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-rw-r--r--arch/parisc/include/asm/ldcw.h62
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diff --git a/arch/parisc/include/asm/ldcw.h b/arch/parisc/include/asm/ldcw.h
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+++ b/arch/parisc/include/asm/ldcw.h
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+/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
+#ifndef __PARISC_LDCW_H
+#define __PARISC_LDCW_H
+
+/* Because kmalloc only guarantees 8-byte alignment for kmalloc'd data,
+ and GCC only guarantees 8-byte alignment for stack locals, we can't
+ be assured of 16-byte alignment for atomic lock data even if we
+ specify "__attribute ((aligned(16)))" in the type declaration. So,
+ we use a struct containing an array of four ints for the atomic lock
+ type and dynamically select the 16-byte aligned int from the array
+ for the semaphore. */
+
+/* From: "Jim Hull" <jim.hull of hp.com>
+ I've attached a summary of the change, but basically, for PA 2.0, as
+ long as the ",CO" (coherent operation) completer is implemented, then the
+ 16-byte alignment requirement for ldcw and ldcd is relaxed, and instead
+ they only require "natural" alignment (4-byte for ldcw, 8-byte for
+ ldcd).
+
+ Although the cache control hint is accepted by all PA 2.0 processors,
+ it is only implemented on PA8800/PA8900 CPUs. Prior PA8X00 CPUs still
+ require 16-byte alignment. If the address is unaligned, the operation
+ of the instruction is undefined. The ldcw instruction does not generate
+ unaligned data reference traps so misaligned accesses are not detected.
+ This hid the problem for years. So, restore the 16-byte alignment dropped
+ by Kyle McMartin in "Remove __ldcw_align for PA-RISC 2.0 processors". */
+
+#define __PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT 16
+#define __PA_LDCW_ALIGN_ORDER 4
+#define __ldcw_align(a) ({ \
+ unsigned long __ret = (unsigned long) &(a)->lock[0]; \
+ __ret = (__ret + __PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT - 1) \
+ & ~(__PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT - 1); \
+ (volatile unsigned int *) __ret; \
+})
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_PA20
+#define __LDCW "ldcw,co"
+#else
+#define __LDCW "ldcw"
+#endif
+
+/* LDCW, the only atomic read-write operation PA-RISC has. *sigh*.
+ We don't explicitly expose that "*a" may be written as reload
+ fails to find a register in class R1_REGS when "a" needs to be
+ reloaded when generating 64-bit PIC code. Instead, we clobber
+ memory to indicate to the compiler that the assembly code reads
+ or writes to items other than those listed in the input and output
+ operands. This may pessimize the code somewhat but __ldcw is
+ usually used within code blocks surrounded by memory barriers. */
+#define __ldcw(a) ({ \
+ unsigned __ret; \
+ __asm__ __volatile__(__LDCW " 0(%1),%0" \
+ : "=r" (__ret) : "r" (a) : "memory"); \
+ __ret; \
+})
+
+#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
+# define __lock_aligned __section(".data..lock_aligned") __aligned(16)
+#endif
+
+#endif /* __PARISC_LDCW_H */