svn commit: r216161 - in head/sys: amd64/amd64 i386/i386

Jung-uk Kim jkim at FreeBSD.org
Fri Dec 3 23:17:33 UTC 2010


On Friday 03 December 2010 06:02 pm, Jung-uk Kim wrote:
> On Friday 03 December 2010 05:43 pm, Jung-uk Kim wrote:
> > On Friday 03 December 2010 05:08 pm, John Baldwin wrote:
> > > On Friday, December 03, 2010 4:54:10 pm Jung-uk Kim wrote:
> > > > Author: jkim
> > > > Date: Fri Dec  3 21:54:10 2010
> > > > New Revision: 216161
> > > > URL: http://svn.freebsd.org/changeset/base/216161
> > > >
> > > > Log:
> > > >   Explicitly initialize TSC frequency.  To calibrate TSC
> > > > frequency, we use DELAY(9) and it may use TSC in turn if TSC
> > > > frequency is non-zero.
> > >
> > > We zero the BSS, so these were already zero.  This just makes
> > > the actual kernel file on disk larger by wasting space in .data
> > > instead of .bss.
> >
> > Please note that I didn't touch other variables, e.g.,
> > tsc_is_broken, because I knew that.  However, I just wanted to do
> > that *explicitly*. Anyway, it is reverted now and SVN will
> > remember what I wanted to do. ;-)
> >
> > BTW, if my memory serves, GCC (and all modern C compilers) put(s)
> > zero-initialized variables back in .bss.
>
> I just tried it.  GCC generates identical binaries as I thought.
> However, Clang doesn't do the optimization. :-/

Strangely, Clang increases .bss when a global variable is explicitly 
initialized to zero.

-  2 .bss 00000004 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 00000540 2**2
+  2 .bss 00000014 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 00000540 2**3

8-)

Jung-uk Kim


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