I'm trying to duplicate the first piece of code on this article
http://www.drdobbs.com/parallel/cache-friendly-code-solving-manycores-ne/240012736
Namely:
static volatile int array[Size];
static void test_function(void)
{
for (int i = 0; i < Iterations; i++)
for (int x = 0; x < Size; x++)
array[x]++;
}
I'm running on OS X with an Ivy Bridge processor, and therefore have 64KiB of L1 cache. However, no matter how much I change around the array size, it takes the same amount of time. Here's my code:
#define ARRAY_SIZE 16 * 1024
#define NUM_ITERATIONS 200000
volatile int array[ARRAY_SIZE];
int main(int argc, const char * argv[])
{
for (int i = 0; i < NUM_ITERATIONS; i++)
for (int x = 0; x < ARRAY_SIZE; x++)
array[x]++;
return 0;
}
Now, according to the logic suggested by the article, array
should be 64KiB and utilize all my L1 cache. However, I've tried this with many difference combinations of ARRAY_SIZE
(up to 160 * 1024), setting NUM_ITERATIONS
accordingly, but every combination about takes the same amount of time.
I'm using gcc -o cachetest cachetest.c
to compile, with no other options. Is there some kind of optimization going on that I don't know about, even though volatile
is used? Or are there so many parallel processes and context switching that I can't even tell? What's going on here? I'm so confused.
Thanks SO!