On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 09:40:03PM +0100, Conor Dooley wrote:
On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 10:43:02AM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
On Fri, Apr 12, 2024 at 12:49:57PM +0100, Conor Dooley wrote:
On Thu, Apr 11, 2024 at 09:11:14PM -0700, Charlie Jenkins wrote:
Create vendor variants of the existing extension helpers. If the existing functions were instead modified to support vendor extensions, a branch based on the ext value being greater than RISCV_ISA_VENDOR_EXT_BASE would have to be introduced. This additional branch would have an unnecessary performance impact.
Signed-off-by: Charlie Jenkins charlie@rivosinc.com
I've not looked at the "main" patch in the series that adds all of the probing and structures for representing this info yet beyond a cursory glance, but it feels like we're duplicating a bunch of infrastructure here before it is necessary. The IDs are all internal to Linux, so I'd rather we kept everything in the same structure until we have more than a handful of vendor extensions. With this patch (and the theadpmu stuff) we will have three vendor extensions which feels like a drop in the bucket compared to the standard ones.
It is not duplicating infrastructure. If we merge this into the existing infrastructure, we would be littering if (ext > RISCV_ISA_VENDOR_EXT_BASE) in __riscv_isa_extension_available. This is particularily important exactly because we have so few vendor extensions currently so this check would be irrelevant in the vast majority of cases.
That's only because of your implementation. The existing vendor extension works fine without this littering. That's another thing actually, you forgot to convert over the user we already have :)
Oh right, I will convert them over. The fundemental goal of this patch is to allow a way for vendors to support their own extensions without needing to populate riscv_isa_ext. This is to create separation between vendors so they do not impact each other.
xlinuxenvcfg does not fit into this scheme however. This scheme assumes that a hart cannot have multiple vendors which that extension breaks. xlinuxenvcfg is really filling a hole in the standard isa that is applicible to all vendors and does not appear in the device tree so it is okay for that to live outside this scheme.
It is also unecessary to push off the refactoring until we have some "sufficient" amount of vendor extensions to deem changing the infrastructure when I already have the patch available here. This does not introduce any extra overhead to existing functions and will be able to support vendors into the future.
Yeah, maybe that's true but this was my gut reaction before reading the other patch in detail (which I've still yet to do).
- Charlie