This optimization level wasn't working before because some passes expect
some globals to be cleaned up afterwards. Cleaning these globals is
easy, just add the pass necessary for it. This shouldn't reduce the
usefulness of the -opt=0 build flag as most optimizations are still
skipped.
Moving settings to a separate config struct has two benefits:
- It decouples the compiler a bit from other packages, most
importantly the compileopts package. Decoupling is generally a good
thing.
- Perhaps more importantly, it precisely specifies which settings are
used while compiling and affect the resulting LLVM module. This will
be necessary for caching the LLVM module.
While it would have been possible to cache without this refactor, it
would have been very easy to miss a setting and thus let the
compiler work with invalid/stale data.
This option was broken for a long time, in part because we didn't test
for it. This commit fixes that and adds a test to make sure it won't
break again unnoticed.
This hack was originally introduced in
https://github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/pull/251 to fix an escape analysis
regression after https://github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo/pull/222
introduced nil checks. Since a new optimization in LLVM (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D60047) this hack is not necessary anymore and
can be removed.
I've compared all regular tests and smoke tests before and after to
check the size. In most cases this change was an improvement although
there are a few regressions.
Panics are bad for usability: whenever something breaks, the user is
shown a (not very informative) backtrace. Replace it with real error
messages instead, that even try to display the Go source location.