2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
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// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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//
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// System calls and other sys.stuff for AMD64, Linux
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//
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2011-12-19 13:51:13 -07:00
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#include "zasm_GOOS_GOARCH.h"
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2014-09-04 21:05:18 -06:00
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#include "textflag.h"
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2009-06-17 16:12:16 -06:00
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cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
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TEXT runtime·exit(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-4
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MOVL code+0(FP), DI
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2010-03-29 23:51:39 -06:00
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MOVL $231, AX // exitgroup - force all os threads to exit
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2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
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SYSCALL
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RET
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cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
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TEXT runtime·exit1(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-4
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MOVL code+0(FP), DI
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2008-08-05 15:18:47 -06:00
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MOVL $60, AX // exit - exit the current os thread
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2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
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SYSCALL
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RET
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cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
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TEXT runtime·open(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-20
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MOVQ name+0(FP), DI
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MOVL mode+8(FP), SI
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MOVL perm+12(FP), DX
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2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
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MOVL $2, AX // syscall entry
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SYSCALL
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cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
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MOVL AX, ret+16(FP)
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2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
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RET
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cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
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TEXT runtime·close(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-12
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MOVL fd+0(FP), DI
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runtime: improve Linux mutex
The implementation is hybrid active/passive spin/blocking mutex.
The design minimizes amount of context switches and futex calls.
The idea is that all critical sections in runtime are intentially
small, so pure blocking mutex behaves badly causing
a lot of context switches, thread parking/unparking and kernel calls.
Note that some synthetic benchmarks become somewhat slower,
that's due to increased contention on other data structures,
it should not affect programs that do any real work.
On 2 x Intel E5620, 8 HT cores, 2.4GHz
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSelectContended 521.00 503.00 -3.45%
BenchmarkSelectContended-2 661.00 320.00 -51.59%
BenchmarkSelectContended-4 1139.00 629.00 -44.78%
BenchmarkSelectContended-8 2870.00 878.00 -69.41%
BenchmarkSelectContended-16 5276.00 818.00 -84.50%
BenchmarkChanContended 112.00 103.00 -8.04%
BenchmarkChanContended-2 631.00 174.00 -72.42%
BenchmarkChanContended-4 682.00 272.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanContended-8 1601.00 520.00 -67.52%
BenchmarkChanContended-16 3100.00 372.00 -88.00%
BenchmarkChanSync 253.00 239.00 -5.53%
BenchmarkChanSync-2 5030.00 4648.00 -7.59%
BenchmarkChanSync-4 4826.00 4694.00 -2.74%
BenchmarkChanSync-8 4778.00 4713.00 -1.36%
BenchmarkChanSync-16 5289.00 4710.00 -10.95%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0 273.00 254.00 -6.96%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-2 599.00 400.00 -33.22%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-4 1168.00 659.00 -43.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-8 2831.00 1057.00 -62.66%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-16 4197.00 1037.00 -75.29%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10 150.00 140.00 -6.67%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-2 607.00 268.00 -55.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-4 1137.00 404.00 -64.47%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-8 2115.00 828.00 -60.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-16 4283.00 855.00 -80.04%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100 117.00 110.00 -5.98%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-2 558.00 218.00 -60.93%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-4 722.00 287.00 -60.25%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-8 1840.00 431.00 -76.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-16 3394.00 448.00 -86.80%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0 2014.00 1996.00 -0.89%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-2 1207.00 1127.00 -6.63%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-4 1913.00 611.00 -68.06%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-8 3016.00 949.00 -68.53%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-16 4320.00 1154.00 -73.29%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10 1906.00 1897.00 -0.47%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-2 1123.00 1033.00 -8.01%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-4 1076.00 571.00 -46.93%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-8 2748.00 1096.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-16 4600.00 1105.00 -75.98%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100 1884.00 1852.00 -1.70%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-2 1235.00 1146.00 -7.21%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-4 1217.00 619.00 -49.14%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-8 1534.00 509.00 -66.82%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-16 4126.00 918.00 -77.75%
BenchmarkSyscall 34.40 33.30 -3.20%
BenchmarkSyscall-2 160.00 121.00 -24.38%
BenchmarkSyscall-4 131.00 136.00 +3.82%
BenchmarkSyscall-8 139.00 131.00 -5.76%
BenchmarkSyscall-16 161.00 168.00 +4.35%
BenchmarkSyscallWork 950.00 950.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-2 481.00 480.00 -0.21%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-4 268.00 270.00 +0.75%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-8 156.00 169.00 +8.33%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-16 188.00 184.00 -2.13%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock 36.40 35.60 -2.20%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-2 81.40 45.10 -44.59%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-4 126.00 108.00 -14.29%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-8 112.00 112.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-16 110.00 112.00 +1.82%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock 35.30 35.30 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-2 118.00 124.00 +5.08%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-4 105.00 108.00 +2.86%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-8 101.00 111.00 +9.90%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-16 112.00 118.00 +5.36%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-2 476.00 414.00 -13.03%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-4 238.00 228.00 -4.20%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-8 140.00 126.00 -10.00%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-16 117.00 116.00 -0.85%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-2 454.00 466.00 +2.64%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-4 243.00 241.00 -0.82%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-8 145.00 137.00 -5.52%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-16 132.00 123.00 -6.82%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore 123.00 102.00 -17.07%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-2 34.80 34.90 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-4 34.70 34.80 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-8 34.70 34.70 +0.00%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-16 34.80 34.70 -0.29%
BenchmarkMutex 26.80 26.00 -2.99%
BenchmarkMutex-2 108.00 45.20 -58.15%
BenchmarkMutex-4 103.00 127.00 +23.30%
BenchmarkMutex-8 109.00 147.00 +34.86%
BenchmarkMutex-16 102.00 152.00 +49.02%
BenchmarkMutexSlack 27.00 26.90 -0.37%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-2 149.00 165.00 +10.74%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-4 121.00 209.00 +72.73%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-8 101.00 158.00 +56.44%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-16 97.00 129.00 +32.99%
BenchmarkMutexWork 792.00 794.00 +0.25%
BenchmarkMutexWork-2 407.00 409.00 +0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWork-4 220.00 209.00 -5.00%
BenchmarkMutexWork-8 267.00 160.00 -40.07%
BenchmarkMutexWork-16 315.00 300.00 -4.76%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack 792.00 793.00 +0.13%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-2 406.00 404.00 -0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-4 225.00 212.00 -5.78%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-8 268.00 136.00 -49.25%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-16 300.00 300.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100 27.10 27.00 -0.37%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-2 33.10 40.80 +23.26%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-4 113.00 88.10 -22.04%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-8 119.00 95.30 -19.92%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-16 148.00 109.00 -26.35%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10 29.60 29.40 -0.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-2 111.00 61.40 -44.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-4 270.00 208.00 -22.96%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-8 204.00 185.00 -9.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-16 261.00 190.00 -27.20%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100 1040.00 1036.00 -0.38%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-2 593.00 580.00 -2.19%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-4 470.00 365.00 -22.34%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-8 468.00 289.00 -38.25%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-16 604.00 374.00 -38.08%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10 951.00 951.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-2 1001.00 928.00 -7.29%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-4 1555.00 1006.00 -35.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-8 2085.00 1171.00 -43.84%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-16 2082.00 1614.00 -22.48%
R=rsc, iant, msolo, fw, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4711045
2011-07-29 10:44:06 -06:00
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MOVL $3, AX // syscall entry
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SYSCALL
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cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
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MOVL AX, ret+8(FP)
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runtime: improve Linux mutex
The implementation is hybrid active/passive spin/blocking mutex.
The design minimizes amount of context switches and futex calls.
The idea is that all critical sections in runtime are intentially
small, so pure blocking mutex behaves badly causing
a lot of context switches, thread parking/unparking and kernel calls.
Note that some synthetic benchmarks become somewhat slower,
that's due to increased contention on other data structures,
it should not affect programs that do any real work.
