clang is a C compiler which encompasses preprocessing, parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is passed, Clang will stop before doing a full link.
clang++ C++ compiler which encompasses preprocessing, parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is passed, Clang will stop before doing a full link.
flang is a Fortran compiler which encompasses parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is passed, Flang will stop before doing a full link.
clang is a C compiler which encompasses preprocessing, parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is passed, Clang will stop before doing a full link.
clang++ C++ compiler which encompasses preprocessing, parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is passed, Clang will stop before doing a full link.
flang is a Fortran compiler which encompasses parsing, optimization, code generation, assembly, and linking. Depending on which high-level mode setting is passed, Flang will stop before doing a full link.
This macro indicates that the benchmark is being compiled on an AMD64-compatible system running the Linux operating system.
This macro specifies that the target system uses the LP64 data model; specifically, that integers are 32 bits, while longs and pointers are 64 bits.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This flag can be set for SPEC compilation for LINUX using default compiler.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This macro indicates that the benchmark is being compiled on an AMD64-compatible system running the Linux operating system.
This macro specifies that the target system uses the LP64 data model; specifically, that integers are 32 bits, while longs and pointers are 64 bits.
Specifies size of off_t data type.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This flag can be set for SPEC compilation for LINUX using default compiler.
Specifies size of off_t data type.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
This option is used to indicate that the host system's integers are 32-bits wide, and longs and pointers are 64-bits wide. Not all benchmarks recognize this macro, but the preferred practice for data model selection applies the flags to all benchmarks; this flag description is a placeholder for those benchmarks that do not recognize this macro.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Like -O2, except that it enables optimizations that take longer to perform or that may generate larger code (in an attempt to make the program run faster).
If multiple "O" options are used, with or without level numbers, the last such option is the one that is effective.
Enables a range of optimizations that provide faster, though sometimes less precise, mathematical operations that may not conform to the IEEE-754 specifications. When this option is specified, the __STDC_IEC_559__ macro is ignored even if set by the system headers.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option enables transformation of the layout of arrays of structure types and their fields to improve the cache locality. Aggressive analysis and transformations are performed at higher levels. This option is effective only with -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This option enables an optimization that transforms the data layout of a single dimensional array to provide better cache locality by analysing the access patterns.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This option enables the GVN hoist pass, which is used to hoist computations from branches.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option enables an optimization that does the slp vectorization across basic blocks. The SLP vectorizer vectorizes instructions within basic blocks. The global slp vectorizer analyzes instructions across basic blocks and vectorizes them.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
Sets the compiler's inlining threshold level to the value passed. The inline threshold is used in the inliner heuristics to decide which functions should be inlined.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
Instructs the linker to use the first definition encountered for a symbol, and ignore all others.
Instructs the compiler to link with system vector math libraries.
Instructs the compiler to link with AMD-supported optimized math library.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Instructs the compiler to link with flang Fortran runtime libraries.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Disable generation of fma instructions when there is a chain of fma instructions and output of one fma instruction is used as input to other fma instruction.
Like -O2, except that it enables optimizations that take longer to perform or that may generate larger code (in an attempt to make the program run faster).
If multiple "O" options are used, with or without level numbers, the last such option is the one that is effective.
Enables a range of optimizations that provide faster, though sometimes less precise, mathematical operations that may not conform to the IEEE-754 specifications. When this option is specified, the __STDC_IEC_559__ macro is ignored even if set by the system headers.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unswitched. For example, if unswitch threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unswtched.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
This optimization does partial unswitching of loops where some part of the unswitched control flow remains in the loop.
Instructs the linker to use the first definition encountered for a symbol, and ignore all others.
Instructs the compiler to link with system vector math libraries.
Instructs the compiler to link with AMD-supported optimized math library.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Instructs the compiler to link with flang Fortran runtime libraries.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Enables a range of optimizations that provide faster, though sometimes less precise, mathematical operations that may not conform to the IEEE-754 specifications. When this option is specified, the __STDC_IEC_559__ macro is ignored even if set by the system headers.
Enables inlining for recursive functions based on heuristics, with level 4 being most aggressive. Higher levels may lead to code bloat due to expansion of recursive functions at call sites.
Levels:
Enables loop strength reduction for nested loop structures. By default, the compiler will do loop strength reduction only for the innermost loop.
Enables splitting of long live ranges of loop induction variables which span loop boundaries. This helps reduce register pressure and can help avoid needless spills to memory and reloads from memory.
Like -O2, except that it enables optimizations that take longer to perform or that may generate larger code (in an attempt to make the program run faster).
