rustc_target/spec/targets/
i686_unknown_uefi.rs

1// This defines the ia32 target for UEFI systems as described in the UEFI specification. See the
2// uefi-base module for generic UEFI options. On ia32 systems
3// UEFI systems always run in protected-mode, have the interrupt-controller pre-configured and
4// force a single-CPU execution.
5// The cdecl ABI is used. It differs from the stdcall or fastcall ABI.
6// "i686-unknown-windows" is used to get the minimal subset of windows-specific features.
7
8use crate::spec::{LinkerFlavor, Lld, RustcAbi, Target, add_link_args, base};
9
10pub(crate) fn target() -> Target {
11    let mut base = base::uefi_msvc::opts();
12    base.cpu = "pentium4".into();
13    base.max_atomic_width = Some(64);
14
15    // We disable MMX and SSE for now, even though UEFI allows using them. Problem is, you have to
16    // enable these CPU features explicitly before their first use, otherwise their instructions
17    // will trigger an exception. Rust does not inject any code that enables AVX/MMX/SSE
18    // instruction sets, so this must be done by the firmware. However, existing firmware is known
19    // to leave these uninitialized, thus triggering exceptions if we make use of them. Which is
20    // why we avoid them and instead use soft-floats. This is also what GRUB and friends did so
21    // far.
22    // If you initialize FP units yourself, you can override these flags with custom linker
23    // arguments, thus giving you access to full MMX/SSE acceleration.
24    base.features = "-mmx,-sse,+soft-float".into();
25    base.rustc_abi = Some(RustcAbi::X86Softfloat);
26
27    // Turn off DWARF. This fixes an lld warning, "section name .debug_frame is longer than 8
28    // characters and will use a non-standard string table". That section will not be created if
29    // DWARF is disabled.
30    //
31    // This is only needed in the i686 target due to using the `-gnu` LLVM target (see below).
32    add_link_args(&mut base.post_link_args, LinkerFlavor::Msvc(Lld::No), &["/DEBUG:NODWARF"]);
33
34    // Use -GNU here, because of the reason below:
35    // Background and Problem:
36    //   If we use i686-unknown-windows, the LLVM IA32 MSVC generates compiler intrinsic
37    //   _alldiv, _aulldiv, _allrem, _aullrem, _allmul, which will cause undefined symbol.
38    //   A real issue is __aulldiv() is referred by __udivdi3() - udivmod_inner!(), from
39    //   https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/compiler-builtins.
40    //   As result, rust-lld generates link error finally.
41    // Root-cause:
42    //   In rust\src\llvm-project\llvm\lib\Target\X86\X86ISelLowering.cpp,
43    //   we have below code to use MSVC intrinsics. It assumes MSVC target
44    //   will link MSVC library. But that is NOT true in UEFI environment.
45    //   UEFI does not link any MSVC or GCC standard library.
46    //      if (Subtarget.isTargetKnownWindowsMSVC() ||
47    //          Subtarget.isTargetWindowsItanium()) {
48    //        // Setup Windows compiler runtime calls.
49    //        setLibcallName(RTLIB::SDIV_I64, "_alldiv");
50    //        setLibcallName(RTLIB::UDIV_I64, "_aulldiv");
51    //        setLibcallName(RTLIB::SREM_I64, "_allrem");
52    //        setLibcallName(RTLIB::UREM_I64, "_aullrem");
53    //        setLibcallName(RTLIB::MUL_I64, "_allmul");
54    //        setLibcallCallingConv(RTLIB::SDIV_I64, CallingConv::X86_StdCall);
55    //        setLibcallCallingConv(RTLIB::UDIV_I64, CallingConv::X86_StdCall);
56    //        setLibcallCallingConv(RTLIB::SREM_I64, CallingConv::X86_StdCall);
57    //        setLibcallCallingConv(RTLIB::UREM_I64, CallingConv::X86_StdCall);
58    //        setLibcallCallingConv(RTLIB::MUL_I64, CallingConv::X86_StdCall);
59    //      }
60    //   The compiler intrinsics should be implemented by compiler-builtins.
61    //   Unfortunately, compiler-builtins has not provided those intrinsics yet. Such as:
62    //      i386/divdi3.S
63    //      i386/lshrdi3.S
64    //      i386/moddi3.S
65    //      i386/muldi3.S
66    //      i386/udivdi3.S
67    //      i386/umoddi3.S
68    // Possible solution:
69    //   1. Eliminate Intrinsics generation.
70    //      1.1 Choose different target to bypass isTargetKnownWindowsMSVC().
71    //      1.2 Remove the "Setup Windows compiler runtime calls" in LLVM
72    //   2. Implement Intrinsics.
73    //   We evaluated all options.
74    //   #2 is hard because we need implement the intrinsics (_aulldiv) generated
75    //   from the other intrinsics (__udivdi3) implementation with the same
76    //   functionality (udivmod_inner). If we let _aulldiv() call udivmod_inner!(),
77    //   then we are in loop. We may have to find another way to implement udivmod_inner!().
78    //   #1.2 may break the existing usage.
79    //   #1.1 seems the simplest solution today.
80    //   The IA32 -gnu calling convention is same as the one defined in UEFI specification.
81    //   It uses cdecl, EAX/ECX/EDX as volatile register, and EAX/EDX as return value.
82    //   We also checked the LLVM X86TargetLowering, the differences between -gnu and -msvc
83    //   is fmodf(f32), longjmp() and TLS. None of them impacts the UEFI code.
84    // As a result, we choose -gnu for i686 version before those intrinsics are implemented in
85    // compiler-builtins. After compiler-builtins implements all required intrinsics, we may
86    // remove -gnu and use the default one.
87    Target {
88        llvm_target: "i686-unknown-windows-gnu".into(),
89        metadata: crate::spec::TargetMetadata {
90            description: Some("32-bit UEFI".into()),
91            tier: Some(2),
92            host_tools: Some(false),
93            std: None, // ?
94        },
95        pointer_width: 32,
96        data_layout: "e-m:x-p:32:32-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-\
97            i64:64-i128:128-f80:32-n8:16:32-a:0:32-S32"
98            .into(),
99        arch: "x86".into(),
100
101        options: base,
102    }
103}