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It is possible for an operating system to determine whether a page of memory is in DRAM or in swap; for example, simply try to access it and if a page fault occurs, it wasn't.

However, is the same thing possible with CPU cache?

Is there any efficient way to tell whether a given memory location has been loaded into a cache line, or to know when it does so?

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In general, I don't think this is possible. It works for DRAM and the pagefile since that is an OS managed resource, cache is managed by the CPU itself.

The OS could do a tight timing loop of a memory read and try to see if it completes fast enough to be in the cache or if it had to go out to main memory - this would be very error prone.

On multi-core/multi-proc systems, there are cache coherency protocols that are used between processors to determine when to they need to invalidate each other's caches, I suppose you could have a custom device that would snoop this protocol that the OS would query.

What are you trying to do? If you want to force something into memory, current x86 processors support prefetching memory into the cache in a non-blocking way, for instance with Visual C++ you could use _mm_prefetch to fetch a line into the cache.

EDIT: I haven't done this myself, so use at your own risk. To determine cache misses for profiling, you may be able to use some architecture-specific registers. http://download.intel.com/design/processor/manuals/253669.pdf, Appendix A gives "Performance Tuning Events". This can't be used to determine if an individual address is in the cache or when it is loaded in the cache, but can be used for overall stats. I believe this is what vTune (a phenomenal profiler for this level) uses.

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Thanks. I'm interested since I'm toying around with writing kernels. I'm interested in profiling cache line misses on the actual hardware. I didn't realise how very detrimental they are on modern CPUs until I saw Herb Sutter's slides: is.gd/oWwp – mike.amy Mar 25 at 19:30
There are ways to profile this in the hardware, vtune does. – Michael Mar 25 at 19:33
A lot of modern CPUs have performance counters which can provide all kinds of information, including cache related statistics. – sigjuice Mar 25 at 19:37
Now that sounds interesting. Do you have any references? – mike.amy Mar 25 at 19:42
Wow, there's a wealth of them, very interesting: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… – mike.amy Mar 25 at 19:44
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If you try to determine this yourself then the very act of running your program could invalidate the relevant cache lines, hence rendering your measurements useless.

This is one of those cases that mirrors the scientific principle that you cannot measure something without affecting that which you are measuring.

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Well, it's very easy to verify that a location is in the cache. Just read from it, and voila, it'll be in the cache. ;) The trick is in testing whether something is not in the cache. :) – jalf Mar 25 at 19:59
If you ensure that your code is running from uncacheable memory, the mere act of running a program wouldn't affect the cache. – Nathan Fellman Mar 25 at 20:36
Good points. So basically I'd have to account for everything else that might happen in order to know whether or not a cache miss loaded the memory in question. – mike.amy Mar 26 at 6:50
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X86 dont know how to tell if address IS in cache BUT here is how to tell if address WAS in cache

rdtsc
save timestamp
mov eax,address
rdtsc read timestamp counter
calculate timestamp difference
if < threshold then was in cache

threshold has to be determined from documentation or empirically

some machines have cache hit/miss counters which would serve equally well

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