> if an argument fits into the size of a register, it's better to pass by value to avoid the extra indirection.
Whether an argument is passed in a register or not is unfortunately much more nuanced than this: it depends on the ABI calling conventions (which vary depending on OS as well as CPU architecture). There are some examples where the argument will not be passed in a register despite being "small enough", and some examples where the argument may be split across two or more registers.
For instance, in the x86-64 ELF ABI spec [0], the type needs to be <= 16 bytes (despite registers only being 8 bytes), and it must not have any nontrivial copy / move constructors. And, of course, only some registers are used in this way, and if those are used up, your value params will be passed on the stack regardless.
Whether an argument is passed in a register or not is unfortunately much more nuanced than this: it depends on the ABI calling conventions (which vary depending on OS as well as CPU architecture). There are some examples where the argument will not be passed in a register despite being "small enough", and some examples where the argument may be split across two or more registers.
For instance, in the x86-64 ELF ABI spec [0], the type needs to be <= 16 bytes (despite registers only being 8 bytes), and it must not have any nontrivial copy / move constructors. And, of course, only some registers are used in this way, and if those are used up, your value params will be passed on the stack regardless.
[0] Section 3.2.3 of https://gitlab.com/x86-psABIs/x86-64-ABI