On Sat, Jun 5, 2021 at 6:29 PM Alan Stern <stern@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Interesting. And changing one of the branches from barrier() to __asm__ > __volatile__("nop": : :"memory") also causes a branch to be emitted. So > even though the compiler doesn't "look inside" assembly code, it does > compare two pieces at least textually and apparently assumes if they are > identical then they do the same thing. That's actually a feature in some cases, ie the ability to do CSE on asm statements (ie the "always has the same output" optimization that the docs talk about). So gcc has always looked at the asm string for that reason, afaik. I think it's something of a bug when it comes to "asm volatile", but the documentation isn't exactly super-specific. There is a statement of "Under certain circumstances, GCC may duplicate (or remove duplicates of) your assembly code when optimizing" and a suggestion of using "%=" to generate a unique instance of an asm. Which might actually be a good idea for "barrier()", just in case. However, the problem with that is that I don't think we are guaranteed to have a universal comment character for asm statements. IOW, it might be a good idea to do something like #define barrier() \ __asm__ __volatile__("# barrier %=": : :"memory") but I'm not 100% convinced that '#' is always a comment in asm code, so the above might not actually build everywhere. However, *testing* the above (in my config, where '#' does work as a comment character) shows that gcc doesn't actually consider them to be distinct EVEN THEN, and will still merge two barrier statements. That's distressing. So the gcc docs are actively wrong, and %= does nothing - it will still compare as the exact same inline asm, because the string equality testing is apparently done before any expansion. Something like this *does* seem to work: #define ____barrier(id) __asm__ __volatile__("#" #id: : :"memory") #define __barrier(id) ____barrier(id) #define barrier() __barrier(__COUNTER__) which is "interesting" or "disgusting" depending on how you happen to feel. And again - the above works only as long as "#" is a valid comment character in the assembler. And I have this very dim memory of us having comments in inline asm, and it breaking certain configurations (for when the assembler that the compiler uses is a special human-unfriendly one that only accepts compiler output). You could make even more disgusting hacks, and have it generate something like .pushsection .discard.barrier .long #id .popsection instead of a comment. We already expect that to work and have generic inline asm cases that generate code like that. Linus