Ruby Sparse Memory: Add function for collating blocks

This patch adds function to the Sparse Memory so that the blocks can be
recorded in a cache trace. The blocks are added to the cache recorder
which can later write them into a file.
This commit is contained in:
Nilay Vaish 2012-01-11 13:29:54 -06:00
parent c3109f7775
commit 8b3ad17cc3
2 changed files with 78 additions and 2 deletions

View file

@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 2009 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
* Copyright (c) 2012 Mark D. Hill and David A. Wood
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
@ -26,6 +27,8 @@
* OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <queue>
#include "debug/RubyCache.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/system/SparseMemory.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/system/System.hh"
@ -341,6 +344,70 @@ SparseMemory::lookup(const Address& address)
return entry;
}
void
SparseMemory::recordBlocks(int cntrl_id, CacheRecorder* tr) const
{
queue<SparseMapType*> unexplored_nodes[2];
queue<physical_address_t> address_of_nodes[2];
unexplored_nodes[0].push(m_map_head);
address_of_nodes[0].push(0);
int parity_of_level = 0;
physical_address_t address, temp_address;
Address curAddress;
// Initiallize the high bit to be the total number of bits plus
// the block offset. However the highest bit index is one less
// than this value.
int highBit = m_total_number_of_bits + RubySystem::getBlockSizeBits();
int lowBit;
for (int cur_level = 0; cur_level < m_number_of_levels; cur_level++) {
// create the appropriate address for this level
// Note: that set Address is inclusive of the specified range,
// thus the high bit is one less than the total number of bits
// used to create the address.
lowBit = highBit - m_number_of_bits_per_level[cur_level];
while (!unexplored_nodes[parity_of_level].empty()) {
SparseMapType* node = unexplored_nodes[parity_of_level].front();
unexplored_nodes[parity_of_level].pop();
address = address_of_nodes[parity_of_level].front();
address_of_nodes[parity_of_level].pop();
SparseMapType::iterator iter;
for (iter = node->begin(); iter != node->end(); iter++) {
SparseMemEntry entry = (*iter).second;
curAddress = (*iter).first;
if (cur_level != (m_number_of_levels - 1)) {
// If not at the last level, put this node in the queue
unexplored_nodes[1 - parity_of_level].push(
(SparseMapType*)(entry));
address_of_nodes[1 - parity_of_level].push(address |
(curAddress.getAddress() << lowBit));
} else {
// If at the last level, add a trace record
temp_address = address | (curAddress.getAddress()
<< lowBit);
DataBlock block = ((AbstractEntry*)entry)->getDataBlk();
tr->addRecord(cntrl_id, temp_address, 0, RubyRequestType_ST, 0,
block);
}
}
}
// Adjust the highBit value for the next level
highBit -= m_number_of_bits_per_level[cur_level];
parity_of_level = 1 - parity_of_level;
}
}
void
SparseMemory::print(ostream& out) const
{

View file

@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 2009 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
* Copyright (c) 2012 Mark D. Hill and David A. Wood
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
@ -32,9 +33,9 @@
#include <iostream>
#include "base/hashmap.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/slicc_interface/AbstractEntry.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/common/Address.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/common/Global.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/recorder/CacheRecorder.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/slicc_interface/AbstractEntry.hh"
typedef void* SparseMemEntry;
typedef m5::hash_map<Address, SparseMemEntry> SparseMapType;
@ -59,6 +60,14 @@ class SparseMemory
void add(const Address& address, AbstractEntry*);
void remove(const Address& address);
/*!
* Function for recording the contents of memory. This function walks
* through all the levels of the sparse memory in a breadth first
* fashion. This might need more memory than a depth first approach.
* But breadth first seems easier to me than a depth first approach.
*/
void recordBlocks(int cntrl_id, CacheRecorder *) const;
AbstractEntry* lookup(const Address& address);
// Print cache contents