A "context" is usually assued to be a "stack".  The simplest of all
context switches 
is:

   mov    x, esp
   mov    esp, y

A context switch can be as short as two instructions, or as big as a TSS
with CR3 hardware switching,

i.e.  

   ltr    ax
   jmp    task_gate

(500 clocks later)

   ts->eip gets exec'd

you can also have a context switch that does an int X where X is a gate
or TSS.

you can also have a context switch (like linux) that does

    mov    x, esp
    mov    esp, y
    mov    z, CR3
    mov    CR3, w

etc.

In NetWare, a context switch is an in-line assembly language macro that
is 2 instructions long for a stack switch and 4 instructions for a CR3
reload -- this is a lot shorter than Linux.
Only EBX, EBP, ESI, and EDI are saved and this is never done in the
kernel, but is a natural
affect of the Watcom C compiler.  There's also strict rules about
register assignments that re enforced between assembler modules in
NetWare to reduce the overhead of a context switch.  The code path is
very complex in NetWare, and priorities and all this stuff exists, but
these code paths are segragated so these types of checks only happen
once in a while and check a pre-calc'd "scoreboard" that is read only
across processors and updated and recal'd by a timer every 18 ticks.

Jeff

   



Andi Kleen wrote:
> 
> On Tue, Oct 31, 2000 at 02:52:11PM -0700, Jeff V. Merkey wrote:
> > The numbers don't lie.  You know where the code is.  You notice that
> > there is a version of
> > the kernel hand coded in assembly language.  You'l also noticed that
> > it's SMP and takes ZERO LOCKS during context switching, in fact, most of
> > the design is completely lockless.
> 
> I suspect most of the confusion in this thread comes because you seem to
> use a different definition of context switch than Ingo and others. Could
> you explain what you exactly mean with a context switch ?
> 
> -Andi
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