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<!--===- docs/Semantics.md
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Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
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See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
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SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
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-->
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2019-05-15 03:01:07 +00:00
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# Semantic Analysis
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The semantic analysis pass determines if a syntactically correct Fortran
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program is is legal by enforcing the constraints of the language.
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The input is a parse tree with a `Program` node at the root;
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and a "cooked" character stream, a contiguous stream of characters
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containing a normalized form of the Fortran source.
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The semantic analysis pass takes a parse tree for a syntactically
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correct Fortran program and determines whether it is legal by enforcing
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the constraints of the language.
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2018-03-20 22:47:52 +00:00
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2018-03-22 18:53:59 +00:00
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If the program is not legal, the results of the semantic pass will be a list of
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errors associated with the program.
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If the program is legal, the semantic pass will produce a (possibly modified)
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parse tree for the semantically correct program with each name mapped to a symbol
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and each expression fully analyzed.
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All user errors are detected either prior to or during semantic analysis.
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After it completes successfully the program should compile with no error messages.
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There may still be warnings or informational messages.
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## Phases of Semantic Analysis
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1. [Validate labels](#validate-labels) -
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Check all constraints on labels and branches
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2. [Rewrite DO loops](#rewrite-do-loops) -
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Convert all occurrences of `LabelDoStmt` to `DoConstruct`.
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3. [Name resolution](#name-resolution) -
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Analyze names and declarations, build a tree of Scopes containing Symbols,
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and fill in the `Name::symbol` data member in the parse tree
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4. [Rewrite parse tree](#rewrite-parse-tree) -
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Fix incorrect parses based on symbol information
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5. [Expression analysis](#expression-analysis) -
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Analyze all expressions in the parse tree and fill in `Expr::typedExpr` and
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`Variable::typedExpr` with analyzed expressions; fix incorrect parses
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based on the result of this analysis
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6. [Statement semantics](#statement-semantics) -
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Perform remaining semantic checks on the execution parts of subprograms
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7. [Write module files](#write-module-files) -
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If no errors have occurred, write out `.mod` files for modules and submodules
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If phase 1 or phase 2 encounter an error on any of the program units,
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compilation terminates. Otherwise, phases 3-6 are all performed even if
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errors occur.
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Module files are written (phase 7) only if there are no errors.
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### Validate labels
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Perform semantic checks related to labels and branches:
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- check that any labels that are referenced are defined and in scope
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- check branches into loop bodies
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- check that labeled `DO` loops are properly nested
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- check labels in data transfer statements
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### Rewrite DO loops
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This phase normalizes the parse tree by removing all unstructured `DO` loops
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and replacing them with `DO` constructs.
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### Name resolution
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The name resolution phase walks the parse tree and constructs the symbol table.
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The symbol table consists of a tree of `Scope` objects rooted at the global scope.
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The global scope is owned by the `SemanticsContext` object.
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It contains a `Scope` for each program unit in the compilation.
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Each `Scope` in the scope tree contains child scopes representing other scopes
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lexically nested in it.
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Each `Scope` also contains a map of `CharBlock` to `Symbol` representing names
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declared in that scope. (All names in the symbol table are represented as
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`CharBlock` objects, i.e. as substrings of the cooked character stream.)
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All `Symbol` objects are owned by the symbol table data structures.
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They should be accessed as `Symbol *` or `Symbol &` outside of the symbol
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table classes as they can't be created, copied, or moved.
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The `Symbol` class has functions and data common across all symbols, and a
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`details` field that contains more information specific to that type of symbol.
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Many symbols also have types, represented by `DeclTypeSpec`.
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Types are also owned by scopes.
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Name resolution happens on the parse tree in this order:
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1. Process the specification of a program unit:
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1. Create a new scope for the unit
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2. Create a symbol for each contained subprogram containing just the name
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3. Process the opening statement of the unit (`ModuleStmt`, `FunctionStmt`, etc.)
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4. Process the specification part of the unit
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2. Apply the same process recursively to nested subprograms
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3. Process the execution part of the program unit
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4. Process the execution parts of nested subprograms recursively
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After the completion of this phase, every `Name` corresponds to a `Symbol`
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unless an error occurred.
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### Rewrite parse tree
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The parser cannot build a completely correct parse tree without symbol information.
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This phase corrects mis-parses based on symbols:
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- Array element assignments may be parsed as statement functions: `a(i) = ...`
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- Namelist group names without `NML=` may be parsed as format expressions
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- A file unit number expression may be parsed as a character variable
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This phase also produces an internal error if it finds a `Name` that does not
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have its `symbol` data member filled in. This error is suppressed if other
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errors have occurred because in that case a `Name` corresponding to an erroneous
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symbol may not be resolved.
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### Expression analysis
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Expressions that occur in the specification part are analyzed during name
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resolution, for example, initial values, array bounds, type parameters.
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Any remaining expressions are analyzed in this phase.
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For each `Variable` and top-level `Expr` (i.e. one that is not nested below
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another `Expr` in the parse tree) the analyzed form of the expression is saved
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in the `typedExpr` data member. After this phase has completed, the analyzed
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expression can be accessed using `semantics::GetExpr()`.
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This phase also corrects mis-parses based on the result of expression analysis:
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- An expression like `a(b)` is parsed as a function reference but may need
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to be rewritten to an array element reference (if `a` is an object entity)
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or to a structure constructor (if `a` is a derive type)
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- An expression like `a(b:c)` is parsed as an array section but may need to be
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rewritten as a substring if `a` is an object with type CHARACTER
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### Statement semantics
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Multiple independent checkers driven by the `SemanticsVisitor` framework
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perform the remaining semantic checks.
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By this phase, all names and expressions that can be successfully resolved
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have been. But there may be names without symbols or expressions without
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analyzed form if errors occurred earlier.
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### Write module files
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Separate compilation information is written out on successful compilation
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of modules and submodules. These are used as input to name resolution
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in program units that `USE` the modules.
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Module files are stripped down Fortran source for the module.
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Parts that aren't needed to compile dependent program units (e.g. action statements)
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are omitted.
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The module file for module `m` is named `m.mod` and the module file for
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submodule `s` of module `m` is named `m-s.mod`.
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