[v3,04/18] Add string vectorized find and detection functions
Commit Message
This patch adds generic string find and detection implementation meant
to be used in generic vectorized string implementation. The idea is to
decompose the basic string operation so each architecture can reimplement
if it provides any specialized hardware instruction.
The 'string-fza.h' provides zero byte detection functions (find_zero_low,
find_zero_all, find_eq_low, find_eq_all, find_zero_eq_low, find_zero_eq_all,
find_zero_ne_low, and find_zero_ne_all). They are used on both functions
provided by 'string-fzb.h' and 'string-fzi'.
The 'string-fzb.h' provides boolean zero byte detection with the
functions:
- has_zero: determine if any byte within a word is zero.
- has_eq: determine byte equality between two words.
- has_zero_eq: determine if any byte within a word is zero along with
byte equality between two words.
The 'string-fzi.h' provides zero byte detection along with its positions:
- index_first_zero: return index of first zero byte within a word.
- index_first_eq: return index of first byte different between two words.
- index_first_zero_eq: return index of first zero byte within a word or
first byte different between two words.
- index_first_zero_ne: return index of first zero byte within a word or
first byte equal between two words.
- index_last_zero: return index of last zero byte within a word.
- index_last_eq: return index of last byte different between two words.
Also, to avoid libcalls in the '__builtin_c{t,l}z{l}' calls (which may
add performance degradation), inline implementation based on De Bruijn
sequences are added (enabled by a configure check).
Richard Henderson <rth@twiddle.net>
Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
* config.h.in (HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ, HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ): New defines.
* configure.ac: Check for __builtin_ctz{l} with no external
dependencies
* sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h: New file.
* sysdeps/generic/string-fza.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/generic/string-fzb.h: Likewise.
* sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h: Likewise.
---
config.h.in | 8 ++
configure | 54 ++++++++++
configure.ac | 34 +++++++
sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h | 35 +++++++
sysdeps/generic/string-fza.h | 117 +++++++++++++++++++++
sysdeps/generic/string-fzb.h | 49 +++++++++
sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h | 215 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
7 files changed, 512 insertions(+)
create mode 100644 sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h
create mode 100644 sysdeps/generic/string-fza.h
create mode 100644 sysdeps/generic/string-fzb.h
create mode 100644 sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h
Comments
On Wed, 10 Jan 2018, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
> +
> +static inline unsigned char
> +extractbyte (op_t x, unsigned idx)
Missing comment on the semantics of this function. "unsigned int".
> +/* For architecture which only provides __builtin_clz{l} (HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ)
> + and/or __builtin_ctz{l} (HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ) which uses external libcalls
> + (for intance __c{l,t}z{s,d}i2 from libgcc) the following wrapper provides
> + inline implementation for both count leading zeros and count trailing
> + zeros using branchless computation. */
I think the comments need to say a bit more about the semantics of these
functions. In particular, do they follow the same rule as the built-in
functions that behavior is undefined if the argument is zero? If they do,
then I'd expect the comments on the functions that call them to specify
that they must not be called with a zero argument (zero arguments in this
case generally corresponding to words that are not at the end of the
string etc., so the functions indeed don't get called in that case).
Some quick typos i noticed while skimming through it.
On 01/10/2018 10:47 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
> +/* If compiler supports __builtin_ctz{l} without any external depedencies
typo... dependencies
More cases of this.
> diff --git a/sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h b/sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h
> new file mode 100644
> index 0000000..69a78ce
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h
> @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
> +/* Extract by from memory word. Generic C version.
Extract byte?
> diff --git a/sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h b/sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h
> new file mode 100644
> index 0000000..57101f2
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h
> @@ -0,0 +1,215 @@
> +/* Zero byte detection; indexes. Generic C version.
> + Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
> + This file is part of the GNU C Library.
> +
> + The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
> + modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
> + License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
> + version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
> +
> + The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
> + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
> + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
> + Lesser General Public License for more details.
> +
> + You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
> + License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
> + <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
> +
> +#ifndef STRING_FZI_H
> +#define STRING_FZI_H 1
> +
> +#include <limits.h>
> +#include <endian.h>
> +#include <string-fza.h>
> +
> +/* An improved bitscan routine, multiplying the De Bruijn sequence with a
> + 0-1 mask separated by the least significant one bit of a scanned integer
> + or bitboard [1].
> +
> + [1] https://chessprogramming.wikispaces.com/Kim+Walisch */
> +
> +static inline unsigned
> +index_access (const op_t i)
> +{
> + static const char index[] =
> + {
> +# if __WORDSIZE == 64
> + 0, 47, 1, 56, 48, 27, 2, 60,
> + 57, 49, 41, 37, 28, 16, 3, 61,
> + 54, 58, 35, 52, 50, 42, 21, 44,
> + 38, 32, 29, 23, 17, 11, 4, 62,
> + 46, 55, 26, 59, 40, 36, 15, 53,
> + 34, 51, 20, 43, 31, 22, 10, 45,
> + 25, 39, 14, 33, 19, 30, 9, 24,
> + 13, 18, 8, 12, 7, 6, 5, 63
> +# else
> + 0, 9, 1, 10, 13, 21, 2, 29,
> + 11, 14, 16, 18, 22, 25, 3, 30,
> + 8, 12, 20, 28, 15, 17, 24, 7,
> + 19, 27, 23, 6, 26, 5, 4, 31
> +# endif
> + };
> + return index[i];
> +}
> +
> +/* For architecture which only provides __builtin_clz{l} (HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ)
For architectures?
On 01/10/2018 04:47 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
> + op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
> + op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
This would be simpler and clearer if it were rewritten as:
opt_t lsb = repeat_bytes (0x01);
opt_t msb = repeat_bytes (0x80);
There are several other opportunities for this kind of simplification.
> +static inline op_t
> +find_zero_eq_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
> +{
> + op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
> + op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
> + op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
> + return (((x1 - lsb) & ~x1) | ((eq - lsb) & ~eq)) & msb;
> +}
How about the following simpler implementation instead? I expect it's
just as fast:
return find_zero_low (x1) | find_zero_low (x1 ^ x2);
Similarly for find_zero_eq_all, find_zero_ne_low, find_zero_ne_all.
> +static inline unsigned
> +__clz (op_t x)
> +{
> +#if !HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ
> + unsigned r;
> + op_t i;
> +
> + x |= x >> 1;
> + x |= x >> 2;
> + x |= x >> 4;
> + x |= x >> 8;
> + x |= x >> 16;
> +# if __WORDSIZE == 64
> + x |= x >> 32;
> + i = x * 0x03F79D71B4CB0A89ull >> 58;
> +# else
> + i = x * 0x07C4ACDDU >> 27;
> +# endif
> + r = index_access (i);
> + return r ^ (sizeof (op_t) * CHAR_BIT - 1);
The Gnulib integer_length module has a faster implementation, at least
for 32-bit platforms. Do we still care about 32-bit platforms? If so,
you might want to take a look at it.
On 11/01/2018 11:44, Luis Machado wrote:
> Some quick typos i noticed while skimming through it.
>
> On 01/10/2018 10:47 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
>> +/* If compiler supports __builtin_ctz{l} without any external depedencies
>
> typo... dependencies
>
> More cases of this.
>
>> diff --git a/sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h b/sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h
>> new file mode 100644
>> index 0000000..69a78ce
>> --- /dev/null
>> +++ b/sysdeps/generic/string-extbyte.h
>> @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
>> +/* Extract by from memory word. Generic C version.
>
> Extract byte?
>
>> diff --git a/sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h b/sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h
>> new file mode 100644
>> index 0000000..57101f2
>> --- /dev/null
>> +++ b/sysdeps/generic/string-fzi.h
>> @@ -0,0 +1,215 @@
>> +/* Zero byte detection; indexes. Generic C version.
>> + Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
>> + This file is part of the GNU C Library.
>> +
>> + The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
>> + modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
>> + License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
>> + version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
>> +
>> + The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
>> + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
>> + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
>> + Lesser General Public License for more details.
>> +
>> + You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
>> + License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
>> + <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
>> +
>> +#ifndef STRING_FZI_H
>> +#define STRING_FZI_H 1
>> +
>> +#include <limits.h>
>> +#include <endian.h>
>> +#include <string-fza.h>
>> +
>> +/* An improved bitscan routine, multiplying the De Bruijn sequence with a
>> + 0-1 mask separated by the least significant one bit of a scanned integer
>> + or bitboard [1].
