Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
199 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

c++ - Are older SIMD-versions available when using newer ones?

When I can use SSE3 or AVX, are then older SSE versions as SSE2 or MMX available -
or do I still need to check for them separately?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

In general, these have been additive but keep in mind that there are differences between Intel and AMD support for these over the years.

If you have AVX, then you can assume SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, and SSE 4.2 as well. Remember that to use AVX you also need to validate the OSXSAVE CPUID bit is set to ensure the OS you are using actually supports saving the AVX registers as well.

You should still explicitly check for all the CPUID support you use in your code for robustness (say checking for AVX, OSXSAVE, SSE4, SSE3, SSSE3 at the same time to guard your AVX codepaths).

#include <intrin.h>

inline bool IsAVXSupported()
{
#if defined(_M_IX86 ) || defined(_M_X64)
   int CPUInfo[4] = {-1};
   __cpuid( CPUInfo, 0 );

   if ( CPUInfo[0] < 1  )
       return false;

    __cpuid(CPUInfo, 1 );

    int ecx = 0x10000000 // AVX
              | 0x8000000 // OSXSAVE
              | 0x100000 // SSE 4.2
              | 0x80000 // SSE 4.1
              | 0x200 // SSSE3
              | 0x1; // SSE3

    if ( ( CPUInfo[2] & ecx ) != ecx )
        return false;

    return true;
#else
    return false;
#endif
}

SSE and SSE2 are required for all processors capable of x64 native, so they are good baseline assumptions for all code. Windows 8.0, Windows 8.1, and Windows 10 explicitly require SSE and SSE2 support even for x86 architectures so those instruction sets are pretty ubiquitous. In other words, if you fail a check for SSE or SSE2, just exit the app with a fatal error.

#include <windows.h>

inline bool IsSSESupported()
{
#if defined(_M_IX86 ) || defined(_M_X64)
   return ( IsProcessorFeaturePresent( PF_XMMI_INSTRUCTIONS_AVAILABLE ) != 0 && IsProcessorFeaturePresent( PF_XMMI64_INSTRUCTIONS_AVAILABLE ) != 0 );
#else
    return false;
#endif
}

-or-

#include <intrin.h>

inline bool IsSSESupported()
{
#if defined(_M_IX86 ) || defined(_M_X64)
   int CPUInfo[4] = {-1};
   __cpuid( CPUInfo, 0 );

   if ( CPUInfo[0] < 1  )
       return false;

    __cpuid(CPUInfo, 1 );

    int edx = 0x4000000 // SSE2
              | 0x2000000; // SSE

    if ( ( CPUInfo[3] & edx ) != edx )
        return false;

    return true;
#else
    return false;
#endif
}

Also, keep in mind that MMX, x87 FPU, and AMD 3DNow!* are all deprecated instruction sets for x64 native, so you shouldn't be using them actively anymore in newer code. A good rule of thumb is to avoid using any intrinsic that returns a __m64 or takes a __m64 data type.

You may want to check out this DirectXMath blog series with notes on many of these instruction sets and the relevant processor support requirements.

Note (*) - All the AMD 3DNow! instructions are deprecated except for PREFETCH and PREFETCHW which were carried forward. First generation Intel64 processors lacked support for these instructions, but they were later added as they are considered part of the core X64 instruction set. Windows 8.1 and Windows 10 x64 require PREFETCHW in particular, although the test is a little odd. Most Intel CPUs prior to Broadwell do not in fact report support for PREFETCHW through CPUID, but they treat the opcode as a no-op rather than throw an 'illegal instruction' exception. As such, the test here is (a) is it supported by CPUID, and (b) if not, does PREFETCHW at least not throw an exception.

Here's some test code for Visual Studio that demonstrates the PREFETCHW test as well as many other CPUID bits for the x86 and x64 platforms.

#include <intrin.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <windows.h>
#include <excpt.h>

void main()
{
   unsigned int x = _mm_getcsr();
   printf("%08X
", x );

   bool prefetchw = false;

   // See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hskdteyh.aspx
   int CPUInfo[4] = {-1};
   __cpuid( CPUInfo, 0 );

   if ( CPUInfo[0] > 0 )
   {
       __cpuid(CPUInfo, 1 );

