-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12.9k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Implement likely/unlikely intrinsic (tracking issue for RFC 1131) #26179
Comments
FWIW, looking through my own code, I actually think the fact that this can't apply to match variants is going to be fairly hard on idiomatic Rust (for example, it means you can't use it when matching on an |
@pythonesque once I get this done, I plan on writing a follow-up RFC for a |
It might be worth having an "unpredictable" option in addition to likely and unlikely. There is now something to lower it to in LLVM: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12341 |
@Aatch Are you still working on this? |
Shall
I expect for most code Ok is likely and Err is unlikely. Of course, annotating |
@vi I think hinting should be only be used rarely, so it being on the type doesn't seem like a good idea. |
@Aatch, Is it a good idea to have |
@vi is is not. As a general rule, people are pretty bad at knowing what cases are actually likely or not. Branch hinting is a fairly specific optimisation hint, used incorrectly it can actually make code slower. It should also only really be used when the unlikely case is known to be very unlikely. Basically, you should only use it if it makes your code faster, otherwise it should be there. |
@vi It might be good idea if the likely thing is cheap, and the unlikely thing is expensive. For example, In my opinion, frequent use of |
Instead of arguing about it, why not just test it? Annotate |
Now that MIR is a thing, it would be nice if this were implemented. |
@comex I do agree =) @Aatch Not sure what your time is like, but if you don't have time to implement this, it seems like a case where we might be able to mentor someone. The idea would be to leave a comment explaining roughly how you think it should work, and then tagging the issue with |
Unassigning @Aatch since, empirically, he doesn't seem to be actively hacking on this right now. =) (Feel free to correct me.) |
@nikomatsakis PR up, though I could use some help adding tests. |
Copying @nagisa's comment from #36181:
I think that keeping the intrinsics is a good idea. They should be fairly obvious for people coming from C/C++. Attributes aren't mutually exclusive with the intrinsics, so we're not exactly cutting ourselves off with intrinsics. Supporting branch weights at the MIR level would probably be the easiest implementation for lowering to the metadata ourselves. |
core: add likely and unlikely intrinsics I'm no good at reading assembly, but I have tried a stage1 compiler with this patch, and it does cause different asm output. Additionally, testing this compiler on my httparse crate with some `likely` usage added in to the branches does affect benchmarks. However, I'm sure a codegen test should be included, if anyone knows what it should look like. There isn't an entry in `librustc_trans/context.rs` in this diff, because it already exists (`llvm.expect.i1` is used for array indices). ---- Even though this does affect httparse benchmarks, it doesn't seem to affect it the same way GCC's `__builtin_expect` affects picohttpparser. I was confused that the deviation on the benchmarks grew hugely when testing this, especially since I'm absolutely certain that the branchs where I added `likely` were always `true`. I chalk that up to GCC and LLVM handle branch prediction differently. cc #26179
Just adding a note here as I'm processing everything in #38643: it will need docs before stabilization. @nikomatsakis would you mind adding a note to that effect in the root of the issue? |
@chriskrycho done |
@Amanieu I would also like to have that. One thing that got mentioned in the meeting was that we have (Albeit one can mostly write |
Clang's Specifically, it performs the following transformations with boolean expressions:
In rustc this would need to be done during THIR to MIR lowering, which would require the compiler to treat these intrinsics specially. Additionally, the |
@Amanieu Those transformations seem potentially useful. I personally wouldn't consider them necessary to make these intrinsics useful, though. Would you consider those transformations to be blockers? |
I have a naive question here: besides |
LLVM already has unpreditable for that. This came up in #53823 |
These intrinsics no longer have any effect for my code (starting with #87570 ?). |
@MSxDOS that's probably worth a regression issue. |