>> +
>> + [1] https://chessprogramming.wikispaces.com/Kim+Walisch */
>> +
>> +static inline unsigned
>> +index_access (const op_t i)
>> +{
>> + static const char index[] =
>> + {
>> +# if __WORDSIZE == 64
>> + 0, 47, 1, 56, 48, 27, 2, 60,
>> + 57, 49, 41, 37, 28, 16, 3, 61,
>> + 54, 58, 35, 52, 50, 42, 21, 44,
>> + 38, 32, 29, 23, 17, 11, 4, 62,
>> + 46, 55, 26, 59, 40, 36, 15, 53,
>> + 34, 51, 20, 43, 31, 22, 10, 45,
>> + 25, 39, 14, 33, 19, 30, 9, 24,
>> + 13, 18, 8, 12, 7, 6, 5, 63
>> +# else
>> + 0, 9, 1, 10, 13, 21, 2, 29,
>> + 11, 14, 16, 18, 22, 25, 3, 30,
>> + 8, 12, 20, 28, 15, 17, 24, 7,
>> + 19, 27, 23, 6, 26, 5, 4, 31
>> +# endif
>> + };
>> + return index[i];
>> +}
>> +
>> +/* For architecture which only provides __builtin_clz{l} (HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ)
>
> For architectures?
Thanks, I fixed all locally.
On 11/01/2018 14:47, Paul Eggert wrote:
> On 01/10/2018 04:47 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
>> + op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
>> + op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
> This would be simpler and clearer if it were rewritten as:
>
> opt_t lsb = repeat_bytes (0x01);
> opt_t msb = repeat_bytes (0x80);
>
> There are several other opportunities for this kind of simplification.
Indeed, I changed it locally
>
>> +static inline op_t
>> +find_zero_eq_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
>> +{
>> + op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
>> + op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
>> + op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
>> + return (((x1 - lsb) & ~x1) | ((eq - lsb) & ~eq)) & msb;
>> +}
>
> How about the following simpler implementation instead? I expect it's just as fast:
>
> return find_zero_low (x1) | find_zero_low (x1 ^ x2);
>
> Similarly for find_zero_eq_all, find_zero_ne_low, find_zero_ne_all.
I think this seems ok and code generation for at least aarch64, powerpc64le,
sparc64, and x86_64 seems similar.
>
>> +static inline unsigned
>> +__clz (op_t x)
>> +{
>> +#if !HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ
>> + unsigned r;
>> + op_t i;
>> +
>> + x |= x >> 1;
>> + x |= x >> 2;
>> + x |= x >> 4;
>> + x |= x >> 8;
>> + x |= x >> 16;
>> +# if __WORDSIZE == 64
>> + x |= x >> 32;
>> + i = x * 0x03F79D71B4CB0A89ull >> 58;
>> +# else
>> + i = x * 0x07C4ACDDU >> 27;
>> +# endif
>> + r = index_access (i);
>> + return r ^ (sizeof (op_t) * CHAR_BIT - 1);
>
> The Gnulib integer_length module has a faster implementation, at least for 32-bit platforms. Do we still care about 32-bit platforms? If so, you might want to take a look at it.
Do you mean the version which uses double to integer, the one with 6 comparisons
or the naive one? Indeed I think for 32 bits is issuing a lot of instruction,
the only advantage I see it is branchless (which might be a gain in some kind
of architectures).
On 01/11/2018 10:54 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
>> The Gnulib integer_length module has a faster implementation, at least for 32-bit platforms. Do we still care about 32-bit platforms? If so, you might want to take a look at it.
> Do you mean the version which uses double to integer, the one with 6 comparisons
> or the naive one?
I meant the one that converts int to double. It can be branchless since
we assume the int is nonzero.
On 11/01/2018 16:54, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
>
>
> On 11/01/2018 14:47, Paul Eggert wrote:
>> On 01/10/2018 04:47 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
>>> + op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
>>> + op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
>> This would be simpler and clearer if it were rewritten as:
>>
>> opt_t lsb = repeat_bytes (0x01);
>> opt_t msb = repeat_bytes (0x80);
>>
>> There are several other opportunities for this kind of simplification.
