xf.li | bdd93d5 | 2023-05-12 07:10:14 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | /* strcpy/stpcpy - copy a string returning pointer to start/end. |
| 2 | Copyright (C) 2013-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| 3 | This file is part of the GNU C Library. |
| 4 | |
| 5 | The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| 6 | modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public |
| 7 | License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either |
| 8 | version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| 11 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| 12 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU |
| 13 | Lesser General Public License for more details. |
| 14 | |
| 15 | You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public |
| 16 | License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see |
| 17 | <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| 18 | |
| 19 | /* To build as stpcpy, define BUILD_STPCPY before compiling this file. |
| 20 | |
| 21 | To test the page crossing code path more thoroughly, compile with |
| 22 | -DSTRCPY_TEST_PAGE_CROSS - this will force all unaligned copies through |
| 23 | the slower entry path. This option is not intended for production use. */ |
| 24 | |
| 25 | #include <sysdep.h> |
| 26 | |
| 27 | /* Assumptions: |
| 28 | * |
| 29 | * ARMv8-a, AArch64, unaligned accesses, min page size 4k. |
| 30 | */ |
| 31 | |
| 32 | /* Arguments and results. */ |
| 33 | #define dstin x0 |
| 34 | #define srcin x1 |
| 35 | |
| 36 | /* Locals and temporaries. */ |
| 37 | #define src x2 |
| 38 | #define dst x3 |
| 39 | #define data1 x4 |
| 40 | #define data1w w4 |
| 41 | #define data2 x5 |
| 42 | #define data2w w5 |
| 43 | #define has_nul1 x6 |
| 44 | #define has_nul2 x7 |
| 45 | #define tmp1 x8 |
| 46 | #define tmp2 x9 |
| 47 | #define tmp3 x10 |
| 48 | #define tmp4 x11 |
| 49 | #define zeroones x12 |
| 50 | #define data1a x13 |
| 51 | #define data2a x14 |
| 52 | #define pos x15 |
| 53 | #define len x16 |
| 54 | #define to_align x17 |
| 55 | |
| 56 | #ifdef BUILD_STPCPY |
| 57 | #define STRCPY __stpcpy |
| 58 | #else |
| 59 | #define STRCPY strcpy |
| 60 | #endif |
| 61 | |
| 62 | /* NUL detection works on the principle that (X - 1) & (~X) & 0x80 |
| 63 | (=> (X - 1) & ~(X | 0x7f)) is non-zero iff a byte is zero, and |
| 64 | can be done in parallel across the entire word. */ |
| 65 | |
| 66 | #define REP8_01 0x0101010101010101 |
| 67 | #define REP8_7f 0x7f7f7f7f7f7f7f7f |
| 68 | #define REP8_80 0x8080808080808080 |
| 69 | |
| 70 | /* AArch64 systems have a minimum page size of 4k. We can do a quick |
| 71 | page size check for crossing this boundary on entry and if we |
| 72 | do not, then we can short-circuit much of the entry code. We |
| 73 | expect early page-crossing strings to be rare (probability of |
| 74 | 16/MIN_PAGE_SIZE ~= 0.4%), so the branch should be quite |
| 75 | predictable, even with random strings. |
| 76 | |
| 77 | We don't bother checking for larger page sizes, the cost of setting |
| 78 | up the correct page size is just not worth the extra gain from |
| 79 | a small reduction in the cases taking the slow path. Note that |
