Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev
2020-Jan-08 21:26 UTC
[llvm-dev] Increasing address pool reuse/reducing .o file size in DWARFv5
On some previous occasion that introduced additional indirection (don't remember the details) my debugger people groused about the additional performance cost of chasing down data in a different object-file section. So we (Sony) might be happier with low_pc as expressions, than with a ranges-always solution. But hard to say without data, and getting both modes in at least as a temporary thing sounds like a good plan. --paulr> -----Original Message----- > From: aprantl at apple.com <aprantl at apple.com> > Sent: Wednesday, January 8, 2020 1:49 PM > To: David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> > Cc: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>; Jonas Devlieghere > <jdevlieghere at apple.com>; Robinson, Paul <paul.robinson at sony.com>; Eric > Christopher <echristo at gmail.com>; Frederic Riss <friss at apple.com> > Subject: Re: Increasing address pool reuse/reducing .o file size in > DWARFv5 > > I think this sounds like a good plan for Linux. I would like to see the > numbers for Darwin (= non-split DWARF) to decide whether we should just > make that the default. Eric's suggestion of having this committed as an > option first seems like a good step in that direction. If it is an > advantage across the board we can remove the option and just make this the > default behavior. > > thanks, > adrian > > > On Dec 30, 2019, at 12:08 PM, David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> wrote: > > > > tl;dr: in DWARFv5, using DW_AT_ranges even when the range is contiguous > reduces linked, uncompressed debug_addr size for optimized builds by 93% > and reduces total .o file size (with compression and split) by 15%. It > does grow .dwo file size a bit - DWARFv5, no compression, not split shows > the net effect if all bytes are equal: -O3 clang binary grows by 0.4%, -O0 > clang binary shrinks by 0.1% > > Should we enable this strategy by default for DWARFv5, for DWARFv5+Split > DWARF, or not by default at all/only under a flag? > > > > > > > > So, I've brought this up a few times before - that DWARFv5 does a pretty > good job of reducing relocations (& reducing .o file size with Split > DWARF) by allowing many uses of addresses to include some kind of > address+offset (debug_rnglists and loclists allowing "base_address" then > offset_pairs (an improvement over similar functionality in DWARFv4 because > the offset pairs can be uleb encoded - so they can be quite compact)) > > > > But one place that DWARFv5 misses to reduce relocations further is > direct addresses from debug_info, such as DW_AT_low_pc. > > > > For a while I've wondered if we could use an extension form for > addr+offset, and I prototyped this without an extension attribute, but > instead using exprloc. This has slightly higher overhead to express the... > expression. (it's 9 bytes in total, could be as few as 5 with a custom > form) > > > > But I had another idea that's more instantly deployable: Why not use > DW_AT_ranges even when the range is contiguous? That way the low_pc that > previously couldn't use an existing address pool entry + offset, could use > the rnglist support for base address. > > > > The only unnecessary address pool entries that remain that I've found > are DW_AT_low_pc for DW_TAG_labels - but there's only a handful of those > in most code. So the "ranges everywhere" strategy gets the addresses for > optimized clang down from 4758 (v4 address pool used 9923 addresses... ) > to 342, with about ~4 "extra" addresses for DW_TAG_labels. > > > > This could also be a bit less costly if DWARFv5 rnglists didn't use a > separate offset table (instead encoding the offsets directly in > debug_info, rather than using indexes) > > > > I have patches for both the addr+offset exprloc and for the ranges- > always, both with -mllvm flags - do people think they're both worth > committing for experimentation? Neither? Default on in some cases (like > Split DWARF)? > > > > Thanks, > > - Dave
David Blaikie via llvm-dev
2020-Jan-08 21:33 UTC
[llvm-dev] Increasing address pool reuse/reducing .o file size in DWARFv5
