Commit Graph

3103 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
stijn 42c4dd09a1 py/nlr: Fix missing trailing characters in comments in nlr.c 2017-12-29 22:24:53 +11:00
stijn b184b6ae53 py/nlr: Fix nlr functions for 64bit ports built with gcc on Windows
The number of registers used should be 10, not 12, to match the assembly
code in nlrx64.c. With this change the 64bit mingw builds don't need to
use the setjmp implementation, and this fixes miscellaneous crashes and
assertion failures as reported in #1751 for instance.

To avoid mistakes in the future where something gcc-related for Windows
only gets fixed for one particular compiler/environment combination,
make use of a MICROPY_NLR_OS_WINDOWS macro.

To make sure everything nlr-related is now ok when built with gcc this
has been verified with:
- unix port built with gcc on Cygwin (i686-pc-cygwin-gcc and
  x86_64-pc-cygwin-gcc, version 6.4.0)
- windows port built with mingw-w64's gcc from Cygwin
 (i686-w64-mingw32-gcc and x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc, version 6.4.0)
 and MSYS2 (like the ones on Cygwin but version 7.2.0)
2017-12-29 22:24:46 +11:00
Damien George e784274430 py/mpz: In mpz_as_str_inpl, convert always-false checks to assertions.
There are two checks that are always false so can be converted to (negated)
assertions to save code space and execution time.  They are:

1. The check of the str parameter, which is required to be non-NULL as per
   the original comment that it has enough space in it as calculated by
   mp_int_format_size.  And for all uses of this function str is indeed
   non-NULL.

2. The check of the base parameter, which is already required to be between
   2 and 16 (inclusive) via the assertion in mp_int_format_size.
2017-12-29 14:17:55 +11:00
Damien George 9766fddcdc py/mpz: Simplify handling of borrow and quo adjustment in mpn_div.
The motivation behind this patch is to remove unreachable code in mpn_div.
This unreachable code was added some time ago in
9a21d2e070, when a loop in mpn_div was copied
and adjusted to work when mpz_dig_t was exactly half of the size of
mpz_dbl_dig_t (a common case).  The loop was copied correctly but it wasn't
noticed at the time that the final part of the calculation of num-quo*den
could be optimised, and hence unreachable code was left for a case that
never occurred.

The observation for the optimisation is that the initial value of quo in
mpn_div is either exact or too large (never too small), and therefore the
subtraction of quo*den from num may subtract exactly enough or too much
(but never too little).  Using this observation the part of the algorithm
that handles the borrow value can be simplified, and most importantly this
eliminates the unreachable code.

The new code has been tested with DIG_SIZE=3 and DIG_SIZE=4 by dividing all
possible combinations of non-negative integers with between 0 and 3
(inclusive) mpz digits.
2017-12-29 14:05:48 +11:00
Damien George c7cb1dfcb9 py/parse: Fix macro evaluation by avoiding empty __VA_ARGS__.
Empty __VA_ARGS__ are not allowed in the C preprocessor so adjust the rule
arg offset calculation to not use them.  Also, some compilers (eg MSVC)
require an extra layer of macro expansion.
2017-12-29 13:44:26 +11:00
Damien George d3fbfa491f py/parse: Update debugging code to compile on 64-bit arch. 2017-12-29 00:13:36 +11:00
Damien George 0016a45368 py/parse: Compress rule pointer table to table of offsets.
This is the sixth and final patch in a series of patches to the parser that
aims to reduce code size by compressing the data corresponding to the rules
of the grammar.

Prior to this set of patches the rules were stored as rule_t structs with
rule_id, act and arg members.  And then there was a big table of pointers
which allowed to lookup the address of a rule_t struct given the id of that
rule.

The changes that have been made are:
- Breaking up of the rule_t struct into individual components, with each
  component in a separate array.
- Removal of the rule_id part of the struct because it's not needed.
- Put all the rule arg data in a big array.
- Change the table of pointers to rules to a table of offsets within the
  array of rule arg data.

The last point is what is done in this patch here and brings about the
biggest decreases in code size, because an array of pointers is now an
array of bytes.

