[PATCH 1/3] RISC-V: re-arrange opcode table for consistent alias handling
Stefan O'Rear
sorear@fastmail.com
Fri Jul 14 22:08:09 GMT 2023
On Fri, Jul 14, 2023, at 5:25 PM, Fangrui Song wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 1:15 AM Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> wrote:
>>
>> On 11.07.2023 23:02, Fangrui Song wrote:
>> > On Fri, Sep 16, 2022 at 2:53 AM Nelson Chu <nelson@rivosinc.com> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> On Thu, Sep 15, 2022 at 3:42 PM Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>> On 15.09.2022 04:30, Nelson Chu wrote:
>> >>>> On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 9:02 PM Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> wrote:
>> >>>>> --- a/opcodes/riscv-opc.c
>> >>>>> +++ b/opcodes/riscv-opc.c
>> >>>>> @@ -290,9 +290,9 @@ const struct riscv_opcode riscv_opcodes[
>> >>>>> {"jalr", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s,j", MATCH_JALR, MASK_JALR, match_opcode, INSN_JSR },
>> >>>>> {"j", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "Ca", MATCH_C_J, MASK_C_J, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS|INSN_BRANCH },
>> >>>>> {"j", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "a", MATCH_JAL, MASK_JAL|MASK_RD, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS|INSN_BRANCH },
>> >>>>> +{"jal", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "a", MATCH_JAL|(X_RA << OP_SH_RD), MASK_JAL|MASK_RD, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS|INSN_JSR },
>> >>>>> {"jal", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,a", MATCH_JAL, MASK_JAL, match_opcode, INSN_JSR },
>> >>>>> {"jal", 32, INSN_CLASS_C, "Ca", MATCH_C_JAL, MASK_C_JAL, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS|INSN_JSR },
>> >>>>> -{"jal", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "a", MATCH_JAL|(X_RA << OP_SH_RD), MASK_JAL|MASK_RD, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS|INSN_JSR },
>> >>>>> {"call", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,c", (X_T1 << OP_SH_RS1), (int) M_CALL, match_never, INSN_MACRO },
>> >>>>> {"call", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "c", (X_RA << OP_SH_RS1)|(X_RA << OP_SH_RD), (int) M_CALL, match_never, INSN_MACRO },
>> >>>>> {"tail", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "c", (X_T1 << OP_SH_RS1), (int) M_CALL, match_never, INSN_MACRO },
>> >>>>> @@ -310,13 +310,13 @@ const struct riscv_opcode riscv_opcodes[
>> >>>>> {"move", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "d,CV", MATCH_C_MV, MASK_C_MV, match_c_add, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> {"move", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s", MATCH_ADDI, MASK_ADDI|MASK_IMM, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> {"zext.b", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s", MATCH_ANDI|ENCODE_ITYPE_IMM (255), MASK_ANDI | MASK_IMM, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> -{"andi", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "Cs,Cw,Co", MATCH_C_ANDI, MASK_C_ANDI, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> -{"andi", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s,j", MATCH_ANDI, MASK_ANDI, match_opcode, 0 },
>> >>>>> {"and", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "Cs,Cw,Ct", MATCH_C_AND, MASK_C_AND, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> {"and", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "Cs,Ct,Cw", MATCH_C_AND, MASK_C_AND, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> {"and", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "Cs,Cw,Co", MATCH_C_ANDI, MASK_C_ANDI, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> {"and", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s,t", MATCH_AND, MASK_AND, match_opcode, 0 },
>> >>>>> {"and", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s,j", MATCH_ANDI, MASK_ANDI, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> +{"andi", 0, INSN_CLASS_C, "Cs,Cw,Co", MATCH_C_ANDI, MASK_C_ANDI, match_opcode, INSN_ALIAS },
>> >>>>> +{"andi", 0, INSN_CLASS_I, "d,s,j", MATCH_ANDI, MASK_ANDI, match_opcode, 0 },
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Doesn't ANDI a base instruction?
>> >>>
>> >>> Of course. Like for all aliases, there is a corresponding base
>> >>> instruction. I guess I simply don't understand what you mean to
>> >>> express with the question.
