[PATCH 00/10] RISC-V: Refactor instructions
Jessica Clarke
jrtc27 at jrtc27.com
Wed Aug 16 20:57:46 PDT 2023
On 17 Aug 2023, at 01:31, Charlie Jenkins <charlie at rivosinc.com> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Aug 04, 2023 at 10:24:33AM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
>> On Fri, Aug 04, 2023 at 12:28:28PM +0300, Andrew Jones wrote:
>>> On Thu, Aug 03, 2023 at 07:10:25PM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
>>>> There are numerous systems in the kernel that rely on directly
>>>> modifying, creating, and reading instructions. Many of these systems
>>>> have rewritten code to do this. This patch will delegate all instruction
>>>> handling into insn.h and reg.h. All of the compressed instructions, RVI,
>>>> Zicsr, M, A instructions are included, as well as a subset of the F,D,Q
>>>> extensions.
>>>>
>>>> ---
>>>> This is modifying code that https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20230731183925.152145-1-namcaov@gmail.com/
>>>> is also touching.
>>>>
>>>> ---
>>>> Testing:
>>>>
>>>> There are a lot of subsystems touched and I have not tested every
>>>> individual instruction. I did a lot of copy-pasting from the RISC-V spec
>>>> so opcodes and such should be correct
>>>
>>> How about we create macros which generate each of the functions an
>>> instruction needs, e.g. riscv_insn_is_*(), etc. based on the output of
>>> [1]. I know basically nothing about that project, but it looks like it
>>> creates most the defines this series is creating from what we [hope] to
>>> be an authoritative source. I also assume that if we don't like the
>>> current output format, then we could probably post patches to the project
>>> to get the format we want. For example, we could maybe propose an "lc"
>>> format for "Linux C".
>> That's a great idea, I didn't realize that existed!
> I have discovered that the riscv-opcodes repository is not in a state
> that makes it helpful. If it were workable, it would make it easy to
> include a "Linux C" format. I have had a pull request open on the repo
> for two weeks now and the person who maintains the repo has not
> interacted.
Huh? Andrew has replied to you twice on your PR, and was the last one to
comment. That’s hardly “has not interacted”.
> At minimum, in order for it to be useful it would need an ability to
> describe the bit order of immediates in an instruction and include script
> arguments to select which instructions should be included. There is a
> "C" format, but it is actually just a Spike format.
So extend it? Or do something with QEMU’s equivalent that expresses it.
Jess
> Nonetheless, it
> seems like it is prohibitive to use it.
>>>
>>> I'd also recommend only importing the generated defines and generating
>>> the functions that will actually have immediate consumers or are part of
>>> a set of defines that have immediate consumers. Each consumer of new
>>> instructions will be responsible for generating and importing the defines
>>> and adding the respective macro invocations to generate the functions.
>>> This series can also take that approach, i.e. convert one set of
>>> instructions at a time, each in a separate patch.
>> Since I was hand-writing everything and copying it wasn't too much
>> effort to just copy all of the instructions from a group. However, from
>> a testing standpoint it makes sense to exclude instructions not yet in
>> use.
>>>
>>> [1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-opcodes
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> drew
>>>
>>>
>>>> , but the construction of every
>>>> instruction is not fully tested.
>>>>
>>>> vector: Compiled and booted
>>>>
>>>> jump_label: Ensured static keys function as expected.
>>>>
>>>> kgdb: Attempted to run the provided tests but they failed even without
>>>> my changes
>>>>
>>>> module: Loaded and unloaded modules
>>>>
>>>> patch.c: Ensured kernel booted
>>>>
>>>> kprobes: Used a kprobing module to probe jalr, auipc, and branch
>>>> instructions
>>>>
>>>> nommu misaligned addresses: Kernel boots
>>>>
>>>> kvm: Ran KVM selftests
>>>>
>>>> bpf: Kernel boots. Most of the instructions are exclusively used by BPF
>>>> but I am unsure of the best way of testing BPF.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Charlie Jenkins <charlie at rivosinc.com>
>>>>
>>>> ---
>>>> Charlie Jenkins (10):
>>>> RISC-V: Expand instruction definitions
>>>> RISC-V: vector: Refactor instructions
>>>> RISC-V: Refactor jump label instructions
>>>> RISC-V: KGDB: Refactor instructions
>>>> RISC-V: module: Refactor instructions
>>>> RISC-V: Refactor patch instructions
>>>> RISC-V: nommu: Refactor instructions
>>>> RISC-V: kvm: Refactor instructions
>>>> RISC-V: bpf: Refactor instructions
>>>> RISC-V: Refactor bug and traps instructions
>>>>
>>>> arch/riscv/include/asm/bug.h | 18 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/include/asm/insn.h | 2744 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
>>>> arch/riscv/include/asm/reg.h | 88 +
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/jump_label.c | 13 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/kgdb.c | 13 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/module.c | 80 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/patch.c | 3 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/probes/kprobes.c | 13 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/probes/simulate-insn.c | 100 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/probes/uprobes.c | 5 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/traps.c | 9 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/traps_misaligned.c | 218 +--
>>>> arch/riscv/kernel/vector.c | 5 +-
>>>> arch/riscv/kvm/vcpu_insn.c | 281 +--
>>>> arch/riscv/net/bpf_jit.h | 707 +-------
>>>> 15 files changed, 2825 insertions(+), 1472 deletions(-)
>>>> ---
>>>> base-commit: 5d0c230f1de8c7515b6567d9afba1f196fb4e2f4
>>>> change-id: 20230801-master-refactor-instructions-v4-433aa040da03
>>>> --
>>>> - Charlie
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> kvm-riscv mailing list
>>>> kvm-riscv at lists.infradead.org
>>>> http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/kvm-riscv
>
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