Like arm64, ARM supports position independent code sequences that produce symbol references with a greater reach than the ordinary adr/ldr instructions. Currently, we use open coded instruction sequences involving literals and arithmetic operations. Instead, we can use movw/movt pairs on v7 CPUs, circumventing the D-cache entirely. For older CPUs, we can emit the literal into a subsection, allowing it to be emitted out of line while retaining the ability to perform arithmetic on label offsets. E.g., on pre-v7 CPUs, we can emit a PC-relative reference as follows: ldr <reg>, 222f 111: add <reg>, <reg>, pc .subsection 1 222: .long <sym> - (111b + 8) .previous This is allowed by the assembler because, unlike ordinary sections, subsections are combined into a single section into the object file, and so the label references are not true cross-section references that are visible as relocations. Note that we could even do something like add <reg>, pc, #(222f - 111f) & ~0xfff ldr <reg>, [<reg>, #(222f - 111f) & 0xfff] 111: add <reg>, <reg>, pc .subsection 1 222: .long <sym> - (111b + 8) .previous if it turns out that the 4 KB range of the ldr instruction is insufficient to reach the literal in the subsection, although this is currently not a problem (of the 98 objects built from .S files in a multi_v7_defconfig build, only 11 have .text sections that are over 1 KB, and the largest one [entry-armv.o] is 3308 bytes) Subsections have been available in binutils since 2004 at least, so they should not cause any issues with older toolchains. So use the above to implement the macros mov_l, adr_l, adrm_l (using ldm to load multiple literals at once), ldr_l and str_l, all of which will use movw/movt pairs on v7 and later CPUs, and use PC-relative literals otherwise. Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> --- arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h | 70 ++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 70 insertions(+) diff --git a/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h b/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h index ad301f107dd2..cedf59a7f853 100644 --- a/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h +++ b/arch/arm/include/asm/assembler.h @@ -518,4 +518,74 @@ THUMB( orr \reg , \reg , #PSR_T_BIT ) #endif .endm +#ifdef CONFIG_THUMB2_KERNEL +#define ARM_PC_BIAS 4 +#else +#define ARM_PC_BIAS 8 +#endif + + .macro __adldst_l, op, reg, sym, tmp + .if __LINUX_ARM_ARCH__ < 7 + ldr \tmp, 111f + .subsection 1 + .align 2 +111: .long \sym - (222f + ARM_PC_BIAS) + .previous + .else + movw \tmp, #:lower16:\sym - (222f + ARM_PC_BIAS) + movt \tmp, #:upper16:\sym - (222f + ARM_PC_BIAS) + .endif +222:; .ifc \op, add + add \reg, \tmp, pc + .elseif CONFIG_THUMB2_KERNEL == 1 + add \tmp, \tmp, pc + \op \reg, [\tmp] + .else + \op \reg, [pc, \tmp] + .endif + .endm + + /* + * mov_l - move a constant value or [relocated] address into a register + */ + .macro mov_l, dst:req, imm:req + .if __LINUX_ARM_ARCH__ < 7 + ldr \dst, =\imm + .else + movw \dst, #:lower16:\imm + movt \dst, #:upper16:\imm + .endif + .endm + + /* + * adr_l - adr pseudo-op with unlimited range + * + * @dst: destination register + * @sym: name of the symbol + */ + .macro adr_l, dst:req, sym:req + __adldst_l add, \dst, \sym, \dst + .endm + + /* + * ldr_l - ldr <literal> pseudo-op with unlimited range + * + * @dst: destination register + * @sym: name of the symbol + */ + .macro ldr_l, dst:req, sym:req + __adldst_l ldr, \dst, \sym, \dst + .endm + + /* + * str_l - str <literal> pseudo-op with unlimited range + * + * @src: source register + * @sym: name of the symbol + * @tmp: mandatory scratch register + */ + .macro str_l, src:req, sym:req, tmp:req + __adldst_l str, \src, \sym, \tmp + .endm + #endif /* __ASM_ASSEMBLER_H__ */ -- 2.11.0 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-omap" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html