[PATCH v8 4/4] riscv: Set unaligned access speed at compile time
Emil Renner Berthing
emil.renner.berthing at canonical.com
Fri Mar 8 05:35:03 PST 2024
Conor Dooley wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 08, 2024 at 01:52:24AM -0800, Emil Renner Berthing wrote:
> > Charlie Jenkins wrote:
>
> > > config RISCV_MISALIGNED
> > > - bool "Support misaligned load/store traps for kernel and userspace"
> > > + bool
> > > select SYSCTL_ARCH_UNALIGN_ALLOW
> > > - default y
> > > help
> > > - Say Y here if you want the kernel to embed support for misaligned
> > > - load/store for both kernel and userspace. When disable, misaligned
> > > - accesses will generate SIGBUS in userspace and panic in kernel.
> > > + Embed support for misaligned load/store for both kernel and userspace.
> > > + When disabled, misaligned accesses will generate SIGBUS in userspace
> > > + and panic in the kernel.
> >
> > Hmm.. this is *may* generate SIGBUS in userspace and panic the kernel. The CPU
> > could support unaligned access natively or there might be a handler in M-mode,
> > right?
>
> Correct. The last sentence could become "When disabled, and there is no
> support in hardware or firmware, unsigned accesses will...". That said,
> this option is no longer user visible, so we could really simplify the
> hell out of this option to just mention that it controls building the
> in-kernel emulator.
>
> > > +choice
> > > + prompt "Unaligned Accesses Support"
> > > + default RISCV_PROBE_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
> > > + help
> > > + This determines the level of support for unaligned accesses. This
> > > + information is used by the kernel to perform optimizations. It is also
> > > + exposed to user space via the hwprobe syscall. The hardware will be
> > > + probed at boot by default.
> > > +
> > > +config RISCV_PROBE_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
> > > + bool "Probe for hardware unaligned access support"
> > > + select RISCV_MISALIGNED
> > > + help
> > > + During boot, the kernel will run a series of tests to determine the
> > > + speed of unaligned accesses. This probing will dynamically determine
> > > + the speed of unaligned accesses on the underlying system. If unaligned
> > > + memory accesses trap into the kernel as they are not supported by the
> > > + system, the kernel will emulate the unaligned accesses to preserve the
> > > + UABI.
> > > +
> > > +config RISCV_EMULATED_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
> > > + bool "Emulate unaligned access where system support is missing"
> > > + select RISCV_MISALIGNED
> > > + help
> > > + If unaligned memory accesses trap into the kernel as they are not
> > > + supported by the system, the kernel will emulate the unaligned
> > > + accesses to preserve the UABI. When the underlying system does support
> > > + unaligned accesses, the unaligned accesses are assumed to be slow.
> >
> > It's still not quite clear to me when you'd want to choose this over probing
> > above. Assuming the probe measures correctly this can only result in a kernel
> > that behaves the same or slower than with the option above, right?
>
> Aye, mostly the same - some people don't want the boot-time overhead
> of actually running the profiling code, so this option is for them.
> Maybe that's not such a big deal anymore with the improvements to do it
> in parallel, but given how bad performance on some of the systems is
> when firmware does the emulation, it is definitely still noticeable.
> I know we definitely have customers that care about their boot time very
> strongly, so I can imagine they'd be turning this off.
Ah, that makes sense. So maybe a help text more along the lines of "Disable
probing and optimizations for CPUs with fast unaligned memory access" would be
a better description of this choice?
> > > +
> > > +config RISCV_SLOW_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
> > > + bool "Assume the system supports slow unaligned memory accesses"
> > > + depends on NONPORTABLE
> > > + help
> > > + Assume that the system supports slow unaligned memory accesses. The
> > > + kernel and userspace programs may not be able to run at all on systems
> > > + that do not support unaligned memory accesses.
> >
> > Again you're just explicitly saying no to the optimizations the kernel might do
> > if it detects fast unaligned access, only here you'll also crash if they're not
> > handled by the CPU or M-mode. Why would you want that?
> >
> > I'm probably missing something, but the only reason I can think of is if you
> > want build a really small kernel and save the few bytes for the handler and
> > probing code.
>
> Aye, just to allow you to disable the in-kernel emulator. That's
> currently a choice that is presented to people, so this option preserves
> that. IMO this is by far the least useful option and is locked behind
> NONPORTABLE anyway. Maybe we could delete it, and if someone really wants
> it, it would not be all that much of a hassle to add back in the future?
Yeah, if noone really needs this less config options is better, but I don't
feel strongly about this option either way.
/Emil
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