[PATCH 2/3] riscv: optimized memmove
Nick Kossifidis
mick at ics.forth.gr
Wed Jan 31 01:13:07 PST 2024
On 1/31/24 07:25, Jisheng Zhang wrote:
>
> I didn't have c99 spec in hand, but I found gcc explanations about
> restrict keyword from [1]:
>
> "the restrict declaration promises that the code will not access that
> object in any other way--only through p."
>
> So if there's overlap in memcpy, then it contradicts the restrict
> implication.
>
> [1] https://www.gnu.org/software/c-intro-and-ref/manual/html_node/restrict-Pointers.html
>
The union used in the code also contradicts this. BTW the restrict
qualifier isn't used in kernel's lib/string.c nor in the current
implementation
(https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/arch/riscv/include/asm/string.h#L16).
> And from the manual, if the memcpy users must ensure "The memory areas
> must not overlap." So I think all linux kernel's memcpy implementations(only copy
> fw and don't take overlap into consideration) are right.
>
> I did see the alias-memcpy-as-memmove in some libc implementations, but
> this is not the style in current kernel's implementations.
>
> Given current riscv asm implementation also doesn't do the alias and
> copy-fw only, and this series improves performance and doesn't introduce the
> Is it better to divide this into two steps: Firstly, merge this series
> if there's no obvious bug; secondly, do the alias as you suggested,
> since you have a basic implementation, you could even submit your patch
> ;) What do you think about this two steps solution?
>
I still don't understand why you prefer undefined behavior over just
aliasing memcpy to memmove. Anyway, do as you wish, I don't have time to
work on this unfortunately. Feel free to use the code I shared for bw
copy etc.
Regards,
Nick
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