cputlb: Make store_helper less fragile to compiler optimizations

This has no functional change.

The current function structure is:

    inline QEMU_ALWAYSINLINE
    store_memop() {
        switch () {
            ...
        default:
            qemu_build_not_reached();
        }
    }
    inline QEMU_ALWAYSINLINE
    store_helper() {
        ...
        if (span_two_pages_or_io) {
            ...
            helper_ret_stb_mmu();
        }
        store_memop();
    }
    helper_ret_stb_mmu() {
        store_helper();
    }

Whereas GCC will generate an error at compile-time when an always_inline
function is not inlined, Clang does not.  Nor does Clang prioritize the
inlining of always_inline functions.  Both of these are arguably bugs.

Both `store_memop` and `store_helper` need to be inlined and allow
constant propogations to eliminate the `qemu_build_not_reached` call.

However, if the compiler instead chooses to inline helper_ret_stb_mmu
into store_helper, then store_helper is now self-recursive and the
compiler is no longer able to propagate the constant in the same way.

This does not produce at current QEMU head, but was reproducible
at v4.2.0 with `clang-10 -O2 -fexperimental-new-pass-manager`.

The inline recursion problem can be fixed solely by marking
helper_ret_stb_mmu as noinline, so the compiler does not make an
incorrect decision about which functions to inline.

In addition, extract store_helper_unaligned as a noinline subroutine
that can be shared by all of the helpers.  This saves about 6k code
size in an optimized x86_64 build.

Reported-by: Shu-Chun Weng <scw@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
master
Richard Henderson 2020-07-26 15:39:53 -07:00
parent 3dd23a4fb8
commit 6b8b622e87
1 changed files with 79 additions and 59 deletions

