572 lines
		
	
	
		
			29 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			572 lines
		
	
	
		
			29 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
| ========================================
 | |
| Precompiled Header and Modules Internals
 | |
| ========================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. contents::
 | |
|    :local:
 | |
| 
 | |
| This document describes the design and implementation of Clang's precompiled
 | |
| headers (PCH) and modules.  If you are interested in the end-user view, please
 | |
| see the :ref:`User's Manual <usersmanual-precompiled-headers>`.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Using Precompiled Headers with ``clang``
 | |
| ----------------------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Clang compiler frontend, ``clang -cc1``, supports two command line options
 | |
| for generating and using PCH files.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To generate PCH files using ``clang -cc1``, use the option `-emit-pch`:
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. code-block:: bash
 | |
| 
 | |
|   $ clang -cc1 test.h -emit-pch -o test.h.pch
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option is transparently used by ``clang`` when generating PCH files.  The
 | |
| resulting PCH file contains the serialized form of the compiler's internal
 | |
| representation after it has completed parsing and semantic analysis.  The PCH
 | |
| file can then be used as a prefix header with the `-include-pch`
 | |
| option:
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. code-block:: bash
 | |
| 
 | |
|   $ clang -cc1 -include-pch test.h.pch test.c -o test.s
 | |
| 
 | |
| Design Philosophy
 | |
| -----------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Precompiled headers are meant to improve overall compile times for projects, so
 | |
| the design of precompiled headers is entirely driven by performance concerns.
 | |
| The use case for precompiled headers is relatively simple: when there is a
 | |
| common set of headers that is included in nearly every source file in the
 | |
| project, we *precompile* that bundle of headers into a single precompiled
 | |
| header (PCH file).  Then, when compiling the source files in the project, we
 | |
| load the PCH file first (as a prefix header), which acts as a stand-in for that
 | |
| bundle of headers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A precompiled header implementation improves performance when:
 | |
| 
 | |
| * Loading the PCH file is significantly faster than re-parsing the bundle of
 | |
|   headers stored within the PCH file.  Thus, a precompiled header design
 | |
|   attempts to minimize the cost of reading the PCH file.  Ideally, this cost
 | |
|   should not vary with the size of the precompiled header file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| * The cost of generating the PCH file initially is not so large that it
 | |
|   counters the per-source-file performance improvement due to eliminating the
 | |
|   need to parse the bundled headers in the first place.  This is particularly
 | |
|   important on multi-core systems, because PCH file generation serializes the
 | |
|   build when all compilations require the PCH file to be up-to-date.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Modules, as implemented in Clang, use the same mechanisms as precompiled
 | |
| headers to save a serialized AST file (one per module) and use those AST
 | |
| modules.  From an implementation standpoint, modules are a generalization of
 | |
| precompiled headers, lifting a number of restrictions placed on precompiled
 | |
| headers.  In particular, there can only be one precompiled header and it must
 | |
| be included at the beginning of the translation unit.  The extensions to the
 | |
| AST file format required for modules are discussed in the section on
 | |
| :ref:`modules <pchinternals-modules>`.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Clang's AST files are designed with a compact on-disk representation, which
 | |
| minimizes both creation time and the time required to initially load the AST
 | |
| file.  The AST file itself contains a serialized representation of Clang's
 | |
| abstract syntax trees and supporting data structures, stored using the same
 | |
| compressed bitstream as `LLVM's bitcode file format
 | |
| <http://llvm.org/docs/BitCodeFormat.html>`_.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Clang's AST files are loaded "lazily" from disk.  When an AST file is initially
 | |
| loaded, Clang reads only a small amount of data from the AST file to establish
 | |
| where certain important data structures are stored.  The amount of data read in
 | |
| this initial load is independent of the size of the AST file, such that a
 | |
| larger AST file does not lead to longer AST load times.  The actual header data
 | |
| in the AST file --- macros, functions, variables, types, etc. --- is loaded
 | |
| only when it is referenced from the user's code, at which point only that
 | |
| entity (and those entities it depends on) are deserialized from the AST file.
