Module Std.Insn

Assembly instruction.

On a high level, the instruction is a pair of the opcode and operands. A BIL code, that describes semantics of the instruction may be attached to it. Also, semantic tags (or flags) may add further information about the instruction.

The instruction are usually created by a low level machinery, and analyzed on the later stages. So, usually, there is no need to create one manually.

For example, each block is a sequence of instructions (see Block.insns), also with each non-synthetic term there is an an Disasm.insn field, that stores an instruction from which the term was born.

include Core_kernel.Bin_prot.Binable.S with type t := t
include Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexpable.S with type t := t
module Slot : sig ... end

Instruction properties.

val of_basic : ?bil:bil -> Disasm_expert.Basic.full_insn -> t

of_basic ?bil insn derives semantics from the machine code instruction.

val with_basic : t -> Disasm_expert.Basic.full_insn -> t

with_basic mc stores properties of the machine code instruction.

  • since 2.2.0
val empty : t

empty is an instruction with no known semantics

val name : t -> string

returns backend specific name of instruction

val asm : t -> string

target-specific assembler string representing the instruction

val bil : t -> bil

returns BIL program specifying instruction semantics

val ops : t -> op array

instruction operands

Instruction properties

A property or a semantic tag is some kind of attribute associated with an instruction. Usually a property is a boolean, it either holds or not. In our case we employ modular logic, and a property can have an intermediate state between true and false. That means, that we have two kinds of relations, strong "must" and weaker "may". The must property is known to be a property associated with the instruction. It is a strong knowledge. For example, if an instruction has jump property, then it is guaranteed to be a jump instruction. On the other hand, the may property represent some uncertain knowledge. For example, the load property is may as it designates that an instruction may access the main memory, or may not access, as it depends on some information, that cannot be deduced statically.

type must =
  1. | Must
type may =
  1. | May
type 'a property
val new_property : 'a -> string -> 'a property

new_property must_or_may name creates a new instruction property with the specified name.

val jump : must property

the instruction performs a non-regular control flow

val conditional : must property

under some dynamic condition the instruction may perform a non-regular control flow

val indirect : must property

the instruction is jump with a target that is not a constant

val call : must property

the instruction is a call to subroutine.

val return : must property

instruction is a return from a call

val barrier : must property

the instruction has no fall-through

val affect_control_flow : may property

the instruction may perform a non-regular control flow

val load : may property

the instruction may load from memory

val store : may property

the instruction may store to memory

val is : must property -> t -> bool

is property insn is true if insn has property

val may : may property -> t -> bool

may property insn is true if insn has property

val must : must property -> t -> t

must property insn postulate that insn must have the property

val mustn't : must property -> t -> t

must property insn postulate that insn must not have the property

val should : may property -> t -> t

must property insn postulate that insn may have the property

val shouldn't : may property -> t -> t

must property insn postulate that insn shouldn't have the property

val pp_adt : Stdlib.Format.formatter -> t -> unit

pp_adt prints instruction in ADT format, suitable for reading by evaluating in many languages, e.g. Python, Js, etc

module Seqnum : sig ... end

Subinstruction Sequence Number.

module Trie : sig ... end
include Regular.Std.Regular.S with type t := t
include Core_kernel.Bin_prot.Binable.S with type t := t
val bin_size_t : t Bin_prot.Size.sizer
val bin_write_t : t Bin_prot.Write.writer
val bin_read_t : t Bin_prot.Read.reader
val __bin_read_t__ : (int -> t) Bin_prot.Read.reader
val bin_shape_t : Bin_prot.Shape.t
val bin_writer_t : t Bin_prot.Type_class.writer
val bin_reader_t : t Bin_prot.Type_class.reader
val bin_t : t Bin_prot.Type_class.t
include Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexpable.S with type t := t
val t_of_sexp : Sexplib0__.Sexp.t -> t
val sexp_of_t : t -> Sexplib0__.Sexp.t
include Regular.Std.Printable.S with type t := t
val to_string : t -> string

to_string x returns a human-readable representation of x

val str : unit -> t -> string

str () t is formatted output function that matches "%a" conversion format specifier in functions, that prints to string, e.g., sprintf, failwithf, errorf and, surprisingly all Lwt printing function, including Lwt_io.printf and logging (or any other function with type ('a,unit,string,...) formatN`. Example:

Or_error.errorf "type %a is not valid for %a"
  Type.str ty Exp.str exp
val pps : unit -> t -> string

synonym for str

val ppo : Core_kernel.Out_channel.t -> t -> unit

will print to a standard output_channel, useful for using in printf, fprintf, etc.

val pp_seq : Stdlib.Format.formatter -> t Core_kernel.Sequence.t -> unit

prints a sequence of values of type t

this will include pp function from Core that has type t printer, and can be used in Format.printf family of functions

