593 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
593 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
@c Copyright (C) 2010-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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@c This is part of the GCC manual.
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@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
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@c Contributed by Jan Hubicka <jh@suse.cz> and
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@c Diego Novillo <dnovillo@google.com>
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@node LTO
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@chapter Link Time Optimization
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@cindex lto
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@cindex whopr
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@cindex wpa
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@cindex ltrans
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Link Time Optimization (LTO) gives GCC the capability of
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dumping its internal representation (GIMPLE) to disk,
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so that all the different compilation units that make up
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a single executable can be optimized as a single module.
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This expands the scope of inter-procedural optimizations
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to encompass the whole program (or, rather, everything
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that is visible at link time).
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@menu
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* LTO Overview:: Overview of LTO.
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* LTO object file layout:: LTO file sections in ELF.
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* IPA:: Using summary information in IPA passes.
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* WHOPR:: Whole program assumptions,
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linker plugin and symbol visibilities.
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* Internal flags:: Internal flags controlling @code{lto1}.
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@end menu
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@node LTO Overview
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@section Design Overview
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Link time optimization is implemented as a GCC front end for a
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bytecode representation of GIMPLE that is emitted in special sections
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of @code{.o} files. Currently, LTO support is enabled in most
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ELF-based systems, as well as darwin, cygwin and mingw systems.
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Since GIMPLE bytecode is saved alongside final object code, object
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files generated with LTO support are larger than regular object files.
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This ``fat'' object format makes it easy to integrate LTO into
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existing build systems, as one can, for instance, produce archives of
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the files. Additionally, one might be able to ship one set of fat
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objects which could be used both for development and the production of
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optimized builds. A, perhaps surprising, side effect of this feature
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is that any mistake in the toolchain leads to LTO information not
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being used (e.g.@: an older @code{libtool} calling @code{ld} directly).
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This is both an advantage, as the system is more robust, and a
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disadvantage, as the user is not informed that the optimization has
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been disabled.
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The current implementation only produces ``fat'' objects, effectively
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doubling compilation time and increasing file sizes up to 5x the
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original size. This hides the problem that some tools, such as
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@code{ar} and @code{nm}, need to understand symbol tables of LTO
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sections. These tools were extended to use the plugin infrastructure,
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and with these problems solved, GCC will also support ``slim'' objects
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consisting of the intermediate code alone.
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At the highest level, LTO splits the compiler in two. The first half
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(the ``writer'') produces a streaming representation of all the
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internal data structures needed to optimize and generate code. This
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includes declarations, types, the callgraph and the GIMPLE representation
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of function bodies.
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When @option{-flto} is given during compilation of a source file, the
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pass manager executes all the passes in @code{all_lto_gen_passes}.
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Currently, this phase is composed of two IPA passes:
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@itemize @bullet
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@item @code{pass_ipa_lto_gimple_out}
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This pass executes the function @code{lto_output} in
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@file{lto-streamer-out.c}, which traverses the call graph encoding
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every reachable declaration, type and function. This generates a
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memory representation of all the file sections described below.
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@item @code{pass_ipa_lto_finish_out}
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This pass executes the function @code{produce_asm_for_decls} in
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@file{lto-streamer-out.c}, which takes the memory image built in the
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previous pass and encodes it in the corresponding ELF file sections.
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@end itemize
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The second half of LTO support is the ``reader''. This is implemented
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as the GCC front end @file{lto1} in @file{lto/lto.c}. When
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@file{collect2} detects a link set of @code{.o}/@code{.a} files with
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LTO information and the @option{-flto} is enabled, it invokes
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@file{lto1} which reads the set of files and aggregates them into a
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single translation unit for optimization. The main entry point for
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the reader is @file{lto/lto.c}:@code{lto_main}.
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@subsection LTO modes of operation
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One of the main goals of the GCC link-time infrastructure was to allow
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effective compilation of large programs. For this reason GCC implements two
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link-time compilation modes.