>
> Indeed, I changed it locally
>
>>
>>> +static inline op_t
>>> +find_zero_eq_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
>>> +{
>>> + op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
>>> + op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
>>> + op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
>>> + return (((x1 - lsb) & ~x1) | ((eq - lsb) & ~eq)) & msb;
>>> +}
>>
>> How about the following simpler implementation instead? I expect it's just as fast:
>>
>> return find_zero_low (x1) | find_zero_low (x1 ^ x2);
>>
>> Similarly for find_zero_eq_all, find_zero_ne_low, find_zero_ne_all.
>
> I think this seems ok and code generation for at least aarch64, powerpc64le,
> sparc64, and x86_64 seems similar.
While trying to compose find_zero_new_{low,all} with find_zero_{low,all}
made me not so sure if it would be gain. To accomplish we will need to add
another operation, such as:
---
static inline op_t
find_zero_ne_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
{
op_t x = repeat_bytes (0x80);
return find_zero_low (x1) | (find_zero_low (x1 ^ x2) ^ x);
}
---
Which seems slight worse than current regarding generated instructions.
Using GCC 7.2.1 for x86_64 I see:
* Patch version:
find_zero_ne_low.constprop.0:
.LFB28:
.cfi_startproc
movabsq $1229782938247303441, %rdx
movq %rdx, %rcx
movabsq $9187201950435737471, %rdx
leaq (%rdi,%rdx), %rax
xorq %rdi, %rcx
addq %rcx, %rdx
orq %rdi, %rax
orq %rcx, %rdx
movabsq $-9187201950435737472, %rdi
notq %rax
orq %rdx, %rax
andq %rdi, %rax
ret
* find_zero_low version above:
find_zero_ne_low.constprop.0:
.LFB28:
.cfi_startproc
movabsq $1229782938247303441, %rax
movabsq $-72340172838076673, %rdx
movabsq $-1229782938247303442, %rcx
xorq %rdi, %rax
xorq %rdi, %rcx
addq %rdx, %rax
addq %rdi, %rdx
notq %rdi
andq %rcx, %rax
andq %rdi, %rdx
movabsq $-9187201950435737472, %rdi
notq %rax
orq %rdx, %rax
andq %rdi, %rax
ret
On Thu, 11 Jan 2018, Paul Eggert wrote:
> On 01/11/2018 10:54 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
> > > The Gnulib integer_length module has a faster implementation, at least for
> > > 32-bit platforms. Do we still care about 32-bit platforms? If so, you
> > > might want to take a look at it.
> > Do you mean the version which uses double to integer, the one with 6
> > comparisons
> > or the naive one?
>
> I meant the one that converts int to double. It can be branchless since we
> assume the int is nonzero.
Looking at glibc architectures (and architectures with recently proposed
ports):
* The following have clz patterns in GCC, unconditionally, meaning this
glibc patch will always use __builtin_clz functions and any fallback code
is irrelevant: aarch64 i386 ia64 powerpc tilegx x86_64. (On ia64 the
pattern uses conversion to floating point.)
* The following have clz patterns in GCC, conditionally: alpha arm m68k
microblaze mips s390 sparc (and arc). I have not checked whether in some
of those cases the conditions might in fact be true for every
configuration for which glibc can be built.
* The following lack clz patterns in GCC: hppa nios2 sh (and riscv).
If the configuration lacking clz is also soft-float, converting int to
double is an extremely inefficient way ending up calling the libgcc clz
implementation (both soft-fp and fp-bit use __builtin_clz). I think
that's sufficient reason to avoid an approach involving conversion to
double unless an architecture has opted in to using it as an efficient
approach on that architecture.
(For arm, for example, clz is supported if "TARGET_32BIT && arm_arch5", so
the only configurations without __builtin_clz expanded inline by the
compiler are armv4t ones - which are also all soft-float, so the expansion
using double can never make sense for arm.)
On 12/01/2018 15:08, Joseph Myers wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Jan 2018, Paul Eggert wrote:
>
>> On 01/11/2018 10:54 AM, Adhemerval Zanella wrote:
>>>> The Gnulib integer_length module has a faster implementation, at least for
>>>> 32-bit platforms. Do we still care about 32-bit platforms? If so, you
>>>> might want to take a look at it.
>>> Do you mean the version which uses double to integer, the one with 6
>>> comparisons
>>> or the naive one?
>>
>> I meant the one that converts int to double. It can be branchless since we
>> assume the int is nonzero.
