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Chapter10-Subprogram Implementation-Dynamic and Static Scoping

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Ismet Köseoğlu
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
70 views

Chapter10-Subprogram Implementation-Dynamic and Static Scoping

Uploaded by

Ismet Köseoğlu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 40

Chapter 10

Implementing
Subprograms

ISBN 0-321-33025-0
Chapter 10 Topics

• The General Semantics of Calls and Returns


• Implementing “Simple” Subprograms
• Implementing Subprograms with Stack-Dynamic
Local Variables
• Nested Subprograms
• Blocks
• Implementing Dynamic Scoping

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-2


The General Semantics of Calls and
Returns
• The subprogram call and return operations
of a language are together called its
subprogram linkage
• A subprogram call has numerous actions
associated with it
– Parameter passing methods
– Static local variables
– Execution status of calling program
– Transfer of control
– Subprogram nesting

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-3


Implementing “Simple”
Subprograms: Call Semantics
• Save the execution status of the caller
• Carry out the parameter-passing process
• Pass the return address to the callee
• Transfer control to the callee

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-4


Implementing “Simple”
Subprograms: Return Semantics
• If pass-by-value-result parameters are
used, move the current values of those
parameters to their corresponding actual
parameters
• If it is a function, move the functional value
to a place the caller can get it
• Restore the execution status of the caller
• Transfer control back to the caller

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-5


Implementing “Simple”
Subprograms: Parts
• Two separate parts: the actual code and the
noncode part (local variables and data that
can change)
• The format, or layout, of the noncode part
of an executing subprogram is called an
activation record
• An activation record instance is a concrete
example of an activation record (the
collection of data for a particular
subprogram activation)

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An Activation Record for “Simple”
Subprograms

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Code and Activation
Records of a Program
with “Simple”
Subprograms

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Implementing Subprograms with
Stack-Dynamic Local Variables
• More complex activation record
– The compiler must generate code to cause
implicit allocation and de-allocation of local
variables
– Recursion must be supported (adds the
possibility of multiple simultaneous activations
of a subprogram)

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Typical Activation Record for a Language
with Stack-Dynamic Local Variables

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Implementing Subprograms with Stack-
Dynamic Local Variables: Activation Record

• The activation record format is static, but


its size may be dynamic
• The dynamic link points to the top of an
instance of the activation record of the
caller
• An activation record instance is dynamically
created when a subprogram is called
• Run-time stack

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-11


An Example Function

void sub(real total, ineteger part)


{
integer list[5];
real sum;

}

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An Example Without Recursion

void A(integer X) {
integer Y;
...
C(Y);
...
}
void B(real R) {
integer S, T;
... main calls B
B calls A
A(S);
...
}
void C(integer Q) { A calls C
...
}
void main() {
real P;
...
B(P);
...
}

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-13


An Example Without Recursion

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-14


Dynamic Chain and Local Offset
• The collection of dynamic links in the stack at a
given time is called the dynamic chain, or call
chain
• Local variables can be accessed by their offset
from the beginning of the activation record. This
offset is called the local_offset
• The local_offset of a local variable can be
determined by the compiler at compile time

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-15


An Example With Recursion

• The activation record used in the


previous example supports recursion,
e.g.
int factorial (int n) {
<-----------------------------1
if (n <= 1) return 1;
else return (n * factorial(n - 1));
<-----------------------------2
}
void main() {
int value;
value = factorial(3);
<-----------------------------3
}

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-16


Activation Record for factorial

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Nested Subprograms
• Some non-C-based static-scoped
languages (e.g., Fortran 95, Ada,
JavaScript) use stack-dynamic local
variables and allow subprograms to be
nested
• All variables that can be non-locally
accessed reside in some activation record
instance in the stack
• The process of locating a non-local
reference:
1. Find the correct activation record instance
2. Determine the correct offset within that
activation record instance
Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-18
Locating a Non-local Reference

• Finding the offset is easy


• Finding the correct activation record
instance
– Static semantic rules guarantee that all non-
local variables that can be referenced have been
allocated in some activation record instance that
is on the stack when the reference is made

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-19


Implementing Dynamic Scoping

• Deep Access: non-local references are


found by searching the activation record
instances on the dynamic chain
• Shallow Access: put locals in a central place
– One stack for each variable name
– Central table with an entry for each variable
name

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-20


Example

procedure MAIN_6{ procedure B{


declare u, v; declare w, x;
... ...
} }

procedure C{
procedure A{
declare x, z;
declare w, v;
...
... }
}
MAIN_6 calls A, A calls A, A calls B, B calls C
Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-21
Using Shallow Access to Implement
Dynamic Scoping

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-22


Static Scoping

• A static chain is a chain of static links that


connects certain activation record instances
• The static link in an activation record
instance for subprogram A points to one of
the activation record instances of A's static
parent
• The static chain from an activation record
instance connects it to all of its static
ancestors

