Writing an inlining transformation pass
As we know, by inlining we mean expanding the function body of the function called at the call site, as it may prove useful through faster execution of code. The compiler takes the decision whether to inline a function or not. In this recipe, you will learn to how to write a simple function-inlining pass that makes use of the implementation in LLVM for inlining. We will write a pass that will handle the functions marked with the alwaysinline
attribute.
Getting ready
Let's write a test code that we will run our pass on. Make the necessary changes in the lib/Transforms/IPO/IPO.cpp
and include/llvm/InitializePasses.h
files, the include/llvm/Transforms/IPO.h
file, and the /include/llvm-c/Transforms/IPO.h
file to include the following pass. Also make the necessary makefile
changes to include his pass:
$ cat testcode.c define i32 @inner1() alwaysinline { ret i32 1 } define i32 @outer1() { %r = call i32 @inner1() ret i32 %r }