v2 is a complete rewrite of the A64FX memcpy. Performance is improved
by streamlining the code, aligning all large copies and using a single
unrolled loop for all sizes. The code size for memcpy and memmove goes
down from 1796 bytes to 868 bytes. Performance is better in all cases:
bench-memcpy-random is 2.3% faster overall, bench-memcpy-large is ~33%
faster for large sizes, bench-memcpy-walk is 25% faster for small sizes
and 20% for the largest sizes. The geomean of all tests in bench-memcpy
is 5.1% faster, and total time is reduced by 4%.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
Rewrite memcmp to improve performance. On small and medium inputs performance
is 10-20% better. Large inputs use a SIMD loop processing 64 bytes per
iteration, which is 30-50% faster depending on the size.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
The syscall pipe2 was added in linux 2.6.27 and glibc requires linux
3.2.0. The patch removes the arch-specific implementation for alpha,
ia64, mips, sh, and sparc which requires a different kernel ABI
than the usual one.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and with a build for the affected ABIs.
Variadic function calls in syscalls.list does not work for all ABIs
(for instance where the argument are passed on the stack instead of
registers) and might have underlying issues depending of the variadic
type (for instance if a 64-bit argument is used).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
The LFS prlimit64 requires a arch-specific implementation in
syscalls.list. Instead add a generic one that handles the
required symbol alias for __RLIM_T_MATCHES_RLIM64_T.
HPPA is the only outlier which requires a different default
symbol.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and with build for the affected ABIs.
Passing 64-bit arguments on syscalls.list is tricky: it requires
to reimplement the expected kernel abi in each architecture. This
is way to better to represent in C code where we already have
macros for this (SYSCALL_LL64).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Add vector sin/sinf and input files to libmvec microbenchmark.
libmvec-sin-inputs:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-DBL_MAX, DBL_MAX)
mean: 0.0
sigma: 5.0
10% uniform random distribution in range (-1000.0, 1000.0)
libmvec-sinf-inputs:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-FLT_MAX, FLT_MAX)
mean: 0.0f
sigma: 5.0f
10% uniform random distribution in range (-1000.0f, 1000.0f)
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Add vector pow/powf and input files to libmvec microbenchmark.
libmvec-pow-inputs:
arg1:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (0.0, 256.0)
mean: 0.0
sigma: 32.0
10% uniform random distribution in range (0.0, 256.0)
arg2:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-127.0, 127.0)
mean: 0.0
sigma: 16.0
10% uniform random distribution in range (-127.0, 127.0)
libmvec-powf-inputs:
arg1:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (0.0f, 100.0f)
mean: 0.0f
sigma: 16.0f
10% uniform random distribution in range (0.0f, 100.0f)
arg2:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-10.0f, 10.0f)
mean: 0.0f
sigma: 8.0f
10% uniform random distribution in range (-10.0f, 10.0f)
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Add vector log/logf and input files to libmvec microbenchmark.
libmvec-log-inputs:
70% Normal random distribution
range: (0.0, DBL_MAX)
mean: 1.0
sigma: 50.0
30% uniform random distribution in range (0.0, DBL_MAX)
libmvec-logf-inputs:
70% Normal random distribution
range: (0.0f, FLT_MAX)
mean: 1.0f
sigma: 50.0f
30% uniform random distribution in range (0.0f, FLT_MAX)
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Add vector exp/expf and input files to libmvec microbenchmark.
libmvec-exp-inputs:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-708.0, 709.0)
mean: 0.0
sigma: 16.0
10% uniform random distribution in range (-500.0, 500.0)
libmvec-expf-inputs:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-87.0f, 88.0f)
mean: 0.0f
sigma: 8.0f
10% uniform random distribution in range (-50.0f, 50.0f)
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Add vector cos/cosf and input files to libmvec microbenchmark.
libmvec-cos-inputs:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-DBL_MAX, DBL_MAX)
mean: 0.0
sigma: 5.0
10% uniform random distribution in range (-1000.0, 1000.0)
libmvec-cosf-inputs:
90% Normal random distribution
range: (-FLT_MAX, FLT_MAX)
mean: 0.0f
sigma: 5.0f
10% uniform random distribution in range (-1000.0f, 1000.0f)
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Now that Hurd implementis both close_range and closefrom (f2c996597d),
we can make close_range() a base ABI, and make the default closefrom()
implementation on top of close_range().
The generic closefrom() implementation based on __getdtablesize() is
moved to generic close_range(). On Linux it will be overriden by
the auto-generation syscall while on Hurd it will be a system specific
implementation.
The closefrom() now calls close_range() and __closefrom_fallback().
