2 * Copyright (c) 2004 The DragonFly Project. All rights reserved.
4 * This code is derived from software contributed to The DragonFly Project
5 * by Matthew Dillon <dillon@backplane.com>
7 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
8 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
11 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
12 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
13 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
14 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
15 * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
17 * 3. Neither the name of The DragonFly Project nor the names of its
18 * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
19 * from this software without specific, prior written permission.
21 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
22 * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
23 * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
24 * FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
25 * COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
26 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING,
27 * BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
28 * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED
29 * AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
30 * OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
31 * OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
34 * $DragonFly: src/sys/i386/i386/Attic/bcopy.s,v 1.7 2005/06/20 17:43:37 dillon Exp $
37 * bcopy(source:%esi, target:%edi, count:%ecx)
39 * note: esi, edi, eax, ecx, and edx may be destroyed
44 #include <machine/asmacros.h>
45 #include <machine/cputypes.h>
46 #include <machine/pmap.h>
47 #include <machine/specialreg.h>
54 * bcopyb() is a 'dumb' byte-granular bcopy. It is only used by
55 * devices which need to bcopy device-mapped memory which cannot
56 * otherwise handle 16 or 32 bit ops.
67 cmpl %ecx,%eax /* overlapping && src < dst? */
69 cld /* nope, copy forwards */
78 addl %ecx,%edi /* copy backwards. */
91 * bcopyi(s, d, len) (NON OVERLAPPING)
93 * This is a dumb 32-bit-granular bcopy
111 * If memcpy/bcopy is called as part of a copyin or copyout, the
112 * on-fault routine is set up to do a 'ret'. We have to restore
113 * %ebx and return to the copyin/copyout fault handler.
117 addl $4,%esp /* skip normal return vector */
118 ret /* return to copyin/copyout fault handler */
121 * GENERIC BCOPY() - COPY DIRECTION CHECK AND FORWARDS COPY
123 * Reasonably optimal on all modern machines.
127 ENTRY(asm_generic_memcpy) /* memcpy() entry point use optimal copy */
129 pushl $generic_onfault
133 ENTRY(asm_generic_bcopy)
135 pushl $generic_onfault
136 cmpl %esi,%edi /* if (edi < esi) fwd copy ok */
139 cmpl %esi,%edi /* if (edi < esi + count) do bkwrds copy */
178 * GENERIC_BCOPY() - BACKWARDS COPY
222 * MMX BCOPY() - COPY DIRECTION CHECK AND FORWARDS COPY
224 * note: esi, edi, eax, ecx, and edx are allowed to be destroyed.
226 * In order for the kernel to be able to use the FPU:
228 * (1) The kernel may not already be using the fpu.
230 * (2) If the fpu is owned by the application, we must save
231 * its state. If the fpu is not owned by the application
232 * the application's saved fp state may already exist
235 * (3) We cannot allow the kernel to overwrite the application's
236 * FPU state with our own, so we make sure the application's
237 * FPU state has been saved and then point TD_SAVEFPU at a
238 * temporary fpu save area in the globaldata structure.
242 * If gd_npxthread is not NULL we must save the application's
243 * current FP state to the current save area and then NULL
244 * out gd_npxthread to interlock against new interruptions
245 * changing the FP state further.
247 * If gd_npxthread is NULL the FP unit is in a known 'safe'
248 * state and may be used once the new save area is installed.
250 * race(1): If an interrupt occurs just prior to calling fxsave
251 * all that happens is that fxsave gets a npxdna trap, restores
252 * the app's environment, and immediately traps, restores,
253 * and saves it again.
255 * race(2): No interrupt can safely occur after we NULL-out
256 * npxthread until we fninit, because the kernel assumes that
257 * the FP unit is in a safe state when npxthread is NULL. It's
258 * more convenient to use a cli sequence here (it is not
259 * considered to be in the critical path), but a critical
260 * section would also work.
262 * race(3): The FP unit is in a known state (because npxthread
263 * was either previously NULL or we saved and init'd and made
264 * it NULL). This is true even if we are preempted and the
265 * preempting thread uses the FP unit, because it will be
266 * fninit's again on return. ANY STATE WE SAVE TO THE FPU MAY
267 * BE DESTROYED BY PREEMPTION WHILE NPXTHREAD IS NULL! However,
268 * an interrupt occuring inbetween clts and the setting of
269 * gd_npxthread may set the TS bit again and cause the next
270 * npxdna() to panic when it sees a non-NULL gd_npxthread.
272 * We can safely set TD_SAVEFPU to point to a new uninitialized
273 * save area and then set GD_NPXTHREAD to non-NULL. If an
274 * interrupt occurs after we set GD_NPXTHREAD, all that happens
275 * is that the safe FP state gets saved and restored. We do not
276 * need to fninit again.
