On 1/29/19 1:33 PM, Konstantin Kharlamov wrote:
On 29.01.2019 14:22, Gabriel Ivăncescu wrote:
On 1/29/19 10:01 AM, Alexandre Julliard wrote:
Konstantin Kharlamov hi-angel@yandex.ru writes:
On 29.01.2019 01:17, Marvin wrote:
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Hi, I don't understand, why the 3-rd patch was marked rejected? AFAIK it's being discussed.
I explained that such micro-optimizations won't be accepted, unless there is clear evidence that they make a difference. Your numbers are not convincing enough I'm afraid.
FWIW, just a side note, speaking in general. Most micro-optimizations have small benefits, just as they have a tiny burden individually. As the burden increases by applying more of them, so does the benefit as it piles up, so it's not all that bad and works both ways, IMO.
I guess in this case, for potential users who want to get max performance out of it, disabling TRACE and compiling wine themselves should be better. (can always just keep a normal compiled Wine along to TRACE problems and post bug reports and so on, if they run into any)
I disagree that less branch-misses is a tiny improvement. I've read various posts where a particular algorithm become 10-15% faster by improving branch-prediction.
I can't remember links ATM, but from a quick search I see e.g this page http://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/CNS/interpreter-branch which says they get 10% speed improvement due to branch prediction.
It's easy to imagine that such a TRACE inserted in the middle of some algo in wine may reduce its execution speed.
Yeah, I was speaking in general. Even if micro-optimizations have small benefits individually (in general), it piles up when more of them get added. Of course, so does the burden, in some cases. But my point was that it's not *only* the burden which piles up, so it's not all negative. ;-)