/* $Id$ */ /* * This file is part of OpenTTD. * OpenTTD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2. * OpenTTD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. * See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with OpenTTD. If not, see . */ /** @file cpu.cpp OS/CPU/compiler dependant real time tick sampling. */ #include "stdafx.h" #undef RDTSC_AVAILABLE /* rdtsc for MSC_VER, uses simple inline assembly, or _rdtsc * from external win64.asm because VS2005 does not support inline assembly */ #if defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(RDTSC_AVAILABLE) && !defined(WINCE) #include uint64 ottd_rdtsc() { return __rdtsc(); } #define RDTSC_AVAILABLE #endif /* rdtsc for OS/2. Hopefully this works, who knows */ #if defined (__WATCOMC__) && !defined(RDTSC_AVAILABLE) unsigned __int64 ottd_rdtsc(); # pragma aux ottd_rdtsc = 0x0F 0x31 value [edx eax] parm nomemory modify exact [edx eax] nomemory; # define RDTSC_AVAILABLE #endif /* rdtsc for all other *nix-en (hopefully). Use GCC syntax */ #if (defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__)) && !defined(__DJGPP__) && !defined(RDTSC_AVAILABLE) uint64 ottd_rdtsc() { uint32 high, low; __asm__ __volatile__ ("rdtsc" : "=a" (low), "=d" (high)); return ((uint64)high << 32) | low; } # define RDTSC_AVAILABLE #endif /* rdtsc for PPC which has this not */ #if (defined(__POWERPC__) || defined(__powerpc__)) && !defined(RDTSC_AVAILABLE) uint64 ottd_rdtsc() { uint32 high = 0, high2 = 0, low; /* PPC does not have rdtsc, so we cheat by reading the two 32-bit time-counters * it has, 'Move From Time Base (Upper)'. Since these are two reads, in the * very unlikely event that the lower part overflows to the upper part while we * read it; we double-check and reread the registers */ asm volatile ( "mftbu %0\n" "mftb %1\n" "mftbu %2\n" "cmpw %3,%4\n" "bne- $-16\n" : "=r" (high), "=r" (low), "=r" (high2) : "0" (high), "2" (high2) ); return ((uint64)high << 32) | low; } # define RDTSC_AVAILABLE #endif /* In all other cases we have no support for rdtsc. No major issue, * you just won't be able to profile your code with TIC()/TOC() */ #if !defined(RDTSC_AVAILABLE) /* MSVC (in case of WinCE) can't handle #warning */ # if !defined(_MSC_VER) #warning "(non-fatal) No support for rdtsc(), you won't be able to profile with TIC/TOC" # endif uint64 ottd_rdtsc() {return 0;} #endif /** * Definitions for CPU detection: * * MSVC offers cpu information while gcc only implements in gcc 4.8 * __builtin_cpu_supports and friends * http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/vstudio/hskdteyh%28v=vs.100%29.aspx * http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/X86-Built-in-Functions.html * * Other platforms/architectures don't have CPUID, so zero the info and then * most (if not all) of the features are set as if they do not exist. */ #if defined(_MSC_VER) void ottd_cpuid(int info[4], int type) __cpuid(info, type); } #elif defined(__x86_64__) || defined(__i386) void ottd_cpuid(int info[4], int type) { __asm__ __volatile__ ( "cpuid" : "=a" (info[0]), "=b" (info[1]), "=c" (info[2]), "=d" (info[3]) : "a" (type) ); } #else void ottd_cpuid(int info[4], int type) { info[0] = info[1] = info[2] = info[3] = 0; } #endif