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Full Discussion: AVX for Linux (32-bit)
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing AVX for Linux (32-bit) Post 302901018 by GG2014 on Saturday 10th of May 2014 02:33:26 PM
Old 05-10-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by alister
Welcome to the forum.
Thank you for your warm words.Smilie

Quote:
Originally Posted by alister
Are you using the CPUID instruction to detect AVX?
Yes, that's necessary. My code follows the recommendations of Intel in every detail. That's for sure.

Quote:
Originally Posted by alister
However, if you actually want to use AVX, simply detecting CPU support is insufficient. Even if the CPU implements AVX, it cannot be used without operating system support (e.g. to save/restore the registers across context switches).
That's the tricky point. Under 64-bit Linux support both the CPU and the operating system the AVX instruction set. No problem. But under 32-bit Linux, it lacks the support of the operating system.

At the moment I'm writing a program for a more detailed analysis of the problem.

Gunther
 

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OPENSSL_ia32cap(3)						      OpenSSL							OPENSSL_ia32cap(3)

NAME
OPENSSL_ia32cap - finding the IA-32 processor capabilities SYNOPSIS
unsigned long *OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc(void); #define OPENSSL_ia32cap (*(OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc())) DESCRIPTION
Value returned by OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc() is address of a variable containing IA-32 processor capabilities bit vector as it appears in EDX register after executing CPUID instruction with EAX=1 input value (see Intel Application Note #241618). Naturally it's meaningful on IA-32[E] platforms only. The variable is normally set up automatically upon toolkit initialization, but can be manipulated afterwards to modify crypto library behaviour. For the moment of this writing six bits are significant, namely: 1. bit #28 denoting Hyperthreading, which is used to distiguish cores with shared cache; 2. bit #26 denoting SSE2 support; 3. bit #25 denoting SSE support; 4. bit #23 denoting MMX support; 5. bit #20, reserved by Intel, is used to choose between RC4 code pathes; 6. bit #4 denoting presence of Time-Stamp Counter. For example, clearing bit #26 at run-time disables high-performance SSE2 code present in the crypto library. You might have to do this if target OpenSSL application is executed on SSE2 capable CPU, but under control of OS which does not support SSE2 extentions. Even though you can manipulate the value programmatically, you most likely will find it more appropriate to set up an environment variable with the same name prior starting target application, e.g. on Intel P4 processor 'env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0x12900010 apps/openssl', to achieve same effect without modifying the application source code. Alternatively you can reconfigure the toolkit with no-sse2 option and recompile. 50 2013-03-05 OPENSSL_ia32cap(3)
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