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authorGlauber de Oliveira Costa <gcosta@redhat.com>2008-01-30 13:32:05 +0100
committerIngo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>2008-01-30 13:32:05 +0100
commita4746364da0c7caa155cc945a5c10312e7925b46 (patch)
tree0ebcd0f8457d607699bfea555bf5a30ddcc1cf5e /include
parentb1df07bd6674a84fbd9248759dc3fa3ff5c78e5b (diff)
x86: adjust PVOP_CALL/VCALL macros for 64-bit
This patch adjust the PVOP_VCALL and PVOP_CALL macros to work with x86_64. It has a different calling convention, and we use auxiliary macros to account for both calling conventions as cleanly as possible Comments are adjusted accordingly. Signed-off-by: Glauber de Oliveira Costa <gcosta@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r--include/asm-x86/paravirt.h87
1 files changed, 65 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/include/asm-x86/paravirt.h b/include/asm-x86/paravirt.h
index 24406703007..bef93277266 100644
--- a/include/asm-x86/paravirt.h
+++ b/include/asm-x86/paravirt.h
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@ int paravirt_disable_iospace(void);
* runtime.
*
* Normally, a call to a pv_op function is a simple indirect call:
- * (paravirt_ops.operations)(args...).
+ * (pv_op_struct.operations)(args...).
*
* Unfortunately, this is a relatively slow operation for modern CPUs,
* because it cannot necessarily determine what the destination
@@ -330,11 +330,17 @@ int paravirt_disable_iospace(void);
* calls are essentially free, because the call and return addresses
* are completely predictable.)
*
- * These macros rely on the standard gcc "regparm(3)" calling
+ * For i386, these macros rely on the standard gcc "regparm(3)" calling
* convention, in which the first three arguments are placed in %eax,
* %edx, %ecx (in that order), and the remaining arguments are placed
* on the stack. All caller-save registers (eax,edx,ecx) are expected
* to be modified (either clobbered or used for return values).
+ * X86_64, on the other hand, already specifies a register-based calling
+ * conventions, returning at %rax, with parameteres going on %rdi, %rsi,
+ * %rdx, and %rcx. Note that for this reason, x86_64 does not need any
+ * special handling for dealing with 4 arguments, unlike i386.
+ * However, x86_64 also have to clobber all caller saved registers, which
+ * unfortunately, are quite a bit (r8 - r11)
*
* The call instruction itself is marked by placing its start address
* and size into the .parainstructions section, so that
@@ -357,10 +363,12 @@ int paravirt_disable_iospace(void);
* the return type. The macro then uses sizeof() on that type to
* determine whether its a 32 or 64 bit value, and places the return
* in the right register(s) (just %eax for 32-bit, and %edx:%eax for
- * 64-bit).
+ * 64-bit). For x86_64 machines, it just returns at %rax regardless of
+ * the return value size.
*
* 64-bit arguments are passed as a pair of adjacent 32-bit arguments
- * in low,high order.
+ * i386 also passes 64-bit arguments as a pair of adjacent 32-bit arguments
+ * in low,high order
*
* Small structures are passed and returned in registers. The macro
* calling convention can't directly deal with this, so the wrapper
@@ -370,46 +378,67 @@ int paravirt_disable_iospace(void);
* means that all uses must be wrapped in inline functions. This also
* makes sure the incoming and outgoing types are always correct.
