[PATCH v2] arm64: KVM: Save four instructions in __guest_enter/exit()

Marc Zyngier marc.zyngier at arm.com
Tue Aug 30 03:54:30 PDT 2016


On 30/08/16 10:55, Christoffer Dall wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 10:51:14PM -0500, Shanker Donthineni wrote:
>> We are doing an unnecessary stack push/pop operation when restoring
>> the guest registers x0-x18 in __guest_enter(). This patch saves the
>> two instructions by using x18 as a base register. No need to store
>> the vcpu context pointer in stack because it is redundant, the same
>> information is available in tpidr_el2. The function __guest_exit()
>> prototype is simplified and caller pushes the regs x0-x1 to stack
>> instead of regs x0-x3.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Shanker Donthineni <shankerd at codeaurora.org>
> 
> This looks reasonable to me:
> 
> Reviewed-by: Christoffer Dall <christoffer.dall at linaro.org>
> 
> Unless Marc has any insight into this having a negative effect on ARM
> CPUs, I'll go ahead an merge this.

I've given it a go on Seattle, and couldn't observe any difference with
the original code, which is pretty good news!

I have some comments below, though:

> 
> -Christoffer
> 
>> ---
>> Changes since v1:
>>   Incorporated Cristoffer suggestions.
>>   __guest_exit prototype is changed to 'void __guest_exit(u64 reason, struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu)'.
>>
>>  arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/entry.S     | 101 +++++++++++++++++++++--------------------
>>  arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/hyp-entry.S |  11 +++--
>>  2 files changed, 57 insertions(+), 55 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/entry.S b/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/entry.S
>> index ce9e5e5..f70489a 100644
>> --- a/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/entry.S
>> +++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/entry.S
>> @@ -55,75 +55,76 @@
>>   */
>>  ENTRY(__guest_enter)
>>  	// x0: vcpu
>> -	// x1: host/guest context
>> -	// x2-x18: clobbered by macros
>> +	// x1: host context
>> +	// x2-x17: clobbered by macros
>> +	// x18: guest context
>>  
>>  	// Store the host regs
>>  	save_callee_saved_regs x1
>>  
>> -	// Preserve vcpu & host_ctxt for use at exit time
>> -	stp	x0, x1, [sp, #-16]!
>> +	// Store the host_ctxt for use at exit time
>> +	str	x1, [sp, #-16]!
>>  
>> -	add	x1, x0, #VCPU_CONTEXT
>> +	add	x18, x0, #VCPU_CONTEXT
>>  
>> -	// Prepare x0-x1 for later restore by pushing them onto the stack
>> -	ldp	x2, x3, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(0)]
>> -	stp	x2, x3, [sp, #-16]!
>> +	// Restore guest regs x0-x17
>> +	ldp	x0, x1,   [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(0)]
>> +	ldp	x2, x3,   [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(2)]
>> +	ldp	x4, x5,   [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(4)]
>> +	ldp	x6, x7,   [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(6)]
>> +	ldp	x8, x9,   [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(8)]
>> +	ldp	x10, x11, [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(10)]
>> +	ldp	x12, x13, [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(12)]
>> +	ldp	x14, x15, [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(14)]
>> +	ldp	x16, x17, [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(16)]
>>  
>> -	// x2-x18
>> -	ldp	x2, x3,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(2)]
>> -	ldp	x4, x5,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(4)]
>> -	ldp	x6, x7,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(6)]
>> -	ldp	x8, x9,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(8)]
>> -	ldp	x10, x11, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(10)]
>> -	ldp	x12, x13, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(12)]
>> -	ldp	x14, x15, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(14)]
>> -	ldp	x16, x17, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(16)]
>> -	ldr	x18,      [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(18)]
>> +	// Restore guest regs x19-x29, lr
>> +	restore_callee_saved_regs x18
>>  
>> -	// x19-x29, lr
>> -	restore_callee_saved_regs x1
>> -
>> -	// Last bits of the 64bit state
>> -	ldp	x0, x1, [sp], #16
>> +	// Restore guest reg x18
>> +	ldr	x18,      [x18, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(18)]
>>  
>>  	// Do not touch any register after this!
>>  	eret
>>  ENDPROC(__guest_enter)
>>  
>> +/*
>> + * void __guest_exit(u64 exit_reason, struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu);
>> + */

I'm not sure this comment makes much sense as it stands. This is not a C
function by any stretch of the imagination, but the continuation of
__guest_enter. The calling convention is not the C one at all (see how
the stack is involved), and caller-saved registers are going to be
clobbered.

