Alex Crichton 58ab4a0064 rustc: Enable -f{function,data}-sections
The compiler has previously been producing binaries on the order of 1.8MB for
hello world programs "fn main() {}". This is largely a result of the compilation
model used by compiling entire libraries into a single object file and because
static linking is favored by default.

When linking, linkers will pull in the entire contents of an object file if any
symbol from the object file is used. This means that if any symbol from a rust
library is used, the entire library is pulled in unconditionally, regardless of
whether the library is used or not.

Traditional C/C++ projects do not normally encounter these large executable
problems because their archives (rust's rlibs) are composed of many objects.
Because of this, linkers can eliminate entire objects from being in the final
executable. With rustc, however, the linker does not have the opportunity to
leave out entire object files.

In order to get similar benefits from dead code stripping at link time, this
commit enables the -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections flags in LLVM, as
well as passing --gc-sections to the linker *by default*. This means that each
function and each global will be placed into its own section, allowing the
linker to GC all unused functions and data symbols.

By enabling these flags, rust is able to generate much smaller binaries default.
On linux, a hello world binary went from 1.8MB to 597K (a 67% reduction in
size). The output size of dynamic libraries remained constant, but the output
size of rlibs increased, as seen below:

    libarena         -  2.27% bigger (   292872 =>    299508)
    libcollections   -  0.64% bigger (  6765884 =>   6809076)
    libflate         -  0.83% bigger (   186516 =>    188060)
    libfourcc        - 14.71% bigger (   307290 =>    352498)
    libgetopts       -  4.42% bigger (   761468 =>    795102)
    libglob          -  2.73% bigger (   899932 =>    924542)
    libgreen         -  9.63% bigger (  1281718 =>   1405124)
    libhexfloat      - 13.88% bigger (   333738 =>    380060)
    liblibc          - 10.79% bigger (   551280 =>    610736)
    liblog           - 10.93% bigger (   218208 =>    242060)
    libnative        -  8.26% bigger (  1362096 =>   1474658)
    libnum           -  2.34% bigger (  2583400 =>   2643916)
    librand          -  1.72% bigger (  1608684 =>   1636394)
    libregex         -  6.50% bigger (  1747768 =>   1861398)
    librustc         -  4.21% bigger (151820192 => 158218924)
    librustdoc       -  8.96% bigger ( 13142604 =>  14320544)
    librustuv        -  4.13% bigger (  4366896 =>   4547304)
    libsemver        -  2.66% bigger (   396166 =>    406686)
    libserialize     -  1.91% bigger (  6878396 =>   7009822)
    libstd           -  3.59% bigger ( 39485286 =>  40902218)
    libsync          -  3.95% bigger (  1386390 =>   1441204)
    libsyntax        -  4.96% bigger ( 35757202 =>  37530798)
    libterm          - 13.99% bigger (   924580 =>   1053902)
    libtest          -  6.04% bigger (  2455720 =>   2604092)
    libtime          -  2.84% bigger (  1075708 =>   1106242)
    liburl           -  6.53% bigger (   590458 =>    629004)
    libuuid          -  4.63% bigger (   326350 =>    341466)
    libworkcache     -  8.45% bigger (  1230702 =>   1334750)

This increase in size is a result of encoding many more section names into each
object file (rlib). These increases are moderate enough that this change seems
worthwhile to me, due to the drastic improvements seen in the final artifacts.
The overall increase of the stage2 target folder (not the size of an install)
went from 337MB to 348MB (3% increase).

Additionally, linking is generally slower when executed with all these new
sections plus the --gc-sections flag. The stage0 compiler takes 1.4s to link the
`rustc` binary, where the stage1 compiler takes 1.9s to link the binary. Three
megabytes are shaved off the binary. I found this increase in link time to be
acceptable relative to the benefits of code size gained.

This commit only enables --gc-sections for *executables*, not dynamic libraries.
LLVM does all the heavy lifting when producing an object file for a dynamic
library, so there is little else for the linker to do (remember that we only
have one object file).

I conducted similar experiments by putting a *module's* functions and data
symbols into its own section (granularity moved to a module level instead of a
function/static level). The size benefits of a hello world were seen to be on
the order of 400K rather than 1.2MB. It seemed that enough benefit was gained
using ffunction-sections that this route was less desirable, despite the lesser
increases in binary rlib size.
2014-04-29 10:29:00 -07:00
..
2014-04-27 18:27:40 -04:00
2014-04-28 11:45:30 +09:00
2014-04-22 18:08:06 -07:00
2014-04-24 09:08:07 -07:00
2014-04-24 09:08:07 -07:00
2014-04-23 14:58:50 -07:00

This is a preliminary version of the Rust compiler, libraries and tools.

Source layout:

Path Description
librustc/ The self-hosted compiler
libstd/ The standard library (imported and linked by default)
libextra/ The "extras" library (slightly more peripheral code)
libgreen/ The M:N runtime library
libnative/ The 1:1 runtime library
libsyntax/ The Rust parser and pretty-printer
libcollections/ A collection of useful data structures and containers
libnum/ Extended number support library (complex, rational, etc)
libtest/ Rust's test-runner code
------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------
libarena/ The arena (a fast but limited) memory allocator
libflate/ Simple compression library
libfourcc/ Data format identifier library
libgetopts/ Get command-line-options library
libglob/ Unix glob patterns library
libregex/ Regular expressions
libsemver/ Rust's semantic versioning library
libserialize/ Encode-Decode types library
libsync/ Concurrency mechanisms and primitives
libterm/ ANSI color library for terminals
libtime/ Time operations library
libuuid/ UUID's handling code
------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------
rt/ The runtime system
rt/rust_*.c - Some of the runtime services
rt/vg - Valgrind headers
rt/msvc - MSVC support
rt/sundown - The Markdown library used by rustdoc
------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------
compiletest/ The test runner
test/ Testsuite
test/codegen - Tests for the LLVM IR infrastructure
test/compile-fail - Tests that should fail to compile
test/debug-info - Tests for the debuginfo tool
test/run-fail - Tests that should compile, run and fail
test/run-make - Tests that depend on a Makefile infrastructure
test/run-pass - Tests that should compile, run and succeed
test/bench - Benchmarks and miscellaneous
test/pretty - Pretty-printer tests
test/auxiliary - Dependencies of tests
------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------
librustdoc/ The Rust API documentation tool
libuv/ The libuv submodule
librustuv/ Rust libuv support code
------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------
llvm/ The LLVM submodule
rustllvm/ LLVM support code
------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------
etc/ Scripts, editors support, misc

NOTE: This list (especially the second part of the table which contains modules and libraries) is highly volatile and subject to change.