BACKPORT: arm64: Import updated version of Cortex Strings' strlen

Import an updated version of the former Cortex Strings - now Arm
Optimized Routines - strcmp function. The latest version introduces
Advanced SIMD usage which rules it out for our purposes, but we can
still pick an intermediate improvement from the previous version,
namely string/aarch64/strlen.S at commit 98e4d6a from
https://github.com/ARM-software/optimized-routines

Note that for simplicity Arm have chosen to contribute this code
to Linux under GPLv2 rather than the original MIT license.

Signed-off-by: Sam Tebbs <sam.tebbs@arm.com>
[ rm: update attribution and commit message ]
Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/32e3489398a24b23ae6e996935ac4818f8fd9dfd.1622128527.git.robin.murphy@arm.com
Signed-off-by: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: UtsavBalar1231 <utsavbalar1231@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Ifee9ef13496a12a5d7dc65f567d7debe34904f2e
This commit is contained in:
Sam Tebbs 2021-05-27 16:34:43 +01:00 committed by spakkkk
parent 86ccc065db
commit 615ae52df5

View File

@ -1,126 +1,201 @@
/*
* Copyright (C) 2013 ARM Ltd.
* Copyright (C) 2013 Linaro.
* Copyright (c) 2013, Arm Limited.
*
* This code is based on glibc cortex strings work originally authored by Linaro
* and re-licensed under GPLv2 for the Linux kernel. The original code can
* be found @
*
* http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~linaro-toolchain-dev/cortex-strings/trunk/
* files/head:/src/aarch64/
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
* published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program 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 General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
* Adapted from the original at:
* https://github.com/ARM-software/optimized-routines/blob/master/string/aarch64/strlen.S
*/
#include <linux/linkage.h>
#include <asm/assembler.h>
/*
* calculate the length of a string
/* Assumptions:
*
* Parameters:
* x0 - const string pointer
* Returns:
* x0 - the return length of specific string
* ARMv8-a, AArch64, unaligned accesses, min page size 4k.
*/
#define L(label) .L ## label
/* Arguments and results. */
srcin .req x0
len .req x0
#define srcin x0
#define len x0
/* Locals and temporaries. */
src .req x1
data1 .req x2
data2 .req x3
data2a .req x4
has_nul1 .req x5
has_nul2 .req x6
tmp1 .req x7
tmp2 .req x8
tmp3 .req x9
tmp4 .req x10
zeroones .req x11
pos .req x12
#define src x1
#define data1 x2
#define data2 x3
#define has_nul1 x4
#define has_nul2 x5
#define tmp1 x4
#define tmp2 x5
#define tmp3 x6
#define tmp4 x7
#define zeroones x8
/* NUL detection works on the principle that (X - 1) & (~X) & 0x80
(=> (X - 1) & ~(X | 0x7f)) is non-zero iff a byte is zero, and
can be done in parallel across the entire word. A faster check
(X - 1) & 0x80 is zero for non-NUL ASCII characters, but gives
false hits for characters 129..255. */
#define REP8_01 0x0101010101010101
#define REP8_7f 0x7f7f7f7f7f7f7f7f
#define REP8_80 0x8080808080808080
#define MIN_PAGE_SIZE 4096
/* Since strings are short on average, we check the first 16 bytes
of the string for a NUL character. In order to do an unaligned ldp
safely we have to do a page cross check first. If there is a NUL
byte we calculate the length from the 2 8-byte words using
conditional select to reduce branch mispredictions (it is unlikely
strlen will be repeatedly called on strings with the same length).
If the string is longer than 16 bytes, we align src so don't need
further page cross checks, and process 32 bytes per iteration
using the fast NUL check. If we encounter non-ASCII characters,
fallback to a second loop using the full NUL check.
If the page cross check fails, we read 16 bytes from an aligned
address, remove any characters before the string, and continue
in the main loop using aligned loads. Since strings crossing a
page in the first 16 bytes are rare (probability of
16/MIN_PAGE_SIZE ~= 0.4%), this case does not need to be optimized.
AArch64 systems have a minimum page size of 4k. We don't bother
checking for larger page sizes - the cost of setting up the correct
page size is just not worth the extra gain from a small reduction in
the cases taking the slow path. Note that we only care about
whether the first fetch, which may be misaligned, crosses a page
boundary. */
SYM_FUNC_START_WEAK_PI(strlen)
mov zeroones, #REP8_01
bic src, srcin, #15
ands tmp1, srcin, #15
b.ne .Lmisaligned
/*
* NUL detection works on the principle that (X - 1) & (~X) & 0x80
* (=> (X - 1) & ~(X | 0x7f)) is non-zero iff a byte is zero, and
* can be done in parallel across the entire word.
*/
/*
* The inner loop deals with two Dwords at a time. This has a
* slightly higher start-up cost, but we should win quite quickly,
* especially on cores with a high number of issue slots per
* cycle, as we get much better parallelism out of the operations.
*/
.Lloop:
ldp data1, data2, [src], #16
.Lrealigned:
and tmp1, srcin, MIN_PAGE_SIZE - 1
mov zeroones, REP8_01
cmp tmp1, MIN_PAGE_SIZE - 16
b.gt L(page_cross)
ldp data1, data2, [srcin]
