| //===- ICF.cpp ------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| // |
| // The LLVM Linker |
| // |
| // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source |
| // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. |
| // |
| //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| // |
| // ICF is short for Identical Code Folding. This is a size optimization to |
| // identify and merge two or more read-only sections (typically functions) |
| // that happened to have the same contents. It usually reduces output size |
| // by a few percent. |
| // |
| // In ICF, two sections are considered identical if they have the same |
| // section flags, section data, and relocations. Relocations are tricky, |
| // because two relocations are considered the same if they have the same |
| // relocation types, values, and if they point to the same sections *in |
| // terms of ICF*. |
| // |
| // Here is an example. If foo and bar defined below are compiled to the |
| // same machine instructions, ICF can and should merge the two, although |
| // their relocations point to each other. |
| // |
| // void foo() { bar(); } |
| // void bar() { foo(); } |
| // |
| // If you merge the two, their relocations point to the same section and |
| // thus you know they are mergeable, but how do you know they are |
| // mergeable in the first place? This is not an easy problem to solve. |
| // |
| // What we are doing in LLD is to partition sections into equivalence |
| // classes. Sections in the same equivalence class when the algorithm |
| // terminates are considered identical. Here are details: |
| // |
| // 1. First, we partition sections using their hash values as keys. Hash |
| // values contain section types, section contents and numbers of |
| // relocations. During this step, relocation targets are not taken into |
| // account. We just put sections that apparently differ into different |
| // equivalence classes. |
| // |
| // 2. Next, for each equivalence class, we visit sections to compare |
| // relocation targets. Relocation targets are considered equivalent if |
| // their targets are in the same equivalence class. Sections with |
| // different relocation targets are put into different equivalence |
| // clases. |
| // |
| // 3. If we split an equivalence class in step 2, two relocations |
| // previously target the same equivalence class may now target |
| // different equivalence classes. Therefore, we repeat step 2 until a |
| // convergence is obtained. |
| // |
| // 4. For each equivalence class C, pick an arbitrary section in C, and |
| // merge all the other sections in C with it. |
| // |
| // For small programs, this algorithm needs 3-5 iterations. For large |
| // programs such as Chromium, it takes more than 20 iterations. |
| // |
| // This algorithm was mentioned as an "optimistic algorithm" in [1], |
| // though gold implements a different algorithm than this. |
| // |
| // We parallelize each step so that multiple threads can work on different |
| // equivalence classes concurrently. That gave us a large performance |
| // boost when applying ICF on large programs. For example, MSVC link.exe |
| // or GNU gold takes 10-20 seconds to apply ICF on Chromium, whose output |
| // size is about 1.5 GB, but LLD can finish it in less than 2 seconds on a |
| // 2.8 GHz 40 core machine. Even without threading, LLD's ICF is still |
| // faster than MSVC or gold though. |
| // |
| // [1] Safe ICF: Pointer Safe and Unwinding aware Identical Code Folding |
| // in the Gold Linker |
| // http://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.com/en//pubs/archive/36912.pdf |
| // |
| //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| #include "ICF.h" |
| #include "Config.h" |
| #include "SymbolTable.h" |
| #include "Symbols.h" |
| #include "SyntheticSections.h" |
| #include "Writer.h" |
| #include "lld/Common/Threads.h" |
| #include "llvm/ADT/StringExtras.h" |
| #include "llvm/BinaryFormat/ELF.h" |
| #include "llvm/Object/ELF.h" |
| #include "llvm/Support/xxhash.h" |
| #include <algorithm> |
| #include <atomic> |
| |
| using namespace lld; |
| using namespace lld::elf; |
| using namespace llvm; |
| using namespace llvm::ELF; |
| using namespace llvm::object; |
| |
| namespace { |
| template <class ELFT> class ICF { |
| public: |
| void run(); |
| |
| private: |
| void segregate(size_t Begin, size_t End, bool Constant); |
| |
| template <class RelTy> |
| bool constantEq(const InputSection *A, ArrayRef<RelTy> RelsA, |
| const InputSection *B, ArrayRef<RelTy> RelsB); |
| |
| template <class RelTy> |
| bool variableEq(const InputSection *A, ArrayRef<RelTy> RelsA, |
