From 6b913e3da87da1be57096c068b4d2e7d4b31f457 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Conor Dooley Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2023 21:28:28 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] RISC-V: rework comments in ISA string parser I have found these comments to not be at all helpful whenever I look at the parser. Further, the comments in the default case (single letter parser) are not quite right either. Group the comments into a larger one at the start of each case, that attempts to explain things at a higher level. Reviewed-by: Andrew Jones Signed-off-by: Conor Dooley Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230607-headpiece-tannery-83ed5cc4856a@spud Signed-off-by: Palmer Dabbelt --- arch/riscv/kernel/cpufeature.c | 70 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 59 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/arch/riscv/kernel/cpufeature.c b/arch/riscv/kernel/cpufeature.c index c3851c8..7dd4589 100644 --- a/arch/riscv/kernel/cpufeature.c +++ b/arch/riscv/kernel/cpufeature.c @@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ void __init riscv_fill_hwcap(void) switch (*ext) { case 's': - /** + /* * Workaround for invalid single-letter 's' & 'u'(QEMU). * No need to set the bit in riscv_isa as 's' & 'u' are * not valid ISA extensions. It works until multi-letter @@ -181,53 +181,101 @@ void __init riscv_fill_hwcap(void) case 'X': case 'z': case 'Z': + /* + * Before attempting to parse the extension itself, we find its end. + * As multi-letter extensions must be split from other multi-letter + * extensions with an "_", the end of a multi-letter extension will + * either be the null character or the "_" at the start of the next + * multi-letter extension. + * + * Next, as the extensions version is currently ignored, we + * eliminate that portion. This is done by parsing backwards from + * the end of the extension, removing any numbers. This may be a + * major or minor number however, so the process is repeated if a + * minor number was found. + * + * ext_end is intended to represent the first character *after* the + * name portion of an extension, but will be decremented to the last + * character itself while eliminating the extensions version number. + * A simple re-increment solves this problem. + */ ext_long = true; - /* Multi-letter extension must be delimited */ for (; *isa && *isa != '_'; ++isa) if (unlikely(!isalnum(*isa))) ext_err = true; - /* Parse backwards */ + ext_end = isa; if (unlikely(ext_err)) break; + if (!isdigit(ext_end[-1])) break; - /* Skip the minor version */ + while (isdigit(*--ext_end)) ; - if (tolower(ext_end[0]) != 'p' - || !isdigit(ext_end[-1])) { - /* Advance it to offset the pre-decrement */ + + if (tolower(ext_end[0]) != 'p' || !isdigit(ext_end[-1])) { ++ext_end; break; } - /* Skip the major version */ + while (isdigit(*--ext_end)) ; + ++ext_end; break; default: + /* + * Things are a little easier for single-letter extensions, as they + * are parsed forwards. + * + * After checking that our starting position is valid, we need to + * ensure that, when isa was incremented at the start of the loop, + * that it arrived at the start of the next extension. + * + * If we are already on a non-digit, there is nothing to do. Either + * we have a multi-letter extension's _, or the start of an + * extension. + * + * Otherwise we have found the current extension's major version + * number. Parse past it, and a subsequent p/minor version number + * if present. The `p` extension must not appear immediately after + * a number, so there is no fear of missing it. + * + */ if (unlikely(!isalpha(*ext))) { ext_err = true; break; } - /* Find next extension */ + if (!isdigit(*isa)) break; - /* Skip the minor version */ + while (isdigit(*++isa)) ; + if (tolower(*isa) != 'p') break; + if (!isdigit(*++isa)) { --isa; break; } - /* Skip the major version */ + while (isdigit(*++isa)) ; + break; } + + /* + * The parser expects that at the start of an iteration isa points to the + * character before the start of the next extension. This will not be the + * case if we have just parsed a single-letter extension and the next + * extension is not a multi-letter extension prefixed with an "_". It is + * also not the case at the end of the string, where it will point to the + * terminating null character. + */ if (*isa != '_') --isa; -- 2.7.4