Re: Using POPCNT and other advanced bit manipulation instructions
| От | Tom Lane | 
|---|---|
| Тема | Re: Using POPCNT and other advanced bit manipulation instructions | 
| Дата | |
| Msg-id | 16168.1550121890@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст | 
| Ответ на | Re: Using POPCNT and other advanced bit manipulation instructions (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>) | 
| Ответы | Re: Using POPCNT and other advanced bit manipulation instructions | 
| Список | pgsql-hackers | 
Some further thoughts here ...
Does the "lzcnt" runtime probe actually do anything useful?
On the x86_64 compilers I tried (gcc 8.2.1 and 4.4.7), __builtin_clz
and __builtin_ctz compile to sequences involving bsrq and bsfq
regardless of -mpopcnt.  It's fairly hard to see how lzcnt would
buy anything over those sequences even if there were zero overhead
involved in using it.
Alvaro noted that the test programs used by c-compiler.m4 fail
to produce any actual code involving the builtin, because of
compile-time constant folding.  This seems pretty unwise.
I see that on my x86_64 compilers, without -mpopcnt,
__builtin_popcnt compiles to a call of some libgcc function
or other.  It's conceivable that on an (arguably misconfigured)
platform, these c-compiler.m4 tests would pass yet the build fails
at link because libgcc lacks the needed infrastructure.  These tests
should be coded in a way that doesn't allow the call to be optimized
away -- cf comments for PGAC_C_BUILTIN_OP_OVERFLOW.
Also, it's starting to seem like we have enough probes for compiler
builtins that we should fold them to use one set of infrastructure.
There are some like __builtin_constant_p that probably do need their
own custom tests, but these ones that just verify that a call
compiles seem pretty duplicative ...
            regards, tom lane
		
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