Matthew Poremba 3589a4c11f arch-vega: Implement translate further
Starting with ROCm 5.4+, MI100 and MI200 make use of the translate
further bit in the page table. This bit enables mixing 4kiB and 2MiB
pages and is functionally equivalent to mixing page sizes using the
PDE.P bit for which gem5 currently has support.

With PDE.P bit set, we stop walking and the page size is equal to the
level in the page table we stopped at. For example, stopping at level
2 would be a 1GiB page, stopping at level 3 would be a 2MiB page.
This assumes most pages are 4kiB.

When the F bit is used, it is assumed most pages are 2MiB and we will
stop walking at the 3rd level of the page table unless the F bit is set.
When the F bit is set, the 2nd level PDE contains a block fragment size
representing the page size of the next PDE in the form of 2^(12+size).
If the next page has the F bit set we continue walking to the 4th level.
The block fragment size is hardcoded to 9 in the driver therefore we
assert that the block fragment size must be 0 or 9.

This enables MI200 with ROCm 5.4+ in gem5. This functionality was
determine by examining the driver source code in Linux and there is no
public documentation about this feature or why the change is made in or
around ROCm 5.4.

Change-Id: I603c0208cd9e821f7ad6eeb1d94ae15eaa146fb9
2023-07-30 13:17:05 -05:00
2022-08-02 18:05:39 +00:00
2022-12-08 00:26:01 +00:00
2020-07-14 18:41:37 +00:00
2017-03-01 11:58:37 +00:00
2022-07-05 17:29:28 +00:00
2023-07-17 15:30:35 -07:00

The gem5 Simulator

This is the repository for the gem5 simulator. It contains the full source code for the simulator and all tests and regressions.

The gem5 simulator is a modular platform for computer-system architecture research, encompassing system-level architecture as well as processor microarchitecture. It is primarily used to evaluate new hardware designs, system software changes, and compile-time and run-time system optimizations.

The main website can be found at http://www.gem5.org.

Getting started

A good starting point is http://www.gem5.org/about, and for more information about building the simulator and getting started please see http://www.gem5.org/documentation and http://www.gem5.org/documentation/learning_gem5/introduction.

Building gem5

To build gem5, you will need the following software: g++ or clang, Python (gem5 links in the Python interpreter), SCons, zlib, m4, and lastly protobuf if you want trace capture and playback support. Please see http://www.gem5.org/documentation/general_docs/building for more details concerning the minimum versions of these tools.

Once you have all dependencies resolved, execute scons build/ALL/gem5.opt to build an optimized version of the gem5 binary (gem5.opt) containing all gem5 ISAs. If you only wish to compile gem5 to include a single ISA, you can replace ALL with the name of the ISA. Valid options include ARM, NULL, MIPS, POWER, SPARC, and X86 The complete list of options can be found in the build_opts directory.

See https://www.gem5.org/documentation/general_docs/building for more information on building gem5.

The Source Tree

The main source tree includes these subdirectories:

  • build_opts: pre-made default configurations for gem5
  • build_tools: tools used internally by gem5's build process.
  • configs: example simulation configuration scripts
  • ext: less-common external packages needed to build gem5
  • include: include files for use in other programs
  • site_scons: modular components of the build system
  • src: source code of the gem5 simulator. The C++ source, Python wrappers, and Python standard library are found in this directory.
  • system: source for some optional system software for simulated systems
  • tests: regression tests
  • util: useful utility programs and files

gem5 Resources

To run full-system simulations, you may need compiled system firmware, kernel binaries and one or more disk images, depending on gem5's configuration and what type of workload you're trying to run. Many of these resources can be obtained from https://resources.gem5.org.

More information on gem5 Resources can be found at https://www.gem5.org/documentation/general_docs/gem5_resources/.

Getting Help, Reporting bugs, and Requesting Features

We provide a variety of channels for users and developers to get help, report bugs, requests features, or engage in community discussions. Below are a few of the most common we recommend using.

Contributing to gem5

We hope you enjoy using gem5. When appropriate we advise charing your contributions to the project. https://www.gem5.org/contributing can help you get started. Additional information can be found in the CONTRIBUTING.md file.

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