View File

@ -2009,6 +2009,80 @@ store_memop(void *haddr, uint64_t val, MemOp op)
}
}
static void __attribute__((noinline))
store_helper_unaligned(CPUArchState *env, target_ulong addr, uint64_t val,
uintptr_t retaddr, size_t size, uintptr_t mmu_idx,
bool big_endian)
{
const size_t tlb_off = offsetof(CPUTLBEntry, addr_write);
uintptr_t index, index2;
CPUTLBEntry *entry, *entry2;
target_ulong page2, tlb_addr, tlb_addr2;
TCGMemOpIdx oi;
size_t size2;
int i;
/*
* Ensure the second page is in the TLB. Note that the first page
* is already guaranteed to be filled, and that the second page
* cannot evict the first.
*/
page2 = (addr + size) & TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
size2 = (addr + size) & ~TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
index2 = tlb_index(env, mmu_idx, page2);
entry2 = tlb_entry(env, mmu_idx, page2);
tlb_addr2 = tlb_addr_write(entry2);
if (!tlb_hit_page(tlb_addr2, page2)) {
if (!victim_tlb_hit(env, mmu_idx, index2, tlb_off, page2)) {
tlb_fill(env_cpu(env), page2, size2, MMU_DATA_STORE,
mmu_idx, retaddr);
index2 = tlb_index(env, mmu_idx, page2);
entry2 = tlb_entry(env, mmu_idx, page2);
}
tlb_addr2 = tlb_addr_write(entry2);
}
index = tlb_index(env, mmu_idx, addr);
entry = tlb_entry(env, mmu_idx, addr);
tlb_addr = tlb_addr_write(entry);
/*
* Handle watchpoints. Since this may trap, all checks
* must happen before any store.
*/
if (unlikely(tlb_addr & TLB_WATCHPOINT)) {
cpu_check_watchpoint(env_cpu(env), addr, size - size2,
env_tlb(env)->d[mmu_idx].iotlb[index].attrs,
BP_MEM_WRITE, retaddr);
}
if (unlikely(tlb_addr2 & TLB_WATCHPOINT)) {
cpu_check_watchpoint(env_cpu(env), page2, size2,
env_tlb(env)->d[mmu_idx].iotlb[index2].attrs,
BP_MEM_WRITE, retaddr);
}
/*
* XXX: not efficient, but simple.
* This loop must go in the forward direction to avoid issues
* with self-modifying code in Windows 64-bit.
*/
oi = make_memop_idx(MO_UB, mmu_idx);
if (big_endian) {
for (i = 0; i < size; ++i) {
/* Big-endian extract. */
uint8_t val8 = val >> (((size - 1) * 8) - (i * 8));
helper_ret_stb_mmu(env, addr + i, val8, oi, retaddr);
}
} else {
for (i = 0; i < size; ++i) {
/* Little-endian extract. */
uint8_t val8 = val >> (i * 8);
helper_ret_stb_mmu(env, addr + i, val8, oi, retaddr);
}
}
}
static inline void QEMU_ALWAYS_INLINE
store_helper(CPUArchState *env, target_ulong addr, uint64_t val,
TCGMemOpIdx oi, uintptr_t retaddr, MemOp op)
@ -2097,64 +2171,9 @@ store_helper(CPUArchState *env, target_ulong addr, uint64_t val,
if (size > 1
&& unlikely((addr & ~TARGET_PAGE_MASK) + size - 1
>= TARGET_PAGE_SIZE)) {
int i;
uintptr_t index2;
CPUTLBEntry *entry2;
target_ulong page2, tlb_addr2;
size_t size2;
do_unaligned_access:
/*
* Ensure the second page is in the TLB. Note that the first page
* is already guaranteed to be filled, and that the second page
* cannot evict the first.
*/
page2 = (addr + size) & TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
size2 = (addr + size) & ~TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
index2 = tlb_index(env, mmu_idx, page2);
entry2 = tlb_entry(env, mmu_idx, page2);
tlb_addr2 = tlb_addr_write(entry2);
if (!tlb_hit_page(tlb_addr2, page2)) {
if (!victim_tlb_hit(env, mmu_idx, index2, tlb_off, page2)) {
tlb_fill(env_cpu(env), page2, size2, MMU_DATA_STORE,
mmu_idx, retaddr);
index2 = tlb_index(env, mmu_idx, page2);
entry2 = tlb_entry(env, mmu_idx, page2);
}
tlb_addr2 = tlb_addr_write(entry2);
}
/*
* Handle watchpoints. Since this may trap, all checks
* must happen before any store.
*/
if (unlikely(tlb_addr & TLB_WATCHPOINT)) {
cpu_check_watchpoint(env_cpu(env), addr, size - size2,
env_tlb(env)->d[mmu_idx].iotlb[index].attrs,
BP_MEM_WRITE, retaddr);
}
if (unlikely(tlb_addr2 & TLB_WATCHPOINT)) {
cpu_check_watchpoint(env_cpu(env), page2, size2,
env_tlb(env)->d[mmu_idx].iotlb[index2].attrs,
BP_MEM_WRITE, retaddr);
}
/*
* XXX: not efficient, but simple.
* This loop must go in the forward direction to avoid issues
* with self-modifying code in Windows 64-bit.
*/
for (i = 0; i < size; ++i) {
uint8_t val8;
if (memop_big_endian(op)) {
/* Big-endian extract. */
val8 = val >> (((size - 1) * 8) - (i * 8));
} else {
/* Little-endian extract. */
val8 = val >> (i * 8);
}
helper_ret_stb_mmu(env, addr + i, val8, oi, retaddr);
}
store_helper_unaligned(env, addr, val, retaddr, size,
mmu_idx, memop_big_endian(op));
return;
}
@ -2162,8 +2181,9 @@ store_helper(CPUArchState *env, target_ulong addr, uint64_t val,
store_memop(haddr, val, op);
}
void helper_ret_stb_mmu(CPUArchState *env, target_ulong addr, uint8_t val,
TCGMemOpIdx oi, uintptr_t retaddr)
void __attribute__((noinline))
helper_ret_stb_mmu(CPUArchState *env, target_ulong addr, uint8_t val,
TCGMemOpIdx oi, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
store_helper(env, addr, val, oi, retaddr, MO_UB);
}