diff options
author | Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy.fitzhardinge@citrix.com> | 2009-04-14 17:29:44 -0400 |
---|---|---|
committer | Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy.fitzhardinge@citrix.com> | 2009-06-17 16:07:12 -0400 |
commit | ac5672f82c39ff2f8dce81bf3e68b1dfc41f366f (patch) | |
tree | 93a10e6a3df4b9f71dda68a07c04ce14ddc1493a /arch/x86 | |
parent | 3fe0344faf7fdcb158bd5c1a9aec960a8d70c8e8 (diff) |
x86/paravirt: split paravirt definitions into paravirt_types.h
Split the monolithic asm/paravirt.h into separate paravirt.h (inlines and other
"active" definitions), and paravirt_types.h (types, constants and other "passive"
definitions). This makes it easier to use the type/constant definitions without
pulling in everything else and causing circular dependency problems.
[ Impact: cleanup ]
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy.fitzhardinge@citrix.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/x86')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt.h | 711 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt_types.h | 720 |
2 files changed, 721 insertions, 710 deletions
diff --git a/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt.h b/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt.h index 4fb37c8a0832..6a07af432c81 100644 --- a/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt.h +++ b/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt.h | |||
@@ -7,689 +7,11 @@ | |||
7 | #include <asm/pgtable_types.h> | 7 | #include <asm/pgtable_types.h> |
8 | #include <asm/asm.h> | 8 | #include <asm/asm.h> |
9 | 9 | ||
10 | /* Bitmask of what can be clobbered: usually at least eax. */ | 10 | #include <asm/paravirt_types.h> |
11 | #define CLBR_NONE 0 | ||
12 | #define CLBR_EAX (1 << 0) | ||
13 | #define CLBR_ECX (1 << 1) | ||
14 | #define CLBR_EDX (1 << 2) | ||
15 | #define CLBR_EDI (1 << 3) | ||
16 | |||
17 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | ||
18 | /* CLBR_ANY should match all regs platform has. For i386, that's just it */ | ||
19 | #define CLBR_ANY ((1 << 4) - 1) | ||
20 | |||
21 | #define CLBR_ARG_REGS (CLBR_EAX | CLBR_EDX | CLBR_ECX) | ||
22 | #define CLBR_RET_REG (CLBR_EAX | CLBR_EDX) | ||
23 | #define CLBR_SCRATCH (0) | ||
24 | #else | ||
25 | #define CLBR_RAX CLBR_EAX | ||
26 | #define CLBR_RCX CLBR_ECX | ||
27 | #define CLBR_RDX CLBR_EDX | ||
28 | #define CLBR_RDI CLBR_EDI | ||
29 | #define CLBR_RSI (1 << 4) | ||
30 | #define CLBR_R8 (1 << 5) | ||
31 | #define CLBR_R9 (1 << 6) | ||
32 | #define CLBR_R10 (1 << 7) | ||
33 | #define CLBR_R11 (1 << 8) | ||
34 | |||
35 | #define CLBR_ANY ((1 << 9) - 1) | ||
36 | |||
37 | #define CLBR_ARG_REGS (CLBR_RDI | CLBR_RSI | CLBR_RDX | \ | ||
38 | CLBR_RCX | CLBR_R8 | CLBR_R9) | ||
39 | #define CLBR_RET_REG (CLBR_RAX) | ||
40 | #define CLBR_SCRATCH (CLBR_R10 | CLBR_R11) | ||
41 | |||
42 | #include <asm/desc_defs.h> | ||
43 | #endif /* X86_64 */ | ||
44 | |||
45 | #define CLBR_CALLEE_SAVE ((CLBR_ARG_REGS | CLBR_SCRATCH) & ~CLBR_RET_REG) | ||
46 | 11 | ||
47 | #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ | 12 | #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ |
48 | #include <linux/types.h> | 13 | #include <linux/types.h> |
49 | #include <linux/cpumask.h> | 14 | #include <linux/cpumask.h> |
50 | #include <asm/kmap_types.h> | ||
51 | #include <asm/desc_defs.h> | ||
52 | |||
53 | struct page; | ||
54 | struct thread_struct; | ||
55 | struct desc_ptr; | ||
56 | struct tss_struct; | ||
57 | struct mm_struct; | ||
58 | struct desc_struct; | ||
59 | struct task_struct; | ||
60 | |||
61 | /* | ||
62 | * Wrapper type for pointers to code which uses the non-standard | ||
63 | * calling convention. See PV_CALL_SAVE_REGS_THUNK below. | ||
64 | */ | ||
65 | struct paravirt_callee_save { | ||
66 | void *func; | ||
67 | }; | ||
68 | |||
69 | /* general info */ | ||
70 | struct pv_info { | ||
71 | unsigned int kernel_rpl; | ||
72 | int shared_kernel_pmd; | ||
73 | int paravirt_enabled; | ||
74 | const char *name; | ||
75 | }; | ||
76 | |||
77 | struct pv_init_ops { | ||
78 | /* | ||
79 | * Patch may replace one of the defined code sequences with | ||
80 | * arbitrary code, subject to the same register constraints. | ||
81 | * This generally means the code is not free to clobber any | ||
82 | * registers other than EAX. The patch function should return | ||
83 | * the number of bytes of code generated, as we nop pad the | ||
84 | * rest in generic code. | ||
85 | */ | ||
86 | unsigned (*patch)(u8 type, u16 clobber, void *insnbuf, | ||
87 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
88 | |||
89 | /* Basic arch-specific setup */ | ||
90 | void (*arch_setup)(void); | ||
91 | char *(*memory_setup)(void); | ||
92 | void (*post_allocator_init)(void); | ||
93 | |||
94 | /* Print a banner to identify the environment */ | ||
95 | void (*banner)(void); | ||
96 | }; | ||
97 | |||
98 | |||
99 | struct pv_lazy_ops { | ||
100 | /* Set deferred update mode, used for batching operations. */ | ||
101 | void (*enter)(void); | ||
102 | void (*leave)(void); | ||
103 | }; | ||
104 | |||
105 | struct pv_time_ops { | ||
106 | void (*time_init)(void); | ||
107 | |||
108 | /* Set and set time of day */ | ||
109 | unsigned long (*get_wallclock)(void); | ||
110 | int (*set_wallclock)(unsigned long); | ||
111 | |||
112 | unsigned long long (*sched_clock)(void); | ||
113 | unsigned long (*get_tsc_khz)(void); | ||
114 | }; | ||
115 | |||
116 | struct pv_cpu_ops { | ||
117 | /* hooks for various privileged instructions */ | ||
118 | unsigned long (*get_debugreg)(int regno); | ||
119 | void (*set_debugreg)(int regno, unsigned long value); | ||
120 | |||
121 | void (*clts)(void); | ||
122 | |||
123 | unsigned long (*read_cr0)(void); | ||
124 | void (*write_cr0)(unsigned long); | ||
125 | |||
126 | unsigned long (*read_cr4_safe)(void); | ||
127 | unsigned long (*read_cr4)(void); | ||
128 | void (*write_cr4)(unsigned long); | ||
129 | |||
130 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 | ||
131 | unsigned long (*read_cr8)(void); | ||
132 | void (*write_cr8)(unsigned long); | ||
133 | #endif | ||
134 | |||
135 | /* Segment descriptor handling */ | ||
136 | void (*load_tr_desc)(void); | ||
137 | void (*load_gdt)(const struct desc_ptr *); | ||
138 | void (*load_idt)(const struct desc_ptr *); | ||
139 | void (*store_gdt)(struct desc_ptr *); | ||
140 | void (*store_idt)(struct desc_ptr *); | ||
141 | void (*set_ldt)(const void *desc, unsigned entries); | ||
142 | unsigned long (*store_tr)(void); | ||
143 | void (*load_tls)(struct thread_struct *t, unsigned int cpu); | ||
144 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 | ||
145 | void (*load_gs_index)(unsigned int idx); | ||
146 | #endif | ||
147 | void (*write_ldt_entry)(struct desc_struct *ldt, int entrynum, | ||
148 | const void *desc); | ||
149 | void (*write_gdt_entry)(struct desc_struct *, | ||
150 | int entrynum, const void *desc, int size); | ||
151 | void (*write_idt_entry)(gate_desc *, | ||
152 | int entrynum, const gate_desc *gate); | ||
153 | void (*alloc_ldt)(struct desc_struct *ldt, unsigned entries); | ||
154 | void (*free_ldt)(struct desc_struct *ldt, unsigned entries); | ||
155 | |||
156 | void (*load_sp0)(struct tss_struct *tss, struct thread_struct *t); | ||
157 | |||
158 | void (*set_iopl_mask)(unsigned mask); | ||
159 | |||
160 | void (*wbinvd)(void); | ||
161 | void (*io_delay)(void); | ||
162 | |||
163 | /* cpuid emulation, mostly so that caps bits can be disabled */ | ||
164 | void (*cpuid)(unsigned int *eax, unsigned int *ebx, | ||
165 | unsigned int *ecx, unsigned int *edx); | ||
166 | |||
167 | /* MSR, PMC and TSR operations. | ||
168 | err = 0/-EFAULT. wrmsr returns 0/-EFAULT. */ | ||
169 | u64 (*read_msr_amd)(unsigned int msr, int *err); | ||
170 | u64 (*read_msr)(unsigned int msr, int *err); | ||
171 | int (*write_msr)(unsigned int msr, unsigned low, unsigned high); | ||
172 | |||
173 | u64 (*read_tsc)(void); | ||
174 | u64 (*read_pmc)(int counter); | ||
175 | unsigned long long (*read_tscp)(unsigned int *aux); | ||
176 | |||
177 | /* | ||
178 | * Atomically enable interrupts and return to userspace. This | ||
179 | * is only ever used to return to 32-bit processes; in a | ||
180 | * 64-bit kernel, it's used for 32-on-64 compat processes, but | ||
181 | * never native 64-bit processes. (Jump, not call.) | ||
182 | */ | ||
183 | void (*irq_enable_sysexit)(void); | ||
184 | |||
185 | /* | ||
186 | * Switch to usermode gs and return to 64-bit usermode using | ||
