> Am 30.04.2024 um 21:11 schrieb Jason Merrill via Gcc <gcc@gcc.gnu.org>:
>
> On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 5:44 AM Aldy Hernandez via Gcc <gcc@gcc.gnu.org>
> wrote:
>>
>> In implementing prange (pointer ranges), I have found a 1.74% slowdown
>> in VRP, even without any code path actually using the code. I have
>> tracked this down to irange::get_bitmask() being compiled differently
>> with and without the bare bones patch. With the patch,
>> irange::get_bitmask() has a lot of code inlined into it, particularly
>> get_bitmask_from_range() and consequently the wide_int_storage code.
> ...
>> +static irange_bitmask
>> +get_bitmask_from_range (tree type,
>> + const wide_int &min, const wide_int &max)
> ...
>> -irange_bitmask
>> -irange::get_bitmask_from_range () const
>
> My guess is that this is the relevant change: the old function has
> external linkage, and is therefore interposable, which inhibits
> inlining. The new function has internal linkage, which allows
> inlining.
>
> Relatedly, I wonder if we want to build GCC with -fno-semantic-interposition?
I guess that’s a good idea, though it’s already implied when doing LTO
bootstrap and building cc1 and friends? (But not for libgccjit?)
Richard
>
> Jason
>