This package was long making the design of the compiler more complicated
than it needs to be. Previously this package implemented several
optimization passes, but those passes have since moved to work directly
with LLVM IR instead of Go SSA. The only remaining pass is the SimpleDCE
pass.
This commit removes the *ir.Function type that permeated the whole
compiler and instead switches to use *ssa.Function directly. The
SimpleDCE pass is kept but is far less tightly coupled to the rest of
the compiler so that it can easily be removed once the switch to
building and caching packages individually happens.
Previously, the compiler used LLVM's shift instructions directly, which have UB whenever the shifts are large or negative.
This commit adds runtime checks for negative shifts, and handles oversized shifts.
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.
The unsafe.Pointer type is used for many low-level operations,
especially in the runtime. It can for example be used to copy the
contents of a slice (in the copy builtin) independent of the slice
element type.
The x/tools/go/ssa package splits slice loads/stores into two
operations. So for code like this:
x = p[3]
It has two instructions:
x_ptr = &p[3]
x = *x_ptr
This makes the IR simpler, but also means we're accidentally inserting
more nil checks than necessary: the slice index operation has
effectively already checked for nil by performing a bounds check.
Therefore, omit nil pointer checks for pointers created by
*ssa.IndexAddr.
This change is necessary to make sure a future removal of runtime.isnil
will not cause the escape analysis pass to regress. Apart from that, it
reduces code size slightly in many smoke tests (with no increases in
code size).
This patch is a combination of two related changes:
1. The compiler now allows other types than `int` when specifying the
size of a channel in a make(chan ..., size) call.
2. The compiler now checks for maximum allowed channel sizes. Such
checks are trivially optimized out in the vast majority of cases as
channel sizes are usually constant.
I discovered this issue when trying out channels on AVR.
Move these asserts into compiler/asserts.go, to keep them together.
The make([]T) asserts aren't moved yet because that code is (still!)
quite ugly and in need of some clean up.
This commit implements nil checks for all platforms. These nil checks
can be optimized on systems with a MMU, but since a major target is
systems without MMU, keep it this way for now.
It implements three checks:
* Nil checks before dereferencing a pointer.
* Nil checks before calculating an address (*ssa.FieldAddr and
*ssa.IndexAddr)
* Nil checks before calling a function pointer.
The first check has by far the biggest impact, with around 5% increase
in code size. The other checks only trigger in only some test cases and
have a minimal impact on code size.
This first nil check is also the one that is easiest to avoid on systems
with MMU, if necessary.