| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368 | /* Assembler macros for ARM.   Copyright (C) 1997, 1998, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.   This file is part of the GNU C Library.   The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.   The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU   Lesser General Public License for more details.   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public   License along with the GNU C Library; if not, write to the Free   Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA   02111-1307 USA.  */#ifndef _LINUX_ARM_SYSDEP_H#define _LINUX_ARM_SYSDEP_H 1#include <common/sysdep.h>#include <bits/arm_asm.h>#include <sys/syscall.h>/* For Linux we can use the system call table in the header file	/usr/include/asm/unistd.h   of the kernel.  But these symbols do not follow the SYS_* syntax   so we have to redefine the `SYS_ify' macro here.  */#undef SYS_ify#define SWI_BASE  (0x900000)#define SYS_ify(syscall_name)	(__NR_##syscall_name)#ifdef	__ASSEMBLER__/* Syntactic details of assembler.  */#define ALIGNARG(log2) log2/* For ELF we need the `.type' directive to make shared libs work right.  */#define ASM_TYPE_DIRECTIVE(name,typearg) .type name,%##typearg;#define ASM_SIZE_DIRECTIVE(name) .size name,.-name/* In ELF C symbols are asm symbols.  */#undef	NO_UNDERSCORES#define NO_UNDERSCORES#define PLTJMP(_x)	_x##(PLT)/* APCS-32 doesn't preserve the condition codes across function call. */#ifdef __APCS_32__#define LOADREGS(cond, base, reglist...)\	ldm##cond	base,reglist#ifdef __USE_BX__#define RETINSTR(cond, reg)	\	bx##cond	reg#define DO_RET(_reg)		\	bx _reg#else#define RETINSTR(cond, reg)	\	mov##cond	pc, reg#define DO_RET(_reg)		\	mov pc, _reg#endif#else  /* APCS-26 */#define LOADREGS(cond, base, reglist...)	\	ldm##cond	base,reglist^#define RETINSTR(cond, reg)	\	mov##cond##s	pc, reg#define DO_RET(_reg)		\	movs pc, _reg#endif/* Define an entry point visible from C.  */#define	ENTRY(name)						\  ASM_GLOBAL_DIRECTIVE C_SYMBOL_NAME(name);			\  ASM_TYPE_DIRECTIVE (C_SYMBOL_NAME(name),function)		\  .align ALIGNARG(4);						\  name##:							\  CALL_MCOUNT#undef	END#define END(name)						\  ASM_SIZE_DIRECTIVE(name)/* If compiled for profiling, call `mcount' at the start of each function.  */#ifdef	PROF#define CALL_MCOUNT			\	str	lr,[sp, #-4]!	;	\	bl	PLTJMP(mcount)	;	\	ldr	lr, [sp], #4	;#else#define CALL_MCOUNT		/* Do nothing.  */#endif#ifdef	NO_UNDERSCORES/* Since C identifiers are not normally prefixed with an underscore   on this system, the asm identifier `syscall_error' intrudes on the   C name space.  Make sure we use an innocuous name.  */#define	syscall_error	__syscall_error#define mcount		_mcount#endif/* Linux uses a negative return value to indicate syscall errors,   unlike most Unices, which use the condition codes' carry flag.   Since version 2.1 the return value of a system call might be   negative even if the call succeeded.  E.g., the `lseek' system call   might return a large offset.  Therefore we must not anymore test   for < 0, but test for a real error by making sure the value in R0   is a real error number.  Linus said he will make sure the no syscall   returns a value in -1 .. -4095 as a valid result so we can safely   test with -4095.  */#undef	PSEUDO#define	PSEUDO(name, syscall_name, args)				\  .text;								\  ENTRY (name);								\    DO_CALL (syscall_name, args);					\    cmn r0, $4096;#define PSEUDO_RET							\    RETINSTR(cc, lr);							\    b PLTJMP(SYSCALL_ERROR)#undef ret#define ret PSEUDO_RET#undef	PSEUDO_END#define	PSEUDO_END(name)						\  SYSCALL_ERROR_HANDLER							\  END (name)#undef	PSEUDO_NOERRNO#define	PSEUDO_NOERRNO(name, syscall_name, args)			\  .text;								\  ENTRY (name);								\    DO_CALL (syscall_name, args);#define PSEUDO_RET_NOERRNO						\    DO_RET (lr);#undef ret_NOERRNO#define ret_NOERRNO PSEUDO_RET_NOERRNO#undef	PSEUDO_END_NOERRNO#define	PSEUDO_END_NOERRNO(name)					\  END (name)/* The function has to return the error code.  */#undef	PSEUDO_ERRVAL#define	PSEUDO_ERRVAL(name, syscall_name, args) \  .text;								\  ENTRY (name)								\    DO_CALL (syscall_name, args);					\    rsb r0, r0, #0#undef	PSEUDO_END_ERRVAL#define	PSEUDO_END_ERRVAL(name) \  END (name)#define ret_ERRVAL PSEUDO_RET_NOERRNO#if defined NOT_IN_libc# define SYSCALL_ERROR __local_syscall_error# ifdef RTLD_PRIVATE_ERRNO#  define SYSCALL_ERROR_HANDLER					\__local_syscall_error:						\       ldr     r1, 1f;						\       rsb     r0, r0, #0;					\0:     str     r0, [pc, r1];					\       mvn     r0, #0;						\       DO_RET(lr);						\1:     .word C_SYMBOL_NAME(rtld_errno) - 0b - 8;# else#  define SYSCALL_ERROR_HANDLER					\__local_syscall_error:						\	str	lr, [sp, #-4]!;					\	str	r0, [sp, #-4]!;					\	bl	PLTJMP(C_SYMBOL_NAME(__errno_location)); 	\	ldr	r1, [sp], #4;					\	rsb	r1, r1, #0;					\	str	r1, [r0];					\	mvn	r0, #0;						\	ldr	pc, [sp], #4;# endif#else# define SYSCALL_ERROR_HANDLER	/* Nothing here; code in sysdep.S is used.  */# define SYSCALL_ERROR __syscall_error#endif/* Linux takes system call args in registers:	syscall number	in the SWI instruction	arg 1		r0	arg 2		r1	arg 3		r2	arg 4		r3	arg 5		r4	(this is different from the APCS convention)	arg 6		r5	arg 7		r6   The compiler is going to form a call by coming here, through PSEUDO, with   arguments	syscall number	in the DO_CALL macro	arg 1		r0	arg 2		r1	arg 3		r2	arg 4		r3	arg 5		[sp]	arg 6		[sp+4]	arg 7		[sp+8]   We need to shuffle values between R4..R6 and the stack so that the   caller's v1..v3 and stack frame are not corrupted, and the kernel   sees the right arguments.*/#undef	DO_CALL#if defined(__ARM_EABI__)#define DO_CALL(syscall_name, args)		\    DOARGS_##args				\    mov ip, r7;					\    ldr r7, =SYS_ify (syscall_name);		\    swi 0x0;					\    mov r7, ip;					\    UNDOARGS_##args#else#define DO_CALL(syscall_name, args)		\    DOARGS_##args				\    swi SYS_ify (syscall_name); 		\    UNDOARGS_##args#endif#define DOARGS_0 /* nothing */#define DOARGS_1 /* nothing */#define DOARGS_2 /* nothing */#define DOARGS_3 /* nothing */#define DOARGS_4 /* nothing */#define DOARGS_5 str r4, [sp, $-4]!; ldr r4, [sp, $4];#define DOARGS_6 mov ip, sp; stmfd sp!, {r4, r5}; ldmia ip, {r4, r5};#define DOARGS_7 mov ip, sp; stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6}; ldmia ip, {r4, r5, r6};#define UNDOARGS_0 /* nothing */#define UNDOARGS_1 /* nothing */#define UNDOARGS_2 /* nothing */#define UNDOARGS_3 /* nothing */#define UNDOARGS_4 /* nothing */#define UNDOARGS_5 ldr r4, [sp], $4;#define UNDOARGS_6 ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5};#define UNDOARGS_7 ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6};#else /* not __ASSEMBLER__ *//* Define a macro which expands into the inline wrapper code for a system   call.  */#undef INLINE_SYSCALL#define INLINE_SYSCALL(name, nr, args...)					\  ({ unsigned int _inline_sys_result = INTERNAL_SYSCALL (name, , nr, args);	\     if (__builtin_expect (INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERROR_P (_inline_sys_result, ), 0))	\       {									\	 __set_errno (INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERRNO (_inline_sys_result, ));		\	 _inline_sys_result = (unsigned int) -1;				\       }									\     (int) _inline_sys_result; })#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_DECL#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_DECL(err) do { } while (0)#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW#if defined(__thumb__)/* Hide the use of r7 from the compiler, this would be a lot * easier but for the fact that the syscalls can exceed 255. * For the moment the LOAD_ARG_7 is sacrificed. * We can't use push/pop inside the asm because that breaks * unwinding (ie. thread cancellation). */#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW(name, err, nr, args...)		