MIR optimizations

MIR optimizations are optimizations run on the MIR to produce better MIR before codegen. This is important for two reasons: first, it makes the final generated executable code better, and second, it means that LLVM has less work to do, so compilation is faster. Note that since MIR is generic (not monomorphized yet), these optimizations are particularly effective; we can optimize the generic version, so all of the monomorphizations are cheaper!

MIR optimizations run after borrow checking. We run a series of optimization passes over the MIR to improve it. Some passes are required to run on all code, some passes don't actually do optimizations but only check stuff, and some passes are only turned on in release mode.

The optimized_mir query is called to produce the optimized MIR for a given DefId. This query makes sure that the borrow checker has run and that some validation has occurred. Then, it steals the MIR optimizes it, and returns the improved MIR.

Defining optimization passes

The list of passes run and the order in which they are run is defined by the run_optimization_passes function. It contains an array of passes to run. Each pass in the array is a struct that implements the MirPass trait. The array is an array of &dyn MirPass trait objects. Typically, a pass is implemented in its own submodule of the rustc_mir::transform module.

Some examples of passes are:

  • CleanupNonCodegenStatements: remove some of the info that is only needed for analyses, rather than codegen.
  • ConstProp: Does constant propagation

You can see the “Implementors” section of the MirPass rustdocs for more examples.