/* * Copyright (c) 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. * * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy * of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal * in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights * to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell * copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is * furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: * * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in * all copies or substantial portions of the Software. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE * AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE * SOFTWARE. * * Derived from the corresponding header file for gcc. */ #include "../loadstore/atomic_load.h" #include "../loadstore/atomic_store.h" /* Some architecture set descriptions include special "ordered" memory */ /* operations. As far as we can tell, no existing processors actually */ /* require those. Nor does it appear likely that future processors */ /* will. */ /* FIXME: The PA emulator on Itanium may obey weaker restrictions. */ /* There should be a mode in which we don't assume sequential */ /* consistency here. */ #include "../ordered.h" #include /* GCC will not guarantee the alignment we need, use four lock words */ /* and select the correctly aligned datum. See the glibc 2.3.2 */ /* linuxthread port for the original implementation. */ struct AO_pa_clearable_loc { int data[4]; }; #undef AO_TS_INITIALIZER #define AO_TS_t struct AO_pa_clearable_loc #define AO_TS_INITIALIZER {1,1,1,1} /* Switch meaning of set and clear, since we only have an atomic clear */ /* instruction. */ typedef enum {AO_PA_TS_set = 0, AO_PA_TS_clear = 1} AO_PA_TS_val; #define AO_TS_VAL_t AO_PA_TS_val #define AO_TS_CLEAR AO_PA_TS_clear #define AO_TS_SET AO_PA_TS_set /* The hppa only has one atomic read and modify memory operation, */ /* load and clear, so hppa spinlocks must use zero to signify that */ /* someone is holding the lock. The address used for the ldcw */ /* semaphore must be 16-byte aligned. */ #define AO_ldcw(a, ret) \ _LDCWX(0 /* index */, 0 /* s */, a /* base */, ret) /* Because malloc only guarantees 8-byte alignment for malloc'd data, */ /* and GCC only guarantees 8-byte alignment for stack locals, we can't */ /* be assured of 16-byte alignment for atomic lock data even if we */ /* specify "__attribute ((aligned(16)))" in the type declaration. So, */ /* we use a struct containing an array of four ints for the atomic lock */ /* type and dynamically select the 16-byte aligned int from the array */ /* for the semaphore. */ #define AO_PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT 16 #define AO_ldcw_align(addr) \ ((volatile unsigned *)(((unsigned long)(addr) \ + (AO_PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT - 1)) \ & ~(AO_PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT - 1))) /* Works on PA 1.1 and PA 2.0 systems */ AO_INLINE AO_TS_VAL_t AO_test_and_set_full(volatile AO_TS_t * addr) { register unsigned int ret; register unsigned long a = (unsigned long)AO_ldcw_align(addr); # if defined(CPPCHECK) ret = 0; /* to void 'uninitialized variable' warning */ # endif AO_ldcw(a, ret); return (AO_TS_VAL_t)ret; } #define AO_HAVE_test_and_set_full AO_INLINE void AO_pa_clear(volatile AO_TS_t * addr) { volatile unsigned *a = AO_ldcw_align(addr); AO_compiler_barrier(); *a = 1; } #define AO_CLEAR(addr) AO_pa_clear(addr) #define AO_HAVE_CLEAR #undef AO_PA_LDCW_ALIGNMENT #undef AO_ldcw #undef AO_ldcw_align