/* * Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. * (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at * http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) * * Copyright (c) 2009 Helge Bahmann * Copyright (c) 2013 Tim Blechmann * Copyright (c) 2014 Andrey Semashev */ /*! * \file atomic/detail/ops_gcc_arm_common.hpp * * This header contains basic utilities for gcc ARM backend. */ #ifndef BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_OPS_GCC_ARM_COMMON_HPP_INCLUDED_ #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_OPS_GCC_ARM_COMMON_HPP_INCLUDED_ #include #include #include #ifdef BOOST_HAS_PRAGMA_ONCE #pragma once #endif namespace boost { namespace atomics { namespace detail { // A memory barrier is effected using a "co-processor 15" instruction, // though a separate assembler mnemonic is available for it in v7. // // "Thumb 1" is a subset of the ARM instruction set that uses a 16-bit encoding. It // doesn't include all instructions and in particular it doesn't include the co-processor // instruction used for the memory barrier or the load-locked/store-conditional // instructions. So, if we're compiling in "Thumb 1" mode, we need to wrap all of our // asm blocks with code to temporarily change to ARM mode. // // You can only change between ARM and Thumb modes when branching using the bx instruction. // bx takes an address specified in a register. The least significant bit of the address // indicates the mode, so 1 is added to indicate that the destination code is Thumb. // A temporary register is needed for the address and is passed as an argument to these // macros. It must be one of the "low" registers accessible to Thumb code, specified // using the "l" attribute in the asm statement. // // Architecture v7 introduces "Thumb 2", which does include (almost?) all of the ARM // instruction set. (Actually, there was an extension of v6 called v6T2 which supported // "Thumb 2" mode, but its architecture manual is no longer available, referring to v7.) // So in v7 we don't need to change to ARM mode; we can write "universal // assembler" which will assemble to Thumb 2 or ARM code as appropriate. The only thing // we need to do to make this "universal" assembler mode work is to insert "IT" instructions // to annotate the conditional instructions. These are ignored in other modes (e.g. v6), // so they can always be present. // A note about memory_order_consume. Technically, this architecture allows to avoid // unnecessary memory barrier after consume load since it supports data dependency ordering. // However, some compiler optimizations may break a seemingly valid code relying on data // dependency tracking by injecting bogus branches to aid out of order execution. // This may happen not only in Boost.Atomic code but also in user's code, which we have no // control of. See this thread: http://lists.boost.org/Archives/boost/2014/06/213890.php. // For this reason we promote memory_order_consume to memory_order_acquire. #if defined(__thumb__) && !defined(__thumb2__) #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_START(TMPREG) "adr " #TMPREG ", 8f\n" "bx " #TMPREG "\n" ".arm\n" ".align 4\n" "8:\n" #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_END(TMPREG) "adr " #TMPREG ", 9f + 1\n" "bx " #TMPREG "\n" ".thumb\n" ".align 2\n" "9:\n" #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_TMPREG_CONSTRAINT(var) "=&l" (var) #else // The tmpreg may be wasted in this case, which is non-optimal. #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_START(TMPREG) #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_END(TMPREG) #define BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_TMPREG_CONSTRAINT(var) "=&r" (var) #endif struct gcc_arm_operations_base { static BOOST_CONSTEXPR_OR_CONST bool full_cas_based = false; static BOOST_CONSTEXPR_OR_CONST bool is_always_lock_free = true; static BOOST_FORCEINLINE void fence_before(memory_order order) BOOST_NOEXCEPT { if ((static_cast< unsigned int >(order) & static_cast< unsigned int >(memory_order_release)) != 0u) hardware_full_fence(); } static BOOST_FORCEINLINE void fence_after(memory_order order) BOOST_NOEXCEPT { if ((static_cast< unsigned int >(order) & (static_cast< unsigned int >(memory_order_consume) | static_cast< unsigned int >(memory_order_acquire))) != 0u) hardware_full_fence(); } static BOOST_FORCEINLINE void fence_after_store(memory_order order) BOOST_NOEXCEPT { if (order == memory_order_seq_cst) hardware_full_fence(); } static BOOST_FORCEINLINE void hardware_full_fence() BOOST_NOEXCEPT { #if defined(BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_HAS_DMB) // Older binutils (supposedly, older than 2.21.1) didn't support symbolic or numeric arguments of the "dmb" instruction such as "ish" or "#11". // As a workaround we have to inject encoded bytes of the instruction. There are two encodings for the instruction: ARM and Thumb. See ARM Architecture Reference Manual, A8.8.43. // Since we cannot detect binutils version at compile time, we'll have to always use this hack. __asm__ __volatile__ ( #if defined(__thumb2__) ".short 0xF3BF, 0x8F5B\n" // dmb ish #else ".word 0xF57FF05B\n" // dmb ish #endif : : : "memory" ); #else uint32_t tmp; __asm__ __volatile__ ( BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_START(%0) "mcr\tp15, 0, r0, c7, c10, 5\n" BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_ARM_ASM_END(%0) : "=&l" (tmp) : : "memory" ); #endif } }; } // namespace detail } // namespace atomics } // namespace boost #endif // BOOST_ATOMIC_DETAIL_OPS_GCC_ARM_COMMON_HPP_INCLUDED_