dnl AMD64 mpn_copyi optimised for CPUs with fast SSE. dnl Copyright 2003, 2005, 2007, 2011, 2012, 2015 Free Software Foundation, dnl Inc. dnl Contributed to the GNU project by Torbjörn Granlund. dnl This file is part of the GNU MP Library. dnl dnl The GNU MP Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify dnl it under the terms of either: dnl dnl * the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free dnl Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your dnl option) any later version. dnl dnl or dnl dnl * the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software dnl Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any dnl later version. dnl dnl or both in parallel, as here. dnl dnl The GNU MP Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but dnl WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY dnl or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License dnl for more details. dnl dnl You should have received copies of the GNU General Public License and the dnl GNU Lesser General Public License along with the GNU MP Library. If not, dnl see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/. include(`../config.m4') C cycles/limb cycles/limb cycles/limb good C aligned unaligned best seen for cpu? C AMD K8,K9 C AMD K10 0.85 1.64 Y/N C AMD bull 1.4 1.4 N C AMD pile 0.77 0.93 N C AMD steam ? ? C AMD excavator ? ? C AMD bobcat C AMD jaguar 0.65 1.02 opt/0.93 Y/N C Intel P4 2.3 2.3 Y C Intel core 1.0 1.0 0.52/0.64 N C Intel NHM 0.5 0.67 Y C Intel SBR 0.51 0.75 opt/0.54 Y/N C Intel IBR 0.50 0.57 opt/0.54 Y C Intel HWL 0.50 0.57 opt/0.51 Y C Intel BWL 0.55 0.62 opt/0.55 Y C Intel atom C Intel SLM 1.02 1.27 opt/1.07 Y/N C VIA nano 1.16 5.16 Y/N C We try to do as many 16-byte operations as possible. The top-most and C bottom-most writes might need 8-byte operations. We can always write using C aligned 16-byte operations, we read with both aligned and unaligned 16-byte C operations. C Instead of having separate loops for reading aligned and unaligned, we read C using MOVDQU. This seems to work great except for core2; there performance C doubles when reading using MOVDQA (for aligned source). It is unclear how to C best handle the unaligned case there. C INPUT PARAMETERS define(`rp', `%rdi') define(`up', `%rsi') define(`n', `%rdx') ABI_SUPPORT(DOS64) ABI_SUPPORT(STD64) dnl define(`movdqu', lddqu) ASM_START() TEXT ALIGN(64) PROLOGUE(mpn_copyi) FUNC_ENTRY(3) cmp $3, n C NB: bc code below assumes this limit jc L(bc) test $8, R8(rp) C is rp 16-byte aligned? jz L(ali) C jump if rp aligned movsq C copy single limb dec n sub $16, n jc L(sma) ALIGN(16) L(top): movdqu (up), %xmm0 movdqu 16(up), %xmm1 movdqu 32(up), %xmm2 movdqu 48(up), %xmm3 movdqu 64(up), %xmm4 movdqu 80(up), %xmm5 movdqu 96(up), %xmm6 movdqu 112(up), %xmm7 lea 128(up), up movdqa %xmm0, (rp) movdqa %xmm1, 16(rp) movdqa %xmm2, 32(rp) movdqa %xmm3, 48(rp) movdqa %xmm4, 64(rp) movdqa %xmm5, 80(rp) movdqa %xmm6, 96(rp) movdqa %xmm7, 112(rp) lea 128(rp), rp L(ali): sub $16, n jnc L(top) L(sma): test $8, R8(n) jz 1f movdqu (up), %xmm0 movdqu 16(up), %xmm1 movdqu 32(up), %xmm2 movdqu 48(up), %xmm3 lea 64(up), up movdqa %xmm0, (rp) movdqa %xmm1, 16(rp) movdqa %xmm2, 32(rp) movdqa %xmm3, 48(rp) lea 64(rp), rp 1: test $4, R8(n) jz 1f movdqu (up), %xmm0 movdqu 16(up), %xmm1 lea 32(up), up movdqa %xmm0, (rp) movdqa %xmm1, 16(rp) lea 32(rp), rp 1: test $2, R8(n) jz 1f movdqu (up), %xmm0 lea 16(up), up movdqa %xmm0, (rp) lea 16(rp), rp ALIGN(16) 1: L(end): test $1, R8(n) jz 1f mov (up), %r8 mov %r8, (rp) 1: FUNC_EXIT() ret C Basecase code. Needed for good small operands speed, not for correctness as C the above code is currently written. The commented-out lines need to be C reinstated if this code is to be used for n > 3, and then the post loop C offsets need fixing. L(bc): sub $2, n jc L(end) ALIGN(16) 1: mov (up), %rax mov 8(up), %rcx dnl lea 16(up), up mov %rax, (rp) mov %rcx, 8(rp) dnl lea 16(rp), rp dnl sub $2, n dnl jnc 1b test $1, R8(n) jz L(ret) mov 16(up), %rax mov %rax, 16(rp) L(ret): FUNC_EXIT() ret EPILOGUE()