llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/BPF/BPFISelLowering.cpp

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BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
//===-- BPFISelLowering.cpp - BPF DAG Lowering Implementation ------------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file defines the interfaces that BPF uses to lower LLVM code into a
// selection DAG.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "BPFISelLowering.h"
#include "BPF.h"
#include "BPFSubtarget.h"
#include "BPFTargetMachine.h"
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
#include "llvm/CodeGen/CallingConvLower.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineFrameInfo.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineFunction.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineInstrBuilder.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineRegisterInfo.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGISel.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/TargetLoweringObjectFileImpl.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/ValueTypes.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DiagnosticInfo.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DiagnosticPrinter.h"
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
#include "llvm/Support/Debug.h"
#include "llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h"
#include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h"
using namespace llvm;
#define DEBUG_TYPE "bpf-lower"
static void fail(const SDLoc &DL, SelectionDAG &DAG, const char *Msg) {
MachineFunction &MF = DAG.getMachineFunction();
DAG.getContext()->diagnose(
DiagnosticInfoUnsupported(*MF.getFunction(), Msg, DL.getDebugLoc()));
}
static void fail(const SDLoc &DL, SelectionDAG &DAG, const char *Msg,
SDValue Val) {
MachineFunction &MF = DAG.getMachineFunction();
std::string Str;
raw_string_ostream OS(Str);
OS << Msg;
Val->print(OS);
OS.flush();
DAG.getContext()->diagnose(
DiagnosticInfoUnsupported(*MF.getFunction(), Str, DL.getDebugLoc()));
}
BPFTargetLowering::BPFTargetLowering(const TargetMachine &TM,
const BPFSubtarget &STI)
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
: TargetLowering(TM) {
// Set up the register classes.
addRegisterClass(MVT::i64, &BPF::GPRRegClass);
// Compute derived properties from the register classes
computeRegisterProperties(STI.getRegisterInfo());
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
setStackPointerRegisterToSaveRestore(BPF::R11);
setOperationAction(ISD::BR_CC, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::BR_JT, MVT::Other, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::BRIND, MVT::Other, Expand);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
setOperationAction(ISD::BRCOND, MVT::Other, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SETCC, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SELECT, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SELECT_CC, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::GlobalAddress, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::DYNAMIC_STACKALLOC, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::STACKSAVE, MVT::Other, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::STACKRESTORE, MVT::Other, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SDIVREM, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::UDIVREM, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SREM, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::UREM, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::MULHU, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::MULHS, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::UMUL_LOHI, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SMUL_LOHI, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::ADDC, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::ADDE, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SUBC, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SUBE, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::ROTR, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::ROTL, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SHL_PARTS, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SRL_PARTS, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SRA_PARTS, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::CTTZ, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::CTLZ, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::CTTZ_ZERO_UNDEF, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::CTLZ_ZERO_UNDEF, MVT::i64, Custom);