| const InputSection *B, ArrayRef<RelTy> RelsB); |
| |
| bool equalsConstant(const InputSection *A, const InputSection *B); |
| bool equalsVariable(const InputSection *A, const InputSection *B); |
| |
| size_t findBoundary(size_t Begin, size_t End); |
| |
| void forEachClassRange(size_t Begin, size_t End, |
| llvm::function_ref<void(size_t, size_t)> Fn); |
| |
| void forEachClass(llvm::function_ref<void(size_t, size_t)> Fn); |
| |
| std::vector<InputSection *> Sections; |
| |
| // We repeat the main loop while `Repeat` is true. |
| std::atomic<bool> Repeat; |
| |
| // The main loop counter. |
| int Cnt = 0; |
| |
| // We have two locations for equivalence classes. On the first iteration |
| // of the main loop, Class[0] has a valid value, and Class[1] contains |
| // garbage. We read equivalence classes from slot 0 and write to slot 1. |
| // So, Class[0] represents the current class, and Class[1] represents |
| // the next class. On each iteration, we switch their roles and use them |
| // alternately. |
| // |
| // Why are we doing this? Recall that other threads may be working on |
| // other equivalence classes in parallel. They may read sections that we |
| // are updating. We cannot update equivalence classes in place because |
| // it breaks the invariance that all possibly-identical sections must be |
| // in the same equivalence class at any moment. In other words, the for |
| // loop to update equivalence classes is not atomic, and that is |
| // observable from other threads. By writing new classes to other |
| // places, we can keep the invariance. |
| // |
| // Below, `Current` has the index of the current class, and `Next` has |
| // the index of the next class. If threading is enabled, they are either |
| // (0, 1) or (1, 0). |
| // |
| // Note on single-thread: if that's the case, they are always (0, 0) |
| // because we can safely read the next class without worrying about race |
| // conditions. Using the same location makes this algorithm converge |
| // faster because it uses results of the same iteration earlier. |
| int Current = 0; |
| int Next = 0; |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| // Returns true if section S is subject of ICF. |
| static bool isEligible(InputSection *S) { |
| if (!S->Live || S->KeepUnique || !(S->Flags & SHF_ALLOC)) |
| return false; |
| |
| // Don't merge writable sections. .data.rel.ro sections are marked as writable |
| // but are semantically read-only. |
| if ((S->Flags & SHF_WRITE) && S->Name != ".data.rel.ro" && |
| !S->Name.startswith(".data.rel.ro.")) |
| return false; |
| |
| // SHF_LINK_ORDER sections are ICF'd as a unit with their dependent sections, |
| // so we don't consider them for ICF individually. |
| if (S->Flags & SHF_LINK_ORDER) |
| return false; |
| |
| // Don't merge synthetic sections as their Data member is not valid and empty. |
| // The Data member needs to be valid for ICF as it is used by ICF to determine |
| // the equality of section contents. |
| if (isa<SyntheticSection>(S)) |
| return false; |
| |
| // .init and .fini contains instructions that must be executed to initialize |
| // and finalize the process. They cannot and should not be merged. |
| if (S->Name == ".init" || S->Name == ".fini") |
| return false; |
| |
| // A user program may enumerate sections named with a C identifier using |
| // __start_* and __stop_* symbols. We cannot ICF any such sections because |
| // that could change program semantics. |
| if (isValidCIdentifier(S->Name)) |
| return false; |
| |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| // Split an equivalence class into smaller classes. |
| template <class ELFT> |
| void ICF<ELFT>::segregate(size_t Begin, size_t End, bool Constant) { |
| // This loop rearranges sections in [Begin, End) so that all sections |
| // that are equal in terms of equals{Constant,Variable} are contiguous |
| // in [Begin, End). |
| // |
| // The algorithm is quadratic in the worst case, but that is not an |
| // issue in practice because the number of the distinct sections in |
| // each range is usually very small. |
| |
| while (Begin < End) { |
| // Divide [Begin, End) into two. Let Mid be the start index of the |
| // second group. |
| auto Bound = |
| std::stable_partition(Sections.begin() + Begin + 1, |
| Sections.begin() + End, [&](InputSection *S) { |
| if (Constant) |
| return equalsConstant(Sections[Begin], S); |
| return equalsVariable(Sections[Begin], S); |
| }); |
| size_t Mid = Bound - Sections.begin(); |
| |
| // Now we split [Begin, End) into [Begin, Mid) and [Mid, End) by |
| // updating the sections in [Begin, Mid). We use Mid as an equivalence |
| // class ID because every group ends with a unique index. |
