On Fri, Jun 17, 2022 at 04:40:24PM +0200, Alexander Lobakin wrote: > So, in order to let the compiler optimize out such cases, expand the > test_bit() and __*_bit() definitions with a compile-time condition > check, so that they will pick the generic C non-atomic bitop > implementations when all of the arguments passed are compile-time > constants, which means that the result will be a compile-time > constant as well and the compiler will produce more efficient and > simple code in 100% cases (no changes when there's at least one > non-compile-time-constant argument). > The savings are architecture, compiler and compiler flags dependent, > for example, on x86_64 -O2: > > GCC 12: add/remove: 78/29 grow/shrink: 332/525 up/down: 31325/-61560 (-30235) > LLVM 13: add/remove: 79/76 grow/shrink: 184/537 up/down: 55076/-141892 (-86816) > LLVM 14: add/remove: 10/3 grow/shrink: 93/138 up/down: 3705/-6992 (-3287) > > and ARM64 (courtesy of Mark[0]): > > GCC 11: add/remove: 92/29 grow/shrink: 933/2766 up/down: 39340/-82580 (-43240) > LLVM 14: add/remove: 21/11 grow/shrink: 620/651 up/down: 12060/-15824 (-3764) Hmm... with *this version* of the series, I'm not getting results nearly as good as that when building defconfig atop v5.19-rc3: GCC 8.5.0: add/remove: 83/49 grow/shrink: 973/1147 up/down: 32020/-47824 (-15804) GCC 9.3.0: add/remove: 68/51 grow/shrink: 1167/592 up/down: 30720/-31352 (-632) GCC 10.3.0: add/remove: 84/37 grow/shrink: 1711/1003 up/down: 45392/-41844 (3548) GCC 11.1.0: add/remove: 88/31 grow/shrink: 1635/963 up/down: 51540/-46096 (5444) GCC 11.3.0: add/remove: 89/32 grow/shrink: 1629/966 up/down: 51456/-46056 (5400) GCC 12.1.0: add/remove: 84/31 grow/shrink: 1540/829 up/down: 48772/-43164 (5608) LLVM 12.0.1: add/remove: 118/58 grow/shrink: 437/381 up/down: 45312/-65668 (-20356) LLVM 13.0.1: add/remove: 35/19 grow/shrink: 416/243 up/down: 14408/-22200 (-7792) LLVM 14.0.0: add/remove: 42/16 grow/shrink: 415/234 up/down: 15296/-21008 (-5712) ... and that now seems to be regressing codegen with recent versions of GCC as much as it improves it LLVM. I'm not sure if we've improved some other code and removed the benefit between v5.19-rc1 and v5.19-rc3, or whether something else it at play, but this doesn't look as compelling as it did. Overall that's mostly hidden in the Image size, due to 64K alignment and padding requirements: Toolchain Before After Difference GCC 8.5.0 36178432 36178432 0 GCC 9.3.0 36112896 36112896 0 GCC 10.3.0 36442624 36377088 -65536 GCC 11.1.0 36311552 36377088 +65536 GCC 11.3.0 36311552 36311552 0 GCC 12.1.0 36377088 36377088 0 LLVM 12.0.1 31418880 31418880 0 LLVM 13.0.1 31418880 31418880 0 LLVM 14.0.0 31218176 31218176 0 ... so aside from the blip around GCC 10.3.0 and 11.1.0, there's not a massive change overall (due to 64KiB alignment restrictions for portions of the kernel Image). Thanks, Mark.