Auto merge of #22948 - rprichard:simple-panic-opt, r=alexcrichton

Reduce code size overhead from core::panicking::panic

core::panicking::panic currently creates an Arguments structure using
format_args!("{}", expr), which formats the expr str using the Display::fmt.
Display::fmt pulls in Formatter::pad, which then also pulls in string-related
code for truncation and padding.

If core::panicking::panic instead creates an Arguments structure with a string
piece, it is possible that the Display::fmt function for str can be optimized
out of the program.

In my testing with a 32-bit x86 bare metal program, the change tended to save
between ~100 bytes and ~5500 bytes, depending on what other panic* functions
the program invokes and whether the panic_fmt lang item uses the Arguments
value.
This commit is contained in:
bors 2015-03-14 01:04:37 +00:00
commit f7453f940b

View file

@ -35,8 +35,14 @@ use fmt;
#[cold] #[inline(never)] // this is the slow path, always
#[lang="panic"]
pub fn panic(expr_file_line: &(&'static str, &'static str, u32)) -> ! {
// Use Arguments::new_v1 instead of format_args!("{}", expr) to potentially
// reduce size overhead. The format_args! macro uses str's Display trait to
// write expr, which calls Formatter::pad, which must accommodate string
// truncation and padding (even though none is used here). Using
// Arguments::new_v1 may allow the compiler to omit Formatter::pad from the
// output binary, saving up to a few kilobytes.
let (expr, file, line) = *expr_file_line;
panic_fmt(format_args!("{}", expr), &(file, line))
panic_fmt(fmt::Arguments::new_v1(&[expr], &[]), &(file, line))
}
#[cold] #[inline(never)]