| 80 | we only care about whether the first fetch, which may be |
| 81 | misaligned, crosses a page boundary - after that we move to aligned |
| 82 | fetches for the remainder of the string. */ |
| 83 | |
| 84 | #ifdef STRCPY_TEST_PAGE_CROSS |
| 85 | /* Make everything that isn't Qword aligned look like a page cross. */ |
| 86 | #define MIN_PAGE_P2 4 |
| 87 | #else |
| 88 | #define MIN_PAGE_P2 12 |
| 89 | #endif |
| 90 | |
| 91 | #define MIN_PAGE_SIZE (1 << MIN_PAGE_P2) |
| 92 | |
| 93 | ENTRY_ALIGN (STRCPY, 6) |
| 94 | /* For moderately short strings, the fastest way to do the copy is to |
| 95 | calculate the length of the string in the same way as strlen, then |
| 96 | essentially do a memcpy of the result. This avoids the need for |
| 97 | multiple byte copies and further means that by the time we |
| 98 | reach the bulk copy loop we know we can always use DWord |
| 99 | accesses. We expect strcpy to rarely be called repeatedly |
| 100 | with the same source string, so branch prediction is likely to |
| 101 | always be difficult - we mitigate against this by preferring |
| 102 | conditional select operations over branches whenever this is |
| 103 | feasible. */ |
| 104 | and tmp2, srcin, #(MIN_PAGE_SIZE - 1) |
| 105 | mov zeroones, #REP8_01 |
| 106 | and to_align, srcin, #15 |
| 107 | cmp tmp2, #(MIN_PAGE_SIZE - 16) |
| 108 | neg tmp1, to_align |
| 109 | /* The first fetch will straddle a (possible) page boundary iff |
| 110 | srcin + 15 causes bit[MIN_PAGE_P2] to change value. A 16-byte |
| 111 | aligned string will never fail the page align check, so will |
| 112 | always take the fast path. */ |
| 113 | b.gt L(page_cross) |
| 114 | |
| 115 | L(page_cross_ok): |
| 116 | ldp data1, data2, [srcin] |
| 117 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 118 | /* Because we expect the end to be found within 16 characters |
| 119 | (profiling shows this is the most common case), it's worth |
| 120 | swapping the bytes now to save having to recalculate the |
| 121 | termination syndrome later. We preserve data1 and data2 |
| 122 | so that we can re-use the values later on. */ |
| 123 | rev tmp2, data1 |
| 124 | sub tmp1, tmp2, zeroones |
| 125 | orr tmp2, tmp2, #REP8_7f |
| 126 | bics has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2 |
| 127 | b.ne L(fp_le8) |
| 128 | rev tmp4, data2 |
| 129 | sub tmp3, tmp4, zeroones |
| 130 | orr tmp4, tmp4, #REP8_7f |
| 131 | #else |
| 132 | sub tmp1, data1, zeroones |
| 133 | orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f |
| 134 | bics has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2 |
| 135 | b.ne L(fp_le8) |
| 136 | sub tmp3, data2, zeroones |
| 137 | orr tmp4, data2, #REP8_7f |
| 138 | #endif |
| 139 | bics has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4 |
| 140 | b.eq L(bulk_entry) |
| 141 | |
| 142 | /* The string is short (<=16 bytes). We don't know exactly how |
| 143 | short though, yet. Work out the exact length so that we can |
| 144 | quickly select the optimal copy strategy. */ |
| 145 | L(fp_gt8): |
| 146 | rev has_nul2, has_nul2 |
| 147 | clz pos, has_nul2 |
| 148 | mov tmp2, #56 |
| 149 | add dst, dstin, pos, lsr #3 /* Bits to bytes. */ |
| 150 | sub pos, tmp2, pos |
| 151 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 152 | lsr data2, data2, pos |