187 | * sysret. Only used in 64-bit kernels to return to 64-bit | ||
188 | * processes. Usermode register state, including %rsp, must | ||
189 | * already be restored. | ||
190 | */ | ||
191 | void (*usergs_sysret64)(void); | ||
192 | |||
193 | /* | ||
194 | * Switch to usermode gs and return to 32-bit usermode using | ||
195 | * sysret. Used to return to 32-on-64 compat processes. | ||
196 | * Other usermode register state, including %esp, must already | ||
197 | * be restored. | ||
198 | */ | ||
199 | void (*usergs_sysret32)(void); | ||
200 | |||
201 | /* Normal iret. Jump to this with the standard iret stack | ||
202 | frame set up. */ | ||
203 | void (*iret)(void); | ||
204 | |||
205 | void (*swapgs)(void); | ||
206 | |||
207 | void (*start_context_switch)(struct task_struct *prev); | ||
208 | void (*end_context_switch)(struct task_struct *next); | ||
209 | }; | ||
210 | |||
211 | struct pv_irq_ops { | ||
212 | void (*init_IRQ)(void); | ||
213 | |||
214 | /* | ||
215 | * Get/set interrupt state. save_fl and restore_fl are only | ||
216 | * expected to use X86_EFLAGS_IF; all other bits | ||
217 | * returned from save_fl are undefined, and may be ignored by | ||
218 | * restore_fl. | ||
219 | * | ||
220 | * NOTE: These functions callers expect the callee to preserve | ||
221 | * more registers than the standard C calling convention. | ||
222 | */ | ||
223 | struct paravirt_callee_save save_fl; | ||
224 | struct paravirt_callee_save restore_fl; | ||
225 | struct paravirt_callee_save irq_disable; | ||
226 | struct paravirt_callee_save irq_enable; | ||
227 | |||
228 | void (*safe_halt)(void); | ||
229 | void (*halt)(void); | ||
230 | |||
231 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 | ||
232 | void (*adjust_exception_frame)(void); | ||
233 | #endif | ||
234 | }; | ||
235 | |||
236 | struct pv_apic_ops { | ||
237 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC | ||
238 | void (*setup_boot_clock)(void); | ||
239 | void (*setup_secondary_clock)(void); | ||
240 | |||
241 | void (*startup_ipi_hook)(int phys_apicid, | ||
242 | unsigned long start_eip, | ||
243 | unsigned long start_esp); | ||
244 | #endif | ||
245 | }; | ||
246 | |||
247 | struct pv_mmu_ops { | ||
248 | /* | ||
249 | * Called before/after init_mm pagetable setup. setup_start | ||
250 | * may reset %cr3, and may pre-install parts of the pagetable; | ||
251 | * pagetable setup is expected to preserve any existing | ||
252 | * mapping. | ||
253 | */ | ||
254 | void (*pagetable_setup_start)(pgd_t *pgd_base); | ||
255 | void (*pagetable_setup_done)(pgd_t *pgd_base); | ||
256 | |||
257 | unsigned long (*read_cr2)(void); | ||
258 | void (*write_cr2)(unsigned long); | ||
259 | |||
260 | unsigned long (*read_cr3)(void); | ||
261 | void (*write_cr3)(unsigned long); | ||
262 | |||
263 | /* | ||
264 | * Hooks for intercepting the creation/use/destruction of an | ||
265 | * mm_struct. | ||
266 | */ | ||
267 | void (*activate_mm)(struct mm_struct *prev, | ||
268 | struct mm_struct *next); | ||
269 | void (*dup_mmap)(struct mm_struct *oldmm, | ||
270 | struct mm_struct *mm); | ||
271 | void (*exit_mmap)(struct mm_struct *mm); | ||
272 | |||
273 | |||
274 | /* TLB operations */ | ||
275 | void (*flush_tlb_user)(void); | ||
276 | void (*flush_tlb_kernel)(void); | ||
277 | void (*flush_tlb_single)(unsigned long addr); | ||
278 | void (*flush_tlb_others)(const struct cpumask *cpus, | ||
279 | struct mm_struct *mm, | ||
280 | unsigned long va); | ||
281 | |||
282 | /* Hooks for allocating and freeing a pagetable top-level */ | ||
283 | int (*pgd_alloc)(struct mm_struct *mm); | ||
284 | void (*pgd_free)(struct mm_struct *mm, pgd_t *pgd); | ||
285 | |||
286 | /* | ||
287 | * Hooks for allocating/releasing pagetable pages when they're | ||
288 | * attached to a pagetable | ||
289 | */ | ||
290 | void (*alloc_pte)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long pfn); | ||
291 | void (*alloc_pmd)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long pfn); | ||
292 | void (*alloc_pmd_clone)(unsigned long pfn, unsigned long clonepfn, unsigned long start, unsigned long count); | ||
293 | void (*alloc_pud)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long pfn); | ||
294 | void (*release_pte)(unsigned long pfn); | ||
295 | void (*release_pmd)(unsigned long pfn); | ||
296 | void (*release_pud)(unsigned long pfn); | ||
297 | |||
298 | /* Pagetable manipulation functions */ | ||
299 | void (*set_pte)(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval); | ||
300 | void (*set_pte_at)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
301 | pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval); | ||
302 | void (*set_pmd)(pmd_t *pmdp, pmd_t pmdval); | ||
303 | void (*pte_update)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
304 | pte_t *ptep); | ||
305 | void (*pte_update_defer)(struct mm_struct *mm, | ||
306 | unsigned long addr, pte_t *ptep); | ||
307 | |||
308 | pte_t (*ptep_modify_prot_start)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
309 | pte_t *ptep); | ||
310 | void (*ptep_modify_prot_commit)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
311 | pte_t *ptep, pte_t pte); | ||
312 | |||
313 | struct paravirt_callee_save pte_val; | ||
314 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pte; | ||
315 | |||
316 | struct paravirt_callee_save pgd_val; | ||
317 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pgd; | ||
318 | |||
319 | #if PAGETABLE_LEVELS >= 3 | ||
320 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE | ||
321 | void (*set_pte_atomic)(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval); | ||
322 | void (*pte_clear)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
323 | pte_t *ptep); | ||
324 | void (*pmd_clear)(pmd_t *pmdp); | ||
325 | |||
326 | #endif /* CONFIG_X86_PAE */ | ||
327 | |||
328 | void (*set_pud)(pud_t *pudp, pud_t pudval); | ||
329 | |||
330 | struct paravirt_callee_save pmd_val; | ||
331 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pmd; | ||
332 | |||
333 | #if PAGETABLE_LEVELS == 4 | ||
334 | struct paravirt_callee_save pud_val; | ||
335 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pud; | ||
336 | |||
337 | void (*set_pgd)(pgd_t *pudp, pgd_t pgdval); | ||
338 | #endif /* PAGETABLE_LEVELS == 4 */ | ||
339 | #endif /* PAGETABLE_LEVELS >= 3 */ | ||
340 | |||
341 | #ifdef CONFIG_HIGHPTE | ||
342 | void *(*kmap_atomic_pte)(struct page *page, enum km_type type); | ||
343 | #endif | ||
344 | |||
345 | struct pv_lazy_ops lazy_mode; | ||
346 | |||
347 | /* dom0 ops */ | ||
348 | |||
349 | /* Sometimes the physical address is a pfn, and sometimes its | ||
350 | an mfn. We can tell which is which from the index. */ | ||
351 | void (*set_fixmap)(unsigned /* enum fixed_addresses */ idx, | ||
352 | phys_addr_t phys, pgprot_t flags); | ||
353 | }; | ||
354 | |||
355 | struct raw_spinlock; | ||
356 | struct pv_lock_ops { | ||
357 | int (*spin_is_locked)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
358 | int (*spin_is_contended)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
359 | void (*spin_lock)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
360 | void (*spin_lock_flags)(struct raw_spinlock *lock, unsigned long flags); | ||
361 | int (*spin_trylock)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
362 | void (*spin_unlock)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
363 | }; | ||
364 | |||
365 | /* This contains all the paravirt structures: we get a convenient | ||
366 | * number for each function using the offset which we use to indicate | ||
367 | * what to patch. */ | ||
368 | struct paravirt_patch_template { | ||
369 | struct pv_init_ops pv_init_ops; | ||
370 | struct pv_time_ops pv_time_ops; | ||
371 | struct pv_cpu_ops pv_cpu_ops; | ||
372 | struct pv_irq_ops pv_irq_ops; | ||
373 | struct pv_apic_ops pv_apic_ops; | ||
374 | struct pv_mmu_ops pv_mmu_ops; | ||
375 | struct pv_lock_ops pv_lock_ops; | ||
376 | }; | ||
377 | |||
378 | extern struct pv_info pv_info; | ||
379 | extern struct pv_init_ops pv_init_ops; | ||
380 | extern struct pv_time_ops pv_time_ops; | ||
381 | extern struct pv_cpu_ops pv_cpu_ops; | ||
382 | extern struct pv_irq_ops pv_irq_ops; | ||
383 | extern struct pv_apic_ops pv_apic_ops; | ||
384 | extern struct pv_mmu_ops pv_mmu_ops; | ||
385 | extern struct pv_lock_ops pv_lock_ops; | ||
386 | |||
387 | #define PARAVIRT_PATCH(x) \ | ||
388 | (offsetof(struct paravirt_patch_template, x) / sizeof(void *)) | ||
389 | |||
390 | #define paravirt_type(op) \ | ||