>
> Looking at glibc architectures (and architectures with recently proposed
> ports):
>
> * The following have clz patterns in GCC, unconditionally, meaning this
> glibc patch will always use __builtin_clz functions and any fallback code
> is irrelevant: aarch64 i386 ia64 powerpc tilegx x86_64. (On ia64 the
> pattern uses conversion to floating point.)
>
> * The following have clz patterns in GCC, conditionally: alpha arm m68k
> microblaze mips s390 sparc (and arc). I have not checked whether in some
> of those cases the conditions might in fact be true for every
> configuration for which glibc can be built.
>
> * The following lack clz patterns in GCC: hppa nios2 sh (and riscv).
>
> If the configuration lacking clz is also soft-float, converting int to
> double is an extremely inefficient way ending up calling the libgcc clz
> implementation (both soft-fp and fp-bit use __builtin_clz). I think
> that's sufficient reason to avoid an approach involving conversion to
> double unless an architecture has opted in to using it as an efficient
> approach on that architecture.
Thanks for remind about soft-float, also for some architectures that does
have hardware floating pointer units the int to/from float is also a costly
operation.
Regarding index_{first,last}_ fallback implementation, maybe simpler
implementation which just check the mask bits instead of fallback ones for
leading/trailing zero bit should better, I am open to suggestions here.
>
> (For arm, for example, clz is supported if "TARGET_32BIT && arm_arch5", so
> the only configurations without __builtin_clz expanded inline by the
> compiler are armv4t ones - which are also all soft-float, so the expansion
> using double can never make sense for arm.)
>
@@ -245,4 +245,12 @@
in i386 6 argument syscall issue). */
#define CAN_USE_REGISTER_ASM_EBP 0
+/* If compiler supports __builtin_ctz{l} without any external depedencies
+ (libgcc for instance). */
+#define HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ 0
+
+/* If compiler supports __builtin_clz{l} without any external depedencies
+ (libgcc for instance). */
+#define HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ 0
+
#endif
@@ -6592,6 +6592,60 @@ if test $libc_cv_builtin_trap = yes; then
fi
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: checking for __builtin_ctz{l} with no external dependencies" >&5
+$as_echo_n "checking for __builtin_ctz{l} with no external dependencies... " >&6; }
+if ${libc_cv_builtin_ctz+:} false; then :
+ $as_echo_n "(cached) " >&6
+else
+ libc_cv_builtin_ctz=yes
+echo 'int foo (unsigned long x) { return __builtin_ctz (x); }' > conftest.c
+if { ac_try='${CC-cc} $CFLAGS $CPPFLAGS -S conftest.c -o conftest.s 1>&5'
+ { { eval echo "\"\$as_me\":${as_lineno-$LINENO}: \"$ac_try\""; } >&5
+ (eval $ac_try) 2>&5
+ ac_status=$?
+ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: \$? = $ac_status" >&5
+ test $ac_status = 0; }; }; then
+ if grep '__ctz[s,d]i2' conftest.s > /dev/null; then
+ libc_cv_builtin_ctz=no
+ fi
+fi
+rm -f conftest.c conftest.s
+
+fi
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: result: $libc_cv_builtin_ctz" >&5
+$as_echo "$libc_cv_builtin_ctz" >&6; }
+if test x$libc_cv_builtin_ctz = xyes; then
+ $as_echo "#define HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ 1" >>confdefs.h
+
+fi
+
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: checking for __builtin_clz{l} with no external dependencies" >&5
+$as_echo_n "checking for __builtin_clz{l} with no external dependencies... " >&6; }
+if ${libc_cv_builtin_clz+:} false; then :
+ $as_echo_n "(cached) " >&6
+else
+ libc_cv_builtin_clz=yes
+echo 'int foo (unsigned long x) { return __builtin_clz (x); }' > conftest.c
+if { ac_try='${CC-cc} $CFLAGS $CPPFLAGS -S conftest.c -o conftest.s 1>&5'
+ { { eval echo "\"\$as_me\":${as_lineno-$LINENO}: \"$ac_try\""; } >&5
+ (eval $ac_try) 2>&5
+ ac_status=$?
+ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: \$? = $ac_status" >&5
+ test $ac_status = 0; }; }; then
+ if grep '__clz[s,d]i2' conftest.s > /dev/null; then
+ libc_cv_builtin_clz=no
+ fi
+fi
+rm -f conftest.c conftest.s
+
+fi
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: result: $libc_cv_builtin_clz" >&5
+$as_echo "$libc_cv_builtin_clz" >&6; }
+if test x$libc_cv_builtin_clz = xyes; then
+ $as_echo "#define HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ 1" >>confdefs.h
+
+fi
+
ac_ext=cpp
ac_cpp='$CXXCPP $CPPFLAGS'
ac_compile='$CXX -c $CXXFLAGS $CPPFLAGS conftest.$ac_ext >&5'
@@ -1675,6 +1675,40 @@ if test $libc_cv_builtin_trap = yes; then
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_BUILTIN_TRAP])
fi
+AC_CACHE_CHECK(for __builtin_ctz{l} with no external dependencies,
+ libc_cv_builtin_ctz, [dnl
+libc_cv_builtin_ctz=yes
+echo 'int foo (unsigned long x) { return __builtin_ctz (x); }' > conftest.c
+if AC_TRY_COMMAND(${CC-cc} $CFLAGS $CPPFLAGS -S conftest.c -o conftest.s 1>&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD); then
+changequote(,)dnl
+ if grep '__ctz[s,d]i2' conftest.s > /dev/null; then
+ libc_cv_builtin_ctz=no
+ fi
+changequote([,])dnl
+fi
+rm -f conftest.c conftest.s
+])
+if test x$libc_cv_builtin_ctz = xyes; then
+ AC_DEFINE(HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ)
+fi
+
+AC_CACHE_CHECK(for __builtin_clz{l} with no external dependencies,
+ libc_cv_builtin_clz, [dnl
+libc_cv_builtin_clz=yes
+echo 'int foo (unsigned long x) { return __builtin_clz (x); }' > conftest.c
+if AC_TRY_COMMAND(${CC-cc} $CFLAGS $CPPFLAGS -S conftest.c -o conftest.s 1>&AS_MESSAGE_LOG_FD); then
+changequote(,)dnl
+ if grep '__clz[s,d]i2' conftest.s > /dev/null; then
+ libc_cv_builtin_clz=no
+ fi
+changequote([,])dnl
+fi
+rm -f conftest.c conftest.s
+])
+if test x$libc_cv_builtin_clz = xyes; then
+ AC_DEFINE(HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ)
+fi
+
dnl C++ feature tests.
AC_LANG_PUSH([C++])
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
+/* Extract by from memory word. Generic C version.
+ Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ This file is part of the GNU C Library.
+
+ The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
+ version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+
+ The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
+ Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
+ <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+
+#ifndef STRING_EXTBYTE_H
+#define STRING_EXTBYTE_H 1
+
+#include <limits.h>
+#include <endian.h>
+#include <string-optype.h>
+
+static inline unsigned char
+extractbyte (op_t x, unsigned idx)
+{
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ return x >> (idx * CHAR_BIT);
+ else
+ return x >> (sizeof (x) - 1 - idx) * CHAR_BIT;
+}
+
+#endif /* STRING_EXTBYTE_H */
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
+/* Basic zero byte detection. Generic C version.
+ Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ This file is part of the GNU C Library.
+
+ The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
+ version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+
+ The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
+ Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
+ <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+
+#ifndef STRING_FZA_H
+#define STRING_FZA_H 1
+
+#include <limits.h>
+#include <string-optype.h>
+
+/* This function returns non-zero if any byte in X is zero.
+ More specifically, at least one bit set within the least significant
+ byte that was zero; other bytes within the word are indeterminate. */
+
+static inline op_t
+find_zero_low (op_t x)
+{
+ /* This expression comes from
+ https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#ZeroInWord
+ Subtracting 1 sets 0x80 in a byte that was 0; anding ~x clears
+ 0x80 in a byte that was >= 128; anding 0x80 isolates that test bit. */
+ op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
+ op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
+ return (x - lsb) & ~x & msb;
+}
+
+/* This function returns at least one bit set within every byte of X that
+ is zero. The result is exact in that, unlike find_zero_low, all bytes
+ are determinate. This is usually used for finding the index of the
+ most significant byte that was zero. */
+
+static inline op_t
+find_zero_all (op_t x)
+{
+ /* For each byte, find not-zero by
+ (0) And 0x7f so that we cannot carry between bytes,
+ (1) Add 0x7f so that non-zero carries into 0x80,
+ (2) Or in the original byte (which might have had 0x80 set).
