This repository demonstrates various hardware effects that can degrade application performance in surprising ways and that may be very hard to explain without knowledge of the low-level CPU and OS architecture. For each effect I try to create a proof of concept program that is as small as possible so that it can be understood easily.
Those effects obviously depend heavily on your CPU microarchitecture and model, so the demonstration programs may not showcase the slowdown on your CPU, but I try to make them as general as I can. That said, the examples are targeting x86-x64 processors (Intel and AMD) and may not make sense on other CPU architectures. I try to make them compatible with Windows, but they are mainly tested on Linux.
Currently the following effects are demonstrated:
- bandwidth saturation
- branch misprediction
- branch target misprediction
- cache aliasing
- cache/memory hierarchy bandwidth
- data dependencies
- false sharing
- hardware prefetching
- memory-bound program
- non-temporal stores
- software prefetching
- write combining
Every example directory has a README that explains the individual effects.
All programs print measured results (execution time, bandwidth) to the standard error output (stderr
).
I try to focus on effects that should be observable on commodity (desktop/notebook) hardware, so for example I left out NUMA effects.
Isolating those hardware effects can be very tricky, so it's possible that some of the examples are actually demonstrating something entirely else (or nothing at all :) ). If you have a better explanation of what is happening, please let me know in the issues. Ideally the code should be written in assembly, however that would lower it's readability. I wrote it in C++ in a way that (hopefully) forces the compiler to emit the instructions that I want (even with -O3).
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ..
$ make -j
If you want to use the benchmark scripts (written in Python 3), you should also install the Python dependencies:
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
You can download a prebuilt image:
$ docker pull kobzol/hardware-effects
or build it yourself:
$ docker build -t hardware-effects .
Then run it:
# interactive run
$ docker run --rm -it hardware-effects
# directly launch a program
$ docker run hardware-effects build/branch-misprediction/branch-misprediction 1
MIT