On 2 x Intel E5620, 8 HT cores, 2.4GHz
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSelectContended 521.00 503.00 -3.45%
BenchmarkSelectContended-2 661.00 320.00 -51.59%
BenchmarkSelectContended-4 1139.00 629.00 -44.78%
BenchmarkSelectContended-8 2870.00 878.00 -69.41%
BenchmarkSelectContended-16 5276.00 818.00 -84.50%
BenchmarkChanContended 112.00 103.00 -8.04%
BenchmarkChanContended-2 631.00 174.00 -72.42%
BenchmarkChanContended-4 682.00 272.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanContended-8 1601.00 520.00 -67.52%
BenchmarkChanContended-16 3100.00 372.00 -88.00%
BenchmarkChanSync 253.00 239.00 -5.53%
BenchmarkChanSync-2 5030.00 4648.00 -7.59%
BenchmarkChanSync-4 4826.00 4694.00 -2.74%
BenchmarkChanSync-8 4778.00 4713.00 -1.36%
BenchmarkChanSync-16 5289.00 4710.00 -10.95%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0 273.00 254.00 -6.96%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-2 599.00 400.00 -33.22%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-4 1168.00 659.00 -43.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-8 2831.00 1057.00 -62.66%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-16 4197.00 1037.00 -75.29%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10 150.00 140.00 -6.67%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-2 607.00 268.00 -55.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-4 1137.00 404.00 -64.47%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-8 2115.00 828.00 -60.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-16 4283.00 855.00 -80.04%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100 117.00 110.00 -5.98%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-2 558.00 218.00 -60.93%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-4 722.00 287.00 -60.25%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-8 1840.00 431.00 -76.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-16 3394.00 448.00 -86.80%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0 2014.00 1996.00 -0.89%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-2 1207.00 1127.00 -6.63%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-4 1913.00 611.00 -68.06%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-8 3016.00 949.00 -68.53%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-16 4320.00 1154.00 -73.29%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10 1906.00 1897.00 -0.47%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-2 1123.00 1033.00 -8.01%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-4 1076.00 571.00 -46.93%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-8 2748.00 1096.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-16 4600.00 1105.00 -75.98%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100 1884.00 1852.00 -1.70%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-2 1235.00 1146.00 -7.21%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-4 1217.00 619.00 -49.14%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-8 1534.00 509.00 -66.82%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-16 4126.00 918.00 -77.75%
BenchmarkSyscall 34.40 33.30 -3.20%
BenchmarkSyscall-2 160.00 121.00 -24.38%
BenchmarkSyscall-4 131.00 136.00 +3.82%
BenchmarkSyscall-8 139.00 131.00 -5.76%
BenchmarkSyscall-16 161.00 168.00 +4.35%
BenchmarkSyscallWork 950.00 950.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-2 481.00 480.00 -0.21%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-4 268.00 270.00 +0.75%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-8 156.00 169.00 +8.33%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-16 188.00 184.00 -2.13%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock 36.40 35.60 -2.20%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-2 81.40 45.10 -44.59%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-4 126.00 108.00 -14.29%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-8 112.00 112.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-16 110.00 112.00 +1.82%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock 35.30 35.30 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-2 118.00 124.00 +5.08%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-4 105.00 108.00 +2.86%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-8 101.00 111.00 +9.90%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-16 112.00 118.00 +5.36%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-2 476.00 414.00 -13.03%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-4 238.00 228.00 -4.20%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-8 140.00 126.00 -10.00%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-16 117.00 116.00 -0.85%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-2 454.00 466.00 +2.64%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-4 243.00 241.00 -0.82%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-8 145.00 137.00 -5.52%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-16 132.00 123.00 -6.82%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore 123.00 102.00 -17.07%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-2 34.80 34.90 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-4 34.70 34.80 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-8 34.70 34.70 +0.00%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-16 34.80 34.70 -0.29%
BenchmarkMutex 26.80 26.00 -2.99%
BenchmarkMutex-2 108.00 45.20 -58.15%
BenchmarkMutex-4 103.00 127.00 +23.30%
BenchmarkMutex-8 109.00 147.00 +34.86%
BenchmarkMutex-16 102.00 152.00 +49.02%
BenchmarkMutexSlack 27.00 26.90 -0.37%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-2 149.00 165.00 +10.74%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-4 121.00 209.00 +72.73%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-8 101.00 158.00 +56.44%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-16 97.00 129.00 +32.99%
BenchmarkMutexWork 792.00 794.00 +0.25%
BenchmarkMutexWork-2 407.00 409.00 +0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWork-4 220.00 209.00 -5.00%
BenchmarkMutexWork-8 267.00 160.00 -40.07%
BenchmarkMutexWork-16 315.00 300.00 -4.76%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack 792.00 793.00 +0.13%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-2 406.00 404.00 -0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-4 225.00 212.00 -5.78%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-8 268.00 136.00 -49.25%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-16 300.00 300.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100 27.10 27.00 -0.37%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-2 33.10 40.80 +23.26%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-4 113.00 88.10 -22.04%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-8 119.00 95.30 -19.92%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-16 148.00 109.00 -26.35%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10 29.60 29.40 -0.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-2 111.00 61.40 -44.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-4 270.00 208.00 -22.96%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-8 204.00 185.00 -9.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-16 261.00 190.00 -27.20%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100 1040.00 1036.00 -0.38%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-2 593.00 580.00 -2.19%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-4 470.00 365.00 -22.34%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-8 468.00 289.00 -38.25%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-16 604.00 374.00 -38.08%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10 951.00 951.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-2 1001.00 928.00 -7.29%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-4 1555.00 1006.00 -35.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-8 2085.00 1171.00 -43.84%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-16 2082.00 1614.00 -22.48%
R=rsc, iant, msolo, fw, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4711045
2011-07-29 10:44:06 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·write(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-28
|
|
|
|
MOVQ fd+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ p+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL n+16(FP), DX
|
2008-07-15 09:27:50 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $1, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+24(FP)
|
2008-07-15 09:27:50 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·read(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-28
|
|
|
|
MOVL fd+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ p+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL n+16(FP), DX
|
runtime: improve Linux mutex
The implementation is hybrid active/passive spin/blocking mutex.
The design minimizes amount of context switches and futex calls.
The idea is that all critical sections in runtime are intentially
small, so pure blocking mutex behaves badly causing
a lot of context switches, thread parking/unparking and kernel calls.
Note that some synthetic benchmarks become somewhat slower,
that's due to increased contention on other data structures,
it should not affect programs that do any real work.
