Inefficient use of 64-bit addresses in Clang
Mark Geisert
mark@maxrnd.com
Mon Aug 12 09:20:00 GMT 2019
Agner Fog wrote:
> Clang is using 64-bit absolute addresses when accessing static data in 64-bit
> mode. This is inefficient because it requires an extra 10-bytes long instruction
> for loading an address into a register every time it needs to access static
> data. All other compilers use relative addresses.
>
> Example:
>
>> #include <immintrin.h>
>>
>> __m128d test (__m128d a) {
>> Â Â Â __m128d b = _mm_add_pd(a, _mm_set1_pd(1.5));
>> Â Â Â __m128d c = _mm_mul_pd(b, _mm_set1_pd(2.5));
>> Â Â Â return c;
>> }
>
> Assembly output:
>
>> .LCPI0_0:
>>    .quad   4609434218613702656    # double 1.5
>>    .quad   4609434218613702656    # double 1.5
>> .LCPI0_1:
>>    .quad   4612811918334230528    # double 2.5
>>    .quad   4612811918334230528    # double 2.5
>> Â Â Â .text
>>    .globl   _Z4testDv2_d
>>    .p2align   4, 0x90
>> _Z4testDv2_d:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â # @_Z4testDv2_d
>> # BB#0:
>>    vmovapd   (%rcx), %xmm0
>>    movabsq   $.LCPI0_0, %rax
>>    vaddpd   (%rax), %xmm0, %xmm0
>>    movabsq   $.LCPI0_1, %rax
>>    vmulpd   (%rax), %xmm0, %xmm0
>> Â Â Â retq
>
> Linux Clang uses 32-bit relative addresses:
>
>>    vaddpd   .LCPI0_0(%rip), %xmm0, %xmm0
>>    vmulpd   .LCPI0_1(%rip), %xmm0, %xmm0
>> Â Â Â retq
This kind of bug report should probably go to the Clang bugtracker at
https://bugs.llvm.org . On that page you could enter "clang cygwin" in the
Quick Search field and see what known issues there are.
Clang is packaged for Cygwin by a very industrious and busy maintainer, but no
development on Clang is being done here (to my knowledge). So something like a
Cygwin packaging error that breaks Clang on Cygwin would be on-topic for this
list, but a problem at code generation level should go to the Clang developers.
..mark
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