If multiple "O" options are used, with or without level numbers, the last such option is the one that is effective.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option instructs the compiler to unroll loops wherever possible.
Allocate local variables on the stack, thus allowing recursion. SAVEd, data-initialized, or namelist members are always allocated statically, regardless of the setting of this switch.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
Instructs the linker to use the first definition encountered for a symbol, and ignore all others.
The induction variable simplification optimization transforms induction variables to simpler forms. The option disables this optimization.
Enables aggressive heuristics to get loop unrolling.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
Instructs the compiler to link with system vector math libraries.
Instructs the compiler to link with AMD-supported optimized math library.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Instructs the compiler to link with flang Fortran runtime libraries.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Turns on LLVM's instrumenation based profiling.
Uses the profiling files generated from a program compiled with -fprofile-instr-generate to guide optimization decisions.
Enables all the optimizations from -O3 along with other aggressive optimizations that may violate strict compliance with language standards. Refer to the AOCC options document for the language you're using for more detailed documentation of optimizations enabled under -Ofast.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option disables the generation of SSE4a instructions.
This option enables transformation of the layout of arrays of structure types and their fields to improve the cache locality. Aggressive analysis and transformations are performed at higher levels. This option is effective only with -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option avoids runtime memory dependency checks to enable aggressive vectorization.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This option enables the GVN hoist pass, which is used to hoist computations from branches.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This option enables an optimization that transforms the data layout of a single dimensional array to provide better cache locality by analysing the access patterns.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option enables an optimization that does the slp vectorization across basic blocks. The SLP vectorizer vectorizes instructions within basic blocks. The global slp vectorizer analyzes instructions across basic blocks and vectorizes them.
Sets the compiler's inlining threshold level to the value passed. The inline threshold is used in the inliner heuristics to decide which functions should be inlined.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
Instructs the compiler to link with system vector math libraries.
Instructs the compiler to link with AMD-supported optimized math library.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Instructs the compiler to link with flang Fortran runtime libraries.
Generate code for a 32-bit environment. The 32-bit environment sets int, long and pointer to 32 bits and generates code that runs on any i386 system. The compiler generates x86 or IA32 32-bit ABI. The default on a 32-bit host is 32-bit ABI. The default on a 64-bit host is 64-bit ABI if the target platform specified is 64-bit, otherwise the default is 32-bit.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Enables all the optimizations from -O3 along with other aggressive optimizations that may violate strict compliance with language standards. Refer to the AOCC options document for the language you're using for more detailed documentation of optimizations enabled under -Ofast.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option disables the generation of SSE4a instructions.
This option enables transformation of the layout of arrays of structure types and their fields to improve the cache locality. Aggressive analysis and transformations are performed at higher levels. This option is effective only with -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option avoids runtime memory dependency checks to enable aggressive vectorization.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This option enables the GVN hoist pass, which is used to hoist computations from branches.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This option enables an optimization that transforms the data layout of a single dimensional array to provide better cache locality by analysing the access patterns.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option enables an optimization that does the slp vectorization across basic blocks. The SLP vectorizer vectorizes instructions within basic blocks. The global slp vectorizer analyzes instructions across basic blocks and vectorizes them.
Sets the compiler's inlining threshold level to the value passed. The inline threshold is used in the inliner heuristics to decide which functions should be inlined.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
In the 502/602.gcc benchmark description, "multiple definitions of symbols" is listed under the "Known Portability Issues" section, and this option is one of the suggested workarounds. This option causes Clang to revert to the same inlining behavior that GCC does when in pre-C99 mode.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Enables all the optimizations from -O3 along with other aggressive optimizations that may violate strict compliance with language standards. Refer to the AOCC options document for the language you're using for more detailed documentation of optimizations enabled under -Ofast.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option disables the generation of SSE4a instructions.
This option enables transformation of the layout of arrays of structure types and their fields to improve the cache locality. Aggressive analysis and transformations are performed at higher levels. This option is effective only with -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option avoids runtime memory dependency checks to enable aggressive vectorization.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This option enables the GVN hoist pass, which is used to hoist computations from branches.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This option enables an optimization that transforms the data layout of a single dimensional array to provide better cache locality by analysing the access patterns.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
This option enables an optimization that does the slp vectorization across basic blocks. The SLP vectorizer vectorizes instructions within basic blocks. The global slp vectorizer analyzes instructions across basic blocks and vectorizes them.
Sets the compiler's inlining threshold level to the value passed. The inline threshold is used in the inliner heuristics to decide which functions should be inlined.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
Instructs the compiler to link with system vector math libraries.
