]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/gcc.git/blob - gcc/doc/lto.texi
Update copyright years.
[thirdparty/gcc.git] / gcc / doc / lto.texi
1 @c Copyright (C) 2010-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
2 @c This is part of the GCC manual.
3 @c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
4 @c Contributed by Jan Hubicka <jh@suse.cz> and
5 @c Diego Novillo <dnovillo@google.com>
6
7 @node LTO
8 @chapter Link Time Optimization
9 @cindex lto
10 @cindex whopr
11 @cindex wpa
12 @cindex ltrans
13
14 Link Time Optimization (LTO) gives GCC the capability of
15 dumping its internal representation (GIMPLE) to disk,
16 so that all the different compilation units that make up
17 a single executable can be optimized as a single module.
18 This expands the scope of inter-procedural optimizations
19 to encompass the whole program (or, rather, everything
20 that is visible at link time).
21
22 @menu
23 * LTO Overview:: Overview of LTO.
24 * LTO object file layout:: LTO file sections in ELF.
25 * IPA:: Using summary information in IPA passes.
26 * WHOPR:: Whole program assumptions,
27 linker plugin and symbol visibilities.
28 * Internal flags:: Internal flags controlling @code{lto1}.
29 @end menu
30
31 @node LTO Overview
32 @section Design Overview
33
34 Link time optimization is implemented as a GCC front end for a
35 bytecode representation of GIMPLE that is emitted in special sections
36 of @code{.o} files. Currently, LTO support is enabled in most
37 ELF-based systems, as well as darwin, cygwin and mingw systems.
38
39 By default, object files generated with LTO support contain only GIMPLE
40 bytecode. Such objects are called ``slim'', and they require that
41 tools like @code{ar} and @code{nm} understand symbol tables of LTO
42 sections. For most targets these tools have been extended to use the
43 plugin infrastructure, so GCC can support ``slim'' objects consisting
44 of the intermediate code alone.
45
46 GIMPLE bytecode could also be saved alongside final object code if
47 the @option{-ffat-lto-objects} option is passed, or if no plugin support
48 is detected for @code{ar} and @code{nm} when GCC is configured. It makes
49 the object files generated with LTO support larger than regular object
50 files. This ``fat'' object format allows to ship one set of fat
51 objects which could be used both for development and the production of
52 optimized builds. A, perhaps surprising, side effect of this feature
53 is that any mistake in the toolchain leads to LTO information not
54 being used (e.g.@: an older @code{libtool} calling @code{ld} directly).
55 This is both an advantage, as the system is more robust, and a
56 disadvantage, as the user is not informed that the optimization has
57 been disabled.
58
59 At the highest level, LTO splits the compiler in two. The first half
60 (the ``writer'') produces a streaming representation of all the
61 internal data structures needed to optimize and generate code. This
62 includes declarations, types, the callgraph and the GIMPLE representation
63 of function bodies.
64
65 When @option{-flto} is given during compilation of a source file, the
66 pass manager executes all the passes in @code{all_lto_gen_passes}.
67 Currently, this phase is composed of two IPA passes:
68
69 @itemize @bullet
70 @item @code{pass_ipa_lto_gimple_out}
71 This pass executes the function @code{lto_output} in
72 @file{lto-streamer-out.cc}, which traverses the call graph encoding
73 every reachable declaration, type and function. This generates a
74 memory representation of all the file sections described below.
75
76 @item @code{pass_ipa_lto_finish_out}
77 This pass executes the function @code{produce_asm_for_decls} in
78 @file{lto-streamer-out.cc}, which takes the memory image built in the
79 previous pass and encodes it in the corresponding ELF file sections.
80 @end itemize
81
82 The second half of LTO support is the ``reader''. This is implemented
83 as the GCC front end @file{lto1} in @file{lto/lto.cc}. When
84 @file{collect2} detects a link set of @code{.o}/@code{.a} files with
85 LTO information and the @option{-flto} is enabled, it invokes
86 @file{lto1} which reads the set of files and aggregates them into a
87 single translation unit for optimization. The main entry point for
88 the reader is @file{lto/lto.cc}:@code{lto_main}.
