On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 11:35:57PM +0800, Bin Meng wrote:
On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 11:07 PM Bin Meng bmeng.cn@gmail.com wrote:
From: Conor Dooley conor.dooley@microchip.com
The spec folk, in their infinite wisdom, moved both control and status registers & the FENCE.I instructions out of the I extension into their own extensions (Zicsr, Zifencei) in the 20190608 version of the ISA spec [0]. The GCC/binutils crew decided [1] to move their default version of the ISA spec to the 20191213 version of the ISA spec, which came into being for version 2.38 of binutils and GCC 12. Building with this toolchain configuration would result in assembler issues: CC arch/riscv/kernel/vdso/vgettimeofday.o <<BUILDDIR>>/arch/riscv/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h: Assembler messages: <<BUILDDIR>>/arch/riscv/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h:71: Error: unrecognized opcode `csrr a5,0xc01' <<BUILDDIR>>/arch/riscv/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h:71: Error: unrecognized opcode `csrr a5,0xc01' <<BUILDDIR>>/arch/riscv/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h:71: Error: unrecognized opcode `csrr a5,0xc01' <<BUILDDIR>>/arch/riscv/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h:71: Error: unrecognized opcode `csrr a5,0xc01' This was fixed in commit 6df2a016c0c8 ("riscv: fix build with binutils 2.38") by Aurelien Jarno, but has proven fragile.
Before LLVM 17, LLVM did not support these extensions and, as such, the cc-option check added by Aurelien worked. Since commit 22e199e6afb1 ("[RISCV] Accept zicsr and zifencei command line options") however, LLVM *does* support them and the cc-option check passes.
This surfaced as a problem while building the 5.10 stable kernel using the default Tuxmake Debian image [2], as 5.10 did not yet support ld.lld, and uses the Debian provided binutils 2.35. Versions of ld prior to 2.38 will refuse to link if they encounter unknown ISA extensions, and unfortunately Zifencei is not supported by bintuils 2.35.
Instead of dancing around with adding these extensions to march, as we currently do, Palmer suggested locking GCC builds to the same version of the ISA spec that is used by LLVM. As far as I can tell, that is 2.2, with, apparently [3], a lack of interest in implementing a flag like GCC's -misa-spec at present.
Add {cc,as}-option checks to add -misa-spec to KBUILD_{A,C}FLAGS when GCC is used & remove the march dance.
As clang does not accept this argument, I had expected to encounter issues with the assembler, as neither zicsr nor zifencei are present in the ISA string and the spec version *should* be defaulting to a version that requires them to be present. The build passed however and the resulting kernel worked perfectly fine for me on a PolarFire SoC...
Link: https://riscv.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/riscv-spec.pdf [0] Link: https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/g/sw-dev/c/aE1ZeHHCYf4 [1] Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/CA+G9fYt9T=ELCLaB9byxaLW2Qf4pZcDO=huCA0D8ug2V2+i... [2] Link: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/specifying-unpriviledge-spec-version-misa-spec-... [3] CC: stable@vger.kernel.org Suggested-by: Palmer Dabbelt palmer@rivosinc.com Reported-by: Naresh Kamboju naresh.kamboju@linaro.org Signed-off-by: Conor Dooley conor.dooley@microchip.com
I think Aurelien's original commit message might actually not be quite correct? I found, in my limited testing, that it is not the default behaviour of gas that matters, but rather the toolchain itself? My binutils versions (both those built using the clang-built-linux tc-build scripts which do not set an ISA spec version, and one built using the riscv-gnu-toolchain infra w/ an explicit 20191213 spec version set) do not encounter these issues.
I am unable to reproduce the build failure as reported by commit 6df2a016c0c8 ("riscv: fix build with binutils 2.38") by Aurelien Jarno using kernel.org pre-built GCC 11.3.0 [1] which includes binutils 2.38.
[1] https://mirrors.edge.kernel.org/pub/tools/crosstool/files/bin/x86_64/11.3.0/...
The defconfig of v5.16 kernel (commit 6df2a016c0c8 lands in v5.17) builds fine for me. Anything I am missing?
Some further note:
After I switched to kernel.org pre-built GCC 12.2.0 [1] which includes binutils 2.39, I was able to reproduce the exact same build failure of v5.16 kernel as described in the commit 6df2a016c0c8 ("riscv: fix build with binutils 2.38") by Aurelien Jarno.
To verify the commit message of 6df2a016c0c8 is accurate or not, I built a GAS from binutils 2.37 and replaced the GAS 2.39 in the kernel.org package, surprisingly kernel v5.16 did not build with the same build failure.
So it seems that it's GCC that caused the build failure instead of GAS from binutils??
Right, that's what I was getting at in the bit below the --- line in my patch. I think Aurelien was misled by the failure message and your email ([1] in my links above) which claimed that binutils would default to the 20191213 spec. It appears (and I'm not a tc person) that GCC must call GAS with the --misa-spec argument, and in GCC 12 the value used is 20191213. Either GCC 11 must pass --misa-spec=2.2 to binutils, or it passes nothing, leading binutils to be permissive about what -march=rv64i means.
The permissive option would "seem" to be correct, as building with clang (that to my knowledge doesn't pass --misa-spec to GAS) and with -march=rv64i has no issues assembling.
It'd appear to me that binutils is a *player* in this issue, but is not the culprit of the issue Aurelien sought to fix.
I dunno what I am talking about though, this is all from playing around with many tc variants and see how it goes!
Cheers, Conor.