Instructs the compiler to link with AMD-supported optimized math library.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Instructs the compiler to link with flang Fortran runtime libraries.
Generate code for a 32-bit environment. The 32-bit environment sets int, long and pointer to 32 bits and generates code that runs on any i386 system. The compiler generates x86 or IA32 32-bit ABI. The default on a 32-bit host is 32-bit ABI. The default on a 64-bit host is 64-bit ABI if the target platform specified is 64-bit, otherwise the default is 32-bit.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Enables all the optimizations from -O3 along with other aggressive optimizations that may violate strict compliance with language standards. Refer to the AOCC options document for the language you're using for more detailed documentation of optimizations enabled under -Ofast.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This optimization does partial unswitching of loops where some part of the unswitched control flow remains in the loop.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unswitched. For example, if unswitch threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unswtched.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
Sets the compiler's inlining threshold level to the value passed. The inline threshold is used in the inliner heuristics to decide which functions should be inlined.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Generate output files in LLVM formats suitable for link time optimization. When used with -S this generates LLVM intermediate language assembly files, otherwise this generates LLVM bitcode format object files (which may be passed to the linker depending on the stage selection options).
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when they are called with constant arguments. This optimization helps in function inlining.
This flag enables vectorization of loops with complex control flow that can not be vectorized by loop and slp vectorizers.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
This option eliminates the array computations based on their usage. The computations on unused array elements and computations on zero valued array elements are eliminated with this optimization. -flto as whole program analysis is required to perform this optimization.
Possible values:
Enables all the optimizations from -O3 along with other aggressive optimizations that may violate strict compliance with language standards. Refer to the AOCC options document for the language you're using for more detailed documentation of optimizations enabled under -Ofast.
Specify that Clang should generate code for a specific processor family member and later. For example, if you specify -march=znver1, the compiler is allowed to generate instructions that are valid on AMD Zen processors, but which may not exist on earlier products.
This option enables an optimization that generates and calls specialized function versions when the loops inside function are vectorizable and the arguments are not aliased with each other. This optimization helps in function inlining and vectorization.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unrolled. For example, if unroll threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unrolled.
This optimization does partial unswitching of loops where some part of the unswitched control flow remains in the loop.
Sets the limit at which loops will be unswitched. For example, if unswitch threshold is set to 100 then only loops with 100 or fewer instructions will be unswtched.
This option instructs the compiler to use vector math library.
Sets the compiler's inlining threshold level to the value passed. The inline threshold is used in the inliner heuristics to decide which functions should be inlined.
Instructs the compiler to link with system vector math libraries.
Instructs the compiler to link with AMD-supported optimized math library.
Use the jemalloc library, which is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support.
Instructs the compiler to link with flang Fortran runtime libraries.
Specifies a directory to search for libraries. Use -L to add directories to the search path for library files. Multiple -L options are valid. However, the position of multiple -L options is important relative to -l options supplied.
Specifies a directory to search for libraries. Use -L to add directories to the search path for library files. Multiple -L options are valid. However, the position of multiple -L options is important relative to -l options supplied.
This section contains descriptions of flags that were included implicitly by other flags, but which do not have a permanent home at SPEC.
Somewhere between -O0 and -O2.
If multiple "O" options are used, with or without level numbers, the last such option is the one that is effective.
Using numactl
to bind processes and memory to cores
For multi-copy runs or single copy runs on systems with multiple sockets, it is advantageous to bind a process to a
particular core. Otherwise, the OS may arbitrarily move your process from one core to another. This can affect
performance. To help, SPEC allows the use of a "submit" command where users can specify a utility to use to bind
processes. We have found the utility 'numactl
' to be the best choice.
numactl
runs processes with a specific NUMA scheduling or memory placement policy. The policy is set for a
command and inherited by all of its children. The numactl
flag "--physcpubind
" specifies
which core(s) to bind the process. "-l
" instructs numactl
to keep a process's memory on the
local node while "-m
" specifies which node(s) to place a process's memory. For full details on using
numactl
, please refer to your Linux documentation, 'man numactl
'
Note that some older versions of numactl
incorrectly interpret application arguments as its own. For
example, with the command "numactl --physcpubind=0 -l a.out -m a
", numactl
will interpret
a.out
's "-m
" option as its own "-m
" option. To work around this problem, we put
the command to be run in a shell script and then run the shell script using numactl
. For example:
"echo 'a.out -m a' > run.sh ; numactl --physcpubind=0 bash run.sh
"
Transparent Huge Pages (THP)
THP is an abstraction layer that automates most aspects of creating, managing, and using huge pages. THP is designed to hide much of the complexity in using huge pages from system administrators and developers, as normal huge pages must be assigned at boot time, can be difficult to manage manually, and often require significant changes to code in order to be used effectively. Most recent Linux OS releases have THP enabled by default.