391 | [paravirt_typenum] "i" (PARAVIRT_PATCH(op)), \ | ||
392 | [paravirt_opptr] "i" (&(op)) | ||
393 | #define paravirt_clobber(clobber) \ | ||
394 | [paravirt_clobber] "i" (clobber) | ||
395 | |||
396 | /* | ||
397 | * Generate some code, and mark it as patchable by the | ||
398 | * apply_paravirt() alternate instruction patcher. | ||
399 | */ | ||
400 | #define _paravirt_alt(insn_string, type, clobber) \ | ||
401 | "771:\n\t" insn_string "\n" "772:\n" \ | ||
402 | ".pushsection .parainstructions,\"a\"\n" \ | ||
403 | _ASM_ALIGN "\n" \ | ||
404 | _ASM_PTR " 771b\n" \ | ||
405 | " .byte " type "\n" \ | ||
406 | " .byte 772b-771b\n" \ | ||
407 | " .short " clobber "\n" \ | ||
408 | ".popsection\n" | ||
409 | |||
410 | /* Generate patchable code, with the default asm parameters. */ | ||
411 | #define paravirt_alt(insn_string) \ | ||
412 | _paravirt_alt(insn_string, "%c[paravirt_typenum]", "%c[paravirt_clobber]") | ||
413 | |||
414 | /* Simple instruction patching code. */ | ||
415 | #define DEF_NATIVE(ops, name, code) \ | ||
416 | extern const char start_##ops##_##name[], end_##ops##_##name[]; \ | ||
417 | asm("start_" #ops "_" #name ": " code "; end_" #ops "_" #name ":") | ||
418 | |||
419 | unsigned paravirt_patch_nop(void); | ||
420 | unsigned paravirt_patch_ident_32(void *insnbuf, unsigned len); | ||
421 | unsigned paravirt_patch_ident_64(void *insnbuf, unsigned len); | ||
422 | unsigned paravirt_patch_ignore(unsigned len); | ||
423 | unsigned paravirt_patch_call(void *insnbuf, | ||
424 | const void *target, u16 tgt_clobbers, | ||
425 | unsigned long addr, u16 site_clobbers, | ||
426 | unsigned len); | ||
427 | unsigned paravirt_patch_jmp(void *insnbuf, const void *target, | ||
428 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
429 | unsigned paravirt_patch_default(u8 type, u16 clobbers, void *insnbuf, | ||
430 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
431 | |||
432 | unsigned paravirt_patch_insns(void *insnbuf, unsigned len, | ||
433 | const char *start, const char *end); | ||
434 | |||
435 | unsigned native_patch(u8 type, u16 clobbers, void *ibuf, | ||
436 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
437 | |||
438 | int paravirt_disable_iospace(void); | ||
439 | |||
440 | /* | ||
441 | * This generates an indirect call based on the operation type number. | ||
442 | * The type number, computed in PARAVIRT_PATCH, is derived from the | ||
443 | * offset into the paravirt_patch_template structure, and can therefore be | ||
444 | * freely converted back into a structure offset. | ||
445 | */ | ||
446 | #define PARAVIRT_CALL "call *%c[paravirt_opptr];" | ||
447 | |||
448 | /* | ||
449 | * These macros are intended to wrap calls through one of the paravirt | ||
450 | * ops structs, so that they can be later identified and patched at | ||
451 | * runtime. | ||
452 | * | ||
453 | * Normally, a call to a pv_op function is a simple indirect call: | ||
454 | * (pv_op_struct.operations)(args...). | ||
455 | * | ||
456 | * Unfortunately, this is a relatively slow operation for modern CPUs, | ||
457 | * because it cannot necessarily determine what the destination | ||
458 | * address is. In this case, the address is a runtime constant, so at | ||
459 | * the very least we can patch the call to e a simple direct call, or | ||
460 | * ideally, patch an inline implementation into the callsite. (Direct | ||
461 | * calls are essentially free, because the call and return addresses | ||
462 | * are completely predictable.) | ||
463 | * | ||
464 | * For i386, these macros rely on the standard gcc "regparm(3)" calling | ||
465 | * convention, in which the first three arguments are placed in %eax, | ||
466 | * %edx, %ecx (in that order), and the remaining arguments are placed | ||
467 | * on the stack. All caller-save registers (eax,edx,ecx) are expected | ||
468 | * to be modified (either clobbered or used for return values). | ||
469 | * X86_64, on the other hand, already specifies a register-based calling | ||
470 | * conventions, returning at %rax, with parameteres going on %rdi, %rsi, | ||
471 | * %rdx, and %rcx. Note that for this reason, x86_64 does not need any | ||
472 | * special handling for dealing with 4 arguments, unlike i386. | ||
473 | * However, x86_64 also have to clobber all caller saved registers, which | ||
474 | * unfortunately, are quite a bit (r8 - r11) | ||
475 | * | ||
476 | * The call instruction itself is marked by placing its start address | ||
477 | * and size into the .parainstructions section, so that | ||
478 | * apply_paravirt() in arch/i386/kernel/alternative.c can do the | ||
479 | * appropriate patching under the control of the backend pv_init_ops | ||
480 | * implementation. | ||
481 | * | ||
482 | * Unfortunately there's no way to get gcc to generate the args setup | ||
483 | * for the call, and then allow the call itself to be generated by an | ||
484 | * inline asm. Because of this, we must do the complete arg setup and | ||
485 | * return value handling from within these macros. This is fairly | ||
486 | * cumbersome. | ||
487 | * | ||
488 | * There are 5 sets of PVOP_* macros for dealing with 0-4 arguments. | ||
489 | * It could be extended to more arguments, but there would be little | ||
490 | * to be gained from that. For each number of arguments, there are | ||
491 | * the two VCALL and CALL variants for void and non-void functions. | ||
492 | * | ||
493 | * When there is a return value, the invoker of the macro must specify | ||
494 | * the return type. The macro then uses sizeof() on that type to | ||
495 | * determine whether its a 32 or 64 bit value, and places the return | ||
496 | * in the right register(s) (just %eax for 32-bit, and %edx:%eax for | ||
497 | * 64-bit). For x86_64 machines, it just returns at %rax regardless of | ||
498 | * the return value size. | ||
499 | * | ||
500 | * 64-bit arguments are passed as a pair of adjacent 32-bit arguments | ||
501 | * i386 also passes 64-bit arguments as a pair of adjacent 32-bit arguments | ||
502 | * in low,high order | ||
503 | * | ||
504 | * Small structures are passed and returned in registers. The macro | ||
505 | * calling convention can't directly deal with this, so the wrapper | ||
506 | * functions must do this. | ||
507 | * | ||
508 | * These PVOP_* macros are only defined within this header. This | ||
509 | * means that all uses must be wrapped in inline functions. This also | ||
510 | * makes sure the incoming and outgoing types are always correct. | ||
511 | */ | ||
512 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | ||
513 | #define PVOP_VCALL_ARGS \ | ||
514 | unsigned long __eax = __eax, __edx = __edx, __ecx = __ecx | ||
515 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARGS PVOP_VCALL_ARGS | ||
516 | |||
517 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG1(x) "a" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
518 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG2(x) "d" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
519 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG3(x) "c" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
520 | |||
521 | #define PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx), \ | ||
522 | "=c" (__ecx) | ||
523 | #define PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS | ||
524 | |||
525 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx) | ||
526 | #define PVOP_CALLEE_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS | ||
527 | |||
528 | #define EXTRA_CLOBBERS | ||
529 | #define VEXTRA_CLOBBERS | ||
530 | #else /* CONFIG_X86_64 */ | ||
531 | #define PVOP_VCALL_ARGS \ | ||
532 | unsigned long __edi = __edi, __esi = __esi, \ | ||
533 | __edx = __edx, __ecx = __ecx | ||
534 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARGS PVOP_VCALL_ARGS, __eax | ||
535 | |||
536 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG1(x) "D" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
537 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG2(x) "S" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
538 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG3(x) "d" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
539 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG4(x) "c" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
540 | |||
541 | #define PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS "=D" (__edi), \ | ||
542 | "=S" (__esi), "=d" (__edx), \ | ||
543 | "=c" (__ecx) | ||
544 | #define PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS, "=a" (__eax) | ||