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@enumerate
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@item @emph{LTO mode}, in which the whole program is read into the
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compiler at link-time and optimized in a similar way as if it
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were a single source-level compilation unit.
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@item @emph{WHOPR or partitioned mode}, designed to utilize multiple
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CPUs and/or a distributed compilation environment to quickly link
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large applications. WHOPR stands for WHOle Program optimizeR (not to
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be confused with the semantics of @option{-fwhole-program}). It
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partitions the aggregated callgraph from many different @code{.o}
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files and distributes the compilation of the sub-graphs to different
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CPUs.
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Note that distributed compilation is not implemented yet, but since
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the parallelism is facilitated via generating a @code{Makefile}, it
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would be easy to implement.
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@end enumerate
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WHOPR splits LTO into three main stages:
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@enumerate
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@item Local generation (LGEN)
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This stage executes in parallel. Every file in the program is compiled
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into the intermediate language and packaged together with the local
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call-graph and summary information. This stage is the same for both
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the LTO and WHOPR compilation mode.
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@item Whole Program Analysis (WPA)
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WPA is performed sequentially. The global call-graph is generated, and
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a global analysis procedure makes transformation decisions. The global
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call-graph is partitioned to facilitate parallel optimization during
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phase 3. The results of the WPA stage are stored into new object files
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which contain the partitions of program expressed in the intermediate
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language and the optimization decisions.
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@item Local transformations (LTRANS)
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This stage executes in parallel. All the decisions made during phase 2
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are implemented locally in each partitioned object file, and the final
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object code is generated. Optimizations which cannot be decided
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efficiently during the phase 2 may be performed on the local
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call-graph partitions.
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@end enumerate
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WHOPR can be seen as an extension of the usual LTO mode of
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compilation. In LTO, WPA and LTRANS are executed within a single
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execution of the compiler, after the whole program has been read into
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memory.
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When compiling in WHOPR mode, the callgraph is partitioned during
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the WPA stage. The whole program is split into a given number of
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partitions of roughly the same size. The compiler tries to
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minimize the number of references which cross partition boundaries.
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The main advantage of WHOPR is to allow the parallel execution of
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LTRANS stages, which are the most time-consuming part of the
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compilation process. Additionally, it avoids the need to load the
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whole program into memory.
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@node LTO object file layout
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@section LTO file sections
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LTO information is stored in several ELF sections inside object files.
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Data structures and enum codes for sections are defined in
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@file{lto-streamer.h}.
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These sections are emitted from @file{lto-streamer-out.c} and mapped
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in all at once from @file{lto/lto.c}:@code{lto_file_read}. The
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individual functions dealing with the reading/writing of each section
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are described below.
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@itemize @bullet
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@item Command line options (@code{.gnu.lto_.opts})
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This section contains the command line options used to generate the
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object files. This is used at link time to determine the optimization
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level and other settings when they are not explicitly specified at the
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linker command line.
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Currently, GCC does not support combining LTO object files compiled
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with different set of the command line options into a single binary.
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At link time, the options given on the command line and the options
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saved on all the files in a link-time set are applied globally. No
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attempt is made at validating the combination of flags (other than the
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usual validation done by option processing). This is implemented in
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@file{lto/lto.c}:@code{lto_read_all_file_options}.
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@item Symbol table (@code{.gnu.lto_.symtab})
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This table replaces the ELF symbol table for functions and variables
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represented in the LTO IL. Symbols used and exported by the optimized
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assembly code of ``fat'' objects might not match the ones used and
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exported by the intermediate code. This table is necessary because
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the intermediate code is less optimized and thus requires a separate
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symbol table.
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Additionally, the binary code in the ``fat'' object will lack a call
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to a function, since the call was optimized out at compilation time
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after the intermediate language was streamed out. In some special
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cases, the same optimization may not happen during link-time
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optimization. This would lead to an undefined symbol if only one
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symbol table was used.
