}:ptr
4671 %ptr = alloca i32, i32 4, align 1024 ; yields {i32*}:ptr
4672 %ptr = alloca i32, align 1024 ; yields {i32*}:ptr
4676 '``load``' Instruction
4677 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4684 <result> = load [volatile] <ty>* <pointer>[, align <alignment>][, !nontemporal !<index>][, !invariant.load !<index>]
4685 <result> = load atomic [volatile] <ty>* <pointer> [singlethread] <ordering>, align <alignment>
4686 !<index> = !{ i32 1 }
4691 The '``load``' instruction is used to read from memory.
4696 The argument to the ``load`` instruction specifies the memory address
4697 from which to load. The pointer must point to a :ref:`first
4698 class <t_firstclass>` type. If the ``load`` is marked as ``volatile``,
4699 then the optimizer is not allowed to modify the number or order of
4700 execution of this ``load`` with other :ref:`volatile
4701 operations <volatile>`.
4703 If the ``load`` is marked as ``atomic``, it takes an extra
4704 :ref:`ordering <ordering>` and optional ``singlethread`` argument. The
4705 ``release`` and ``acq_rel`` orderings are not valid on ``load``
4706 instructions. Atomic loads produce :ref:`defined <memmodel>` results
4707 when they may see multiple atomic stores. The type of the pointee must
4708 be an integer type whose bit width is a power of two greater than or
4709 equal to eight and less than or equal to a target-specific size limit.
4710 ``align`` must be explicitly specified on atomic loads, and the load has
4711 undefined behavior if the alignment is not set to a value which is at
4712 least the size in bytes of the pointee. ``!nontemporal`` does not have
4713 any defined semantics for atomic loads.
4715 The optional constant ``align`` argument specifies the alignment of the
4716 operation (that is, the alignment of the memory address). A value of 0
4717 or an omitted ``align`` argument means that the operation has the ABI
4718 alignment for the target. It is the responsibility of the code emitter
4719 to ensure that the alignment information is correct. Overestimating the
4720 alignment results in undefined behavior. Underestimating the alignment
4721 may produce less efficient code. An alignment of 1 is always safe.
4723 The optional ``!nontemporal`` metadata must reference a single
4724 metadata name ``<index>`` corresponding to a metadata node with one
4725 ``i32`` entry of value 1. The existence of the ``!nontemporal``
4726 metadata on the instruction tells the optimizer and code generator
4727 that this load is not expected to be reused in the cache. The code
4728 generator may select special instructions to save cache bandwidth, such
4729 as the ``MOVNT`` instruction on x86.
4731 The optional ``!invariant.load`` metadata must reference a single
4732 metadata name ``<index>`` corresponding to a metadata node with no
4733 entries. The existence of the ``!invariant.load`` metadata on the
4734 instruction tells the optimizer and code generator that this load
4735 address points to memory which does not change value during program
4736 execution. The optimizer may then move this load around, for example, by
4737 hoisting it out of loops using loop invariant code motion.
4742 The location of memory pointed to is loaded. If the value being loaded
4743 is of scalar type then the number of bytes read does not exceed the
4744 minimum number of bytes needed to hold all bits of the type. For
4745 example, loading an ``i24`` reads at most three bytes. When loading a
4746 value of a type like ``i20`` with a size that is not an integral number
4747 of bytes, the result is undefined if the value was not originally
4748 written using a store of the same type.
4753 .. code-block:: llvm
4755 %ptr = alloca i32 ; yields {i32*}:ptr
4756 store i32 3, i32* %ptr ; yields {void}
4757 %val = load i32* %ptr ; yields {i32}:val = i32 3
4761 '``store``' Instruction
4762 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4769 store [volatile] <ty> <value>, <ty>* <pointer>[, align <alignment>][, !nontemporal !<index>] ; yields {void}
4770 store atomic [volatile] <ty> <value>, <ty>* <pointer> [singlethread] <ordering>, align <alignment> ; yields {void}
4775 The '``store``' instruction is used to write to memory.
4780 There are two arguments to the ``store`` instruction: a value to store
4781 and an address at which to store it. The type of the ``<pointer>``
4782 operand must be a pointer to the :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` type of
4783 the ``<value>`` operand. If the ``store`` is marked as ``volatile``,
4784 then the optimizer is not allowed to modify the number or order of
4785 execution of this ``store`` with other :ref:`volatile
4786 operations <volatile>`.
4788 If the ``store`` is marked as ``atomic``, it takes an extra
4789 :ref:`ordering <ordering>` and optional ``singlethread`` argument. The
4790 ``acquire`` and ``acq_rel`` orderings aren't valid on ``store``
4791 instructions. Atomic loads produce :ref:`defined <memmodel>` results
4792 when they may see multiple atomic stores. The type of the pointee must
4793 be an integer type whose bit width is a power of two greater than or
4794 equal to eight and less than or equal to a target-specific size limit.
4795 ``align`` must be explicitly specified on atomic stores, and the store
4796 has undefined behavior if the alignment is not set to a value which is
4797 at least the size in bytes of the pointee. ``!nontemporal`` does not
4798 have any defined semantics for atomic stores.
4800 The optional constant ``align`` argument specifies the alignment of the
4801 operation (that is, the alignment of the memory address). A value of 0
4802 or an omitted ``align`` argument means that the operation has the ABI
4803 alignment for the target. It is the responsibility of the code emitter
4804 to ensure that the alignment information is correct. Overestimating the
4805 alignment results in undefined behavior. Underestimating the
4806 alignment may produce less efficient code. An alignment of 1 is always
4809 The optional ``!nontemporal`` metadata must reference a single metadata
4810 name ``<index>`` corresponding to a metadata node with one ``i32`` entry of
4811 value 1. The existence of the ``!nontemporal`` metadata on the instruction
4812 tells the optimizer and code generator that this load is not expected to
4813 be reused in the cache. The code generator may select special
4814 instructions to save cache bandwidth, such as the MOVNT instruction on
4820 The contents of memory are updated to contain ``<value>`` at the
4821 location specified by the ``<pointer>`` operand. If ``<value>`` is
4822 of scalar type then the number of bytes written does not exceed the
4823 minimum number of bytes needed to hold all bits of the type. For
4824 example, storing an ``i24`` writes at most three bytes. When writing a
4825 value of a type like ``i20`` with a size that is not an integral number
4826 of bytes, it is unspecified what happens to the extra bits that do not
4827 belong to the type, but they will typically be overwritten.
4832 .. code-block:: llvm
4834 %ptr = alloca i32 ; yields {i32*}:ptr
4835 store i32 3, i32* %ptr ; yields {void}
4836 %val = load i32* %ptr ; yields {i32}:val = i32 3
4840 '``fence``' Instruction
4841 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4848 fence [singlethread] <ordering> ; yields {void}
4853 The '``fence``' instruction is used to introduce happens-before edges
4859 '``fence``' instructions take an :ref:`ordering <ordering>` argument which
4860 defines what *synchronizes-with* edges they add. They can only be given
4861 ``acquire``, ``release``, ``acq_rel``, and ``seq_cst`` orderings.
4866 A fence A which has (at least) ``release`` ordering semantics
4867 *synchronizes with* a fence B with (at least) ``acquire`` ordering
4868 semantics if and only if there exist atomic operations X and Y, both
4869 operating on some atomic object M, such that A is sequenced before X, X
4870 modifies M (either directly or through some side effect of a sequence
4871 headed by X), Y is sequenced before B, and Y observes M. This provides a
4872 *happens-before* dependency between A and B. Rather than an explicit
4873 ``fence``, one (but not both) of the atomic operations X or Y might
4874 provide a ``release`` or ``acquire`` (resp.) ordering constraint and
4875 still *synchronize-with* the explicit ``fence`` and establish the
4876 *happens-before* edge.
4878 A ``fence`` which has ``seq_cst`` ordering, in addition to having both
4879 ``acquire`` and ``release`` semantics specified above, participates in
4880 the global program order of other ``seq_cst`` operations and/or fences.
4882 The optional ":ref:`singlethread <singlethread>`" argument specifies
4883 that the fence only synchronizes with other fences in the same thread.
4884 (This is useful for interacting with signal handlers.)
4889 .. code-block:: llvm
4891 fence acquire ; yields {void}
4892 fence singlethread seq_cst ; yields {void}
4896 '``cmpxchg``' Instruction
4897 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4904 cmpxchg [volatile] <ty>* <pointer>, <ty> <cmp>, <ty> <new> [singlethread] <ordering> ; yields {ty}
4909 The '``cmpxchg``' instruction is used to atomically modify memory. It
4910 loads a value in memory and compares it to a given value. If they are
4911 equal, it stores a new value into the memory.
4916 There are three arguments to the '``cmpxchg``' instruction: an address
4917 to operate on, a value to compare to the value currently be at that
4918 address, and a new value to place at that address if the compared values
4919 are equal. The type of '<cmp>' must be an integer type whose bit width
4920 is a power of two greater than or equal to eight and less than or equal
4921 to a target-specific size limit. '<cmp>' and '<new>' must have the same
4922 type, and the type of '<pointer>' must be a pointer to that type. If the
4923 ``cmpxchg`` is marked as ``volatile``, then the optimizer is not allowed
4924 to modify the number or order of execution of this ``cmpxchg`` with
4925 other :ref:`volatile operations <volatile>`.
4927 The :ref:`ordering <ordering>` argument specifies how this ``cmpxchg``
4928 synchronizes with other atomic operations.
4930 The optional "``singlethread``" argument declares that the ``cmpxchg``
4931 is only atomic with respect to code (usually signal handlers) running in
4932 the same thread as the ``cmpxchg``. Otherwise the cmpxchg is atomic with
4933 respect to all other code in the system.
4935 The pointer passed into cmpxchg must have alignment greater than or
4936 equal to the size in memory of the operand.
4941 The contents of memory at the location specified by the '``<pointer>``'
4942 operand is read and compared to '``<cmp>``'; if the read value is the
4943 equal, '``<new>``' is written. The original value at the location is
4946 A successful ``cmpxchg`` is a read-modify-write instruction for the purpose
4947 of identifying release sequences. A failed ``cmpxchg`` is equivalent to an
4948 atomic load with an ordering parameter determined by dropping any
4949 ``release`` part of the ``cmpxchg``'s ordering.
4954 .. code-block:: llvm
4957 %orig = atomic load i32* %ptr unordered ; yields {i32}
4961 %cmp = phi i32 [ %orig, %entry ], [%old, %loop]
4962 %squared = mul i32 %cmp, %cmp
4963 %old = cmpxchg i32* %ptr, i32 %cmp, i32 %squared ; yields {i32}
4964 %success = icmp eq i32 %cmp, %old
4965 br i1 %success, label %done, label %loop
4972 '``atomicrmw``' Instruction
4973 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4980 atomicrmw [volatile] <operation> <ty>* <pointer>, <ty> <value> [singlethread] <ordering> ; yields {ty}
4985 The '``atomicrmw``' instruction is used to atomically modify memory.
4990 There are three arguments to the '``atomicrmw``' instruction: an
4991 operation to apply, an address whose value to modify, an argument to the
4992 operation. The operation must be one of the following keywords:
5006 The type of '<value>' must be an integer type whose bit width is a power
5007 of two greater than or equal to eight and less than or equal to a
5008 target-specific size limit. The type of the '``<pointer>``' operand must
5009 be a pointer to that type. If the ``atomicrmw`` is marked as
5010 ``volatile``, then the optimizer is not allowed to modify the number or
5011 order of execution of this ``atomicrmw`` with other :ref:`volatile
5012 operations <volatile>`.
5017 The contents of memory at the location specified by the '``<pointer>``'
5018 operand are atomically read, modified, and written back. The original
5019 value at the location is returned. The modification is specified by the
5022 - xchg: ``*ptr = val``
5023 - add: ``*ptr = *ptr + val``
5024 - sub: ``*ptr = *ptr - val``
5025 - and: ``*ptr = *ptr & val``
5026 - nand: ``*ptr = ~(*ptr & val)``
5027 - or: ``*ptr = *ptr | val``
5028 - xor: ``*ptr = *ptr ^ val``
5029 - max: ``*ptr = *ptr > val ? *ptr : val`` (using a signed comparison)
5030 - min: ``*ptr = *ptr < val ? *ptr : val`` (using a signed comparison)
5031 - umax: ``*ptr = *ptr > val ? *ptr : val`` (using an unsigned
5033 - umin: ``*ptr = *ptr < val ? *ptr : val`` (using an unsigned
5039 .. code-block:: llvm
5041 %old = atomicrmw add i32* %ptr, i32 1 acquire ; yields {i32}
5043 .. _i_getelementptr:
5045 '``getelementptr``' Instruction
5046 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5053 <result> = getelementptr <pty>* <ptrval>{, <ty> <idx>}*
5054 <result> = getelementptr inbounds <pty>* <ptrval>{, <ty> <idx>}*
5055 <result> = getelementptr <ptr vector> ptrval, <vector index type> idx
5060 The '``getelementptr``' instruction is used to get the address of a
5061 subelement of an :ref:`aggregate <t_aggregate>` data structure. It performs
5062 address calculation only and does not access memory.
5067 The first argument is always a pointer or a vector of pointers, and
5068 forms the basis of the calculation. The remaining arguments are indices
5069 that indicate which of the elements of the aggregate object are indexed.
5070 The interpretation of each index is dependent on the type being indexed
5071 into. The first index always indexes the pointer value given as the
5072 first argument, the second index indexes a value of the type pointed to
5073 (not necessarily the value directly pointed to, since the first index
5074 can be non-zero), etc. The first type indexed into must be a pointer
5075 value, subsequent types can be arrays, vectors, and structs. Note that
5076 subsequent types being indexed into can never be pointers, since that
5077 would require loading the pointer before continuing calculation.