>> >>>
>> >>>> The operand "d,s,j" of AND is an
>> >>>> alias of ANDI, so the original order seems correct. Always dump *.i
>> >>>> instructions to the non-i type looks weird, and llvm-dump seems has
>> >>>> the same behavior as current GNU objdump.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> % cat tmp.s
>> >>>> and a0, a1, 0x10
>> >>>> % riscv64-unknown-elf-as tmp.s -o tmp.o
>> >>>> % riscv64-unknown-elf-objdump -d tmp.o
>> >>>>
>> >>>> tmp.o: file format elf64-littleriscv
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Disassembly of section .text:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> 0000000000000000 <.text>:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> 0: 0105f513 and a0,a1,16
>> >>>
>> >>> What's weird about that? And if that's weird, would you mind spelling
>> >>> out the conditions under which aliases are to be preferred over base
>> >>> instructions when disassembling? There actually is a "These aliases are
>> >>> for assembly but not disassembly" comment somewhere in the file,
>> >>> clarifying for two of the aliases that they ought to come after their
>> >>> base insns. But for all other aliases which aren't simply a different
>> >>> (but not shorter) name for the same insn (e.g. "bgt" vs "blt") I'd
>> >>> assume the aliases should be preferred, for the reason stated in the
>> >>> patch description. That said - I can see it being a matter of taste
>> >>> for <insn>i vs <insn>, but if so this should be spelled out somewhere.
>> >>
>> >> Yeah, that's what I worried about. At the beginning, I think dumping
>> >> a base instruction as another base instruction looks weird. But these
>> >> days I also noticed that - we also dump compressed instructions as
>> >> base i without "c." prefixes, so why I feel weird is just that I'm
>> >> used to it because of historical behavior. I have no objection to
>> >> this, so please go ahead if there are no objections for a period of
>> >> time. But if there are any objections, then we probably can mark
>> >> these aliases by something like INSN_ALIAS_CANNOT_DUMP in the opcode
>> >> table, and that's what Kito suggested to me before, but I didn't think
>> >> it was a serious problem at the time.
>> >>
>> >> Thanks
>> >> Nelson
>> >
>> > I apologize as I haven't read all prior discussions. For many
>> > instructions, the "i" form is written in the ISA manual and prevalent.
>>
>> Why "prevalent"? The "i"-less forms are mentioned there as well, aren't
>> they? Then why not use them ...
>
> I think aliases like "add rd,rs,imm" (without "i") should be treated
> as deprecated aliases that we keep just for compatibility.
> We should not endorse the use cases by making objdump -d "prefer" this form.
>
> When I brought up the topic in the #riscv channel on libera.chat, I
> got a lot of complaints about having these "deprecated" aliases from
> folks, including courmisch, jrtc27, muurkha, sorear.
> As I happen to know two folks' email addresses, I have CCed them in this thread.
>
>> > I wonder whether we can give these add/and/xor/etc without "i" lower
>> > priority so that objdump -d will not show them, even without using -M
>> > no-aliases.
>>
>> ... unless use of aliases was suppressed? In other arches' assembly
>> that I know (to some degree) and which knows the concept of aliases,
>> aliases are typically the preferred way of disassembling, for
>> typically producing easier to grok output.
>
> AIUI aliases for other architectures are indeeded preferred (use my
> understanding of llvm-objdump -d output).
> This RISC-V case is not, though.
The aliases that are documented in [1] are preferred for use in disassembly.
The other aliases, which gas supports for compatibility with old versions of
itself but which were never part of any spec, are not preferred.
-s
[1]: https://github.com/riscv-non-isa/riscv-asm-manual/blob/master/riscv-asm.md
>> There are other aspects to consider here, related to the handling of
>> equates in assembly sources. I did bring this up before, but it feels
>> like a minefield - it first would need firmly establishing what exactly
>> assembler behavior is intended to be. Aiui no-one has properly thought
>> of this, including for the (surprisingly similar) handling in tc-mips.c
>> (making me guess that RISC-V code may have been derived from that).
>>
>> Jan
>
> My knowledge about GNU assembler is quite limited...
> I hope that other RISC-V folks can answer this question.
>
>
>> > % cat b.s
>> > add a0,a1,13
>> > and a2,a3,4
>> > xor a2,a3,4
>> > or a2,a3,4
>> > sll a2,a3,4
>> > % riscv64-linux-gnu-gcc -c b.s
>> > % ~/Dev/binutils-gdb/out/riscv64/binutils/objdump -d b.o
>> >
>> > b.o: file format elf64-littleriscv
>> >
>> >
>> > Disassembly of section .text:
>> >
>> > 0000000000000000 <.text>:
>> > 0: 00d58513 add a0,a1,13
>> > 4: 0046f613 and a2,a3,4
>> > 8: 0046c613 xor a2,a3,4
>> > c: 0046e613 or a2,a3,4
>> > 10: 00469613 sll a2,a3,0x4
>> >
>> >
>> > When LLVM integrated assembler added these aliases
>> > (https://reviews.llvm.org/D50046), these instructions are assigned a
>> > low priority "let EmitPriority = 0" so llvm-objdump -d will never show
>> > them.
>>
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