Julia ASTs
Julia has two representations of code. First there is a surface syntax AST returned by the parser (e.g. the parse() function), and manipulated by macros. It is a structured representation of code as it is written, constructed by julia-parser.scm from a character stream. Next there is a lowered form, or IR (intermediate representation), which is used by type inference and code generation. In the lowered form there are fewer types of nodes, all macros are expanded, and all control flow is converted to explicit branches and sequences of statements. The lowered form is constructed by julia-syntax.scm.
First we will focus on the lowered form, since it is more important to the compiler. It is also less obvious to the human, since it results from a significant rearrangement of the input syntax.
Lowered form
The following data types exist in lowered form:
ExprHas a node type indicated by the
headfield, and anargsfield which is aVector{Any}of subexpressions.SlotIdentifies arguments and local variables by consecutive numbering.
Slotis an abstract type with subtypesSlotNumberandTypedSlot. Both types have an integer-valuedidfield giving the slot index. Most slots have the same type at all uses, and so are represented withSlotNumber. The types of these slots are found in theslottypesfield of theirMethodInstanceobject. Slots that require per-use type annotations are represented withTypedSlot, which has atypfield.CodeInfoWraps the IR of a method.
LineNumberNodeContains a single number, specifying the line number the next statement came from.
LabelNodeBranch target, a consecutively-numbered integer starting at 0.
GotoNodeUnconditional branch.
QuoteNodeWraps an arbitrary value to reference as data. For example, the function
f() = :acontains aQuoteNodewhosevaluefield is the symbola, in order to return the symbol itself instead of evaluating it.GlobalRefRefers to global variable
namein modulemod.SSAValueRefers to a consecutively-numbered (starting at 0) static single assignment (SSA) variable inserted by the compiler.
NewvarNodeMarks a point where a variable is created. This has the effect of resetting a variable to undefined.
Expr types
These symbols appear in the head field of Exprs in lowered form.
callFunction call (dynamic dispatch).
args[1]is the function to call,args[2:end]are the arguments.invokeFunction call (static dispatch).
args[1]is the MethodInstance to call,args[2:end]are the arguments (including the function that is being called, atargs[2]).static_parameterReference a static parameter by index.
lineLine number and file name metadata. Unlike a
LineNumberNode, can also contain a file name.gotoifnotConditional branch. If
args[1]is false, goes to label identified inargs[2].=Assignment.
methodAdds a method to a generic function and assigns the result if necessary.
Has a 1-argument form and a 4-argument form. The 1-argument form arises from the syntax
function foo end. In the 1-argument form, the argument is a symbol. If this symbol already names a function in the current scope, nothing happens. If the symbol is undefined, a new function is created and assigned to the identifier specified by the symbol. If the symbol is defined but names a non-function, an error is raised. The definition of "names a function" is that the binding is constant, and refers to an object of singleton type. The rationale for this is that an instance of a singleton type uniquely identifies the type to add the method to. When the type has fields, it wouldn't be clear whether the method was being added to the instance or its type.The 4-argument form has the following arguments:
args[1]A function name, or
falseif unknown. If a symbol, then the expression first behaves like the 1-argument form above. This argument is ignored from then on. When this isfalse, it means a method is being added strictly by type,(::T)(x) = x.args[2]A
SimpleVectorof argument type data.args[2][1]is aSimpleVectorof the argument types, andargs[2][2]is aSimpleVectorof type variables corresponding to the method's static parameters.args[3]A
CodeInfoof the method itself. For "out of scope" method definitions (adding a method to a function that also has methods defined in different scopes) this is an expression that evaluates to a:lambdaexpression.args[4]trueorfalse, identifying whether the method is staged (@generated function).
constDeclares a (global) variable as constant.
nullHas no arguments; simply yields the value
nothing.newAllocates a new struct-like object. First argument is the type. The
newpseudo-function is lowered to this, and the type is always inserted by the compiler. This is very much an internal-only feature, and does no checking. Evaluating arbitrarynewexpressions can easily segfault.returnReturns its argument as the value of the enclosing function.
the_exceptionYields the caught exception inside a
catchblock. This is the value of the run time system variablejl_exception_in_transit.enterEnters an exception handler (
setjmp).args[1]is the label of the catch block to jump to on error.leavePop exception handlers.
