| Too many problems poped up because of unnoticed misaligned memory access in | 
 | kernel code lately.  Therefore the alignment fixup is now unconditionally | 
 | configured in for SA11x0 based targets.  According to Alan Cox, this is a | 
 | bad idea to configure it out, but Russell King has some good reasons for | 
 | doing so on some f***ed up ARM architectures like the EBSA110.  However | 
 | this is not the case on many design I'm aware of, like all SA11x0 based | 
 | ones. | 
 |  | 
 | Of course this is a bad idea to rely on the alignment trap to perform | 
 | unaligned memory access in general.  If those access are predictable, you | 
 | are better to use the macros provided by include/asm/unaligned.h.  The | 
 | alignment trap can fixup misaligned access for the exception cases, but at | 
 | a high performance cost.  It better be rare. | 
 |  | 
 | Now for user space applications, it is possible to configure the alignment | 
 | trap to SIGBUS any code performing unaligned access (good for debugging bad | 
 | code), or even fixup the access by software like for kernel code.  The later | 
 | mode isn't recommended for performance reasons (just think about the | 
 | floating point emulation that works about the same way).  Fix your code | 
 | instead! | 
 |  | 
 | Please note that randomly changing the behaviour without good thought is | 
 | real bad - it changes the behaviour of all unaligned instructions in user | 
 | space, and might cause programs to fail unexpectedly. | 
 |  | 
 | To change the alignment trap behavior, simply echo a number into | 
 | /proc/cpu/alignment.  The number is made up from various bits: | 
 |  | 
 | bit		behavior when set | 
 | ---		----------------- | 
 |  | 
 | 0		A user process performing an unaligned memory access | 
 | 		will cause the kernel to print a message indicating | 
 | 		process name, pid, pc, instruction, address, and the | 
 | 		fault code. | 
 |  | 
 | 1		The kernel will attempt to fix up the user process | 
 | 		performing the unaligned access.  This is of course | 
 | 		slow (think about the floating point emulator) and | 
 | 		not recommended for production use. | 
 |  | 
 | 2		The kernel will send a SIGBUS signal to the user process | 
 | 		performing the unaligned access. | 
 |  | 
 | Note that not all combinations are supported - only values 0 through 5. | 
 | (6 and 7 don't make sense). | 
 |  | 
 | For example, the following will turn on the warnings, but without | 
 | fixing up or sending SIGBUS signals: | 
 |  | 
 | 	echo 1 > /proc/cpu/alignment | 
 |  | 
 | You can also read the content of the same file to get statistical | 
 | information on unaligned access occurrences plus the current mode of | 
 | operation for user space code. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Nicolas Pitre, Mar 13, 2001.  Modified Russell King, Nov 30, 2001. |