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The symbol table is emitted in
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@file{lto-streamer-out.c}:@code{produce_symtab}.
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@item Global declarations and types (@code{.gnu.lto_.decls})
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This section contains an intermediate language dump of all
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declarations and types required to represent the callgraph, static
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variables and top-level debug info.
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The contents of this section are emitted in
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@file{lto-streamer-out.c}:@code{produce_asm_for_decls}. Types and
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symbols are emitted in a topological order that preserves the sharing
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of pointers when the file is read back in
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(@file{lto.c}:@code{read_cgraph_and_symbols}).
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@item The callgraph (@code{.gnu.lto_.cgraph})
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This section contains the basic data structure used by the GCC
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inter-procedural optimization infrastructure. This section stores an
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annotated multi-graph which represents the functions and call sites as
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well as the variables, aliases and top-level @code{asm} statements.
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This section is emitted in
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@file{lto-streamer-out.c}:@code{output_cgraph} and read in
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@file{lto-cgraph.c}:@code{input_cgraph}.
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@item IPA references (@code{.gnu.lto_.refs})
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This section contains references between function and static
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variables. It is emitted by @file{lto-cgraph.c}:@code{output_refs}
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and read by @file{lto-cgraph.c}:@code{input_refs}.
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@item Function bodies (@code{.gnu.lto_.function_body.<name>})
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This section contains function bodies in the intermediate language
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representation. Every function body is in a separate section to allow
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copying of the section independently to different object files or
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reading the function on demand.
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Functions are emitted in
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@file{lto-streamer-out.c}:@code{output_function} and read in
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@file{lto-streamer-in.c}:@code{input_function}.
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@item Static variable initializers (@code{.gnu.lto_.vars})
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This section contains all the symbols in the global variable pool. It
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is emitted by @file{lto-cgraph.c}:@code{output_varpool} and read in
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@file{lto-cgraph.c}:@code{input_cgraph}.
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@item Summaries and optimization summaries used by IPA passes
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(@code{.gnu.lto_.<xxx>}, where @code{<xxx>} is one of @code{jmpfuncs},
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@code{pureconst} or @code{reference})
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These sections are used by IPA passes that need to emit summary
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information during LTO generation to be read and aggregated at
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link time. Each pass is responsible for implementing two pass manager
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hooks: one for writing the summary and another for reading it in. The
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format of these sections is entirely up to each individual pass. The
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only requirement is that the writer and reader hooks agree on the
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format.
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@end itemize
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@node IPA
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@section Using summary information in IPA passes
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Programs are represented internally as a @emph{callgraph} (a
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multi-graph where nodes are functions and edges are call sites)
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and a @emph{varpool} (a list of static and external variables in
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the program).
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The inter-procedural optimization is organized as a sequence of
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individual passes, which operate on the callgraph and the
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varpool. To make the implementation of WHOPR possible, every
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inter-procedural optimization pass is split into several stages
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that are executed at different times during WHOPR compilation:
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@itemize @bullet
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@item LGEN time
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@enumerate
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@item @emph{Generate summary} (@code{generate_summary} in
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@code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}). This stage analyzes every function
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body and variable initializer is examined and stores relevant
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information into a pass-specific data structure.
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@item @emph{Write summary} (@code{write_summary} in
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@code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}). This stage writes all the
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pass-specific information generated by @code{generate_summary}.
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Summaries go into their own @code{LTO_section_*} sections that
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have to be declared in @file{lto-streamer.h}:@code{enum
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lto_section_type}. A new section is created by calling
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@code{create_output_block} and data can be written using the
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@code{lto_output_*} routines.
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@end enumerate
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@item WPA time
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@enumerate
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@item @emph{Read summary} (@code{read_summary} in
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@code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}). This stage reads all the
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pass-specific information in exactly the same order that it was
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written by @code{write_summary}.
