Opaque Pointers

The Opaque Pointer Type

Traditionally, LLVM IR pointer types have contained a pointee type. For example, i32* is a pointer that points to an i32 somewhere in memory. However, due to a lack of pointee type semantics and various issues with having pointee types, there is a desire to remove pointee types from pointers.

The opaque pointer type project aims to replace all pointer types containing pointee types in LLVM with an opaque pointer type. The new pointer type is tentatively represented textually as ptr.

Address spaces are still used to distinguish between different kinds of pointers where the distinction is relevant for lowering (e.g. data vs function pointers have different sizes on some architectures). Opaque pointers are not changing anything related to address spaces and lowering. For more information, see DataLayout. Opaque pointers in non-default address space are spelled ptr addrspace(N).

Issues with explicit pointee types

LLVM IR pointers can be cast back and forth between pointers with different pointee types. The pointee type does not necessarily represent the actual underlying type in memory. In other words, the pointee type carries no real semantics.

Lots of operations do not actually care about the underlying type. These operations, typically intrinsics, usually end up taking an i8*. This causes lots of redundant no-op bitcasts in the IR to and from a pointer with a different pointee type. The extra bitcasts take up space and require extra work to look through in optimizations. And more bitcasts increase the chances of incorrect bitcasts, especially in regards to address spaces.

Some instructions still need to know what type to treat the memory pointed to by the pointer as. For example, a load needs to know how many bytes to load from memory. In these cases, instructions themselves contain a type argument. For example the load instruction from older versions of LLVM

load i64* %p

becomes

load i64, ptr %p

A nice analogous transition that happened earlier in LLVM is integer signedness. There is no distinction between signed and unsigned integer types, rather the integer operations themselves contain what to treat the integer as. Initially, LLVM IR distinguished between unsigned and signed integer types. The transition from manifesting signedness in types to instructions happened early on in LLVM’s life to the betterment of LLVM IR.

Opaque Pointers Mode

During the transition phase, LLVM can be used in two modes: In typed pointer mode (currently still the default) all pointer types have a pointee type and opaque pointers cannot be used. In opaque pointers mode, all pointers are opaque. The opaque pointer mode can be enabled using -opaque-pointers in LLVM tools like opt, or -Xclang -opaque-pointers in clang. Additionally, opaque pointer mode is automatically enabled for IR and bitcode files that use the ptr type.

In opaque pointer mode, all typed pointers used in IR, bitcode, or created using PointerType::get() and similar APIs are automatically converted into opaque pointers. This simplifies migration and allows testing existing IR with opaque pointers.

define i8* @test(i8* %p) {
  %p2 = getelementptr i8, i8* %p, i64 1
  ret i8* %p2
}

; Is automatically converted into the following if -opaque-pointers
; is enabled:

define ptr @test(ptr %p) {
  %p2 = getelementptr i8, ptr %p, i64 1
  ret ptr %p2
}

Migration Instructions

In order to support opaque pointers, two types of changes tend to be necessary. The first is the removal of all calls to PointerType::getElementType() and Type::getPointerElementType().

In the LLVM middle-end and backend, this is usually accomplished by inspecting the type of relevant operations instead. For example, memory access related analyses and optimizations should use the types encoded in the load and store instructions instead of querying the pointer type.

Here are some common ways to avoid pointer element type accesses:

  • For loads, use getType().

  • For stores, use getValueOperand()->getType().

  • Use getLoadStoreType() to handle both of the above in one call.

  • For getelementptr instructions, use getSourceElementType().

  • For calls, use getFunctionType().

  • For allocas, use getAllocatedType().

  • For globals, use getValueType().

  • For consistency assertions, use PointerType::isOpaqueOrPointeeTypeEquals().

  • To create a pointer type in a different address space, use PointerType::getWithSamePointeeType().

  • To check that two pointers have the same element type, use PointerType::hasSameElementTypeAs().

  • While it is preferred to write code in a way that accepts both typed and opaque pointers, Type::isOpaquePointerTy() and PointerType::isOpaque() can be used to handle opaque pointers specially. PointerType::getNonOpaquePointerElementType() can be used as a marker in code-paths where opaque pointers have been explicitly excluded.

  • To get the type of a byval argument, use getParamByValType(). Similar method exists for other ABI-affecting attributes that need to know the element type, such as byref, sret, inalloca and preallocated.

  • Some intrinsics require an elementtype attribute, which can be retrieved using getParamElementType(). This attribute is required in cases where the intrinsic does not naturally encode a needed element type. This is also used for inline assembly.

Note that some of the methods mentioned above only exist to support both typed and opaque pointers at the same time, and will be dropped once the migration has completed. For example, isOpaqueOrPointeeTypeEquals() becomes meaningless once all pointers are opaque.

While direct usage of pointer element types is immediately apparent in code, there is a more subtle issue that opaque pointers need to contend with: A lot of code assumes that pointer equality also implies that the used load/store type or GEP source element type is the same. Consider the following examples with typed an opaque pointers:

define i32 @test(i32* %p) {
  store i32 0, i32* %p
  %bc = bitcast i32* %p to i64*
  %v = load i64, i64* %bc
  ret i64 %v
}

define i32 @test(ptr %p) {
  store i32 0, ptr %p
  %v = load i64, ptr %p
  ret i64 %v
}

Without opaque pointers, a check that the pointer operand of the load and store are the same also ensures that the accessed type is the same. Using a different type requires a bitcast, which will result in distinct pointer operands.

With opaque pointers, the bitcast is not present, and this check is no longer sufficient. In the above example, it could result in store to load forwarding of an incorrect type. Code making such assumptions needs to be adjusted to check the accessed type explicitly: LI->getType() == SI->getValueOperand()->getType().

Frontends

Frontends need to be adjusted to track pointee types independently of LLVM, insofar as they are necessary for lowering. For example, clang now tracks the pointee type in the Address structure.

Frontends using the C API through an FFI interface should be aware that a number of C API functions are deprecated and will be removed as part of the opaque pointer transition:

LLVMBuildLoad -> LLVMBuildLoad2
LLVMBuildCall -> LLVMBuildCall2
LLVMBuildInvoke -> LLVMBuildInvoke2
LLVMBuildGEP -> LLVMBuildGEP2
LLVMBuildInBoundsGEP -> LLVMBuildInBoundsGEP2
LLVMBuildStructGEP -> LLVMBuildStructGEP2
LLVMBuildPtrDiff -> LLVMBuildPtrDiff2
LLVMConstGEP -> LLVMConstGEP2
LLVMConstInBoundsGEP -> LLVMConstInBoundsGEP2
LLVMAddAlias -> LLVMAddAlias2

Additionally, it will no longer be possible to call LLVMGetElementType() on a pointer type.

Transition State

As of April 2022 both LLVM and Clang have complete support for opaque pointers, and opaque pointers are enabled by default in Clang. It is possible to temporarily restore the old default using the -DCLANG_ENABLE_OPAQUE_POINTERS=OFF cmake option. Opaque pointers can be disabled for a single Clang invocation using -Xclang -no-opaque-pointers.

The MLIR and Polly monorepo projects are not fully compatible with opaque pointers yet.