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+//
+// Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
+//
+// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
+// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
+// You may obtain a copy of the License at
+//
+// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
+//
+// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
+// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
+// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
+// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
+// limitations under the License.
+//
+
+#ifndef ABSL_BASE_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_ACCESS_H_
+#define ABSL_BASE_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_ACCESS_H_
+
+#include <string.h>
+#include <cstdint>
+
+#include "absl/base/attributes.h"
+
+// unaligned APIs
+
+// Portable handling of unaligned loads, stores, and copies.
+// On some platforms, like ARM, the copy functions can be more efficient
+// then a load and a store.
+//
+// It is possible to implement all of these these using constant-length memcpy
+// calls, which is portable and will usually be inlined into simple loads and
+// stores if the architecture supports it. However, such inlining usually
+// happens in a pass that's quite late in compilation, which means the resulting
+// loads and stores cannot participate in many other optimizations, leading to
+// overall worse code.
+
+// The unaligned API is C++ only. The declarations use C++ features
+// (namespaces, inline) which are absent or incompatible in C.
+#if defined(__cplusplus)
+
+#if defined(ADDRESS_SANITIZER) || defined(THREAD_SANITIZER) ||\
+ defined(MEMORY_SANITIZER)
+// Consider we have an unaligned load/store of 4 bytes from address 0x...05.
+// AddressSanitizer will treat it as a 3-byte access to the range 05:07 and
+// will miss a bug if 08 is the first unaddressable byte.
+// ThreadSanitizer will also treat this as a 3-byte access to 05:07 and will
+// miss a race between this access and some other accesses to 08.
+// MemorySanitizer will correctly propagate the shadow on unaligned stores
+// and correctly report bugs on unaligned loads, but it may not properly
+// update and report the origin of the uninitialized memory.
+// For all three tools, replacing an unaligned access with a tool-specific
+// callback solves the problem.
+
+// Make sure uint16_t/uint32_t/uint64_t are defined.
+#include <stdint.h>
+
+extern "C" {
+uint16_t __sanitizer_unaligned_load16(const void *p);
+uint32_t __sanitizer_unaligned_load32(const void *p);
+uint64_t __sanitizer_unaligned_load64(const void *p);
+void __sanitizer_unaligned_store16(void *p, uint16_t v);
+void __sanitizer_unaligned_store32(void *p, uint32_t v);
+void __sanitizer_unaligned_store64(void *p, uint64_t v);
+} // extern "C"
+
+namespace absl {
+
+inline uint16_t UnalignedLoad16(const void *p) {
+ return __sanitizer_unaligned_load16(p);
+}
+
+inline uint32_t UnalignedLoad32(const void *p) {
+ return __sanitizer_unaligned_load32(p);
+}
+
+inline uint64_t UnalignedLoad64(const void *p) {
+ return __sanitizer_unaligned_load64(p);
+}
+
+inline void UnalignedStore16(void *p, uint16_t v) {
+ __sanitizer_unaligned_store16(p, v);
+}
+
+inline void UnalignedStore32(void *p, uint32_t v) {
+ __sanitizer_unaligned_store32(p, v);
+}
+
+inline void UnalignedStore64(void *p, uint64_t v) {
+ __sanitizer_unaligned_store64(p, v);
+}
+
+} // namespace absl
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD16(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad16(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD32(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad32(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD64(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad64(_p))
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE16(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore16(_p, _val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE32(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore32(_p, _val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE64(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore64(_p, _val))
+
+#elif defined(__x86_64__) || defined(_M_X64) || defined(__i386) || \
+ defined(_M_IX86) || defined(__ppc__) || defined(__PPC__) || \
+ defined(__ppc64__) || defined(__PPC64__)
+
+// x86 and x86-64 can perform unaligned loads/stores directly;
+// modern PowerPC hardware can also do unaligned integer loads and stores;
+// but note: the FPU still sends unaligned loads and stores to a trap handler!