 | |
| With this approach, the cost of using an AST file for a translation unit is
 | |
| proportional to the amount of code actually used from the AST file, rather than
 | |
| being proportional to the size of the AST file itself.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When given the `-print-stats` option, Clang produces statistics
 | |
| describing how much of the AST file was actually loaded from disk.  For a
 | |
| simple "Hello, World!" program that includes the Apple ``Cocoa.h`` header
 | |
| (which is built as a precompiled header), this option illustrates how little of
 | |
| the actual precompiled header is required:
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. code-block:: none
 | |
| 
 | |
|   *** AST File Statistics:
 | |
|     895/39981 source location entries read (2.238563%)
 | |
|     19/15315 types read (0.124061%)
 | |
|     20/82685 declarations read (0.024188%)
 | |
|     154/58070 identifiers read (0.265197%)
 | |
|     0/7260 selectors read (0.000000%)
 | |
|     0/30842 statements read (0.000000%)
 | |
|     4/8400 macros read (0.047619%)
 | |
|     1/4995 lexical declcontexts read (0.020020%)
 | |
|     0/4413 visible declcontexts read (0.000000%)
 | |
|     0/7230 method pool entries read (0.000000%)
 | |
|     0 method pool misses
 | |
| 
 | |
| For this small program, only a tiny fraction of the source locations, types,
 | |
| declarations, identifiers, and macros were actually deserialized from the
 | |
| precompiled header.  These statistics can be useful to determine whether the
 | |
| AST file implementation can be improved by making more of the implementation
 | |
| lazy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Precompiled headers can be chained.  When you create a PCH while including an
 | |
| existing PCH, Clang can create the new PCH by referencing the original file and
 | |
| only writing the new data to the new file.  For example, you could create a PCH
 | |
| out of all the headers that are very commonly used throughout your project, and
 | |
| then create a PCH for every single source file in the project that includes the
 | |
| code that is specific to that file, so that recompiling the file itself is very
 | |
| fast, without duplicating the data from the common headers for every file.  The
 | |
| mechanisms behind chained precompiled headers are discussed in a :ref:`later
 | |
| section <pchinternals-chained>`.
 | |
| 
 | |
| AST File Contents
 | |
| -----------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| An AST file produced by clang is an object file container with a ``clangast``
 | |
| (COFF) or ``__clangast`` (ELF and Mach-O) section containing the serialized AST.
 | |
| Other target-specific sections in the object file container are used to hold
 | |
| debug information for the data types defined in the AST.  Tools built on top of
 | |
| libclang that do not need debug information may also produce raw AST files that
 | |
| only contain the serialized AST.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The ``clangast`` section is organized into several different blocks, each of
 | |
| which contains the serialized representation of a part of Clang's internal
 | |
| representation.  Each of the blocks corresponds to either a block or a record
 | |
| within `LLVM's bitstream format <http://llvm.org/docs/BitCodeFormat.html>`_.
 | |
| The contents of each of these logical blocks are described below.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. image:: PCHLayout.png
 | |
| 
 | |
| The ``llvm-objdump`` utility provides a ``-raw-clang-ast`` option to extract the
 | |
| binary contents of the AST section from an object file container.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The `llvm-bcanalyzer <http://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/llvm-bcanalyzer.html>`_
 | |
| utility can be used to examine the actual structure of the bitstream for the AST
 | |
| section.  This information can be used both to help understand the structure of
 | |
| the AST section and to isolate areas where the AST representation can still be
 | |
| optimized, e.g., through the introduction of abbreviations.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| Metadata Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The metadata block contains several records that provide information about how
 | |
| the AST file was built.  This metadata is primarily used to validate the use of
 | |
| an AST file.  For example, a precompiled header built for a 32-bit x86 target
 | |
| cannot be used when compiling for a 64-bit x86 target.  The metadata block
 | |
| contains information about:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Language options
 | |
|   Describes the particular language dialect used to compile the AST file,
 | |
|   including major options (e.g., Objective-C support) and more minor options
 | |
|   (e.g., support for "``//``" comments).  The contents of this record correspond to
 | |
|   the ``LangOptions`` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Target architecture
 | |
|   The target triple that describes the architecture, platform, and ABI for
 | |
|   which the AST file was generated, e.g., ``i386-apple-darwin9``.
