"Tim Peters" <tim@zope.com> writes: > [Michael Hudson] > > Beats me. I still see a healthy speed up: > > > > Before: > > > > $ ./python ../Lib/test/pystone.py > > Pystone(1.1) time for 50000 passes = 3.99 > > This machine benchmarks at 12531.3 pystones/second > > > > After: > > > > $ ./python ../Lib/test/pystone.py > > Pystone(1.1) time for 50000 passes = 3.65 > > This machine benchmarks at 13698.6 pystones/second > > > > (which is nosing on for 10% faster, actually). > > > > You're not testing a debug vs a release build or anything like that > > are you? > > I'm not, but I was comparing -O times (in release builds). Ah. FWIW gcc makes my patch a small win even with -O. > Three runs before patch: [...] > This machine benchmarks at 14295.7 pystones/second [...] > Three runs after patch: [...] > This machine benchmarks at 13351.6 pystones/second Ouch! > Three runs after commenting out the new [...] > on the eval-loop critical path: [...] > This machine benchmarks at 13910.4 pystones/second This makes no sense; after you've commented out the trace stuff, the only difference left is that the switch is smaller! Actually, there are some other changes, like always updating f->f_lasti, and allocating 8 more bytes on the stack. Does commenting out the definition of instr_lb & instr_ub make any difference? > OTOH, MSVC 6 has been generating faster ceval.c code than gcc for a long > time; given how touchy this is, maybe it's just time for gcc to win 587 coin > flips in a row <wink>. Does reading assembly give any clues? Not that I'd really expect anyone to read all of the main loop... I'm baffled. Perhaps you can put SET_LINENO back in for the Windows build <1e-6 wink>. Cheers, M. -- Programming languages should be designed not by piling feature on top of feature, but by removing the weaknesses and restrictions that make the additional features appear necessary. -- Revised(5) Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme
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