I remember reading somewhere that to really optimize & speed up certain section of the code, programmers write that section in Assembly language. My questions are -
The only time it's useful to revert to assembly language is when
the CPU instructions don't have functional equivalents in C++ (e.g. single-instruction-multiple-data instructions, BCD or decimal arithmetic operations)
<cstdlib>
has div/ldiv et al for getting quotient and remainder efficiently)OR
for some inexplicable reason - the optimiser is failing to use the best CPU instructions
...AND...
Simply using inline assembly to do an operation that can easily be expressed in C++ - like adding two values or searching in a string - is actively counterproductive, because:
gcc -S
) or disassemble the machine code#ifdef
-ed for your platformsOne perspective that I think's worth keeping in mind is that when C was introduced it had to win over a lot of hardcore assembly language programmers who fussed over the machine code generated. Machines had less CPU power and RAM back then and you can bet people fussed over the tiniest thing. Optimisers became very sophisticated and have continued to improve, whereas the assembly languages of processors like the x86 have become increasingly complicated, as have their execution pipelines, caches and other factors involved in their performance. You can't just add values from a table of cycles-per-instruction any more. Compiler writers spend time considering all those subtle factors (especially those working for CPU manufacturers, but that ups the pressure on other compilers too). It's now impractical for assembly programmers to average - over any non-trivial application - significantly better efficiency of code than that generated by a good optimising compiler, and they're overwhelmingly likely to do worse. So, use of assembly should be limited to times it really makes a measurable and useful difference, worth the coupling and maintenance costs.
"Is this practice still done?" --> It is done in image processing, signal processing, AI (eg. efficient matrix multiplication), and other. I would bet the processing of the scroll gesture on my macbook trackpad is also partially assembly code because it is immediate. --> It is even done in C# applications (see https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/winsdk/2015/02/09/c-and-fastcall-how-to-make-them-work-together-without-ccli-shellcode/)
"Isn't writing in Assembly Language a bit too cumbersome & archaic?" --> It is a tool like a hammer or a screwdriver and some tasks require a watchmaker screwdriver.
I dont think you specified the processor. Different answers depending on the processor and the environment. The general answer is yes it is still done, it is not archaic certainly. The general reason is the compilers, sometimes they do a good job at optimizing in general but not really well for specific targets. Some are really good at one target and not so good at others. Most of the time it is good enough, most of the time you want portable C code and not non-portable assembler. But you still find that C libraries will still hand optimize memcpy and other routines that the compiler simply cannot figure out that there is a very fast way to implement it. In part because that corner case is not worth spending time on making the compiler optimize for, just solve it in assembler and the build system has a lot of if this target then use C if that target use C if that target use asm, if that target use asm. So it still occurs, and I argue must continue forever in some areas.
X86 is is own beast with a lot of history, we are at a point where you really cannot in a practical manner write one blob of assembler that is always faster, you can definitely optimize routines for a specific processor on a specific machine on a specific day, and out perform the compiler. Other than for some specific cases it is generally futile. Educational but overall not worth the time. Also note the processor is no longer the bottleneck, so a sloppy generic C compiler is good enough, find the performance elsewhere.
Other platforms which often means embedded, arm, mips, avr, msp430, pic, etc. You may or may not be running an operating system, you may or may not be running with a cache or other such things that your desktop has. So the weaknesses of the compiler will show. Also note that programming languages continue to evolve away from processors instead of toward them. Even in the case of C considered perhaps to be a low level language, it doesnt match the instruction set. There will always be times where you can produce segments of assembler that outperform the compiler. Not necessarily the segment that is your bottleneck but across the entire program you can often make improvements here and there. You still have to check the value of doing that. In an embedded environment it can and does make the difference between success and failure of a product. If your product has $25 per unit invested in more power hungry, board real estate, higher speed processors so you dont have to use assembler, but your competitor spends $10 or less per unit and is willing to mix asm with C to use smaller memories, use less power, cheaper parts, etc. Well so long as the NRE is recovered then the mixed with asm solution will in the long run.
True embedded is a specialized market with specialized engineers. Another embedded market, your embedded linux roku, tivo, etc. Embedded phones, etc all need to have portable operating systems to survive because you need third party developers. So the platform has to be more like a desktop than an embedded system. Buried in the C library as mentioned or the operating system there may be some assembler optimizations, but as with the desktop you want to try to throw more hardware at so the software can be portable instead of hand optimized. And your product line or embedded operating system will fail if assembler is required for third party success.
