On Tue, 2004-11-30 at 01:33 -0500, William M. Quarles wrote:
Arjan van de Ven wrote:
On Sun, 2004-11-28 at 19:46 -0500, William M. Quarles wrote:
I would, but are there any free ways of doing benchmarks? Not to mention I'm not really much of a programmer, so I don't know what oprofile/gprof are.
for what it's worth... cmov isn't faster on newer (pM/pIV/amd64 level) CPUs than the open coded conditional jump anymore.... so there no longer really is a reason to use cmov-only code.
More terminology that I am not aware of... cmov?
cmov is a conditional move instruction on x86. Basically a C code construct like this
if (some_condition == 5) A = B;
normally gets translated into (pseudo asm)
compare some_condition, 5 jump_if_not_equal label; move B into A label: ... the rest of the program
the "jump_if_not_equal" instruction is a conditional instruction, which means that the cpu cannot look ahead and decide what the next instruction is, until the actual compare is finished. With the current deeply pipelined cpus that is sort of a problem (the solution is that the cpu makes a guess what it'll be based on past decisions for this line of code, and if wrong, it backtracks).
Now with cmov, the code looks like
compare some_condition, 5 move_if_equal B into A ... the rest of the program
and in theory there is no question about which instructions will be executed when, so the "cost" of having an empty pipeline until the decision is known wouldn't be there. And that's mostly true for PPro/PII level CPUS.
However, newer ones (both AMD and Intel) operate in such a way that the advantage of this no longer is an advantage, they need to know the result anyway in effect (and also make a guess about the "if" result)
I know that I'm a novice about development, you don't have to further proove it to me.
I absolutely don't mean it in that way.