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  • gcc - How is -march different from -mtune? - Stack Overflow
    -march=foo implies -mtune=foo unless you also specify a different -mtune This is one reason why using -march is better than just enabling options like -mavx without doing anything about tuning Caveat: -march=native on a CPU that GCC doesn't specifically recognize will still enable new instruction sets that GCC can detect, but will leave -mtune=generic Use a new enough GCC that knows about
  • Why is -march=native not enabled by default by compilers IDEs?
    For -O0, whether -march=native or -march=<generic> is the default still specifies the same family, so both are perfectly compatibly with -O0; and whenever another optimization level is specified, -march=native is beneficial to performance So, for me, the fact that -O0 is the default doesn't matter for -march 's default
  • What are reasons for -march=native to be detrimental
    7 There are plenty of reasons why a code can be slower with -march=native, although this is quite exceptional That being said, in your specific context, one possible scenario is the use of slower SIMD instructions, or more precisely different SIMD instructions finally making the program slower
  • What is the default for gcc -march option? - Stack Overflow
    There is no `-march=generic' option because `-march' indicates the instruction set the compiler can use, and there is no generic instruction set applicable to all processors In contrast, `-mtune' indicates the processor (or, in this case, collection of processors) for which the code is optimized
  • what is march parameter when compile a c file - Stack Overflow
    I saw these two kinds of make parameters: make -march=corei7-avx xxxx xxxx make -march-icelake-server xxxx xxx arch is understood, what's the m meaning? Where can I find which arch can be used
  • -march=haswell vs -march=core-avx2 vs -mavx2 - Stack Overflow
    What are the differences and tradeoffs between -march=haswell, -march=core-avx2, and -mavx2 for compiling avx2 intrinsics? I know that -mavx2 is a flag and -march=haswell core-avx2 are architectures which just translate to a bunch of flags So -mavx2 is a subset of the other two But beyond that, how do I choose the right one for my application?
  • gcc: Differences between -march=native and -march= lt;specific arch gt;
    As I understand it, -march=native will detect the ISA and extensions to use from cpuid (which include model, family and stepping information) -march=xxx will use a baseline set of extensions and a baseline ISA There are a lot of possible combinations of extensions, so only the most relevant were chosen (e g skylake-avx512 was added to reflect an important extension of some skylakes) -march
  • What are my available march mtune options? - Stack Overflow
    Is there a way to get gcc to output the available -march=arch options? I'm getting build errors (tried -march=x86_64) and I don't know what my options are The compiler I'm using is a proprietary




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