d75b1b5a7366c162ffca69b29901f4cb5e05895d
This patch adds a traffic generator to the code base. The generator is aimed to be used as a black box model to create appropriate use-cases and benchmarks for the memory system, and in particular the interconnect and the memory controller. The traffic generator is a master module, where the actual behaviour is captured in a state-transition graph where each state generates some sort of traffic. By constructing a graph it is possible to create very elaborate scenarios from basic generators. Currencly the set of generators include idling, linear address sweeps, random address sequences and playback of traces (recording will be done by the Communication Monitor in a follow-up patch). At the moment the graph and the states are described in an ad-hoc line-based format, and in the future this should be aligned with our used of e.g. the Google protobufs. Similarly for the traces, the format is currently a simplistic ad-hoc line-based format that merely serves as a starting point. In addition to being used as a black-box model for system components, the traffic generator is also useful for creating test cases and regressions for the interconnect and memory system. In future patches we will use the traffic generator to create DRAM test cases for the controller model. The patch following this one adds a basic regressions which also contains an example configuration script and trace file for playback.
This is the M5 simulator. For detailed information about building the simulator and getting started please refer to http://www.m5sim.org. Specific pages of interest are: http://www.m5sim.org/wiki/index.php/Compiling_M5 http://www.m5sim.org/wiki/index.php/Running_M5 Short version: 1. If you don't have SCons version 0.98.1 or newer, get it from http://wwww.scons.org. 2. If you don't have SWIG version 1.3.31 or newer, get it from http://wwww.swig.org. 3. Make sure you also have gcc version 3.4.6 or newer, Python 2.4 or newer (the dev version with header files), zlib, and the m4 preprocessor. 4. In this directory, type 'scons build/ALPHA_SE/tests/debug/quick'. This will build the debug version of the m5 binary (m5.debug) for the Alpha syscall emulation target, and run the quick regression tests on it. If you have questions, please send mail to m5-users@m5sim.org WHAT'S INCLUDED (AND NOT) ------------------------- The basic source release includes these subdirectories: - m5: - configs: simulation configuration scripts - ext: less-common external packages needed to build m5 - src: source code of the m5 simulator - system: source for some optional system software for simulated systems - tests: regression tests - util: useful utility programs and files To run full-system simulations, you will need compiled system firmware (console and PALcode for Alpha), kernel binaries and one or more disk images. These files for Alpha are collected in a separate archive, m5_system.tar.bz2. This file can he downloaded separately. Depending on the ISA used, M5 may support Linux 2.4/2.6, FreeBSD, and the proprietary Compaq/HP Tru64 version of Unix. We are able to distribute Linux and FreeBSD bootdisks, but we are unable to distribute bootable disk images of Tru64 Unix. If you have a Tru64 license and are interested in obtaining disk images, contact us at m5-users@m5sim.org
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