545 | |||
546 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax) | ||
547 | #define PVOP_CALLEE_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS | ||
548 | |||
549 | #define EXTRA_CLOBBERS , "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11" | ||
550 | #define VEXTRA_CLOBBERS , "rax", "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11" | ||
551 | #endif /* CONFIG_X86_32 */ | ||
552 | |||
553 | #ifdef CONFIG_PARAVIRT_DEBUG | ||
554 | #define PVOP_TEST_NULL(op) BUG_ON(op == NULL) | ||
555 | #else | ||
556 | #define PVOP_TEST_NULL(op) ((void)op) | ||
557 | #endif | ||
558 | |||
559 | #define ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, clbr, call_clbr, extra_clbr, \ | ||
560 | pre, post, ...) \ | ||
561 | ({ \ | ||
562 | rettype __ret; \ | ||
563 | PVOP_CALL_ARGS; \ | ||
564 | PVOP_TEST_NULL(op); \ | ||
565 | /* This is 32-bit specific, but is okay in 64-bit */ \ | ||
566 | /* since this condition will never hold */ \ | ||
567 | if (sizeof(rettype) > sizeof(unsigned long)) { \ | ||
568 | asm volatile(pre \ | ||
569 | paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \ | ||
570 | post \ | ||
571 | : call_clbr \ | ||
572 | : paravirt_type(op), \ | ||
573 | paravirt_clobber(clbr), \ | ||
574 | ##__VA_ARGS__ \ | ||
575 | : "memory", "cc" extra_clbr); \ | ||
576 | __ret = (rettype)((((u64)__edx) << 32) | __eax); \ | ||
577 | } else { \ | ||
578 | asm volatile(pre \ | ||
579 | paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \ | ||
580 | post \ | ||
581 | : call_clbr \ | ||
582 | : paravirt_type(op), \ | ||
583 | paravirt_clobber(clbr), \ | ||
584 | ##__VA_ARGS__ \ | ||
585 | : "memory", "cc" extra_clbr); \ | ||
586 | __ret = (rettype)__eax; \ | ||
587 | } \ | ||
588 | __ret; \ | ||
589 | }) | ||
590 | |||
591 | #define __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
592 | ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, CLBR_ANY, PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS, \ | ||
593 | EXTRA_CLOBBERS, pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
594 | |||
595 | #define __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
596 | ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op.func, CLBR_RET_REG, \ | ||
597 | PVOP_CALLEE_CLOBBERS, , \ | ||
598 | pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
599 | |||
600 | |||
601 | #define ____PVOP_VCALL(op, clbr, call_clbr, extra_clbr, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
602 | ({ \ | ||
603 | PVOP_VCALL_ARGS; \ | ||
604 | PVOP_TEST_NULL(op); \ | ||
605 | asm volatile(pre \ | ||
606 | paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \ | ||
607 | post \ | ||
608 | : call_clbr \ | ||
609 | : paravirt_type(op), \ | ||
610 | paravirt_clobber(clbr), \ | ||
611 | ##__VA_ARGS__ \ | ||
612 | : "memory", "cc" extra_clbr); \ | ||
613 | }) | ||
614 | |||
615 | #define __PVOP_VCALL(op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
616 | ____PVOP_VCALL(op, CLBR_ANY, PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS, \ | ||
617 | VEXTRA_CLOBBERS, \ | ||
618 | pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
619 | |||
620 | #define __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
621 | ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op.func, CLBR_RET_REG, \ | ||
622 | PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS, , \ | ||
623 | pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
624 | |||
625 | |||
626 | |||
627 | #define PVOP_CALL0(rettype, op) \ | ||
628 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "") | ||
629 | #define PVOP_VCALL0(op) \ | ||
630 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "") | ||
631 | |||
632 | #define PVOP_CALLEE0(rettype, op) \ | ||
633 | __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, "", "") | ||
634 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE0(op) \ | ||
635 | __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(op, "", "") | ||
636 | |||
637 | |||
638 | #define PVOP_CALL1(rettype, op, arg1) \ | ||
639 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
640 | #define PVOP_VCALL1(op, arg1) \ | ||
641 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
642 | |||
643 | #define PVOP_CALLEE1(rettype, op, arg1) \ | ||
644 | __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
645 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE1(op, arg1) \ | ||
646 | __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
647 | |||
648 | |||
649 | #define PVOP_CALL2(rettype, op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
650 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
651 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
652 | #define PVOP_VCALL2(op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
653 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
654 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
655 | |||
656 | #define PVOP_CALLEE2(rettype, op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
657 | __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
658 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
659 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE2(op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
660 | __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
661 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
662 | |||
663 | |||
664 | #define PVOP_CALL3(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3) \ | ||
665 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
666 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3)) | ||
667 | #define PVOP_VCALL3(op, arg1, arg2, arg3) \ | ||
668 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
669 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3)) | ||
670 | |||
671 | /* This is the only difference in x86_64. We can make it much simpler */ | ||
672 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | ||
673 | #define PVOP_CALL4(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
674 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, \ | ||
675 | "push %[_arg4];", "lea 4(%%esp),%%esp;", \ | ||
676 | PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), \ | ||
677 | PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3), [_arg4] "mr" ((u32)(arg4))) | ||
678 | #define PVOP_VCALL4(op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
679 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, \ | ||
680 | "push %[_arg4];", "lea 4(%%esp),%%esp;", \ | ||
681 | "0" ((u32)(arg1)), "1" ((u32)(arg2)), \ | ||
682 | "2" ((u32)(arg3)), [_arg4] "mr" ((u32)(arg4))) | ||
683 | #else | ||
684 | #define PVOP_CALL4(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
685 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", \ | ||
686 | PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), \ | ||
687 | PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3), PVOP_CALL_ARG4(arg4)) | ||
688 | #define PVOP_VCALL4(op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
689 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", \ | ||
690 | PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), \ | ||
691 | PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3), PVOP_CALL_ARG4(arg4)) | ||
692 | #endif | ||
693 | 15 | ||
694 | static inline int paravirt_enabled(void) | 16 | static inline int paravirt_enabled(void) |
695 | { | 17 | { |
@@ -1393,20 +715,6 @@ static inline void pmd_clear(pmd_t *pmdp) | |||
1393 | } | 715 | } |
1394 | #endif /* CONFIG_X86_PAE */ | 716 | #endif /* CONFIG_X86_PAE */ |
1395 | 717 | ||
1396 | /* Lazy mode for batching updates / context switch */ | ||
1397 | enum paravirt_lazy_mode { | ||
1398 | PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE, | ||
1399 | PARAVIRT_LAZY_MMU, | ||
1400 | PARAVIRT_LAZY_CPU, | ||
1401 | }; | ||
1402 | |||
1403 | enum paravirt_lazy_mode paravirt_get_lazy_mode(void); | ||
1404 | void paravirt_start_context_switch(struct task_struct *prev); | ||
1405 | void paravirt_end_context_switch(struct task_struct *next); | ||
1406 | |||
1407 | void paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu(void); | ||
1408 | void paravirt_leave_lazy_mmu(void); | ||
1409 | |||
1410 | #define __HAVE_ARCH_START_CONTEXT_SWITCH | 718 | #define __HAVE_ARCH_START_CONTEXT_SWITCH |
1411 | static inline void arch_start_context_switch(struct task_struct *prev) | 719 | static inline void arch_start_context_switch(struct task_struct *prev) |
1412 | { | 720 | { |
@@ -1437,12 +745,6 @@ static inline void __set_fixmap(unsigned /* enum fixed_addresses */ idx, | |||