The biggest concern I have is that this knowledge is being lost at an alarming rate. Because nobody inspects the assembler, because nobody writes in assembler, etc. Nobody is noticing that the compilers have not been improving when it comes to the code being produced. Developers often think they have to buy more hardware instead of realizing that by either knowing the compiler or how to program better they can improve their performance by 5 to several hundred percent with the same compiler, sometimes with the same source code. 5-10% usually with the same source code and compiler. gcc 4 does not always produce better code than gcc 3, I keep both around because sometimes gcc3 does better. Target specific compilers can (not always do) run circles around gcc, you can see a few hundred percent improvement sometimes with the same source code different compiler. Where does all of this come from? The folks that still bother to look and/or use assembler. Some of those folks work on the compiler backends. The front end and middle are fun and educational certainly, but the backend is where you make or break quality and performance of the resulting program. Even if you never write assembler but only look at the output from the compiler from time to time (gcc -O2 -s myprog.c) it will make you a better high level programmer and will retain some of this knowledge. If nobody is willing to know and write assembler then by definition we have given up in writing and maintaining compilers for high level languages and software in general will cease to exist.
Understand that with gcc for example the output of the compiler is assembly that is passed to an assembler which turns it into object code. The C compiler does not normally produce binaries. The objects when combined into the final binary, are done by the linker, yet another program that is called by the compiler and not part of the compiler. The compiler turns C or C++ or ADA or whatever into assembler then the assembler and linker tools take it the rest of the way. Dynamic recompilers, like tcc for example, must be able to generate binaries on the fly somehow, but I see that as the exception not the rule. LLVM has its own runtime solution as well as quite visibly showing the high level to internal code to target code to binary path if you use it as a cross compiler.
So back to the point, yes it is done, more often than you think. Mostly has to do with the language not comparing directly to the instruction set, and then the compiler not always producing fast enough code. If you can get say dozens of times improvement on heavily used functions like malloc or memcpy. Or want to have a HD video player on your phone without hardware support, balance the pros and cons of assembler. Truly embedded markets still use assembler quite a bit, sometimes it is all C but sometimes the software is completely coded in assembler. For desktop x86, the processor is not the bottleneck. The processors are microcoded. Even if you make beautiful looking assembler on the surface it wont run really fast on all families x86 processors, sloppy, good enough code is more likely to run about the same across the board.
I highly recommend learning assembler for non-x86 ISAs like arm, thumb/thumb2, mips, msp430, avr. Targets that have compilers, particularly ones with gcc or llvm compiler support. Learn the assembler, learn to understand the output of the C compiler, and prove that you can do better by actually modifying that output and testing it. This knowledge will help make your desktop high level code much better without assembler, faster and more reliable.
On my work, I used assembly on embedded target (micro controller) for low level access.
But for a PC software, I don't think it is very usefull.
I have an example of assembly optimization I've done, but again it's on an embedded target. You can see some examples of assembly programming for PCs too, and it creates really small and fast programs, but usually not worth the effort (Look for "assembly for windows", you can find some very small and pretty programs).
My example was when I was writing a printer controller, and there was a function that was supposed to be called every 50 micro-seconds. It has to do reshuffling of bits, more or less. Using C I've been able to do it in about 35microseconds, and with assembly I've done it in about 8 microseconds. It's a very specific procedure but still, something real and necessary.
It depends. It is (still) being done in some situations, but for the most part, it is not worth it. Modern CPUs are insanely complex, and it is equally complex to write efficient assembly code for them. So most of the time, the assembly you write by hand will end up slower than what the compiler can generate for you.
Assuming a decent compiler released within the last couple of years, you can usually tweak your C/C++ code to gain the same performance benefit as you would using assembly.
A lot of people in the comments and answers here are talking about the "N times speedup" they gained rewriting something in assembly, but that by itself doesn't mean too much. I got a 13 times speedup from rewriting a C function evaluating fluid dynamics equations in C, by applying many of the same optimizations as you would if you were to write it in assembly, by knowing the hardware, and by profiling. At the end, it got close enough to the theoretical peak performance of the CPU that there would be no point in rewriting it in assembly. Usually, it's not the language that's the limiting factor, but the actual code you've written. As long as you're not using "special" instructions that the compiler has difficulty with, it's hard to beat well-written C++ code.
Assembly isn't magically faster. It just takes the compiler out of the loop. That is often a bad thing, unless you really know what you're doing, since the compiler performs a lot of optimizations that are really really painful to do manually. But in rare cases, the compiler just doesn't understand your code, and can't generate efficient assembly for it, and then, it might be useful to write some assembly yourself. Other than driver development or the like (where you need to manipulate the hardware directly), the only place I can think of where writing assembly may be worth it is if you're stuck with a compiler that can't generate efficient SSE code from intrinsics (such as MSVC). Even there, I'd still start out using intrinsics in C++, and profile it and try to tweak it as much as possible, but because the compiler just isn't very good at this, it might eventually be worth it to rewrite that code in assembly.