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LLVM-EXEGESIS(1)		     LLVM		      LLVM-EXEGESIS(1)

NAME
       llvm-exegesis - LLVM Machine Instruction	Benchmark

SYNOPSIS
       llvm-exegesis [options]

DESCRIPTION
       llvm-exegesis is	a benchmarking tool that uses information available in
       LLVM  to	measure	host machine instruction characteristics like latency,
       throughput, or port decomposition.

       Given an	LLVM opcode name and a benchmarking mode, llvm-exegesis	gener-
       ates a code snippet that	makes execution	as serial (resp. as  parallel)
       as  possible so that we can measure the latency (resp. inverse through-
       put/uop decomposition) of the instruction.  The code snippet is	jitted
       and  executed on	the host subtarget. The	time taken (resp. resource us-
       age) is measured	using hardware performance  counters.  The  result  is
       printed out as YAML to the standard output.

       The  main goal of this tool is to automatically (in)validate the	LLVM's
       TableDef	scheduling models. To that end,	we also	 provide  analysis  of
       the results.

       llvm-exegesis can also benchmark	arbitrary user-provided	code snippets.

EXAMPLE	1: BENCHMARKING	INSTRUCTIONS
       Assume  you  have an X86-64 machine. To measure the latency of a	single
       instruction, run:

	  $ llvm-exegesis -mode=latency	-opcode-name=ADD64rr

       Measuring the uop decomposition or inverse throughput of	an instruction
       works similarly:

	  $ llvm-exegesis -mode=uops -opcode-name=ADD64rr
	  $ llvm-exegesis -mode=inverse_throughput -opcode-name=ADD64rr

       The output is a YAML document (the default is to	write to  stdout,  but
       you can redirect	the output to a	file using -benchmarks-file):

	  ---
	  key:
	    opcode_name:     ADD64rr
	    mode:	     latency
	    config:	     ''
	  cpu_name:	   haswell
	  llvm_triple:	   x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
	  num_repetitions: 10000
	  measurements:
	    - {	key: latency, value: 1.0058, debug_string: '' }
	  error:	   ''
	  info:		   'explicit self cycles, selecting one	aliasing configuration.
	  Snippet:
	  ADD64rr R8, R8, R10
	  '
	  ...

       To  measure  the	latency	of all instructions for	the host architecture,
       run:

	  #!/bin/bash
	  readonly INSTRUCTIONS=$(($(grep INSTRUCTION_LIST_END build/lib/Target/X86/X86GenInstrInfo.inc	| cut -f2 -d=) - 1))
	  for INSTRUCTION in $(seq 1 ${INSTRUCTIONS});
	  do
	    ./build/bin/llvm-exegesis -mode=latency -opcode-index=${INSTRUCTION} | sed -n '/---/,$p'
	  done

       FIXME: Provide an llvm-exegesis option to test all instructions.

EXAMPLE	2: BENCHMARKING	A CUSTOM CODE SNIPPET
       To measure the latency/uops of a	custom piece of	code, you can  specify
       the snippets-file option	(- reads from standard input).

	  $ echo "vzeroupper" |	llvm-exegesis -mode=uops -snippets-file=-

       Real-life  code	snippets  typically  depend  on	 registers  or memory.
       llvm-exegesis checks the	liveliness of registers	(i.e. any register use
       has a corresponding def or is a "live in"). If your code	depends	on the
       value of	some registers,	you have two options:

        Mark the register as requiring	a definition. llvm-exegesis will auto-
	 matically assign a value to the register. This	can be done using  the
	 directive   LLVM-EXEGESIS-DEFREG   <reg   name>   <hex_value>,	 where
	 <hex_value> is	a bit pattern used to fill <reg_name>. If  <hex_value>
	 is smaller than the register width, it	will be	sign-extended.

        Mark  the register as a "live in". llvm-exegesis will benchmark using
	 whatever value	was in this registers on entry.	This can be done using
	 the directive LLVM-EXEGESIS-LIVEIN <reg name>.