89
90 @subsection LTO modes of operation
91
92 One of the main goals of the GCC link-time infrastructure was to allow
93 effective compilation of large programs. For this reason GCC implements two
94 link-time compilation modes.
95
96 @enumerate
97 @item @emph{LTO mode}, in which the whole program is read into the
98 compiler at link-time and optimized in a similar way as if it
99 were a single source-level compilation unit.
100
101 @item @emph{WHOPR or partitioned mode}, designed to utilize multiple
102 CPUs and/or a distributed compilation environment to quickly link
103 large applications. WHOPR stands for WHOle Program optimizeR (not to
104 be confused with the semantics of @option{-fwhole-program}). It
105 partitions the aggregated callgraph from many different @code{.o}
106 files and distributes the compilation of the sub-graphs to different
107 CPUs.
108
109 Note that distributed compilation is not implemented yet, but since
110 the parallelism is facilitated via generating a @code{Makefile}, it
111 would be easy to implement.
112 @end enumerate
113
114 WHOPR splits LTO into three main stages:
115 @enumerate
116 @item Local generation (LGEN)
117 This stage executes in parallel. Every file in the program is compiled
118 into the intermediate language and packaged together with the local
119 call-graph and summary information. This stage is the same for both
120 the LTO and WHOPR compilation mode.
121
122 @item Whole Program Analysis (WPA)
123 WPA is performed sequentially. The global call-graph is generated, and
124 a global analysis procedure makes transformation decisions. The global
125 call-graph is partitioned to facilitate parallel optimization during
126 phase 3. The results of the WPA stage are stored into new object files
127 which contain the partitions of program expressed in the intermediate
128 language and the optimization decisions.
129
130 @item Local transformations (LTRANS)
131 This stage executes in parallel. All the decisions made during phase 2
132 are implemented locally in each partitioned object file, and the final
133 object code is generated. Optimizations which cannot be decided
134 efficiently during the phase 2 may be performed on the local
135 call-graph partitions.
136 @end enumerate
137
138 WHOPR can be seen as an extension of the usual LTO mode of
139 compilation. In LTO, WPA and LTRANS are executed within a single
140 execution of the compiler, after the whole program has been read into
141 memory.
142
143 When compiling in WHOPR mode, the callgraph is partitioned during
144 the WPA stage. The whole program is split into a given number of
145 partitions of roughly the same size. The compiler tries to
146 minimize the number of references which cross partition boundaries.
147 The main advantage of WHOPR is to allow the parallel execution of
148 LTRANS stages, which are the most time-consuming part of the
149 compilation process. Additionally, it avoids the need to load the
150 whole program into memory.
151
152
153 @node LTO object file layout
154 @section LTO file sections
155
156 LTO information is stored in several ELF sections inside object files.
157 Data structures and enum codes for sections are defined in
158 @file{lto-streamer.h}.
159
160 These sections are emitted from @file{lto-streamer-out.cc} and mapped
161 in all at once from @file{lto/lto.cc}:@code{lto_file_read}. The
162 individual functions dealing with the reading/writing of each section
163 are described below.
164
165 @itemize @bullet
166 @item Command line options (@code{.gnu.lto_.opts})
167
168 This section contains the command line options used to generate the
169 object files. This is used at link time to determine the optimization
170 level and other settings when they are not explicitly specified at the
171 linker command line.
172
173 Currently, GCC does not support combining LTO object files compiled
174 with different set of the command line options into a single binary.
175 At link time, the options given on the command line and the options
176 saved on all the files in a link-time set are applied globally. No
177 attempt is made at validating the combination of flags (other than the
178 usual validation done by option processing). This is implemented in
179 @file{lto/lto.cc}:@code{lto_read_all_file_options}.
180
181
182 @item Symbol table (@code{.gnu.lto_.symtab})
183
184 This table replaces the ELF symbol table for functions and variables
185 represented in the LTO IL. Symbols used and exported by the optimized
186 assembly code of ``fat'' objects might not match the ones used and
187 exported by the intermediate code. This table is necessary because
188 the intermediate code is less optimized and thus requires a separate
189 symbol table.
190
191 Additionally, the binary code in the ``fat'' object will lack a call
192 to a function, since the call was optimized out at compilation time
193 after the intermediate language was streamed out. In some special
194 cases, the same optimization may not happen during link-time
195 optimization. This would lead to an undefined symbol if only one
196 symbol table was used.