+ Then invert and mask such that 0x80 is set iff that byte was zero. */
+ op_t m = ((op_t)-1 / 0xff) * 0x7f;
+ return ~(((x & m) + m) | x | m);
+}
+
+/* With similar caveats, identify bytes that are equal between X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline op_t
+find_eq_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ return find_zero_low (x1 ^ x2);
+}
+
+static inline op_t
+find_eq_all (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ return find_zero_all (x1 ^ x2);
+}
+
+/* With similar caveats, identify zero bytes in X1 and bytes that are
+ equal between in X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline op_t
+find_zero_eq_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ op_t lsb = (op_t)-1 / 0xff;
+ op_t msb = lsb << (CHAR_BIT - 1);
+ op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
+ return (((x1 - lsb) & ~x1) | ((eq - lsb) & ~eq)) & msb;
+}
+
+static inline op_t
+find_zero_eq_all (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ op_t m = ((op_t)-1 / 0xff) * 0x7f;
+ op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
+ op_t c1 = ((x1 & m) + m) | x1;
+ op_t c2 = ((eq & m) + m) | eq;
+ return ~((c1 & c2) | m);
+}
+
+/* With similar caveats, identify zero bytes in X1 and bytes that are
+ not equal between in X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline op_t
+find_zero_ne_low (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ op_t m = ((op_t)-1 / 0xff) * 0x7f;
+ op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
+ op_t nz1 = (x1 + m) | x1; /* msb set if byte not zero */
+ op_t ne2 = (eq + m) | eq; /* msb set if byte not equal */
+ return (ne2 | ~nz1) & ~m; /* msb set if x1 zero or x2 not equal */
+}
+
+static inline op_t
+find_zero_ne_all (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ op_t m = ((op_t)-1 / 0xff) * 0x7f;
+ op_t eq = x1 ^ x2;
+ op_t nz1 = ((x1 & m) + m) | x1;
+ op_t ne2 = ((eq & m) + m) | eq;
+ return (ne2 | ~nz1) & ~m;
+}
+
+#endif /* STRING_FZA_H */
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
+/* Zero byte detection, boolean. Generic C version.
+ Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ This file is part of the GNU C Library.
+
+ The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
+ version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+
+ The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
+ Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
+ <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+
+#ifndef STRING_FZB_H
+#define STRING_FZB_H 1
+
+#include <endian.h>
+#include <string-fza.h>
+
+/* Determine if any byte within X is zero. This is a pure boolean test. */
+
+static inline _Bool
+has_zero (op_t x)
+{
+ return find_zero_low (x) != 0;
+}
+
+/* Likewise, but for byte equality between X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline _Bool
+has_eq (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ return find_eq_low (x1, x2) != 0;
+}
+
+/* Likewise, but for zeros in X1 and equal bytes between X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline _Bool
+has_zero_eq (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ return find_zero_eq_low (x1, x2);
+}
+
+#endif /* STRING_FZB_H */
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,215 @@
+/* Zero byte detection; indexes. Generic C version.
+ Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ This file is part of the GNU C Library.
+
+ The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
+ modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
+ version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
+
+ The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
+ Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
+ License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
+ <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
+
+#ifndef STRING_FZI_H
+#define STRING_FZI_H 1
+
+#include <limits.h>
+#include <endian.h>
+#include <string-fza.h>
+
+/* An improved bitscan routine, multiplying the De Bruijn sequence with a
+ 0-1 mask separated by the least significant one bit of a scanned integer
+ or bitboard [1].
