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Andrew Morton authored
From: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org> On machines with Altivec (i.e. G4 and G5 processors), the altivec floating-point instructions can operate in two modes: one where denormalized inputs or outputs are truncated to zero, and one where they aren't. In the latter mode the processor can take an exception when it encounters denormalized floating-point inputs or outputs rather than dealing with them in hardware. This patch adds code to deal properly with the exception, by emulating the instruction that caused the exception. Previously the kernel just switched the altivec unit into the truncate-to-zero mode, which works but is a bit gross. Fortunately there are only a limited set of altivec instructions which can generate the assist exception, so we don't have to emulate the whole altivec instruction set. This patch also makes sure that we always have a handler for the altivec unavailable exception. Without this, if you run a kernel that is not configured for altivec support on a machine with altivec, it works fine until a user process tries to execute an altivec instruction. At that point the kernel thinks it has taken an unknown exception and panics. With this patch it sends a SIGILL to the process instead.
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