Re: [PATCH 5/7] lib/random32.c: Make prandom_u32_max efficient for powers of 2
From: George Spelvin
Date: Sun Jun 08 2014 - 16:48:19 EST
Thank you for your comments!
> Have you checked assembler output if this helps anything at all? Constant
> propagation in the compiler should be able to figure that out all by
> itself. The only places I use __builtin_constant_p today are where I
> also make use of inline assembler.
Yes, I did. (I'll expand the commit comment for v2; my bad.)
It seems that GCC isn't smart enough to reduce this to a single shift.
With the multiply and reduce, the code looks like:
call prandom_u32
xorl %edx, %edx
shldl $4, %eax, %edx
movl %edx, %eax
Instead of the hoped-for
call prandom_u32
shrl $28, %eax
Converting to a single mask is something the compiler can't do,
because it doesn't understand that using the lsbits instead of the
msbits is okay.
With the mask, it turns into the spectacularly simple:
call prandom_u32
andl $15, %eax
An interesting question is which is preferred in general.
The AND allows non-constant powers of 2 without requiring CLZ. But I
don't recall seeing that actually happen anywhere. And the shift allows
a smaller encoding (8-bit rather than 32-bit immediate constant) when
the power of 2 is known at compile time and is larger than 128 (for
example, PAGE_SIZE).
Me, I thought it was in the noise and not worth stressing about,
but I also understand the hackers's urge for maximum tweaking.
The other thing that I couldn't think of a clean wrapper for is the
"probability 1 in N" case that happens in several bits of code.
For example, in drivers/mtd/ubi/debug.h, I made the following change:
static inline int ubi_dbg_is_bitflip(const struct ubi_device *ubi)
{
- if (ubi->dbg.emulate_bitflips)
- return !(prandom_u32() % 200);
- return 0;
+ return ubi->dbg.emulate_bitflips && prandom_u32() < -1u/200;
}
GCC doesn't know how to optimize "prandom_u32_max(200) == 0", which
is basically the same. It spits out:
call prandom_u32
movl %eax, %edx
movl $200, %eax
mull %edx
testl %edx, %edx
I couldn't think of a good enough function name for this, so I just left
it as inline code. (Using "-1u/200" rather than the technically correct
"(u32)(((u64)1 << 32)/200)" is okay as long as 200 isn't a power of 2, and
even if it were, the error wouldn't matter since it's approximate anyway.)
> Btw, IIRC there is a function is_power_of_2 somewhere. ;)
In <linux/log2.h>; thanks for the pointer.
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