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How can I check if my installed version of numpy is compiled with SSE/SSE2 instruction set? I know that some parts of numpy is using BLAS, how to check BLAS too?

3 Answers 3

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I think that one way is to use objdump on a numpy.so file if you are under linux, and grep for instruction that are specific to sse.

for SSE3 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE3) :

objdump -d  /usr/lib/pyshared/python2.7/numpy/core/*.so | grep -i MOVDDUP

for SSE2 (http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeu_d%27instructions_x86#Instructions_SSE2) :

objdump -d  /usr/lib/pyshared/python2.7/numpy/core/*.so | grep -i ADDPD

if you get some results with the grep it means that the binary has been compiled with the SSE flags.

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  • 1
    In my system (derivative of Ubuntu 14.04), those files are /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy/core/*.so . May 9, 2016 at 15:35
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    To find your numpy location : python3 -c "import numpy; print(numpy.__file__)"
    – RedEyed
    Dec 2, 2017 at 12:34
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    Checking against a single instruction from an instruction set is not very robust. Moreover, this will match against AVX instructions VADDPD and VMOVDDUP. I improved your solution in my answer. Mar 11, 2018 at 14:37
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Take a look at:

import numpy.distutils.system_info as sysinfo
sysinfo.show_all()

This will print out all of the information about what numpy was compiled against.

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  • This does not answer the question, as it does not check for any dependency depending on it recursively.
    – TimZaman
    Feb 22, 2017 at 12:06
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First, find the path of numpy/core .so files:

python -c "import numpy, os; print (os.path.join(os.path.dirname(numpy.__file__), 'core/*.so'))"
#  Output:  /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy/core/*.so 

Then decompile numpy's core to file numpy.asm:

objdump -d /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy/core/*.so > numpy.asm

Then find all SSE instructions:

gawk 'BEGIN { IGNORECASE = 1 } /\<(ADDPS|ADDSS|ANDNPS|ANDPS|CMPPS|CMPSS|COMISS|CVTPI2PS|CVTPS2PI|CVTSI2SS|CVTSS2S|CVTTPS2PI|CVTTSS2SI|DIVPS|DIVSS|LDMXCSR|MAXPS|MAXSS|MINPS|MINSS|MOVAPS|MOVHLPS|MOVHPS|MOVLHPS|MOVLPS|MOVMSKPS|MOVNTPS|MOVSS|MOVUPS|MULPS|MULSS|ORPS|RCPPS|RCPSS|RSQRTPS|RSQRTSS|SHUFPS|SQRTPS|SQRTSS|STMXCSR|SUBPS|SUBSS|UCOMISS|UNPCKHPS|UNPCKLPS|XORPS|PAVGB|PAVGW|PEXTRW|PINSRW|PMAXSW|PMAXUB|PMINSW|PMINUB|PMOVMSKB|PSADBW|PSHUFW)\>/' numpy.asm

Find all SSE2 instructions (except MOVSD and CMPSD, which were first introduced in 80386):

gawk 'BEGIN { IGNORECASE = 1 } /\<(ADDPD|ADDSD|ANDNPD|ANDPD|CMPPD|COMISD|CVTDQ2PD|CVTDQ2PS|CVTPD2DQ|CVTPD2PI|CVTPD2PS|CVTPI2PD|CVTPS2DQ|CVTPS2PD|CVTSD2SI|CVTSD2SS|CVTSI2SD|CVTSS2SD|CVTTPD2DQ|CVTTPD2PI|CVTPS2DQ|CVTTSD2SI|DIVPD|DIVSD|MAXPD|MAXSD|MINPD|MINSD|MOVAPD|MOVHPD|MOVLPD|MOVMSKPD|MOVUPD|MULPD|MULSD|ORPD|SHUFPD|SQRTPD|SQRTSD|SUBPD|SUBSD|UCOMISD|UNPCKHPD|UNPCKLPD|XORPD|MOVDQ2Q|MOVDQA|MOVDQU|MOVQ2DQ|PADDQ|PMULUDQ|PSHUFHW|PSHUFLW|PSHUFD|PSLLDQ|PSRLDQ|PUNPCKHQDQ|PUNPCKLQDQ)\>/' numpy.asm

Find all SSE3 instructions:

gawk 'BEGIN { IGNORECASE = 1 } /\<(ADDSUBPD|ADDSUBPS|HADDPD|HADDPS|HSUBPD|HSUBPS|MOVDDUP|MOVSHDUP|MOVSLDUP|LDDQU|FISTTP)\>/' numpy.asm

Find all SSSE3 instructions:

gawk 'BEGIN { IGNORECASE = 1 } /\<(PSIGNW|PSIGND|PSIGNB|PSHUFB|PMULHRSW|PMADDUBSW|PHSUBW|PHSUBSW|PHSUBD|PHADDW|PHADDSW|PHADDD|PALIGNR|PABSW|PABSD|PABSB)\>/' numpy.asm

Find all SSE4 instructions:

gawk 'BEGIN { IGNORECASE = 1 } /\<(MPSADBW|PHMINPOSUW|PMULLD|PMULDQ|DPPS|DPPD|BLENDPS|BLENDPD|BLENDVPS|BLENDVPD|PBLENDVB|PBLENDDW|PMINSB|PMAXSB|PMINUW|PMAXUW|PMINUD|PMAXUD|PMINSD|PMAXSD|ROUNDPS|ROUNDSS|ROUNDPD|ROUNDSD|INSERTPS|PINSRB|PINSRD|PINSRQ|EXTRACTPS|PEXTRB|PEXTRD|PEXTRW|PEXTRQ|PMOVSXBW|PMOVZXBW|PMOVSXBD|PMOVZXBD|PMOVSXBQ|PMOVZXBQ|PMOVSXWD|PMOVZXWD|PMOVSXWQ|PMOVZXWQ|PMOVSXDQ|PMOVZXDQ|PTEST|PCMPEQQ|PCMPGTQ|PACKUSDW|PCMPESTRI|PCMPESTRM|PCMPISTRI|PCMPISTRM|CRC32|POPCNT|MOVNTDQA|EXTRQ|INSERTQ|MOVNTSD|MOVNTSS|LZCNT)\>/' numpy.asm
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    Searching for scalar SSE/SSE2 instructions is not very interesting. It's somewhat better than x87, but the real gains come from SIMD addps, not scalar addss. And BTW, to check for AVX, search for %ymm to find uses of 256-bit vector registers. Mar 12, 2018 at 1:47
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    Also, why gawk instead of egrep -i, or fgrep with a list of patterns from a file? And BTW, objdump -d always uses lower-case mnemonics. Mar 12, 2018 at 1:50
  • @PeterCordes, no special reason. You can use other tools. Good to know about objdump. Mar 12, 2018 at 2:02
  • use otool -tv instead of objdump -d on macOS
    – abey
    Oct 14, 2019 at 15:06

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