Linux Huge Page settings
If you need finer control you can manually set huge pages using the following steps:
mkdir /mnt/hugepages
mount -t hugetlbfs nodev /mnt/hugepages
vm/nr_hugepages=N
in /etc/sysctl.conf
where N is the maximum number of pages the
system may allocate.Note that further information about huge pages may be found in the Linux kernel documentation file
hugetlbpage.txt
.
ulimit -s <n>
Sets the stack size to n kbytes, or unlimited to allow the stack size to grow without limit.
ulimit -l <n>
Sets the maximum size of memory that may be locked into physical memory.
powersave -f
(on SuSE)
Makes the powersave daemon set the CPUs to the highest supported frequency.
/etc/init.d/cpuspeed stop
(on Red Hat)
Disables the cpu frequency scaling program in order to set the CPUs to the highest supported frequency.
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
An environment variable that indicates the location in the filesystem of bundled libraries to use when running the benchmark binaries.
kernel/randomize_va_space
This option can be used to select the type of process address space randomization that is used in the system, for architectures that support this feature.
norandmaps
" parameter.CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK
option is enabled.CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK
is
disabled.MALLOC_CONF
An environment variable set to tune the jemalloc allocation strategy during the execution of the binaries. This environment variable setting is not needed when building the binaries on the system under test.
C States:
C States allow the processor to enter lower power states when idle. When set to Enabled (OS controlled) or when set to Autonomous (if Hardware controlled is supported), the processor can operate in all available Power States to save power, but my increase memory latency and frequency jitter.
Determinism Slider:
It controls whether BIOS will enable determinism to control performance. Performance: BIOS will enable 100% deterministic performance control. Power: BIOS will not enable deterministic performance control.
CPU Power Management set to Maximum Performance:
Allows selection of CPU power management methodology. Maximum Performance is typically selected for performance-centric workloads where it is acceptable to consume additional power to achieve the highest possible performance for the computing environment. This mode drives processor frequency to the maximum across all cores (although idled cores can still be frequency reduced by C0state enforcement through BIOS or OS mechanisms if enabled). This mode also offers the lowest latency of the CPU Power Management Mode options, so is always preferred for latency-sensitive environments. OS DBPM is another performance-per-watt option that relies on the operating system to dynamically control individual cores in order to save power.
Memory Frequency set to Maximum Performance:
Governs the BIOS memory frequency. The variables that govern maximum memory frequency include the maximum rated frequency of the DIMMs, the DIMMs per channel population, the processor choice, and this BIOS option. Additional power savings can be achieved by reducing the memory frequency, at the expense of reduced performance. Read-only unless System Profile is set to Custom.
Efficiency Optimized Mode Disabled:
This field enables/disabled Efficiency Optimized Mode. Efficiency Optimized Mode maximizes Performance-per-Watt by opportunistically reducing frequency/power.
NUMA Nodes Per Socket:
This field specifies the number of NUMA nodes per socket. The Zero option is for 2 socket configurations.
CCX as NUMA Domain:
This field specifies that each CCX within the processor will be declared as a NUMA Domain.
Adaptive Double DRAM Device Correction (ADDDC):
When Adaptive Double DRAM Device Correction (ADDDC) is enabled, failing DRAM’s are dynamically mapped out. When set to enabled, it can have some impact to system performance under certain workloads. This feature is applicable for x4 DIMMs only.
DCU Streamer Prefetcher:
Enables or disables Data Cache Unit (DCU) Streamer Prefetcher. This setting can affect performance, depending on the application running on the server. DCU streamer prefetchers detect multiple reads to a single cache line in a certain period of time and choose to load the following cache line to the L1 data caches. Recommended for High Performance Computing applications.
Memory Frequency:
Governs the BIOS memory frequency. The variables that govern maximum memory frequency include the maximum rated frequency of the DIMMs, the DIMMs per channel population, the processor choice, and this BIOS option. Additional power savings can be achieved by reducing the memory frequency, at the expense of reduced performance.
Turbo Boost:
Governs the Boost Technology. This feature allows teh processor cores to be automatically clocked up in frequency beyond the advertised processor speed. The amount of increased frequency (or 'turbo upside') one can expect from an EPYC processor depends on the fewer cores being exercised with work the higher the potential turbo upside. The potential drawback for Boost are mainly centered on increased power consumption and possible frequency jitter that can affect a small minority of latency-sensitive environments.