1437 | pv_mmu_ops.set_fixmap(idx, phys, flags); | 745 | pv_mmu_ops.set_fixmap(idx, phys, flags); |
1438 | } | 746 | } |
1439 | 747 | ||
1440 | void _paravirt_nop(void); | ||
1441 | u32 _paravirt_ident_32(u32); | ||
1442 | u64 _paravirt_ident_64(u64); | ||
1443 | |||
1444 | #define paravirt_nop ((void *)_paravirt_nop) | ||
1445 | |||
1446 | #if defined(CONFIG_SMP) && defined(CONFIG_PARAVIRT_SPINLOCKS) | 748 | #if defined(CONFIG_SMP) && defined(CONFIG_PARAVIRT_SPINLOCKS) |
1447 | 749 | ||
1448 | static inline int __raw_spin_is_locked(struct raw_spinlock *lock) | 750 | static inline int __raw_spin_is_locked(struct raw_spinlock *lock) |
@@ -1479,17 +781,6 @@ static __always_inline void __raw_spin_unlock(struct raw_spinlock *lock) | |||
1479 | 781 | ||
1480 | #endif | 782 | #endif |
1481 | 783 | ||
1482 | /* These all sit in the .parainstructions section to tell us what to patch. */ | ||
1483 | struct paravirt_patch_site { | ||
1484 | u8 *instr; /* original instructions */ | ||
1485 | u8 instrtype; /* type of this instruction */ | ||
1486 | u8 len; /* length of original instruction */ | ||
1487 | u16 clobbers; /* what registers you may clobber */ | ||
1488 | }; | ||
1489 | |||
1490 | extern struct paravirt_patch_site __parainstructions[], | ||
1491 | __parainstructions_end[]; | ||
1492 | |||
1493 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | 784 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 |
1494 | #define PV_SAVE_REGS "pushl %ecx; pushl %edx;" | 785 | #define PV_SAVE_REGS "pushl %ecx; pushl %edx;" |
1495 | #define PV_RESTORE_REGS "popl %edx; popl %ecx;" | 786 | #define PV_RESTORE_REGS "popl %edx; popl %ecx;" |
diff --git a/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt_types.h b/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt_types.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..2b3371bae295 --- /dev/null +++ b/arch/x86/include/asm/paravirt_types.h | |||
@@ -0,0 +1,720 @@ | |||
1 | #ifndef _ASM_X86_PARAVIRT_TYPES_H | ||
2 | #define _ASM_X86_PARAVIRT_TYPES_H | ||
3 | |||
4 | /* Bitmask of what can be clobbered: usually at least eax. */ | ||
5 | #define CLBR_NONE 0 | ||
6 | #define CLBR_EAX (1 << 0) | ||
7 | #define CLBR_ECX (1 << 1) | ||
8 | #define CLBR_EDX (1 << 2) | ||
9 | #define CLBR_EDI (1 << 3) | ||
10 | |||
11 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | ||
12 | /* CLBR_ANY should match all regs platform has. For i386, that's just it */ | ||
13 | #define CLBR_ANY ((1 << 4) - 1) | ||
14 | |||
15 | #define CLBR_ARG_REGS (CLBR_EAX | CLBR_EDX | CLBR_ECX) | ||
16 | #define CLBR_RET_REG (CLBR_EAX | CLBR_EDX) | ||
17 | #define CLBR_SCRATCH (0) | ||
18 | #else | ||
19 | #define CLBR_RAX CLBR_EAX | ||
20 | #define CLBR_RCX CLBR_ECX | ||
21 | #define CLBR_RDX CLBR_EDX | ||
22 | #define CLBR_RDI CLBR_EDI | ||
23 | #define CLBR_RSI (1 << 4) | ||
24 | #define CLBR_R8 (1 << 5) | ||
25 | #define CLBR_R9 (1 << 6) | ||
26 | #define CLBR_R10 (1 << 7) | ||
27 | #define CLBR_R11 (1 << 8) | ||
28 | |||
29 | #define CLBR_ANY ((1 << 9) - 1) | ||
30 | |||
31 | #define CLBR_ARG_REGS (CLBR_RDI | CLBR_RSI | CLBR_RDX | \ | ||
32 | CLBR_RCX | CLBR_R8 | CLBR_R9) | ||
33 | #define CLBR_RET_REG (CLBR_RAX) | ||
34 | #define CLBR_SCRATCH (CLBR_R10 | CLBR_R11) | ||
35 | |||
36 | #endif /* X86_64 */ | ||
37 | |||
38 | #define CLBR_CALLEE_SAVE ((CLBR_ARG_REGS | CLBR_SCRATCH) & ~CLBR_RET_REG) | ||
39 | |||
40 | #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ | ||
41 | |||
42 | #include <asm/desc_defs.h> | ||
43 | #include <asm/kmap_types.h> | ||
44 | |||
45 | struct page; | ||
46 | struct thread_struct; | ||
47 | struct desc_ptr; | ||
48 | struct tss_struct; | ||
49 | struct mm_struct; | ||
50 | struct desc_struct; | ||
51 | struct task_struct; | ||
52 | struct cpumask; | ||
53 | |||
54 | /* | ||
55 | * Wrapper type for pointers to code which uses the non-standard | ||
56 | * calling convention. See PV_CALL_SAVE_REGS_THUNK below. | ||
57 | */ | ||
58 | struct paravirt_callee_save { | ||
59 | void *func; | ||
60 | }; | ||
61 | |||
62 | /* general info */ | ||
63 | struct pv_info { | ||
64 | unsigned int kernel_rpl; | ||
65 | int shared_kernel_pmd; | ||
66 | int paravirt_enabled; | ||
67 | const char *name; | ||
68 | }; | ||
69 | |||
70 | struct pv_init_ops { | ||
71 | /* | ||
72 | * Patch may replace one of the defined code sequences with | ||
73 | * arbitrary code, subject to the same register constraints. | ||
74 | * This generally means the code is not free to clobber any | ||
75 | * registers other than EAX. The patch function should return | ||
76 | * the number of bytes of code generated, as we nop pad the | ||
77 | * rest in generic code. | ||
78 | */ | ||
79 | unsigned (*patch)(u8 type, u16 clobber, void *insnbuf, | ||
80 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
81 | |||
82 | /* Basic arch-specific setup */ | ||
83 | void (*arch_setup)(void); | ||
84 | char *(*memory_setup)(void); | ||
85 | void (*post_allocator_init)(void); | ||
86 | |||
87 | /* Print a banner to identify the environment */ | ||
88 | void (*banner)(void); | ||
89 | }; | ||
90 | |||
91 | |||
92 | struct pv_lazy_ops { | ||
93 | /* Set deferred update mode, used for batching operations. */ | ||
94 | void (*enter)(void); | ||
95 | void (*leave)(void); | ||
96 | }; | ||
97 | |||
98 | struct pv_time_ops { | ||
99 | void (*time_init)(void); | ||
100 | |||
101 | /* Set and set time of day */ | ||
102 | unsigned long (*get_wallclock)(void); | ||
103 | int (*set_wallclock)(unsigned long); | ||
104 | |||
105 | unsigned long long (*sched_clock)(void); | ||
106 | unsigned long (*get_tsc_khz)(void); | ||
107 | }; | ||
108 | |||
109 | struct pv_cpu_ops { | ||
110 | /* hooks for various privileged instructions */ | ||
111 | unsigned long (*get_debugreg)(int regno); | ||
112 | void (*set_debugreg)(int regno, unsigned long value); | ||
113 | |||
114 | void (*clts)(void); | ||
115 | |||
116 | unsigned long (*read_cr0)(void); | ||
117 | void (*write_cr0)(unsigned long); | ||
118 | |||
119 | unsigned long (*read_cr4_safe)(void); | ||
120 | unsigned long (*read_cr4)(void); | ||
121 | void (*write_cr4)(unsigned long); | ||
122 | |||
123 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 | ||
124 | unsigned long (*read_cr8)(void); | ||
125 | void (*write_cr8)(unsigned long); | ||
126 | #endif | ||
127 | |||
128 | /* Segment descriptor handling */ | ||
129 | void (*load_tr_desc)(void); | ||
130 | void (*load_gdt)(const struct desc_ptr *); | ||
131 | void (*load_idt)(const struct desc_ptr *); | ||
132 | void (*store_gdt)(struct desc_ptr *); | ||
133 | void (*store_idt)(struct desc_ptr *); | ||
134 | void (*set_ldt)(const void *desc, unsigned entries); | ||
135 | unsigned long (*store_tr)(void); | ||
136 | void (*load_tls)(struct thread_struct *t, unsigned int cpu); | ||
137 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 | ||
138 | void (*load_gs_index)(unsigned int idx); | ||
139 | #endif | ||
140 | void (*write_ldt_entry)(struct desc_struct *ldt, int entrynum, | ||
141 | const void *desc); | ||
142 | void (*write_gdt_entry)(struct desc_struct *, | ||
143 | int entrynum, const void *desc, int size); | ||
144 | void (*write_idt_entry)(gate_desc *, | ||
145 | int entrynum, const gate_desc *gate); | ||
146 | void (*alloc_ldt)(struct desc_struct *ldt, unsigned entries); | ||
147 | void (*free_ldt)(struct desc_struct *ldt, unsigned entries); | ||
148 | |||
149 | void (*load_sp0)(struct tss_struct *tss, struct thread_struct *t); | ||
150 | |||
151 | void (*set_iopl_mask)(unsigned mask); | ||
152 | |||
153 | void (*wbinvd)(void); | ||
154 | void (*io_delay)(void); | ||
155 | |||
156 | /* cpuid emulation, mostly so that caps bits can be disabled */ | ||
157 | void (*cpuid)(unsigned int *eax, unsigned int *ebx, | ||
158 | unsigned int *ecx, unsigned int *edx); | ||
159 | |||
160 | /* MSR, PMC and TSR operations. | ||
161 | err = 0/-EFAULT. wrmsr returns 0/-EFAULT. */ | ||
162 | u64 (*read_msr_amd)(unsigned int msr, int *err); | ||
163 | u64 (*read_msr)(unsigned int msr, int *err); | ||
164 | int (*write_msr)(unsigned int msr, unsigned low, unsigned high); | ||
165 | |||
166 | u64 (*read_tsc)(void); | ||
167 | u64 (*read_pmc)(int counter); | ||
168 | unsigned long long (*read_tscp)(unsigned int *aux); | ||
169 | |||
170 | /* | ||
171 | * Atomically enable interrupts and return to userspace. This | ||
172 | * is only ever used to return to 32-bit processes; in a | ||
173 | * 64-bit kernel, it's used for 32-on-64 compat processes, but | ||
174 | * never native 64-bit processes. (Jump, not call.) | ||
