From cdacc1278b12d929f9a053c245ff3d16eb7af9f8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge Date: Tue, 8 Jul 2008 15:06:46 -0700 Subject: xen64: add 64-bit assembler Split xen-asm into 32- and 64-bit files, and implement the 64-bit variants. Signed-off-by: Jeremy Fitzhardinge Cc: Stephen Tweedie Cc: Eduardo Habkost Cc: Mark McLoughlin Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar --- arch/x86/xen/xen-asm.S | 305 ------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 305 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 arch/x86/xen/xen-asm.S (limited to 'arch/x86/xen/xen-asm.S') diff --git a/arch/x86/xen/xen-asm.S b/arch/x86/xen/xen-asm.S deleted file mode 100644 index 2497a30f41de..000000000000 --- a/arch/x86/xen/xen-asm.S +++ /dev/null @@ -1,305 +0,0 @@ -/* - Asm versions of Xen pv-ops, suitable for either direct use or inlining. - The inline versions are the same as the direct-use versions, with the - pre- and post-amble chopped off. - - This code is encoded for size rather than absolute efficiency, - with a view to being able to inline as much as possible. - - We only bother with direct forms (ie, vcpu in pda) of the operations - here; the indirect forms are better handled in C, since they're - generally too large to inline anyway. - */ - -#include - -#include -#include -#include -#include -#include - -#include - -#define RELOC(x, v) .globl x##_reloc; x##_reloc=v -#define ENDPATCH(x) .globl x##_end; x##_end=. - -/* Pseudo-flag used for virtual NMI, which we don't implement yet */ -#define XEN_EFLAGS_NMI 0x80000000 - -/* - Enable events. This clears the event mask and tests the pending - event status with one and operation. If there are pending - events, then enter the hypervisor to get them handled. - */ -ENTRY(xen_irq_enable_direct) - /* Unmask events */ - movb $0, PER_CPU_VAR(xen_vcpu_info)+XEN_vcpu_info_mask - - /* Preempt here doesn't matter because that will deal with - any pending interrupts. The pending check may end up being - run on the wrong CPU, but that doesn't hurt. */ - - /* Test for pending */ - testb $0xff, PER_CPU_VAR(xen_vcpu_info)+XEN_vcpu_info_pending - jz 1f - -2: call check_events -1: -ENDPATCH(xen_irq_enable_direct) - ret - ENDPROC(xen_irq_enable_direct) - RELOC(xen_irq_enable_direct, 2b+1) - - -/* - Disabling events is simply a matter of making the event mask - non-zero. - */ -ENTRY(xen_irq_disable_direct) - movb $1, PER_CPU_VAR(xen_vcpu_info)+XEN_vcpu_info_mask -ENDPATCH(xen_irq_disable_direct) - ret - ENDPROC(xen_irq_disable_direct) - RELOC(xen_irq_disable_direct, 0) - -/* - (xen_)save_fl is used to get the current interrupt enable status. - Callers expect the status to be in X86_EFLAGS_IF, and other bits - may be set in the return value. We take advantage of this by - making sure that X86_EFLAGS_IF has the right value (and other bits - in that byte are 0), but other bits in the return value are - undefined. We need to toggle the state of the bit, because - Xen and x86 use opposite senses (mask vs enable). - */ -ENTRY(xen_save_fl_direct) - testb $0xff, PER_CPU_VAR(xen_vcpu_info)+XEN_vcpu_info_mask - setz %ah - addb %ah,%ah -ENDPATCH(xen_save_fl_direct) - ret - ENDPROC(xen_save_fl_direct) - RELOC(xen_save_fl_direct, 0) - - -/* - In principle the caller should be passing us a value return - from xen_save_fl_direct, but for robustness sake we test only - the X86_EFLAGS_IF flag rather than the whole byte. After - setting the interrupt mask state, it checks for unmasked - pending events and enters the hypervisor to get them delivered - if so. - */ -ENTRY(xen_restore_fl_direct) - testb $X86_EFLAGS_IF>>8, %ah - setz PER_CPU_VAR(xen_vcpu_info)+XEN_vcpu_info_mask - /* Preempt here doesn't matter because that will deal with - any pending interrupts. The pending check may end up being - run on the wrong CPU, but that doesn't hurt. */ - - /* check for unmasked and pending */ - cmpw $0x0001, PER_CPU_VAR(xen_vcpu_info)+XEN_vcpu_info_pending - jz 1f -2: call check_events -1: -ENDPATCH(xen_restore_fl_direct) - ret - ENDPROC(xen_restore_fl_direct) - RELOC(xen_restore_fl_direct, 2b+1) - -/* - We can't use sysexit directly, because we're not running in ring0. - But we can easily fake it up using iret. Assuming xen_sysexit - is jumped to with a standard stack frame, we can just strip it - back to a standard iret frame and use iret. - */ -ENTRY(xen_sysexit) - movl PT_EAX(%esp), %eax /* Shouldn't be necessary? */ - orl $X86_EFLAGS_IF, PT_EFLAGS(%esp) - lea PT_EIP(%esp), %esp - - jmp xen_iret -ENDPROC(xen_sysexit) - -/* - This is run where a normal iret would be run, with the same stack setup: - 8: eflags - 4: cs - esp-> 0: eip - - This attempts to make sure that any pending events are dealt - with on return to usermode, but there is a small window in - which an event can happen just before entering usermode. If - the nested interrupt ends up setting one of the TIF_WORK_MASK - pending work flags, they will not be tested again before - returning to usermode. This means that a process can end up - with pending work, which will be