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22 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Russ Cox
cb040d59b9 runtime: use new #include "textflag.h"
I did this just to clean things up, but it will be important
when we drop the pkg directory later.

LGTM=bradfitz
R=r, bradfitz
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/132600043
2014-09-04 23:05:18 -04:00
Anthony Martin
b3de7f28a8 runtime: fix Plan 9 build for new C calling convention
LGTM=0intro, rsc
R=rsc, 0intro
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/132320043
2014-08-28 16:02:15 -07:00
Russ Cox
9e36092697 runtime: fix plan9 build
sighandler now returns its value on the stack.

TBR=0intro
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/135900043
2014-08-27 17:38:01 -04:00
Russ Cox
25f6b02ab0 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 11:32:17 -04:00
Aram Hăvărneanu
a84e3ad198 runtime: use the nsec system call instead of /dev/bintime on Plan 9
LGTM=0intro
R=0intro
CC=ality, dave, golang-codereviews, jas, mischief, rsc
https://golang.org/cl/104570043
2014-07-09 12:33:42 +02:00
Aram Hăvărneanu
decd810945 liblink, runtime: preliminary support for plan9/amd64
A TLS slot is reserved by _rt0_.*_plan9 as an automatic and
its address (which is static on Plan 9) is saved in the
global _privates symbol. The startup linkage now is exactly
like that from Plan 9 libc, and the way we access g is
exactly as if we'd have used privalloc(2).

Aside from making the code more standard, this change
drastically simplifies it, both for 386 and for amd64, and
makes the Plan 9 code in liblink common for both 386 and
amd64.

The amd64 runtime code was cleared of nxm assumptions, and
now runs on the standard Plan 9 kernel.

Note handling fixes will follow in a separate CL.

LGTM=rsc
R=golang-codereviews, rsc, bradfitz, dave
CC=0intro, ality, golang-codereviews, jas, minux.ma, mischief
https://golang.org/cl/101510049
2014-07-02 21:04:10 +10:00
Russ Cox
89f185fe8a 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 11:54:39 -04:00
Russ Cox
90093f0634 liblink: introduce TLS register on 386 and amd64
When I did the original 386 ports on Linux and OS X, I chose to
define GS-relative expressions like 4(GS) as relative to the actual
thread-local storage base, which was usually GS but might not be
(it might be FS, or it might be a different constant offset from GS or FS).

The original scope was limited but since then the rewrites have
gotten out of control. Sometimes GS is rewritten, sometimes FS.
Some ports do other rewrites to enable shared libraries and
other linking. At no point in the code is it clear whether you are
looking at the real GS/FS or some synthesized thing that will be
rewritten. The code manipulating all these is duplicated in many
places.

The first step to fixing issue 7719 is to make the code intelligible
again.

This CL adds an explicit TLS pseudo-register to the 386 and amd64.
As a register, TLS refers to the thread-local storage base, and it
can only be loaded into another register:

        MOVQ TLS, AX

An offset from the thread-local storage base is written off(reg)(TLS*1).
Semantically it is off(reg), but the (TLS*1) annotation marks this as
indexing from the loaded TLS base. This emits a relocation so that
if the linker needs to adjust the offset, it can. For example:

        MOVQ TLS, AX
        MOVQ 8(AX)(TLS*1), CX // load m into CX

On systems that support direct access to the TLS memory, this
pair of instructions can be reduced to a direct TLS memory reference:

        MOVQ 8(TLS), CX // load m into CX

The 2-instruction and 1-instruction forms correspond roughly to
ELF TLS initial exec mode and ELF TLS local exec mode, respectively.

Liblink applies this rewrite on systems that support the 1-instruction form.
The decision is made using only the operating system (and probably
the -shared flag, eventually), not the link mode. If some link modes
on a particular operating system require the 2-instruction form,
then all builds for that operating system will use the 2-instruction
form, so that the link mode decision can be delayed to link time.

Obviously it is late to be making changes like this, but I despair
of correcting issue 7719 and issue 7164 without it. To make sure
I am not changing existing behavior, I built a "hello world" program
for every GOOS/GOARCH combination we have and then worked
to make sure that the rewrite generates exactly the same binaries,
byte for byte. There are a handful of TODOs in the code marking
kludges to get the byte-for-byte property, but at least now I can
explain exactly how each binary is handled.

The targets I tested this way are:

        darwin-386
        darwin-amd64
        dragonfly-386
        dragonfly-amd64
        freebsd-386
        freebsd-amd64
        freebsd-arm
        linux-386
        linux-amd64
        linux-arm
        nacl-386
        nacl-amd64p32
        netbsd-386
        netbsd-amd64
        openbsd-386
        openbsd-amd64
        plan9-386
        plan9-amd64
        solaris-amd64
        windows-386
        windows-amd64

There were four exceptions to the byte-for-byte goal:

windows-386 and windows-amd64 have a time stamp
at bytes 137 and 138 of the header.

darwin-386 and plan9-386 have five or six modified
bytes in the middle of the Go symbol table, caused by
editing comments in runtime/sys_{darwin,plan9}_386.s.

Fixes #7164.

LGTM=iant
R=iant, aram, minux.ma, dave
CC=golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/87920043
2014-04-15 13:45:39 -04:00
David du Colombier
56872f02f0 runtime: fix "invalid address in sys call" on Plan 9
Rfork is not splitting the stack when creating a new thread,
so the parent and child are executing on the same stack.
However, if the parent returns and keeps executing before
the child can read the arguments from the parent stack,
the child will not see the right arguments. The solution
is to load the needed pieces from the parent stack into
register before INT $64.

