show/hide this revision's text 2 Fixed some unfishished phrases.

... working on one piece of data but with two functions can sometimes make it so that code to act on that data doesn't fit in the processor's low level caches.

for(i=0, i<10, i++ ) {
  myObject object = array[i];
  myObject.functionreallybig1(); // pushes functionreallybig2 out of cache
  myObject.functionreallybig2(); // pushes fucntion1 functionreallybig1 out of cache
}

vs

for(i=0, i<10, i++ ) {
  myObject object = array[i];
  myObject.functionreallybig1(); // this stays in the cache next time through loop
}


for(i=0, i<10, i++ ) {
  myObject object = array[i];
  myObject.functionreallybig2(); // this stays in the cache next time through loop
}

But it was probably a mistake (usually this type of trick is commented)

This

When data is cycicly loaded and unloaded like this, it is called cache thrashing, btw.

This is a seperate issue from the data these functions are working on, as typically the processor caches that separately.

show/hide this revision's text 1

... working on one piece of data but with two functions can sometimes make it so that code to act on that data doesn't fit in the processor's low level caches.

for(i=0, i<10, i++ ) {
  myObject object = array[i];
  myObject.functionreallybig1();          // pushes functionreallybig2 out of cache
  myObject.functionreallybig2(); // pushes fucntion1 out of cache
}

vs

for(i=0, i<10, i++ ) {
  myObject object = array[i];
  myObject.functionreallybig1(); // this 
}


for(i=0, i<10, i++ ) {
  myObject object = array[i];
  myObject.functionreallybig2(); 
}

But it was probably a mistake (usually this type of trick is commented)

This is called cache thrashing, btw.