Dokumentation
This document was written by 0xAX at linux-insides under BY-NC-SA Creative Commons License
Introduction
While reading source code in the Linux kernel, I often see statements like this:
Yes, this is inline assembly or in other words assembler code which is integrated in a high level programming language. In this case the high level programming language is C. Yes, the C
programming language is not very high-level, but still.
If you are familiar with the assembly programming language, you may notice that inline assembly
is not very different from normal assembler. Moreover, the special form of inline assembly which is called basic form
is exactly the same. For example:
or:
The same code (of course without __asm__
prefix) you might see in plain assembly code. Yes, this is very similar, but not so simple as it might seem at first glance. Actually, the GCC supports two forms of inline assembly statements:
basic
;extended
.
The basic form consists of only two things: the __asm__
keyword and the string with valid assembler instructions. For example it may look something like this:
The asm
keyword may be used in place of __asm__
, however __asm__
is portable whereas the asm
keyword is a GNU
extension. In further examples I will only use the __asm__
variant.
If you know assembly programming language this looks pretty familiar. The main problem is in the second form of inline assembly statements - extended
. This form allows us to pass parameters to an assembly statement, perform jumps etc. Does not sound difficult, but requires knowledge of special rules in addition to knowledge of the assembly language. Every time I see yet another piece of inline assembly code in the Linux kernel, I need to refer to the official documentation of GCC
to remember how a particular qualifier
behaves or what the meaning of =&r
is for example.
I've decided to write this part to consolidate my knowledge related to the inline assembly, as inline assembly statements are quite common in the Linux kernel and we may see them in linux-insides parts sometimes. I thought that it would be useful if we have a special part which contains information on more important aspects of the inline assembly. Of course you may find comprehensive information about inline assembly in the official documentation, but I like to put everything in one place.
- Note
- This part will not provide guide for assembly programming. It is not intended to teach you to write programs with assembler or to know what one or another assembler instruction means. Just a little memo for extended asm.
Introduction to extended inline assembly
So, let's start. As I already mentioned above, the basic
assembly statement consists of the asm
or __asm__
keyword and set of assembly instructions. This form is in no way different from "normal" assembly. The most interesting part is inline assembler with operands, or extended
assembler. An extended assembly statement looks more complicated and consists of more than two parts:
All parameters which are marked with squared brackets are optional. You may notice that if we skip the optional parameters and the modifiers volatile
and goto
we obtain the basic
form.
Let's start to consider this in order. The first optional qualifier
is volatile
. This specifier tells the compiler that an assembly statement may produce side effects
. In this case we need to prevent compiler optimizations related to the given assembly statement. In simple terms the volatile
specifier instructs the compiler not to modify the statement and place it exactly where it was in the original code. As an example let's look at the following function from the Linux kernel:
Here we see the native_load_gdt
function which loads a base address from the Global Descriptor Table to the GDTR
register with the lgdt
instruction. This assembly statement is marked with volatile
qualifier. It is very important that the compiler does not change the original place of this assembly statement in the resulting code. Otherwise the GDTR
register may contain wrong address for the Global Descriptor Table
or the address may be correct, but the structure has not been filled yet. This can lead to an exception being generated, preventing the kernel from booting correctly.
The second optional qualifier
is the goto
. This qualifier tells the compiler that the given assembly statement may perform a jump to one of the labels which are listed in the GotoLabels
. For example:
Since we finished with these two qualifiers, let's look at the main part of an assembly statement body. As we have seen above, the main part of an assembly statement consists of the following four parts:
- set of assembly instructions;
- output parameters;
- input parameters;
- clobbers.
The first represents a string which contains a set of valid assembly instructions which may be separated by the \t\n
sequence. Names of processor registers must be prefixed with the %%
sequence in extended
form and other symbols like immediates must start with the $
symbol. The OutputOperands
and InputOperands
are comma-separated lists of C variables which may be provided with "constraints" and the Clobbers
is a list of registers or other values which are modified by the assembler instructions from the AssemblerTemplate
beyond those listed in the OutputOperands
. Before we dive into the examples we have to know a little bit about constraints
. A constraint is a string which specifies placement of an operand. For example the value of an operand may be written to a processor register or read from memory etc.
Consider the following simple example:
Let's compile and run it to be sure that it works as expected:
Ok, great. It works. Now let's look at this example in detail. Here we see a simple C
program which calculates the sum of two variables placing the result into the sum
variable and in the end we print the result. This example consists of three parts. The first is the assembly statement with the add instruction. It adds the value of the source operand together with the value of the destination operand and stores the result in the destination operand. In our case:
will be expanded to the:
Variables and expressions which are listed in the OutputOperands
and InputOperands
may be matched in the AssemblerTemplate
. An input/output operand is designated as N
where the N
is the number of operand from left to right beginning from zero
. The second part of the our assembly statement is located after the first :
symbol and contains the definition of the output value:
Notice that the sum
is marked with two special symbols: =r
. This is the first constraint that we have encountered. The actual constraint here is only r
itself. The =
symbol is modifier
which denotes output value. This tells to compiler that the previous value will be discarded and replaced by the new data. Besides the =
modifier, GCC
provides support for following three modifiers:
+
- an operand is read and written by an instruction;&
- output register shouldn't overlap an input register and should be used only for output;%
- tells the compiler that operands may be commutative.
