Assume a simple hello world in C, compiled using gcc -c to an object file and disassembled using objdump will looks like this:
_main:
0: 55 pushq %rbp
1: 48 89 e5 movq %rsp, %rbp
4: c7 45 fc 00 00 00 00 movl $0, -4(%rbp)
b: c7 45 f8 05 00 00 00 movl $5, -8(%rbp)
12: 8b 05 00 00 00 00 movl (%rip), %eax
As you can see the memory addresses are 0, 1, 4, .. and so on. They are not actual addresses.
Linking the object file and disassembling it looks like this:
_main:
100000f90: 55 pushq %rbp
100000f91: 48 89 e5 movq %rsp, %rbp
100000f94: c7 45 fc 00 00 00 00 movl $0, -4(%rbp)
100000f9b: c7 45 f8 05 00 00 00 movl $5, -8(%rbp)
100000fa2: 8b 05 58 00 00 00 movl 88(%rip), %eax
My question is, is 100000f90 an actual address of a byte of virtual memory or is it an offset?
How can the linker give an actual address prior to execution? What if that memory address isn't available when executing? What if I execute it on another machine with much less memory (maybe paging kicks in here).
Is't it the job of the loader to assign actual addresses?
Is the linker generating actual addresses for he final executable file?
(The following answers assume that the linker is not creating a position-independent executable.)
My question is, is 100000f90 an actual address of a byte of virtual memory or is it an offset?
It's the actual virtual address. Strictly speaking, it is the offset from the base of the code segment, but since modern operating systems always set the base of the code segment to 0, it is effectively the actual virtual address.
How can the linker give an actual address prior to execution? What if that memory address isn't available when executing? What if I execute it on another machine with much less memory (maybe paging kicks in here).
Each process gets its own separate virtual address space. Because it is virtual memory, the amount of physical memory in the machine doesn't matter. Paging is the process by which virtual addresses get mapped to physical address.
Isn't it the job of the loader to assign actual addresses?
Yes, when creating a process, the operating system loader allocates physical page frames for the process and maps the pages into the process's virtual address space. But the virtual addresses are those assigned by the linker.
Does a linker generate absolute virtual addresses when linking
It depends upon the linker setting and the input source. For general programming, linkers usually strive to create position independent code.
My question is, is 100000f90 an actual address of a byte of virtual memory or is it an offset?
It is most likely an offset.
How can the linker give an actual address prior to execution?
Think about the loader for an operating system. It expects things to be in specific address locations. Any decent linker will allow the programmer to specify absolute addresses some way.
What if that memory address isn't available when executing? What if I execute it on another machine with much less memory (maybe paging kicks in here).
That's the problem with position-dependent code.
Is't it the job of the loader to assign actual addresses?
The job of the loader is to follow the instructions given to it in the executable file. In creating the executable, the linker can specify addresses or defer to the loader in some cases.
Imagine you want to align a series of x86 assembly instructions to certain boundaries. For example, you may want to align loops to a 16 or 32-byte boundary, or pack instructions so they are efficiently placed in the uop cache or whatever.
The simplest way to achieve this is single-byte NOP instructions, followed closely by multi-byte NOPs. Although the latter is generally more efficient, neither method is free: NOPs use front-end execution resources, and also count against your 4-wide1 rename limit on modern x86.
Another option is to somehow lengthen some instructions to get the alignment you want. If this is done without introducing new stalls, it seems better than the NOP approach. How can instructions be efficiently made longer on recent x86 CPUs?
In the ideal world lengthening techniques would simultaneously be:
Applicable to most instructions
Capable of lengthening the instruction by a variable amount
Not stall or otherwise slow down the decoders
Be efficiently represented in the uop cache
It isn't likely that there is a single method that satisfies all of the above points simultaneously, so good answers will probably address various tradeoffs.
1The limit is 5 or 6 on AMD Ryzen.
Consider mild code-golfing to shrink your code instead of expanding it, especially before a loop. e.g. xor eax,eax / cdq if you need two zeroed registers, or mov eax, 1 / lea ecx, [rax+1] to set registers to 1 and 2 in only 8 total bytes instead of 10. See Set all bits in CPU register to 1 efficiently for more about that, and Tips for golfing in x86/x64 machine code for more general ideas. Probably you still want to avoid false dependencies, though.
