// Copyright 2013 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. use back::bytecode::{DecodedBytecode, RLIB_BYTECODE_EXTENSION}; use back::symbol_export; use back::write::{ModuleConfig, with_llvm_pmb, CodegenContext}; use back::write::{self, DiagnosticHandlers}; use errors::{FatalError, Handler}; use llvm::archive_ro::ArchiveRO; use llvm::{True, False}; use llvm; use rustc::hir::def_id::LOCAL_CRATE; use rustc::middle::exported_symbols::SymbolExportLevel; use rustc::session::config::{self, Lto}; use rustc::util::common::time_ext; use time_graph::Timeline; use {ModuleCodegen, ModuleLlvm, ModuleKind, ModuleSource}; use libc; use std::ffi::CString; use std::ptr; use std::slice; use std::sync::Arc; pub fn crate_type_allows_lto(crate_type: config::CrateType) -> bool { match crate_type { config::CrateTypeExecutable | config::CrateTypeStaticlib | config::CrateTypeCdylib => true, config::CrateTypeDylib | config::CrateTypeRlib | config::CrateTypeProcMacro => false, } } pub(crate) enum LtoModuleCodegen { Fat { module: Option, _serialized_bitcode: Vec, }, Thin(ThinModule), } impl LtoModuleCodegen { pub fn name(&self) -> &str { match *self { LtoModuleCodegen::Fat { .. } => "everything", LtoModuleCodegen::Thin(ref m) => m.name(), } } /// Optimize this module within the given codegen context. /// /// This function is unsafe as it'll return a `ModuleCodegen` still /// points to LLVM data structures owned by this `LtoModuleCodegen`. /// It's intended that the module returned is immediately code generated and /// dropped, and then this LTO module is dropped. pub(crate) unsafe fn optimize(&mut self, cgcx: &CodegenContext, timeline: &mut Timeline) -> Result { match *self { LtoModuleCodegen::Fat { ref mut module, .. } => { let module = module.take().unwrap(); { let config = cgcx.config(module.kind); let llmod = module.llvm().unwrap().llmod(); let tm = &*module.llvm().unwrap().tm; run_pass_manager(cgcx, tm, llmod, config, false); timeline.record("fat-done"); } Ok(module) } LtoModuleCodegen::Thin(ref mut thin) => thin.optimize(cgcx, timeline), } } /// A "gauge" of how costly it is to optimize this module, used to sort /// biggest modules first. pub fn cost(&self) -> u64 { match *self { // Only one module with fat LTO, so the cost doesn't matter. LtoModuleCodegen::Fat { .. } => 0, LtoModuleCodegen::Thin(ref m) => m.cost(), } } } pub(crate) fn run(cgcx: &CodegenContext, modules: Vec, timeline: &mut Timeline) -> Result, FatalError> { let diag_handler = cgcx.create_diag_handler(); let export_threshold = match cgcx.lto { // We're just doing LTO for our one crate Lto::ThinLocal => SymbolExportLevel::Rust, // We're doing LTO for the entire crate graph Lto::Yes | Lto::Fat | Lto::Thin => { symbol_export::crates_export_threshold(&cgcx.crate_types) } Lto::No => panic!("didn't request LTO but we're doing LTO"), }; let symbol_filter = &|&(ref name, level): &(String, SymbolExportLevel)| { if level.is_below_threshold(export_threshold) { let mut bytes = Vec::with_capacity(name.len() + 1); bytes.extend(name.bytes()); Some(CString::new(bytes).unwrap()) } else { None } }; let exported_symbols = cgcx.exported_symbols .as_ref().expect("needs exported symbols for LTO"); let mut symbol_white_list = exported_symbols[&LOCAL_CRATE] .iter() .filter_map(symbol_filter) .collect::>(); timeline.record("whitelist"); info!("{} symbols to preserve in this crate", symbol_white_list.len()); // If we're performing LTO for the entire crate graph, then for each of our // upstream dependencies, find the corresponding rlib and load the bitcode // from the archive. // // We save off all the bytecode and LLVM module ids for later processing // with either fat or thin LTO let mut upstream_modules = Vec::new(); if cgcx.lto != Lto::ThinLocal { if cgcx.opts.cg.prefer_dynamic { diag_handler.struct_err("cannot prefer dynamic linking when performing LTO") .note("only 'staticlib', 'bin', and 'cdylib' outputs are \ supported with LTO") .emit(); return Err(FatalError) } // Make sure we actually can run LTO for crate_type in cgcx.crate_types.iter() { if !crate_type_allows_lto(*crate_type) { let e = diag_handler.fatal("lto can only be run for executables, cdylibs and \ static library outputs"); return Err(e) } } for &(cnum, ref path) in cgcx.each_linked_rlib_for_lto.iter() { let exported_symbols = cgcx.exported_symbols .as_ref().expect("needs exported symbols for LTO"); symbol_white_list.extend( exported_symbols[&cnum] .iter() .filter_map(symbol_filter)); let archive = ArchiveRO::open(&path).expect("wanted an rlib"); let bytecodes = archive.iter().filter_map(|child| { child.ok().and_then(|c| c.name().map(|name| (name, c))) }).filter(|&(name, _)| name.ends_with(RLIB_BYTECODE_EXTENSION)); for (name, data) in bytecodes { info!