Since on Hurd close_range() does not fail, __closefrom_fallback() is an
empty static inline function set by__ASSUME_CLOSE_RANGE.
The __ASSUME_CLOSE_RANGE also allows optimize Linux
__closefrom_fallback() implementation when --enable-kernel=5.9 or
higher is used.
Finally the Linux specific tst-close_range.c is moved to io and
enabled as default. The Linuxism and CLOSE_RANGE_UNSHARE are
guarded so it can be built for Hurd (I have not actually test it).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and with a i686-gnu
build.
__libc_signal_restore_set was in the wrong place: It also ran
when setjmp returned the second time (after pthread_exit or
pthread_cancel). This is observable with blocked pending
signals during thread exit.
Fixes commit b3cae39dcb
("nptl: Start new threads with all signals blocked [BZ #25098]").
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The @notoc usage only yields an advantage on ISA 3.1+ machine (power10)
and for ld.bfd also when it sees pcrel relocations used on the code
(generated if compiler targets ISA 3.1+). On bfd case ISA 3.1+
instruction on stubs are used iff linker also sees the new pc-relative
relocations (for instance R_PPC64_D34), otherwise it generates default
stubs (ppc64_elf_check_relocs:4700).
This patch also help on linkers that do not implement this optimization,
since building for older ISA (such as 3.0 / power9) will also trigger
power10 stubs generation in the assembly code uses the NOTOC imacro.
Checked on powerpc64le-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Tulio Magno Quites Machado Filho <tuliom@linux.ibm.com>
It requires less boilerplate code for newer ports. The _Static_assert
checks from internal setjmp are moved to its own internal test since
setjmp.h is included early by multiple headers (to generate
rtld-sizes.sym).
The riscv jmp_buf-macros.h check is also redundant, it is already
done by riscv configure.ac.
Checked with a build for the affected architectures.
This patch updates the kernel version in the test tst-mman-consts.py
to 5.15. (There are no new MAP_* constants covered by this test in
5.15 that need any other header changes.)
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
The change 1e5a5866cb ("Remove malloc hooks [BZ #23328]") has broken
ports that are using GLIBC_2_35, like the new OpenRISC port I am working
on.
The libc_malloc_debug.so library used to bring in the debug
infrastructure is currently essentially empty for GLIBC_2_35 ports like
mine causing mtrace tests to fail:
cat sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/or1k/shlib-versions
DEFAULT GLIBC_2.35
ld=ld-linux-or1k.so.1
FAIL: posix/bug-glob2-mem
FAIL: posix/bug-regex14-mem
FAIL: posix/bug-regex2-mem
FAIL: posix/bug-regex21-mem
FAIL: posix/bug-regex31-mem
FAIL: posix/bug-regex36-mem
FAIL: malloc/tst-mtrace.
The issue seems to be with the ifdefs in malloc/malloc-debug.c. The
ifdefs are currently essentially exluding all symbols for ports > 2.35.
Removing the top level SHLIB_COMPAT ifdef allows things to just work.
Fixes: 1e5a5866cb ("Remove malloc hooks [BZ #23328]")
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
And make it an installed header. This addresses a few aliasing
violations (which do not seem to result in miscompilation due to
the use of atomics), and also enables use of wide counters in other
parts of the library.
The debug output in nptl/tst-cond22 has been adjusted to print
the 32-bit values instead because it avoids a big-endian/little-endian
difference.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Add python script to generate libmvec microbenchmark from the input
values for each libmvec function using skeleton benchmark template.
Creates double and float benchmarks with vector length 1, 2, 4, 8,
and 16 for each libmvec function. Vector length 1 corresponds to
scalar version of function and is included for vector function perf
comparison.
Co-authored-by: Haochen Jiang <haochen.jiang@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Since b05fae4d8e, __minimal malloc code is used during static
startup before PIE self-relocation (_dl_relocate_static_pie).
So it requires the same fix done for other objects by 47618209d0.
Checked on aarch64, x86_64, and i686 with and without static-pie.
1. Use a temporary file to generate Makefile fragments for DSO sorting
tests and use -include on them.
2. Add Makefile fragments to postclean-generated so that a "make clean"
removes the autogenerated fragments and a subsequent "make" regenerates
them.
This partially fixes BZ #28550.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Put all sources for DSO sorting tests in the dso-sort-tests-src directory
and compile test relocatable objects with
$(objpfx)tst-dso-ordering1-dir/tst-dso-ordering1-a.os: $(objpfx)dso-sort-tests-src/tst-dso-ordering1-a.c
$(compile.c) $(OUTPUT_OPTION)
to avoid random $< values from $(before-compile) when compiling test
relocatable objects with
$(objpfx)%$o: $(objpfx)%.c $(before-compile); $$(compile-command.c)
compile-command.c = $(compile.c) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $(compile-mkdep-flags)
compile.c = $(CC) $< -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS)
for 3 "make -j 28" parallel builds on a machine with 112 cores at the
same time.
