use gccjit::{FunctionType, RValue}; use rustc_codegen_ssa::traits::BaseTypeMethods; use rustc_middle::ty::{self, Instance, TypeFoldable}; use rustc_middle::ty::layout::{FnAbiOf, HasTyCtxt}; use crate::abi::FnAbiGccExt; use crate::context::CodegenCx; /// Codegens a reference to a fn/method item, monomorphizing and /// inlining as it goes. /// /// # Parameters /// /// - `cx`: the crate context /// - `instance`: the instance to be instantiated pub fn get_fn<'gcc, 'tcx>(cx: &CodegenCx<'gcc, 'tcx>, instance: Instance<'tcx>) -> RValue<'gcc> { let tcx = cx.tcx(); assert!(!instance.substs.needs_infer()); assert!(!instance.substs.has_escaping_bound_vars()); if let Some(&func) = cx.function_instances.borrow().get(&instance) { return func; } let sym = tcx.symbol_name(instance).name; let fn_abi = cx.fn_abi_of_instance(instance, ty::List::empty()); let func = if let Some(func) = cx.get_declared_value(&sym) { // Create a fn pointer with the new signature. let ptrty = fn_abi.ptr_to_gcc_type(cx); // This is subtle and surprising, but sometimes we have to bitcast // the resulting fn pointer. The reason has to do with external // functions. If you have two crates that both bind the same C // library, they may not use precisely the same types: for // example, they will probably each declare their own structs, // which are distinct types from LLVM's point of view (nominal // types). // // Now, if those two crates are linked into an application, and // they contain inlined code, you can wind up with a situation // where both of those functions wind up being loaded into this // application simultaneously. In that case, the same function // (from LLVM's point of view) requires two types. But of course // LLVM won't allow one function to have two types. // // What we currently do, therefore, is declare the function with // one of the two types (whichever happens to come first) and then // bitcast as needed when the function is referenced to make sure // it has the type we expect. // // This can occur on either a crate-local or crate-external // reference. It also occurs when testing libcore and in some // other weird situations. Annoying. if cx.val_ty(func) != ptrty { // TODO(antoyo): cast the pointer. func } else { func } } else { cx.linkage.set(FunctionType::Extern); let func = cx.declare_fn(&sym, &fn_abi); // TODO(antoyo): set linkage and attributes. func }; cx.function_instances.borrow_mut().insert(instance, func); func }