table of contents
| FPU_KERN(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | FPU_KERN(9) | 
NAME¶
fpu_kern —
    facility to use the FPU in the kernel
SYNOPSIS¶
struct fpu_kern_ctx *
  
  fpu_kern_alloc_ctx(u_int
    flags);
void
  
  fpu_kern_free_ctx(struct
    fpu_kern_ctx *ctx);
int
  
  fpu_kern_enter(struct
    thread *td, struct
    fpu_kern_ctx *ctx, u_int
    flags);
int
  
  fpu_kern_leave(struct
    thread *td, struct
    fpu_kern_ctx *ctx);
int
  
  fpu_kern_thread(u_int
    flags);
int
  
  is_fpu_kern_thread(u_int
    flags);
DESCRIPTION¶
The fpu_kern family of functions allows
    the use of FPU hardware in kernel code. Modern FPUs are not limited to
    providing hardware implementation for floating point arithmetic; they offer
    advanced accelerators for cryptography and other computational-intensive
    algorithms. These facilities share registers with the FPU hardware.
Typical kernel code does not need access to the FPU. Saving a large register file on each entry to the kernel would waste time. When kernel code uses the FPU, the current FPU state must be saved to avoid corrupting the user-mode state, and vice versa.
The management of the save and restore is automatic. The processor catches accesses to the FPU registers when the non-current context tries to access them. Explicit calls are required for the allocation of the save area and the notification of the start and end of the code using the FPU.
The
    fpu_kern_alloc_ctx()
    function allocates the memory used by fpu_kern to
    track the use of the FPU hardware state and the related software state. The
    fpu_kern_alloc_ctx() function requires the
    flags argument, which currently accepts the following
    flags:
FPU_KERN_NOWAIT- Do not wait for the available memory if the request could not be satisfied without sleep.
 - 0
 - No special handling is required.
 
The function returns the allocated context area, or NULL if the allocation failed.
The
    fpu_kern_free_ctx()
    function frees the context previously allocated by
    fpu_kern_alloc_ctx().
The
    fpu_kern_enter()
    function designates the start of the region of kernel code where the use of
    the FPU is allowed. Its arguments are:
- td
 - Currently must be curthread.
 - ctx
 - The context save area previously allocated by
      
fpu_kern_alloc_ctx() and not currently in use by another call tofpu_kern_enter(). - flags
 - This argument currently accepts the following flags:
    
FPU_KERN_NORMAL- Indicates that the caller intends to access the full FPU state. Must be specified currently.
 FPU_KERN_KTHR- Indicates that no saving of the current FPU state should be performed,
          if the thread called fpu_kern_thread(9) function.
          This is intended to minimize code duplication in callers which could
          be used from both kernel thread and syscall contexts. The
          
fpu_kern_leave() function correctly handles such contexts. 
 
The function does not sleep or block. It
    could cause the Device Not Available exception
    during execution, and on the first FPU access after the function returns, as
    well as after each context switch (see Intel Software Developer Manual for
    the reference). Currently, no errors are defined which can be returned by
    fpu_kern_enter()
    to the caller.
The
    fpu_kern_leave()
    function ends the region started by
    fpu_kern_enter(). The uses of FPU in the kernel
    after the call to fpu_kern_leave() are erroneous
    until the next call to fpu_kern_enter() is
    performed. The function takes the td thread argument,
    which currently must be curthread, and the
    ctx context pointer, previously passed to
    fpu_kern_enter(). After the function returns, the
    context may be freed or reused by other invocation of
    fpu_kern_enter(). There are no errors defined for
    the function, it always returns 0.
The
    fpu_kern_thread()
    function enables an optimization for threads which never leave to the
    usermode. The current thread will reuse the usermode save area for the
    kernel FPU state instead of requiring an explicitly allocated context. There
    are no flags defined for the function, and no error states that the function
    returns. Once this function has been called, neither
    fpu_kern_enter() nor
    fpu_kern_leave() is required to be called and the
    fpu is available for use in the calling thread.
The
    is_fpu_kern_thread()
    function returns the boolean indicating whether the current thread entered
    the mode enabled by fpu_kern_thread(). There is
    currently no flags defined for the function, the return value is true if the
    current thread have the permanent FPU save area, and false otherwise.
NOTES¶
The fpu_kern is currently implemented only
    for the i386 and amd64 architectures.
There is no way to handle floating point exceptions raised from kernel mode.
The unused flags arguments to the
    fpu_kern functions are to be extended to allow
    specification of the set of the FPU hardware state used by the code region.
    This would allow optimizations of saving and restoring the state.
AUTHORS¶
The fpu_kern facitily and this manual page
    were written by Konstantin Belousov
    <kib@FreeBSD.org>.
| October 23, 2014 | Debian |