5079 The type of each index argument depends on the type it is indexing into.
5080 When indexing into a (optionally packed) structure, only ``i32`` integer
5081 **constants** are allowed (when using a vector of indices they must all
5082 be the **same** ``i32`` integer constant). When indexing into an array,
5083 pointer or vector, integers of any width are allowed, and they are not
5084 required to be constant. These integers are treated as signed values
5087 For example, let's consider a C code fragment and how it gets compiled
5103 int *foo(struct ST *s) {
5104 return &s[1].Z.B[5][13];
5107 The LLVM code generated by Clang is:
5109 .. code-block:: llvm
5111 %struct.RT = type { i8, [10 x [20 x i32]], i8 }
5112 %struct.ST = type { i32, double, %struct.RT }
5114 define i32* @foo(%struct.ST* %s) nounwind uwtable readnone optsize ssp {
5116 %arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds %struct.ST* %s, i64 1, i32 2, i32 1, i64 5, i64 13
5123 In the example above, the first index is indexing into the
5124 '``%struct.ST*``' type, which is a pointer, yielding a '``%struct.ST``'
5125 = '``{ i32, double, %struct.RT }``' type, a structure. The second index
5126 indexes into the third element of the structure, yielding a
5127 '``%struct.RT``' = '``{ i8 , [10 x [20 x i32]], i8 }``' type, another
5128 structure. The third index indexes into the second element of the
5129 structure, yielding a '``[10 x [20 x i32]]``' type, an array. The two
5130 dimensions of the array are subscripted into, yielding an '``i32``'
5131 type. The '``getelementptr``' instruction returns a pointer to this
5132 element, thus computing a value of '``i32*``' type.
5134 Note that it is perfectly legal to index partially through a structure,
5135 returning a pointer to an inner element. Because of this, the LLVM code
5136 for the given testcase is equivalent to:
5138 .. code-block:: llvm
5140 define i32* @foo(%struct.ST* %s) {
5141 %t1 = getelementptr %struct.ST* %s, i32 1 ; yields %struct.ST*:%t1
5142 %t2 = getelementptr %struct.ST* %t1, i32 0, i32 2 ; yields %struct.RT*:%t2
5143 %t3 = getelementptr %struct.RT* %t2, i32 0, i32 1 ; yields [10 x [20 x i32]]*:%t3
5144 %t4 = getelementptr [10 x [20 x i32]]* %t3, i32 0, i32 5 ; yields [20 x i32]*:%t4
5145 %t5 = getelementptr [20 x i32]* %t4, i32 0, i32 13 ; yields i32*:%t5
5149 If the ``inbounds`` keyword is present, the result value of the
5150 ``getelementptr`` is a :ref:`poison value <poisonvalues>` if the base
5151 pointer is not an *in bounds* address of an allocated object, or if any
5152 of the addresses that would be formed by successive addition of the
5153 offsets implied by the indices to the base address with infinitely
5154 precise signed arithmetic are not an *in bounds* address of that
5155 allocated object. The *in bounds* addresses for an allocated object are
5156 all the addresses that point into the object, plus the address one byte
5157 past the end. In cases where the base is a vector of pointers the
5158 ``inbounds`` keyword applies to each of the computations element-wise.
5160 If the ``inbounds`` keyword is not present, the offsets are added to the
5161 base address with silently-wrapping two's complement arithmetic. If the
5162 offsets have a different width from the pointer, they are sign-extended
5163 or truncated to the width of the pointer. The result value of the
5164 ``getelementptr`` may be outside the object pointed to by the base
5165 pointer. The result value may not necessarily be used to access memory
5166 though, even if it happens to point into allocated storage. See the
5167 :ref:`Pointer Aliasing Rules <pointeraliasing>` section for more
5170 The getelementptr instruction is often confusing. For some more insight
5171 into how it works, see :doc:`the getelementptr FAQ <GetElementPtr>`.
5176 .. code-block:: llvm
5178 ; yields [12 x i8]*:aptr
5179 %aptr = getelementptr {i32, [12 x i8]}* %saptr, i64 0, i32 1
5181 %vptr = getelementptr {i32, <2 x i8>}* %svptr, i64 0, i32 1, i32 1
5183 %eptr = getelementptr [12 x i8]* %aptr, i64 0, i32 1
5185 %iptr = getelementptr [10 x i32]* @arr, i16 0, i16 0
5187 In cases where the pointer argument is a vector of pointers, each index
5188 must be a vector with the same number of elements. For example:
5190 .. code-block:: llvm
5192 %A = getelementptr <4 x i8*> %ptrs, <4 x i64> %offsets,
5194 Conversion Operations
5195 ---------------------
5197 The instructions in this category are the conversion instructions
5198 (casting) which all take a single operand and a type. They perform
5199 various bit conversions on the operand.
5201 '``trunc .. to``' Instruction
5202 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5209 <result> = trunc <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5214 The '``trunc``' instruction truncates its operand to the type ``ty2``.
5219 The '``trunc``' instruction takes a value to trunc, and a type to trunc
5220 it to. Both types must be of :ref:`integer <t_integer>` types, or vectors
5221 of the same number of integers. The bit size of the ``value`` must be
5222 larger than the bit size of the destination type, ``ty2``. Equal sized
5223 types are not allowed.
5228 The '``trunc``' instruction truncates the high order bits in ``value``
5229 and converts the remaining bits to ``ty2``. Since the source size must
5230 be larger than the destination size, ``trunc`` cannot be a *no-op cast*.
5231 It will always truncate bits.
5236 .. code-block:: llvm
5238 %X = trunc i32 257 to i8 ; yields i8:1
5239 %Y = trunc i32 123 to i1 ; yields i1:true
5240 %Z = trunc i32 122 to i1 ; yields i1:false
5241 %W = trunc <2 x i16> <i16 8, i16 7> to <2 x i8> ; yields <i8 8, i8 7>
5243 '``zext .. to``' Instruction
5244 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5251 <result> = zext <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5256 The '``zext``' instruction zero extends its operand to type ``ty2``.
5261 The '``zext``' instruction takes a value to cast, and a type to cast it
5262 to. Both types must be of :ref:`integer <t_integer>` types, or vectors of
5263 the same number of integers. The bit size of the ``value`` must be
5264 smaller than the bit size of the destination type, ``ty2``.
5269 The ``zext`` fills the high order bits of the ``value`` with zero bits
5270 until it reaches the size of the destination type, ``ty2``.
5272 When zero extending from i1, the result will always be either 0 or 1.
5277 .. code-block:: llvm
5279 %X = zext i32 257 to i64 ; yields i64:257
5280 %Y = zext i1 true to i32 ; yields i32:1
5281 %Z = zext <2 x i16> <i16 8, i16 7> to <2 x i32> ; yields <i32 8, i32 7>
5283 '``sext .. to``' Instruction
5284 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5291 <result> = sext <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5296 The '``sext``' sign extends ``value`` to the type ``ty2``.
5301 The '``sext``' instruction takes a value to cast, and a type to cast it
5302 to. Both types must be of :ref:`integer <t_integer>` types, or vectors of
5303 the same number of integers. The bit size of the ``value`` must be
5304 smaller than the bit size of the destination type, ``ty2``.
5309 The '``sext``' instruction performs a sign extension by copying the sign
5310 bit (highest order bit) of the ``value`` until it reaches the bit size
5311 of the type ``ty2``.
5313 When sign extending from i1, the extension always results in -1 or 0.
5318 .. code-block:: llvm
5320 %X = sext i8 -1 to i16 ; yields i16 :65535
5321 %Y = sext i1 true to i32 ; yields i32:-1
5322 %Z = sext <2 x i16> <i16 8, i16 7> to <2 x i32> ; yields <i32 8, i32 7>
5324 '``fptrunc .. to``' Instruction
5325 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5332 <result> = fptrunc <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5337 The '``fptrunc``' instruction truncates ``value`` to type ``ty2``.
5342 The '``fptrunc``' instruction takes a :ref:`floating point <t_floating>`
5343 value to cast and a :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` type to cast it to.
5344 The size of ``value`` must be larger than the size of ``ty2``. This
5345 implies that ``fptrunc`` cannot be used to make a *no-op cast*.
5350 The '``fptrunc``' instruction truncates a ``value`` from a larger
5351 :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` type to a smaller :ref:`floating
5352 point <t_floating>` type. If the value cannot fit within the
5353 destination type, ``ty2``, then the results are undefined.
5358 .. code-block:: llvm
5360 %X = fptrunc double 123.0 to float ; yields float:123.0
5361 %Y = fptrunc double 1.0E+300 to float ; yields undefined
5363 '``fpext .. to``' Instruction
5364 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5371 <result> = fpext <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5376 The '``fpext``' extends a floating point ``value`` to a larger floating
5382 The '``fpext``' instruction takes a :ref:`floating point <t_floating>`
5383 ``value`` to cast, and a :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` type to cast it
5384 to. The source type must be smaller than the destination type.
5389 The '``fpext``' instruction extends the ``value`` from a smaller
5390 :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` type to a larger :ref:`floating
5391 point <t_floating>` type. The ``fpext`` cannot be used to make a
5392 *no-op cast* because it always changes bits. Use ``bitcast`` to make a
5393 *no-op cast* for a floating point cast.
5398 .. code-block:: llvm
5400 %X = fpext float 3.125 to double ; yields double:3.125000e+00
5401 %Y = fpext double %X to fp128 ; yields fp128:0xL00000000000000004000900000000000
5403 '``fptoui .. to``' Instruction
5404 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5411 <result> = fptoui <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5416 The '``fptoui``' converts a floating point ``value`` to its unsigned
5417 integer equivalent of type ``ty2``.
5422 The '``fptoui``' instruction takes a value to cast, which must be a
5423 scalar or vector :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` value, and a type to
5424 cast it to ``ty2``, which must be an :ref:`integer <t_integer>` type. If
5425 ``ty`` is a vector floating point type, ``ty2`` must be a vector integer
5426 type with the same number of elements as ``ty``
5431 The '``fptoui``' instruction converts its :ref:`floating
5432 point <t_floating>` operand into the nearest (rounding towards zero)
5433 unsigned integer value. If the value cannot fit in ``ty2``, the results
5439 .. code-block:: llvm
5441 %X = fptoui double 123.0 to i32 ; yields i32:123
5442 %Y = fptoui float 1.0E+300 to i1 ; yields undefined:1
5443 %Z = fptoui float 1.04E+17 to i8 ; yields undefined:1
5445 '``fptosi .. to``' Instruction
5446 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5453 <result> = fptosi <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5458 The '``fptosi``' instruction converts :ref:`floating point <t_floating>`
5459 ``value`` to type ``ty2``.
5464 The '``fptosi``' instruction takes a value to cast, which must be a
5465 scalar or vector :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` value, and a type to
5466 cast it to ``ty2``, which must be an :ref:`integer <t_integer>` type. If
5467 ``ty`` is a vector floating point type, ``ty2`` must be a vector integer
5468 type with the same number of elements as ``ty``
5473 The '``fptosi``' instruction converts its :ref:`floating
5474 point <t_floating>` operand into the nearest (rounding towards zero)
5475 signed integer value. If the value cannot fit in ``ty2``, the results
5481 .. code-block:: llvm
5483 %X = fptosi double -123.0 to i32 ; yields i32:-123
5484 %Y = fptosi float 1.0E-247 to i1 ; yields undefined:1
5485 %Z = fptosi float 1.04E+17 to i8 ; yields undefined:1
5487 '``uitofp .. to``' Instruction
5488 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5495 <result> = uitofp <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5500 The '``uitofp``' instruction regards ``value`` as an unsigned integer
5501 and converts that value to the ``ty2`` type.
5506 The '``uitofp``' instruction takes a value to cast, which must be a
5507 scalar or vector :ref:`integer <t_integer>` value, and a type to cast it to
5508 ``ty2``, which must be an :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` type. If
5509 ``ty`` is a vector integer type, ``ty2`` must be a vector floating point
5510 type with the same number of elements as ``ty``
5515 The '``uitofp``' instruction interprets its operand as an unsigned
5516 integer quantity and converts it to the corresponding floating point
5517 value. If the value cannot fit in the floating point value, the results
5523 .. code-block:: llvm
5525 %X = uitofp i32 257 to float ; yields float:257.0
5526 %Y = uitofp i8 -1 to double ; yields double:255.0
5528 '``sitofp .. to``' Instruction
5529 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5536 <result> = sitofp <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5541 The '``sitofp``' instruction regards ``value`` as a signed integer and
5542 converts that value to the ``ty2`` type.
5547 The '``sitofp``' instruction takes a value to cast, which must be a
5548 scalar or vector :ref:`integer <t_integer>` value, and a type to cast it to
5549 ``ty2``, which must be an :ref:`floating point <t_floating>` type. If
5550 ``ty`` is a vector integer type, ``ty2`` must be a vector floating point
5551 type with the same number of elements as ``ty``
5556 The '``sitofp``' instruction interprets its operand as a signed integer
5557 quantity and converts it to the corresponding floating point value. If
5558 the value cannot fit in the floating point value, the results are
5564 .. code-block:: llvm
5566 %X = sitofp i32 257 to float ; yields float:257.0
5567 %Y = sitofp i8 -1 to double ; yields double:-1.0
5571 '``ptrtoint .. to``' Instruction
5572 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5579 <result> = ptrtoint <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5584 The '``ptrtoint``' instruction converts the pointer or a vector of
5585 pointers ``value`` to the integer (or vector of integers) type ``ty2``.
5590 The '``ptrtoint``' instruction takes a ``value`` to cast, which must be
5591 a a value of type :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` or a vector of pointers, and a
5592 type to cast it to ``ty2``, which must be an :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or
5593 a vector of integers type.
5598 The '``ptrtoint``' instruction converts ``value`` to integer type
5599 ``ty2`` by interpreting the pointer value as an integer and either
5600 truncating or zero extending that value to the size of the integer type.
5601 If ``value`` is smaller than ``ty2`` then a zero extension is done. If
5602 ``value`` is larger than ``ty2`` then a truncation is done. If they are
5603 the same size, then nothing is done (*no-op cast*) other than a type
5609 .. code-block:: llvm
5611 %X = ptrtoint i32* %P to i8 ; yields truncation on 32-bit architecture
5612 %Y = ptrtoint i32* %P to i64 ; yields zero extension on 32-bit architecture
5613 %Z = ptrtoint <4 x i32*> %P to <4 x i64>; yields vector zero extension for a vector of addresses on 32-bit architecture
5617 '``inttoptr .. to``' Instruction
5618 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5625 <result> = inttoptr <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5630 The '``inttoptr``' instruction converts an integer ``value`` to a
5631 pointer type, ``ty2``.