 | |
| 
 | |
| AST version
 | |
|   The major and minor version numbers of the AST file format.  Changes in the
 | |
|   minor version number should not affect backward compatibility, while changes
 | |
|   in the major version number imply that a newer compiler cannot read an older
 | |
|   precompiled header (and vice-versa).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Original file name
 | |
|   The full path of the header that was used to generate the AST file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Predefines buffer
 | |
|   Although not explicitly stored as part of the metadata, the predefines buffer
 | |
|   is used in the validation of the AST file.  The predefines buffer itself
 | |
|   contains code generated by the compiler to initialize the preprocessor state
 | |
|   according to the current target, platform, and command-line options.  For
 | |
|   example, the predefines buffer will contain "``#define __STDC__ 1``" when we
 | |
|   are compiling C without Microsoft extensions.  The predefines buffer itself
 | |
|   is stored within the :ref:`pchinternals-sourcemgr`, but its contents are
 | |
|   verified along with the rest of the metadata.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A chained PCH file (that is, one that references another PCH) and a module
 | |
| (which may import other modules) have additional metadata containing the list
 | |
| of all AST files that this AST file depends on.  Each of those files will be
 | |
| loaded along with this AST file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For chained precompiled headers, the language options, target architecture and
 | |
| predefines buffer data is taken from the end of the chain, since they have to
 | |
| match anyway.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-sourcemgr:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Source Manager Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The source manager block contains the serialized representation of Clang's
 | |
| :ref:`SourceManager <SourceManager>` class, which handles the mapping from
 | |
| source locations (as represented in Clang's abstract syntax tree) into actual
 | |
| column/line positions within a source file or macro instantiation.  The AST
 | |
| file's representation of the source manager also includes information about all
 | |
| of the headers that were (transitively) included when building the AST file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The bulk of the source manager block is dedicated to information about the
 | |
| various files, buffers, and macro instantiations into which a source location
 | |
| can refer.  Each of these is referenced by a numeric "file ID", which is a
 | |
| unique number (allocated starting at 1) stored in the source location.  Clang
 | |
| serializes the information for each kind of file ID, along with an index that
 | |
| maps file IDs to the position within the AST file where the information about
 | |
| that file ID is stored.  The data associated with a file ID is loaded only when
 | |
| required by the front end, e.g., to emit a diagnostic that includes a macro
 | |
| instantiation history inside the header itself.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The source manager block also contains information about all of the headers
 | |
| that were included when building the AST file.  This includes information about
 | |
| the controlling macro for the header (e.g., when the preprocessor identified
 | |
| that the contents of the header dependent on a macro like
 | |
| ``LLVM_CLANG_SOURCEMANAGER_H``).
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-preprocessor:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Preprocessor Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The preprocessor block contains the serialized representation of the
 | |
| preprocessor.  Specifically, it contains all of the macros that have been
 | |
| defined by the end of the header used to build the AST file, along with the
 | |
| token sequences that comprise each macro.  The macro definitions are only read
 | |
| from the AST file when the name of the macro first occurs in the program.  This
 | |
| lazy loading of macro definitions is triggered by lookups into the
 | |
| :ref:`identifier table <pchinternals-ident-table>`.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-types:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Types Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The types block contains the serialized representation of all of the types
 | |
| referenced in the translation unit.  Each Clang type node (``PointerType``,
 | |
| ``FunctionProtoType``, etc.) has a corresponding record type in the AST file.
