We have a library that guards runtime paths. If a cpu feature is available then a faster code path is taken. We are trying to add an AVX2 code path on Solaris 11.3.
On an old, downlevel machine without AVX2 we are experiencing:
$ ./cryptest.exe v
ld.so.1: cryptest.exe: fatal: cryptest.exe: hardware capability (CA_SUNW_HW_2) unsupported: 0x40 [ AVX2 ]
Killed
We have a mapfile that clears capabilities due to runtime feature detection. It has worked well for CA_SUNW_HW_1
and AESNI, CLMUL, SSE4.2, SSE4.1 and SSE3:
$ cat cryptopp.mapfile
hwcap_1 = SSE SSE2 OVERRIDE;
We need to clear caps for hwcap_2
. According to Sun's Mapfile Directives, we should be able to use an empty assignment to clear the caps:
If the “=” operator is used, the value specified replaces the previous value, and exclude is reset to 0. In addition, the use of “=” overrides any capabilities that are collected from input file processing.
And then later in the document:
To completely eliminate a given capability from the output object, it suffices to use the “=” operator and an empty value list...
So we added an empty hwcap_2
to eliminate the capability:
$ cat cryptopp.mapfile
hwcap_1 = SSE SSE2 OVERRIDE;
hwcap_2 = ;
But it results in the same runtime error.
We found one bug report at Disable hwcaps on libgfortran, but it has an Autools workaround and not a mapfile fix.
How do we clear AVX and AVX2 capabilities in a mapfile on Solaris x86?
Setting hwcap_2 = 0;
results in the following at linktime:
ld: fatal: cryptopp.mapfile: 4: unknown segment attribute: 0
make: *** [GNUmakefile:1084: cryptest.exe] Error 2
We can't use hwcap_2 = SSE SSE2
because SSE
and SSE2
from hwcap_1
collides with AV2_386_RDSEED
and AV2_386_ADX
from hwcap_2
.
Here is the full link command using the mapfile:
$ CXX=/opt/solarisstudio12.4/bin/CC make
/opt/solarisstudio12.4/bin/CC -o cryptest.exe -DNDEBUG -g -xO3 -template=no%extd
ef adhoc.o test.o bench1.o bench2.o bench3.o datatest.o dlltest.o fipsalgt.o val
idat0.o validat1.o validat2.o validat3.o validat4.o validat5.o validat6.o valida
t7.o validat8.o validat9.o validat10.o regtest1.o regtest2.o regtest3.o regtest4
.o ./libcryptopp.a -xarch=sse2 -xarch=ssse3 -xarch=sse4_1 -xarch=sse4_2 -xarch=a
es -xarch=avx -xarch=avx2 -M cryptopp.mapfile -lnsl -lsocket
$
The reason the linker includes -xarch
options (which are removed by the mapfile) is, the manual tells us the link command must include all -xarch
options. So we don't have a choice in omitting it.
And here is <sys/auxv_386.h>
:
$ cat /usr/include/sys/auxv_386.h
/*
* Copyright (c) 2004, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_AUXV_386_H
#define _SYS_AUXV_386_H
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/*
* Flags used in AT_SUN_CAP_HW* elements to describe various userland
* instruction set extensions available on different processors.
* The basic assumption is that of the i386 ABI; that is, i386 plus i387
* floating point.
*
* Note that if a given bit is set; the implication is that the kernel
* provides all the underlying architectural support for the correct
* functioning of the extended instruction(s).
