On Mon, 3 Mar 2025 10:47:20 +0800
Kuan-Wei Chiu <visitor...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Sun, Mar 02, 2025 at 07:09:54PM +0000, David Laight wrote:
> > On Mon, 3 Mar 2025 01:29:19 +0800
> > Kuan-Wei Chiu <visitor...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >   
> > > Hi Yury,
> > > 
...
> > > #define parity(val)                                       \
> > > ({                                                        \
> > >   __auto_type __v = (val);                        \
> > >   bool __ret;                                     \
> > >   switch (BITS_PER_TYPE(val)) {                   \
> > >   case 64:                                        \
> > >           __v ^= __v >> 16 >> 16;                 \
> > >           fallthrough;                            \
> > >   case 32:                                        \
> > >           __v ^= __v >> 16;                       \
> > >           fallthrough;                            \
> > >   case 16:                                        \
> > >           __v ^= __v >> 8;                        \
> > >           fallthrough;                            \
> > >   case 8:                                         \
> > >           __v ^= __v >> 4;                        \
> > >           __ret =  (0x6996 >> (__v & 0xf)) & 1;   \
> > >           break;                                  \
> > >   default:                                        \
> > >           BUILD_BUG();                            \
> > >   }                                               \
> > >   __ret;                                          \
> > > })  
> > 
> > I'm seeing double-register shifts for 64bit values on 32bit systems.
> > And gcc is doing 64bit double-register maths all the way down.
> > 
> > That is fixed by changing the top of the define to
> > #define parity(val)                                 \
> > ({                                                  \
> >     unsigned int __v = (val);                       \
> >     bool __ret;                                     \
> >     switch (BITS_PER_TYPE(val)) {                   \
> >     case 64:                                        \
> >             __v ^= val >> 16 >> 16;                 \
> >             fallthrough;                            \
> > 
> > But it's need changing to only expand 'val' once.
> > Perhaps:
> >     auto_type _val = (val);
> >     u32 __ret = val;
> > and (mostly) s/__v/__ret/g
> >  
> I'm happy to make this change, though I'm a bit confused about how much
> we care about the code generated by gcc. So this is the macro expected
> in v3:

There is 'good', 'bad' and 'ugly' - it was in the 'bad' to 'ugly' area.

> 
> #define parity(val)                                   \
> ({                                                    \
>       __auto_type __v = (val);                        \
>       u32 __ret = val;                                \
>       switch (BITS_PER_TYPE(val)) {                   \
>       case 64:                                        \
>                 __ret ^= __v >> 16 >> 16;             \
>               fallthrough;                            \
>       case 32:                                        \
>               __ret ^= __ret >> 16;                   \
>               fallthrough;                            \
>       case 16:                                        \
>               __ret ^= __ret >> 8;                    \
>               fallthrough;                            \
>       case 8:                                         \
>               __ret ^= __ret >> 4;                    \
>               __ret = (0x6996 >> (__ret & 0xf)) & 1;  \
>               break;                                  \
>       default:                                        \
>               BUILD_BUG();                            \
>       }                                               \
>       __ret;                                          \
> })

That looks like it will avoid double-register shifts on 32bit archs.
arm64 can do slightly better (a couple of instructions) because of its
barrel shifter.
x86 can do a lot better because of the cpu 'parity' flag.
But maybe it is never used anywhere that really matters.

        David


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