Tells the compiler to use a specific memory model to generate code and store data.
None
Intel® 64 architecture
Linux: | -mcmodel=mem_model |
Mac OS: | None |
Windows: | None |
mem_model | Is the memory model to use. Possible values are: | |
small | Tells the compiler to restrict
code and data to the first 2GB of address space. All accesses of code
and data can be done with Instruction Pointer (IP)-relative addressing. | |
medium | Tells the compiler to restrict code to the first 2GB; it places no memory restriction on data. Accesses of code can be done with IP-relative addressing, but accesses of data must be done with absolute addressing. | |
large | Places no memory restriction on code or data. All accesses of code and data must be done with absolute addressing. |
/Qmcmodel=small |
On systems
using Intel® 64 architecture, the compiler restricts code and data
to the first 2GB of address space. Instruction Pointer (IP)-relative addressing
can be used to access code and data. |
This option tells the compiler to use a specific memory model to generate code and store data. It can affect code size and performance. If your program has COMMON blocks and local data with a total size smaller than 2GB, -mcmodel=small is sufficient. COMMONs larger than 2GB require -mcmodel=medium or -mcmodel=large. Allocation of memory larger than 2GB can be done with any setting of -mcmodel.
IP-relative addressing requires only 32 bits, whereas absolute addressing requires 64-bits. IP-relative addressing is somewhat faster. So, the small memory model has the least impact on performance.
When you specify -mcmodel=medium or -mcmodel=large, you must also specify compiler option -shared-intel to ensure that the correct dynamic versions of the Intel run-time libraries are used.
When shared objects (.so files) are built, position-independent code (PIC) is specified so that a single .so file can support all three memory models. The compiler driver adds compiler option -fpic to implement PIC.
However, you must specify a memory model for code that is to be placed in a static library or code that will be linked statically.
None
shared-intel compiler option
fpic compiler option