NAME

Subs - Parrot Subroutines

VERSION

$Revision$

ABSTRACT

This document describes how to define, call, and return from Parrot subroutine objects and other invokables.

DESCRIPTION

Parrot comes with different subroutine and related classes which implement CPS (Continuation Passing Style) and PCC (Parrot Calling Conventions) docs/pdds/pdd03_calling_conventions.pod.

Class Tree

These are all of the built-in classes that are directly callable, or "invokable":

  Sub
    Closure
    Coroutine
    Eval
  Continuation
    RetContinuation
    ExceptionHandler

By "invokable" we mean that they can be supplied as the first argument to the invoke, invokecc, or tailcall instructions. Generally speaking, invokable objects are divided into two subtypes: Sub and classes that are built on it create a new context when invoked, and Continuation classes return control to an existing context that was captured when the Continuation was created.

There are (of course) two classes that straddle this distinction:

  1. Invoking a Closure object creates a new context for the sub it refers to directly, but it also captures an "outer" context that provides bindings for the immediately-enclosing lexical scope (and, if that context is itself is for a Closure, the subsequent scopes working outwards).
  2. [add a newclosure example? -- rgr, 6-Apr-08.]

  3. A Coroutine acts like a normal sub when called initially, and can also return normally, but acts like a continuation when exited via the yield instruction and re-entered by re-invoking.
  4. [need a reference to a coroutine example. -- rgr, 6-Apr-08.]

SYNOPSIS

Creating subs

Subs are created by IMCC (the PIR compiler) via the .sub directive. Unless the :anon pragma is included, they are stored in the constant table associated with the bytecode and can be fetched with the get_hll_global and get_root_global opcodes. Within the PIR source, they can also be put in registers with a .const 'Sub' declaration:

    .const 'Sub' rsub = 'random_sub'

This uses find_sub_not_null under the hood to look up the sub named "random_sub".

Here's an example of fetching a sub from another namespace:

    .sub main :main
	get_hll_global $P0, ['Other'; 'Namespace'], "the_sub"
	$P0()
	print "back\n"
    .end

    .namespace ['Other'; 'Namespace']

    .sub the_sub
	print "in sub\n"
    .end

Note that the_sub could be defined in a different bytecode or PIR source file from main.

Program entry point

One subroutine in the first executed source or bytecode file may be flagged as the "main" subroutine, where execution starts.

  .sub the_main_event :main
     # ...
  .end

In the absence of a :main entry Parrot starts execution at the first statement. Any :main directives in a subsequent PIR or bytecode file that are loaded under program control are ignored.

Note that if the first executed source or bytecode file contains more than one sub flagged as :main, Parrot currently picks the last such sub to start execution. This is arguably a bug, so users should not depend upon it.

Load-time initialization

If a subroutine is marked as :load this subroutine is run, before the load_bytecode opcode returns.

e.g.

  .sub main :main
     print "in main\n"
     load_bytecode "library_code.pir"
     print "back to main\n"
  .end

  # library_code.pir

  .sub _my_lib_init :load
     print "initializing library\n"
  .end

If a subroutine is marked as :init this subroutine is run before the :main or the first subroutine in the source file runs. Unlike :main subs, :init subs are also run when compiling from memory. :load subs are run only in any source or bytecode files loaded subsequently.

These markers are called "pragmas", and are defined fully in "pdds/pdd19_pir.pod" in docs. The following table summarizes the behavior of the five pragmas that cause Parrot to run a sub implicitly:

                ------ Executed when --------
                compiling to    -- loading --
  Sub Pragma    disk  memory    first   after
  ==========    ====  ======    =====   =====
   :immediate   yes   yes       no      no        
   :postcomp    yes   no        no      no        
   :load        no    no        no      yes       
   :init        no    yes       yes     no        
   :main        no    no        yes     no        

The same load-time behavior applies regardless of whether the loaded file is PIR source or bytecode. Note that it is possible to mark a sub with both :load and :init.

Calling the sub

PIR sub invocation syntax is similar to HLL syntax:

    $P0 = do_something($P1, $S3)

This is syntactic sugar for the following four bytecode instructions:

    # Establish arguments.
    set_args '(0,0)', $P1, $S3
    # Find the sub.
    $P8 = find_sub_not_null "do_something"
    # Establish return values.
    get_results '(0)', $P0
    # Call the sub in $P8, implicitly creating a return continuation.
    invokecc $P8

The sub name could be replaced with a PMC register, in which case the find_sub_not_null instruction would not be needed. If the return values from the sub were ignored (by dropping the $P0 = part), the get_results instruction would be omitted. However, set_args is emitted even in the case of a call without arguments.

