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author | Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de> | 2014-03-18 12:30:11 +0000 |
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committer | Richard Biener <rguenth@gcc.gnu.org> | 2014-03-18 12:30:11 +0000 |
commit | b9abf793932ab4b7387eacbf58c6030a8f3f554a (patch) | |
tree | d89382c7fd7efbf4e8b54bdd6fd0300dad64d9fa /gcc | |
parent | 3f00cf18ca022961177f13399323de7b674ff515 (diff) | |
download | gcc-b9abf793932ab4b7387eacbf58c6030a8f3f554a.zip gcc-b9abf793932ab4b7387eacbf58c6030a8f3f554a.tar.gz gcc-b9abf793932ab4b7387eacbf58c6030a8f3f554a.tar.bz2 |
invoke.texi (flto): Update for changes in 4.9.
2014-03-18 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
* doc/invoke.texi (flto): Update for changes in 4.9.
From-SVN: r208646
Diffstat (limited to 'gcc')
-rw-r--r-- | gcc/ChangeLog | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gcc/doc/invoke.texi | 99 |
2 files changed, 66 insertions, 37 deletions
diff --git a/gcc/ChangeLog b/gcc/ChangeLog index c4b3b0a..8038951 100644 --- a/gcc/ChangeLog +++ b/gcc/ChangeLog @@ -1,5 +1,9 @@ 2014-03-18 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de> + * doc/invoke.texi (flto): Update for changes in 4.9. + +2014-03-18 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de> + * doc/loop.texi: Remove section on the removed lambda framework. Update loop docs with recent changes in preserving loop structure. diff --git a/gcc/doc/invoke.texi b/gcc/doc/invoke.texi index 24bd76e..4c183a3 100644 --- a/gcc/doc/invoke.texi +++ b/gcc/doc/invoke.texi @@ -8524,8 +8524,9 @@ file. When the object files are linked together, all the function bodies are read from these ELF sections and instantiated as if they had been part of the same translation unit. -To use the link-time optimizer, @option{-flto} needs to be specified at -compile time and during the final link. For example: +To use the link-time optimizer, @option{-flto} and optimization +options should be specified at compile time and during the final link. +For example: @smallexample gcc -c -O2 -flto foo.c @@ -8555,8 +8556,15 @@ merges them together into a single GIMPLE representation and optimizes them as usual to produce @file{myprog}. The only important thing to keep in mind is that to enable link-time -optimizations the @option{-flto} flag needs to be passed to both the -compile and the link commands. +optimizations you need to use the GCC driver to perform the link-step. +GCC then automatically performs link-time optimization if any of the +objects involved were compiled with the @option{-flto}. You generally +should specify the optimization options to be used for link-time +optimization though GCC will try to be clever at guessing an +optimization level to use from the options used at compile-time +if you fail to specify one at link-time. You can always override +the automatic decision to do link-time optimization at link-time +by passing @option{-fno-lto} to the link command. To make whole program optimization effective, it is necessary to make certain whole program assumptions. The compiler needs to know @@ -8568,28 +8576,31 @@ the linker plugin is not available, @option{-fwhole-program} should be used to allow the compiler to make these assumptions, which leads to more aggressive optimization decisions. -Note that when a file is compiled with @option{-flto}, the generated -object file is larger than a regular object file because it -contains GIMPLE bytecodes and the usual final code. This means that +When @option{-fuse-linker-plugin} is not enabled then, when a file is +compiled with @option{-flto}, the generated object file is larger than +a regular object file because it contains GIMPLE bytecodes and the usual +final code (see @option{-ffat-lto-objects}. This means that object files with LTO information can be linked as normal object -files; if @option{-flto} is not passed to the linker, no -interprocedural optimizations are applied. +files; if @option{-fno-lto} is passed to the linker, no +interprocedural optimizations are applied. Note that when +@option{-fno-fat-lto-objects} is enabled the compile-stage is faster +but you cannot perform a regular, non-LTO link on them. Additionally, the optimization flags used to compile individual files are not necessarily related to those used at link time. For instance, @smallexample -gcc -c -O0 -flto foo.c -gcc -c -O0 -flto bar.c -gcc -o myprog -flto -O3 foo.o bar.o +gcc -c -O0 -ffat-lto-objects -flto foo.c +gcc -c -O0 -ffat-lto-objects -flto bar.c +gcc -o myprog -O3 foo.o bar.o @end smallexample This produces individual object files with unoptimized assembler code, but the resulting binary @file{myprog} is optimized at -@option{-O3}. If, instead, the final binary is generated without -@option{-flto}, then @file{myprog} is not optimized. +@option{-O3}. If, instead, the final binary is generated with +@option{-fno-lto}, then @file{myprog} is not optimized. -When producing the final