Mercurial > emacs
view lisp/find-gc.el @ 13740:7868bb1ee05f libc-951216 libc-951217 libc-951218 libc-951219 libc-951220 libc-951221 libc-951222 libc-951223 libc-951224 libc-951225 libc-951226 libc-951227 libc-951228 libc-951229 libc-951230 libc-951231 libc-960101 libc-960102 libc-960103 libc-960104 libc-960105 libc-960106 libc-960107 libc-960108 libc-960109 libc-960110 libc-960111 libc-960112 libc-960113 libc-960114 libc-960115
(AViiON): Add ix86-dg-dgux
author | Stan Cox <scox@redhat.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 16 Dec 1995 03:32:35 +0000 |
parents | 6314334d7c2b |
children | 83f275dcd93a |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; find-gc.el --- detect functions that call the garbage collector ;; Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Maintainer: FSF ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) ;; any later version. ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to ;; the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. ;;; Commentary: ;;; Produce in unsafe-list the set of all functions that may invoke GC. ;;; This expects the Emacs sources to live in emacs-source-directory. ;;; It creates a temporary working directory /tmp/esrc. ;;; Code: (defun find-gc-unsafe () (trace-call-tree nil) (trace-use-tree) (find-unsafe-funcs 'Fgarbage_collect) (setq unsafe-list (sort unsafe-list (function (lambda (x y) (string-lessp (car x) (car y)))))) ) (setq emacs-source-directory "/usr/gnu/src/dist/src") ;;; This does a depth-first search to find all functions that can ;;; ultimately call the function "target". The result is an a-list ;;; in unsafe-list; the cars are the unsafe functions, and the cdrs ;;; are (one of) the unsafe functions that these functions directly ;;; call. (defun find-unsafe-funcs (target) (setq unsafe-list (list (list target))) (trace-unsafe target) ) (defun trace-unsafe (func) (let ((used (assq func subrs-used))) (or used (error "No subrs-used for %s" (car unsafe-list))) (while (setq used (cdr used)) (or (assq (car used) unsafe-list) (memq (car used) noreturn-list) (progn (setq unsafe-list (cons (cons (car used) func) unsafe-list)) (trace-unsafe (car used)))))) ) ;;; Functions on this list are safe, even if they appear to be able ;;; to call the target. (setq noreturn-list '( Fsignal Fthrow wrong_type_argument )) ;;; This produces an a-list of functions in subrs-called. The cdr of ;;; each entry is a list of functions which the function in car calls. (defun trace-call-tree (&optional already-setup) (message "Setting up directories...") (or already-setup (progn ;; Gee, wouldn't a built-in "system" function be handy here. (call-process "csh" nil nil nil "-c" "rm -rf /tmp/esrc") (call-process "csh" nil nil nil "-c" "mkdir /tmp/esrc") (call-process "csh" nil nil nil "-c" (format "ln -s %s/*.[ch] /tmp/esrc" emacs-source-directory)))) (save-excursion (set-buffer (get-buffer-create "*Trace Call Tree*")) (setq subrs-called nil) (let ((case-fold-search nil) (files source-files) name entry) (while files (message "Compiling %s..." (car files)) (call-process "csh" nil nil nil "-c" (format "gcc -dr -c /tmp/esrc/%s -o /dev/null" (car files))) (erase-buffer) (insert-file-contents (concat "/tmp/esrc/" (car files) ".rtl")) (while (re-search-forward ";; Function \\|(call_insn " nil t) (if (= (char-after (- (point) 3)) ?o) (progn (looking-at "[a-zA-Z0-9_]+") (setq name (intern (buffer-substring (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)))) (message "%s : %s" (car files) name) (setq entry (list name) subrs-called (cons entry subrs-called))) (if (looking-at ".*\n?.*\"\\([A-Za-z0-9_]+\\)\"") (progn (setq name (intern (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))) (or (memq name (cdr entry)) (setcdr entry (cons name (cdr entry)))))))) (delete-file (concat "/tmp/esrc/" (car files) ".rtl")) (setq files (cdr files))))) ) ;;; This was originally generated directory-files, but there were ;;; too many files there that were not actually compiled. The ;;; list below was created for a HP-UX 7.0 system. (setq source-files '("dispnew.c" "scroll.c" "xdisp.c" "window.c" "term.c" "cm.c" "emacs.c" "keyboard.c" "macros.c" "keymap.c" "sysdep.c" "buffer.c" "filelock.c" "insdel.c" "marker.c" "minibuf.c" "fileio.c" "dired.c" "filemode.c" "cmds.c" "casefiddle.c" "indent.c" "search.c" "regex.c" "undo.c" "alloc.c" "data.c" "doc.c" "editfns.c" "callint.c" "eval.c" "fns.c" "print.c" "lread.c" "abbrev.c" "syntax.c" "unexec.c" "mocklisp.c" "bytecode.c" "process.c" "callproc.c" "doprnt.c" "x11term.c" "x11fns.c")) ;;; This produces an inverted a-list in subrs-used. The cdr of each ;;; entry is a list of functions that call the function in car. (defun trace-use-tree () (setq subrs-used (mapcar 'list (mapcar 'car subrs-called))) (let ((ptr subrs-called) p2 found) (while ptr (setq p2 (car ptr)) (while (setq p2 (cdr p2)) (if (setq found (assq (car p2) subrs-used)) (setcdr found (cons (car (car ptr)) (cdr found))))) (setq ptr (cdr ptr)))) ) ;;; find-gc.el ends here