usercopy.c 13.7 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
/*
 * User address space access functions.
 * The non-inlined parts of asm-cris/uaccess.h are here.
 *
 * Copyright (C) 2000, 2003 Axis Communications AB.
 *
 * Written by Hans-Peter Nilsson.
 * Pieces used from memcpy, originally by Kenny Ranerup long time ago.
 */

#include <asm/uaccess.h>

/* Asm:s have been tweaked (within the domain of correctness) to give
   satisfactory results for "gcc version 3.2.1 Axis release R53/1.53-v32".

   Check regularly...

   Note that for CRISv32, the PC saved at a bus-fault is the address
   *at* the faulting instruction, with a special case for instructions
   in delay slots: then it's the address of the branch.  Note also that
   in contrast to v10, a postincrement in the instruction is *not*
   performed at a bus-fault; the register is seen having the original
   value in fault handlers.  */


/* Copy to userspace.  This is based on the memcpy used for
   kernel-to-kernel copying; see "string.c".  */

29
unsigned long __copy_user(void __user *pdst, const void *psrc, unsigned long pn)
30 31 32 33 34 35
{
  /* We want the parameters put in special registers.
     Make sure the compiler is able to make something useful of this.
     As it is now: r10 -> r13; r11 -> r11 (nop); r12 -> r12 (nop).

     FIXME: Comment for old gcc version.  Check.
S
Simon Arlott 已提交
36
     If gcc was alright, it really would need no temporaries, and no
37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156
     stack space to save stuff on. */

  register char *dst __asm__ ("r13") = pdst;
  register const char *src __asm__ ("r11") = psrc;
  register int n __asm__ ("r12") = pn;
  register int retn __asm__ ("r10") = 0;


  /* When src is aligned but not dst, this makes a few extra needless
     cycles.  I believe it would take as many to check that the
     re-alignment was unnecessary.  */
  if (((unsigned long) dst & 3) != 0
      /* Don't align if we wouldn't copy more than a few bytes; so we
	 don't have to check further for overflows.  */
      && n >= 3)
  {
    if ((unsigned long) dst & 1)
    {
      __asm_copy_to_user_1 (dst, src, retn);
      n--;
    }

    if ((unsigned long) dst & 2)
    {
      __asm_copy_to_user_2 (dst, src, retn);
      n -= 2;
    }
  }

  /* Movem is dirt cheap.  The overheap is low enough to always use the
     minimum possible block size as the threshold.  */
  if (n >= 44)
  {
    /* For large copies we use 'movem'.  */

    /* It is not optimal to tell the compiler about clobbering any
       registers; that will move the saving/restoring of those registers
       to the function prologue/epilogue, and make non-movem sizes
       suboptimal.  */
    __asm__ volatile ("\
        ;; Check that the register asm declaration got right.		\n\
        ;; The GCC manual explicitly says TRT will happen.		\n\
	.ifnc %0%1%2%3,$r13$r11$r12$r10					\n\
	.err								\n\
	.endif								\n\
									\n\
	;; Save the registers we'll use in the movem process		\n\
	;; on the stack.						\n\
	subq	11*4,$sp						\n\
	movem	$r10,[$sp]						\n\
									\n\
	;; Now we've got this:						\n\
	;; r11 - src							\n\
	;; r13 - dst							\n\
	;; r12 - n							\n\
									\n\
	;; Update n for the first loop					\n\
	subq	44,$r12							\n\
0:									\n\
	movem	[$r11+],$r10						\n\
	subq   44,$r12							\n\
1:	bge	0b							\n\
	movem	$r10,[$r13+]						\n\
3:									\n\
	addq   44,$r12  ;; compensate for last loop underflowing n	\n\
									\n\
	;; Restore registers from stack					\n\
	movem [$sp+],$r10						\n\
2:									\n\
	.section .fixup,\"ax\"						\n\
4:									\n\
; When failing on any of the 1..44 bytes in a chunk, we adjust back the	\n\
; source pointer and just drop through	to the by-16 and by-4 loops to	\n\
; get the correct number of failing bytes.  This necessarily means a	\n\
; few extra exceptions, but invalid user pointers shouldn't happen in	\n\
; time-critical code anyway.						\n\
	jump 3b								\n\
	subq 44,$r11							\n\
									\n\
	.previous							\n\
	.section __ex_table,\"a\"					\n\
	.dword 1b,4b							\n\
	.previous"