       // EAX
       {
           int stepping = (CPUInfo[0] & 0xf);
           int basemodel = (CPUInfo[0] >> 4) & 0xf;
           int basefamily = (CPUInfo[0] >> 8) & 0xf;
           int xmodel = (CPUInfo[0] >> 16) & 0xf;
           int xfamily = (CPUInfo[0] >> 20) & 0xff;

           int family = basefamily + xfamily;
           int model = (xmodel << 4) | basemodel;

           printf("Family %02X, Model %02X, Stepping %u
", family, model, stepping );
       }

       // ECX
       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x20000000 ) // bit 29
          printf("F16C
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x10000000 ) // bit 28
          printf("AVX
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x8000000 ) // bit 27
          printf("OSXSAVE
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x400000 ) // bit 22
          printf("MOVBE
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x100000 ) // bit 20
          printf("SSE4.2
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x80000 ) // bit 19
          printf("SSE4.1
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x2000 ) // bit 13
          printf("CMPXCHANG16B
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x1000 ) // bit 12
          printf("FMA3
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x200 ) // bit 9
          printf("SSSE3
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x1 ) // bit 0
          printf("SSE3
");

       // EDX
       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x4000000 ) // bit 26
           printf("SSE2
");

       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x2000000 ) // bit 25
           printf("SSE
");

       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x800000 ) // bit 23
           printf("MMX
");
   }
   else
       printf("CPU doesn't support Feature Identifiers
");

   if ( CPUInfo[0] >= 7 )
   {
       __cpuidex(CPUInfo, 7, 0);

       // EBX
       if ( CPUInfo[1] & 0x100 ) // bit 8
         printf("BMI2
");

       if ( CPUInfo[1] & 0x20 ) // bit 5
         printf("AVX2
");

       if ( CPUInfo[1] & 0x8 ) // bit 3
         printf("BMI
");
   }
   else
       printf("CPU doesn't support Structured Extended Feature Flags
");

   // Extended features
   __cpuid( CPUInfo, 0x80000000 );

   if ( CPUInfo[0] > 0x80000000 )
   {
       __cpuid(CPUInfo, 0x80000001 );

       // ECX
       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x10000 ) // bit 16
           printf("FMA4
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x800 ) // bit 11
           printf("XOP
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x100 ) // bit 8
       {
           printf("PREFETCHW
");
           prefetchw = true;
       }

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x80 ) // bit 7
           printf("Misalign SSE
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x40 ) // bit 6
           printf("SSE4A
");

       if ( CPUInfo[2] & 0x1 ) // bit 0
           printf("LAHF/SAHF
");

       // EDX
       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x80000000 ) // bit 31
           printf("3DNow!
");

       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x40000000 ) // bit 30
           printf("3DNowExt!
");

       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x20000000 ) // bit 29
           printf("x64
");

       if ( CPUInfo[3] & 0x100000 ) // bit 20
           printf("NX
");
   }
   else
       printf("CPU doesn't support Extended Feature Identifiers
");

   if ( !prefetchw )
   {
       bool illegal = false;

       __try
       {
           static const unsigned int s_data = 0xabcd0123;

           _m_prefetchw(&s_data);
       }
       __except (EXCEPTION_EXECUTE_HANDLER)
       {
           illegal = true;
       }

       if (illegal)
       {
           printf("PREFETCHW is an invalid instruction on this processor
");
       }
   }
}

UPDATE: The fundamental challenge, of course, is how do you handle systems that lack support for AVX? While the instruction set is useful, the biggest benefit of having an AVX-capable processor is the ability to use the /arch:AVX build switch which enables the global use of the VEX prefix for better SSE/SSE2 code-gen. The only problem is the resulting code DLL/EXE is not compatible with systems that lack AVX support.

As such, for Windows, ideally you should build one EXE for non-AVX systems (assuming SSE/SSE2 only so use /arch:SSE2 instead for x86 code; this setting is implicit for x64 code), a different EXE that is optimized for AVX (using /arch:AVX), and then use CPU detection to determine which EXE to use for a given system.

Luckily with Xbox One, we can just always build with /arch::AVX since it's a fixed platform...

UPDATE 2: For clang/LLVM, you should use slight dikyfferent intriniscs for CPUID:

if defined(__clang__) || defined(__GNUC__)
    __cpuid(1, CPUInfo[0], CPUInfo[1], CPUInfo[2], CPUInfo[3]);
#else
    __cpuid(CPUInfo, 1);
#endif
if defined(__clang__) || defined(__GNUC__)
    __cpuid_count(7, 0, CPUInfo[0], CPUInfo[1], CPUInfo[2], CPUInfo[3]);
#else
    __cpuidex(CPUInfo, 7, 0);
#endif

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...