       For example, the	following code snippet depends on the values  of  XMM1
       (which  will  be	 set  by the tool) and the memory buffer passed	in RDI
       (live in).

	  # LLVM-EXEGESIS-LIVEIN RDI
	  # LLVM-EXEGESIS-DEFREG XMM1 42
	  vmulps	(%rdi),	%xmm1, %xmm2
	  vhaddps	%xmm2, %xmm2, %xmm3
	  addq $0x10, %rdi

EXAMPLE	3: ANALYSIS
       Assuming	you have a set of benchmarked instructions (either latency  or
       uops) as	YAML in	file /tmp/benchmarks.yaml, you can analyze the results
       using the following command:

	    $ llvm-exegesis -mode=analysis \
	  -benchmarks-file=/tmp/benchmarks.yaml	\
	  -analysis-clusters-output-file=/tmp/clusters.csv \
	  -analysis-inconsistencies-output-file=/tmp/inconsistencies.html

       This  will  group  the instructions into	clusters with the same perfor-
       mance characteristics. The clusters will	be written out	to  /tmp/clus-
       ters.csv	in the following format:

	  cluster_id,opcode_name,config,sched_class
	  ...
	  2,ADD32ri8_DB,,WriteALU,1.00
	  2,ADD32ri_DB,,WriteALU,1.01
	  2,ADD32rr,,WriteALU,1.01
	  2,ADD32rr_DB,,WriteALU,1.00
	  2,ADD32rr_REV,,WriteALU,1.00
	  2,ADD64i32,,WriteALU,1.01
	  2,ADD64ri32,,WriteALU,1.01
	  2,MOVSX64rr32,,BSWAP32r_BSWAP64r_MOVSX64rr32,1.00
	  2,VPADDQYrr,,VPADDBYrr_VPADDDYrr_VPADDQYrr_VPADDWYrr_VPSUBBYrr_VPSUBDYrr_VPSUBQYrr_VPSUBWYrr,1.02
	  2,VPSUBQYrr,,VPADDBYrr_VPADDDYrr_VPADDQYrr_VPADDWYrr_VPSUBBYrr_VPSUBDYrr_VPSUBQYrr_VPSUBWYrr,1.01
	  2,ADD64ri8,,WriteALU,1.00
	  2,SETBr,,WriteSETCC,1.01
	  ...

       llvm-exegesis  will also	analyze	the clusters to	point out inconsisten-
       cies in the scheduling information. The output is an html file. For ex-
       ample, /tmp/inconsistencies.html	will contain messages like the follow-
       ing : [image]

       Note that the  scheduling  class	 names	will  be  resolved  only  when
       llvm-exegesis is	compiled in debug mode,	else only the class id will be
       shown. This does	not invalidate any of the analysis results though.

OPTIONS
       -help  Print a summary of command line options.

       -opcode-index=<LLVM opcode index>
	      Specify  the opcode to measure, by index.	Specifying -1 will re-
	      sult in measuring	every existing opcode. See example 1  for  de-
	      tails.   Either  opcode-index, opcode-name or snippets-file must
	      be set.

       -opcode-name=<opcode name 1>,<opcode name 2>,...
	      Specify the opcode to measure, by	name. Several opcodes  can  be
	      specified	 as a comma-separated list. See	example	1 for details.
	      Either opcode-index, opcode-name or snippets-file	must be	set.

       -snippets-file=<filename>
	      Specify the custom code snippet to measure. See  example	2  for
	      details.	Either opcode-index, opcode-name or snippets-file must
	      be set.

       -mode=[latency|uops|inverse_throughput|analysis]
	      Specify  the  run	mode. Note that	if you pick analysis mode, you
	      also need	to specify at least one	of the -analysis-clusters-out-
	      put-file=	and -analysis-inconsistencies-output-file=.

