Contributors: 6
Author Tokens Token Proportion Commits Commit Proportion
David Howells 64 84.21% 1 16.67%
Helge Deller 8 10.53% 1 16.67%
Greg Kroah-Hartman 1 1.32% 1 16.67%
Andrea Gelmini 1 1.32% 1 16.67%
Joe Perches 1 1.32% 1 16.67%
John David Anglin 1 1.32% 1 16.67%
Total 76 6


/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
#ifndef __PARISC_LDCW_H
#define __PARISC_LDCW_H

#ifndef CONFIG_PA20
/* 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.  */

#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;			\
})
#define __LDCW	"ldcw"

#else /*CONFIG_PA20*/
/* 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 specified, 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). */

#define __PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT	4
#define __PA_LDCW_ALIGN_ORDER	2
#define __ldcw_align(a) (&(a)->slock)
#define __LDCW	"ldcw,co"

#endif /*!CONFIG_PA20*/

/* 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")
#endif

#endif /* __PARISC_LDCW_H */