| /* |
| * arch/xtensa/kernel/vectors.S |
| * |
| * This file contains all exception vectors (user, kernel, and double), |
| * as well as the window vectors (overflow and underflow), and the debug |
| * vector. These are the primary vectors executed by the processor if an |
| * exception occurs. |
| * |
| * This file is subject to the terms and conditions of the GNU General |
| * Public License. See the file "COPYING" in the main directory of |
| * this archive for more details. |
| * |
| * Copyright (C) 2005 - 2008 Tensilica, Inc. |
| * |
| * Chris Zankel <chris@zankel.net> |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * We use a two-level table approach. The user and kernel exception vectors |
| * use a first-level dispatch table to dispatch the exception to a registered |
| * fast handler or the default handler, if no fast handler was registered. |
| * The default handler sets up a C-stack and dispatches the exception to a |
| * registerd C handler in the second-level dispatch table. |
| * |
| * Fast handler entry condition: |
| * |
| * a0: trashed, original value saved on stack (PT_AREG0) |
| * a1: a1 |
| * a2: new stack pointer, original value in depc |
| * a3: dispatch table |
| * depc: a2, original value saved on stack (PT_DEPC) |
| * excsave_1: a3 |
| * |
| * The value for PT_DEPC saved to stack also functions as a boolean to |
| * indicate that the exception is either a double or a regular exception: |
| * |
| * PT_DEPC >= VALID_DOUBLE_EXCEPTION_ADDRESS: double exception |
| * < VALID_DOUBLE_EXCEPTION_ADDRESS: regular exception |
| * |
| * Note: Neither the kernel nor the user exception handler generate literals. |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| #include <linux/linkage.h> |
| #include <linux/pgtable.h> |
| #include <asm/asmmacro.h> |
| #include <asm/ptrace.h> |
| #include <asm/current.h> |
| #include <asm/asm-offsets.h> |
| #include <asm/processor.h> |
| #include <asm/page.h> |
| #include <asm/thread_info.h> |
| #include <asm/vectors.h> |
| |
| #define WINDOW_VECTORS_SIZE 0x180 |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * User exception vector. (Exceptions with PS.UM == 1, PS.EXCM == 0) |
| * |
| * We get here when an exception occurred while we were in userland. |
| * We switch to the kernel stack and jump to the first level handler |
| * associated to the exception cause. |
| * |
| * Note: the saved kernel stack pointer (EXC_TABLE_KSTK) is already |
| * decremented by PT_USER_SIZE. |
| */ |
| |
| .section .UserExceptionVector.text, "ax" |
| |
| ENTRY(_UserExceptionVector) |
| |
| xsr a3, excsave1 # save a3 and get dispatch table |
| wsr a2, depc # save a2 |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_KSTK # load kernel stack to a2 |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_AREG0 # save a0 to ESF |
| rsr a0, exccause # retrieve exception cause |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_DEPC # mark it as a regular exception |
| addx4 a0, a0, a3 # find entry in table |
| l32i a0, a0, EXC_TABLE_FAST_USER # load handler |
| xsr a3, excsave1 # restore a3 and dispatch table |
| jx a0 |
| |
| ENDPROC(_UserExceptionVector) |
| |
| /* |
| * Kernel exception vector. (Exceptions with PS.UM == 0, PS.EXCM == 0) |
| * |
| * We get this exception when we were already in kernel space. |
| * We decrement the current stack pointer (kernel) by PT_SIZE and |
| * jump to the first-level handler associated with the exception cause. |
| * |
| * Note: we need to preserve space for the spill region. |
| */ |
| |
| .section .KernelExceptionVector.text, "ax" |
| |
| ENTRY(_KernelExceptionVector) |
| |
| xsr a3, excsave1 # save a3, and get dispatch table |