Or fill extra space by creating a vector constant on the fly instead of loading it from memory. (Adding more uop-cache pressure could be worse, though, for the larger loop that contains your setup + inner loop. But it avoids d-cache misses for constants, so it has an upside to compensate for running more uops.)
If you weren't already using them to load "compressed" constants, pmovsxbd, movddup, or vpbroadcastd are longer than movaps. dword / qword broadcast loads are free (no ALU uop, just a load).
If you're worried about code alignment at all, you're probably worried about how it sits in the L1I cache or where the uop-cache boundaries are, so just counting total uops is no longer sufficient, and a few extra uops in the block before the one you care about may not be a problem at all.
But in some situations, you might really want to optimize decode throughput / uop-cache usage / total uops for the instructions before the block you want aligned.
Padding instructions, like the question asked for:
Agner Fog has a whole section on this: "10.6 Making instructions longer for the sake of alignment" in his "Optimizing subroutines in assembly language" guide. (The lea, push r/m64, and SIB ideas are from there, and I copied a sentence / phrase or two, otherwise this answer is my own work, either different ideas or written before checking Agner's guide.)
It hasn't been updated for current CPUs, though: lea eax, [rbx + dword 0] has more downsides than it used to vs mov eax, ebx, because you miss out on zero-latency / no execution unit mov. If it's not on the critical path, go for it though. Simple lea has fairly good throughput, and an LEA with a large addressing mode (and maybe even some segment prefixes) can be better for decode / execute throughput than mov + nop.
Use the general form instead of the short form (no ModR/M) of instructions like push reg or mov reg,imm. e.g. use 2-byte push r/m64 for push rbx. Or use an equivalent instruction that is longer, like add dst, 1 instead of inc dst, in cases where there are no perf downsides to inc so you were already using inc.
Use SIB byte. You can get NASM to do that by using a single register as an index, like mov eax, [nosplit rbx*1] (see also), but that hurts the load-use latency vs. simply encoding mov eax, [rbx] with a SIB byte. Indexed addressing modes have other downsides on SnB-family, like un-lamination and not using port7 for stores.
So it's best to just encode base=rbx + disp0/8/32=0 using ModR/M + SIB with no index reg. (The SIB encoding for "no index" is the encoding that would otherwise mean idx=RSP). [rsp + x] addressing modes require a SIB already (base=RSP is the escape code that means there's a SIB), and that appears all the time in compiler-generated code. So there's very good reason to expect this to be fully efficient to decode and execute (even for base registers other than RSP) now and in the future. NASM syntax can't express this, so you'd have to encode manually. GNU gas Intel syntax from objdump -d says 8b 04 23 mov eax,DWORD PTR [rbx+riz*1] for Agner Fog's example 10.20. (riz is a fictional index-zero notation that means there's a SIB with no index). I haven't tested if GAS accepts that as input.
Use an imm32 and/or disp32 form of an instruction that only needed imm8 or disp0/disp32. Agner Fog's testing of Sandybridge's uop cache (microarch guide table 9.1) indicates that the actual value of an immediate / displacement is what matters, not the number of bytes used in the instruction encoding. I don't have any info on Ryzen's uop cache.
So NASM imul eax, [dword 4 + rdi], strict dword 13 (10 bytes: opcode + modrm + disp32 + imm32) would use the 32small, 32small category and take 1 entry in the uop cache, unlike if either the immediate or disp32 actually had more than 16 significant bits. (Then it would take 2 entries, and loading it from the uop cache would take an extra cycle.)
According to Agner's table, 8/16/32small are always equivalent for SnB. And addressing modes with a register are the same whether there's no displacement at all, or whether it's 32small, so mov dword [dword 0 + rdi], 123456 takes 2 entries, just like mov dword [rdi], 123456789. I hadn't realized [rdi] + full imm32 took 2 entries, but apparently that' is the case on SnB.
Use jmp / jcc rel32 instead of rel8. Ideally try to expand instructions in places that don't require longer jump encodings outside the region you're expanding. Pad after jump targets for earlier forward jumps, pad before jump targets for later backward jumps, if they're close to needing a rel32 somewhere else. i.e. try to avoid padding between a branch and its target, unless you want that branch to use a rel32 anyway.
