rustc_codegen_gcc
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rustc_codegen_gcc
- Rust Support in the Linux Kernel
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GCC Rust Monthly Report #9 August 2021
It's true that if this project succeeds, that would be an outcome, but it's probably worth noting that you'd really only have to add support for the GCC backend to do that, and not reimplement the frontend as well (parsing, type checking, lifetime checking, etc.). There's an unrelated project working to do that: https://github.com/antoyo/rustc_codegen_gcc that would likely yield those same benefits for less effort.
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Gentoo be like :
platform support (may improve soon)
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Recursive fib is faster in C++?
Here's the gcc backend for rustc here https://github.com/antoyo/rustc_codegen_gcc Since this just swaps the optimizer/codegen module and reuses all the other stuff from rustc it needs less work and can already compile many valid rust programs.
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Anyone used the gcc backend before?
I'd like to use the rustc_codegen_gcc backend to compile some Rust programs, but I'm confused about how to install and use the patched libgccjit dependency. I've downloaded the fork provided but don't know where to go from there.
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The Tor Project announces Arti, a Tor implementation written in Rust from scratch
I was being a little sloppy and mixing together "actual embedded hardware" with "extensions for applications written in other languages" in my head. I think your point about LLVM is still accurate, though I hear peeps about different projects working on GCC support from time to time.
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Rust GCC back end was officially accepted into the compiler
This doesn't have anything to do with using GCC to compile rust, but instead using rustc to compile Rust using the GCC backend. You can do that today by using the linked project, rustc_codegen_gcc, which is intended to be integrated into rustc at some point in the (hopefully near) future.
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This is the patch series to add support for Rust as a second language to the Linux kernel.
Rather than mrustc you should probably look at rustc_codegen_gcc which uses gcc as a backend to rustc (WIP) or GCC Rust which tries to implement a rust frontend for gcc (also WIP). I think rustc_codegen_gcc looks the most promising at the moment
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Hacker News top posts: Jul 6, 2021
Libgccjit AOT Codegen for Rustc\ (2 comments)
- Libgccjit AOT Codegen for Rustc
compiler-explorer
- Ask HN: Which books/resources to understand modern Assembler?
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3rd Edition of Programming: Principles and Practice Using C++ by Stroustrup
You said You won't get "extreme performance" from C++ because it is buried under the weight of decades of compatibility hacks.
Now your whole comment is about vector behavior. You haven't talked about what 'decades of compatibility hacks' are holding back performance. Whatever behavior you want from a vector is not a language limitation.
You could write your own vector and be done with it, although I'm still not sure what you mean, since once you reserve capacity a vector still doubles capacity when you overrun it. The reason this is never a performance obstacle is that if you're going to use more memory anyway, you reserve more up front. This is what any normal programmer does and they move on.
Show what you mean here:
https://godbolt.org/
I've never used ISPC. It's somewhat interesting although since it's Intel focused of course it's not actually portable.
I guess now the goal posts are shifting. First it was that "C++ as a language has performance limitations" now it's "rust has a vector that has a function I want and also I want SIMD stuff that doesn't exist. It does exist? not like that!"
Try to stay on track. You said there were "decades of compatibility hacks" holding back C++ performance then you went down a rabbit hole that has nothing to do with supporting that.
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C++ Insights – See your source code with the eyes of a compiler
C++ Insights is available online at https://cppinsights.io/
It is also available at a touch of a button within the most excellent https://godbolt.org/
along side the button that takes your code sample to https://quick-bench.com/
Those sites and https://cppreference.com/ are what I'm using constantly while coding.
I recently discovered https://whitebox.systems/ It's a local app with a $69 one-time charge. And, it only really works with "C With Classes" style functions. But, it looks promising as another productivity boost.
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Ask HN: How can I learn about performance optimization?
[P&H RISC] https://www.google.com/books/edition/_/e8DvDwAAQBAJ
Compiler Explorer by Matt Godbolt [Godbolt] can help better understand what code a compiler generates under different circumstances.
[Godbolt] https://godbolt.org
The official CPU architecture manuals from CPU vendors are surprisingly readable and information-rich. I only read the fragments that I need or that I am interested in and move on. Here is the Intel’s one [Intel]. I use the Combined Volume Set, which is a huge PDF comprising all the ten volumes. It is easier to search in when it’s all in one file. I can open several copies on different pages to make navigation easier.
Intel also has a whole optimization reference manual [Intel] (scroll down, it’s all on the same page). The manual helps understand what exactly the CPU is doing.
[Intel] https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/t...
Personally, I believe in automated benchmarks that measure end-to-end what is actually important and notify you when a change impacts performance for the worse.
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Managing mutable data in Elixir with Rust
Let's compile it with https://godbolt.org/, turn on some optimisations and inspect the IR (-O2 -emit-llvm). Copying out the part that corresponds to the while loop:
4:
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Free MIT Course: Performance Engineering of Software Systems
resources were extra useful when building deeper intuitions about GPU performance for ML models at work and in graduate school.
- CMU's "Deep Learning Systems" Course is hosted online and has YouTube lectures online. While not generally relevant to software performance, it is especially useful for engineers interested in building strong fundamentals that will serve them well when taking ML models into production environments: https://dlsyscourse.org/
- Compiler Explorer is a tool that allows you easily input some code in and check how the assembly output maps to the source. I think this is exceptionally useful for beginner/intermediate programmers who are familiar with one compiled high-level language and have not been exposed to reading lots of assembly. It is also great for testing how different compiler flags affect assembly output. Many people used to coding in C and C++ probably know about this, but I still run into people who haven't so I share it whenever performance comes up: https://godbolt.org/
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Verifying Rust Zeroize with Assembly...including portable SIMD
To really understand what's going on here we can look at the compiled assembly code. I'm working on a Mac and can do this using the objdump tool. Compiler Explorer is also a handy tool but doesn't seem to support Arm assembly which is what Rust will use when compiling on Apple Silicon.
- 4B If Statements
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Operator precedence doubt
Play around with it in godbolt if you're really curious: https://godbolt.org/
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Cant Use Vectors in VSCode
It sounds like you are very new to programming and C++. If you'll allow me to make a recommendation: trying to set up a C++ in VS Code is quite a difficult task for a beginner. There are a lot of trip ups -- the compiler you're using, how your Code Runner or tasks.json or launch.json are set up, whether you're using Makefiles or Cmake, etc. For beginning with C++, I would really recommend messing around with Compiler Explorer instead (https://godbolt.org/). It was originally designed to turn C++ code into assembly for debugging, but you can use it like a fast scratchpad for learning, and it auto rebuilds as you make changes so you can see errors quickly. Good luck!
What are some alternatives?
gccrs - GCC Front-End for Rust
C++ Format - A modern formatting library
polonius - Defines the Rust borrow checker.
rust - Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
avr-hal - embedded-hal abstractions for AVR microcontrollers
format-benchmark - A collection of formatting benchmarks
min-sized-rust - 🦀 How to minimize Rust binary size 📦
papers - ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG21 paper scheduling and management
ttapi - Golang Turntable.fm api
rustc_codegen_gcc - libgccjit AOT codegen for rustc
Rust-for-Linux - Adding support for the Rust language to the Linux kernel.
firejail - Linux namespaces and seccomp-bpf sandbox