Code size changes for the six patches combined is:

   bare-arm:  -644
minimal x86: -1856
   unix x64: -5408
unix nanbox: -2080
      stm32:  -720
    esp8266:  -812
     cc3200:  -712

For the change in parser performance: it was measured on pyboard that these
six patches combined gave an increase in script parse time of about 0.4%.
This is due to the slightly more complicated way of looking up the data for
a rule (since the 9th bit of the offset into the rule arg data table is
calculated with an if statement).  This is an acceptable increase in parse
time considering that parsing is only done once per script (if compiled on
the target).
2017-12-29 00:13:36 +11:00
Damien George c2c92ceefc py/parse: Remove rule_t struct because it's no longer needed. 2017-12-28 23:15:36 +11:00
Damien George 66d8885d85 py/parse: Pass rule_id to push_result_token, instead of passing rule_t*. 2017-12-28 23:12:10 +11:00
Damien George 815a8cd1ae py/parse: Pass rule_id to push_result_rule, instead of passing rule_t*.
Reduces code size by eliminating quite a few pointer dereferences.
2017-12-28 23:11:43 +11:00
Damien George 845511af25 py/parse: Break rule data into separate act and arg arrays.
Instead of each rule being stored in ROM as a struct with rule_id, act and
arg, the act and arg parts are now in separate arrays and the rule_id part
is removed because it's not needed.  This reduces code size, by roughly one
byte per grammar rule, around 150 bytes.
2017-12-28 23:09:49 +11:00
Damien George 1039c5e699 py/parse: Split out rule name from rule struct into separate array.
The rule name is only used for debugging, and this patch makes things a bit
cleaner by completely separating out the rule name from the rest of the
rule data.
2017-12-28 23:08:00 +11:00
Damien George b25f92160b py/nlr: Factor out common NLR code to macro and generic funcs in nlr.c.
Each NLR implementation (Thumb, x86, x64, xtensa, setjmp) duplicates a lot
of the NLR code, specifically that dealing with pushing and popping the NLR
pointer to maintain the linked-list of NLR buffers.  This patch factors all
of that code out of the specific implementations into generic functions in
nlr.c, along with a helper macro in nlr.h.  This eliminates duplicated
code.
2017-12-28 16:46:30 +11:00
Damien George 5bf8e85fc8 py/nlr: Clean up selection and config of NLR implementation.
If MICROPY_NLR_SETJMP is not enabled and the machine is auto-detected then
nlr.h now defines some convenience macros for the individual NLR
implementations to use (eg MICROPY_NLR_THUMB).  This keeps nlr.h and the
implementation in sync, and also makes the nlr_buf_t struct easier to read.
2017-12-28 16:18:39 +11:00
Damien George 97cc485538 py/nlrthumb: Fix use of naked funcs, must only contain basic asm code.
A function with a naked attribute must only contain basic inline asm
statements and no C code.

For nlr_push this means removing the "return 0" statement.  But for some
gcc versions this induces a compiler warning so the __builtin_unreachable()
line needs to be added.

For nlr_jump, this function contains a combination of C code and inline asm
so cannot be naked.
2017-12-28 15:59:09 +11:00
Paul Sokolovsky 096e967aad Revert "py/nlr: Factor out common NLR code to generic functions."
This reverts commit 6a3a742a6c.

The above commit has number of faults starting from the motivation down
to the actual implementation.

1. Faulty implementation.

The original code contained functions like:

NORETURN void nlr_jump(void *val) {
    nlr_buf_t **top_ptr = &MP_STATE_THREAD(nlr_top);
    nlr_buf_t *top = *top_ptr;
...
     __asm volatile (
    "mov    %0, %%edx           \n" // %edx points to nlr_buf
    "mov    28(%%edx), %%esi    \n" // load saved %esi
    "mov    24(%%edx), %%edi    \n" // load saved %edi
    "mov    20(%%edx), %%ebx    \n" // load saved %ebx
    "mov    16(%%edx), %%esp    \n" // load saved %esp
    "mov    12(%%edx), %%ebp    \n" // load saved %ebp
    "mov    8(%%edx), %%eax     \n" // load saved %eip
    "mov    %%eax, (%%esp)      \n" // store saved %eip to stack
    "xor    %%eax, %%eax        \n" // clear return register
    "inc    %%al                \n" // increase to make 1, non-local return
     "ret                        \n" // return
    :                               // output operands
    : "r"(top)                      // input operands
    :                               // clobbered registers
     );
}

Which clearly stated that C-level variable should be a parameter of the
assembly, whcih then moved it into correct register.

Whereas now it's:

NORETURN void nlr_jump_tail(nlr_buf_t *top) {
    (void)top;

    __asm volatile (
    "mov    28(%edx), %esi      \n" // load saved %esi
    "mov    24(%edx), %edi      \n" // load saved %edi
    "mov    20(%edx), %ebx      \n" // load saved %ebx
    "mov    16(%edx), %esp      \n" // load saved %esp
    "mov    12(%edx), %ebp      \n" // load saved %ebp
    "mov    8(%edx), %eax       \n" // load saved %eip
    "mov    %eax, (%esp)        \n" // store saved %eip to stack
    "xor    %eax, %eax          \n" // clear return register
    "inc    %al                 \n" // increase to make 1, non-local return
    "ret                        \n" // return
    );

    for (;;); // needed to silence compiler warning
}

Which just tries to perform operations on a completely random register (edx
in this case). The outcome is the expected: saving the pure random luck of
the compiler putting the right value in the random register above, there's
a crash.

