/* * Copyright 2022 WebAssembly Community Group participants * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ #ifndef wasm_ir_local_structural_dominance_h #define wasm_ir_local_structural_dominance_h #include "wasm.h" namespace wasm { // // This class is useful for the handling of non-nullable locals that is in the // wasm spec: a local.get validates if it is structurally dominated by a set. // That dominance proves the get cannot access the default null value, and, // nicely, it can be validated in linear time. (Historically, this was called // "1a" during spec discussions.) // // Concretely, this class finds which local indexes lack the structural // dominance property. It only looks at reference types and not anything else. // It can look at both nullable and non-nullable references, though, as it can // be used to validate non-nullable ones, and also to check if a nullable one // could become non-nullable and still validate. // // The property of "structural dominance" means that the set dominates the gets // using wasm's structured control flow constructs, like this: // // (block $A // (local.set $x ..) // (local.get $x) ;; use in the same scope. // (block $B // (local.get $x) ;; use in an inner scope. // ) // ) // // That set structurally dominates both of those gets. However, in this example // it does not: // // (block $A // (local.set $x ..) // ) // (local.get $x) ;; use in an outer scope. // // This is a little similar to breaks: (br $foo) can only go to a label $foo // that is in scope. // // Note that this property must hold on the final wasm binary, while we are // checking it on Binaryen IR. The property will carry over, however: when // lowering to wasm we may remove some Block nodes, but removing nodes cannot // break validation. // // In fact, since Blocks without names are not emitted in the binary format (we // never need them, since nothing can branch to them, so we just emit their // contents), we can ignore them here. That means that this will validate, which // is identical to the last example but the block has no name: // // (block ;; no name here // (local.set $x ..) // ) // (local.get $x) // // It is useful to ignore such blocks here, as various passes emit them // temporarily. // struct LocalStructuralDominance { // We always look at non-nullable locals, but can be configured to ignore // or process nullable ones. enum Mode { All, NonNullableOnly, }; LocalStructuralDominance(Function* func, Module& wasm, Mode mode = All); // Local indexes for whom a local.get exists that is not structurally // dominated. std::set nonDominatingIndices; }; } // namespace wasm #endif // wasm_ir_local_structural_dominance_h