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Home/ Questions/Q 7847747
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 2, 20262026-06-02T17:59:36+00:00 2026-06-02T17:59:36+00:00

In my application, at one point I need to perform calculations on a large

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In my application, at one point I need to perform calculations on a large contiguous block of memory data (100s of MBs). What I was thinking was to keep prefetching the part of the block my program will touch in future, so that when I perform calculations on that portion, the data is already in the cache.

Can someone give me a simple example of how to achieve this with gcc? I read _mm_prefetch somewhere, but don’t know how to properly use it. Also note that I have a multicore system, but each core will be working on a different region of memory in parallel.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-02T17:59:38+00:00Added an answer on June 2, 2026 at 5:59 pm

    gcc uses builtin functions as an interface for lowlevel instructions. In particular for your case __builtin_prefetch. But you only should see a measurable difference when using this in cases where the access pattern is not easy to predict automatically.

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