We discussed this during the libs-api meeting and don't think that a function is the correct interface for exposing probabilities on LLVM IR branch instruction (or equivalents in other backends). We would instead prefer an attribute-based solution which would work on both Passing this back to T-lang. |
For this tracking issue, for the intrinsics, we're marking these as "perma-unstable", like most LLVM intrinsics. We'd love to see a lang MCP for |
#[cold] on match arms ### Edit This should be in T-lang. I'm not sure how I can change it. There is discussion: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/Allow.20.23.5Bcold.5D.20on.20match.20and.20if.20arms ### Summary Adds the possibility to use `#[cold]` attribute on match arms to hint the optimizer that the arm is unlikely to be taken. ### Motivation These hints are sometimes thought to help branch prediction, but the effect is probably marginal. Modern CPUs don't support hints on conditional branch instructions. They either have the current branch in the BTB (branch prediction buffer), or not, in which case the branch is predicted not to be taken. These hints are, however, helpful in letting the compiler know what is the fast path, so it can be optimized at the expense of the slow path. `grep`-ing the LLVM code for BlockFrequencyInfo and BranchProbabilityInfo shows that these hints are used at many places in the optimizer. Such as: - block placement - improve locality by making the fast path compact and move everything else out of the way - inlining, loop unrolling - these optimizations can be less aggressive on the cold path therefore reducing code size - register allocation - preferably keep in registers the data needed on the fast path ### History RFC 1131 ( rust-lang#26179 ) added `likely` and `unlikely` intrinsics, which get converted to `llvm.expect.i8`. However this LLVM instruction is fragile and may get removed by some optimization passes. The problems with the intrinsics have been reported several times: rust-lang#96276 , rust-lang#96275 , rust-lang#88767 ### Other languages Clang and GCC C++ compilers provide `__builtin_expect`. Since C++20, it is also possible to use `[[likely]]` and `[[unlikely]]` attributes. Use: ``` if (__builtin_expect(condition, false)) { ... this branch is UNlikely ... } if (condition) [[likely]] { ... this branch is likely... } ``` Note that while clang provides `__builtin_expect`, it does not convert it to `llvm.expect.i8`. Instead, it looks at the surrounding code and if there is a condition, emits branch weight metadata for conditional branches. ### Design Implementing `likely`/`unlikely` type of functions properly to emit branch weights would add significant complexity to the compiler. Additionally, these functions are not easy to use with `match` arms. Replacing the functions with attributes is easier to implement and will also work with `match`. A question remains whether these attributes should be named `likely`/`unlikely` as in C++, or if we could reuse the already existing `#[cold]` attribute. `#[cold]` has the same meaning as `unlikely`, i.e., marking the slow path, but it can currently only be used on entire functions. I personally prefer `#[cold]` because it already exists in Rust and is a short word that looks better in code. It has one disadvantage though. This code: ``` if cond #[likely] { ... } ``` becomes: ``` if cond { ... } #[cold] { ... empty cold branch ... } ``` In this PR, I implemented the possibility to add `#[cold]` attribute on match arms. Use is as follows: ``` match x { #[cold] true => { ... } // the true arm is UNlikely _ => { ... } // the false arm is likely } ``` ### Limitations The implementation only works on bool, or integers with single value arm and an otherwise arm. Extending it to other types and to `if` statements should not be too difficult.
Likely unlikely fix RFC 1131 ( rust-lang#26179 ) added likely/unlikely intrinsics, but they have been broken for a while: rust-lang#96276 , rust-lang#96275 , rust-lang#88767 . This PR tries to fix them. Changes: - added a new `cold_path()` intrinsic - `likely()` and `unlikely()` changed to regular functions implemented using `cold_path()`
Likely unlikely fix RFC 1131 ( rust-lang/rust#26179 ) added likely/unlikely intrinsics, but they have been broken for a while: rust-lang/rust#96276 , rust-lang/rust#96275 , rust-lang/rust#88767 . This PR tries to fix them. Changes: - added a new `cold_path()` intrinsic - `likely()` and `unlikely()` changed to regular functions implemented using `cold_path()`
Tracking issue for rust-lang/rfcs#1131:
std::hint
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: