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 - <a name="IPA"></a>
 - <div class="header">
 - <p>
 - Next: <a href="WHOPR.html#WHOPR" accesskey="n" rel="next">WHOPR</a>, Previous: <a href="LTO-object-file-layout.html#LTO-object-file-layout" accesskey="p" rel="prev">LTO object file layout</a>, Up: <a href="LTO.html#LTO" accesskey="u" rel="up">LTO</a>   [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
 - </div>
 - <hr>
 - <a name="Using-summary-information-in-IPA-passes"></a>
 - <h3 class="section">25.3 Using summary information in IPA passes</h3>
 - 
 - <p>Programs are represented internally as a <em>callgraph</em> (a
 - multi-graph where nodes are functions and edges are call sites)
 - and a <em>varpool</em> (a list of static and external variables in
 - the program).
 - </p>
 - <p>The inter-procedural optimization is organized as a sequence of
 - individual passes, which operate on the callgraph and the
 - varpool.  To make the implementation of WHOPR possible, every
 - inter-procedural optimization pass is split into several stages
 - that are executed at different times during WHOPR compilation:
 - </p>
 - <ul>
 - <li> LGEN time
 - <ol>
 - <li> <em>Generate summary</em> (<code>generate_summary</code> in
 - <code>struct ipa_opt_pass_d</code>).  This stage analyzes every function
 - body and variable initializer is examined and stores relevant
 - information into a pass-specific data structure.
 - 
 - </li><li> <em>Write summary</em> (<code>write_summary</code> in
 - <code>struct ipa_opt_pass_d</code>).  This stage writes all the
 - pass-specific information generated by <code>generate_summary</code>.
 - Summaries go into their own <code>LTO_section_*</code> sections that
 - have to be declared in <samp>lto-streamer.h</samp>:<code>enum
 - lto_section_type</code>.  A new section is created by calling
 - <code>create_output_block</code> and data can be written using the
 - <code>lto_output_*</code> routines.
 - </li></ol>
 - 
 - </li><li> WPA time
 - <ol>
 - <li> <em>Read summary</em> (<code>read_summary</code> in
 - <code>struct ipa_opt_pass_d</code>).  This stage reads all the
 - pass-specific information in exactly the same order that it was
 - written by <code>write_summary</code>.
 - 
 - </li><li> <em>Execute</em> (<code>execute</code> in <code>struct
 - opt_pass</code>).  This performs inter-procedural propagation.  This
 - must be done without actual access to the individual function
 - bodies or variable initializers.  Typically, this results in a
 - transitive closure operation over the summary information of all
 - the nodes in the callgraph.
 - 
 - </li><li> <em>Write optimization summary</em>
 - (<code>write_optimization_summary</code> in <code>struct
 - ipa_opt_pass_d</code>).  This writes the result of the inter-procedural
 - propagation into the object file.  This can use the same data
 - structures and helper routines used in <code>write_summary</code>.
 - </li></ol>
 - 
 - </li><li> LTRANS time
 - <ol>
 - <li> <em>Read optimization summary</em>
 - (<code>read_optimization_summary</code> in <code>struct
 - ipa_opt_pass_d</code>).  The counterpart to
 - <code>write_optimization_summary</code>.  This reads the interprocedural
 - optimization decisions in exactly the same format emitted by
 - <code>write_optimization_summary</code>.
 - 
 - </li><li> <em>Transform</em> (<code>function_transform</code> and
 - <code>variable_transform</code> in <code>struct ipa_opt_pass_d</code>).
 - The actual function bodies and variable initializers are updated
 - based on the information passed down from the <em>Execute</em> stage.
 - </li></ol>
 - </li></ul>
 - 
 - <p>The implementation of the inter-procedural passes are shared
 - between LTO, WHOPR and classic non-LTO compilation.
 - </p>
 - <ul>
 - <li> During the traditional file-by-file mode every pass executes its
 - own <em>Generate summary</em>, <em>Execute</em>, and <em>Transform</em>
 - stages within the single execution context of the compiler.
 - 
 - </li><li> In LTO compilation mode, every pass uses <em>Generate
 - summary</em> and <em>Write summary</em> stages at compilation time,
 - while the <em>Read summary</em>, <em>Execute</em>, and
 - <em>Transform</em> stages are executed at link time.
 - 
 - </li><li> In WHOPR mode all stages are used.
 - </li></ul>
 - 
 - <p>To simplify development, the GCC pass manager differentiates
 - between normal inter-procedural passes (see <a href="Regular-IPA-passes.html#Regular-IPA-passes">Regular IPA passes</a>),
 - small inter-procedural passes (see <a href="Small-IPA-passes.html#Small-IPA-passes">Small IPA passes</a>)
 - and late inter-procedural passes (see <a href="Late-IPA-passes.html#Late-IPA-passes">Late IPA passes</a>).
 - A small or late IPA pass (<code>SIMPLE_IPA_PASS</code>) does
 - everything at once and thus cannot be executed during WPA in
 - WHOPR mode.  It defines only the <em>Execute</em> stage and during
 - this stage it accesses and modifies the function bodies.  Such
 - passes are useful for optimization at LGEN or LTRANS time and are
 - used, for example, to implement early optimization before writing
 - object files.  The simple inter-procedural passes can also be used
 - for easier prototyping and development of a new inter-procedural
 - pass.
