fe68e68f6a
Because of an ARM1136 erratum (326103), the current v6_early_abort function needs to set the correct FSR[11] value which determines whether the data abort was caused by a read or write. For legacy reasons (bit 10 not handled by software), bit 10 was also cleared masking out imprecise aborts on ARMv6 CPUs. This patch removes the clearing of bit 10 of FSR. Signed-off-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
46 lines
1.2 KiB
ArmAsm
46 lines
1.2 KiB
ArmAsm
#include <linux/linkage.h>
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#include <asm/assembler.h>
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#include "abort-macro.S"
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/*
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* Function: v6_early_abort
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*
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* Params : r2 = address of aborted instruction
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* : r3 = saved SPSR
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*
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* Returns : r0 = address of abort
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* : r1 = FSR, bit 11 = write
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* : r2-r8 = corrupted
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* : r9 = preserved
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* : sp = pointer to registers
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*
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* Purpose : obtain information about current aborted instruction.
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* Note: we read user space. This means we might cause a data
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* abort here if the I-TLB and D-TLB aren't seeing the same
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* picture. Unfortunately, this does happen. We live with it.
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*/
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.align 5
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ENTRY(v6_early_abort)
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#ifdef CONFIG_CPU_32v6K
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clrex
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#else
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sub r1, sp, #4 @ Get unused stack location
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strex r0, r1, [r1] @ Clear the exclusive monitor
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#endif
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mrc p15, 0, r1, c5, c0, 0 @ get FSR
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mrc p15, 0, r0, c6, c0, 0 @ get FAR
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/*
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* Faulty SWP instruction on 1136 doesn't set bit 11 in DFSR (erratum 326103).
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* The test below covers all the write situations, including Java bytecodes
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*/
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bic r1, r1, #1 << 11 @ clear bit 11 of FSR
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tst r3, #PSR_J_BIT @ Java?
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movne pc, lr
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do_thumb_abort
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ldreq r3, [r2] @ read aborted ARM instruction
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do_ldrd_abort
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tst r3, #1 << 20 @ L = 0 -> write
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orreq r1, r1, #1 << 11 @ yes.
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mov pc, lr
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