| wsr a2, depc # save a2 |
| addi a2, a1, -16-PT_SIZE # adjust stack pointer |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_AREG0 # save a0 to ESF |
| rsr a0, exccause # retrieve exception cause |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_DEPC # mark it as a regular exception |
| addx4 a0, a0, a3 # find entry in table |
| l32i a0, a0, EXC_TABLE_FAST_KERNEL # load handler address |
| xsr a3, excsave1 # restore a3 and dispatch table |
| jx a0 |
| |
| ENDPROC(_KernelExceptionVector) |
| |
| /* |
| * Double exception vector (Exceptions with PS.EXCM == 1) |
| * We get this exception when another exception occurs while were are |
| * already in an exception, such as window overflow/underflow exception, |
| * or 'expected' exceptions, for example memory exception when we were trying |
| * to read data from an invalid address in user space. |
| * |
| * Note that this vector is never invoked for level-1 interrupts, because such |
| * interrupts are disabled (masked) when PS.EXCM is set. |
| * |
| * We decode the exception and take the appropriate action. However, the |
| * double exception vector is much more careful, because a lot more error |
| * cases go through the double exception vector than through the user and |
| * kernel exception vectors. |
| * |
| * Occasionally, the kernel expects a double exception to occur. This usually |
| * happens when accessing user-space memory with the user's permissions |
| * (l32e/s32e instructions). The kernel state, though, is not always suitable |
| * for immediate transfer of control to handle_double, where "normal" exception |
| * processing occurs. Also in kernel mode, TLB misses can occur if accessing |
| * vmalloc memory, possibly requiring repair in a double exception handler. |
| * |
| * The variable at TABLE_FIXUP offset from the pointer in EXCSAVE_1 doubles as |
| * a boolean variable and a pointer to a fixup routine. If the variable |
| * EXC_TABLE_FIXUP is non-zero, this handler jumps to that address. A value of |
| * zero indicates to use the default kernel/user exception handler. |
| * There is only one exception, when the value is identical to the exc_table |
| * label, the kernel is in trouble. This mechanism is used to protect critical |
| * sections, mainly when the handler writes to the stack to assert the stack |
| * pointer is valid. Once the fixup/default handler leaves that area, the |
| * EXC_TABLE_FIXUP variable is reset to the fixup handler or zero. |
| * |
| * Procedures wishing to use this mechanism should set EXC_TABLE_FIXUP to the |
| * nonzero address of a fixup routine before it could cause a double exception |
| * and reset it before it returns. |
| * |
| * Some other things to take care of when a fast exception handler doesn't |
| * specify a particular fixup handler but wants to use the default handlers: |
| * |
| * - The original stack pointer (in a1) must not be modified. The fast |
| * exception handler should only use a2 as the stack pointer. |
| * |
| * - If the fast handler manipulates the stack pointer (in a2), it has to |
| * register a valid fixup handler and cannot use the default handlers. |
| * |
| * - The handler can use any other generic register from a3 to a15, but it |
| * must save the content of these registers to stack (PT_AREG3...PT_AREGx) |
| * |
| * - These registers must be saved before a double exception can occur. |
| * |
| * - If we ever implement handling signals while in double exceptions, the |
| * number of registers a fast handler has saved (excluding a0 and a1) must |
| * be written to PT_AREG1. (1 if only a3 is used, 2 for a3 and a4, etc. ) |
| * |
| * The fixup handlers are special handlers: |
