Commit 40fb79c8 authored by Nicolas Pitre's avatar Nicolas Pitre Committed by Nicolas Pitre

ARM: add a kuser_cmpxchg64 user space helper

Some user space applications are designed around the ability to perform
atomic operations on 64 bit values.  Since this is natively possible
only with ARMv6k and above, let's provide a new kuser helper to perform
the operation with kernel supervision on pre ARMv6k hardware.
Signed-off-by: default avatarNicolas Pitre <nicolas.pitre@linaro.org>
Tested-by: default avatarDave Martin <dave.martin@linaro.org>
parent 37b83046
......@@ -201,3 +201,67 @@ typedef void (__kuser_dmb_t)(void);
Notes:
- Valid only if __kuser_helper_version >= 3 (from kernel version 2.6.15).
kuser_cmpxchg64
---------------
Location: 0xffff0f60
Reference prototype:
int __kuser_cmpxchg64(const int64_t *oldval,
const int64_t *newval,
volatile int64_t *ptr);
Input:
r0 = pointer to oldval
r1 = pointer to newval
r2 = pointer to target value
lr = return address
Output:
r0 = success code (zero or non-zero)
C flag = set if r0 == 0, clear if r0 != 0
Clobbered registers:
r3, lr, flags
Definition:
Atomically store the 64-bit value pointed by *newval in *ptr only if *ptr
is equal to the 64-bit value pointed by *oldval. Return zero if *ptr was
changed or non-zero if no exchange happened.
The C flag is also set if *ptr was changed to allow for assembly
optimization in the calling code.
Usage example:
typedef int (__kuser_cmpxchg64_t)(const int64_t *oldval,
const int64_t *newval,
volatile int64_t *ptr);
#define __kuser_cmpxchg64 (*(__kuser_cmpxchg64_t *)0xffff0f60)
int64_t atomic_add64(volatile int64_t *ptr, int64_t val)
{
int64_t old, new;
do {
old = *ptr;
new = old + val;
} while(__kuser_cmpxchg64(&old, &new, ptr));
return new;
}
Notes:
- This routine already includes memory barriers as needed.
- Due to the length of this sequence, this spans 2 conventional kuser
"slots", therefore 0xffff0f80 is not used as a valid entry point.
- Valid only if __kuser_helper_version >= 5 (from kernel version 3.1).
......@@ -383,7 +383,7 @@ ENDPROC(__pabt_svc)
.endm
.macro kuser_cmpxchg_check
#if __LINUX_ARM_ARCH__ < 6 && !defined(CONFIG_NEEDS_SYSCALL_FOR_CMPXCHG)
#if !defined(CONFIG_CPU_32v6K) && !defined(CONFIG_NEEDS_SYSCALL_FOR_CMPXCHG)
#ifndef CONFIG_MMU
#warning "NPTL on non MMU needs fixing"
#else
......@@ -392,7 +392,7 @@ ENDPROC(__pabt_svc)
@ perform a quick test inline since it should be false
@ 99.9999% of the time. The rest is done out of line.
cmp r2, #TASK_SIZE
blhs kuser_cmpxchg_fixup
blhs kuser_cmpxchg64_fixup
#endif
#endif
.endm
......@@ -775,6 +775,99 @@ ENDPROC(__switch_to)
.globl __kuser_helper_start
__kuser_helper_start:
/*
* Due to the length of some sequences, __kuser_cmpxchg64 spans 2 regular
* kuser "slots", therefore 0xffff0f80 is not used as a valid entry point.
*/
__kuser_cmpxchg64: @ 0xffff0f60
#if defined(CONFIG_NEEDS_SYSCALL_FOR_CMPXCHG)
/*
* Poor you. No fast solution possible...
* The kernel itself must perform the operation.
* A special ghost syscall is used for that (see traps.c).
*/
stmfd sp!, {r7, lr}
ldr r7, 1f @ it's 20 bits
swi __ARM_NR_cmpxchg64
ldmfd sp!, {r7, pc}
1: .word __ARM_NR_cmpxchg64
#elif defined(CONFIG_CPU_32v6K)
stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6, r7}
ldrd r4, r5, [r0] @ load old val
ldrd r6, r7, [r1] @ load new val
smp_dmb arm
1: ldrexd r0, r1, [r2] @ load current val
eors r3, r0, r4 @ compare with oldval (1)
eoreqs r3, r1, r5 @ compare with oldval (2)
strexdeq r3, r6, r7, [r2] @ store newval if eq
teqeq r3, #1 @ success?
beq 1b @ if no then retry
smp_dmb arm
rsbs r0, r3, #0 @ set returned val and C flag
ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6, r7}
bx lr
#elif !defined(CONFIG_SMP)
#ifdef CONFIG_MMU
/*
* The only thing that can break atomicity in this cmpxchg64
* implementation is either an IRQ or a data abort exception
* causing another process/thread to be scheduled in the middle of
* the critical sequence. The same strategy as for cmpxchg is used.
*/
stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6, lr}
ldmia r0, {r4, r5} @ load old val
ldmia r1, {r6, lr} @ load new val
1: ldmia r2, {r0, r1} @ load current val
eors r3, r0, r4 @ compare with oldval (1)
eoreqs r3, r1, r5 @ compare with oldval (2)
2: stmeqia r2, {r6, lr} @ store newval if eq
rsbs r0, r3, #0 @ set return val and C flag
ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6, pc}
.text
kuser_cmpxchg64_fixup:
@ Called from kuser_cmpxchg_fixup.
@ r2 = address of interrupted insn (must be preserved).
@ sp = saved regs. r7 and r8 are clobbered.
@ 1b = first critical insn, 2b = last critical insn.
@ If r2 >= 1b and r2 <= 2b then saved pc_usr is set to 1b.
mov r7, #0xffff0fff
sub r7, r7, #(0xffff0fff - (0xffff0f60 + (1b - __kuser_cmpxchg64)))
subs r8, r2, r7
rsbcss r8, r8, #(2b - 1b)
strcs r7, [sp, #S_PC]
#if __LINUX_ARM_ARCH__ < 6
bcc kuser_cmpxchg32_fixup
#endif
mov pc, lr
.previous
#else
#warning "NPTL on non MMU needs fixing"
mov r0, #-1
adds r0, r0, #0
usr_ret lr
#endif
#else
#error "incoherent kernel configuration"
#endif
/* pad to next slot */
.rept (16 - (. - __kuser_cmpxchg64)/4)
.word 0
.endr
.align 5
__kuser_memory_barrier: @ 0xffff0fa0
smp_dmb arm
usr_ret lr
......@@ -816,7 +909,7 @@ __kuser_cmpxchg: @ 0xffff0fc0
usr_ret lr
.text
kuser_cmpxchg_fixup:
kuser_cmpxchg32_fixup:
@ Called from kuser_cmpxchg_check macro.
@ r2 = address of interrupted insn (must be preserved).
@ sp = saved regs. r7 and r8 are clobbered.
......
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