On Mon, Oct 10, 2022 at 10:03:53AM +0000, David Laight wrote:
From: Willy Tarreau w@1wt.eu
Sent: 09 October 2022 19:36
...
By the way, just for the sake of completeness, the one that consistently gives me a better output is this one:
size_t strlen(const char *str) { const char *s0 = str--;
while (*++str) ; return str - s0;
}
Which gives me this:
0000000000000000 <strlen>: 0: 48 8d 47 ff lea -0x1(%rdi),%rax 4: 48 ff c0 inc %rax 7: 80 38 00 cmpb $0x0,(%rax) a: 75 f8 jne 4 <len+0x4> c: 48 29 f8 sub %rdi,%rax f: c3 ret
But this is totally ruined by the addition of asm() in the loop. However I suspect that the construct is difficult to match against a real strlen() since it starts on an extra character, thus placing the asm() statement before the loop could durably preserve it. It does work here (the code remains the exact same one), but for how long, that's the question. Maybe we can revisit the various loop-based functions in the future with this in mind.
clang wilfully and persistently generates:
strlen: # @strlen movq $-1, %rax .LBB0_1: # =>This Inner Loop Header: Depth=1 cmpb $0, 1(%rdi,%rax) leaq 1(%rax), %rax jne .LBB0_1 retq
But feed the C for that into gcc and it generates a 'jmp strlen' at everything above -O1.
Interesting, that's not the case for me here with 12.2 from kernel.org on x86_64, which gives this at -O1, -O2, -O3 and -Ofast:
0000000000000000 <strlen>: 0: 48 8d 47 ff lea -0x1(%rdi),%rax 4: 0f 1f 40 00 nopl 0x0(%rax) 8: 48 83 c0 01 add $0x1,%rax c: 80 38 00 cmpb $0x0,(%rax) f: 75 f7 jne 8 <strlen+0x8> 11: 48 29 f8 sub %rdi,%rax 14: c3 ret
Out of curiosity what version were you using ?
I suspect that might run with less clocks/byte than the code above.
Certainly for large strings, but not for short ones.
Somewhere I hate some complier pessimisations. Substituting a call to strlen() is typical. strlen() is almost certainly optimised for long strings. If the string is short the coded loop will be faster.
Yes, and more importantly, if a developer takes the time to explicitly write a loop to do something that matches such a function, it's very likely that they already considered the function and did *not* want to use it for whatever reason. And the problem we're currently having with compilers is that they are not willing to respect the developer's intent because they always know better.
The same is true (and probably more so) for memcpy.
Yes, I think that we'll eventually have to stuff a few asm() here and there in a few such loops as compilers become less and less trustable.
Willy