*/
+#ifdef CONFIG_X86_32
+#define PVOP_VCALL_ARGS unsigned long __eax, __edx, __ecx
+#define PVOP_CALL_ARGS PVOP_VCALL_ARGS
+#define PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx), \
+ "=c" (__ecx)
+#define PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS
+#define EXTRA_CLOBBERS
+#define VEXTRA_CLOBBERS
+#else
+#define PVOP_VCALL_ARGS unsigned long __edi, __esi, __edx, __ecx
+#define PVOP_CALL_ARGS PVOP_VCALL_ARGS, __eax
+#define PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS "=D" (__edi), \
+ "=S" (__esi), "=d" (__edx), \
+ "=c" (__ecx)
+
+#define PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS, "=a" (__eax)
+
+#define EXTRA_CLOBBERS , "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11"
+#define VEXTRA_CLOBBERS , "rax", "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11"
+#endif
+
#define __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \
({ \
rettype __ret; \
- unsigned long __eax, __edx, __ecx; \
+ PVOP_CALL_ARGS; \
+ /* This is 32-bit specific, but is okay in 64-bit */ \
+ /* since this condition will never hold */ \
if (sizeof(rettype) > sizeof(unsigned long)) { \
asm volatile(pre \
paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \
post \
- : "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx), \
- "=c" (__ecx) \
+ : PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS \
: paravirt_type(op), \
paravirt_clobber(CLBR_ANY), \
##__VA_ARGS__ \
- : "memory", "cc"); \
+ : "memory", "cc" EXTRA_CLOBBERS); \
__ret = (rettype)((((u64)__edx) << 32) | __eax); \
} else { \
asm volatile(pre \
paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \
post \
- : "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx), \
- "=c" (__ecx) \
+ : PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS \
: paravirt_type(op), \
paravirt_clobber(CLBR_ANY), \
##__VA_ARGS__ \
- : "memory", "cc"); \
+ : "memory", "cc" EXTRA_CLOBBERS); \
__ret = (rettype)__eax; \
} \
__ret; \
})
#define __PVOP_VCALL(op, pre, post, ...) \
({ \
- unsigned long __eax, __edx, __ecx; \
+ PVOP_VCALL_ARGS; \
asm volatile(pre \
paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \
post \
- : "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx), "=c" (__ecx) \
+ : PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS \
: paravirt_type(op), \
paravirt_clobber(CLBR_ANY), \
##__VA_ARGS__ \
- : "memory", "cc"); \
+ : "memory", "cc" VEXTRA_CLOBBERS); \
})
#define PVOP_CALL0(rettype, op) \
@@ -418,22 +447,26 @@ int paravirt_disable_iospace(void);
__PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "")
#define PVOP_CALL1(rettype, op, arg1) \
- __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((u32)(arg1)))
+ __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)))
#define PVOP_VCALL1(op, arg1) \
- __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((u32)(arg1)))
+ __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)))
#define PVOP_CALL2(rettype, op, arg1, arg2) \
- __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((u32)(arg1)), "1" ((u32)(arg2)))
+ __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)), \
+ "1" ((unsigned long)(arg2)))
#define PVOP_VCALL2(op, arg1, arg2) \
- __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((u32)(arg1)), "1" ((u32)(arg2)))
+ __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)), \
+ "1" ((unsigned long)(arg2)))
#define PVOP_CALL3(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3) \
- __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((u32)(arg1)), \
- "1"((u32)(arg2)), "2"((u32)(arg3)))
+ __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)), \
+ "1"((unsigned long)(arg2)), "2"((unsigned long)(arg3)))
#define PVOP_VCALL3(op, arg1, arg2, arg3) \
- __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((u32)(arg1)), "1"((u32)(arg2)), \
- "2"((u32)(arg3)))
+ __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)), \
+ "1"((unsigned long)(arg2)), "2"((unsigned long)(arg3)))
+/* This is the only difference in x86_64. We can make it much simpler */
+#ifdef CONFIG_X86_32
#define PVOP_CALL4(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \
__PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, \
"push %[_arg4];", "lea 4(%%esp),%%esp;", \
@@ -444,6 +477,16 @@ int paravirt_disable_iospace(void);
"push %[_arg4];", "lea 4(%%esp),%%esp;", \
"0" ((u32)(arg1)), "1" ((u32)(arg2)), \
"2" ((u32)(arg3)), [_arg4] "mr" ((u32)(arg4)))
+#else
+#define PVOP_CALL4(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \
+ __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)), \
+ "1"((unsigned long)(arg2)), "2"((unsigned long)(arg3)), \
+ "3"((unsigned long)(arg4)))
+#define PVOP_VCALL4(op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \
+ __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", "0" ((unsigned long)(arg1)), \
+ "1"((unsigned long)(arg2)), "2"((unsigned long)(arg3)), \
+ "3"((unsigned long)(arg4)))
+#endif
static inline int paravirt_enabled(void)
{