Linux kernel mirror (for testing)
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linux
1/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
2#ifndef __LINUX_COMPILER_H
3#define __LINUX_COMPILER_H
4
5#include <linux/compiler_types.h>
6
7#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__
8
9#ifdef __KERNEL__
10
11/*
12 * Note: DISABLE_BRANCH_PROFILING can be used by special lowlevel code
13 * to disable branch tracing on a per file basis.
14 */
15void ftrace_likely_update(struct ftrace_likely_data *f, int val,
16 int expect, int is_constant);
17#if defined(CONFIG_TRACE_BRANCH_PROFILING) \
18 && !defined(DISABLE_BRANCH_PROFILING) && !defined(__CHECKER__)
19#define likely_notrace(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 1)
20#define unlikely_notrace(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 0)
21
22#define __branch_check__(x, expect, is_constant) ({ \
23 long ______r; \
24 static struct ftrace_likely_data \
25 __aligned(4) \
26 __section("_ftrace_annotated_branch") \
27 ______f = { \
28 .data.func = __func__, \
29 .data.file = __FILE__, \
30 .data.line = __LINE__, \
31 }; \
32 ______r = __builtin_expect(!!(x), expect); \
33 ftrace_likely_update(&______f, ______r, \
34 expect, is_constant); \
35 ______r; \
36 })
37
38/*
39 * Using __builtin_constant_p(x) to ignore cases where the return
40 * value is always the same. This idea is taken from a similar patch
41 * written by Daniel Walker.
42 */
43# ifndef likely
44# define likely(x) (__branch_check__(x, 1, __builtin_constant_p(x)))
45# endif
46# ifndef unlikely
47# define unlikely(x) (__branch_check__(x, 0, __builtin_constant_p(x)))
48# endif
49
50#ifdef CONFIG_PROFILE_ALL_BRANCHES
51/*
52 * "Define 'is'", Bill Clinton
53 * "Define 'if'", Steven Rostedt
54 */
55#define if(cond, ...) if ( __trace_if_var( !!(cond , ## __VA_ARGS__) ) )
56
57#define __trace_if_var(cond) (__builtin_constant_p(cond) ? (cond) : __trace_if_value(cond))
58
59#define __trace_if_value(cond) ({ \
60 static struct ftrace_branch_data \
61 __aligned(4) \
62 __section("_ftrace_branch") \
63 __if_trace = { \
64 .func = __func__, \
65 .file = __FILE__, \
66 .line = __LINE__, \
67 }; \
68 (cond) ? \
69 (__if_trace.miss_hit[1]++,1) : \
70 (__if_trace.miss_hit[0]++,0); \
71})
72
73#endif /* CONFIG_PROFILE_ALL_BRANCHES */
74
75#else
76# define likely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 1)
77# define unlikely(x) __builtin_expect(!!(x), 0)
78# define likely_notrace(x) likely(x)
79# define unlikely_notrace(x) unlikely(x)
80#endif
81
82/* Optimization barrier */
83#ifndef barrier
84/* The "volatile" is due to gcc bugs */
85# define barrier() __asm__ __volatile__("": : :"memory")
86#endif
87
88#ifndef barrier_data
89/*
90 * This version is i.e. to prevent dead stores elimination on @ptr
91 * where gcc and llvm may behave differently when otherwise using
92 * normal barrier(): while gcc behavior gets along with a normal
93 * barrier(), llvm needs an explicit input variable to be assumed
94 * clobbered. The issue is as follows: while the inline asm might
95 * access any memory it wants, the compiler could have fit all of
96 * @ptr into memory registers instead, and since @ptr never escaped
97 * from that, it proved that the inline asm wasn't touching any of
98 * it. This version works well with both compilers, i.e. we're telling
99 * the compiler that the inline asm absolutely may see the contents
100 * of @ptr. See also: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15495
101 */
102# define barrier_data(ptr) __asm__ __volatile__("": :"r"(ptr) :"memory")
103#endif
104
105/* workaround for GCC PR82365 if needed */
106#ifndef barrier_before_unreachable
107# define barrier_before_unreachable() do { } while (0)
108#endif
109
110/* Unreachable code */
111#ifdef CONFIG_OBJTOOL
112/* Annotate a C jump table to allow objtool to follow the code flow */
113#define __annotate_jump_table __section(".data.rel.ro.c_jump_table")
114#else /* !CONFIG_OBJTOOL */
115#define __annotate_jump_table
116#endif /* CONFIG_OBJTOOL */
117
118/*
119 * Mark a position in code as unreachable. This can be used to
120 * suppress control flow warnings after asm blocks that transfer
121 * control elsewhere.
122 */
123#define unreachable() do { \
124 barrier_before_unreachable(); \
125 __builtin_unreachable(); \
126} while (0)
127
128/*
129 * KENTRY - kernel entry point
130 * This can be used to annotate symbols (functions or data) that are used
131 * without their linker symbol being referenced explicitly. For example,
132 * interrupt vector handlers, or functions in the kernel image that are found
133 * programatically.
