Files
adler32
aho_corasick
approx
arrayvec
ascii
backtrace
backtrace_sys
base64
bitflags
brotli2
brotli_sys
bstr
buf_redux
byteorder
bytes
cfg_if
chrono
chunked_transfer
color_quant
cookie
cookie_store
crc32fast
crossbeam_deque
crossbeam_epoch
crossbeam_queue
crossbeam_utils
csv
csv_core
csv_user_import
deflate
diesel
associations
connection
expression
expression_methods
macros
migration
mysql
query_builder
query_dsl
query_source
sql_types
type_impls
types
diesel_derives
diesel_migrations
dirs
dotenv
dtoa
either
encoding_rs
error_chain
failure
failure_derive
filetime
flate2
fnv
foreign_types
foreign_types_shared
futures
futures_cpupool
gif
google_signin
gzip_header
h2
http
http_body
httparse
hyper
hyper_rustls
hyper_tls
idna
image
indexmap
inflate
iovec
itoa
jpeg_decoder
language_tags
lazy_static
libc
lock_api
log
lzw
matches
memchr
memoffset
migrations_internals
migrations_macros
mime
mime_guess
miniz_oxide
mio
multipart
mysqlclient_sys
native_tls
net2
nodrop
num_cpus
num_derive
num_integer
num_iter
num_rational
num_traits
openssl
openssl_probe
openssl_sys
ordered_float
owning_ref
parking_lot
parking_lot_core
percent_encoding
phf
phf_shared
png
proc_macro2
publicsuffix
quick_error
quote
r2d2
rand
rand_chacha
rand_core
rand_hc
rand_isaac
rand_jitter
rand_os
rand_pcg
rand_xorshift
rayon
rayon_core
regex
regex_automata
regex_syntax
remove_dir_all
reqwest
ring
rouille
rustc_demangle
rustls
rusttype
ryu
safemem
scheduled_thread_pool
scoped_threadpool
scopeguard
sct
serde
serde_derive
serde_json
serde_urlencoded
sha1
simplelog
siphasher
slab
smallvec
stable_deref_trait
stb_truetype
string
syn
synom
synstructure
tempdir
term
thread_local
threadpool
tiff
time
tiny_http
tokio
tokio_buf
tokio_current_thread
tokio_executor
tokio_io
tokio_reactor
tokio_sync
tokio_tcp
tokio_threadpool
tokio_timer
traitobject
try_from
try_lock
twoway
typeable
unicase
unicode_bidi
unicode_normalization
unicode_xid
untrusted
url
uuid
want
webdev_lib
webpki
webpki_roots
  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
// This file contains a set of fairly generic utility functions when working
// with SIMD vectors.
//
// SAFETY: All of the routines below are unsafe to call because they assume
// the necessary CPU target features in order to use particular vendor
// intrinsics. Calling these routines when the underlying CPU does not support
// the appropriate target features is NOT safe. Callers must ensure this
// themselves.
//
// Note that it may not look like this safety invariant is being upheld when
// these routines are called. Namely, the CPU feature check is typically pretty
// far away from when these routines are used. Instead, we rely on the fact
// that certain types serve as a guaranteed receipt that pertinent target
// features are enabled. For example, the only way TeddySlim3Mask256 can be
// constructed is if the AVX2 CPU feature is available. Thus, any code running
// inside of TeddySlim3Mask256 can use any of the functions below without any
// additional checks: its very existence *is* the check.

use std::arch::x86_64::*;

/// Shift `a` to the left by two bytes (removing its two most significant
/// bytes), and concatenate it with the the two most significant bytes of `b`.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn alignr256_14(a: __m256i, b: __m256i) -> __m256i {
    // Credit goes to jneem for figuring this out:
    // https://github.com/jneem/teddy/blob/9ab5e899ad6ef6911aecd3cf1033f1abe6e1f66c/src/x86/teddy_simd.rs#L145-L184
    //
    // TL;DR avx2's PALIGNR instruction is actually just two 128-bit PALIGNR
    // instructions, which is not what we want, so we need to do some extra
    // shuffling.

    // This permute gives us the low 16 bytes of a concatenated with the high
    // 16 bytes of b, in order of most significant to least significant. So
    // `v = a[15:0] b[31:16]`.
    let v = _mm256_permute2x128_si256(b, a, 0x21);
    // This effectively does this (where we deal in terms of byte-indexing
    // and byte-shifting, and use inclusive ranges):
    //
    //   ret[15:0]  := ((a[15:0] << 16) | v[15:0]) >> 14
    //               = ((a[15:0] << 16) | b[31:16]) >> 14
    //   ret[31:16] := ((a[31:16] << 16) | v[31:16]) >> 14
    //               = ((a[31:16] << 16) | a[15:0]) >> 14
    //
    // Which therefore results in:
    //
    //   ret[31:0]  := a[29:16] a[15:14] a[13:0] b[31:30]
    //
    // The end result is that we've effectively done this:
    //
    //   (a << 2) | (b >> 30)
    //
    // When `A` and `B` are strings---where the beginning of the string is in
    // the least significant bits---we effectively result in the following
    // semantic operation:
    //
    //   (A >> 2) | (B << 30)
    //
    // The reversal being attributed to the fact that we are in little-endian.
    _mm256_alignr_epi8(a, v, 14)
}