On 2 x Intel E5620, 8 HT cores, 2.4GHz
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSelectContended 521.00 503.00 -3.45%
BenchmarkSelectContended-2 661.00 320.00 -51.59%
BenchmarkSelectContended-4 1139.00 629.00 -44.78%
BenchmarkSelectContended-8 2870.00 878.00 -69.41%
BenchmarkSelectContended-16 5276.00 818.00 -84.50%
BenchmarkChanContended 112.00 103.00 -8.04%
BenchmarkChanContended-2 631.00 174.00 -72.42%
BenchmarkChanContended-4 682.00 272.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanContended-8 1601.00 520.00 -67.52%
BenchmarkChanContended-16 3100.00 372.00 -88.00%
BenchmarkChanSync 253.00 239.00 -5.53%
BenchmarkChanSync-2 5030.00 4648.00 -7.59%
BenchmarkChanSync-4 4826.00 4694.00 -2.74%
BenchmarkChanSync-8 4778.00 4713.00 -1.36%
BenchmarkChanSync-16 5289.00 4710.00 -10.95%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0 273.00 254.00 -6.96%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-2 599.00 400.00 -33.22%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-4 1168.00 659.00 -43.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-8 2831.00 1057.00 -62.66%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-16 4197.00 1037.00 -75.29%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10 150.00 140.00 -6.67%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-2 607.00 268.00 -55.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-4 1137.00 404.00 -64.47%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-8 2115.00 828.00 -60.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-16 4283.00 855.00 -80.04%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100 117.00 110.00 -5.98%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-2 558.00 218.00 -60.93%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-4 722.00 287.00 -60.25%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-8 1840.00 431.00 -76.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-16 3394.00 448.00 -86.80%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0 2014.00 1996.00 -0.89%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-2 1207.00 1127.00 -6.63%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-4 1913.00 611.00 -68.06%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-8 3016.00 949.00 -68.53%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-16 4320.00 1154.00 -73.29%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10 1906.00 1897.00 -0.47%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-2 1123.00 1033.00 -8.01%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-4 1076.00 571.00 -46.93%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-8 2748.00 1096.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-16 4600.00 1105.00 -75.98%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100 1884.00 1852.00 -1.70%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-2 1235.00 1146.00 -7.21%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-4 1217.00 619.00 -49.14%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-8 1534.00 509.00 -66.82%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-16 4126.00 918.00 -77.75%
BenchmarkSyscall 34.40 33.30 -3.20%
BenchmarkSyscall-2 160.00 121.00 -24.38%
BenchmarkSyscall-4 131.00 136.00 +3.82%
BenchmarkSyscall-8 139.00 131.00 -5.76%
BenchmarkSyscall-16 161.00 168.00 +4.35%
BenchmarkSyscallWork 950.00 950.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-2 481.00 480.00 -0.21%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-4 268.00 270.00 +0.75%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-8 156.00 169.00 +8.33%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-16 188.00 184.00 -2.13%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock 36.40 35.60 -2.20%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-2 81.40 45.10 -44.59%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-4 126.00 108.00 -14.29%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-8 112.00 112.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-16 110.00 112.00 +1.82%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock 35.30 35.30 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-2 118.00 124.00 +5.08%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-4 105.00 108.00 +2.86%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-8 101.00 111.00 +9.90%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-16 112.00 118.00 +5.36%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-2 476.00 414.00 -13.03%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-4 238.00 228.00 -4.20%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-8 140.00 126.00 -10.00%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-16 117.00 116.00 -0.85%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-2 454.00 466.00 +2.64%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-4 243.00 241.00 -0.82%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-8 145.00 137.00 -5.52%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-16 132.00 123.00 -6.82%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore 123.00 102.00 -17.07%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-2 34.80 34.90 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-4 34.70 34.80 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-8 34.70 34.70 +0.00%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-16 34.80 34.70 -0.29%
BenchmarkMutex 26.80 26.00 -2.99%
BenchmarkMutex-2 108.00 45.20 -58.15%
BenchmarkMutex-4 103.00 127.00 +23.30%
BenchmarkMutex-8 109.00 147.00 +34.86%
BenchmarkMutex-16 102.00 152.00 +49.02%
BenchmarkMutexSlack 27.00 26.90 -0.37%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-2 149.00 165.00 +10.74%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-4 121.00 209.00 +72.73%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-8 101.00 158.00 +56.44%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-16 97.00 129.00 +32.99%
BenchmarkMutexWork 792.00 794.00 +0.25%
BenchmarkMutexWork-2 407.00 409.00 +0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWork-4 220.00 209.00 -5.00%
BenchmarkMutexWork-8 267.00 160.00 -40.07%
BenchmarkMutexWork-16 315.00 300.00 -4.76%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack 792.00 793.00 +0.13%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-2 406.00 404.00 -0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-4 225.00 212.00 -5.78%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-8 268.00 136.00 -49.25%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-16 300.00 300.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100 27.10 27.00 -0.37%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-2 33.10 40.80 +23.26%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-4 113.00 88.10 -22.04%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-8 119.00 95.30 -19.92%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-16 148.00 109.00 -26.35%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10 29.60 29.40 -0.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-2 111.00 61.40 -44.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-4 270.00 208.00 -22.96%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-8 204.00 185.00 -9.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-16 261.00 190.00 -27.20%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100 1040.00 1036.00 -0.38%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-2 593.00 580.00 -2.19%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-4 470.00 365.00 -22.34%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-8 468.00 289.00 -38.25%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-16 604.00 374.00 -38.08%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10 951.00 951.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-2 1001.00 928.00 -7.29%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-4 1555.00 1006.00 -35.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-8 2085.00 1171.00 -43.84%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-16 2082.00 1614.00 -22.48%
R=rsc, iant, msolo, fw, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4711045
2011-07-29 10:44:06 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $0, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+24(FP)
|
runtime: improve Linux mutex
The implementation is hybrid active/passive spin/blocking mutex.
The design minimizes amount of context switches and futex calls.
The idea is that all critical sections in runtime are intentially
small, so pure blocking mutex behaves badly causing
a lot of context switches, thread parking/unparking and kernel calls.
Note that some synthetic benchmarks become somewhat slower,
that's due to increased contention on other data structures,
it should not affect programs that do any real work.
On 2 x Intel E5620, 8 HT cores, 2.4GHz
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSelectContended 521.00 503.00 -3.45%
BenchmarkSelectContended-2 661.00 320.00 -51.59%
BenchmarkSelectContended-4 1139.00 629.00 -44.78%
BenchmarkSelectContended-8 2870.00 878.00 -69.41%
BenchmarkSelectContended-16 5276.00 818.00 -84.50%
BenchmarkChanContended 112.00 103.00 -8.04%
BenchmarkChanContended-2 631.00 174.00 -72.42%
BenchmarkChanContended-4 682.00 272.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanContended-8 1601.00 520.00 -67.52%
BenchmarkChanContended-16 3100.00 372.00 -88.00%
BenchmarkChanSync 253.00 239.00 -5.53%
BenchmarkChanSync-2 5030.00 4648.00 -7.59%
BenchmarkChanSync-4 4826.00 4694.00 -2.74%
BenchmarkChanSync-8 4778.00 4713.00 -1.36%
BenchmarkChanSync-16 5289.00 4710.00 -10.95%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0 273.00 254.00 -6.96%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-2 599.00 400.00 -33.22%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-4 1168.00 659.00 -43.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-8 2831.00 1057.00 -62.66%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-16 4197.00 1037.00 -75.29%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10 150.00 140.00 -6.67%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-2 607.00 268.00 -55.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-4 1137.00 404.00 -64.47%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-8 2115.00 828.00 -60.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-16 4283.00 855.00 -80.04%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100 117.00 110.00 -5.98%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-2 558.00 218.00 -60.93%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-4 722.00 287.00 -60.25%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-8 1840.00 431.00 -76.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-16 3394.00 448.00 -86.80%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0 2014.00 1996.00 -0.89%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-2 1207.00 1127.00 -6.63%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-4 1913.00 611.00 -68.06%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-8 3016.00 949.00 -68.53%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-16 4320.00 1154.00 -73.29%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10 1906.00 1897.00 -0.47%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-2 1123.00 1033.00 -8.01%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-4 1076.00 571.00 -46.93%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-8 2748.00 1096.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-16 4600.00 1105.00 -75.98%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100 1884.00 1852.00 -1.70%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-2 1235.00 1146.00 -7.21%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-4 1217.00 619.00 -49.14%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-8 1534.00 509.00 -66.82%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-16 4126.00 918.00 -77.75%
BenchmarkSyscall 34.40 33.30 -3.20%
BenchmarkSyscall-2 160.00 121.00 -24.38%
BenchmarkSyscall-4 131.00 136.00 +3.82%
BenchmarkSyscall-8 139.00 131.00 -5.76%
BenchmarkSyscall-16 161.00 168.00 +4.35%
BenchmarkSyscallWork 950.00 950.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-2 481.00 480.00 -0.21%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-4 268.00 270.00 +0.75%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-8 156.00 169.00 +8.33%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-16 188.00 184.00 -2.13%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock 36.40 35.60 -2.20%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-2 81.40 45.10 -44.59%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-4 126.00 108.00 -14.29%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-8 112.00 112.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-16 110.00 112.00 +1.82%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock 35.30 35.30 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-2 118.00 124.00 +5.08%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-4 105.00 108.00 +2.86%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-8 101.00 111.00 +9.90%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-16 112.00 118.00 +5.36%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-2 476.00 414.00 -13.03%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-4 238.00 228.00 -4.20%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-8 140.00 126.00 -10.00%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-16 117.00 116.00 -0.85%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-2 454.00 466.00 +2.64%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-4 243.00 241.00 -0.82%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-8 145.00 137.00 -5.52%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-16 132.00 123.00 -6.82%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore 123.00 102.00 -17.07%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-2 34.80 34.90 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-4 34.70 34.80 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-8 34.70 34.70 +0.00%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-16 34.80 34.70 -0.29%
BenchmarkMutex 26.80 26.00 -2.99%
BenchmarkMutex-2 108.00 45.20 -58.15%
BenchmarkMutex-4 103.00 127.00 +23.30%
BenchmarkMutex-8 109.00 147.00 +34.86%
BenchmarkMutex-16 102.00 152.00 +49.02%
BenchmarkMutexSlack 27.00 26.90 -0.37%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-2 149.00 165.00 +10.74%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-4 121.00 209.00 +72.73%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-8 101.00 158.00 +56.44%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-16 97.00 129.00 +32.99%
BenchmarkMutexWork 792.00 794.00 +0.25%
BenchmarkMutexWork-2 407.00 409.00 +0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWork-4 220.00 209.00 -5.00%
BenchmarkMutexWork-8 267.00 160.00 -40.07%
BenchmarkMutexWork-16 315.00 300.00 -4.76%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack 792.00 793.00 +0.13%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-2 406.00 404.00 -0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-4 225.00 212.00 -5.78%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-8 268.00 136.00 -49.25%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-16 300.00 300.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100 27.10 27.00 -0.37%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-2 33.10 40.80 +23.26%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-4 113.00 88.10 -22.04%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-8 119.00 95.30 -19.92%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-16 148.00 109.00 -26.35%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10 29.60 29.40 -0.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-2 111.00 61.40 -44.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-4 270.00 208.00 -22.96%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-8 204.00 185.00 -9.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-16 261.00 190.00 -27.20%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100 1040.00 1036.00 -0.38%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-2 593.00 580.00 -2.19%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-4 470.00 365.00 -22.34%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-8 468.00 289.00 -38.25%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-16 604.00 374.00 -38.08%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10 951.00 951.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-2 1001.00 928.00 -7.29%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-4 1555.00 1006.00 -35.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-8 2085.00 1171.00 -43.84%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-16 2082.00 1614.00 -22.48%
R=rsc, iant, msolo, fw, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4711045
2011-07-29 10:44:06 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·getrlimit(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-20
|
|
|
|
MOVL kind+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ limit+8(FP), SI
|
2012-02-24 13:28:51 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $97, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+16(FP)
|
2012-02-24 13:28:51 -07:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·usleep(SB),NOSPLIT,$16
|
runtime: parallelize garbage collector mark + sweep
Running test/garbage/parser.out.