binary with @option{-flto}, GCC only +When producing the final binary, GCC only applies link-time optimizations to those files that contain bytecode. Therefore, you can mix and match object files and libraries with GIMPLE bytecodes and final object code. GCC automatically selects @@ -8598,28 +8609,45 @@ further processing. There are some code generation flags preserved by GCC when generating bytecodes, as they need to be used during the final link -stage. Currently, the following options are saved into the GIMPLE -bytecode files: @option{-fPIC}, @option{-fcommon} and all the -@option{-m} target flags. - -At link time, these options are read in and reapplied. Note that the -current implementation makes no attempt to recognize conflicting -values for these options. If different files have conflicting option -values (e.g., one file is compiled with @option{-fPIC} and another -isn't), the compiler simply uses the last value read from the -bytecode files. It is recommended, then, that you compile all the files -participating in the same link with the same options. +stage. Generally options specified at link-time override those +specified at compile-time. + +If you do not specify an optimization level option @option{-O} at +link-time then GCC will compute one based on the optimization levels +used when compiling the object files. The highest optimization +level will win here. + +Currently, the following options and their setting are take from +the first object file that explicitely specified it: +@option{-fPIC}, @option{-fpic}, @option{-fpie}, @option{-fcommon}, +@option{-fexceptions}, @option{-fnon-call-exceptions}, @option{-fgnu-tm} +and all the @option{-m} target flags. + +Certain ABI changing flags are required to match in all compilation-units +and trying to override this at link-time with a conflicting value +is ignored. This includes options such as @option{-freg-struct-return} +and @option{-fpcc-struct-return}. + +Other options such as @option{-ffp-contract}, @option{-fno-strict-overflow}, +@option{-fwrapv}, @option{-fno-trapv} or @option{-fno-strict-aliasing} +are passed through to the link stage and merged conservatively for +conflicting translation units. Specifically +@option{-fno-strict-overflow}, @option{-fwrapv} and @option{-fno-trapv} take +precedence and for example @option{-ffp-contract=off} takes precedence +over @option{-ffp-contract=fast}. You can override them at linke-time. + +It is recommended that you compile all the files participating in the +same link with the same options and also specify those options at +link time. If LTO encounters objects with C linkage declared with incompatible types in separate translation units to be linked together (undefined behavior according to ISO C99 6.2.7), a non-fatal diagnostic may be -issued. The behavior is still undefined at run time. +issued. The behavior is still undefined at run time. Similar +diagnostics may be raised for other languages. Another feature of LTO is that it is possible to apply interprocedural -optimizations on files written in different languages. This requires -support in the language front end. Currently, the C, C++ and -Fortran front ends are capable of emitting GIMPLE bytecodes, so -something like this should work: +optimizations on files written in different languages: @smallexample gcc -c -flto foo.c @@ -8632,8 +8660,7 @@ Notice that the final link is done with @command{g++} to get the C++ runtime libraries and @option{-lgfortran} is added to get the Fortran runtime libraries. In general, when mixing languages in LTO mode, you should use the same link command options as when mixing languages in a -regular (non-LTO) compilation; all you need to add is @option{-flto} to -all the compile and link commands. +regular (non-LTO) compilation. If object files containing GIMPLE bytecode are stored in a library archive, say @file{libfoo.a}, it is possible to extract and use them in an LTO link if you @@ -8665,11 +8692,11 @@ The current implementation of LTO makes no attempt to generate bytecode that is portable between different types of hosts. The bytecode files are versioned and there is a strict version check, so bytecode files generated in one version of -GCC will not work with an older/newer version of GCC@. +GCC will not work with an older or newer version of GCC. Link-time optimization does not work well with generation of debugging information. Combining @option{-flto} with -@option{-g} is currently experimental and expected to produce wrong +@option{-g} is currently experimental and expected to produce unexpected results. If you specify the optional @var{n}, the optimization and code @@ -8685,8 +8712,6 @@ You must prepend a @samp{+} to the command recipe in the parent Makefile for this to work. This option likely only works if @env{MAKE} is GNU make. -This option is disabled by default. - @item -flto-partition=@var{alg} @opindex flto-partition Specify the partitioning algorithm used by the link-time optimizer. |