Recently, I asked a question on Stack Overflow about the implementation details of Last-Level Cache found in today's typical mainstream GPUs made by Intel, AMD, and Nvidia - "Which GPU architectures have Persistent Last-Level Cache Across Kernel Launches?" - Knowing the answer would be helpful for optimizing cache temporal locality of GPU kernels. In the question, I explained my motivation, cited existing answers and references (and showed they were all unclear), and finally asked my question.
The question remained unanswered for a while. Several weeks later, Robert Crovella - an experienced GPGPU developer at Nvidia - helpfully answered the question and even demonstrated it with some example code using hardware performance counters. Although it's specific to Nvidia GPUs only, but I considered it good enough and accepted the answer. So far, so good. Several months later, answer expert on SO, Greg Smith, also answered this question with some additional information. Since this new answer bumped the question back to the SO home page, the question attracted renewed attention... What happened next is a truly an O. Henry-style ending, it was soon closed after being voted as "off-topic", because "This question is not about programming or software development."
Since I've already received a satisfactory answer, I'm not particularly concerned about reopening it. But I find this response is baffling and confusing. Although I'm not active on Stack Overflow (and more active on EE.SE), I've been reading and writing on various Stack Exchange sites for over a decade, and I personally I believe I'm pretty familiar with the norms here, and I know that some questions (including some of my own) are not the best fits for Stack Overflow. But of all possible questions that can be considered off-topic, the least likely one would be a micro-optimization question. It comes as bizarre to me: On Stack Overflow, there are pages after pages of questions on the implementation details of mainstream CPUs. Some random examples include:
Size of store buffers on Intel hardware? What exactly is a store buffer?
What are the complete sources of L3 misses which aren't counted by the cache-miss event on Skylake?
Which cache mapping technique is used in intel core i7 processor?
How do the store buffer and Line Fill Buffer interact with each other?
How hardware thread-level-speculation supported in modern cpus?
I've personally learned a lot about CPU micro-architectures just by reading the related tags and sorting them by upvotes, and quite a few SO personalities are known for answering questions based on their extreme knowledge on hardware implementation details.
In my opinion, my question is fundamentally not different from the hundreds, if not thousands, of questions on hardware and micro-optimization questions (if I must find a difference, I'd say that it's about GPUs, so it's a niche even more arcane than CPU optimizations). A few other observers also pointed it out in the comment section, but they have been removed after a further review found the question remains an off-topic one.
It suggests a few possibilities:
My question was fundamentally on topic, but it was just poorly worded. It's possibly on topic if the question can be rephrased to ask "Do Mainstream GPU architectures (Intel, AMD, Nvidia) have Persistent Last-Level Cache Across Kernel Launches?" instead of "Which GPU architectures" have them.
Only CPU performance characteristics are considered legitimate, not GPUs, because SO has many CPU gurus but few GPU gurus - If one wants to learn how Intel Skylake works, SO is the right place. But not if you want to learn about AMD GCN or Nvidia Ampere.
All hardware performance characteristics questions are arguably off-topic, but SO has many influential CPU gurus, so they get a pass.
I hope the answer is as simple as No. 1. Otherwise I would consider this a rather strange and alarming situation.