197
198 The symbol table is emitted in
199 @file{lto-streamer-out.cc}:@code{produce_symtab}.
200
201
202 @item Global declarations and types (@code{.gnu.lto_.decls})
203
204 This section contains an intermediate language dump of all
205 declarations and types required to represent the callgraph, static
206 variables and top-level debug info.
207
208 The contents of this section are emitted in
209 @file{lto-streamer-out.cc}:@code{produce_asm_for_decls}. Types and
210 symbols are emitted in a topological order that preserves the sharing
211 of pointers when the file is read back in
212 (@file{lto.cc}:@code{read_cgraph_and_symbols}).
213
214
215 @item The callgraph (@code{.gnu.lto_.cgraph})
216
217 This section contains the basic data structure used by the GCC
218 inter-procedural optimization infrastructure. This section stores an
219 annotated multi-graph which represents the functions and call sites as
220 well as the variables, aliases and top-level @code{asm} statements.
221
222 This section is emitted in
223 @file{lto-streamer-out.cc}:@code{output_cgraph} and read in
224 @file{lto-cgraph.cc}:@code{input_cgraph}.
225
226
227 @item IPA references (@code{.gnu.lto_.refs})
228
229 This section contains references between function and static
230 variables. It is emitted by @file{lto-cgraph.cc}:@code{output_refs}
231 and read by @file{lto-cgraph.cc}:@code{input_refs}.
232
233
234 @item Function bodies (@code{.gnu.lto_.function_body.<name>})
235
236 This section contains function bodies in the intermediate language
237 representation. Every function body is in a separate section to allow
238 copying of the section independently to different object files or
239 reading the function on demand.
240
241 Functions are emitted in
242 @file{lto-streamer-out.cc}:@code{output_function} and read in
243 @file{lto-streamer-in.cc}:@code{input_function}.
244
245
246 @item Static variable initializers (@code{.gnu.lto_.vars})
247
248 This section contains all the symbols in the global variable pool. It
249 is emitted by @file{lto-cgraph.cc}:@code{output_varpool} and read in
250 @file{lto-cgraph.cc}:@code{input_cgraph}.
251
252 @item Summaries and optimization summaries used by IPA passes
253 (@code{.gnu.lto_.<xxx>}, where @code{<xxx>} is one of @code{jmpfuncs},
254 @code{pureconst} or @code{reference})
255
256 These sections are used by IPA passes that need to emit summary
257 information during LTO generation to be read and aggregated at
258 link time. Each pass is responsible for implementing two pass manager
259 hooks: one for writing the summary and another for reading it in. The
260 format of these sections is entirely up to each individual pass. The
261 only requirement is that the writer and reader hooks agree on the
262 format.
263 @end itemize
264
265
266 @node IPA
267 @section Using summary information in IPA passes
268
269 Programs are represented internally as a @emph{callgraph} (a
270 multi-graph where nodes are functions and edges are call sites)
271 and a @emph{varpool} (a list of static and external variables in
272 the program).
273
274 The inter-procedural optimization is organized as a sequence of
275 individual passes, which operate on the callgraph and the
276 varpool. To make the implementation of WHOPR possible, every
277 inter-procedural optimization pass is split into several stages
278 that are executed at different times during WHOPR compilation:
279
280 @itemize @bullet
281 @item LGEN time
282 @enumerate
283 @item @emph{Generate summary} (@code{generate_summary} in
284 @code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}). This stage analyzes every function
285 body and variable initializer is examined and stores relevant
286 information into a pass-specific data structure.
287
288 @item @emph{Write summary} (@code{write_summary} in
289 @code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}). This stage writes all the
290 pass-specific information generated by @code{generate_summary}.
291 Summaries go into their own @code{LTO_section_*} sections that
292 have to be declared in @file{lto-streamer.h}:@code{enum
293 lto_section_type}. A new section is created by calling
294 @code{create_output_block} and data can be written using the
295 @code{lto_output_*} routines.
