Mail Archives: djgpp/1994/03/29/16:29:03
Curioser and curioser, said Alice....
I've been fiddling with the -O and -m options to GCC, and have been getting
some startling results. First, my compilation times don't change between
using -O0 and -O2. This is for a project made up of about a dozen files;
it takes almost exactly one minute to compile and link from scratch.
Note that this is C++.
Also, there doesn't seem to be *any* difference in code size between
using the -m486 and -mno-486 options to gcc. Is this an artifact of
the COFF file format, or is there really no difference? Or is it just
my particular code doesn't change when the codegen parameters are
tweaked? (The final linked COFF file is around 80K in size.)
On a similar note, is there a gcc out that does Pentium optmization
yet? I notice that the Info lists a bunch of PowerPC target-specific
options, but no P5 options.
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Christopher Tate | "Blue ice cubes? How degenerate!"
MSD, Inc. |
fixer AT faxcsl DOT dcrt DOT nih DOT gov | < anybody recognize the source? >
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