I'm writing a cryptography program, and the core (a wide multiply routine) is written in x86-64 assembly, both for speed and because it extensively uses instructions like adc
that are not easily accessible from C. I don't want to inline this function, because it's big and it's called several times in the inner loop.
Ideally I would also like to define a custom calling convention for this function, because internally it uses all the registers (except rsp
), doesn't clobber its arguments, and returns in registers. Right now, it's adapted to the C calling convention, but of course this makes it slower (by about 10%).
To avoid this, I can call it with asm("call %Pn" : ... : my_function... : "cc", all the registers);
but is there a way to tell GCC that the call instruction messes with the stack? Otherwise GCC will just put all those registers in the red zone, and the top one will get clobbered. I can compile the whole module with -mno-red-zone, but I'd prefer a way to tell GCC that, say, the top 8 bytes of the red zone will be clobbered so that it won't put anything there.
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