JavaScriptCore (which is where SquirrelFish Extreme lives) and V8 have a more similar approach in that they both JIT all JS code immediately and produce code that is more speculative (eg. if you are doing a*b they generate code that assumes a and b are numbers and falls back to exceptionally slow code if they aren't). This has a number of benefits over tracing, namely that you can jit all code, regardless as to whether or not it calls native code/throws exceptions, etc, which means a single DOM call won't destroy performance. The downside is that all code is speculative -- TM will inline calls to Math.floor, etc, but the best JSC/V8 can do would be equivalent to a=Math.floor(0.5) -> a=(Math.floor == realFloor) ? inline : Math.floor(0.5) this has costs both in performance and memory usage, it also isn't particularly feasible. The reason for this is the up front compilation, whereas TM only JITs code after it's run (and so knows exactly what function was called) JSC and V8 have no real basis to make such an assumption and basically have to guess (and currently neither attempts this). The one thing that V8 and JSC do to try and compensate for this problem is to track what they've seen in the past and incorporate that into the path of execution, both use a combination of techniques to do this caching, in especially hot cases they rewrite small portions of the instruction stream, and in other cases they keep out of band caches. Broadly speaking if you have code that goes
a.x * a.yV8 and JSC will check the 'implicit type'/'Structure' twice -- once for each access, and then check that a.x and a.y are both numbers, whereas TM will generate code that checks the type of a only once, and can (all things being equal) just multiply a.x and a.y without checking that they're numbers.
