gcc -ansi versus SSE4.2 detection
[ this is a bit roundabout, bear with me ]
I noticed that, contrary to project policy, a //-style comment snuck into
pg_regress.c a month or two back. I had had the idea that buildfarm
member pademelon would complain about such comments, given its stone-age
C compiler, but evidently not. After some experimentation it seems that
"gcc -ansi" can be used to throw errors for // comments, so I'm planning
to enable that flag on dromedary. However I found out that adding -ansi
also caused configure to stop selecting "-msse4.2", which seemed odd,
since that switch has no bearing on C language conformance. And it fell
back to the slicing-by-8 CRC implementation too.
Investigation showed that that's because -ansi causes the compiler to
stop defining __SSE4_2__, which configure supposes must get defined if
we are targeting an SSE 4.2 processor. This seems a bit dumb to me:
if we have determined that "-msse4.2" works, isn't that sufficient
evidence that we can use the intrinsics? Or if not, isn't there a less
fragile way to find out the target?
Also, it seems like the logic in configure.in is broken in any case:
if we are able to compile the intrinsics, should it not pick the
runtime-determination option for CRC? It isn't doing that.
regards, tom lane
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On 06/05/2015 09:27 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
[ this is a bit roundabout, bear with me ]
I noticed that, contrary to project policy, a //-style comment snuck into
pg_regress.c a month or two back. I had had the idea that buildfarm
member pademelon would complain about such comments, given its stone-age
C compiler, but evidently not. After some experimentation it seems that
"gcc -ansi" can be used to throw errors for // comments, so I'm planning
to enable that flag on dromedary. However I found out that adding -ansi
also caused configure to stop selecting "-msse4.2", which seemed odd,
since that switch has no bearing on C language conformance. And it fell
back to the slicing-by-8 CRC implementation too.
Hmm, that's odd. -ansi has no effect on the CRC implementation on my system.
Investigation showed that that's because -ansi causes the compiler to
stop defining __SSE4_2__, which configure supposes must get defined if
we are targeting an SSE 4.2 processor. This seems a bit dumb to me:
if we have determined that "-msse4.2" works, isn't that sufficient
evidence that we can use the intrinsics? Or if not, isn't there a less
fragile way to find out the target?Also, it seems like the logic in configure.in is broken in any case:
if we are able to compile the intrinsics, should it not pick the
runtime-determination option for CRC? It isn't doing that.
It's quite subtle. The point of the __SSE4.2__ test is to determine if
we are targeting a system that has SSE4.2 instructions. If it's defined,
then we can assume that SSE4.2 instructions are always available. For
example, if you pass CFLAGS=-msse4.2, gcc can freely use SSE4.2
instructions when optimizing, and the produced binary will not work on a
system without SSE4.2 support. In that case, __SSE4.2__ is defined, and
we don't need the run-time check or the fallback implementation, because
we can also freely assume that SSE 4.2 support is available.
If __SSE4.2__ is not defined, but the compiler accepts -msse4.2, that
means that the compiler will normally not use SSE4.2 instructions, and
the produced binary must work without them. We will use the -msse4.2
flag when compiling pg_crc32c_sse42.c, and at runtime, we check that SSE
4.2 instructions are available before using it.
- Heikki
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Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> writes:
On 06/05/2015 09:27 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
... However I found out that adding -ansi
also caused configure to stop selecting "-msse4.2", which seemed odd,
since that switch has no bearing on C language conformance. And it fell
back to the slicing-by-8 CRC implementation too.
Hmm, that's odd. -ansi has no effect on the CRC implementation on my system.
Ummm ... I was reading the diff backwards. Actually it seems that on
dromedary's platform, CFLAGS_SSE42 is set to empty by default, but forcing
"-ansi" makes it get set to "-msse4.2". Evidently, (this) gcc will accept
the _mm_crc32_foo intrinsics by default normally, but if you say -ansi
then it won't accept them unless you also say "-msse4.2".
It looks like the actual reason that we aren't using the runtime-check
CRC implementation is that we can't find a way to do "cpuid" on this
old version of OS X. Not sure if it's worth the time to look for one;
modern versions of OS X do have __get_cpuid().
regards, tom lane
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On 06/05/2015 10:07 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
It looks like the actual reason that we aren't using the runtime-check
CRC implementation is that we can't find a way to do "cpuid" on this
old version of OS X. Not sure if it's worth the time to look for one;
modern versions of OS X do have __get_cpuid().
Doesn't seem worth it to me.
- Heikki
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