*/
#define AV_386_FPU 0x00001 /* x87-style floating point */
#define AV_386_TSC 0x00002 /* rdtsc insn */
#define AV_386_CX8 0x00004 /* cmpxchg8b insn */
#define AV_386_SEP 0x00008 /* sysenter and sysexit */
#define AV_386_AMD_SYSC 0x00010 /* AMD's syscall and sysret */
#define AV_386_CMOV 0x00020 /* conditional move insns */
#define AV_386_MMX 0x00040 /* MMX insns */
#define AV_386_AMD_MMX 0x00080 /* AMD's MMX insns */
#define AV_386_AMD_3DNow 0x00100 /* AMD's 3Dnow! insns */
#define AV_386_AMD_3DNowx 0x00200 /* AMD's 3Dnow! extended insns */
#define AV_386_FXSR 0x00400 /* fxsave and fxrstor */
#define AV_386_SSE 0x00800 /* SSE insns and regs */
#define AV_386_SSE2 0x01000 /* SSE2 insns and regs */
/* 0x02000 withdrawn - do not assign */
#define AV_386_SSE3 0x04000 /* SSE3 insns and regs */
/* 0x08000 withdrawn - do not assign */
#define AV_386_CX16 0x10000 /* cmpxchg16b insn */
#define AV_386_AHF 0x20000 /* lahf/sahf insns */
#define AV_386_TSCP 0x40000 /* rdtscp instruction */
#define AV_386_AMD_SSE4A 0x80000 /* AMD's SSE4A insns */
#define AV_386_POPCNT 0x100000 /* POPCNT insn */
#define AV_386_AMD_LZCNT 0x200000 /* AMD's LZCNT insn */
#define AV_386_SSSE3 0x400000 /* Intel SSSE3 insns */
#define AV_386_SSE4_1 0x800000 /* Intel SSE4.1 insns */
#define AV_386_SSE4_2 0x1000000 /* Intel SSE4.2 insns */
#define AV_386_MOVBE 0x2000000 /* Intel MOVBE insns */
#define AV_386_AES 0x4000000 /* Intel AES insns */
#define AV_386_PCLMULQDQ 0x8000000 /* Intel PCLMULQDQ insn */
#define AV_386_XSAVE 0x10000000 /* Intel XSAVE/XRSTOR insns */
#define AV_386_AVX 0x20000000 /* Intel AVX insns */
#define AV_386_AMD_XOP 0x40000000 /* AMD XOP insns */
#define AV_386_AMD_FMA4 0x80000000 /* AMD FMA4 insns */
#define FMT_AV_386_HW1 \
"\20" \
"\40amd_fma4\37amd_xop" \
"\36avx\35xsave" \
"\34pclmulqdq\33aes" \
"\32movbe\31sse4.2" \
"\30sse4.1\27ssse3\26amd_lzcnt\25popcnt" \
"\24amd_sse4a\23tscp\22ahf\21cx16" \
"\17sse3\15sse2\14sse\13fxsr\12amd3dx\11amd3d" \
"\10amdmmx\7mmx\6cmov\5amdsysc\4sep\3cx8\2tsc\1fpu"
#define FMT_AV_386_HW2 \
"\20" \
"\16prfchw\15adx\14rdseed\13efs\12rtm\11hle\10bmi2\7avx2" \
"\6fsgsbase\5bmi1\4amd_tbm\3f16c\2fma\1rdrand"
/*
* Flags used in AT_SUN_CAP_HW2 elements.
*/
#define AV2_386_RDRAND 0x00001 /* Intel RDRAND insns */
#define AV2_386_FMA 0x00002 /* Intel FMA insn */
#define AV2_386_F16C 0x00004 /* IEEE half precn(float) insn */
#define AV2_386_AMD_TBM 0x00008 /* AMD TBM insn */
#define AV2_386_BMI1 0x00010 /* Intel BMI1 insn */
#define AV2_386_FSGSBASE 0x00020 /* Intel RD/WR FS/GSBASE insn */
#define AV2_386_AVX2 0x00040 /* Intel AVX2 insns */
#define AV2_386_BMI2 0x00080 /* Intel BMI2 insns */
#define AV2_386_HLE 0x00100 /* Intel HLE insns */
#define AV2_386_RTM 0x00200 /* Intel RTM insns */
#define AV2_386_EFS 0x00400 /* Intel Enhanced Fast String */
#define AV2_386_RDSEED 0x00800 /* Intel RDSEED insn */
#define AV2_386_ADX 0x01000 /* Intel ADX insns */
#define AV2_386_PRFCHW 0x02000 /* Intel PREFETCHW hint */
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif /* !_SYS_AUXV_386_H */
It looks to me like your mapfile isn't complete. The example from your link to the Oracle Solaris 11.1 Linkers and Libraries Guide looks like this:
To completely eliminate a given capability from the output object, it suffices to use the “=” operator and an empty value list. For example, the following suppresses any hardware capabilities contributed by the input objects:
$mapfile_version 2 CAPABILITY { HW = ; };
But your map file is:
hwcap_1 = SSE SSE2 OVERRIDE;
hwcap_2 = ;
EDIT:
Also, per @jww examining the ld
source code that parses linker maps, the undocumented value V0x0
works to remove hardware capabilities with version 1 map files:
hwcap_1 = SSE SSE2 OVERRIDE;
hwcap_2 = V0x0;