unprocessed until the process - enters and leaves the kernel again, which could be an - unbounded amount of time. This means that a pending signal or - reschedule event could be indefinitely delayed. - - The fix is to notice a nested interrupt in the critical - window, and if one occurs, then fold the nested interrupt into - the current interrupt stack frame, and re-process it - iteratively rather than recursively. This means that it will - exit via the normal path, and all pending work will be dealt - with appropriately. - - Because the nested interrupt handler needs to deal with the - current stack state in whatever form its in, we keep things - simple by only using a single register which is pushed/popped - on the stack. - */ -ENTRY(xen_iret) - /* test eflags for special cases */ - testl $(X86_EFLAGS_VM | XEN_EFLAGS_NMI), 8(%esp) - jnz hyper_iret - - push %eax - ESP_OFFSET=4 # bytes pushed onto stack - - /* Store vcpu_info pointer for easy access. Do it this - way to avoid having to reload %fs */ -#ifdef CONFIG_SMP - GET_THREAD_INFO(%eax) - movl TI_cpu(%eax),%eax - movl __per_cpu_offset(,%eax,4),%eax - mov per_cpu__xen_vcpu(%eax),%eax -#else - movl per_cpu__xen_vcpu, %eax -#endif - - /* check IF state we're restoring */ - testb $X86_EFLAGS_IF>>8, 8+1+ESP_OFFSET(%esp) - - /* Maybe enable events. Once this happens we could get a - recursive event, so the critical region starts immediately - afterwards. However, if that happens we don't end up - resuming the code, so we don't have to be worried about - being preempted to another CPU. */ - setz XEN_vcpu_info_mask(%eax) -xen_iret_start_crit: - - /* check for unmasked and pending */ - cmpw $0x0001, XEN_vcpu_info_pending(%eax) - - /* If there's something pending, mask events again so we - can jump back into xen_hypervisor_callback */ - sete XEN_vcpu_info_mask(%eax) - - popl %eax - - /* From this point on the registers are restored and the stack - updated, so we don't need to worry about it if we're preempted */ -iret_restore_end: - - /* Jump to hypervisor_callback after fixing up the stack. - Events are masked, so jumping out of the critical - region is OK. */ - je xen_hypervisor_callback - -1: iret -xen_iret_end_crit: -.section __ex_table,"a" - .align 4 - .long 1b,iret_exc -.previous - -hyper_iret: - /* put this out of line since its very rarely used */ - jmp hypercall_page + __HYPERVISOR_iret * 32 - - .globl xen_iret_start_crit, xen_iret_end_crit - -/* - This is called by xen_hypervisor_callback in entry.S when it sees - that the EIP at the time of interrupt was between xen_iret_start_crit - and xen_iret_end_crit. We're passed the EIP in %eax so we can do - a more refined determination of what to do. - - The stack format at this point is: - ---------------- - ss : (ss/esp may be present if we came from usermode) - esp : - eflags } outer exception info - cs } - eip } - ---------------- <- edi (copy dest) - eax : outer eax if it hasn't been restored - ---------------- - eflags } nested exception info - cs } (no ss/esp because we're nested - eip } from the same ring) - orig_eax }<- esi (copy src) - - - - - - - - - - fs } - es } - ds } SAVE_ALL state - eax } - : : - ebx }<- esp - ---------------- - - In order to deliver the nested exception properly, we need to shift - everything from the return addr up to the error code so it - sits just under the outer exception info. This means that when we - handle the exception, we do it in the context of the outer exception - rather than starting a new one. - - The only caveat is that if the outer eax hasn't been - restored yet (ie, it's still on stack), we need to insert - its value into the SAVE_ALL state before going on, since - it's usermode state which we eventually need to restore. - */ -ENTRY(xen_iret_crit_fixup) - /* - Paranoia: Make sure we're really coming from kernel space. - One could imagine a case where userspace jumps into the - critical range address, but just before the CPU delivers a GP, - it decides to deliver an interrupt instead. Unlikely? - Definitely. Easy to avoid? Yes. The Intel documents - explicitly say that the reported EIP for a bad jump is the - jump instruction itself, not the destination, but some virtual - environments get this wrong. - */ - movl PT_CS(%esp), %ecx - andl $SEGMENT_RPL_MASK, %ecx - cmpl $USER_RPL, %ecx - je 2f - - lea PT_ORIG_EAX(%esp), %esi - lea PT_EFLAGS(%esp), %edi - - /* If eip is before iret_restore_end then stack - hasn't been restored yet. */ - cmp $iret_restore_end, %eax - jae 1f - - movl 0+4(%edi),%eax /* copy EAX (just above top of frame) */ - movl %eax, PT_EAX(%esp) - - lea ESP_OFFSET(%edi),%edi /* move dest up over saved regs */ - - /* set up the copy */ -1: std - mov $PT_EIP / 4, %ecx /* saved regs up to orig_eax */ - rep movsl - cld - - lea 4(%edi),%esp /* point esp to new frame */ -2: jmp xen_do_upcall - - -/* - Force an event check by making a hypercall, - but preserve regs before making the call. - */ -check_events: - push %eax - push %ecx - push %edx - call force_evtchn_callback - pop %edx - pop %ecx - pop %eax - ret -- cgit