From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id ; Thu, 4 Oct 2001 07:47:09 -0400 Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org id ; Thu, 4 Oct 2001 07:47:00 -0400 Received: from mail.ocs.com.au ([203.34.97.2]:40206 "HELO mail.ocs.com.au") by vger.kernel.org with SMTP id ; Thu, 4 Oct 2001 07:46:52 -0400 X-Mailer: exmh version 2.2 06/23/2000 with nmh-1.0.4 From: Keith Owens To: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Subject: [RFC] Standard way of generating assembler offsets Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Date: Thu, 04 Oct 2001 21:47:08 +1000 Message-ID: <28136.1002196028@ocs3.intra.ocs.com.au> Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Almost every architecture generates Assembler values to map the offsets of fields in C structures, about the only exception is i386 and that is because its offsets are hard coded into entry.S. Every arch has done it differently, none of them have got it exactly right. As part of kbuild 2.5 I am standardizing on one method for generating Assembler offsets. This change is required for kbuild 2.5 but it can be added to 2.4 without disturbing the current kbuild, I want to do this gradually now instead of a single massive change in kernel 2.5. I will be issuing per architecture changes for generating Assembler offsets against 2.4. The kbuild 2.5 method for generating Assembler offsets satisfies these requirements: * No manual intervention required. Many architectures rely on users running make dep after changing config options that affect the Assembler offsets. If the user forgets to run make dep then the C and Assembler code is out of sync - totally unacceptable. This is completely fixed in kbuild 2.5; I cannot do a complete fix in kbuild 2.4 but it is still better than the existing manual system. * Standard name for the related files. There are 6+ different names for the files used to generate Assembler offsets, kbuild 2.5 uses asm-offsets.[csh] on all architectures. * Allows for multiple parallel compiles from the same source tree. Writing the generated asm-offsets.h to include/asm is not an option, it prevents concurrent compiles. * The method must work in native and cross compile mode and give exactly the same results. Some 2.4 code only works in native mode, some architectures have different methods for native and cross compile with different output formats. Yeuch! * Standard scripts for generating the output. Every arch does it differently in 2.4, standards are good! * Correct dependency trees. Because 2.4 make dep does not scan .S files, there is little or no dependency information. Even if the offsets are regenerated, the affected Assembler code does not always get rebuilt. kbuild 2.5 handles dependencies for Assembler as well as C; I cannot get kbuild 2.4 perfect but I can improve on the existing (or non-existent) 2.4 dependencies. All architectures will define arch/$(ARCH)/asm-offsets.c. This has a standard prologue for the macros that convert offsets to Assembler, followed by arch specific field references. arch/$(ARCH)/asm-offsets.s is generated from arch/$(ARCH)/asm-offsets.c using standard rules, although kbuild 2.4 needs some tweaking. arch/$(ARCH)/asm-offsets.h is generated from arch/$(ARCH)/asm-offsets.s by a semi-standard script. Most of the script is common to all architectures but the precise format of the Assembler output is arch specific. The final result is included in *only* the Assembler programs that need it, as #include "asm-offsets.h" with -I arch/$(ARCH) in the relevant Makefiles. Hard coding relative paths in source files is a pet hate, use #include "localname.h" and -I instead. Including the generated file in C code is not allowed, it severly pollutes the dependency chain, to the extent that any config change can force a complete recompile, unacceptable. Example from i386: arch/i386/asm-offsets.c /* * Generate definitions needed by assembly language modules. * This code generates raw asm output which is post-processed to extract * and format the required data. */ #include #include #include /* Use marker if you need to separate the values later */ #define DEFINE(sym, val, marker) \ asm volatile("\n-> " #sym " %0 " #val " " #marker : : "i" (val)) #define BLANK() asm volatile("\n->" : : ) int main(void) { DEFINE(state, offsetof(struct task_struct, state),); DEFINE(flags, offsetof(struct task_struct, flags),); DEFINE(sigpending, offsetof(struct task_struct, sigpending),); DEFINE(addr_limit, offsetof(struct task_struct, addr_limit),); DEFINE(exec_domain, offsetof(struct task_struct, exec_domain),); DEFINE(need_resched, offsetof(struct task_struct, need_resched),); DEFINE(tsk_ptrace, offsetof(struct task_struct, ptrace),); DEFINE(processor, offsetof(struct task_struct, processor),); BLANK(); DEFINE(ENOSYS, ENOSYS,); return 0; } asm-offsets.s to asm-offsets.h. # Convert raw asm offsets into something that can be included as # assembler definitions. It converts # -> symbol $value source # into # symbol = value /* 0xvalue source */ echo '#ifndef __ASM_OFFSETS_H__' echo '#define __ASM_OFFSETS_H__' echo '/*' echo ' * DO NOT MODIFY' echo ' *' echo " * This file was generated by arch/$(ARCH)/Makefile.in." echo ' *' echo ' */' echo '' awk ' /^->$/{printf("\n")} /^-> /{ sym = $2; val = $3; sub(/^\$/, "", val); $1 = ""; $2 = ""; $3 = ""; printf("%-20s = %3d\t/* 0x%x\t%s */\n", sym, val, val, $0) } ' echo '#endif' Generated arch/i386/asm-offsets.h #ifndef __ASM_OFFSETS_H__ #define __ASM_OFFSETS_H__ /* * DO NOT MODIFY * * This file was generated by arch/i386/Makefile.in. * */ state = 0 /* 0x0 offsetof(struct task_struct, state) */ flags = 4 /* 0x4 offsetof(struct task_struct, flags) */ sigpending = 8 /* 0x8 offsetof(struct task_struct, sigpending) */ addr_limit = 12 /* 0xc offsetof(struct task_struct, addr_limit) */ exec_domain = 16 /* 0x10 offsetof(struct task_struct, exec_domain) */ need_resched = 20 /* 0x14 offsetof(struct task_struct, need_resched) */ tsk_ptrace = 24 /* 0x18 offsetof(struct task_struct, ptrace) */ processor = 52 /* 0x34 offsetof(struct task_struct, processor) */ ENOSYS = 38 /* 0x26 ENOSYS */ #endif