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HiPE ABI
========
This document describes aspects of HiPE's runtime system
that are common for all supported architectures.

Calling Convention
------------------
The first NR_ARG_REGS parameters (an architecture parameter)
are passed in registers.
Remaining parameters are pushed on the stack, in left-to-right order.
Left-to-right order is used to cater for the BEAM interpreter's
calling convention for closures.

The callee deallocates the stacked actual parameters from the stack
before returning. This is required for correct implementation of
tailcalls.

Stack Descriptors
-----------------
For each native code call site there is a stack descriptor which
describes certain static properties of that call:
- The call site's return address, used as key for lookups.
- The caller's local exception handler code address, if present.
- The caller's (fixed) frame size, in words.
- The set of live and traceable words in the caller's frame.
- The caller's arity. If f/N recursively calls g/M, then the
  call site's arity is N, not M. (M is not a function of the
  return address, due to the presence of tailcalls.)

Exceptions
----------
A recursive call occurring within the scope of a local exception
handler is indicated by having a stack descriptor with a non-NULL
exception handler code address.

If an exception is thrown, the runtime system will unwind the native
stack one frame at a time, using the stack descriptors associated
with each frame's return address.

When a frame with an active exception handler is found, the stack
pointer is reset to the low address of the fixed portion of that frame,
and a branch is made to the handler.

Garbage Collection Interface
----------------------------
[gc-points are call sites. each call site has a stack descriptor.
the descriptor allows the gc to traverse the stack and to find
all live Erlang terms.]

BIFs
----
C BIFs are called on the C stack, not the current native stack.

A C BIF returns a single tagged Erlang value. To indicate an
exceptional condition, it puts an error code in p->freason
and returns THE_NON_VALUE (zero, except in debug mode).

If p->freason == TRAP, then the BIF redirects its call to some
other function, given by p->def_arg_reg[].
The BIF and the new callee may have different arities.

The "hipe_${ARCH}_bifs.m4" macro files take care of these issues
by automatically generating assembly code which performs the
necessary stack switching, parameter copying, and checking for
and handling of exceptional conditions. To compiled Erlang code,
a call to a C BIF looks like an ordinary function call.