readme: setup github pages to overcome 512k limit

This commit is contained in:
Ciro Santilli 六四事件 法轮功
2019-07-05 00:00:00 +00:00
parent c98d93f7f7
commit de1457c932
9 changed files with 384 additions and 51 deletions

24
.gitignore vendored
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@@ -1,4 +1,8 @@
# Extensions and prefixes.
# Important directories.
/out
/data
# Temporary files.
*.tmp
tmp.*
*.tmp.*
@@ -6,12 +10,11 @@ tmp.*
*.gitignore
gitignore.*
# Specific files.
/data
/gem5/out
# https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat#prebuilt
/lkmc-*.zip
/out
/out.*
# https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat#bst-vs-heap-vs-hashmap
*.dat
# Python trash.
*.pyc
@@ -23,15 +26,12 @@ __pycache__
*.o
*.out
# Data to be plotted output.
*.dat
# Kernel modules.
.cache.mk
*.ko
*.ko.cmd
*.mod.c
*.o.cmd
.cache.mk
.tmp_versions
Module.symvers
*.ko
*.mod.c
modules.order

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@@ -1,3 +1,5 @@
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'asciidoctor', '2.0.10'
#gem 'jekyll', '3.8.6'
gem 'github-pages'

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@@ -1,13 +1,250 @@
GEM
remote: https://rubygems.org/
specs:
activesupport (4.2.11.1)
i18n (~> 0.7)
minitest (~> 5.1)
thread_safe (~> 0.3, >= 0.3.4)
tzinfo (~> 1.1)
addressable (2.6.0)
public_suffix (>= 2.0.2, < 4.0)
asciidoctor (2.0.10)
coffee-script (2.4.1)
coffee-script-source
execjs
coffee-script-source (1.11.1)
colorator (1.1.0)
commonmarker (0.17.13)
ruby-enum (~> 0.5)
concurrent-ruby (1.1.5)
dnsruby (1.61.2)
addressable (~> 2.5)
em-websocket (0.5.1)
eventmachine (>= 0.12.9)
http_parser.rb (~> 0.6.0)
ethon (0.12.0)
ffi (>= 1.3.0)
eventmachine (1.2.7)
execjs (2.7.0)
faraday (0.15.4)
multipart-post (>= 1.2, < 3)
ffi (1.11.1)
forwardable-extended (2.6.0)
gemoji (3.0.1)
github-pages (198)
activesupport (= 4.2.11.1)
github-pages-health-check (= 1.16.1)
jekyll (= 3.8.5)
jekyll-avatar (= 0.6.0)
jekyll-coffeescript (= 1.1.1)
jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (= 0.1.5)
jekyll-default-layout (= 0.1.4)
jekyll-feed (= 0.11.0)
jekyll-gist (= 1.5.0)
jekyll-github-metadata (= 2.12.1)
jekyll-mentions (= 1.4.1)
jekyll-optional-front-matter (= 0.3.0)
jekyll-paginate (= 1.1.0)
jekyll-readme-index (= 0.2.0)
jekyll-redirect-from (= 0.14.0)
jekyll-relative-links (= 0.6.0)
jekyll-remote-theme (= 0.3.1)
jekyll-sass-converter (= 1.5.2)
jekyll-seo-tag (= 2.5.0)
jekyll-sitemap (= 1.2.0)
jekyll-swiss (= 0.4.0)
jekyll-theme-architect (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-cayman (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-dinky (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-hacker (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-leap-day (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-merlot (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-midnight (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-minimal (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-modernist (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-primer (= 0.5.3)
jekyll-theme-slate (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-tactile (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-time-machine (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-titles-from-headings (= 0.5.1)
jemoji (= 0.10.2)
kramdown (= 1.17.0)
liquid (= 4.0.0)
listen (= 3.1.5)
mercenary (~> 0.3)
minima (= 2.5.0)
nokogiri (>= 1.8.5, < 2.0)
rouge (= 2.2.1)
terminal-table (~> 1.4)
github-pages-health-check (1.16.1)
addressable (~> 2.3)
dnsruby (~> 1.60)
octokit (~> 4.0)
public_suffix (~> 3.0)
typhoeus (~> 1.3)
html-pipeline (2.11.0)
activesupport (>= 2)
nokogiri (>= 1.4)
http_parser.rb (0.6.0)
i18n (0.9.5)
concurrent-ruby (~> 1.0)
jekyll (3.8.5)
addressable (~> 2.4)
colorator (~> 1.0)