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@item @emph{Execute} (@code{execute} in @code{struct
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opt_pass}). This performs inter-procedural propagation. This
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must be done without actual access to the individual function
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bodies or variable initializers. Typically, this results in a
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transitive closure operation over the summary information of all
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the nodes in the callgraph.
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@item @emph{Write optimization summary}
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(@code{write_optimization_summary} in @code{struct
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ipa_opt_pass_d}). This writes the result of the inter-procedural
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propagation into the object file. This can use the same data
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structures and helper routines used in @code{write_summary}.
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@end enumerate
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@item LTRANS time
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@enumerate
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@item @emph{Read optimization summary}
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(@code{read_optimization_summary} in @code{struct
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ipa_opt_pass_d}). The counterpart to
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@code{write_optimization_summary}. This reads the interprocedural
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optimization decisions in exactly the same format emitted by
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@code{write_optimization_summary}.
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@item @emph{Transform} (@code{function_transform} and
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@code{variable_transform} in @code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}).
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The actual function bodies and variable initializers are updated
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based on the information passed down from the @emph{Execute} stage.
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@end enumerate
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@end itemize
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The implementation of the inter-procedural passes are shared
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between LTO, WHOPR and classic non-LTO compilation.
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@itemize
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@item During the traditional file-by-file mode every pass executes its
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own @emph{Generate summary}, @emph{Execute}, and @emph{Transform}
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stages within the single execution context of the compiler.
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@item In LTO compilation mode, every pass uses @emph{Generate
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summary} and @emph{Write summary} stages at compilation time,
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while the @emph{Read summary}, @emph{Execute}, and
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@emph{Transform} stages are executed at link time.
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@item In WHOPR mode all stages are used.
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@end itemize
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To simplify development, the GCC pass manager differentiates
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between normal inter-procedural passes (@pxref{Regular IPA passes}),
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small inter-procedural passes (@pxref{Small IPA passes})
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and late inter-procedural passes (@pxref{Late IPA passes}).
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A small or late IPA pass (@code{SIMPLE_IPA_PASS}) does
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everything at once and thus cannot be executed during WPA in
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WHOPR mode. It defines only the @emph{Execute} stage and during
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this stage it accesses and modifies the function bodies. Such
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passes are useful for optimization at LGEN or LTRANS time and are
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used, for example, to implement early optimization before writing
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object files. The simple inter-procedural passes can also be used
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for easier prototyping and development of a new inter-procedural
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pass.
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@subsection Virtual clones
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One of the main challenges of introducing the WHOPR compilation
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mode was addressing the interactions between optimization passes.
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In LTO compilation mode, the passes are executed in a sequence,
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each of which consists of analysis (or @emph{Generate summary}),
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propagation (or @emph{Execute}) and @emph{Transform} stages.
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Once the work of one pass is finished, the next pass sees the
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updated program representation and can execute. This makes the
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individual passes dependent on each other.
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In WHOPR mode all passes first execute their @emph{Generate
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summary} stage. Then summary writing marks the end of the LGEN
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stage. At WPA time,
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the summaries are read back into memory and all passes run the
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@emph{Execute} stage. Optimization summaries are streamed and
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sent to LTRANS, where all the passes execute the @emph{Transform}
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stage.
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Most optimization passes split naturally into analysis,
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propagation and transformation stages. But some do not. The
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main problem arises when one pass performs changes and the
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following pass gets confused by seeing different callgraphs
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between the @emph{Transform} stage and the @emph{Generate summary}
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or @emph{Execute} stage. This means that the passes are required
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to communicate their decisions with each other.
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To facilitate this communication, the GCC callgraph
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infrastructure implements @emph{virtual clones}, a method of
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representing the changes performed by the optimization passes in
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the callgraph without needing to update function bodies.
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A @emph{virtual clone} in the callgraph is a function that has no
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associated body, just a description of how to create its body based
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on a different function (which itself may be a virtual clone).
