The following rewords the documentation for -Og which over-promises the ability to debug the generated code. While -Og enables var-tracking and thus improves debugging in some areas the experience is usually worse than -O0 for standard C code.
Any other comments/clarifications? OK? Thanks, Richard. PR debug/78685 * doc/invoke.texi (-Og): Reword. --- gcc/doc/invoke.texi | 14 ++++++++------ 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/gcc/doc/invoke.texi b/gcc/doc/invoke.texi index 7fcf7dee497..7945bacb1ae 100644 --- a/gcc/doc/invoke.texi +++ b/gcc/doc/invoke.texi @@ -12888,17 +12888,19 @@ It turns off @option{-fsemantic-interposition}. @opindex Og @item -Og -Optimize debugging experience. @option{-Og} should be the optimization +Optimize while keeping in mind debugging experience. +@option{-Og} should be the optimization level of choice for the standard edit-compile-debug cycle, offering -a reasonable level of optimization while maintaining fast compilation -and a good debugging experience. It is a better choice than @option{-O0} -for producing debuggable code because some compiler passes -that collect debug information are disabled at @option{-O0}. +a reasonable blend of optimization, fast compilation and debugging experience +especially for code with a high abstraction penalty. Ontop of @option{-O0} +this enables @option{-fvar-tracking-assignments} and @option{-fvar-tracking} +which handles debug information in the prologue and epilogue of functions +better than @option{-O0}. Like @option{-O0}, @option{-Og} completely disables a number of optimization passes so that individual options controlling them have no effect. Otherwise @option{-Og} enables all @option{-O1} -optimization flags except for those that may interfere with debugging: +optimization flags except for those known to greatly interfere with debugging: @gccoptlist{-fbranch-count-reg -fdelayed-branch -fdse -fif-conversion -fif-conversion2 -- 2.43.0