DaveJ wrote:
>On Sat, Dec 28, 2002 at 10:37:06PM +0200, Ville Herva wrote:
>
> > > SYSCALL is AMD. SYSENTER is Intel, and is likely to be significantly
> > Now that Linus has killed the dragon and everybody seems happy with the
> > shiny new SYSENTER code, let just add one more stupid question to this
> > thread: has anyone made benchmarks on SYSCALL/SYSENTER/INT80 on Athlon? Is
> > SYSCALL worth doing separately for Athlon (and perhaps Hammer/32-bit mode)?
>
>Its something I wondered about too. Even if it isn't a win for K7,
>it's possible that the K6 family may benefit from SYSCALL support.
>Maybe even the K5 if it was around that early ? (too lazy to check pdf's)
>
>
I looked at SYSCALL once, and noticed some problems:
- it doesn't even load ESP with a kernel value, a task gate for NMI is
mandatory.
- SMP support is only possible with a per-cpu entry point with
(boot-time) fixups to the address where the entry point can find the
kernel stack.
- The AMD docs contain one odd sentence:
"The CS and SS registers must not be modified by the operating system
between the execution of the SYSCALL and the corresponding SYSRET
instruction".
Is SYSCALL+iretd permitted? That's needed for execve, iopl, task
switches, signal delivery.
What about interrupts during SYSCALLs? NMI to taskgate?
Either that sentence is just wrong, or SYSCALL is unusable.
It's not supported by the K5 cpu:
http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/white_papers_and_tech_docs/20734.pdf
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