[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC v1 0/8] x86/init: Linux linker tables
On 12/17/15 15:46, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > > I explain why I do that there but the gist of it is that on Linux we may also > want stronger semantics for specific linker table solutions, and solutions > such > as those devised on the IOMMU init stuff do memmove() for sorting depending on > semantics defined (in the simplest case here so far dependency between init > sequences), this makes each set of sequences very subsystem specific. An issue > with *one* subsystem could make things really bad for others. I thought about > this quite a bit and figured its best left to the subsystem maintainers to > decide. > A table that needs sorting or other runtime handling is just a read-write table for the purpose of the linker table construct. It presents to C as an array of initialized data. > Perhaps a new sections.h file (you tell me) which documents the different > section components: > > /* document this *really* well */ > #define SECTION_RODATA ".rodata" > #define SECTION_INIT ".init" > #define SECTION_INIT_RODATA ".init_rodata" > #define SECTION_READ_MOSTLY ".read_mostly" > > Then on tables.h we add the section components support: Yes, something like that. How to macroize it cleanly is another matter; we may want to use slightly different conventions that iPXE to match our own codebase. > #define __table(component, type, name) (component, type, name) > > #define __table_component(table) __table_extract_component table > > #define __table_extract_component(component, type, name) component > > #define __table_type(table) __table_extract_type table > > #define __table_extract_type(component, type, name) type > > #define __table_name(table) __table_extract_name table > > #define __table_extract_name(component, type, name) name > > #define __table_str(x) #x > > #define __table_section(table, idx) \ > > "." __table_component (table) ".tbl." __table_name (table) "." > __table_str (idx) > > #define __table_entry(table, idx) \ > > __attribute__ ((__section__(__table_section(table, idx)), \ > > __aligned__(__table_alignment(table)))) > > A user could then be something as follows: > > #define X86_INIT_FNS __table(SECTION_INIT, struct x86_init_fn, > "x86_init_fns") > #define __x86_init_fn(order_level) __table_entry(X86_INIT_FNS, order_level) Yes, but in particular the common case of function initialization tables should be generic. I'm kind of thinking a syntax like this: DECLARE_LINKTABLE_RO(struct foo, tablename); DEFINE_LINKTABLE_RO(struct foo, tablename); LINKTABLE_RO(tablename,level) = /* contents */; LINKTABLE_SIZE(tablename) ... which would turn into something like this once it goes through all the preprocessing phases /* DECLARE_LINKTABLE_RO */ extern const struct foo tablename[], tablename__end[]; /* DEFINE_LINKTABLE_RO */ DECLARE_LINKTABLE_RO(struct foo, tablename); const struct foo__attribute__((used,section(".rodata.tbl.tablename.0"))) tablename[0]; const struct foo__attribute__((used,section(".rodata.tbl.tablename.999"))) tablename__end[0]; /* LINKTABLE_RO */ static const __typeof__(tablename) __attribute__((used,section(".rodata.tbl.tablename.50"))) __tbl_tablename_12345 /* LINKTABLE_SIZE */ ((tablename__end) - (tablename)) ... and so on for all the possible sections where we may want tables. Note: I used 0 and 999 above since they sort before and after all possible 2-digit decimal numbers, but that's just cosmetic. > If that's what you mean? > > I'm a bit wary about having the linker sort any of the above SECTION_*'s, but > if we're happy to do that perhaps a simple first step might be to see if 0-day > but would be happy with just the sort without any consequences to any > architecture. Thoughts? I don't see what is dangerous about it. The section names are such that a lexographical sort will do the right thing, and we can simply use SORT(.rodata.tbl.*) in the linker script, for example. >> The other thing is to take a >> clue from the implementation in iPXE, which uses priority levels 00 and >> 99 (or we could use non-integers which sort appropriately instead of >> using "real" levels) to contain the start and end symbols, which >> eliminates any need for linker script modifications to add new tables. > > This solution uses that as well. The only need for adding custom sections > is when they have a requirement for a custom run time sort, and also to > ensure they don't cause regressions on other subsystems if they have a buggy > sort. The run time sorting is all subsystem specific and up to their own > semantics. Again, from a linker table POV this is nothing other than a read-write table; there is a runtime function that then operates on that read-write table. -hpa _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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