C1E:
When set to Enabled, the processor is allowed to switch to minimum performance state when idle.
CPU Interconnect Bus Link Power Management:
When Enabled, CPU interconnect bus link power management can reduce overall system power a bit while slightly reducing system performance.
CPU Performance:
Maximum Performance is typically selected for performance-centric workloads where it is acceptable to consume additional power to achieve the highest possible performance for the computing environment. This mode drives processor frequency to the maximum across all cores (although idled cores can still be frequency reduced by C-state enforcement through BIOS or OS mechanisms if enabled). This mode also offers the lowest latency of the CPU Power Management Mode options, so is always preferred.
Energy Efficient Policy:
The CPU uses the setting to manipulate the internal behavior of the processor and determines
whether to target higher performance or better power savings. The possible settings are: Performance, Balanced Performance, Balanced Energy, Energy Efficient.
Energy Efficient Turbo:
Permits Energy Efficient Turbo to be Enabled or Disabled.
Energy Efficient Turbo (EET) is a mode of operation where a processor's core frequency is adjusted within the turbo range based on workload.
Logical Processor:
Each processor core supports up to two logical processors. When set to Enabled, the BIOS reports all logical processors. When set to Disabled, the BIOS only reports one logical processor per core. Generally, higher processor count results in increased performance for most multi-threaded workloads and the recommendation is to keep this enabled. However, there are some floating point/scientific workloads, including HPC workloads, where disabling this feature may result in higher performance.
Memory Patrol Scrub:
Patrol Scrubbing searches the memory for errors and repairs correctable errors to prevent the accumulation of memory errors. When set to Disabled, no patrol scrubbing will occur. When set to Standard Mode, the entire memory array will be scrubbed once in a 24 hour period. When set to Extended Mode, the entire memory array will be scrubbed more frequently to further increase system reliability.
Memory Refresh Rate:
The memory controller will periodically refresh the data in memory. The frequency at which memory is normally refreshed is referred to as 1X refresh rate. When memory modules are operating at a higher than normal temperature or to further increase system reliability, the refresh rate can be set to 2X, but may have a negative impact on memory subsystem performance under some circumstances.
PCI ASPM L1 Link Power Management:
When Enabled, PCIe Advanced State Power Management (ASPM) can reduce overall system power
a bit while slightly reducing system performance.
NOTE: Some devices may not perform properly (they may hang or cause the system to hang)
when ASPM is enabled, for this reason L1 will only be enabled for validated qualified cards.
System Profile:
When set to Custom, you can change setting of each option. Under Custom mode when C States is enabled, Monitor/Mwait should also be Enabled.
Monitor/Mwait:
Specifies whether Monitor/Mwait instructions are enabled. Monitor/Mwait is only active when C States is set to Disabled.
Sub NUMA Cluster:
When Enabled, Sub NUMA Clustering (SNC) is a feature for breaking up the LLC into disjoint clusters based on address range, with each cluster bound to a subset of the memory controllers in the system. It improves average latency to the LLC.
Uncore Frequency:
Selects the Processor Uncore Frequency.
Dynamic mode allows processor to optimize power resources across the cores and uncore during runtime.
The optimization of the uncore frequency to either save power or optimize performance is influenced
by the setting of the Energy Efficient Policy.
Virtualization technology:
When set to Enabled, the BIOS will enable processor Virtualization features and provide the virtualization support to the Operating System (OS) through the DMAR table. In general, only virtualized environments such as VMware(r) ESX (tm), Microsoft Hyper-V(r) , Red Hat(r) KVM, and other virtualized operating systems will take advantage of these features. Disabling this feature is not known to significantly alter the performance or power characteristics of the system, so leaving this option Enabled is advised for most cases.
nohz_full:
This kernel option sets adaptive tick mode (NOHZ_FULL) to specified processors. Since the number of interrupts is reduced to ones per second, latency-sensitive applications can take advantage of it.
Memory Interleaving:
When Enabled, memory interleaving is supported if a symmetric memory configuration is installed. When set to Disabled, the system supports Non-Uniform Memory Access (NUMA) (asymmetric) memory configurations. Channel interleaving is available with all configurations and is the intra-die memory interleave option. With channel interleaving the memory behind each UMC will be interleaved and seen as 1 NUMA domain per die.
Flag description origin markings:
For questions about the meanings of these flags, please contact the tester.
For other inquiries, please contact info@spec.org
Copyright 2017-2019 Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation
Tested with SPEC CPU2017 v1.0.5.
Report generated on 2019-10-15 14:41:54 by SPEC CPU2017 flags formatter v5178.