From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: from mail-it0-x22d.google.com (mail-it0-x22d.google.com [IPv6:2607:f8b0:4001:c0b::22d]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 (128/128 bits)) (No client certificate requested) by ml01.01.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 6DE2C1A1E5A for ; Thu, 22 Sep 2016 04:14:43 -0700 (PDT) Received: by mail-it0-x22d.google.com with SMTP id 186so78137249itf.0 for ; Thu, 22 Sep 2016 04:14:43 -0700 (PDT) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=linaro.org; s=google; h=mime-version:in-reply-to:references:from:date:message-id:subject:to :cc; bh=3DbBT/r0v5s7opfkcJbz7o3yrZEfQU2b2hhgNEaneIY=; b=MQN+HW0xyZg/7uxPqi7wY7UxCYQEwXBFkGu4rCOi4H8m3aulKNJxSUQqLB7HASpV7A V7uD/SpagQtLqDuo+sAmF6aDtB+DPZdYy2eo01YX+fNgSWQDndNRFoafJTfHsKuSP4Nq 528GL2C+5tAHTsEdV/vAF+99tnJXW0hawSYtE= X-Google-DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=1e100.net; s=20130820; h=x-gm-message-state:mime-version:in-reply-to:references:from:date :message-id:subject:to:cc; bh=3DbBT/r0v5s7opfkcJbz7o3yrZEfQU2b2hhgNEaneIY=; b=j+cGuPnyWO+u8x1akQ1AluCwA7i+VRBwkYrApS9ufJBx94oNM10bqD8wo81/hNTUex CwihU6E6/YHIZalE1JRDjyPBGIOK0hoJhE8vAuIPIuMc4x7KbNXu4UdeUPAkLIqA/gBS a66Ri1UkykJi7BcL5LMC+8ol0SCO7ybEPigYWuZhvEATm9Gp3h5M2mIf5BR9Ps5wzG52 qMJJb1sk79H7GGXkhlfqrjy7SvgGaWUmVLqeszNbTt8u+ImiRVKt47R7o54y3A7aBB/q ytbNikZtFK5EYs/nEX2nQBfXPxYxBkqI1hnQbPg4f0/hyRQhe3iaELTOqFlgMoPIT8rX lXtA== X-Gm-Message-State: AE9vXwMkjIz/NYFBs8n8qsAGbxdx8vetzj51mvRXqD6nexFjWKv9eVhXuk/mbw0aNIVhJBsCPRrNgc5dlVdvZpXr X-Received: by 10.36.71.73 with SMTP id t70mr9750489itb.47.1474542882608; Thu, 22 Sep 2016 04:14:42 -0700 (PDT) MIME-Version: 1.0 Received: by 10.36.204.195 with HTTP; Thu, 22 Sep 2016 04:14:42 -0700 (PDT) In-Reply-To: References: <88690c52-2185-13cb-2f61-eabedeb59b03@akeo.ie> From: Ard Biesheuvel Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2016 12:14:42 +0100 Message-ID: To: Pete Batard Cc: "edk2-devel@lists.01.org" Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/1] MdeModulePkg/EbcDxe: add ARM support X-BeenThere: edk2-devel@lists.01.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.21 Precedence: list List-Id: EDK II Development List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2016 11:14:43 -0000 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 On 22 September 2016 at 12:05, Pete Batard wrote: > On 2016.09.22 11:06, Ard Biesheuvel wrote: >> >> However, there is a fundamental issue with EBC on ARM that has not >> been addressed yet, which makes EBC support problematic: >> ARM uses natural alignment for 64-bit types, which means it leaves >> gaps in the stack frame, and the thunking code has no way of dealing >> with that. > > > I was hoping you would comment on this, as I believe the issue is larger > than Arm (which is why I thought the Arm patch could be integrated), since I > ran into something similar for X64 and AARCH64, with the conversion from > stack to register parameters. > > Let me start by showing a real-life example of what the current EBC > implementation does, on different architectures, if you CALLEX from EBC into > a native function call such as: > > VOID MultiParamNative( > UINT32, > UINT64, > UINT64, > UINT64, > UINT32, > UINT32, > UINT64 > ); > > with values: > > 0x1C1C1C1C, > 0x2B2B2B2B2A2A2A2A, > 0x3B3B3B3B3A3A3A3A, > 0x4B4B4B4B4A4A4A4A, > 0x5C5C5C5C, > 0x6C6C6C6C, > 0x7B7B7B7B7A7A7A7A > > If you do that, then the parameter values seen by each Arch will be as > follows: > > IA32: > p1 = 0x1C1C1C1C > p2 = 0x2B2B2B2B2A2A2A2A > p3 = 0x3B3B3B3B3A3A3A3A > p4 = 0x4B4B4B4B4A4A4A4A > p5 = 0x5C5C5C5C > p6 = 0x6C6C6C6C > p7 = 0x7B7B7B7B7A7A7A7A > > X64: > p1 = 0x1C1C1C1C > p2 = 0x3A3A3A3A2B2B2B2B > p3 = 0x4A4A4A4A3B3B3B3B > p4 = 0x5C5C5C5C4B4B4B4B > p5 = 0x6C6C6C6C > p6 = 0x7B7B7B7B > p7 = 0x06F23E4012345678 > > ARM: > p1 = 0x1C1C1C1C > p2 = 0x3A3A3A3A2B2B2B2B > p3 = 0x4A4A4A4A3B3B3B3B > p4 = 0x5C5C5C5C4B4B4B4B > p5 = 0x6C6C6C6C > p6 = 0x7A7A7A7A > p7 = 0x446EEC467B7B7B7B > > AA64: > p1 = 0x1C1C1C1C > p2 = 0x3A3A3A3A2B2B2B2B > p3 = 0x4A4A4A4A3B3B3B3B > p4 = 0x5C5C5C5C4B4B4B4B > p5 = 0x6C6C6C6C > p6 = 0x7B7B7B7B > p7 = 0x00000000FFFFFF91 > > Note that these are real-life results gotten from a native set of drivers > [1] + EBC sample [2], specifically designed to test the above. > > So, as you can see, only IA32 currently retrieves the parameters with their > expected values. All the other platforms, and not just Arm, have an issue > with parameter retrieval. > > I too performed some analysis [3], to understand the problem, the result of > which can be summarized as follows: > > Let's say you have native protocol function: > > ProtocolCall(UINT32, UINT64, UINT64) > > to which you want to pass values: > > (0x1C1C1C1C, 0x2B2B2B2B2A2A2A2A, 0x3B3B3B3B3A3A3A3A) > > With the EBC VM, the parameters then get stacked as (little endian, CDECL > and using 32-bit longwords to represent the stack): > > +--------+ > |1C1C1C1C| > +--------+ > |2A2A2A2A| > +--------+ > |2B2B2B2B| > +--------+ > |3A3A3A3A| > +--------+ > |3B3B3B3B| > +--------+ > +????????+ > +--------+ > > Now, if you are calling into an x86_32 arch, this is no issue, as the native > call reads the parameters off the stack, and finds each one it its expected > location. > > But if, say, you are calling into native Arm, then the calling convention > dictates that the first four 32 bits parameters must be placed into Arm > registers r0-r3, rather than on the stack, and what's more, that if there > exist 64 bit parameters among the register ones, they must start with an > even register (r0 or r2). > > What this means is that, with the current EBC handling, which simply maps > the top of the stack onto registers for native CALLEX (as the VM cannot > guess the parameter signature of the function it is calling into, and > therefore will not do anything else but a blind mapping of the stack onto > registers), the native Arm function effectively gets called with the > following parameter mapping: > > +--------+ > |1C1C1C1C| -> r0 (32-bit first parameter) > +--------+ > |2A2A2A2A| -> (r1/unused, since first parameter is 32-bit) > +--------+ > |2B2B2B2B| -> r2 (lower half of 64-bit second parameter) > +--------+ > |3A3A3A3A| -> r3 (upper half of 64-bit second parameter) > +--------+ > |3B3B3B3B| -> lower half of 64-bit third parameter (stack) > +--------+ > +????????+ -> upper half of 64-bit third parameter (stack) > +--------+ > > The end result is that, the Arm call ends up with these values: > > (0x1C1C1C1C, 0x3A3A3A3A2B2B2B2B, 0x????????3B3B3B3B) > > However, while we used Arm for this example, this is not an Arm specific > issue, as x86_64 and Arm64 also expect any of the first eight parameters to > a native call, that are smaller than 64-bit, to get passed as a 64-bit > register, which means they too have the same issue as the one illustrated > above. > > Now, I'm not sure what the solution to that issue would be. I tend to agree > that, short of including a parameter signature for function calls, this > function argument marshalling issue between EBC and native will be difficult > to solve. A possible half-workaround I thought of could be to keep track of > all the PUSHes having been carried out before a CALLEX, and *assume* (or > mandate in the specs) that all the arguments were pushed individually and > that the size of the PUSH matches the desired size for a register argument, > but even that would still add a lot of complexity and be prone to > breakage... > > The other solution of course is to ask EBC code developers to be aware of > and compensate for the calling convention issue, and pad the stack as > required depending on the ISA they are calling into, which is how I made my > protocol.asm sample work [4], but this is still rather inconvenient, > especially if not coding in EBC assembly, and defeats the point of trying to > write Arch independent code. > > Considering this, I'm not entirely convinced ARM EBC integration should be > held back, as the problem we are faced with is part of a larger issue that > we'll need to resolve for all archs (except IA32), and not just ARM... > Hello Peter, For X64 and AARCH64, the issue does not exist because the EBC spec mandates that all function arguments are widened to the native word size. So when executing on a 64-bit architecture, the EBC stack looks differently from what you describe above, and maps seamlessly onto the register assignment mandated by the respective calling conventions. -- Ard.