2. Non-critical assessment.

The original commit message says "There is a small overhead introduced
(typically 1 machine instruction)". That machine instruction is a call
if a compiler doesn't perform tail optimization (happens regularly), and
it's 1 instruction only with the broken code shown above, fixing it
requires adding more. With inefficiencies already presented in the NLR
code, the overhead becomes "considerable" (several times more than 1%),
not "small".

The commit message also says "This eliminates duplicated code.". An
obvious way to eliminate duplication would be to factor out common code
to macros, not introduce overhead and breakage like above.

3. Faulty motivation.

All this started with a report of warnings/errors happening for a niche
compiler. It could have been solved in one the direct ways: a) fixing it
just for affected compiler(s); b) rewriting it in proper assembly (like
it was before BTW); c) by not doing anything at all, MICROPY_NLR_SETJMP
exists exactly to address minor-impact cases like thar (where a) or b) are
not applicable). Instead, a backwards "solution" was put forward, leading
to all the issues above.

The best action thus appears to be revert and rework, not trying to work
around what went haywire in the first place.
2017-12-26 19:27:58 +02:00
Damien George 26d4a6fa45 py/malloc: Remove unneeded code checking m_malloc return value.
m_malloc already checks for a failed allocation so there's no need to check
for it in m_malloc0.
2017-12-20 16:55:42 +11:00
Damien George 6a3a742a6c py/nlr: Factor out common NLR code to generic functions.
Each NLR implementation (Thumb, x86, x64, xtensa, setjmp) duplicates a lot
of the NLR code, specifically that dealing with pushing and popping the NLR
pointer to maintain the linked-list of NLR buffers.  This patch factors all
of that code out of the specific implementations into generic functions in
nlr.c.  This eliminates duplicated code.

The factoring also allows to make the machine-specific NLR code pure
assembler code, thus allowing nlrthumb.c to use naked function attributes
in the correct way (naked functions can only have basic inline assembler
code in them).

There is a small overhead introduced (typically 1 machine instruction)
because now the generic nlr_jump() must call nlr_jump_tail() rather than
them being one combined function.
2017-12-20 15:42:06 +11:00
Damien George 304a3bcc1c py/modio: Use correct config macro to enable resource_stream function. 2017-12-19 16:59:08 +11:00
Damien George ae1be76d40 py/mpz: Apply a small code-size optimisation. 2017-12-19 15:45:56 +11:00
Damien George 374eaf5271 py/mpz: Fix pow3 function so it handles the case when 3rd arg is 1.
In this case the result should always be 0, even if 2nd arg is 0.
2017-12-19 15:42:58 +11:00
Damien George 7db79d8b03 py/objset: Remove unneeded check from set_equal.
set_equal is called only from set_binary_op, and this guarantees that the
second arg to set_equal is always a set or frozenset.  So there is no need
to do a further check.
2017-12-19 14:01:19 +11:00
Damien George 136cb7f27c py/map: Don't include ordered-dict mutating code when not needed. 2017-12-19 13:37:15 +11:00
Damien George f5fb68e94f py/runtime: Remove unnecessary break statements from switch. 2017-12-19 13:13:21 +11:00
Paul Sokolovsky 6364401666 py/objgenerator: Allow to pend an exception for next execution.
This implements .pend_throw(exc) method, which sets up an exception to be
triggered on the next call to generator's .__next__() or .send() method.
This is unlike .throw(), which immediately starts to execute the generator
to process the exception. This effectively adds Future-like capabilities
to generator protocol (exception will be raised in the future).

The need for such a method arised to implement uasyncio wait_for() function
efficiently (its behavior is clearly "Future" like, and normally would
require to introduce an expensive Future wrapper around all native
couroutines, like upstream asyncio does).

py/objgenerator: pend_throw: Return previous pended value.

This effectively allows to store an additional value (not necessary an
exception) in a coroutine while it's not being executed. uasyncio has
exactly this usecase: to mark a coro waiting in I/O queue (and thus
not executed in the normal scheduling queue), for the purpose of
implementing wait_for() function (cancellation of such waiting coro
by a timeout).
2017-12-15 20:20:36 +02:00