On a 4-core Lenovo X201s (Linux):
31.12u 0.60s 31.74r 1 cpu, no atomics
32.27u 0.58s 32.86r 1 cpu, atomic instructions
33.04u 0.83s 27.47r 2 cpu
On a 16-core Xeon (Linux):
33.08u 0.65s 33.80r 1 cpu, no atomics
34.87u 1.12s 29.60r 2 cpu
36.00u 1.87s 28.43r 3 cpu
36.46u 2.34s 27.10r 4 cpu
38.28u 3.85s 26.92r 5 cpu
37.72u 5.25s 26.73r 6 cpu
39.63u 7.11s 26.95r 7 cpu
39.67u 8.10s 26.68r 8 cpu
On a 2-core MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo 2.26 (circa 2009, MacBookPro5,5):
39.43u 1.45s 41.27r 1 cpu, no atomics
43.98u 2.95s 38.69r 2 cpu
On a 2-core Mac Mini Core 2 Duo 1.83 (circa 2008; Macmini2,1):
48.81u 2.12s 51.76r 1 cpu, no atomics
57.15u 4.72s 51.54r 2 cpu
The handoff algorithm is really only good for two cores.
Beyond that we will need to so something more sophisticated,
like have each core hand off to the next one, around a circle.
Even so, the code is a good checkpoint; for now we'll limit the
number of gc procs to at most 2.
R=dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4641082
2011-09-30 07:40:01 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $0, DX
|
|
|
|
MOVL usec+0(FP), AX
|
|
|
|
MOVL $1000000, CX
|
|
|
|
DIVL CX
|
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, 0(SP)
|
|
|
|
MOVQ DX, 8(SP)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// select(0, 0, 0, 0, &tv)
|
|
|
|
MOVL $0, DI
|
|
|
|
MOVL $0, SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL $0, DX
|
|
|
|
MOVL $0, R10
|
|
|
|
MOVQ SP, R8
|
|
|
|
MOVL $23, AX
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
all: nacl import round 2
These previously reviewed CLs are present in this CL.
---
changeset: 18445:436bb084caed
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 09:50:34 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: assembly and system calls for Native Client x86-64
See golang.org/s/go13nacl for design overview.
This CL is publicly visible but not CC'ed to golang-dev,
to avoid distracting from the preparation of the Go 1.2
release.
This CL and the others will be checked into my rsc-go13nacl
clone repo for now, and I will send CLs against the main
repo early in the Go 1.3 development.
R≡adg
https://golang.org/cl/15760044
---
changeset: 18448:90bd871b5994
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 09:51:36 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: amd64p32 and Native Client assembly bootstrap
See golang.org/s/go13nacl for design overview.
This CL is publicly visible but not CC'ed to golang-dev,
to avoid distracting from the preparation of the Go 1.2
release.
This CL and the others will be checked into my rsc-go13nacl
clone repo for now, and I will send CLs against the main
repo early in the Go 1.3 development.
R≡khr
https://golang.org/cl/15820043
---
changeset: 18449:b011c3dc687e
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 09:51:58 2013 -0500
description:
math: amd64p32 assembly routines
These routines only manipulate float64 values,
so the amd64 and amd64p32 can share assembly.
The large number of files is symptomatic of a problem
with package path: it is a Go package structured like a C library.
But that will need to wait for another day.
See golang.org/s/go13nacl for design overview.
This CL is publicly visible but not CC'ed to golang-dev,
to avoid distracting from the preparation of the Go 1.2
release.
This CL and the others will be checked into my rsc-go13nacl
clone repo for now, and I will send CLs against the main
repo early in the Go 1.3 development.
R≡bradfitz
https://golang.org/cl/15870043
---
changeset: 18450:43234f082eec
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 10:03:19 2013 -0500
description:
syscall: networking for Native Client
See golang.org/s/go13nacl for design overview.
This CL is publicly visible but not CC'ed to golang-dev,
to avoid distracting from the preparation of the Go 1.2
release.
This CL and the others will be checked into my rsc-go13nacl
clone repo for now, and I will send CLs against the main
repo early in the Go 1.3 development.
R≡rsc
https://golang.org/cl/15780043
---
changeset: 18451:9c8d1d890aaa
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 10:03:34 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: assembly and system calls for Native Client x86-32
See golang.org/s/go13nacl for design overview.
This CL is publicly visible but not CC'ed to golang-dev,
to avoid distracting from the preparation of the Go 1.2
release.
This CL and the others will be checked into my rsc-go13nacl
clone repo for now, and I will send CLs against the main
repo early in the Go 1.3 development.
R≡rsc
https://golang.org/cl/15800043
---
changeset: 18452:f90b1dd9228f
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 11:04:09 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: fix frame size for linux/amd64 runtime.raise
R≡rsc
https://golang.org/cl/24480043
---
changeset: 18445:436bb084caed
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 09:50:34 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: assembly and system calls for Native Client x86-64
See golang.org/s/go13nacl for design overview.
This CL is publicly visible but not CC'ed to golang-dev,
to avoid distracting from the preparation of the Go 1.2
release.
This CL and the others will be checked into my rsc-go13nacl
clone repo for now, and I will send CLs against the main
repo early in the Go 1.3 development.
R≡adg
https://golang.org/cl/15760044
---
changeset: 18455:53b06799a938
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Mon Nov 11 23:29:52 2013 -0500
description:
cmd/gc: add -nolocalimports flag
R≡dsymonds
https://golang.org/cl/24990043
---
changeset: 18456:24f64e1eaa8a
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Tue Nov 12 22:06:29 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: add comments for playback write
R≡adg
https://golang.org/cl/25190043
---
changeset: 18457:d1f615bbb6e4
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Wed Nov 13 17:03:52 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: write only to NaCl stdout, never to NaCl stderr
NaCl writes some other messages on standard error
that we would like to be able to squelch.