| for (size_t I = Begin; I < Mid; ++I) |
| Sections[I]->Class[Next] = Mid; |
| |
| // If we created a group, we need to iterate the main loop again. |
| if (Mid != End) |
| Repeat = true; |
| |
| Begin = Mid; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Compare two lists of relocations. |
| template <class ELFT> |
| template <class RelTy> |
| bool ICF<ELFT>::constantEq(const InputSection *SecA, ArrayRef<RelTy> RA, |
| const InputSection *SecB, ArrayRef<RelTy> RB) { |
| for (size_t I = 0; I < RA.size(); ++I) { |
| if (RA[I].r_offset != RB[I].r_offset || |
| RA[I].getType(Config->IsMips64EL) != RB[I].getType(Config->IsMips64EL)) |
| return false; |
| |
| uint64_t AddA = getAddend<ELFT>(RA[I]); |
| uint64_t AddB = getAddend<ELFT>(RB[I]); |
| |
| Symbol &SA = SecA->template getFile<ELFT>()->getRelocTargetSym(RA[I]); |
| Symbol &SB = SecB->template getFile<ELFT>()->getRelocTargetSym(RB[I]); |
| if (&SA == &SB) { |
| if (AddA == AddB) |
| continue; |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| auto *DA = dyn_cast<Defined>(&SA); |
| auto *DB = dyn_cast<Defined>(&SB); |
| if (!DA || !DB) |
| return false; |
| |
| // Relocations referring to absolute symbols are constant-equal if their |
| // values are equal. |
| if (!DA->Section && !DB->Section && DA->Value + AddA == DB->Value + AddB) |
| continue; |
| if (!DA->Section || !DB->Section) |
| return false; |
| |
| if (DA->Section->kind() != DB->Section->kind()) |
| return false; |
| |
| // Relocations referring to InputSections are constant-equal if their |
| // section offsets are equal. |
| if (isa<InputSection>(DA->Section)) { |
| if (DA->Value + AddA == DB->Value + AddB) |
| continue; |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| // Relocations referring to MergeInputSections are constant-equal if their |
| // offsets in the output section are equal. |
| auto *X = dyn_cast<MergeInputSection>(DA->Section); |
| if (!X) |
| return false; |
| auto *Y = cast<MergeInputSection>(DB->Section); |
| if (X->getParent() != Y->getParent()) |
| return false; |
| |
| uint64_t OffsetA = |
| SA.isSection() ? X->getOffset(AddA) : X->getOffset(DA->Value) + AddA; |
| uint64_t OffsetB = |
| SB.isSection() ? Y->getOffset(AddB) : Y->getOffset(DB->Value) + AddB; |
| if (OffsetA != OffsetB) |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| // Compare "non-moving" part of two InputSections, namely everything |
| // except relocation targets. |
| template <class ELFT> |
| bool ICF<ELFT>::equalsConstant(const InputSection *A, const InputSection *B) { |
| if (A->NumRelocations != B->NumRelocations || A->Flags != B->Flags || |
| A->getSize() != B->getSize() || A->Data != B->Data) |
| return false; |
| |
| // If two sections have different output sections, we cannot merge them. |
| // FIXME: This doesn't do the right thing in the case where there is a linker |
| // script. We probably need to move output section assignment before ICF to |
| // get the correct behaviour here. |
| if (getOutputSectionName(A) != getOutputSectionName(B)) |
| return false; |
| |
| if (A->AreRelocsRela) |
| return constantEq(A, A->template relas<ELFT>(), B, |
| B->template relas<ELFT>()); |
| return constantEq(A, A->template rels<ELFT>(), B, B->template rels<ELFT>()); |
| } |
| |
| // Compare two lists of relocations. Returns true if all pairs of |
| // relocations point to the same section in terms of ICF. |
| template <class ELFT> |
| template <class RelTy> |
| bool ICF<ELFT>::variableEq(const InputSection *SecA, ArrayRef<RelTy> RA, |
| const InputSection *SecB, ArrayRef<RelTy> RB) { |
| assert(RA.size() == RB.size()); |
| |
| for (size_t I = 0; I < RA.size(); ++I) { |
| // The two sections must be identical. |
| Symbol &SA = SecA->template getFile<ELFT>()->getRelocTargetSym(RA[I]); |
| Symbol &SB = SecB->template getFile<ELFT>()->getRelocTargetSym(RB[I]); |
| if (&SA == &SB) |
| continue; |
| |
| auto *DA = cast<Defined>(&SA); |
| auto *DB = cast<Defined>(&SB); |
| |
| // We already dealt with absolute and non-InputSection symbols in |
| // constantEq, and for InputSections we have already checked everything |
| // except the equivalence class. |
| if (!DA->Section) |
| continue; |
| auto *X = dyn_cast<InputSection>(DA->Section); |
| if (!X) |
| continue; |
| auto *Y = cast<InputSection>(DB->Section); |
| |
| // Ineligible sections are in the special equivalence class 0. |
| // They can never be the same in terms of the equivalence class. |
| if (X->Class[Current] == 0) |
| return false; |
| if (X->Class[Current] != Y->Class[Current]) |
| return false; |
| }; |
| |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| // Compare "moving" part of two InputSections, namely relocation targets. |