| 153 | #else |
| 154 | lsl data2, data2, pos |
| 155 | #endif |
| 156 | str data2, [dst, #1] |
| 157 | str data1, [dstin] |
| 158 | #ifdef BUILD_STPCPY |
| 159 | add dstin, dst, #8 |
| 160 | #endif |
| 161 | ret |
| 162 | |
| 163 | L(fp_le8): |
| 164 | rev has_nul1, has_nul1 |
| 165 | clz pos, has_nul1 |
| 166 | add dst, dstin, pos, lsr #3 /* Bits to bytes. */ |
| 167 | subs tmp2, pos, #24 /* Pos in bits. */ |
| 168 | b.lt L(fp_lt4) |
| 169 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 170 | mov tmp2, #56 |
| 171 | sub pos, tmp2, pos |
| 172 | lsr data2, data1, pos |
| 173 | lsr data1, data1, #32 |
| 174 | #else |
| 175 | lsr data2, data1, tmp2 |
| 176 | #endif |
| 177 | /* 4->7 bytes to copy. */ |
| 178 | str data2w, [dst, #-3] |
| 179 | str data1w, [dstin] |
| 180 | #ifdef BUILD_STPCPY |
| 181 | mov dstin, dst |
| 182 | #endif |
| 183 | ret |
| 184 | L(fp_lt4): |
| 185 | cbz pos, L(fp_lt2) |
| 186 | /* 2->3 bytes to copy. */ |
| 187 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 188 | lsr data1, data1, #48 |
| 189 | #endif |
| 190 | strh data1w, [dstin] |
| 191 | /* Fall-through, one byte (max) to go. */ |
| 192 | L(fp_lt2): |
| 193 | /* Null-terminated string. Last character must be zero! */ |
| 194 | strb wzr, [dst] |
| 195 | #ifdef BUILD_STPCPY |
| 196 | mov dstin, dst |
| 197 | #endif |
| 198 | ret |
| 199 | |
| 200 | .p2align 6 |
| 201 | /* Aligning here ensures that the entry code and main loop all lies |
| 202 | within one 64-byte cache line. */ |
| 203 | L(bulk_entry): |
| 204 | sub to_align, to_align, #16 |
| 205 | stp data1, data2, [dstin] |
| 206 | sub src, srcin, to_align |
| 207 | sub dst, dstin, to_align |
| 208 | b L(entry_no_page_cross) |
| 209 | |
| 210 | /* The inner loop deals with two Dwords at a time. This has a |
| 211 | slightly higher start-up cost, but we should win quite quickly, |
| 212 | especially on cores with a high number of issue slots per |
| 213 | cycle, as we get much better parallelism out of the operations. */ |
| 214 | L(main_loop): |
| 215 | stp data1, data2, [dst], #16 |
| 216 | L(entry_no_page_cross): |
| 217 | ldp data1, data2, [src], #16 |
| 218 | sub tmp1, data1, zeroones |
| 219 | orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f |
| 220 | sub tmp3, data2, zeroones |
| 221 | orr tmp4, data2, #REP8_7f |
| 222 | bic has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2 |
| 223 | bics has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4 |
| 224 | ccmp has_nul1, #0, #0, eq /* NZCV = 0000 */ |
| 225 | b.eq L(main_loop) |
| 226 | |
| 227 | /* Since we know we are copying at least 16 bytes, the fastest way |
| 228 | to deal with the tail is to determine the location of the |
| 229 | trailing NUL, then (re)copy the 16 bytes leading up to that. */ |
| 230 | cmp has_nul1, #0 |
| 231 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 232 | /* For big-endian, carry propagation (if the final byte in the |
| 233 | string is 0x01) means we cannot use has_nul directly. The |
| 234 | easiest way to get the correct byte is to byte-swap the data |
| 235 | and calculate the syndrome a second time. */ |
| 236 | csel data1, data1, data2, ne |
| 237 | rev data1, data1 |
