Hi Dmitry, Bogdan,
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dmitry Stogov"
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2015
Hi Bogdan,
On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 5:22 PM, Andone, Bogdan <bogdan.and...@intel.com>
wrote:
Hi Guys,
My name is Bogdan Andone and I work for Intel in the area of SW
performance analysis and optimizations.
We would like to actively contribute to Zend PHP project and to involve
ourselves in finding new performance improvement opportunities based on
available and/or new hardware features.
I am still in the source code digesting phase but I had a look to the
fast_memcpy() implementation in opcache extension which uses SSE
intrinsics:
If I am not wrong fast_memcpy() function is not currently used, as I
didn't find the "-msse4.2" gcc flag in the Makefile. I assume you
probably
didn't see any performance benefit so you preserved generic memcpy()
usage.
This is not SSE4.2 this is SSE2.
Any X86_64 target implements SSE2, so it's enabled by default on x86_64
systems (at least on Linux).
It also may be enabled on x86 targets adding "-msse2" option.
Right, I was gonna say, I think that was a mistake, and all x86_64 should be
using it at least...
Of course, using anything newer that needs special options is nearly
useless, since I guess the vast majority aren't building themselves, but
using lowest-common-denominator repos. I had been wondering about speeding
up some other things, maybe taking advantage of SSE4.x (string stuff, I
don't know), but... like I said. Runtime checks would be awesome, but
except for the recent GCC, the intrinsics aren't available unless the
corresponding SSE option is enabled (lame!). So requires a separate
compilation unit. :-/
Of course I guess if the intrinsic maps simply to the instruction, could
just do it with inline asm, if wanted to do runtime CPU checking.
I would like to propose a slightly different implementation which uses
_mm_store_si128() instead of _mm_stream_si128(). This ensures that copied
memory is preserved in data cache, which is not bad as the interpreter
will
start to use this data without the need to go back one more time to
memory.
_mm_stream_si128() in the current implementation is intended to be used
for
stores where we want to avoid reading data into the cache and the cache
pollution; in opcache scenario it seems that preserving the data in cache
has a positive impact.
_mm_stream_si128() was used on purpose, to avoid CPU cache pollution,
because data copied from SHM to process memory is not necessary used
before
eviction.
By the way, I'm not completely sure. May be _mm_store_si128() can provide
better result.
Interesting (that _stream was used on purpose). :-)
Running php-cgi -T10000 on WordPress4.1/index.php I see ~1% performance
increase for the new version of fast_memcpy() compared with the generic
memcpy(). Same result using a full load test with http_load on a Haswell
EP
18 cores.
1% is really big improvement.
I'll able to check this only on next week (when back from vacation).
Well, he talks like he was comparing to *generic* memcpy(), so...? But not
sure how that would have been accomplished.
BTW guys, I was wondering before why fast_memcpy() only in this opcache
area? For the prefetch and/or cache pollution reasons?
Because shouldn't the library functions in glibc, etc. already be using
versions optimized for the CPU at runtime? So is generic memcpy() already
"fast?" (Other than overhead for a function call.)
Here is the proposed pull request:
https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/1446
Related to the SW prefetching instructions in fast_memcpy()... they are
not really useful in this place. There benefit is almost negligible as
the
address requested for prefetch will be needed at the next iteration (few
cycles later), while the time needed to get data from RAM is >100 cycles
usually.. Nevertheless... they don't heart and it seems they still have a
very small benefit so I preserved the original instruction and I added a
new prefetch request for the destination pointer.
I also didn't see significant difference from software prefetching.
So how about prefetching "further"/more interations ahead...?
Thanks. Dmitry.
Hope it helps,
Bogdan
- Matt
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