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Re: PATCH: 0/6 [2nd try]: Add AVX support


On Sun, Mar 7, 2010 at 6:16 AM, Mark Kettenis <mark.kettenis@xs4all.nl> wrote:
>> Date: Sat, 6 Mar 2010 14:16:34 -0800
>> From: "H.J. Lu" <hongjiu.lu@intel.com>
>>
>> AVX registers are saved and restored via the XSAVE extended state. The
>> extended control register 0 (the XFEATURE_ENABLED_MASK register), XCR0,
>> is used to determine which states, x87, SSE, AVX, ... are supported
>> in the XSAVE extended state. ?XCR0 can be read with the new "xgetbv"
>> instruction. ?The xstate_bv field at byte offset 512 in the XSAVE
>> extended state indicates what states the current process is in. If
>> the feature bit is cleared, the corresponding registers should be read as
>> 0. If we update a register, we should set the corresponding feature
>> bit in the xstate_bv field.
>>
>> We added PTRACE_GETREGSET and PTRACE_SETREGSET to Linux kernel to
>> fetch and store AVX registers with ptrace. Linux kernel also stores
>> XCR0 at the first 8 bytes of the software usable bytes, starting at
>> byte offset 464.
>>
>> There are total 6 patches to add AVX support for Linux. ?They support:
>>
>> 1. The upper 128bit YMM registers are added for AVX support. The upper
>> 128bit YMM registers are hidden from users. Gdb combines XMM register,
>> %xmmX, with 128bit YMM register, %ymmXh, and present the whole 256bit
>> YMM register, %ymmX, as pseudo register to users.
>> 2. Backward compatible. If AVX isn't supported, SSE will be used.
>> 3. Forward compatible. If new state beyond AVX is supported in
>> the XSAVE extended state, only AVX state will be used.
>> 4. Remote gdb protocol extension. GDB will send "x86=xml" in qSupported
>> request packet to indicate that GDB supports x86 XML target desciption.
>> The gdb stub will send x86 XML target desciption if it sees "x86=xml"
>> in qSupported request packet.
>>
>> One advantage of this approach is YMM registers are actually stored as
>> XMM registers and upper YMM registers in the XSAVE extended state. ?It
>> is easy and natural to access them as %xmmX and %ymmXh internally. ?We
>> just need to hide %ymmXh from users.
>>
>> To support AVX on other OSes, the following changes are needed:
>>
>> 1. Kernel support to get/set the XSAVE extended state.
>> 2. Handle 8/16 upper YMM registers.
>> 3. Provide target to_read_description to return SSE or AVX target
>> description.
>> 4. Update gdbarch_core_read_description to return SSE or AVX target
>> description based on contents of core dump.
>
> Wait; there is something important missing here. ?How are the new %ymm
> registers referred to in debug info? ?The AMD64 SysV psABI defines the
> DWARF register Number Mapping, but the 0.99.4 draft copy I have
> doesn't define any mappings for the %ymm registers. ?What mapping does
> GCC use?
>

In gcc, XMM and YMM registers have the same register number. They map
to be the same DWARF register with different sizes.  Since XMM and YMM
registers are caller-saved, they don't appear in unwind info. So, the same
DWARF register with different sizes for XMM/YMM registers isn't a problem.



-- 
H.J.


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