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/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* (c) The GHC Team, 1998-2004
*
* Code for starting, stopping and restarting threads.
*
* This file is written in a subset of C--, extended with various
* features specific to GHC. It is compiled by GHC directly. For the
* syntax of .cmm files, see the parser in ghc/compiler/cmm/CmmParse.y.
*
* ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
#include "Cmm.h"
/*
* This module contains the two entry points and the final exit point
* to/from the Haskell world. We can enter either by:
*
* a) returning to the address on the top of the stack, or
* b) entering the closure on the top of the stack
*
* the function stg_stop_thread_entry is the final exit for a
* thread: it is the last return address on the stack. It returns
* to the scheduler marking the thread as finished.
*/
#define CHECK_SENSIBLE_REGS() \
ASSERT(Hp != 0); \
ASSERT(Sp != 0); \
ASSERT(SpLim != 0); \
ASSERT(SpLim - WDS(RESERVED_STACK_WORDS) <= Sp);
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Returning from the STG world.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
INFO_TABLE_RET( stg_stop_thread, STOP_FRAME,
#if defined(PROFILING)
W_ unused,
W_ unused
#endif
)
{
/*
The final exit.
The top-top-level closures (e.g., "main") are of type "IO a".
When entered, they perform an IO action and return an 'a' in R1.
We save R1 on top of the stack where the scheduler can find it,
tidy up the registers and return to the scheduler.
We Leave the stack looking like this:
+----------------+
| -------------------> return value
+----------------+
| stg_enter_info |
+----------------+
The stg_enter_info is just a dummy info table so that the
garbage collector can understand the stack (there must always
be an info table on top of the stack).
*/
Sp = Sp + SIZEOF_StgStopFrame - WDS(2);
Sp(1) = R1;
Sp(0) = stg_enter_info;
StgTSO_what_next(CurrentTSO) = ThreadComplete::I16;
SAVE_THREAD_STATE();
/* The return code goes in BaseReg->rRet, and BaseReg is returned in R1 */
StgRegTable_rRet(BaseReg) = ThreadFinished;
R1 = BaseReg;
jump StgReturn;
}
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Start a thread from the scheduler by returning to the address on
the top of the stack. This is used for all entries to STG code
from C land.
On the way back, we (usually) pass through stg_returnToSched which saves
the thread's state away nicely.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
stg_returnToStackTop
{
LOAD_THREAD_STATE();
CHECK_SENSIBLE_REGS();
jump %ENTRY_CODE(Sp(0));
}
stg_returnToSched
{
SAVE_THREAD_STATE();
foreign "C" threadPaused(MyCapability() "ptr", CurrentTSO);
jump StgReturn;
}
// A variant of stg_returntToSched that doesn't call threadPaused() on the
// current thread. This is used for switching from compiled execution to the
// interpreter, where calling threadPaused() on every switch would be too
// expensive.
stg_returnToSchedNotPaused
{
SAVE_THREAD_STATE();
jump StgReturn;
}
// A variant of stg_returnToSched, but instead of returning directly to the
// scheduler, we jump to the code fragment pointed to by R2. This lets us
// perform some final actions after making the thread safe, such as unlocking
// the MVar on which we are about to block in SMP mode.
stg_returnToSchedButFirst
{
SAVE_THREAD_STATE();
foreign "C" threadPaused(MyCapability() "ptr", CurrentTSO);
jump R2;
}
stg_threadFinished
{
StgRegTable_rRet(BaseReg) = ThreadFinished;
R1 = BaseReg;
jump StgReturn;
}
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Strict IO application - performing an IO action and entering its result.
rts_evalIO() lets you perform Haskell IO actions from outside of
Haskell-land, returning back to you their result. Want this result
to be evaluated to WHNF by that time, so that we can easily get at
the int/char/whatever using the various get{Ty} functions provided
by the RTS API.
forceIO takes care of this, performing the IO action and entering the
results that comes back.
------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
INFO_TABLE_RET( stg_forceIO, RET_SMALL)
{
Sp_adj(1);
ENTER();
}
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-strict IO application.
This stack frame works like stg_forceIO_info except that it
doesn't evaluate the return value. We need the layer because the
return convention for an IO action differs depending on whether R1
is a register or not.
------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
INFO_TABLE_RET( stg_noforceIO, RET_SMALL )
{
Sp_adj(1);
jump %ENTRY_CODE(Sp(0));
}
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Special STG entry points for module registration.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
stg_init_finish
{
jump StgReturn;
}
/* On entry to stg_init:
* init_stack[0] = &stg_init_ret;
* init_stack[1] = __stginit_Something;
*/
stg_init
{
W_ next;
Sp = W_[BaseReg + OFFSET_StgRegTable_rSp];
next = W_[Sp];
Sp_adj(1);
jump next;
}
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