This patch changes the class names of the variuos DRAM configurations
to better reflect what memory they are based on. The speed and
interface width is now part of the name, and also the alias that is
used to select them on the command line.
Some minor changes are done to the actual parameters, to better
reflect the named configurations. As a result of these changes the
regressions change slightly and the stats will be bumped in a separate
patch.
This patch adds a histogram to track how many bytes are accessed in an
open row before it is closed. This metric is useful in characterising
a workload and the efficiency of the DRAM scheduler. For example, a
DDR3-1600 device requires 44 cycles (tRC) before it can activate
another row in the same bank. For a x32 interface (8 bytes per cycle)
that means 8 x 44 = 352 bytes must be transferred to hide the
preparation time.
This patch adds a frontend and backend static latency to the DRAM
controller by delaying the responses. Two parameters expressing the
frontend and backend contributions in absolute time are added to the
controller, and the appropriate latency is added to the responses when
adding them to the (infinite) queued port for sending.
For writes and reads that hit in the write buffer, only the frontend
latency is added. For reads that are serviced by the DRAM, the static
latency is the sum of the pipeline latencies of the entire frontend,
backend and PHY. The default values are chosen based on having roughly
10 pipeline stages in total at 500 MHz.
In the future, it would be sensible to make the controller use its
clock and convert these latencies (and a few of the DRAM timings) to
cycles.
This patch does some minor tidying up of the MSHR and MSHRQueue. The
clean up started as part of some ad-hoc tracing and debugging, but
seems worthwhile enough to go in as a separate patch.
The highlights of the changes are reduced scoping (private) members
where possible, avoiding redundant new/delete, and constructor
initialisation to please static code analyzers.
This patch prunes the TraceCPU as the code is stale and the
functionality that it provided can now be achieved with the TrafficGen
using its trace playback mode.
The TraceCPU was able to play back pre-recorded memory traces of a few
different formats, and to achieve this level of flexibility with the
TrafficGen, use the util/encode_packet_trace (with suitable
modifications) to create a protobuf trace off-line.
Add a check which ensures that the minumum period for the LINEAR and
RANDOM traffic generator states is less than or equal to the maximum
period. If the minimum period is greater than the maximum period a
fatal is triggered.
This patch fixes a bug with the traffic generator which occured when
reading in the state transitions from the configuration
file. Previously, the size of the vector which stored the transitions
was used to get the size of the transitions matrix, rather than using
the number of states. Therefore, if there were more transitions than
states, i.e. some transitions has a probability of less than 1, then
the traffic generator would fatal when trying to check the
transitions.
This issue has been addressed by using the number of input states,
rather then the number of transitions.
This patch adds an optional request elasticity to the traffic
generator, effectievly compensating for it in the case of the linear
and random generators, and adding it in the case of the trace
generator. The accounting is left with the top-level traffic
generator, and the individual generators do the necessary math as part
of determining the next packet tick.
Note that in the linear and random generators we have to compensate
for the blocked time to not be elastic, i.e. without this patch the
aforementioned generators will slow down in the case of back-pressure.
This patch changes the queued port for a conventional master port and
stalls the traffic generator when requests are not immediately
accepted. This is a first step to allowing elasticity in the injection
of requests.
The patch also adds stats for the sent packets and retries, and
slightly changes how the nextPacketTick and getNextPacket
interact. The advancing of the trace is now moved to getNextPacket and
nextPacketTick is only responsible for answering the question when the
next packet should be sent.
This patch moves the responsibility for sending packets out of the
generator states and leaves it with the top-level traffic
generator. The main aim of this patch is to enable a transition to
non-queued ports, i.e. with send/retry flow control, and to do so it
is much more convenient to not wrap the port interactions and instead
leave it all local to the traffic generator.
The generator states now only govern when they are ready to send
something new, and the generation of the packets to send. They thus
have no knowledge of the port that is used.
This patch simplifies the object hierarchy of the traffic generator by
getting rid of the StateGraph class and folding this functionality
into the traffic generator itself.
The main goal of this patch is to facilitate upcoming changes by
reducing the number of affected layers.
This patch introduces a mirrored internal snoop port to facilitate
easy addition of flow control for the snoop responses that are turned
into normal responses on their return. To perform this, the slave
ports of the coherent bus are wrapped in internal master ports that
are passed as the source ports to the response layer in question.
As a result of this patch, there is more contention for the response
resources, and as such system performance will decrease slightly.