setOperationAction(ISD::CTPOP, MVT::i64, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SIGN_EXTEND_INREG, MVT::i1, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SIGN_EXTEND_INREG, MVT::i8, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SIGN_EXTEND_INREG, MVT::i16, Expand);
setOperationAction(ISD::SIGN_EXTEND_INREG, MVT::i32, Expand);
// Extended load operations for i1 types must be promoted
for (MVT VT : MVT::integer_valuetypes()) {
setLoadExtAction(ISD::EXTLOAD, VT, MVT::i1, Promote);
setLoadExtAction(ISD::ZEXTLOAD, VT, MVT::i1, Promote);
setLoadExtAction(ISD::SEXTLOAD, VT, MVT::i1, Promote);
setLoadExtAction(ISD::SEXTLOAD, VT, MVT::i8, Expand);
setLoadExtAction(ISD::SEXTLOAD, VT, MVT::i16, Expand);
setLoadExtAction(ISD::SEXTLOAD, VT, MVT::i32, Expand);
}
setBooleanContents(ZeroOrOneBooleanContent);
// Function alignments (log2)
setMinFunctionAlignment(3);
setPrefFunctionAlignment(3);
// inline memcpy() for kernel to see explicit copy
MaxStoresPerMemset = MaxStoresPerMemsetOptSize = 128;
MaxStoresPerMemcpy = MaxStoresPerMemcpyOptSize = 128;
MaxStoresPerMemmove = MaxStoresPerMemmoveOptSize = 128;
}
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerOperation(SDValue Op, SelectionDAG &DAG) const {
switch (Op.getOpcode()) {
case ISD::BR_CC:
return LowerBR_CC(Op, DAG);
case ISD::GlobalAddress:
return LowerGlobalAddress(Op, DAG);
case ISD::SELECT_CC:
return LowerSELECT_CC(Op, DAG);
default:
llvm_unreachable("unimplemented operand");
}
}
// Calling Convention Implementation
#include "BPFGenCallingConv.inc"
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments(
SDValue Chain, CallingConv::ID CallConv, bool IsVarArg,
const SmallVectorImpl<ISD::InputArg> &Ins, const SDLoc &DL,
SelectionDAG &DAG, SmallVectorImpl<SDValue> &InVals) const {
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
switch (CallConv) {
default:
llvm_unreachable("Unsupported calling convention");
case CallingConv::C:
case CallingConv::Fast:
break;
}
MachineFunction &MF = DAG.getMachineFunction();
MachineRegisterInfo &RegInfo = MF.getRegInfo();
// Assign locations to all of the incoming arguments.
SmallVector<CCValAssign, 16> ArgLocs;
CCState CCInfo(CallConv, IsVarArg, MF, ArgLocs, *DAG.getContext());
CCInfo.AnalyzeFormalArguments(Ins, CC_BPF64);
for (auto &VA : ArgLocs) {
if (VA.isRegLoc()) {
// Arguments passed in registers
EVT RegVT = VA.getLocVT();
switch (RegVT.getSimpleVT().SimpleTy) {
default: {
errs() << "LowerFormalArguments Unhandled argument type: "
<< RegVT.getEVTString() << '\n';
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
llvm_unreachable(0);
}
case MVT::i64:
unsigned VReg = RegInfo.createVirtualRegister(&BPF::GPRRegClass);
RegInfo.addLiveIn(VA.getLocReg(), VReg);
SDValue ArgValue = DAG.getCopyFromReg(Chain, DL, VReg, RegVT);
// If this is an 8/16/32-bit value, it is really passed promoted to 64
// bits. Insert an assert[sz]ext to capture this, then truncate to the
// right size.
if (VA.getLocInfo() == CCValAssign::SExt)
ArgValue = DAG.getNode(ISD::AssertSext, DL, RegVT, ArgValue,
DAG.getValueType(VA.getValVT()));
else if (VA.getLocInfo() == CCValAssign::ZExt)
ArgValue = DAG.getNode(ISD::AssertZext, DL, RegVT, ArgValue,
DAG.getValueType(VA.getValVT()));
if (VA.getLocInfo() != CCValAssign::Full)
ArgValue = DAG.getNode(ISD::TRUNCATE, DL, VA.getValVT(), ArgValue);
InVals.push_back(ArgValue);
}
} else {
fail(DL, DAG, "defined with too many args");
InVals.push_back(DAG.getConstant(0, DL, VA.getLocVT()));
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
}
if (IsVarArg || MF.getFunction()->hasStructRetAttr()) {
fail(DL, DAG, "functions with VarArgs or StructRet are not supported");
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
return Chain;
}
const unsigned BPFTargetLowering::MaxArgs = 5;
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerCall(TargetLowering::CallLoweringInfo &CLI,
SmallVectorImpl<SDValue> &InVals) const {
SelectionDAG &DAG = CLI.DAG;
auto &Outs = CLI.Outs;
auto &OutVals = CLI.OutVals;
auto &Ins = CLI.Ins;
SDValue Chain = CLI.Chain;
SDValue Callee = CLI.Callee;
bool &IsTailCall = CLI.IsTailCall;
CallingConv::ID CallConv = CLI.CallConv;
bool IsVarArg = CLI.IsVarArg;
MachineFunction &MF = DAG.getMachineFunction();
// BPF target does not support tail call optimization.
