1.\" Copyright (c) 2016-2017 The FreeBSD Foundation. 2.\" 3.\" This documentation was created by Ed Maste under sponsorship of 4.\" The FreeBSD Foundation. 5.\" 6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8.\" are met: 9.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 11.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 12.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 13.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 14.\" 15.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS ``AS IS'' AND 16.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 17.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 18.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE 19.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 20.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 21.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 22.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 23.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 24.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 25.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 26.\" 27.\" $FreeBSD$ 28.\" 29.Dd April 12, 2023 30.Dt ARCH 7 31.Os 32.Sh NAME 33.Nm arch 34.Nd Architecture-specific details 35.Sh DESCRIPTION 36Differences between CPU architectures and platforms supported by 37.Fx . 38.Ss Introduction 39This document is a quick reference of key ABI details of 40.Fx 41architecture ports. 42For full details consult the processor-specific ABI supplement 43documentation. 44.Pp 45If not explicitly mentioned, sizes are in bytes. 46The architecture details in this document apply to 47.Fx 12.0 48and later, unless otherwise noted. 49.Pp 50.Fx 51uses a flat address space. 52Variables of types 53.Vt unsigned long , 54.Vt uintptr_t , 55and 56.Vt size_t 57and pointers all have the same representation. 58.Pp 59In order to maximize compatibility with future pointer integrity mechanisms, 60manipulations of pointers as integers should be performed via 61.Vt uintptr_t 62or 63.Vt intptr_t 64and no other types. 65In particular, 66.Vt long 67and 68.Vt ptrdiff_t 69should be avoided. 70.Pp 71On some architectures, e.g., 72.Dv powerpc 73and AIM variants of 74.Dv powerpc64 , 75the kernel uses a separate address space. 76On other architectures, kernel and a user mode process share a 77single address space. 78The kernel is located at the highest addresses. 79.Pp 80On each architecture, the main user mode thread's stack starts near 81the highest user address and grows down. 82.Pp 83.Fx 84architecture support varies by release. 85This table shows currently supported CPU architectures along with the first 86.Fx 87release to support each architecture. 88.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "Initial Release" 89.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy Initial Release 90.It aarch64 Ta 11.0 91.It amd64 Ta 5.1 92.It armv6 Ta 10.0 93.It armv7 Ta 12.0 94.It i386 Ta 1.0 95.It powerpc Ta 6.0 96.It powerpcspe Ta 12.0 97.It powerpc64 Ta 9.0 98.It powerpc64le Ta 13.0 99.It riscv64 Ta 12.0 100.El 101.Pp 102Discontinued architectures are shown in the following table. 103.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "Initial Release" "Final Release" 104.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy Initial Release Ta Sy Final Release 105.It alpha Ta 3.2 Ta 6.4 106.It arm Ta 6.0 Ta 12.x 107.It armeb Ta 8.0 Ta 11.4 108.It ia64 Ta 5.0 Ta 10.4 109.It mips Ta 8.0 Ta 13.x 110.It mipsel Ta 9.0 Ta 13.x 111.It mipselhf Ta 12.0 Ta 13.x 112.It mipshf Ta 12.0 Ta 13.x 113.It mipsn32 Ta 9.0 Ta 13.x 114.It mips64 Ta 9.0 Ta 13.x 115.It mips64el Ta 9.0 Ta 13.x 116.It mips64elhf Ta 12.0 Ta 13.x 117.It mips64hf Ta 12.0 Ta 13.x 118.It pc98 Ta 2.2 Ta 11.4 119.It riscv64sf Ta 12.0 Ta 13.x 120.It sparc64 Ta 5.0 Ta 12.x 121.El 122.Ss Type sizes 123All 124.Fx 125architectures use some variant of the ELF (see 126.Xr elf 5 ) 127.Sy Application Binary Interface 128(ABI) for the machine processor. 129All supported ABIs can be divided into two groups: 130.Bl -tag -width "Dv ILP32" 131.It Dv ILP32 132.Vt int , 133.Vt long , 134.Vt void * 135types machine representations all have 4-byte size. 136.It Dv LP64 137.Vt int 138type machine representation uses 4 bytes, 139while 140.Vt long 141and 142.Vt void * 143are 8 bytes. 144.El 145.Pp 146Some machines support more than one 147.Fx 148ABI. 149Typically these are 64-bit machines, where the 150.Dq native 151.Dv LP64 152execution environment is accompanied by the 153.Dq legacy 154.Dv ILP32 155environment, which was the historical 32-bit predecessor for 64-bit evolution. 156Examples are: 157.Bl -column -offset indent "powerpc64" "ILP32 counterpart" 158.It Sy LP64 Ta Sy ILP32 counterpart 159.It Dv amd64 Ta Dv i386 160.It Dv powerpc64 Ta Dv powerpc 161.It Dv aarch64 Ta Dv armv6/armv7 162.El 163.Pp 164.Dv aarch64 165will support execution of 166.Dv armv6 167or 168.Dv armv7 169binaries if the CPU implements 170.Dv AArch32 171execution state, however older 172.Dv armv4 173and 174.Dv armv5 175binaries aren't supported. 176.Pp 177On all supported architectures: 178.Bl -column -offset -indent "long long" "Size" 179.It Sy Type Ta Sy Size 180.It short Ta 2 181.It int Ta 4 182.It long Ta sizeof(void*) 183.It long long Ta 8 184.It float Ta 4 185.It double Ta 8 186.El 187.Pp 188Integers are represented in two's complement. 189Alignment of integer and pointer types is natural, that is, 190the address of the variable must be congruent to zero modulo the type size. 191Most ILP32 ABIs, except 192.Dv arm , 193require only 4-byte alignment for 64-bit integers. 194.Pp 195Machine-dependent type sizes: 196.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "void *" "long double" "time_t" 197.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy void * Ta Sy long double Ta Sy time_t 198.It aarch64 Ta 8 Ta 16 Ta 8 199.It amd64 Ta 8 Ta 16 Ta 8 200.It armv6 Ta 4 Ta 8 Ta 8 201.It armv7 Ta 4 Ta 8 Ta 8 202.It i386 Ta 4 Ta 12 Ta 4 203.It powerpc Ta 4 Ta 8 Ta 8 204.It powerpcspe Ta 4 Ta 8 Ta 8 205.It powerpc64 Ta 8 Ta 8 Ta 8 206.It powerpc64le Ta 8 Ta 8 Ta 8 207.It riscv64 Ta 8 Ta 16 Ta 8 208.El 209.Pp 210.Sy time_t 211is 8 bytes on all supported architectures except i386. 212.Ss Endianness and Char Signedness 213.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "Endianness" "char Signedness" 214.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy Endianness Ta Sy char Signedness 215.It aarch64 Ta little Ta unsigned 216.It amd64 Ta little Ta signed 217.It armv6 Ta little Ta unsigned 218.It armv7 Ta little Ta unsigned 219.It i386 Ta little Ta signed 220.It powerpc Ta big Ta unsigned 221.It powerpcspe Ta big Ta unsigned 222.It powerpc64 Ta big Ta unsigned 223.It powerpc64le Ta little Ta unsigned 224.It riscv64 Ta little Ta signed 225.El 226.Ss Page Size 227.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "Page Sizes" 228.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy Page Sizes 229.It aarch64 Ta 4K, 2M, 1G 230.It amd64 Ta 4K, 2M, 1G 231.It armv6 Ta 4K, 1M 232.It armv7 Ta 4K, 1M 233.It i386 Ta 4K, 2M (PAE), 4M 234.It powerpc Ta 4K 235.It powerpcspe Ta 4K 236.It powerpc64 Ta 4K 237.It powerpc64le Ta 4K 238.It riscv64 Ta 4K, 2M, 1G 239.El 240.Ss Floating Point 241.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "float, double" "long double" 242.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy float, double Ta Sy long double 243.It aarch64 Ta hard Ta soft, quad precision 244.It amd64 Ta hard Ta hard, 80 bit 245.It armv6 Ta hard Ta hard, double precision 246.It armv7 Ta hard Ta hard, double precision 247.It i386 Ta hard Ta hard, 80 bit 248.It powerpc Ta hard Ta hard, double precision 249.It powerpcspe Ta hard Ta hard, double precision 250.It powerpc64 Ta hard Ta hard, double precision 251.It powerpc64le Ta hard Ta hard, double precision 252.It riscv64 Ta hard Ta hard, quad precision 253.El 254.Ss Default Tool Chain 255.Fx 256uses 257.Xr clang 1 258as the default compiler on all supported CPU architectures, 259LLVM's 260.Xr ld.lld 1 261as the default linker, and 262ELF Tool Chain binary utilities such as 263.Xr objcopy 1 264and 265.Xr readelf 1 . 266.Ss MACHINE_ARCH vs MACHINE_CPUARCH vs MACHINE 267.Dv MACHINE_CPUARCH 268should be preferred in Makefiles when the generic 269architecture is being tested. 270.Dv MACHINE_ARCH 271should be preferred when there is something specific to a particular type of 272architecture where there is a choice of many, or could be a choice of many. 273Use 274.Dv MACHINE 275when referring to the kernel, interfaces dependent on a specific type of kernel 276or similar things like boot sequences. 277.Bl -column -offset indent "Dv MACHINE" "Dv MACHINE_CPUARCH" "Dv MACHINE_ARCH" 278.It Dv MACHINE Ta Dv MACHINE_CPUARCH Ta Dv MACHINE_ARCH 279.It arm64 Ta aarch64 Ta aarch64 280.It amd64 Ta amd64 Ta amd64 281.It arm Ta arm Ta armv6, armv7 282.It i386 Ta i386 Ta i386 283.It powerpc Ta powerpc Ta powerpc, powerpcspe, powerpc64, powerpc64le 284.It riscv Ta riscv Ta riscv64 285.El 286.Ss Predefined Macros 287The compiler provides a number of predefined macros. 288Some of these provide architecture-specific details and are explained below. 289Other macros, including those required by the language standard, are not 290included here. 291.Pp 292The full set of predefined macros can be obtained with this command: 293.Bd -literal -offset indent 294cc -x c -dM -E /dev/null 295.Ed 296.Pp 297Common type size and endianness macros: 298.Bl -column -offset indent "BYTE_ORDER" "Meaning" 299.It Sy Macro Ta Sy Meaning 300.It Dv __LP64__ Ta 64-bit (8-byte) long and pointer, 32-bit (4-byte) int 301.It Dv __ILP32__ Ta 32-bit (4-byte) int, long and pointer 302.It Dv BYTE_ORDER Ta Either Dv BIG_ENDIAN or Dv LITTLE_ENDIAN . 303.Dv PDP11_ENDIAN 304is not used on 305.Fx . 306.El 307.Pp 308Architecture-specific macros: 309.Bl -column -offset indent "Architecture" "Predefined macros" 310.It Sy Architecture Ta Sy Predefined macros 311.It aarch64 Ta Dv __aarch64__ 312.It amd64 Ta Dv __amd64__ , Dv __x86_64__ 313.It armv6 Ta Dv __arm__ , Dv __ARM_ARCH >= 6 314.It armv7 Ta Dv __arm__ , Dv __ARM_ARCH >= 7 315.It i386 Ta Dv __i386__ 316.It powerpc Ta Dv __powerpc__ 317.It powerpcspe Ta Dv __powerpc__ , Dv __SPE__ 318.It powerpc64 Ta Dv __powerpc__ , Dv __powerpc64__ 319.It powerpc64le Ta Dv __powerpc__ , Dv __powerpc64__ 320.It riscv64 Ta Dv __riscv , Dv __riscv_xlen == 64 321.El 322.Pp 323Compilers may define additional variants of architecture-specific macros. 324The macros above are preferred for use in 325.Fx . 326.Ss Important Xr make 1 variables 327Most of the externally settable variables are defined in the 328.Xr build 7 329man page. 330These variables are not otherwise documented and are used extensively 331in the build system. 332.Bl -tag -width "MACHINE_CPUARCH" 333.It Dv MACHINE 334Represents the hardware platform. 335This is the same as the native platform's 336.Xr uname 1 337.Fl m 338output. 339It defines both the userland / kernel interface, as well as the 340bootloader / kernel interface. 341It should only be used in these contexts. 342Each CPU architecture may have multiple hardware platforms it supports 343where 344.Dv MACHINE 345differs among them. 346It is used to collect together all the files from 347.Xr config 8 348to build the kernel. 349It is often the same as 350.Dv MACHINE_ARCH 351just as one CPU architecture can be implemented by many different 352hardware platforms, one hardware platform may support multiple CPU 353architecture family members, though with different binaries. 354For example, 355.Dv MACHINE 356of i386 supported the IBM-AT hardware platform while the 357.Dv MACHINE 358of pc98 supported the Japanese company NEC's PC-9801 and PC-9821 359hardware platforms. 360Both of these hardware platforms supported only the 361.Dv MACHINE_ARCH 362of i386 where they shared a common ABI, except for certain kernel / 363userland interfaces relating to underlying hardware platform 364differences in bus architecture, device enumeration and boot interface. 365Generally, 366.Dv MACHINE 367should only be used in src/sys and src/stand or in system imagers or 368installers. 369.It Dv MACHINE_ARCH 370Represents the CPU processor architecture. 371This is the same as the native platforms 372.Xr uname 1 373.Fl p 374output. 375It defines the CPU instruction family supported. 376It may also encode a variation in the byte ordering of multi-byte 377integers (endian). 378It may also encode a variation in the size of the integer or pointer. 379It may also encode a ISA revision. 380It may also encode hard versus soft floating point ABI and usage. 381It may also encode a variant ABI when the other factors do not 382uniquely define the ABI. 383It, along with 384.Dv MACHINE , 385defines the ABI used by the system. 386Generally, the plain CPU name specifies the most common (or at least 387first) variant of the CPU. 388This is why powerpc and powerpc64 imply 'big endian' while 'armv6' and 'armv7' 389imply little endian. 390If we ever were to support the so-called x32 ABI (using 32-bit 391pointers on the amd64 architecture), it would most likely be encoded 392as amd64-x32. 393It is unfortunate that amd64 specifies the 64-bit evolution of the x86 394platform (it matches the 'first rule') as everybody else uses x86_64. 395There is no standard name for the processor: each OS selects its own 396conventions. 397.It Dv MACHINE_CPUARCH 398Represents the source location for a given 399.Dv MACHINE_ARCH . 400It is generally the common prefix for all the MACHINE_ARCH that 401share the same implementation, though 'riscv' breaks this rule. 402While amd64 and i386 are closely related, MACHINE_CPUARCH is not x86 403for them. 404The 405.Fx 406source base supports amd64 and i386 with two 407distinct source bases living in subdirectories named amd64 and i386 408(though behind the scenes there's some sharing that fits into this 409framework). 410.It Dv CPUTYPE 411Sets the flavor of 412.Dv MACHINE_ARCH 413to build. 414It is used to optimize the build for a specific CPU / core that the 415binaries run on. 416Generally, this does not change the ABI, though it can be a fine line 417between optimization for specific cases. 418.It Dv TARGET 419Used to set 420.Dv MACHINE 421in the top level Makefile for cross building. 422Unused outside of that scope. 423It is not passed down to the rest of the build. 424Makefiles outside of the top level should not use it at all (though 425some have their own private copy for hysterical raisons). 426.It Dv TARGET_ARCH 427Used to set 428.Dv MACHINE_ARCH 429by the top level Makefile for cross building. 430Like 431.Dv TARGET , 432it is unused outside of that scope. 433.El 434.Sh SEE ALSO 435.Xr src.conf 5 , 436.Xr build 7 437.Sh HISTORY 438An 439.Nm 440manual page appeared in 441.Fx 11.1 . 442