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[clang.git] / www / performance-2008-10-31.html
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18 <!--*************************************************************************-->
19 <h1>Clang - Performance</h1>
20 <!--*************************************************************************-->
22 <p>This page tracks the compile time performance of Clang on two
23 interesting benchmarks:
24 <ul>
25 <li><i>Sketch</i>: The Objective-C example application shipped on
26 Mac OS X as part of Xcode. <i>Sketch</i> is indicative of a
27 "typical" Objective-C app. The source itself has a relatively
28 small amount of code (~7,500 lines of source code), but it relies
29 on the extensive Cocoa APIs to build its functionality. Like many
30 Objective-C applications, it includes
31 <tt>Cocoa/Cocoa.h</tt> in all of its source files, which represents a
32 significant stress test of the front-end's performance on lexing,
33 preprocessing, parsing, and syntax analysis.</li>
34 <li><i>176.gcc</i>: This is the gcc-2.7.2.2 code base as present in
35 SPECINT 2000. In contrast to Sketch, <i>176.gcc</i> consists of a
36 large amount of C source code (~220,000 lines) with few system
37 dependencies. This stresses the back-end's performance on generating
38 assembly code and debug information.</li>
39 </ul>
40 </p>
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43 <h2><a name="enduser">Experiments</a></h2>
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46 <p>Measurements are done by serially processing each file in the
47 respective benchmark, using Clang, gcc, and llvm-gcc as compilers. In
48 order to track the performance of various subsystems the timings have
49 been broken down into separate stages where possible:
51 <ul>
52 <li><tt>-Eonly</tt>: This option runs the preprocessor but does not
53 perform any output. For gcc and llvm-gcc, the -MM option is used
54 as a rough equivalent to this step.</li>
55 <li><tt>-parse-noop</tt>: This option runs the parser on the input,
56 but without semantic analysis or any output. gcc and llvm-gcc have
57 no equivalent for this option.</li>
58 <li><tt>-fsyntax-only</tt>: This option runs the parser with semantic
59 analysis.</li>
60 <li><tt>-emit-llvm -O0</tt>: For Clang and llvm-gcc, this option
61 converts to the LLVM intermediate representation but doesn't
62 generate native code.</li>
63 <li><tt>-S -O0</tt>: Perform actual code generation to produce a
64 native assembler file.</li>
65 <li><tt>-S -O0 -g</tt>: This adds emission of debug information to
66 the assembly output.</li>
67 </ul>
68 </p>
70 <p>This set of stages is chosen to be approximately additive, that is
71 each subsequent stage simply adds some additional processing. The
72 timings measure the delta of the given stage from the previous
73 one. For example, the timings for <tt>-fsyntax-only</tt> below show
74 the difference of running with <tt>-fsyntax-only</tt> versus running
75 with <tt>-parse-noop</tt> (for clang) or <tt>-MM</tt> with gcc and
76 llvm-gcc. This amounts to a fairly accurate measure of only the time
77 to perform semantic analysis (and parsing, in the case of gcc and llvm-gcc).</p>
79 <p>These timings are chosen to break down the compilation process for
80 clang as much as possible. The graphs below show these numbers
81 combined so that it is easy to see how the time for a particular task
82 is divided among various components. For example, <tt>-S -O0</tt>
83 includes the time of <tt>-fsyntax-only</tt> and <tt>-emit-llvm -O0</tt>.</p>
85 <p>Note that we already know that the LLVM optimizers are substantially (30-40%)
86 faster than the GCC optimizers at a given -O level, so we only focus on -O0
87 compile time here.</p>
89 <!--*************************************************************************-->
90 <h2><a name="enduser">Timing Results</a></h2>
91 <!--*************************************************************************-->
93 <!--=======================================================================-->
94 <h3><a name="2008-10-31">2008-10-31</a></h3>
95 <!--=======================================================================-->
97 <center><h4>Sketch</h4></center>
98 <img class="img_slide"
99 src="timing-data/2008-10-31/sketch.png" alt="Sketch Timings"/>
101 <p>This shows Clang's substantial performance improvements in
102 preprocessing and semantic analysis; over 90% faster on
103 -fsyntax-only. As expected, time spent in code generation for this
104 benchmark is relatively small. One caveat, Clang's debug information
105 generation for Objective-C is very incomplete; this means the <tt>-S
106 -O0 -g</tt> numbers are unfair since Clang is generating substantially
107 less output.</p>
109 <p>This chart also shows the effect of using precompiled headers (PCH)
110 on compiler time. gcc and llvm-gcc see a large performance improvement
111 with PCH; about 4x in wall time. Unfortunately, Clang does not yet
112 have an implementation of PCH-style optimizations, but we are actively
113 working to address this.</p>
115 <center><h4>176.gcc</h4></center>
116 <img class="img_slide"
117 src="timing-data/2008-10-31/176.gcc.png" alt="176.gcc Timings"/>
119 <p>Unlike the <i>Sketch</i> timings, compilation of <i>176.gcc</i>
120 involves a large amount of code generation. The time spent in Clang's
121 LLVM IR generation and code generation is on par with gcc's code
122 generation time but the improved parsing & semantic analysis
123 performance means Clang still comes in at ~29% faster versus gcc
124 on <tt>-S -O0 -g</tt> and ~20% faster versus llvm-gcc.</p>
126 <p>These numbers indicate that Clang still has room for improvement in
127 several areas, notably our LLVM IR generation is significantly slower
128 than that of llvm-gcc, and both Clang and llvm-gcc incur a
129 significantly higher cost for adding debugging information compared to
130 gcc.</p>
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