From 758602c04409d8c5a092cef570b2de125ce0f2ae Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sam Tebbs Date: Thu, 27 May 2021 16:34:42 +0100 Subject: arm64: Import latest version of Cortex Strings' strcmp Import the latest version of the former Cortex Strings - now Arm Optimized Routines - strcmp function based on the upstream code of string/aarch64/strcmp.S at commit afd6244 from https://github.com/ARM-software/optimized-routines Note that for simplicity Arm have chosen to contribute this code to Linux under GPLv2 rather than the original MIT license. Signed-off-by: Sam Tebbs [ rm: update attribution and commit message ] Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/0fe90c90b96b569fbdfd46e47bd1298abb02079e.1622128527.git.robin.murphy@arm.com Signed-off-by: Will Deacon --- arch/arm64/lib/strcmp.S | 289 ++++++++++++++++++++---------------------------- 1 file changed, 121 insertions(+), 168 deletions(-) (limited to 'arch/arm64/lib') diff --git a/arch/arm64/lib/strcmp.S b/arch/arm64/lib/strcmp.S index 4e79566726c8..e82ccb6c2f93 100644 --- a/arch/arm64/lib/strcmp.S +++ b/arch/arm64/lib/strcmp.S @@ -1,84 +1,123 @@ /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only */ /* - * Copyright (C) 2013 ARM Ltd. - * Copyright (C) 2013 Linaro. + * Copyright (c) 2012-2020, Arm Limited. * - * This code is based on glibc cortex strings work originally authored by Linaro - * be found @ - * - * http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~linaro-toolchain-dev/cortex-strings/trunk/ - * files/head:/src/aarch64/ + * Adapted from the original at: + * https://github.com/ARM-software/optimized-routines/blob/master/string/aarch64/strcmp.S */ #include #include -/* - * compare two strings +/* Assumptions: * - * Parameters: - * x0 - const string 1 pointer - * x1 - const string 2 pointer - * Returns: - * x0 - an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero - * if s1 is found, respectively, to be less than, to match, - * or be greater than s2. + * ARMv8-a, AArch64 */ +#define L(label) .L ## label + #define REP8_01 0x0101010101010101 #define REP8_7f 0x7f7f7f7f7f7f7f7f #define REP8_80 0x8080808080808080 /* Parameters and result. */ -src1 .req x0 -src2 .req x1 -result .req x0 +#define src1 x0 +#define src2 x1 +#define result x0 /* Internal variables. */ -data1 .req x2 -data1w .req w2 -data2 .req x3 -data2w .req w3 -has_nul .req x4 -diff .req x5 -syndrome .req x6 -tmp1 .req x7 -tmp2 .req x8 -tmp3 .req x9 -zeroones .req x10 -pos .req x11 - +#define data1 x2 +#define data1w w2 +#define data2 x3 +#define data2w w3 +#define has_nul x4 +#define diff x5 +#define syndrome x6 +#define tmp1 x7 +#define tmp2 x8 +#define tmp3 x9 +#define zeroones x10 +#define pos x11 + + /* Start of performance-critical section -- one 64B cache line. */ + .align 6 SYM_FUNC_START_WEAK_PI(strcmp) eor tmp1, src1, src2 mov zeroones, #REP8_01 tst tmp1, #7 - b.ne .Lmisaligned8 + b.ne L(misaligned8) ands tmp1, src1, #7 - b.ne .Lmutual_align - - /* - * NUL detection works on the principle that (X - 1) & (~X) & 0x80 - * (=> (X - 1) & ~(X | 0x7f)) is non-zero iff a byte is zero, and - * can be done in parallel across the entire word. - */ -.Lloop_aligned: + b.ne L(mutual_align) + /* NUL detection works on the principle that (X - 1) & (~X) & 0x80 + (=> (X - 1) & ~(X | 0x7f)) is non-zero iff a byte is zero, and + can be done in parallel across the entire word. */ +L(loop_aligned): ldr data1, [src1], #8 ldr data2, [src2], #8 -.Lstart_realigned: +L(start_realigned): sub tmp1, data1, zeroones orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f eor diff, data1, data2 /* Non-zero if differences found. */ bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 /* Non-zero if NUL terminator. */ orr syndrome, diff, has_nul - cbz syndrome, .Lloop_aligned - b .Lcal_cmpresult + cbz syndrome, L(loop_aligned) + /* End of performance-critical section -- one 