| * |
| * - Fixup entry conditions differ from regular exceptions: |
| * |
| * a0: DEPC |
| * a1: a1 |
| * a2: trashed, original value in EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| * a3: exctable |
| * depc: a0 |
| * excsave_1: a3 |
| * |
| * - When the kernel enters the fixup handler, it still assumes it is in a |
| * critical section, so EXC_TABLE_FIXUP variable is set to exc_table. |
| * The fixup handler, therefore, has to re-register itself as the fixup |
| * handler before it returns from the double exception. |
| * |
| * - Fixup handler can share the same exception frame with the fast handler. |
| * The kernel stack pointer is not changed when entering the fixup handler. |
| * |
| * - Fixup handlers can jump to the default kernel and user exception |
| * handlers. Before it jumps, though, it has to setup a exception frame |
| * on stack. Because the default handler resets the register fixup handler |
| * the fixup handler must make sure that the default handler returns to |
| * it instead of the exception address, so it can re-register itself as |
| * the fixup handler. |
| * |
| * In case of a critical condition where the kernel cannot recover, we jump |
| * to unrecoverable_exception with the following entry conditions. |
| * All registers a0...a15 are unchanged from the last exception, except: |
| * |
| * a0: last address before we jumped to the unrecoverable_exception. |
| * excsave_1: a0 |
| * |
| * |
| * See the handle_alloca_user and spill_registers routines for example clients. |
| * |
| * FIXME: Note: we currently don't allow signal handling coming from a double |
| * exception, so the item markt with (*) is not required. |
| */ |
| |
| .section .DoubleExceptionVector.text, "ax" |
| |
| ENTRY(_DoubleExceptionVector) |
| |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| |
| /* Check for kernel double exception (usually fatal). */ |
| |
| rsr a2, ps |
| _bbsi.l a2, PS_UM_BIT, 1f |
| j .Lksp |
| |
| .align 4 |
| .literal_position |
| 1: |
| /* Check if we are currently handling a window exception. */ |
| /* Note: We don't need to indicate that we enter a critical section. */ |
| |
| xsr a0, depc # get DEPC, save a0 |
| |
| movi a2, WINDOW_VECTORS_VADDR |
| _bltu a0, a2, .Lfixup |
| addi a2, a2, WINDOW_VECTORS_SIZE |
| _bgeu a0, a2, .Lfixup |
| |
| /* Window overflow/underflow exception. Get stack pointer. */ |
| |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_KSTK |
| |
| /* Check for overflow/underflow exception, jump if overflow. */ |
| |
| bbci.l a0, 6, _DoubleExceptionVector_WindowOverflow |
| |
| /* |
| * Restart window underflow exception. |
| * Currently: |
| * depc = orig a0, |
| * a0 = orig DEPC, |
| * a2 = new sp based on KSTK from exc_table |
| * a3 = excsave_1 |
| * excsave_1 = orig a3 |
| * |
| * We return to the instruction in user space that caused the window |
| * underflow exception. Therefore, we change window base to the value |
| * before we entered the window underflow exception and prepare the |
| * registers to return as if we were coming from a regular exception |
| * by changing depc (in a0). |
| * Note: We can trash the current window frame (a0...a3) and depc! |
| */ |
| _DoubleExceptionVector_WindowUnderflow: |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| wsr a2, depc # save stack pointer temporarily |
| rsr a0, ps |
| extui a0, a0, PS_OWB_SHIFT, PS_OWB_WIDTH |
| wsr a0, windowbase |
| rsync |
| |
| /* We are now in the previous window frame. Save registers again. */ |
| |
