Based on kernel version 4.16.1. Page generated on 2018-04-09 11:52 EST.
1 Too many problems poped up because of unnoticed misaligned memory access in 2 kernel code lately. Therefore the alignment fixup is now unconditionally 3 configured in for SA11x0 based targets. According to Alan Cox, this is a 4 bad idea to configure it out, but Russell King has some good reasons for 5 doing so on some f***ed up ARM architectures like the EBSA110. However 6 this is not the case on many design I'm aware of, like all SA11x0 based 7 ones. 8 9 Of course this is a bad idea to rely on the alignment trap to perform 10 unaligned memory access in general. If those access are predictable, you 11 are better to use the macros provided by include/asm/unaligned.h. The 12 alignment trap can fixup misaligned access for the exception cases, but at 13 a high performance cost. It better be rare. 14 15 Now for user space applications, it is possible to configure the alignment 16 trap to SIGBUS any code performing unaligned access (good for debugging bad 17 code), or even fixup the access by software like for kernel code. The later 18 mode isn't recommended for performance reasons (just think about the 19 floating point emulation that works about the same way). Fix your code 20 instead! 21 22 Please note that randomly changing the behaviour without good thought is 23 real bad - it changes the behaviour of all unaligned instructions in user 24 space, and might cause programs to fail unexpectedly. 25 26 To change the alignment trap behavior, simply echo a number into 27 /proc/cpu/alignment. The number is made up from various bits: 28 29 bit behavior when set 30 --- ----------------- 31 32 0 A user process performing an unaligned memory access 33 will cause the kernel to print a message indicating 34 process name, pid, pc, instruction, address, and the 35 fault code. 36 37 1 The kernel will attempt to fix up the user process 38 performing the unaligned access. This is of course 39 slow (think about the floating point emulator) and 40 not recommended for production use. 41 42 2 The kernel will send a SIGBUS signal to the user process 43 performing the unaligned access. 44 45 Note that not all combinations are supported - only values 0 through 5. 46 (6 and 7 don't make sense). 47 48 For example, the following will turn on the warnings, but without 49 fixing up or sending SIGBUS signals: 50 51 echo 1 > /proc/cpu/alignment 52 53 You can also read the content of the same file to get statistical 54 information on unaligned access occurrences plus the current mode of 55 operation for user space code. 56 57 58 Nicolas Pitre, Mar 13, 2001. Modified Russell King, Nov 30, 2001.