R≡adg
https://golang.org/cl/26240044
---
changeset: 18458:1f01be1a1dc2
tag: tip
user: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
date: Wed Nov 13 19:45:16 2013 -0500
description:
runtime: remove apparent debugging dreg
Setting timens to 0 turns off fake time.
TBR≡adg
https://golang.org/cl/26400043
LGTM=bradfitz
R=dave, bradfitz
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/68730043
2014-02-25 15:00:08 -07:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·raise(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
2011-04-25 14:58:00 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $186, AX // syscall - gettid
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
MOVL AX, DI // arg 1 tid
|
2013-03-14 23:11:03 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL sig+0(FP), SI // arg 2
|
2011-04-25 14:58:00 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $200, AX // syscall - tkill
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·setitimer(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-24
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL mode+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ new+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ old+16(FP), DX
|
2011-03-23 09:31:42 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $38, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·mincore(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-28
|
|
|
|
MOVQ addr+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ n+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ dst+16(FP), DX
|
2011-06-07 22:50:10 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $27, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+24(FP)
|
2011-06-07 22:50:10 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2011-11-30 09:59:44 -07:00
|
|
|
// func now() (sec int64, nsec int32)
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT time·now(SB),NOSPLIT,$16
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
// Be careful. We're calling a function with gcc calling convention here.
|
|
|
|
// We're guaranteed 128 bytes on entry, and we've taken 16, and the
|
|
|
|
// call uses another 8.
|
|
|
|
// That leaves 104 for the gettime code to use. Hope that's enough!
|
2012-11-08 23:19:07 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ runtime·__vdso_clock_gettime_sym(SB), AX
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0
|
|
|
|
JEQ fallback_gtod
|
|
|
|
MOVL $0, DI // CLOCK_REALTIME
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
LEAQ 0(SP), SI
|
2012-11-08 23:19:07 -07:00
|
|
|
CALL AX
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ 0(SP), AX // sec
|
|
|
|
MOVQ 8(SP), DX // nsec
|
2012-11-08 23:19:07 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, sec+0(FP)
|
|
|
|
MOVL DX, nsec+8(FP)
|
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
fallback_gtod:
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
LEAQ 0(SP), DI
|
2011-11-30 09:59:44 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ $0, SI
|
2012-11-07 19:29:31 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ runtime·__vdso_gettimeofday_sym(SB), AX
|
2011-11-30 09:59:44 -07:00
|
|
|
CALL AX
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ 0(SP), AX // sec
|
|
|
|
MOVL 8(SP), DX // usec
|
2011-11-30 09:59:44 -07:00
|
|
|
IMULQ $1000, DX
|
2012-11-08 23:19:07 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, sec+0(FP)
|
2011-11-30 09:59:44 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL DX, nsec+8(FP)
|
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·nanotime(SB),NOSPLIT,$16
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
// Duplicate time.now here to avoid using up precious stack space.
|
|
|
|
// See comment above in time.now.
|
|
|
|
MOVQ runtime·__vdso_clock_gettime_sym(SB), AX
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0
|
|
|
|
JEQ fallback_gtod_nt
|
runtime: use monotonic clock for timers (linux/386, linux/amd64)
This lays the groundwork for making Go robust when the system's
calendar time jumps around. All input values to the runtimeTimer
struct now use the runtime clock as a common reference point.
This affects net.Conn.Set[Read|Write]Deadline(), time.Sleep(),
time.Timer, etc. Under normal conditions, behavior is unchanged.
Each platform and architecture's implementation of runtime·nanotime()
should be modified to use a monotonic system clock when possible.
Platforms/architectures modified and tested with monotonic clock:
linux/x86 - clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC)
Update #6007
LGTM=dvyukov, rsc
R=golang-codereviews, dvyukov, alex.brainman, stephen.gutekanst, dave, rsc, mikioh.mikioh
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/53010043
2014-02-24 08:57:46 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $1, DI // CLOCK_MONOTONIC
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
LEAQ 0(SP), SI
|
|
|
|
CALL AX
|
2012-11-08 23:19:07 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ 0(SP), AX // sec
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ 8(SP), DX // nsec
|
|
|
|
// sec is in AX, nsec in DX
|
|
|
|
// return nsec in AX
|
|
|
|
IMULQ $1000000000, AX
|
|
|
|
ADDQ DX, AX
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, ret+0(FP)
|
2012-11-26 10:42:01 -07:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
fallback_gtod_nt:
|
|
|
|
LEAQ 0(SP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ $0, SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ runtime·__vdso_gettimeofday_sym(SB), AX
|
|
|
|
CALL AX
|
|
|
|
MOVQ 0(SP), AX // sec
|
|
|
|
MOVL 8(SP), DX // usec
|
|
|
|
IMULQ $1000, DX
|
|
|
|
// sec is in AX, nsec in DX
|
2011-11-03 15:35:28 -06:00
|
|
|
// return nsec in AX
|
|
|
|
IMULQ $1000000000, AX
|
|
|
|
ADDQ DX, AX
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, ret+0(FP)
|
2010-02-08 15:32:22 -07:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·rtsigprocmask(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-28
|
|
|
|
MOVL sig+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ new+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ old+16(FP), DX
|
|
|
|
MOVL size+24(FP), R10
|
2012-02-23 12:43:58 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $14, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0xfffffffffffff001
|
|
|
|
JLS 2(PC)
|
2012-03-08 12:03:56 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $0xf1, 0xf1 // crash
|
2012-02-23 12:43:58 -07:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·rt_sigaction(SB),NOSPLIT,$0-36
|
|
|
|
MOVQ sig+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ new+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ old+16(FP), DX
|
|
|
|
MOVQ size+24(FP), R10
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $13, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+32(FP)
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·sigtramp(SB),NOSPLIT,$64
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
get_tls(BX)
|
|
|
|
|
all: remove 'extern register M *m' from runtime
The runtime has historically held two dedicated values g (current goroutine)
and m (current thread) in 'extern register' slots (TLS on x86, real registers
backed by TLS on ARM).
This CL removes the extern register m; code now uses g->m.
On ARM, this frees up the register that formerly held m (R9).
This is important for NaCl, because NaCl ARM code cannot use R9 at all.
The Go 1 macrobenchmarks (those with per-op times >= 10 µs) are unaffected:
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 5491374955 5471024381 -0.37%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 4357101311 4275174828 -1.88%
BenchmarkGobDecode 11029957 11364184 +3.03%
BenchmarkGobEncode 6852205 6784822 -0.98%
BenchmarkGzip 650795967 650152275 -0.10%
BenchmarkGunzip 140962363 141041670 +0.06%
BenchmarkHTTPClientServer 71581 73081 +2.10%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 31928079 31913356 -0.05%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 117470065 113689916 -3.22%
BenchmarkMandelbrot200 6008923 5998712 -0.17%
BenchmarkGoParse 6310917 6327487 +0.26%
BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_1K 114568 114763 +0.17%
BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_1K 168977 169244 +0.16%
BenchmarkRevcomp 935294971 914060918 -2.27%
BenchmarkTemplate 145917123 148186096 +1.55%
Minux previous reported larger variations, but these were caused by
run-to-run noise, not repeatable slowdowns.
Actual code changes by Minux.
I only did the docs and the benchmarking.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant, minux
R=minux, josharian, iant, dave, bradfitz, dvyukov
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/109050043
2014-06-26 09:54:39 -06:00
|
|
|
// check that g exists
|
|
|
|
MOVQ g(BX), R10
|
|
|
|
CMPQ R10, $0
|
2013-07-11 14:39:39 -06:00
|
|
|
JNE 5(PC)
|
2012-09-04 12:40:49 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ DI, 0(SP)
|
2013-07-11 14:39:39 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ $runtime·badsignal(SB), AX
|
|
|
|
CALL AX
|
2012-09-04 12:40:49 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
2012-03-12 13:55:18 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
// save g
|
2011-02-23 12:47:42 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ R10, 40(SP)
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// g = m->gsignal
|
all: remove 'extern register M *m' from runtime
The runtime has historically held two dedicated values g (current goroutine)
and m (current thread) in 'extern register' slots (TLS on x86, real registers
backed by TLS on ARM).