include Core_kernel.Pretty_printer.S with type t := t
val pp : Base__.Formatter.t -> t -> unit
include Core_kernel.Comparable.S_binable with type t := t
val (>=) : t -> t -> bool
val (<=) : t -> t -> bool
val (=) : t -> t -> bool
val (>) : t -> t -> bool
val (<) : t -> t -> bool
val (<>) : t -> t -> bool
val equal : t -> t -> bool
val compare : t -> t -> int
val min : t -> t -> t
val max : t -> t -> t
val ascending : t -> t -> int
val descending : t -> t -> int
val between : t -> low:t -> high:t -> bool
val clamp_exn : t -> min:t -> max:t -> t
val clamp : t -> min:t -> max:t -> t Base__.Or_error.t
type comparator_witness
val validate_lbound : min:t Base__.Maybe_bound.t -> t Base__.Validate.check
val validate_ubound : max:t Base__.Maybe_bound.t -> t Base__.Validate.check
val validate_bound : min:t Base__.Maybe_bound.t -> max:t Base__.Maybe_bound.t -> t Base__.Validate.check
module Replace_polymorphic_compare : sig ... end
val comparator : (t, comparator_witness) Core_kernel__.Comparator.comparator
module Map : sig ... end
module Set : sig ... end
include Core_kernel.Hashable.S_binable with type t := t
val hash_fold_t : Ppx_hash_lib.Std.Hash.state -> t -> Ppx_hash_lib.Std.Hash.state
val hash : t -> Ppx_hash_lib.Std.Hash.hash_value
val hashable : t Core_kernel__.Hashtbl.Hashable.t
module Table : sig ... end
module Hash_set : sig ... end
module Hash_queue : sig ... end
include Regular.Std.Data.S with type t := t
type info = string * [ `Ver of string ] * string option

name,Ver v,desc information attached to a particular reader or writer.

val version : string

Data representation version. After any change in data representation the version should be increased.

Serializers that are derived from a data representation must have the same version as a version of the data structure, from which it is derived. This kind of serializers can only read and write data of the same version.

Other serializers can actually read and write data independent on its representation version. A serializer, that can't store data of current version simply shouldn't be added to a set of serializers.

It is assumed, that if a reader and a writer has the same name and version, then whatever was written by the writer should be readable by the reader. The round-trip equality is not required, thus it is acceptable if some information is lost.

It is also possible, that a reader and a writer that has the same name are compatible. In that case it is recommended to use semantic versioning.

val size_in_bytes : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> t -> int

size_in_bytes ?ver ?fmt datum returns the amount of bytes that is needed to represent datum in the given format and version

val of_bytes : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> Regular.Std.bytes -> t

of_bytes ?ver ?fmt bytes deserializes a value from bytes.

val to_bytes : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> t -> Regular.Std.bytes

to_bytes ?ver ?fmt datum serializes a datum to a sequence of bytes.

val blit_to_bytes : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> Regular.Std.bytes -> t -> int -> unit

blit_to_bytes ?ver ?fmt buffer datum offset copies a serialized representation of datum into a buffer, starting from the offset.

val of_bigstring : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> Core_kernel.bigstring -> t

of_bigstring ?ver ?fmt buf deserializes a datum from bigstring

val to_bigstring : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> t -> Core_kernel.bigstring

of_bigstring ?ver ?fmt datum serializes a datum to a sequence of bytes represented as bigstring

val blit_to_bigstring : ?ver:string -> ?fmt:string -> Core_kernel.bigstring -> t -> int -> unit

blit_to_bigstring ?ver ?fmt buffer datum offset copies a serialized representation of datum into a buffer, starting from offset.

module Io : sig ... end

Input/Output functions for the given datum.

module Cache : sig ... end

Data cache.

val add_reader : ?desc:string -> ver:string -> string -> t Regular.Std.reader -> unit

add_reader ?desc ~ver name reader registers a new reader with a provided name, version ver and optional description desc

val add_writer : ?desc:string -> ver:string -> string -> t Regular.Std.writer -> unit

add_writer ?desc ~ver name writer registers a new writer with a provided name, version ver and optional description desc

val available_readers : unit -> info list

available_reader () lists available readers for the data type

val default_reader : unit -> info

default_reader returns information about default reader

val set_default_reader : ?ver:string -> string -> unit

set_default_reader ?ver name sets new default reader. If version is not specified then the latest available version is used. Raises an exception if a reader with a given name doesn't exist.

val with_reader : ?ver:string -> string -> (unit -> 'a) -> 'a

with_reader ?ver name operation temporary sets a default reader to a reader with a specified name and version. The default reader is restored after operation is finished.

val available_writers : unit -> info list

available_writer () lists available writers for the data type

val default_writer : unit -> info

default_writer returns information about the default writer

val set_default_writer : ?ver:string -> string -> unit

set_default_writer ?ver name sets new default writer. If version is not specified then the latest available version is used. Raises an exception if a writer with a given name doesn't exist.

val with_writer : ?ver:string -> string -> (unit -> 'a) -> 'a

with_writer ?ver name operation temporary sets a default writer to a writer with a specified name and version. The default writer is restored after operation is finished.

val default_printer : unit -> info option

default_writer optionally returns an information about default printer

val set_default_printer : ?ver:string -> string -> unit

set_default_printer ?ver name sets new default printer. If version is not specified then the latest available version is used. Raises an exception if a printer with a given name doesn't exist.

val with_printer : ?ver:string -> string -> (unit -> 'a) -> 'a

with_printer ?ver name operation temporary sets a default printer to a printer with a specified name and version. The default printer is restored after operation is finished.

Low level access to serializers

val find_reader : ?ver:string -> string -> t Regular.Std.reader option

find_reader ?ver name lookups a reader with a given name. If version is not specified, then a reader with maximum version is returned.

val find_writer : ?ver:string -> string -> t Regular.Std.writer option

find_writer ?ver name lookups a writer with a given name. If version is not specified, then a writer with maximum version is returned.