xref: /openbmc/linux/arch/parisc/include/asm/hash.h (revision dea54fba)
1 #ifndef _ASM_HASH_H
2 #define _ASM_HASH_H
3 
4 /*
5  * HP-PA only implements integer multiply in the FPU.  However, for
6  * integer multiplies by constant, it has a number of shift-and-add
7  * (but no shift-and-subtract, sigh!) instructions that a compiler
8  * can synthesize a code sequence with.
9  *
10  * Unfortunately, GCC isn't very efficient at using them.  For example
11  * it uses three instructions for "x *= 21" when only two are needed.
12  * But we can find a sequence manually.
13  */
14 
15 #define HAVE_ARCH__HASH_32 1
16 
17 /*
18  * This is a multiply by GOLDEN_RATIO_32 = 0x61C88647 optimized for the
19  * PA7100 pairing rules.  This is an in-order 2-way superscalar processor.
20  * Only one instruction in a pair may be a shift (by more than 3 bits),
21  * but other than that, simple ALU ops (including shift-and-add by up
22  * to 3 bits) may be paired arbitrarily.
23  *
24  * PA8xxx processors also dual-issue ALU instructions, although with
25  * fewer constraints, so this schedule is good for them, too.
26  *
27  * This 6-step sequence was found by Yevgen Voronenko's implementation
28  * of the Hcub algorithm at http://spiral.ece.cmu.edu/mcm/gen.html.
29  */
30 static inline u32 __attribute_const__ __hash_32(u32 x)
31 {
32 	u32 a, b, c;
33 
34 	/*
35 	 * Phase 1: Compute  a = (x << 19) + x,
36 	 * b = (x << 9) + a, c = (x << 23) + b.
37 	 */
38 	a = x << 19;		/* Two shifts can't be paired */
39 	b = x << 9;	a += x;
40 	c = x << 23;	b += a;
41 			c += b;
42 	/* Phase 2: Return (b<<11) + (c<<6) + (a<<3) - c */
43 	b <<= 11;
44 	a += c << 3;	b -= c;
45 	return (a << 3) + b;
46 }
47 
48 #if BITS_PER_LONG == 64
49 
50 #define HAVE_ARCH_HASH_64 1
51 
52 /*
53  * Finding a good shift-and-add chain for GOLDEN_RATIO_64 is tricky,
54  * because available software for the purpose chokes on constants this
55  * large.  (It's mostly designed for compiling FIR filter coefficients
56  * into FPGAs.)
57  *
58  * However, Jason Thong pointed out a work-around.  The Hcub software
59  * (http://spiral.ece.cmu.edu/mcm/gen.html) is designed for *multiple*
60  * constant multiplication, and is good at finding shift-and-add chains
61  * which share common terms.
62  *
63  * Looking at 0x0x61C8864680B583EB in binary:
64  * 0110000111001000100001100100011010000000101101011000001111101011
65  *  \______________/    \__________/       \_______/     \________/
66  *   \____________________________/         \____________________/
67  * you can see the non-zero bits are divided into several well-separated
68  * blocks.  Hcub can find algorithms for those terms separately, which
69  * can then be shifted and added together.
70  *
71  * Dividing the input into 2, 3 or 4 blocks, Hcub can find solutions
72  * with 10, 9 or 8 adds, respectively, making a total of 11 for the
73  * whole number.
74  *
75  * Using just two large blocks, 0xC3910C8D << 31 in the high bits,
76  * and 0xB583EB in the low bits, produces as good an algorithm as any,
77  * and with one more small shift than alternatives.
78  *
79  * The high bits are a larger number and more work to compute, as well
80  * as needing one extra cycle to shift left 31 bits before the final
81  * addition, so they are the critical path for scheduling.  The low bits
82  * can fit into the scheduling slots left over.
83  */
84 
85 
86 /*
87  * This _ASSIGN(dst, src) macro performs "dst = src", but prevents GCC
88  * from inferring anything about the value assigned to "dest".
89  *
90  * This prevents it from mis-optimizing certain sequences.
91  * In particular, gcc is annoyingly eager to combine consecutive shifts.
92  * Given "x <<= 19; y += x; z += x << 1;", GCC will turn this into
93  * "y += x << 19; z += x << 20;" even though the latter sequence needs
94  * an additional instruction and temporary register.
95  *
96  * Because no actual assembly code is generated, this construct is
97  * usefully portable across all GCC platforms, and so can be test-compiled
98  * on non-PA systems.
99  *
100  * In two places, additional unused input dependencies are added.  This
101  * forces GCC's scheduling so it does not rearrange instructions too much.
102  * Because the PA-8xxx is out of order, I'm not sure how much this matters,
103  * but why make it more difficult for the processor than necessary?
104  */
105 #define _ASSIGN(dst, src, ...) asm("" : "=r" (dst) : "0" (src), ##__VA_ARGS__)
106 
107 /*
108  * Multiply by GOLDEN_RATIO_64 = 0x0x61C8864680B583EB using a heavily
109  * optimized shift-and-add sequence.
110  *
111  * Without the final shift, the multiply proper is 19 instructions,
112  * 10 cycles and uses only 4 temporaries.  Whew!
113  *
114  * You are not expected to understand this.
115  */
116 static __always_inline u32 __attribute_const__
117 hash_64(u64 a, unsigned int bits)
118 {
119 	u64 b, c, d;
120 
121 	/*
122 	 * Encourage GCC to move a dynamic shift to %sar early,
123 	 * thereby freeing up an additional temporary register.
124 	 */
125 	if (!__builtin_constant_p(bits))
126 		asm("" : "=q" (bits) : "0" (64 - bits));
127 	else
128 		bits = 64 - bits;
129 
130 	_ASSIGN(b, a*5);	c = a << 13;
131 	b = (b << 2) + a;	_ASSIGN(d, a << 17);
132 	a = b + (a << 1);	c += d;
133 	d = a << 10;		_ASSIGN(a, a << 19);
134 	d = a - d;		_ASSIGN(a, a << 4, "X" (d));
135 	c += b;			a += b;
136 	d -= c;			c += a << 1;
137 	a += c << 3;		_ASSIGN(b, b << (7+31), "X" (c), "X" (d));
138 	a <<= 31;		b += d;
139 	a += b;
140 	return a >> bits;
141 }
142 #undef _ASSIGN	/* We're a widely-used header file, so don't litter! */
143 
144 #endif /* BITS_PER_LONG == 64 */
145 
146 #endif /* _ASM_HASH_H */
147