This partially fixes BZ #28550.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Update
commit 49302b8fdf
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Nov 11 06:54:01 2021 -0800
Avoid extra load with CAS in __pthread_mutex_clocklock_common [BZ #28537]
Replace boolean CAS with value CAS to avoid the extra load.
and
commit 0b82747dc4
Author: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Nov 11 06:31:51 2021 -0800
Avoid extra load with CAS in __pthread_mutex_lock_full [BZ #28537]
Replace boolean CAS with value CAS to avoid the extra load.
by moving assignment out of the CAS condition.
Currently, if the temporary file creation fails the create_tz_file
function returns NULL. The NULL pointer is then passed to setenv which
causes a SIGSEGV. Rather than failing with a SIGSEGV print a warning
and exit.
CAS instruction is expensive. From the x86 CPU's point of view, getting
a cache line for writing is more expensive than reading. See Appendix
A.2 Spinlock in:
https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/xeon-lock-scaling-analysis-paper.pdf
The full compare and swap will grab the cache line exclusive and cause
excessive cache line bouncing.
Add LLL_MUTEX_READ_LOCK to do an atomic load and skip CAS in spinlock
loop if compare may fail to reduce cache line bouncing on contended locks.
Reviewed-by: Szabolcs Nagy <szabolcs.nagy@arm.com>
No bug.
This commit splits test-memcpy.c into test-memcpy.c and
test-memcpy-large.c. The idea is parallel builds will be able to run
both in parallel speeding up the process.
Signed-off-by: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
No bug.
This implementation refactors memcmp-sse4.S primarily with minimizing
code size in mind. It does this by removing the lookup table logic and
removing the unrolled check from (256, 512] bytes.
memcmp-sse4 code size reduction : -3487 bytes
wmemcmp-sse4 code size reduction: -1472 bytes
The current memcmp-sse4.S implementation has a large code size
cost. This has serious adverse affects on the ICache / ITLB. While
in micro-benchmarks the implementations appears fast, traces of
real-world code have shown that the speed in micro benchmarks does not
translate when the ICache/ITLB are not primed, and that the cost
of the code size has measurable negative affects on overall
application performance.
See https://research.google/pubs/pub48320/ for more details.
Signed-off-by: Noah Goldstein <goldstein.w.n@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
C2X adds a printf %b format (see
<http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2630.pdf>, accepted
for C2X), for outputting integers in binary. It also has recommended
practice for a corresponding %B format (like %b, but %#B starts the
output with 0B instead of 0b). Add support for these formats to
glibc.
One existing test uses %b as an example of an unknown format, to test
how glibc printf handles unknown formats; change that to %v. Use of
%b and %B as user-registered format specifiers continues to work (and
we already have a test that covers that, tst-printfsz.c).
Note that C2X also has scanf %b support, plus support for binary
constants starting 0b in strtol (base 0 and 2) and scanf %i (strtol
base 0 and scanf %i coming from a previous paper that added binary
integer literals). I intend to implement those features in a separate
patch or patches; as discussed in the thread starting at
<https://sourceware.org/pipermail/libc-alpha/2020-December/120414.html>,
they will be more complicated because they involve adding extra public
symbols to ensure compatibility with existing code that might not
expect 0b constants to be handled by strtol base 0 and 2 and scanf %i,
whereas simply adding a new format specifier poses no such
compatibility concerns.
Note that the actual conversion from integer to string uses existing
code in _itoa.c. That code has special cases for bases 8, 10 and 16,
probably so that the compiler can optimize division by an integer
constant in the code for those bases. If desired such special cases
could easily be added for base 2 as well, but that would be an
optimization, not actually needed for these printf formats to work.
Tested for x86_64 and x86. Also tested with build-many-glibcs.py for
aarch64-linux-gnu with GCC mainline to make sure that the test does
indeed build with GCC 12 (where format checking warnings are enabled
for most of the test).
Linux 5.15 has one new syscall, process_mrelease (and also enables the
clone3 syscall for RV32). It also has a macro __NR_SYSCALL_MASK for
Arm, which is not a syscall but matches the pattern used for syscall
macro names.
Add __NR_SYSCALL_MASK to the names filtered out in the code dealing
with syscall lists, update syscall-names.list for the new syscall and
regenerate the arch-syscall.h headers with build-many-glibcs.py
update-syscalls.
