word-at-a-time: make the interfaces truly generic
This changes the interfaces in <asm/word-at-a-time.h> to be a bit more
complicated, but a lot more generic.
In particular, it allows us to really do the operations efficiently on
both little-endian and big-endian machines, pretty much regardless of
machine details. For example, if you can rely on a fast population
count instruction on your architecture, this will allow you to make your
optimized <asm/word-at-a-time.h> file with that.
NOTE! The "generic" version in include/asm-generic/word-at-a-time.h is
not truly generic, it actually only works on big-endian. Why? Because
on little-endian the generic algorithms are wasteful, since you can
inevitably do better. The x86 implementation is an example of that.
(The only truly non-generic part of the asm-generic implementation is
the "find_zero()" function, and you could make a little-endian version
of it. And if the Kbuild infrastructure allowed us to pick a particular
header file, that would be lovely)
The <asm/word-at-a-time.h> functions are as follows:
- WORD_AT_A_TIME_CONSTANTS: specific constants that the algorithm
uses.
- has_zero(): take a word, and determine if it has a zero byte in it.
It gets the word, the pointer to the constant pool, and a pointer to
an intermediate "data" field it can set.
This is the "quick-and-dirty" zero tester: it's what is run inside
the hot loops.
- "prep_zero_mask()": take the word, the data that has_zero() produced,
and the constant pool, and generate an *exact* mask of which byte had
the first zero. This is run directly *outside* the loop, and allows
the "has_zero()" function to answer the "is there a zero byte"
question without necessarily getting exactly *which* byte is the
first one to contain a zero.
If you do multiple byte lookups concurrently (eg "hash_name()", which
looks for both NUL and '/' bytes), after you've done the prep_zero_mask()
phase, the result of those can be or'ed together to get the "either
or" case.
- The result from "prep_zero_mask()" can then be fed into "find_zero()"
(to find the byte offset of the first byte that was zero) or into
"zero_bytemask()" (to find the bytemask of the bytes preceding the
zero byte).
The existence of zero_bytemask() is optional, and is not necessary
for the normal string routines. But dentry name hashing needs it, so
if you enable DENTRY_WORD_AT_A_TIME you need to expose it.
This changes the generic strncpy_from_user() function and the dentry
hashing functions to use these modified word-at-a-time interfaces. This
gets us back to the optimized state of the x86 strncpy that we lost in
the previous commit when moving over to the generic version.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
diff --git a/include/asm-generic/word-at-a-time.h b/include/asm-generic/word-at-a-time.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3f21f1b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/asm-generic/word-at-a-time.h
@@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
+#ifndef _ASM_WORD_AT_A_TIME_H
+#define _ASM_WORD_AT_A_TIME_H
+
+/*
+ * This says "generic", but it's actually big-endian only.
+ * Little-endian can use more efficient versions of these
+ * interfaces, see for example
+ * arch/x86/include/asm/word-at-a-time.h
+ * for those.
+ */
+
+#include <linux/kernel.h>
+
+struct word_at_a_time {
+ const unsigned long high_bits, low_bits;
+};
+
+#define WORD_AT_A_TIME_CONSTANTS { REPEAT_BYTE(0xfe) + 1, REPEAT_BYTE(0x7f) }
+
+/* Bit set in the bytes that have a zero */
+static inline long prep_zero_mask(unsigned long val, unsigned long rhs, const struct word_at_a_time *c)
+{
+ unsigned long mask = (val & c->low_bits) + c->low_bits;
+ return ~(mask | rhs);
+}
+
+#define create_zero_mask(mask) (mask)
+
+static inline long find_zero(unsigned long mask)
+{
+ long byte = 0;
+#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
+ if (mask >> 32)
+ mask >>= 32;
+ else
+ byte = 4;
+#endif
+ if (mask >> 16)
+ mask >>= 16;
+ else
+ byte += 2;
+ return (mask >> 8) ? byte : byte + 1;
+}
+
+static inline bool has_zero(unsigned long val, unsigned long *data, const struct word_at_a_time *c)
+{
+ unsigned long rhs = val | c->low_bits;
+ *data = rhs;
+ return (val + c->high_bits) & ~rhs;
+}
+
+#endif /* _ASM_WORD_AT_A_TIME_H */