A consequence of the mirrored internal port is that the port the bus
tells to retry (the internal one) and the port actually retrying (the
mirrored) one are not the same. Thus, the existing check in tryTiming
is not longer correct. In fact, the test is redundant as the layer is
only in the retry state while calling sendRetry on the waiting port,
and if the latter does not immediately call the bus then the retry
state is left. Consequently the check is removed.
This patch makes the buses multi layered, and effectively creates a
crossbar structure with distributed contention ports at the
destination ports. Before this patch, a bus could have a single
request, response and snoop response in flight at any time, and with
these changes there can be as many requests as connected slaves (bus
master ports), and as many responses as connected masters (bus slave
ports).
Together with address interleaving, this patch enables us to create
high-throughput memory interconnects, e.g. 50+ GByte/s.
This patch makes the flow control and state updates of the coherent
bus more clear by separating the two cases, i.e. forward as a snoop
response, or turn it into a normal response.
With this change it is also more clear what resources are being
occupied, and that we effectively bypass the busy check for the second
case. As a result of the change in resource usage some stats change.
This patch does some minor housekeeping on the bus code, removing
redundant code, and moving the extraction of the destination id to the
top of the functions using it.
This patch adds a basic set of stats which are hard to impossible to
implement using only communication monitors, and are needed for
insight such as bus utilization, transactions through the bus etc.
Stats added include throughput and transaction distribution, and also
a two-dimensional vector capturing how many packets and how much data
is exchanged between the masters and slaves connected to the bus.
This patch changes the set used to track outstanding requests to an
unordered set (part of C++11 STL). There is no need to maintain the
order, and hopefully there might even be a small performance benefit.
This patch adds a typical (leaning towards fast) LPDDR3 configuration
based on publically available data. As expected, it looks very similar
to the LPDDR2-S4 configuration, only with a slightly lower burst time.
This patch adapts the existing LPDDR2 configuration to make use of the
multi-channel functionality. Thus, to get a x64 interface two
controllers should be instantiated using the makeMultiChannel method.
The page size and ranks are also adapted to better suit with a typical
LPDDR2 part.
This patch removes the explicit memset as it is redundant and causes
the simulator to touch the entire space, forcing the host system to
allocate the pages.
Anonymous pages are mapped on the first access, and the page-fault
handler is responsible for zeroing them. Thus, the pages are still
zeroed, but we avoid touching the entire allocated space which enables
us to use much larger memory sizes as long as not all the memory is
actually used.
This patch changes how the streams are created to avoid the size
limitation on the coded streams. As we only read/write a single
message at a time, there is never any message larger than a few
bytes. However, the coded stream eventually complains that its
internal counter reaches 64+ MByte if the total file size exceeds this
value.
Based on suggestions in the protobuf discussion forums, the coded
stream is now created for every message that is read/written. The
result is that the internal byte count never goes about tens of bytes,
and we can read/write any size file that the underlying file I/O can
handle.
This patch changes the type of the hash function for BasicBlockRanges
to match the original definition of the templatized type. Without
this, clang raises a warning and combined with the "-Werror" flag this
causes compilation to fail.
This is the x86 version of the ARM changeset baa17ba80e06. In case an
instruction has been squashed by the o3 cpu, this patch allows page
table walker to avoid carrying out a pending translation that the
instruction requested for.
Currently call and return instructions are marked as IsCall and IsReturn. Thus, the
branch predictor does not use RAS for these instructions. Similarly, the number of
function calls that took place is recorded as 0. This patch marks these instructions
as they should be.
Currently all the integer microops are marked as IntAluOp and the floating
point microops are marked as FloatAddOp. This patch adds support for marking
different microops differently. Now IntMultOp, IntDivOp, FloatDivOp,
FloatMultOp, FloatCvtOp, FloatSqrtOp classes will be used as well. This will
help in providing different latencies for different op class.
This patch changes the way cache statistics are collected in ruby.
As of now, there is separate entity called CacheProfiler which holds
statistical variables for caches. The CacheMemory class defines different
functions for accessing the CacheProfiler. These functions are then invoked
in the .sm files. I find this approach opaque and prone to error. Secondly,
we probably should not be paying the cost of a function call for recording
statistics.
Instead, this patch allows for accessing statistical variables in the
.sm files. The collection would become transparent. Secondly, it would happen
in place, so no function calls. The patch also removes the CacheProfiler class.