Sounds good all round - I'll commit these two modes, and maybe even the third (given Sony's interest & possible interest in changing their consumer to handle it) of a custom form to eek out the last few bytes from the more direct addr+offset encoding. I'll follow up here with flag names and revision numbers once they're in. On Wed, Jan 8, 2020 at 1:26 PM Robinson, Paul <paul.robinson at sony.com> wrote:> On some previous occasion that introduced additional indirection > (don't remember the details) my debugger people groused about the > additional performance cost of chasing down data in a different > object-file section. So we (Sony) might be happier with low_pc as > expressions, than with a ranges-always solution. > > But hard to say without data, and getting both modes in at least > as a temporary thing sounds like a good plan. > --paulr > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: aprantl at apple.com <aprantl at apple.com> > > Sent: Wednesday, January 8, 2020 1:49 PM > > To: David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> > > Cc: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>; Jonas Devlieghere > > <jdevlieghere at apple.com>; Robinson, Paul <paul.robinson at sony.com>; Eric > > Christopher <echristo at gmail.com>; Frederic Riss <friss at apple.com> > > Subject: Re: Increasing address pool reuse/reducing .o file size in > > DWARFv5 > > > > I think this sounds like a good plan for Linux. I would like to see the > > numbers for Darwin (= non-split DWARF) to decide whether we should just > > make that the default. Eric's suggestion of having this committed as an > > option first seems like a good step in that direction. If it is an > > advantage across the board we can remove the option and just make this > the > > default behavior. > > > > thanks, > > adrian > > > > > On Dec 30, 2019, at 12:08 PM, David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > tl;dr: in DWARFv5, using DW_AT_ranges even when the range is contiguous > > reduces linked, uncompressed debug_addr size for optimized builds by 93% > > and reduces total .o file size (with compression and split) by 15%. It > > does grow .dwo file size a bit - DWARFv5, no compression, not split shows > > the net effect if all bytes are equal: -O3 clang binary grows by 0.4%, > -O0 > > clang binary shrinks by 0.1% > > > Should we enable this strategy by default for DWARFv5, for > DWARFv5+Split > > DWARF, or not by default at all/only under a flag? > > > > > > > > > > > > So, I've brought this up a few times before - that DWARFv5 does a > pretty > > good job of reducing relocations (& reducing .o file size with Split > > DWARF) by allowing many uses of addresses to include some kind of > > address+offset (debug_rnglists and loclists allowing "base_address" then > > offset_pairs (an improvement over similar functionality in DWARFv4 > because > > the offset pairs can be uleb encoded - so they can be quite compact)) > > > > > > But one place that DWARFv5 misses to reduce relocations further is > > direct addresses from debug_info, such as DW_AT_low_pc. > > > > > > For a while I've wondered if we could use an extension form for > > addr+offset, and I prototyped this without an extension attribute, but > > instead using exprloc. This has slightly higher overhead to express > the... > > expression. (it's 9 bytes in total, could be as few as 5 with a custom > > form) > > > > > > But I had another idea that's more instantly deployable: Why not use > > DW_AT_ranges even when the range is contiguous? That way the low_pc that > > previously couldn't use an existing address pool entry + offset, could > use > > the rnglist support for base address. > > > > > > The only unnecessary address pool entries that remain that I've found > > are DW_AT_low_pc for DW_TAG_labels - but there's only a handful of those > > in most code. So the "ranges everywhere" strategy gets the addresses for > > optimized clang down from 4758 (v4 address pool used 9923 addresses... ) > > to 342, with about ~4 "extra" addresses for DW_TAG_labels. > > > > > > This could also be a bit less costly if DWARFv5 rnglists didn't use a > > separate offset table (instead encoding the offsets directly in > > debug_info, rather than using indexes) > > > > > > I have patches for both the addr+offset exprloc and for the ranges- > > always, both with -mllvm flags - do people think they're both worth > > committing for experimentation? Neither? Default on in some cases (like > > Split DWARF)? > > > > > > Thanks, > > > - Dave > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200108/b57c5542/attachment.html>
Vedant Kumar via llvm-dev
2020-Jan-10 20:57 UTC
[llvm-dev] Increasing address pool reuse/reducing .o file size in DWARFv5
