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__predict_false(3) [netbsd man page]

ATTRIBUTE(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					      ATTRIBUTE(3)

NAME
attribute -- non-standard GCC attribute extensions SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/cdefs.h> __dead __pure __constfunc __noinline __unused __used __packed __aligned(x); __section(section); __read_mostly __cacheline_aligned __predict_true(exp); __predict_false(exp); DESCRIPTION
The GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) provides many extensions to the standard C language. Among these are the so-called attributes. In NetBSD all attributes are provided in a restricted namespace. The described macros should be preferred instead of using the GCC's __attribute__ extension directly. ATTRIBUTES
__dead The gcc(1) compiler knows that certain functions such as abort(3) and exit(3) can never return any value. When such a function is equipped with __dead, certain optimizations are possible. Obviously a __dead function can never have return type other than void. __pure A __pure function is defined to be one that has no effects except the return value, which is assumed to depend only on the function parameters and/or global variables. Any access to parameters and/or global variables must also be read-only. A function that depends on volatile memory, or other comparable system resource that can change between two consecutive calls, can never be __pure. Many math(3) functions satisfy the definition of a __pure function, at least in theory. Other examples include strlen(3) and strcmp(3). __constfunc A ``const function'' is a stricter variant of ``pure functions''. In addition to the restrictions of pure functions, a function declared with __constfunc can never access global variables nor take pointers as parameters. The return value of these functions must depend only on the passed-by-value parameters. Note also that a function that calls non-const functions can not be __constfunc. The canonical example of a const function would be abs(3). As with pure functions, certain micro-optimizations are possible for functions declared with __constfunc. __noinline GCC is known for aggressive function inlining. Sometimes it is known that inlining is undesirable or that a function will perform incorrectly when inlined. The __noinline macro expands to a function attribute that prevents GCC for inlining the function, irrespec- tive whether the function was declared with the inline keyword. The attribute takes precedence over all other compiler options related to inlining. __unused In most GCC versions the common -Wall flag enables warnings produced by functions that are defined but unused. Marking an unused func- tion with the __unused macro inhibits these warnings. __used The __used macro expands to an attribute that informs GCC that a static variable or function is to be always retained in the object file even if it is unreferenced. __packed The __packed macro expands to an attribute that forces a variable or structure field to have the smallest possible alignment, poten- tially disregarding architecture specific alignment requirements. The smallest possible alignment is effectively one byte for variables and one bit for fields. If specified on a struct or union, all variables therein are also packed. The __packed macro is often useful when dealing with data that is in a particular static format on the disk, wire, or memory. __aligned(x) The __aligned() macro expands to an attribute that specifies the minimum alignment in bytes for a variable, structure field, or func- tion. In other words, the specified object should have an alignment of at least x bytes, as opposed to the minimum alignment require- ments dictated by the architecture and the ABI. Possible use cases include: o Mixing assembly and C code. o Dealing with hardware that may impose alignment requirements greater than the architecture itself. o Using instructions that may impose special alignment requirements. Typical example would be alignment of frequently used objects along processor cache lines. Note that when used with functions, structures, or structure members, __aligned() can only be used to increase the alignment. If the macro is however used as part of a typedef, the alignment can both increase and decrease. Otherwise it is only possible to decrease the alignment for variables and fields by using the __packed macro. The effectiveness of __aligned() is largely dependent on the linker. The __alignof__(3) operator can be used to examine the alignment. __section(section) The __section() macro expands to an attribute that specifies a particular section to which a variable or function should be placed. Normally the compiler places the generated objects to sections such as ``data'' or ``text''. By using __section(), it is possible to override this behavior, perhaps in order to place some variables into particular sections specific to unique hardware. __read_mostly The __read_mostly macro uses __section() to place a variable or function into the ``.data.read_mostly'' section of the (kernel) elf(5). The use of __read_mostly allows infrequently modified data to be grouped together; it is expected that the cachelines of rarely and fre- quently modified data structures are this way separated. Candidates for __read_mostly include variables that are initialized once, read very often, and seldom written to. __cacheline_aligned The __cacheline_aligned macro behaves like __read_mostly, but the used section is ``.data.cacheline_aligned'' instead. It also uses __aligned() to set the minimum alignment into a predefined coherency unit. This should ensure that frequently used data structures are aligned on cacheline boundaries. Both __cacheline_aligned and __read_mostly are only available for the kernel. __predict_true A branch is generally defined to be a conditional execution of a program depending on whether a certain flow control mechanism is altered. Typical example would be a ``if-then-else'' sequence used in high-level languages or a jump instruction used in machine-level code. A branch prediction would then be defined as an attempt to guess whether a conditional branch will be taken. The macros __predict_true() and __predict_false() annotate the likelihood of whether a branch will evaluate to true or false. The rationale is to improve instruction pipelining. Semantically __predict_true expects that the integral expression exp equals 1. __predict_false The __predict_false expands to an attribute that instructs the compiler to predict that a given branch will be likely false. As pro- grammers are notoriously bad at predicting the likely behavior of their code, profiling and empirical evidence should precede the use of __predict_false and __predict_true. SEE ALSO
gcc(1), __builtin_object_size(3), cdefs(3), c(7) CAVEATS
It goes without saying that portable applications should steer clear from non-standard extensions specific to any given compiler. Even when portability is not a concern, use these macros sparsely and wisely. BSD
December 19, 2010 BSD
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