| template <class ELFT> |
| bool ICF<ELFT>::equalsVariable(const InputSection *A, const InputSection *B) { |
| if (A->AreRelocsRela) |
| return variableEq(A, A->template relas<ELFT>(), B, |
| B->template relas<ELFT>()); |
| return variableEq(A, A->template rels<ELFT>(), B, B->template rels<ELFT>()); |
| } |
| |
| template <class ELFT> size_t ICF<ELFT>::findBoundary(size_t Begin, size_t End) { |
| uint32_t Class = Sections[Begin]->Class[Current]; |
| for (size_t I = Begin + 1; I < End; ++I) |
| if (Class != Sections[I]->Class[Current]) |
| return I; |
| return End; |
| } |
| |
| // Sections in the same equivalence class are contiguous in Sections |
| // vector. Therefore, Sections vector can be considered as contiguous |
| // groups of sections, grouped by the class. |
| // |
| // This function calls Fn on every group within [Begin, End). |
| template <class ELFT> |
| void ICF<ELFT>::forEachClassRange(size_t Begin, size_t End, |
| llvm::function_ref<void(size_t, size_t)> Fn) { |
| while (Begin < End) { |
| size_t Mid = findBoundary(Begin, End); |
| Fn(Begin, Mid); |
| Begin = Mid; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Call Fn on each equivalence class. |
| template <class ELFT> |
| void ICF<ELFT>::forEachClass(llvm::function_ref<void(size_t, size_t)> Fn) { |
| // If threading is disabled or the number of sections are |
| // too small to use threading, call Fn sequentially. |
| if (!ThreadsEnabled || Sections.size() < 1024) { |
| forEachClassRange(0, Sections.size(), Fn); |
| ++Cnt; |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| Current = Cnt % 2; |
| Next = (Cnt + 1) % 2; |
| |
| // Shard into non-overlapping intervals, and call Fn in parallel. |
| // The sharding must be completed before any calls to Fn are made |
| // so that Fn can modify the Chunks in its shard without causing data |
| // races. |
| const size_t NumShards = 256; |
| size_t Step = Sections.size() / NumShards; |
| size_t Boundaries[NumShards + 1]; |
| Boundaries[0] = 0; |
| Boundaries[NumShards] = Sections.size(); |
| |
| parallelForEachN(1, NumShards, [&](size_t I) { |
| Boundaries[I] = findBoundary((I - 1) * Step, Sections.size()); |
| }); |
| |
| parallelForEachN(1, NumShards + 1, [&](size_t I) { |
| if (Boundaries[I - 1] < Boundaries[I]) |
| forEachClassRange(Boundaries[I - 1], Boundaries[I], Fn); |
| }); |
| ++Cnt; |
| } |
| |
| static void print(const Twine &S) { |
| if (Config->PrintIcfSections) |
| message(S); |
| } |
| |
| // The main function of ICF. |
| template <class ELFT> void ICF<ELFT>::run() { |
| // Collect sections to merge. |
| for (InputSectionBase *Sec : InputSections) |
| if (auto *S = dyn_cast<InputSection>(Sec)) |
| if (isEligible(S)) |
| Sections.push_back(S); |
| |
| // Initially, we use hash values to partition sections. |
| parallelForEach(Sections, [&](InputSection *S) { |
| // Set MSB to 1 to avoid collisions with non-hash IDs. |
| S->Class[0] = xxHash64(S->Data) | (1U << 31); |
| }); |
| |
| // From now on, sections in Sections vector are ordered so that sections |
| // in the same equivalence class are consecutive in the vector. |
| std::stable_sort(Sections.begin(), Sections.end(), |
| [](InputSection *A, InputSection *B) { |
| return A->Class[0] < B->Class[0]; |
| }); |
| |
| // Compare static contents and assign unique IDs for each static content. |
| forEachClass([&](size_t Begin, size_t End) { segregate(Begin, End, true); }); |
| |
| // Split groups by comparing relocations until convergence is obtained. |
| do { |
| Repeat = false; |
| forEachClass( |
| [&](size_t Begin, size_t End) { segregate(Begin, End, false); }); |
| } while (Repeat); |
| |
| log("ICF needed " + Twine(Cnt) + " iterations"); |
| |
| // Merge sections by the equivalence class. |
| forEachClassRange(0, Sections.size(), [&](size_t Begin, size_t End) { |
| if (End - Begin == 1) |
| return; |
| print("selected section " + toString(Sections[Begin])); |
| for (size_t I = Begin + 1; I < End; ++I) { |
| print(" removing identical section " + toString(Sections[I])); |
| Sections[Begin]->replace(Sections[I]); |
| |
| // At this point we know sections merged are fully identical and hence |
| // we want to remove duplicate implicit dependencies such as link order |
| // and relocation sections. |
| for (InputSection *IS : Sections[I]->DependentSections) |
| IS->Live = false; |
| } |
| }); |
| } |
| |
| // ICF entry point function. |
| template <class ELFT> void elf::doIcf() { ICF<ELFT>().run(); } |
| |
| template void elf::doIcf<ELF32LE>(); |
| template void elf::doIcf<ELF32BE>(); |
| template void elf::doIcf<ELF64LE>(); |
| template void elf::doIcf<ELF64BE>(); |