This code seems not to be of any use now. There is no path in the simulator
that allows for reconfiguring the network. A better approach would be to
take a checkpoint and start the simulation from the checkpoint with the new
configuration.
The configuration scripts provided for ruby assume that the available
physical memory is equally distributed amongst the directory controllers.
But there is no check to ensure this assumption has been adhered to. This
patch adds the required check.
This patch removes the sparse histogram total from the CommMonitor
stats. It also bumps the stats after the unit fixes in the atomic
cache access. Lastly, it updates the stats to match the new port
ordering. All numbers are the same, and the only thing that changes is
which master corresponds to what port index.
This patch reorganizes the cache tags to allow more flexibility to
implement new replacement policies. The base tags class is now a
clocked object so that derived classes can use a clock if they need
one. Also having deriving from SimObject allows specialized Tag
classes to be swapped in/out in .py files.
The cache set is now templatized to allow it to contain customized
cache blocks with additional informaiton. This involved moving code to
the .hh file and removing cacheset.cc.
The statistics belonging to the cache tags are now including ".tags"
in their name. Hence, the stats need an update to reflect the change
in naming.
This patch removes the multiplication operator support for Clock
parameters as this functionality is now achieved by creating derived
clock domains.
Nate, this one is for you.
This patch adds the notion of source- and derived-clock domains to the
ClockedObjects. As such, all clock information is moved to the clock
domain, and the ClockedObjects are grouped into domains.
The clock domains are either source domains, with a specific clock
period, or derived domains that have a parent domain and a divider
(potentially chained). For piece of logic that runs at a derived clock
(a ratio of the clock its parent is running at) the necessary derived
clock domain is created from its corresponding parent clock
domain. For now, the derived clock domain only supports a divider,
thus ensuring a lower speed compared to its parent. Multiplier
functionality implies a PLL logic that has not been modelled yet
(create a separate clock instead).
The clock domains should be used as a mechanism to provide a
controllable clock source that affects clock for every clocked object
lying beneath it. The clock of the domain can (in a future patch) be
controlled by a handler responsible for dynamic frequency scaling of
the respective clock domains.
All the config scripts have been retro-fitted with clock domains. For
the System a default SrcClockDomain is created. For CPUs that run at a
different speed than the system, there is a seperate clock domain
created. This domain incorporates the CPU and the associated
caches. As before, Ruby runs under its own clock domain.
The clock period of all domains are pre-computed, such that no virtual
functions or multiplications are needed when calling
clockPeriod. Instead, the clock period is pre-computed when any
changes occur. For this to be possible, each clock domain tracks its
children.
This patch extends the existing system builders to also include a
syscall-emulation builder. This builder is deployed in all
syscall-emulation regressions that do not involve Ruby,
i.e. o3-timing, simple-timing and simple-atomic, as well as the
multi-processor regressions o3-timing-mp, simple-timing-mp and
simple-atomic-mp (the latter are only used by SPARC at this point).
The values chosen for the cache sizes match those that were used in
the existing config scripts (despite being on the large
side). Similarly, a mem_class parameter is added to the builder base
class to enable simple-atomic to use SimpleMemory and o3-timing to use
the default DDR3 configuration.
Due to the different order the ports are connected, the bus stats get
shuffled around for the multi-processor regressions. A separate patch
bumps the port indices. Besides this, all behaviour is exactly the
same.
This patch adds a 'sys_clock' command-line option and use it to assign
clocks to the system during instantiation.
As part of this change, the default clock in the System class is
removed and whenever a system is instantiated a system clock value
must be set. A default value is provided for the command-line option.
The configs and tests are updated accordingly.
This patch adds a 'cpu_clock' command-line option and uses the value
to assign clocks to components running at the CPU speed (L1 and L2
including the L2-bus). The configuration scripts are updated
accordingly.
The 'clock' option is left unchanged in this patch as it is still used
by a number of components. In follow-on patches the latter will be
disambiguated further.