("adding bytecode {}", name); let bc_encoded = data.data(); let (bc, id) = time_ext(cgcx.time_passes, None, &format!("decode {}", name), || { match DecodedBytecode::new(bc_encoded) { Ok(b) => Ok((b.bytecode(), b.identifier().to_string())), Err(e) => Err(diag_handler.fatal(&e)), } })?; let bc = SerializedModule::FromRlib(bc); upstream_modules.push((bc, CString::new(id).unwrap())); } timeline.record(&format!("load: {}", path.display())); } } let arr = symbol_white_list.iter().map(|c| c.as_ptr()).collect::>(); match cgcx.lto { Lto::Yes | // `-C lto` == fat LTO by default Lto::Fat => { fat_lto(cgcx, &diag_handler, modules, upstream_modules, &arr, timeline) } Lto::Thin | Lto::ThinLocal => { thin_lto(&diag_handler, modules, upstream_modules, &arr, timeline) } Lto::No => unreachable!(), } } fn fat_lto(cgcx: &CodegenContext, diag_handler: &Handler, mut modules: Vec, mut serialized_modules: Vec<(SerializedModule, CString)>, symbol_white_list: &[*const libc::c_char], timeline: &mut Timeline) -> Result, FatalError> { info!("going for a fat lto"); // Find the "costliest" module and merge everything into that codegen unit. // All the other modules will be serialized and reparsed into the new // context, so this hopefully avoids serializing and parsing the largest // codegen unit. // // Additionally use a regular module as the base here to ensure that various // file copy operations in the backend work correctly. The only other kind // of module here should be an allocator one, and if your crate is smaller // than the allocator module then the size doesn't really matter anyway. let (_, costliest_module) = modules.iter() .enumerate() .filter(|&(_, module)| module.kind == ModuleKind::Regular) .map(|(i, module)| { let cost = unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustModuleCost(module.llvm().unwrap().llmod()) }; (cost, i) }) .max() .expect("must be codegen'ing at least one module"); let module = modules.remove(costliest_module); let mut serialized_bitcode = Vec::new(); { let (llcx, llmod) = { let llvm = module.llvm().expect("can't lto pre-codegened modules"); (&llvm.llcx, llvm.llmod()) }; info!("using {:?} as a base module", module.llmod_id); // The linking steps below may produce errors and diagnostics within LLVM // which we'd like to handle and print, so set up our diagnostic handlers // (which get unregistered when they go out of scope below). let _handler = DiagnosticHandlers::new(cgcx, diag_handler, llcx); // For all other modules we codegened we'll need to link them into our own // bitcode. All modules were codegened in their own LLVM context, however, // and we want to move everything to the same LLVM context. Currently the // way we know of to do that is to serialize them to a string and them parse // them later. Not great but hey, that's why it's "fat" LTO, right? for module in modules { let llvm = module.llvm().expect("can't lto pre-codegened modules"); let buffer = ModuleBuffer::new(llvm.llmod()); let llmod_id = CString::new(&module.llmod_id[..]).unwrap(); serialized_modules.push((SerializedModule::Local(buffer), llmod_id)); } // For all serialized bitcode files we parse them and link them in as we did // above, this is all mostly handled in C++. Like above, though, we don't // know much about the memory management here so we err on the side of being // save and persist everything with the original module. let mut linker = Linker::new(llmod); for (bc_decoded, name) in serialized_modules { info!("linking {:?}", name); time_ext(cgcx.time_passes, None, &format!("ll link {:?}", name), || { let data = bc_decoded.data(); linker.add(&data).map_err(|()| { let msg = format!("failed to load bc of {:?