On Sun, Aug 19, 2012 at 09:37:27AM +0100, Jan Beulich wrote: > >>> Andi Kleen <andi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 08/19/12 4:59 AM >>> > >I verified this generates the same binary (on 64bit) as the original > >register variable. > > This isn't very surprising given that the modified code is inside a > CONFIG_X86_32 conditional (as ought to be obvious from the code using > %%esp). Given that it's being used as operand to a binary &, the resulting > code - if the compiler handles this only half way sensibly - can hardly be > expected to be identical. Doh! Thanks. I'll double check. You're right it'll likely change code. But it shouldn't be common. > > >-register unsigned long current_stack_pointer asm("esp") __used; > >+#define current_stack_pointer ({ \ > >+ unsigned long sp; \ > >+ asm("mov %%esp,%0" : "=r" (sp)); \ > >+ sp; \ > >+}) > > It would get closer to the original if you used "=g" (I noticed in a few > earlier patches already that you like to use "=r" in places where a register > is not strictly required, thus reducing the flexibility the compiler has). My fingers have =r hardcoded. Will fix. > > Also, given that this is more a workaround for a compiler deficiency, > shouldn't this be conditional upon use of LTO? I think it's cleaner than the global reg var, so unconditional should be fine. It wouldn't surprise me if global reg causes trouble even without LTO, i probably just triggered some latent bug. -Andi -- ak@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -- Speaking for myself only. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kbuild" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html