Skip to content

dmitry-t/NativeJIT

 
 

Repository files navigation

Build status Build status

NativeJIT

NativeJIT is an open-source cross-platform library for high-performance just-in-time compilation of expressions involving C data structures. The compiler is light weight and fast and it takes no dependencies beyond the standard C++ runtime. It runs on Linux, OSX, and Windows. The generated code is optimized with particular attention paid to register allocation.

The compiler was developed by the Bing team for use in the Bing search engine. One important use is scoring documents containing keywords that match a user's query. The scoring process attempts to gauge how well each document matches the user's intent, and as such, depends on the specifics of how each query was phrased. Bing formulates a custom expression for each query and then uses NativeJIT to compile the expression into x64 code that will be run on a large set of candidate documents spread across a cluster of machines.

We knew from the get go that throughput and latency would be essential when processing queries at scale, so we put a lot of effort in to making NativeJIT run fast.

Our design point was scenarios where

  • The expression isn't known until runtime.
  • The expression will be evaluated enough times to amortize the cost of compilation.
  • Latency and throughput demands require low cost for compilation.

Here's trivial "Hello, world" level example that computes the area of a circle:

#include "NativeJIT/CodeGen/ExecutionBuffer.h"
#include "NativeJIT/CodeGen/FunctionBuffer.h"
#include "NativeJIT/Function.h"
#include "Temporary/Allocator.h"

#include <iostream>

using NativeJIT::Allocator;
using NativeJIT::ExecutionBuffer;
using NativeJIT::Function;
using NativeJIT::FunctionBuffer;

int main()
{
    // Create allocator and buffers for pre-compiled and post-compiled code.
    ExecutionBuffer codeAllocator(8192);
    Allocator allocator(8192);
    FunctionBuffer code(codeAllocator, 8192);

    // Create the factory for expression nodes.
    // Our area expression will take a single float parameter and return a float.
    Function<float, float> expression(allocator, code);

    // Multiply input parameter by itself to get radius squared.
    auto & rsquared = expression.Mul(expression.GetP1(), expression.GetP1());

    // Multiply by PI.
    const float  PI = 3.14159265358979f;
    auto & area = expression.Mul(rsquared, expression.Immediate(PI));

    // Compile expression into a function.
    auto function = expression.Compile(area);

    // Now run our expression!
    float radius = 2.0;
    std::cout << "The area of a circle with radius " << radius
              << " is " << function(radius);

    return 0;
}

Here is the generated assembly code on Windows:

PI_CONSTANT:
   db 0f 49 40                              ; PI constant is stored in memory.
ENTRY_POINT:
  sub         rsp,8                         ; Standard function prologue.
  mov         qword ptr [rsp],rbp           ; Standard function prologue.
  lea         rbp,[rsp+8]                   ; Standard function prologue.
  mulss       xmm0,xmm0                     ; Multiply by radius parameter by itself.
  mulss       xmm0,dword ptr [29E2A580000h] ; Multiply by PI.
  mov         rbp,qword ptr [rsp]           ; Standard function epilogue.
  add         rsp,8                         ; Standard function epilogue.

This example shows an expression that multiplies a number by itself. We also support a wide variety of arithmetic and logical operations, pointer and array operations, conditionals, accessing structure fields, and calling out to C functions. See our preliminary API docs for more information and the Examples/ directory for more examples.

Dependencies

In order to build NativeJIT you will need CMake (2.8.11+), and a modern C++ compiler (gcc 5+, clang 3.4+, or VC 2015+). You can run CMake directly to generate the appropriate build setup for your platform. Alternately, we have some scripts that have the defaults that we use available.

*nix

For *nix platforms (including OS X),

./Configure_Make.sh
cd build-make
make
make test

Ubuntu

If you're on Ubuntu 15+, you can install dependencies with:

sudo apt-get install clang cmake

On Ubuntu 14 and below, you'll need to install a newer version of CMake. To install a new-enough CMake, see this link. If you're using gcc, you'll also need to make sure you have gcc-5 (sudo apt-get install g++-5).

To override the default compiler, set the CXX and CC environment variables. For example, if you have clang-3.8 installed as clang-3.8 and are using bash:

export CXX="clang++-3.8"
export CC="clang-3.8"

OS X

Install XCode and then run the following command to install required packages using Homebrew (http://brew.sh/):

brew install cmake

NativeJIT can be built on OS X using either standard *nix makefiles or XCode. In order to generate and build makefiles, in the root NativeJIT directory run:

If you want to create an Xcode project instead of using Makefiles, run:

./Configure_XCode.sh

Windows

Install the following tools:

You can get the free version of Visual Studio here. Note that if you're installing Visual Studio for the first time and select the default install options, you won't get a C++ compiler. To force the install of the C++ compiler, you need to either create a new C++ project or open an existing C++ project.

In order to configure solution for Visual Studio 2015 run the following commands from the root NativeJIT directory:

.\Configure_MSVC.bat

From now on you can use the generated solution build-msvc\NativeJIT.sln from Visual Studio or build from command line using cmake.

About

A C++ expression -> x64 JIT

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C++ 89.1%
  • Python 5.4%
  • Assembly 3.7%
  • CMake 0.5%
  • Shell 0.4%
  • Makefile 0.3%
  • Other 0.6%