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.net - When is a method eligible to be inlined by the CLR?

I've observed a lot of "stack-introspective" code in applications, which often implicitly rely on their containing methods not being inlined for their correctness. Such methods commonly involve calls to:

  • MethodBase.GetCurrentMethod
  • Assembly.GetCallingAssembly
  • Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly

Now, I find the information surrounding these methods to be very confusing. I've heard that the run-time will not inline a method that calls GetCurrentMethod, but I can't find any documentation to that effect. I've seen posts on StackOverflow on several occasions, such as this one, indicating the CLR does not inline cross-assembly calls, but the GetCallingAssembly documentation strongly indicates otherwise.

There's also the much-maligned [MethodImpl(MethodImplOptions.NoInlining)], but I am unsure if the CLR considers this to be a "request" or a "command."

Note that I am asking about inlining eligibility from the standpoint of contract, not about when current implementations of the JITter decline to consider methods because of implementation difficulties, or about when the JITter finally ends up choosing to inline an eligible method after assessing the trade-offs. I have read this and this, but they seem to be more focused on the last two points (there are passing mentions of MethodImpOptions.NoInlining and "exotic IL instructions", but these seem to be presented as heuristics rather than as obligations).

When is the CLR allowed to inline?

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It is a jitter implementation detail, the x86 and x64 jitters have subtly different rules. This is casually documented in blog posts of team members that worked on the jitter but the teams certainly reserve the right to alter the rules. Looks like you already found them.

Inlining methods from other assemblies is most certainly supported, a lot of the .NET classes would work quite miserably if that wasn't the case. You can see it at work when you look at the machine code generated for Console.WriteLine(), it often gets inlined when you pass a simple string. To see this for yourself, you need to switch to the Release build and change a debugger option. Tools + Options, Debugging, General, untick "Suppress JIT optimization on module load".

There is otherwise no good reason to consider MethodImpOptions.NoInlining maligned, it's pretty much why it exists in the first place. It is in fact used intentionally in the .NET framework on lots of small public methods that call an internal helper method. It makes exception stack traces easier to diagnose.


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