I have implemented the strlen()
function in different ways, including SSE2 assembly
, SSE4.2 assembly
and SSE2 intrinsic
, I also exerted some experiments on them, with strlen() in <string.h>
and strlen() in glibc
. However, their performance in terms of milliseconds (time) are unexpected.
My experiment environment:
CentOS 7.0 + gcc 4.8.5 + Intel Xeon
Following are my implementations:
strlen
using SSE2 assemblylong strlen_sse2_asm(const char* src){ long result = 0; asm( "movl %1, %%edi\n\t" "movl $-0x10, %%eax\n\t" "pxor %%xmm0, %%xmm0\n\t" "lloop:\n\t" "addl $0x10, %%eax\n\t" "movdqu (%%edi,%%eax), %%xmm1\n\t" "pcmpeqb %%xmm0, %%xmm1\n\t" "pmovmskb %%xmm1, %%ecx\n\t" "test %%ecx, %%ecx\n\t" "jz lloop\n\t" "bsf %%ecx, %%ecx\n\t" "addl %%ecx, %%eax\n\t" "movl %%eax, %0" :"=r"(result) :"r"(src) :"%eax" ); return result; }
2.strlen
using SSE4.2 assembly
long strlen_sse4_2_asm(const char* src){
long result = 0;
asm(
"movl %1, %%edi\n\t"
"movl $-0x10, %%eax\n\t"
"pxor %%xmm0, %%xmm0\n\t"
"lloop2:\n\t"
"addl $0x10, %%eax\n\t"
"pcmpistri $0x08,(%%edi, %%eax), %%xmm0\n\t"
"jnz lloop2\n\t"
"add %%ecx, %%eax\n\t"
"movl %%eax, %0"
:"=r"(result)
:"r"(src)
:"%eax"
);
return result;
}
3. strlen
using SSE2 intrinsic
long strlen_sse2_intrin_align(const char* src){
if (src == NULL || *src == '\0'){
return 0;
}
const __m128i zero = _mm_setzero_si128();
const __m128i* ptr = (const __m128i*)src;
if(((size_t)ptr&0xF)!=0){
__m128i xmm = _mm_loadu_si128(ptr);
unsigned int mask = _mm_movemask_epi8(_mm_cmpeq_epi8(xmm,zero));
if(mask!=0){
return (const char*)ptr-src+(size_t)ffs(mask);
}
ptr = (__m128i*)(0x10+(size_t)ptr & ~0xF);
}
for (;;ptr++){
__m128i xmm = _mm_load_si128(ptr);
unsigned int mask = _mm_movemask_epi8(_mm_cmpeq_epi8(xmm,zero));
if (mask!=0)
return (const char*)ptr-src+(size_t)ffs(mask);
}
}
I also looked up the one implemented in linux kernel, following is its implementation
size_t strlen_inline_asm(const char* str){ int d0; size_t res; asm volatile("repne\n\t" "scasb" :"=c" (res), "=&D" (d0) : "1" (str), "a" (0), "" (0xffffffffu) : "memory"); return ~res-1; }
In my experience, I also added the one of standard library and compared their performance.
Followings are my main
function code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <xmmintrin.h>
#include <x86intrin.h>
#include <emmintrin.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
int main()
{
struct timeval tpstart,tpend;
int i=0;
for(;i<1023;i++){
test_str[i] = 'a';
}
test_str[i]='\0';
gettimeofday(&tpstart,NULL);
for(i=0;i<10000000;i++)
strlen(test_str);
gettimeofday(&tpend,NULL);
printf("strlen from stirng.h--->%lf\n",(tpend.tv_sec-tpstart.tv_sec)*1000+(tpend.tv_usec-tpstart.tv_usec)/1000.0);
gettimeofday(&tpstart,NULL);
for(i=0;i<10000000;i++)
strlen_inline_asm(test_str);
gettimeofday(&tpend,NULL);
printf("strlen_inline_asm--->%lf\n",(tpend.tv_sec-tpstart.tv_sec)*1000+(tpend.tv_usec-tpstart.tv_usec)/1000.0);
gettimeofday(&tpstart,NULL);
for(i=0;i<10000000;i++)
strlen_sse2_asm(test_str);
gettimeofday(&tpend,NULL);
printf("strlen_sse2_asm--->%lf\n",(tpend.tv_sec-tpstart.tv_sec)*1000+(tpend.tv_usec-tpstart.tv_usec)/1000.0);
gettimeofday(&tpstart,NULL);
for(i=0;i<10000000;i++)
strlen_sse4_2_asm(test_str);
gettimeofday(&tpend,NULL);
printf("strlen_sse4_2_asm--->%lf\n",(tpend.tv_sec-tpstart.tv_sec)*1000+(tpend.tv_usec-tpstart.tv_usec)/1000.0);
gettimeofday(&tpstart,NULL);
for(i=0;i<10000000;i++)
strlen_sse2_intrin_align(test_str);
gettimeofday(&tpend,NULL);
printf("strlen_sse2_intrin_align--->%lf\n",(tpend.tv_sec-tpstart.tv_sec)*1000+(tpend.tv_usec-tpstart.tv_usec)/1000.0);
return 0;
}
The result is : (ms)
strlen from stirng.h--->23.518000
strlen_inline_asm--->222.311000
strlen_sse2_asm--->782.907000
strlen_sse4_2_asm--->955.960000
strlen_sse2_intrin_align--->3499.586000
I have some questions about it:
- Why
strlen
ofstring.h
is so fast? I think its code should be identify tostrlen_inline_asm
because I copied the code from/linux-4.2.2/arch/x86/lib/string_32.c
[http://lxr.oss.org.cn/source/arch/x86/lib/string_32.c#L164] - Why
sse2 intrinsic
andsse2 assembly
are so different in performance? - Could someone help me how to disassembly the code so that I can see what has the function
strlen
of static library been transformed by the compiler? I usedgcc -s
but didn't find the disassembly ofstrlen from the <string.h>
- I think my code may be not very well, I would be appreciate if you could help me improve my code, especially assembly ones.
Thanks.