Commit 12f21745 authored by Rob Pike's avatar Rob Pike

doc: update Implementation and Performance sections of the FAQ

Changes are mostly about making more about now than about the past,
changing some verb tenses, and mentioning gollvm (which should
be pronounced "gollum" if you ask me).

Update #26107

Change-Id: I6c14f42b9fc2684259d4ba8bc149d7ec9bb83d15
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/123917Reviewed-by: default avatarIan Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
parent ca69a916
......@@ -1851,38 +1851,69 @@ But we encourage most new code to live elsewhere.
What compiler technology is used to build the compilers?</h3>
<p>
<code>Gccgo</code> has a front end written in C++, with a recursive descent parser coupled to the
standard GCC back end. <code>Gc</code> is written in Go with a recursive descent parser
There are several production compilers for Go, and a number of others
in development for various platforms.
</p>
<p>
The default compiler, <code>gc</code>, is included with the
Go distribution as part of the support for the <code>go</code>
command.
<code>Gc</code> was originally written in C
because of the difficulties of bootstrapping&mdash;you'd need a Go compiler to
set up a Go environment.
But things have advanced and since the Go 1.5 release the compiler has been
a Go program.
The compiler was converted from C to Go using automatic translation tools, as
described in this <a href="/s/go13compiler">design document</a>
and <a href="https://talks.golang.org/2015/gogo.slide#1">talk</a>.
Thus the compiler is now "self-hosting", which means we needed to face
the bootstrapping problem.
The solution is to have a working Go installation already in place,
just as one normally has with a working C installation.
The story of how to bring up a new Go environment from source
is described <a href="/s/go15bootstrap">here</a> and
<a href="/doc/install/source">here</a>.
</p>
<p>
<code>Gc</code> is written in Go with a recursive descent parser
and uses a custom loader, also written in Go but
based on the Plan 9 loader, to generate ELF/Mach-O/PE binaries.
</p>
<p>
We considered using LLVM for <code>gc</code> but we felt it was too large and
slow to meet our performance goals.
At the beginning of the project we considered using LLVM for
<code>gc</code> but decided it was too large and slow to meet
our performance goals.
More important in retrospect, starting with LLVM would have made it
harder to introduce some of the ABI and related changes, such as
stack management, that Go requires but not are not part of the
standard C setup.
A new <a href="https://go.googlesource.com/gollvm/">LLVM implementation</a>
is starting to come together now, however.
</p>
<p>
The original <code>gc</code>, the Go compiler, was written in C
because of the difficulties of bootstrapping&mdash;you'd need a Go compiler to
set up a Go environment.
But things have advanced and as of Go 1.5 the compiler is written in Go.
It was converted from C to Go using automatic translation tools, as
described in <a href="/s/go13compiler">this design document</a>
and <a href="https://talks.golang.org/2015/gogo.slide#1">a recent talk</a>.
Thus the compiler is now "self-hosting", which means we must face
the bootstrapping problem.
The solution, naturally, is to have a working Go installation already,
just as one normally has a working C installation in place.
The story of how to bring up a new Go installation from source
is described <a href="/s/go15bootstrap">separately</a>.
The <code>Gccgo</code> compiler is a front end written in C++
with a recursive descent parser coupled to the
standard GCC back end.
</p>
<p>
Go turned out to be a fine language in which to implement a Go compiler,
although that was not its original goal.
Not being self-hosting from the beginning allowed Go's design to
concentrate on its original use case, which was networked servers.
Had we decided Go should compile itself early on, we might have
ended up with a language targeted more for compiler construction,
which is a worthy goal but not the one we had initially.
</p>
<p>
Go is a fine language in which to implement a Go compiler.
Although <code>gc</code> does not use them (yet?), a native lexer and
parser are available in the <a href="/pkg/go/"><code>go</code></a> package
and there is also a <a href="/pkg/go/types">type checker</a>.
and there is also a native <a href="/pkg/go/types">type checker</a>.
</p>
<h3 id="How_is_the_run_time_support_implemented">
......@@ -1896,6 +1927,8 @@ tiny bit of assembler) but it has since been translated to Go
The <code>gccgo</code> compiler implements goroutines using
a technique called segmented stacks,
supported by recent modifications to the gold linker.
<code>Gollvm</code> similarly is built on the corresponding
LLVM infrastructure.
</p>
<h3 id="Why_is_my_trivial_program_such_a_large_binary">
......@@ -1905,7 +1938,7 @@ Why is my trivial program such a large binary?</h3>
The linker in the <code>gc</code> toolchain
creates statically-linked binaries by default.
All Go binaries therefore include the Go
run-time, along with the run-time type information necessary to support dynamic
runtime, along with the run-time type information necessary to support dynamic
type checks, reflection, and even panic-time stack traces.
</p>
......@@ -1918,6 +1951,14 @@ An equivalent Go program using
more powerful run-time support and type and debugging information.
</p>
<p>
A Go program compiled with <code>gc</code> can be linked with
the <code>-ldflags=-w</code> flag to disable DWARF generation,
removing debugging information from the binary but with no
other loss of functionality.
This can reduce the binary size substantially.
</p>
<h3 id="unused_variables_and_imports">
Can I stop these complaints about my unused variable/import?</h3>
......@@ -2157,7 +2198,7 @@ brace to live on the next line. We disagree. Since Go code is meant
to be formatted automatically by
<a href="/cmd/gofmt/"><code>gofmt</code></a>,
<i>some</i> style must be chosen. That style may differ from what
you've used in C or Java, but Go is a new language and
you've used in C or Java, but Go is a different language and
<code>gofmt</code>'s style is as good as any other. More
important&mdash;much more important&mdash;the advantages of a single,
programmatically mandated format for all Go programs greatly outweigh
......@@ -2170,15 +2211,19 @@ Go can use the standard syntax one line at a time without special rules.
Why do garbage collection? Won't it be too expensive?</h3>
<p>
One of the biggest sources of bookkeeping in systems programs is
memory management. We feel it's critical to eliminate that
memory management.
In languages in which it is done manually,
it can consume a significant amount of programmer time and is
often the cause of pernicious bugs.
We felt it was critical to eliminate that
programmer overhead, and advances in garbage collection
technology in the last few years give us confidence that we can
implement it with low enough overhead and no significant
technology in the last few years gave us confidence that it
could be implemented with low enough overhead and no significant
latency.
</p>
<p>
Another point is that a large part of the difficulty of concurrent
Another issue is that a large part of the difficulty of concurrent
and multi-threaded programming is memory management;
as objects get passed among threads it becomes cumbersome
to guarantee they become freed safely.
......@@ -2194,12 +2239,15 @@ simpler because they don't need to specify how memory is managed across them.
</p>
<p>
The current implementation is a parallel mark-and-sweep collector.
Recent improvements, documented in
<a href="/s/go14gc">this design document</a>,
have introduced bounded pause times and improved the
parallelism.
Future versions might attempt new approaches.
The current implementation is a mark-and-sweep collector that runs
in parallel with the main program on a separate CPU core if the
machine is a multiprocessor.
Major work on the collector in recent years has reduced pause times
often to the sub-millisecond range, even for large heaps,
all but eliminating one of the major objections to garbage collection
in networked servers.
Work continues to refine the algorithm, reduce overhead and
latency further, and to explore new approaches.
</p>
<p>
......
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