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go/test/nilptr3.go

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// errorcheck -0 -d=nil
cmd/7g: enable peephole optimizer Based on cmd/9g/peep.go. Go 1 benchmark comparison: benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkBinaryTree17 24328574000 18351639000 -24.57% BenchmarkFannkuch11 17029365000 10817758000 -36.48% BenchmarkFmtFprintfEmpty 291 223 -23.37% BenchmarkFmtFprintfString 1073 799 -25.54% BenchmarkFmtFprintfInt 1024 778 -24.02% BenchmarkFmtFprintfIntInt 1654 1277 -22.79% BenchmarkFmtFprintfPrefixedInt 1360 1083 -20.37% BenchmarkFmtFprintfFloat 2272 1415 -37.72% BenchmarkFmtManyArgs 5933 4742 -20.07% BenchmarkGobDecode 53166003 38584736 -27.43% BenchmarkGobEncode 37930156 30074874 -20.71% BenchmarkGzip 1880638900 1286832100 -31.57% BenchmarkGunzip 386343633 292194480 -24.37% BenchmarkHTTPClientServer 237077 179776 -24.17% BenchmarkJSONEncode 101731690 73116925 -28.13% BenchmarkJSONDecode 344655360 241277600 -29.99% BenchmarkMandelbrot200 28329778 12950809 -54.29% BenchmarkGoParse 21670755 16554244 -23.61% BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy0_32 557 484 -13.11% BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy0_1K 4687 4832 +3.09% BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy1_32 539 483 -10.39% BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy1_1K 5100 5080 -0.39% BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_32 796 651 -18.22% BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_1K 233099 182047 -21.90% BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_32 13202 9897 -25.03% BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_1K 401027 303602 -24.29% BenchmarkRevcomp 3837679666 2816546600 -26.61% BenchmarkTemplate 440608300 324831040 -26.28% BenchmarkTimeParse 1460 1019 -30.21% BenchmarkTimeFormat 1609 1174 -27.04% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkGobDecode 14.44 19.89 1.38x BenchmarkGobEncode 20.24 25.52 1.26x BenchmarkGzip 10.32 15.08 1.46x BenchmarkGunzip 50.23 66.41 1.32x BenchmarkJSONEncode 19.07 26.54 1.39x BenchmarkJSONDecode 5.63 8.04 1.43x BenchmarkGoParse 2.67 3.50 1.31x BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy0_32 57.38 66.05 1.15x BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy0_1K 218.47 211.91 0.97x BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy1_32 59.29 66.21 1.12x BenchmarkRegexpMatchEasy1_1K 200.76 201.54 1.00x BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_32 1.26 1.53 1.21x BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_1K 4.39 5.62 1.28x BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_32 2.42 3.23 1.33x BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_1K 2.55 3.37 1.32x BenchmarkRevcomp 66.23 90.24 1.36x BenchmarkTemplate 4.40 5.97 1.36x Fixes #10105. Change-Id: I353cc9fdf922e431821508c9dbbe4d9a85d64bd4 Signed-off-by: Shenghou Ma <minux@golang.org> Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8471 Reviewed-by: Dave Cheney <dave@cheney.net>
2015-04-03 23:24:36 -06:00
// Fails on ppc64x because of incomplete optimization.
// See issues 9058.
// +build !ppc64,!ppc64le
// Copyright 2013 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Test that nil checks are removed.
// Optimization is enabled.
package p
type Struct struct {
X int
Y float64
}
type BigStruct struct {
X int
Y float64
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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A [1 << 20]int
Z string
}
type Empty struct {
}
type Empty1 struct {
Empty
}
var (
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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intp *int
arrayp *[10]int
array0p *[0]int
bigarrayp *[1 << 26]int
structp *Struct
bigstructp *BigStruct
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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emptyp *Empty
empty1p *Empty1
)
func f1() {
_ = *intp // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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// This one should be removed but the block copy needs
// to be turned into its own pseudo-op in order to see
// the indirect.
