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src/cmd/compile/README.md

Introduction to the Go compiler

cmd/compile contains the main packages that form the Go compiler. The compiler may be logically split in four phases, which we will briefly describe alongside the list of packages that contain their code.

You may sometimes hear the terms “front-end” and “back-end” when referring to the compiler. Roughly speaking, these translate to the first two and last two phases we are going to list here. A third term, “middle-end”, often refers to much of the work that happens in the second phase.

Note that the go/* family of packages, such as go/parser and go/types, are mostly unused by the compiler. Since the compiler was initially written in C, the go/* packages were developed to enable writing tools working with Go code, such as gofmt and vet. However, over time the compiler's internal APIs have slowly evolved to be more familiar to users of the go/* packages.

It should be clarified that the name “gc” stands for “Go compiler”, and has little to do with uppercase “GC”, which stands for garbage collection.

1. Parsing

  • cmd/compile/internal/syntax (lexer, parser, syntax tree)

In the first phase of compilation, source code is tokenized (lexical analysis), parsed (syntax analysis), and a syntax tree is constructed for each source file.

Each syntax tree is an exact representation of the respective source file, with nodes corresponding to the various elements of the source such as expressions, declarations, and statements. The syntax tree also includes position information which is used for error reporting and the creation of debugging information.

2. Type checking

  • cmd/compile/internal/types2 (type checking)

The types2 package is a port of go/types to use the syntax package's AST instead of go/ast.

3. IR construction (“noding”)

  • cmd/compile/internal/types (compiler types)
  • cmd/compile/internal/ir (compiler AST)
  • cmd/compile/internal/noder (create compiler AST)

The compiler middle end uses its own AST definition and representation of Go types carried over from when it was written in C. All of its code is written in terms of these, so the next step after type checking is to convert the syntax and types2 representations to ir and types. This process is referred to as “noding.”

Noding using a process called Unified IR, which builds a node representation using a serialized version of the typechecked code from step 2. Unified IR is also involved in import/export of packages and inlining.

4. Middle end

  • cmd/compile/internal/deadcode (dead code elimination)
  • cmd/compile/internal/inline (function call inlining)
  • cmd/compile/internal/devirtualize (devirtualization of known interface method calls)
  • cmd/compile/internal/escape (escape analysis)

Several optimization passes are performed on the IR representation: dead code elimination, (early) devirtualization, function call inlining, and escape analysis.

5. Walk

  • cmd/compile/internal/walk (order of evaluation, desugaring)

The final pass over the IR representation is “walk,” which serves two purposes:

  1. It decomposes complex statements into individual, simpler statements, introducing temporary variables and respecting order of evaluation. This step is also referred to as “order.”

  2. It desugars higher-level Go constructs into more primitive ones. For example, switch statements are turned into binary search or jump tables, and operations on maps and channels are replaced with runtime calls.

6. Generic SSA

  • cmd/compile/internal/ssa (SSA passes and rules)
  • cmd/compile/internal/ssagen (converting IR to SSA)

In this phase, IR is converted into Static Single Assignment (SSA) form, a lower-level intermediate representation with specific properties that make it easier to implement optimizations and to eventually generate machine code from it.

During this conversion, function intrinsics are applied. These are special functions that the compiler has been taught to replace with heavily optimized code on a case-by-case basis.

Certain nodes are also lowered into simpler components during the AST to SSA conversion, so that the rest of the compiler can work with them. For instance, the copy builtin is replaced by memory moves, and range loops are rewritten into for loops. Some of these currently happen before the conversion to SSA due to historical reasons, but the long-term plan is to move all of them here.

Then, a series of machine-independent passes and rules are applied. These do not concern any single computer architecture, and thus run on all GOARCH variants. These passes include dead code elimination, removal of unneeded nil checks, and removal of unused branches. The generic rewrite rules mainly concern expressions, such as replacing some expressions with constant values, and optimizing multiplications and float operations.

7. Generating machine code

  • cmd/compile/internal/ssa (SSA lowering and arch-specific passes)
  • cmd/internal/obj (machine code generation)

The machine-dependent phase of the compiler begins with the “lower” pass, which rewrites generic values into their machine-specific variants. For example, on amd64 memory operands are possible, so many load-store operations may be combined.

Note that the lower pass runs all machine-specific rewrite rules, and thus it currently applies lots of optimizations too.

Once the SSA has been “lowered” and is more specific to the target architecture, the final code optimization passes are run. This includes yet another dead code elimination pass, moving values closer to their uses, the removal of local variables that are never read from, and register allocation.

Other important pieces of work done as part of this step include stack frame layout, which assigns stack offsets to local variables, and pointer liveness analysis, which computes which on-stack pointers are live at each GC safe point.

At the end of the SSA generation phase, Go functions have been transformed into a series of obj.Prog instructions. These are passed to the assembler (cmd/internal/obj), which turns them into machine code and writes out the final object file. The object file will also contain reflect data, export data, and debugging information.

8. Tips

Getting Started

  • If you have never contributed to the compiler before, a simple way to begin can be adding a log statement or panic("here") to get some initial insight into whatever you are investigating.

  • The compiler itself provides logging, debugging and visualization capabilities, such as:

    $ go build -gcflags=-m=2                   # print optimization info, including inlining, escape analysis
    $ go build -gcflags=-d=ssa/check_bce/debug # print bounds check info
    $ go build -gcflags=-W                     # print internal parse tree after type checking
    $ GOSSAFUNC=Foo go build                   # generate ssa.html file for func Foo
    $ go build -gcflags=-S                     # print assembly
    $ go tool compile -bench=out.txt x.go      # print timing of compiler phases
    

    Some flags alter the compiler behavior, such as:

    $ go tool compile -h file.go               # panic on first compile error encountered
    $ go build -gcflags=-d=checkptr=2          # enable additional unsafe pointer checking
    

    There are many additional flags. Some descriptions are available via:

    $ go tool compile -h              # compiler flags, e.g., go build -gcflags='-m=1 -l'
    $ go tool compile -d help         # debug flags, e.g., go build -gcflags=-d=checkptr=2
    $ go tool compile -d ssa/help     # ssa flags, e.g., go build -gcflags=-d=ssa/prove/debug=2
    

    There are some additional details about -gcflags and the differences between go build vs. go tool compile in a section below.