--HG--
rename : src/mem/slicc/ast/InfixOperatorExprAST.py => src/mem/slicc/ast/OperatorExprAST.py
having separate params for the local/globalHistoryBits and the
local/globalPredictorSize can lead to inconsistencies if they
are not carefully set. this patch dervies the number of bits
necessary to index into the local/global predictors based on
their size.
the value of the localHistoryTableSize for the ARM O3 CPU has been
increased to 1024 from 64, which is more accurate for an A15 based
on some correlation against A15 hardware.
The CpuPort class was removed before the KVM patches were committed,
which means that the KVM interface currently doesn't compile. This
changeset adds the BaseKvmCPU::KVMCpuPort class which derives from
MasterPort. This class is used on the data and instruction ports
instead of the old CpuPort.
This changeset adds a 'numInsts' stat to the KVM-based CPU. It also
cleans up the variable names in kvmRun to make the distinction between
host cycles and estimated simulated cycles clearer. As a bonus
feature, it also fixes a warning (unreferenced variable) when
compiling in fast mode.
Add a debug print (when the Checkpoint debug flag is set) on serialize
and unserialize. Additionally, dump the KVM state before
serializing. The KVM state isn't dumped after unserializing since the
state is loaded lazily on the next KVM entry.
Device accesses are normally uncacheable. This change probably doesn't
make any difference since we normally disable caching when KVM is
active. However, there might be devices that check this, so we'd
better enable this flag to be safe.
The vsyscall address for gettimeofday is 0xffffffffff600000ul. The offset
therefore should be 0x0 instead of 0x410. This can be cross checked with
the file sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/x86_64/gettimeofday.c in source of glibc.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
The existing implementation can read uninitialized data or stale information
from the cached PageTable entries.
1) Add a valid bit for the cache entries. Simply using zero for the virtual
address to signify invalid entries is not sufficient. Speculative, wrong-path
accesses frequently access page zero. The current implementation would return
a uninitialized TLB entry when address zero was accessed and the PageTable
cache entry was invalid.
2) When unmapping/mapping/remaping a page, invalidate the corresponding
PageTable cache entry if one already exists.
The 'lret' instruction reloads instruction pointer and code segment from the
stack and then pops them. But the popping part is missing from the current
implementation. This caused incorrect behavior in some code related to the
Fiasco OS. Microops are being added to rectify the behavior of the instruction.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
Due to recent changes to clocking system in Ruby and the way Ruby restores
state from a checkpoint, garnet was failing to run from a checkpointed state.
The problem is that Ruby resets the time to zero while warming up the caches.
If any component records a local copy of the time (read calls curCycle())
before the simulation has started, then that component will not operate until
that time is reached. In the context of this particular patch, the Garnet
Network class calls curCycle() at multiple places. Any non-operational
component can block in requests in the memory system, which the system
interprets as a deadlock. This patch makes changes so that Garnet can
successfully run from checkpointed state.
It adds a globally visible time at which the actual execution started. This
time is initialized in RubySystem::startup() function. This variable is only
meant for components with in Ruby. This replaces the private variable that
was maintained within Garnet since it is not possible to figure out the
correct time when the value of this variable can be set.
The patch also does away with all cases where curCycle() is called with in
some Ruby component before the system has actually started executing. This
is required due to the quirky manner in which ruby restores from a checkpoint.
This patch adds an address mapping scheme where the channel
interleaving takes place on a cache line granularity. It is similar to
the existing RaBaChCo that interleaves on a DRAM page, but should give
higher performance when there is less locality in the address
stream.
This patch changes the slightly ambigious names used for the address
mapping scheme to be more descriptive, and actually spell out what
they do. With this patch we also open up for adding more flavours of
open- and close-type mappings, i.e. interleaving across channels with
the open map.
This patch enables the use of the generator behaviours outside the
TrafficGen module. This is useful e.g. to allow packet replay modes
for other devices in the system without having to replace them with a
TrafficGen in the configuration files.
This change also enables more specific behaviours to be composed as
specific modules, e.g. BaseBandModem can use a number of generators
and have application-specific parameters based around a specific set
of generators.
This patch adds a WideIO 200 MHz configuration that can be used as a
baseline to compare with DDRx and LPDDRx. Note that it is a single
channel and that it should be replicated 4 times. It is based on
publically available information and attempts to capture an envisioned
8 Gbit single-die part (i.e. without TSVs).
This patch provides useful printouts throughut the memory system. This
includes pretty-printed cache tags and function call messages
(call-stack like).