| xsr a2, depc # save a2 and get stack pointer |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_AREG0 |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| rsr a0, exccause |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_DEPC # mark it as a regular exception |
| addx4 a0, a0, a3 |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| l32i a0, a0, EXC_TABLE_FAST_USER |
| jx a0 |
| |
| /* |
| * We only allow the ITLB miss exception if we are in kernel space. |
| * All other exceptions are unexpected and thus unrecoverable! |
| */ |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_MMU |
| .extern fast_second_level_miss_double_kernel |
| |
| .Lksp: /* a0: a0, a1: a1, a2: a2, a3: trashed, depc: depc, excsave: a3 */ |
| |
| rsr a3, exccause |
| beqi a3, EXCCAUSE_ITLB_MISS, 1f |
| addi a3, a3, -EXCCAUSE_DTLB_MISS |
| bnez a3, .Lunrecoverable |
| 1: movi a3, fast_second_level_miss_double_kernel |
| jx a3 |
| #else |
| .equ .Lksp, .Lunrecoverable |
| #endif |
| |
| /* Critical! We can't handle this situation. PANIC! */ |
| |
| .extern unrecoverable_exception |
| |
| .Lunrecoverable_fixup: |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a0, depc |
| |
| .Lunrecoverable: |
| rsr a3, excsave1 |
| wsr a0, excsave1 |
| call0 unrecoverable_exception |
| |
| .Lfixup:/* Check for a fixup handler or if we were in a critical section. */ |
| |
| /* a0: depc, a1: a1, a2: trash, a3: exctable, depc: a0, excsave1: a3 */ |
| |
| /* Enter critical section. */ |
| |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_FIXUP |
| s32i a3, a3, EXC_TABLE_FIXUP |
| beq a2, a3, .Lunrecoverable_fixup # critical section |
| beqz a2, .Ldflt # no handler was registered |
| |
| /* a0: depc, a1: a1, a2: trash, a3: exctable, depc: a0, excsave: a3 */ |
| |
| jx a2 |
| |
| .Ldflt: /* Get stack pointer. */ |
| |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| addi a2, a2, -PT_USER_SIZE |
| |
| /* a0: depc, a1: a1, a2: kstk, a3: exctable, depc: a0, excsave: a3 */ |
| |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_DEPC |
| l32i a0, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a0, depc |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_AREG0 |
| |
| /* a0: avail, a1: a1, a2: kstk, a3: exctable, depc: a2, excsave: a3 */ |
| |
| rsr a0, exccause |
| addx4 a0, a0, a3 |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| l32i a0, a0, EXC_TABLE_FAST_USER |
| jx a0 |
| |
| /* |
| * Restart window OVERFLOW exception. |
| * Currently: |
| * depc = orig a0, |
| * a0 = orig DEPC, |
| * a2 = new sp based on KSTK from exc_table |
| * a3 = EXCSAVE_1 |
| * excsave_1 = orig a3 |
| * |
| * We return to the instruction in user space that caused the window |
| * overflow exception. Therefore, we change window base to the value |
| * before we entered the window overflow exception and prepare the |
| * registers to return as if we were coming from a regular exception |
| * by changing DEPC (in a0). |
| * |
| * NOTE: We CANNOT trash the current window frame (a0...a3), but we |
| * can clobber depc. |
| * |
| * The tricky part here is that overflow8 and overflow12 handlers |
| * save a0, then clobber a0. To restart the handler, we have to restore |
| * a0 if the double exception was past the point where a0 was clobbered. |
| * |
| * To keep things simple, we take advantage of the fact all overflow |
| * handlers save a0 in their very first instruction. If DEPC was past |
| * that instruction, we can safely restore a0 from where it was saved |
| * on the stack. |
| * |
| * a0: depc, a1: a1, a2: kstk, a3: exc_table, depc: a0, excsave1: a3 |
| */ |
| _DoubleExceptionVector_WindowOverflow: |
| extui a2, a0, 0, 6 # get offset into 64-byte vector handler |
| beqz a2, 1f # if at start of vector, don't restore |
| |
| addi a0, a0, -128 |
