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we have to avoid using ebx unconditionally in asm constraints for
i386, because gcc 3 and 4 and possibly other simplistic compilers
(pcc?) implement PIC via making ebx a fixed-use register, and disallow
its use for anything else. rather than hard-coding knowledge of which
compilers work (at least gcc 5+ and clang), perform a configure test;
this should give us the good codegen on any new compilers we don't yet
know about.
swapping ebx and edx is kept for 1- and 2-arg syscalls because it
avoids having any spills/stack-frame at all in small functions. for
6-arg, if ebx is directly usable, the complex shuffling introduced in
commit c8798ef974d21c338a7d8d874a402978ffc6168e can be avoided, and
ebp can be loaded the same way ebx is in 5-arg syscalls for compilers
that don't support direct use of ebx.
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commit 22e5bbd0deadcbd767864bd714e890b70e1fe1df inlined the i386
syscall mechanism, but wrongly assumed memory operands to the 5- and
6-argument syscall asm would be esp-based. however, nothing in the
constraints prevented them from being ebx- or ebp-based, and in those
cases, ebx and ebp could be clobbered before use of the memory operand
was complete. in the 6-argument case, this prevented restoration of
the original register values before the end of the asm block, breaking
the asm contract since ebx and ebp are not marked as clobbered. (they
can't be, because lots of compilers don't accept these registers in
constraints or clobbers if PIC or frame pointer is enabled).
doing this right is complicated by the fact that, after a single push,
no operands which might be memory operands are usable. if they are
esp-based, the value of esp has changed, rendering them invalid.
introduce some new dances to load the registers. for the 5-arg case,
push the operand that may be a memory operand first, and after that,
it doesn't matter if the operand is invalid, since we'll just use the
newly pushed value. for the 6-arg case, we need to put both operands
in memory to begin with, like the old non-inline code prior to commit
22e5bbd0deadcbd767864bd714e890b70e1fe1df accepted, so that there's
only one potentially memory-based operand to the asm. this can then be
saved with a single push, and after that the values can be read off
into the registers they're needed in.
there's some size overhead, but still a lot less execution overhead
than the old out-of-line code. doing it better depends on a modern
compiler that lets you use ebx and ebp in asm constraints without
restriction. the failure modes on compilers where this doesn't work
are inconsistent and dangerous (on at least some gcc versions 4.x and
earlier, wrong codegen!), so this is a delicate matter. it can be
addressed later if needed.
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this is the first part of a series of patches intended to make
__syscall fully self-contained in the object file produced using
syscall.h, which will make it possible for crt1 code to perform
syscalls.
the (confusingly named) i386 __vsyscall mechanism, which this commit
removes, was introduced before the presence of a valid thread pointer
was mandatory; back then the thread pointer was setup lazily only if
threads were used. the intent was to be able to perform syscalls using
the kernel's fast entry point in the VDSO, which can use the sysenter
(Intel) or syscall (AMD) instruction instead of int $128, but without
inlining an access to the __syscall global at the point of each
syscall, which would incur a significant size cost from PIC setup
everywhere. the mechanism also shuffled registers/calling convention
around to avoid spills of call-saved registers, and to avoid
allocating ebx or ebp via asm constraints, since there are plenty of
broken-but-supported compiler versions which are incapable of
allocating ebx with -fPIC or ebp with -fno-omit-frame-pointer.
the new mechanism preserves the properties of avoiding spills and
avoiding allocation of ebx/ebp in constraints, but does it inline,
using some fairly simple register shuffling, and uses a field of the
thread structure rather than global data for the vdso-provided syscall
code address.
for now, the external __syscall function is refactored not to use the
old __vsyscall so it can be kept, but the intent is to remove it too.
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only use SYS_socketcall if SYSCALL_USE_SOCKETCALL is defined
internally, otherwise use direct syscalls.
this commit does not change the current behaviour, it is
preparation for adding direct syscall numbers for i386.
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otherwise the call instruction in the inline syscall asm results in
textrels without ld-time binding.
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the issue at hand is that many syscalls require as an argument the
kernel-ABI size of sigset_t, intended to allow the kernel to switch to
a larger sigset_t in the future. previously, each arch was defining
this size in syscall_arch.h, which was redundant with the definition
of _NSIG in bits/signal.h. as it's used in some not-quite-portable
application code as well, _NSIG is much more likely to be recognized
and understood immediately by someone reading the code, and it's also
shorter and less cluttered.
note that _NSIG is actually 65/129, not 64/128, but the division takes
care of throwing away the off-by-one part.
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this is actually a rather subtle issue: do arrays decay to pointers
when used as inline asm args? gcc says yes, but currently pcc says no.
hopefully this discrepency in pcc will be fixed, but since the
behavior is not clearly defined anywhere I can find, I'm using an
explicit operation to cause the decay to occur.
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this doubles the performance of the fastest syscalls on the atom I
tested it on; improvement is reportedly much more dramatic on
worst-case cpus. cannot be used for cancellable syscalls.
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now public syscall.h only exposes __NR_* and SYS_* constants and the
variadic syscall function. no macros or inline functions, no
__syscall_ret or other internal details, no 16-/32-bit legacy syscall
renaming, etc. this logic has all been moved to src/internal/syscall.h
with the arch-specific parts in arch/$(ARCH)/syscall_arch.h, and the
amount of arch-specific stuff has been reduced to a minimum.
changes still need to be reviewed/double-checked. minimal testing on
i386 and mips has already been performed.
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