This CL removes the extern register m; code now uses g->m.
On ARM, this frees up the register that formerly held m (R9).
This is important for NaCl, because NaCl ARM code cannot use R9 at all.
The Go 1 macrobenchmarks (those with per-op times >= 10 µs) are unaffected:
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 5491374955 5471024381 -0.37%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 4357101311 4275174828 -1.88%
BenchmarkGobDecode 11029957 11364184 +3.03%
BenchmarkGobEncode 6852205 6784822 -0.98%
BenchmarkGzip 650795967 650152275 -0.10%
BenchmarkGunzip 140962363 141041670 +0.06%
BenchmarkHTTPClientServer 71581 73081 +2.10%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 31928079 31913356 -0.05%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 117470065 113689916 -3.22%
BenchmarkMandelbrot200 6008923 5998712 -0.17%
BenchmarkGoParse 6310917 6327487 +0.26%
BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_1K 114568 114763 +0.17%
BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_1K 168977 169244 +0.16%
BenchmarkRevcomp 935294971 914060918 -2.27%
BenchmarkTemplate 145917123 148186096 +1.55%
Minux previous reported larger variations, but these were caused by
run-to-run noise, not repeatable slowdowns.
Actual code changes by Minux.
I only did the docs and the benchmarking.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant, minux
R=minux, josharian, iant, dave, bradfitz, dvyukov
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/109050043
2014-06-26 09:54:39 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ g_m(R10), BP
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ m_gsignal(BP), BP
|
|
|
|
MOVQ BP, g(BX)
|
|
|
|
|
2009-06-17 16:12:16 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ DI, 0(SP)
|
|
|
|
MOVQ SI, 8(SP)
|
|
|
|
MOVQ DX, 16(SP)
|
2011-02-23 12:47:42 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ R10, 24(SP)
|
|
|
|
|
runtime: ,s/[a-zA-Z0-9_]+/runtime·&/g, almost
Prefix all external symbols in runtime by runtime·,
to avoid conflicts with possible symbols of the same
name in linked-in C libraries. The obvious conflicts
are printf, malloc, and free, but hide everything to
avoid future pain.
The symbols left alone are:
** known to cgo **
_cgo_free
_cgo_malloc
libcgo_thread_start
initcgo
ncgocall
** known to linker **
_rt0_$GOARCH
_rt0_$GOARCH_$GOOS
text
etext
data
end
pclntab
epclntab
symtab
esymtab
** known to C compiler **
_divv
_modv
_div64by32
etc (arch specific)
Tested on darwin/386, darwin/amd64, linux/386, linux/amd64.
Built (but not tested) for freebsd/386, freebsd/amd64, linux/arm, windows/386.
R=r, PeterGo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2899041
2010-11-04 12:00:19 -06:00
|
|
|
CALL runtime·sighandler(SB)
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// restore g
|
|
|
|
get_tls(BX)
|
2011-02-23 12:47:42 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ 40(SP), R10
|
|
|
|
MOVQ R10, g(BX)
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·sigreturn(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
2008-12-03 15:21:28 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $15, AX // rt_sigreturn
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
INT $3 // not reached
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·mmap(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ addr+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ n+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL prot+16(FP), DX
|
|
|
|
MOVL flags+20(FP), R10
|
|
|
|
MOVL fd+24(FP), R8
|
|
|
|
MOVL off+28(FP), R9
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2010-09-07 07:57:22 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $9, AX // mmap
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0xfffffffffffff001
|
2009-11-13 11:08:51 -07:00
|
|
|
JLS 3(PC)
|
|
|
|
NOTQ AX
|
|
|
|
INCQ AX
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, ret+32(FP)
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·munmap(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ addr+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ n+8(FP), SI
|
2010-09-07 07:57:22 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ $11, AX // munmap
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0xfffffffffffff001
|
|
|
|
JLS 2(PC)
|
2012-03-08 12:03:56 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $0xf1, 0xf1 // crash
|
2010-09-07 07:57:22 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·madvise(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ addr+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ n+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL flags+16(FP), DX
|
2011-12-12 14:33:13 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVQ $28, AX // madvise
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
2012-12-22 13:06:28 -07:00
|
|
|
// ignore failure - maybe pages are locked
|
2008-06-30 12:50:36 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2008-08-05 15:18:47 -06:00
|
|
|
// int64 futex(int32 *uaddr, int32 op, int32 val,
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
// struct timespec *timeout, int32 *uaddr2, int32 val2);
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·futex(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ addr+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVL op+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL val+12(FP), DX
|
|
|
|
MOVQ ts+16(FP), R10
|
|
|
|
MOVQ addr2+24(FP), R8
|
|
|
|
MOVL val3+32(FP), R9
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $202, AX
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+40(FP)
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
// int32 clone(int32 flags, void *stack, M *mp, G *gp, void (*fn)(void));
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·clone(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
2008-08-05 15:18:47 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL flags+8(SP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ stack+16(SP), SI
|
2008-08-05 15:21:42 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2012-12-18 09:30:29 -07:00
|
|
|
// Copy mp, gp, fn off parent stack for use by child.
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
// Careful: Linux system call clobbers CX and R11.
|
2009-06-17 16:12:16 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ mm+24(SP), R8
|
|
|
|
MOVQ gg+32(SP), R9
|
2008-08-05 15:18:47 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ fn+40(SP), R12
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MOVL $56, AX
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// In parent, return.
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
JEQ 3(PC)
|
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+40(FP)
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
runtime: parallelize garbage collector mark + sweep
Running test/garbage/parser.out.
On a 4-core Lenovo X201s (Linux):
31.12u 0.60s 31.74r 1 cpu, no atomics
32.27u 0.58s 32.86r 1 cpu, atomic instructions
33.04u 0.83s 27.47r 2 cpu
On a 16-core Xeon (Linux):
33.08u 0.65s 33.80r 1 cpu, no atomics
34.87u 1.12s 29.60r 2 cpu
36.00u 1.87s 28.43r 3 cpu
36.46u 2.34s 27.10r 4 cpu
38.28u 3.85s 26.92r 5 cpu
37.72u 5.25s 26.73r 6 cpu
39.63u 7.11s 26.95r 7 cpu
39.67u 8.10s 26.68r 8 cpu
On a 2-core MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo 2.26 (circa 2009, MacBookPro5,5):
39.43u 1.45s 41.27r 1 cpu, no atomics
43.98u 2.95s 38.69r 2 cpu
On a 2-core Mac Mini Core 2 Duo 1.83 (circa 2008; Macmini2,1):
48.81u 2.12s 51.76r 1 cpu, no atomics
57.15u 4.72s 51.54r 2 cpu
The handoff algorithm is really only good for two cores.
Beyond that we will need to so something more sophisticated,
like have each core hand off to the next one, around a circle.
Even so, the code is a good checkpoint; for now we'll limit the
number of gc procs to at most 2.
R=dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4641082
2011-09-30 07:40:01 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
// In child, on new stack.
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ SI, SP
|
runtime: parallelize garbage collector mark + sweep
Running test/garbage/parser.out.
On a 4-core Lenovo X201s (Linux):
31.12u 0.60s 31.74r 1 cpu, no atomics
32.27u 0.58s 32.86r 1 cpu, atomic instructions
33.04u 0.83s 27.47r 2 cpu
On a 16-core Xeon (Linux):
33.08u 0.65s 33.80r 1 cpu, no atomics
34.87u 1.12s 29.60r 2 cpu
36.00u 1.87s 28.43r 3 cpu
36.46u 2.34s 27.10r 4 cpu
38.28u 3.85s 26.92r 5 cpu
37.72u 5.25s 26.73r 6 cpu
39.63u 7.11s 26.95r 7 cpu
39.67u 8.10s 26.68r 8 cpu
On a 2-core MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo 2.26 (circa 2009, MacBookPro5,5):
39.43u 1.45s 41.27r 1 cpu, no atomics
43.98u 2.95s 38.69r 2 cpu
On a 2-core Mac Mini Core 2 Duo 1.83 (circa 2008; Macmini2,1):
48.81u 2.12s 51.76r 1 cpu, no atomics
57.15u 4.72s 51.54r 2 cpu
The handoff algorithm is really only good for two cores.