>>  ENTRY(__guest_exit)
>> -	// x0: vcpu
>> -	// x1: return code
>> -	// x2-x3: free
>> -	// x4-x29,lr: vcpu regs
>> -	// vcpu x0-x3 on the stack
>> -
>> -	add	x2, x0, #VCPU_CONTEXT
>> -
>> -	stp	x4, x5,   [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(4)]
>> -	stp	x6, x7,   [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(6)]
>> -	stp	x8, x9,   [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(8)]
>> -	stp	x10, x11, [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(10)]
>> -	stp	x12, x13, [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(12)]
>> -	stp	x14, x15, [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(14)]
>> -	stp	x16, x17, [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(16)]
>> -	str	x18,      [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(18)]
>> -
>> -	ldp	x6, x7, [sp], #16	// x2, x3
>> -	ldp	x4, x5, [sp], #16	// x0, x1
>> -
>> -	stp	x4, x5, [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(0)]
>> -	stp	x6, x7, [x2, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(2)]
>> +	// x0: return code
>> +	// x1: vcpu
>> +	// x2-x29,lr: vcpu regs
>> +	// vcpu x0-x1 on the stack
>> +
>> +	add	x1, x1, #VCPU_CONTEXT
>> +
>> +	// Store the guest regs x2 and x3
>> +	stp	x2, x3,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(2)]
>> +
>> +	// Retrieve the guest regs x0-x1 from the stack
>> +	ldp	x2, x3, [sp], #16	// x0, x1
>> +
>> +	// Store the guest regs x0-x1 and x4-x18
>> +	stp	x2, x3,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(0)]
>> +	stp	x4, x5,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(4)]
>> +	stp	x6, x7,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(6)]
>> +	stp	x8, x9,   [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(8)]
>> +	stp	x10, x11, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(10)]
>> +	stp	x12, x13, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(12)]
>> +	stp	x14, x15, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(14)]
>> +	stp	x16, x17, [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(16)]
>> +	str	x18,      [x1, #CPU_XREG_OFFSET(18)]
>> +
>> +	// Store the guest regs x19-x29, lr
>> +	save_callee_saved_regs x1
>>  
>> -	save_callee_saved_regs x2
>> +	// Restore the host_ctxt from the stack
>> +	ldr	x2, [sp], #16
>>  
>> -	// Restore vcpu & host_ctxt from the stack
>> -	// (preserving return code in x1)
>> -	ldp	x0, x2, [sp], #16
>>  	// Now restore the host regs
>>  	restore_callee_saved_regs x2
>>  
>> -	mov	x0, x1
>>  	ret
>>  ENDPROC(__guest_exit)
>>  
>> diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/hyp-entry.S b/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/hyp-entry.S
>> index f6d9694..06e8b3b 100644
>> --- a/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/hyp-entry.S
>> +++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/hyp/hyp-entry.S
>> @@ -121,14 +121,15 @@ el1_trap:
>>  	cmp	x2, #ESR_ELx_EC_FP_ASIMD
>>  	b.eq	__fpsimd_guest_restore
>>  
>> -	mrs	x0, tpidr_el2
>> -	mov	x1, #ARM_EXCEPTION_TRAP
>> +	ldp     x2, x3, [sp], #16
>> +	mrs	x1, tpidr_el2
>> +	mov	x0, #ARM_EXCEPTION_TRAP
>>  	b	__guest_exit
>>  
>>  el1_irq:
>> -	save_x0_to_x3

So the save_x0_to_x3 macro now only has one single user (and so does
restore_x0_to_x3).  Should we consider inline it?

>> -	mrs	x0, tpidr_el2
>> -	mov	x1, #ARM_EXCEPTION_IRQ
>> +	stp     x0, x1, [sp, #-16]!
>> +	mrs	x1, tpidr_el2
>> +	mov	x0, #ARM_EXCEPTION_IRQ
>>  	b	__guest_exit
>>  
>>  ENTRY(__hyp_do_panic)
>> -- 
>> Qualcomm Datacenter Technologies, Inc. on behalf of the Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.
>> Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. is a member of the Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project.
>>
> 

Thanks,

	M.
-- 
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...



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