em-websocket (~> 0.5)
i18n (~> 0.7)
jekyll-sass-converter (~> 1.0)
jekyll-watch (~> 2.0)
kramdown (~> 1.14)
liquid (~> 4.0)
mercenary (~> 0.3.3)
pathutil (~> 0.9)
rouge (>= 1.7, < 4)
safe_yaml (~> 1.0)
jekyll-avatar (0.6.0)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
jekyll-coffeescript (1.1.1)
coffee-script (~> 2.2)
coffee-script-source (~> 1.11.1)
jekyll-commonmark (1.3.1)
commonmarker (~> 0.14)
jekyll (>= 3.7, < 5.0)
jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (0.1.5)
commonmarker (~> 0.17.6)
jekyll-commonmark (~> 1)
rouge (~> 2)
jekyll-default-layout (0.1.4)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
jekyll-feed (0.11.0)
jekyll (~> 3.3)
jekyll-gist (1.5.0)
octokit (~> 4.2)
jekyll-github-metadata (2.12.1)
jekyll (~> 3.4)
octokit (~> 4.0, != 4.4.0)
jekyll-mentions (1.4.1)
html-pipeline (~> 2.3)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
jekyll-optional-front-matter (0.3.0)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
jekyll-paginate (1.1.0)
jekyll-readme-index (0.2.0)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
jekyll-redirect-from (0.14.0)
jekyll (~> 3.3)
jekyll-relative-links (0.6.0)
jekyll (~> 3.3)
jekyll-remote-theme (0.3.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
rubyzip (>= 1.2.1, < 3.0)
jekyll-sass-converter (1.5.2)
sass (~> 3.4)
jekyll-seo-tag (2.5.0)
jekyll (~> 3.3)
jekyll-sitemap (1.2.0)
jekyll (~> 3.3)
jekyll-swiss (0.4.0)
jekyll-theme-architect (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-cayman (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-dinky (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-hacker (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-leap-day (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-merlot (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-midnight (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-minimal (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-modernist (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-primer (0.5.3)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-github-metadata (~> 2.9)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-slate (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-tactile (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-time-machine (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-titles-from-headings (0.5.1)
jekyll (~> 3.3)
jekyll-watch (2.2.1)
listen (~> 3.0)
jemoji (0.10.2)
gemoji (~> 3.0)
html-pipeline (~> 2.2)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
kramdown (1.17.0)
liquid (4.0.0)
listen (3.1.5)
rb-fsevent (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.4)
rb-inotify (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.7)
ruby_dep (~> 1.2)
mercenary (0.3.6)
mini_portile2 (2.4.0)
minima (2.5.0)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
jekyll-feed (~> 0.9)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.1)
minitest (5.11.3)
multipart-post (2.1.1)
nokogiri (1.10.3)
mini_portile2 (~> 2.4.0)
octokit (4.14.0)
sawyer (~> 0.8.0, >= 0.5.3)
pathutil (0.16.2)
forwardable-extended (~> 2.6)
public_suffix (3.1.1)
rb-fsevent (0.10.3)
rb-inotify (0.10.0)
ffi (~> 1.0)
rouge (2.2.1)
ruby-enum (0.7.2)
i18n
ruby_dep (1.5.0)
rubyzip (1.2.3)
safe_yaml (1.0.5)
sass (3.7.4)
sass-listen (~> 4.0.0)
sass-listen (4.0.0)
rb-fsevent (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.4)
rb-inotify (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.7)
sawyer (0.8.2)
addressable (>= 2.3.5)
faraday (> 0.8, < 2.0)
terminal-table (1.8.0)
unicode-display_width (~> 1.1, >= 1.1.1)
thread_safe (0.3.6)
typhoeus (1.3.1)
ethon (>= 0.9.0)
tzinfo (1.2.5)
thread_safe (~> 0.1)
unicode-display_width (1.6.0)
PLATFORMS
ruby
DEPENDENCIES
asciidoctor (= 2.0.10)
github-pages
BUNDLED WITH
2.0.2

