Function multi-versioning
2023-2-5 16:0:0 Author: maskray.me(查看原文) 阅读量:18 收藏

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

GCC supports some function attributes for function multi-versioning: a way for a function to have multiple implementations, each using a different set of ISA extensions. A function attribute specifies different requirements of ISA extensions. The generated program decodes the CPU model and features at run-time, and picks the most restrictive implementation which is satisfied by the CPU, assuming that the most restrictive implementation has the best performance.

__attribute__((target(...)))

__attribute__((target(...))) has been available for a long time, even before attributes for function multi-versioning were introduced. Here are some links to relevant documentation.

Usually we use different function names for different implementations and define a dispatch function. This approach is like a manual ifunc.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
extern int flags;

static __attribute__((target("default"))) int foo_default(int a) { return a & a-1; }
static __attribute__((target("arch=x86-64-v2"))) int foo_v2(int a) { return a & a-1; }
static __attribute__((target("arch=x86-64-v3"))) int foo_v3(int a) { return a & a-1; }

int foo(int a) {
if (flags & 2) return foo_v3(a);
if (flags & 1) return foo_v2(a);
return foo_default(a);
}

The function bodies are duplicated. We can define a [[gnu::always_inline]] function shared by the different implementations.

1
2
3
4
__attribute__((always_inline)) static inline foo_impl(int a) { return a & a-1; }
static __attribute__((target("default"))) int foo_default(int a) { return foo(a); }
static __attribute__((target("arch=x86-64-v2"))) int foo_v2(int a) { return foo(a); }
static __attribute__((target("arch=x86-64-v3"))) int foo_v3(int a) { return foo(a); }

Let's check the behavior of an external linkage. In C++ mode, GCC and Clang emit two symbols _Z3foov and _Z3foov.sse4.2 for the following program:

1
2
__attribute__((target("default"))) int foo(void) { return 0; }
__attribute__((target("sse4.2"))) int foo(void) { return 1; }

In C mode, GCC reports error: redefinition of ‘foo’. Clang emits two symbols foo and foo.see4.2.

TODO forward declaring

__attribute__((target_clones(...)))

GCC 6 introduced __attribute__((target_clones(...))). We can just define one function with the attribute specifying all supported targets.

1
2
3
4
5

__attribute__((target_clones("default","arch=x86-64-v2","arch=x86-64-v3")))
int foo(int a) { return a & a-1; }

int foo_plus_1(int a) { return foo(a) + 1; }

See the GCC doc (Common Function Attributes) and Attributes in Clang#target_clones. Clang only supports some basic forms, not arch=.

For the above function, GCC emits three implementations foo.default, foo.arch_x86_64_v2, and foo.arch_x86_64_v3. foo is a dispatch function which selects one of the implementations. This is implemented as a GNU indirect function (ifunc). The ifunc resolver is called once by rtld at the relocation resolving phase. The resolver references a function and a variable defined in the runtime (libgcc).

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
        .section        .text.foo.resolver,"axG",@progbits,foo.resolver,comdat
.p2align 4
.weak foo.resolver
.type foo.resolver, @function
foo.resolver:
subq $8, %rsp
call [email protected]
movq [email protected](%rip), %rax
movl 8(%rax), %eax
testb $2, %al
je .L8
leaq foo.arch_x86_64_v3(%rip), %rax
.L7:
addq $8, %rsp
ret
.L8:
testb $1, %al
leaq foo.arch_x86_64_v2(%rip), %rdx
leaq foo.default(%rip), %rax
cmovne %rdx, %rax
jmp .L7
.size foo.resolver, .-foo.resolver
.globl foo
.type foo, @gnu_indirect_function
.set foo,foo.resolver

As an ifunc, foo defeats interprocedural optimizations. We can see that foo_plus_1 does not inline foo.

The attribute can apply to a non-definition declaration. foo.default, foo.arch_x86_64_v2, and foo.arch_x86_64_v3 are undefined symbols while (GCC: foo, Clang: foo.ifunc) and foo.resolver remain as definitions.

1
2
3
4

__attribute__((target_clones("default","arch=x86-64-v2","arch=x86-64-v3")))
int foo(int a);
int main(void) { foo(0); }

In llvm-project, compiler-rt provides an alternative implementation.

x86

The runtime executes cpuid, extracts information about the x86 family model and available CPU features, and stores them into __cpu_model and __cpu_features2. The resolver decodes the information and selects the best implementation.

AArch64

The support is missing/incomplete as of GCC 12 and Clang 16.0.

1
2
__attribute__((target_clones("sha2+memtag2", "fcma+sve2-pmull128")))
void foo() {}

(compiler-rt/lib/builtins/cpu_model.c defines some symbols like __aarch64_have_lse_atomics. GCC commit)

__attribute__((cpu_dispatch(...))) and __attribute__((cpu_specific(...)))

Supported by Intel C++ Compiler and later ported to Clang. GCC doesn't support the two attributes.

The declaration and definition can be in different translation units.

1
2
3
echo '__attribute__((cpu_dispatch(ivybridge, atom, sandybridge))) void foo(void); int main(void) { foo(); }' > a.c
echo '__attribute__((cpu_specific(ivybridge, atom, sandybridge))) void foo(void) {}' > b.c
clang a.c b.c -o a

__attribute__((target_version(...)))

Arm C Language Extensions introduced a new GNU attribute target_version. Clang 17

1
2
int __attribute__((target_version("default"))) tv(void) { return 0; }
int __attribute__((target_version("fp16+simd"))) tv(void) { return 1; }

文章来源: https://maskray.me/blog/2023-02-05-function-multi-versioning
如有侵权请联系:admin#unsafe.sh