Re: [PATCH 3/4] x86: open-code register save/restore in trace_hardirqs thunks
From: Denys Vlasenko
Date: Sat Jan 10 2015 - 15:44:04 EST
On Sat, Jan 10, 2015 at 9:17 PM, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> After I've seen the disassembly I myself posted, I can't help but wonder
>> why we use 5-byte instructions to store and load regs on stack when
>> pushes and pops are 1 or 2-byte long.
>
> I asked this once, and someone told me that push/pop has lower
> throughput. I find this surprising.
Theoretically yes.
In practice, AMD K7 and K8 seem to be able to execute two movq's
in one cycle, but only one push.
For all other processors I looked at, they have the same throughput:
K10 can do two movq's in one cycle, but also two push'es.
Bulldozer...Steamroller: can do one insn per cycle.
Bobcat..Jaguar: can do one insn per cycle.
Core 2: can do one insn per cycle.
Nehalem: can do one insn per cycle.
The above was microbenchmarked with long sequences
of similar instructions, in which case store unit gets saturated
and becomes a bottleneck.
Here's the document.
http://www.agner.org/optimize/instruction_tables.pdf
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