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@@ -13,6 +13,8 @@ The perfect emulation setup to study and develop the <<linux-kernel>> v5.1, kern
TL;DR: <<qemu-buildroot-setup-getting-started>>
The source code for this page is located at: https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat[]. Due to link:https://github.com/isaacs/github/issues/1610[a GitHub limitation], this README is too long and not fully rendered on github.com. Either use: https://www.cirosantilli.com/linux-kernel-module-cheat or <<build-the-documentation,build the docs yourself>>.
toc::[]
== Getting started
@@ -1371,8 +1373,8 @@ continue
See also:
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11408041/how-to-debug-the-linux-kernel-with-gdb-and-qemu/33203642#33203642
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4943857/linux-kernel-live-debugging-how-its-done-and-what-tools-are-used/42316607#42316607
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11408041/how-to-debug-the-linux-kernel-with-gdb-and-qemu/33203642#33203642
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4943857/linux-kernel-live-debugging-how-its-done-and-what-tools-are-used/42316607#42316607
==== GDB step debug kernel boot other archs
@@ -1545,7 +1547,7 @@ From inside tmux, you can create new terminals on a new window with `Ctrl-B C` s
=== GDB step debug kernel module
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28607538/how-to-debug-linux-kernel-modules-with-qemu/44095831#44095831
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28607538/how-to-debug-linux-kernel-modules-with-qemu/44095831#44095831
Loadable kernel modules are a bit trickier since the kernel can place them at different memory locations depending on load order.
@@ -4417,7 +4419,7 @@ TODO <<kmscube>> failed on `aarch64` with:
kmscube[706]: unhandled level 2 translation fault (11) at 0x00000000, esr 0x92000006, in libgbm.so.1.0.0[7fbf6a6000+e000]
....
Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/38fd6153d965ba20145f53dc1bb3ba34b336bde9[38fd6153d965ba20145f53dc1bb3ba34b336bde9]
Tested on: link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/38fd6153d965ba20145f53dc1bb3ba34b336bde9[38fd6153d965ba20145f53dc1bb3ba34b336bde9]
==== Graphic mode gem5 aarch64
@@ -6570,7 +6572,7 @@ sh -x ./fops.sh
We have put printks on each fop, so this allows you to see which system calls are being made for each command.
No, there no official documentation: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15213932/what-are-the-struct-file-operations-arguments
No, there no official documentation: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15213932/what-are-the-struct-file-operations-arguments
==== seq_file
@@ -6843,8 +6845,8 @@ The sleep is done with `usleep_range`, see: <<sleep>>.
Bibliography:
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10177641/proper-way-of-handling-threads-in-kernel
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4084708/how-to-wait-for-a-linux-kernel-thread-kthreadto-exit
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10177641/proper-way-of-handling-threads-in-kernel
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4084708/how-to-wait-for-a-linux-kernel-thread-kthreadto-exit
==== kthreads
@@ -7041,7 +7043,7 @@ Therefore they produce more accurate timing than thread scheduling, which is mor
Bibliography:
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10812858/timers-in-linux-device-drivers
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10812858/timers-in-linux-device-drivers
* https://gist.github.com/yagihiro/310149
=== IRQ
@@ -7831,7 +7833,7 @@ It only appears once on every log I've seen so far, checked with `grep 0x1000000
+
Then when we count the instructions that run before the kernel entry point, there is only about 100k instructions, which is insignificant compared to the kernel boot itself.
+
TODO `--arch arm` and `--arch aarch64` does not count firmware instructions properly because the entry point address of the ELF file (`ffffff8008080000` for `aarch64`) does not show up on the trace at all. Tested on link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005[f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005].
TODO `--arch arm` and `--arch aarch64` does not count firmware instructions properly because the entry point address of the ELF file (`ffffff8008080000` for `aarch64`) does not show up on the trace at all. Tested on link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005[f8c0502bb2680f2dbe7c1f3d7958f60265347005].
* We can also discount the instructions after `init` runs by using `readelf` to get the initial address of `init`. One easy way to do that now is to just run:
+
....
@@ -8492,7 +8494,7 @@ Bibliography:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Rendering_Manager
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_setting KMS
Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/93e383902ebcc03d8a7ac0d65961c0e62af9612b[93e383902ebcc03d8a7ac0d65961c0e62af9612b]
Tested on: link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/93e383902ebcc03d8a7ac0d65961c0e62af9612b[93e383902ebcc03d8a7ac0d65961c0e62af9612b]
==== kmscube
@@ -8541,7 +8543,7 @@ failed to initialize legacy DRM
See also: https://github.com/robclark/kmscube/issues/12 and https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26920835/can-egl-application-run-in-console-mode/26921287#26921287
Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/2903771275372ccfecc2b025edbb0d04c4016930[2903771275372ccfecc2b025edbb0d04c4016930]
Tested on: link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/2903771275372ccfecc2b025edbb0d04c4016930[2903771275372ccfecc2b025edbb0d04c4016930]
==== kmscon
@@ -9386,7 +9388,7 @@ and go back to the terminal with:
Ctrl-A C
....
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14165158/how-to-switch-to-qemu-monitor-console-when-running-with-curses
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14165158/how-to-switch-to-qemu-monitor-console-when-running-with-curses
* https://superuser.com/questions/488263/how-to-switch-to-the-qemu-control-panel-with-nographics
When in graphic mode, we can do it from the GUI:
@@ -10372,7 +10374,7 @@ Source: link:userland/libs/eigen/hello.cpp[]
This example just creates a matrix and prints it out.
Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/a4bdcf102c068762bb1ef26c591fcf71e5907525[a4bdcf102c068762bb1ef26c591fcf71e5907525]
Tested on: link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/a4bdcf102c068762bb1ef26c591fcf71e5907525[a4bdcf102c068762bb1ef26c591fcf71e5907525]
===== PARSEC benchmark
@@ -11328,7 +11330,7 @@ We setup 2 big and 2 small CPUs, but `cat /proc/cpuinfo` shows 4 identical CPUs
TODO: why is the `--dtb` required despite `fs_bigLITTLE.py` having a DTB generation capability? Without it, nothing shows on terminal, and the simulation terminates with `simulate() limit reached @ 18446744073709551615`. The magic `vmlinux.vexpress_gem5_v1.20170616` works however without a DTB.
Tested on: link:http://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/18c1c823feda65f8b54cd38e261c282eee01ed9f[18c1c823feda65f8b54cd38e261c282eee01ed9f]
Tested on: link:https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/commit/18c1c823feda65f8b54cd38e261c282eee01ed9f[18c1c823feda65f8b54cd38e261c282eee01ed9f]
=== gem5 unit tests
@@ -12065,7 +12067,7 @@ Particularly important numerical analysis instruction, that is used in particula
FMA is so important that <<ieee-754>> specifies it with single precision drop compared to a separate add and multiply!
Micro-op fun: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28630864/how-is-fma-implemented
Micro-op fun: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28630864/how-is-fma-implemented
Historically, FMA instructions have been added relatively late to instruction sets.
@@ -12331,8 +12333,8 @@ Official specification: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0042
Bibliography:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calling_convention#ARM_(A32) Wiki contains the master list as usual.
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8422287/calling-c-functions-from-arm-assembly
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/261419/arm-to-c-calling-convention-registers-to-save
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8422287/calling-c-functions-from-arm-assembly
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/261419/arm-to-c-calling-convention-registers-to-save
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10494848/arm-whats-the-difference-between-apcs-and-aapcs-abi
=== GNU GAS assembler
@@ -12455,7 +12457,7 @@ Bibliography: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27147043/n-suffix-to-branch-in
link:userland/arch/x86_64/char_literals.S[]
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/33246811/how-to-use-character-literals-in-gnu-gas-to-replace-numbers
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33246811/how-to-use-character-literals-in-gnu-gas-to-replace-numbers
This syntax plays horribly with the C preprocessor:
@@ -12474,7 +12476,7 @@ No OPeration.
Does nothing except take up one processor cycle and occupy some instruction memory.
Applications: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/234906/whats-the-purpose-of-the-nop-opcode
Applications: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/234906/whats-the-purpose-of-the-nop-opcode
== x86 userland assembly
@@ -12616,7 +12618,7 @@ mov (%rsp), %rax
add $8, %rsp
....
Why do those instructions exist at all vs MOV / ADD / SUB: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4584089/what-is-the-function-of-push-pop-registers-in-x86-assembly/33583134#33583134
Why do those instructions exist at all vs MOV / ADD / SUB: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4584089/what-is-the-function-of-push-pop-registers-in-x86-assembly/33583134#33583134
==== x86 CQTO and CLTQ instructions
@@ -12697,14 +12699,14 @@ where `cc` are the same flags as Jcc.
Vs jmp:
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14131096/why-is-a-conditional-move-not-vulnerable-for-branch-prediction-failure
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27136961/what-is-it-about-cmov-which-improves-cpu-pipeline-performance
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26154488/difference-between-conditional-instructions-cmov-and-jump-instructions
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6754454/speed-difference-between-if-else-and-ternary-operator-in-c?lq=1#comment8007791_6754495
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14131096/why-is-a-conditional-move-not-vulnerable-for-branch-prediction-failure
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27136961/what-is-it-about-cmov-which-improves-cpu-pipeline-performance