You might be tempted to encode mov eax, [symbol] as 6-byte a32 mov eax, [abs symbol] in 64-bit code, using an address-size prefix to use a 32-bit absolute address. But this does cause a Length-Changing-Prefix stall when it decodes on Intel CPUs. Fortunately, none of NASM/YASM / gas / clang do this code-size optimization by default if you don't explicitly specify a 32-bit address-size, instead using 7-byte mov r32, r/m32 with a ModR/M+SIB+disp32 absolute addressing mode for mov eax, [abs symbol].
In 64-bit position-dependent code, absolute addressing is a cheap way to use 1 extra byte vs. RIP-relative. But note that 32-bit absolute + immediate takes 2 cycles to fetch from uop cache, unlike RIP-relative + imm8/16/32 which takes only 1 cycle even though it still uses 2 entries for the instruction. (e.g. for a mov-store or a cmp). So cmp [abs symbol], 123 is slower to fetch from the uop cache than cmp [rel symbol], 123, even though both take 2 entries each. Without an immediate, there's no extra cost for
Note that PIE executables allow ASLR even for the executable, and are the default in many Linux distro, so if you can keep your code PIC without any perf downsides, then that's preferable.
Use a REX prefix when you don't need one, e.g. db 0x40 / add eax, ecx.
It's not in general safe to add prefixes like rep that current CPUs ignore, because they might mean something else in future ISA extensions.
Repeating the same prefix is sometimes possible (not with REX, though). For example, db 0x66, 0x66 / add ax, bx gives the instruction 3 operand-size prefixes, which I think is always strictly equivalent to one copy of the prefix. Up to 3 prefixes is the limit for efficient decoding on some CPUs. But this only works if you have a prefix you can use in the first place; you usually aren't using 16-bit operand-size, and generally don't want 32-bit address-size (although it's safe for accessing static data in position-dependent code).
A ds or ss prefix on an instruction that accesses memory is a no-op, and probably doesn't cause any slowdown on any current CPUs. (#prl suggested this in comments).
In fact, Agner Fog's microarch guide uses a ds prefix on a movq
[esi+ecx],mm0 in Example 7.1. Arranging IFETCH blocks to tune a loop for PII/PIII (no loop buffer or uop cache), speeding it up from 3 iterations per clock to 2.
Some CPUs (like AMD) decode slowly when instructions have more than 3 prefixes. On some CPUs, this includes the mandatory prefixes in SSE2 and especially SSSE3 / SSE4.1 instructions. In Silvermont, even the 0F escape byte counts.
AVX instructions can use a 2 or 3-byte VEX prefix. Some instructions require a 3-byte VEX prefix (2nd source is x/ymm8-15, or mandatory prefixes for SSSE3 or later). But an instruction that could have used a 2-byte prefix can always be encoded with a 3-byte VEX. NASM or GAS {vex3} vxorps xmm0,xmm0. If AVX512 is available, you can use 4-byte EVEX as well.
Use 64-bit operand-size for mov even when you don't need it, for example mov rax, strict dword 1 forces the 7-byte sign-extended-imm32 encoding in NASM, which would normally optimize it to 5-byte mov eax, 1.
mov eax, 1 ; 5 bytes to encode (B8 imm32)
mov rax, strict dword 1 ; 7 bytes: REX mov r/m64, sign-extended-imm32.
mov rax, strict qword 1 ; 10 bytes to encode (REX B8 imm64). movabs mnemonic for AT&T.
You could even use mov reg, 0 instead of xor reg,reg.
mov r64, imm64 fits efficiently in the uop cache when the constant is actually small (fits in 32-bit sign extended.) 1 uop-cache entry, and load-time = 1, the same as for mov r32, imm32. Decoding a giant instruction means there's probably not room in a 16-byte decode block for 3 other instructions to decode in the same cycle, unless they're all 2-byte. Possibly lengthening multiple other instructions slightly can be better than having one long instruction.
Decode penalties for extra prefixes:
P5: prefixes prevent pairing, except for address/operand-size on PMMX only.
PPro to PIII: There is always a penalty if an instruction has more than one prefix. This penalty is usually one clock per extra prefix. (Agner's microarch guide, end of section 6.3)
Silvermont: it's probably the tightest constraint on which prefixes you can use, if you care about it. Decode stalls on more than 3 prefixes, counting mandatory prefixes + 0F escape byte. SSSE3 and SSE4 instructions already have 3 prefixes so even a REX makes them slow to decode.
some AMD: maybe a 3-prefix limit, not including escape bytes, and maybe not including mandatory prefixes for SSE instructions.
... TODO: finish this section. Until then, consult Agner Fog's microarch guide.