args[1]is the number of handlers to pop.inboundsControls turning bounds checks on or off. A stack is maintained; if the first argument of this expression is true or false (
truemeans bounds checks are disabled), it is pushed onto the stack. If the first argument is:pop, the stack is popped.boundscheckIndicates the beginning or end of a section of code that performs a bounds check. Like
inbounds, a stack is maintained, and the second argument can be one of:true,false, or:pop.copyastPart of the implementation of quasi-quote. The argument is a surface syntax AST that is simply copied recursively and returned at run time.
metaMetadata.
args[1]is typically a symbol specifying the kind of metadata, and the rest of the arguments are free-form. The following kinds of metadata are commonly used::inlineand:noinline: Inlining hints.:push_loc: enters a sequence of statements from a specified source location.args[2]specifies a filename, as a symbol.args[3]optionally specifies the name of an (inlined) function that originally contained the code.
:pop_loc: returns to the source location before the matching:push_loc.
Method
A unique'd container describing the shared metadata for a single method.
name,module,file,line,sigMetadata to uniquely identify the method for the computer and the human.
ambigCache of other methods that may be ambiguous with this one.
specializationsCache of all MethodInstance ever created for this Method, used to ensure uniqueness. Uniqueness is required for efficiency, especially for incremental precompile and tracking of method invalidation.
sourceThe original source code (usually compressed).
rootsPointers to non-AST things that have been interpolated into the AST, required by compression of the AST, type-inference, or the generation of native code.
nargs,isva,called,isstaged,pureDescriptive bit-fields for the source code of this Method.
min_world/max_worldThe range of world ages for which this method is visible to dispatch.
MethodInstance
A unique'd container describing a single callable signature for a Method. See especially Proper maintenance and care of multi-threading locks for important details on how to modify these fields safely.
specTypesThe primary key for this MethodInstance. Uniqueness is guaranteed through a
def.specializationslookup.defThe
Methodthat this function describes a specialization of. Or#undef, if this is a top-level Lambda that is not part of a Method.sparam_valsThe values of the static parameters in
specTypesindexed bydef.sparam_syms. For theMethodInstanceatMethod.unspecialized, this is the emptySimpleVector. But for a runtimeMethodInstancefrom theMethodTablecache, this will always be defined and indexable.rettypeThe inferred return type for the
specFunctionObjectfield, which (in most cases) is also the computed return type for the function in general.inferredMay contain a cache of the inferred source for this function, or other information about the inference result such as a constant return value may be put here (if
jlcall_api == 2), or it could be set tonothingto just indicaterettypeis inferred.ftprThe generic jlcall entry point.
jlcall_apiThe ABI to use when calling
fptr. Some significant ones include:0 - Not compiled yet
1 - JL_CALLABLE
jl_value_t *(*)(jl_function_t *f, jl_value_t *args[nargs], uint32_t nargs)2 - Constant (value stored in
inferred)3 - With Static-parameters forwarded
jl_value_t *(*)(jl_svec_t *sparams, jl_function_t *f, jl_value_t *args[nargs], uint32_t nargs)4 - Run in interpreter
jl_value_t *(*)(jl_method_instance_t *meth, jl_function_t *f, jl_value_t *args[nargs], uint32_t nargs)
min_world/max_worldThe range of world ages for which this method instance is valid to be called.
CodeInfo
A temporary container for holding lowered source code.
codeAn
Anyarray of statementsslotnamesAn array of symbols giving the name of each slot (argument or local variable).
slottypesAn array of types for the slots.
slotflagsA
UInt8array of slot properties, represented as bit flags:2 - assigned (only false if there are no assignment statements with this var on the left)
8 - const (currently unused for local variables)
16 - statically assigned once
32 - might be used before assigned. This flag is only valid after type inference.
ssavaluetypesEither an array or an
Int.If an
Int, it gives the number of compiler-inserted temporary locations in the function. If an array, specifies a type for each location.
Boolean properties:
inferredWhether this has been produced by type inference.
inlineableWhether this should be inlined.
propagate_inboundsWhether this should should propagate
@inboundswhen inlined for the purpose of eliding@boundscheckblocks.pureWhether this is known to be a pure function of its arguments, without respect to the state of the method caches or other mutable global state.
Surface syntax AST
Front end ASTs consist entirely of Exprs and atoms (e.g. symbols, numbers). There is generally a different expression head for each visually distinct syntactic form. Examples will be given in s-expression syntax. Each parenthesized list corresponds to an Expr, where the first element is the head. For example (call f x) corresponds to Expr(:call, :f, :x) in Julia.