       -repetition-mode=[duplicate|loop|min]
	      Specify the repetition mode.  duplicate  will  create  a	large,
	      straight	line  basic  block  with num-repetitions copies	of the
	      snippet. loop will wrap the snippet in a loop which will be  run
	      num-repetitions  times.  The  loop mode tends to better hide the
	      effects of the CPU frontend on architectures that	cache  decoded
	      instructions,  but  consumes a register for counting iterations.
	      If performing an analysis	over many opcodes, it may be  best  to
	      instead  use  the	 min mode, which will run each other mode, and
	      produce the minimal measured result.

       -num-repetitions=<Number	of repetitions>
	      Specify the number of repetitions	of the	asm  snippet.	Higher
	      values  lead  to	more  accurate	measurements  but lengthen the
	      benchmark.

       -max-configs-per-opcode=<value>
	      Specify the maximum configurations that  can  be	generated  for
	      each  opcode.  By	default	this is	1, meaning that	we assume that
	      a	single measurement is enough to	characterize an	 opcode.  This
	      might  not be true of all	instructions: for example, the perfor-
	      mance characteristics of the LEA instruction on X86  depends  on
	      the  value of assigned registers and immediates. Setting a value
	      of -max-configs-per-opcode larger	than 1 allows llvm-exegesis to
	      explore more configurations to discover if some register or  im-
	      mediate  assignments  lead to different performance characteris-
	      tics.

       -benchmarks-file=</path/to/file>
	      File  to	read  (analysis	 mode)	or   write   (latency/uops/in-
	      verse_throughput	modes)	benchmark results. "-" uses stdin/std-
	      out.

       -analysis-clusters-output-file=</path/to/file>
	      If provided, write the analysis clusters as CSV  to  this	 file.
	      "-" prints to stdout. By default,	this analysis is not run.

       -analysis-inconsistencies-output-file=</path/to/file>
	      If  non-empty,  write  inconsistencies  found during analysis to
	      this file. - prints to stdout. By	default, this analysis is  not
	      run.

       -analysis-clustering=[dbscan,naive]
	      Specify  the clustering algorithm	to use.	By default DBSCAN will
	      be used.	Naive clustering algorithm is better for doing further
	      work on the  -analysis-inconsistencies-output-file=  output,  it
	      will  create  one	cluster	per opcode, and	check that the cluster
	      is stable	(all points are	neighbours).

       -analysis-numpoints=<dbscan numPoints parameter>
	      Specify the numPoints parameters to be used for DBSCAN  cluster-
	      ing (analysis mode, DBSCAN only).

       -analysis-clustering-epsilon=<dbscan epsilon parameter>
	      Specify  the  epsilon parameter used for clustering of benchmark
	      points (analysis mode).

       -analysis-inconsistency-epsilon=<epsilon>
	      Specify the epsilon parameter used for  detection	 of  when  the
	      cluster  is  different  from  the	 LLVM  schedule	profile	values
	      (analysis	mode).

       -analysis-display-unstable-clusters
	      If there is more than one	benchmark for an opcode,  said	bench-
	      marks  may  end  up not being clustered into the same cluster if
	      the measured performance characteristics are different.  by  de-
	      fault all	such opcodes are filtered out.	This flag will instead
	      show only	such unstable opcodes.

       -ignore-invalid-sched-class=false
	      If  set,	ignore	instructions  that  do	not have a sched class
	      (class idx = 0).

       -mcpu=<cpu name>
	      If set, measure the cpu characteristics using the	 counters  for
	      this  CPU.  This	is  useful when	creating new sched models (the
	      host CPU is unknown to LLVM).

       --dump-object-to-disk=true
	      By default, llvm-exegesis	will dump the generated	code to	a tem-
	      porary file to enable code inspection. You  may  disable	it  to
	      speed up the execution and save disk space.

EXIT STATUS
       llvm-exegesis  returns  0  on  success.	Otherwise, an error message is
       printed to standard error, and the tool returns a non 0 value.

AUTHOR
       Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).

COPYRIGHT
       2003-2025, LLVM Project

11				  2025-04-17		      LLVM-EXEGESIS(1)

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