IsTailCall = false;
switch (CallConv) {
default:
report_fatal_error("Unsupported calling convention");
case CallingConv::Fast:
case CallingConv::C:
break;
}
// Analyze operands of the call, assigning locations to each operand.
SmallVector<CCValAssign, 16> ArgLocs;
CCState CCInfo(CallConv, IsVarArg, MF, ArgLocs, *DAG.getContext());
CCInfo.AnalyzeCallOperands(Outs, CC_BPF64);
unsigned NumBytes = CCInfo.getNextStackOffset();
if (Outs.size() > MaxArgs)
fail(CLI.DL, DAG, "too many args to ", Callee);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
for (auto &Arg : Outs) {
ISD::ArgFlagsTy Flags = Arg.Flags;
if (!Flags.isByVal())
continue;
fail(CLI.DL, DAG, "pass by value not supported ", Callee);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
auto PtrVT = getPointerTy(MF.getDataLayout());
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
Chain = DAG.getCALLSEQ_START(
Chain, DAG.getConstant(NumBytes, CLI.DL, PtrVT, true), CLI.DL);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
SmallVector<std::pair<unsigned, SDValue>, MaxArgs> RegsToPass;
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
// Walk arg assignments
for (unsigned i = 0,
e = std::min(static_cast<unsigned>(ArgLocs.size()), MaxArgs);
i != e; ++i) {
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
CCValAssign &VA = ArgLocs[i];
SDValue Arg = OutVals[i];
// Promote the value if needed.
switch (VA.getLocInfo()) {
default:
llvm_unreachable("Unknown loc info");
case CCValAssign::Full:
break;
case CCValAssign::SExt:
Arg = DAG.getNode(ISD::SIGN_EXTEND, CLI.DL, VA.getLocVT(), Arg);
break;
case CCValAssign::ZExt:
Arg = DAG.getNode(ISD::ZERO_EXTEND, CLI.DL, VA.getLocVT(), Arg);
break;
case CCValAssign::AExt:
Arg = DAG.getNode(ISD::ANY_EXTEND, CLI.DL, VA.getLocVT(), Arg);
break;
}
// Push arguments into RegsToPass vector
if (VA.isRegLoc())
RegsToPass.push_back(std::make_pair(VA.getLocReg(), Arg));
else
llvm_unreachable("call arg pass bug");
}
SDValue InFlag;
// Build a sequence of copy-to-reg nodes chained together with token chain and
// flag operands which copy the outgoing args into registers. The InFlag in
// necessary since all emitted instructions must be stuck together.
for (auto &Reg : RegsToPass) {
Chain = DAG.getCopyToReg(Chain, CLI.DL, Reg.first, Reg.second, InFlag);
InFlag = Chain.getValue(1);
}
// If the callee is a GlobalAddress node (quite common, every direct call is)
// turn it into a TargetGlobalAddress node so that legalize doesn't hack it.
// Likewise ExternalSymbol -> TargetExternalSymbol.
if (GlobalAddressSDNode *G = dyn_cast<GlobalAddressSDNode>(Callee))
Callee = DAG.getTargetGlobalAddress(G->getGlobal(), CLI.DL, PtrVT,
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
G->getOffset(), 0);
else if (ExternalSymbolSDNode *E = dyn_cast<ExternalSymbolSDNode>(Callee))
Callee = DAG.getTargetExternalSymbol(E->getSymbol(), PtrVT, 0);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
// Returns a chain & a flag for retval copy to use.
SDVTList NodeTys = DAG.getVTList(MVT::Other, MVT::Glue);
SmallVector<SDValue, 8> Ops;
Ops.push_back(Chain);
Ops.push_back(Callee);
// Add argument registers to the end of the list so that they are
// known live into the call.
for (auto &Reg : RegsToPass)
Ops.push_back(DAG.getRegister(Reg.first, Reg.second.getValueType()));
if (InFlag.getNode())
Ops.push_back(InFlag);
Chain = DAG.getNode(BPFISD::CALL, CLI.DL, NodeTys, Ops);
InFlag = Chain.getValue(1);
// Create the CALLSEQ_END node.