 - </p>
 - 
 - <a name="Virtual-clones"></a>
 - <h4 class="subsection">25.3.1 Virtual clones</h4>
 - 
 - <p>One of the main challenges of introducing the WHOPR compilation
 - mode was addressing the interactions between optimization passes.
 - In LTO compilation mode, the passes are executed in a sequence,
 - each of which consists of analysis (or <em>Generate summary</em>),
 - propagation (or <em>Execute</em>) and <em>Transform</em> stages.
 - Once the work of one pass is finished, the next pass sees the
 - updated program representation and can execute.  This makes the
 - individual passes dependent on each other.
 - </p>
 - <p>In WHOPR mode all passes first execute their <em>Generate
 - summary</em> stage.  Then summary writing marks the end of the LGEN
 - stage.  At WPA time,
 - the summaries are read back into memory and all passes run the
 - <em>Execute</em> stage.  Optimization summaries are streamed and
 - sent to LTRANS, where all the passes execute the <em>Transform</em>
 - stage.
 - </p>
 - <p>Most optimization passes split naturally into analysis,
 - propagation and transformation stages.  But some do not.  The
 - main problem arises when one pass performs changes and the
 - following pass gets confused by seeing different callgraphs
 - between the <em>Transform</em> stage and the <em>Generate summary</em>
 - or <em>Execute</em> stage.  This means that the passes are required
 - to communicate their decisions with each other.
 - </p>
 - <p>To facilitate this communication, the GCC callgraph
 - infrastructure implements <em>virtual clones</em>, a method of
 - representing the changes performed by the optimization passes in
 - the callgraph without needing to update function bodies.
 - </p>
 - <p>A <em>virtual clone</em> in the callgraph is a function that has no
 - associated body, just a description of how to create its body based
 - on a different function (which itself may be a virtual clone).
 - </p>
 - <p>The description of function modifications includes adjustments to
 - the function’s signature (which allows, for example, removing or
 - adding function arguments), substitutions to perform on the
 - function body, and, for inlined functions, a pointer to the
 - function that it will be inlined into.
 - </p>
 - <p>It is also possible to redirect any edge of the callgraph from a
 - function to its virtual clone.  This implies updating of the call
 - site to adjust for the new function signature.
 - </p>
 - <p>Most of the transformations performed by inter-procedural
 - optimizations can be represented via virtual clones.  For
 - instance, a constant propagation pass can produce a virtual clone
 - of the function which replaces one of its arguments by a
 - constant.  The inliner can represent its decisions by producing a
 - clone of a function whose body will be later integrated into
 - a given function.
 - </p>
 - <p>Using <em>virtual clones</em>, the program can be easily updated
 - during the <em>Execute</em> stage, solving most of pass interactions
 - problems that would otherwise occur during <em>Transform</em>.
 - </p>
 - <p>Virtual clones are later materialized in the LTRANS stage and
 - turned into real functions.  Passes executed after the virtual
 - clone were introduced also perform their <em>Transform</em> stage
 - on new functions, so for a pass there is no significant
 - difference between operating on a real function or a virtual
 - clone introduced before its <em>Execute</em> stage.
 - </p>
 - <p>Optimization passes then work on virtual clones introduced before
 - their <em>Execute</em> stage as if they were real functions.  The
 - only difference is that clones are not visible during the
 - <em>Generate Summary</em> stage.
 - </p>
 - <p>To keep function summaries updated, the callgraph interface
 - allows an optimizer to register a callback that is called every
 - time a new clone is introduced as well as when the actual
 - function or variable is generated or when a function or variable
 - is removed.  These hooks are registered in the <em>Generate
 - summary</em> stage and allow the pass to keep its information intact
 - until the <em>Execute</em> stage.  The same hooks can also be
 - registered during the <em>Execute</em> stage to keep the
 - optimization summaries updated for the <em>Transform</em> stage.
 - </p>
 - <a name="IPA-references"></a>
 - <h4 class="subsection">25.3.2 IPA references</h4>
 - 
 - <p>GCC represents IPA references in the callgraph.  For a function
 - or variable <code>A</code>, the <em>IPA reference</em> is a list of all
 - locations where the address of <code>A</code> is taken and, when
 - <code>A</code> is a variable, a list of all direct stores and reads
 - to/from <code>A</code>.  References represent an oriented multi-graph on
 - the union of nodes of the callgraph and the varpool.  See
 - <samp>ipa-reference.c</samp>:<code>ipa_reference_write_optimization_summary</code>
 - and
 - <samp>ipa-reference.c</samp>:<code>ipa_reference_read_optimization_summary</code>
 - for details.
 - </p>
 - <a name="Jump-functions"></a>
 - <h4 class="subsection">25.3.3 Jump functions</h4>
 - <p>Suppose that an optimization pass sees a function <code>A</code> and it
 - knows the values of (some of) its arguments.  The <em>jump
 - function</em> describes the value of a parameter of a given function
 - call in function <code>A</code> based on this knowledge.
 - </p>
 - <p>Jump functions are used by several optimizations, such as the
 - inter-procedural constant propagation pass and the
 - devirtualization pass.  The inliner also uses jump functions to
 - perform inlining of callbacks.
 - </p>
 - <hr>
 - <div class="header">
 - <p>
 - Next: <a href="WHOPR.html#WHOPR" accesskey="n" rel="next">WHOPR</a>, Previous: <a href="LTO-object-file-layout.html#LTO-object-file-layout" accesskey="p" rel="prev">LTO object file layout</a>, Up: <a href="LTO.html#LTO" accesskey="u" rel="up">LTO</a>   [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
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