 | |
| When types are deserialized from the AST file, the data within the record is
 | |
| used to reconstruct the appropriate type node using the AST context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Each type has a unique type ID, which is an integer that uniquely identifies
 | |
| that type.  Type ID 0 represents the NULL type, type IDs less than
 | |
| ``NUM_PREDEF_TYPE_IDS`` represent predefined types (``void``, ``float``, etc.),
 | |
| while other "user-defined" type IDs are assigned consecutively from
 | |
| ``NUM_PREDEF_TYPE_IDS`` upward as the types are encountered.  The AST file has
 | |
| an associated mapping from the user-defined types block to the location within
 | |
| the types block where the serialized representation of that type resides,
 | |
| enabling lazy deserialization of types.  When a type is referenced from within
 | |
| the AST file, that reference is encoded using the type ID shifted left by 3
 | |
| bits.  The lower three bits are used to represent the ``const``, ``volatile``,
 | |
| and ``restrict`` qualifiers, as in Clang's :ref:`QualType <QualType>` class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-decls:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Declarations Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The declarations block contains the serialized representation of all of the
 | |
| declarations referenced in the translation unit.  Each Clang declaration node
 | |
| (``VarDecl``, ``FunctionDecl``, etc.) has a corresponding record type in the
 | |
| AST file.  When declarations are deserialized from the AST file, the data
 | |
| within the record is used to build and populate a new instance of the
 | |
| corresponding ``Decl`` node.  As with types, each declaration node has a
 | |
| numeric ID that is used to refer to that declaration within the AST file.  In
 | |
| addition, a lookup table provides a mapping from that numeric ID to the offset
 | |
| within the precompiled header where that declaration is described.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Declarations in Clang's abstract syntax trees are stored hierarchically.  At
 | |
| the top of the hierarchy is the translation unit (``TranslationUnitDecl``),
 | |
| which contains all of the declarations in the translation unit but is not
 | |
| actually written as a specific declaration node.  Its child declarations (such
 | |
| as functions or struct types) may also contain other declarations inside them,
 | |
| and so on.  Within Clang, each declaration is stored within a :ref:`declaration
 | |
| context <DeclContext>`, as represented by the ``DeclContext`` class.
 | |
| Declaration contexts provide the mechanism to perform name lookup within a
 | |
| given declaration (e.g., find the member named ``x`` in a structure) and
 | |
| iterate over the declarations stored within a context (e.g., iterate over all
 | |
| of the fields of a structure for structure layout).
 | |
| 
 | |
| In Clang's AST file format, deserializing a declaration that is a
 | |
| ``DeclContext`` is a separate operation from deserializing all of the
 | |
| declarations stored within that declaration context.  Therefore, Clang will
 | |
| deserialize the translation unit declaration without deserializing the
 | |
| declarations within that translation unit.  When required, the declarations
 | |
| stored within a declaration context will be deserialized.  There are two
 | |
| representations of the declarations within a declaration context, which
 | |
| correspond to the name-lookup and iteration behavior described above:
 | |
| 
 | |
| * When the front end performs name lookup to find a name ``x`` within a given
 | |
|   declaration context (for example, during semantic analysis of the expression
 | |
|   ``p->x``, where ``p``'s type is defined in the precompiled header), Clang
 | |
|   refers to an on-disk hash table that maps from the names within that
 | |
|   declaration context to the declaration IDs that represent each visible
 | |
|   declaration with that name.  The actual declarations will then be
 | |
|   deserialized to provide the results of name lookup.
 | |
| * When the front end performs iteration over all of the declarations within a
 | |
|   declaration context, all of those declarations are immediately
 | |
|   de-serialized.  For large declaration contexts (e.g., the translation unit),
 | |
|   this operation is expensive; however, large declaration contexts are not
 | |
|   traversed in normal compilation, since such a traversal is unnecessary.
 | |
|   However, it is common for the code generator and semantic analysis to
 | |
|   traverse declaration contexts for structs, classes, unions, and
 | |
|   enumerations, although those contexts contain relatively few declarations in
 | |
|   the common case.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Statements and Expressions
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| Statements and expressions are stored in the AST file in both the :ref:`types
 | |
| <pchinternals-types>` and the :ref:`declarations <pchinternals-decls>` blocks,
 | |
| because every statement or expression will be associated with either a type or
 | |
| declaration.  The actual statement and expression records are stored
 | |
| immediately following the declaration or type that owns the statement or
 | |
| expression.  For example, the statement representing the body of a function
 | |
| will be stored directly following the declaration of the function.