This patch removes the explicit setting of the clock period for
certain instances of CoherentBus, NonCoherentBus and IOCache where the
specified clock is same as the default value of the system clock. As
all the values used are the defaults, there are no performance
changes. There are similar cases where the toL2Bus is set to use the
parent CPU clock which is already the default behaviour.
The main motivation for these simplifications is to ease the
introduction of clock domains.
This patch prunes the 00.gzip regressions with the main motivation
being that it adds little (or no) coverage and requires a substantial
amount of run time.
A complete regression run, including compilation from a clean repo, is
almost 20% faster(!).
This patch does a bit of tidying up in the bridge code, adding const
where appropriate and also removing redundant checks and adding a few
new ones.
There are no changes to the behaviour of any regressions.
This patch fixes the CommMonitor local variable names, and also
introduces a variable to capture if it expects to see a response. The
latter check considers both needsResponse and memInhibitAsserted.
This patch changes the IEW drain check to include the FU pool as there
can be instructions that are "stored" in FU completion events and thus
not covered by the existing checks. With this patch, we simply include
a check to see if all the FUs are considered non-busy in the next
tick.
Without this patch, the pc-switcheroo-full regression fails after
minor changes to the cache timing (aligning to clock edge).
This patch fixes an outstanding issue in the cache timing calculations
where an atomic access returned a time in Cycles, but the port
forwarded it on as if it was in Ticks.
A separate patch will update the regression stats.
This patch changes the regression script such that it is possible to
identify the runs that fail with an exit code, and those that finish
with stats differences. The ones that truly fail are reported as
FAILED, and those that finish with changed stats as CHANGED.
The yellow colour has been reclaimed from the skipped regressions and
is now used for the changed ones. With no obvious good option left the
skipped ones are now in cyan.
While I was editing the script I also bumped any occurence of M5 to
gem5.
This patch fixes a bug in the granularity calculation. For example, if
the high bit is 6 (counting from 0) and we have one interleaving bit,
then the granularity is now 2 ** (6 - 1 + 1) = 64.
This patch changes the updards snoop packet to avoid allocating and
later deleting it. As the code executes in 0 time and the lifetime of
the packet does not extend beyond the block there is no reason to heap
allocate it.
This patch removes the printing of the SparseHist total in the
stats.txt output file. This has been removed as a sparse histogram has
no total, and therefore this was printing out the value of a
non-local, unrelated variable.
This patch adds separate actions for requests that missed in the local cache
and messages were sent out to get the requested line. These separate actions
are required for differentiating between the hit and miss latencies in the
statistics collected.
This patch adds separate actions for requests that missed in the local cache
and messages were sent out to get the requested line. These separate actions
are required for differentiating between the hit and miss latencies in the
statistics collected.
The patch started of with removing the global variables from the profiler for
profiling the miss latency of requests made to the cache. The corrresponding
histograms have been moved to the Sequencer. These are combined together when
the histograms are printed. Separate histograms are now maintained for
tracking latency of all requests together, of hits only and of misses only.
A particular set of histograms used to use the type GenericMachineType defined
in one of the protocol files. This patch removes this type. Now, everything
that relied on this type would use MachineType instead. To do this, SLICC has
been changed so that multiple machine types can be declared by a controller
in its preamble.
This patch removes the following three files: RubySlicc_Profiler.sm,
RubySlicc_Profiler_interface.cc and RubySlicc_Profiler_interface.hh.
Only one function prototyped in the file RubySlicc_Profiler.sm. Rest of the
code appearing in any of these files is not in use. Therefore, these files
are being removed.
That one single function, profileMsgDelay(), is being moved to the protocol
files where it is in use. If we need any of these deleted functions, I think
the right way to make them visible is to have the AbstractController class in
a .sm and let the controller state machine inherit from this class. The
AbstractController class can then have the prototypes of these profiling
functions in its definition.
2013-06-24 08:59:08 -05:00
Joel Hestness ext:(%2C%20Nilay%20Vaish%20%3Cnilay%40cs.wisc.edu%3E)
The m_size variable attempted to track m_prio_heap.size(), but it did so
incorrectly due to the functions reanalyzeMessages and reanalyzeAllMessages().
