Re: Memory ordering

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Sujet : Re: Memory ordering
De : mitchalsup (at) *nospam* aol.com (MitchAlsup1)
Groupes : comp.arch
Date : 29. Jul 2024, 18:49:19
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Rocksolid Light
Message-ID : <f8869fa1aadb85896d237179d46b20f8@www.novabbs.org>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Rocksolid Light
On Mon, 29 Jul 2024 13:21:10 +0000, Anton Ertl wrote:

mitchalsup@aol.com (MitchAlsup1) writes:
On Fri, 26 Jul 2024 17:00:07 +0000, Anton Ertl wrote:
Similarly, I expect that hardware that is designed for good TSO or
sequential consistency performance will run faster on code written for
this model than code written for weakly consistent hardware will run
on that hardware.
>
According to Lamport; only the ATOMIC stuff needs sequential
consistency.
So, it is completely possible to have a causally consistent processor
that switches to sequential consistency when doing ATOMIC stuff and gain
performance when not doing ATOMIC stuff, and gain programmability when
doing atomic stuff.
>
That's not what I have in mind.  What I have in mind is hardware that,
e.g., speculatively performs loads, predicting that no other core will
store there with an earlier time stamp.  But if another core actually
performs such a store, the usual misprediction handling happens and
the code starting from that mispredicted load is reexecuted.  So as
long as two cores do not access the same memory, they can run at full
speed, and there is only slowdown if there is actual (not potential)
communication between the cores.
OK...
>
A problem with that approach is that this requires enough reorder
buffering (or something equivalent, there may be something cheaper for
this particular problem) to cover at least the shared-cache latency
(usually L3, more with multiple sockets).
The depth of the execution window may be smaller than the time it takes
to send the required information around and have this core recognize
that it is out-of-order wrt memory.

                   That's because software written for weakly
consistent hardware often has to insert barriers or atomic operations
just in case, and these operations are slow on hardware optimized for
weak consistency.
>
The operations themselves are not slow.
>
Citation needed.
A MEMBAR dropped into the pipeline, when nothing is speculative, takes
no more time than an integer ADD. Only when there is speculation does
it have to take time to relax the speculation.

By contrast, one can design hardware for strong ordering such that the
slowness occurs only in those cases when actual (not potential)
communication between the cores happens, i.e., much less frequently.
>
How would you do this for a 256-way banked memory system of the
NEC SX ?? I.E., the processor is not in charge of memory order--
the memory system is.
>
Memory consistency is defined wrt what several processors do.  Some
processor performs some reads and writes and another performs some
read and writes, and memory consistency defines what a processor sees
about what the other does, and what ends up in main memory.  But as
long as the processors, their caches, and their interconnect gets the
memory ordering right, the main memory is just the backing store that
eventually gets a consistent result of what the other components did.
So it does not matter whether the main memory has one bank or 256.
NEC SX is a multi-processor vector machine with the property that
addresses are spewed out as fast as AGEN can perform. These addresses
are routed to banks based on bus-segment and can arrive OoO wrt
how they were spewed out.
So two processors accessing the same memory using vector LDs will
see a single vector having multiple memory orderings. P[0]V[0] ordered
before P[1]V[0] but P[1]V[1] ordered before P[0]V[1], ...

One interesting aspect is that for supercomputers I generally think
that they have not yet been struck by the software crisis:
Supercomputer hardware is more expensive than supercomputer software.
So I expect that supercomputer hardware designers tend to throw
complexity over the wall to the software people, and in many cases
they do (the Cell broadband engine offers many examples of that).
However, "some ... Fujitsu [ARM] CPUs run with TSO at all times"
<https://lwn.net/Articles/970907/>; that sounds like the A64FX, a
processor designed for supercomputing.  So apparently in this case the
hardware designers actually accepted the hardware and design
complexity cost of TSO and gave a better model to software, even in
hardware designed for a supercomputer.
That may be true, but I always saw it as "Supercomputers run
applications for which they have source code"
>
- anton

