[PATCH 02/30] ARM: assembler: introduce adr_l, ldr_l and str_l macros
Dave Martin
Dave.Martin at arm.com
Mon Aug 14 08:29:51 PDT 2017
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 01:53:43PM +0100, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
> Like arm64, ARM supports position independent code sequences that
> produce symbol references with a greater reach than the ordinary
> adr/ldr instructions.
>
> Currently, we use open coded instruction sequences involving literals
> and arithmetic operations. Instead, we can use movw/movt pairs on v7
> CPUs, circumventing the D-cache entirely. For older CPUs, we can emit
> the literal into a subsection, allowing it to be emitted out of line
> while retaining the ability to perform arithmetic on label offsets.
>
> E.g., on pre-v7 CPUs, we can emit a PC-relative reference as follows:
>
> ldr <reg>, 222f
> 111: add <reg>, <reg>, pc
> .subsection 1
> 222: .long <sym> - (111b + 8)
> .previous
>
> This is allowed by the assembler because, unlike ordinary sections,
> subsections are combined into a single section into the object file,
> and so the label references are not true cross-section references that
> are visible as relocations. Note that we could even do something like
>
> add <reg>, pc, #(222f - 111f) & ~0xfff
> ldr <reg>, [<reg>, #(222f - 111f) & 0xfff]
> 111: add <reg>, <reg>, pc
> .subsection 1
> 222: .long <sym> - (111b + 8)
> .previous
This is reinventing ldr=
I seem to remember ldr= barfing on things that .long happily accepts
though, was this the reason?
> if it turns out that the 4 KB range of the ldr instruction is insufficient
> to reach the literal in the subsection, although this is currently not a
> problem (of the 98 objects built from .S files in a multi_v7_defconfig
> build, only 11 have .text sections that are over 1 KB, and the largest one
> [entry-armv.o] is 3308 bytes)
>
> Subsections have been available in binutils since 2004 at least, so
> they should not cause any issues with older toolchains.
(I also believe this to be an ancient feature, but I've not done the
digging to prove it.)
> So use the above to implement the macros mov_l, adr_l, adrm_l (using ldm
> to load multiple literals at once), ldr_l and str_l, all of which will
> use movw/movt pairs on v7 and later CPUs, and use PC-relative literals
> otherwise.
>
> Cc: Russell King <linux at armlinux.org.uk>
> Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel at linaro.org>
> ---
> arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h | 71 ++++++++++++++++++++
> 1 file changed, 71 insertions(+)
>
> diff --git a/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h b/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h
> index ad301f107dd2..516ebaf4ff38 100644
> --- a/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h
> +++ b/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h
> @@ -518,4 +518,75 @@ THUMB( orr \reg , \reg , #PSR_T_BIT )
> #endif
> .endm
>
> +#ifdef CONFIG_THUMB2_KERNEL
> +#define ARM_PC_BIAS 4
> +#else
> +#define ARM_PC_BIAS 8
> +#endif
> +
> + .macro __adldst_l, op, reg, sym, tmp, c
> + .if __LINUX_ARM_ARCH__ < 7
> + ldr\c \tmp, 111f
> + .subsection 1
> + .align 2
> +111: .long \sym - (222f + ARM_PC_BIAS)
See above comment about ldr=.
> + .previous
> + .else
> + W(movw\c\()) \tmp, #:lower16:\sym - (222f + ARM_PC_BIAS)
> + W(movt\c\()) \tmp, #:upper16:\sym - (222f + ARM_PC_BIAS)
Why W()?
There are no narrow forms of these instructions anyway -- if there were
then they couldn't accommodate a 16-bit immediate.
> + .endif
> +222:
> + .ifc \op, add
> + add\c \reg, \tmp, pc
> + .elseif CONFIG_THUMB2_KERNEL == 1
> + add \tmp, \tmp, pc
> + \op\c \reg, [\tmp]
Shame
\op\c \reg, [pc, \tmp]
doesn't work.
But it doesn't, apparently.
> + .else
> + \op\c \reg, [pc, \tmp]
> + .endif
> + .endm
> +
> + /*
> + * mov_l - move a constant value or [relocated] address into a register
> + */
> + .macro mov_l, dst:req, imm:req, cond
> + .if __LINUX_ARM_ARCH__ < 7
> + ldr\cond \dst, =\imm
> + .else
> + W(movw\cond\()) \dst, #:lower16:\imm
> + W(movt\cond\()) \dst, #:upper16:\imm
> + .endif
> + .endm
> +
> + /*
> + * adr_l - adr pseudo-op with unlimited range
> + *
> + * @dst: destination register
> + * @sym: name of the symbol
> + */
> + .macro adr_l, dst:req, sym:req, cond
> + __adldst_l add, \dst, \sym, \dst, \cond
> + .endm
> +
> + /*
> + * ldr_l - ldr <literal> pseudo-op with unlimited range
> + *
> + * @dst: destination register
> + * @sym: name of the symbol
> + */
> + .macro ldr_l, dst:req, sym:req, cond
> + __adldst_l ldr, \dst, \sym, \dst, \cond
> + .endm
> +
> + /*
> + * str_l - str <literal> pseudo-op with unlimited range
> + *
> + * @src: source register
> + * @sym: name of the symbol
> + * @tmp: mandatory scratch register
> + */
> + .macro str_l, src:req, sym:req, tmp:req, cond
> + __adldst_l str, \src, \sym, \tmp, \cond
> + .endm
Cheers
---Dave
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