Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nilay Vaish
5ffc165939 ruby: improved support for functional accesses
This patch adds support to different entities in the ruby memory system
for more reliable functional read/write accesses. Only the simple network
has been augmented as of now. Later on Garnet will also support functional
accesses.
The patch adds functional access code to all the different types of messages
that protocols can send around. These messages are functionally accessed
by going through the buffers maintained by the network entities.
The patch also rectifies some of the bugs found in coherence protocols while
testing the patch.

With this patch applied, functional writes always succeed. But functional
reads can still fail.
2012-10-15 17:51:57 -05:00
Nilay Vaish
343e94a257 Ruby: Improve Change PerfectSwitch's wakeup function
Currently the wakeup function for the PerfectSwitch contains three loops -

loop on number of virtual networks
  loop on number of incoming links
	    loop till all messages for this (link, network) have been routed

With an 8 processor mesh network and Hammer protocol, about 11-12% of the
was observed to have been spent in this function, which is the highest
amongst all the functions. It was found that the innermost loop is executed
about 45 times per invocation of the wakeup function, when each invocation
of the wakeup function processes just about one message.

The patch tries to do away with the redundant executions of the innermost
loop. Counters have been added for each virtual network that record the
number of messages that need to be routed for that virtual network. The
inner loops are only executed when the number of messages for that particular
virtual network > 0. This does away with almost 80% of the executions of the
innermost loop. The function now consumes about 5-6% of the total execution
time.
2011-02-14 16:14:54 -06:00
Tushar Krishna
2f2962fee3 NetworkMessage copy constructor fix 2010-07-08 16:18:20 -07:00
Nathan Binkert
bc87fa30d7 ruby: get rid of RefCnt and Allocator stuff use base/refcnt.hh
This was somewhat tricky because the RefCnt API was somewhat odd.  The
biggest confusion was that the the RefCnt object's constructor that
took a TYPE& cloned the object.  I created an explicit virtual clone()
function for things that took advantage of this version of the
constructor.  I was conservative and used clone() when I was in doubt
of whether or not it was necessary.  I still think that there are
probably too many instances of clone(), but hopefully not too many.

I converted several instances of const MsgPtr & to a simple MsgPtr.
If the function wants to avoid the overhead of creating another
reference, then it should just use a regular pointer instead of a ref
counting ptr.

There were a couple of instances where refcounted objects were created
on the stack.  This seems pretty dangerous since if you ever
accidentally make a reference to that object with a ref counting
pointer, bad things are bound to happen.
2010-06-10 23:17:06 -07:00
Nathan Binkert
f1c3f3044b ruby: get "using namespace" out of headers
In addition to obvious changes, this required a slight change to the slicc
grammar to allow types with :: in them.  Otherwise slicc barfs on std::string
which we need for the headers that slicc generates.
2010-04-02 11:20:32 -07:00
Nathan Binkert
5ab13e2deb ruby: style pass 2010-03-22 18:43:53 -07:00
Nathan Binkert
05f6a4a6b9 ruby: replace strings that were missed in original ruby import. 2009-07-06 15:49:47 -07:00
Nathan Binkert
24da30e317 ruby: Make ruby #includes use full paths to the files they're including.
This basically means changing all #include statements and changing
autogenerated code so that it generates the correct paths.  Because
slicc generates #includes, I had to hard code the include paths to
mem/protocol.
2009-05-11 10:38:45 -07:00
Nathan Binkert
2f30950143 ruby: Import ruby and slicc from GEMS
We eventually plan to replace the m5 cache hierarchy with the GEMS
hierarchy, but for now we will make both live alongside eachother.
2009-05-11 10:38:43 -07:00