}", name); write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg) }) })?; timeline.record(&format!("link {:?}", name)); serialized_bitcode.push(bc_decoded); } drop(linker); cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "lto.input"); // Internalize everything that *isn't* in our whitelist to help strip out // more modules and such unsafe { let ptr = symbol_white_list.as_ptr(); llvm::LLVMRustRunRestrictionPass(llmod, ptr as *const *const libc::c_char, symbol_white_list.len() as libc::size_t); cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "lto.after-restriction"); } if cgcx.no_landing_pads { unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustMarkAllFunctionsNounwind(llmod); } cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "lto.after-nounwind"); } timeline.record("passes"); } Ok(vec![LtoModuleCodegen::Fat { module: Some(module), _serialized_bitcode: serialized_bitcode, }]) } struct Linker<'a>(&'a mut llvm::Linker<'a>); impl Linker<'a> { fn new(llmod: &'a llvm::Module) -> Self { unsafe { Linker(llvm::LLVMRustLinkerNew(llmod)) } } fn add(&mut self, bytecode: &[u8]) -> Result<(), ()> { unsafe { if llvm::LLVMRustLinkerAdd(self.0, bytecode.as_ptr() as *const libc::c_char, bytecode.len()) { Ok(()) } else { Err(()) } } } } impl Drop for Linker<'a> { fn drop(&mut self) { unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustLinkerFree(&mut *(self.0 as *mut _)); } } } /// Prepare "thin" LTO to get run on these modules. /// /// The general structure of ThinLTO is quite different from the structure of /// "fat" LTO above. With "fat" LTO all LLVM modules in question are merged into /// one giant LLVM module, and then we run more optimization passes over this /// big module after internalizing most symbols. Thin LTO, on the other hand, /// avoid this large bottleneck through more targeted optimization. /// /// At a high level Thin LTO looks like: /// /// 1. Prepare a "summary" of each LLVM module in question which describes /// the values inside, cost of the values, etc. /// 2. Merge the summaries of all modules in question into one "index" /// 3. Perform some global analysis on this index /// 4. For each module, use the index and analysis calculated previously to /// perform local transformations on the module, for example inlining /// small functions from other modules. /// 5. Run thin-specific optimization passes over each module, and then code /// generate everything at the end. /// /// The summary for each module is intended to be quite cheap, and the global /// index is relatively quite cheap to create as well. As a result, the goal of /// ThinLTO is to reduce the bottleneck on LTO and enable LTO to be used in more /// situations. For example one cheap optimization is that we can parallelize /// all codegen modules, easily making use of all the cores on a machine. /// /// With all that in mind, the function here is designed at specifically just /// calculating the *index* for ThinLTO. This index will then be shared amongst /// all of the `LtoModuleCodegen` units returned below and destroyed once /// they all go out of scope. fn thin_lto(diag_handler: &Handler, modules: Vec, serialized_modules: Vec<(SerializedModule, CString)>, symbol_white_list: &[*const libc::c_char], timeline: &mut Timeline) -> Result, FatalError> { unsafe { info!("going for that thin, thin LTO"); let mut thin_buffers = Vec::new(); let mut module_names = Vec::new(); let mut thin_modules = Vec::new(); // FIXME: right now, like with fat LTO, we serialize all in-memory // modules before working with them and ThinLTO. We really // shouldn't do this, however, and instead figure out how to // extract a summary from an in-memory module and then merge that // into the global index. It turns out that this loop is by far // the most expensive portion of this small bit of global // analysis! for (i, module) in modules.iter().enumerate() { info!