Chain = DAG.getCALLSEQ_END(
Chain, DAG.getConstant(NumBytes, CLI.DL, PtrVT, true),
DAG.getConstant(0, CLI.DL, PtrVT, true), InFlag, CLI.DL);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
InFlag = Chain.getValue(1);
// Handle result values, copying them out of physregs into vregs that we
// return.
return LowerCallResult(Chain, InFlag, CallConv, IsVarArg, Ins, CLI.DL, DAG,
InVals);
}
SDValue
BPFTargetLowering::LowerReturn(SDValue Chain, CallingConv::ID CallConv,
bool IsVarArg,
const SmallVectorImpl<ISD::OutputArg> &Outs,
const SmallVectorImpl<SDValue> &OutVals,
const SDLoc &DL, SelectionDAG &DAG) const {
unsigned Opc = BPFISD::RET_FLAG;
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
// CCValAssign - represent the assignment of the return value to a location
SmallVector<CCValAssign, 16> RVLocs;
MachineFunction &MF = DAG.getMachineFunction();
// CCState - Info about the registers and stack slot.
CCState CCInfo(CallConv, IsVarArg, MF, RVLocs, *DAG.getContext());
if (MF.getFunction()->getReturnType()->isAggregateType()) {
fail(DL, DAG, "only integer returns supported");
return DAG.getNode(Opc, DL, MVT::Other, Chain);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
// Analize return values.
CCInfo.AnalyzeReturn(Outs, RetCC_BPF64);
SDValue Flag;
SmallVector<SDValue, 4> RetOps(1, Chain);
// Copy the result values into the output registers.
for (unsigned i = 0; i != RVLocs.size(); ++i) {
CCValAssign &VA = RVLocs[i];
assert(VA.isRegLoc() && "Can only return in registers!");
Chain = DAG.getCopyToReg(Chain, DL, VA.getLocReg(), OutVals[i], Flag);
// Guarantee that all emitted copies are stuck together,
// avoiding something bad.
Flag = Chain.getValue(1);
RetOps.push_back(DAG.getRegister(VA.getLocReg(), VA.getLocVT()));
}
RetOps[0] = Chain; // Update chain.
// Add the flag if we have it.
if (Flag.getNode())
RetOps.push_back(Flag);
return DAG.getNode(Opc, DL, MVT::Other, RetOps);
}
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerCallResult(
SDValue Chain, SDValue InFlag, CallingConv::ID CallConv, bool IsVarArg,
const SmallVectorImpl<ISD::InputArg> &Ins, const SDLoc &DL,
SelectionDAG &DAG, SmallVectorImpl<SDValue> &InVals) const {
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
MachineFunction &MF = DAG.getMachineFunction();
// Assign locations to each value returned by this call.
SmallVector<CCValAssign, 16> RVLocs;
CCState CCInfo(CallConv, IsVarArg, MF, RVLocs, *DAG.getContext());
if (Ins.size() >= 2) {
fail(DL, DAG, "only small returns supported");
for (unsigned i = 0, e = Ins.size(); i != e; ++i)
InVals.push_back(DAG.getConstant(0, DL, Ins[i].VT));
return DAG.getCopyFromReg(Chain, DL, 1, Ins[0].VT, InFlag).getValue(1);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
CCInfo.AnalyzeCallResult(Ins, RetCC_BPF64);
// Copy all of the result registers out of their specified physreg.