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py.
Depending on the layout chosen by the linker, the 16-bit displacement
of the jh instruction is insufficient to reach the target label.
Analysis of the linker failure was carried out by Nick Clifton.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Liebler <stli@linux.ibm.com>
Since
commit d73f5331ce
Author: Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org>
Date: Fri May 2 02:20:45 2003 +0000
2003-05-01 Roland McGrath <roland@redhat.com>
dependency is generated by passing -MD -MF to compiler. Remove the unused
+mkdep, +make-deps, s-proto.S and s-proto-cancel.S.
This fixes BZ #28554.
The include cleanup on dl-minimal.c removed too much for some
targets.
Also for Hurd, __sbrk is removed from localplt.data now that
tunables allocated memory through mmap.
Checked with a build for all affected architectures.
The rtld_malloc functions are moved to its own file so it can be
used on csu code. Also, the functiosn are renamed to __minimal_*
(since there are now used not only on loader code).
Using the __minimal_malloc on tunables_strdup() avoids potential
issues with sbrk() calls while processing the tunables (I see
sporadic elf/tst-dso-ordering9 on powerpc64le with different
tests failing due ASLR).
Also, using __minimal_malloc over plain mmap optimizes the memory
allocation on both static and dynamic case (since it will any unused
space in either the last page of data segments, avoiding mmap() call,
or from the previous mmap() call).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu, i686-linux-gnu, and powerpc64le-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
A recent GCC mainline change introduces errors of the form:
vfprintf-internal.c: In function 'group_number':
vfprintf-internal.c:2093:15: error: 'memmove' specified bound between 9223372036854775808 and 18446744073709551615 exceeds maximum object size 9223372036854775807 [-Werror=stringop-overflow=]
2093 | memmove (w, s, (front_ptr -s) * sizeof (CHAR_T));
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This is a genuine bug in the glibc code: s > front_ptr is always true
at this point in the code, and the intent is clearly for the
subtraction to be the other way round. The other arguments to the
memmove call here also appear to be wrong; w and s point just *after*
the destination and source for copying the rest of the number, so the
size needs to be subtracted to get appropriate pointers for the
copying. Adjust the memmove call to conform to the apparent intent of
the code, so fixing the -Wstringop-overflow error.
Now, if the original code were ever executed, a buffer overrun would
result. However, I believe this code (introduced in commit
edc1686af0, "vfprintf: Reuse work_buffer
in group_number", so in glibc 2.26) is unreachable in prior glibc
releases (so there is no need for a bug in Bugzilla, no need to
consider any backports unless someone wants to build older glibc
releases with GCC 12 and no possibility of this buffer overrun
resulting in a security issue).
work_buffer is 1000 bytes / 250 wide characters. This case is only
reachable if an initial part of the number, plus a grouped copy of the
rest of the number, fail to fit in that space; that is, if the grouped
number fails to fit in the space. In the wide character case,
grouping is always one wide character, so even with a locale (of which
there aren't any in glibc) grouping every digit, a number would need
to occupy at least 125 wide characters to overflow, and a 64-bit
integer occupies at most 23 characters in octal including a leading 0.
In the narrow character case, the multibyte encoding of the grouping
separator would need to be at least 42 bytes to overflow, again
supposing grouping every digit, but MB_LEN_MAX is 16. So even if we
admit the case of artificially constructed locales not shipped with
glibc, given that such a locale would need to use one of the character
sets supported by glibc, this code cannot be reached at present. (And
POSIX only actually specifies the ' flag for grouping for decimal
output, though glibc acts on it for other bases as well.)
With binary output (if you consider use of grouping there to be
valid), you'd need a 15-byte multibyte character for overflow; I don't
know if any supported character set has such a character (if, again,
we admit constructed locales using grouping every digit and a grouping
separator chosen to have a multibyte encoding as long as possible, as
well as accepting use of grouping with binary), but given that we have
this code at all (clearly it's not *correct*, or in accordance with
the principle of avoiding arbitrary limits, to skip grouping on
running out of internal space like that), I don't think it should need
any further changes for binary printf support to go in.
On the other hand, support for large sizes of _BitInt in printf (see
the N2858 proposal) *would* require something to be done about such
arbitrary limits (presumably using dynamic allocation in printf again,
for sufficiently large _BitInt arguments only - currently only
floating-point uses dynamic allocation, and, as previously discussed,
that could actually be replaced by bounded allocation given smarter
code).
Tested with build-many-glibcs.py for aarch64-linux-gnu (GCC mainline).
Also tested natively for x86_64.