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1Assembler Annotations
2=====================
3
4Copyright (c) 2017-2019 Jiri Slaby
5
6This document describes the new macros for annotation of data and code in
7assembly. In particular, it contains information about ``SYM_FUNC_START``,
8``SYM_FUNC_END``, ``SYM_CODE_START``, and similar.
9
10Rationale
11---------
12Some code like entries, trampolines, or boot code needs to be written in
13assembly. The same as in C, such code is grouped into functions and
14accompanied with data. Standard assemblers do not force users into precisely
15marking these pieces as code, data, or even specifying their length.
16Nevertheless, assemblers provide developers with such annotations to aid
17debuggers throughout assembly. On top of that, developers also want to mark
18some functions as *global* in order to be visible outside of their translation
19units.
20
21Over time, the Linux kernel has adopted macros from various projects (like
22``binutils``) to facilitate such annotations. So for historic reasons,
23developers have been using ``ENTRY``, ``END``, ``ENDPROC``, and other
24annotations in assembly. Due to the lack of their documentation, the macros
25are used in rather wrong contexts at some locations. Clearly, ``ENTRY`` was
26intended to denote the beginning of global symbols (be it data or code).
27``END`` used to mark the end of data or end of special functions with
28*non-standard* calling convention. In contrast, ``ENDPROC`` should annotate
29only ends of *standard* functions.
30
31When these macros are used correctly, they help assemblers generate a nice
32object with both sizes and types set correctly. For example, the result of
33``arch/x86/lib/putuser.S``::
34
35 Num: Value Size Type Bind Vis Ndx Name
36 25: 0000000000000000 33 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 __put_user_1
37 29: 0000000000000030 37 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 __put_user_2
38 32: 0000000000000060 36 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 __put_user_4
39 35: 0000000000000090 37 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 1 __put_user_8
40
41This is not only important for debugging purposes. When there are properly
42annotated objects like this, tools can be run on them to generate more useful
43information. In particular, on properly annotated objects, ``objtool`` can be
44run to check and fix the object if needed. Currently, ``objtool`` can report
45missing frame pointer setup/destruction in functions. It can also
46automatically generate annotations for :doc:`ORC unwinder <x86/orc-unwinder>`
47for most code. Both of these are especially important to support reliable
48stack traces which are in turn necessary for :doc:`Kernel live patching
49<livepatch/livepatch>`.
50
51Caveat and Discussion
52---------------------
53As one might realize, there were only three macros previously. That is indeed
54insufficient to cover all the combinations of cases:
55
56* standard/non-standard function
57* code/data
58* global/local symbol
59
60There was a discussion_ and instead of extending the current ``ENTRY/END*``
61macros, it was decided that brand new macros should be introduced instead::
62
63 So how about using macro names that actually show the purpose, instead
64 of importing all the crappy, historic, essentially randomly chosen
65 debug symbol macro names from the binutils and older kernels?
66
67.. _discussion: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20170217104757.28588-1-jslaby@suse.cz
68
69Macros Description
70------------------
71
72The new macros are prefixed with the ``SYM_`` prefix and can be divided into
73three main groups:
74
751. ``SYM_FUNC_*`` -- to annotate C-like functions. This means functions with
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76 standard C calling conventions. For example, on x86, this means that the
77 stack contains a return address at the predefined place and a return from
78 the function can happen in a standard way. When frame pointers are enabled,
79 save/restore of frame pointer shall happen at the start/end of a function,
80 respectively, too.
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81
82 Checking tools like ``objtool`` should ensure such marked functions conform
83 to these rules. The tools can also easily annotate these functions with
84 debugging information (like *ORC data*) automatically.
85
862. ``SYM_CODE_*`` -- special functions called with special stack. Be it
87 interrupt handlers with special stack content, trampolines, or startup
88 functions.
89
90 Checking tools mostly ignore checking of these functions. But some debug
91 information still can be generated automatically. For correct debug data,
92 this code needs hints like ``UNWIND_HINT_REGS`` provided by developers.
93
943. ``SYM_DATA*`` -- obviously data belonging to ``.data`` sections and not to
95 ``.text``. Data do not contain instructions, so they have to be treated
96 specially by the tools: they should not treat the bytes as instructions,
97 nor assign any debug information to them.
98
99Instruction Macros
100~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
101This section covers ``SYM_FUNC_*`` and ``SYM_CODE_*`` enumerated above.
102
103* ``SYM_FUNC_START`` and ``SYM_FUNC_START_LOCAL`` are supposed to be **the
104 most frequent markings**. They are used for functions with standard calling
105 conventions -- global and local. Like in C, they both align the functions to
106 architecture specific ``__ALIGN`` bytes. There are also ``_NOALIGN`` variants
107 for special cases where developers do not want this implicit alignment.
