//! This module contains the `InterpCx` methods for executing a single step of the interpreter. //! //! The main entry point is the `step` method. use either::Either; use rustc_middle::mir; use rustc_middle::mir::interpret::{InterpResult, Scalar}; use rustc_middle::ty::layout::LayoutOf; use super::{ImmTy, InterpCx, Machine}; /// Classify whether an operator is "left-homogeneous", i.e., the LHS has the /// same type as the result. #[inline] fn binop_left_homogeneous(op: mir::BinOp) -> bool { use rustc_middle::mir::BinOp::*; match op { Add | Sub | Mul | Div | Rem | BitXor | BitAnd | BitOr | Offset | Shl | Shr => true, Eq | Ne | Lt | Le | Gt | Ge => false, } } /// Classify whether an operator is "right-homogeneous", i.e., the RHS has the /// same type as the LHS. #[inline] fn binop_right_homogeneous(op: mir::BinOp) -> bool { use rustc_middle::mir::BinOp::*; match op { Add | Sub | Mul | Div | Rem | BitXor | BitAnd | BitOr | Eq | Ne | Lt | Le | Gt | Ge => true, Offset | Shl | Shr => false, } } impl<'mir, 'tcx: 'mir, M: Machine<'mir, 'tcx>> InterpCx<'mir, 'tcx, M> { /// Returns `true` as long as there are more things to do. /// /// This is used by [priroda](https://github.com/oli-obk/priroda) /// /// This is marked `#inline(always)` to work around adversarial codegen when `opt-level = 3` #[inline(always)] pub fn step(&mut self) -> InterpResult<'tcx, bool> { if self.stack().is_empty() { return Ok(false); } let Either::Left(loc) = self.frame().loc else { // We are unwinding and this fn has no cleanup code. // Just go on unwinding. trace!("unwinding: skipping frame"); self.pop_stack_frame(/* unwinding */ true)?; return Ok(true); }; let basic_block = &self.body().basic_blocks[loc.block]; if let Some(stmt) = basic_block.statements.get(loc.statement_index) { let old_frames = self.frame_idx(); self.statement(stmt)?; // Make sure we are not updating `statement_index` of the wrong frame. assert_eq!(old_frames, self.frame_idx()); // Advance the program counter. self.frame_mut().loc.as_mut().left().unwrap().statement_index += 1; return Ok(true); } M::before_terminator(self)?; let terminator = basic_block.terminator(); self.terminator(terminator)?; Ok(true) } /// Runs the interpretation logic for the given `mir::Statement` at the current frame and /// statement counter. /// /// This does NOT move the statement counter forward, the caller has to do that! pub fn statement(&mut self, stmt: &mir::Statement<'tcx>) -> InterpResult<'tcx> { info!("{:?}", stmt); use rustc_middle::mir::StatementKind::*; match &stmt.kind { Assign(box (place, rvalue)) => self.eval_rvalue_into_place(rvalue, *place)?, SetDiscriminant { place, variant_index } => { let dest = self.eval_place(**place)?; self.write_discriminant(*variant_index, &dest)?; } Deinit(place) => { let dest = self.eval_place(**place)?; self.write_uninit(&dest)?; } // Mark locals as alive StorageLive(local) => { self.storage_live(*local)?; } // Mark locals as dead StorageDead(local) => { self.storage_dead(*local)?; } // No dynamic semantics attached to `FakeRead`; MIR // interpreter is solely intended for borrowck'ed code. FakeRead(..) => {} // Stacked Borrows. Retag(kind, place) => { let dest = self.eval_place(**place)?; M::retag_place_contents(self, *kind, &dest)?; } Intrinsic(box intrinsic) => self.emulate_nondiverging_intrinsic(intrinsic)?, // Statements we do not track. AscribeUserType(..) => {} // Currently, Miri discards Coverage statements. Coverage statements are only injected // via an optional compile time MIR pass and have no side effects. Since Coverage // statements don't exist at the source level, it is safe for Miri to ignore them, even // for undefined behavior (UB) checks. // // A coverage counter inside a const expression (for example, a counter injected in a // const function) is discarded when the const is evaluated at compile time. Whether // this should change, and/or how to implement a const eval counter, is a subject of the // following issue: // // FIXME(#73156): Handle source code coverage in const eval Coverage(..) => {} ConstEvalCounter => { M::increment_const_eval_counter(self)?; } // Defined to do nothing. These are added by optimization passes, to avoid changing the // size of MIR constantly. Nop => {} } Ok(()) } /// Evaluate an assignment statement. /// /// There is no separate `eval_rvalue` function. Instead, the code for handling each rvalue /// type writes its results directly into the memory specified by the place. pub fn eval_rvalue_into_place( &mut self, rvalue: &mir::Rvalue<'tcx>, place: mir::Place<'tcx>, ) -> InterpResult<'tcx> { let dest = self.eval_place(place)?; // FIXME: ensure some kind of non-aliasing between LHS and RHS? // Also see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/68364. use rustc_middle::mir::Rvalue::*; match *rvalue { ThreadLocalRef(did) => { let ptr = M::thread_local_static_base_pointer(self, did)?; self.write_pointer(ptr, &dest)?; } Use(ref operand) => { // Avoid recomputing the layout let op = self.eval_operand(operand, Some(dest.layout))?; self.copy_op(&op, &dest, /*allow_transmute*/ false)?; } CopyForDeref(place) => { let op = self.eval_place_to_op(place, Some(dest.layout))?; self.copy_op(&op, &dest, /* allow_transmute*/ false)?; } BinaryOp(bin_op, box (ref left, ref right)) => { let layout = binop_left_homogeneous(bin_op).then_some(dest.layout); let left = self.read_immediate(&self.eval_operand(left, layout)?)