_ = *arrayp // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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// 0-byte indirect doesn't suffice.
// we don't registerize globals, so there are no removed repeated nil checks.
_ = *array0p // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *array0p // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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_ = *intp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *arrayp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *structp // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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_ = *emptyp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *arrayp // ERROR "generated nil check"
}
func f2() {
var (
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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intp *int
arrayp *[10]int
array0p *[0]int
bigarrayp *[1 << 20]int
structp *Struct
bigstructp *BigStruct
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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emptyp *Empty
empty1p *Empty1
)
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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_ = *intp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *arrayp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *array0p // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *array0p // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
_ = *intp // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
_ = *arrayp // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
_ = *structp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *emptyp // ERROR "generated nil check"
_ = *arrayp // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
_ = *bigarrayp // ERROR "generated nil check" ARM removed nil check before indirect!!
_ = *bigstructp // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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_ = *empty1p // ERROR "generated nil check"
}
func fx10k() *[10000]int
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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var b bool
func f3(x *[10000]int) {
// Using a huge type and huge offsets so the compiler
// does not expect the memory hardware to fault.
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
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for {
if x[9999] != 0 { // ERROR "generated nil check"
break
}
}
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
x = fx10k()
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
if b {
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
} else {
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
}
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
x = fx10k()
if b {
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
} else {
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
}
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
fx10k()
// This one is a bit redundant, if we figured out that
// x wasn't going to change across the function call.
// But it's a little complex to do and in practice doesn't
// matter enough.
_ = x[9999] // ERROR "generated nil check"
}
func f3a() {
x := fx10k()
y := fx10k()
z := fx10k()
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "generated nil check"
y = z
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
x = y
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "generated nil check"
}
func f3b() {
x := fx10k()
y := fx10k()
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "generated nil check"
y = x
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
x = y
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
}
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
func fx10() *[10]int
func f4(x *[10]int) {
// Most of these have no checks because a real memory reference follows,
// and the offset is small enough that if x is nil, the address will still be
// in the first unmapped page of memory.
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
for {
if x[9] != 0 { // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
break
}
}
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
x = fx10()
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
if b {
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
} else {
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
}
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
x = fx10()
if b {
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
} else {
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "generated nil check"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
}
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
fx10()
_ = x[9] // ERROR "removed nil check before indirect"
cmd/gc: correct handling of globals, func args, results Globals, function arguments, and results are special cases in registerization. Globals must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the recovery code must see the latest values. Globals also must be loaded aggressively, because nearly any store through a pointer might be updating a global: the compiler cannot see all the "address of" operations on globals, especially exported globals. To accomplish this, mark all globals as having their address taken, which effectively disables registerization. If a function contains a defer statement, the function results must be flushed aggressively, because nearly any operation can cause a panic, and the deferred code may call recover, causing the original function to return the current values of its function results. To accomplish this, mark all function results as having their address taken if the function contains any defer statements. This causes not just aggressive flushing but also aggressive loading. The aggressive loading is overkill but the best we can do in the current code. Function arguments must be considered live at all safe points in a function, because garbage collection always preserves them: they must be up-to-date in order to be preserved correctly. Accomplish this by marking them live at all call sites. An earlier attempt at this marked function arguments as having their address taken, which disabled registerization completely, making programs slower. This CL's solution allows registerization while preserving safety. The benchmark speedup is caused by being able to registerize again (the earlier CL lost the same amount). benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta BenchmarkEqualPort32 61.4 56.0 -8.79% benchmark old MB/s new MB/s speedup BenchmarkEqualPort32 521.56 570.97 1.09x Fixes #1304. (again) Fixes #7944. (again) Fixes #7984. Fixes #7995. LGTM=khr R=golang-codereviews, khr CC=golang-codereviews, iant, r https://golang.org/cl/97500044
2014-05-15 13:34:53 -06:00
x = fx10()
y := fx10()
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "generated nil check"
y = x
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
x = y
_ = &x[9] // ERROR "removed repeated nil check"
}