On Fri, Feb 25, 2022 at 10:23:07AM +1000, Nicholas Piggin wrote:
Excerpts from Segher Boessenkool's message of February 25, 2022 3:29 am:
On Thu, Feb 24, 2022 at 09:13:25PM +1000, Nicholas Piggin wrote:
Excerpts from Arnd Bergmann's message of February 24, 2022 8:20 pm:
Again, there should be a minimum number of those .machine directives in inline asm as well, which tends to work out fine as long as the entire kernel is built with the correct -march= option for the minimum supported CPU, and stays away from inline asm that requires a higher CPU level.
There's really no advantage to them, and they're ugly and annoying and if we applied the concept consistently for all asm they would grow to a very large number.
The advantage is that you get machine code that *works*. There are quite a few mnemonics that translate to different instructions with different machine options! We like to get the intended instructions instead of something that depends on what assembler options the user has passed behind our backs.
The idea they'll give you good static checking just doesn't really pan out.
That never was a goal of this at all.
-many was very problematical for GCC itself. We no longer use it.
You have the wrong context. We're not talking about -many vs .machine here.
Okay, so you have no idea what you are talking about? Wow.
The reason GCC uses .machine *itself* is because assembler -mmachine options *cannot work*, for many reasons. We hit problems often enough that years ago we started moving away from it already. The biggest problems are that on one hand there are mnemonics that encode to different instructions depending on target arch or cpu selected (like mftb, lxvx, wait, etc.), and on the other hand GCC needs to switch that target halfway through compilation (attribute((target(...)))).
Often these problems were hidden most of the time by us passing -many. But not all of the time, and over time, problems became more frequent and nasty.
Passing assembler -m options is nasty when you have to mix it with .machine statements (and we need the latter no matter what), and it becomes completely unpredictable if the user passes other -m options manually.
Inline assembler is inserted textually in the generated assembler code. This is a big part of the strength of inline assembler. It does mean that if you need a different target selected for your assembler code then you need to arrange for that in your assembler code.
So yes, this very much is about -many, other -m options, and .machine . I discourage the kernel (as well as any other project) from using -m options, especially -many, but that is your own choice of course. I get sick and tired from you calling a deliberate design decision we arrived at after years of work and weighing alternatives a "bug" though.
Segher