278 * We can safely clts after setting up the new save-area, before
279 * installing gd_npxthread, even if we get preempted just after
280 * calling clts. This is because the FP unit will be in a safe
281 * state while gd_npxthread is NULL. Setting gd_npxthread will
282 * simply lock-in that safe-state. Calling clts saves
283 * unnecessary trap overhead since we are about to use the FP
284 * unit anyway and don't need to 'restore' any state prior to
287 * MMX+XMM (SSE2): Typical on Athlons, later P4s. 128 bit media insn.
288 * MMX: Typical on XPs and P3s. 64 bit media insn.
291 #define MMX_SAVE_BLOCK(missfunc) \
294 movl MYCPU,%eax ; /* EAX = MYCPU */ \
295 btsl $1,GD_FPU_LOCK(%eax) ; \
299 movl GD_CURTHREAD(%eax),%edx ; /* EDX = CURTHREAD */ \
300 movl TD_SAVEFPU(%edx),%ebx ; /* save app save area */\
301 addl $TDPRI_CRIT,TD_PRI(%edx) ; \
302 cmpl $0,GD_NPXTHREAD(%eax) ; \
304 fxsave 0(%ebx) ; /* race(1) */ \
305 movl $0,GD_NPXTHREAD(%eax) ; /* interlock intr */ \
307 fninit ; /* race(2) */ \
309 leal GD_SAVEFPU(%eax),%ecx ; \
310 movl %ecx,TD_SAVEFPU(%edx) ; \
312 movl %edx,GD_NPXTHREAD(%eax) ; /* race(3) */ \
313 subl $TDPRI_CRIT,TD_PRI(%edx) ; /* crit_exit() */ \
314 cmpl $0,GD_REQFLAGS(%eax) ; \
316 cmpl $TDPRI_CRIT,TD_PRI(%edx) ; \
318 call lwkt_yield_quick ; \
319 /* note: eax,ecx,edx destroyed */ \
322 movl $mmx_onfault,(%esp) ; \
325 * When restoring the application's FP state we must first clear
326 * npxthread to prevent further saves, then restore the pointer
327 * to the app's save area. We do not have to (and should not)
328 * restore the app's FP state now. Note that we do not have to
329 * call fninit because our use of the FP guarentees that it is in
330 * a 'safe' state (at least for kernel use).
332 * NOTE: it is not usually safe to mess with CR0 outside of a
333 * critical section, because TS may get set by a preemptive
334 * interrupt. However, we *can* race a load/set-ts/store against
335 * an interrupt doing the same thing.
338 #define MMX_RESTORE_BLOCK \
342 #define MMX_RESTORE_BLOCK2 \
344 movl GD_CURTHREAD(%ecx),%edx ; \
345 movl $0,GD_NPXTHREAD(%ecx) ; \
346 movl %ebx,TD_SAVEFPU(%edx) ; \
351 movl $0,GD_FPU_LOCK(%ecx)
354 * xmm/mmx_onfault routine. Restore the fpu state, skip the normal
355 * return vector, and return to the caller's on-fault routine
356 * (which was pushed on the callers stack just before he called us)
365 * MXX entry points - only support 64 bit media instructions
368 ENTRY(asm_mmx_memcpy) /* memcpy() entry point use optimal copy */
369 MMX_SAVE_BLOCK(asm_generic_memcpy)
374 MMX_SAVE_BLOCK(asm_generic_bcopy)
375 cmpl %esi,%edi /* if (edi < esi) fwd copy ok */
378 cmpl %esi,%edi /* if (edi < esi + count) do bkwrds copy */
384 * XMM entry points - support 128 bit media instructions
387 ENTRY(asm_xmm_memcpy) /* memcpy() entry point use optimal copy */
388 MMX_SAVE_BLOCK(asm_generic_memcpy)
393 MMX_SAVE_BLOCK(asm_generic_bcopy)
394 cmpl %esi,%edi /* if (edi < esi) fwd copy ok */
397 cmpl %esi,%edi /* if (edi < esi + count) do bkwrds copy */
401 movl %esi,%eax /* skip xmm if the data is not aligned */
412 movdqa 16(%esi),%xmm1
413 movdqa 32(%esi),%xmm2
414 movdqa 48(%esi),%xmm3
415 movdqa 64(%esi),%xmm4
416 movdqa 80(%esi),%xmm5
417 movdqa 96(%esi),%xmm6
418 movdqa 112(%esi),%xmm7
419 /*prefetchnta 128(%esi) 3dNOW */
423 * movdqa or movntdq can be used.
426 movdqa %xmm1,16(%edi)
427 movdqa %xmm2,32(%edi)
428 movdqa %xmm3,48(%edi)
429 movdqa %xmm4,64(%edi)
430 movdqa %xmm5,80(%edi)
431 movdqa %xmm6,96(%edi)
432 movdqa %xmm7,112(%edi)
450 /*prefetchnta 128(%esi) 3dNOW */
474 * GENERIC_BCOPY() - BACKWARDS COPY
476 * Don't bother using xmm optimizations, just stick with mmx.
493 /*prefetchnta -128(%esi)*/