On Wed, Mar 30, 2005 at 07:57:28AM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > [ binutils and libc back in the discussion - I don't know why they got > dropped ]
Removing glibc since it accesses segment register with proper instructions. > > On Tue, 29 Mar 2005, H. J. Lu wrote: > > > > There is no such an instruction of "movl %ds,(%eax)". The old assembler > > accepts it and turns it into "movw %ds,(%eax)". > > I disagree. Violently. As does the old assembler, which does not turn > "mov" into "movw" as you say. AT ALL. I should have made myself clear. By "movw %ds,(%eax)", I meant: 8c 18 movw %ds,(%eax) That is what the assembler generates, and should have generated, for "movw %ds,(%eax)" since Nov. 4, 2004. > > A "movw" has a 0x66 prefix. The assembler agree with me. Plain logic > agrees with me. Being consistent _also_ agrees with me (it's the same damn > instruction to move to a register, for chrissake!) This is a bug in asssembler and has been fixed on Nov. 4, 2004. If you want the 0x66 prefix for "movw %ds,(%eax)", you need to use "word movw %ds,(%eax)" with the new assembler. > > The fact is, every single "mov" instruction takes the size hint, and it > HAS MEANING, even if the meaning is only about performance, not about > semantics. In other words, yes, in the specific case of "mov segment to > memory", it ends up being only a performance hit, but as such IT DOES HAVE > MEANING. And in fact, even if it didn't end up having any meaning at all, > it's still a good idea as just a consistency issue. Accessing segment register is a very special case. It has been treated differently by gas. Try "movw (%eax),%ds" with your gas. Gas doesn't generate 0x66. The "movw %ds,(%eax)" bug was fixed last year. > If you think people should use just "mov", then fine, let people use I only suggested "mov" for old assemblers. > "mov". That's their choice - the same way you can write just "or $5,%eax" > and gas will pick the 32-bit version based on the register name, yes, you > should be able to write just "mov %fs,mem", and gas will pick whatever > version using its heuristics for the size (in this case the 32-bit, since > it does the same thing and is smaller and faster). > > And "mov" has always worked. The kernel just doesn't use it much, because > the kernel - for good historical reasons - doesn't trust gas to pick sizes > of instructions automagically. > > And the fact that it is obvious that gas _should_ pick the 32-bit format > of the instruction when you do not specify a size does NOT MEAN that it's > wrong to specify the size explicitly. > > And your arguments that there is no semantic difference between the 16-bit > and the 32-bit version IS MEANINGLESS. An assembler shouldn't care. This For segment register access, there is no 16-bit nor 32-bit version. There is only one version. > is not an argument about semantic difference. This is an argument over a > user wanting to make the size explicit, to DOCUMENT it. Are you suggesting that gas should put back 0x66 for both "movw %ds,(%eax)" and "movw (%eax),%ds"? > > The fact is, if users use "movl" and "movw" explicitly (and the kernel has > traditionally been _very_ careful to use all instruction sizes explicitly, > partly exactly because gas itself has been very happy-go-lucky about > them), then that is a GOOD THING. It means that the instruction is > well-defined to somebody who knows the x86 instruction set, and he never > needs to worry or use "objdump" to see if gas was being stupid and > generated the 16-bit version. Allowing "movl %ds,(%eax)" has a possibilty that people assume it will update 32bit memory location. That is how this issue was uncovered. If you really don't like "mov %ds,(%eax)" and want to support the old assembler, I can write a kernel patch to check asssembler to use "movl" for the old asssembler and "movw" for the new assembler. BTW, to report problems with assembler, there is http://www.sourceware.org/bugzilla/ Or I can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] H.J. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/