("local module: {} - {}", i, module.llmod_id); let llvm = module.llvm().expect("can't lto precodegened module"); let name = CString::new(module.llmod_id.clone()).unwrap(); let buffer = ThinBuffer::new(llvm.llmod()); thin_modules.push(llvm::ThinLTOModule { identifier: name.as_ptr(), data: buffer.data().as_ptr(), len: buffer.data().len(), }); thin_buffers.push(buffer); module_names.push(name); timeline.record(&module.llmod_id); } // FIXME: All upstream crates are deserialized internally in the // function below to extract their summary and modules. Note that // unlike the loop above we *must* decode and/or read something // here as these are all just serialized files on disk. An // improvement, however, to make here would be to store the // module summary separately from the actual module itself. Right // now this is store in one large bitcode file, and the entire // file is deflate-compressed. We could try to bypass some of the // decompression by storing the index uncompressed and only // lazily decompressing the bytecode if necessary. // // Note that truly taking advantage of this optimization will // likely be further down the road. We'd have to implement // incremental ThinLTO first where we could actually avoid // looking at upstream modules entirely sometimes (the contents, // we must always unconditionally look at the index). let mut serialized = Vec::new(); for (module, name) in serialized_modules { info!("foreign module {:?}", name); thin_modules.push(llvm::ThinLTOModule { identifier: name.as_ptr(), data: module.data().as_ptr(), len: module.data().len(), }); serialized.push(module); module_names.push(name); } // Delegate to the C++ bindings to create some data here. Once this is a // tried-and-true interface we may wish to try to upstream some of this // to LLVM itself, right now we reimplement a lot of what they do // upstream... let data = llvm::LLVMRustCreateThinLTOData( thin_modules.as_ptr(), thin_modules.len() as u32, symbol_white_list.as_ptr(), symbol_white_list.len() as u32, ).ok_or_else(|| { write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, "failed to prepare thin LTO context".to_string()) })?; let data = ThinData(data); info!("thin LTO data created"); timeline.record("data"); // Throw our data in an `Arc` as we'll be sharing it across threads. We // also put all memory referenced by the C++ data (buffers, ids, etc) // into the arc as well. After this we'll create a thin module // codegen per module in this data. let shared = Arc::new(ThinShared { data, thin_buffers, serialized_modules: serialized, module_names, }); Ok((0..shared.module_names.len()).map(|i| { LtoModuleCodegen::Thin(ThinModule { shared: shared.clone(), idx: i, }) }).collect()) } } fn run_pass_manager(cgcx: &CodegenContext, tm: &llvm::TargetMachine, llmod: &llvm::Module, config: &ModuleConfig, thin: bool) { // Now we have one massive module inside of llmod. Time to run the // LTO-specific optimization passes that LLVM provides. // // This code is based off the code found in llvm's LTO code generator: // tools/lto/LTOCodeGenerator.cpp debug!("running the pass manager"); unsafe { let pm = llvm::LLVMCreatePassManager(); llvm::LLVMRustAddAnalysisPasses(tm, pm, llmod); if config.verify_llvm_ir { let pass = llvm::LLVMRustFindAndCreatePass("verify\0".as_ptr() as *const _); llvm::LLVMRustAddPass(pm, pass.unwrap()); } // When optimizing for LTO we don't actually pass in `-O0`, but we force // it to always happen at least with `-O1`. // // With ThinLTO we mess around a lot with symbol visibility in a way // that will actually cause linking failures if we optimize at O0 which // notable is lacking in dead code elimination. To ensure we at least // get some optimizations and correctly link we forcibly switch to `-O1` // to get dead code elimination. // // Note that in general this shouldn't matter too much as you typically // only turn on ThinLTO when you're compiling with optimizations // otherwise. let opt_level = config.opt_level.unwrap_or(llvm::CodeGenOptLevel::None); let opt_level = match opt_level { llvm::CodeGenOptLevel::None => llvm::CodeGenOptLevel::Less, level => level, }; with_llvm_pmb(llmod, config, opt_level, false, &mut |b| { if thin { if !llvm::LLVMRustPassManagerBuilderPopulateThinLTOPassManager(b, pm) { panic!