5636 The '``inttoptr``' instruction takes an :ref:`integer <t_integer>` value to
5637 cast, and a type to cast it to, which must be a :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>`
5643 The '``inttoptr``' instruction converts ``value`` to type ``ty2`` by
5644 applying either a zero extension or a truncation depending on the size
5645 of the integer ``value``. If ``value`` is larger than the size of a
5646 pointer then a truncation is done. If ``value`` is smaller than the size
5647 of a pointer then a zero extension is done. If they are the same size,
5648 nothing is done (*no-op cast*).
5653 .. code-block:: llvm
5655 %X = inttoptr i32 255 to i32* ; yields zero extension on 64-bit architecture
5656 %Y = inttoptr i32 255 to i32* ; yields no-op on 32-bit architecture
5657 %Z = inttoptr i64 0 to i32* ; yields truncation on 32-bit architecture
5658 %Z = inttoptr <4 x i32> %G to <4 x i8*>; yields truncation of vector G to four pointers
5662 '``bitcast .. to``' Instruction
5663 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5670 <result> = bitcast <ty> <value> to <ty2> ; yields ty2
5675 The '``bitcast``' instruction converts ``value`` to type ``ty2`` without
5681 The '``bitcast``' instruction takes a value to cast, which must be a
5682 non-aggregate first class value, and a type to cast it to, which must
5683 also be a non-aggregate :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` type. The
5684 bit sizes of ``value`` and the destination type, ``ty2``, must be
5685 identical. If the source type is a pointer, the destination type must
5686 also be a pointer of the same size. This instruction supports bitwise
5687 conversion of vectors to integers and to vectors of other types (as
5688 long as they have the same size).
5693 The '``bitcast``' instruction converts ``value`` to type ``ty2``. It
5694 is always a *no-op cast* because no bits change with this
5695 conversion. The conversion is done as if the ``value`` had been stored
5696 to memory and read back as type ``ty2``. Pointer (or vector of
5697 pointers) types may only be converted to other pointer (or vector of
5698 pointers) types with the same address space through this instruction.
5699 To convert pointers to other types, use the :ref:`inttoptr <i_inttoptr>`
5700 or :ref:`ptrtoint <i_ptrtoint>` instructions first.
5705 .. code-block:: llvm
5707 %X = bitcast i8 255 to i8 ; yields i8 :-1
5708 %Y = bitcast i32* %x to sint* ; yields sint*:%x
5709 %Z = bitcast <2 x int> %V to i64; ; yields i64: %V
5710 %Z = bitcast <2 x i32*> %V to <2 x i64*> ; yields <2 x i64*>
5712 .. _i_addrspacecast:
5714 '``addrspacecast .. to``' Instruction
5715 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5722 <result> = addrspacecast <pty> <ptrval> to <pty2> ; yields pty2
5727 The '``addrspacecast``' instruction converts ``ptrval`` from ``pty`` in
5728 address space ``n`` to type ``pty2`` in address space ``m``.
5733 The '``addrspacecast``' instruction takes a pointer or vector of pointer value
5734 to cast and a pointer type to cast it to, which must have a different
5740 The '``addrspacecast``' instruction converts the pointer value
5741 ``ptrval`` to type ``pty2``. It can be a *no-op cast* or a complex
5742 value modification, depending on the target and the address space
5743 pair. Pointer conversions within the same address space must be
5744 performed with the ``bitcast`` instruction. Note that if the address space
5745 conversion is legal then both result and operand refer to the same memory
5751 .. code-block:: llvm
5753 %X = addrspacecast i32* %x to i32 addrspace(1)* ; yields i32 addrspace(1)*:%x
5754 %Y = addrspacecast i32 addrspace(1)* %y to i64 addrspace(2)* ; yields i64 addrspace(2)*:%y
5755 %Z = addrspacecast <4 x i32*> %z to <4 x float addrspace(3)*> ; yields <4 x float addrspace(3)*>:%z
5762 The instructions in this category are the "miscellaneous" instructions,
5763 which defy better classification.
5767 '``icmp``' Instruction
5768 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5775 <result> = icmp <cond> <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {i1} or {<N x i1>}:result
5780 The '``icmp``' instruction returns a boolean value or a vector of
5781 boolean values based on comparison of its two integer, integer vector,
5782 pointer, or pointer vector operands.
5787 The '``icmp``' instruction takes three operands. The first operand is
5788 the condition code indicating the kind of comparison to perform. It is
5789 not a value, just a keyword. The possible condition code are:
5792 #. ``ne``: not equal
5793 #. ``ugt``: unsigned greater than
5794 #. ``uge``: unsigned greater or equal
5795 #. ``ult``: unsigned less than
5796 #. ``ule``: unsigned less or equal
5797 #. ``sgt``: signed greater than
5798 #. ``sge``: signed greater or equal
5799 #. ``slt``: signed less than
5800 #. ``sle``: signed less or equal
5802 The remaining two arguments must be :ref:`integer <t_integer>` or
5803 :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` or integer :ref:`vector <t_vector>` typed. They
5804 must also be identical types.
5809 The '``icmp``' compares ``op1`` and ``op2`` according to the condition
5810 code given as ``cond``. The comparison performed always yields either an
5811 :ref:`i1 <t_integer>` or vector of ``i1`` result, as follows:
5813 #. ``eq``: yields ``true`` if the operands are equal, ``false``
5814 otherwise. No sign interpretation is necessary or performed.
5815 #. ``ne``: yields ``true`` if the operands are unequal, ``false``
5816 otherwise. No sign interpretation is necessary or performed.
5817 #. ``ugt``: interprets the operands as unsigned values and yields
5818 ``true`` if ``op1`` is greater than ``op2``.
5819 #. ``uge``: interprets the operands as unsigned values and yields
5820 ``true`` if ``op1`` is greater than or equal to ``op2``.
5821 #. ``ult``: interprets the operands as unsigned values and yields
5822 ``true`` if ``op1`` is less than ``op2``.
5823 #. ``ule``: interprets the operands as unsigned values and yields
5824 ``true`` if ``op1`` is less than or equal to ``op2``.
5825 #. ``sgt``: interprets the operands as signed values and yields ``true``
5826 if ``op1`` is greater than ``op2``.
5827 #. ``sge``: interprets the operands as signed values and yields ``true``
5828 if ``op1`` is greater than or equal to ``op2``.
5829 #. ``slt``: interprets the operands as signed values and yields ``true``
5830 if ``op1`` is less than ``op2``.
5831 #. ``sle``: interprets the operands as signed values and yields ``true``
5832 if ``op1`` is less than or equal to ``op2``.
5834 If the operands are :ref:`pointer <t_pointer>` typed, the pointer values
5835 are compared as if they were integers.
5837 If the operands are integer vectors, then they are compared element by
5838 element. The result is an ``i1`` vector with the same number of elements
5839 as the values being compared. Otherwise, the result is an ``i1``.
5844 .. code-block:: llvm
5846 <result> = icmp eq i32 4, 5 ; yields: result=false
5847 <result> = icmp ne float* %X, %X ; yields: result=false
5848 <result> = icmp ult i16 4, 5 ; yields: result=true
5849 <result> = icmp sgt i16 4, 5 ; yields: result=false
5850 <result> = icmp ule i16 -4, 5 ; yields: result=false
5851 <result> = icmp sge i16 4, 5 ; yields: result=false
5853 Note that the code generator does not yet support vector types with the
5854 ``icmp`` instruction.
5858 '``fcmp``' Instruction
5859 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5866 <result> = fcmp <cond> <ty> <op1>, <op2> ; yields {i1} or {<N x i1>}:result
5871 The '``fcmp``' instruction returns a boolean value or vector of boolean
5872 values based on comparison of its operands.
5874 If the operands are floating point scalars, then the result type is a
5875 boolean (:ref:`i1 <t_integer>`).
5877 If the operands are floating point vectors, then the result type is a
5878 vector of boolean with the same number of elements as the operands being
5884 The '``fcmp``' instruction takes three operands. The first operand is
5885 the condition code indicating the kind of comparison to perform. It is
5886 not a value, just a keyword. The possible condition code are:
5888 #. ``false``: no comparison, always returns false
5889 #. ``oeq``: ordered and equal
5890 #. ``ogt``: ordered and greater than
5891 #. ``oge``: ordered and greater than or equal
5892 #. ``olt``: ordered and less than
5893 #. ``ole``: ordered and less than or equal
5894 #. ``one``: ordered and not equal
5895 #. ``ord``: ordered (no nans)
5896 #. ``ueq``: unordered or equal
5897 #. ``ugt``: unordered or greater than
5898 #. ``uge``: unordered or greater than or equal
5899 #. ``ult``: unordered or less than
5900 #. ``ule``: unordered or less than or equal
5901 #. ``une``: unordered or not equal
5902 #. ``uno``: unordered (either nans)
5903 #. ``true``: no comparison, always returns true
5905 *Ordered* means that neither operand is a QNAN while *unordered* means
5906 that either operand may be a QNAN.
5908 Each of ``val1`` and ``val2`` arguments must be either a :ref:`floating
5909 point <t_floating>` type or a :ref:`vector <t_vector>` of floating point
5910 type. They must have identical types.
5915 The '``fcmp``' instruction compares ``op1`` and ``op2`` according to the
5916 condition code given as ``cond``. If the operands are vectors, then the
5917 vectors are compared element by element. Each comparison performed
5918 always yields an :ref:`i1 <t_integer>` result, as follows:
5920 #. ``false``: always yields ``false``, regardless of operands.
5921 #. ``oeq``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN and ``op1``
5922 is equal to ``op2``.
5923 #. ``ogt``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN and ``op1``
5924 is greater than ``op2``.
5925 #. ``oge``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN and ``op1``
5926 is greater than or equal to ``op2``.
5927 #. ``olt``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN and ``op1``
5928 is less than ``op2``.
5929 #. ``ole``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN and ``op1``
5930 is less than or equal to ``op2``.
5931 #. ``one``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN and ``op1``
5932 is not equal to ``op2``.
5933 #. ``ord``: yields ``true`` if both operands are not a QNAN.
5934 #. ``ueq``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN or ``op1`` is
5936 #. ``ugt``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN or ``op1`` is
5937 greater than ``op2``.
5938 #. ``uge``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN or ``op1`` is
5939 greater than or equal to ``op2``.
5940 #. ``ult``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN or ``op1`` is
5942 #. ``ule``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN or ``op1`` is
5943 less than or equal to ``op2``.
5944 #. ``une``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN or ``op1`` is
5945 not equal to ``op2``.
5946 #. ``uno``: yields ``true`` if either operand is a QNAN.
5947 #. ``true``: always yields ``true``, regardless of operands.
5952 .. code-block:: llvm
5954 <result> = fcmp oeq float 4.0, 5.0 ; yields: result=false
5955 <result> = fcmp one float 4.0, 5.0 ; yields: result=true
5956 <result> = fcmp olt float 4.0, 5.0 ; yields: result=true
5957 <result> = fcmp ueq double 1.0, 2.0 ; yields: result=false
5959 Note that the code generator does not yet support vector types with the
5960 ``fcmp`` instruction.
5964 '``phi``' Instruction
5965 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
5972 <result> = phi <ty> [ <val0>, <label0>], ...
5977 The '``phi``' instruction is used to implement the φ node in the SSA
5978 graph representing the function.
5983 The type of the incoming values is specified with the first type field.
5984 After this, the '``phi``' instruction takes a list of pairs as
5985 arguments, with one pair for each predecessor basic block of the current
5986 block. Only values of :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` type may be used as
5987 the value arguments to the PHI node. Only labels may be used as the
5990 There must be no non-phi instructions between the start of a basic block
5991 and the PHI instructions: i.e. PHI instructions must be first in a basic
5994 For the purposes of the SSA form, the use of each incoming value is
5995 deemed to occur on the edge from the corresponding predecessor block to
5996 the current block (but after any definition of an '``invoke``'
5997 instruction's return value on the same edge).
6002 At runtime, the '``phi``' instruction logically takes on the value
6003 specified by the pair corresponding to the predecessor basic block that
6004 executed just prior to the current block.
6009 .. code-block:: llvm
6011 Loop: ; Infinite loop that counts from 0 on up...
6012 %indvar = phi i32 [ 0, %LoopHeader ], [ %nextindvar, %Loop ]
6013 %nextindvar = add i32 %indvar, 1
6018 '``select``' Instruction
6019 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6026 <result> = select selty <cond>, <ty> <val1>, <ty> <val2> ; yields ty
6028 selty is either i1 or {<N x i1>}
6033 The '``select``' instruction is used to choose one value based on a
6034 condition, without branching.
6039 The '``select``' instruction requires an 'i1' value or a vector of 'i1'
6040 values indicating the condition, and two values of the same :ref:`first
6041 class <t_firstclass>` type. If the val1/val2 are vectors and the
6042 condition is a scalar, then entire vectors are selected, not individual
6048 If the condition is an i1 and it evaluates to 1, the instruction returns
6049 the first value argument; otherwise, it returns the second value
6052 If the condition is a vector of i1, then the value arguments must be
6053 vectors of the same size, and the selection is done element by element.
6058 .. code-block:: llvm
6060 %X = select i1 true, i8 17, i8 42 ; yields i8:17
6064 '``call``' Instruction
6065 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6072 <result> = [tail] call [cconv] [ret attrs] <ty> [<fnty>*] <fnptrval>(<function args>) [fn attrs]
6077 The '``call``' instruction represents a simple function call.
6082 This instruction requires several arguments:
6084 #. The optional "tail" marker indicates that the callee function does
6085 not access any allocas or varargs in the caller. Note that calls may
6086 be marked "tail" even if they do not occur before a
6087 :ref:`ret <i_ret>` instruction. If the "tail" marker is present, the
6088 function call is eligible for tail call optimization, but `might not
6089 in fact be optimized into a jump <CodeGenerator.html#tailcallopt>`_.
