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According to the gcc docs, memcmp is not an intrinsic function of GCC. If you wanted to speed up glibc's memcmp under gcc, you would need to use the lower level intrinsics defined in the docs. However, when searching around the internet, it seems that many people have the impression that memcmp is a builtin function. Is it for some compilers and not for others?

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Check out memcmp from glibc too. The relationship between GCC and glibc is quite complicated, with both providing different versions of the same functions and then sometimes fighting it out in header files whose definition will get in fact used in user programs. – kastauyra May 13 at 19:31

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Your link appears to be for the x86 architecture-specific built-in functions, according to this memcmp is implemented as an architecture-independent built-in by gcc.

Edit:

Compiling the following code with Cygwin gcc version 3.3.1 for i686, -O2:

#include <stdlib.h>

struct foo {
    int a;
    int b;
} ;

int func(struct foo *x, struct foo *y)
{
    return memcmp(x, y, sizeof (struct foo));
}

Produces the following output (note that the call to memcmp() is converted to an 8-byte "repz cmpsb"):

   0:   55                   	push   %ebp
   1:   b9 08 00 00 00       	mov    $0x8,%ecx
   6:   89 e5                	mov    %esp,%ebp
   8:   fc                   	cld    
   9:   83 ec 08             	sub    $0x8,%esp
   c:   89 34 24             	mov    %esi,(%esp)
   f:   8b 75 08             	mov    0x8(%ebp),%esi
  12:   89 7c 24 04          	mov    %edi,0x4(%esp)
  16:   8b 7d 0c             	mov    0xc(%ebp),%edi
  19:   f3 a6                	repz cmpsb %es:(%edi),%ds:(%esi)
  1b:   0f 92 c0             	setb   %al
  1e:   8b 34 24             	mov    (%esp),%esi
  21:   8b 7c 24 04          	mov    0x4(%esp),%edi
  25:   0f 97 c2             	seta   %dl
  28:   89 ec                	mov    %ebp,%esp
  2a:   5d                   	pop    %ebp
  2b:   28 c2                	sub    %al,%dl
  2d:   0f be c2             	movsbl %dl,%eax
  30:   c3                   	ret    
  31:   90                   	nop
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Interesting. Any idea if these are optimized in architecture specific ways? – Justin May 13 at 3:51

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