The first operands to the set_args and get_results instructions are actually placeholders for an integer array that describes the register types. For example, the '(0,0)' for set_args is replaced internally with [2, 1], which means "two arguments, of type PMC and string". Note that return values get the same register type coercion as sub parameters. This is all described in much more detail in "pdds/pdd03_calling_conventions.pod" in docs.

To receive multiple values, put the register names in parentheses:

    ($P10, $P11) = do_something($P1, $S3)

    ($P10, $P11) = do_something($P1, $S3)

To test whether a value was returned, declare it :optional, and follow it with an integer register declared :opt_val:

    ($P10 :optional, $I10 :opt_val) = do_something($P1, $S3)

Both of these affect only the signature provided via get_results.

[should also describe :flat, :slurpy, :named, ..., or at least provide a reference. -- rgr, 25-May-08.]

    # Call the sub in $P8, with continuation (created earlier) in $P9.
    invoke $P8, $P9

Returning from a sub

PIR supports a convenient syntax for returning any number of values from a sub or closure:

To test whether a value was returned, declare it :optional, and follow it with an integer register declared :opt_val:

    ($P10 :optional, $I10 :opt_val) = do_something($P1, $S3)

Both of these affect only the signature provided via get_results.

[should also describe :flat, :slurpy, :named, ..., or at least provide a reference. -- rgr, 25-May-08.]

    # Call the sub in $P8, with continuation (created earlier) in $P9.
    invoke $P8, $P9

Returning from a sub

PIR supports a convenient syntax for returning any number of values from a sub or closure:

    .sub main 
      .return ($P0, $I1, $S3)
    .end

Integer, float, and string constants are also accepted. This is translated to:

    get_results '(0,0,0)', $P0, $I1, $S3
    returncc	# return by calling the current continuation

As for set_args, the '(0,0,0)' is actually a placeholder for an integer array that describes the register types; it is replaced internally with [2, 0, 1], which means "three arguments, of type PMC, integer, and string".

Another way to return from a sub is to use tail-calling, which calls a new sub with the current continuation, so that the new sub returns directly to the caller of the old sub (i.e. without first returning to the old sub). This passes the three values to another_sub via tail-calling:

    .sub main
      .tailcall another_sub($P0, $I1, $S3)
    .end

This is translated into a set_args instruction for the call, but with tailcall instead of invokecc:

    set_args '(0,0,0)', $P0, $I1, $S3
    $P8 = find_sub_not_null "another_sub"
    tailcall $P8

As for calling, the sub name could be replaced with a PMC register, in which case the find_sub_not_null instruction would not be needed.

If needed, the current continuation can be extracted and called explicitly as follows:

    ## This is what defines .INTERPINFO_CURRENT_CONT.
    .include 'interpinfo.pasm'
    ## Store our return continuation as exit_cont.
    .local pmc exit_cont
    exit_cont = interpinfo .INTERPINFO_CURRENT_CONT
    ## Invoke it explicitly:
    invokecc exit_cont
    ## ... or equivalently:
    tailcall exit_cont

To return values, use set_args as before.

All together now

The following complete example illustrates the typical call/return pattern:

    .sub main :main
	print "in main\n"
        the_sub()
	print "back to main\n"
    .end

    .sub the_sub
	print "in sub\n"
    .end

Notice that we are not passing or returning values here.

[example of passing values. this could get pretty elaborate; look for other examples first. -- rgr, 6-Apr-08.]

If a short subroutine is called several times, for instance inside a loop, the creation of the return continuation can be done outside the loop:

    .sub main :main
	    ## Initialize the sub and the return cont.
	    .local pmc cont
	    cont = new 'Continuation'
	    set_addr cont, ret_label
	    .const .Sub rsub = 'random_sub'
	    ## Loop initialization.
	    .local int loop_max, i
	    loop_max = 1000000
	    i = 0

	    ## Main loop.
    again:
	    set_args '(0)', i
	    invoke rsub, cont
    ret_label:
	    ## This is where "cont" returns.
	    inc i
	    if i < loop_max goto again
    .end

    .sub random_sub
	    .param int foo
	    ## do_something
    .end

If the sub returns values, the get_results must be after ret_label in order to receive them.

Since this is much more obscure than the PIR calling syntax, it should only be done if there is a measurable performance advantage. Even in this trivial example, calling "rsub(i)" is only about a third slower on x86.

FILES

src/pmc/sub.pmc, src/pmc/closure.pmc, src/pmc/continuation.pmc, src/pmc/coroutine.pmc, src/sub.c, t/pmc/sub.t

SEE ALSO

docs/pdds/pdd03_calling_conventions.pod docs/pdds/pdd19_pir.pod

AUTHOR

Leopold Toetsch <lt@toetsch.at>