for (auto &Val : RVLocs) {
Chain = DAG.getCopyFromReg(Chain, DL, Val.getLocReg(),
Val.getValVT(), InFlag).getValue(1);
InFlag = Chain.getValue(2);
InVals.push_back(Chain.getValue(0));
}
return Chain;
}
static void NegateCC(SDValue &LHS, SDValue &RHS, ISD::CondCode &CC) {
switch (CC) {
default:
break;
case ISD::SETULT:
case ISD::SETULE:
case ISD::SETLT:
case ISD::SETLE:
CC = ISD::getSetCCSwappedOperands(CC);
std::swap(LHS, RHS);
break;
}
}
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerBR_CC(SDValue Op, SelectionDAG &DAG) const {
SDValue Chain = Op.getOperand(0);
ISD::CondCode CC = cast<CondCodeSDNode>(Op.getOperand(1))->get();
SDValue LHS = Op.getOperand(2);
SDValue RHS = Op.getOperand(3);
SDValue Dest = Op.getOperand(4);
SDLoc DL(Op);
NegateCC(LHS, RHS, CC);
return DAG.getNode(BPFISD::BR_CC, DL, Op.getValueType(), Chain, LHS, RHS,
DAG.getConstant(CC, DL, MVT::i64), Dest);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerSELECT_CC(SDValue Op, SelectionDAG &DAG) const {
SDValue LHS = Op.getOperand(0);
SDValue RHS = Op.getOperand(1);
SDValue TrueV = Op.getOperand(2);
SDValue FalseV = Op.getOperand(3);
ISD::CondCode CC = cast<CondCodeSDNode>(Op.getOperand(4))->get();
SDLoc DL(Op);
NegateCC(LHS, RHS, CC);
SDValue TargetCC = DAG.getConstant(CC, DL, MVT::i64);
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
SDVTList VTs = DAG.getVTList(Op.getValueType(), MVT::Glue);
SDValue Ops[] = {LHS, RHS, TargetCC, TrueV, FalseV};
return DAG.getNode(BPFISD::SELECT_CC, DL, VTs, Ops);
}
const char *BPFTargetLowering::getTargetNodeName(unsigned Opcode) const {
switch ((BPFISD::NodeType)Opcode) {
2015-05-20 08:20:26 +08:00
case BPFISD::FIRST_NUMBER:
break;
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
case BPFISD::RET_FLAG:
return "BPFISD::RET_FLAG";
case BPFISD::CALL:
return "BPFISD::CALL";
case BPFISD::SELECT_CC:
return "BPFISD::SELECT_CC";
case BPFISD::BR_CC:
return "BPFISD::BR_CC";
case BPFISD::Wrapper:
return "BPFISD::Wrapper";
}
return nullptr;
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
}
SDValue BPFTargetLowering::LowerGlobalAddress(SDValue Op,
SelectionDAG &DAG) const {
SDLoc DL(Op);
const GlobalValue *GV = cast<GlobalAddressSDNode>(Op)->getGlobal();
SDValue GA = DAG.getTargetGlobalAddress(GV, DL, MVT::i64);
return DAG.getNode(BPFISD::Wrapper, DL, MVT::i64, GA);
}
MachineBasicBlock *
BPFTargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter(MachineInstr &MI,
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
MachineBasicBlock *BB) const {
const TargetInstrInfo &TII = *BB->getParent()->getSubtarget().getInstrInfo();
DebugLoc DL = MI.getDebugLoc();
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
assert(MI.getOpcode() == BPF::Select && "Unexpected instr type to insert");
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
// To "insert" a SELECT instruction, we actually have to insert the diamond
// control-flow pattern. The incoming instruction knows the destination vreg
// to set, the condition code register to branch on, the true/false values to
// select between, and a branch opcode to use.
const BasicBlock *LLVM_BB = BB->getBasicBlock();
MachineFunction::iterator I = ++BB->getIterator();
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
// ThisMBB:
// ...
// TrueVal = ...
// jmp_XX r1, r2 goto Copy1MBB
// fallthrough --> Copy0MBB
MachineBasicBlock *ThisMBB = BB;
MachineFunction *F = BB->getParent();
MachineBasicBlock *Copy0MBB = F->CreateMachineBasicBlock(LLVM_BB);
MachineBasicBlock *Copy1MBB = F->CreateMachineBasicBlock(LLVM_BB);
F->insert(I, Copy0MBB);
F->insert(I, Copy1MBB);
// Update machine-CFG edges by transferring all successors of the current
// block to the new block which will contain the Phi node for the select.