| bbsi.l a0, 8, 1f # don't restore except for overflow 8 and 12 |
| |
| /* |
| * This fixup handler is for the extremely unlikely case where the |
| * overflow handler's reference thru a0 gets a hardware TLB refill |
| * that bumps out the (distinct, aliasing) TLB entry that mapped its |
| * prior references thru a9/a13, and where our reference now thru |
| * a9/a13 gets a 2nd-level miss exception (not hardware TLB refill). |
| */ |
| movi a2, window_overflow_restore_a0_fixup |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_FIXUP |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| |
| bbsi.l a0, 7, 2f |
| |
| /* |
| * Restore a0 as saved by _WindowOverflow8(). |
| */ |
| |
| l32e a0, a9, -16 |
| wsr a0, depc # replace the saved a0 |
| j 3f |
| |
| 2: |
| /* |
| * Restore a0 as saved by _WindowOverflow12(). |
| */ |
| |
| l32e a0, a13, -16 |
| wsr a0, depc # replace the saved a0 |
| 3: |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| movi a0, 0 |
| s32i a0, a3, EXC_TABLE_FIXUP |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| 1: |
| /* |
| * Restore WindowBase while leaving all address registers restored. |
| * We have to use ROTW for this, because WSR.WINDOWBASE requires |
| * an address register (which would prevent restore). |
| * |
| * Window Base goes from 0 ... 7 (Module 8) |
| * Window Start is 8 bits; Ex: (0b1010 1010):0x55 from series of call4s |
| */ |
| |
| rsr a0, ps |
| extui a0, a0, PS_OWB_SHIFT, PS_OWB_WIDTH |
| rsr a2, windowbase |
| sub a0, a2, a0 |
| extui a0, a0, 0, 3 |
| |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| beqi a0, 1, .L1pane |
| beqi a0, 3, .L3pane |
| |
| rsr a0, depc |
| rotw -2 |
| |
| /* |
| * We are now in the user code's original window frame. |
| * Process the exception as a user exception as if it was |
| * taken by the user code. |
| * |
| * This is similar to the user exception vector, |
| * except that PT_DEPC isn't set to EXCCAUSE. |
| */ |
| 1: |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| wsr a2, depc |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_KSTK |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_AREG0 |
| rsr a0, exccause |
| |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_DEPC |
| |
| _DoubleExceptionVector_handle_exception: |
| addi a0, a0, -EXCCAUSE_UNALIGNED |
| beqz a0, 2f |
| addx4 a0, a0, a3 |
| l32i a0, a0, EXC_TABLE_FAST_USER + 4 * EXCCAUSE_UNALIGNED |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| jx a0 |
| 2: |
| movi a0, user_exception |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| jx a0 |
| |
| .L1pane: |
| rsr a0, depc |
| rotw -1 |
| j 1b |
| |
| .L3pane: |
| rsr a0, depc |
| rotw -3 |
| j 1b |
| |
| ENDPROC(_DoubleExceptionVector) |
| |
| /* |
| * Fixup handler for TLB miss in double exception handler for window owerflow. |
| * We get here with windowbase set to the window that was being spilled and |
| * a0 trashed. a0 bit 7 determines if this is a call8 (bit clear) or call12 |
| * (bit set) window. |
| * |
| * We do the following here: |
| * - go to the original window retaining a0 value; |
| * - set up exception stack to return back to appropriate a0 restore code |
| * (we'll need to rotate window back and there's no place to save this |
| * information, use different return address for that); |
| * - handle the exception; |
| * - go to the window that was being spilled; |
| * - set up window_overflow_restore_a0_fixup as a fixup routine; |
| * - reload a0; |
| * - restore the original window; |
| * - reset the default fixup routine; |
| * - return to user. By the time we get to this fixup handler all information |
| * about the conditions of the original double exception that happened in |
