From: malc <malc@pulsesoft.com>
To: Thorsten Ohl <ohl@physik.uni-wuerzburg.de>
Cc: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: [Caml-list] Re: Specialization (was: Inlining across functors)
Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2002 10:35:28 +0400 (MSD) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.44.0208201025310.926-100000@home.oyster.ru> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <15713.27612.63106.168053@wptx47.physik.uni-wuerzburg.de>
On Tue, 20 Aug 2002, Thorsten Ohl wrote:
> malc <malc@pulsesoft.com> writes:
>
> > With http://algol.prosalg.no/~malc/code/patches/specfun.tar.gz
> > (patch against 3.04) you will get this instead:
> >
> > *** Linearized code
> > Opt_f2_72:
> > A/11[%ecx] := [env/10[%ecx] + 12]
> > A/12[%ecx] := [A/11[%ecx]]
> > tailcall "Opt_f_62" R/0[%eax]
> > R/1[%ebx]
> > R/2[%ecx]
>
> Neat!
>
> > What will be specialized: frist order non-curried functors
>
> Unfortunately, the cases where my code would benefit most are all
> curried and or higher-order functors. E.g., I have beauties like
>
> module Tagged (Tagger : Tagger) (PT : Tuple.Poly)
> (Stat : Stat_Maker) (T : Topology.T with type 'a children = 'a PT.t)
> (P : Momentum.T) (M : Model.T) =
> struct
> ...
> end
>
> where the signature Momentum.T can be implemented by simple bitmask
> operations and since it is used _very_ often, specialization would
> help a great deal. The situation for symoblic algebra is similar.
If i remember correctly curried functors werent implemented because they
cant be mapped neatly into current code, with hacks here and there it was
possible, but i wanted to create half-decent and semi-readable code. Maybe
there are other obstacles as well, it's been a while.
>
> I guess that the major obstacle for generalizing your approach to
> specialization is in preventing code bloat. Or am I wrong?
More than code bloat(which is tunable in case of my patch) lack of
interest on part of Inria team has much bigger impact.
>
> Fine-grained control for specialization (like your syntax extension)
> at the point of functor application would be very useful. The above
> code could probably gain a constant factor larger than 10, if I could
> specialize curried and higher-order functors. [At crunch time, I can
> do this by hand of course, but--also for educational reasons--it would
> be nice to let the compiler take care of this.]
There's one thing i should mention, im not a type teorist, lambda calculus
expert and so on. Specialization like it is implemented(simple rewriting
of functor argument in functor body with some care to preserve typing) is
what SML/NJ does as well. Then again, types that specfun produces are a
bit off w.r.t vanilla Caml (they used to be 1:1 but, then one bump was
noticed and they stoped to be). I belive that if Jacques or Xavier or
anyone else on the team was interested in this feature it could have been
added in a matter of days, alas, they dont, and there is little that can
be done.
--
mailto:malc@pulsesoft.com
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2002-08-20 6:36 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 23+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-08-18 17:17 [Caml-list] O'Caml vs C++: a little benchmark Oleg
2002-08-18 18:00 ` William Chesters
2002-08-18 19:06 ` Oleg
2002-08-18 21:37 ` William Chesters
2002-08-19 13:02 ` Xavier Leroy
2002-08-19 13:58 ` [Caml-list] Inlining across functors (was: O'Caml vs C++: a little benchmark) Thorsten Ohl
2002-08-19 21:16 ` malc
2002-08-19 22:06 ` [Caml-list] Specialization (was: Inlining across functors) Thorsten Ohl
2002-08-20 6:35 ` malc [this message]
2002-08-20 6:25 ` [Caml-list] Inlining across functors (was: O'Caml vs C++: a little benchmark) malc
2002-08-19 14:39 ` [Caml-list] O'Caml vs C++: a little benchmark Oleg
2002-08-19 15:15 ` William Chesters
2002-08-18 19:16 ` Markus Mottl
2002-08-18 19:58 ` Oleg
2002-08-18 22:59 ` Markus Mottl
2002-08-19 13:12 ` malc
2002-08-19 13:22 ` malc
2002-08-23 21:05 ` John Max Skaller
2002-08-23 21:35 ` Oleg
2002-08-28 13:47 ` John Max Skaller
2002-08-28 14:34 ` Alain Frisch
2002-08-28 17:23 ` inlining tail-recursive functions (Re: [Caml-list] O'Caml vs C++: a little benchmark) Oleg
2002-08-31 1:13 ` John Max Skaller
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