rustc_codegen_gcc: Progress Report #24
What is rustc_codegen_gcc?
rustc_codegen_gcc is a GCC ahead-of-time codegen for rustc, meaning that it can be loaded by the existing rustc frontend, but benefits from GCC by having more architectures supported and having access to GCC’s optimizations. It is not to be confused with gccrs, which is a GCC frontend for Rust.
GCC patches status
This month, some progress was made:
-
Fix compilation error when bfloat is unsupported (thanks to Heath123!)
-
Add support for the
cold
function attribute (thanks to GuillaumeGomez!)
None of these were sent as patches to GCC yet.
State of rustc_codegen_gcc
Here’s what has been done this month:
-
Regen intrinsics with latest LLVM version (thanks to GuillaumeGomez!)
-
Add support for cold attribute (thanks to GuillaumeGomez!)
Apart for that, I continued working on Link-Time Optimization (LTO) support: I managed to fix the GCC’s garbage collector issue and tried LTO on a personal project of mine. Without LTO, the program compiled with GCC is around 5% slower than the one compiled with LLVM. With LTO, both GCC and LLVM brings a performance benefit of around 40%. It’s interesting to see that LTO give around the same performance improvement for both GCC and LLVM.
Finally, since one of the goals of this project is to be able to run Rust code on new platforms, I created a wiki page that shows on which new platforms some people succeeded in compiling Rust code on. There isn’t much there yet, but the idea is to complete it when people try to compile Rust on new platforms.
Here’s a rough summary of what has been implemented:
Feature | Last month completion | Completion | Delta |
---|---|---|---|
Unwinding. |
80% |
80% |
|
LTO. |
20% |
40% |
+20% |
More function and variable attributes. |
5% |
10% |
+5% |
Target features (to detect what is supported in an architecture, like SIMD). |
0% |
60% |
+60% |
Debug info. |
0% |
||
Endianness support for non-native 128-bit integers. |
0% |
||
Rustup distribution. |
0% |
||
SIMD for other architectures than x86-64. |
0% |
||
Support for new architectures in libraries (libc, object, …) and rustc. |
0% |
||
SIMD (x86-64). |
Done |
||
Basic and aggregate types. |
Done |
||
Operations, local and global variables, constants, functions, basic blocks. |
Done |
||
Atomics. |
Done |
||
Thread-local storage. |
Done |
||
Inline assembly. |
Done |
||
Many intrinsics. |
Done |
||
Metadata. |
Done |
||
Setting optimization level. |
Done |
||
Packed structures. |
Done |
||
Alignment, symbol visibility, attributes. |
Done |
||
128-bit integers. |
Done |
UI tests progress
Here are the results of running the UI tests in the CI:
-
https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_gcc/actions/runs/5469252330/jobs/9957949859#step:19:1571
-
https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_gcc/actions/runs/5469252330/jobs/9957949982#step:19:1565
-
https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_gcc/actions/runs/5469252330/jobs/9957950108#step:19:4032 (failures)
Category | Last Month | This Month | Delta |
---|---|---|---|
Passed |
5125 |
5352 |
+227 |
Failed |
67 |
62 |
-5 |
For the next month, I’ll continue working on link-time optimization.
How to contribute
rustc_codegen_gcc
If you want to help on the project itself, please do the following:
-
Run the tests locally.
-
Choose a test that fails.
-
Investigate why it fails.
-
Fix the problem.
Even if you can’t fix the problem, your investigation could help, so if you enjoy staring at assembly code, have fun!
Crates and rustc
If you would like to contribute on adding support for Rust on
currently unsupported platforms, you can help by adding the support
for those platforms in some crates like libc
and object
and also
in the rust compiler itself.
Test this project
Otherwise, you can test this project on new platforms and also compare the assembly with LLVM to see if some optimization is missing.
Good first issue
Finally, another good way to help is to look at good first issues. Those are issues that should be easier to start with.
Thanks for your support!
I wanted to personally thank all the people that sponsor this project: your support is very much appreciated.
A special thanks to the following sponsors:
-
Futurewei
-
saethlin
-
embark-studios
-
Traverse-Research
-
Shnatsel
-
Rust Foundation
A big thank you to bjorn3 for his help, contributions and reviews. And a big thank you to lqd and GuillaumeGomez for answering my questions about rustc’s internals. Another big thank you to Commeownist for his contributions.
Also, a big thank you to the rest of my sponsors:
-
kpp
-
0x7CFE
-
repi
-
nevi-me
-
oleid
-
acshi
-
joshtriplett
-
djc
-
TimNN
-
sdroege
-
pcn
-
alanfalloon
-
steven-joruk
-
davidlattimore
-
Nehliin
-
colelawrence
-
zmanian
-
alexkirsz
-
berkus
-
belzael
-
yvt
-
Shoeboxam
-
yerke
-
bes
-
seanpianka
-
srijs
-
kkysen
-
riking
-
Lemmih
-
memoryruins
-
senden9
-
robjtede
-
Jonas Platte
-
spike grobstein
-
Oliver Marshall
-
Sam Harrington
-
Jonas
-
Jeff Muizelaar
-
Eugene Bulkin
-
Chris Butler
-
sierrafiveseven
-
Joseph Garvin
-
MarcoFalke
-
athre0z
-
icewind
-
Tommy Thorn
-
Sebastian Zivota
-
Oskar Nehlin
-
Nicolas Barbier
-
Daniel
-
Thomas Colliers
-
Justin Ossevoort
-
Chris
-
Bálint Horváth
-
kiyoshigawa
-
robinmoussu
-
Daniel Sheehan
-
Marvin Löbel
-
nacaclanga
-
Matthew Conolly
-
0x0177b11f
-
L.apz
-
JockeTF
-
davidcornu
-
stuhood
-
Myrik Lord
-
Mauve
-
icewind1991
-
T
-
nicholasbishop
-
Emily A. Bellows
-
David Vasak
-
Eric Driggers
-
Olaf Leidinger
-
UtherII
-
simonlindholm
-
lemmih
-
Eddddddd
-
rrbutani
and a few others who preferred to stay anonymous.
Former sponsors/patreons:
-
igrr
-
finfet
-
Alovchin91
-
wezm
-
mexus
-
raymanfx
-
ghost
-
gilescope
-
olanod
-
Denis Zaletaev
-
Chai T. Rex
-
Paul Ellenbogen
-
Dakota Brink
-
Botlabs
-
Cass
-
Oliver Marshall
-
pthariensflame
-
tedbyron
-
sstadick
-
Absolucy
-
rafaelcaricio
-
dandxy89
-
luizirber
-
regiontog
-
vincentdephily
-
zebp
-
Hofer-Julian
-
messense
-
0xdeafbeef
-
fanquake
-
jam1garner
-
sbstp
-
evanrichter