+
+ [1] https://chessprogramming.wikispaces.com/Kim+Walisch */
+
+static inline unsigned
+index_access (const op_t i)
+{
+ static const char index[] =
+ {
+# if __WORDSIZE == 64
+ 0, 47, 1, 56, 48, 27, 2, 60,
+ 57, 49, 41, 37, 28, 16, 3, 61,
+ 54, 58, 35, 52, 50, 42, 21, 44,
+ 38, 32, 29, 23, 17, 11, 4, 62,
+ 46, 55, 26, 59, 40, 36, 15, 53,
+ 34, 51, 20, 43, 31, 22, 10, 45,
+ 25, 39, 14, 33, 19, 30, 9, 24,
+ 13, 18, 8, 12, 7, 6, 5, 63
+# else
+ 0, 9, 1, 10, 13, 21, 2, 29,
+ 11, 14, 16, 18, 22, 25, 3, 30,
+ 8, 12, 20, 28, 15, 17, 24, 7,
+ 19, 27, 23, 6, 26, 5, 4, 31
+# endif
+ };
+ return index[i];
+}
+
+/* For architecture which only provides __builtin_clz{l} (HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ)
+ and/or __builtin_ctz{l} (HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ) which uses external libcalls
+ (for intance __c{l,t}z{s,d}i2 from libgcc) the following wrapper provides
+ inline implementation for both count leading zeros and count trailing
+ zeros using branchless computation. */
+
+static inline unsigned
+__ctz (op_t x)
+{
+#if !HAVE_BUILTIN_CTZ
+ op_t i;
+# if __WORDSIZE == 64
+ i = (x ^ (x - 1)) * 0x03F79D71B4CB0A89ull >> 58;
+# else
+ i = (x ^ (x - 1)) * 0x07C4ACDDU >> 27;
+# endif
+ return index_access (i);
+#else
+ if (sizeof (op_t) == sizeof (long))
+ return __builtin_ctzl (x);
+ else
+ return __builtin_ctzll (x);
+#endif
+};
+
+static inline unsigned
+__clz (op_t x)
+{
+#if !HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZ
+ unsigned r;
+ op_t i;
+
+ x |= x >> 1;
+ x |= x >> 2;
+ x |= x >> 4;
+ x |= x >> 8;
+ x |= x >> 16;
+# if __WORDSIZE == 64
+ x |= x >> 32;
+ i = x * 0x03F79D71B4CB0A89ull >> 58;
+# else
+ i = x * 0x07C4ACDDU >> 27;
+# endif
+ r = index_access (i);
+ return r ^ (sizeof (op_t) * CHAR_BIT - 1);
+#else
+ if (sizeof (op_t) == sizeof (long))
+ return __builtin_clzl (x);
+ else
+ return __builtin_clzll (x);
+#endif
+}
+
+/* A subroutine for the index_zero functions. Given a test word C, return
+ the (memory order) index of the first byte (in memory order) that is
+ non-zero. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_first_ (op_t c)
+{
+ _Static_assert (sizeof (op_t) == sizeof (long)
+ || sizeof (op_t) == sizeof (long long),
+ "Unhandled word size");
+
+ unsigned r;
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ r = __ctz (c);
+ else
+ r = __clz (c);
+ return r / CHAR_BIT;
+}
+
+/* Similarly, but return the (memory order) index of the last byte
+ that is non-zero. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_last_ (op_t c)
+{
+ _Static_assert (sizeof (op_t) == sizeof (long)
+ || sizeof (op_t) == sizeof (long long),
+ "Unhandled word size");
+
+ unsigned r;
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ r = __clz (c);
+ else
+ r = __ctz (c);
+ return sizeof (op_t) - 1 - (r / CHAR_BIT);
+}
+
+/* Given a word X that is known to contain a zero byte, return the
+ index of the first such within the word in memory order. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_first_zero (op_t x)
+{
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ x = find_zero_low (x);
+ else
+ x = find_zero_all (x);
+ return index_first_ (x);
+}
+
+/* Similarly, but perform the search for byte equality between X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_first_eq (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ x1 = find_eq_low (x1, x2);
+ else
+ x1 = find_eq_all (x1, x2);
+ return index_first_ (x1);
+}
+
+/* Similarly, but perform the search for zero within X1 or
+ equality between X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_first_zero_eq (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ x1 = find_zero_eq_low (x1, x2);
+ else
+ x1 = find_zero_eq_all (x1, x2);
+ return index_first_ (x1);
+}
+
+/* Similarly, but perform the search for zero within X1 or
+ inequality between X1 and X2. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_first_zero_ne (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ x1 = find_zero_ne_low (x1, x2);
+ else
+ x1 = find_zero_ne_all (x1, x2);
+ return index_first_ (x1);
+}
+
+/* Similarly, but search for the last zero within X. */
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_last_zero (op_t x)
+{
+ if (__BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN)
+ x = find_zero_all (x);
+ else
+ x = find_zero_low (x);
+ return index_last_ (x);
+}
+
+static inline unsigned int
+index_last_eq (op_t x1, op_t x2)
+{
+ return index_last_zero (x1 ^ x2);
+}
+
+#endif /* STRING_FZI_H */