Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

C# Compiler Optimizations

I'm wondering if someone can explain to me what exactly the compiler might be doing for me to observe such extreme differences in performance for a simple method.

 public static uint CalculateCheckSum(string str) { 
    char[] charArray = str.ToCharArray();
    uint checkSum = 0;
    foreach (char c in charArray) {
        checkSum += c;
    }
    return checkSum % 256;
 }

I'm working with a colleague doing some benchmarking/optimizations for a message processing application. Doing 10 million iterations of this function using the same input string took about 25 seconds in Visual Studio 2012, however when the project was built using the "Optimize Code" option turned on the same code executed in 7 seconds for the same 10 million iterations.

I'm very interested to understand what the compiler is doing behind the scenes for us to be able to see a greater than 3x performance increase for a seemingly innocent block of code such as this.

As requested, here is a complete Console application that demonstrates what I am seeing.

class Program
{
    public static uint CalculateCheckSum(string str)
    {
        char[] charArray = str.ToCharArray();
        uint checkSum = 0;
        foreach (char c in charArray)
        {
            checkSum += c;
        }
        return checkSum % 256;
    }

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        string stringToCount = "8=FIX.4.29=15135=D49=SFS56=TOMW34=11752=20101201-03:03:03.2321=DEMO=DG00121=155=IBM54=138=10040=160=20101201-03:03:03.23244=10.059=0100=ARCA10=246";
        Stopwatch stopwatch = Stopwatch.StartNew();
        for (int i = 0; i < 10000000; i++)
        {
            CalculateCheckSum(stringToCount);
        }
        stopwatch.Stop();
        Console.WriteLine(stopwatch.Elapsed);
    }
}

Running in debug with Optimization off I see 13 seconds, on I get 2 seconds.

Running in Release with Optimization off 3.1 seconds and on 2.3 seconds.

like image 353
Jesse Carter Avatar asked Jan 29 '14 17:01

Jesse Carter


People also ask

What C is used for?

C programming language is a machine-independent programming language that is mainly used to create many types of applications and operating systems such as Windows, and other complicated programs such as the Oracle database, Git, Python interpreter, and games and is considered a programming foundation in the process of ...

What is the full name of C?

In the real sense it has no meaning or full form. It was developed by Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson at AT&T bell Lab. First, they used to call it as B language then later they made some improvement into it and renamed it as C and its superscript as C++ which was invented by Dr. Stroustroupe.

Is C language easy?

C is a general-purpose language that most programmers learn before moving on to more complex languages. From Unix and Windows to Tic Tac Toe and Photoshop, several of the most commonly used applications today have been built on C. It is easy to learn because: A simple syntax with only 32 keywords.

How old is the letter C?

The letter c was applied by French orthographists in the 12th century to represent the sound ts in English, and this sound developed into the simpler sibilant s.


1 Answers

To look at what the C# compiler does for you, you need to look at the IL. If you want to see how that affects the JITted code, you'll need to look at the native code as described by Scott Chamberlain. Be aware that the JITted code will vary based on processor architecture, CLR version, how the process was launched, and possibly other things.

I would usually start with the IL, and then potentially look at the JITted code.

Comparing the IL using ildasm can be slightly tricky, as it includes a label for each instruction. Here are two versions of your method compiled with and without optimization (using the C# 5 compiler), with extraneous labels (and nop instructions) removed to make them as easy to compare as possible:

Optimized

  .method public hidebysig static uint32 
          CalculateCheckSum(string str) cil managed
  {
    // Code size       46 (0x2e)
    .maxstack  2
    .locals init (char[] V_0,
             uint32 V_1,
             char V_2,
             char[] V_3,
             int32 V_4)
    ldarg.0
    callvirt   instance char[] [mscorlib]System.String::ToCharArray()
    stloc.0
    ldc.i4.0
    stloc.1
    ldloc.0
    stloc.3
    ldc.i4.0
    stloc.s    V_4
    br.s       loopcheck
  loopstart:
    ldloc.3
    ldloc.s    V_4
    ldelem.u2
    stloc.2
    ldloc.1
    ldloc.2
    add
    stloc.1
    ldloc.s    V_4
    ldc.i4.1
    add
    stloc.s    V_4
  loopcheck:
    ldloc.s    V_4
    ldloc.3
    ldlen
    conv.i4
    blt.s      loopstart
    ldloc.1
    ldc.i4     0x100
    rem.un
    ret
  } // end of method Program::CalculateCheckSum

Unoptimized

  .method public hidebysig static uint32 
          CalculateCheckSum(string str) cil managed
  {
    // Code size       63 (0x3f)
    .maxstack  2
    .locals init (char[] V_0,
             uint32 V_1,
             char V_2,
             uint32 V_3,
             char[] V_4,
             int32 V_5,
             bool V_6)
    ldarg.0
    callvirt   instance char[] [mscorlib]System.String::ToCharArray()
    stloc.0
    ldc.i4.0
    stloc.1
    ldloc.0
    stloc.s    V_4
    ldc.i4.0
    stloc.s    V_5
    br.s       loopcheck

  loopstart:
    ldloc.s    V_4
    ldloc.s    V_5
    ldelem.u2
    stloc.2
    ldloc.1
    ldloc.2
    add
    stloc.1
    ldloc.s    V_5
    ldc.i4.1
    add
    stloc.s    V_5
  loopcheck:
    ldloc.s    V_5
    ldloc.s    V_4
    ldlen
    conv.i4
    clt
    stloc.s    V_6
    ldloc.s    V_6
    brtrue.s   loopstart

    ldloc.1
    ldc.i4     0x100
    rem.un
    stloc.3
    br.s       methodend

  methodend:
    ldloc.3
    ret
  }

Points to note:

  • The optimized version uses fewer locals. This may allow the JIT to use registers more effectively.
  • The optimized version uses blt.s rather than clt followed by brtrue.s when checking whether or not to go round the loop again (this is the reason for one of the extra locals).
  • The unoptimized version uses an additional local to store the return value before returning, presumably to make debugging easier.
  • The unoptimized version has an unconditional branch just before it returns.
  • The optimized version is shorter, but I doubt that it's short enough to be inlined, so I suspect that's irrelevant.
like image 125
Jon Skeet Avatar answered Oct 08 '22 02:10

Jon Skeet