This patch changes the SimpleTimingPort and RubyPort to panic on
inhibited requests as this should never happen in either of the
cases. The SimpleTimingPort is only used for the I/O devices PIO port
and the DMA devices config port and should thus never see an inhibited
request. Similarly, the SimpleTimingPort is also used for the
MessagePort in x86, and there should also not be any cases where the
port sees an inhibited request.
This changeset adds support for m5 pseudo-ops when running in
kvm-mode. Unfortunately, we can't trap the normal gem5 co-processor
entry in KVM (it doesn't seem to be possible to trap accesses to
non-existing co-processors). We therefore use BZJ instructions to
cause a trap from virtualized mode into gem5. The BZJ instruction is
becomes a normal branch to the gem5 fallback code when running in
simulated mode, which means that this patch does not need to change
the ARM ISA-specific code.
Note: This requires a patched host kernel.
All architectures execute m5 pseudo instructions by setting up
arguments according to the ABI and executing a magic instruction that
contains an operation number. Handling of such instructions is
currently spread across the different ISA implementations. This
changeset introduces the PseudoInst::pseudoInst function which handles
most of this in an architecture independent way. This is function is
mainly intended to be used from KVM, but can also be used from the
simulated CPUs.
Architecture specific limitations:
* LPAE is currently not supported by gem5. We therefore panic if LPAE
is enabled when returning to gem5.
* The co-processor based interface to the architected timer is
unsupported. We can't support this due to limitations in the KVM
API on ARM.
* M5 ops are currently not supported. This requires either a kernel
hack or a memory mapped device that handles the guest<->m5
interface.
Add the method checkRaw to ArmISA::Interrupts. This method can be used
to query the raw state (ignoring CPSR masks) of an interrupt. It is
primarily intended for hardware virtualized CPUs.
Add support for using the CPU cycle counter instead of a normal POSIX
timer to generate timed exits to gem5. This should, in theory, provide
better resolution when requesting timer signals.
The perf-based timer requires a fairly recent kernel since it requires
a working PERF_EVENT_IOC_PERIOD ioctl. This ioctl has existed in the
kernel for a long time, but it used to be completely broken due to an
inverted match when the kernel copied things from user
space. Additionally, the ioctl does not change the sample period
correctly on all kernel versions which implement it. It is currently
only known to work reliably on kernel version 3.7 and above on ARM.
Reduce the number of KVM->TC synchronizations by overloading the
getContext() method and only request an update when the TC is
requested as opposed to every time KVM returns to gem5.
This changeset introduces the architecture independent parts required
to support KVM-accelerated CPUs. It introduces two new simulation
objects:
KvmVM -- The KVM VM is a component shared between all CPUs in a shared
memory domain. It is typically instantiated as a child of the
system object in the simulation hierarchy. It provides access
to KVM VM specific interfaces.
BaseKvmCPU -- Abstract base class for all KVM-based CPUs. Architecture
dependent CPU implementations inherit from this class
and implement the following methods:
* updateKvmState() -- Update the
architecture-dependent KVM state from the gem5
thread context associated with the CPU.
* updateThreadContext() -- Update the thread context
from the architecture-dependent KVM state.
* dump() -- Dump the KVM state using (optional).
In order to deliver interrupts to the guest, CPU
implementations typically override the tick() method and
check for, and deliver, interrupts prior to entering
KVM.
Hardware-virutalized CPU currently have the following limitations:
* SE mode is not supported.
* PC events are not supported.
* Timing statistics are currently very limited. The current approach
simply scales the host cycles with a user-configurable factor.
* The simulated system must not contain any caches.
* Since cycle counts are approximate, there is no way to request an
exact number of cycles (or instructions) to be executed by the CPU.
* Hardware virtualized CPUs and gem5 CPUs must not execute at the
same time in the same simulator instance.
* Only single-CPU systems can be simulated.
* Remote GDB connections to the guest system are not supported.
Additionally, m5ops requires an architecture specific interface and
might not be supported.
Add the options 'panic_on_panic' and 'panic_on_oops' to the
LinuxArmSystem SimObject. When these option are enabled, the simulator
panics when the guest kernel panics or oopses. Enable panic on panic
and panic on oops in ARM-based test cases.