 | |
| 
 | |
| As with types and declarations, each statement and expression kind in Clang's
 | |
| abstract syntax tree (``ForStmt``, ``CallExpr``, etc.) has a corresponding
 | |
| record type in the AST file, which contains the serialized representation of
 | |
| that statement or expression.  Each substatement or subexpression within an
 | |
| expression is stored as a separate record (which keeps most records to a fixed
 | |
| size).  Within the AST file, the subexpressions of an expression are stored, in
 | |
| reverse order, prior to the expression that owns those expression, using a form
 | |
| of `Reverse Polish Notation
 | |
| <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_Polish_notation>`_.  For example, an
 | |
| expression ``3 - 4 + 5`` would be represented as follows:
 | |
| 
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| | ``IntegerLiteral(5)`` |
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| | ``IntegerLiteral(4)`` |
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| | ``IntegerLiteral(3)`` |
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| | ``IntegerLiteral(-)`` |
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| | ``IntegerLiteral(+)`` |
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| |       ``STOP``        |
 | |
| +-----------------------+
 | |
| 
 | |
| When reading this representation, Clang evaluates each expression record it
 | |
| encounters, builds the appropriate abstract syntax tree node, and then pushes
 | |
| that expression on to a stack.  When a record contains *N* subexpressions ---
 | |
| ``BinaryOperator`` has two of them --- those expressions are popped from the
 | |
| top of the stack.  The special STOP code indicates that we have reached the end
 | |
| of a serialized expression or statement; other expression or statement records
 | |
| may follow, but they are part of a different expression.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-ident-table:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Identifier Table Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The identifier table block contains an on-disk hash table that maps each
 | |
| identifier mentioned within the AST file to the serialized representation of
 | |
| the identifier's information (e.g, the ``IdentifierInfo`` structure).  The
 | |
| serialized representation contains:
 | |
| 
 | |
| * The actual identifier string.
 | |
| * Flags that describe whether this identifier is the name of a built-in, a
 | |
|   poisoned identifier, an extension token, or a macro.
 | |
| * If the identifier names a macro, the offset of the macro definition within
 | |
|   the :ref:`pchinternals-preprocessor`.
 | |
| * If the identifier names one or more declarations visible from translation
 | |
|   unit scope, the :ref:`declaration IDs <pchinternals-decls>` of these
 | |
|   declarations.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When an AST file is loaded, the AST file reader mechanism introduces itself
 | |
| into the identifier table as an external lookup source.  Thus, when the user
 | |
| program refers to an identifier that has not yet been seen, Clang will perform
 | |
| a lookup into the identifier table.  If an identifier is found, its contents
 | |
| (macro definitions, flags, top-level declarations, etc.) will be deserialized,
 | |
| at which point the corresponding ``IdentifierInfo`` structure will have the
 | |
| same contents it would have after parsing the headers in the AST file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Within the AST file, the identifiers used to name declarations are represented
 | |
| with an integral value.  A separate table provides a mapping from this integral
 | |
| value (the identifier ID) to the location within the on-disk hash table where
 | |
| that identifier is stored.  This mapping is used when deserializing the name of
 | |
| a declaration, the identifier of a token, or any other construct in the AST
 | |
| file that refers to a name.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-method-pool:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Method Pool Block
 | |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 | |
| 
 | |
| The method pool block is represented as an on-disk hash table that serves two
 | |
| purposes: it provides a mapping from the names of Objective-C selectors to the
 | |
| set of Objective-C instance and class methods that have that particular
 | |
| selector (which is required for semantic analysis in Objective-C) and also
 | |
| stores all of the selectors used by entities within the AST file.  The design
 | |
| of the method pool is similar to that of the :ref:`identifier table
 | |
| <pchinternals-ident-table>`: the first time a particular selector is formed
 | |
| during the compilation of the program, Clang will search in the on-disk hash
 | |
| table of selectors; if found, Clang will read the Objective-C methods
 | |
| associated with that selector into the appropriate front-end data structure
 | |
| (``Sema::InstanceMethodPool`` and ``Sema::FactoryMethodPool`` for instance and
 | |
| class methods, respectively).
 | |
| 
 | |
| As with identifiers, selectors are represented by numeric values within the AST
 | |
| file.  A separate index maps these numeric selector values to the offset of the
 | |
| selector within the on-disk hash table, and will be used when de-serializing an
 | |
| Objective-C method declaration (or other Objective-C construct) that refers to
 | |
| the selector.