Thanks to Russ Cox for the explanation.

LGTM=rsc
R=rsc
CC=ality, golang-codereviews
https://golang.org/cl/64140043
2014-02-14 22:27:47 +01:00
Keith Randall
0273dc131e runtime: convert .s textflags from numbers to symbolic constants.
Remove NOPROF/DUPOK from everything.

Edits done with a script, except pclinetest.asm which depended
on the DUPOK flag on main().

R=golang-dev, bradfitz
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/12613044
2013-08-07 12:20:05 -07:00
Shenghou Ma
2f1ead7095 runtime: correctly handle signals received on foreign threads
Fixes #3250.

R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/10757044
2013-07-12 04:39:39 +08:00
Akshat Kumar
ef7705f6dd runtime: Plan 9: fix errstr
The call to the C function runtime.findnull() requires
that we provide the argument at 0(SP).

R=rsc, rminnich, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7559047
2013-03-09 05:39:15 +01:00
Akshat Kumar
a566deace1 syscall: Plan 9: use lightweight errstr in entersyscall mode
Change 231af8ac63aa (CL 7314062) made runtime.enteryscall()
set m->mcache = nil, which means that we can no longer use
syscall.errstr in syscall.Syscall and syscall.Syscall6, since it
requires a new buffer to be allocated for holding the error string.
Instead, we use pre-allocated per-M storage to hold error strings
from syscalls made while in entersyscall mode, and call
runtime.findnull to calculate the lengths.

Fixes #4994.

R=rsc, rminnich, ality, dvyukov, rminnich, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/7567043
2013-03-08 00:54:44 +01:00
Akshat Kumar
c74f3c4576 runtime: add support for panic/recover in Plan 9 note handler
This change also resolves some issues with note handling: we now make
sure that there is enough room at the bottom of every goroutine to
execute the note handler, and the `exitstatus' is no longer a global
entity, which resolves some race conditions.

R=rminnich, npe, rsc, ality
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6569068
2013-01-30 02:53:56 -08:00
Anthony Martin
432f18221f runtime: implement getenv for Plan 9
With this change the runtime can now read GOMAXPROCS, GOGC, etc.

I'm not quite sure how we missed this.

R=seed, lucio.dere, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6935062
2012-12-17 11:07:40 -05:00
Akshat Kumar
23599ca2f6 runtime: mask SSE exceptions on plan9/amd64
The Go run-time assumes that all SSE floating-point exceptions
are masked so that Go programs are not broken by such invalid
operations. By default, the 64-bit version of the Plan 9 kernel
masks only some SSE floating-point exceptions. Here, we mask
them all on a per-thread basis.

R=rsc, rminnich, minux.ma
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/6592056
2012-10-05 16:23:30 -04:00
Akshat Kumar
f5752848fd pkg/runtime: Fix semasleep on Plan 9
With the timed semacquire patch
(kernel-tsemacquire) for Plan 9,
we can now properly do a timed
wait for the semaphore, in
semasleep.

R=golang-dev, rsc, rminnich, ality, r
CC=0intro, golang-dev, john, mirtchovski
https://golang.org/cl/6197046
2012-05-16 15:09:28 -07:00
Akshat Kumar
ccdca2cd6b pkg/runtime: Plan 9 signal handling in Go
This adds proper note handling for Plan 9,
and fixes the issue of properly killing go procs.
Without this change, the first go proc that dies
(using runtime·exit()) would kill all the running
go procs. Proper signal handling is needed.

R=golang-dev, ality, rminnich, rsc
CC=golang-dev, john, mirtchovski
https://golang.org/cl/5617048
2012-05-04 03:48:34 -07:00
Russ Cox
55889409f8 runtime: separate out auto-generated files, take 2
This is like the ill-fated CL 5493063 except that
I have written a shell script (autogen.sh) instead of
thinking I could possibly write a correct Makefile.

R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5496075
2011-12-19 15:51:13 -05:00
Russ Cox
86dcc431e9 runtime: hg revert -r 6ec0a5c12d75
That was the last build that was close to working.
I will try that change again next week.
Make is being very subtle today.

At the reverted-to CL, the ARM traceback appears
to be broken.  I'll look into that next week too.

R=golang-dev, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5492063
2011-12-16 18:50:40 -05:00
Russ Cox
bd9243da22 runtime: separate out auto-generated files
R=golang-dev, r, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5493063
2011-12-16 17:04:32 -05:00
Russ Cox
851f30136d runtime: make more build-friendly
Collapse the arch,os-specific directories into the main directory
by renaming xxx/foo.c to foo_xxx.c, and so on.

There are no substantial edits here, except to the Makefile.
The assumption is that the Go tool will #define GOOS_darwin
and GOARCH_amd64 and will make any file named something
like signals_darwin.h available as signals_GOOS.h during the
build.  This replaces what used to be done with -I$(GOOS).

There is still work to be done to make runtime build with
standard tools, but this is a big step.  After this we will have
to write a script to generate all the generated files so they
can be checked in (instead of generated during the build).

R=r, iant, r, lucio.dere
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/5490053
2011-12-16 15:33:58 -05:00