On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 11:31:27AM -0700, Richard Henderson wrote: > On 05/18/2010 11:47 PM, Aurelien Jarno wrote: > > The reg allocator is able to issue move if needed, so the only > > improvement this patch is for doing a ext8u on both "q" registers. > > > > OTOH the reg allocator knows this situation and will try to avoid this > > situation during the allocation. Cheating on the reg allocator might > > have some wrong effects, especially after your patch "Allocate > > call-saved registers first". I am thinking of the scenario where the > > value is in memory (which is likely to be the case given the limited > > number of registers), it will be likely loaded in a "r" register (they > > are now at the top priority), and then ext8u will be called, which will > > issue "mov" + "and" instructions instead of a "movzbl" instruction. > > The case I was concerned with is the fact that if we have a value > allocated to, say, %esi, and we need to to an ext8u, then the > register allocator has been told that it must move the value to a > "q" register in order to perform the movzbl. In this case, the > new code will simply emit the andl. > > I.e. the real problem is that we've told the register allocator > one way that the extend can be implemented, but not every way. > > > All of that is purely theoretical. Do you know how does it behave in > > practice? > > Picking the i386 target since it seems to use more extensions than > any other target, from linux-user-test -d op_opt,out_asm i386/ls: > > There are 176 instances of ext8u. > Of those, 83 instances are in-place, i.e. "ext8u_i32 tmp0,tmp0" > > I examined the first 2 dozen appearances in the output assembly: > > There are several instances of the value being in an "r" register: > > shr_i32 tmp1,edx,tmp13 > ext8u_i32 tmp1,tmp1 > => > 0x601c5468: shr $0x8,%edi > 0x601c546b: and $0xff,%edi > > All of the instances that I looked at that were not in-place happened > to already be using a "q" register -- usually %ebx. I assume that's > because we place %ebx as the first allocation register and that's just > how things happen to work out once we've flushed the registers before > the qemu_ld. > > qemu_ld8u tmp0,tmp2,$0xffffffff > ext8u_i32 tmp13,tmp0 > => > 0x601c82f9: movzbl (%esi),%ebx > 0x601c82fc: movzbl %bl,%ebx >
Do you have tried to compare the generated code before and after your patch? I expect a few cases where your patch has some drawbacks, so I don't know if there is a net gain on the size of the translated code. -- Aurelien Jarno GPG: 1024D/F1BCDB73 aurel...@aurel32.net http://www.aurel32.net