Commit Graph

2889 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Giacomo Gabrielli
cc2346e8ca arm: Implement some missing syscalls (SE mode)
Adding a few syscalls that were previously considered unimplemented.
2015-05-26 03:21:35 -04:00
Andreas Sandberg
6533f2000b arm: Get rid of pointless have_generic_timer param
The ArmSystem class has a parameter to indicate whether it is
configured to use the generic timer extension or not. This parameter
doesn't affect any feature flags in the current implementation and is
therefore completely unnecessary. In fact, we usually don't set it
even if a system has a generic timer. If we ever need to check if
there is a generic timer present, we should just request a pointer and
check if it is non-null instead.
2015-05-23 13:46:54 +01:00
Andreas Sandberg
2278fec1d1 dev, arm: Add virtual timers to the generic timer model
The generic timer model currently does not support virtual
counters. Virtual and physical counters both tick with the same
frequency. However, virtual timers allow a hypervisor to set an offset
that is subtracted from the counter when it is read. This enables the
hypervisor to present a time base that ticks with virtual time in the
VM (i.e., doesn't tick when the VM isn't running). Modern Linux
kernels generally assume that virtual counters exist and try to use
them by default.
2015-05-23 13:46:53 +01:00
Andreas Sandberg
65f3f097d3 dev, arm: Refactor and clean up the generic timer model
This changeset cleans up the generic timer a bit and moves most of the
register juggling from the ISA code into a separate class in the same
source file as the rest of the generic timer. It also removes the
assumption that there is always 8 or fewer CPUs in the system. Instead
of having a fixed limit, we now instantiate per-core timers as they
are requested. This is all in preparation for other patches that add
support for virtual timers and a memory mapped interface.
2015-05-23 13:46:52 +01:00
Andreas Hansson
99d3fa5945 arm: Identify table-walker requests
This patch ensures all page-table walks are flagged as such.
2015-05-15 13:40:01 -04:00
Andreas Hansson
bd583d00f9 misc: Appease gcc 5.1
Three minor issues are resolved:

1. Apparently gcc 5.1 does not like negation of booleans followed by
   bitwise AND.

2. Somehow the compiler also gets confused and warns about
   NoopMachInst being unused (removing it causes compilation errors
   though). Most likely a compiler bug.

3. There seems to be a number of instances where loop unrolling causes
   false positives for the array-bounds check. For now, switch to
   std::array. Potentially we could disable the warning for newer gcc
   versions, but switching to std::array is probably a good move in
   any case.
2015-05-15 13:39:53 -04:00
Steve Reinhardt
c65fa3dceb syscall_emul: fix warn_once behavior
The current ignoreWarnOnceFunc doesn't really work as expected,
since it will only generate one warning total, for whichever
"warn-once" syscall is invoked first.  This patch fixes that
behavior by keeping a "warned" flag in the SyscallDesc object,
allowing suitably flagged syscalls to warn exactly once per
syscall.
2015-05-05 09:25:59 -07:00
Andreas Hansson
f349592071 arm: Add missing FPEXC.EN check
Add a missing check to ensure that exceptions are generated properly.
2015-05-05 03:22:45 -04:00
Giacomo Gabrielli
a3f23894eb arm: enable DCZVA by default in SE mode 2015-05-05 03:22:42 -04:00
Andreas Sandberg
706597f021 arm: Relax ordering for some uncacheable accesses
We currently assume that all uncacheable memory accesses are strictly
ordered. Instead of always enforcing strict ordering, we now only
enforce it if the required memory type is device memory or strongly
ordered memory.
2015-05-05 03:22:34 -04:00
Andreas Sandberg
48281375ee mem, cpu: Add a separate flag for strictly ordered memory
The Request::UNCACHEABLE flag currently has two different
functions. The first, and obvious, function is to prevent the memory
system from caching data in the request. The second function is to
prevent reordering and speculation in CPU models.