Beyond that we will need to so something more sophisticated,
like have each core hand off to the next one, around a circle.
Even so, the code is a good checkpoint; for now we'll limit the
number of gc procs to at most 2.
R=dvyukov
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4641082
2011-09-30 07:40:01 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2008-09-09 12:50:14 -06:00
|
|
|
// Initialize m->procid to Linux tid
|
|
|
|
MOVL $186, AX // gettid
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ AX, m_procid(R8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Set FS to point at m->tls.
|
|
|
|
LEAQ m_tls(R8), DI
|
runtime: ,s/[a-zA-Z0-9_]+/runtime·&/g, almost
Prefix all external symbols in runtime by runtime·,
to avoid conflicts with possible symbols of the same
name in linked-in C libraries. The obvious conflicts
are printf, malloc, and free, but hide everything to
avoid future pain.
The symbols left alone are:
** known to cgo **
_cgo_free
_cgo_malloc
libcgo_thread_start
initcgo
ncgocall
** known to linker **
_rt0_$GOARCH
_rt0_$GOARCH_$GOOS
text
etext
data
end
pclntab
epclntab
symtab
esymtab
** known to C compiler **
_divv
_modv
_div64by32
etc (arch specific)
Tested on darwin/386, darwin/amd64, linux/386, linux/amd64.
Built (but not tested) for freebsd/386, freebsd/amd64, linux/arm, windows/386.
R=r, PeterGo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2899041
2010-11-04 12:00:19 -06:00
|
|
|
CALL runtime·settls(SB)
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// In child, set up new stack
|
|
|
|
get_tls(CX)
|
all: remove 'extern register M *m' from runtime
The runtime has historically held two dedicated values g (current goroutine)
and m (current thread) in 'extern register' slots (TLS on x86, real registers
backed by TLS on ARM).
This CL removes the extern register m; code now uses g->m.
On ARM, this frees up the register that formerly held m (R9).
This is important for NaCl, because NaCl ARM code cannot use R9 at all.
The Go 1 macrobenchmarks (those with per-op times >= 10 µs) are unaffected:
BenchmarkBinaryTree17 5491374955 5471024381 -0.37%
BenchmarkFannkuch11 4357101311 4275174828 -1.88%
BenchmarkGobDecode 11029957 11364184 +3.03%
BenchmarkGobEncode 6852205 6784822 -0.98%
BenchmarkGzip 650795967 650152275 -0.10%
BenchmarkGunzip 140962363 141041670 +0.06%
BenchmarkHTTPClientServer 71581 73081 +2.10%
BenchmarkJSONEncode 31928079 31913356 -0.05%
BenchmarkJSONDecode 117470065 113689916 -3.22%
BenchmarkMandelbrot200 6008923 5998712 -0.17%
BenchmarkGoParse 6310917 6327487 +0.26%
BenchmarkRegexpMatchMedium_1K 114568 114763 +0.17%
BenchmarkRegexpMatchHard_1K 168977 169244 +0.16%
BenchmarkRevcomp 935294971 914060918 -2.27%
BenchmarkTemplate 145917123 148186096 +1.55%
Minux previous reported larger variations, but these were caused by
run-to-run noise, not repeatable slowdowns.
Actual code changes by Minux.
I only did the docs and the benchmarking.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant, minux
R=minux, josharian, iant, dave, bradfitz, dvyukov
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/109050043
2014-06-26 09:54:39 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ R8, g_m(R9)
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ R9, g(CX)
|
runtime: ,s/[a-zA-Z0-9_]+/runtime·&/g, almost
Prefix all external symbols in runtime by runtime·,
to avoid conflicts with possible symbols of the same
name in linked-in C libraries. The obvious conflicts
are printf, malloc, and free, but hide everything to
avoid future pain.
The symbols left alone are:
** known to cgo **
_cgo_free
_cgo_malloc
libcgo_thread_start
initcgo
ncgocall
** known to linker **
_rt0_$GOARCH
_rt0_$GOARCH_$GOOS
text
etext
data
end
pclntab
epclntab
symtab
esymtab
** known to C compiler **
_divv
_modv
_div64by32
etc (arch specific)
Tested on darwin/386, darwin/amd64, linux/386, linux/amd64.
Built (but not tested) for freebsd/386, freebsd/amd64, linux/arm, windows/386.
R=r, PeterGo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2899041
2010-11-04 12:00:19 -06:00
|
|
|
CALL runtime·stackcheck(SB)
|
2009-01-16 15:58:14 -07:00
|
|
|
|
2008-09-09 12:50:14 -06:00
|
|
|
// Call fn
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
CALL R12
|
2008-08-05 15:21:42 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2010-03-29 23:51:39 -06:00
|
|
|
// It shouldn't return. If it does, exit
|
2008-08-04 17:43:49 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $111, DI
|
|
|
|
MOVL $60, AX
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
JMP -3(PC) // keep exiting
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·sigaltstack(SB),NOSPLIT,$-8
|
2008-09-18 16:56:46 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ new+8(SP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ old+16(SP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ $131, AX
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0xfffffffffffff001
|
|
|
|
JLS 2(PC)
|
2012-03-08 12:03:56 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $0xf1, 0xf1 // crash
|
2008-09-18 16:56:46 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// set tls base to DI
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·settls(SB),NOSPLIT,$32
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
ADDQ $16, DI // ELF wants to use -16(FS), -8(FS)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MOVQ DI, SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ $0x1002, DI // ARCH_SET_FS
|
|
|
|
MOVQ $158, AX // arch_prctl
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
CMPQ AX, $0xfffffffffffff001
|
|
|
|
JLS 2(PC)
|
2012-03-08 12:03:56 -07:00
|
|
|
MOVL $0xf1, 0xf1 // crash
|
2010-08-04 18:50:22 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·osyield(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
runtime: improve Linux mutex
The implementation is hybrid active/passive spin/blocking mutex.
The design minimizes amount of context switches and futex calls.
The idea is that all critical sections in runtime are intentially
small, so pure blocking mutex behaves badly causing
a lot of context switches, thread parking/unparking and kernel calls.
Note that some synthetic benchmarks become somewhat slower,
that's due to increased contention on other data structures,
it should not affect programs that do any real work.
