Den tis 6 sep. 2022 kl 16:47 skrev Richard Biener < richard.guenther@gmail.com>: > > > > Am 06.09.2022 um 16:23 schrieb Henrik Holst < > henrik.holst@millistream.com>: > > > > Hi all, > > > > is there any reason why the access attribute is not used as hints to the > > optimizer? > > > > If we take this ancient example: > > > > void foo(const int *); > > > > int bar(void) > > { > > int x = 0; > > int y = 0; > > > > for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) { > > foo(&x); > > y += x; // this load not optimized out > > } > > return y; > > } > > > > The load of X is not optimized out in the loop since the compiler does > not > > know if the external function foo() will cast away the const internally. > > However changing the x variable to const as in: > > > > void foo(const int *); > > > > int bar(void) > > { > > const int x = 0; > > int y = 0; > > > > for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) { > > foo(&x); > > y += x; // this load is now optimized out > > } > > return y; > > } > > > > The load of x is now optimized out since it is undefined behaviour if > bar() > > casts the const away when x is declared to be const. > > > > Now what strikes me as odd however is that declaring the function access > > attribute to read_only does not hint the compiler to optimize out the > load > > of x even though read_only is defined as being stronger than const ("The > > mode implies a stronger guarantee than the const qualifier which, when > cast > > away from a pointer, does not prevent the pointed-to object from being > > modified."), so in the following code: > > > > __attribute__ ((access (read_only, 1))) void foo(const int *); > > > > int bar(void) > > { > > int x = 0; > > int y = 0; > > > > for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) { > > foo(&x); > > y += x; // this load not optimized out even though we have set > the > > access to read_only > > } > > return y; > > } > > > > The load of x should really be optimized out but isn't. So is this an > > oversight in gcc or is the access attribute completely ignored by the > > optimizer for some good reason? > > It’s ignored because it is not thoroughly specified. There’s an alternate > representation the language Frontend can rewrite the attribute to to take > advantage in optimization if it’s semantics matches. > > Richard > Ok, didn't really understand the bit about the language Frontend but I guess that you are talking about internal GCC things here and thus there is nothing that I as a GCC user can do to inform the optimizer that a variable is read_only as a hint for external functions. And if so could it be "thoroughly specified" to enable this type of optimization or is this just "the way it is" ? /HH > > > > If there is no good reason for this then changing this to hint the > > optimizer should enable some nice optimizations of external functions > where > > const in the declaration is not cast away. > > > > Regards, > > Henrik Holst >