After hand-encoding stuff, always disassemble your binary to make sure you got it right. It's unfortunate that NASM and other assemblers don't have better support for choosing cheap padding over a region of instructions to reach a given alignment boundary.
Assembler syntax
NASM has some encoding override syntax: {vex3} and {evex} prefixes, NOSPLIT, and strict byte / dword, and forcing disp8/disp32 inside addressing modes. Note that [rdi + byte 0] isn't allowed, the byte keyword has to come first. [byte rdi + 0] is allowed, but I think that looks weird.
Listing from nasm -l/dev/stdout -felf64 padding.asm
line addr machine-code bytes source line
num
4 00000000 0F57C0 xorps xmm0,xmm0 ; SSE1 *ps instructions are 1-byte shorter
5 00000003 660FEFC0 pxor xmm0,xmm0
6
7 00000007 C5F058DA vaddps xmm3, xmm1,xmm2
8 0000000B C4E17058DA {vex3} vaddps xmm3, xmm1,xmm2
9 00000010 62F1740858DA {evex} vaddps xmm3, xmm1,xmm2
10
11
12 00000016 FFC0 inc eax
13 00000018 83C001 add eax, 1
14 0000001B 4883C001 add rax, 1
15 0000001F 678D4001 lea eax, [eax+1] ; runs on fewer ports and doesn't set flags
16 00000023 67488D4001 lea rax, [eax+1] ; address-size and REX.W
17 00000028 0501000000 add eax, strict dword 1 ; using the EAX-only encoding with no ModR/M
18 0000002D 81C001000000 db 0x81, 0xC0, 1,0,0,0 ; add eax,0x1 using the ModR/M imm32 encoding
19 00000033 81C101000000 add ecx, strict dword 1 ; non-eax must use the ModR/M encoding
20 00000039 4881C101000000 add rcx, strict qword 1 ; YASM requires strict dword for the immediate, because it's still 32b
21 00000040 67488D8001000000 lea rax, [dword eax+1]
22
23
24 00000048 8B07 mov eax, [rdi]
25 0000004A 8B4700 mov eax, [byte 0 + rdi]
26 0000004D 3E8B4700 mov eax, [ds: byte 0 + rdi]
26 ****************** warning: ds segment base generated, but will be ignored in 64-bit mode
27 00000051 8B8700000000 mov eax, [dword 0 + rdi]
28 00000057 8B043D00000000 mov eax, [NOSPLIT dword 0 + rdi*1] ; 1c extra latency on SnB-family for non-simple addressing mode
GAS has encoding-override pseudo-prefixes {vex3}, {evex}, {disp8}, and {disp32} These replace the now-deprecated .s, .d8 and .d32 suffixes.
GAS doesn't have an override to immediate size, only displacements.
GAS does let you add an explicit ds prefix, with ds mov src,dst
gcc -g -c padding.S && objdump -drwC padding.o -S, with hand-editting:
# no CPUs have separate ps vs. pd domains, so there's no penalty for mixing ps and pd loads/shuffles
0: 0f 28 07 movaps (%rdi),%xmm0
3: 66 0f 28 07 movapd (%rdi),%xmm0
7: 0f 58 c8 addps %xmm0,%xmm1 # not equivalent for SSE/AVX transitions, but sometimes safe to mix with AVX-128
a: c5 e8 58 d9 vaddps %xmm1,%xmm2, %xmm3 # default {vex2}
e: c4 e1 68 58 d9 {vex3} vaddps %xmm1,%xmm2, %xmm3
13: 62 f1 6c 08 58 d9 {evex} vaddps %xmm1,%xmm2, %xmm3
19: ff c0 inc %eax
1b: 83 c0 01 add $0x1,%eax
1e: 48 83 c0 01 add $0x1,%rax
22: 67 8d 40 01 lea 1(%eax), %eax # runs on fewer ports and doesn't set flags
26: 67 48 8d 40 01 lea 1(%eax), %rax # address-size and REX
# no equivalent for add eax, strict dword 1 # no-ModR/M
.byte 0x81, 0xC0; .long 1 # add eax,0x1 using the ModR/M imm32 encoding
2b: 81 c0 01 00 00 00 add $0x1,%eax # manually encoded
31: 81 c1 d2 04 00 00 add $0x4d2,%ecx # large immediate, can't get GAS to encode this way with $1 other than doing it manually
37: 67 8d 80 01 00 00 00 {disp32} lea 1(%eax), %eax
3e: 67 48 8d 80 01 00 00 00 {disp32} lea 1(%eax), %rax
mov 0(%rdi), %eax # the 0 optimizes away
46: 8b 07 mov (%rdi),%eax
{disp8} mov (%rdi), %eax # adds a disp8 even if you omit the 0
48: 8b 47 00 mov 0x0(%rdi),%eax
{disp8} ds mov (%rdi), %eax # with a DS prefix
4b: 3e 8b 47 00 mov %ds:0x0(%rdi),%eax
{disp32} mov (%rdi), %eax
4f: 8b 87 00 00 00 00 mov 0x0(%rdi),%eax
{disp32} mov 0(,%rdi,1), %eax # 1c extra latency on SnB-family for non-simple addressing mode
55: 8b 04 3d 00 00 00 00 mov 0x0(,%rdi,1),%eax
GAS is strictly less powerful than NASM for expressing longer-than-needed encodings.
