Questions tagged [branch-prediction]

In computer architecture, a branch predictor is a digital circuit that tries to guess which way a branch (e.g. an if-then-else structure) will go before this is known for sure. The purpose of the branch predictor is to improve the flow in the instruction pipeline. Branch predictors play a critical role in achieving high effective performance in many modern pipelined microprocessor architectures such as x86.

Why is it faster to process a sorted array than an unsorted array? Stack Overflow's highest-voted question and answer is a good introduction to the subject.


In computer architecture, a branch predictor is a digital circuit that tries to guess which way a branch (e.g. an if-then-else structure) will go before this is known for sure. The purpose of the branch predictor is to improve the flow in the instruction pipeline.

Branch predictors play a critical role in achieving high effective performance in many modern pipelined microprocessor architectures such as x86.

Two-way branching is usually implemented with a conditional jump instruction. A conditional jump can either be "not taken" and continue execution with the first branch of code which follows immediately after the conditional jump - or it can be "taken" and jump to a different place in program memory where the second branch of code is stored.

It is not known for certain whether a conditional jump will be taken or not taken until the condition has been calculated and the conditional jump has passed the execution stage in the instruction pipeline.

Without branch prediction, the processor would have to wait until the conditional jump instruction has passed the execute stage before the next instruction can enter the fetch stage in the pipeline. The branch predictor attempts to avoid this waste of time by trying to guess whether the conditional jump is most likely to be taken or not taken. The branch that is guessed to be the most likely is then fetched and speculatively executed. If it is later detected that the guess was wrong then the speculatively executed or partially executed instructions are discarded and the pipeline starts over with the correct branch, incurring a delay.

The time that is wasted in case of a branch misprediction is equal to the number of stages in the pipeline from the fetch stage to the execute stage. Modern microprocessors tend to have quite long pipelines so that the misprediction delay is between 10 and 20 clock cycles. The longer the pipeline the greater the need for a good branch predictor.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_predictor


The Spectre security vulnerability revolves around branch prediction:


Other resources

Special-purpose predictors: Return Address Stack for call/ret. ret is effectively an indirect branch, setting program-counter = return address. This would be hard to predict on its own, but calls are normally made with a special instruction so modern CPUs can match call/ret pairs with an internal stack.

Computer architecture details about branch prediction / speculative execution, and its effects on pipelined CPUs

  • Why is it faster to process a sorted array than an unsorted array?
  • Branch prediction - Dan Luu's article on branch prediction, adapted from a talk. With diagrams. Good introduction to why it's needed, and some basic implementations used in early CPUs, building up to more complicated predictors. And at the end, a link to TAGE branch predictors used on modern Intel CPUs. (Too complicated for that article to explain, though!)
  • Slow jmp-instruction - even unconditional direct jumps (like x86's jmp) need to be predicted, to avoid stalls in the very first stage of the pipeline: fetching blocks of machine code from I-cache. After fetching one block, you need to know which block to fetch next, before (or at best in parallel with) decoding the block you just fetched. A large sequence of jmp next_instruction will overwhelm branch prediction and expose the cost of misprediction in this part of the pipeline. (Many high-end modern CPUs have a queue after fetch before decode, to hide bubbles, so some blocks of non-branchy code can allow the queue to refill.)
  • Branch target prediction in conjunction with branch prediction?
  • What branch misprediction does the Branch Target Buffer detect?

Cost of a branch miss


Modern TAGE predictors (in Intel CPUs for example) can "learn" amazingly long patterns, because they index based on past branch history. (So the same branch can get different predictions depending on the path leading up to it. A single branch can have its prediction data scattered over many bits in the branch predictor table). This goes a long way to solving the problem of indirect branches in an interpreter almost always mispredicting (X86 prefetching optimizations: "computed goto" threaded code and Branch prediction and the performance of interpreters — Don't trust folklore), or for example a binary search on the same data with the same input can be really efficient.

Static branch prediction on newer Intel processors - according to experimental evidence, it appears Nehalem and earlier do sometimes use static prediction at some point in the pipeline (backwards branches default to predicted-taken, forward to not-taken.) But Sandybridge and newer seem to be always dynamic based on some history, whether it's from this branch or one that aliases it. Why did Intel change the static branch prediction mechanism over these years?

Cases where TAGE does "amazingly" well


Assembly code layout: not so much for branch prediction, but because not-taken branches are easier on the front-end than taken branches. Better I-cache code density if the fast-path is just a straight line, and taken branches mean the part of a fetch block after the branch isn't useful.

Superscalar CPUs fetch code in blocks, e.g. aligned 16 byte blocks, containing multiple instructions. In non-branching code, including not-taken conditional branches, all of those bytes are useful instruction bytes.