134 *
135 * Not required for symbols exported with EXPORT_SYMBOL, or initcalls. Those
136 * are handled in their own way (with KEEP() in linker scripts).
137 *
138 * KENTRY can be avoided if the symbols in question are marked as KEEP() in the
139 * linker script. For example an architecture could KEEP() its entire
140 * boot/exception vector code rather than annotate each function and data.
141 */
142#ifndef KENTRY
143# define KENTRY(sym) \
144 extern typeof(sym) sym; \
145 static const unsigned long __kentry_##sym \
146 __used \
147 __attribute__((__section__("___kentry+" #sym))) \
148 = (unsigned long)&sym;
149#endif
150
151#ifndef RELOC_HIDE
152# define RELOC_HIDE(ptr, off) ((typeof(ptr))((unsigned long)(ptr) + (off)))
153#endif
154
155#define absolute_pointer(val) RELOC_HIDE((void *)(val), 0)
156
157#ifndef OPTIMIZER_HIDE_VAR
158/* Make the optimizer believe the variable can be manipulated arbitrarily. */
159#define OPTIMIZER_HIDE_VAR(var) \
160 __asm__ ("" : "=r" (var) : "0" (var))
161#endif
162
163/* Format: __UNIQUE_ID_<name>_<__COUNTER__> */
164#define __UNIQUE_ID(name) \
165 __PASTE(__UNIQUE_ID_, \
166 __PASTE(name, \
167 __PASTE(_, __COUNTER__)))
168
169/**
170 * data_race - mark an expression as containing intentional data races
171 *
172 * This data_race() macro is useful for situations in which data races
173 * should be forgiven. One example is diagnostic code that accesses
174 * shared variables but is not a part of the core synchronization design.
175 * For example, if accesses to a given variable are protected by a lock,
176 * except for diagnostic code, then the accesses under the lock should
177 * be plain C-language accesses and those in the diagnostic code should
178 * use data_race(). This way, KCSAN will complain if buggy lockless
179 * accesses to that variable are introduced, even if the buggy accesses
180 * are protected by READ_ONCE() or WRITE_ONCE().
181 *
182 * This macro *does not* affect normal code generation, but is a hint
183 * to tooling that data races here are to be ignored. If the access must
184 * be atomic *and* KCSAN should ignore the access, use both data_race()
185 * and READ_ONCE(), for example, data_race(READ_ONCE(x)).
186 */
187#define data_race(expr) \
188({ \
189 __kcsan_disable_current(); \
190 disable_context_analysis(); \
191 auto __v = (expr); \
192 enable_context_analysis(); \
193 __kcsan_enable_current(); \
194 __v; \
195})
196
197#ifdef __CHECKER__
198#define __BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO_MSG(e, msg, ...) (0)
199#else /* __CHECKER__ */
200#define __BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO_MSG(e, msg, ...) ((int)sizeof(struct {_Static_assert(!(e), msg);}))
201#endif /* __CHECKER__ */
202
203/* &a[0] degrades to a pointer: a different type from an array */
204#define __is_array(a) (!__same_type((a), &(a)[0]))
205#define __must_be_array(a) __BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO_MSG(!__is_array(a), \
206 "must be array")
207
208#define __is_byte_array(a) (__is_array(a) && sizeof((a)[0]) == 1)
209#define __must_be_byte_array(a) __BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO_MSG(!__is_byte_array(a), \
210 "must be byte array")
211
212/*
213 * If the "nonstring" attribute isn't available, we have to return true
214 * so the __must_*() checks pass when "nonstring" isn't supported.
215 */
216#if __has_attribute(__nonstring__) && defined(__annotated)
217#define __is_cstr(a) (!__annotated(a, nonstring))
218#define __is_noncstr(a) (__annotated(a, nonstring))
219#else
220#define __is_cstr(a) (true)
221#define __is_noncstr(a) (true)
222#endif
223
224/* Require C Strings (i.e. NUL-terminated) lack the "nonstring" attribute. */
225#define __must_be_cstr(p) \
226 __BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO_MSG(!__is_cstr(p), \
227 "must be C-string (NUL-terminated)")
228#define __must_be_noncstr(p) \
229 __BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO_MSG(!__is_noncstr(p), \
230 "must be non-C-string (not NUL-terminated)")
231
232/*
233 * Define TYPEOF_UNQUAL() to use __typeof_unqual__() as typeof
234 * operator when available, to return an unqualified type of the exp.
235 */
236#if defined(USE_TYPEOF_UNQUAL)
237# define TYPEOF_UNQUAL(exp) __typeof_unqual__(exp)
238#else
239# define TYPEOF_UNQUAL(exp) __typeof__(exp)
240#endif
241
242#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
243
244#if defined(CONFIG_CFI) && !defined(__DISABLE_EXPORTS) && !defined(BUILD_VDSO)
245/*
246 * Force a reference to the external symbol so the compiler generates
247 * __kcfi_typid.
