strlen.S revision 1.8 1 1.8 andvar /* $NetBSD: strlen.S,v 1.8 2024/03/30 22:03:39 andvar Exp $ */
2 1.5 dsl
3 1.5 dsl /*-
4 1.5 dsl * Copyright (c) 2009 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
5 1.5 dsl * All rights reserved.
6 1.5 dsl *
7 1.5 dsl * This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
8 1.5 dsl * by David Laight.
9 1.5 dsl *
10 1.5 dsl * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
11 1.5 dsl * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
12 1.5 dsl * are met:
13 1.5 dsl * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
14 1.5 dsl * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
15 1.5 dsl * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
16 1.5 dsl * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
17 1.5 dsl * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
18 1.5 dsl *
19 1.5 dsl * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE NETBSD FOUNDATION, INC. AND CONTRIBUTORS
20 1.5 dsl * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
21 1.5 dsl * TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
22 1.5 dsl * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE FOUNDATION OR CONTRIBUTORS
23 1.5 dsl * BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
24 1.5 dsl * CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
25 1.5 dsl * SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
26 1.5 dsl * INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
27 1.5 dsl * CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
28 1.5 dsl * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
29 1.5 dsl * POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
30 1.5 dsl */
31 1.5 dsl
32 1.1 christos /*
33 1.5 dsl * Inspired by a version written by J.T. Conklin <jtc (at) acorntoolworks.com>
34 1.5 dsl * (Only the long comment really remains his work!)
35 1.1 christos */
36 1.1 christos
37 1.1 christos #include <machine/asm.h>
38 1.1 christos
39 1.1 christos #if defined(LIBC_SCCS)
40 1.8 andvar RCSID("$NetBSD: strlen.S,v 1.8 2024/03/30 22:03:39 andvar Exp $")
41 1.1 christos #endif
42 1.1 christos
43 1.3 dsl /*
44 1.3 dsl * There are many well known branch-free sequences which are used
45 1.3 dsl * for determining whether a zero-byte is contained within a word.
46 1.7 andvar * These sequences are generally much more efficient than loading
47 1.3 dsl * and comparing each byte individually.
48 1.3 dsl *
49 1.3 dsl * The expression [1,2]:
50 1.3 dsl *
51 1.3 dsl * (1) ~(((x & 0x7f....7f) + 0x7f....7f) | (x | 0x7f....7f))
52 1.3 dsl *
53 1.3 dsl * evaluates to a non-zero value if any of the bytes in the
54 1.3 dsl * original word is zero.
55 1.3 dsl *
56 1.3 dsl * It also has the useful property that bytes in the result word
57 1.3 dsl * that correspond to non-zero bytes in the original word have
58 1.3 dsl * the value 0x00, while bytes corresponding to zero bytes have
59 1.3 dsl * the value 0x80. This allows calculation of the first (and
60 1.3 dsl * last) occurrence of a zero byte within the word (useful for C's
61 1.3 dsl * str* primitives) by counting the number of leading (or
62 1.3 dsl * trailing) zeros and dividing the result by 8. On machines
63 1.3 dsl * without (or with slow) clz() / ctz() instructions, testing
64 1.3 dsl * each byte in the result word for zero is necessary.
65 1.3 dsl *
66 1.3 dsl * This typically takes 4 instructions (5 on machines without
67 1.3 dsl * "not-or") not including those needed to load the constant.
68 1.3 dsl *
69 1.3 dsl *
70 1.3 dsl * The expression:
71 1.3 dsl *
72 1.3 dsl * (2) ((x - 0x01....01) & 0x80....80 & ~x)
73 1.3 dsl *
74 1.3 dsl * evaluates to a non-zero value if any of the bytes in the
75 1.3 dsl * original word is zero.
76 1.3 dsl *
77 1.3 dsl * On little endian machines, the first byte in the result word
78 1.3 dsl * that corresponds to a zero byte in the original byte is 0x80,
79 1.3 dsl * so clz() can be used as above. On big endian machines, and
80 1.3 dsl * little endian machines without (or with a slow) clz() insn,
81 1.3 dsl * testing each byte in the original for zero is necessary.
82 1.3 dsl *
83 1.3 dsl * This typically takes 3 instructions (4 on machines without
84 1.3 dsl * "and with complement") not including those needed to load
85 1.3 dsl * constants.
86 1.3 dsl *
87 1.3 dsl *
88 1.3 dsl * The expression:
89 1.3 dsl *
90 1.3 dsl * (3) ((x - 0x01....01) & 0x80....80)
91 1.3 dsl *
92 1.3 dsl * always evaluates to a non-zero value if any of the bytes in
93 1.3 dsl * the original word is zero or has the top bit set.