| 238 | sub tmp1, data1, zeroones |
| 239 | orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f |
| 240 | bic has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2 |
| 241 | #else |
| 242 | csel has_nul1, has_nul1, has_nul2, ne |
| 243 | #endif |
| 244 | rev has_nul1, has_nul1 |
| 245 | clz pos, has_nul1 |
| 246 | add tmp1, pos, #72 |
| 247 | add pos, pos, #8 |
| 248 | csel pos, pos, tmp1, ne |
| 249 | add src, src, pos, lsr #3 |
| 250 | add dst, dst, pos, lsr #3 |
| 251 | ldp data1, data2, [src, #-32] |
| 252 | stp data1, data2, [dst, #-16] |
| 253 | #ifdef BUILD_STPCPY |
| 254 | sub dstin, dst, #1 |
| 255 | #endif |
| 256 | ret |
| 257 | |
| 258 | L(page_cross): |
| 259 | bic src, srcin, #15 |
| 260 | /* Start by loading two words at [srcin & ~15], then forcing the |
| 261 | bytes that precede srcin to 0xff. This means they never look |
| 262 | like termination bytes. */ |
| 263 | ldp data1, data2, [src] |
| 264 | lsl tmp1, tmp1, #3 /* Bytes beyond alignment -> bits. */ |
| 265 | tst to_align, #7 |
| 266 | csetm tmp2, ne |
| 267 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 268 | lsl tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */ |
| 269 | #else |
| 270 | lsr tmp2, tmp2, tmp1 /* Shift (tmp1 & 63). */ |
| 271 | #endif |
| 272 | orr data1, data1, tmp2 |
| 273 | orr data2a, data2, tmp2 |
| 274 | cmp to_align, #8 |
| 275 | csinv data1, data1, xzr, lt |
| 276 | csel data2, data2, data2a, lt |
| 277 | sub tmp1, data1, zeroones |
| 278 | orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f |
| 279 | sub tmp3, data2, zeroones |
| 280 | orr tmp4, data2, #REP8_7f |
| 281 | bic has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2 |
| 282 | bics has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4 |
| 283 | ccmp has_nul1, #0, #0, eq /* NZCV = 0000 */ |
| 284 | b.eq L(page_cross_ok) |
| 285 | /* We now need to make data1 and data2 look like they've been |
| 286 | loaded directly from srcin. Do a rotate on the 128-bit value. */ |
| 287 | lsl tmp1, to_align, #3 /* Bytes->bits. */ |
| 288 | neg tmp2, to_align, lsl #3 |
| 289 | #ifdef __AARCH64EB__ |
| 290 | lsl data1a, data1, tmp1 |
| 291 | lsr tmp4, data2, tmp2 |
| 292 | lsl data2, data2, tmp1 |
| 293 | orr tmp4, tmp4, data1a |
| 294 | cmp to_align, #8 |
| 295 | csel data1, tmp4, data2, lt |
| 296 | rev tmp2, data1 |
| 297 | rev tmp4, data2 |
| 298 | sub tmp1, tmp2, zeroones |
| 299 | orr tmp2, tmp2, #REP8_7f |
| 300 | sub tmp3, tmp4, zeroones |
| 301 | orr tmp4, tmp4, #REP8_7f |
| 302 | #else |
| 303 | lsr data1a, data1, tmp1 |
| 304 | lsl tmp4, data2, tmp2 |
| 305 | lsr data2, data2, tmp1 |
| 306 | orr tmp4, tmp4, data1a |
| 307 | cmp to_align, #8 |
| 308 | csel data1, tmp4, data2, lt |
| 309 | sub tmp1, data1, zeroones |
| 310 | orr tmp2, data1, #REP8_7f |
| 311 | sub tmp3, data2, zeroones |
| 312 | orr tmp4, data2, #REP8_7f |
| 313 | #endif |
| 314 | bic has_nul1, tmp1, tmp2 |
| 315 | cbnz has_nul1, L(fp_le8) |
| 316 | bic has_nul2, tmp3, tmp4 |
| 317 | b L(fp_gt8) |
| 318 | END (STRCPY) |
| 319 | |
| 320 | #ifdef BUILD_STPCPY |
| 321 | weak_alias (__stpcpy, stpcpy) |
| 322 | libc_hidden_def (__stpcpy) |
| 323 | libc_hidden_builtin_def (stpcpy) |
| 324 | #else |
| 325 | libc_hidden_builtin_def (strcpy) |
| 326 | #endif |