Re: [tip:core/locking] locking, x86: Slightly shorten __ticket_spin_trylock()

From: H. Peter Anvin
Date: Wed Dec 02 2009 - 12:25:07 EST


On 12/02/2009 09:05 AM, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> Btw, even if gcc just treats 'bool' as 'char' (which is the sane thing to
> do on x86 anyway - I don't see why it should ever do anything else), we
> actually mess up in the kernel and make that type confusion even worse.
>

For what it's worth, the gcc ABI for i386-Linux treats _Bool (bool) as
follows:

When in memory, except stack slots:

sizeof(_Bool) = 1
0 is false, 1 is true, any other value is *undefined behavior*.

When in registers, or in a stack slot:

Registers, and stack slots, are always 4 bytes
0 is false, 1 is true, any other value is *undefined behavior*.

All of which is well-defined. However, it also only applies to values
in memory, or values passed across function boundaries in registers[1]
-- anything else is *by definition outside the scope of the ABI* and
therefore the compiler can legitimately do whatever is appropriate at
any point in time.

As such, I would agree with Linus in that using an u8 is the right thing
to be handed through the inline asm boundary -- if the compiler needs to
extend it, it will, and if it doesn't, there is no penalty. Similarly,
a bool can be cast to u8 without penalty.

-hpa

--
H. Peter Anvin, Intel Open Source Technology Center
I work for Intel. I don't speak on their behalf.

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