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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: for_each_set_bit() clean-up (API RFC)
On 14.06.2024 19:07, Andrew Cooper wrote:
> More fallout from looking at the code generation...
>
> for_each_set_bit() forces it's bitmap parameter out into memory. For an
> arbitrary sized bitmap, this is fine - and likely preferable as it's an
> in-memory to begin with.
>
> However, more than half the current users of for_each_set_bit() are
> operating over an single int/long, and this too is spilled to the
> stack. Worse, x86 seems to be the only architecture which (tries, but
> not very well) to optimise find_{first,next}_bit() for GPR-sized
> quantities, meaning that for_each_set_bit() hides 2 backing function calls.
>
> The ARM (v)GIC code in particular suffers horribly because of this.
>
> We also have several interesting opencoded forms:
> * evtchn_check_pollers() is a (preprocessor identical) opencoding.
> * hvm_emulate_writeback() is equivalent.
> * for_each_vp() exists just to hardcode a constant and swap the other
> two parameters.
>
> and several others forms which I think could be expressed more cleanly
> as for_each_set_bit().
I agree.
> We also have the while()/ffs() forms which are "just" for_each_set_bit()
> and some even manage to not spill their main variable to memory.
>
>
> I want to get to a position where there is one clear API to use, and
> that the compiler will handle nicely. Xen's code generation will
> definitely improve as a consequence.
>
>
> Sadly, transforming the ideal while()/ffs() form into a for() loop is a
> bit tricky. This works:
>
> for ( unsigned int v = (val), (bit);
> v;
> v &= v - 1 )
> if ( 1 )
> {
> (bit) = ffs(v) - 1;
> goto body;
> }
> else
> body:
>
> which is a C metaprogramming trick borrowed from PuTTY to make:
>
> for_each_BLAH ( bit, val )
> {
> // nice loop body
> }
>
> work, while having the ffs() calculated logically within the loop body.
What's wrong with
#define for_each_set_bit(iter, val) \
for ( unsigned int v_ = (val), iter; \
v_ && ((iter) = ffs(v_) - 1, true); \
v_ &= v_ - 1 )
? I'll admit though that it's likely a matter of taste which one is
"uglier". Yet I'd be in favor of avoiding the scope trickery.
> The first issue I expect people to have with the above is the raw 'body'
> label, although with a macro that can be fixed using body_ ## __COUNTER__.
>
> A full example is https://godbolt.org/z/oMGfah696 although a real
> example in Xen is going to have to be variadic for at least ffs() and
> ffsl().
How would variadic-ness help with this? Unless we play some type
trickery (like typeof((val) + 0U), thus yielding at least an unsigned,
but an unsigned long if the incoming value is such, followed by a
compile-time conditional operator to select between ffs() and ffsl()),
I don't think we'd get away with just a single construct for both the
int and long (for Arm32: long long) cases.
> Now, from an API point of view, it would be lovely if we could make a
> single for_each_set_bit() which covers both cases, and while I can
> distinguish the two forms by whether there are 2 or 3 args,
With the 3-argument form specifying the number of bits in the 3rd arg?
I'd fear such mixed uses may end up confusing.
> I expect
> MISRA is going to have a fit at that. Also there's a difference based
> on the scope of 'bit' and also whether modifications to 'val' in the
> loop body take effect on the loop condition (they don't because a copy
> is taken).
>
> So I expect everyone is going to want a new API to use here. But what
> to call it?
>
> More than half of the callers in Xen really want the GPR form, so we
> could introduce a new bitmap_for_each_set_bit(), move all the callers
> over, then introduce a "new" for_each_set_bit() which is only of the GPR
> form.
>
> Or does anyone want to suggest an alternative name?
I'd be okay-ish with those, maybe with slight shortening to bitmap_for_each()
or bitmap_for_each_set().
Jan
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