linux/arch/x86/um/sys_call_table_64.c
H. Peter Anvin 45db1c6176 x86, um: Use the same style generated syscall tables as native
Now when the native kernel uses a single style of generated system
call table, follow suite for UML and implement the same style, all in
C.  This requires __NR_syscall_max and NR_syscalls to be generated; on
native this is done in asm-headers.h but that file is common to all
UML architectures; therefore put it in user-headers.h instead which
already have accommodations for architecture-specific values.

Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@linux.intel.com>
2011-12-05 16:08:49 -08:00

58 lines
1.5 KiB
C

/*
* System call table for UML/x86-64, copied from arch/x86/kernel/syscall_*.c
* with some changes for UML.
*/
#include <linux/linkage.h>
#include <linux/sys.h>
#include <linux/cache.h>
#include <generated/user_constants.h>
#define __NO_STUBS
/*
* Below you can see, in terms of #define's, the differences between the x86-64
* and the UML syscall table.
*/
/* Not going to be implemented by UML, since we have no hardware. */
#define stub_iopl sys_ni_syscall
#define sys_ioperm sys_ni_syscall
/*
* The UML TLS problem. Note that x86_64 does not implement this, so the below
* is needed only for the ia32 compatibility.
*/
/* On UML we call it this way ("old" means it's not mmap2) */
#define sys_mmap old_mmap
#define stub_clone sys_clone
#define stub_fork sys_fork
#define stub_vfork sys_vfork
#define stub_execve sys_execve
#define stub_rt_sigsuspend sys_rt_sigsuspend
#define stub_sigaltstack sys_sigaltstack
#define stub_rt_sigreturn sys_rt_sigreturn
#define __SYSCALL_64(nr, sym, compat) extern asmlinkage void sym(void) ;
#include <asm/syscalls_64.h>
#undef __SYSCALL_64
#define __SYSCALL_64(nr, sym, compat) [ nr ] = sym,
typedef void (*sys_call_ptr_t)(void);
extern void sys_ni_syscall(void);
sys_call_ptr_t sys_call_table[] __cacheline_aligned = {
/*
* Smells like a compiler bug -- it doesn't work
* when the & below is removed.
*/
[0 ... __NR_syscall_max] = &sys_ni_syscall,
#include <asm/syscalls_64.h>
};
int syscall_table_size = sizeof(sys_call_table);