X86,TLB: Make sure the "delayedResponse" variable is always set.

When an instruction is translated in the x86 TLB, a variable called
delayedResponse is passed back and forth which tracks whether a translation
could be completed immediately, or if there's going to be callback that will
finish things up. If a read was to the internal memory space, memory mapped
registers used to implement things like MSRs, the function hadn't yet gotten
to where delayedResponse was set to false, it's default. That meant that the
value was never set, and the TLB could start waiting for a callback that would
never come. This change simply moves the assignment to above where control
can divert to translateInt().
This commit is contained in:
Gabe Black 2011-09-05 02:48:57 -07:00
parent 365966304e
commit 3bd0b9654c

View file

@ -539,13 +539,14 @@ TLB::translate(RequestPtr req, ThreadContext *tc, Translation *translation,
int seg = flags & SegmentFlagMask;
bool storeCheck = flags & (StoreCheck << FlagShift);
delayedResponse = false;
// If this is true, we're dealing with a request to a non-memory address
// space.
if (seg == SEGMENT_REG_MS) {
return translateInt(req, tc);
}
delayedResponse = false;
Addr vaddr = req->getVaddr();
DPRINTF(TLB, "Translating vaddr %#x.\n", vaddr);