175 | */ | ||
176 | void (*irq_enable_sysexit)(void); | ||
177 | |||
178 | /* | ||
179 | * Switch to usermode gs and return to 64-bit usermode using | ||
180 | * sysret. Only used in 64-bit kernels to return to 64-bit | ||
181 | * processes. Usermode register state, including %rsp, must | ||
182 | * already be restored. | ||
183 | */ | ||
184 | void (*usergs_sysret64)(void); | ||
185 | |||
186 | /* | ||
187 | * Switch to usermode gs and return to 32-bit usermode using | ||
188 | * sysret. Used to return to 32-on-64 compat processes. | ||
189 | * Other usermode register state, including %esp, must already | ||
190 | * be restored. | ||
191 | */ | ||
192 | void (*usergs_sysret32)(void); | ||
193 | |||
194 | /* Normal iret. Jump to this with the standard iret stack | ||
195 | frame set up. */ | ||
196 | void (*iret)(void); | ||
197 | |||
198 | void (*swapgs)(void); | ||
199 | |||
200 | void (*start_context_switch)(struct task_struct *prev); | ||
201 | void (*end_context_switch)(struct task_struct *next); | ||
202 | }; | ||
203 | |||
204 | struct pv_irq_ops { | ||
205 | void (*init_IRQ)(void); | ||
206 | |||
207 | /* | ||
208 | * Get/set interrupt state. save_fl and restore_fl are only | ||
209 | * expected to use X86_EFLAGS_IF; all other bits | ||
210 | * returned from save_fl are undefined, and may be ignored by | ||
211 | * restore_fl. | ||
212 | * | ||
213 | * NOTE: These functions callers expect the callee to preserve | ||
214 | * more registers than the standard C calling convention. | ||
215 | */ | ||
216 | struct paravirt_callee_save save_fl; | ||
217 | struct paravirt_callee_save restore_fl; | ||
218 | struct paravirt_callee_save irq_disable; | ||
219 | struct paravirt_callee_save irq_enable; | ||
220 | |||
221 | void (*safe_halt)(void); | ||
222 | void (*halt)(void); | ||
223 | |||
224 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 | ||
225 | void (*adjust_exception_frame)(void); | ||
226 | #endif | ||
227 | }; | ||
228 | |||
229 | struct pv_apic_ops { | ||
230 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC | ||
231 | void (*setup_boot_clock)(void); | ||
232 | void (*setup_secondary_clock)(void); | ||
233 | |||
234 | void (*startup_ipi_hook)(int phys_apicid, | ||
235 | unsigned long start_eip, | ||
236 | unsigned long start_esp); | ||
237 | #endif | ||
238 | }; | ||
239 | |||
240 | struct pv_mmu_ops { | ||
241 | /* | ||
242 | * Called before/after init_mm pagetable setup. setup_start | ||
243 | * may reset %cr3, and may pre-install parts of the pagetable; | ||
244 | * pagetable setup is expected to preserve any existing | ||
245 | * mapping. | ||
246 | */ | ||
247 | void (*pagetable_setup_start)(pgd_t *pgd_base); | ||
248 | void (*pagetable_setup_done)(pgd_t *pgd_base); | ||
249 | |||
250 | unsigned long (*read_cr2)(void); | ||
251 | void (*write_cr2)(unsigned long); | ||
252 | |||
253 | unsigned long (*read_cr3)(void); | ||
254 | void (*write_cr3)(unsigned long); | ||
255 | |||
256 | /* | ||
257 | * Hooks for intercepting the creation/use/destruction of an | ||
258 | * mm_struct. | ||
259 | */ | ||
260 | void (*activate_mm)(struct mm_struct *prev, | ||
261 | struct mm_struct *next); | ||
262 | void (*dup_mmap)(struct mm_struct *oldmm, | ||
263 | struct mm_struct *mm); | ||
264 | void (*exit_mmap)(struct mm_struct *mm); | ||
265 | |||
266 | |||
267 | /* TLB operations */ | ||
268 | void (*flush_tlb_user)(void); | ||
269 | void (*flush_tlb_kernel)(void); | ||
270 | void (*flush_tlb_single)(unsigned long addr); | ||
271 | void (*flush_tlb_others)(const struct cpumask *cpus, | ||
272 | struct mm_struct *mm, | ||
273 | unsigned long va); | ||
274 | |||
275 | /* Hooks for allocating and freeing a pagetable top-level */ | ||
276 | int (*pgd_alloc)(struct mm_struct *mm); | ||
277 | void (*pgd_free)(struct mm_struct *mm, pgd_t *pgd); | ||
278 | |||
279 | /* | ||
280 | * Hooks for allocating/releasing pagetable pages when they're | ||
281 | * attached to a pagetable | ||
282 | */ | ||
283 | void (*alloc_pte)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long pfn); | ||
284 | void (*alloc_pmd)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long pfn); | ||
285 | void (*alloc_pmd_clone)(unsigned long pfn, unsigned long clonepfn, unsigned long start, unsigned long count); | ||
286 | void (*alloc_pud)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long pfn); | ||
287 | void (*release_pte)(unsigned long pfn); | ||
288 | void (*release_pmd)(unsigned long pfn); | ||
289 | void (*release_pud)(unsigned long pfn); | ||
290 | |||
291 | /* Pagetable manipulation functions */ | ||
292 | void (*set_pte)(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval); | ||
293 | void (*set_pte_at)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
294 | pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval); | ||
295 | void (*set_pmd)(pmd_t *pmdp, pmd_t pmdval); | ||
296 | void (*pte_update)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
297 | pte_t *ptep); | ||
298 | void (*pte_update_defer)(struct mm_struct *mm, | ||
299 | unsigned long addr, pte_t *ptep); | ||
300 | |||
301 | pte_t (*ptep_modify_prot_start)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
302 | pte_t *ptep); | ||
303 | void (*ptep_modify_prot_commit)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
304 | pte_t *ptep, pte_t pte); | ||
305 | |||
306 | struct paravirt_callee_save pte_val; | ||
307 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pte; | ||
308 | |||
309 | struct paravirt_callee_save pgd_val; | ||
310 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pgd; | ||
311 | |||
312 | #if PAGETABLE_LEVELS >= 3 | ||
313 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_PAE | ||
314 | void (*set_pte_atomic)(pte_t *ptep, pte_t pteval); | ||
315 | void (*pte_clear)(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long addr, | ||
316 | pte_t *ptep); | ||
317 | void (*pmd_clear)(pmd_t *pmdp); | ||
318 | |||
319 | #endif /* CONFIG_X86_PAE */ | ||
320 | |||
321 | void (*set_pud)(pud_t *pudp, pud_t pudval); | ||
322 | |||
323 | struct paravirt_callee_save pmd_val; | ||
324 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pmd; | ||
325 | |||
326 | #if PAGETABLE_LEVELS == 4 | ||
327 | struct paravirt_callee_save pud_val; | ||
328 | struct paravirt_callee_save make_pud; | ||
329 | |||
330 | void (*set_pgd)(pgd_t *pudp, pgd_t pgdval); | ||
331 | #endif /* PAGETABLE_LEVELS == 4 */ | ||
332 | #endif /* PAGETABLE_LEVELS >= 3 */ | ||
333 | |||
334 | #ifdef CONFIG_HIGHPTE | ||
335 | void *(*kmap_atomic_pte)(struct page *page, enum km_type type); | ||
336 | #endif | ||
337 | |||
338 | struct pv_lazy_ops lazy_mode; | ||
339 | |||
340 | /* dom0 ops */ | ||
341 | |||
342 | /* Sometimes the physical address is a pfn, and sometimes its | ||
343 | an mfn. We can tell which is which from the index. */ | ||
344 | void (*set_fixmap)(unsigned /* enum fixed_addresses */ idx, | ||
345 | phys_addr_t phys, pgprot_t flags); | ||
346 | }; | ||
347 | |||
348 | struct raw_spinlock; | ||
349 | struct pv_lock_ops { | ||
350 | int (*spin_is_locked)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
351 | int (*spin_is_contended)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
352 | void (*spin_lock)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
353 | void (*spin_lock_flags)(struct raw_spinlock *lock, unsigned long flags); | ||
354 | int (*spin_trylock)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
355 | void (*spin_unlock)(struct raw_spinlock *lock); | ||
356 | }; | ||
357 | |||
358 | /* This contains all the paravirt structures: we get a convenient | ||
359 | * number for each function using the offset which we use to indicate | ||
360 | * what to patch. */ | ||
361 | struct paravirt_patch_template { | ||
362 | struct pv_init_ops pv_init_ops; | ||
363 | struct pv_time_ops pv_time_ops; | ||
364 | struct pv_cpu_ops pv_cpu_ops; | ||
365 | struct pv_irq_ops pv_irq_ops; | ||
366 | struct pv_apic_ops pv_apic_ops; | ||
367 | struct pv_mmu_ops pv_mmu_ops; | ||
368 | struct pv_lock_ops pv_lock_ops; | ||
369 | }; | ||
370 | |||
371 | extern struct pv_info pv_info; | ||
372 | extern struct pv_init_ops pv_init_ops; | ||
373 | extern struct pv_time_ops pv_time_ops; | ||
374 | extern struct pv_cpu_ops pv_cpu_ops; | ||
375 | extern struct pv_irq_ops pv_irq_ops; | ||
376 | extern struct pv_apic_ops pv_apic_ops; | ||
377 | extern struct pv_mmu_ops pv_mmu_ops; | ||
378 | extern struct pv_lock_ops pv_lock_ops; | ||
379 | |||
380 | #define PARAVIRT_PATCH(x) \ | ||