248 */
249#define KCFI_REFERENCE(sym) __ADDRESSABLE(sym)
250#else
251#define KCFI_REFERENCE(sym)
252#endif
253
254/**
255 * offset_to_ptr - convert a relative memory offset to an absolute pointer
256 * @off: the address of the 32-bit offset value
257 */
258static inline void *offset_to_ptr(const int *off)
259{
260 return (void *)((unsigned long)off + *off);
261}
262
263#endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
264
265/*
266 * Force the compiler to emit 'sym' as a symbol, so that we can reference
267 * it from inline assembler. Necessary in case 'sym' could be inlined
268 * otherwise, or eliminated entirely due to lack of references that are
269 * visible to the compiler.
270 */
271#define ___ADDRESSABLE(sym, __attrs) \
272 static void * __used __attrs \
273 __UNIQUE_ID(__PASTE(addressable_, sym)) = (void *)(uintptr_t)&sym;
274
275#define __ADDRESSABLE(sym) \
276 ___ADDRESSABLE(sym, __section(".discard.addressable"))
277
278/*
279 * This returns a constant expression while determining if an argument is
280 * a constant expression, most importantly without evaluating the argument.
281 * Glory to Martin Uecker <Martin.Uecker@med.uni-goettingen.de>
282 *
283 * Details:
284 * - sizeof() return an integer constant expression, and does not evaluate
285 * the value of its operand; it only examines the type of its operand.
286 * - The results of comparing two integer constant expressions is also
287 * an integer constant expression.
288 * - The first literal "8" isn't important. It could be any literal value.
289 * - The second literal "8" is to avoid warnings about unaligned pointers;
290 * this could otherwise just be "1".
291 * - (long)(x) is used to avoid warnings about 64-bit types on 32-bit
292 * architectures.
293 * - The C Standard defines "null pointer constant", "(void *)0", as
294 * distinct from other void pointers.
295 * - If (x) is an integer constant expression, then the "* 0l" resolves
296 * it into an integer constant expression of value 0. Since it is cast to
297 * "void *", this makes the second operand a null pointer constant.
298 * - If (x) is not an integer constant expression, then the second operand
299 * resolves to a void pointer (but not a null pointer constant: the value
300 * is not an integer constant 0).
301 * - The conditional operator's third operand, "(int *)8", is an object
302 * pointer (to type "int").
303 * - The behavior (including the return type) of the conditional operator
304 * ("operand1 ? operand2 : operand3") depends on the kind of expressions
305 * given for the second and third operands. This is the central mechanism
306 * of the macro:
307 * - When one operand is a null pointer constant (i.e. when x is an integer
308 * constant expression) and the other is an object pointer (i.e. our
309 * third operand), the conditional operator returns the type of the
310 * object pointer operand (i.e. "int *"). Here, within the sizeof(), we
311 * would then get:
312 * sizeof(*((int *)(...)) == sizeof(int) == 4
313 * - When one operand is a void pointer (i.e. when x is not an integer
314 * constant expression) and the other is an object pointer (i.e. our
315 * third operand), the conditional operator returns a "void *" type.
316 * Here, within the sizeof(), we would then get:
317 * sizeof(*((void *)(...)) == sizeof(void) == 1
318 * - The equality comparison to "sizeof(int)" therefore depends on (x):
319 * sizeof(int) == sizeof(int) (x) was a constant expression
320 * sizeof(int) != sizeof(void) (x) was not a constant expression
321 */
322#define __is_constexpr(x) \
323 (sizeof(int) == sizeof(*(8 ? ((void *)((long)(x) * 0l)) : (int *)8)))
324
325/*
326 * Whether 'type' is a signed type or an unsigned type. Supports scalar types,
327 * bool and also pointer types.
328 */
329#define is_signed_type(type) (((type)(-1)) < (__force type)1)
330#define is_unsigned_type(type) (!is_signed_type(type))
331
332/*
333 * Useful shorthand for "is this condition known at compile-time?"
334 *
335 * Note that the condition may involve non-constant values,
336 * but the compiler may know enough about the details of the
337 * values to determine that the condition is statically true.
338 */
339#define statically_true(x) (__builtin_constant_p(x) && (x))
340
341/*
342 * Similar to statically_true() but produces a constant expression
343 *
344 * To be used in conjunction with macros, such as BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO(),
345 * which require their input to be a constant expression and for which
346 * statically_true() would otherwise fail.
347 *
348 * This is a trade-off: const_true() requires all its operands to be
349 * compile time constants. Else, it would always returns false even on
350 * the most trivial cases like:
351 *
352 * true || non_const_var
353 *
354 * On the opposite, statically_true() is able to fold more complex
355 * tautologies and will return true on expressions such as:
356 *
357 * !(non_const_var * 8 % 4)
358 *
359 * For the general case, statically_true() is better.
360 */
361#define const_true(x) __builtin_choose_expr(__is_constexpr(x), x, false)
362
363/*
364 * This is needed in functions which generate the stack canary, see
365 * arch/x86/kernel/smpboot.c::start_secondary() for an example.
366 */
367#define prevent_tail_call_optimization() mb()
368
369#include <asm/rwonce.h>
370
371#endif /* __LINUX_COMPILER_H */