6090 The code generator may optimize calls marked "tail" with either 1)
6091 automatic `sibling call
6092 optimization <CodeGenerator.html#sibcallopt>`_ when the caller and
6093 callee have matching signatures, or 2) forced tail call optimization
6094 when the following extra requirements are met:
6096 - Caller and callee both have the calling convention ``fastcc``.
6097 - The call is in tail position (ret immediately follows call and ret
6098 uses value of call or is void).
6099 - Option ``-tailcallopt`` is enabled, or
6100 ``llvm::GuaranteedTailCallOpt`` is ``true``.
6101 - `Platform specific constraints are
6102 met. <CodeGenerator.html#tailcallopt>`_
6104 #. The optional "cconv" marker indicates which :ref:`calling
6105 convention <callingconv>` the call should use. If none is
6106 specified, the call defaults to using C calling conventions. The
6107 calling convention of the call must match the calling convention of
6108 the target function, or else the behavior is undefined.
6109 #. The optional :ref:`Parameter Attributes <paramattrs>` list for return
6110 values. Only '``zeroext``', '``signext``', and '``inreg``' attributes
6112 #. '``ty``': the type of the call instruction itself which is also the
6113 type of the return value. Functions that return no value are marked
6115 #. '``fnty``': shall be the signature of the pointer to function value
6116 being invoked. The argument types must match the types implied by
6117 this signature. This type can be omitted if the function is not
6118 varargs and if the function type does not return a pointer to a
6120 #. '``fnptrval``': An LLVM value containing a pointer to a function to
6121 be invoked. In most cases, this is a direct function invocation, but
6122 indirect ``call``'s are just as possible, calling an arbitrary pointer
6124 #. '``function args``': argument list whose types match the function
6125 signature argument types and parameter attributes. All arguments must
6126 be of :ref:`first class <t_firstclass>` type. If the function signature
6127 indicates the function accepts a variable number of arguments, the
6128 extra arguments can be specified.
6129 #. The optional :ref:`function attributes <fnattrs>` list. Only
6130 '``noreturn``', '``nounwind``', '``readonly``' and '``readnone``'
6131 attributes are valid here.
6136 The '``call``' instruction is used to cause control flow to transfer to
6137 a specified function, with its incoming arguments bound to the specified
6138 values. Upon a '``ret``' instruction in the called function, control
6139 flow continues with the instruction after the function call, and the
6140 return value of the function is bound to the result argument.
6145 .. code-block:: llvm
6147 %retval = call i32 @test(i32 %argc)
6148 call i32 (i8*, ...)* @printf(i8* %msg, i32 12, i8 42) ; yields i32
6149 %X = tail call i32 @foo() ; yields i32
6150 %Y = tail call fastcc i32 @foo() ; yields i32
6151 call void %foo(i8 97 signext)
6153 %struct.A = type { i32, i8 }
6154 %r = call %struct.A @foo() ; yields { 32, i8 }
6155 %gr = extractvalue %struct.A %r, 0 ; yields i32
6156 %gr1 = extractvalue %struct.A %r, 1 ; yields i8
6157 %Z = call void @foo() noreturn ; indicates that %foo never returns normally
6158 %ZZ = call zeroext i32 @bar() ; Return value is %zero extended
6160 llvm treats calls to some functions with names and arguments that match
6161 the standard C99 library as being the C99 library functions, and may
6162 perform optimizations or generate code for them under that assumption.
6163 This is something we'd like to change in the future to provide better
6164 support for freestanding environments and non-C-based languages.
6168 '``va_arg``' Instruction
6169 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6176 <resultval> = va_arg <va_list*> <arglist>, <argty>
6181 The '``va_arg``' instruction is used to access arguments passed through
6182 the "variable argument" area of a function call. It is used to implement
6183 the ``va_arg`` macro in C.
6188 This instruction takes a ``va_list*`` value and the type of the
6189 argument. It returns a value of the specified argument type and
6190 increments the ``va_list`` to point to the next argument. The actual
6191 type of ``va_list`` is target specific.
6196 The '``va_arg``' instruction loads an argument of the specified type
6197 from the specified ``va_list`` and causes the ``va_list`` to point to
6198 the next argument. For more information, see the variable argument
6199 handling :ref:`Intrinsic Functions <int_varargs>`.
6201 It is legal for this instruction to be called in a function which does
6202 not take a variable number of arguments, for example, the ``vfprintf``
6205 ``va_arg`` is an LLVM instruction instead of an :ref:`intrinsic
6206 function <intrinsics>` because it takes a type as an argument.
6211 See the :ref:`variable argument processing <int_varargs>` section.
6213 Note that the code generator does not yet fully support va\_arg on many
6214 targets. Also, it does not currently support va\_arg with aggregate
6215 types on any target.
6219 '``landingpad``' Instruction
6220 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6227 <resultval> = landingpad <resultty> personality <type> <pers_fn> <clause>+
6228 <resultval> = landingpad <resultty> personality <type> <pers_fn> cleanup <clause>*
6230 <clause> := catch <type> <value>
6231 <clause> := filter <array constant type> <array constant>
6236 The '``landingpad``' instruction is used by `LLVM's exception handling
6237 system <ExceptionHandling.html#overview>`_ to specify that a basic block
6238 is a landing pad --- one where the exception lands, and corresponds to the
6239 code found in the ``catch`` portion of a ``try``/``catch`` sequence. It
6240 defines values supplied by the personality function (``pers_fn``) upon
6241 re-entry to the function. The ``resultval`` has the type ``resultty``.
6246 This instruction takes a ``pers_fn`` value. This is the personality
6247 function associated with the unwinding mechanism. The optional
6248 ``cleanup`` flag indicates that the landing pad block is a cleanup.
6250 A ``clause`` begins with the clause type --- ``catch`` or ``filter`` --- and
6251 contains the global variable representing the "type" that may be caught
6252 or filtered respectively. Unlike the ``catch`` clause, the ``filter``
6253 clause takes an array constant as its argument. Use
6254 "``[0 x i8**] undef``" for a filter which cannot throw. The
6255 '``landingpad``' instruction must contain *at least* one ``clause`` or
6256 the ``cleanup`` flag.
6261 The '``landingpad``' instruction defines the values which are set by the
6262 personality function (``pers_fn``) upon re-entry to the function, and
6263 therefore the "result type" of the ``landingpad`` instruction. As with
6264 calling conventions, how the personality function results are
6265 represented in LLVM IR is target specific.
6267 The clauses are applied in order from top to bottom. If two
6268 ``landingpad`` instructions are merged together through inlining, the
6269 clauses from the calling function are appended to the list of clauses.
6270 When the call stack is being unwound due to an exception being thrown,
6271 the exception is compared against each ``clause`` in turn. If it doesn't
6272 match any of the clauses, and the ``cleanup`` flag is not set, then
6273 unwinding continues further up the call stack.
6275 The ``landingpad`` instruction has several restrictions:
6277 - A landing pad block is a basic block which is the unwind destination
6278 of an '``invoke``' instruction.
6279 - A landing pad block must have a '``landingpad``' instruction as its
6280 first non-PHI instruction.
6281 - There can be only one '``landingpad``' instruction within the landing
6283 - A basic block that is not a landing pad block may not include a
6284 '``landingpad``' instruction.
6285 - All '``landingpad``' instructions in a function must have the same
6286 personality function.
6291 .. code-block:: llvm
6293 ;; A landing pad which can catch an integer.
6294 %res = landingpad { i8*, i32 } personality i32 (...)* @__gxx_personality_v0
6296 ;; A landing pad that is a cleanup.
6297 %res = landingpad { i8*, i32 } personality i32 (...)* @__gxx_personality_v0
6299 ;; A landing pad which can catch an integer and can only throw a double.
6300 %res = landingpad { i8*, i32 } personality i32 (...)* @__gxx_personality_v0
6302 filter [1 x i8**] [@_ZTId]
6309 LLVM supports the notion of an "intrinsic function". These functions
6310 have well known names and semantics and are required to follow certain
6311 restrictions. Overall, these intrinsics represent an extension mechanism
6312 for the LLVM language that does not require changing all of the
6313 transformations in LLVM when adding to the language (or the bitcode
6314 reader/writer, the parser, etc...).
6316 Intrinsic function names must all start with an "``llvm.``" prefix. This
6317 prefix is reserved in LLVM for intrinsic names; thus, function names may
6318 not begin with this prefix. Intrinsic functions must always be external
6319 functions: you cannot define the body of intrinsic functions. Intrinsic
6320 functions may only be used in call or invoke instructions: it is illegal
6321 to take the address of an intrinsic function. Additionally, because
6322 intrinsic functions are part of the LLVM language, it is required if any
6323 are added that they be documented here.
6325 Some intrinsic functions can be overloaded, i.e., the intrinsic
6326 represents a family of functions that perform the same operation but on
6327 different data types. Because LLVM can represent over 8 million
6328 different integer types, overloading is used commonly to allow an
6329 intrinsic function to operate on any integer type. One or more of the
6330 argument types or the result type can be overloaded to accept any
6331 integer type. Argument types may also be defined as exactly matching a
6332 previous argument's type or the result type. This allows an intrinsic
6333 function which accepts multiple arguments, but needs all of them to be
6334 of the same type, to only be overloaded with respect to a single
6335 argument or the result.
6337 Overloaded intrinsics will have the names of its overloaded argument
6338 types encoded into its function name, each preceded by a period. Only
6339 those types which are overloaded result in a name suffix. Arguments
6340 whose type is matched against another type do not. For example, the
6341 ``llvm.ctpop`` function can take an integer of any width and returns an
6342 integer of exactly the same integer width. This leads to a family of
6343 functions such as ``i8 @llvm.ctpop.i8(i8 %val)`` and
6344 ``i29 @llvm.ctpop.i29(i29 %val)``. Only one type, the return type, is
6345 overloaded, and only one type suffix is required. Because the argument's
6346 type is matched against the return type, it does not require its own
6349 To learn how to add an intrinsic function, please see the `Extending
6350 LLVM Guide <ExtendingLLVM.html>`_.
6354 Variable Argument Handling Intrinsics
6355 -------------------------------------
6357 Variable argument support is defined in LLVM with the
6358 :ref:`va_arg <i_va_arg>` instruction and these three intrinsic
6359 functions. These functions are related to the similarly named macros
6360 defined in the ``<stdarg.h>`` header file.
6362 All of these functions operate on arguments that use a target-specific
6363 value type "``va_list``". The LLVM assembly language reference manual
6364 does not define what this type is, so all transformations should be
6365 prepared to handle these functions regardless of the type used.
6367 This example shows how the :ref:`va_arg <i_va_arg>` instruction and the
6368 variable argument handling intrinsic functions are used.
6370 .. code-block:: llvm
6372 define i32 @test(i32 %X, ...) {
6373 ; Initialize variable argument processing
6375 %ap2 = bitcast i8** %ap to i8*
6376 call void @llvm.va_start(i8* %ap2)
6378 ; Read a single integer argument
6379 %tmp = va_arg i8** %ap, i32
6381 ; Demonstrate usage of llvm.va_copy and llvm.va_end
6383 %aq2 = bitcast i8** %aq to i8*
6384 call void @llvm.va_copy(i8* %aq2, i8* %ap2)
6385 call void @llvm.va_end(i8* %aq2)
6387 ; Stop processing of arguments.
6388 call void @llvm.va_end(i8* %ap2)
6392 declare void @llvm.va_start(i8*)
6393 declare void @llvm.va_copy(i8*, i8*)
6394 declare void @llvm.va_end(i8*)
6398 '``llvm.va_start``' Intrinsic
6399 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6406 declare void @llvm.va_start(i8* <arglist>)
6411 The '``llvm.va_start``' intrinsic initializes ``*<arglist>`` for
6412 subsequent use by ``va_arg``.
6417 The argument is a pointer to a ``va_list`` element to initialize.
6422 The '``llvm.va_start``' intrinsic works just like the ``va_start`` macro
6423 available in C. In a target-dependent way, it initializes the
6424 ``va_list`` element to which the argument points, so that the next call
6425 to ``va_arg`` will produce the first variable argument passed to the
6426 function. Unlike the C ``va_start`` macro, this intrinsic does not need
6427 to know the last argument of the function as the compiler can figure
6430 '``llvm.va_end``' Intrinsic
6431 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6438 declare void @llvm.va_end(i8* <arglist>)
6443 The '``llvm.va_end``' intrinsic destroys ``*<arglist>``, which has been
6444 initialized previously with ``llvm.va_start`` or ``llvm.va_copy``.
6449 The argument is a pointer to a ``va_list`` to destroy.
6454 The '``llvm.va_end``' intrinsic works just like the ``va_end`` macro
6455 available in C. In a target-dependent way, it destroys the ``va_list``
6456 element to which the argument points. Calls to
6457 :ref:`llvm.va_start <int_va_start>` and
6458 :ref:`llvm.va_copy <int_va_copy>` must be matched exactly with calls to
6463 '``llvm.va_copy``' Intrinsic
6464 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6471 declare void @llvm.va_copy(i8* <destarglist>, i8* <srcarglist>)
6476 The '``llvm.va_copy``' intrinsic copies the current argument position
6477 from the source argument list to the destination argument list.
6482 The first argument is a pointer to a ``va_list`` element to initialize.
6483 The second argument is a pointer to a ``va_list`` element to copy from.
6488 The '``llvm.va_copy``' intrinsic works just like the ``va_copy`` macro
6489 available in C. In a target-dependent way, it copies the source
6490 ``va_list`` element into the destination ``va_list`` element. This
6491 intrinsic is necessary because the `` llvm.va_start`` intrinsic may be
6492 arbitrarily complex and require, for example, memory allocation.
6494 Accurate Garbage Collection Intrinsics
6495 --------------------------------------
6497 LLVM support for `Accurate Garbage Collection <GarbageCollection.html>`_
6498 (GC) requires the implementation and generation of these intrinsics.
6499 These intrinsics allow identification of :ref:`GC roots on the
6500 stack <int_gcroot>`, as well as garbage collector implementations that
6501 require :ref:`read <int_gcread>` and :ref:`write <int_gcwrite>` barriers.
