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Re: Bloat
> So on a vax or 68xxx inlining and unrolling are probably wins.
Depends. It probably produces faster code, but it also produces larger
code. If this makes the difference between running in-core and paging,
it will be a lose. (How likely is this? I don't know. Has anyone
done a size comparison between kernels with inlines and without?)
> - instruction prefetch and decode will continue through an
> unconditional jump/call (and quite possibly return) without a
> pipeline stall. So subroutine call cost is minimal - apart from
> argument stacking.
Which may be nonexistent. Inlined routines will usually be leaf
routines, which for architectures that pass arguments in registers
means they don't need a stack frame at all and thus can totally avoid
stacking anything. (PowerPC is an example; I've got a lot of PPC in my
head these days.)
> My 'gut feeling' is that it isn't worth inlining anything that is
> likely to be longer than the call sequence.
Roughly, that's my feeling too. But I also recall seeing some code
once where inlining was essential because that code could not do a real
call for some reason - I forget why this was; maybe it didn't have a
stack at that point or something.
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