std::bind vs lambda performance

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花落未央
花落未央 2020-12-06 01:18

I wanted to time a few functions\' execution and I\'ve written myself a helper:

using namespace std;
template
void         


        
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  • 2020-12-06 02:03

    I assume that lambda cannot be that better than bind.

    That's quite a preconception.

    Lambdas are tied into the compiler internals, so extra optimization opportunities may be found. Moreover, they're designed to avoid inefficiency.

    However, there are probably no compiler optimization tricks happening here. The likely culprit is the argument to bind, bind(&decltype(result)::eval, &result). You are passing a pointer-to-member-function (PTMF) and an object. Unlike the lambda type, the PTMF does not capture what function actually gets called; it only contains the function signature (parameter and return types). The slow loop is using an indirect branch function call, because the compiler failed to resolve the function pointer through constant propagation.

    If you rename the member eval() to operator () () and get rid of bind, then the explicit object will essentially behave like the lambda and the performance difference should disappear.

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  • 2020-12-06 02:04

    I've tested it. My results shows, that Lambda is actually faster than bind.

    This is the code (please don't look at style):

    #include <iostream>
    #include <functional>
    #include <chrono>
    
    using namespace std;
    using namespace chrono;
    using namespace placeholders;
    
    typedef void SumDataBlockEventHandler(uint8_t data[], uint16_t len);
    
    class SpeedTest {
        uint32_t sum = 0;
        uint8_t i = 0;
        void SumDataBlock(uint8_t data[], uint16_t len) {
            for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
                sum += data[i];
            }
        }
    public:
        function<SumDataBlockEventHandler> Bind() {
            return bind(&SpeedTest::SumDataBlock, this, _1, _2);
        }
        function<SumDataBlockEventHandler> Lambda() {
            return [this](auto data, auto len)
            {
                SumDataBlock(data, len);
            };
        }
    };
    
    int main()
    {
        SpeedTest test;
        function<SumDataBlockEventHandler> testF;
        uint8_t data[] = { 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 };
    
    #if _DEBUG
        const uint32_t testFcallCount = 1000000;
    #else
        const uint32_t testFcallCount = 100000000;
    #endif
        uint32_t callsCount, whileCount = 0;
        auto begin = high_resolution_clock::now();
        auto end = begin;
    
        while (whileCount++ < 10) {
            testF = test.Bind();
            begin = high_resolution_clock::now();
            callsCount = 0;
            while (callsCount++ < testFcallCount)
                testF(data, 8);
            end = high_resolution_clock::now();
            cout << testFcallCount << " calls of binded function: " << duration_cast<nanoseconds>(end - begin).count() << "ns" << endl;
    
            testF = test.Lambda();
            begin = high_resolution_clock::now();
            callsCount = 0;
            while (callsCount++ < testFcallCount)
                testF(data, 8);
            end = high_resolution_clock::now();
            cout << testFcallCount << " calls of lambda function: " << duration_cast<nanoseconds>(end - begin).count() << "ns" << endl << endl;
        }
        system("pause");
    }
    

    Console results (Release with optimalization):

    100000000 calls of binded function: 1846298524ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1048086461ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1259759880ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1032256243ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1264817832ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1039052353ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1263404007ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1031216018ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1275305794ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1041313446ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1256565304ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1031961675ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1248132135ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1033890224ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1252277130ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1042336736ns
    
    100000000 calls of binded function: 1250320869ns
    100000000 calls of lambda function: 1046529458ns
    

    I've compiled it under Visual Studio Enterprise 2015 in the Release mode with Full Optimization (/ Ox) and in the Debug mode with disabled optimalization. Results confirm that lambda is faster than the bind on my laptop (Dell Inspiron 7537, Intel Core i7-4510U 2.00GHz, 8GB RAM).

    Can anyone verify this on your computer?

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