94 1.3 dsl * For strings that are likely to only contain 7-bit ascii these
95 1.3 dsl * false positives will be rare.
96 1.3 dsl *
97 1.3 dsl * To account for possible false positives, each byte of the
98 1.3 dsl * original word must be checked when the expression evaluates to
99 1.3 dsl * a non-zero value. However, because it is simpler than those
100 1.3 dsl * presented above, code that uses it will be faster as long as
101 1.3 dsl * the rate of false positives is low.
102 1.3 dsl *
103 1.3 dsl * This is likely, because the the false positive can only occur
104 1.3 dsl * if the most siginificant bit of a byte within the word is set.
105 1.3 dsl * The expression will never fail for typical 7-bit ASCII strings.
106 1.3 dsl *
107 1.3 dsl * This typically takes 2 instructions not including those needed
108 1.3 dsl * to load constants.
109 1.3 dsl *
110 1.3 dsl *
111 1.8 andvar * [1] Henry S. Warren Jr., "Hacker's Delight", Addison-Wesley 2003
112 1.3 dsl *
113 1.3 dsl * [2] International Business Machines, "The PowerPC Compiler Writer's
114 1.3 dsl * Guide", Warthman Associates, 1996
115 1.3 dsl */
116 1.3 dsl
117 1.3 dsl #ifdef TEST_STRLEN
118 1.3 dsl ENTRY(test_strlen)
119 1.3 dsl #else
120 1.1 christos ENTRY(strlen)
121 1.3 dsl #endif
122 1.3 dsl movabsq $0x0101010101010101,%r8
123 1.3 dsl
124 1.3 dsl test $7,%dil
125 1.3 dsl movq %rdi,%rax /* Buffer, %rdi unchanged */
126 1.3 dsl movabsq $0x8080808080808080,%r9
127 1.3 dsl jnz 10f /* Jump if misaligned */
128 1.1 christos
129 1.3 dsl _ALIGN_TEXT
130 1.3 dsl 1:
131 1.3 dsl movq (%rax),%rdx /* get bytes to check */
132 1.3 dsl 2:
133 1.3 dsl addq $8,%rax
134 1.3 dsl mov %rdx,%rcx /* save for later check */
135 1.3 dsl subq %r8,%rdx /* alg (3) above first */
136 1.3 dsl not %rcx /* Invert of data */
137 1.3 dsl andq %r9,%rdx
138 1.4 dsl je 1b /* jump if all 0x01-0x80 */
139 1.3 dsl
140 1.4 dsl /* Do check from alg (2) above - loops for 0x81..0xff bytes */
141 1.3 dsl andq %rcx,%rdx
142 1.3 dsl je 1b
143 1.3 dsl
144 1.3 dsl /* Since we are LE, use bit scan for first 0x80 byte */
145 1.3 dsl sub %rdi,%rax /* length to next word */
146 1.3 dsl bsf %rdx,%rdx /* 7, 15, 23 ... 63 */
147 1.3 dsl shr $3,%rdx /* 0, 1, 2 ... 7 */
148 1.3 dsl lea -8(%rax,%rdx),%rax
149 1.1 christos ret
150 1.1 christos
151 1.3 dsl /* Misaligned, read aligned word and make low bytes non-zero */
152 1.1 christos _ALIGN_TEXT
153 1.3 dsl 10:
154 1.5 dsl mov %al,%cl
155 1.3 dsl mov $1,%rsi
156 1.5 dsl and $7,%cl /* offset into word 1..7 */
157 1.3 dsl and $~7,%al /* start of word with buffer */
158 1.3 dsl shl $3,%cl /* bit count 8, 16 .. 56 */
159 1.3 dsl movq (%rax),%rdx /* first data in high bytes */
160 1.3 dsl shl %cl,%rsi
161 1.3 dsl dec %rsi
162 1.3 dsl or %rsi,%rdx /* low bytes now non-zero */
163 1.3 dsl jmp 2b
164 1.6 jakllsch #ifdef TEST_STRLEN
165 1.6 jakllsch END(test_strlen)
166 1.6 jakllsch #else
167 1.6 jakllsch END(strlen)
168 1.6 jakllsch #endif
169 1.1 christos
170 1.3 dsl #ifdef TEST_STRLEN
171 1.3 dsl /* trivial implementation when testing above! */
172 1.3 dsl ENTRY(strlen)
173 1.3 dsl mov %rdi,%rax
174 1.3 dsl 1:
175 1.3 dsl cmpb $0,(%rax)
176 1.3 dsl jz 2f
177 1.3 dsl inc %rax
178 1.3 dsl jmp 1b
179 1.3 dsl 2: sub %rdi,%rax
180 1.1 christos ret
181 1.6 jakllsch END(strlen)
182 1.3 dsl #endif
183