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Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +01001/*
2 * Copyright (C) 1994 Linus Torvalds
3 *
4 * Pentium III FXSR, SSE support
5 * General FPU state handling cleanups
6 * Gareth Hughes <gareth@valinux.com>, May 2000
7 * x86-64 work by Andi Kleen 2002
8 */
9
H. Peter Anvin1965aae2008-10-22 22:26:29 -070010#ifndef _ASM_X86_I387_H
11#define _ASM_X86_I387_H
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010012
Herbert Xu3b0d6592009-11-03 09:11:15 -050013#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
14
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010015#include <linux/sched.h>
Suresh Siddhae4914012008-08-13 22:02:26 +100016#include <linux/hardirq.h>
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010017
Linus Torvalds1361b832012-02-21 13:19:22 -080018struct pt_regs;
19struct user_i387_struct;
20
Suresh Siddhaaa283f42008-03-10 15:28:05 -070021extern int init_fpu(struct task_struct *child);
Jaswinder Singh36454932008-07-21 22:31:57 +053022extern int dump_fpu(struct pt_regs *, struct user_i387_struct *);
Linus Torvalds1361b832012-02-21 13:19:22 -080023extern void math_state_restore(void);
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010024
Linus Torvalds8546c002012-02-21 10:25:45 -080025extern bool irq_fpu_usable(void);
26extern void kernel_fpu_begin(void);
27extern void kernel_fpu_end(void);
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010028
Suresh Siddhae4914012008-08-13 22:02:26 +100029/*
30 * Some instructions like VIA's padlock instructions generate a spurious
31 * DNA fault but don't modify SSE registers. And these instructions
Chuck Ebbert0b8c3d52009-06-09 10:40:50 -040032 * get used from interrupt context as well. To prevent these kernel instructions
33 * in interrupt context interacting wrongly with other user/kernel fpu usage, we
Suresh Siddhae4914012008-08-13 22:02:26 +100034 * should use them only in the context of irq_ts_save/restore()
35 */
36static inline int irq_ts_save(void)
37{
38 /*
Chuck Ebbert0b8c3d52009-06-09 10:40:50 -040039 * If in process context and not atomic, we can take a spurious DNA fault.
40 * Otherwise, doing clts() in process context requires disabling preemption
41 * or some heavy lifting like kernel_fpu_begin()
Suresh Siddhae4914012008-08-13 22:02:26 +100042 */
Chuck Ebbert0b8c3d52009-06-09 10:40:50 -040043 if (!in_atomic())
Suresh Siddhae4914012008-08-13 22:02:26 +100044 return 0;
45
46 if (read_cr0() & X86_CR0_TS) {
47 clts();
48 return 1;
49 }
50
51 return 0;
52}
53
54static inline void irq_ts_restore(int TS_state)
55{
56 if (TS_state)
57 stts();
58}
59
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010060/*
Linus Torvalds15d87912012-02-16 09:15:04 -080061 * The question "does this thread have fpu access?"
62 * is slightly racy, since preemption could come in
63 * and revoke it immediately after the test.
64 *
65 * However, even in that very unlikely scenario,
66 * we can just assume we have FPU access - typically
67 * to save the FP state - we'll just take a #NM
68 * fault and get the FPU access back.
Linus Torvalds15d87912012-02-16 09:15:04 -080069 */
70static inline int user_has_fpu(void)
71{
Linus Torvalds1361b832012-02-21 13:19:22 -080072 return current->thread.fpu.has_fpu;
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010073}
74
Linus Torvalds8546c002012-02-21 10:25:45 -080075extern void unlazy_fpu(struct task_struct *tsk);
Roland McGrath1eeaed72008-01-30 13:31:51 +010076
Herbert Xu3b0d6592009-11-03 09:11:15 -050077#endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
78
H. Peter Anvin1965aae2008-10-22 22:26:29 -070079#endif /* _ASM_X86_I387_H */