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Low level Programming.

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Presentation on theme: "Low level Programming."— Presentation transcript:

1 Low level Programming

2 Assembly basics What makes up assembly code? Instructions Operands
Architecture specific Operands Registers Memory (specified as an address) Immediates Conventions Rules of the road and/or behavior models

3 Registers General purpose Environmental Special uses
16bit: AX, BX, CX, DX, SI, DI 32 bit: EAX, EBX, ECX, EDX, ESI, EDI 64 bit: RAX, RBX, RCX, RDX, RSI, RDI + others Environmental RSP, RIP RBP = frame pointer, defines local scope Special uses Calling conventions RAX == return code RDI, RSI, RDX, RCX… == ordered arguments Hardware defined Some instructions implicitly use specific registers RSI/RDI  String instructions RBP  leaveq

4 Memory X86 provides complex memory addressing capabilities
Immediate addressing mov %rsi, ($0xfff000) Direct addressing mov %rsi, (%rbp) Offset Addressing mov %rsi, $0x8(%rax) Base + (Index * Scale) + Displacement A.K.A. SIB Occasionally seen Hardly ever used by hand movl %ebp, (%rdi,%rsi,4) Address = rdi + rsi * 4 A more complicated example segment:disp(base, index, scale)

5 8/16/32/64 bit operands Programmer explicitly specifies operand length in operand Example: mov reg, reg 8 bits: movb %al, %bl 16 bits: movw %ax, %bx 32 bits: movl %eax, %ebx 64 bits: movq %rax, %rbx What about “movl %ebx, (%rdi)”?

6 Function call implementation
We can now decode what is going on here int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) { return 0; } <foo>: 107: push %rbp 108: e mov %rsp,%rbp 10b: d fc mov %edi,-0x4(%rbp) 10e: f mov %rsi,-0x10(%rbp) 112: b mov $0x0,%eax 117: c leaveq 118: c retq Location Address of function + ret instruction Arguments Passed in registers (which ones? And why those?) Return code Stored in register: EAX

7 OS development requires assembly programming
OS operations are not typically expressible with a higher level language Examples: atomic operations, page table management, configuring segments, System calls(!) How to mix assembly with OS code (in C) Compile with assembler and link with C code .S files compiled with gas Inline w/ compiler support .c files compiled with gcc

8 Implementing assembler functions
C functions: Location, args, return code ASM functions: Location only Programmer must implement everything else Arguments, context, return values Everything in foo() from before + function body Programmer takes place of compiler Must match calling conventions

9 Calling assembler functions
Programmer implements calling convention Behaves just like a regular function Only need location Linker takes care of the rest Defines a global variable .globl foo foo: push %rbp mov %rsp, %rbp extern int foo(int, char *); int main() { int x = foo(1, “test”); } main.c foo.S

10 Inline OS only needs a few full blown assembly functions
Context switches, interrupt handling, a few others Most of the time just need to execute a single instruction i.e. set a bit in this control register GCC provides ability to incorporate inline assembly instructions into a regular .c file Not a function Compiler handles argument marshaling

11 Overview Inline assembly includes 2 components Assembly code
Compiler directives for operand marshaling asm ( assembler template : output operands /* optional */ : input operands /* optional */ : list of clobbered registers /* optional */ );

12 Inline assembly execution
Sequence of individual assembly instructions Can execute any hardware instruction Can reference any register or memory location Can reference specified variables in C code 3 Stages of execution Load C variables into correct registers or memory Execute assembly instructions Copy register and memory contents into C variables

13 Specifying inline operands
How does compiler copy C variables to/from registers? C variables and registers are explicitly linked in asm specification Sections for input and output operands Compiler handles copying to and from variables before and after assembly executed Assembly code references marshaled values (index of operand) instead of raw registers

14 Explicit Register codes
Operand Codes Wide range of operand codes (“constraints”) are available Input: “code”(c-variable) Output: “=code”(c-variable) a = %rax, %eax, %ax b = %rbx, %ebx, %bx c = %rcx, %ecx, %cx d = %rdx, %edx, %dx S = %rsi, %esi, %si D = %rdi, %edi, %di r = Any register q = a, b, c, d regs m = memory operand f = floating point reg i = immediate g = anything Explicit Register codes Other Operand codes And many more….

15 Register example What does this do? int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) {
int a=10, b; asm ("movl %1, %%ecx;\n“ “movl %%ecx, %0;\n" : ”=b"(b) /* output */ : “a"(a) /* input */ : ); return 0; } <foo>: 107: push %rbp 108: e mov %rsp,%rbp 10b: push %rbx 10c: d e mov %edi,-0x1c(%rbp) 10f: d mov %rsi,-0x28(%rbp) 113: c7 45 f0 0a movl $0xa,-0x10(%rbp) 11a: 8b 45 f mov -0x10(%rbp),%eax 11d: 89 c mov %eax,%ecx 11f: 89 cb mov %ecx,%ebx 121: 89 d mov %ebx,%eax 123: f mov %eax,-0xc(%rbp) 126: b mov $0x0,%eax 12b: 5b pop %rbx 12c: c leaveq 12d: c retq What does this do?

