Both loops are infinite, but we can see which one takes more instructions/resources per iteration.
Using gcc, I compiled the two following programs to assembly at varying levels of optimization:
int main(void) {
while(1) {}
return 0;
}
int main(void) {
while(2) {}
return 0;
}
Even with no optimizations (-O0
), the generated assembly was identical for both programs. Therefore, there is no speed difference between the two loops.
For reference, here is the generated assembly (using gcc main.c -S -masm=intel
with an optimization flag):
With -O0
:
.file "main.c"
.intel_syntax noprefix
.def __main; .scl 2; .type 32; .endef
.text
.globl main
.def main; .scl 2; .type 32; .endef
.seh_proc main
main:
push rbp
.seh_pushreg rbp
mov rbp, rsp
.seh_setframe rbp, 0
sub rsp, 32
.seh_stackalloc 32
.seh_endprologue
call __main
.L2:
jmp .L2
.seh_endproc
.ident "GCC: (tdm64-2) 4.8.1"
With -O1
:
.file "main.c"
.intel_syntax noprefix
.def __main; .scl 2; .type 32; .endef
.text
.globl main
.def main; .scl 2; .type 32; .endef
.seh_proc main
main:
sub rsp, 40
.seh_stackalloc 40
.seh_endprologue
call __main
.L2:
jmp .L2
.seh_endproc
.ident "GCC: (tdm64-2) 4.8.1"
With -O2
and -O3
(same output):
.file "main.c"
.intel_syntax noprefix
.def __main; .scl 2; .type 32; .endef
.section .text.startup,"x"
.p2align 4,,15
.globl main
.def main; .scl 2; .type 32; .endef
.seh_proc main
main:
sub rsp, 40
.seh_stackalloc 40
.seh_endprologue
call __main
.L2:
jmp .L2
.seh_endproc
.ident "GCC: (tdm64-2) 4.8.1"
In fact, the assembly generated for the loop is identical for every level of optimization:
.L2:
jmp .L2
.seh_endproc
.ident "GCC: (tdm64-2) 4.8.1"
The important bits being:
.L2:
jmp .L2
I can't read assembly very well, but this is obviously an unconditional loop. The jmp
instruction unconditionally resets the program back to the .L2
label without even comparing a value against true, and of course immediately does so again until the program is somehow ended. This directly corresponds to the C/C++ code:
L2:
goto L2;
Edit:
Interestingly enough, even with no optimizations, the following loops all produced the exact same output (unconditional jmp
) in assembly:
while(42) {}
while(1==1) {}
while(2==2) {}
while(4<7) {}
while(3==3 && 4==4) {}
while(8-9 < 0) {}
while(4.3 * 3e4 >= 2 << 6) {}
while(-0.1 + 02) {}
And even to my amazement:
#include<math.h>
while(sqrt(7)) {}
while(hypot(3,4)) {}
Things get a little more interesting with user-defined functions:
int x(void) {
return 1;
}
while(x()) {}
#include<math.h>
double x(void) {
return sqrt(7);
}
while(x()) {}
At -O0
, these two examples actually call x
and perform a comparison for each iteration.
First example (returning 1):
.L4:
call x
testl %eax, %eax
jne .L4
movl $0, %eax
addq $32, %rsp
popq %rbp
ret
.seh_endproc
.ident "GCC: (tdm64-2) 4.8.1"
Second example (returning sqrt(7)
):
.L4:
call x
xorpd %xmm1, %xmm1
ucomisd %xmm1, %xmm0
jp .L4
xorpd %xmm1, %xmm1
ucomisd %xmm1, %xmm0
jne .L4
movl $0, %eax
addq $32, %rsp
popq %rbp
ret
.seh_endproc
.ident "GCC: (tdm64-2) 4.8.1"
However, at -O1
and above, they both produce the same assembly as the previous examples (an unconditional jmp
back to the preceding label).
TL;DR
Under GCC, the different loops are compiled to identical assembly. The compiler evaluates the constant values and doesn't bother performing any actual comparison.
The moral of the story is:
- There exists a layer of translation between C++ source code and CPU instructions, and this layer has important implications for performance.
- Therefore, performance cannot be evaluated by only looking at source code.
- The compiler should be smart enough to optimize such trivial cases. Programmers should not waste their time thinking about them in the vast majority of cases.