     /* Outputs */ : "=r" (dst), "=r" (src), "=r" (n), "=r" (retn)
     /* Inputs */ : "0" (dst), "1" (src), "2" (n), "3" (retn));

  }

  while (n >= 16)
  {
    __asm_copy_to_user_16 (dst, src, retn);
    n -= 16;
  }

  /* Having a separate by-four loops cuts down on cache footprint.
     FIXME:  Test with and without; increasing switch to be 0..15.  */
  while (n >= 4)
  {
    __asm_copy_to_user_4 (dst, src, retn);
    n -= 4;
  }

  switch (n)
  {
    case 0:
      break;
    case 1:
      __asm_copy_to_user_1 (dst, src, retn);
      break;
    case 2:
      __asm_copy_to_user_2 (dst, src, retn);
      break;
    case 3:
      __asm_copy_to_user_3 (dst, src, retn);
      break;
  }

  return retn;
}
157
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__copy_user);
158 159 160 161

/* Copy from user to kernel, zeroing the bytes that were inaccessible in
   userland.  The return-value is the number of bytes that were
   inaccessible.  */
162 163
unsigned long __copy_user_zeroing(void *pdst, const void __user *psrc,
				  unsigned long pn)
164 165 166 167 168 169
{
  /* We want the parameters put in special registers.
     Make sure the compiler is able to make something useful of this.
     As it is now: r10 -> r13; r11 -> r11 (nop); r12 -> r12 (nop).

     FIXME: Comment for old gcc version.  Check.
S
Simon Arlott 已提交
170
     If gcc was alright, it really would need no temporaries, and no
171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322
     stack space to save stuff on.  */

  register char *dst __asm__ ("r13") = pdst;
  register const char *src __asm__ ("r11") = psrc;
  register int n __asm__ ("r12") = pn;
  register int retn __asm__ ("r10") = 0;

  /* The best reason to align src is that we then know that a read-fault
     was for aligned bytes; there's no 1..3 remaining good bytes to
     pickle.  */
  if (((unsigned long) src & 3) != 0)
  {
    if (((unsigned long) src & 1) && n != 0)
    {
      __asm_copy_from_user_1 (dst, src, retn);
      n--;
    }

    if (((unsigned long) src & 2) && n >= 2)
    {
      __asm_copy_from_user_2 (dst, src, retn);
      n -= 2;
    }

    /* We only need one check after the unalignment-adjustments, because
       if both adjustments were done, either both or neither reference
       had an exception.  */
    if (retn != 0)
      goto copy_exception_bytes;
  }