6502 Front-ends for type-safe garbage collected languages should generate
6503 these intrinsics to make use of the LLVM garbage collectors. For more
6504 details, see `Accurate Garbage Collection with
6505 LLVM <GarbageCollection.html>`_.
6507 The garbage collection intrinsics only operate on objects in the generic
6508 address space (address space zero).
6512 '``llvm.gcroot``' Intrinsic
6513 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6520 declare void @llvm.gcroot(i8** %ptrloc, i8* %metadata)
6525 The '``llvm.gcroot``' intrinsic declares the existence of a GC root to
6526 the code generator, and allows some metadata to be associated with it.
6531 The first argument specifies the address of a stack object that contains
6532 the root pointer. The second pointer (which must be either a constant or
6533 a global value address) contains the meta-data to be associated with the
6539 At runtime, a call to this intrinsic stores a null pointer into the
6540 "ptrloc" location. At compile-time, the code generator generates
6541 information to allow the runtime to find the pointer at GC safe points.
6542 The '``llvm.gcroot``' intrinsic may only be used in a function which
6543 :ref:`specifies a GC algorithm <gc>`.
6547 '``llvm.gcread``' Intrinsic
6548 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6555 declare i8* @llvm.gcread(i8* %ObjPtr, i8** %Ptr)
6560 The '``llvm.gcread``' intrinsic identifies reads of references from heap
6561 locations, allowing garbage collector implementations that require read
6567 The second argument is the address to read from, which should be an
6568 address allocated from the garbage collector. The first object is a
6569 pointer to the start of the referenced object, if needed by the language
6570 runtime (otherwise null).
6575 The '``llvm.gcread``' intrinsic has the same semantics as a load
6576 instruction, but may be replaced with substantially more complex code by
6577 the garbage collector runtime, as needed. The '``llvm.gcread``'
6578 intrinsic may only be used in a function which :ref:`specifies a GC
6583 '``llvm.gcwrite``' Intrinsic
6584 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6591 declare void @llvm.gcwrite(i8* %P1, i8* %Obj, i8** %P2)
6596 The '``llvm.gcwrite``' intrinsic identifies writes of references to heap
6597 locations, allowing garbage collector implementations that require write
6598 barriers (such as generational or reference counting collectors).
6603 The first argument is the reference to store, the second is the start of
6604 the object to store it to, and the third is the address of the field of
6605 Obj to store to. If the runtime does not require a pointer to the
6606 object, Obj may be null.
6611 The '``llvm.gcwrite``' intrinsic has the same semantics as a store
6612 instruction, but may be replaced with substantially more complex code by
6613 the garbage collector runtime, as needed. The '``llvm.gcwrite``'
6614 intrinsic may only be used in a function which :ref:`specifies a GC
6617 Code Generator Intrinsics
6618 -------------------------
6620 These intrinsics are provided by LLVM to expose special features that
6621 may only be implemented with code generator support.
6623 '``llvm.returnaddress``' Intrinsic
6624 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6631 declare i8 *@llvm.returnaddress(i32 <level>)
6636 The '``llvm.returnaddress``' intrinsic attempts to compute a
6637 target-specific value indicating the return address of the current
6638 function or one of its callers.
6643 The argument to this intrinsic indicates which function to return the
6644 address for. Zero indicates the calling function, one indicates its
6645 caller, etc. The argument is **required** to be a constant integer
6651 The '``llvm.returnaddress``' intrinsic either returns a pointer
6652 indicating the return address of the specified call frame, or zero if it
6653 cannot be identified. The value returned by this intrinsic is likely to
6654 be incorrect or 0 for arguments other than zero, so it should only be
6655 used for debugging purposes.
6657 Note that calling this intrinsic does not prevent function inlining or
6658 other aggressive transformations, so the value returned may not be that
6659 of the obvious source-language caller.
6661 '``llvm.frameaddress``' Intrinsic
6662 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6669 declare i8* @llvm.frameaddress(i32 <level>)
6674 The '``llvm.frameaddress``' intrinsic attempts to return the
6675 target-specific frame pointer value for the specified stack frame.
6680 The argument to this intrinsic indicates which function to return the
6681 frame pointer for. Zero indicates the calling function, one indicates
6682 its caller, etc. The argument is **required** to be a constant integer
6688 The '``llvm.frameaddress``' intrinsic either returns a pointer
6689 indicating the frame address of the specified call frame, or zero if it
6690 cannot be identified. The value returned by this intrinsic is likely to
6691 be incorrect or 0 for arguments other than zero, so it should only be
6692 used for debugging purposes.
6694 Note that calling this intrinsic does not prevent function inlining or
6695 other aggressive transformations, so the value returned may not be that
6696 of the obvious source-language caller.
6700 '``llvm.stacksave``' Intrinsic
6701 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6708 declare i8* @llvm.stacksave()
6713 The '``llvm.stacksave``' intrinsic is used to remember the current state
6714 of the function stack, for use with
6715 :ref:`llvm.stackrestore <int_stackrestore>`. This is useful for
6716 implementing language features like scoped automatic variable sized
6722 This intrinsic returns a opaque pointer value that can be passed to
6723 :ref:`llvm.stackrestore <int_stackrestore>`. When an
6724 ``llvm.stackrestore`` intrinsic is executed with a value saved from
6725 ``llvm.stacksave``, it effectively restores the state of the stack to
6726 the state it was in when the ``llvm.stacksave`` intrinsic executed. In
6727 practice, this pops any :ref:`alloca <i_alloca>` blocks from the stack that
6728 were allocated after the ``llvm.stacksave`` was executed.
6730 .. _int_stackrestore:
6732 '``llvm.stackrestore``' Intrinsic
6733 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6740 declare void @llvm.stackrestore(i8* %ptr)
6745 The '``llvm.stackrestore``' intrinsic is used to restore the state of
6746 the function stack to the state it was in when the corresponding
6747 :ref:`llvm.stacksave <int_stacksave>` intrinsic executed. This is
6748 useful for implementing language features like scoped automatic variable
6749 sized arrays in C99.
6754 See the description for :ref:`llvm.stacksave <int_stacksave>`.
6756 '``llvm.prefetch``' Intrinsic
6757 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6764 declare void @llvm.prefetch(i8* <address>, i32 <rw>, i32 <locality>, i32 <cache type>)
6769 The '``llvm.prefetch``' intrinsic is a hint to the code generator to
6770 insert a prefetch instruction if supported; otherwise, it is a noop.
6771 Prefetches have no effect on the behavior of the program but can change
6772 its performance characteristics.
6777 ``address`` is the address to be prefetched, ``rw`` is the specifier
6778 determining if the fetch should be for a read (0) or write (1), and
6779 ``locality`` is a temporal locality specifier ranging from (0) - no
6780 locality, to (3) - extremely local keep in cache. The ``cache type``
6781 specifies whether the prefetch is performed on the data (1) or
6782 instruction (0) cache. The ``rw``, ``locality`` and ``cache type``
6783 arguments must be constant integers.
6788 This intrinsic does not modify the behavior of the program. In
6789 particular, prefetches cannot trap and do not produce a value. On
6790 targets that support this intrinsic, the prefetch can provide hints to
6791 the processor cache for better performance.
6793 '``llvm.pcmarker``' Intrinsic
6794 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6801 declare void @llvm.pcmarker(i32 <id>)
6806 The '``llvm.pcmarker``' intrinsic is a method to export a Program
6807 Counter (PC) in a region of code to simulators and other tools. The
6808 method is target specific, but it is expected that the marker will use
6809 exported symbols to transmit the PC of the marker. The marker makes no
6810 guarantees that it will remain with any specific instruction after
6811 optimizations. It is possible that the presence of a marker will inhibit
6812 optimizations. The intended use is to be inserted after optimizations to
6813 allow correlations of simulation runs.
6818 ``id`` is a numerical id identifying the marker.
6823 This intrinsic does not modify the behavior of the program. Backends
6824 that do not support this intrinsic may ignore it.
6826 '``llvm.readcyclecounter``' Intrinsic
6827 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6834 declare i64 @llvm.readcyclecounter()
6839 The '``llvm.readcyclecounter``' intrinsic provides access to the cycle
6840 counter register (or similar low latency, high accuracy clocks) on those
6841 targets that support it. On X86, it should map to RDTSC. On Alpha, it
6842 should map to RPCC. As the backing counters overflow quickly (on the
6843 order of 9 seconds on alpha), this should only be used for small
6849 When directly supported, reading the cycle counter should not modify any
6850 memory. Implementations are allowed to either return a application
6851 specific value or a system wide value. On backends without support, this
6852 is lowered to a constant 0.
6854 Note that runtime support may be conditional on the privilege-level code is
6855 running at and the host platform.
6857 Standard C Library Intrinsics
6858 -----------------------------
6860 LLVM provides intrinsics for a few important standard C library
6861 functions. These intrinsics allow source-language front-ends to pass
6862 information about the alignment of the pointer arguments to the code
6863 generator, providing opportunity for more efficient code generation.
6867 '``llvm.memcpy``' Intrinsic
6868 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6873 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.memcpy`` on any
6874 integer bit width and for different address spaces. Not all targets
6875 support all bit widths however.
6879 declare void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* <dest>, i8* <src>,
6880 i32 <len>, i32 <align>, i1 <isvolatile>)
6881 declare void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i64(i8* <dest>, i8* <src>,
6882 i64 <len>, i32 <align>, i1 <isvolatile>)
6887 The '``llvm.memcpy.*``' intrinsics copy a block of memory from the
6888 source location to the destination location.
6890 Note that, unlike the standard libc function, the ``llvm.memcpy.*``
6891 intrinsics do not return a value, takes extra alignment/isvolatile
6892 arguments and the pointers can be in specified address spaces.
6897 The first argument is a pointer to the destination, the second is a
6898 pointer to the source. The third argument is an integer argument
6899 specifying the number of bytes to copy, the fourth argument is the
6900 alignment of the source and destination locations, and the fifth is a
6901 boolean indicating a volatile access.
6903 If the call to this intrinsic has an alignment value that is not 0 or 1,
6904 then the caller guarantees that both the source and destination pointers
6905 are aligned to that boundary.
6907 If the ``isvolatile`` parameter is ``true``, the ``llvm.memcpy`` call is
6908 a :ref:`volatile operation <volatile>`. The detailed access behavior is not
6909 very cleanly specified and it is unwise to depend on it.
6914 The '``llvm.memcpy.*``' intrinsics copy a block of memory from the
6915 source location to the destination location, which are not allowed to
6916 overlap. It copies "len" bytes of memory over. If the argument is known
6917 to be aligned to some boundary, this can be specified as the fourth
6918 argument, otherwise it should be set to 0 or 1 (both meaning no alignment).
6920 '``llvm.memmove``' Intrinsic
6921 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6926 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use llvm.memmove on any integer
6927 bit width and for different address space. Not all targets support all
6932 declare void @llvm.memmove.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* <dest>, i8* <src>,
6933 i32 <len>, i32 <align>, i1 <isvolatile>)
6934 declare void @llvm.memmove.p0i8.p0i8.i64(i8* <dest>, i8* <src>,
6935 i64 <len>, i32 <align>, i1 <isvolatile>)
6940 The '``llvm.memmove.*``' intrinsics move a block of memory from the
6941 source location to the destination location. It is similar to the
6942 '``llvm.memcpy``' intrinsic but allows the two memory locations to
6945 Note that, unlike the standard libc function, the ``llvm.memmove.*``
6946 intrinsics do not return a value, takes extra alignment/isvolatile
6947 arguments and the pointers can be in specified address spaces.
6952 The first argument is a pointer to the destination, the second is a
6953 pointer to the source. The third argument is an integer argument
6954 specifying the number of bytes to copy, the fourth argument is the
6955 alignment of the source and destination locations, and the fifth is a
6956 boolean indicating a volatile access.
6958 If the call to this intrinsic has an alignment value that is not 0 or 1,
6959 then the caller guarantees that the source and destination pointers are
6960 aligned to that boundary.
6962 If the ``isvolatile`` parameter is ``true``, the ``llvm.memmove`` call
6963 is a :ref:`volatile operation <volatile>`. The detailed access behavior is
6964 not very cleanly specified and it is unwise to depend on it.
6969 The '``llvm.memmove.*``' intrinsics copy a block of memory from the
6970 source location to the destination location, which may overlap. It
6971 copies "len" bytes of memory over. If the argument is known to be
6972 aligned to some boundary, this can be specified as the fourth argument,
6973 otherwise it should be set to 0 or 1 (both meaning no alignment).
6975 '``llvm.memset.*``' Intrinsics
6976 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
6981 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use llvm.memset on any integer
6982 bit width and for different address spaces. However, not all targets
6983 support all bit widths.
6987 declare void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i32(i8* <dest>, i8 <val>,
6988 i32 <len>, i32 <align>, i1 <isvolatile>)
6989 declare void @llvm.memset.p0i8.i64(i8* <dest>, i8 <val>,
6990 i64 <len>, i32 <align>, i1 <isvolatile>)
6995 The '``llvm.memset.*``' intrinsics fill a block of memory with a
6996 particular byte value.
6998 Note that, unlike the standard libc function, the ``llvm.memset``
6999 intrinsic does not return a value and takes extra alignment/volatile
7000 arguments. Also, the destination can be in an arbitrary address space.
7005 The first argument is a pointer to the destination to fill, the second
7006 is the byte value with which to fill it, the third argument is an
7007 integer argument specifying the number of bytes to fill, and the fourth
7008 argument is the known alignment of the destination location.
7010 If the call to this intrinsic has an alignment value that is not 0 or 1,
7011 then the caller guarantees that the destination pointer is aligned to
7014 If the ``isvolatile`` parameter is ``true``, the ``llvm.memset`` call is
7015 a :ref:`volatile operation <volatile>`. The detailed access behavior is not
7016 very cleanly specified and it is unwise to depend on it.
7021 The '``llvm.memset.*``' intrinsics fill "len" bytes of memory starting
7022 at the destination location. If the argument is known to be aligned to
7023 some boundary, this can be specified as the fourth argument, otherwise
7024 it should be set to 0 or 1 (both meaning no alignment).
