cosmopolitan/libc/intrin/aarch64/memchr.S

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/*-*- mode:unix-assembly; indent-tabs-mode:t; tab-width:8; coding:utf-8 -*-│
vi: set noet ft=asm ts=8 sw=8 fenc=utf-8 :vi
Optimized Routines
Copyright (c) 2018-2024, Arm Limited.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#include "libc/intrin/aarch64/asmdefs.h"
Release Cosmopolitan v3.3 This change upgrades to GCC 12.3 and GNU binutils 2.42. The GNU linker appears to have changed things so that only a single de-duplicated str table is present in the binary, and it gets placed wherever the linker wants, regardless of what the linker script says. To cope with that we need to stop using .ident to embed licenses. As such, this change does significant work to revamp how third party licenses are defined in the codebase, using `.section .notice,"aR",@progbits`. This new GCC 12.3 toolchain has support for GNU indirect functions. It lets us support __target_clones__ for the first time. This is used for optimizing the performance of libc string functions such as strlen and friends so far on x86, by ensuring AVX systems favor a second codepath that uses VEX encoding. It shaves some latency off certain operations. It's a useful feature to have for scientific computing for the reasons explained by the test/libcxx/openmp_test.cc example which compiles for fifteen different microarchitectures. Thanks to the upgrades, it's now also possible to use newer instruction sets, such as AVX512FP16, VNNI. Cosmo now uses the %gs register on x86 by default for TLS. Doing it is helpful for any program that links `cosmo_dlopen()`. Such programs had to recompile their binaries at startup to change the TLS instructions. That's not great, since it means every page in the executable needs to be faulted. The work of rewriting TLS-related x86 opcodes, is moved to fixupobj.com instead. This is great news for MacOS x86 users, since we previously needed to morph the binary every time for that platform but now that's no longer necessary. The only platforms where we need fixup of TLS x86 opcodes at runtime are now Windows, OpenBSD, and NetBSD. On Windows we morph TLS to point deeper into the TIB, based on a TlsAlloc assignment, and on OpenBSD/NetBSD we morph %gs back into %fs since the kernels do not allow us to specify a value for the %gs register. OpenBSD users are now required to use APE Loader to run Cosmo binaries and assimilation is no longer possible. OpenBSD kernel needs to change to allow programs to specify a value for the %gs register, or it needs to stop marking executable pages loaded by the kernel as mimmutable(). This release fixes __constructor__, .ctor, .init_array, and lastly the .preinit_array so they behave the exact same way as glibc. We no longer use hex constants to define math.h symbols like M_PI.
2024-02-20 19:12:09 +00:00
.yoink arm_optimized_routines_notice
#define __memchr_aarch64 memchr
/* Assumptions:
*
* ARMv8-a, AArch64
* Neon Available.
*/
/* Arguments and results. */
#define srcin x0
#define chrin w1
#define cntin x2
#define result x0
#define src x3
#define tmp x4
#define wtmp2 w5
#define synd x6
#define soff x9
#define cntrem x10
#define vrepchr v0
#define vdata1 v1
#define vdata2 v2
#define vhas_chr1 v3
#define vhas_chr2 v4
#define vrepmask v5
#define vend v6
/*
* Core algorithm:
*
* For each 32-byte chunk we calculate a 64-bit syndrome value, with two bits
* per byte. For each tuple, bit 0 is set if the relevant byte matched the
* requested character and bit 1 is not used (faster than using a 32bit
* syndrome). Since the bits in the syndrome reflect exactly the order in which
* things occur in the original string, counting trailing zeros allows to
* identify exactly which byte has matched.
*/
ENTRY (__memchr_aarch64)
PTR_ARG (0)
SIZE_ARG (2)
/* Do not dereference srcin if no bytes to compare. */
cbz cntin, L(zero_length)
/*
* Magic constant 0x40100401 allows us to identify which lane matches
* the requested byte.
*/
mov wtmp2, #0x0401
movk wtmp2, #0x4010, lsl #16
dup vrepchr.16b, chrin
/* Work with aligned 32-byte chunks */
bic src, srcin, #31
dup vrepmask.4s, wtmp2
ands soff, srcin, #31
and cntrem, cntin, #31
b.eq L(loop)
/*
* Input string is not 32-byte aligned. We calculate the syndrome
* value for the aligned 32 bytes block containing the first bytes
* and mask the irrelevant part.
*/
ld1 {vdata1.16b, vdata2.16b}, [src], #32
sub tmp, soff, #32
adds cntin, cntin, tmp
cmeq vhas_chr1.16b, vdata1.16b, vrepchr.16b
cmeq vhas_chr2.16b, vdata2.16b, vrepchr.16b
and vhas_chr1.16b, vhas_chr1.16b, vrepmask.16b
and vhas_chr2.16b, vhas_chr2.16b, vrepmask.16b
addp vend.16b, vhas_chr1.16b, vhas_chr2.16b /* 256->128 */
addp vend.16b, vend.16b, vend.16b /* 128->64 */
mov synd, vend.d[0]
/* Clear the soff*2 lower bits */
lsl tmp, soff, #1
lsr synd, synd, tmp
lsl synd, synd, tmp
/* The first block can also be the last */
b.ls L(masklast)
/* Have we found something already? */
cbnz synd, L(tail)
L(loop):
ld1 {vdata1.16b, vdata2.16b}, [src], #32
subs cntin, cntin, #32
cmeq vhas_chr1.16b, vdata1.16b, vrepchr.16b
cmeq vhas_chr2.16b, vdata2.16b, vrepchr.16b
/* If we're out of data we finish regardless of the result */
b.ls L(end)
/* Use a fast check for the termination condition */
orr vend.16b, vhas_chr1.16b, vhas_chr2.16b
addp vend.2d, vend.2d, vend.2d
mov synd, vend.d[0]
/* We're not out of data, loop if we haven't found the character */
cbz synd, L(loop)
L(end):
/* Termination condition found, let's calculate the syndrome value */
and vhas_chr1.16b, vhas_chr1.16b, vrepmask.16b
and vhas_chr2.16b, vhas_chr2.16b, vrepmask.16b
addp vend.16b, vhas_chr1.16b, vhas_chr2.16b /* 256->128 */
addp vend.16b, vend.16b, vend.16b /* 128->64 */
mov synd, vend.d[0]
/* Only do the clear for the last possible block */
b.hs L(tail)
L(masklast):
/* Clear the (32 - ((cntrem + soff) % 32)) * 2 upper bits */
add tmp, cntrem, soff
and tmp, tmp, #31
sub tmp, tmp, #32
neg tmp, tmp, lsl #1
lsl synd, synd, tmp
lsr synd, synd, tmp
L(tail):
/* Count the trailing zeros using bit reversing */
rbit synd, synd
/* Compensate the last post-increment */
sub src, src, #32
/* Check that we have found a character */
cmp synd, #0
/* And count the leading zeros */
clz synd, synd
/* Compute the potential result */
add result, src, synd, lsr #1
/* Select result or NULL */
csel result, xzr, result, eq
ret
L(zero_length):
mov result, #0
ret
END (__memchr_aarch64)