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A call to a subprogram in the current unit is inlined if all the following conditions are met:
pragma Inline
is applied to the
subprogram and the -gnatn switch is specified; the
subprogram is local to the unit and called once from within it; the
subprogram is small and optimization level -O2 is specified;
optimization level -O3) is specified.
Calls to subprograms in with
'ed units are normally not inlined.
To achieve actual inlining (that is, replacement of the call by the code
in the body of the subprogram), the following conditions must all be true.
pragma Inline
for the subprogram.
Even if all these conditions are met, it may not be possible for the compiler to inline the call, due to the length of the body, or features in the body that make it impossible for the compiler to do the inlining.
Note that specifying the -gnatn switch causes additional compilation dependencies. Consider the following:
package R is procedure Q; pragma Inline (Q); end R; package body R is ... end R; with R; procedure Main is begin ... R.Q; end Main; |
With the default behavior (no -gnatn switch specified), the
compilation of the Main
procedure depends only on its own source,
main.adb, and the spec of the package in file r.ads. This
means that editing the body of R
does not require recompiling
Main
.
On the other hand, the call R.Q
is not inlined under these
circumstances. If the -gnatn switch is present when Main
is compiled, the call will be inlined if the body of Q
is small
enough, but now Main
depends on the body of R
in
r.adb as well as on the spec. This means that if this body is edited,
the main program must be recompiled. Note that this extra dependency
occurs whether or not the call is in fact inlined by gcc.
The use of front end inlining with -gnatN generates similar additional dependencies.
Note: The -fno-inline switch can be used to prevent all inlining. This switch overrides all other conditions and ensures that no inlining occurs. The extra dependences resulting from -gnatn will still be active, even if this switch is used to suppress the resulting inlining actions.
Note: The -fno-inline-functions switch can be used to prevent automatic inlining of subprograms if -O3 is used.
Note: The -fno-inline-small-functions switch can be used to prevent automatic inlining of small subprograms if -O2 is used.
Note: The -fno-inline-functions-called-once switch can be used to prevent inlining of subprograms local to the unit and called once from within it if -O1 is used.
Note regarding the use of -O3: There is no difference in inlining
behavior between -O2 and -O3 for subprograms with an explicit
pragma Inline
assuming the use of -gnatn
or -gnatN (the switches that activate inlining). If you have used
pragma Inline
in appropriate cases, then it is usually much better
to use -O2 and -gnatn and avoid the use of -O3 which
in this case only has the effect of inlining subprograms you did not
think should be inlined. We often find that the use of -O3 slows
down code by performing excessive inlining, leading to increased instruction
cache pressure from the increased code size. So the bottom line here is
that you should not automatically assume that -O3 is better than
-O2, and indeed you should use -O3 only if tests show that
it actually improves performance.