diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c')
-rw-r--r-- | sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c | 23 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c b/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c index 94c9465..a558da1 100644 --- a/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c +++ b/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/init-first.c @@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ init (int *data) /* Call `init1' (above) with the user code as the return address, and the argument data immediately above that on the stack. */ - int usercode; + void *usercode, **ret_address; void call_init1 (void); @@ -206,10 +206,11 @@ init (int *data) recognize that this read operation may alias the following write operation, and thus is free to reorder the two, clobbering the original return address. */ - usercode = *((int *) __builtin_frame_address (0) + 1); + ret_address = (void **) __builtin_frame_address (0) + 1; + usercode = *ret_address; /* GCC 4.4.6 also wants us to force loading USERCODE already here. */ asm volatile ("# %0" : : "X" (usercode)); - *((void **) __builtin_frame_address (0) + 1) = &call_init1; + *ret_address = &call_init1; /* Force USERCODE into %eax and &init1 into %ecx, which are not restored by function return. */ asm volatile ("# a %0 c %1" : : "a" (usercode), "c" (&init1)); @@ -223,19 +224,9 @@ init (int *data) /* The return address of `init' above, was redirected to here, so at this point our stack is unwound and callers' registers restored. Only %ecx and %eax are call-clobbered and thus still have the - values we set just above. Fetch from there the new stack pointer - we will run on, and jmp to the run-time address of `init1'; when it - returns, it will run the user code with the argument data at the - top of the stack. */ -asm ("switch_stacks:\n" - " movl %eax, %esp\n" - " jmp *%ecx"); - -/* As in the stack-switching case, at this point our stack is unwound - and callers' registers restored, and only %ecx and %eax communicate - values from the lines above. In this case we have stashed in %eax - the user code return address. Push it on the top of the stack so - it acts as init1's return address, and then jump there. */ + values we set just above. We have stashed in %eax the user code + return address. Push it on the top of the stack so it acts as + init1's return address, and then jump there. */ asm ("call_init1:\n" " push %eax\n" " jmp *%ecx\n"); |