Previously, nextCycle() could return the *current* cycle if the current tick was
already aligned with the clock edge. This behavior is not only confusing (not
quite what the function name implies), but also caused problems in the
drainResume() function. When exiting/re-entering the sim loop (e.g., to take
checkpoints), the CPUs will drain and resume. Due to the previous behavior of
nextCycle(), the CPU tick events were being rescheduled in the same ticks that
were already processed before draining. This caused divergence from runs that
did not exit/re-entered the sim loop. (Initially a cycle difference, but a
significant impact later on.)
This patch separates out the two behaviors (nextCycle() and clockEdge()),
uses nextCycle() in drainResume, and uses clockEdge() everywhere else.
Nothing (other than name) should change except for the drainResume timing.
This patch is based on http://reviews.m5sim.org/r/1474/ originally written by
Mitch Hayenga. Basic block vectors are generated (simpoint.bb.gz in simout
folder) based on start and end addresses of basic blocks.
Some comments to the original patch are addressed and hooks are added to create
and resume from checkpoints based on instruction counts dictated by external
SimPoint analysis tools.
SimPoint creation/resuming options will be implemented as a separate patch.
Newer core tiles / daughterboards for the Versatile Express platform have an
HDLCD controller that supports HD-quality output. This patch adds an
implementation of the controller.
This changeset adds support for forwarding arguments to the PC
event constructors to following methods:
addKernelFuncEvent
addFuncEvent
Additionally, this changeset adds the following helper method to the
System base class:
addFuncEventOrPanic - Hook a PCEvent to a symbol, panic on failure.
addKernelFuncEventOrPanic - Hook a PCEvent to a kernel symbol, panic
on failure.
System implementations have been updated to use the new functionality
where appropriate.
This change fixes the switcheroo test that broke earlier this month. The code
that was checking for the pipeline being blocked wasn't checking for a pending
translation, only for a icache access.
Without loading weak symbols into gem5, some function names and the given PC
cannot correspond correctly, because the binding attributes of unction names
in an ELF file are not only STB_GLOBAL or STB_LOCAL, but also STB_WEAK. This
patch adds a function for loading weak symbols.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
This patch adds a missing flag to the ldr_ret_uop microop instruction.
The flag is added when the instruction is used, not directly in the
constructor of the instruction.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>"
This patch fixes two instances of incorrect use of the seekp/seekg
stream member functions. These two functions return a stream reference
(*this), and should not be compared to an integer value.
When using the o3 or inorder CPUs with many Ruby protocols, the caches may
need to forward invalidations to the CPUs. The RubyPort was instantiating a
packet to be sent to the CPUs to signal the eviction, but the packets were
not being freed by the CPUs. Consistent with the classic memory model, stack
allocate the packet and heap allocate the request so on
ruby_eviction_callback() completion, the packet deconstructor is called, and
deletes the request (*Note: stack allocating the request causes double
deletion, since it will be deleted in the packet destructor). This results in
the least memory allocations without memory errors.
When warming up caches in Ruby, the CacheRecorder sends fetch requests into
Ruby Sequencers with packet types that require responses. Since responses are
never generated for these CacheRecorder requests, the requests are not deleted
in the packet destructor called from the Ruby hit callback. Free the request.
This allows you to have (i.e.) an L2 cache that is not named "L2Cache"
but is still a GenericMachineType_L2Cache. This is particularly
helpful if the protocol has multiple L2 controllers.
When Ruby stats are printed for events and transitions, they include stats
for all of the controllers of the same type, but they are not necessarily
printed in order of the controller ID "version", because of the way the
profilers were added to the profiler vector. This patch fixes the push order
problem so that the stats are printed in ascending order 0->(# controllers),
so statistics parsers may correctly assume the controller to which the stats
belong.
When connecting message buffers between Ruby controllers, it is
easy to mistakenly connect multiple controllers to the same message
buffer. This patch prints a more descriptive fatal message than the
previous assert statement in order to facilitate easier debugging.
The cache trace variables are array allocated uint8_t* in the RubySystem and
the Ruby CacheRecorder, but the code used delete to free the memory, resulting
in Valgrind memory errors. Change these deletes to delete [] to get rid of the
errors.
Currently the commit stage keeps a local copy of the interrupt object.
Since the interrupt is usually handled several cycles after the commit
stage becomes aware of it, it is possible that the local copy of the
interrupt object may not be the interrupt that is actually handled.
