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This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to std::optional: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716 |
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.. | ||
include/automemcpy | ||
lib | ||
unittests | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
README.md |
This folder contains an implementation of automemcpy: A framework for automatic generation of fundamental memory operations.
It uses the Z3 theorem prover to enumerate a subset of valid memory function implementations. These implementations are then materialized as C++ code and can be benchmarked against various size distributions. This process helps the design of efficient implementations for a particular environnement (size distribution, processor or custom compilation options).
This is not enabled by default, as it is mostly useful when working on tuning the library implementation. To build it, use LIBC_BUILD_AUTOMEMCPY=ON
(see below).
Prerequisites
You may need to install Z3
from source if it's not available on your system.
Here we show instructions to install it into <Z3_INSTALL_DIR>
.
You may need to sudo
to make install
.
mkdir -p ~/git
cd ~/git
git clone https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3.git
python scripts/mk_make.py --prefix=<Z3_INSTALL_DIR>
cd build
make -j
make install
Configuration
mkdir -p <BUILD_DIR>
cd <LLVM_PROJECT_DIR>/llvm
cmake -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=/usr/bin/clang \
-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/usr/bin/clang++ \
-DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="libc" \
-DLLVM_ENABLE_Z3_SOLVER=ON \
-DLLVM_Z3_INSTALL_DIR=<Z3_INSTALL_DIR> \
-DLIBC_BUILD_AUTOMEMCPY=ON \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
-B<BUILD_DIR>
Targets and compilation
There are three main CMake targets
automemcpy_implementations
- runs
Z3
and materializes valid memory functions as C++ code, a message will display its ondisk location. - the source code is then compiled using the native host optimizations (i.e.
-march=native
or-mcpu=native
depending on the architecture).
- runs
automemcpy
- the binary that benchmarks the autogenerated implementations.
automemcpy_result_analyzer
- the binary that analyses the benchmark results.
You may only compile the binaries as they both pull the autogenerated code as a dependency.
make -C <BUILD_DIR> -j automemcpy automemcpy_result_analyzer
Running the benchmarks
Make sure to save the results of the benchmark as a json file.
<BUILD_DIR>/bin/automemcpy --benchmark_out_format=json --benchmark_out=<RESULTS_DIR>/results.json
Additional useful options
-
--benchmark_min_time=.2
By default, each function is benchmarked for at least one second, here we lower it to 200ms.
-
--benchmark_filter="BM_Memset|BM_Bzero"
By default, all functions are benchmarked, here we restrict them to
memset
andbzero
.
Other options might be useful, use --help
for more information.
Analyzing the benchmarks
Analysis is performed by running automemcpy_result_analyzer
on one or more json result files.
<BUILD_DIR>/bin/automemcpy_result_analyzer <RESULTS_DIR>/results.json
What it does:
-
Gathers all throughput values for each function / distribution pair and picks the median one.
This allows picking a representative value over many runs of the benchmark. Please make sure all the runs happen under similar circumstances. -
For each distribution, look at the span of throughputs for functions of the same type (e.g. For distribution
A
, memcpy throughput spans from 2GiB/s to 5GiB/s). -
For each distribution, give a normalized score to each function (e.g. For distribution
A
, functionM
scores 0.65).
This score is then turned into a gradeEXCELLENT
,VERY_GOOD
,GOOD
,PASSABLE
,INADEQUATE
,MEDIOCRE
,BAD
- so that each distribution categorizes how function perform according to them. -
A Majority Judgement process is then used to categorize each function. This enables finer analysis of how distributions agree on which function is better. In the following example,
Function_1
andFunction_2
are ratedEXCELLENT
but looking at the grade's distribution might help decide which is best.
EXCELLENT | VERY_GOOD | GOOD | PASSABLE | INADEQUATE | MEDIOCRE | BAD | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Function_1 | 7 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Function_2 | 6 | 4 |
The tool outputs the histogram of grades for each function. In case of tie, other dimensions might help decide (e.g. code size, performance on other microarchitectures).
EXCELLENT |█▁▂ | Function_0
EXCELLENT |█▅ | Function_1
VERY_GOOD |▂█▁ ▁ | Function_2
GOOD | ▁█▄ | Function_3
PASSABLE | ▂▆▄█ | Function_4
INADEQUATE | ▃▃█▁ | Function_5
MEDIOCRE | █▆▁| Function_6
BAD | ▁▁█| Function_7