Branchless code: using cmov or other tricks to avoid branches

This is the asm equivalent of replacing if (c) a=b; with a = c ? b : a;. If b doesn't have side-effects, and a isn't a potentially-shared memory location, compilers can do "if-conversion" to do the conditional with a data dependency on c instead of a control dependency.

(C compilers can't introduce a non-atomic read/write: that could step on another thread's modification of the variable. Writing your code as always rewriting a value tells compilers that it's safe, which sometimes enables auto-vectorization: AVX-512 and Branching)

Potential downside to cmov in scalar code: the data dependency can become part of a loop-carried dependency chain and become a bottleneck, while branch prediction + speculative execution hide the latency of control dependencies. The branchless data dependency isn't predicted or speculated, which makes it good for unpredictable cases, but potentially bad otherwise.

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Does the branch predictor kick in with this?

Most, if not all modern processors utilize a technique called "branch prediction", with which it guesses what way to go in an if-then-else branch. I have a question considering the scheme. Let's say we have this piece of code, in no specific…
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C/C++ most efficient if statement evaluation

X is true nearly 99.9% of the time but I need to handle Y and Z as well. Although the body of the X condition is empty, I'm thinking it should be faster than potentially checking 2 other conditions Y and Z if the X condition is omitted. What do you…
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Using rdmsr/rdpmc for branch prediction accuracy

I am trying to understand how does a branch prediction unit work in a CPU. I have used papi and also linux's perf-events but both of them do not give accurate results (for my case). This is my code: void func(int* arr, int sequence_len){ for(int i…
user12527223
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BTB size for Haswell, Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Skylake?

Are there any way to determine or any resource where I can find the branch Target Buffer size for Haswell, Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Skylake Intel processors?
samira
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Branch Prediction at no cost?

I've just stumbled upon this thing, and I'm really curious if maybe modern CPUs (current ones, maybe mobile ones as well (embedded)) don't actually have a branching cost in the situation below. 1.Let's say we have this: x += a; // let's assume…
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Branch prediction in a java for loop

I saw this comment next to a if condition: // branch prediction favors most often used condition in the source code of the JavaFX SkinBase class. protected double computeMinWidth(double height, double topInset, double rightInset, double…
gontard
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How to handle branch mispredictions that seem to depend on machine code position?

While trying to benchmark implementations of a simple sparse unit lower triangular backward solve in CSC format, I observe strange behavior. The performance seems to vary drastically, depending on where in the executable the assembly instructions…
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Correctly using C++20 `[likely]]`/`[[unlikely]]` in `switch` statements

C++20 has handy [[likely]]/[[unlikely]] attributes which guide code generation. For example, you can specify a branch is likely to be taken by: if (b) [[likely]] { /*...*/ } Similarly, it is possible to use these attributes in switch statements .…
geometrian
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Why isn't there a branch prediction failure penalty in this Rust code?

I've written this very simple Rust function: fn iterate(nums: &Box<[i32]>) -> i32 { let mut total = 0; let len = nums.len(); for i in 0..len { if nums[i] > 0 { total += nums[i]; } else { total -=…
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Small branches in modern CPUs

How do modern CPUs like Kaby Lake handle small branches? (in code below it is the jump to label LBB1_67). From what I know the branch will not be harmful because the jump is inferior to the 16-bytes block size which is the size of the decoding…
elmattic
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Has Python got branch prediction?

I implemented a physics simulation in Python (most of the heavy lifting is done in numerical libraries anyways, thus performance is good enough). Now that the project has grown a bit, I added extra functionality via parameters that do not change…
japs
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Are If Thens faster than multiplication and assignment?

I have a quick question, suppose I have the following code and it's repeated in a simliar way 10 times for example. if blah then number = number + 2^n end if Would it be faster to evaluate: number = number + blah*2^n? Which also brings the…
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Trying famous branch-prediction example sometimes results in strange times

I tried to duplicate the example in this famous question. My code looks like this: #![feature(test)] extern crate rand; extern crate test; use test::Bencher; use rand::{thread_rng, Rng}; type ItemType = u8; type SumType = u64; const TEST_SIZE:…
Lukas Kalbertodt
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Logical operators and branch prediction failure

Consider the following loops: while((expressionA) & (expressionB)){ // do something } while((expressionA) && (expressionB)){ // do something } where expressionA and expressionB are expressions of type bool and expressionB has no…
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Why predict a branch, instead of simply executing both in parallel?

I believe that when creating CPUs, branch prediction is a major slow down when the wrong branch is chosen. So why do CPU designers choose a branch instead of simply executing both branches, then cutting one off once you know for sure which one was…
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