I noticed that sometimes even if I don't use iostream
and related I/O libraries, my binaries produced by Mingw were still unreasonably large.
For example, I wrote a code to use vector
and cstdio
only and compiled it with -O2 -flto
, my program can go as large as 2MB! I run nm main.exe > e.txt
and was shocked to see all the iostream
related functions in it.
After some googling, I learnt to use -ffunction-sections -Wl,-gc-sections
, that reduces the program size from 2MB to ~300KB (if with -s
, 100+KB). Excellent!
To further test the effect of -ffunction-sections -Wl,-gc-sections
, here is another code:
#include <cstdio>
#include <vector>
#include <tuple>
#include <algorithm>
#include <chrono>
#include <windows.h>
#undef min
struct Point {
int x, y;
};
constexpr int length = 5;
constexpr int half_length() {
return length & 1 ? length : length - 1;
}
template<class F>
int func_template(F&& f) {
#ifdef _MSC_VER
puts(__FUNCSIG__);
#else
puts(__PRETTY_FUNCTION__);
#endif
printf("\n");
return f();
}
struct fake_func {
int operator()() const { return 59; };
};
template<class F, class... Args>
int pass_args(F&& f, Args&&... args) {
#ifdef _MSC_VER
puts(__FUNCSIG__);
#else
puts(__PRETTY_FUNCTION__);
#endif
printf("\n");
return f(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
}
template<class T>
T min(T x) {
return x;
}
template<class T, class... Args>
T min(T x, Args... args) {
T y = min(args...);
return x < y ? x : y;
}
void type_verifier(int x) {
printf("%dd ", x);
}
void type_verifier(char x) {
printf("'%c' ", x);
}
void type_verifier(double x) {
printf("%lff ", x);
}
template<class T>
void type_verifier(T x) {
printf("unknown ");
}
template<class T, class... Args>
void type_verifier(T x, Args... args) {
type_verifier(x);
type_verifier(args...);
}
int bufLen;
char buf[100];
template<class... Args>
inline int send(Args... args) {
bufLen = sprintf(buf, std::forward<Args>(args)...);
return bufLen;
}
namespace std {
inline namespace v1 {
void func() {
printf("I am v1\n");
}
}
namespace v2 {
void func() {
printf("I am v2\n");
}
}
}
int main() {
std::vector<int> v {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
for (auto &i : v) printf("%d ", i);
printf("\n");
Point p {1, 2};
printf("%d %d\n", p.x, p.y);
auto t = std::make_tuple("Hello World", 12);
printf("%s %d\n", std::get<0>(t), std::get<1>(t));
int a, b;
auto f = []() { return std::make_tuple(1, 2); };
std::tie(a, b) = f();
printf("%d %d\n", a, b);
//int test_constexpr[half_length() + 4];
int ft = func_template([]{ return 42; });
printf("func_template: %d\n", ft);
ft = func_template(fake_func {});
printf("func_template: %d\n", ft);
ft = pass_args([](int x, int y) { return x + y; }, 152, 58);
printf("pass_args: %d\n", ft);
ft = pass_args([](int n, const char *m) {
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) printf("%c ", m[i]);
printf("\n");
return 0;
}, 5, "Hello");
printf("min: %d\n", min(3, 4, 2, 1, 5));
type_verifier(12, 'A', 0.5, "Hello");
printf("\n");
/* send("Hello World");
send("%d", 1);
send("%d", "1234");
sprintf(buf, "%d", "123");*/
std::func();
std::v1::func();
std::v2::func();
std::rotate(v.begin(), v.begin() + 2, v.end());
for (auto &i : v) printf("%d ", i);
printf("\n");
auto start = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
std::vector<int> x {2, 4, 2, 0, 5, 10, 7, 3, 7, 1};
printf("insertion sort: ");
for (auto &i: x) printf("%d ", i);
printf("\n");
// insertion sort
for (auto i = x.begin(); i != x.end(); ++i) {
std::rotate(std::upper_bound(x.begin(), i, *i), i, i+1);
for (auto &j: x) printf("%d ", j);
printf("\n");
}
std::vector<int> heap {7, 5, 3, 4, 2};
std::make_heap(heap.begin(), heap.end());
std::pop_heap(heap.begin(), heap.end());
printf("Pop heap (%d)\n", heap.back());
heap.pop_back();
heap.push_back(1);
std::push_heap(heap.begin(), heap.end());
std::sort_heap(heap.begin(), heap.end());
for (auto &i: heap) printf("%d ", i);
printf("\n");
auto end = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
auto diff = end - start;
printf("time: %I64d ms\n",
std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::milliseconds>(diff).count());
{
auto u = v;
std::move_backward(u.begin(), u.begin() + u.size() - 1, u.begin() + u.size());
for (auto &i : u) printf("%d ", i);
printf("\n");
}
{
auto u = v;
std::move(u.begin() + 1, u.begin() + u.size(), u.begin());
for (auto &i : u) printf("%d ", i);
printf("\n");
}
start = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
Sleep(2000);
end = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
diff = end - start;
printf("time: %I64d ms\n",
std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::milliseconds>(diff).count());
std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point before;
before = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
Sleep(2000);
auto after = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
printf("%f seconds\n", std::chrono::duration<double>(after - before).count());
return 0;
}
To my disappointment, the final program is once again > 2MB.
Interestingly, cl.exe
thoughtfully remove all iostream
related functions consistently even if I didn't use /O2
or any other flags, just cl.exe main.cpp
. (For the code above, cl.exe
produces 100+KB binary).
Did I miss any other useful gcc flags for this?
Specification:
- Mingw-w64 gcc 6.1.0
- Mingw-w64 gcc 6.2.0
- Visual Studio 2017 RC
- All binaries are linked statically
Compare with Linux
I compared the binaries produced by gcc 4.9.2 (Linux) and gcc 4.9.3 (mingw-w64) for the above code (except windows.h
and Sleep
were removed).
Compile flag
g++ -o c++11 c++11.cpp -std=c++11 -static-libgcc -static-libstdc++ -ffunction-sections -Wl,-gc-sections -O2
Linux gcc did successfully strip away iostream
and functions without the need for -flto
while Mingw-w64 gcc just can't do it properly.
Windows only support PE format while Linux supports ELF format, allowing Linux to use Gold linker. Maybe this is the explanation?
Update
I eventually filed a bug at https://sourceforge.net/p/mingw-w64/bugs/578/ . Let's hope it gets some attentions!
Try stripping debug and symbol info from static libstdc++ via -Wl,--strip-all
. This reduced my executable from 9M to 670K on Cygwin (13x) and from 6M to 80K on Ubuntu (80x).
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40856787/gcc-strip-unused-functions