  /* Movem is dirt cheap.  The overheap is low enough to always use the
     minimum possible block size as the threshold.  */
  if (n >= 44)
  {
    /* It is not optimal to tell the compiler about clobbering any
       registers; that will move the saving/restoring of those registers
       to the function prologue/epilogue, and make non-movem sizes
       suboptimal.  */
    __asm__ volatile ("\
	.ifnc %0%1%2%3,$r13$r11$r12$r10					\n\
	.err								\n\
	.endif								\n\
									\n\
	;; Save the registers we'll use in the movem process		\n\
	;; on the stack.						\n\
	subq	11*4,$sp						\n\
	movem	$r10,[$sp]						\n\
									\n\
	;; Now we've got this:						\n\
	;; r11 - src							\n\
	;; r13 - dst							\n\
	;; r12 - n							\n\
									\n\
	;; Update n for the first loop					\n\
	subq	44,$r12							\n\
0:									\n\
	movem	[$r11+],$r10						\n\
									\n\
	subq   44,$r12							\n\
	bge	0b							\n\
	movem	$r10,[$r13+]						\n\
									\n\
4:									\n\
	addq   44,$r12  ;; compensate for last loop underflowing n	\n\
									\n\
	;; Restore registers from stack					\n\
	movem [$sp+],$r10						\n\
	.section .fixup,\"ax\"						\n\
									\n\
;; Do not jump back into the loop if we fail.  For some uses, we get a	\n\
;; page fault somewhere on the line.  Without checking for page limits,	\n\
;; we don't know where, but we need to copy accurately and keep an	\n\
;; accurate count; not just clear the whole line.  To do that, we fall	\n\
;; down in the code below, proceeding with smaller amounts.  It should	\n\
;; be kept in mind that we have to cater to code like what at one time	\n\
;; was in fs/super.c:							\n\
;;  i = size - copy_from_user((void *)page, data, size);		\n\
;; which would cause repeated faults while clearing the remainder of	\n\
;; the SIZE bytes at PAGE after the first fault.			\n\
;; A caveat here is that we must not fall through from a failing page	\n\
;; to a valid page.							\n\
									\n\
3:									\n\
	jump	4b ;; Fall through, pretending the fault didn't happen.	\n\
	nop								\n\
									\n\
	.previous							\n\
	.section __ex_table,\"a\"					\n\
	.dword 0b,3b							\n\
	.previous"

     /* Outputs */ : "=r" (dst), "=r" (src), "=r" (n), "=r" (retn)
     /* Inputs */ : "0" (dst), "1" (src), "2" (n), "3" (retn));
  }

  /* Either we directly start copying here, using dword copying in a loop,
     or we copy as much as possible with 'movem' and then the last block
     (<44 bytes) is copied here.  This will work since 'movem' will have
     updated src, dst and n.  (Except with failing src.)

     Since we want to keep src accurate, we can't use
     __asm_copy_from_user_N with N != (1, 2, 4); it updates dst and
     retn, but not src (by design; it's value is ignored elsewhere).  */

  while (n >= 4)
  {
    __asm_copy_from_user_4 (dst, src, retn);
    n -= 4;

    if (retn)
      goto copy_exception_bytes;
  }

  /* If we get here, there were no memory read faults.  */
  switch (n)
  {
    /* These copies are at least "naturally aligned" (so we don't have
       to check each byte), due to the src alignment code before the
       movem loop.  The *_3 case *will* get the correct count for retn.  */
    case 0:
      /* This case deliberately left in (if you have doubts check the
	 generated assembly code).  */
      break;
    case 1:
      __asm_copy_from_user_1 (dst, src, retn);
      break;
    case 2:
      __asm_copy_from_user_2 (dst, src, retn);
      break;
    case 3:
      __asm_copy_from_user_3 (dst, src, retn);
      break;
  }

  /* If we get here, retn correctly reflects the number of failing
     bytes.  */
  return retn;

copy_exception_bytes:
  /* We already have "retn" bytes cleared, and need to clear the
     remaining "n" bytes.  A non-optimized simple byte-for-byte in-line
     memset is preferred here, since this isn't speed-critical code and
     we'd rather have this a leaf-function than calling memset.  */
  {
    char *endp;
    for (endp = dst + n; dst < endp; dst++)
      *dst = 0;
  }

  return retn + n;
}
323
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__copy_user_zeroing);
324 325

/* Zero userspace.  */
326
unsigned long __do_clear_user(void __user *pto, unsigned long pn)
327 328 329 330 331 332
{
  /* We want the parameters put in special registers.
     Make sure the compiler is able to make something useful of this.
      As it is now: r10 -> r13; r11 -> r11 (nop); r12 -> r12 (nop).