/// Shift `a` to the left by one byte (removing its most significant byte), and
/// concatenate it with the the most significant byte of `b`.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn alignr256_15(a: __m256i, b: __m256i) -> __m256i {
    // For explanation, see alignr256_14.
    let v = _mm256_permute2x128_si256(b, a, 0x21);
    _mm256_alignr_epi8(a, v, 15)
}

/// Unpack the given 128-bit vector into its 64-bit components. The first
/// element of the array returned corresponds to the least significant 64-bit
/// lane in `a`.
#[target_feature(enable = "ssse3")]
pub unsafe fn unpack64x128(a: __m128i) -> [u64; 2] {
    [
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(a) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(_mm_srli_si128(a, 8)) as u64,
    ]
}

/// Unpack the given 256-bit vector into its 64-bit components. The first
/// element of the array returned corresponds to the least significant 64-bit
/// lane in `a`.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn unpack64x256(a: __m256i) -> [u64; 4] {
    // Using transmute here is precisely equivalent, but actually slower. It's
    // not quite clear why.
    let lo = _mm256_extracti128_si256(a, 0);
    let hi = _mm256_extracti128_si256(a, 1);
    [
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(lo) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(_mm_srli_si128(lo, 8)) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(hi) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(_mm_srli_si128(hi, 8)) as u64,
    ]
}

/// Unpack the low 128-bits of `a` and `b`, and return them as 4 64-bit
/// integers.
///
/// More precisely, if a = a4 a3 a2 a1 and b = b4 b3 b2 b1, where each element
/// is a 64-bit integer and a1/b1 correspond to the least significant 64 bits,
/// then the return value is `b2 b1 a2 a1`.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn unpacklo64x256(a: __m256i, b: __m256i) -> [u64; 4] {
    let lo = _mm256_castsi256_si128(a);
    let hi = _mm256_castsi256_si128(b);
    [
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(lo) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(_mm_srli_si128(lo, 8)) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(hi) as u64,
        _mm_cvtsi128_si64(_mm_srli_si128(hi, 8)) as u64,
    ]
}

/// Returns true if and only if all bits in the given 128-bit vector are 0.
#[target_feature(enable = "ssse3")]
pub unsafe fn is_all_zeroes128(a: __m128i) -> bool {
    let cmp = _mm_cmpeq_epi8(a, zeroes128());
    _mm_movemask_epi8(cmp) as u32 == 0xFFFF
}

/// Returns true if and only if all bits in the given 256-bit vector are 0.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn is_all_zeroes256(a: __m256i) -> bool {
    let cmp = _mm256_cmpeq_epi8(a, zeroes256());
    _mm256_movemask_epi8(cmp) as u32 == 0xFFFFFFFF
}

/// Load a 128-bit vector from slice at the given position. The slice does
/// not need to be unaligned.
///
/// Since this code assumes little-endian (there is no big-endian x86), the
/// bytes starting in `slice[at..]` will be at the least significant bits of
/// the returned vector. This is important for the surrounding code, since for
/// example, shifting the resulting vector right is equivalent to logically
/// shifting the bytes in `slice` left.
#[target_feature(enable = "sse2")]
pub unsafe fn loadu128(slice: &[u8], at: usize) -> __m128i {
    let ptr = slice.get_unchecked(at..).as_ptr();
    _mm_loadu_si128(ptr as *const u8 as *const __m128i)
}

/// Load a 256-bit vector from slice at the given position. The slice does
/// not need to be unaligned.
///
/// Since this code assumes little-endian (there is no big-endian x86), the
/// bytes starting in `slice[at..]` will be at the least significant bits of
/// the returned vector. This is important for the surrounding code, since for
/// example, shifting the resulting vector right is equivalent to logically
/// shifting the bytes in `slice` left.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn loadu256(slice: &[u8], at: usize) -> __m256i {
    let ptr = slice.get_unchecked(at..).as_ptr();
    _mm256_loadu_si256(ptr as *const u8 as *const __m256i)
}

/// Returns a 128-bit vector with all bits set to 0.
#[target_feature(enable = "sse2")]
pub unsafe fn zeroes128() -> __m128i {
    _mm_set1_epi8(0)
}

/// Returns a 256-bit vector with all bits set to 0.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn zeroes256() -> __m256i {
    _mm256_set1_epi8(0)
}

/// Returns a 128-bit vector with all bits set to 1.
#[target_feature(enable = "sse2")]
pub unsafe fn ones128() -> __m128i {
    _mm_set1_epi8(0xFF as u8 as i8)
}

/// Returns a 256-bit vector with all bits set to 1.
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
pub unsafe fn ones256() -> __m256i {
    _mm256_set1_epi8(0xFF as u8 as i8)
}