?; let layout = binop_right_homogeneous(bin_op).then_some(left.layout); let right = self.read_immediate(&self.eval_operand(right, layout)?)?; self.binop_ignore_overflow(bin_op, &left, &right, &dest)?; } CheckedBinaryOp(bin_op, box (ref left, ref right)) => { // Due to the extra boolean in the result, we can never reuse the `dest.layout`. let left = self.read_immediate(&self.eval_operand(left, None)?)?; let layout = binop_right_homogeneous(bin_op).then_some(left.layout); let right = self.read_immediate(&self.eval_operand(right, layout)?)?; self.binop_with_overflow(bin_op, &left, &right, &dest)?; } UnaryOp(un_op, ref operand) => { // The operand always has the same type as the result. let val = self.read_immediate(&self.eval_operand(operand, Some(dest.layout))?)?; let val = self.unary_op(un_op, &val)?; assert_eq!(val.layout, dest.layout, "layout mismatch for result of {:?}", un_op); self.write_immediate(*val, &dest)?; } Aggregate(box ref kind, ref operands) => { self.write_aggregate(kind, operands, &dest)?; } Repeat(ref operand, _) => { let src = self.eval_operand(operand, None)?; assert!(src.layout.is_sized()); let dest = self.force_allocation(&dest)?; let length = dest.len(self)?; if length == 0 { // Nothing to copy... but let's still make sure that `dest` as a place is valid. self.get_place_alloc_mut(&dest)?; } else { // Write the src to the first element. let first = self.mplace_field(&dest, 0)?; self.copy_op(&src, &first.into(), /*allow_transmute*/ false)?; // This is performance-sensitive code for big static/const arrays! So we // avoid writing each operand individually and instead just make many copies // of the first element. let elem_size = first.layout.size; let first_ptr = first.ptr; let rest_ptr = first_ptr.offset(elem_size, self)?; // For the alignment of `rest_ptr`, we crucially do *not* use `first.align` as // that place might be more aligned than its type mandates (a `u8` array could // be 4-aligned if it sits at the right spot in a struct). Instead we use // `first.layout.align`, i.e., the alignment given by the type. self.mem_copy_repeatedly( first_ptr, first.align, rest_ptr, first.layout.align.abi, elem_size, length - 1, /*nonoverlapping:*/ true, )?; } } Len(place) => { let src = self.eval_place(place)?; let op = self.place_to_op(&src)?; let len = op.len(self)?; self.write_scalar(Scalar::from_target_usize(len, self), &dest)?; } Ref(_, borrow_kind, place) => { let src = self.eval_place(place)?; let place = self.force_allocation(&src)?; let val = ImmTy::from_immediate(place.to_ref(self), dest.layout); // A fresh reference was created, make sure it gets retagged. let val = M::retag_ptr_value( self, if borrow_kind.allows_two_phase_borrow() { mir::RetagKind::TwoPhase } else { mir::RetagKind::Default }, &val, )?; self.write_immediate(*val, &dest)?; } AddressOf(_, place) => { // Figure out whether this is an addr_of of an already raw place. let place_base_raw = if place.has_deref() { let ty = self.frame().body.local_decls[place.local].ty; ty.is_unsafe_ptr() } else { // Not a deref, and thus not raw. false }; let src = self.eval_place(place)?; let place = self.force_allocation(&src)?; let mut val = ImmTy::from_immediate(place.to_ref(self), dest.layout); if !place_base_raw { // If this was not already raw, it needs retagging. val = M::retag_ptr_value(self, mir::RetagKind::Raw, &val)?; } self.write_immediate(*val, &dest)?; } NullaryOp(null_op, ty) => { let ty = self.subst_from_current_frame_and_normalize_erasing_regions(ty)?; let layout = self.layout_of(ty)?; if layout.is_unsized() { // FIXME: This should be a span_bug (#80742) self.tcx.sess.delay_span_bug( self.frame().current_span(), &format!("Nullary MIR operator called for unsized type {}", ty), ); throw_inval!(SizeOfUnsizedType(ty)); } let val = match null_op { mir::NullOp::SizeOf => layout.size.bytes(), mir::NullOp::AlignOf => layout.align.abi.bytes(), }; self.write_scalar(Scalar::from_target_usize(val, self), &dest)?; } ShallowInitBox(ref operand, _) => { let src = self.eval_operand(operand, None)?; let v = self.read_immediate(&src)?; self.write_immediate(*v, &dest)?; } Cast(cast_kind, ref operand, cast_ty) => { let src = self.eval_operand(operand, None)?; let cast_ty = self.subst_from_current_frame_and_normalize_erasing_regions(cast_ty)?; self.cast(&src, cast_kind, cast_ty, &dest)?; } Discriminant(place) => { let op = self.eval_place_to_op(place, None)?; let discr_val = self.read_discriminant(&op)?.0; self.write_scalar(discr_val, &dest)?; } } trace!("{:?}", self.dump_place(*dest)); Ok(()) } /// Evaluate the given terminator. Will also adjust the stack frame and statement position accordingly. fn terminator(&mut self, terminator: &mir::Terminator<'tcx>) -> InterpResult<'tcx> { info!("{:?}", terminator.kind); self.eval_terminator(terminator)?; if !self.stack().is_empty() { if let Either::Left(loc) = self.frame().loc { info!("// executing {:?}", loc.block); } } Ok(()) } }