This changeset gives the order/speculation requirement a separate flag
(Request::STRICT_ORDER). This flag prevents CPU models from doing the
following optimizations:

    * Speculation: CPU models are not allowed to issue speculative
      loads.

    * Write combining: CPU models and caches are not allowed to merge
      writes to the same cache line.

Note: The memory system may still reorder accesses unless the
UNCACHEABLE flag is set. It is therefore expected that the
STRICT_ORDER flag is combined with the UNCACHEABLE flag to prevent
this behavior.
2015-05-05 03:22:33 -04:00
Andreas Sandberg
1da634ace0 mem, alpha: Move Alpha-specific request flags
Move Alpha-specific memory request flags to an architecture-specific
header and map them to the architecture specific flag bit range.
2015-05-05 03:22:31 -04:00
Andreas Hansson
23b9792681 arm: Remove unnecessary boot uncachability
With the recent patches addressing how we deal with uncacheable
accesses there is no longer need for the work arounds put in place to
enforce certain sections of memory to be uncacheable during boot.
2015-05-05 03:22:30 -04:00
Andreas Hansson
554ddc7c07 arch, cpu: Do not forward snoops to table walker
This patch simplifies the overall CPU by changing the TLB caches such
that they do not forward snoops to the table walker port(s). Note that
only ARM and X86 are affected.

There is no reason for the ports to snoop as they do not actually take
any action, and from a performance point of view we are better of not
snooping more than we have to.

Should it at a later point be required to snoop for a particular TLB
design it is easy enough to add it back.
2015-05-05 03:22:27 -04:00
Ruslan Bukin
81f3211149 arch, base, dev, kern, sym: FreeBSD support
This adds support for FreeBSD/aarch64 FS and SE mode (basic set of syscalls only)

Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2015-04-29 22:35:23 -05:00
Nilay Vaish
ee06fed656 x86: change divide-by-zero fault to divide-error
Same exception is raised whether division with zero is performed or the
quotient is greater than the maximum value that the provided space can hold.
Divide-by-Zero is the AMD terminology, while Divide-Error is Intel's.
2015-04-29 22:35:22 -05:00
Andreas Hansson
179787f31f misc: Appease gcc 5.1 without moving GDB_REG_BYTES
This patch rolls back the move of the GDB_REG_BYTES constant, and
instead adds M5_VAR_USED.
2015-04-24 03:30:08 -04:00
Andreas Hansson
c8c4f66889 misc: Appease gcc 5.1
This patch fixes a few small issues to ensure gem5 compiles when using
gcc 5.1.

First, the GDB_REG_BYTES in the RemoteGDB header are, rather
surprisingly, flagged as unused for both ARM and X86. Removing them,
however, causes compilation errors as they are actually used in the
source file. Moving the constant into the class definition fixes the
issue. Possibly a gcc bug.

Second, we have an unused EthPktData constructor using auto_ptr, and
the latter is deprecated. Since the code is never used it is simply
removed.
2015-04-23 13:37:46 -04:00
Brandon Potter
4991c29965 syscall_emul: implement clock_gettime system call 2015-04-22 07:51:27 -07:00
Monir Mozumder
00e3cab8fc syscall_emul: update x86 syscall table
Update table with additional definitions through Linux 3.13.
2015-04-22 07:51:27 -07:00
Nilay Vaish
e596e52498 x86: implements x87 mult/div instructions 2015-04-13 17:33:57 -05:00
Lena Olson
333988a73e x86: fix debug trace output for mwait
When running with the Exec flag, the mwait instruction attempted
to print out its source registers, which were never actually
initialized. This led to sporadic assertion failures when the
value stored there was invalid.

Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2015-04-03 11:42:10 -05:00
Steve Reinhardt
6677b9122a mem: rename Locked/LOCKED to LockedRMW/LOCKED_RMW
Makes x86-style locked operations even more distinct from
LLSC operations.  Using "locked" by itself should be
obviously ambiguous now.
2015-03-23 16:14:20 -07:00
Andreas Hansson
d64b34bef8 arm: Share a port for the two table walker objects
This patch changes how the MMU and table walkers are created such that
a single port is used to connect the MMU and the TLBs to the memory
system. Previously two ports were needed as there are two table walker
objects (stage one and stage two), and they both had a port. Now the
port itself is moved to the Stage2MMU, and each TableWalker is simply
using the port from the parent.