It is possible that another interrupt occurred in the
interval between interrupt detection and interrupt handling.
This patch creates a copy of the interrupt just before the interrupt
is handled. The local copy is ignored.
It is possible that operating system wants to shutdown the
lapic timer by writing timer's initial count to 0. This patch
adds a check that the timer event is only scheduled if the
count is 0.
The patch also converts few of the panics related to the keyboard
to warnings since we are any way not interested in simulating the
keyboard.
Fixes a latency calculation bug for accesses during a cache line fill.
Under a cache miss, before the line is filled, accesses to the cache are
associated with a MSHR and marked as targets. Once the line fill completes,
MSHR target packets pay an additional latency of
"responseLatency + busSerializationLatency". However, the "whenReady"
field of the cache line is only set to an additional delay of
"busSerializationLatency". This lacks the responseLatency component of
the fill. It is possible for accesses that occur on the cycle of
(or briefly after) the line fill to respond without properly paying the
responseLatency. This also creates the situation where two accesses to the
same address may be serviced in an order opposite of how they were received
by the cache. For stores to the same address, this means that although the
cache performs the stores in the order they were received, acknowledgements
may be sent in a different order.
Adding the responseLatency component to the whenReady field preserves the
penalty that should be paid and prevents these ordering issues.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
There's not much to do about it other than disable the offending
warning anyway, so it's not worth terminating the build over.
Also suppress uninitialized variable warnings on gcc (happens
at least with gcc 4.4 and swig 1.3.40).
This patch solves the corner case scenario where the sendRetryEvent could be
scheduled twice, when an io device stresses the IOcache in the system. This
should not be possible in the cache system.
This patch splits the retryList into a list of ports that are waiting
for the bus itself to become available, and a map that tracks the
ports where forwarding failed due to a peer not accepting the
packet. Thus, when a retry reaches the bus, it can be sent to the
appropriate port that initiated that transaction.
As a consequence of this patch, only ports that are really ready to go
will get a retry, thus reducing the amount of redundant failed
attempts. This patch also makes it easier to reason about the order of
servicing requests as the ports waiting for the bus are now clearly
FIFO and much easier to change if desired.
This patch introduces a variable to keep track of the retrying port
instead of relying on it being the front of the retryList.
Besides the improvement in readability, this patch is a step towards
separating out the two cases where a port is waiting for the bus to be
free, and where the forwarding did not succeed and the bus is waiting
for a retry to pass on to the original initiator of the transaction.
The changes made are currently such that the regressions are not
affected. This is ensured by always prioritizing the currently
retrying port and putting it back at the front of the retry list.
This patch adds an optional generic 64-bit identifier field to the
packet trace. This can be used to store the sequential number of the
instruction that gave rise to the packet, thread id, master id,
"sub"-master within a larger module etc. As the field is optional it
has a marginal cost if not used.
This patch adds an optional flags field to the packet trace to encode
the request flags that contain information about whether the request
is (un)cacheable, instruction fetch, preftech etc.
This patch changes the port in the CPU classes to use MasterPort
instead of the derived CpuPort. The functions of the CpuPort are now
distributed across the relevant subclasses. The port accessor
functions (getInstPort and getDataPort) now return a MasterPort
instead of a CpuPort. This simplifies creating derivative CPUs that do
not use the CpuPort.
A recent set of patches added support for multiple clock domains to ruby.
I had made some errors while writing those patches. The sender was using
the receiver side clock while enqueuing a message in the buffer. Those
errors became visible while creating (or restoring from) checkpoints. The
errors also become visible when a multi eventq scenario occurs.
The message buffer node used to keep time in terms of Cycles. Since the
sender and the receiver can have different clock periods, storing node
time in cycles requires some conversion. Instead store the time directly
in Ticks.
A set of patches was recently committed to allow multiple clock domains
in ruby. In those patches, I had inadvertently made an incorrect use of
the clocks. Suppose object A needs to schedule an event on object B. It
was possible that A accesses B's clock to schedule the event. This is not
possible in actual system. Hence, changes are being to the Consumer class
so as to avoid such happenings. Note that in a multi eventq simulation,
this can possibly lead to an incorrect simulation.
There are two functions in the Consumer class that are used for scheduling
events. The first function takes in the relative delay over the current time
as the argument and adds the current time to it for scheduling the event.