296 @end enumerate
297
298 @item WPA time
299 @enumerate
300 @item @emph{Read summary} (@code{read_summary} in
301 @code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}). This stage reads all the
302 pass-specific information in exactly the same order that it was
303 written by @code{write_summary}.
304
305 @item @emph{Execute} (@code{execute} in @code{struct
306 opt_pass}). This performs inter-procedural propagation. This
307 must be done without actual access to the individual function
308 bodies or variable initializers. Typically, this results in a
309 transitive closure operation over the summary information of all
310 the nodes in the callgraph.
311
312 @item @emph{Write optimization summary}
313 (@code{write_optimization_summary} in @code{struct
314 ipa_opt_pass_d}). This writes the result of the inter-procedural
315 propagation into the object file. This can use the same data
316 structures and helper routines used in @code{write_summary}.
317 @end enumerate
318
319 @item LTRANS time
320 @enumerate
321 @item @emph{Read optimization summary}
322 (@code{read_optimization_summary} in @code{struct
323 ipa_opt_pass_d}). The counterpart to
324 @code{write_optimization_summary}. This reads the interprocedural
325 optimization decisions in exactly the same format emitted by
326 @code{write_optimization_summary}.
327
328 @item @emph{Transform} (@code{function_transform} and
329 @code{variable_transform} in @code{struct ipa_opt_pass_d}).
330 The actual function bodies and variable initializers are updated
331 based on the information passed down from the @emph{Execute} stage.
332 @end enumerate
333 @end itemize
334
335 The implementation of the inter-procedural passes are shared
336 between LTO, WHOPR and classic non-LTO compilation.
337
338 @itemize
339 @item During the traditional file-by-file mode every pass executes its
340 own @emph{Generate summary}, @emph{Execute}, and @emph{Transform}
341 stages within the single execution context of the compiler.
342
343 @item In LTO compilation mode, every pass uses @emph{Generate
344 summary} and @emph{Write summary} stages at compilation time,
345 while the @emph{Read summary}, @emph{Execute}, and
346 @emph{Transform} stages are executed at link time.
347
348 @item In WHOPR mode all stages are used.
349 @end itemize
350
351 To simplify development, the GCC pass manager differentiates
352 between normal inter-procedural passes (@pxref{Regular IPA passes}),
353 small inter-procedural passes (@pxref{Small IPA passes})
354 and late inter-procedural passes (@pxref{Late IPA passes}).
355 A small or late IPA pass (@code{SIMPLE_IPA_PASS}) does
356 everything at once and thus cannot be executed during WPA in
357 WHOPR mode. It defines only the @emph{Execute} stage and during
358 this stage it accesses and modifies the function bodies. Such
359 passes are useful for optimization at LGEN or LTRANS time and are
360 used, for example, to implement early optimization before writing
361 object files. The simple inter-procedural passes can also be used
362 for easier prototyping and development of a new inter-procedural
363 pass.
364
365
366 @subsection Virtual clones
367
368 One of the main challenges of introducing the WHOPR compilation
369 mode was addressing the interactions between optimization passes.
370 In LTO compilation mode, the passes are executed in a sequence,
371 each of which consists of analysis (or @emph{Generate summary}),
372 propagation (or @emph{Execute}) and @emph{Transform} stages.
373 Once the work of one pass is finished, the next pass sees the
374 updated program representation and can execute. This makes the
375 individual passes dependent on each other.
376
377 In WHOPR mode all passes first execute their @emph{Generate
378 summary} stage. Then summary writing marks the end of the LGEN
379 stage. At WPA time,
380 the summaries are read back into memory and all passes run the
381 @emph{Execute} stage. Optimization summaries are streamed and
382 sent to LTRANS, where all the passes execute the @emph{Transform}
383 stage.
384
385 Most optimization passes split naturally into analysis,
386 propagation and transformation stages. But some do not. The
387 main problem arises when one pass performs changes and the
388 following pass gets confused by seeing different callgraphs
389 between the @emph{Transform} stage and the @emph{Generate summary}
390 or @emph{Execute} stage. This means that the passes are required
391 to communicate their decisions with each other.
392
393 To facilitate this communication, the GCC callgraph
394 infrastructure implements @emph{virtual clones}, a method of
395 representing the changes performed by the optimization passes in
396 the callgraph without needing to update function bodies.