108
109 ``SYM_FUNC_START_WEAK`` and ``SYM_FUNC_START_WEAK_NOALIGN`` markings are
110 also offered as an assembler counterpart to the *weak* attribute known from
111 C.
112
113 All of these **shall** be coupled with ``SYM_FUNC_END``. First, it marks
114 the sequence of instructions as a function and computes its size to the
115 generated object file. Second, it also eases checking and processing such
116 object files as the tools can trivially find exact function boundaries.
117
118 So in most cases, developers should write something like in the following
119 example, having some asm instructions in between the macros, of course::
120
0f42c1ad 121 SYM_FUNC_START(memset)
ffedeeb7 122 ... asm insns ...
0f42c1ad 123 SYM_FUNC_END(memset)
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124
125 In fact, this kind of annotation corresponds to the now deprecated ``ENTRY``
126 and ``ENDPROC`` macros.
127
128* ``SYM_FUNC_START_ALIAS`` and ``SYM_FUNC_START_LOCAL_ALIAS`` serve for those
129 who decided to have two or more names for one function. The typical use is::
130
131 SYM_FUNC_START_ALIAS(__memset)
132 SYM_FUNC_START(memset)
133 ... asm insns ...
134 SYM_FUNC_END(memset)
135 SYM_FUNC_END_ALIAS(__memset)
136
137 In this example, one can call ``__memset`` or ``memset`` with the same
138 result, except the debug information for the instructions is generated to
139 the object file only once -- for the non-``ALIAS`` case.
140
141* ``SYM_CODE_START`` and ``SYM_CODE_START_LOCAL`` should be used only in
142 special cases -- if you know what you are doing. This is used exclusively
143 for interrupt handlers and similar where the calling convention is not the C
144 one. ``_NOALIGN`` variants exist too. The use is the same as for the ``FUNC``
145 category above::
146
147 SYM_CODE_START_LOCAL(bad_put_user)
148 ... asm insns ...
149 SYM_CODE_END(bad_put_user)
150
151 Again, every ``SYM_CODE_START*`` **shall** be coupled by ``SYM_CODE_END``.
152
153 To some extent, this category corresponds to deprecated ``ENTRY`` and
154 ``END``. Except ``END`` had several other meanings too.
155
156* ``SYM_INNER_LABEL*`` is used to denote a label inside some
157 ``SYM_{CODE,FUNC}_START`` and ``SYM_{CODE,FUNC}_END``. They are very similar
158 to C labels, except they can be made global. An example of use::
159
160 SYM_CODE_START(ftrace_caller)
161 /* save_mcount_regs fills in first two parameters */
162 ...
163
164 SYM_INNER_LABEL(ftrace_caller_op_ptr, SYM_L_GLOBAL)
165 /* Load the ftrace_ops into the 3rd parameter */
166 ...
167
168 SYM_INNER_LABEL(ftrace_call, SYM_L_GLOBAL)
169 call ftrace_stub
170 ...
171 retq
172 SYM_CODE_END(ftrace_caller)
173
174Data Macros
175~~~~~~~~~~~
176Similar to instructions, there is a couple of macros to describe data in the
177assembly.
178
179* ``SYM_DATA_START`` and ``SYM_DATA_START_LOCAL`` mark the start of some data
180 and shall be used in conjunction with either ``SYM_DATA_END``, or
181 ``SYM_DATA_END_LABEL``. The latter adds also a label to the end, so that
182 people can use ``lstack`` and (local) ``lstack_end`` in the following
183 example::
184
185 SYM_DATA_START_LOCAL(lstack)
186 .skip 4096
187 SYM_DATA_END_LABEL(lstack, SYM_L_LOCAL, lstack_end)
188
189* ``SYM_DATA`` and ``SYM_DATA_LOCAL`` are variants for simple, mostly one-line
190 data::
191
192 SYM_DATA(HEAP, .long rm_heap)
193 SYM_DATA(heap_end, .long rm_stack)
194
195 In the end, they expand to ``SYM_DATA_START`` with ``SYM_DATA_END``
196 internally.
197
198Support Macros
199~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
200All the above reduce themselves to some invocation of ``SYM_START``,
201``SYM_END``, or ``SYM_ENTRY`` at last. Normally, developers should avoid using
202these.
203
204Further, in the above examples, one could see ``SYM_L_LOCAL``. There are also
205``SYM_L_GLOBAL`` and ``SYM_L_WEAK``. All are intended to denote linkage of a
206symbol marked by them. They are used either in ``_LABEL`` variants of the
207earlier macros, or in ``SYM_START``.
208
209
210Overriding Macros
211~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
212Architecture can also override any of the macros in their own
213``asm/linkage.h``, including macros specifying the type of a symbol
214(``SYM_T_FUNC``, ``SYM_T_OBJECT``, and ``SYM_T_NONE``). As every macro
215described in this file is surrounded by ``#ifdef`` + ``#endif``, it is enough
216to define the macros differently in the aforementioned architecture-dependent
217header.