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author Geogaddi\David <d.m.ronan@qmul.ac.uk>
date Fri, 05 Feb 2016 19:21:42 +0000
parents 25bf17994ef1
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d@0 3 <title>Stack alignment on x86 - FFTW 3.2.1</title>
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d@0 49 <a name="Stack-alignment-on-x86"></a>
d@0 50 Previous:&nbsp;<a rel="previous" accesskey="p" href="SIMD-alignment-and-fftw_005fmalloc.html#SIMD-alignment-and-fftw_005fmalloc">SIMD alignment and fftw_malloc</a>,
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d@0 54
d@0 55 <h4 class="subsection">3.1.2 Stack alignment on x86</h4>
d@0 56
d@0 57 <p>On the Pentium and subsequent x86 processors, there is a substantial
d@0 58 performance penalty if double-precision variables are not stored
d@0 59 8-byte aligned; a factor of two or more is not unusual.
d@0 60 Unfortunately, the stack (the place that local variables and
d@0 61 subroutine arguments live) is not guaranteed by the Intel ABI to be
d@0 62 8-byte aligned.
d@0 63
d@0 64 <p>Recent versions of <code>gcc</code> (as well as most other compilers, we are
d@0 65 told, such as Intel's, Metrowerks', and Microsoft's) are able to keep
d@0 66 the stack 8-byte aligned; <code>gcc</code> does this by default (see
d@0 67 <code>-mpreferred-stack-boundary</code> in the <code>gcc</code> documentation).
d@0 68 If you are not certain whether your compiler maintains stack alignment
d@0 69 by default, it is a good idea to make sure.
d@0 70
d@0 71 <p>Unfortunately, <code>gcc</code> only <em>preserves</em> the stack
d@0 72 alignment&mdash;as a result, if the stack starts off misaligned, it will
d@0 73 always be misaligned, with a disastrous effect on performance (in
d@0 74 double precision). To prevent this, FFTW includes hacks to align its
d@0 75 own stack if necessary, so it should perform well even if you call it
d@0 76 from a program with a misaligned stack. Currently, our hacks support
d@0 77 <code>gcc</code> and the Intel C compiler; if you use another compiler you
d@0 78 are on your own. Fortunately, recent versions of glibc (on GNU/Linux)
d@0 79 provide a properly-aligned starting stack, but this was not the case
d@0 80 with a number of older versions, and we are not certain of the
d@0 81 situation on other operating systems. Hopefully, as time goes by this
d@0 82 will become less of a concern.
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