397
398 A @emph{virtual clone} in the callgraph is a function that has no
399 associated body, just a description of how to create its body based
400 on a different function (which itself may be a virtual clone).
401
402 The description of function modifications includes adjustments to
403 the function's signature (which allows, for example, removing or
404 adding function arguments), substitutions to perform on the
405 function body, and, for inlined functions, a pointer to the
406 function that it will be inlined into.
407
408 It is also possible to redirect any edge of the callgraph from a
409 function to its virtual clone. This implies updating of the call
410 site to adjust for the new function signature.
411
412 Most of the transformations performed by inter-procedural
413 optimizations can be represented via virtual clones. For
414 instance, a constant propagation pass can produce a virtual clone
415 of the function which replaces one of its arguments by a
416 constant. The inliner can represent its decisions by producing a
417 clone of a function whose body will be later integrated into
418 a given function.
419
420 Using @emph{virtual clones}, the program can be easily updated
421 during the @emph{Execute} stage, solving most of pass interactions
422 problems that would otherwise occur during @emph{Transform}.
423
424 Virtual clones are later materialized in the LTRANS stage and
425 turned into real functions. Passes executed after the virtual
426 clone were introduced also perform their @emph{Transform} stage
427 on new functions, so for a pass there is no significant
428 difference between operating on a real function or a virtual
429 clone introduced before its @emph{Execute} stage.
430
431 Optimization passes then work on virtual clones introduced before
432 their @emph{Execute} stage as if they were real functions. The
433 only difference is that clones are not visible during the
434 @emph{Generate Summary} stage.
435
436 To keep function summaries updated, the callgraph interface
437 allows an optimizer to register a callback that is called every
438 time a new clone is introduced as well as when the actual
439 function or variable is generated or when a function or variable
440 is removed. These hooks are registered in the @emph{Generate
441 summary} stage and allow the pass to keep its information intact
442 until the @emph{Execute} stage. The same hooks can also be
443 registered during the @emph{Execute} stage to keep the
444 optimization summaries updated for the @emph{Transform} stage.
445
446 @subsection IPA references
447
448 GCC represents IPA references in the callgraph. For a function
449 or variable @code{A}, the @emph{IPA reference} is a list of all
450 locations where the address of @code{A} is taken and, when
451 @code{A} is a variable, a list of all direct stores and reads
452 to/from @code{A}. References represent an oriented multi-graph on
453 the union of nodes of the callgraph and the varpool. See
454 @file{ipa-reference.cc}:@code{ipa_reference_write_optimization_summary}
455 and
456 @file{ipa-reference.cc}:@code{ipa_reference_read_optimization_summary}
457 for details.
458
459 @subsection Jump functions
460 Suppose that an optimization pass sees a function @code{A} and it
461 knows the values of (some of) its arguments. The @emph{jump
462 function} describes the value of a parameter of a given function
463 call in function @code{A} based on this knowledge.
464
465 Jump functions are used by several optimizations, such as the
466 inter-procedural constant propagation pass and the
467 devirtualization pass. The inliner also uses jump functions to
468 perform inlining of callbacks.
469
470 @node WHOPR
471 @section Whole program assumptions, linker plugin and symbol visibilities
472
473 Link-time optimization gives relatively minor benefits when used
474 alone. The problem is that propagation of inter-procedural
475 information does not work well across functions and variables
476 that are called or referenced by other compilation units (such as
477 from a dynamically linked library). We say that such functions
478 and variables are @emph{externally visible}.
479
480 To make the situation even more difficult, many applications
481 organize themselves as a set of shared libraries, and the default
482 ELF visibility rules allow one to overwrite any externally
483 visible symbol with a different symbol at runtime. This
484 basically disables any optimizations across such functions and
485 variables, because the compiler cannot be sure that the function
486 body it is seeing is the same function body that will be used at
487 runtime. Any function or variable not declared @code{static} in
488 the sources degrades the quality of inter-procedural
489 optimization.
490
491 To avoid this problem the compiler must assume that it sees the
492 whole program when doing link-time optimization. Strictly
493 speaking, the whole program is rarely visible even at link-time.
