[PATCH] arm64: write_sysreg asm illegal for aarch32
Mark Rutland
mark.rutland at arm.com
Thu Nov 2 03:08:10 PDT 2017
On Wed, Nov 01, 2017 at 01:32:50PM -0700, Mark Salyzyn wrote:
> On 11/01/2017 11:16 AM, Mark Salyzyn wrote:
> > On 11/01/2017 10:56 AM, Mark Rutland wrote:
> > > On Wed, Nov 01, 2017 at 10:49:00AM -0700, Mark Salyzyn wrote:
> > > > On 11/01/2017 10:14 AM, Robin Murphy wrote:
> > > > > On 01/11/17 16:58, Mark Salyzyn wrote:
> > > > > > Cross compiling to aarch32 (for vdso32) using clang correctly
> > > > > > identifies that (the unused) write_sysreg inline asm directive is
> > > > > > illegal in that architectural context:
> > > > > >
> > > > > > arch/arm64/include/asm/arch_timer.h: error: invalid
> > > > > > input constraint 'rZ' in asm
> > > > > > write_sysreg(cntkctl, cntkctl_el1);
> > > > > > ^
> > > > > > arch/arm64/include/asm/sysreg.h: note: expanded from
> > > > > > macro 'write_sysreg'
> > > > > > : : "rZ" (__val));
> > > > > > ^
> > > > > >
> > > > > > GCC normally checks for correctness everywhere. But uniquely for
> > > > > > unused asm, will optimize out and suppress the error report.
> > > > > It sounds more like some paths are wrong in the compat vDSO build if
> > > > > it's pulling in this header in the first place - nothing in
> > > > > this file is
> > > > > relevant to AArch32.
> > > > >
> > > > > Robin.
> > > > >
> > > > And yet, when you CROSS_COMPILE_ARM32 a vdso32, you have no
> > > > choice but to
> > > > utilize the arm64 headers since they contain all the relevant kernel
> > > > structures and environment.
> > > This itself is the underlying issue.
> > >
> > > When building the compat VDSO, we must ensure that we only include
> > > headers that make sense for 32-bit arm.
> > >
> > > If the build system can't do that today, we should rework it so that it
> > > can. Anything else cannot be a complete fix.
> > Ok, will attack it and see just how bad the scale is...
> Scoped, not as bad as I thought, but there is some open-coded evilness to
> fix:
>
> 1) linux/jiffies.h can not be included, replace with open coding:
[...]
> 2) linux/hrtimer.h can not be included, replace with open coding (must have
> above to work):
[...]
> 3) asm/processor.h can not be included, replace with open coding:
[...]
> 4) linux/time.h can not be included, replace with open coding:
[...]
Evidently I was not sufficiently clear.
I don't think that we should try to bodge the #include directives to try
to avoid including 64-bit headers. The above changes might work today,
but they're *extremely* fragile.
When I said that we should rework the build system above, I mean we
should rework the Makefile logic to pass the 32-bit include paths into
the compat vdso. That way, we can include the usual set of headers, as
we'll pick up the 32-bit headers.
We might have to have separate native/compat vdso data pages to make
sure that the types align, but that's not the end of the world...
Thanks,
Mark.
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