On Thu, 25 Jan 2024 12:52:21 GMT, Maurizio Cimadamore <mcimadam...@openjdk.org> wrote:
>>> > Naive question: the right way to use this would be almost invariably be >>> > like this: >>> > ``` >>> > if (isCompileConstant(foo) && fooHasCertainStaticProperties(foo)) { >>> > // fast-path >>> > } >>> > // slow path >>> > ``` >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > Right? >>> >>> Yes, I think so. >> >> But then whatever is in the fast path and `fooHasCertainStaticProperties` >> are never profiled because never executed by the interpreter or c1. So >> `fooHasCertainStaticProperties` will likely not be inlined and c2 will do a >> poor (or rather not as good as you'd like) job of compiling whatever is in >> the fast path. > >> > > Naive question: the right way to use this would be almost invariably be >> > > like this: >> > > ``` >> > > if (isCompileConstant(foo) && fooHasCertainStaticProperties(foo)) { >> > > // fast-path >> > > } >> > > // slow path >> > > ``` >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > Right? >> > >> > >> > Yes, I think so. >> >> But then whatever is in the fast path and `fooHasCertainStaticProperties` >> are never profiled because never executed by the interpreter or c1. So >> `fooHasCertainStaticProperties` will likely not be inlined and c2 will do a >> poor (or rather not as good as you'd like) job of compiling whatever is in >> the fast path. > > I suppose perhaps it is implied that `fooHasCertainStaticProperties` should > have `@ForceInline` ? But yes, there seems to be several assumptions in how > this logic is supposed to be used, and at the moment, it seems to me more of > a footgun than something actually useful (but I admit my ignorance on the > subject). @mcimadamore Yes this is hard to use apart from the simple cases. Considering we have already used this technique in the `MethodHandle` implementation, I think there are valid use cases. ------------- PR Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/17527#issuecomment-1910271891