Copy1MBB->splice(Copy1MBB->begin(), BB,
std::next(MachineBasicBlock::iterator(MI)), BB->end());
Copy1MBB->transferSuccessorsAndUpdatePHIs(BB);
// Next, add the true and fallthrough blocks as its successors.
BB->addSuccessor(Copy0MBB);
BB->addSuccessor(Copy1MBB);
// Insert Branch if Flag
unsigned LHS = MI.getOperand(1).getReg();
unsigned RHS = MI.getOperand(2).getReg();
int CC = MI.getOperand(3).getImm();
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
switch (CC) {
case ISD::SETGT:
BuildMI(BB, DL, TII.get(BPF::JSGT_rr))
.addReg(LHS)
.addReg(RHS)
.addMBB(Copy1MBB);
break;
case ISD::SETUGT:
BuildMI(BB, DL, TII.get(BPF::JUGT_rr))
.addReg(LHS)
.addReg(RHS)
.addMBB(Copy1MBB);
break;
case ISD::SETGE:
BuildMI(BB, DL, TII.get(BPF::JSGE_rr))
.addReg(LHS)
.addReg(RHS)
.addMBB(Copy1MBB);
break;
case ISD::SETUGE:
BuildMI(BB, DL, TII.get(BPF::JUGE_rr))
.addReg(LHS)
.addReg(RHS)
.addMBB(Copy1MBB);
break;
case ISD::SETEQ:
BuildMI(BB, DL, TII.get(BPF::JEQ_rr))
.addReg(LHS)
.addReg(RHS)
.addMBB(Copy1MBB);
break;
case ISD::SETNE:
BuildMI(BB, DL, TII.get(BPF::JNE_rr))
.addReg(LHS)
.addReg(RHS)
.addMBB(Copy1MBB);
break;
default:
report_fatal_error("unimplemented select CondCode " + Twine(CC));
}
// Copy0MBB:
// %FalseValue = ...
// # fallthrough to Copy1MBB
BB = Copy0MBB;
// Update machine-CFG edges
BB->addSuccessor(Copy1MBB);
// Copy1MBB:
// %Result = phi [ %FalseValue, Copy0MBB ], [ %TrueValue, ThisMBB ]
// ...
BB = Copy1MBB;
BuildMI(*BB, BB->begin(), DL, TII.get(BPF::PHI), MI.getOperand(0).getReg())
.addReg(MI.getOperand(5).getReg())
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
.addMBB(Copy0MBB)
.addReg(MI.getOperand(4).getReg())
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
.addMBB(ThisMBB);
MI.eraseFromParent(); // The pseudo instruction is gone now.
BPF backend Summary: V8->V9: - cleanup tests V7->V8: - addressed feedback from David: - switched to range-based 'for' loops - fixed formatting of tests V6->V7: - rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args - CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns - diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-) V5->V6: - addressed feedback from Chandler: - reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files - fixed variables that were not in CamelCase - fixed names of #ifdef in header files - removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements - fixed comments - removed trailing empty line - dropped debug annotations from tests - diffstat of these changes: 46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-) V4->V5: - fix setLoadExtAction() interface - clang-formated all where it made sense V3->V4: - added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend V2->V3: - fix metadata in tests V1->V2: - addressed feedback from Tom and Matt - removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend') - reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600) - added few more tests - added cmake build - added Triple::bpf - tested on linux and darwin V1 cover letter: --------------------- recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since new instruction set is based on it. This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set. The concept and development are covered by the following articles: http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/ http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/ http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/ http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/ http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/ One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative. bpf syscall manpage: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt Short summary of instruction set: - 64-bit registers R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack - two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store - implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer) - no floating point, no simd Short history of extended BPF in kernel: interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future. It's a very small and simple backend. There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs, exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc. From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel. This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list, so this is not the end of development. Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends. Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics and 'compare and goto' as single instruction. Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future. Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com> Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494 llvm-svn: 227008
2015-01-25 01:51:26 +08:00
return BB;
}