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26154488/difference-between-conditional-instructions-cmov-and-jump-instructions
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6754454/speed-difference-between-if-else-and-ternary-operator-in-c?lq=1#comment8007791_6754495
Not necessarily faster because of branch prediction.
This is partly why the ternary `?` C operator exists: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3565368/ternary-operator-vs-if-else
This is partly why the ternary `?` C operator exists: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3565368/ternary-operator-vs-if-else
It is interesting to compare this with ARMv7 conditional executaion: which is available for all instructions: <<arm-conditional-execution>>
@@ -12880,7 +12882,7 @@ REP and REPZ also additionally stop if the comparison operation they repeat fail
link:userland/arch/x86_64/enter.S[]
These instructions were designed to allocate and deallocate function stack frames in the prologue and epilogue: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5959890/enter-vs-push-ebp-mov-ebp-esp-sub-esp-imm-and-leave-vs-mov-esp-ebp
These instructions were designed to allocate and deallocate function stack frames in the prologue and epilogue: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5959890/enter-vs-push-ebp-mov-ebp-esp-sub-esp-imm-and-leave-vs-mov-esp-ebp
ENTER appears obsolete and is kept mostly for backwards compatibility. LEAVE is still emitted by some compilers.
@@ -12897,7 +12899,7 @@ which implies an allocation of:
* one dword to remember EBP
* A bytes for local function variables
I didn't have the patience to study the B parameter, and it does not seem to be used often: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26323215/do-any-languages-compilers-utilize-the-x86-enter-instruction-with-a-nonzero-ne
I didn't have the patience to study the B parameter, and it does not seem to be used often: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26323215/do-any-languages-compilers-utilize-the-x86-enter-instruction-with-a-nonzero-ne
LEAVE is equivalent to:
@@ -13005,7 +13007,7 @@ Instructions such as FLDL convert standard <<ieee-754>> 64-bit values from memor
==== x86 x87 FPU vs SIMD
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1844669/benefits-of-x87-over-sse
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1844669/benefits-of-x87-over-sse
Modern x86 has two main ways of doing floating point operations:
@@ -13622,7 +13624,7 @@ The registers are encoded as single bits inside the instruction: each bit repres
As a consequence, the push order is fixed no matter how you write the assembly instruction: there is just not enough space to encode ordering.
AArch64 loses those instructions, likely because it was not possible anymore to encode all registers: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27941220/push-lr-and-pop-lr-in-arm-arch64 and replaces them with the <<armv8-aarch64-ldp-and-stp-instructions>>
AArch64 loses those instructions, likely because it was not possible anymore to encode all registers: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27941220/push-lr-and-pop-lr-in-arm-arch64 and replaces them with the <<armv8-aarch64-ldp-and-stp-instructions>>
=== ARM data processing instructions
@@ -15772,7 +15774,9 @@ but note that this does not include script specific options.
=== Build the documentation
You don't need to depend on GitHub. To build the first time use:
You don't need to depend on GitHub.
To build the first time use:
....
./build --download-dependencies docs
@@ -15794,7 +15798,6 @@ Then just open the HTML output at:
xdg-open out/README.html
....
[[documentation-verification]]
==== Documentation verification
When running link:build-doc[], we do the following checks:
@@ -15853,6 +15856,43 @@ explicitly-given
One application we have in mind for this is that as of 2.0.10 Asciidoctor does not warn on header ID collisions between auto-generated IDs: https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor/issues/3147 But this script doesn't solve that yet as it would require generating the section IDs without the `-N` suffix. Section generation happens at `Section.generate_id` in Asciidoctor code.
[[asciidoctor-link-target-up-rb]]
=== asciidoctor/link-target-up.rb
The Asciidoctor extension scripts:
* link:asciidoctor-link-up.rb
* link:asciidoctor-link-github.rb
hack the README `link:` targets to make them work from:
* inside the `out/` directory with `../`
* <<github-pages>>, with explicit GitHub blob URLs
==== GitHub pages
As mentioned before the TOC, we have to push this README to GitHub pages due to: https://github.com/isaacs/github/issues/1610
For now, instead of pushing with `git push`, I just remember to always push with:
....
./publish-gh-pages
....
Source: link:publish-gh-pages[]
I'm going this way for now because:
* the Jekyll Asciidoctor plugin is not enabled by default on GitHub: https://webapps.stackexchange.com/questions/114606/can-github-pages-render-asciidoc
* link:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1797074/local-executing-hook-after-a-git-push[post-push hooks don't exist]
* I'm lazy to setup a proper Travis CI push
* I'm the only contributor essentially, so no problems with pull requests
The only files used by the GitHub pages are:
* link:Gemfile[]
* link:_config.yml[]
=== Clean the build
You did something crazy, and nothing seems to work anymore?