| * the window overflow handler is lost, so we just return to userspace to |
| * retry overflow from start. |
| * |
| * a0: value of depc, original value in depc |
| * a2: trashed, original value in EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| * a3: exctable, original value in excsave1 |
| */ |
| |
| __XTENSA_HANDLER |
| .literal_position |
| |
| ENTRY(window_overflow_restore_a0_fixup) |
| |
| rsr a0, ps |
| extui a0, a0, PS_OWB_SHIFT, PS_OWB_WIDTH |
| rsr a2, windowbase |
| sub a0, a2, a0 |
| extui a0, a0, 0, 3 |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| |
| _beqi a0, 1, .Lhandle_1 |
| _beqi a0, 3, .Lhandle_3 |
| |
| .macro overflow_fixup_handle_exception_pane n |
| |
| rsr a0, depc |
| rotw -\n |
| |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| wsr a2, depc |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_KSTK |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_AREG0 |
| |
| movi a0, .Lrestore_\n |
| s32i a0, a2, PT_DEPC |
| rsr a0, exccause |
| j _DoubleExceptionVector_handle_exception |
| |
| .endm |
| |
| overflow_fixup_handle_exception_pane 2 |
| .Lhandle_1: |
| overflow_fixup_handle_exception_pane 1 |
| .Lhandle_3: |
| overflow_fixup_handle_exception_pane 3 |
| |
| .macro overflow_fixup_restore_a0_pane n |
| |
| rotw \n |
| /* Need to preserve a0 value here to be able to handle exception |
| * that may occur on a0 reload from stack. It may occur because |
| * TLB miss handler may not be atomic and pointer to page table |
| * may be lost before we get here. There are no free registers, |
| * so we need to use EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE area. |
| */ |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| movi a2, window_overflow_restore_a0_fixup |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_FIXUP |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| bbsi.l a0, 7, 1f |
| l32e a0, a9, -16 |
| j 2f |
| 1: |
| l32e a0, a13, -16 |
| 2: |
| rotw -\n |
| |
| .endm |
| |
| .Lrestore_2: |
| overflow_fixup_restore_a0_pane 2 |
| |
| .Lset_default_fixup: |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| movi a2, 0 |
| s32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_FIXUP |
| l32i a2, a3, EXC_TABLE_DOUBLE_SAVE |
| xsr a3, excsave1 |
| rfe |
| |
| .Lrestore_1: |
| overflow_fixup_restore_a0_pane 1 |
| j .Lset_default_fixup |
| .Lrestore_3: |
| overflow_fixup_restore_a0_pane 3 |
| j .Lset_default_fixup |
| |
| ENDPROC(window_overflow_restore_a0_fixup) |
| |
| /* |
| * Debug interrupt vector |
| * |
| * There is not much space here, so simply jump to another handler. |
| * EXCSAVE[DEBUGLEVEL] has been set to that handler. |
| */ |
| |
| .section .DebugInterruptVector.text, "ax" |
| |
| ENTRY(_DebugInterruptVector) |
| |
| xsr a3, SREG_EXCSAVE + XCHAL_DEBUGLEVEL |
| s32i a0, a3, DT_DEBUG_SAVE |
| l32i a0, a3, DT_DEBUG_EXCEPTION |
| jx a0 |
| |
| ENDPROC(_DebugInterruptVector) |
| |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Medium priority level interrupt vectors |
| * |
| * Each takes less than 16 (0x10) bytes, no literals, by placing |
| * the extra 8 bytes that would otherwise be required in the window |
| * vectors area where there is space. With relocatable vectors, |
| * all vectors are within ~ 4 kB range of each other, so we can |
| * simply jump (J) to another vector without having to use JX. |
| * |
| * common_exception code gets current IRQ level in PS.INTLEVEL |
| * and preserves it for the IRQ handling time. |
| */ |
| |
| .macro irq_entry_level level |
| |
| .if XCHAL_EXCM_LEVEL >= \level |
| .section .Level\level\()InterruptVector.text, "ax" |
| ENTRY(_Level\level\()InterruptVector) |