On 2 x Intel E5620, 8 HT cores, 2.4GHz
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkSelectContended 521.00 503.00 -3.45%
BenchmarkSelectContended-2 661.00 320.00 -51.59%
BenchmarkSelectContended-4 1139.00 629.00 -44.78%
BenchmarkSelectContended-8 2870.00 878.00 -69.41%
BenchmarkSelectContended-16 5276.00 818.00 -84.50%
BenchmarkChanContended 112.00 103.00 -8.04%
BenchmarkChanContended-2 631.00 174.00 -72.42%
BenchmarkChanContended-4 682.00 272.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanContended-8 1601.00 520.00 -67.52%
BenchmarkChanContended-16 3100.00 372.00 -88.00%
BenchmarkChanSync 253.00 239.00 -5.53%
BenchmarkChanSync-2 5030.00 4648.00 -7.59%
BenchmarkChanSync-4 4826.00 4694.00 -2.74%
BenchmarkChanSync-8 4778.00 4713.00 -1.36%
BenchmarkChanSync-16 5289.00 4710.00 -10.95%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0 273.00 254.00 -6.96%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-2 599.00 400.00 -33.22%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-4 1168.00 659.00 -43.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-8 2831.00 1057.00 -62.66%
BenchmarkChanProdCons0-16 4197.00 1037.00 -75.29%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10 150.00 140.00 -6.67%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-2 607.00 268.00 -55.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-4 1137.00 404.00 -64.47%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-8 2115.00 828.00 -60.85%
BenchmarkChanProdCons10-16 4283.00 855.00 -80.04%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100 117.00 110.00 -5.98%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-2 558.00 218.00 -60.93%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-4 722.00 287.00 -60.25%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-8 1840.00 431.00 -76.58%
BenchmarkChanProdCons100-16 3394.00 448.00 -86.80%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0 2014.00 1996.00 -0.89%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-2 1207.00 1127.00 -6.63%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-4 1913.00 611.00 -68.06%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-8 3016.00 949.00 -68.53%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork0-16 4320.00 1154.00 -73.29%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10 1906.00 1897.00 -0.47%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-2 1123.00 1033.00 -8.01%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-4 1076.00 571.00 -46.93%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-8 2748.00 1096.00 -60.12%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork10-16 4600.00 1105.00 -75.98%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100 1884.00 1852.00 -1.70%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-2 1235.00 1146.00 -7.21%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-4 1217.00 619.00 -49.14%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-8 1534.00 509.00 -66.82%
BenchmarkChanProdConsWork100-16 4126.00 918.00 -77.75%
BenchmarkSyscall 34.40 33.30 -3.20%
BenchmarkSyscall-2 160.00 121.00 -24.38%
BenchmarkSyscall-4 131.00 136.00 +3.82%
BenchmarkSyscall-8 139.00 131.00 -5.76%
BenchmarkSyscall-16 161.00 168.00 +4.35%
BenchmarkSyscallWork 950.00 950.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-2 481.00 480.00 -0.21%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-4 268.00 270.00 +0.75%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-8 156.00 169.00 +8.33%
BenchmarkSyscallWork-16 188.00 184.00 -2.13%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock 36.40 35.60 -2.20%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-2 81.40 45.10 -44.59%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-4 126.00 108.00 -14.29%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-8 112.00 112.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntNonblock-16 110.00 112.00 +1.82%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock 35.30 35.30 +0.00%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-2 118.00 124.00 +5.08%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-4 105.00 108.00 +2.86%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-8 101.00 111.00 +9.90%
BenchmarkSemaSyntBlock-16 112.00 118.00 +5.36%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-2 476.00 414.00 -13.03%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-4 238.00 228.00 -4.20%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-8 140.00 126.00 -10.00%
BenchmarkSemaWorkNonblock-16 117.00 116.00 -0.85%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock 810.00 811.00 +0.12%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-2 454.00 466.00 +2.64%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-4 243.00 241.00 -0.82%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-8 145.00 137.00 -5.52%
BenchmarkSemaWorkBlock-16 132.00 123.00 -6.82%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore 123.00 102.00 -17.07%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-2 34.80 34.90 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-4 34.70 34.80 +0.29%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-8 34.70 34.70 +0.00%
BenchmarkContendedSemaphore-16 34.80 34.70 -0.29%
BenchmarkMutex 26.80 26.00 -2.99%
BenchmarkMutex-2 108.00 45.20 -58.15%
BenchmarkMutex-4 103.00 127.00 +23.30%
BenchmarkMutex-8 109.00 147.00 +34.86%
BenchmarkMutex-16 102.00 152.00 +49.02%
BenchmarkMutexSlack 27.00 26.90 -0.37%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-2 149.00 165.00 +10.74%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-4 121.00 209.00 +72.73%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-8 101.00 158.00 +56.44%
BenchmarkMutexSlack-16 97.00 129.00 +32.99%
BenchmarkMutexWork 792.00 794.00 +0.25%
BenchmarkMutexWork-2 407.00 409.00 +0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWork-4 220.00 209.00 -5.00%
BenchmarkMutexWork-8 267.00 160.00 -40.07%
BenchmarkMutexWork-16 315.00 300.00 -4.76%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack 792.00 793.00 +0.13%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-2 406.00 404.00 -0.49%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-4 225.00 212.00 -5.78%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-8 268.00 136.00 -49.25%
BenchmarkMutexWorkSlack-16 300.00 300.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100 27.10 27.00 -0.37%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-2 33.10 40.80 +23.26%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-4 113.00 88.10 -22.04%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-8 119.00 95.30 -19.92%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite100-16 148.00 109.00 -26.35%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10 29.60 29.40 -0.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-2 111.00 61.40 -44.68%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-4 270.00 208.00 -22.96%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-8 204.00 185.00 -9.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWrite10-16 261.00 190.00 -27.20%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100 1040.00 1036.00 -0.38%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-2 593.00 580.00 -2.19%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-4 470.00 365.00 -22.34%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-8 468.00 289.00 -38.25%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite100-16 604.00 374.00 -38.08%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10 951.00 951.00 +0.00%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-2 1001.00 928.00 -7.29%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-4 1555.00 1006.00 -35.31%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-8 2085.00 1171.00 -43.84%
BenchmarkRWMutexWorkWrite10-16 2082.00 1614.00 -22.48%
R=rsc, iant, msolo, fw, iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4711045
2011-07-29 10:44:06 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $24, AX
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
RET
|
2012-08-09 20:05:26 -06:00
|
|
|
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·sched_getaffinity(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ pid+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ len+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ buf+16(FP), DX
|
2012-08-09 20:05:26 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $204, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+24(FP)
|
2012-08-09 20:05:26 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// int32 runtime·epollcreate(int32 size);
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·epollcreate(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL size+0(FP), DI
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $213, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+8(FP)
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// int32 runtime·epollcreate1(int32 flags);
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·epollcreate1(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL flags+0(FP), DI
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $291, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+8(FP)
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
2014-09-04 00:04:04 -06:00
|
|
|
// func epollctl(epfd, op, fd int32, ev *epollEvent) int
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·epollctl(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL epfd+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVL op+4(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL fd+8(FP), DX
|
|
|
|
MOVQ ev+16(FP), R10
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $233, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+24(FP)
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// int32 runtime·epollwait(int32 epfd, EpollEvent *ev, int32 nev, int32 timeout);
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·epollwait(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL epfd+0(FP), DI
|
|
|
|
MOVQ ev+8(FP), SI
|
|
|
|
MOVL nev+16(FP), DX
|
|
|
|
MOVL timeout+20(FP), R10
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL $232, AX // syscall entry
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL AX, ret+24(FP)
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
RET
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// void runtime·closeonexec(int32 fd);
|
2013-08-07 13:20:05 -06:00
|
|
|
TEXT runtime·closeonexec(SB),NOSPLIT,$0
|
cmd/cc, runtime: convert C compilers to use Go calling convention
To date, the C compilers and Go compilers differed only in how
values were returned from functions. This made it difficult to call
Go from C or C from Go if return values were involved. It also made
assembly called from Go and assembly called from C different.
This CL changes the C compiler to use the Go conventions, passing
results on the stack, after the arguments.
[Exception: this does not apply to C ... functions, because you can't
know where on the stack the arguments end.]
By doing this, the CL makes it possible to rewrite C functions into Go
one at a time, without worrying about which languages call that
function or which languages it calls.
This CL also updates all the assembly files in package runtime to use
the new conventions. Argument references of the form 40(SP) have
been rewritten to the form name+10(FP) instead, and there are now
Go func prototypes for every assembly function called from C or Go.
This means that 'go vet runtime' checks effectively every assembly
function, and go vet's output was used to automate the bulk of the
conversion.
Some functions, like seek and nsec on Plan 9, needed to be rewritten.
Many assembly routines called from C were reading arguments
incorrectly, using MOVL instead of MOVQ or vice versa, especially on
the less used systems like openbsd.
These were found by go vet and have been corrected too.
If we're lucky, this may reduce flakiness on those systems.
Tested on:
darwin/386
darwin/amd64
linux/arm
linux/386
linux/amd64
If this breaks another system, the bug is almost certainly in the
sys_$GOOS_$GOARCH.s file, since the rest of the CL is tested
by the combination of the above systems.
LGTM=dvyukov, iant
R=golang-codereviews, 0intro, dave, alex.brainman, dvyukov, iant
CC=golang-codereviews, josharian, r
https://golang.org/cl/135830043
2014-08-27 09:32:17 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVL fd+0(FP), DI // fd
|
2013-03-14 09:06:35 -06:00
|
|
|
MOVQ $2, SI // F_SETFD
|
|
|
|
MOVQ $1, DX // FD_CLOEXEC
|
|
|
|
MOVL $72, AX // fcntl
|
|
|
|
SYSCALL
|
|
|
|
RET
|