\  ({ unsigned int _internal_sys_result;				\    {								\      int _sys_buf[2];						\      register int __a1 __asm__ ("a1");				\      register int *_v3 __asm__ ("v3") = _sys_buf;		\      LOAD_ARGS_##nr (args)					\      *_v3 = (int) (name);					\      __asm__ __volatile__ ("str	r7, [v3, #4]\n"		\                    "\tldr      r7, [v3]\n"			\                    "\tswi      0       @ syscall " #name "\n"	\                    "\tldr      r7, [v3, #4]"			\                   : "=r" (__a1)				\                    : "r" (_v3) ASM_ARGS_##nr			\                    : "memory");				\      _internal_sys_result = __a1;				\    }								\    (int) _internal_sys_result; })#elif defined(__ARM_EABI__)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW(name, err, nr, args...)		\  ({unsigned int _internal_sys_result;				\     {								\       register int __a1 __asm__ ("r0"), _nr __asm__ ("r7");	\       LOAD_ARGS_##nr (args)					\       _nr = name;						\       __asm__ __volatile__ ("swi	0x0 @ syscall " #name	\		     : "=r" (__a1)				\		     : "r" (_nr) ASM_ARGS_##nr			\		     : "memory");				\       _internal_sys_result = __a1;				\     }								\     (int) _internal_sys_result; })#else /* !defined(__ARM_EABI__) */#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW(name, err, nr, args...)		\  ({ unsigned int _internal_sys_result;				\     {								\       register int __a1 __asm__ ("a1");			\       LOAD_ARGS_##nr (args)					\       __asm__ __volatile__ ("swi	%1 @ syscall " #name	\		     : "=r" (__a1)				\		     : "i" (name) ASM_ARGS_##nr			\		     : "memory");				\       _internal_sys_result = __a1;				\     }								\     (int) _internal_sys_result; })#endif#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL(name, err, nr, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW(SYS_ify(name), err, nr, args)#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ARM#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ARM(name, err, nr, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW(__ARM_NR_##name, err, nr, args)#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERROR_P#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERROR_P(val, err) \  ((unsigned int) (val) >= 0xfffff001u)#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERRNO#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_ERRNO(val, err)	(-(val))#if defined(__ARM_EABI__)#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS(number, err, nr, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL_RAW(number, err, nr, args)#else/* We can't implement non-constant syscalls directly since the syscall   number is normally encoded in the instruction.  So use SYS_syscall.  */#undef INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS(number, err, nr, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_##nr (number, err, args)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_0(number, err, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL (syscall, err, 1, number, args)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_1(number, err, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL (syscall, err, 2, number, args)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_2(number, err, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL (syscall, err, 3, number, args)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_3(number, err, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL (syscall, err, 4, number, args)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_4(number, err, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL (syscall, err, 5, number, args)#define INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS_5(number, err, args...)		\	INTERNAL_SYSCALL (syscall, err, 6, number, args)#endif#endif	/* __ASSEMBLER__ *//* Pointer mangling is not yet supported for ARM.  */#define PTR_MANGLE(var) (void) (var)#define PTR_DEMANGLE(var) (void) (var)#endif /* linux/arm/sysdep.h */
 |