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The description of function modifications includes adjustments to
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the function's signature (which allows, for example, removing or
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adding function arguments), substitutions to perform on the
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function body, and, for inlined functions, a pointer to the
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function that it will be inlined into.
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It is also possible to redirect any edge of the callgraph from a
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function to its virtual clone. This implies updating of the call
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site to adjust for the new function signature.
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Most of the transformations performed by inter-procedural
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optimizations can be represented via virtual clones. For
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instance, a constant propagation pass can produce a virtual clone
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of the function which replaces one of its arguments by a
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constant. The inliner can represent its decisions by producing a
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clone of a function whose body will be later integrated into
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a given function.
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Using @emph{virtual clones}, the program can be easily updated
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during the @emph{Execute} stage, solving most of pass interactions
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problems that would otherwise occur during @emph{Transform}.
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Virtual clones are later materialized in the LTRANS stage and
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turned into real functions. Passes executed after the virtual
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clone were introduced also perform their @emph{Transform} stage
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on new functions, so for a pass there is no significant
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difference between operating on a real function or a virtual
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clone introduced before its @emph{Execute} stage.
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Optimization passes then work on virtual clones introduced before
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their @emph{Execute} stage as if they were real functions. The
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only difference is that clones are not visible during the
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@emph{Generate Summary} stage.
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To keep function summaries updated, the callgraph interface
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allows an optimizer to register a callback that is called every
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time a new clone is introduced as well as when the actual
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function or variable is generated or when a function or variable
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is removed. These hooks are registered in the @emph{Generate
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summary} stage and allow the pass to keep its information intact
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until the @emph{Execute} stage. The same hooks can also be
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registered during the @emph{Execute} stage to keep the
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optimization summaries updated for the @emph{Transform} stage.
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@subsection IPA references
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GCC represents IPA references in the callgraph. For a function
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or variable @code{A}, the @emph{IPA reference} is a list of all
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locations where the address of @code{A} is taken and, when
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@code{A} is a variable, a list of all direct stores and reads
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to/from @code{A}. References represent an oriented multi-graph on
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the union of nodes of the callgraph and the varpool. See
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@file{ipa-reference.c}:@code{ipa_reference_write_optimization_summary}
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and
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@file{ipa-reference.c}:@code{ipa_reference_read_optimization_summary}
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for details.
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@subsection Jump functions
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Suppose that an optimization pass sees a function @code{A} and it
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knows the values of (some of) its arguments. The @emph{jump
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function} describes the value of a parameter of a given function
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call in function @code{A} based on this knowledge.
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Jump functions are used by several optimizations, such as the
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inter-procedural constant propagation pass and the
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devirtualization pass. The inliner also uses jump functions to
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perform inlining of callbacks.
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@node WHOPR
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@section Whole program assumptions, linker plugin and symbol visibilities
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Link-time optimization gives relatively minor benefits when used
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alone. The problem is that propagation of inter-procedural
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information does not work well across functions and variables
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that are called or referenced by other compilation units (such as
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from a dynamically linked library). We say that such functions
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and variables are @emph{externally visible}.
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To make the situation even more difficult, many applications
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organize themselves as a set of shared libraries, and the default
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ELF visibility rules allow one to overwrite any externally
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visible symbol with a different symbol at runtime. This
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basically disables any optimizations across such functions and
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variables, because the compiler cannot be sure that the function
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body it is seeing is the same function body that will be used at
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runtime. Any function or variable not declared @code{static} in
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the sources degrades the quality of inter-procedural
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optimization.
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To avoid this problem the compiler must assume that it sees the
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whole program when doing link-time optimization. Strictly
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speaking, the whole program is rarely visible even at link-time.
