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Re: [PATCH 1/5] fallocate() implementation in i86, x86_64 and powerpc

To: "Paul Mackerras" <paulus@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 1/5] fallocate() implementation in i86, x86_64 and powerpc
From: "Martin Schwidefsky" <schwidefsky@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 9 May 2007 14:00:19 +0200
Cc: suparna@xxxxxxxxxx, "Andrew Morton" <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Amit K. Arora" <aarora@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-fsdevel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-ext4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx, cmm@xxxxxxxxxx
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On 5/9/07, Paul Mackerras <paulus@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Suparna Bhattacharya writes:

> > Of course the interface used by an application program would have the
> > fd first.  Glibc can do the translation.
>
> I think that was understood.

OK, then what does it matter what the glibc/kernel interface is, as
long as it works?

It's only a minor point; the order of arguments can vary between
architectures if necessary, but it's nicer if they don't have to.
32-bit powerpc will need to have the two int arguments adjacent in
order to avoid using more than 6 argument registers at the user/kernel
boundary, and s390 will need to avoid having a 64-bit argument last
(if I understand it correctly).

Ah, almost but not quite the point. But I admit it is hard to understand.. The trouble started with the futex call which has been the first system call with 6 arguments. s390 supported only 5 arguments up to that point (%r2 - %r6). For futex we added a wrapper to the glibc that loaded the 6th argument to %r7. In entry.S we set up things so that %r7 gets stored to the kernel stack where normal C code expects the first overflow argument. This enabled us to use the standard futex system call with 6 arguments. fallocate now has an additional problem: the last argument is a 64 bit integers AND registers %r2-%r5 are already used. In this case the 64 bit number would have to be split into the high part in %r6 and the low part on the stack so that the glibc wrapper can load the low part to %r7. But the C compiler will skip %r6 and store the 64 bit number on the stack. If the order of the arguments if modified so that %r6 is assigned to a 32-bit argument, then the entry.S magic with %r7 would work.

--
blue skies,
 Martin


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