| wsr a0, excsave2 |
| rsr a0, epc\level |
| wsr a0, epc1 |
| .if \level <= LOCKLEVEL |
| movi a0, EXCCAUSE_LEVEL1_INTERRUPT |
| .else |
| movi a0, EXCCAUSE_MAPPED_NMI |
| .endif |
| wsr a0, exccause |
| rsr a0, eps\level |
| # branch to user or kernel vector |
| j _SimulateUserKernelVectorException |
| .endif |
| |
| .endm |
| |
| irq_entry_level 2 |
| irq_entry_level 3 |
| irq_entry_level 4 |
| irq_entry_level 5 |
| irq_entry_level 6 |
| |
| |
| /* Window overflow and underflow handlers. |
| * The handlers must be 64 bytes apart, first starting with the underflow |
| * handlers underflow-4 to underflow-12, then the overflow handlers |
| * overflow-4 to overflow-12. |
| * |
| * Note: We rerun the underflow handlers if we hit an exception, so |
| * we try to access any page that would cause a page fault early. |
| */ |
| |
| #define ENTRY_ALIGN64(name) \ |
| .globl name; \ |
| .align 64; \ |
| name: |
| |
| .section .WindowVectors.text, "ax" |
| |
| |
| /* 4-Register Window Overflow Vector (Handler) */ |
| |
| ENTRY_ALIGN64(_WindowOverflow4) |
| |
| s32e a0, a5, -16 |
| s32e a1, a5, -12 |
| s32e a2, a5, -8 |
| s32e a3, a5, -4 |
| rfwo |
| |
| ENDPROC(_WindowOverflow4) |
| |
| |
| #if XCHAL_EXCM_LEVEL >= 2 |
| /* Not a window vector - but a convenient location |
| * (where we know there's space) for continuation of |
| * medium priority interrupt dispatch code. |
| * On entry here, a0 contains PS, and EPC2 contains saved a0: |
| */ |
| .align 4 |
| _SimulateUserKernelVectorException: |
| addi a0, a0, (1 << PS_EXCM_BIT) |
| #if !XTENSA_FAKE_NMI |
| wsr a0, ps |
| #endif |
| bbsi.l a0, PS_UM_BIT, 1f # branch if user mode |
| xsr a0, excsave2 # restore a0 |
| j _KernelExceptionVector # simulate kernel vector exception |
| 1: xsr a0, excsave2 # restore a0 |
| j _UserExceptionVector # simulate user vector exception |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| /* 4-Register Window Underflow Vector (Handler) */ |
| |
| ENTRY_ALIGN64(_WindowUnderflow4) |
| |
| l32e a0, a5, -16 |
| l32e a1, a5, -12 |
| l32e a2, a5, -8 |
| l32e a3, a5, -4 |
| rfwu |
| |
| ENDPROC(_WindowUnderflow4) |
| |
| /* 8-Register Window Overflow Vector (Handler) */ |
| |
| ENTRY_ALIGN64(_WindowOverflow8) |
| |
| s32e a0, a9, -16 |
| l32e a0, a1, -12 |
| s32e a2, a9, -8 |
| s32e a1, a9, -12 |
| s32e a3, a9, -4 |
| s32e a4, a0, -32 |
| s32e a5, a0, -28 |
| s32e a6, a0, -24 |
| s32e a7, a0, -20 |
| rfwo |
| |
| ENDPROC(_WindowOverflow8) |
| |
| /* 8-Register Window Underflow Vector (Handler) */ |
| |
| ENTRY_ALIGN64(_WindowUnderflow8) |
| |
| l32e a1, a9, -12 |
| l32e a0, a9, -16 |
| l32e a7, a1, -12 |
| l32e a2, a9, -8 |
| l32e a4, a7, -32 |
| l32e a3, a9, -4 |
| l32e a5, a7, -28 |
| l32e a6, a7, -24 |
| l32e a7, a7, -20 |
| rfwu |
| |
| ENDPROC(_WindowUnderflow8) |
| |
| /* 12-Register Window Overflow Vector (Handler) */ |
| |
| ENTRY_ALIGN64(_WindowOverflow12) |
| |
| s32e a0, a13, -16 |
| l32e a0, a1, -12 |
| s32e a1, a13, -12 |
| s32e a2, a13, -8 |
| s32e a3, a13, -4 |
| s32e a4, a0, -48 |
| s32e a5, a0, -44 |
| s32e a6, a0, -40 |
| s32e a7, a0, -36 |
| s32e a8, a0, -32 |
| s32e a9, a0, -28 |
| s32e a10, a0, -24 |
| s32e a11, a0, -20 |
| rfwo |
| |
| ENDPROC(_WindowOverflow12) |
| |
| /* 12-Register Window Underflow Vector (Handler) */ |
| |
| ENTRY_ALIGN64(_WindowUnderflow12) |
| |
| l32e a1, a13, -12 |
| l32e a0, a13, -16 |
| l32e a11, a1, -12 |
| l32e a2, a13, -8 |
| l32e a4, a11, -48 |
| l32e a8, a11, -32 |
| l32e a3, a13, -4 |
| l32e a5, a11, -44 |
| l32e a6, a11, -40 |
| l32e a7, a11, -36 |
| l32e a9, a11, -28 |
| l32e a10, a11, -24 |
| l32e a11, a11, -20 |
| rfwu |
| |
| ENDPROC(_WindowUnderflow12) |
| |
| .text |