 | |
| 
 | |
| AST Reader Integration Points
 | |
| -----------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| The "lazy" deserialization behavior of AST files requires their integration
 | |
| into several completely different submodules of Clang.  For example, lazily
 | |
| deserializing the declarations during name lookup requires that the name-lookup
 | |
| routines be able to query the AST file to find entities stored there.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For each Clang data structure that requires direct interaction with the AST
 | |
| reader logic, there is an abstract class that provides the interface between
 | |
| the two modules.  The ``ASTReader`` class, which handles the loading of an AST
 | |
| file, inherits from all of these abstract classes to provide lazy
 | |
| deserialization of Clang's data structures.  ``ASTReader`` implements the
 | |
| following abstract classes:
 | |
| 
 | |
| ``ExternalSLocEntrySource``
 | |
|   This abstract interface is associated with the ``SourceManager`` class, and
 | |
|   is used whenever the :ref:`source manager <pchinternals-sourcemgr>` needs to
 | |
|   load the details of a file, buffer, or macro instantiation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ``IdentifierInfoLookup``
 | |
|   This abstract interface is associated with the ``IdentifierTable`` class, and
 | |
|   is used whenever the program source refers to an identifier that has not yet
 | |
|   been seen.  In this case, the AST reader searches for this identifier within
 | |
|   its :ref:`identifier table <pchinternals-ident-table>` to load any top-level
 | |
|   declarations or macros associated with that identifier.
 | |
| 
 | |
| ``ExternalASTSource``
 | |
|   This abstract interface is associated with the ``ASTContext`` class, and is
 | |
|   used whenever the abstract syntax tree nodes need to loaded from the AST
 | |
|   file.  It provides the ability to de-serialize declarations and types
 | |
|   identified by their numeric values, read the bodies of functions when
 | |
|   required, and read the declarations stored within a declaration context
 | |
|   (either for iteration or for name lookup).
 | |
| 
 | |
| ``ExternalSemaSource``
 | |
|   This abstract interface is associated with the ``Sema`` class, and is used
 | |
|   whenever semantic analysis needs to read information from the :ref:`global
 | |
|   method pool <pchinternals-method-pool>`.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-chained:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Chained precompiled headers
 | |
| ---------------------------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Chained precompiled headers were initially intended to improve the performance
 | |
| of IDE-centric operations such as syntax highlighting and code completion while
 | |
| a particular source file is being edited by the user.  To minimize the amount
 | |
| of reparsing required after a change to the file, a form of precompiled header
 | |
| --- called a precompiled *preamble* --- is automatically generated by parsing
 | |
| all of the headers in the source file, up to and including the last
 | |
| ``#include``.  When only the source file changes (and none of the headers it
 | |
| depends on), reparsing of that source file can use the precompiled preamble and
 | |
| start parsing after the ``#include``\ s, so parsing time is proportional to the
 | |
| size of the source file (rather than all of its includes).  However, the
 | |
| compilation of that translation unit may already use a precompiled header: in
 | |
| this case, Clang will create the precompiled preamble as a chained precompiled
 | |
| header that refers to the original precompiled header.  This drastically
 | |
| reduces the time needed to serialize the precompiled preamble for use in
 | |
| reparsing.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Chained precompiled headers get their name because each precompiled header can
 | |
| depend on one other precompiled header, forming a chain of dependencies.  A
 | |
| translation unit will then include the precompiled header that starts the chain
 | |
| (i.e., nothing depends on it).  This linearity of dependencies is important for
 | |
| the semantic model of chained precompiled headers, because the most-recent
 | |
| precompiled header can provide information that overrides the information
 | |
| provided by the precompiled headers it depends on, just like a header file
 | |
| ``B.h`` that includes another header ``A.h`` can modify the state produced by
 | |
| parsing ``A.h``, e.g., by ``#undef``'ing a macro defined in ``A.h``.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There are several ways in which chained precompiled headers generalize the AST
 | |
| file model:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Numbering of IDs
 | |
|   Many different kinds of entities --- identifiers, declarations, types, etc.
