arm64: lib: Implement optimized memcpy routine

This patch, based on Linaro's Cortex Strings library, improves
the performance of the assembly optimized memcpy() function.

Signed-off-by: Zhichang Yuan <zhichang.yuan@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Deepak Saxena <dsaxena@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
This commit is contained in:
zhichang.yuan 2014-04-28 06:11:29 +01:00 committed by Catalin Marinas
parent 74d2eb3cdb
commit 808dbac6b5
1 changed files with 170 additions and 22 deletions

View File

@ -1,5 +1,13 @@
/*
* Copyright (C) 2013 ARM Ltd.
* Copyright (C) 2013 Linaro.
*
* This code is based on glibc cortex strings work originally authored by Linaro
* and re-licensed under GPLv2 for the Linux kernel. The original code can
* be found @
*
* http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~linaro-toolchain-dev/cortex-strings/trunk/
* files/head:/src/aarch64/
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
@ -16,6 +24,7 @@
#include <linux/linkage.h>
#include <asm/assembler.h>
#include <asm/cache.h>
/*
* Copy a buffer from src to dest (alignment handled by the hardware)
@ -27,27 +36,166 @@
* Returns:
* x0 - dest
*/
dstin .req x0
src .req x1
count .req x2
tmp1 .req x3
tmp1w .req w3
tmp2 .req x4
tmp2w .req w4
tmp3 .req x5
tmp3w .req w5
dst .req x6
A_l .req x7
A_h .req x8
B_l .req x9
B_h .req x10
C_l .req x11
C_h .req x12
D_l .req x13
D_h .req x14
ENTRY(memcpy)
mov x4, x0
subs x2, x2, #8
b.mi 2f
1: ldr x3, [x1], #8
subs x2, x2, #8
str x3, [x4], #8
b.pl 1b
2: adds x2, x2, #4
b.mi 3f
ldr w3, [x1], #4
sub x2, x2, #4
str w3, [x4], #4
3: adds x2, x2, #2
b.mi 4f
ldrh w3, [x1], #2
sub x2, x2, #2
strh w3, [x4], #2
4: adds x2, x2, #1
b.mi 5f
ldrb w3, [x1]
strb w3, [x4]
5: ret
mov dst, dstin
cmp count, #16
/*When memory length is less than 16, the accessed are not aligned.*/
b.lo .Ltiny15
neg tmp2, src
ands tmp2, tmp2, #15/* Bytes to reach alignment. */
b.eq .LSrcAligned
sub count, count, tmp2
/*
* Copy the leading memory data from src to dst in an increasing
* address order.By this way,the risk of overwritting the source
* memory data is eliminated when the distance between src and
* dst is less than 16. The memory accesses here are alignment.
*/
tbz tmp2, #0, 1f
ldrb tmp1w, [src], #1
strb tmp1w, [dst], #1
1:
tbz tmp2, #1, 2f
ldrh tmp1w, [src], #2
strh tmp1w, [dst], #2
2:
tbz tmp2, #2, 3f
ldr tmp1w, [src], #4
str tmp1w, [dst], #4
3:
tbz tmp2, #3, .LSrcAligned
ldr tmp1, [src],#8
str tmp1, [dst],#8
.LSrcAligned:
cmp count, #64
b.ge .Lcpy_over64
/*
* Deal with small copies quickly by dropping straight into the
* exit block.
*/
.Ltail63:
/*
* Copy up to 48 bytes of data. At this point we only need the
* bottom 6 bits of count to be accurate.
*/
ands tmp1, count, #0x30
b.eq .Ltiny15
cmp tmp1w, #0x20
b.eq 1f
b.lt 2f
ldp A_l, A_h, [src], #16
stp A_l, A_h, [dst], #16
1:
ldp A_l, A_h, [src], #16
stp A_l, A_h, [dst], #16
2:
ldp A_l, A_h, [src], #16
stp A_l, A_h, [dst], #16
.Ltiny15:
/*
* Prefer to break one ldp/stp into several load/store to access
* memory in an increasing address order,rather than to load/store 16
* bytes from (src-16) to (dst-16) and to backward the src to aligned
* address,which way is used in original cortex memcpy. If keeping
* the original memcpy process here, memmove need to satisfy the
* precondition that src address is at least 16 bytes bigger than dst
* address,otherwise some source data will be overwritten when memove
* call memcpy directly. To make memmove simpler and decouple the
* memcpy's dependency on memmove, withdrew the original process.
*/
tbz count, #3, 1f
ldr tmp1, [src], #8
str tmp1, [dst], #8
1:
tbz count, #2, 2f
ldr tmp1w, [src], #4
str tmp1w, [dst], #4
2:
tbz count, #1, 3f
ldrh tmp1w, [src], #2
strh tmp1w, [dst], #2
3:
tbz count, #0, .Lexitfunc
ldrb tmp1w, [src]
strb tmp1w, [dst]
.Lexitfunc:
ret
.Lcpy_over64:
subs count, count, #128
b.ge .Lcpy_body_large
/*
* Less than 128 bytes to copy, so handle 64 here and then jump
* to the tail.
*/
ldp A_l, A_h, [src],#16
stp A_l, A_h, [dst],#16
ldp B_l, B_h, [src],#16
ldp C_l, C_h, [src],#16
stp B_l, B_h, [dst],#16
stp C_l, C_h, [dst],#16
ldp D_l, D_h, [src],#16
stp D_l, D_h, [dst],#16
tst count, #0x3f
b.ne .Ltail63
ret
/*
* Critical loop. Start at a new cache line boundary. Assuming
* 64 bytes per line this ensures the entire loop is in one line.
*/
.p2align L1_CACHE_SHIFT
.Lcpy_body_large:
/* pre-get 64 bytes data. */
ldp A_l, A_h, [src],#16
ldp B_l, B_h, [src],#16
ldp C_l, C_h, [src],#16
ldp D_l, D_h, [src],#16
1:
/*
* interlace the load of next 64 bytes data block with store of the last
* loaded 64 bytes data.
*/
stp A_l, A_h, [dst],#16
ldp A_l, A_h, [src],#16
stp B_l, B_h, [dst],#16
ldp B_l, B_h, [src],#16
stp C_l, C_h, [dst],#16
ldp C_l, C_h, [src],#16
stp D_l, D_h, [dst],#16
ldp D_l, D_h, [src],#16
subs count, count, #64
b.ge 1b
stp A_l, A_h, [dst],#16
stp B_l, B_h, [dst],#16
stp C_l, C_h, [dst],#16
stp D_l, D_h, [dst],#16
tst count, #0x3f
b.ne .Ltail63
ret
ENDPROC(memcpy)