RFR: 8020282: Generated code quality: redundant LEAs in the chained dereferences
Emanuel Peter
epeter at openjdk.org
Wed Jun 4 08:44:19 UTC 2025
On Tue, 27 May 2025 17:26:59 GMT, Manuel Hässig <mhaessig at openjdk.org> wrote:
> ## Summary
>
> On x86, chained dereferences of narrow oops at a constant offset from the base oop can use a `lea` instruction to perform the address computation in one go using the `leaP8Narrow`, `leaP32Narrow`, and `leaPCompressedOopOffset` matching rules. However, the generated code contains an additional `lea` with an unused result:
>
> ; OptoAssembly
> 03d decode_heap_oop_not_null R8,R10
> 041 leaq R10, [R12 + R10 << 3 + #12] (compressed oop addressing) ; ptr compressedoopoff32
>
> ; x86
> 0x00007f1f210625bd: lea (%r12,%r10,8),%r8 ; result is unused
> 0x00007f1f210625c1: lea 0xc(%r12,%r10,8),%r10 ; the same computation as decode, but with offset
>
>
> This PR adds a peephole optimization to remove such redundant `lea`s.
>
> ## The Issue in Detail
>
> The ideal subgraph producing redundant `lea`s, or rather redundant `decodeHeapOop_not_null`s, is `LoadN -> DecodeN -> AddP`, where both the address and base edge of the `AddP` originate from the `DecodeN`. After matching, this becomes
>
> LoadN -> decodeHeapOop_not_null -> leaP*
> ______________________________Î
>
> where `leaP*` is either of `leaP8Narrow`, `leaP32Narrow`, or `leaPCompressedOopOffset` (depending on the heap location and size). Here, the base input of `leaP*` comes from the decode. Looking at the matching code path, we find that the `leaP*` rules match both the `AddP` and the `DecodeN`, since x86 can fold this, but the following code adds the decode back as the base input to `leaP*`:
>
> https://github.com/openjdk/jdk/blob/c29537740efb04e061732a700582d43b1956cff4/src/hotspot/share/opto/matcher.cpp#L1894-L1897
>
> On its face, this is completely unnecessary if we matched a `leaP*`, since it already computes the result of the decode, so adding the `LoadN` node as base seems like the logical choice. However, if the derived oop computed by the `leaP*` gets added to an oop map, this `DecodeN` is needed as the base for the derived oop. Because as of now, derived oops in oop maps cannot have narrow base pointers.
>
> This leaves us with a handful of possible solutions:
> 1. implement narrow bases for derived oops in oop maps,
> 2. perform some dead code elimination after we know which oops are part of oop maps,
> 3. add a peephole optimization to simply remove unused `lea`s.
>
> Option 1 would have been ideal in the sense, that it is the earliest possible point to remove the decode, which would simplify the graph and reduce pressure on the register allocator. However, rewriting the oop map machinery to remove a...
Drive by comment ;)
test/micro/org/openjdk/bench/vm/compiler/x86/RedundantLeaPeephole.java line 33:
> 31: @Warmup(iterations = 10, time = 1, timeUnit = TimeUnit.SECONDS)
> 32: @Measurement(iterations = 10, time = 1, timeUnit = TimeUnit.SECONDS)
> 33: @Fork(value = 3, jvmArgsAppend = {"-Xms1g", "-Xmx1g"})
Ha, what did you need these args for? Could be nice to have a little comment in the code.
-------------
PR Review: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/25471#pullrequestreview-2895825725
PR Review Comment: https://git.openjdk.org/jdk/pull/25471#discussion_r2126028316
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