Excerpts from Nathan Chancellor's message of February 21, 2020 9:16 pm: > Hi Alex, > > On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 07:38:20PM -0500, Alex Xu (Hello71) wrote: >> -pipe reduces unnecessary disk wear for systems where /tmp is not a >> tmpfs, slightly increases compilation speed, and avoids leaving behind >> files when gcc crashes. >> >> According to the gcc manual, "this fails to work on some systems where >> the assembler is unable to read from a pipe; but the GNU assembler has >> no trouble". We already require GNU ld on all platforms, so this is not >> an additional dependency. LLVM as also supports pipes. >> >> -pipe has always been used for most architectures, this change >> standardizes it globally. Most notably, arm, arm64, riscv, and x86 are >> affected. >> >> Signed-off-by: Alex Xu (Hello71) <alex_y_xu@xxxxxxxx> > > Do you have any numbers to show this is actually beneficial from a > compilation time perspective? I ask because I saw an improvement in > compilation time when removing -pipe from x86's KBUILD_CFLAGS in > commit 437e88ab8f9e ("x86/build: Remove -pipe from KBUILD_CFLAGS"). > > For what it's worth, clang ignores -pipe so this does not actually > matter for its integrated assembler. > > That type of change could have been a fluke but I guarantee people > will care more about any change in compilation time than any of the > other things that you mention so it might be wise to check on major > architectures to make sure that it doesn't hurt. > > Cheers, > Nathan > Sorry, I should've checked the performance first. I have now run: cd /tmp/linux # previously: make O=/tmp/linux export MAKEFLAGS=12 # Ryzen 1600, 6 cores, 12 threads make allnoconfig for i in {1..10}; do make clean >/dev/null time make XPIPE=-pipe >/dev/null make clean >/dev/null time make >/dev/null done after patching -pipe to $(XPIPE) in Makefile. Results (without ld warnings): make > /dev/null 130.54s user 10.41s system 969% cpu 14.537 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 129.83s user 9.95s system 977% cpu 14.296 total make > /dev/null 129.73s user 10.28s system 966% cpu 14.493 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 130.04s user 10.63s system 986% cpu 14.252 total make > /dev/null 129.53s user 10.28s system 972% cpu 14.379 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 130.29s user 10.17s system 983% cpu 14.288 total make > /dev/null 130.19s user 10.52s system 968% cpu 14.530 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 129.90s user 10.47s system 978% cpu 14.343 total make > /dev/null 129.50s user 10.81s system 959% cpu 14.620 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 130.37s user 10.60s system 975% cpu 14.446 total make > /dev/null 129.63s user 10.18s system 972% cpu 14.374 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 131.29s user 9.92s system 1016% cpu 13.899 total make > /dev/null 129.96s user 10.39s system 961% cpu 14.596 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 131.63s user 10.16s system 1011% cpu 14.015 total make > /dev/null 129.33s user 10.54s system 970% cpu 14.405 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 129.70s user 10.40s system 976% cpu 14.349 total make > /dev/null 129.53s user 10.25s system 964% cpu 14.494 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 130.38s user 10.62s system 973% cpu 14.479 total make > /dev/null 130.73s user 10.08s system 957% cpu 14.704 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 130.43s user 10.62s system 985% cpu 14.309 total make > /dev/null 130.54s user 10.41s system 969% cpu 14.537 total There is a fair bit of variance, probably due to cpufreq, schedutil, CPU temperature, CPU scheduler, motherboard power delivery, etc. But, I think it can be clearly seen that -pipe is, on average, about 0.1 to 0.2 seconds faster. I also tried "make defconfig": make > /dev/null 1238.26s user 102.39s system 1095% cpu 2:02.33 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 1231.33s user 102.52s system 1081% cpu 2:03.29 total make > /dev/null 1232.92s user 102.07s system 1096% cpu 2:01.71 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 1239.59s user 102.30s system 1096% cpu 2:02.39 total make > /dev/null 1229.81s user 101.72s system 1093% cpu 2:01.74 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 1234.64s user 101.30s system 1098% cpu 2:01.64 total make > /dev/null 1228.50s user 104.39s system 1093% cpu 2:01.91 total make XPIPE=-pipe > /dev/null 1238.78s user 102.57s system 1099% cpu 2:01.99 total make > /dev/null 1238.26s user 102.39s system 1095% cpu 2:02.33 total I stopped after this because I needed to use the machine for other tasks. The results are less clear, but I think there's not a big difference one way or another, at least on my machine. CPU: Ryzen 1600, overclocked to ~3.8 GHz RAM: Corsair Vengeance, overclocked to ~3300 MHz, forgot timings Motherboard: ASRock B450 Pro4 I would speculate that the recent pipe changes have caused a change in the relative speed compared to 2018. I am using 5.6.0-rc2 with -O3 -march=native patches. Regards, Alex.