Davide Italiano via llvm-dev
2016-Nov-18 02:30 UTC
[llvm-dev] LLD: time to enable --threads by default
On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 1:20 PM, Rafael Espíndola via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:>> >> Thank you for the explanation! That makes sense. >> >> Unlike ThinLTO, each thread in LLD consumes very small amount of memory >> (probably just a few megabytes), so that's not a problem for me. At the >> final stage of linking, we spawn threads to copy section contents and apply >> relocations, and I guess that causes a lot of memory traffic because that's >> basically memcpy'ing input files to an output file, so the memory bandwidth >> could be a limiting factor there. But I do not see a reason to limit the >> number of threads to the number of physical core. For LLD, it seems like we >> can just spawn as many threads as HT provides. > > > It is quite common for SMT to *not* be profitable. I did notice some > small wins by not using it. On an intel machine you can do a quick > check by running with half the threads since they always have 2x SMT. >I had the same experience. Ideally I would like to have a way to override the number of threads used by the linker. gold has a plethora of options for doing that, i.e. --thread-count COUNT Number of threads to use --thread-count-initial COUNT Number of threads to use in initial pass --thread-count-middle COUNT Number of threads to use in middle pass --thread-count-final COUNT Number of threads to use in final pass I don't think we need the full generality/flexibility of initial/middle/final, but --thread-count could be useful (at least for experimenting). The current interface of `parallel_for_each` doesn't allow to specify the number of threads to be run, so, assuming lld goes that route (it may not), that should be extended accordingly. -- Davide "There are no solved problems; there are only problems that are more or less solved" -- Henri Poincare
Rui Ueyama via llvm-dev
2016-Nov-18 03:34 UTC
[llvm-dev] LLD: time to enable --threads by default
On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 6:30 PM, Davide Italiano <davide at freebsd.org> wrote:> On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 1:20 PM, Rafael Espíndola via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> > >> Thank you for the explanation! That makes sense. > >> > >> Unlike ThinLTO, each thread in LLD consumes very small amount of memory > >> (probably just a few megabytes), so that's not a problem for me. At the > >> final stage of linking, we spawn threads to copy section contents and > apply > >> relocations, and I guess that causes a lot of memory traffic because > that's > >> basically memcpy'ing input files to an output file, so the memory > bandwidth > >> could be a limiting factor there. But I do not see a reason to limit the > >> number of threads to the number of physical core. For LLD, it seems > like we > >> can just spawn as many threads as HT provides. > > > > > > It is quite common for SMT to *not* be profitable. I did notice some > > small wins by not using it. On an intel machine you can do a quick > > check by running with half the threads since they always have 2x SMT. > > > > I had the same experience. Ideally I would like to have a way to > override the number of threads used by the linker. > gold has a plethora of options for doing that, i.e. > > --thread-count COUNT Number of threads to use > --thread-count-initial COUNT > Number of threads to use in initial pass > --thread-count-middle COUNT Number of threads to use in middle pass > --thread-count-final COUNT Number of threads to use in final pass > > I don't think we need the full generality/flexibility of > initial/middle/final, but --thread-count could be useful (at least for > experimenting). The current interface of `parallel_for_each` doesn't > allow to specify the number of threads to be run, so, assuming lld > goes that route (it may not), that should be extended accordingly. >I agree that these options would be useful for testing, but I'm reluctant to expose them as user options because I wish LLD would just work out of the box without turning lots of knobs. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20161117/220b0e2d/attachment.html>
Davide Italiano via llvm-dev
2016-Nov-18 04:04 UTC
[llvm-dev] LLD: time to enable --threads by default
On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 7:34 PM, Rui Ueyama <ruiu at google.com> wrote:> On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 6:30 PM, Davide Italiano <davide at freebsd.org> wrote: >> >> On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 1:20 PM, Rafael Espíndola via llvm-dev >> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> >> >> >> Thank you for the explanation! That makes sense. >> >> >> >> Unlike ThinLTO, each thread in LLD consumes very small amount of memory >> >> (probably just a few megabytes), so that's not a problem for me. At the >> >> final stage of linking, we spawn threads to copy section contents and >> >> apply >> >> relocations, and I guess that causes a lot of memory traffic because >> >> that's >> >> basically memcpy'ing input files to an output file, so the memory >> >> bandwidth >> >> could be a limiting factor there. But I do not see a reason to limit >> >> the >> >> number of threads to the number of physical core. For LLD, it seems >> >> like we >> >> can just spawn as many threads as HT provides. >> > >> > >> > It is quite common for SMT to *not* be profitable. I did notice some >> > small wins by not using it. On an intel machine you can do a quick >> > check by running with half the threads since they always have 2x SMT. >> > >> >> I had the same experience. Ideally I would like to have a way to >> override the number of threads used by the linker. >> gold has a plethora of options for doing that, i.e. >> >> --thread-count COUNT Number of threads to use >> --thread-count-initial COUNT >> Number of threads to use in initial pass >> --thread-count-middle COUNT Number of threads to use in middle pass >> --thread-count-final COUNT Number of threads to use in final pass >> >> I don't think we need the full generality/flexibility of >> initial/middle/final, but --thread-count could be useful (at least for >> experimenting). The current interface of `parallel_for_each` doesn't >> allow to specify the number of threads to be run, so, assuming lld >> goes that route (it may not), that should be extended accordingly. > > > I agree that these options would be useful for testing, but I'm reluctant to > expose them as user options because I wish LLD would just work out of the > box without turning lots of knobs. >I share your view that lld should work fine out-the-box. I think an alternative is having the option as hidden, maybe. I consider the set of users tinkering with linker options not large, although there are some people who like to override/"tune" the linker anyway, so IMHO we should expose a sane default and let users decide if they care or not (a similar example is what we do for --thinlto-threads or --lto-partitions, even if in the last case we still have that set to 1 because it's not entirely clear what's a reasonable number). -- Davide "There are no solved problems; there are only problems that are more or less solved" -- Henri Poincare