The second function takes in the absolute time (in ticks) for scheduling the
event. The first function is now being moved to protected section of the
class so that only objects of the derived classes can use it. All other
objects will have to specify absolute time while scheduling an event
for some consumer.
The histogram for tracking outstanding counts per cycle is maintained
in the profiler. For a parallel implementation of the memory system, we
need that this histogram is maintained locally. Hence it will now be
kept in the sequencer itself. The resulting histograms will be merged
when the stats are printed.
These functions are currently implemented in one of the files related to Slicc.
Since these are purely C++ functions, they are better suited to be in the base
class.
This patch modifies ruby so that two controllers can be connected to each
other with only message buffers in between. Before this patch, all the
controllers had to be connected to the network for them to communicate
with each other. With this patch, one can have protocols where a controller
is not connected to the network, but communicates with another controller
through a message buffer.
The Topology class in Ruby does not need to inherit from SimObject class.
This patch turns it into a regular class. The topology object is now created
in the constructor of the Network class. All the parameters for the topology
class have been moved to the network class.
This patch comments out the inclusion of the inorder TLBUnit which is
only used in the 9-stage pipeline. With the TLBUnit present, gcc >=
4.6 in combination with LTO ends up throwing away the definition of
the TLBUnit destructor, and consequently fail to link. See
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=53808 for more details
about the bug, and http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2012-06/msg00397.html for
the discussion thread that also touches on similar issues seen with
clang.
The traffic generator used to incorrectly determine the next state in
when state 0 had a non-zero probability. Due to the way the next
transition was determined, state 0 could never be entered other than
as an initial state. This changeset updates the transitition() method
to correctly handle such cases and cases where the transition matrix
is a 1x1 matrix.
This patch fixes a bug in the address range granularity
calculations. Previously it incorrectly used the high bit to establish
the size of the regions created, when it should really be looking at
the low bit.
This patch fixes an issue related to the table walker recycling
packets that still have a bus delay that is not accounted for. For
now, we simply ignore the values and reset them to zero.
This change fixes the switcheroo test that broke earlier this month. The code
that was checking for the pipeline being blocked wasn't checking for a pending
translation, only for a icache access.
The functional write code was assuming that all writes are block sized,
which may not be true for Ruby Requests. This bug can lead to a buffer
overflow.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
This check covers a case where a retry is called from the SimpleDRAM
causing a new request to appear before the DRAM itself schedules a
nextReqEvent. By adding this check, the event is not scheduled twice.
This patch adds a class method that allows easy creation of
channel-interleaved multi-channel DRAM configurations. It is enabled
by a class method to allow customisation of the class independent of
the channel configuration. For example, the user can create a MyDDR
subclass of e.g. SimpleDDR3, and then create a four-channel
configuration of the subclass by calling MyDDR.makeMultiChannel(4,
mem_start, mem_size).
This patch fixes a number of small cosmetic issues in the SimpleDRAM
module. The most important change is to move the accounting of
received packets to after the check is made if the packet should be
retried or not. Thus, packets are only counted if they are actually
accepted.
This patch adds support for multi-channel instances of the DRAM
controller model by stripping away the channel bits in the address
decoding. The patch relies on the availiability of address
interleaving and, at this time, it is up to the user to configure the
interleaving appropriately. At the moment it is assumed that the
channel interleaving bits are immediately following the column bits
(smallest sensible interleaving). Convenience methods for building
multi-channel configurations will be added later.
This patch adds merging of interleaved ranges before creating the
backing stores. The backing stores are always a contigous chunk of the
address space, and with this patch it is possible to have interleaved
memories in the system.
This patch adds basic merging of address ranges to the bus, such that
interleaved ranges are merged together before being passed on by the
bus. As such, the bus aggregates the address ranges of the connected
slave ports and then passes on the merged ranges through its master
ports. The bus thus hides the complexity of the interleaved ranges and
only exposes contigous ranges to the surrounding system.
As part of this patch, the bus ranges are also cached for any future
queries.
The MESI CMP directory coherence protocol, while transitioning from SM to IM,
did not invalidate the lock that it might have taken on a cache line. This
patch adds an action for doing so.
The problem was found by Dibakar, but I was not happy with his proposed
solution. So I implemented a different solution.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
This patch fixes a newly introduced bug where the sender state was
popped before checking that it should be. Amazingly all regressions
pass, but Linux fails to boot on the detailed CPU with caches enabled.