64B cache line. */ + +L(end): +#ifndef __AARCH64EB__ + rev syndrome, syndrome + rev data1, data1 + /* The MS-non-zero bit of the syndrome marks either the first bit + that is different, or the top bit of the first zero byte. + Shifting left now will bring the critical information into the + top bits. */ + clz pos, syndrome + rev data2, data2 + lsl data1, data1, pos + lsl data2, data2, pos + /* But we need to zero-extend (char is unsigned) the value and then + perform a signed 32-bit subtraction. */ + lsr data1, data1, #56 + sub result, data1, data2, lsr #56 + ret +#else + /* For big-endian we cannot use the trick with the syndrome value + as carry-propagation can corrupt the upper bits if the trailing + bytes in the string contain 0x01. */ + /* However, if there is no NUL byte in the dword, we can generate + the result directly. We can't just subtract the bytes as the + MSB might be significant. */ + cbnz has_nul, 1f + cmp data1, data2 + cset result, ne + cneg result, result, lo + ret +1: + /* Re-compute the NUL-byte detection, using a byte-reversed value. */ + rev tmp3, data1 + sub tmp1, tmp3, zeroones + orr tmp2, tmp3, #REP8_7f + bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 + rev has_nul, has_nul + orr syndrome, diff, has_nul + clz pos, syndrome + /* The MS-non-zero bit of the syndrome marks either the first bit + that is different, or the top bit of the first zero byte. + Shifting left now will bring the critical information into the + top bits. */ + lsl data1, data1, pos + lsl data2, data2, pos + /* But we need to zero-extend (char is unsigned) the value and then + perform a signed 32-bit subtraction. */ + lsr data1, data1, #56 + sub result, data1, data2, lsr #56 + ret +#endif -.Lmutual_align: - /* - * Sources are mutually aligned, but are not currently at an - * alignment boundary. Round down the addresses and then mask off - * the bytes that preceed the start point. - */ +L(mutual_align): + /* Sources are mutually aligned, but are not currently at an + alignment boundary. Round down the addresses and then mask off + the bytes that preceed the start point. */ bic src1, src1, #7 bic src2, src2, #7 lsl tmp1, tmp1, #3 /* Bytes beyond alignment -> bits. */ @@ -86,138 +125,52 @@ SYM_FUNC_START_WEAK_PI(strcmp) neg tmp1, tmp1 /* Bits to alignment -64. */ ldr data2, [src2], #8 mov tmp2, #~0 +#ifdef __AARCH64EB__ /* Big-endian. Early bytes are at MSB. */ -CPU_BE( lsl tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 ) /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */ + lsl tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */ +#else /* Little-endian. Early bytes are at LSB. */ -CPU_LE( lsr tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 ) /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */ - + lsr tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */ +#endif orr data1, data1, tmp2 orr data2, data2, tmp2 - b .Lstart_realigned - -.Lmisaligned8: - /* - * Get the align offset length to compare per byte first. - * After this process, one string's address will be aligned. - */ - and tmp1, src1, #7 - neg tmp1, tmp1 - add tmp1, tmp1, #8 - and tmp2, src2, #7 - neg tmp2, tmp2 - add tmp2, tmp2, #8 - subs tmp3, tmp1, tmp2 - csel pos, tmp1, tmp2, hi /*Choose the maximum. */ -.Ltinycmp: + b L(start_realigned) + +L(misaligned8): + /* Align SRC1 to 8 bytes and then compare 8 bytes at a time, always + checking to make sure that we don't access beyond page boundary in + SRC2. */ + tst src1, #7 + b.eq L(loop_misaligned) +L(do_misaligned): ldrb data1w, [src1], #1 ldrb data2w, [src2], #1 - subs pos, pos, #1 - ccmp data1w, #1, #0, ne /* NZCV = 0b0000. */ - ccmp data1w, data2w, #0, cs /* NZCV = 0b0000. */ - b.eq .Ltinycmp - cbnz pos, 1f /*find the null or unequal...*/ cmp data1w, #1 - ccmp data1w, data2w, #0, cs - b.eq .Lstart_align /*the last bytes are equal....