16 Memory example X86 can also use memory (SIB, etc) operands
“m” operand code int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) { int a=10, b; asm ("movl %1, %%ecx;\n" "movl %%ecx, %0;\n" : "=m"(b) : "m"(a) : ); return 0; } <foo>: 0: push %rbp 1: e mov %rsp,%rbp 4: d ec mov %edi,-0x14(%rbp) 7: e mov %rsi,-0x20(%rbp) b: c7 45 fc 0a movl $0xa,-0x4(%rbp) 12: 8b 4d fc mov -0x4(%rbp),%ecx 15: d f mov %ecx,-0x8(%rbp) 18: b mov $0x0,%eax 1d: c leaveq 1e: c retq

17 Input/output operands
Sometimes input and output operands are the same variable Transform input variable in some way int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) { int a=10, b=5; asm (“addl %1, %0;\n" : "=r"(b) : "m"(a), "0"(b) : ); return 0; } <foo>: 0: push %rbp 1: e mov %rsp,%rbp 4: d ec mov %edi,-0x14(%rbp) 7: e mov %rsi,-0x20(%rbp) b: c7 45 fc 0a movl $0xa,-0x8(%rbp) 12: c7 45 fc movl $0x5,-0x4(%rbp) 19: 8b 45 fc mov -0x4(%rbp),%eax 1c: f add -0x8(%rbp),%eax 1f: fc mov %eax,-0x4(%rbp) 22: b mov $0x0,%eax 27: c leaveq 28: c retq

18 Input/output operands (2)
Input/output operands can also be specified with “+” int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) { int a=10, b=5; asm (“addl %1, %0;\n" : “+r"(b) : "m"(a) : ); return 0; } <foo>: 0: push %rbp 1: e mov %rsp,%rbp 4: d ec mov %edi,-0x14(%rbp) 7: e mov %rsi,-0x20(%rbp) b: c7 45 fc 0a movl $0xa,-0x8(%rbp) 12: c7 45 fc movl $0x5,-0x4(%rbp) 19: 8b 45 fc mov -0x4(%rbp),%eax 1c: f add -0x8(%rbp),%eax 1f: fc mov %eax,-0x4(%rbp) 22: b mov $0x0,%eax 27: c leaveq 28: c retq

19 Clobbered list We cheated earlier…
int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) { int a=10, b; asm ("movl %1, %%ecx;\n" "movl %%ecx, %0;\n" : "=m"(b) : "m"(a) : ); return 0; } We cheated earlier… How does compiler know to save/restore ECX? It doesn’t We must explicitly tell compiler what registers have been implicitly messed with In this case ECX, but other instructions have implicit operands (CHECK THE MANUALS) Second set of constraints to inline assembly Clobber list: Operands not used as either input or output but still must be saved/restored by compiler

20 Why clobber list? Why do we need this? Clobber lists tell compiler:
Compilers try to optimize performance Cache intermediate values and assume values don’t change Compiler cannot inspect ASM behavior outside scope of compiler Clobber lists tell compiler: “You cannot trust the contents of these resources after this point” Or “Do not perform optimizations that span this block on these resources”

21 Using clobber lists int foo(int arg1, char * arg2) { int a=10, b; asm ("movl %1, %%ecx;\n" "movl %%ecx, %0;\n" : "=m"(b) : "m"(a) : “ecx”, “memory” ); return 0; } ECX is used implicitly so its value must be saved/restored What about “memory”?

22 Sneak Preview: The x86 is not atomic!
CISC (x86) Load/Store Arch (micro ops) HW decoder asm (“addl %1, %0\n” : “+m”(balance) : “r”(amount) : ); Load R1, balance Add R1, amount Store R1, balance The x86 offers a special instruction mode that forces atomicity Only for a single instruction!! Lock Prefix: Forces all micro-ops of a single instruction to execute atomically Asserts a lock signal on the memory bus Disallows other CPUs/cores from accessing memory region asm (“lock <instr>” ::: )

23 When can you use lock? Not all instructions support locked (atomic) operation You need to check the ISA manuals

24 Lock Example Load/Store Arch (micro ops) CISC (x86) Lock Mem/Cache
Load R1, balance Add R1, amount Store R1, balance Unlock Mem/Cache asm (“lock addl %1, %0\n” : “+m”(balance) : “r”(amount) : ); HW decoder 400564: 8b 45 f mov -0xc(%rbp),%eax 400567: f add %eax,-0x10(%rbp) 400567: f f0 lock add %eax,-0x10(%rbp)


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