381 | (offsetof(struct paravirt_patch_template, x) / sizeof(void *)) | ||
382 | |||
383 | #define paravirt_type(op) \ | ||
384 | [paravirt_typenum] "i" (PARAVIRT_PATCH(op)), \ | ||
385 | [paravirt_opptr] "i" (&(op)) | ||
386 | #define paravirt_clobber(clobber) \ | ||
387 | [paravirt_clobber] "i" (clobber) | ||
388 | |||
389 | /* | ||
390 | * Generate some code, and mark it as patchable by the | ||
391 | * apply_paravirt() alternate instruction patcher. | ||
392 | */ | ||
393 | #define _paravirt_alt(insn_string, type, clobber) \ | ||
394 | "771:\n\t" insn_string "\n" "772:\n" \ | ||
395 | ".pushsection .parainstructions,\"a\"\n" \ | ||
396 | _ASM_ALIGN "\n" \ | ||
397 | _ASM_PTR " 771b\n" \ | ||
398 | " .byte " type "\n" \ | ||
399 | " .byte 772b-771b\n" \ | ||
400 | " .short " clobber "\n" \ | ||
401 | ".popsection\n" | ||
402 | |||
403 | /* Generate patchable code, with the default asm parameters. */ | ||
404 | #define paravirt_alt(insn_string) \ | ||
405 | _paravirt_alt(insn_string, "%c[paravirt_typenum]", "%c[paravirt_clobber]") | ||
406 | |||
407 | /* Simple instruction patching code. */ | ||
408 | #define DEF_NATIVE(ops, name, code) \ | ||
409 | extern const char start_##ops##_##name[], end_##ops##_##name[]; \ | ||
410 | asm("start_" #ops "_" #name ": " code "; end_" #ops "_" #name ":") | ||
411 | |||
412 | unsigned paravirt_patch_nop(void); | ||
413 | unsigned paravirt_patch_ident_32(void *insnbuf, unsigned len); | ||
414 | unsigned paravirt_patch_ident_64(void *insnbuf, unsigned len); | ||
415 | unsigned paravirt_patch_ignore(unsigned len); | ||
416 | unsigned paravirt_patch_call(void *insnbuf, | ||
417 | const void *target, u16 tgt_clobbers, | ||
418 | unsigned long addr, u16 site_clobbers, | ||
419 | unsigned len); | ||
420 | unsigned paravirt_patch_jmp(void *insnbuf, const void *target, | ||
421 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
422 | unsigned paravirt_patch_default(u8 type, u16 clobbers, void *insnbuf, | ||
423 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
424 | |||
425 | unsigned paravirt_patch_insns(void *insnbuf, unsigned len, | ||
426 | const char *start, const char *end); | ||
427 | |||
428 | unsigned native_patch(u8 type, u16 clobbers, void *ibuf, | ||
429 | unsigned long addr, unsigned len); | ||
430 | |||
431 | int paravirt_disable_iospace(void); | ||
432 | |||
433 | /* | ||
434 | * This generates an indirect call based on the operation type number. | ||
435 | * The type number, computed in PARAVIRT_PATCH, is derived from the | ||
436 | * offset into the paravirt_patch_template structure, and can therefore be | ||
437 | * freely converted back into a structure offset. | ||
438 | */ | ||
439 | #define PARAVIRT_CALL "call *%c[paravirt_opptr];" | ||
440 | |||
441 | /* | ||
442 | * These macros are intended to wrap calls through one of the paravirt | ||
443 | * ops structs, so that they can be later identified and patched at | ||
444 | * runtime. | ||
445 | * | ||
446 | * Normally, a call to a pv_op function is a simple indirect call: | ||
447 | * (pv_op_struct.operations)(args...). | ||
448 | * | ||
449 | * Unfortunately, this is a relatively slow operation for modern CPUs, | ||
450 | * because it cannot necessarily determine what the destination | ||
451 | * address is. In this case, the address is a runtime constant, so at | ||
452 | * the very least we can patch the call to e a simple direct call, or | ||
453 | * ideally, patch an inline implementation into the callsite. (Direct | ||
454 | * calls are essentially free, because the call and return addresses | ||
455 | * are completely predictable.) | ||
456 | * | ||
457 | * For i386, these macros rely on the standard gcc "regparm(3)" calling | ||
458 | * convention, in which the first three arguments are placed in %eax, | ||
459 | * %edx, %ecx (in that order), and the remaining arguments are placed | ||
460 | * on the stack. All caller-save registers (eax,edx,ecx) are expected | ||
461 | * to be modified (either clobbered or used for return values). | ||
462 | * X86_64, on the other hand, already specifies a register-based calling | ||
463 | * conventions, returning at %rax, with parameteres going on %rdi, %rsi, | ||
464 | * %rdx, and %rcx. Note that for this reason, x86_64 does not need any | ||
465 | * special handling for dealing with 4 arguments, unlike i386. | ||
466 | * However, x86_64 also have to clobber all caller saved registers, which | ||
467 | * unfortunately, are quite a bit (r8 - r11) | ||
468 | * | ||
469 | * The call instruction itself is marked by placing its start address | ||
470 | * and size into the .parainstructions section, so that | ||
471 | * apply_paravirt() in arch/i386/kernel/alternative.c can do the | ||
472 | * appropriate patching under the control of the backend pv_init_ops | ||
473 | * implementation. | ||
474 | * | ||
475 | * Unfortunately there's no way to get gcc to generate the args setup | ||
476 | * for the call, and then allow the call itself to be generated by an | ||
477 | * inline asm. Because of this, we must do the complete arg setup and | ||
478 | * return value handling from within these macros. This is fairly | ||
479 | * cumbersome. | ||
480 | * | ||
481 | * There are 5 sets of PVOP_* macros for dealing with 0-4 arguments. | ||
482 | * It could be extended to more arguments, but there would be little | ||
483 | * to be gained from that. For each number of arguments, there are | ||
484 | * the two VCALL and CALL variants for void and non-void functions. | ||
485 | * | ||
486 | * When there is a return value, the invoker of the macro must specify | ||
487 | * the return type. The macro then uses sizeof() on that type to | ||
488 | * determine whether its a 32 or 64 bit value, and places the return | ||
489 | * in the right register(s) (just %eax for 32-bit, and %edx:%eax for | ||
490 | * 64-bit). For x86_64 machines, it just returns at %rax regardless of | ||
491 | * the return value size. | ||
492 | * | ||
493 | * 64-bit arguments are passed as a pair of adjacent 32-bit arguments | ||
494 | * i386 also passes 64-bit arguments as a pair of adjacent 32-bit arguments | ||
495 | * in low,high order | ||
496 | * | ||
497 | * Small structures are passed and returned in registers. The macro | ||
498 | * calling convention can't directly deal with this, so the wrapper | ||
499 | * functions must do this. | ||
500 | * | ||
501 | * These PVOP_* macros are only defined within this header. This | ||
502 | * means that all uses must be wrapped in inline functions. This also | ||
503 | * makes sure the incoming and outgoing types are always correct. | ||
504 | */ | ||
505 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | ||
506 | #define PVOP_VCALL_ARGS \ | ||
507 | unsigned long __eax = __eax, __edx = __edx, __ecx = __ecx | ||
508 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARGS PVOP_VCALL_ARGS | ||
509 | |||
510 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG1(x) "a" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
511 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG2(x) "d" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
512 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG3(x) "c" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
513 | |||
514 | #define PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx), \ | ||
515 | "=c" (__ecx) | ||
516 | #define PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS | ||
517 | |||
518 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax), "=d" (__edx) | ||
519 | #define PVOP_CALLEE_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS | ||
520 | |||
521 | #define EXTRA_CLOBBERS | ||
522 | #define VEXTRA_CLOBBERS | ||
523 | #else /* CONFIG_X86_64 */ | ||
524 | #define PVOP_VCALL_ARGS \ | ||
525 | unsigned long __edi = __edi, __esi = __esi, \ | ||
526 | __edx = __edx, __ecx = __ecx | ||
527 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARGS PVOP_VCALL_ARGS, __eax | ||
528 | |||
529 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG1(x) "D" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
530 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG2(x) "S" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
531 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG3(x) "d" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
532 | #define PVOP_CALL_ARG4(x) "c" ((unsigned long)(x)) | ||
533 | |||
534 | #define PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS "=D" (__edi), \ | ||
535 | "=S" (__esi), "=d" (__edx), \ | ||
536 | "=c" (__ecx) | ||