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-23


Example Pascal Program
program MAIN_2;
var X : integer;
procedure BIGSUB;
var A, B, C : integer;
procedure SUB1;
var A, D : integer;
begin { SUB1 }
A := B + C; <-----------------------1
end; { SUB1 }
procedure SUB2(X : integer);
var B, E : integer;
procedure SUB3;
var C, E : integer;
begin { SUB3 }
SUB1;
E := B + A: <--------------------2
end; { SUB3 }
begin { SUB2 }
SUB3;
A := D + E; <-----------------------3
end; { SUB2 }
begin { BIGSUB }
SUB2(7);
end; { BIGSUB }
begin
BIGSUB;
end; { MAIN_2 }
Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-24
Example Pascal Program (continued)

• Call sequence for MAIN_2

MAIN_2 calls BIGSUB


BIGSUB calls SUB2
SUB2 calls SUB3
SUB3 calls SUB1

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-25


Stack Contents at
Position 1

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Displays

• An alternative to static chains


• Static links are stored in a single array
called a display
• The contents of the display at any given
time is a list of addresses of the accessible
activation record instances

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-27


Use of displays
Problem with static links:
Many links to follow if deeply nested. (how common?)
Use of displays reduces access always to 2 instructions:
1. Access Display[I] = Act. Rec. pointer at level I
2. Get L-value of variable (fixed offset in act. rec.)
Activation record structure:

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-28


Display example

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Accessing variables
Data access is always a 2-step process:
1. [If non-local] Load Reg1, Display[I]
2. [For all] Load Reg2, L-value offset (Reg1)

Size of activation record for a procedure:


• Housekeeping storage (Fixed size = K):
– Dynamic Link
– Return address (in source program)
– End of activation record
– Registers
• Display
• Local data storage

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-30


Creating activation records
To create new activation record (e.g., P calls Q):
Assume have pointer to P's activation record.
1. Get EndStack pointer from P's activation record.
This is start of Q's activation record.
2. Add K+NewDisplaySize+LocalStorageSize.
3. Save as new EndStack in Q's activation record.
4. Set DL in Q to point to old activation record (P).
5. Fill in housekeeping in Q's activation record.
6. Set up new display in Q's activation record.

To create a new display to call from level I to level J:


Copy Display[1..J-1] from calling activation record.
Add new activation record pointer as Display[J].

To return:
Use dynamic link in current activation record to get old
activation record.
Use return address in housekeeping area to jump to.
Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-31
Blocks

• Blocks are user-specified local scopes for variables


• An example in C
{int temp;
temp = list [upper];
list [upper] = list [lower];
list [lower] = temp
}
• The lifetime of temp in the above example begins
when control enters the block
• An advantage of using a local variable like temp is
that it cannot interfere with any other variable with
the same name

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-32


Implementing Blocks

• Two Methods:
1. Treat blocks as parameter-less subprograms
that are always called from the same location
– Every block has an activation record; an instance is
created every time the block is executed
2. Since the maximum storage required for a
block can be statically determined, this amount
of space can be allocated after the local
variables in the activation record

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-33


Optimizations in activation record
design
1. Instead of displays, use M registers only:
E.g., M1, M2, M3, M4 only.

What if a procedure is nested 5 deep?


1. Illegal program?
2. Spill to displays only in this case?

2. Note that C was designed for efficient execution:


• No nested procedures
• No need for displays or static links
• But needs dynamic links.

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-34


C++ storage access

General properties
1. Procedure allocations follow general rules of C
• Allocate activation records on a stack
• No need for static links, but need dynamic links
2. Class variables are allocated like structs in C.
[Structs in C++ can have function members. Functions
in structs are by default public, while in a class
are by default private.]
3. Static functions are not represented in runtime
activation records
4. Objects requiring dynamic binding (i.e., virtual
functions) are present in runtime activation
records
Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-35
Sample C++ allocation example
class A {
public: int x;
virtual void p() {...};
void q() {...p()...};
protected: int y;
private: int Z;
...}

class B:A {
public: int w;
virtual void p() {...};
void r() {...p()...};
private: int v;
virtual void s() {...};
...}

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-36


Symbol table for example

Name Type Access Mode Location


X var public static A(1)
P func public dynamic A(2)
Q func public static addr of proc
Y var protected static A(3)
Z var private static A(4)
W var public static B(5)
P func public dynamic A(2)
R func public static Addr of proc
V var private static B(6)
S func private dynamic B(7)

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Class instance records at runtime

X: R-value X: R-value

P: Addr of P in A P: Addr of P in B

Y: R-value Y: R-value

Z: R-value
Z: R-value

Class A W: R-value

V: R-value

S: Addr of S in B

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Class B 1-38


Summary

• Subprogram linkage semantics requires


many action by the implementation
• Simple subprograms have relatively basic
actions
• Stack-dynamic languages are more
complex
• Subprograms with stack-dynamic local
variables and nested subprograms have two
components
– actual code
– activation record

Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-39


Summary (continued)

• Activation record instances contain formal


parameters and local variables among other
things
• Static chains are the primary method of
implementing accesses to non-local
variables in static-scoped languages with
nested subprograms
• Access to non-local variables in dynamic-
scoped languages can be implemented by
use of the dynamic chain or thru some
central variable table method
Copyright © 2006 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-40

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