[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH] xen/x86: Work around Clang code generation bug with asm parameters
On 11.11.2020 21:01, Andrew Cooper wrote: > On 11/11/2020 15:11, Jan Beulich wrote: >> On 11.11.2020 13:45, Andrew Cooper wrote: >>> Clang 9 and later don't handle the clobber of %r10 correctly in >>> _hypercall64_4(). See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48122 >> Are you sure this is a bug? > > Yes. > >> With ... >> >>> #define _hypercall64_4(type, hcall, a1, a2, a3, a4) \ >>> ({ \ >>> - long res, tmp__; \ >>> - register long _a4 asm ("r10") = ((long)(a4)); \ >>> + long res, _a1 = (long)(a1), _a2 = (long)(a2), \ >>> + _a3 = (long)(a3); \ >>> + register long _a4 asm ("r10") = (long)(a4); \ >>> asm volatile ( \ >>> "call hypercall_page + %c[offset]" \ >>> - : "=a" (res), "=D" (tmp__), "=S" (tmp__), "=d" (tmp__), \ >>> - "=&r" (tmp__) ASM_CALL_CONSTRAINT \ >> ... this we've requested "any register", while with ... >> >>> - : [offset] "i" (hcall * 32), \ >>> - "1" ((long)(a1)), "2" ((long)(a2)), "3" ((long)(a3)), \ >>> - "4" (_a4) \ >> ... this we've asked for that specific register to be initialized >> from r10 (and without telling the compiler that r10 is going to >> change). > > Consider applying that same reasoning to "1" instead of "4". In that > case, a1 would no longer be bound to %rdi. That's different: "=D" specifies the register, and "1" says "use the same register as input". Whereas, as said, "=&r" says "use any register" with "1" saying "use the same register" and (_a4) specifying where the value is to come from. > The use of "4" explicitly binds the input and the output, which includes > requiring them to be the same register. > > Furthermore, LLVM tends to consider "not behaving in the same was as > GCC" a bug. That's a fair statement, but then still the description wants re-wording. Plus of course future gcc is free to change their behavior to that currently observed with clang. Consider the following example (on an arch where "f" is a floating point register and there are ways to copy directly between GPR and floating point registers: int i; register float f asm("f7") = <input>; asm("..." : "=r" (i) : "0" (f)); In this case obviously f7 can't be used for i (as it doesn't match "r"). It's merely that the initial value of i is to come from f7. In fact for Arm64 this extern float flt; int test(void) { int i; register float f asm("s7") = flt; asm("add %0,%0,5" : "=r" (i) : "0" (f)); return i; } behaves exactly as described: test: adrp x0, flt ldr s7, [x0, @lo12(flt)] fmov w0, s7 add x0, x0, #5 ret (Whether fmov is a sensible choice here is a different question; I'd have expected some fcvt*.) Similarly a constant initial value would demonstrate this (or one necessarily coming from memory), albeit in a less obvious way: It doesn't say "this constant lives in the register", but "this constant is to be loaded into the register". >> Also, by what I would have hoped is convention meanwhile, the new >> macro local variables' names shouldn't start with an underscore, >> but instead perhaps end in one. But to be honest, despite knowing >> of the latent (albeit highly hypothetical) issue, each time I >> find myself making such a comment I'm one tiny step closer to >> giving up. > > Convention is not created by you getting irritated at others getting > irritated at you for requesting bizarre and unusual changes in submitted > code, or by continuing to point things out, knowing that others > specifically disagree with your reasoning in this case. > > Convention is created when there is general agreement over the technical > merits of writing code in one particular way vs the alternatives, *and* > its written down somewhere, so this argument does not continue any further. > > There is no restrictions or guidance in the coding style to prefer one > form over another, therefore anything is acceptable. Our coding style document imo ought to describe things not already specified by the standard. What scopes certain identifiers are to be considered reserved in is, however, written down there already. Jan
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