494 Standard system libraries are usually linked dynamically or not
495 provided with the link-time information. In GCC, the whole
496 program option (@option{-fwhole-program}) asserts that every
497 function and variable defined in the current compilation
498 unit is static, except for function @code{main} (note: at
499 link time, the current unit is the union of all objects compiled
500 with LTO). Since some functions and variables need to
501 be referenced externally, for example by another DSO or from an
502 assembler file, GCC also provides the function and variable
503 attribute @code{externally_visible} which can be used to disable
504 the effect of @option{-fwhole-program} on a specific symbol.
505
506 The whole program mode assumptions are slightly more complex in
507 C++, where inline functions in headers are put into @emph{COMDAT}
508 sections. COMDAT function and variables can be defined by
509 multiple object files and their bodies are unified at link-time
510 and dynamic link-time. COMDAT functions are changed to local only
511 when their address is not taken and thus un-sharing them with a
512 library is not harmful. COMDAT variables always remain externally
513 visible, however for readonly variables it is assumed that their
514 initializers cannot be overwritten by a different value.
515
516 GCC provides the function and variable attribute
517 @code{visibility} that can be used to specify the visibility of
518 externally visible symbols (or alternatively an
519 @option{-fdefault-visibility} command line option). ELF defines
520 the @code{default}, @code{protected}, @code{hidden} and
521 @code{internal} visibilities.
522
523 The most commonly used is visibility is @code{hidden}. It
524 specifies that the symbol cannot be referenced from outside of
525 the current shared library. Unfortunately, this information
526 cannot be used directly by the link-time optimization in the
527 compiler since the whole shared library also might contain
528 non-LTO objects and those are not visible to the compiler.
529
530 GCC solves this problem using linker plugins. A @emph{linker
531 plugin} is an interface to the linker that allows an external
532 program to claim the ownership of a given object file. The linker
533 then performs the linking procedure by querying the plugin about
534 the symbol table of the claimed objects and once the linking
535 decisions are complete, the plugin is allowed to provide the
536 final object file before the actual linking is made. The linker
537 plugin obtains the symbol resolution information which specifies
538 which symbols provided by the claimed objects are bound from the
539 rest of a binary being linked.
540
541 GCC is designed to be independent of the rest of the toolchain
542 and aims to support linkers without plugin support. For this
543 reason it does not use the linker plugin by default. Instead,
544 the object files are examined by @command{collect2} before being
545 passed to the linker and objects found to have LTO sections are
546 passed to @command{lto1} first. This mode does not work for
547 library archives. The decision on what object files from the
548 archive are needed depends on the actual linking and thus GCC
549 would have to implement the linker itself. The resolution
550 information is missing too and thus GCC needs to make an educated
551 guess based on @option{-fwhole-program}. Without the linker
552 plugin GCC also assumes that symbols are declared @code{hidden}
553 and not referred by non-LTO code by default.
554
555 @node Internal flags
556 @section Internal flags controlling @code{lto1}
557
558 The following flags are passed into @command{lto1} and are not
559 meant to be used directly from the command line.
560
561 @itemize
562 @item -fwpa
563 @opindex fwpa
564 This option runs the serial part of the link-time optimizer
565 performing the inter-procedural propagation (WPA mode). The
566 compiler reads in summary information from all inputs and
567 performs an analysis based on summary information only. It
568 generates object files for subsequent runs of the link-time
569 optimizer where individual object files are optimized using both
570 summary information from the WPA mode and the actual function
571 bodies. It then drives the LTRANS phase.
572
573 @item -fltrans
574 @opindex fltrans
575 This option runs the link-time optimizer in the
576 local-transformation (LTRANS) mode, which reads in output from a
577 previous run of the LTO in WPA mode. In the LTRANS mode, LTO
578 optimizes an object and produces the final assembly.
579
580 @item -fltrans-output-list=@var{file}
581 @opindex fltrans-output-list
582 This option specifies a file to which the names of LTRANS output
583 files are written. This option is only meaningful in conjunction
584 with @option{-fwpa}.
585
586 @item -fresolution=@var{file}
587 @opindex fresolution
588 This option specifies the linker resolution file. This option is
589 only meaningful in conjunction with @option{-fwpa} and as option
590 to pass through to the LTO linker plugin.
591 @end itemize