6
_config.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
exclude: [
data/,
out/,
rootfs_overlay/etc/ld.so.cache,
submodules/,
]

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@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
#
# https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat#asciidoctor-link-target-up-rb
require 'asciidoctor'
require 'asciidoctor/extensions'
require_relative 'link-target-up.rb'
class LinkTargetGitHub < LinkTargetUp
named :link
def target_base
'https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat/blob/master/'
end
end
Asciidoctor::Extensions.register do
inline_macro LinkTargetGitHub
end

View File

@@ -1,29 +1,31 @@
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
=begin
README.html links break because we place that output file in out/
This extension hacks local link targets to the right path.
=end
# https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat#asciidoctor-link-target-up-rb
require 'asciidoctor'
require 'asciidoctor/extensions'
class Main < Asciidoctor::Extensions::InlineMacroProcessor
class LinkTargetUp < Asciidoctor::Extensions::InlineMacroProcessor
use_dsl
named :link
ExternalLinkRegex = /^https?:\/\//
def target_base
'..'
end
def process parent, target, attrs
text = attrs[1]
if text.nil? || text.empty?
text = target
end
if !ExternalLinkRegex.match?(target)
target = File.join('..', target)
target = File.join(target_base, target)
end
create_anchor parent, text, type: :link, target: target
end
end
Asciidoctor::Extensions.register do
inline_macro Main
inline_macro LinkTargetUp
end

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@@ -17,14 +17,26 @@ class Main(common.LkmcCliFunction):
https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat#build-the-documentation
''',
)
self.add_argument(
'--github-pages',
default=False,
help='''
Build for GitHub pages instead of a local build. This redirects all links
from the README to example sources to GitHub rather than locally.
'''
)
def timed_main(self):
asciidoctor_dir = os.path.join(self.env['root_dir'], 'asciidoctor')
if self.env['github_pages']:
link_target_script = 'link-target-github.rb'
else:
link_target_script = 'link-target-up.rb'
exit_status = self.sh.run_cmd(
[
'asciidoctor', LF,
'--failure-level', 'info', LF,
'--require', os.path.join(asciidoctor_dir, 'link-target-up.rb'), LF,
'--require', os.path.join(asciidoctor_dir, link_target_script), LF,
'--out-file', self.env['readme_out'], LF,
'--trace', LF,
'--verbose', LF,

15
publish-gh-pages Executable file
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@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# https://github.com/cirosantilli/linux-kernel-module-cheat#github-pages
set -eu
git push
./build-doc --github-pages
git branch -D gh-pages
git checkout --orphan gh-pages
git reset
cp out/README.html index.html
git add _config.yml index.html
git commit --message "$(git log -n1 --pretty='%H' master)"
git push --force
git symbolic-ref HEAD refs/heads/master
git reset
rm index.html