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Re: number of spills and reloads
On Wed, 2004-08-25 at 22:45, Qiong Cai wrote:
> I'm a bit confused with "spill register". Consider the following example,
> r0 <- [sp+4] + [sp + 8]
> then operand 1 must be the register. so reload into register r1 first
> r1 <- [sp+4]
> Is the register r1 a "spill" register?
A spill register is an allocatable register that the reload pass can use
for resolving reloads. Preferably this is a register that wasn't used
by the local or global register allocation passes. But if we need a
reg, and there isn't one free, we can make one free by picking a hard
reg, and then for every pseudo reg allocated to that hard reg, we spill
it to the stack. Since this is expensive, the reload pass tries to
compute the minimum number of spill regs needed.
For your example, yes, in the common case, r1 will be a spill reg.
However, it isn't guaranteed to be a spill reg. There is quite a bit of
complexity in reload to try to avoid using a spill reg when we don't
need one, so in complicated cases we might be able to reuse a register
from elsewhere. For instance, if the previous instruction was
[sp+4] <- r1
then we will use r1 instead of a spill reg. (Though of course, r1 could
itself be a spill reg if the previous instruction needed a spill reg.)
> I need the number of "stores" or "spills" to memory caused by register
> allocation.
> It seems that this is close to your second measure.
There are actually two things here. There are pseudos which get
assigned to a hard reg in local/global, and then spilled to the stack in
reload. And there are pseudos which never get assigned to a hard reg.
You may have to count these separately, as they may be handled in
different places.
A pseudo may be used in more than one place, which means you have to
find all of the places where they are used. Reload doesn't track this
info because it doesn't need to know. We modify a REG to a MEM in
place, so there is no need to know where all of the uses are. It just
needs to know that every instruction is fixed. It doesn't need to know
how many uses there are of each pseudo. You might need a separate scan
over all of the instructions to compute this.
Then of course you need the dynamic count calculation for every use of a
pseudo.
> Where's the place in which the final reload is emitted? If I know the place,
> then I just count the number of reload there.
reload_as_needed. It calls find_reloads to compute the number of
reloads needed for each instruction, and then emit_reload_insns to emit
the instructions needed to perform the reloads.
--
Jim Wilson, GNU Tools Support, http://www.SpecifixInc.com