     FIXME: Comment for old gcc version.  Check.
S
Simon Arlott 已提交
333
     If gcc was alright, it really would need no temporaries, and no
334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468
     stack space to save stuff on. */

  register char *dst __asm__ ("r13") = pto;
  register int n __asm__ ("r12") = pn;
  register int retn __asm__ ("r10") = 0;


  if (((unsigned long) dst & 3) != 0
     /* Don't align if we wouldn't copy more than a few bytes.  */
      && n >= 3)
  {
    if ((unsigned long) dst & 1)
    {
      __asm_clear_1 (dst, retn);
      n--;
    }

    if ((unsigned long) dst & 2)
    {
      __asm_clear_2 (dst, retn);
      n -= 2;
    }
  }

  /* Decide which copying method to use.
     FIXME: This number is from the "ordinary" kernel memset.  */
  if (n >= 48)
  {
    /* For large clears we use 'movem' */

    /* It is not optimal to tell the compiler about clobbering any
       call-saved registers; that will move the saving/restoring of
       those registers to the function prologue/epilogue, and make
       non-movem sizes suboptimal.

       This method is not foolproof; it assumes that the "asm reg"
       declarations at the beginning of the function really are used
       here (beware: they may be moved to temporary registers).
       This way, we do not have to save/move the registers around into
       temporaries; we can safely use them straight away.

      If you want to check that the allocation was right; then
      check the equalities in the first comment.  It should say
      something like "r13=r13, r11=r11, r12=r12". */
    __asm__ volatile ("\
	.ifnc %0%1%2,$r13$r12$r10					\n\
	.err								\n\
	.endif								\n\
									\n\
	;; Save the registers we'll clobber in the movem process	\n\
	;; on the stack.  Don't mention them to gcc, it will only be	\n\
	;; upset.							\n\
	subq	11*4,$sp						\n\
	movem	$r10,[$sp]						\n\
									\n\
	clear.d $r0							\n\
	clear.d $r1							\n\
	clear.d $r2							\n\
	clear.d $r3							\n\
	clear.d $r4							\n\
	clear.d $r5							\n\
	clear.d $r6							\n\
	clear.d $r7							\n\
	clear.d $r8							\n\
	clear.d $r9							\n\
	clear.d $r10							\n\
	clear.d $r11							\n\
									\n\
	;; Now we've got this:						\n\
	;; r13 - dst							\n\
	;; r12 - n							\n\
									\n\
	;; Update n for the first loop					\n\
	subq	12*4,$r12						\n\
0:									\n\
	subq   12*4,$r12						\n\
1:									\n\
	bge	0b							\n\
	movem	$r11,[$r13+]						\n\
									\n\
	addq   12*4,$r12 ;; compensate for last loop underflowing n	\n\
									\n\
	;; Restore registers from stack					\n\
	movem [$sp+],$r10						\n\
2:									\n\
	.section .fixup,\"ax\"						\n\
3:									\n\
	movem [$sp],$r10						\n\
	addq 12*4,$r10							\n\
	addq 12*4,$r13							\n\
	movem $r10,[$sp]						\n\
	jump 0b								\n\
	clear.d $r10							\n\
									\n\
	.previous							\n\
	.section __ex_table,\"a\"					\n\
	.dword 1b,3b							\n\
	.previous"

     /* Outputs */ : "=r" (dst), "=r" (n), "=r" (retn)
     /* Inputs */ : "0" (dst), "1" (n), "2" (retn)
     /* Clobber */ : "r11");
  }

  while (n >= 16)
  {
    __asm_clear_16 (dst, retn);
    n -= 16;
  }

  /* Having a separate by-four loops cuts down on cache footprint.
     FIXME:  Test with and without; increasing switch to be 0..15.  */
  while (n >= 4)
  {
    __asm_clear_4 (dst, retn);
    n -= 4;
  }

  switch (n)
  {
    case 0:
      break;
    case 1:
      __asm_clear_1 (dst, retn);
      break;
    case 2:
      __asm_clear_2 (dst, retn);
      break;
    case 3:
      __asm_clear_3 (dst, retn);
      break;
  }

  return retn;
}
469
EXPORT_SYMBOL(__do_clear_user);