7026 '``llvm.sqrt.*``' Intrinsic
7027 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7032 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.sqrt`` on any
7033 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7038 declare float @llvm.sqrt.f32(float %Val)
7039 declare double @llvm.sqrt.f64(double %Val)
7040 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.sqrt.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7041 declare fp128 @llvm.sqrt.f128(fp128 %Val)
7042 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.sqrt.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7047 The '``llvm.sqrt``' intrinsics return the sqrt of the specified operand,
7048 returning the same value as the libm '``sqrt``' functions would. Unlike
7049 ``sqrt`` in libm, however, ``llvm.sqrt`` has undefined behavior for
7050 negative numbers other than -0.0 (which allows for better optimization,
7051 because there is no need to worry about errno being set).
7052 ``llvm.sqrt(-0.0)`` is defined to return -0.0 like IEEE sqrt.
7057 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7063 This function returns the sqrt of the specified operand if it is a
7064 nonnegative floating point number.
7066 '``llvm.powi.*``' Intrinsic
7067 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7072 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.powi`` on any
7073 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7078 declare float @llvm.powi.f32(float %Val, i32 %power)
7079 declare double @llvm.powi.f64(double %Val, i32 %power)
7080 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.powi.f80(x86_fp80 %Val, i32 %power)
7081 declare fp128 @llvm.powi.f128(fp128 %Val, i32 %power)
7082 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.powi.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val, i32 %power)
7087 The '``llvm.powi.*``' intrinsics return the first operand raised to the
7088 specified (positive or negative) power. The order of evaluation of
7089 multiplications is not defined. When a vector of floating point type is
7090 used, the second argument remains a scalar integer value.
7095 The second argument is an integer power, and the first is a value to
7096 raise to that power.
7101 This function returns the first value raised to the second power with an
7102 unspecified sequence of rounding operations.
7104 '``llvm.sin.*``' Intrinsic
7105 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7110 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.sin`` on any
7111 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7116 declare float @llvm.sin.f32(float %Val)
7117 declare double @llvm.sin.f64(double %Val)
7118 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.sin.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7119 declare fp128 @llvm.sin.f128(fp128 %Val)
7120 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.sin.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7125 The '``llvm.sin.*``' intrinsics return the sine of the operand.
7130 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7136 This function returns the sine of the specified operand, returning the
7137 same values as the libm ``sin`` functions would, and handles error
7138 conditions in the same way.
7140 '``llvm.cos.*``' Intrinsic
7141 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7146 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.cos`` on any
7147 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7152 declare float @llvm.cos.f32(float %Val)
7153 declare double @llvm.cos.f64(double %Val)
7154 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.cos.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7155 declare fp128 @llvm.cos.f128(fp128 %Val)
7156 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.cos.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7161 The '``llvm.cos.*``' intrinsics return the cosine of the operand.
7166 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7172 This function returns the cosine of the specified operand, returning the
7173 same values as the libm ``cos`` functions would, and handles error
7174 conditions in the same way.
7176 '``llvm.pow.*``' Intrinsic
7177 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7182 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.pow`` on any
7183 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7188 declare float @llvm.pow.f32(float %Val, float %Power)
7189 declare double @llvm.pow.f64(double %Val, double %Power)
7190 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.pow.f80(x86_fp80 %Val, x86_fp80 %Power)
7191 declare fp128 @llvm.pow.f128(fp128 %Val, fp128 %Power)
7192 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.pow.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val, ppc_fp128 Power)
7197 The '``llvm.pow.*``' intrinsics return the first operand raised to the
7198 specified (positive or negative) power.
7203 The second argument is a floating point power, and the first is a value
7204 to raise to that power.
7209 This function returns the first value raised to the second power,
7210 returning the same values as the libm ``pow`` functions would, and
7211 handles error conditions in the same way.
7213 '``llvm.exp.*``' Intrinsic
7214 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7219 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.exp`` on any
7220 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7225 declare float @llvm.exp.f32(float %Val)
7226 declare double @llvm.exp.f64(double %Val)
7227 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.exp.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7228 declare fp128 @llvm.exp.f128(fp128 %Val)
7229 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.exp.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7234 The '``llvm.exp.*``' intrinsics perform the exp function.
7239 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7245 This function returns the same values as the libm ``exp`` functions
7246 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7248 '``llvm.exp2.*``' Intrinsic
7249 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7254 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.exp2`` on any
7255 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7260 declare float @llvm.exp2.f32(float %Val)
7261 declare double @llvm.exp2.f64(double %Val)
7262 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.exp2.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7263 declare fp128 @llvm.exp2.f128(fp128 %Val)
7264 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.exp2.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7269 The '``llvm.exp2.*``' intrinsics perform the exp2 function.
7274 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7280 This function returns the same values as the libm ``exp2`` functions
7281 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7283 '``llvm.log.*``' Intrinsic
7284 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7289 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.log`` on any
7290 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7295 declare float @llvm.log.f32(float %Val)
7296 declare double @llvm.log.f64(double %Val)
7297 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.log.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7298 declare fp128 @llvm.log.f128(fp128 %Val)
7299 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.log.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7304 The '``llvm.log.*``' intrinsics perform the log function.
7309 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7315 This function returns the same values as the libm ``log`` functions
7316 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7318 '``llvm.log10.*``' Intrinsic
7319 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7324 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.log10`` on any
7325 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7330 declare float @llvm.log10.f32(float %Val)
7331 declare double @llvm.log10.f64(double %Val)
7332 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.log10.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7333 declare fp128 @llvm.log10.f128(fp128 %Val)
7334 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.log10.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7339 The '``llvm.log10.*``' intrinsics perform the log10 function.
7344 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7350 This function returns the same values as the libm ``log10`` functions
7351 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7353 '``llvm.log2.*``' Intrinsic
7354 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7359 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.log2`` on any
7360 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7365 declare float @llvm.log2.f32(float %Val)
7366 declare double @llvm.log2.f64(double %Val)
7367 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.log2.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7368 declare fp128 @llvm.log2.f128(fp128 %Val)
7369 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.log2.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7374 The '``llvm.log2.*``' intrinsics perform the log2 function.
7379 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7385 This function returns the same values as the libm ``log2`` functions
7386 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7388 '``llvm.fma.*``' Intrinsic
7389 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7394 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.fma`` on any
7395 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7400 declare float @llvm.fma.f32(float %a, float %b, float %c)
7401 declare double @llvm.fma.f64(double %a, double %b, double %c)
7402 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.fma.f80(x86_fp80 %a, x86_fp80 %b, x86_fp80 %c)
7403 declare fp128 @llvm.fma.f128(fp128 %a, fp128 %b, fp128 %c)
7404 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.fma.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %a, ppc_fp128 %b, ppc_fp128 %c)
7409 The '``llvm.fma.*``' intrinsics perform the fused multiply-add
7415 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7421 This function returns the same values as the libm ``fma`` functions
7424 '``llvm.fabs.*``' Intrinsic
7425 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7430 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.fabs`` on any
7431 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7436 declare float @llvm.fabs.f32(float %Val)
7437 declare double @llvm.fabs.f64(double %Val)
7438 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.fabs.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7439 declare fp128 @llvm.fabs.f128(fp128 %Val)
7440 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.fabs.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7445 The '``llvm.fabs.*``' intrinsics return the absolute value of the
7451 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7457 This function returns the same values as the libm ``fabs`` functions
7458 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7460 '``llvm.copysign.*``' Intrinsic
7461 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7466 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.copysign`` on any
7467 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7472 declare float @llvm.copysign.f32(float %Mag, float %Sgn)
7473 declare double @llvm.copysign.f64(double %Mag, double %Sgn)
7474 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.copysign.f80(x86_fp80 %Mag, x86_fp80 %Sgn)
7475 declare fp128 @llvm.copysign.f128(fp128 %Mag, fp128 %Sgn)
7476 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.copysign.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Mag, ppc_fp128 %Sgn)
7481 The '``llvm.copysign.*``' intrinsics return a value with the magnitude of the
7482 first operand and the sign of the second operand.
7487 The arguments and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7493 This function returns the same values as the libm ``copysign``
7494 functions would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7496 '``llvm.floor.*``' Intrinsic
7497 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7502 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.floor`` on any
7503 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7508 declare float @llvm.floor.f32(float %Val)
7509 declare double @llvm.floor.f64(double %Val)
7510 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.floor.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7511 declare fp128 @llvm.floor.f128(fp128 %Val)
7512 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.floor.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7517 The '``llvm.floor.*``' intrinsics return the floor of the operand.
7522 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7528 This function returns the same values as the libm ``floor`` functions
7529 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7531 '``llvm.ceil.*``' Intrinsic
7532 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7537 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.ceil`` on any
7538 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7543 declare float @llvm.ceil.f32(float %Val)
7544 declare double @llvm.ceil.f64(double %Val)
7545 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.ceil.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7546 declare fp128 @llvm.ceil.f128(fp128 %Val)
7547 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.ceil.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7552 The '``llvm.ceil.*``' intrinsics return the ceiling of the operand.
7557 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7563 This function returns the same values as the libm ``ceil`` functions
7564 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7566 '``llvm.trunc.*``' Intrinsic
7567 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7572 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.trunc`` on any
7573 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7578 declare float @llvm.trunc.f32(float %Val)
7579 declare double @llvm.trunc.f64(double %Val)
7580 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.trunc.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7581 declare fp128 @llvm.trunc.f128(fp128 %Val)
7582 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.trunc.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7587 The '``llvm.trunc.*``' intrinsics returns the operand rounded to the
7588 nearest integer not larger in magnitude than the operand.
7593 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7599 This function returns the same values as the libm ``trunc`` functions
7600 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7602 '``llvm.rint.*``' Intrinsic
7603 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7608 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.rint`` on any
7609 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7614 declare float @llvm.rint.f32(float %Val)
7615 declare double @llvm.rint.f64(double %Val)
7616 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.rint.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7617 declare fp128 @llvm.rint.f128(fp128 %Val)
7618 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.rint.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7623 The '``llvm.rint.*``' intrinsics returns the operand rounded to the
7624 nearest integer. It may raise an inexact floating-point exception if the
7625 operand isn't an integer.
7630 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7636 This function returns the same values as the libm ``rint`` functions
7637 would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7639 '``llvm.nearbyint.*``' Intrinsic
7640 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7645 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.nearbyint`` on any
7646 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7651 declare float @llvm.nearbyint.f32(float %Val)
7652 declare double @llvm.nearbyint.f64(double %Val)
7653 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.nearbyint.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7654 declare fp128 @llvm.nearbyint.f128(fp128 %Val)
7655 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.nearbyint.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7660 The '``llvm.nearbyint.*``' intrinsics returns the operand rounded to the
7666 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7672 This function returns the same values as the libm ``nearbyint``
7673 functions would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7675 '``llvm.round.*``' Intrinsic
7676 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7681 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.round`` on any
7682 floating point or vector of floating point type. Not all targets support
7687 declare float @llvm.round.f32(float %Val)
7688 declare double @llvm.round.f64(double %Val)
7689 declare x86_fp80 @llvm.round.f80(x86_fp80 %Val)
7690 declare fp128 @llvm.round.f128(fp128 %Val)
7691 declare ppc_fp128 @llvm.round.ppcf128(ppc_fp128 %Val)
7696 The '``llvm.round.*``' intrinsics returns the operand rounded to the
7702 The argument and return value are floating point numbers of the same
7708 This function returns the same values as the libm ``round``
7709 functions would, and handles error conditions in the same way.
7711 Bit Manipulation Intrinsics
7712 ---------------------------
7714 LLVM provides intrinsics for a few important bit manipulation
7715 operations. These allow efficient code generation for some algorithms.
7717 '``llvm.bswap.*``' Intrinsics
7718 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7723 This is an overloaded intrinsic function. You can use bswap on any
7724 integer type that is an even number of bytes (i.e. BitWidth % 16 == 0).
7728 declare i16 @llvm.bswap.i16(i16 <id>)
7729 declare i32 @llvm.bswap.i32(i32 <id>)
7730 declare i64 @llvm.bswap.i64(i64 <id>)
7735 The '``llvm.bswap``' family of intrinsics is used to byte swap integer
7736 values with an even number of bytes (positive multiple of 16 bits).
7737 These are useful for performing operations on data that is not in the
7738 target's native byte order.
7743 The ``llvm.bswap.i16`` intrinsic returns an i16 value that has the high
7744 and low byte of the input i16 swapped. Similarly, the ``llvm.bswap.i32``
7745 intrinsic returns an i32 value that has the four bytes of the input i32
7746 swapped, so that if the input bytes are numbered 0, 1, 2, 3 then the
7747 returned i32 will have its bytes in 3, 2, 1, 0 order. The
7748 ``llvm.bswap.i48``, ``llvm.bswap.i64`` and other intrinsics extend this
7749 concept to additional even-byte lengths (6 bytes, 8 bytes and more,
7752 '``llvm.ctpop.*``' Intrinsic
7753 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7758 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use llvm.ctpop on any integer
7759 bit width, or on any vector with integer elements. Not all targets
7760 support all bit widths or vector types, however.
7764 declare i8 @llvm.ctpop.i8(i8 <src>)
7765 declare i16 @llvm.ctpop.i16(i16 <src>)
7766 declare i32 @llvm.ctpop.i32(i32 <src>)
7767 declare i64 @llvm.ctpop.i64(i64 <src>)
7768 declare i256 @llvm.ctpop.i256(i256 <src>)
7769 declare <2 x i32> @llvm.ctpop.v2i32(<2 x i32> <src>)
7774 The '``llvm.ctpop``' family of intrinsics counts the number of bits set
7780 The only argument is the value to be counted. The argument may be of any
7781 integer type, or a vector with integer elements. The return type must
7782 match the argument type.
7787 The '``llvm.ctpop``' intrinsic counts the 1's in a variable, or within
7788 each element of a vector.
7790 '``llvm.ctlz.*``' Intrinsic
7791 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7796 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.ctlz`` on any
7797 integer bit width, or any vector whose elements are integers. Not all
7798 targets support all bit widths or vector types, however.