*/ -1: - sub result, data1, data2 - ret - -.Lstart_align: - ands xzr, src1, #7 - b.eq .Lrecal_offset - /*process more leading bytes to make str1 aligned...*/ - add src1, src1, tmp3 - add src2, src2, tmp3 - /*load 8 bytes from aligned str1 and non-aligned str2..*/ + ccmp data1w, data2w, #0, cs /* NZCV = 0b0000. */ + b.ne L(done) + tst src1, #7 + b.ne L(do_misaligned) + +L(loop_misaligned): + /* Test if we are within the last dword of the end of a 4K page. If + yes then jump back to the misaligned loop to copy a byte at a time. */ + and tmp1, src2, #0xff8 + eor tmp1, tmp1, #0xff8 + cbz tmp1, L(do_misaligned) ldr data1, [src1], #8 ldr data2, [src2], #8 sub tmp1, data1, zeroones orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f - bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 - eor diff, data1, data2 /* Non-zero if differences found. */ - orr syndrome, diff, has_nul - cbnz syndrome, .Lcal_cmpresult - /*How far is the current str2 from the alignment boundary...*/ - and tmp3, tmp3, #7 -.Lrecal_offset: - neg pos, tmp3 -.Lloopcmp_proc: - /* - * Divide the eight bytes into two parts. First,backwards the src2 - * to an alignment boundary,load eight bytes from the SRC2 alignment - * boundary,then compare with the relative bytes from SRC1. - * If all 8 bytes are equal,then start the second part's comparison. - * Otherwise finish the comparison. - * This special handle can garantee all the accesses are in the - * thread/task space in avoid to overrange access. - */ - ldr data1, [src1,pos] - ldr data2, [src2,pos] - sub tmp1, data1, zeroones - orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f - bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 - eor diff, data1, data2 /* Non-zero if differences found. */ - orr syndrome, diff, has_nul - cbnz syndrome, .Lcal_cmpresult - - /*The second part process*/ - ldr data1, [src1], #8 - ldr data2, [src2], #8 - sub tmp1, data1, zeroones - orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f - bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 - eor diff, data1, data2 /* Non-zero if differences found. */ + eor diff, data1, data2 /* Non-zero if differences found. */ + bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 /* Non-zero if NUL terminator. */ orr syndrome, diff, has_nul - cbz syndrome, .Lloopcmp_proc + cbz syndrome, L(loop_misaligned) + b L(end) -.Lcal_cmpresult: - /* - * reversed the byte-order as big-endian,then CLZ can find the most - * significant zero bits. - */ -CPU_LE( rev syndrome, syndrome ) -CPU_LE( rev data1, data1 ) -CPU_LE( rev data2, data2 ) - - /* - * For big-endian we cannot use the trick with the syndrome value - * as carry-propagation can corrupt the upper bits if the trailing - * bytes in the string contain 0x01. - * However, if there is no NUL byte in the dword, we can generate - * the result directly. We cannot just subtract the bytes as the - * MSB might be significant. - */ -CPU_BE( cbnz has_nul, 1f ) -CPU_BE( cmp data1, data2 ) -CPU_BE( cset result, ne ) -CPU_BE( cneg result, result, lo ) -CPU_BE( ret ) -CPU_BE( 1: ) - /*Re-compute the NUL-byte detection, using a byte-reversed value. */ -CPU_BE( rev tmp3, data1 ) -CPU_BE( sub tmp1, tmp3, zeroones ) -CPU_BE( orr tmp2, tmp3, #REP8_7f ) -CPU_BE( bic has_nul, tmp1, tmp2 ) -CPU_BE( rev has_nul, has_nul ) -CPU_BE( orr syndrome, diff, has_nul ) - - clz pos, syndrome - /* - * The MS-non-zero bit of the syndrome marks either the first bit - * that is different, or the top bit of the first zero byte. - * Shifting left now will bring the critical information into the - * top bits. - */ - lsl data1, data1, pos - lsl data2, data2, pos - /* - * But we need to zero-extend (char is unsigned) the value and then - * perform a signed 32-bit subtraction. - */ - lsr data1, data1, #56 - sub result, data1, data2, lsr #56 +L(done): + sub result, data1, data2 ret + SYM_FUNC_END_PI(strcmp) EXPORT_SYMBOL_NOKASAN(strcmp) -- cgit v1.2.3