  • In general, when investigating a problem in the compiler you usually want to start with the simplest possible reproduction and understand exactly what is happening with it.

Testing your changes

  • Be sure to read the Quickly testing your changes section of the Go Contribution Guide.

  • Some tests live within the cmd/compile packages and can be run by go test ./... or similar, but many cmd/compile tests are in the top-level test directory:

    $ go test cmd/internal/testdir                           # all tests in 'test' dir
    $ go test cmd/internal/testdir -run='Test/escape.*.go'   # test specific files in 'test' dir
    

    For details, see the testdir README. The errorCheck method in testdir_test.go is helpful for a description of the ERROR comments used in many of those tests.

    In addition, the go/types package from the standard library and cmd/compile/internal/types2 have shared tests in src/internal/types/testdata, and both type checkers should be checked if anything changes there.

  • The new application-based coverage profiling can be used with the compiler, such as:

    $ go install -cover -coverpkg=cmd/compile/... cmd/compile  # build compiler with coverage instrumentation
    $ mkdir /tmp/coverdir                                      # pick location for coverage data
    $ GOCOVERDIR=/tmp/coverdir go test [...]                   # use compiler, saving coverage data
    $ go tool covdata textfmt -i=/tmp/coverdir -o coverage.out # convert to traditional coverage format
    $ go tool cover -html coverage.out                         # view coverage via traditional tools
    

Juggling compiler versions

  • Many of the compiler tests use the version of the go command found in your PATH and its corresponding compile binary.

  • If you are in a branch and your PATH includes <go-repo>/bin, doing go install cmd/compile will build the compiler using the code from your branch and install it to the proper location so that subsequent go commands like go build or go test ./... will exercise your freshly built compiler.

  • toolstash provides a way to save, run, and restore a known good copy of the Go toolchain. For example, it can be a good practice to initially build your branch, save that version of the toolchain, then restore the known good version of the tools to compile your work-in-progress version of the compiler.

    Sample set up steps:

    $ go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/toolstash@latest
    $ git clone https://go.googlesource.com/go
    $ cd go
    $ git checkout -b mybranch
    $ ./src/all.bash               # build and confirm good starting point
    $ export PATH=$PWD/bin:$PATH
    $ toolstash save               # save current tools
    

    After that, your edit/compile/test cycle can be similar to:

    <... make edits to cmd/compile source ...>
    $ toolstash restore && go install cmd/compile   # restore known good tools to build compiler
    <... 'go build', 'go test', etc. ...>           # use freshly built compiler
    
  • toolstash also allows comparing the installed vs. stashed copy of the compiler, such as if you expect equivalent behavior after a refactor. For example, to check that your changed compiler produces identical object files to the stashed compiler while building the standard library:

    $ toolstash restore && go install cmd/compile   # build latest compiler
    $ go build -toolexec "toolstash -cmp" -a -v std # compare latest vs. saved compiler
    
  • If versions appear to get out of sync (for example, with errors like linked object header mismatch with version strings like devel go1.21-db3f952b1f), you might need to do toolstash restore && go install cmd/... to update all the tools under cmd.

Additional helpful tools

  • compilebench benchmarks the speed of the compiler.

  • benchstat is the standard tool for reporting performance changes resulting from compiler modifications, including whether any improvements are statistically significant:

    $ go test -bench=SomeBenchmarks -count=20 > new.txt   # use new compiler
    $ toolstash restore                                   # restore old compiler
    $ go test -bench=SomeBenchmarks -count=20 > old.txt   # use old compiler
    $ benchstat old.txt new.txt                           # compare old vs. new
    
  • bent facilitates running a large set of benchmarks from various community Go projects inside a Docker container.

  • perflock helps obtain more consistent benchmark results, including by manipulating CPU frequency scaling settings on Linux.

  • view-annotated-file (from the community) overlays inlining, bounds check, and escape info back onto the source code.

  • godbolt.org is widely used to examine and share assembly output from many compilers, including the Go compiler. It can also compare assembly for different versions of a function or across Go compiler versions, which can be helpful for investigations and bug reports.

-gcflags and ‘go build’ vs. ‘go tool compile’

  • -gcflags is a go command build flag. go build -gcflags=<args> passes the supplied <args> to the underlying compile invocation(s) while still doing everything that the go build command normally does (e.g., handling the build cache, modules, and so on). In contrast, go tool compile <args> asks the go command to invoke compile <args> a single time without involving the standard go build machinery. In some cases, it can be helpful to have fewer moving parts by doing go tool compile <args>, such as if you have a small standalone source file that can be compiled without any assistance from go build. In other cases, it is more convenient to pass -gcflags to a build command like go build, go test, or go install.

  • -gcflags by default applies to the packages named on the command line, but can use package patterns such as -gcflags='all=-m=1 -l', or multiple package patterns such as -gcflags='all=-m=1' -gcflags='fmt=-m=2'. For details, see the cmd/go documentation.

Further reading

To dig deeper into how the SSA package works, including its passes and rules, head to cmd/compile/internal/ssa/README.md.

Finally, if something in this README or the SSA README is unclear or if you have an idea for an improvement, feel free to leave a comment in issue 30074.