537 | #define PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS, "=a" (__eax) | ||
538 | |||
539 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS "=a" (__eax) | ||
540 | #define PVOP_CALLEE_CLOBBERS PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS | ||
541 | |||
542 | #define EXTRA_CLOBBERS , "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11" | ||
543 | #define VEXTRA_CLOBBERS , "rax", "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11" | ||
544 | #endif /* CONFIG_X86_32 */ | ||
545 | |||
546 | #ifdef CONFIG_PARAVIRT_DEBUG | ||
547 | #define PVOP_TEST_NULL(op) BUG_ON(op == NULL) | ||
548 | #else | ||
549 | #define PVOP_TEST_NULL(op) ((void)op) | ||
550 | #endif | ||
551 | |||
552 | #define ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, clbr, call_clbr, extra_clbr, \ | ||
553 | pre, post, ...) \ | ||
554 | ({ \ | ||
555 | rettype __ret; \ | ||
556 | PVOP_CALL_ARGS; \ | ||
557 | PVOP_TEST_NULL(op); \ | ||
558 | /* This is 32-bit specific, but is okay in 64-bit */ \ | ||
559 | /* since this condition will never hold */ \ | ||
560 | if (sizeof(rettype) > sizeof(unsigned long)) { \ | ||
561 | asm volatile(pre \ | ||
562 | paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \ | ||
563 | post \ | ||
564 | : call_clbr \ | ||
565 | : paravirt_type(op), \ | ||
566 | paravirt_clobber(clbr), \ | ||
567 | ##__VA_ARGS__ \ | ||
568 | : "memory", "cc" extra_clbr); \ | ||
569 | __ret = (rettype)((((u64)__edx) << 32) | __eax); \ | ||
570 | } else { \ | ||
571 | asm volatile(pre \ | ||
572 | paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \ | ||
573 | post \ | ||
574 | : call_clbr \ | ||
575 | : paravirt_type(op), \ | ||
576 | paravirt_clobber(clbr), \ | ||
577 | ##__VA_ARGS__ \ | ||
578 | : "memory", "cc" extra_clbr); \ | ||
579 | __ret = (rettype)__eax; \ | ||
580 | } \ | ||
581 | __ret; \ | ||
582 | }) | ||
583 | |||
584 | #define __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
585 | ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, CLBR_ANY, PVOP_CALL_CLOBBERS, \ | ||
586 | EXTRA_CLOBBERS, pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
587 | |||
588 | #define __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
589 | ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op.func, CLBR_RET_REG, \ | ||
590 | PVOP_CALLEE_CLOBBERS, , \ | ||
591 | pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
592 | |||
593 | |||
594 | #define ____PVOP_VCALL(op, clbr, call_clbr, extra_clbr, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
595 | ({ \ | ||
596 | PVOP_VCALL_ARGS; \ | ||
597 | PVOP_TEST_NULL(op); \ | ||
598 | asm volatile(pre \ | ||
599 | paravirt_alt(PARAVIRT_CALL) \ | ||
600 | post \ | ||
601 | : call_clbr \ | ||
602 | : paravirt_type(op), \ | ||
603 | paravirt_clobber(clbr), \ | ||
604 | ##__VA_ARGS__ \ | ||
605 | : "memory", "cc" extra_clbr); \ | ||
606 | }) | ||
607 | |||
608 | #define __PVOP_VCALL(op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
609 | ____PVOP_VCALL(op, CLBR_ANY, PVOP_VCALL_CLOBBERS, \ | ||
610 | VEXTRA_CLOBBERS, \ | ||
611 | pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
612 | |||
613 | #define __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(rettype, op, pre, post, ...) \ | ||
614 | ____PVOP_CALL(rettype, op.func, CLBR_RET_REG, \ | ||
615 | PVOP_VCALLEE_CLOBBERS, , \ | ||
616 | pre, post, ##__VA_ARGS__) | ||
617 | |||
618 | |||
619 | |||
620 | #define PVOP_CALL0(rettype, op) \ | ||
621 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "") | ||
622 | #define PVOP_VCALL0(op) \ | ||
623 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "") | ||
624 | |||
625 | #define PVOP_CALLEE0(rettype, op) \ | ||
626 | __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, "", "") | ||
627 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE0(op) \ | ||
628 | __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(op, "", "") | ||
629 | |||
630 | |||
631 | #define PVOP_CALL1(rettype, op, arg1) \ | ||
632 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
633 | #define PVOP_VCALL1(op, arg1) \ | ||
634 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
635 | |||
636 | #define PVOP_CALLEE1(rettype, op, arg1) \ | ||
637 | __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
638 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE1(op, arg1) \ | ||
639 | __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1)) | ||
640 | |||
641 | |||
642 | #define PVOP_CALL2(rettype, op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
643 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
644 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
645 | #define PVOP_VCALL2(op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
646 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
647 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
648 | |||
649 | #define PVOP_CALLEE2(rettype, op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
650 | __PVOP_CALLEESAVE(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
651 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
652 | #define PVOP_VCALLEE2(op, arg1, arg2) \ | ||
653 | __PVOP_VCALLEESAVE(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
654 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2)) | ||
655 | |||
656 | |||
657 | #define PVOP_CALL3(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3) \ | ||
658 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
659 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3)) | ||
660 | #define PVOP_VCALL3(op, arg1, arg2, arg3) \ | ||
661 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), \ | ||
662 | PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3)) | ||
663 | |||
664 | /* This is the only difference in x86_64. We can make it much simpler */ | ||
665 | #ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 | ||
666 | #define PVOP_CALL4(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
667 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, \ | ||
668 | "push %[_arg4];", "lea 4(%%esp),%%esp;", \ | ||
669 | PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), \ | ||
670 | PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3), [_arg4] "mr" ((u32)(arg4))) | ||
671 | #define PVOP_VCALL4(op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
672 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, \ | ||
673 | "push %[_arg4];", "lea 4(%%esp),%%esp;", \ | ||
674 | "0" ((u32)(arg1)), "1" ((u32)(arg2)), \ | ||
675 | "2" ((u32)(arg3)), [_arg4] "mr" ((u32)(arg4))) | ||
676 | #else | ||
677 | #define PVOP_CALL4(rettype, op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
678 | __PVOP_CALL(rettype, op, "", "", \ | ||
679 | PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), \ | ||
680 | PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3), PVOP_CALL_ARG4(arg4)) | ||
681 | #define PVOP_VCALL4(op, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4) \ | ||
682 | __PVOP_VCALL(op, "", "", \ | ||
683 | PVOP_CALL_ARG1(arg1), PVOP_CALL_ARG2(arg2), \ | ||
684 | PVOP_CALL_ARG3(arg3), PVOP_CALL_ARG4(arg4)) | ||
685 | #endif | ||
686 | |||
687 | /* Lazy mode for batching updates / context switch */ | ||
688 | enum paravirt_lazy_mode { | ||
689 | PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE, | ||
690 | PARAVIRT_LAZY_MMU, | ||
691 | PARAVIRT_LAZY_CPU, | ||
692 | }; | ||
693 | |||
694 | enum paravirt_lazy_mode paravirt_get_lazy_mode(void); | ||
695 | void paravirt_start_context_switch(struct task_struct *prev); | ||
696 | void paravirt_end_context_switch(struct task_struct *next); | ||
697 | |||
698 | void paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu(void); | ||
699 | void paravirt_leave_lazy_mmu(void); | ||
700 | |||
701 | void _paravirt_nop(void); | ||
702 | u32 _paravirt_ident_32(u32); | ||
703 | u64 _paravirt_ident_64(u64); | ||
704 | |||
705 | #define paravirt_nop ((void *)_paravirt_nop) | ||
706 | |||
707 | /* These all sit in the .parainstructions section to tell us what to patch. */ | ||
708 | struct paravirt_patch_site { | ||
709 | u8 *instr; /* original instructions */ | ||
710 | u8 instrtype; /* type of this instruction */ | ||
711 | u8 len; /* length of original instruction */ | ||
712 | u16 clobbers; /* what registers you may clobber */ | ||
713 | }; | ||
714 | |||
715 | extern struct paravirt_patch_site __parainstructions[], | ||
716 | __parainstructions_end[]; | ||
717 | |||
718 | #endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */ | ||
719 | |||
720 | #endif /* _ASM_X86_PARAVIRT_TYPES_H */ | ||