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I've been trying to search on google but couldn't find anything useful.

typedef int64_t v4si __attribute__ ((vector_size(32)));

//warning: AVX vector return without AVX enabled changes the ABI [-Wpsabi]
// so isn't AVX already automatically enabled? 
// What does it mean "without AVX enabled"?
// What does it mean "changes the ABI"?
inline v4si v4si_gt0(v4si x_);

//warning: The ABI for passing parameters with 32-byte alignment has changed in GCC 4.6
//So why there's warning and what does it mean? 
// Why only this parameter got warning?
// And all other v4si parameter/arguments got no warning?
void set_quota(v4si quota);
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  • 4
    No my vote, but it looks like you dumped a block of code and just one line of text "couldn't find it on google". In general, those aren't good questions. And you may want to explain what you are trying to do - why are you trying to use AVX when you don't understand what it is?
    – MSalters
    Sep 8, 2016 at 8:27
  • 4
    You should ask your questions in text paragraphs, not as comments inside the code block. Sep 8, 2016 at 13:23

1 Answer 1

12

That's not legacy code. __attribute__ ((vector_size(32))) means a 32 byte vector, i.e. 256 bit, which (on x86) means AVX. (GNU C Vector Extensions)

AVX isn't enabled unless you use -mavx (or a -march setting that includes it). Without that, the compiler isn't allowed to generate code that uses AVX instructions, because those would trigger an illegal-instruction fault on older CPUs that don't support AVX.

So the compiler can't pass or return 256b vectors in registers, like the normal calling convention specifies. Probably it treats them the same as structs of that size passed by value.

See the ABI links in the tag wiki, or the x86 Calling Conventions page on Wikipedia (mostly doesn't mention vector registers).


Since the GNU C Vector Extensions syntax isn't tied to any particular hardware, using a 32 byte vector will still compile to correct code. It will perform badly, but it will still work even if the compiler can only use SSE instructions. (Last I saw, gcc was known to do a very bad job of generating code to deal with vectors wider than the target machine supports. You'd get significantly better code for a machine with 16B vectors from using vector_size(16) manually.)

Anyway, the point is that you get a warning instead of a compiler error because __attribute__ ((vector_size(32))) doesn't imply AVX specifically, but AVX or some other 256b vector instruction set is required for it to compile to good code.

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  • Thank you! I'm facing a different issue, but your response has given me enough hints about the behavior of this barely documented attribute that I am able to guess at how to fix my issue. Nov 1, 2017 at 20:04

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