To be consistent with the all the other tiers and avoid confusion, we
rename --opt to ---turbofan, and --always-opt to --always-turbofan.
Change-Id: Ie23dc8282b3fb4cf2fbf73b6c3d5264de5d09718
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/v8/v8/+/3610431
Reviewed-by: Leszek Swirski <leszeks@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Camillo Bruni <cbruni@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Jakob Linke <jgruber@chromium.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#80336}
TurboFan wasn't able to inline calls to Array.prototype.push which
didn't have exactly one parameter. This was a rather artifical
limitation and was mostly due to the way the MaybeGrowFastElements
operator was implemented (which was not ideal by itself). Refactoring
this a bit, allows us to inline the operation in general, independent
of the number of values to push.
Array#push with multiple parameters is used quite a lot inside Ember (as
discovered by Apple, i.e. https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=175823)
and is also dominating the Six-Speed/SpreadLiterals/ES5 benchmark (see
https://twitter.com/SpiderMonkeyJS/status/906528938452832257 from the
SpiderMonkey folks). The micro-benchmark mentioned in the tracking bug
(v8:6808) improves from
arrayPush0: 2422 ms.
arrayPush1: 2567 ms.
arrayPush2: 4092 ms.
arrayPush3: 4308 ms.
to
arrayPush0: 798 ms.
arrayPush1: 2563 ms.
arrayPush2: 2623 ms.
arrayPush3: 2773 ms.
with this change, effectively removing the odd 50-60% performance
cliff that was associated with going from one parameter to two or
more.
Bug: v8:2229, v8:6808
Change-Id: Iffe4c1233903c04c3dc2062aad39d99769c8ab57
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/657582
Reviewed-by: Jaroslav Sevcik <jarin@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Benedikt Meurer <bmeurer@chromium.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#47940}