Date Sujet#  Auteur
24 Jul 24 * Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later63MitchAlsup1
25 Jul 24 `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later62BGB
25 Jul 24  +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later57Chris M. Thomasson
26 Jul 24  i`* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later56Anton Ertl
26 Jul 24  i +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later20BGB
29 Jul 24  i i`* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later19Anton Ertl
29 Jul 24  i i +* Intel overvoltage (was: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later)2Thomas Koenig
29 Jul 24  i i i`- Re: Intel overvoltage1BGB
29 Jul 24  i i `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later16BGB
30 Jul 24  i i  `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later15Anton Ertl
30 Jul 24  i i   `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later14BGB
30 Jul 24  i i    +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2Chris M. Thomasson
31 Jul 24  i i    i`- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1BGB
1 Aug 24  i i    `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later11Anton Ertl
1 Aug 24  i i     +- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Michael S
1 Aug 24  i i     +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later8MitchAlsup1
1 Aug 24  i i     i+- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Michael S
2 Aug 24  i i     i`* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later6MitchAlsup1
2 Aug 24  i i     i +- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Michael S
4 Aug 24  i i     i `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later4MitchAlsup1
5 Aug 24  i i     i  `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later3Stephen Fuld
5 Aug 24  i i     i   `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2Stephen Fuld
5 Aug 24  i i     i    `- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1MitchAlsup1
1 Aug 24  i i     `- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1BGB
26 Jul 24  i +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later20MitchAlsup1
27 Jul 24  i i+- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1BGB
29 Jul 24  i i`* Memory ordering (was: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later)18Anton Ertl
29 Jul 24  i i +* Re: Memory ordering15MitchAlsup1
29 Jul 24  i i i+* Re: Memory ordering6Chris M. Thomasson
29 Jul 24  i i ii`* Re: Memory ordering5MitchAlsup1
30 Jul 24  i i ii `* Re: Memory ordering4Michael S
31 Jul 24  i i ii  `* Re: Memory ordering3Chris M. Thomasson
31 Jul 24  i i ii   `* Re: Memory ordering2Chris M. Thomasson
31 Jul 24  i i ii    `- Re: Memory ordering1Chris M. Thomasson
30 Jul 24  i i i`* Re: Memory ordering8Anton Ertl
30 Jul 24  i i i +* Re: Memory ordering2Chris M. Thomasson
30 Jul 24  i i i i`- Re: Memory ordering1Chris M. Thomasson
31 Jul 24  i i i `* Re: Memory ordering5MitchAlsup1
31 Jul 24  i i i  +- Re: Memory ordering1Chris M. Thomasson
1 Aug 24  i i i  `* Re: Memory ordering3Anton Ertl
1 Aug 24  i i i   `* Re: Memory ordering2MitchAlsup1
2 Aug 24  i i i    `- Re: Memory ordering1Anton Ertl
29 Jul 24  i i `* Re: Memory ordering2Chris M. Thomasson
30 Jul 24  i i  `- Re: Memory ordering1Chris M. Thomasson
29 Jul 24  i +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later13Chris M. Thomasson
29 Jul 24  i i+* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later9BGB
29 Jul 24  i ii`* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later8Chris M. Thomasson
29 Jul 24  i ii +- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Chris M. Thomasson
29 Jul 24  i ii +* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2BGB
29 Jul 24  i ii i`- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Chris M. Thomasson
30 Jul 24  i ii `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later4jseigh
30 Jul 24  i ii  `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later3Chris M. Thomasson
31 Jul 24  i ii   `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2jseigh
31 Jul 24  i ii    `- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Chris M. Thomasson
29 Jul 24  i i+- Memory ordering (was: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later)1Anton Ertl
29 Jul 24  i i`* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2MitchAlsup1
29 Jul 24  i i `- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1BGB
6 Aug 24  i `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2Chris M. Thomasson
6 Aug 24  i  `- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1Chris M. Thomasson
26 Jul 24  `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later4MitchAlsup1
27 Jul 24   +- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1BGB
28 Jul 24   `* Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later2Paul A. Clayton
28 Jul 24    `- Re: Arguments for a sane ISA 6-years later1MitchAlsup1

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