| ================ |
| Kernel mode NEON |
| ================ |
| |
| TL;DR summary |
| ------------- |
| * Use only NEON instructions, or VFP instructions that don't rely on support |
| code |
| * Isolate your NEON code in a separate compilation unit, and compile it with |
| '-march=armv7-a -mfpu=neon -mfloat-abi=softfp' |
| * Put kernel_neon_begin() and kernel_neon_end() calls around the calls into your |
| NEON code |
| * Don't sleep in your NEON code, and be aware that it will be executed with |
| preemption disabled |
| |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| It is possible to use NEON instructions (and in some cases, VFP instructions) in |
| code that runs in kernel mode. However, for performance reasons, the NEON/VFP |
| register file is not preserved and restored at every context switch or taken |
| exception like the normal register file is, so some manual intervention is |
| required. Furthermore, special care is required for code that may sleep [i.e., |
| may call schedule()], as NEON or VFP instructions will be executed in a |
| non-preemptible section for reasons outlined below. |
| |
| |
| Lazy preserve and restore |
| ------------------------- |
| The NEON/VFP register file is managed using lazy preserve (on UP systems) and |
| lazy restore (on both SMP and UP systems). This means that the register file is |
| kept 'live', and is only preserved and restored when multiple tasks are |
| contending for the NEON/VFP unit (or, in the SMP case, when a task migrates to |
| another core). Lazy restore is implemented by disabling the NEON/VFP unit after |
| every context switch, resulting in a trap when subsequently a NEON/VFP |
| instruction is issued, allowing the kernel to step in and perform the restore if |
| necessary. |
| |
| Any use of the NEON/VFP unit in kernel mode should not interfere with this, so |
| it is required to do an 'eager' preserve of the NEON/VFP register file, and |
| enable the NEON/VFP unit explicitly so no exceptions are generated on first |
| subsequent use. This is handled by the function kernel_neon_begin(), which |
| should be called before any kernel mode NEON or VFP instructions are issued. |
| Likewise, the NEON/VFP unit should be disabled again after use to make sure user |
| mode will hit the lazy restore trap upon next use. This is handled by the |
| function kernel_neon_end(). |
| |
| |
| Interruptions in kernel mode |
| ---------------------------- |
| For reasons of performance and simplicity, it was decided that there shall be no |
| preserve/restore mechanism for the kernel mode NEON/VFP register contents. This |
| implies that interruptions of a kernel mode NEON section can only be allowed if |
| they are guaranteed not to touch the NEON/VFP registers. For this reason, the |
| following rules and restrictions apply in the kernel: |
| * NEON/VFP code is not allowed in interrupt context; |
| * NEON/VFP code is not allowed to sleep; |
| * NEON/VFP code is executed with preemption disabled. |
| |
| If latency is a concern, it is possible to put back to back calls to |
| kernel_neon_end() and kernel_neon_begin() in places in your code where none of |
| the NEON registers are live. (Additional calls to kernel_neon_begin() should be |
| reasonably cheap if no context switch occurred in the meantime) |
| |
| |
| VFP and support code |
| -------------------- |
| Earlier versions of VFP (prior to version 3) rely on software support for things |
| like IEEE-754 compliant underflow handling etc. When the VFP unit needs such |
| software assistance, it signals the kernel by raising an undefined instruction |
| exception. The kernel responds by inspecting the VFP control registers and the |
| current instruction and arguments, and emulates the instruction in software. |
| |
| Such software assistance is currently not implemented for VFP instructions |
| executed in kernel mode. If such a condition is encountered, the kernel will |
| fail and generate an OOPS. |
| |
| |
| Separating NEON code from ordinary code |
| --------------------------------------- |
| The compiler is not aware of the special significance of kernel_neon_begin() and |
| kernel_neon_end(), i.e., that it is only allowed to issue NEON/VFP instructions |
| between calls to these respective functions. Furthermore, GCC may generate NEON |
| instructions of its own at -O3 level if -mfpu=neon is selected, and even if the |
| kernel is currently compiled at -O2, future changes may result in NEON/VFP |
| instructions appearing in unexpected places if no special care is taken. |
| |
| Therefore, the recommended and only supported way of using NEON/VFP in the |
| kernel is by adhering to the following rules: |
| |
| * isolate the NEON code in a separate compilation unit and compile it with |
| '-march=armv7-a -mfpu=neon -mfloat-abi=softfp'; |
| * issue the calls to kernel_neon_begin(), kernel_neon_end() as well as the calls |
| into the unit containing the NEON code from a compilation unit which is *not* |
| built with the GCC flag '-mfpu=neon' set. |
| |
| As the kernel is compiled with '-msoft-float', the above will guarantee that |
| both NEON and VFP instructions will only ever appear in designated compilation |
| units at any optimization level. |
| |
| |
| NEON assembler |
| -------------- |
| NEON assembler is supported with no additional caveats as long as the rules |
| above are followed. |
| |
| |
| NEON code generated by GCC |
| -------------------------- |
| The GCC option -ftree-vectorize (implied by -O3) tries to exploit implicit |
| parallelism, and generates NEON code from ordinary C source code. This is fully |
| supported as long as the rules above are followed. |
| |
| |
| NEON intrinsics |
| --------------- |
| NEON intrinsics are also supported. However, as code using NEON intrinsics |
| relies on the GCC header <arm_neon.h>, (which #includes <stdint.h>), you should |
| observe the following in addition to the rules above: |
| |
| * Compile the unit containing the NEON intrinsics with '-ffreestanding' so GCC |
| uses its builtin version of <stdint.h> (this is a C99 header which the kernel |
| does not supply); |
| * Include <arm_neon.h> last, or at least after <linux/types.h> |