Re: [PATCH 02/17] bitops: Add generic parity calculation for u64

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On February 27, 2025 1:57:41 PM PST, David Laight <david.laight.linux@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>On Thu, 27 Feb 2025 13:05:29 -0500
>Yury Norov <yury.norov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Feb 26, 2025 at 10:29:11PM +0000, David Laight wrote:
>> > On Mon, 24 Feb 2025 14:27:03 -0500
>> > Yury Norov <yury.norov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > ....  
>> > > +#define parity(val)					\
>> > > +({							\
>> > > +	u64 __v = (val);				\
>> > > +	int __ret;					\
>> > > +	switch (BITS_PER_TYPE(val)) {			\
>> > > +	case 64:					\
>> > > +		__v ^= __v >> 32;			\
>> > > +		fallthrough;				\
>> > > +	case 32:					\
>> > > +		__v ^= __v >> 16;			\
>> > > +		fallthrough;				\
>> > > +	case 16:					\
>> > > +		__v ^= __v >> 8;			\
>> > > +		fallthrough;				\
>> > > +	case 8:						\
>> > > +		__v ^= __v >> 4;			\
>> > > +		__ret =  (0x6996 >> (__v & 0xf)) & 1;	\
>> > > +		break;					\
>> > > +	default:					\
>> > > +		BUILD_BUG();				\
>> > > +	}						\
>> > > +	__ret;						\
>> > > +})
>> > > +  
>> > 
>> > You really don't want to do that!
>> > gcc makes a right hash of it for x86 (32bit).
>> > See https://www.godbolt.org/z/jG8dv3cvs  
>> 
>> GCC fails to even understand this. Of course, the __v should be an
>> __auto_type. But that way GCC fails to understand that case 64 is
>> a dead code for all smaller type and throws a false-positive 
>> Wshift-count-overflow. This is a known issue, unfixed for 25 years!
>
>Just do __v ^= __v >> 16 >> 16
>
>> 
>> https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=4210
>>  
>> > You do better using a __v32 after the 64bit xor.  
>> 
>> It should be an __auto_type. I already mentioned. So because of that,
>> we can either do something like this:
>> 
>>   #define parity(val)					\
>>   ({							\
>>   #ifdef CLANG                                          \
>>   	__auto_type __v = (val);			\
>>   #else /* GCC; because of this and that */             \
>>   	u64 __v = (val);			        \
>>   #endif                                                \
>>   	int __ret;					\
>> 
>> Or simply disable Wshift-count-overflow for GCC.
>
>For 64bit values on 32bit it is probably better to do:
>int p32(unsigned long long x)
>{
>    unsigned int lo = x;
>    lo ^= x >> 32;
>    lo ^= lo >> 16;
>    lo ^= lo >> 8;
>    lo ^= lo >> 4;
>    return (0x6996 >> (lo & 0xf)) & 1;
>}
>That stops the compiler doing 64bit shifts (ok on x86, but probably not elsewhere).
>It is likely to be reasonably optimal for most 64bit cpu as well.
>(For x86-64 it probably removes a load of REX prefix.)
>(It adds an extra instruction to arm because if its barrel shifter.)
>
>
>> 
>> > Even the 64bit version is probably sub-optimal (both gcc and clang).
>> > The whole lot ends up being a bit single register dependency chain.
>> > You want to do:  
>> 
>> No, I don't. I want to have a sane compiler that does it for me.
>> 
>> > 	mov %eax, %edx
>> > 	shrl $n, %eax
>> > 	xor %edx, %eax
>> > so that the 'mov' and 'shrl' can happen in the same clock
>> > (without relying on the register-register move being optimised out).
>> > 
>> > I dropped in the arm64 for an example of where the magic shift of 6996
>> > just adds an extra instruction.  
>> 
>> It's still unclear to me that this parity thing is used in hot paths.
>> If that holds, it's unclear that your hand-made version is better than
>> what's generated by GCC.
>
>I wasn't seriously considering doing that optimisation.
>Perhaps just hoping is might make a compiler person think :-)
>
>	David
>
>> 
>> Do you have any perf test?
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> Yury
>

What the compiler people need to do is to not make __builtin_parity*() generate crap.





[Index of Archives]     [Linux Input]     [Video for Linux]     [Gstreamer Embedded]     [Mplayer Users]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [Yosemite Backpacking]

  Powered by Linux