Calls
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
f(x) | (call f x) |
f(x, y=1, z=2) | (call f x (kw y 1) (kw z 2)) |
f(x; y=1) | (call f (parameters (kw y 1)) x) |
f(x...) | (call f (... x)) |
do syntax:
f(x) do a,b
body
endparses as (call f (-> (tuple a b) (block body)) x).
Operators
Most uses of operators are just function calls, so they are parsed with the head call. However some operators are special forms (not necessarily function calls), and in those cases the operator itself is the expression head. In julia-parser.scm these are referred to as "syntactic operators". Some operators (+ and *) use N-ary parsing; chained calls are parsed as a single N-argument call. Finally, chains of comparisons have their own special expression structure.
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
x+y | (call + x y) |
a+b+c+d | (call + a b c d) |
2x | (call * 2 x) |
a&&b | (&& a b) |
x += 1 | (+= x 1) |
a ? 1 : 2 | (if a 1 2) |
a:b | (: a b) |
a:b:c | (: a b c) |
a,b | (tuple a b) |
a==b | (call == a b) |
1<i<=n | (comparison 1 < i <= n) |
a.b | (. a (quote b)) |
a.(b) | (. a b) |
Bracketed forms
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
a[i] | (ref a i) |
t[i;j] | (typed_vcat t i j) |
t[i j] | (typed_hcat t i j) |
t[a b; c d] | (typed_vcat t (row a b) (row c d)) |
a{b} | (curly a b) |
a{b;c} | (curly a (parameters c) b) |
[x] | (vect x) |
[x,y] | (vect x y) |
[x;y] | (vcat x y) |
[x y] | (hcat x y) |
[x y; z t] | (vcat (row x y) (row z t)) |
[x for y in z, a in b] | (comprehension x (= y z) (= a b)) |
T[x for y in z] | (typed_comprehension T x (= y z)) |
(a, b, c) | (tuple a b c) |
(a; b; c) | (block a (block b c)) |
Macros
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
@m x y | (macrocall @m x y) |
Base.@m x y | (macrocall (. Base (quote @m)) x y) |
@Base.m x y | (macrocall (. Base (quote @m)) x y) |
Strings
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
"a" | "a" |
x"y" | (macrocall @x_str "y") |
x"y"z | (macrocall @x_str "y" "z") |
"x = $x" | (string "x = " x) |
`a b c` | (macrocall @cmd "a b c") |
Doc string syntax:
"some docs"
f(x) = xparses as (macrocall (|.| Core '@doc) "some docs" (= (call f x) (block x))).
Imports and such
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
import a | (import a) |
import a.b.c | (import a b c) |
import ...a | (import . . . a) |
import a.b, c.d | (toplevel (import a b) (import c d)) |
import Base: x | (import Base x) |
import Base: x, y | (toplevel (import Base x) (import Base y)) |
export a, b | (export a b) |
Numbers
Julia supports more number types than many scheme implementations, so not all numbers are represented directly as scheme numbers in the AST.
| Input | AST |
|---|---|
11111111111111111111 | (macrocall @int128_str "11111111111111111111") |
0xfffffffffffffffff | (macrocall @uint128_str "0xfffffffffffffffff") |
1111...many digits... | (macrocall @big_str "1111....") |
Block forms
A block of statements is parsed as (block stmt1 stmt2 ...).
If statement:
if a
b
elseif c
d
else e
f
endparses as:
(if a (block (line 2) b)
(block (line 3) (if c (block (line 4) d)
(block (line 5) e (line 6) f))))A while loop parses as (while condition body).
A for loop parses as (for (= var iter) body). If there is more than one iteration specification, they are parsed as a block: (for (block (= v1 iter1) (= v2 iter2)) body).
break and continue are parsed as 0-argument expressions (break) and (continue).
let is parsed as (let body (= var1 val1) (= var2 val2) ...).
A basic function definition is parsed as (function (call f x) body). A more complex example:
function f{T}(x::T; k = 1)
return x+1
endparses as:
(function (call (curly f T) (parameters (kw k 1))
(:: x T))
(block (line 2 file.jl) (return (call + x 1))))Type definition:
mutable struct Foo{T<:S}
x::T
endparses as:
(type #t (curly Foo (<: T S))
(block (line 2 none) (:: x T)))The first argument is a boolean telling whether the type is mutable.
try blocks parse as (try try_block var catch_block finally_block). If no variable is present after catch, var is #f. If there is no finally clause, then the last argument is not present.