 | |
|   --- have ID numbers that start at 1 or some other predefined constant and
 | |
|   grow upward.  Each precompiled header records the maximum ID number it has
 | |
|   assigned in each category.  Then, when a new precompiled header is generated
 | |
|   that depends on (chains to) another precompiled header, it will start
 | |
|   counting at the next available ID number.  This way, one can determine, given
 | |
|   an ID number, which AST file actually contains the entity.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Name lookup
 | |
|   When writing a chained precompiled header, Clang attempts to write only
 | |
|   information that has changed from the precompiled header on which it is
 | |
|   based.  This changes the lookup algorithm for the various tables, such as the
 | |
|   :ref:`identifier table <pchinternals-ident-table>`: the search starts at the
 | |
|   most-recent precompiled header.  If no entry is found, lookup then proceeds
 | |
|   to the identifier table in the precompiled header it depends on, and so one.
 | |
|   Once a lookup succeeds, that result is considered definitive, overriding any
 | |
|   results from earlier precompiled headers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Update records
 | |
|   There are various ways in which a later precompiled header can modify the
 | |
|   entities described in an earlier precompiled header.  For example, later
 | |
|   precompiled headers can add entries into the various name-lookup tables for
 | |
|   the translation unit or namespaces, or add new categories to an Objective-C
 | |
|   class.  Each of these updates is captured in an "update record" that is
 | |
|   stored in the chained precompiled header file and will be loaded along with
 | |
|   the original entity.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .. _pchinternals-modules:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Modules
 | |
| -------
 | |
| 
 | |
| Modules generalize the chained precompiled header model yet further, from a
 | |
| linear chain of precompiled headers to an arbitrary directed acyclic graph
 | |
| (DAG) of AST files.  All of the same techniques used to make chained
 | |
| precompiled headers work --- ID number, name lookup, update records --- are
 | |
| shared with modules.  However, the DAG nature of modules introduce a number of
 | |
| additional complications to the model:
 | |
| 
 | |
| Numbering of IDs
 | |
|   The simple, linear numbering scheme used in chained precompiled headers falls
 | |
|   apart with the module DAG, because different modules may end up with
 | |
|   different numbering schemes for entities they imported from common shared
 | |
|   modules.  To account for this, each module file provides information about
 | |
|   which modules it depends on and which ID numbers it assigned to the entities
 | |
|   in those modules, as well as which ID numbers it took for its own new
 | |
|   entities.  The AST reader then maps these "local" ID numbers into a "global"
 | |
|   ID number space for the current translation unit, providing a 1-1 mapping
 | |
|   between entities (in whatever AST file they inhabit) and global ID numbers.
 | |
|   If that translation unit is then serialized into an AST file, this mapping
 | |
|   will be stored for use when the AST file is imported.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Declaration merging
 | |
|   It is possible for a given entity (from the language's perspective) to be
 | |
|   declared multiple times in different places.  For example, two different
 | |
|   headers can have the declaration of ``printf`` or could forward-declare
 | |
|   ``struct stat``.  If each of those headers is included in a module, and some
 | |
|   third party imports both of those modules, there is a potentially serious
 | |
|   problem: name lookup for ``printf`` or ``struct stat`` will find both
 | |
|   declarations, but the AST nodes are unrelated.  This would result in a
 | |
|   compilation error, due to an ambiguity in name lookup.  Therefore, the AST
 | |
|   reader performs declaration merging according to the appropriate language
 | |
|   semantics, ensuring that the two disjoint declarations are merged into a
 | |
|   single redeclaration chain (with a common canonical declaration), so that it
 | |
|   is as if one of the headers had been included before the other.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Name Visibility
 | |
|   Modules allow certain names that occur during module creation to be "hidden",
 | |
|   so that they are not part of the public interface of the module and are not
 | |
|   visible to its clients.  The AST reader maintains a "visible" bit on various
 | |
|   AST nodes (declarations, macros, etc.) to indicate whether that particular
 | |
|   AST node is currently visible; the various name lookup mechanisms in Clang
 | |
|   inspect the visible bit to determine whether that entity, which is still in
 | |
|   the AST (because other, visible AST nodes may depend on it), can actually be
 | |
|   found by name lookup.  When a new (sub)module is imported, it may make
 | |
|   existing, non-visible, already-deserialized AST nodes visible; it is the
 | |
|   responsibility of the AST reader to find and update these AST nodes when it
 | |
|   is notified of the import.
 | |
| 
 |