("this version of LLVM does not support ThinLTO"); } } else { llvm::LLVMPassManagerBuilderPopulateLTOPassManager(b, pm, /* Internalize = */ False, /* RunInliner = */ True); } }); if config.verify_llvm_ir { let pass = llvm::LLVMRustFindAndCreatePass("verify\0".as_ptr() as *const _); llvm::LLVMRustAddPass(pm, pass.unwrap()); } time_ext(cgcx.time_passes, None, "LTO passes", || llvm::LLVMRunPassManager(pm, llmod)); llvm::LLVMDisposePassManager(pm); } debug!("lto done"); } pub enum SerializedModule { Local(ModuleBuffer), FromRlib(Vec), } impl SerializedModule { fn data(&self) -> &[u8] { match *self { SerializedModule::Local(ref m) => m.data(), SerializedModule::FromRlib(ref m) => m, } } } pub struct ModuleBuffer(&'static mut llvm::ModuleBuffer); unsafe impl Send for ModuleBuffer {} unsafe impl Sync for ModuleBuffer {} impl ModuleBuffer { pub fn new(m: &llvm::Module) -> ModuleBuffer { ModuleBuffer(unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustModuleBufferCreate(m) }) } pub fn data(&self) -> &[u8] { unsafe { let ptr = llvm::LLVMRustModuleBufferPtr(self.0); let len = llvm::LLVMRustModuleBufferLen(self.0); slice::from_raw_parts(ptr, len) } } } impl Drop for ModuleBuffer { fn drop(&mut self) { unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustModuleBufferFree(&mut *(self.0 as *mut _)); } } } pub struct ThinModule { shared: Arc, idx: usize, } struct ThinShared { data: ThinData, thin_buffers: Vec, serialized_modules: Vec, module_names: Vec, } struct ThinData(&'static mut llvm::ThinLTOData); unsafe impl Send for ThinData {} unsafe impl Sync for ThinData {} impl Drop for ThinData { fn drop(&mut self) { unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustFreeThinLTOData(&mut *(self.0 as *mut _)); } } } pub struct ThinBuffer(&'static mut llvm::ThinLTOBuffer); unsafe impl Send for ThinBuffer {} unsafe impl Sync for ThinBuffer {} impl ThinBuffer { pub fn new(m: &llvm::Module) -> ThinBuffer { unsafe { let buffer = llvm::LLVMRustThinLTOBufferCreate(m); ThinBuffer(buffer) } } pub fn data(&self) -> &[u8] { unsafe { let ptr = llvm::LLVMRustThinLTOBufferPtr(self.0) as *const _; let len = llvm::LLVMRustThinLTOBufferLen(self.0); slice::from_raw_parts(ptr, len) } } } impl Drop for ThinBuffer { fn drop(&mut self) { unsafe { llvm::LLVMRustThinLTOBufferFree(&mut *(self.0 as *mut _)); } } } impl ThinModule { fn name(&self) -> &str { self.shared.module_names[self.idx].to_str().unwrap() } fn cost(&self) -> u64 { // Yes, that's correct, we're using the size of the bytecode as an // indicator for how costly this codegen unit is. self.data().len() as u64 } fn data(&self) -> &[u8] { let a = self.shared.thin_buffers.get(self.idx).map(|b| b.data()); a.unwrap_or_else(|| { let len = self.shared.thin_buffers.len(); self.shared.serialized_modules[self.idx - len].data() }) } unsafe fn optimize(&mut self, cgcx: &CodegenContext, timeline: &mut Timeline) -> Result { let diag_handler = cgcx.create_diag_handler(); let tm = (cgcx.tm_factory)().map_err(|e| { write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, e) })?; // Right now the implementation we've got only works over serialized // modules, so we create a fresh new LLVM context and parse the module // into that context. One day, however, we may do this for upstream // crates but for locally codegened modules we may be able to reuse // that LLVM Context and Module. let llcx = llvm::LLVMRustContextCreate(cgcx.fewer_names); let llmod_raw = llvm::LLVMRustParseBitcodeForThinLTO( llcx, self.data().as_ptr(), self.data().len(), self.shared.module_names[self.idx].as_ptr(), ).ok_or_else(|| { let msg = "failed to parse bitcode for thin LTO module".to_string(); write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg) })? as *const _; let module = ModuleCodegen { source: ModuleSource::Codegened(ModuleLlvm { llmod_raw, llcx, tm, }), llmod_id: self.name().to_string(), name: self.name().to_string(), kind: ModuleKind::Regular, }; { let llmod = module.llvm().unwrap().llmod(); cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-input"); // Before we do much else find the "main" `DICompileUnit` that we'll be // using below. If we find more than one though then rustc has changed // in a way we're not ready for, so generate an ICE by returning // an error. let mut cu1 = ptr::null_mut(); let mut cu2 = ptr::null_mut(); llvm::LLVMRustThinLTOGetDICompileUnit(llmod, &mut cu1, &mut cu2); if !cu2.is_null() { let msg = "multiple source DICompileUnits found".to_string(); return Err(write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg)) } // Like with "fat" LTO, get some better optimizations if landing pads // are disabled by removing all landing pads. if cgcx.no_landing_pads { llvm::LLVMRustMarkAllFunctionsNounwind(llmod); cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-nounwind"); timeline.record("nounwind"); } // Up next comes the per-module local analyses that we do for Thin LTO. // Each of these functions is basically copied from the LLVM // implementation and then tailored to suit this implementation. Ideally // each of these would be supported by upstream LLVM but that's perhaps // a patch for another day! // // You can find some more comments about these functions in the LLVM // bindings we've got (currently `PassWrapper.cpp`) if !llvm::LLVMRustPrepareThinLTORename(self.shared.data.0, llmod) { let msg = "failed to prepare thin LTO module".to_string(); return Err(write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg)) } cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-rename"); timeline.record("rename"); if !llvm::LLVMRustPrepareThinLTOResolveWeak(self.shared.data.0, llmod) { let msg = "failed to prepare thin LTO module".to_string(); return Err(write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg)) } cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-resolve"); timeline.record("resolve"); if !llvm::LLVMRustPrepareThinLTOInternalize(self.shared.data.0, llmod) { let msg = "failed to prepare thin LTO module".to_string(); return Err(write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg)) } cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-internalize"); timeline.record("internalize"); if !llvm::LLVMRustPrepareThinLTOImport(self.shared.data.0, llmod) { let msg = "failed to prepare thin LTO module".to_string(); return Err(write::llvm_err(&diag_handler, msg)) } cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-import"); timeline.record("import"); // Ok now this is a bit unfortunate. This is also something you won't // find upstream in LLVM's ThinLTO passes! This is a hack for now to // work around bugs in LLVM. // // First discovered in #45511 it was found that as part of ThinLTO // importing passes LLVM will import `DICompileUnit` metadata // information across modules. This means that we'll be working with one // LLVM module that has multiple `DICompileUnit` instances in it (a // bunch of `llvm.dbg.cu` members). Unfortunately there's a number of // bugs in LLVM's backend which generates invalid DWARF in a situation // like this: // // https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35212 // https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35562 // // While the first bug there is fixed the second ended up causing #46346 // which was basically a resurgence of #45511 after LLVM's bug 35212 was // fixed. // // This function below is a huge hack around this problem. The function // below is defined in `PassWrapper.cpp` and will basically "merge" // all `DICompileUnit` instances in a module. Basically it'll take all // the objects, rewrite all pointers of `DISubprogram` to point to the // first `DICompileUnit`, and then delete all the other units. // // This is probably mangling to the debug info slightly (but hopefully // not too much) but for now at least gets LLVM to emit valid DWARF (or // so it appears). Hopefully we can remove this once upstream bugs are // fixed in LLVM. llvm::LLVMRustThinLTOPatchDICompileUnit(llmod, cu1); cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-patch"); timeline.record("patch"); // Alright now that we've done everything related to the ThinLTO // analysis it's time to run some optimizations! Here we use the same // `run_pass_manager` as the "fat" LTO above except that we tell it to // populate a thin-specific pass manager, which presumably LLVM treats a // little differently. info!("running thin lto passes over {}", module.name); let config = cgcx.config(module.kind); run_pass_manager(cgcx, module.llvm().unwrap().tm, llmod, config, true); cgcx.save_temp_bitcode(&module, "thin-lto-after-pm"); timeline.record("thin-done"); } Ok(module) } }