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How do I disable tailcall optimizations in gcc

Tags:

c++

c

gcc

Wondering if anyone knows the flag for gcc to disable tailcall optimizations. Basically in a tailcall optimization, gcc will replace a stack frame when the return value from a called function is passed through (via return) or nothing else happens in the function.

That is, in

 void main() {
     foo();
 }

 void foo() {
     bar();
 }

 void bar() {
     /* at this point in code, the foo() stack frame no longer exists! */    
 }

When foo calls bar, gcc emits code that replaces the stack frame for foo, rather than adding a new stack frame.

My company has a stack unwinder that can print out a stack trace from any point in code. tailcall optimization makes stack frames disappear, which can confuse the stack trace somewhat.

I am compiling for x86-64 using gcc4.3.

Thanks in advance! P

like image 572
pgod Avatar asked Sep 09 '10 18:09

pgod


1 Answers

GCC manual:

   -foptimize-sibling-calls
       Optimize sibling and tail recursive calls.

       Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

So either compile with -O0/-O1, or use -fno-optimize-sibling-calls.

like image 175
liori Avatar answered Sep 28 '22 08:09

liori