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authorbors <bors@rust-lang.org>2024-11-14 04:17:20 +0000
committerbors <bors@rust-lang.org>2024-11-14 04:17:20 +0000
commit22bcb81c6636f8ccc24478f92b30bf9266f116ef (patch)
treeddfebf622bef9d291a7b54fc426358faef141250 /tests/codegen/integer-cmp.rs
parentbd0826a4521a845f36cce1b00e1dd2918ba09e90 (diff)
parenta54d6ad03945d071ad74cb0363c12fd613fd9430 (diff)
downloadrust-22bcb81c6636f8ccc24478f92b30bf9266f116ef.tar.gz
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Auto merge of #122770 - iximeow:ixi/int-formatting-optimization, r=workingjubilee
improve codegen of fmt_num to delete unreachable panic

it seems LLVM doesn't realize that `curr` is always decremented at least once in either loop formatting characters of the input string by their appropriate radix, and so the later `&buf[curr..]` generates a check for out-of-bounds access and panic. this is unreachable in reality as even for `x == T::zero()` we'll produce at least the character `Self::digit(T::zero())`, yielding at least one character output, and `curr` will always be at least one below `buf.len()`.

adjust `fmt_int` to make this fact more obvious to the compiler, which fortunately (or unfortunately) results in a measurable performance improvement for workloads heavy on formatting integers.

in the program i'd noticed this in, you can see the `cmp $0x80,%rdi; ja 7c` here, which branches to a slice index fail helper:
<img width="660" alt="before" src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/4615790/ac482d54-21f8-494b-9c83-4beadc3ca0ef">

where after this change the function is broadly similar, but smaller, with one fewer registers updated in each pass through the loop in addition the never-taken `cmp/ja` being gone:
<img width="646" alt="after" src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/4615790/1bee1d76-b674-43ec-9b21-4587364563aa">

this represents a ~2-3% difference in runtime in my [admittedly comically i32-formatting-bound](https://github.com/athre0z/disas-bench/blob/master/bench/yaxpeax/src/main.rs#L58-L67) use case (printing x86 instructions, including i32 displacements and immediates) as measured on a ryzen 9 3950x.

the impact on `<impl LowerHex for i8>::fmt` is both more dramatic and less impactful: it continues to have a loop that is evaluated at most twice, though the compiler doesn't know that to unroll it. the generated code there is identical to the impl for `i32`. there, the smaller loop body has less effect on runtime, and removing the never-taken slice bounds check is offset by whatever address recalculation is happening with the `lea/add/neg` at the end of the loop. it behaves about the same before and after.

---

i initially measured slightly better outcomes using `unreachable_unchecked()` here instead, but that was hacking on std and rebuilding with `-Z build-std` on an older rustc (nightly 5b377cece, 2023-06-30). it does not yield better outcomes now, so i see no reason to proceed with that approach at all.

<details>
<summary>initial notes about that, seemingly irrelevant on modern rustc</summary>
i went through a few tries at getting llvm to understand the bounds check isn't necessary, but i should mention the _best_ i'd seen here was actually from the existing `fmt_int` with a diff like
```diff
        if x == zero {
            // No more digits left to accumulate.
            break;
        };
    }
}
+
+ if curr >= buf.len() {
+     unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked(); }
+ }
let buf = &buf[curr..];
```

posting a random PR to `rust-lang/rust` to do that without a really really compelling reason seemed a bit absurd, so i tried to work that into something that seems more palatable at a glance. but if you're interested, that certainly produced better (x86_64) code through LLVM. in that case with `buf.iter_mut().rev()` as the iterator, `<impl LowerHex for i8>::fmt` actually unrolls into something like

```
put_char(x & 0xf);
let mut len = 1;
if x > 0xf {
  put_char((x >> 4) & 0xf);
  len = 2;
}
pad_integral(buf[buf.len() - len..]);
```

it's pretty cool! `<impl LowerHex for i32>::fmt` also was slightly better. that all resulted in closer to an 6% difference in my use case.

</details>

---

i have not looked at formatters other than LowerHex/UpperHex with this change, though i'd be a bit shocked if any were _worse_.

(i have absolutely _no_ idea how you'd regression test this, but that might be just my not knowing what the right tool for that would be in rust-lang/rust. i'm of half a mind that this is small and fiddly enough to not be worth landing lest it quietly regress in the future anyway. but i didn't want to discard the idea without at least offering it upstream here)
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