>Submitter-Id: net >Originator: Zoltan Hidvegi >Confidential: no >Synopsis: Compile time increases quadratically with struct size >Severity: critical >Priority: medium >Category: c >Class: sw-bug >Release: 3.2.3 (Debian testing/unstable) >Environment: System: Linux hzoli 2.4.21-rc1-ac3 #1 Wed Apr 30 11:10:22 CDT 2003 i686 unknown unknown GNU/Linux Architecture: i686
host: i386-pc-linux-gnu build: i386-pc-linux-gnu target: i386-pc-linux-gnu configured with: ../src/configure -v --enable-languages=c,c++,java,f77,objc,ada --prefix=/usr --mandir=/usr/share/man --infodir=/usr/share/info --with-gxx-include-dir=/usr/include/c++/3.2 --enable-shared --with-system-zlib --enable-nls --without-included-gettext --enable-__cxa_atexit --enable-clocale=gnu --enable-java-gc=boehm --enable-objc-gc i386-linux >Description: The compile time increases quadratically (actually more than quadratically) with the number of members in a struct. >How-To-Repeat: The following is a shell script that will generate a struct with a given number of members and instantiates a global variable of that type: ------- BEGIN biggen.sh ------------- #! /bin/sh let i=0 echo 'struct foo {' while [ "$i" -lt "$1" ] do echo "int i_$((i=i+1));" done echo '};' echo 'struct foo f;' --------- END biggen.sh ------------- Run it like this: ./biggen.sh 10000 > big.c; cc -c big.c Change the number from 10000 and see how the compile time is affected. E.g. on my 1.73GHz Athlon, 5000 members take 1.66s, 10000 takes 8.5s and 20000 takes 35.91s. Unfortunately, I need to compile a generated struct with several hundred thousand members, which is not feasible. >Fix: