diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src/display')
| -rw-r--r-- | src/display/display_sink.rs | 1232 | 
1 files changed, 1232 insertions, 0 deletions
| diff --git a/src/display/display_sink.rs b/src/display/display_sink.rs new file mode 100644 index 0000000..418b6aa --- /dev/null +++ b/src/display/display_sink.rs @@ -0,0 +1,1232 @@ +use core::fmt; + +use crate::display::u8_to_hex; + +use crate::safer_unchecked::unreachable_kinda_unchecked; + +/// `DisplaySink` allows client code to collect output and minimal markup. this is currently used +/// in formatting instructions for two reasons: +/// * `DisplaySink` implementations have the opportunity to collect starts and ends of tokens at +///   the same time as collecting output itself. +/// * `DisplaySink` implementations provide specialized functions for writing strings in +///   circumstances where a simple "use `core::fmt`" might incur unwanted overhead. +/// +/// ## spans +/// +/// spans are out-of-band indicators for the meaning of data written to this sink. when a +/// `span_start_<foo>` function is called, data written until a matching `span_end_<foo>` can be +/// considered the text corresponding to `<foo>`. +/// +/// spans are entered and exited in a FILO manner. implementations of `DisplaySink` are explicitly +/// allowed to depend on this fact. functions writing to a `DisplaySink` must exit spans in reverse +/// order to when they are entered. a function that has a call sequence like +/// ```text +/// sink.span_start_operand(); +/// sink.span_start_immediate(); +/// sink.span_end_operand(); +/// ``` +/// is in error. +/// +/// spans are reported through the `span_start_*` and `span_end_*` families of functions to avoid +/// constraining implementations into tracking current output offset (which may not be knowable) or +/// span size (which may be knowable, but incur additional overhead to compute or track). if the +/// task for a span is to simply emit VT100 color codes, for example, implementations avoid the +/// overhead of tracking offsets. +/// +/// default implementations of the `span_start_*` and `span_end_*` functions are to do nothing. a +/// no-op `span_start_*` or `span_end_*` allows rustc to elimiate such calls at compile time for +/// `DisplaySink` that are uninterested in the corresponding span type. +/// +/// # write helpers (`write_*`) +/// +/// the `write_*` helpers on `DisplaySink` may be able to take advantage of contraints described in +/// documentation here to better support writing some kinds of inputs than a fully-general solution +/// (such as `core::fmt`) might be able to yield. +/// +/// currently there are two motivating factors for `write_*` helpers: +/// +/// instruction formatting often involves writing small but variable-size strings, such as register +/// names, which is something of a pathological case for string appending as Rust currently exists: +/// this often becomes `memcpy` and specifically a call to the platform's `memcpy` (rather than an +/// inlined `rep movsb`) just to move 3-5 bytes. one relevant Rust issue for reference: +/// <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92993#issuecomment-2028915232> +/// +/// there are similar papercuts around formatting integers as base-16 numbers, such as +/// <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122770>. in isolation and in most applications these are +/// not a significant source of overhead. but for programs bounded on decoding and printing +/// instructions, these can add up to significant overhead - on the order of 10-20% of total +/// runtime. +/// +/// ## example +/// +/// a simple call sequence to `DisplaySink` might look something like: +/// ```compile_fail +/// sink.span_start_operand() +/// sink.write_char('[') +/// sink.span_start_register() +/// sink.write_fixed_size("rbp") +/// sink.span_end_register() +/// sink.write_char(']') +/// sink.span_end_operand() +/// ``` +/// which writes the text `[rbp]`, telling sinks that the operand begins at `[`, ends after `]`, +/// and `rbp` is a register in that operand. +/// +/// ## extensibility +/// +/// additional `span_{start,end}_*` helpers may be added over time - in the above example, one +/// future addition might be to add a new `effective_address` span that is started before +/// `register` and ended after `register. for an operand like `\[rbp\]` the effective address span +/// would exactly match a corresponding register span, but in more complicated scenarios like +/// `[rsp + rdi * 4 + 0x50]` the effective address would be all of `rsp + rdi * 4 + 0x50`. +/// +/// additional spans are expected to be added as needed. it is not immediately clear how to add +/// support for more architecture-specific concepts (such as itanium predicate registers) would be +/// supported yet, and so architecture-specific concepts may be expressed on `DisplaySink` if the +/// need arises. +/// +/// new `span_{start,end}_*` helpers will be defaulted as no-op. additions to this trait will be +/// minor version bumps, so users should take care to not add custom functions starting with +/// `span_start_` or `span_end_` to structs implementing `DisplaySink`. +pub trait DisplaySink: fmt::Write { +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_fixed_size(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_str(s) +    } + +    /// write a string to this sink that is less than 32 bytes. this is provided for optimization +    /// opportunities when writing a variable-length string with known max size. +    /// +    /// SAFETY: the provided `s` must be less than 32 bytes. if the provided string is longer than +    /// 31 bytes, implementations may only copy part of a multi-byte codepoint while writing to a +    /// utf-8 string. this may corrupt Rust strings. +    unsafe fn write_lt_32(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_str(s) +    } +    /// write a string to this sink that is less than 16 bytes. this is provided for optimization +    /// opportunities when writing a variable-length string with known max size. +    /// +    /// SAFETY: the provided `s` must be less than 16 bytes. if the provided string is longer than +    /// 15 bytes, implementations may only copy part of a multi-byte codepoint while writing to a +    /// utf-8 string. this may corrupt Rust strings. +    unsafe fn write_lt_16(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_str(s) +    } +    /// write a string to this sink that is less than 8 bytes. this is provided for optimization +    /// opportunities when writing a variable-length string with known max size. +    /// +    /// SAFETY: the provided `s` must be less than 8 bytes. if the provided string is longer than +    /// 7 bytes, implementations may only copy part of a multi-byte codepoint while writing to a +    /// utf-8 string. this may corrupt Rust strings. +    unsafe fn write_lt_8(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_str(s) +    } + +    /// write a u8 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this corresponds to the Rust format specifier `{:x}` - see [`std::fmt::LowerHex`] for more. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_u8(&mut self, v: u8) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        write!(self, "{:x}", v) +    } +    /// write a u8 to the output as a base-16 integer with leading `0x`. +    /// +    /// this corresponds to the Rust format specifier `{#:x}` - see [`std::fmt::LowerHex`] for more. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_u8(&mut self, v: u8) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_fixed_size("0x")?; +        self.write_u8(v) +    } +    /// write an i8 to the output as a base-16 integer with leading `0x`, and leading `-` if the +    /// value is negative. +    /// +    /// there is no matching `std` formatter, so some examples here: +    /// ```text +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i8(-0x60); // writes `-0x60` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i8(127); // writes `0x7f` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i8(-128); // writes `-0x80` to the sink +    /// ``` +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_i8(&mut self, v: i8) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        let v = if v < 0 { +            self.write_char('-')?; +            v.unsigned_abs() +        } else { +            v as u8 +        }; +        self.write_prefixed_u8(v) +    } +    /// write a u16 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_u16(&mut self, v: u16) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        write!(self, "{:x}", v) +    } +    /// write a u16 to the output as a base-16 integer with leading `0x`. +    /// +    /// this corresponds to the Rust format specifier `{#:x}` - see [`std::fmt::LowerHex`] for more. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_u16(&mut self, v: u16) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_fixed_size("0x")?; +        self.write_u16(v) +    } +    /// write an i16 to the output as a base-16 integer with leading `0x`, and leading `-` if the +    /// value is negative. +    /// +    /// there is no matching `std` formatter, so some examples here: +    /// ```text +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i16(-0x60); // writes `-0x60` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i16(127); // writes `0x7f` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i16(-128); // writes `-0x80` to the sink +    /// ``` +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_i16(&mut self, v: i16) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        let v = if v < 0 { +            self.write_char('-')?; +            v.unsigned_abs() +        } else { +            v as u16 +        }; +        self.write_prefixed_u16(v) +    } +    /// write a u32 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_u32(&mut self, v: u32) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        write!(self, "{:x}", v) +    } +    /// write a u32 to the output as a base-16 integer with leading `0x`. +    /// +    /// this corresponds to the Rust format specifier `{#:x}` - see [`std::fmt::LowerHex`] for more. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_u32(&mut self, v: u32) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_fixed_size("0x")?; +        self.write_u32(v) +    } +    /// write an i32 to the output as a base-32 integer with leading `0x`, and leading `-` if the +    /// value is negative. +    /// +    /// there is no matching `std` formatter, so some examples here: +    /// ```text +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i32(-0x60); // writes `-0x60` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i32(127); // writes `0x7f` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i32(-128); // writes `-0x80` to the sink +    /// ``` +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_i32(&mut self, v: i32) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        let v = if v < 0 { +            self.write_char('-')?; +            v.unsigned_abs() +        } else { +            v as u32 +        }; +        self.write_prefixed_u32(v) +    } +    /// write a u64 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_u64(&mut self, v: u64) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        write!(self, "{:x}", v) +    } +    /// write a u64 to the output as a base-16 integer with leading `0x`. +    /// +    /// this corresponds to the Rust format specifier `{#:x}` - see [`std::fmt::LowerHex`] for more. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_u64(&mut self, v: u64) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.write_fixed_size("0x")?; +        self.write_u64(v) +    } +    /// write an i64 to the output as a base-64 integer with leading `0x`, and leading `-` if the +    /// value is negative. +    /// +    /// there is no matching `std` formatter, so some examples here: +    /// ```text +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i64(-0x60); // writes `-0x60` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i64(127); // writes `0x7f` to the sink +    /// sink.write_prefixed_i64(-128); // writes `-0x80` to the sink +    /// ``` +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    fn write_prefixed_i64(&mut self, v: i64) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        let v = if v < 0 { +            self.write_char('-')?; +            v.unsigned_abs() +        } else { +            v as u64 +        }; +        self.write_prefixed_u64(v) +    } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to an immediate. +    fn span_start_immediate(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where an immediate was written. see docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more. +    fn span_end_immediate(&mut self) { } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to a register. +    fn span_start_register(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where a register was written. see docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more. +    fn span_end_register(&mut self) { } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to an opcode. +    fn span_start_opcode(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where an opcode was written. see docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more. +    fn span_end_opcode(&mut self) { } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to the program counter. +    fn span_start_program_counter(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where the program counter was written. see docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more. +    fn span_end_program_counter(&mut self) { } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to a number, such as a memory offset or +    /// immediate. +    fn span_start_number(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where a number was written. see docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more. +    fn span_end_number(&mut self) { } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to an address. this is a best guess; +    /// instructions like x86's `lea` may involve an "address" that is not, and arithmetic +    /// instructions may operate on addresses held in registers. +    /// +    /// where possible, the presence of this span will be informed by ISA semantics - if an +    /// instruction has a memory operand, the effective address calculation of that operand should +    /// be in an address span. +    fn span_start_address(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where an address was written. the specifics of an "address" are ambiguous and +    /// best-effort; see [`DisplaySink::span_start_address`] for more about this. otherwise, see +    /// docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more about spans. +    fn span_end_address(&mut self) { } + +    /// enter a region inside which output corresponds to a function address, or expression +    /// evaluating to a function address. this is a best guess; instructions like `call` may call +    /// to a non-function address, `jmp` may jump to a function (as with tail calls), function +    /// addresses may be computed via table lookup without semantic hints. +    /// +    /// where possible, the presence of this span will be informed by ISA semantics - if an +    /// instruction is like a "call", an address operand should be a `function` span. if other +    /// instructions can be expected to handle subroutine starting addresses purely from ISA +    /// semantics, address operand(s) should be in a `function` span. +    fn span_start_function_expr(&mut self) { } +    /// end a region where function address expression was written. the specifics of a "function +    /// address" are ambiguous and best-effort; see [`DisplaySink::span_start_function_expr`] for more +    /// about this. otherwise, see docs on [`DisplaySink`] for more about spans. +    fn span_end_function_expr(&mut self) { } +} + +/// `FmtSink` can be used to adapt any `fmt::Write`-implementing type into a `DisplaySink` to +/// format an instruction while discarding all span information at zero cost. +pub struct FmtSink<'a, T: fmt::Write> { +    out: &'a mut T, +} + +impl<'a, T: fmt::Write> FmtSink<'a, T> { +    pub fn new(f: &'a mut T) -> Self { +        Self { out: f } +    } +} + +/// blanket impl that discards all span information, forwards writes to the underlying `fmt::Write` +/// type. +impl<'a, T: fmt::Write> DisplaySink for FmtSink<'a, T> { } + +impl<'a, T: fmt::Write> fmt::Write for FmtSink<'a, T> { +    fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.out.write_str(s) +    } +    fn write_char(&mut self, c: char) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.out.write_char(c) +    } +    fn write_fmt(&mut self, f: fmt::Arguments) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.out.write_fmt(f) +    } +} + +/// this is an implementation detail of yaxpeax-arch and related crates. if you are a user of the +/// disassemblers, do not use this struct. do not depend on this struct existing. this struct is +/// not stable. this struct is not safe for general use. if you use this struct you and your +/// program will be eaten by gremlins. +/// +/// if you are implementing an instruction formatter for the yaxpeax family of crates: this struct +/// is guaranteed to contain a string that is long enough to hold a fully-formatted instruction. +/// because the buffer is guaranteed to be long enough, writes through `InstructionTextSink` are +/// not bounds-checked, and the buffer is never grown. +/// +/// this is wildly dangerous in general use. the public constructor of `InstructionTextSink` is +/// unsafe as a result. as used in `InstructionFormatter`, the buffer is guaranteed to be +/// `clear()`ed before use, `InstructionFormatter` ensures the buffer is large enough, *and* +/// `InstructionFormatter` never allows `InstructionTextSink` to exist in a context where it would +/// be written to without being rewound first. +/// +/// because this opens a very large hole through which `fmt::Write` can become unsafe, incorrect +/// uses of this struct will be hard to debug in general. `InstructionFormatter` is probably at the +/// limit of easily-reasoned-about lifecycle of the buffer, which "only" leaves the problem of +/// ensuring that instruction formatting impls this buffer is passed to are appropriately sized. +/// +/// this is intended to be hidden in docs. if you see this in docs, it's a bug. +#[doc(hidden)] +pub struct InstructionTextSink<'buf> { +    buf: &'buf mut alloc::string::String +} + +impl<'buf> InstructionTextSink<'buf> { +    // TODO: safety +    pub unsafe fn new(buf: &'buf mut alloc::string::String) -> Self { +        Self { buf } +    } +} + +impl<'buf> fmt::Write for InstructionTextSink<'buf> { +    fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.buf.write_str(s) +    } +    fn write_char(&mut self, c: char) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + 1 { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_char would overflow output"); +            } +        } +        // SAFETY: `buf` is assumed to be long enough to hold all input, `buf` at `underlying.len()` +        // is valid for writing, but may be uninitialized. +        // +        // this function is essentially equivalent to `Vec::push` specialized for the case that +        // `len < buf.capacity()`: +        // https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/be9e27e/library/alloc/src/vec/mod.rs#L1993-L2006 +        unsafe { +            let underlying = self.buf.as_mut_vec(); +            // `InstructionTextSink::write_char` is only used by yaxpeax-x86, and is only used to +            // write single ASCII characters. this is wrong in the general case, but `write_char` +            // here is not going to be used in the general case. +            if cfg!(debug_asertions) { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_char would truncate output"); +            } +            let to_push = c as u8; +            // `ptr::write` here because `underlying.add(underlying.len())` may not point to an +            // initialized value, which would mean that turning that pointer into a `&mut u8` to +            // store through would be UB. `ptr::write` avoids taking the mut ref. +            underlying.as_mut_ptr().offset(underlying.len() as isize).write(to_push); +            // we have initialized all (one) bytes that `set_len` is increasing the length to +            // include. +            underlying.set_len(underlying.len() + 1); +        } +        Ok(()) +    } +} + +/// this [`DisplaySink`] impl exists to support somewhat more performant buffering of the kinds of +/// strings `yaxpeax-x86` uses in formatting instructions. +/// +/// span information is discarded at zero cost. +impl DisplaySink for alloc::string::String { +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_fixed_size(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        self.reserve(s.len()); +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        if new_bytes.len() == 0 { +            unsafe { unreachable_kinda_unchecked() } +        } + +        if new_bytes.len() >= 16 { +            unsafe { unreachable_kinda_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); + +            // this used to be enough to bamboozle llvm away from +            // https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92993#issuecomment-2028915232 +            // if `s` is not fixed size. somewhere between Rust 1.68 and Rust 1.74 this stopped +            // being sufficient, so `write_fixed_size` truly should only be used for fixed size `s` +            // (otherwise this is a libc memcpy call in disguise). for fixed-size strings this +            // unrolls into some kind of appropriate series of `mov`. +            dest.offset(0 as isize).write(new_bytes[0]); +            for i in 1..new_bytes.len() { +                dest.offset(i as isize).write(new_bytes[i]); +            } + +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    unsafe fn write_lt_32(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> { +        self.reserve(s.len()); + +        // SAFETY: todo +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        // should get DCE +        if new_bytes.len() >= 32 { +            unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); +            let src = new_bytes.as_ptr(); + +            let rem = new_bytes.len() as isize; + +            // set_len early because there is no way to avoid the following asm!() writing that +            // same number of bytes into buf +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); + +            core::arch::asm!( +                "6:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 16", +                "jb 7f", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 16]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 16], {buf:r}", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 8]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 8], {buf:r}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 16", +                "jz 11f", +                "7:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 8", +                "jb 8f", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 8]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 8], {buf:r}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 8", +                "jz 11f", +                "8:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 4", +                "jb 9f", +                "mov {buf:e}, dword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 4]", +                "mov dword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 4], {buf:e}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 4", +                "jz 11f", +                "9:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 2", +                "jb 10f", +                "mov {buf:x}, word ptr [{src} + {rem} - 2]", +                "mov word ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 2], {buf:x}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 2", +                "jz 11f", +                "10:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 1", +                "jb 11f", +                "mov {buf:l}, byte ptr [{src} + {rem} - 1]", +                "mov byte ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 1], {buf:l}", +                "11:", +                src = in(reg) src, +                dest = in(reg) dest, +                rem = inout(reg) rem => _, +                buf = out(reg) _, +                options(nostack), +            ); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    unsafe fn write_lt_16(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> { +        self.reserve(s.len()); + +        // SAFETY: todo +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        // should get DCE +        if new_bytes.len() >= 16 { +            unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); +            let src = new_bytes.as_ptr(); + +            let rem = new_bytes.len() as isize; + +            // set_len early because there is no way to avoid the following asm!() writing that +            // same number of bytes into buf +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); + +            core::arch::asm!( +                "7:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 8", +                "jb 8f", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 8]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 8], {buf:r}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 8", +                "jz 11f", +                "8:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 4", +                "jb 9f", +                "mov {buf:e}, dword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 4]", +                "mov dword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 4], {buf:e}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 4", +                "jz 11f", +                "9:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 2", +                "jb 10f", +                "mov {buf:x}, word ptr [{src} + {rem} - 2]", +                "mov word ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 2], {buf:x}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 2", +                "jz 11f", +                "10:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 1", +                "jb 11f", +                "mov {buf:l}, byte ptr [{src} + {rem} - 1]", +                "mov byte ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 1], {buf:l}", +                "11:", +                src = in(reg) src, +                dest = in(reg) dest, +                rem = inout(reg) rem => _, +                buf = out(reg) _, +                options(nostack), +            ); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    unsafe fn write_lt_8(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> { +        self.reserve(s.len()); + +        // SAFETY: todo +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        // should get DCE +        if new_bytes.len() >= 8 { +            unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); +            let src = new_bytes.as_ptr(); + +            let rem = new_bytes.len() as isize; + +            // set_len early because there is no way to avoid the following asm!() writing that +            // same number of bytes into buf +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); + +            core::arch::asm!( +                "8:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 4", +                "jb 9f", +                "mov {buf:e}, dword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 4]", +                "mov dword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 4], {buf:e}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 4", +                "jz 11f", +                "9:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 2", +                "jb 10f", +                "mov {buf:x}, word ptr [{src} + {rem} - 2]", +                "mov word ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 2], {buf:x}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 2", +                "jz 11f", +                "10:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 1", +                "jb 11f", +                "mov {buf:l}, byte ptr [{src} + {rem} - 1]", +                "mov byte ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 1], {buf:l}", +                "11:", +                src = in(reg) src, +                dest = in(reg) dest, +                rem = inout(reg) rem => _, +                buf = out(reg) _, +                options(nostack), +            ); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u8 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u8(&mut self, mut v: u8) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((8 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        self.reserve(printed_size); + +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u16 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u16(&mut self, mut v: u16) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((16 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        self.reserve(printed_size); + +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u32 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u32(&mut self, mut v: u32) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((32 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        self.reserve(printed_size); + +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u64 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u64(&mut self, mut v: u64) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((64 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        self.reserve(printed_size); + +        let buf = unsafe { self.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +} + +impl<'buf> DisplaySink for InstructionTextSink<'buf> { +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_fixed_size(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + s.len() { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_fixed_size would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        if new_bytes.len() == 0 { +            return Ok(()); +        } + +        if new_bytes.len() >= 16 { +            unsafe { unreachable_kinda_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); + +            // this used to be enough to bamboozle llvm away from +            // https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92993#issuecomment-2028915232https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92993#issuecomment-2028915232 +            // if `s` is not fixed size. somewhere between Rust 1.68 and Rust 1.74 this stopped +            // being sufficient, so `write_fixed_size` truly should only be used for fixed size `s` +            // (otherwise this is a libc memcpy call in disguise). for fixed-size strings this +            // unrolls into some kind of appropriate series of `mov`. +            dest.offset(0 as isize).write(new_bytes[0]); +            for i in 1..new_bytes.len() { +                dest.offset(i as isize).write(new_bytes[i]); +            } + +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    unsafe fn write_lt_32(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> { +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + s.len() { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_lt_32 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        // SAFETY: todo +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        // should get DCE +        if new_bytes.len() >= 32 { +            unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); +            let src = new_bytes.as_ptr(); + +            let rem = new_bytes.len() as isize; + +            // set_len early because there is no way to avoid the following asm!() writing that +            // same number of bytes into buf +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); + +            core::arch::asm!( +                "6:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 16", +                "jb 7f", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 16]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 16], {buf:r}", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 8]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 8], {buf:r}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 16", +                "jz 11f", +                "7:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 8", +                "jb 8f", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 8]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 8], {buf:r}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 8", +                "jz 11f", +                "8:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 4", +                "jb 9f", +                "mov {buf:e}, dword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 4]", +                "mov dword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 4], {buf:e}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 4", +                "jz 11f", +                "9:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 2", +                "jb 10f", +                "mov {buf:x}, word ptr [{src} + {rem} - 2]", +                "mov word ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 2], {buf:x}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 2", +                "jz 11f", +                "10:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 1", +                "jb 11f", +                "mov {buf:l}, byte ptr [{src} + {rem} - 1]", +                "mov byte ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 1], {buf:l}", +                "11:", +                src = in(reg) src, +                dest = in(reg) dest, +                rem = inout(reg) rem => _, +                buf = out(reg) _, +                options(nostack), +            ); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    unsafe fn write_lt_16(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> { +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + s.len() { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_lt_16 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        // SAFETY: todo +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        // should get DCE +        if new_bytes.len() >= 16 { +            unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); +            let src = new_bytes.as_ptr(); + +            let rem = new_bytes.len() as isize; + +            // set_len early because there is no way to avoid the following asm!() writing that +            // same number of bytes into buf +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); + +            core::arch::asm!( +                "7:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 8", +                "jb 8f", +                "mov {buf:r}, qword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 8]", +                "mov qword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 8], {buf:r}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 8", +                "jz 11f", +                "8:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 4", +                "jb 9f", +                "mov {buf:e}, dword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 4]", +                "mov dword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 4], {buf:e}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 4", +                "jz 11f", +                "9:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 2", +                "jb 10f", +                "mov {buf:x}, word ptr [{src} + {rem} - 2]", +                "mov word ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 2], {buf:x}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 2", +                "jz 11f", +                "10:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 1", +                "jb 11f", +                "mov {buf:l}, byte ptr [{src} + {rem} - 1]", +                "mov byte ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 1], {buf:l}", +                "11:", +                src = in(reg) src, +                dest = in(reg) dest, +                rem = inout(reg) rem => _, +                buf = out(reg) _, +                options(nostack), +            ); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    unsafe fn write_lt_8(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), fmt::Error> { +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + s.len() { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_lt_8 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        // SAFETY: todo +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_bytes = s.as_bytes(); + +        // should get DCE +        if new_bytes.len() >= 8 { +            unsafe { core::hint::unreachable_unchecked() } +        } + +        unsafe { +            let dest = buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(buf.len() as isize); +            let src = new_bytes.as_ptr(); + +            let rem = new_bytes.len() as isize; + +            // set_len early because there is no way to avoid the following asm!() writing that +            // same number of bytes into buf +            buf.set_len(buf.len() + new_bytes.len()); + +            core::arch::asm!( +                "8:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 4", +                "jb 9f", +                "mov {buf:e}, dword ptr [{src} + {rem} - 4]", +                "mov dword ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 4], {buf:e}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 4", +                "jz 11f", +                "9:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 2", +                "jb 10f", +                "mov {buf:x}, word ptr [{src} + {rem} - 2]", +                "mov word ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 2], {buf:x}", +                "sub {rem:e}, 2", +                "jz 11f", +                "10:", +                "cmp {rem:e}, 1", +                "jb 11f", +                "mov {buf:l}, byte ptr [{src} + {rem} - 1]", +                "mov byte ptr [{dest} + {rem} - 1], {buf:l}", +                "11:", +                src = in(reg) src, +                dest = in(reg) dest, +                rem = inout(reg) rem => _, +                buf = out(reg) _, +                options(nostack), +            ); +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u8 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u8(&mut self, mut v: u8) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((8 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + printed_size { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_u8 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u16 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u16(&mut self, mut v: u16) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } + +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((16 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + printed_size { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_u16 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u32 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u32(&mut self, mut v: u32) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } + +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((32 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + printed_size { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_u32 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +    /// write a u64 to the output as a base-16 integer. +    /// +    /// this is provided for optimization opportunities when the formatted integer can be written +    /// directly to the sink (rather than formatted to an intermediate buffer and output as a +    /// followup step) +    #[inline(always)] +    fn write_u64(&mut self, mut v: u64) -> Result<(), core::fmt::Error> { +        if v == 0 { +            return self.write_fixed_size("0"); +        } + +        // we can fairly easily predict the size of a formatted string here with lzcnt, which also +        // means we can write directly into the correct offsets of the output string. +        let printed_size = ((64 - v.leading_zeros() + 3) >> 2) as usize; + +        if cfg!(debug_assertions) { +            if self.buf.capacity() < self.buf.len() + printed_size { +                panic!("InstructionTextSink::write_u64 would overflow output"); +            } +        } + +        let buf = unsafe { self.buf.as_mut_vec() }; +        let new_len = buf.len() + printed_size; + +        unsafe { +            buf.set_len(new_len); +        } +        let mut p = unsafe { buf.as_mut_ptr().offset(new_len as isize) }; + +        loop { +            let digit = v % 16; +            let c = u8_to_hex(digit as u8); +            unsafe { +                p = p.offset(-1); +                p.write(c); +            } +            v = v / 16; +            if v == 0 { +                break; +            } +        } + +        Ok(()) +    } +} | 