7802 declare i8 @llvm.ctlz.i8 (i8 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7803 declare i16 @llvm.ctlz.i16 (i16 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7804 declare i32 @llvm.ctlz.i32 (i32 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7805 declare i64 @llvm.ctlz.i64 (i64 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7806 declare i256 @llvm.ctlz.i256(i256 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7807 declase <2 x i32> @llvm.ctlz.v2i32(<2 x i32> <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7812 The '``llvm.ctlz``' family of intrinsic functions counts the number of
7813 leading zeros in a variable.
7818 The first argument is the value to be counted. This argument may be of
7819 any integer type, or a vectory with integer element type. The return
7820 type must match the first argument type.
7822 The second argument must be a constant and is a flag to indicate whether
7823 the intrinsic should ensure that a zero as the first argument produces a
7824 defined result. Historically some architectures did not provide a
7825 defined result for zero values as efficiently, and many algorithms are
7826 now predicated on avoiding zero-value inputs.
7831 The '``llvm.ctlz``' intrinsic counts the leading (most significant)
7832 zeros in a variable, or within each element of the vector. If
7833 ``src == 0`` then the result is the size in bits of the type of ``src``
7834 if ``is_zero_undef == 0`` and ``undef`` otherwise. For example,
7835 ``llvm.ctlz(i32 2) = 30``.
7837 '``llvm.cttz.*``' Intrinsic
7838 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7843 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.cttz`` on any
7844 integer bit width, or any vector of integer elements. Not all targets
7845 support all bit widths or vector types, however.
7849 declare i8 @llvm.cttz.i8 (i8 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7850 declare i16 @llvm.cttz.i16 (i16 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7851 declare i32 @llvm.cttz.i32 (i32 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7852 declare i64 @llvm.cttz.i64 (i64 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7853 declare i256 @llvm.cttz.i256(i256 <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7854 declase <2 x i32> @llvm.cttz.v2i32(<2 x i32> <src>, i1 <is_zero_undef>)
7859 The '``llvm.cttz``' family of intrinsic functions counts the number of
7865 The first argument is the value to be counted. This argument may be of
7866 any integer type, or a vectory with integer element type. The return
7867 type must match the first argument type.
7869 The second argument must be a constant and is a flag to indicate whether
7870 the intrinsic should ensure that a zero as the first argument produces a
7871 defined result. Historically some architectures did not provide a
7872 defined result for zero values as efficiently, and many algorithms are
7873 now predicated on avoiding zero-value inputs.
7878 The '``llvm.cttz``' intrinsic counts the trailing (least significant)
7879 zeros in a variable, or within each element of a vector. If ``src == 0``
7880 then the result is the size in bits of the type of ``src`` if
7881 ``is_zero_undef == 0`` and ``undef`` otherwise. For example,
7882 ``llvm.cttz(2) = 1``.
7884 Arithmetic with Overflow Intrinsics
7885 -----------------------------------
7887 LLVM provides intrinsics for some arithmetic with overflow operations.
7889 '``llvm.sadd.with.overflow.*``' Intrinsics
7890 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7895 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.sadd.with.overflow``
7896 on any integer bit width.
7900 declare {i16, i1} @llvm.sadd.with.overflow.i16(i16 %a, i16 %b)
7901 declare {i32, i1} @llvm.sadd.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
7902 declare {i64, i1} @llvm.sadd.with.overflow.i64(i64 %a, i64 %b)
7907 The '``llvm.sadd.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
7908 a signed addition of the two arguments, and indicate whether an overflow
7909 occurred during the signed summation.
7914 The arguments (%a and %b) and the first element of the result structure
7915 may be of integer types of any bit width, but they must have the same
7916 bit width. The second element of the result structure must be of type
7917 ``i1``. ``%a`` and ``%b`` are the two values that will undergo signed
7923 The '``llvm.sadd.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
7924 a signed addition of the two variables. They return a structure --- the
7925 first element of which is the signed summation, and the second element
7926 of which is a bit specifying if the signed summation resulted in an
7932 .. code-block:: llvm
7934 %res = call {i32, i1} @llvm.sadd.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
7935 %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 0
7936 %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 1
7937 br i1 %obit, label %overflow, label %normal
7939 '``llvm.uadd.with.overflow.*``' Intrinsics
7940 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7945 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.uadd.with.overflow``
7946 on any integer bit width.
7950 declare {i16, i1} @llvm.uadd.with.overflow.i16(i16 %a, i16 %b)
7951 declare {i32, i1} @llvm.uadd.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
7952 declare {i64, i1} @llvm.uadd.with.overflow.i64(i64 %a, i64 %b)
7957 The '``llvm.uadd.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
7958 an unsigned addition of the two arguments, and indicate whether a carry
7959 occurred during the unsigned summation.
7964 The arguments (%a and %b) and the first element of the result structure
7965 may be of integer types of any bit width, but they must have the same
7966 bit width. The second element of the result structure must be of type
7967 ``i1``. ``%a`` and ``%b`` are the two values that will undergo unsigned
7973 The '``llvm.uadd.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
7974 an unsigned addition of the two arguments. They return a structure --- the
7975 first element of which is the sum, and the second element of which is a
7976 bit specifying if the unsigned summation resulted in a carry.
7981 .. code-block:: llvm
7983 %res = call {i32, i1} @llvm.uadd.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
7984 %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 0
7985 %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 1
7986 br i1 %obit, label %carry, label %normal
7988 '``llvm.ssub.with.overflow.*``' Intrinsics
7989 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7994 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.ssub.with.overflow``
7995 on any integer bit width.
7999 declare {i16, i1} @llvm.ssub.with.overflow.i16(i16 %a, i16 %b)
8000 declare {i32, i1} @llvm.ssub.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8001 declare {i64, i1} @llvm.ssub.with.overflow.i64(i64 %a, i64 %b)
8006 The '``llvm.ssub.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8007 a signed subtraction of the two arguments, and indicate whether an
8008 overflow occurred during the signed subtraction.
8013 The arguments (%a and %b) and the first element of the result structure
8014 may be of integer types of any bit width, but they must have the same
8015 bit width. The second element of the result structure must be of type
8016 ``i1``. ``%a`` and ``%b`` are the two values that will undergo signed
8022 The '``llvm.ssub.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8023 a signed subtraction of the two arguments. They return a structure --- the
8024 first element of which is the subtraction, and the second element of
8025 which is a bit specifying if the signed subtraction resulted in an
8031 .. code-block:: llvm
8033 %res = call {i32, i1} @llvm.ssub.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8034 %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 0
8035 %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 1
8036 br i1 %obit, label %overflow, label %normal
8038 '``llvm.usub.with.overflow.*``' Intrinsics
8039 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8044 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.usub.with.overflow``
8045 on any integer bit width.
8049 declare {i16, i1} @llvm.usub.with.overflow.i16(i16 %a, i16 %b)
8050 declare {i32, i1} @llvm.usub.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8051 declare {i64, i1} @llvm.usub.with.overflow.i64(i64 %a, i64 %b)
8056 The '``llvm.usub.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8057 an unsigned subtraction of the two arguments, and indicate whether an
8058 overflow occurred during the unsigned subtraction.
8063 The arguments (%a and %b) and the first element of the result structure
8064 may be of integer types of any bit width, but they must have the same
8065 bit width. The second element of the result structure must be of type
8066 ``i1``. ``%a`` and ``%b`` are the two values that will undergo unsigned
8072 The '``llvm.usub.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8073 an unsigned subtraction of the two arguments. They return a structure ---
8074 the first element of which is the subtraction, and the second element of
8075 which is a bit specifying if the unsigned subtraction resulted in an
8081 .. code-block:: llvm
8083 %res = call {i32, i1} @llvm.usub.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8084 %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 0
8085 %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 1
8086 br i1 %obit, label %overflow, label %normal
8088 '``llvm.smul.with.overflow.*``' Intrinsics
8089 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8094 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.smul.with.overflow``
8095 on any integer bit width.
8099 declare {i16, i1} @llvm.smul.with.overflow.i16(i16 %a, i16 %b)
8100 declare {i32, i1} @llvm.smul.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8101 declare {i64, i1} @llvm.smul.with.overflow.i64(i64 %a, i64 %b)
8106 The '``llvm.smul.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8107 a signed multiplication of the two arguments, and indicate whether an
8108 overflow occurred during the signed multiplication.
8113 The arguments (%a and %b) and the first element of the result structure
8114 may be of integer types of any bit width, but they must have the same
8115 bit width. The second element of the result structure must be of type
8116 ``i1``. ``%a`` and ``%b`` are the two values that will undergo signed
8122 The '``llvm.smul.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8123 a signed multiplication of the two arguments. They return a structure ---
8124 the first element of which is the multiplication, and the second element
8125 of which is a bit specifying if the signed multiplication resulted in an
8131 .. code-block:: llvm
8133 %res = call {i32, i1} @llvm.smul.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8134 %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 0
8135 %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 1
8136 br i1 %obit, label %overflow, label %normal
8138 '``llvm.umul.with.overflow.*``' Intrinsics
8139 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8144 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use ``llvm.umul.with.overflow``
8145 on any integer bit width.
8149 declare {i16, i1} @llvm.umul.with.overflow.i16(i16 %a, i16 %b)
8150 declare {i32, i1} @llvm.umul.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8151 declare {i64, i1} @llvm.umul.with.overflow.i64(i64 %a, i64 %b)
8156 The '``llvm.umul.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8157 a unsigned multiplication of the two arguments, and indicate whether an
8158 overflow occurred during the unsigned multiplication.
8163 The arguments (%a and %b) and the first element of the result structure
8164 may be of integer types of any bit width, but they must have the same
8165 bit width. The second element of the result structure must be of type
8166 ``i1``. ``%a`` and ``%b`` are the two values that will undergo unsigned
8172 The '``llvm.umul.with.overflow``' family of intrinsic functions perform
8173 an unsigned multiplication of the two arguments. They return a structure ---
8174 the first element of which is the multiplication, and the second
8175 element of which is a bit specifying if the unsigned multiplication
8176 resulted in an overflow.
8181 .. code-block:: llvm
8183 %res = call {i32, i1} @llvm.umul.with.overflow.i32(i32 %a, i32 %b)
8184 %sum = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 0
8185 %obit = extractvalue {i32, i1} %res, 1
8186 br i1 %obit, label %overflow, label %normal
8188 Specialised Arithmetic Intrinsics
8189 ---------------------------------
8191 '``llvm.fmuladd.*``' Intrinsic
8192 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8199 declare float @llvm.fmuladd.f32(float %a, float %b, float %c)
8200 declare double @llvm.fmuladd.f64(double %a, double %b, double %c)
8205 The '``llvm.fmuladd.*``' intrinsic functions represent multiply-add
8206 expressions that can be fused if the code generator determines that (a) the
8207 target instruction set has support for a fused operation, and (b) that the
8208 fused operation is more efficient than the equivalent, separate pair of mul
8209 and add instructions.
8214 The '``llvm.fmuladd.*``' intrinsics each take three arguments: two
8215 multiplicands, a and b, and an addend c.
8224 %0 = call float @llvm.fmuladd.f32(%a, %b, %c)
8226 is equivalent to the expression a \* b + c, except that rounding will
8227 not be performed between the multiplication and addition steps if the
8228 code generator fuses the operations. Fusion is not guaranteed, even if
8229 the target platform supports it. If a fused multiply-add is required the
8230 corresponding llvm.fma.\* intrinsic function should be used instead.
8235 .. code-block:: llvm
8237 %r2 = call float @llvm.fmuladd.f32(float %a, float %b, float %c) ; yields {float}:r2 = (a * b) + c
8239 Half Precision Floating Point Intrinsics
8240 ----------------------------------------
8242 For most target platforms, half precision floating point is a
8243 storage-only format. This means that it is a dense encoding (in memory)
8244 but does not support computation in the format.
8246 This means that code must first load the half-precision floating point
8247 value as an i16, then convert it to float with
8248 :ref:`llvm.convert.from.fp16 <int_convert_from_fp16>`. Computation can
8249 then be performed on the float value (including extending to double
8250 etc). To store the value back to memory, it is first converted to float
8251 if needed, then converted to i16 with
8252 :ref:`llvm.convert.to.fp16 <int_convert_to_fp16>`, then storing as an
8255 .. _int_convert_to_fp16:
8257 '``llvm.convert.to.fp16``' Intrinsic
8258 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8265 declare i16 @llvm.convert.to.fp16(f32 %a)
8270 The '``llvm.convert.to.fp16``' intrinsic function performs a conversion
8271 from single precision floating point format to half precision floating
8277 The intrinsic function contains single argument - the value to be
8283 The '``llvm.convert.to.fp16``' intrinsic function performs a conversion
8284 from single precision floating point format to half precision floating
8285 point format. The return value is an ``i16`` which contains the
8291 .. code-block:: llvm
8293 %res = call i16 @llvm.convert.to.fp16(f32 %a)
8294 store i16 %res, i16* @x, align 2
8296 .. _int_convert_from_fp16:
8298 '``llvm.convert.from.fp16``' Intrinsic
8299 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8306 declare f32 @llvm.convert.from.fp16(i16 %a)
8311 The '``llvm.convert.from.fp16``' intrinsic function performs a
8312 conversion from half precision floating point format to single precision
8313 floating point format.
8318 The intrinsic function contains single argument - the value to be
8324 The '``llvm.convert.from.fp16``' intrinsic function performs a
8325 conversion from half single precision floating point format to single
8326 precision floating point format. The input half-float value is
8327 represented by an ``i16`` value.