Let's look at a specific piece of code:
cmp ebx,123456
mov al,0xFF
je .foo
For this code, none of the instructions can be replaced with anything else, so the only options are redundant prefixes and NOPs.
However, what if you change the instruction ordering?
You could convert the code into this:
mov al,0xFF
cmp ebx,123456
je .foo
After re-ordering the instructions; the mov al,0xFF could be replaced with or eax,0x000000FF or or ax,0x00FF.
For the first instruction ordering there is only one possibility, and for the second instruction ordering there are 3 possibilities; so there's a total of 4 possible permutations to choose from without using any redundant prefixes or NOPs.
For each of those 4 permutations you can add variations with different amounts of redundant prefixes, and single and multi-byte NOPs, to make it end on a specific alignment/s. I'm too lazy to do the maths, so let's assume that maybe it expands to 100 possible permutations.
What if you gave each of these 100 permutations a score (based on things like how long it would take to execute, how well it aligns the instruction after this piece, if size or speed matters, ...). This can include micro-architectural targeting (e.g. maybe for some CPUs the original permutation breaks micro-op fusion and makes the code worse).
You could generate all the possible permutations and give them a score, and choose the permutation with the best score. Note that this may not be the permutation with the best alignment (if alignment is less important than other factors and just makes performance worse).
Of course you can break large programs into many small groups of linear instructions separated by control flow changes; and then do this "exhaustive search for the permutation with the best score" for each small group of linear instructions.
The problem is that instruction order and instruction selection are co-dependent.
For the example above, you couldn't replace mov al,0xFF until after we re-ordered the instructions; and it's easy to find cases where you can't re-order the instructions until after you've replaced (some) instructions. This makes it hard to do an exhaustive search for the best solution, for any definition of "best", even if you only care about alignment and don't care about performance at all.
I can think of four ways off the top of my head:
First: Use alternate encodings for instructions (Peter Cordes mentioned something similar). There are a lot of ways to call the ADD operation for example, and some of them take up more bytes:
http://www.felixcloutier.com/x86/ADD.html
Usually an assembler will try to choose the "best" encoding for the situation whether that is optimizing for speed or length, but you can always use another one and get the same result.
Second: Use other instructions that mean the same thing and have different lengths. I'm sure you can think of countless examples where you could drop one instruction into the code to replace an existing one and get the same results. People that hand optimize code do it all the time:
shl 1
add eax, eax
mul 2
etc etc
Third: Use the variety of NOPs available to pad out extra space:
nop
and eax, eax
sub eax, 0
etc etc
In an ideal world you'd probably have to use all these tricks to get code to be the exact byte length you want.
Fourth: Change your algorithm to get more options using the above methods.
One final note: Obviously targeting more modern processors will give you better results due to the number and complexity of instructions. Having access to MMX, XMM, SSE, SSE2, floating point, etc instructions could make your job easier.
Depends on the nature of the code.
Floatingpoint heavy code
AVX prefix
One can resort to the longer AVX prefix for most SSE instructions.
Note that there is a fixed penalty when switching between SSE and AVX on intel CPUs [1][2]. This requires vzeroupper which can be interpreted as another NOP for SSE code or AVX code which doesn't require the higher 128 bits.
SSE/AVX NOPS
typical NOPs I can think of are:
XORPS the same register, use SSE/AVX variations for integers of these
ANDPS the same register, use SSE/AVX variations for integers of these