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.
tcmalloc_minimal doesn't support the heap checker on Debian, while
tcmalloc does. Instead of always linking with tcmalloc_minimal, if it
exists, we first check for tcmalloc and then use tcmalloc_minimal as a
fallback.
According to the tcmalloc readme, the recommended way of compiling
applications that make use of tcmalloc is to disable compiler
optimizations that make assumptions about malloc and friends. This
changeset adds the necessary compiler flags for both gcc and clang.
From the tcmalloc readme:
"NOTE: When compiling with programs with gcc, that you plan to link
with libtcmalloc, it's safest to pass in the flags
-fno-builtin-malloc -fno-builtin-calloc
-fno-builtin-realloc -fno-builtin-free
when compiling."
Python requires the flags in LINKFORSHARED to be added the linker
flags when linking with a statically with Python. Failing to do so can
lead to errors from the Python's dynamic module loader at start up.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : e7a8daf72f4ede7ee5a4a5398a0b12e978a919b9
SWIG version 2.0.9 uses fully qualified module names despite of the
importing module being in the same package as the imported
module. This has the unfortunate consequence of causing the following
error when importing m5.internal.event:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "src/python/importer.py", line 75, in load_module
exec code in mod.__dict__
File "src/python/m5/__init__.py", line 35, in <module>
import internal
File "src/python/importer.py", line 75, in load_module
exec code in mod.__dict__
File "src/python/m5/internal/__init__.py", line 32, in <module>
import event
File "src/python/importer.py", line 75, in load_module
exec code in mod.__dict__
File "build/X86/python/swig/event.py", line 107, in <module>
class Event(m5.internal.serialize.Serializable):
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'internal'
When 'event' is loaded, it triggers 'serialize' to be loaded. However,
it seems like the dictionary of 'm5' isn't updated until after
__init__.py terminates, which means that 'event' never sees the
'internal' attribute on 'm5'. Older versions of SWIG didn't include
the fully qualified module name if the modules were in the same
package.
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.