[ sent to both Linux kernel mailing list and to gcc list ]

I was looking at some of the old code I still have marked in my TODO
list, that I never pushed to get mainlined. One of them is to move trace
point logic out of the fast path to get rid of the stress that it
imposes on the icache.

Almost a full year ago, Mathieu suggested something like:

if (unlikely(x)) __attribute__((section(".unlikely"))) {
        ...
} else __attribute__((section(".likely"))) {
        ...
}

https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/8/9/658

Which got me thinking. How hard would it be to set a block in its own
section. Like what Mathieu suggested, but it doesn't have to be
".unlikely".

if (x) __attibute__((section(".foo"))) {
        /* do something */
}

Then have in the assembly, simply:

        test x
        beq     2f
1:
        /* continue */
        ret

2:
        jmp     foo1
3:
        jmp     1b


Then in section ".foo":

foo1:
        /* do something */
        jmp 3b

Perhaps we can't use the section attribute. We could create a new
attribute. Perhaps a __jmp_section__ or whatever (I'm horrible with
names).

Is this a possibility?

If this is possible, we can get a lot of code out of the fast path.
Things like stats and tracing, which is mostly default off. I would
imagine that we would get better performance by doing this. Especially
as tracepoints are being added all over the place.

Thanks,

-- Steve


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