Now let's go back to the r
qualifier. As I mentioned above, a qualifier denotes the placement of an operand. The r
symbol means a value will be stored in one of the general purpose register. The last part of our assembly statement:
These are input operands - variables a
and b
. We already know what the r
qualifier does. Now we can have a look at the constraint for the variable b
. The 0
or any other digit from 1
to 9
is called "matching constraint". With this a single operand can be used for multiple roles. The value of the constraint is the source operand index. In our case 0
will match sum
. If we look at assembly output of our program:
First of all our values 5
and 10
will be put at the stack and then these values will be moved to the two general purpose registers: rdx
and rax
.
This way the rax
register is used for storing the value of the b
as well as storing the result of the calculation. NOTE that I've used gcc 6.3.1
version, so the resulted code of your compiler may differ.
We have looked at input and output parameters of an inline assembly statement. Before we move on to other constraints supported by gcc
, there is one remaining part of the inline assembly statement we have not discussed yet - clobbers
.
Clobbers
As mentioned above, the "clobbered" part should contain a comma-separated list of registers whose content will be modified by the assembler code. This is useful if our assembly expression needs additional registers for calculation. If we add clobbered registers to the inline assembly statement, the compiler take this into account and the register in question will not simultaneously be used by the compiler.
Consider the example from before, but we will add an additional, simple assembler instruction:
If we look at the assembly output:
we will see that the rdx
register is overwritten with 0x64
or 100
and the result will be 110
instead of 10
. Now if we add the rdx
register to the list of clobbered
registers:
and look at the assembler output again:
the rcx
register will be used for sum
calculation, preserving the intended semantics of the program. Besides general purpose registers, we may pass two special specifiers. They are:
cc
;memory
.
The first - cc
indicates that an assembler code modifies flags register. This is typically used if the assembly within contains arithmetic or logic instructions:
The second memory
specifier tells the compiler that the given inline assembly statement executes read/write operations on memory not specified by operands in the output list. This prevents the compiler from keeping memory values loaded and cached in registers. Let's take a look at the following example:
This example may be artificial, but it illustrates the main idea. Here we have an array of integers and one integer variable. The example is pretty simple, we take the first element of a
and increment its value. After this we subtract the value of b
from the first element of a
. In the end we print the result. If we compile and run this simple example the result may surprise you:
The result is a[0] - b = 9999999995
here, but why? We incremented a[0]
and subtracted b
, so the result should be a[0] - b = 9999999996
here.
If we have a look at the assembler output for this example:
we will see that the first element of the a
contains the value 0x2540be400
(10000000000
). The last two lines of code are the actual calculations.
We see our increment instruction with incq
but then just a move of 0x2540be3fb
(9999999995
) to the rsi
register. This looks strange.
The problem is we have passed the -O3
flag to gcc
, so the compiler did some constant folding and propagation to determine the result of a[0] - 5
at compile time and reduced it to a movabs
with a constant 0x2540be3fb
or 9999999995
in runtime.
Let's now add memory
to the clobbers list:
and the new result of running this is:
Now the result is correct. If we look at the assembly output again:
we will see one difference here which is in the last two lines:
Instead of constant folding, GCC
now preserves calculations in the assembly and places the value of a[0]
in the rax
register afterwards. In the end it just subtracts the constant value of b
from the rax
register and puts result to the rsi
.
Besides the memory
specifier, we also see a new constraint here - m
. This constraint tells the compiler to use the address of a[0]
, instead of its value. So, now we are finished with clobbers
and we may continue by looking at other constraints supported by GCC
besides r
and m
which we have already seen.
Constraints
Now that we are finished with all three parts of an inline assembly statement, let's return to constraints. We already saw some constraints in the previous parts, like r
which represents a register
operand, m
which represents a memory operand and 0-9
which represent an reused, indexed operand. Besides these GCC
provides support for other constraints. For example the i
constraint represents an immediate
integer operand with know value:
The result is:
Or for example I
which represents an immediate 32-bit integer. The difference between i
and I
is that i
is general, whereas I
is strictly specified to 32-bit integer data. For example if you try to compile the following code:
you will get an error:
when at the same time:
works perfectly:
GCC
also supports J
, K
, N
constraints for integer constants in the range of 0-63 bits, signed 8-bit integer constants and unsigned 8-bit integer constants respectively. The o
constraint represents a memory operand with an offsetable
memory address. For example:
The result, as expected:
All of these constraints may be combined (so long as they do not conflict). In this case the compiler will choose the best one for a certain situation. For example:
will use a memory operand:
instead of direct usage of general purpose registers.
That's about all of the commonly used constraints in inline assembly statements. You can find more in the official documentation.
Architecture specific constraints
Before we finish, let's look at the set of special constraints. These constrains are architecture specific and as this book is specific to the x86_64 architecture, we will look at constraints related to it. First of all the set of a
... d
and also S
and D
constraints represent generic purpose registers. In this case the a
constraint corresponds to al
, ax
, eax
or rax
register depending on instruction size. The S
and D
constraints are si
and di
registers respectively. For example let's take our previous example. We can see in its assembly output that value of the a
variable is stored in the eax
register. Now let's look at the assembly output of the same assembly, but with other constraint:
Now we see that value of the a
variable will be stored in the rax
register:
The f
and t
constraints represent any floating point stack register - st
and the top of the floating point stack respectively. The u
constraint represents the second value from the top of the floating point stack.
That's all. You may find more details about x86_64 and general constraints in the official documentation.