By using the same port we also remove the need for having an
additional crossbar joining the two ports before the walker cache or
the L2. This simplifies the creation of the CPU cache topology in
BaseCPU.py considerably. Moreover, for naming and symmetry reasons,
the TLB walker port is connected through the stage-one table walker
thus making the naming identical to x86. Along the same line, we use
the stage-one table walker to generate the master id that is used by
all TLB-related requests.
2015-03-02 04:00:42 -05:00
Giacomo Gabrielli
bd70db5521 arm: Remove unnecessary dependencies between AArch64 FP instructions 2015-03-02 04:00:41 -05:00
Andreas Hansson
f26a289295 mem: Split port retry for all different packet classes
This patch fixes a long-standing isue with the port flow
control. Before this patch the retry mechanism was shared between all
different packet classes. As a result, a snoop response could get
stuck behind a request waiting for a retry, even if the send/recv
functions were split. This caused message-dependent deadlocks in
stress-test scenarios.

The patch splits the retry into one per packet (message) class. Thus,
sendTimingReq has a corresponding recvReqRetry, sendTimingResp has
recvRespRetry etc. Most of the changes to the code involve simply
clarifying what type of request a specific object was accepting.

The biggest change in functionality is in the cache downstream packet
queue, facing the memory. This queue was shared by requests and snoop
responses, and it is now split into two queues, each with their own
flow control, but the same physical MasterPort. These changes fixes
the previously seen deadlocks.
2015-03-02 04:00:35 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
3b4ae7debb arm: Don't truncate 16-bit ASIDs to 8 bits
The ISA code sometimes stores 16-bit ASIDs as 8-bit unsigned integers
and has a couple of inverted checks that mask out the high 8 bits of
an ASID if 16-bit ASIDs have been /enabled/. This changeset fixes both
of those issues.
2015-03-02 04:00:28 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
804b11a3ed arm: Correctly access the stack pointer in GDB
We curently use INTREG_X31 instead of INTREG_SPX when accessing the
stack pointer in GDB. gem5 normally uses INTREG_SPX to access the
stack pointer, which gets mapped to the stack pointer corresponding
(INTREG_SPn) to the current exception level. This changeset updates
the GDB interface to use SPX instead of X31 (which is always zero)
when transfering CPU state to gdb.
2015-03-02 04:00:27 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
34dcd90b61 arm: Fix broken page table permissions checks in remote GDB
The remote GDB interface currently doesn't check if translations are
valid before reading memory. This causes a panic when GDB tries to
access unmapped memory (e.g., when getting a stack trace). There are
two reasons for this: 1) The function used to check for valid
translations (virtvalid()) doesn't work and panics on invalid
translations. 2) The method in the GDB interface used to test if a
translation is valid (RemoteGDB::acc) always returns true regardless
of the return from virtvalid().

This changeset fixes both of these issues.
2015-03-02 04:00:27 -05:00
Andreas Hansson
d0e1b8a19c arch: Make readMiscRegNoEffect const throughout
Finally took the plunge and made this apply to all ISAs, not just ARM.
2015-02-16 03:33:28 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
5bfa7e3d59 arm: Merge ISA files with pseudo instructions
This changeset moves the pseudo instructions used to signal unknown
instructions and unimplemented instructions to the same source files
as the decoder fault.
2015-02-16 03:32:58 -05:00
Marco Balboni
268d9e59c5 mem: Clarification of packet crossbar timings
This patch clarifies the packet timings annotated
when going through a crossbar.

The old 'firstWordDelay' is replaced by 'headerDelay' that represents
the delay associated to the delivery of the header of the packet.