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Standard system libraries are usually linked dynamically or not
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provided with the link-time information. In GCC, the whole
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program option (@option{-fwhole-program}) asserts that every
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function and variable defined in the current compilation
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unit is static, except for function @code{main} (note: at
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link time, the current unit is the union of all objects compiled
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with LTO). Since some functions and variables need to
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be referenced externally, for example by another DSO or from an
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assembler file, GCC also provides the function and variable
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attribute @code{externally_visible} which can be used to disable
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the effect of @option{-fwhole-program} on a specific symbol.
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The whole program mode assumptions are slightly more complex in
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C++, where inline functions in headers are put into @emph{COMDAT}
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sections. COMDAT function and variables can be defined by
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multiple object files and their bodies are unified at link-time
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and dynamic link-time. COMDAT functions are changed to local only
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when their address is not taken and thus un-sharing them with a
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library is not harmful. COMDAT variables always remain externally
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visible, however for readonly variables it is assumed that their
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initializers cannot be overwritten by a different value.
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GCC provides the function and variable attribute
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@code{visibility} that can be used to specify the visibility of
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externally visible symbols (or alternatively an
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@option{-fdefault-visibility} command line option). ELF defines
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the @code{default}, @code{protected}, @code{hidden} and
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@code{internal} visibilities.
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The most commonly used is visibility is @code{hidden}. It
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specifies that the symbol cannot be referenced from outside of
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the current shared library. Unfortunately, this information
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cannot be used directly by the link-time optimization in the
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compiler since the whole shared library also might contain
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non-LTO objects and those are not visible to the compiler.
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GCC solves this problem using linker plugins. A @emph{linker
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plugin} is an interface to the linker that allows an external
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program to claim the ownership of a given object file. The linker
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then performs the linking procedure by querying the plugin about
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the symbol table of the claimed objects and once the linking
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decisions are complete, the plugin is allowed to provide the
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final object file before the actual linking is made. The linker
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plugin obtains the symbol resolution information which specifies
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which symbols provided by the claimed objects are bound from the
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rest of a binary being linked.
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GCC is designed to be independent of the rest of the toolchain
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and aims to support linkers without plugin support. For this
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reason it does not use the linker plugin by default. Instead,
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the object files are examined by @command{collect2} before being
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passed to the linker and objects found to have LTO sections are
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passed to @command{lto1} first. This mode does not work for
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library archives. The decision on what object files from the
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archive are needed depends on the actual linking and thus GCC
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would have to implement the linker itself. The resolution
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information is missing too and thus GCC needs to make an educated
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guess based on @option{-fwhole-program}. Without the linker
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plugin GCC also assumes that symbols are declared @code{hidden}
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and not referred by non-LTO code by default.
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@node Internal flags
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@section Internal flags controlling @code{lto1}
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The following flags are passed into @command{lto1} and are not
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meant to be used directly from the command line.
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@itemize
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@item -fwpa
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@opindex fwpa
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This option runs the serial part of the link-time optimizer
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performing the inter-procedural propagation (WPA mode). The
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compiler reads in summary information from all inputs and
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performs an analysis based on summary information only. It
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generates object files for subsequent runs of the link-time
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optimizer where individual object files are optimized using both
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summary information from the WPA mode and the actual function
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bodies. It then drives the LTRANS phase.
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@item -fltrans
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@opindex fltrans
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This option runs the link-time optimizer in the
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local-transformation (LTRANS) mode, which reads in output from a
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previous run of the LTO in WPA mode. In the LTRANS mode, LTO
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optimizes an object and produces the final assembly.
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@item -fltrans-output-list=@var{file}
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@opindex fltrans-output-list
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This option specifies a file to which the names of LTRANS output
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files are written. This option is only meaningful in conjunction
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with @option{-fwpa}.
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@item -fresolution=@var{file}
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@opindex fresolution
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This option specifies the linker resolution file. This option is
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only meaningful in conjunction with @option{-fwpa} and as option
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to pass through to the LTO linker plugin.
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@end itemize
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