I don't totally follow the proposed encoding change & would appreciate a small example. Is the idea to replace e.g. an 'AT_low_pc (<direct address>) + relocation for <direct address>' with an 'AT_low_pc (<indirection into a pool of addresses> + offset)', s.t. the cost of a relocation for the address is paid down the more it's used? How do you figure the offset out? thanks, vedant> On Jan 8, 2020, at 1:33 PM, David Blaikie via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Sounds good all round - I'll commit these two modes, and maybe even the third (given Sony's interest & possible interest in changing their consumer to handle it) of a custom form to eek out the last few bytes from the more direct addr+offset encoding. > > I'll follow up here with flag names and revision numbers once they're in. > > On Wed, Jan 8, 2020 at 1:26 PM Robinson, Paul <paul.robinson at sony.com <mailto:paul.robinson at sony.com>> wrote: > On some previous occasion that introduced additional indirection > (don't remember the details) my debugger people groused about the > additional performance cost of chasing down data in a different > object-file section. So we (Sony) might be happier with low_pc as > expressions, than with a ranges-always solution. > > But hard to say without data, and getting both modes in at least > as a temporary thing sounds like a good plan. > --paulr > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: aprantl at apple.com <mailto:aprantl at apple.com> <aprantl at apple.com <mailto:aprantl at apple.com>> > > Sent: Wednesday, January 8, 2020 1:49 PM > > To: David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com <mailto:dblaikie at gmail.com>> > > Cc: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>>; Jonas Devlieghere > > <jdevlieghere at apple.com <mailto:jdevlieghere at apple.com>>; Robinson, Paul <paul.robinson at sony.com <mailto:paul.robinson at sony.com>>; Eric > > Christopher <echristo at gmail.com <mailto:echristo at gmail.com>>; Frederic Riss <friss at apple.com <mailto:friss at apple.com>> > > Subject: Re: Increasing address pool reuse/reducing .o file size in > > DWARFv5 > > > > I think this sounds like a good plan for Linux. I would like to see the > > numbers for Darwin (= non-split DWARF) to decide whether we should just > > make that the default. Eric's suggestion of having this committed as an > > option first seems like a good step in that direction. If it is an > > advantage across the board we can remove the option and just make this the > > default behavior. > > > > thanks, > > adrian > > > > > On Dec 30, 2019, at 12:08 PM, David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com <mailto:dblaikie at gmail.com>> wrote: > > > > > > tl;dr: in DWARFv5, using DW_AT_ranges even when the range is contiguous > > reduces linked, uncompressed debug_addr size for optimized builds by 93% > > and reduces total .o file size (with compression and split) by 15%. It > > does grow .dwo file size a bit - DWARFv5, no compression, not split shows > > the net effect if all bytes are equal: -O3 clang binary grows by 0.4%, -O0 > > clang binary shrinks by 0.1% > > > Should we enable this strategy by default for DWARFv5, for DWARFv5+Split > > DWARF, or not by default at all/only under a flag? > > > > > > > > > > > > So, I've brought this up a few times before - that DWARFv5 does a pretty > > good job of reducing relocations (& reducing .o file size with Split > > DWARF) by allowing many uses of addresses to include some kind of > > address+offset (debug_rnglists and loclists allowing "base_address" then > > offset_pairs (an improvement over similar functionality in DWARFv4 because > > the offset pairs can be uleb encoded - so they can be quite compact)) > > > > > > But one place that DWARFv5 misses to reduce relocations further is > > direct addresses from debug_info, such as DW_AT_low_pc. > > > > > > For a while I've wondered if we could use an extension form for > > addr+offset, and I prototyped this without an extension attribute, but > > instead using exprloc. This has slightly higher overhead to express the... > > expression. (it's 9 bytes in total, could be as few as 5 with a custom > > form) > > > > > > But I had another idea that's more instantly deployable: Why not use > > DW_AT_ranges even when the range is contiguous? That way the low_pc that > > previously couldn't use an existing address pool entry + offset, could use > > the rnglist support for base address. > > > > > > The only unnecessary address pool entries that remain that I've found > > are DW_AT_low_pc for DW_TAG_labels - but there's only a handful of those > > in most code. So the "ranges everywhere" strategy gets the addresses for > > optimized clang down from 4758 (v4 address pool used 9923 addresses... ) > > to 342, with about ~4 "extra" addresses for DW_TAG_labels. > > > > > > This could also be a bit less costly if DWARFv5 rnglists didn't use a > > separate offset table (instead encoding the offsets directly in > > debug_info, rather than using indexes) > > > > > > I have patches for both the addr+offset exprloc and for the ranges- > > always, both with -mllvm flags - do people think they're both worth > > committing for experimentation? Neither? Default on in some cases (like > > Split DWARF)? > > > > > > Thanks, > > > - Dave > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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