8332 .. code-block:: llvm
8334 %a = load i16* @x, align 2
8335 %res = call f32 @llvm.convert.from.fp16(i16 %a)
8340 The LLVM debugger intrinsics (which all start with ``llvm.dbg.``
8341 prefix), are described in the `LLVM Source Level
8342 Debugging <SourceLevelDebugging.html#format_common_intrinsics>`_
8345 Exception Handling Intrinsics
8346 -----------------------------
8348 The LLVM exception handling intrinsics (which all start with
8349 ``llvm.eh.`` prefix), are described in the `LLVM Exception
8350 Handling <ExceptionHandling.html#format_common_intrinsics>`_ document.
8354 Trampoline Intrinsics
8355 ---------------------
8357 These intrinsics make it possible to excise one parameter, marked with
8358 the :ref:`nest <nest>` attribute, from a function. The result is a
8359 callable function pointer lacking the nest parameter - the caller does
8360 not need to provide a value for it. Instead, the value to use is stored
8361 in advance in a "trampoline", a block of memory usually allocated on the
8362 stack, which also contains code to splice the nest value into the
8363 argument list. This is used to implement the GCC nested function address
8366 For example, if the function is ``i32 f(i8* nest %c, i32 %x, i32 %y)``
8367 then the resulting function pointer has signature ``i32 (i32, i32)*``.
8368 It can be created as follows:
8370 .. code-block:: llvm
8372 %tramp = alloca [10 x i8], align 4 ; size and alignment only correct for X86
8373 %tramp1 = getelementptr [10 x i8]* %tramp, i32 0, i32 0
8374 call i8* @llvm.init.trampoline(i8* %tramp1, i8* bitcast (i32 (i8*, i32, i32)* @f to i8*), i8* %nval)
8375 %p = call i8* @llvm.adjust.trampoline(i8* %tramp1)
8376 %fp = bitcast i8* %p to i32 (i32, i32)*
8378 The call ``%val = call i32 %fp(i32 %x, i32 %y)`` is then equivalent to
8379 ``%val = call i32 %f(i8* %nval, i32 %x, i32 %y)``.
8383 '``llvm.init.trampoline``' Intrinsic
8384 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8391 declare void @llvm.init.trampoline(i8* <tramp>, i8* <func>, i8* <nval>)
8396 This fills the memory pointed to by ``tramp`` with executable code,
8397 turning it into a trampoline.
8402 The ``llvm.init.trampoline`` intrinsic takes three arguments, all
8403 pointers. The ``tramp`` argument must point to a sufficiently large and
8404 sufficiently aligned block of memory; this memory is written to by the
8405 intrinsic. Note that the size and the alignment are target-specific -
8406 LLVM currently provides no portable way of determining them, so a
8407 front-end that generates this intrinsic needs to have some
8408 target-specific knowledge. The ``func`` argument must hold a function
8409 bitcast to an ``i8*``.
8414 The block of memory pointed to by ``tramp`` is filled with target
8415 dependent code, turning it into a function. Then ``tramp`` needs to be
8416 passed to :ref:`llvm.adjust.trampoline <int_at>` to get a pointer which can
8417 be :ref:`bitcast (to a new function) and called <int_trampoline>`. The new
8418 function's signature is the same as that of ``func`` with any arguments
8419 marked with the ``nest`` attribute removed. At most one such ``nest``
8420 argument is allowed, and it must be of pointer type. Calling the new
8421 function is equivalent to calling ``func`` with the same argument list,
8422 but with ``nval`` used for the missing ``nest`` argument. If, after
8423 calling ``llvm.init.trampoline``, the memory pointed to by ``tramp`` is
8424 modified, then the effect of any later call to the returned function
8425 pointer is undefined.
8429 '``llvm.adjust.trampoline``' Intrinsic
8430 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8437 declare i8* @llvm.adjust.trampoline(i8* <tramp>)
8442 This performs any required machine-specific adjustment to the address of
8443 a trampoline (passed as ``tramp``).
8448 ``tramp`` must point to a block of memory which already has trampoline
8449 code filled in by a previous call to
8450 :ref:`llvm.init.trampoline <int_it>`.
8455 On some architectures the address of the code to be executed needs to be
8456 different to the address where the trampoline is actually stored. This
8457 intrinsic returns the executable address corresponding to ``tramp``
8458 after performing the required machine specific adjustments. The pointer
8459 returned can then be :ref:`bitcast and executed <int_trampoline>`.
8464 This class of intrinsics exists to information about the lifetime of
8465 memory objects and ranges where variables are immutable.
8469 '``llvm.lifetime.start``' Intrinsic
8470 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8477 declare void @llvm.lifetime.start(i64 <size>, i8* nocapture <ptr>)
8482 The '``llvm.lifetime.start``' intrinsic specifies the start of a memory
8488 The first argument is a constant integer representing the size of the
8489 object, or -1 if it is variable sized. The second argument is a pointer
8495 This intrinsic indicates that before this point in the code, the value
8496 of the memory pointed to by ``ptr`` is dead. This means that it is known
8497 to never be used and has an undefined value. A load from the pointer
8498 that precedes this intrinsic can be replaced with ``'undef'``.
8502 '``llvm.lifetime.end``' Intrinsic
8503 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8510 declare void @llvm.lifetime.end(i64 <size>, i8* nocapture <ptr>)
8515 The '``llvm.lifetime.end``' intrinsic specifies the end of a memory
8521 The first argument is a constant integer representing the size of the
8522 object, or -1 if it is variable sized. The second argument is a pointer
8528 This intrinsic indicates that after this point in the code, the value of
8529 the memory pointed to by ``ptr`` is dead. This means that it is known to
8530 never be used and has an undefined value. Any stores into the memory
8531 object following this intrinsic may be removed as dead.
8533 '``llvm.invariant.start``' Intrinsic
8534 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8541 declare {}* @llvm.invariant.start(i64 <size>, i8* nocapture <ptr>)
8546 The '``llvm.invariant.start``' intrinsic specifies that the contents of
8547 a memory object will not change.
8552 The first argument is a constant integer representing the size of the
8553 object, or -1 if it is variable sized. The second argument is a pointer
8559 This intrinsic indicates that until an ``llvm.invariant.end`` that uses
8560 the return value, the referenced memory location is constant and
8563 '``llvm.invariant.end``' Intrinsic
8564 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8571 declare void @llvm.invariant.end({}* <start>, i64 <size>, i8* nocapture <ptr>)
8576 The '``llvm.invariant.end``' intrinsic specifies that the contents of a
8577 memory object are mutable.
8582 The first argument is the matching ``llvm.invariant.start`` intrinsic.
8583 The second argument is a constant integer representing the size of the
8584 object, or -1 if it is variable sized and the third argument is a
8585 pointer to the object.
8590 This intrinsic indicates that the memory is mutable again.
8595 This class of intrinsics is designed to be generic and has no specific
8598 '``llvm.var.annotation``' Intrinsic
8599 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8606 declare void @llvm.var.annotation(i8* <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8611 The '``llvm.var.annotation``' intrinsic.
8616 The first argument is a pointer to a value, the second is a pointer to a
8617 global string, the third is a pointer to a global string which is the
8618 source file name, and the last argument is the line number.
8623 This intrinsic allows annotation of local variables with arbitrary
8624 strings. This can be useful for special purpose optimizations that want
8625 to look for these annotations. These have no other defined use; they are
8626 ignored by code generation and optimization.
8628 '``llvm.ptr.annotation.*``' Intrinsic
8629 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8634 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use '``llvm.ptr.annotation``' on a
8635 pointer to an integer of any width. *NOTE* you must specify an address space for
8636 the pointer. The identifier for the default address space is the integer
8641 declare i8* @llvm.ptr.annotation.p<address space>i8(i8* <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8642 declare i16* @llvm.ptr.annotation.p<address space>i16(i16* <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8643 declare i32* @llvm.ptr.annotation.p<address space>i32(i32* <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8644 declare i64* @llvm.ptr.annotation.p<address space>i64(i64* <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8645 declare i256* @llvm.ptr.annotation.p<address space>i256(i256* <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8650 The '``llvm.ptr.annotation``' intrinsic.
8655 The first argument is a pointer to an integer value of arbitrary bitwidth
8656 (result of some expression), the second is a pointer to a global string, the
8657 third is a pointer to a global string which is the source file name, and the
8658 last argument is the line number. It returns the value of the first argument.
8663 This intrinsic allows annotation of a pointer to an integer with arbitrary
8664 strings. This can be useful for special purpose optimizations that want to look
8665 for these annotations. These have no other defined use; they are ignored by code
8666 generation and optimization.
8668 '``llvm.annotation.*``' Intrinsic
8669 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8674 This is an overloaded intrinsic. You can use '``llvm.annotation``' on
8675 any integer bit width.
8679 declare i8 @llvm.annotation.i8(i8 <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8680 declare i16 @llvm.annotation.i16(i16 <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8681 declare i32 @llvm.annotation.i32(i32 <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8682 declare i64 @llvm.annotation.i64(i64 <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8683 declare i256 @llvm.annotation.i256(i256 <val>, i8* <str>, i8* <str>, i32 <int>)
8688 The '``llvm.annotation``' intrinsic.
8693 The first argument is an integer value (result of some expression), the
8694 second is a pointer to a global string, the third is a pointer to a
8695 global string which is the source file name, and the last argument is
8696 the line number. It returns the value of the first argument.
8701 This intrinsic allows annotations to be put on arbitrary expressions
8702 with arbitrary strings. This can be useful for special purpose
8703 optimizations that want to look for these annotations. These have no
8704 other defined use; they are ignored by code generation and optimization.
8706 '``llvm.trap``' Intrinsic
8707 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8714 declare void @llvm.trap() noreturn nounwind
8719 The '``llvm.trap``' intrinsic.
8729 This intrinsic is lowered to the target dependent trap instruction. If
8730 the target does not have a trap instruction, this intrinsic will be
8731 lowered to a call of the ``abort()`` function.
8733 '``llvm.debugtrap``' Intrinsic
8734 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8741 declare void @llvm.debugtrap() nounwind
8746 The '``llvm.debugtrap``' intrinsic.
8756 This intrinsic is lowered to code which is intended to cause an
8757 execution trap with the intention of requesting the attention of a
8760 '``llvm.stackprotector``' Intrinsic
8761 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8768 declare void @llvm.stackprotector(i8* <guard>, i8** <slot>)
8773 The ``llvm.stackprotector`` intrinsic takes the ``guard`` and stores it
8774 onto the stack at ``slot``. The stack slot is adjusted to ensure that it
8775 is placed on the stack before local variables.
8780 The ``llvm.stackprotector`` intrinsic requires two pointer arguments.
8781 The first argument is the value loaded from the stack guard
8782 ``@__stack_chk_guard``. The second variable is an ``alloca`` that has
8783 enough space to hold the value of the guard.
8788 This intrinsic causes the prologue/epilogue inserter to force the position of
8789 the ``AllocaInst`` stack slot to be before local variables on the stack. This is
8790 to ensure that if a local variable on the stack is overwritten, it will destroy
8791 the value of the guard. When the function exits, the guard on the stack is
8792 checked against the original guard by ``llvm.stackprotectorcheck``. If they are
8793 different, then ``llvm.stackprotectorcheck`` causes the program to abort by
8794 calling the ``__stack_chk_fail()`` function.
8796 '``llvm.stackprotectorcheck``' Intrinsic
8797 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8804 declare void @llvm.stackprotectorcheck(i8** <guard>)
8809 The ``llvm.stackprotectorcheck`` intrinsic compares ``guard`` against an already
8810 created stack protector and if they are not equal calls the
8811 ``__stack_chk_fail()`` function.
8816 The ``llvm.stackprotectorcheck`` intrinsic requires one pointer argument, the
8817 the variable ``@__stack_chk_guard``.
8822 This intrinsic is provided to perform the stack protector check by comparing
8823 ``guard`` with the stack slot created by ``llvm.stackprotector`` and if the
8824 values do not match call the ``__stack_chk_fail()`` function.
8826 The reason to provide this as an IR level intrinsic instead of implementing it
8827 via other IR operations is that in order to perform this operation at the IR
8828 level without an intrinsic, one would need to create additional basic blocks to
8829 handle the success/failure cases. This makes it difficult to stop the stack
8830 protector check from disrupting sibling tail calls in Codegen. With this
8831 intrinsic, we are able to generate the stack protector basic blocks late in
8832 codegen after the tail call decision has occurred.
8834 '``llvm.objectsize``' Intrinsic
8835 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8842 declare i32 @llvm.objectsize.i32(i8* <object>, i1 <min>)
8843 declare i64 @llvm.objectsize.i64(i8* <object>, i1 <min>)
8848 The ``llvm.objectsize`` intrinsic is designed to provide information to
8849 the optimizers to determine at compile time whether a) an operation
8850 (like memcpy) will overflow a buffer that corresponds to an object, or
8851 b) that a runtime check for overflow isn't necessary. An object in this
8852 context means an allocation of a specific class, structure, array, or
8858 The ``llvm.objectsize`` intrinsic takes two arguments. The first
8859 argument is a pointer to or into the ``object``. The second argument is
8860 a boolean and determines whether ``llvm.objectsize`` returns 0 (if true)
8861 or -1 (if false) when the object size is unknown. The second argument
8862 only accepts constants.
8867 The ``llvm.objectsize`` intrinsic is lowered to a constant representing
8868 the size of the object concerned. If the size cannot be determined at
8869 compile time, ``llvm.objectsize`` returns ``i32/i64 -1 or 0`` (depending
8870 on the ``min`` argument).
8872 '``llvm.expect``' Intrinsic
8873 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8880 declare i32 @llvm.expect.i32(i32 <val>, i32 <expected_val>)
8881 declare i64 @llvm.expect.i64(i64 <val>, i64 <expected_val>)
8886 The ``llvm.expect`` intrinsic provides information about expected (the
8887 most probable) value of ``val``, which can be used by optimizers.
8892 The ``llvm.expect`` intrinsic takes two arguments. The first argument is
8893 a value. The second argument is an expected value, this needs to be a
8894 constant value, variables are not allowed.
8899 This intrinsic is lowered to the ``val``.
8901 '``llvm.donothing``' Intrinsic
8902 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
8909 declare void @llvm.donothing() nounwind readnone
8914 The ``llvm.donothing`` intrinsic doesn't perform any operation. It's the
8915 only intrinsic that can be called with an invoke instruction.
8925 This intrinsic does nothing, and it's removed by optimizers and ignored
8928 Stack Map Intrinsics
8929 --------------------
8931 LLVM provides experimental intrinsics to support runtime patching
8932 mechanisms commonly desired in dynamic language JITs. These intrinsics
8933 are described in :doc:`StackMaps`.