The old 'lastWordDelay' is replaced by 'payloadDelay' that represents
the delay needed to processing the payload of the packet.

For now the uses and values remain identical. However, going forward
the payloadDelay will be additive, and not include the
headerDelay. Follow-on patches will make the headerDelay capture the
pipeline latency incurred in the crossbar, whereas the payloadDelay
will capture the additional serialisation delay.
2015-02-11 10:23:47 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
550c318490 sim: Move the BaseTLB to src/arch/generic/
The TLB-related code is generally architecture dependent and should
live in the arch directory to signify that.

--HG--
rename : src/sim/BaseTLB.py => src/arch/generic/BaseTLB.py
rename : src/sim/tlb.cc => src/arch/generic/tlb.cc
rename : src/sim/tlb.hh => src/arch/generic/tlb.hh
2015-02-11 10:23:27 -05:00
Ali Saidi
89b3616d7e arm: always set the IsFirstMicroop flag
While the IsFirstMicroop flag exists it was only occasionally used in the ARM
instructions that gem5 microOps and therefore couldn't be relied on to be correct.
2015-01-25 07:22:56 -05:00
Ali Saidi
f6742ea26e cpu: Remove all notion that we know when the cpu is misspeculating.
We have no way of knowing if a CPU model is on the wrong path with
our execute-in-execute CPU models. Don't pretend that we do.
2015-01-25 07:22:26 -05:00
Ali Saidi
0bd986015b cpu: Put all CPU instruction tracers in a single file 2015-01-25 07:22:17 -05:00
Andreas Hansson
10c69bb168 mem: Remove unused Packet src and dest fields
This patch takes the final step in removing the src and dest fields in
the packet. These fields were rather confusing in that they only
remember a single multiplexing component, and pushed the
responsibility to the bridge and caches to store the fields in a
senderstate, thus effectively creating a stack. With the recent
changes to the crossbar response routing the crossbar is now
responsible without relying on the packet fields. Thus, these
variables are now unused and can be removed.
2015-01-22 05:01:31 -05:00
Andreas Hansson
ce12d4bc63 x86: Delay X86 table walk on receiving walker response
This patch fixes a minor issue in the X86 page table walker where it
ended up sending new request packets to the crossbar before the
response processing was finished (recvTimingResp is directly calling
sendTimingReq). Under certain conditions this caused the crossbar to
see illegal combinations of request/response overlap, in turn causing
problems with a slightly modified crossbar implementation.
2015-01-22 05:00:54 -05:00
Andreas Hansson
f49830ce0b mem: Clean up Request initialisation
This patch tidies up how we create and set the fields of a Request. In
essence it tries to use the constructor where possible (as opposed to
setPhys and setVirt), thus avoiding spreading the information across a
number of locations. In fact, setPhys is made private as part of this
patch, and a number of places where we callede setVirt instead uses
the appropriate constructor.
2015-01-22 05:00:53 -05:00
Emilio Castillo
7bb65dd434 x86 : fxsave and fxrestore missing template code
This patch corrects the FXSAVE and FXRSTOR Macroops.  The actual code used for
saving/restore the FP registers is in the file but it was not used.

The FXSAVE and FXRSTOR instructions are used in the kernel for saving and
loading the state of the mmx,xmm and fpu registers.

This operation is triggered in FS by issuing a Device Not Available Fault.  The
cr0 register has a TS flag that is set upon each context change. Every time a
task access any FP related register (SIMD as well) if the TS flag is set to
one, the device not available fault is issued.  The kernel saves the current
state of the registers, and restore the previous state of the currently running
task.

Right now Gem5 lacks of this capability. the Device Not Available Fault is
never issued, leading to several problems when different threads share the same
CPU and SMT is not used. The PARSEC Ferret benchmark is an example of this
behavior.

In order to test this a hack in the atomic cpu code was done to detect if a
static instruction has any FP operands and the cr0 reg TS bit is set.  This
check must be done in the ISA dependent code. But it seems to be tricky to
access the cr0 register while executing an instruction.

Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2015-01-10 14:30:53 -06:00
Gabe Black
cd6380605c x86: Enable three bits in the FamilyModelStepping ECX CPUID bitfield.
These are for the monitor/mwait instructions, SSSE3, and XSAVE.
2015-01-06 22:15:00 -08:00
Gabe Black
cb181d6f91 cpuid, x86: Revert "Enabling more features in CPUid"
That change enables CPUID bits for features that aren't implemented in gem5.
If a simulated system tries to use those features because it was told it
could, bad things can happen.
2015-01-06 22:13:56 -08:00
mike upton
cb911559dc arm: Add unlinkat syscall implementation
added ARM aarch64 unlinkat syscall support, modeled on other <xxx>at syscalls.
This gets all of the cpu2006 int workloads passing in SE mode on aarch64.

Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2015-01-03 17:51:48 -06:00
Maxime Martinasso
5a5416d575 x86: implements the simd128 ADDSUBPD instruction
This patch implements the simd128 ADDSUBPD instruction for the x86 architecture.

Tested with a simple program in assembly language which executes the
instruction.  Checked that different versions of the instruction are executed
by using the execution tracing option.

Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu
2015-01-03 17:51:48 -06:00
Curtis Dunham
4d88978913 arm: Add stats to table walker
This patch adds table walker stats for:
- Walk events
- Instruction vs Data
- Page size histogram
- Wait time and service time histograms
- Pending requests histogram (per cycle) - measures dist. of L
  (p(1..) = how often busy, p(0) = how often idle)
- Squashes, before starting and after completion
2014-12-23 09:31:18 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
184fefbb3b arm: Raise an alignment fault if a PC has illegal alignment
We currently don't handle unaligned PCs correctly. There is one check
for unaligned PCs in the TLB when running in aarch64 mode, but this
check does not cover cases where the CPU does not do a TLB lookup when
decoding an instruction (e.g., a branch stays within the same cache
line). Additionally, the Decoder class sometimes throws an assertion
for unaligned PCs which breaks speculation.

This changeset introduces a decoder fault bit field in the ExtMachInst
structure. This field can be used to signal a decoder failure. If set,
the decoder generates an internal gem5fault instruction instead of a
normal instruction. This instruction in turns either panics (fault
type PANIC), returns an PCAlignmentFault (fault type UNALIGNED,
aarch64) or PrefetchAbort (fault type UNALIGNED, aarch32).

The patch causes minor changes to the realview64 regressions, and a
stats bump will follow.
2014-12-23 09:31:17 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
b33812ba43 arm: Clean up and document decoder API
This changeset adds more documentation to the ArmISA::Decoder class
and restructures it slightly to make API groups more obvious.
2014-12-23 09:31:17 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
070b4a81db arm: Add support for filtering in the PMU
This patch adds support for filtering events in the PMU. In order to
do so, it updates the ISADevice base class to forward an ISA pointer
to ISA devices. This enables such devices to access the MiscReg file
to determine the current execution level.
2014-12-23 09:31:17 -05:00
Andreas Sandberg
9b7578d8c7 arm: Fix decoding of PMXEVTYPER_EL0 and PMCCFILTR_EL0
The aarch64 system register decoder is currently not decoding
PMXEVTYPER_EL0 and PMCCFILTR_EL0 correctly. This changeset updates the
decoder so that they are decoded using the values in table C5-6 in ARM
DDI 0478A.c.
2014-12-08 04:49:53 -05:00
Gabe Black
4a8a0a0798 misc: Generalize GDB single stepping.
The new single stepping implementation for x86 doesn't rely on any ISA
specific properties or functionality. This change pulls out the per ISA
implementation of those functions and promotes the X86 implementation to the
base class.

One drawback of that implementation is that the CPU might stop on an
instruction twice if it's affected by both breakpoints and single stepping.
While that might be a little surprising, it's harmless and would only happen
under somewhat unlikely circumstances.
2014-12-05 22:37:03 -08:00