/* * Simple interface for 128-bit atomic operations. * * Copyright (C) 2018 Linaro, Ltd. * * This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later. * See the COPYING file in the top-level directory. * * See docs/devel/atomics.rst for discussion about the guarantees each * atomic primitive is meant to provide. */ #ifndef QEMU_ATOMIC128_H #define QEMU_ATOMIC128_H #include "qemu/int128.h" /* * If __alignof(unsigned __int128) < 16, GCC may refuse to inline atomics * that are supported by the host, e.g. s390x. We can force the pointer to * have our known alignment with __builtin_assume_aligned, however prior to * GCC 13 that was only reliable with optimization enabled. See * https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=107389 */ #if defined(CONFIG_ATOMIC128_OPT) # if !defined(__OPTIMIZE__) # define ATTRIBUTE_ATOMIC128_OPT __attribute__((optimize("O1"))) # endif # define CONFIG_ATOMIC128 #endif #ifndef ATTRIBUTE_ATOMIC128_OPT # define ATTRIBUTE_ATOMIC128_OPT #endif /* * GCC is a house divided about supporting large atomic operations. * * For hosts that only have large compare-and-swap, a legalistic reading * of the C++ standard means that one cannot implement __atomic_read on * read-only memory, and thus all atomic operations must synchronize * through libatomic. * * See https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=80878 * * This interpretation is not especially helpful for QEMU. * For system-mode, all RAM is always read/write from the hypervisor. * For user-mode, if the guest doesn't implement such an __atomic_read * then the host need not worry about it either. * * Moreover, using libatomic is not an option, because its interface is * built for std::atomic, and requires that *all* accesses to such an * object go through the library. In our case we do not have an object * in the C/C++ sense, but a view of memory as seen by the guest. * The guest may issue a large atomic operation and then access those * pieces using word-sized accesses. From the hypervisor, we have no * way to connect those two actions. * * Therefore, special case each platform. */ #include "host/atomic128-cas.h" #include "host/atomic128-ldst.h" #endif /* QEMU_ATOMIC128_H */