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD16(_p) \
+ (*reinterpret_cast<const uint16_t *>(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD32(_p) \
+ (*reinterpret_cast<const uint32_t *>(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD64(_p) \
+ (*reinterpret_cast<const uint64_t *>(_p))
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE16(_p, _val) \
+ (*reinterpret_cast<uint16_t *>(_p) = (_val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE32(_p, _val) \
+ (*reinterpret_cast<uint32_t *>(_p) = (_val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE64(_p, _val) \
+ (*reinterpret_cast<uint64_t *>(_p) = (_val))
+
+#elif defined(__arm__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_5__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_5T__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_5TE__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_5TEJ__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_6__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_6J__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_6K__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_6Z__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_6ZK__) && \
+ !defined(__ARM_ARCH_6T2__)
+
+
+// ARMv7 and newer support native unaligned accesses, but only of 16-bit
+// and 32-bit values (not 64-bit); older versions either raise a fatal signal,
+// do an unaligned read and rotate the words around a bit, or do the reads very
+// slowly (trip through kernel mode). There's no simple #define that says just
+// “ARMv7 or higher”, so we have to filter away all ARMv5 and ARMv6
+// sub-architectures. Newer gcc (>= 4.6) set an __ARM_FEATURE_ALIGNED #define,
+// so in time, maybe we can move on to that.
+//
+// This is a mess, but there's not much we can do about it.
+//
+// To further complicate matters, only LDR instructions (single reads) are
+// allowed to be unaligned, not LDRD (two reads) or LDM (many reads). Unless we
+// explicitly tell the compiler that these accesses can be unaligned, it can and
+// will combine accesses. On armcc, the way to signal this is done by accessing
+// through the type (uint32_t __packed *), but GCC has no such attribute
+// (it ignores __attribute__((packed)) on individual variables). However,
+// we can tell it that a _struct_ is unaligned, which has the same effect,
+// so we do that.
+
+namespace absl {
+namespace internal {
+
+struct Unaligned16Struct {
+ uint16_t value;
+ uint8_t dummy; // To make the size non-power-of-two.
+} ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PACKED;
+
+struct Unaligned32Struct {
+ uint32_t value;
+ uint8_t dummy; // To make the size non-power-of-two.
+} ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_PACKED;
+
+} // namespace internal
+} // namespace absl
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD16(_p) \
+ ((reinterpret_cast<const ::absl::internal::Unaligned16Struct *>(_p))->value)
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD32(_p) \
+ ((reinterpret_cast<const ::absl::internal::Unaligned32Struct *>(_p))->value)
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE16(_p, _val) \
+ ((reinterpret_cast< ::absl::internal::Unaligned16Struct *>(_p))->value = \
+ (_val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE32(_p, _val) \
+ ((reinterpret_cast< ::absl::internal::Unaligned32Struct *>(_p))->value = \
+ (_val))
+
+namespace absl {
+
+inline uint64_t UnalignedLoad64(const void *p) {
+ uint64_t t;
+ memcpy(&t, p, sizeof t);
+ return t;
+}
+
+inline void UnalignedStore64(void *p, uint64_t v) { memcpy(p, &v, sizeof v); }
+
+} // namespace absl
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD64(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad64(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE64(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore64(_p, _val))
+
+#else
+
+// ABSL_INTERNAL_NEED_ALIGNED_LOADS is defined when the underlying platform
+// doesn't support unaligned access.
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_NEED_ALIGNED_LOADS
+
+// These functions are provided for architectures that don't support
+// unaligned loads and stores.
+
+namespace absl {
+
+inline uint16_t UnalignedLoad16(const void *p) {
+ uint16_t t;
+ memcpy(&t, p, sizeof t);
+ return t;
+}
+
+inline uint32_t UnalignedLoad32(const void *p) {
+ uint32_t t;
+ memcpy(&t, p, sizeof t);
+ return t;
+}
+
+inline uint64_t UnalignedLoad64(const void *p) {
+ uint64_t t;
+ memcpy(&t, p, sizeof t);
+ return t;
+}
+
+inline void UnalignedStore16(void *p, uint16_t v) { memcpy(p, &v, sizeof v); }
+
+inline void UnalignedStore32(void *p, uint32_t v) { memcpy(p, &v, sizeof v); }
+
+inline void UnalignedStore64(void *p, uint64_t v) { memcpy(p, &v, sizeof v); }
+
+} // namespace absl
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD16(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad16(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD32(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad32(_p))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_LOAD64(_p) (absl::UnalignedLoad64(_p))
+
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE16(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore16(_p, _val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE32(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore32(_p, _val))
+#define ABSL_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_STORE64(_p, _val) \
+ (absl::UnalignedStore64(_p, _val))
+
+#endif
+
+#endif // defined(__cplusplus), end of unaligned API
+
+#endif // ABSL_BASE_INTERNAL_UNALIGNED_ACCESS_H_