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author | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 2010-06-14 17:15:33 -0700 |
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committer | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 2010-06-14 17:15:33 -0700 |
commit | 1dc242356a0726159841219c8293d31b9c9d08d1 (patch) | |
tree | 66e511c528bf0ad0a2fa5344c477a013f005f159 /sysdeps/powerpc | |
parent | 158db1226717c77f30ee2245e164f2e1f7721637 (diff) | |
download | glibc-1dc242356a0726159841219c8293d31b9c9d08d1.tar.gz glibc-1dc242356a0726159841219c8293d31b9c9d08d1.tar.xz glibc-1dc242356a0726159841219c8293d31b9c9d08d1.zip |
Fix whitespaces.
Diffstat (limited to 'sysdeps/powerpc')
-rw-r--r-- | sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/memcmp.S | 32 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/strncmp.S | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/memcmp.S | 38 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/strncmp.S | 2 |
4 files changed, 37 insertions, 37 deletions
diff --git a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/memcmp.S b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/memcmp.S index 7d9db515ab..d529b492fc 100644 --- a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/memcmp.S +++ b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/memcmp.S @@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ EALIGN (BP_SYM(memcmp),4,0) /* At this point we know both strings have the same alignment and the compare length is at least 8 bytes. rBITDIF contains the low order 2 bits of rSTR1 and cr5 contains the result of the logical compare - of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then we are already word + of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then we are already word aligned and can perform the word aligned loop. Otherwise we know the two strings have the same alignment (but not @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ L(dP1): (8-15 byte compare), we want to use only volatile registers. This means we can avoid restoring non-volatile registers since we did not change any on the early exit path. The key here is the non-early - exit path only cares about the condition code (cr5), not about which + exit path only cares about the condition code (cr5), not about which register pair was used. */ lwz rWORD5,0(rSTR1) lwz rWORD6,0(rSTR2) @@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ L(d24): bne cr6,L(dLcr6) L(d14): slwi. r12,rN,3 - bne cr5,L(dLcr5) + bne cr5,L(dLcr5) L(d04): lwz r30,44(1) lwz r31,48(1) @@ -348,10 +348,10 @@ L(d04): beq L(zeroLength) /* At this point we have a remainder of 1 to 3 bytes to compare. Since we are aligned it is safe to load the whole word, and use - shift right to eliminate bits beyond the compare length. */ + shift right to eliminate bits beyond the compare length. */ L(d00): lwz rWORD1,4(rSTR1) - lwz rWORD2,4(rSTR2) + lwz rWORD2,4(rSTR2) srw rWORD1,rWORD1,rN srw rWORD2,rWORD2,rN cmplw rWORD1,rWORD2 @@ -406,11 +406,11 @@ L(bytealigned): mtctr rN /* We need to prime this loop. This loop is swing modulo scheduled - to avoid pipe delays. The dependent instruction latencies (load to + to avoid pipe delays. The dependent instruction latencies (load to compare to conditional branch) is 2 to 3 cycles. In this loop each dispatch group ends in a branch and takes 1 cycle. Effectively - the first iteration of the loop only serves to load operands and - branches based on compares are delayed until the next loop. + the first iteration of the loop only serves to load operands and + branches based on compares are delayed until the next loop. So we must precondition some registers and condition codes so that we don't exit the loop early on the first iteration. */ @@ -450,7 +450,7 @@ L(bLoop): /* We speculatively loading bytes before we have tested the previous bytes. But we must avoid overrunning the length (in the ctr) to - prevent these speculative loads from causing a segfault. In this + prevent these speculative loads from causing a segfault. In this case the loop will exit early (before the all pending bytes are tested. In this case we must complete the pending operations before returning. */ @@ -503,7 +503,7 @@ L(bx12): sub rRTN,rWORD1,rWORD2 blr - .align 4 + .align 4 L(zeroLengthReturn): L(zeroLength): @@ -515,9 +515,9 @@ L(zeroLength): /* At this point we know the strings have different alignment and the compare length is at least 8 bytes. rBITDIF contains the low order 2 bits of rSTR1 and cr5 contains the result of the