This patch fixes the warnings that clang3.2svn emit due to the "-Wall"
flag. There is one case of an uninitialised value in the ARM neon ISA
description, and then a whole range of unused private fields that are
pruned.
This patch restructures and unifies the flags used by gcc and clang as
they are largely the same. The common parts are now dealt with in a
shared block of code, and the few bits and pieces that are
specifically affecting either gcc or clang are done separately.
This patch enables a warning for deleting derived classes that do not
have a virtual destructor. The patch merely adds additional checks,
and there are currently no cases that had to be fixed.
A derived function with a different signature than a base class
function will result in the base class function of the same name being
hidden. The parameter list and return type for the member function in
the derived class must match those of the member function in the base
class, otherwise the function in the derived class will hide the
function in the base class and no polymorphic behaviour will occur.
This patch addresses these warnings by ensuring a unique function name
to avoid (unintentionally) hiding any functions.
This patch address the most important name shadowing warnings (as
produced when using gcc/clang with -Wshadow). There are many
locations where constructor parameters and function parameters shadow
local variables, but these are left unchanged.
This patch adds a check to ensure that the delay incurred by
the bus is not simply disregarded, but accounted for by someone. At
this point, all the modules do is to zero it out, and no additional
time is spent. This highlights where the bus timing is simply dropped
instead of being paid for.
As a follow up, the locations identified in this patch should add this
additional time to the packets in one way or another. For now it
simply acts as a sanity check and highlights where the delay is simply
ignored.
Since no time is added, all regressions remain the same.
This patch changes the names of the cache accessor functions to be in
line with those used by the ports. This is done to avoid confusion and
get closer to a one-to-one correspondence between the interface of the
memory object (the cache in this case) and the port itself.
The member function timingAccess has been split into a snoop/non-snoop
part to avoid branching on the isResponse() of the packet.
This patch changes the bus-related time accounting done in the packet
to be relative. Besides making it easier to align the cache timing to
cache clock cycles, it also makes it possible to create a Last-Level
Cache (LLC) directly to a memory controller without a bus inbetween.
The bus is unique in that it does not ever make the packets wait to
reflect the time spent forwarding them. Instead, the cache is
currently responsible for making the packets wait. Thus, the bus
annotates the packets with the time needed for the first word to
appear, and also the last word. The cache then delays the packets in
its queues before passing them on. It is worth noting that every
object attached to a bus (devices, memories, bridges, etc) should be
doing this if we opt for keeping this way of accounting for the bus
timing.
This patch removes the time field from the packet as it was only used
by the preftecher. Similar to the packet queue, the prefetcher now
wraps the packet in a deferred packet, which also has a tick
representing the absolute time when the packet should be sent.
This patch makes the clock member private to the ClockedObject and
forces all children to access it using clockPeriod(). This makes it
impossible to inadvertently change the clock, and also makes it easier
to transition to a situation where the clock is derived from e.g. a
clock domain, or through a multiplier.
This patch moves the 16x APIC clock divider to the Python code to
avoid the post-instantiation modifications to the clock. The x86 APIC
was the only object setting the clock after creation time and this
required some custom functionality and configuration. With this patch,
the clock multiplier is moved to the Python code and the objects are
instantiated with the appropriate clock.
This patch fixes a potential deadlock in the caches. This deadlock
could occur when more than one cache is used in a system, and
pkt->senderState is modified in between the two caches. This happened
as the caches relied on the senderState remaining unchanged, and used
it for instantaneous upstream communication with other caches.
This issue has been addressed by iterating over the linked list of
senderStates until we are either able to cast to a MSHR* or
senderState is NULL. If the cast is successful, we know that the
packet has previously passed through another cache, and therefore
update the downstreamPending flag accordingly. Otherwise, we do
nothing.
This patch adds a predecessor field to the SenderState base class to
make the process of linking them up more uniform, and enable a
traversal of the stack without knowing the specific type of the
subclasses.
There are a number of simplifications done as part of changing the
SenderState, particularly in the RubyTest.
This patch fixes a bug in the CommMonitor caused by the packet being
modified before it is captured in the trace. By recording the fields
before passing the packet on, and then putting these values in the
trace we ensure that even if the packet is modified the trace captures
what the CommMonitor saw.
If multiple memory operations to the same page are miss the TLB they are
all inserted into the page table queue and before this change could result
in multiple uncessesary walks as well as duplicate enteries being inserted
into the TLB.