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I just noticed that there is a _mm_cvtsd_si64 and a _mm_cvtsd_si64x intrinsic in the SSE2 instruction set. According to the intel intrinsics guide, both do exactly the same. So where is the difference, or, if there is none, why are there two identical intrinsics?

This is only an example, there are more intrinsics with an si64 and an si64x version which seem to do the same.

2 Answers 2

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It's probably historical, going back to the early days of MMX/SSE and probably some discrepancies between different sets of intrinsics.

Note that even now some intrinsics have 64 and 64x versions because they take different argument types, even though they do the same thing, e.g.

__m128i _mm_set1_epi64x (__int64 a)

and

__m128i _mm_set1_epi64 (__m64 a)
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    Intel lists _mm256_permute2f128_si256 and _mm256_permute2x128_si256 and the only difference I can see between them is that first uses int imm and the second const int imm. The second requires AVX2 but they both call the exact same instruction. I don't understand the point of the 2x128 version.
    – Z boson
    Nov 19, 2014 at 10:44
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    Nevermind my last comment. They call different instructions actually. One acts in the floating point domain and one acts in the integer domain. The difference is the same as in this question stackoverflow.com/questions/25684454/…
    – Z boson
    Nov 21, 2014 at 8:44
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The two are not the same. __m64 is MMX register and MMX is deprecated on x86_64. The MMX registers share the register file with x87 and the operating systems don't preserve these between context switches on x86_64. MMX is still possible to use in 32 bit processes, of course. __int64 is Microsoft's typedef for 64 bit signed integer ALU registers (emulated in 32 bit mode). The 64x form is preferred on 64 bit programs because of these reasons.

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