logical compare - of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then rStr1 is word aligned and can + of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then rStr1 is word aligned and can perform the Wunaligned loop. - + Otherwise we know that rSTR1 is not aready word aligned yet. So we can force the string addresses to the next lower word boundary and special case this first word using shift left to @@ -554,7 +554,7 @@ L(unaligned): stw r26,28(r1) cfi_offset(r26,(28-64)) /* Compute the left/right shift counts for the unalign rSTR2, - compensating for the logical (W aligned) start of rSTR1. */ + compensating for the logical (W aligned) start of rSTR1. */ clrlwi rSHL,r27,30 clrrwi rSTR1,rSTR1,2 stw r25,24(r1) @@ -892,9 +892,9 @@ L(du14): slwi. rN,rN,3 bne cr5,L(duLcr5) /* At this point we have a remainder of 1 to 3 bytes to compare. We use - shift right to eliminate bits beyond the compare length. + shift right to eliminate bits beyond the compare length. - However it may not be safe to load rWORD2 which may be beyond the + However it may not be safe to load rWORD2 which may be beyond the string length. So we compare the bit length of the remainder to the right shift count (rSHR). If the bit count is less than or equal we do not need to load rWORD2 (all significant bits are already in @@ -909,7 +909,7 @@ L(du14): L(dutrim): lwz rWORD1,4(rSTR1) lwz r31,48(1) - subfic rN,rN,32 /* Shift count is 32 - (rN * 8). */ + subfic rN,rN,32 /* Shift count is 32 - (rN * 8). */ or rWORD2,rA,rB lwz r30,44(1) lwz r29,40(r1) diff --git a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/strncmp.S b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/strncmp.S index dd0f7099a8..ba72d0a029 100644 --- a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/strncmp.S +++ b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc32/power7/strncmp.S @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ EALIGN (BP_SYM(strncmp),4,0) #define rSTR2 r4 /* second string arg */ #define rN r5 /* max string length */ /* Note: The Bounded pointer support in this code is broken. This code - was inherited from PPC32 and and that support was never completed. + was inherited from PPC32 and and that support was never completed. Current PPC gcc does not support -fbounds-check or -fbounded-pointers. */ #define rWORD1 r6 /* current word in s1 */ #define rWORD2 r7 /* current word in s2 */ diff --git a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/memcmp.S b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/memcmp.S index f9b5c12cd6..424891de4f 100644 --- a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/memcmp.S +++ b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/memcmp.S @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ EALIGN (BP_SYM(memcmp),4,0) #define rSTR2 r4 /* second string arg */ #define rN r5 /* max string length */ /* Note: The Bounded pointer support in this code is broken. This code - was inherited from PPC32 and and that support was never completed. + was inherited from PPC32 and and that support was never completed. Current PPC gcc does not support -fbounds-check or -fbounded-pointers. */ #define rWORD1 r6 /* current word in s1 */ #define rWORD2 r7 /* current word in s2 */ @@ -67,9 +67,9 @@ EALIGN (BP_SYM(memcmp),4,0) /* At this point we know both strings have the same alignment and the compare length is at least 8 bytes. rBITDIF containes the low order 3 bits of rSTR1 and cr5 contains the result of the logical compare - of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then we are already double word + of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then we are already double word aligned and can perform the DWaligned loop. - + Otherwise we know the two strings have the same alignment (but not yet DW). So we can force the string addresses to the next lower DW boundary and special case this first DW word using shift left to @@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ L(dP1): (8-15 byte compare), we want to use only volitile registers. This means we can avoid restoring non-volitile registers since we did not change any on the early exit path. The key here is the non-early - exit path only cares about the condition code (cr5), not about which + exit path only cares about the condition code (cr5), not about which register pair was used. */ ld rWORD5,0(rSTR1) ld rWORD6,0(rSTR2) @@ -335,7 +335,7 @@ L(d24): bne cr6,L(dLcr6) L(d14): sldi. r12,rN,3 - bne cr5,L(dLcr5) + bne cr5,L(dLcr5) L(d04): ld rWORD8,-8(r1) ld rWORD7,-16(r1) @@ -343,10 +343,10 @@ L(d04): beq L(zeroLength) /* At this point we have a remainder of 1 to 7 bytes to compare. Since we are aligned it is safe to load the whole double word, and use - shift right double to elliminate bits beyond the compare length. */ + shift right double to elliminate bits beyond the compare length. */ L(d00): ld rWORD1,8(rSTR1) - ld rWORD2,8(rSTR2) + ld rWORD2,8(rSTR2) srd rWORD1,rWORD1,rN srd rWORD2,rWORD2,rN cmpld cr5,rWORD1,rWORD2 @@ -393,15 +393,15 @@ L(bytealigned): beq cr6,L(zeroLength) /* We need to prime this loop. This loop is swing modulo scheduled - to avoid pipe delays. The dependent instruction latencies (load to + to avoid pipe delays. The dependent instruction latencies (load to compare to conditional branch) is 2 to 3 cycles. In this loop each dispatch group ends in a branch and takes 1 cycle. Effectively - the first iteration of the loop only serves to load operands and - branches based on compares are delayed until the next loop. + the first iteration of the loop only serves to load operands and + branches based on compares are delayed until the next loop. So we must precondition some registers and condition codes so that we don't exit the loop early on the first iteration. */ - + lbz rWORD1,0(rSTR1) lbz rWORD2,0(rSTR2) bdz L(b11) @@ -438,7 +438,7 @@ L(bLoop): /* We speculatively loading bytes before we have tested the previous bytes. But we must avoid overrunning the length (in the ctr) to - prevent these speculative loads from causing a segfault. In this + prevent these speculative loads from causing a segfault. In this case the loop will exit early (before the all pending bytes are tested. In this case we must complete the pending operations before returning. */ @@ -489,7 +489,7 @@ L(b11): L(bx12): sub rRTN,rWORD1,rWORD2 blr - .align 4 + .align 4 L(zeroLengthReturn): ld rWORD8,-8(r1) ld rWORD7,-16(r1) @@ -501,9 +501,9 @@ L(zeroLength): /* At this point we know the strings have different alignment and the compare length is at least 8 bytes. rBITDIF containes the low order 3 bits of rSTR1 and cr5 contains the result of the logical compare - of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then rStr1 is double word + of rBITDIF to 0. If rBITDIF == 0 then rStr1 is double word aligned and can perform the DWunaligned loop. - + Otherwise we know that rSTR1 is not aready DW aligned yet. So we can force the string addresses to the next lower DW boundary and special case this first DW word using shift left to @@ -541,7 +541,7 @@ L(unaligned): std r26,-48(r1) cfi_offset(r26,-48) /* Compute the leaft/right shift counts for the unalign rSTR2, - compensating for the logical (DW aligned) start of rSTR1. */ + compensating for the logical (DW aligned) start of rSTR1. */ clrldi rSHL,r27,61 clrrdi rSTR1,rSTR1,3 std r25,-56(r1) @@ -879,11 +879,11 @@ L(du14): sldi. rN,rN,3 bne cr5,L(duLcr5) /* At this point we have a remainder of 1 to 7 bytes to compare. We use - shift right double to elliminate bits beyond the compare length. + shift right double to elliminate bits beyond the compare length. This allows the use of double word subtract to compute the final result. - However it may not be safe to load rWORD2 which may be beyond the + However it may not be safe to load rWORD2 which may be beyond the string length. So we compare the bit length of the remainder to the right shift count (rSHR). If the bit count is less than or equal we do not need to load rWORD2 (all significant bits are already in @@ -898,7 +898,7 @@ L(du14): L(dutrim): ld rWORD1,8(rSTR1) ld rWORD8,-8(r1) - subfic rN,rN,64 /* Shift count is 64 - (rN * 8). */ + subfic rN,rN,64 /* Shift count is 64 - (rN * 8). */ or rWORD2,rA,rB ld rWORD7,-16(r1) ld r29,-24(r1) diff --git a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/strncmp.S b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/strncmp.S index e32920e219..34f1e52df9 100644 --- a/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/strncmp.S +++ b/sysdeps/powerpc/powerpc64/power7/strncmp.S @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ EALIGN (BP_SYM(strncmp),4,0) #define rSTR2 r4 /* second string arg */ #define rN r5 /* max string length */ /* Note: The Bounded pointer support in this code is broken. This code - was inherited from PPC32 and and that support was never completed. + was inherited from PPC32 and and that support was never completed. Current PPC gcc does not support -fbounds-check or -fbounded-pointers. */ #define rWORD1 r6 /* current word in s1 */ #define rWORD2 r7 /* current word in s2 */ |