| // Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style |
| // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| // Package devirtualize implements two "devirtualization" optimization passes: |
| // |
| // - "Static" devirtualization which replaces interface method calls with |
| // direct concrete-type method calls where possible. |
| // - "Profile-guided" devirtualization which replaces indirect calls with a |
| // conditional direct call to the hottest concrete callee from a profile, as |
| // well as a fallback using the original indirect call. |
| package devirtualize |
| |
| import ( |
| "cmd/compile/internal/base" |
| "cmd/compile/internal/ir" |
| "cmd/compile/internal/typecheck" |
| "cmd/compile/internal/types" |
| ) |
| |
| // StaticCall devirtualizes the given call if possible when the concrete callee |
| // is available statically. |
| func StaticCall(call *ir.CallExpr) { |
| // For promoted methods (including value-receiver methods promoted |
| // to pointer-receivers), the interface method wrapper may contain |
| // expressions that can panic (e.g., ODEREF, ODOTPTR, |
| // ODOTINTER). Devirtualization involves inlining these expressions |
| // (and possible panics) to the call site. This normally isn't a |
| // problem, but for go/defer statements it can move the panic from |
| // when/where the call executes to the go/defer statement itself, |
| // which is a visible change in semantics (e.g., #52072). To prevent |
| // this, we skip devirtualizing calls within go/defer statements |
| // altogether. |
| if call.GoDefer { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| if call.Op() != ir.OCALLINTER { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| sel := call.Fun.(*ir.SelectorExpr) |
| r := ir.StaticValue(sel.X) |
| if r.Op() != ir.OCONVIFACE { |
| return |
| } |
| recv := r.(*ir.ConvExpr) |
| |
| typ := recv.X.Type() |
| if typ.IsInterface() { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // If typ is a shape type, then it was a type argument originally |
| // and we'd need an indirect call through the dictionary anyway. |
| // We're unable to devirtualize this call. |
| if typ.IsShape() { |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // If typ *has* a shape type, then it's a shaped, instantiated |
| // type like T[go.shape.int], and its methods (may) have an extra |
| // dictionary parameter. We could devirtualize this call if we |
| // could derive an appropriate dictionary argument. |
| // |
| // TODO(mdempsky): If typ has has a promoted non-generic method, |
| // then that method won't require a dictionary argument. We could |
| // still devirtualize those calls. |
| // |
| // TODO(mdempsky): We have the *runtime.itab in recv.TypeWord. It |
| // should be possible to compute the represented type's runtime |
| // dictionary from this (e.g., by adding a pointer from T[int]'s |
| // *runtime._type to .dict.T[int]; or by recognizing static |
| // references to go:itab.T[int],iface and constructing a direct |
| // reference to .dict.T[int]). |
| if typ.HasShape() { |
| if base.Flag.LowerM != 0 { |
| base.WarnfAt(call.Pos(), "cannot devirtualize %v: shaped receiver %v", call, typ) |
| } |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // Further, if sel.X's type has a shape type, then it's a shaped |
| // interface type. In this case, the (non-dynamic) TypeAssertExpr |
| // we construct below would attempt to create an itab |
| // corresponding to this shaped interface type; but the actual |
| // itab pointer in the interface value will correspond to the |
| // original (non-shaped) interface type instead. These are |
| // functionally equivalent, but they have distinct pointer |
| // identities, which leads to the type assertion failing. |
| // |
| // TODO(mdempsky): We know the type assertion here is safe, so we |
| // could instead set a flag so that walk skips the itab check. For |
| // now, punting is easy and safe. |
| if sel.X.Type().HasShape() { |
| if base.Flag.LowerM != 0 { |
| base.WarnfAt(call.Pos(), "cannot devirtualize %v: shaped interface %v", call, sel.X.Type()) |
| } |
| return |
| } |
| |
| dt := ir.NewTypeAssertExpr(sel.Pos(), sel.X, nil) |
| dt.SetType(typ) |
| x := typecheck.XDotMethod(sel.Pos(), dt, sel.Sel, true) |
| switch x.Op() { |
| case ir.ODOTMETH: |
| if base.Flag.LowerM != 0 { |
| base.WarnfAt(call.Pos(), "devirtualizing %v to %v", sel, typ) |
| } |
| call.SetOp(ir.OCALLMETH) |
| call.Fun = x |
| case ir.ODOTINTER: |
| // Promoted method from embedded interface-typed field (#42279). |
| if base.Flag.LowerM != 0 { |
| base.WarnfAt(call.Pos(), "partially devirtualizing %v to %v", sel, typ) |
| } |
| call.SetOp(ir.OCALLINTER) |
| call.Fun = x |
| default: |
| base.FatalfAt(call.Pos(), "failed to devirtualize %v (%v)", x, x.Op()) |
| } |
| |
| // Duplicated logic from typecheck for function call return |
| // value types. |
| // |
| // Receiver parameter size may have changed; need to update |
| // call.Type to get correct stack offsets for result |
| // parameters. |
| types.CheckSize(x.Type()) |
| switch ft := x.Type(); ft.NumResults() { |
| case 0: |
| case 1: |
| call.SetType(ft.Result(0).Type) |
| default: |
| call.SetType(ft.ResultsTuple()) |
| } |
| |
| // Desugar OCALLMETH, if we created one (#57309). |
| typecheck.FixMethodCall(call) |
| } |