Load-Dependent Branches (LDB) often do not exhibit regular patterns in their local or global history and thus are inherently hard to predict correctly by conventional branch predictors. We propose a software-to-hardware branch pre-resolution mechanism that allows software to pass branch outcomes to the processor frontend ahead of fetching the branch instruction. A compiler pass identifies the instruction chain leading to the branch (the branch backslice) and generates the pre-execute code that produces the branch outcomes ahead of the frontend observing them. The loop structure helps to unambiguously map the branch outcomes to their corresponding dynamic instances of the branch instruction. Our approach also allows for covering the loop iteration space selectively, with arbitrarily complex patterns. Our method for pre-execution enables important optimizations such as unrolling and vectorization, in order to substantially reduce the pre-execution overhead. Experimental results on select workloads from SPEC CPU 2017 and graph analytics workloads show up to 95% reduction of MPKI (21% on average), up to 39% speedup (7% on average), and up to 3x improvement on IPC (23% on average) compared to a core with TAGE-SC-L-64KB branch predictor.
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