#ifdef __AARCH64EB__
/* For big-endian, carry propagation (if the final byte in the
string is 0x01) means we cannot use has_nul1/2 directly.
Since we expect strings to be small and early-exit,
byte-swap the data now so has_null1/2 will be correct. */
rev data1, data1
rev data2, data2
#endif
sub tmp1, data1, zeroones
orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f
orr tmp2, data1, REP8_7f
sub tmp3, data2, zeroones
orr tmp4, data2, #REP8_7f
bic has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2
bics has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4
ccmp has_nul1, #0, #0, eq /* NZCV = 0000 */
b.eq .Lloop
orr tmp4, data2, REP8_7f
bics has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2
bic has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4
ccmp has_nul2, 0, 0, eq
beq L(main_loop_entry)
sub len, src, srcin
cbz has_nul1, .Lnul_in_data2
CPU_BE( mov data2, data1 ) /*prepare data to re-calculate the syndrome*/
sub len, len, #8
mov has_nul2, has_nul1
.Lnul_in_data2:
/*
* For big-endian, carry propagation (if the final byte in the
* string is 0x01) means we cannot use has_nul directly. The
* easiest way to get the correct byte is to byte-swap the data
* and calculate the syndrome a second time.
*/
CPU_BE( rev data2, data2 )
CPU_BE( sub tmp1, data2, zeroones )
CPU_BE( orr tmp2, data2, #REP8_7f )
CPU_BE( bic has_nul2, tmp1, tmp2 )
sub len, len, #8
rev has_nul2, has_nul2
clz pos, has_nul2
add len, len, pos, lsr #3 /* Bits to bytes. */
/* Enter with C = has_nul1 == 0. */
csel has_nul1, has_nul1, has_nul2, cc
mov len, 8
rev has_nul1, has_nul1
clz tmp1, has_nul1
csel len, xzr, len, cc
add len, len, tmp1, lsr 3
ret
.Lmisaligned:
cmp tmp1, #8
neg tmp1, tmp1
ldp data1, data2, [src], #16
lsl tmp1, tmp1, #3 /* Bytes beyond alignment -> bits. */
mov tmp2, #~0
/* Big-endian. Early bytes are at MSB. */
CPU_BE( lsl tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 ) /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */
/* Little-endian. Early bytes are at LSB. */
CPU_LE( lsr tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 ) /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */
/* The inner loop processes 32 bytes per iteration and uses the fast
NUL check. If we encounter non-ASCII characters, use a second
loop with the accurate NUL check. */
.p2align 4
L(main_loop_entry):
bic src, srcin, 15
sub src, src, 16
L(main_loop):
ldp data1, data2, [src, 32]!
L(page_cross_entry):
sub tmp1, data1, zeroones
sub tmp3, data2, zeroones
orr tmp2, tmp1, tmp3
tst tmp2, zeroones, lsl 7
bne 1f
ldp data1, data2, [src, 16]
sub tmp1, data1, zeroones
sub tmp3, data2, zeroones
orr tmp2, tmp1, tmp3
tst tmp2, zeroones, lsl 7
beq L(main_loop)
add src, src, 16
1:
/* The fast check failed, so do the slower, accurate NUL check. */
orr tmp2, data1, REP8_7f
orr tmp4, data2, REP8_7f
bics has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2
bic has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4
ccmp has_nul2, 0, 0, eq
beq L(nonascii_loop)
/* Enter with C = has_nul1 == 0. */
L(tail):
#ifdef __AARCH64EB__
/* For big-endian, carry propagation (if the final byte in the
string is 0x01) means we cannot use has_nul1/2 directly. The
easiest way to get the correct byte is to byte-swap the data
and calculate the syndrome a second time. */
csel data1, data1, data2, cc
rev data1, data1
sub tmp1, data1, zeroones
orr tmp2, data1, REP8_7f
bic has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2
#else
csel has_nul1, has_nul1, has_nul2, cc
#endif
sub len, src, srcin
rev has_nul1, has_nul1
add tmp2, len, 8
clz tmp1, has_nul1
csel len, len, tmp2, cc
add len, len, tmp1, lsr 3
ret
L(nonascii_loop):
ldp data1, data2, [src, 16]!
sub tmp1, data1, zeroones
orr tmp2, data1, REP8_7f
sub tmp3, data2, zeroones
orr tmp4, data2, REP8_7f
bics has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2
bic has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4
ccmp has_nul2, 0, 0, eq
bne L(tail)
ldp data1, data2, [src, 16]!
sub tmp1, data1, zeroones
orr tmp2, data1, REP8_7f
sub tmp3, data2, zeroones
orr tmp4, data2, REP8_7f
bics has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2
bic has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4
ccmp has_nul2, 0, 0, eq
beq L(nonascii_loop)
b L(tail)
/* Load 16 bytes from [srcin & ~15] and force the bytes that precede
srcin to 0x7f, so we ignore any NUL bytes before the string.
Then continue in the aligned loop. */
L(page_cross):
bic src, srcin, 15
ldp data1, data2, [src]
lsl tmp1, srcin, 3
mov tmp4, -1
#ifdef __AARCH64EB__
/* Big-endian. Early bytes are at MSB. */
lsr tmp1, tmp4, tmp1 /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */
#else
/* Little-endian. Early bytes are at LSB. */
lsl tmp1, tmp4, tmp1 /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */
#endif
orr tmp1, tmp1, REP8_80
orn data1, data1, tmp1
orn tmp2, data2, tmp1
tst srcin, 8
csel data1, data1, tmp4, eq
csel data2, data2, tmp2, eq
b L(page_cross_entry)
orr data1, data1, tmp2
orr data2a, data2, tmp2
csinv data1, data1, xzr, le
csel data2, data2, data2a, le
b .Lrealigned
SYM_FUNC_END_PI(strlen)