Re: [PATCH -v4 4/9] tracing: add static function tracer support for MIPS

From: Richard Sandiford
Date: Thu Oct 22 2009 - 18:17:16 EST


David Daney <ddaney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> Wu Zhangjin wrote:
>> On Wed, 2009-10-21 at 11:24 -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> [...]
>>>> +
>>>> +NESTED(_mcount, PT_SIZE, ra)
>>>> + RESTORE_SP_FOR_32BIT
>>>> + PTR_LA t0, ftrace_stub
>>>> + PTR_L t1, ftrace_trace_function /* please don't use t1 later, safe? */
>>> Is t0 and t1 safe for mcount to use? Remember, mcount does not follow
>>> the dynamics of C function ABI.
>>
>> So, perhaps we can use the saved registers(a0,a1...) instead.
>>
>
> a0..a7 may not always be saved.
>
> You can use at, v0, v1 and all the temporary registers. Note that for
> the 64-bit ABIs sometimes the names t0-t4 shadow a4-a7. So for a 64-bit
> kernel, you can use: $1, $2, $3, $12, $13, $14, $15, $24, $25, noting
> that at == $1 and contains the callers ra. For a 32-bit kernel you can
> add $8, $9, $10, and $11
>
> This whole thing seems a little fragile.
>
> I think it might be a good idea to get input from Richard Sandiford,
> and/or Adam Nemet about this approach (so I add them to the CC).
>
> This e-mail thread starts here:
>
> http://www.linux-mips.org/archives/linux-mips/2009-10/msg00286.html
>
> and here:
>
> http://www.linux-mips.org/archives/linux-mips/2009-10/msg00290.html

I'm not sure that the "search for a save of RA" thing is really a good idea.
The last version of that seemed to be "assume that any register stores
will be in a block that immediately precedes the move into RA", but even
if that's true now, it might not be in future. And as Wu Zhangjin says,
it doesn't cope with long calls, where the target address is loaded
into a temporary register before the call.

FWIW, I'd certainly be happy to make GCC pass an additional parameter
to _mcount. The parameter could give the address of the return slot,
or null for leaf functions. In almost all cases[*], there would be
no overhead, since the move would go in the delay slot of the call.

[*] Meaning when the frame is <=32k. ;) I'm guessing you never
get anywhere near that, and if you did, the scan thing wouldn't
work anyway.

The new behaviour could be controlled by a command-line option,
which would also give linux a cheap way of checking whether the
feature is available.

Richard
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