Since this variable is intended to track m_prio_heap.size(), we can simply
replace instances where m_size is referenced with m_prio_heap.size(), which
has the added bonus of removing the need for m_size.
Note: This patch also removes an extraneous DPRINTF format string designator
from reanalyzeAllMessages()
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
Previously, .sm files were allowed to use the same name for a type and a
variable. This is unnecessarily confusing and has some bad side effects, like
not being able to declare later variables in the same scope with the same type.
This causes the compiler to complain and die on things like Address Address.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
Change all occurrances of Address as a variable name to instead use Addr.
Address is an allowed name in slicc even when Address is also being used as a
type, leading to declarations of "Address Address". While this works, it
prevents adding another field of type Address because the compiler then thinks
Address is a variable name, not type.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
The current implementation of the x87 never updates the x87 tag
word. This is currently not a big issue since the simulated x87 never
checks for stack overflows, however this becomes an issue when
switching between a virtualized CPU and a simulated CPU. This
changeset adds support, which is enabled by default, for updating the
tag register to every floating point microop that updates the stack
top using the spm mechanism.
The new tag words is generated by the helper function
X86ISA::genX87Tags(). This function is currently limited to flagging a
stack position as valid or invalid and does not try to distinguish
between the valid, zero, and special states.
This changeset actually fixes two issues:
* The lfpimm instruction didn't work correctly when applied to a
floating point constant (it did work for integers containing the
bit string representation of a constant) since it used
reinterpret_cast to convert a double to a uint64_t. This caused a
compilation error, at least, in gcc 4.6.3.
* The instructions loading floating point constants in the x87
processor didn't work correctly since they just stored a truncated
integer instead of a double in the floating point register. This
changeset fixes the old microcode by using lfpimm instruction
instead of the limm instructions.
The current implementation of fprem simply does an fmod and doesn't
simulate any of the iterative behavior in a real fprem. This isn't
normally a problem, however, it can lead to problems when switching
between CPU models. If switching from a real CPU in the middle of an
fprem loop to a simulated CPU, the output of the fprem loop becomes
correupted. This changeset changes the fprem implementation to work
like the one on real hardware.
Reuse the address finalization code in the TLB instead of replicating
it when handling MMIO. This patch also adds support for injecting
memory mapped IPR requests into the memory system.
The rflags register is spread across several different registers. Most
of the flags are stored in MISCREG_RFLAGS, but some are stored in
microcode registers. When accessing RFLAGS, we need to reconstruct it
from these registers. This changeset adds two functions,
X86ISA::getRFlags() and X86ISA::setRFlags(), that take care of this
magic.
This changeset fixes two problems in the FABS and FCHS
implementation. First, the ISA parser expects the assignment in
flag_code to be a pure assignment and not an and-assignment, which
leads to the isa_parser omitting the misc reg update. Second, the FCHS
and FABS macro-ops don't set the SetStatus flag, which means that the
default micro-op version, which doesn't update FSW, is executed.
This patch moves the instantiation of system.membus in se.py to the area of
code where classic memory system has been dealt with. Ruby does not require
this bus and hence it should not be instantiated.
This changeset adds the following stats to KVM:
* numVMHalfEntries: Number of entries into KVM to finalize pending
IO operations without executing guest instructions. These typically
happen as a result of a drain where the guest must finalize some
operations before the guest state is consistent.
* numExitSignal: Number of VM exits that have been triggered by a
signal. These usually happen as a result of the timer that limits
the time spent in KVM.
We used to use the KVM CPU's clock to specify the host frequency. This
was not ideal for several reasons. One of them being that the clock
parameter of a CPU determines the frequency of some of the components
connected to the CPU. This changeset adds a separate hostFreq
parameter that should be used to specify the host frequency until we
add code to autodetect it. The hostFactor should still be used to
specify the conversion factor between the host performance and that of
the simulated system.
We currently execute instructions in the guest and then handle any IO
request right after we break out of the virtualized environment. This
has the effect of executing IO requests in the exact same tick as the
first instruction in the sequence that was just run. There seem to be
cases where this simplification upsets some timing-sensitive devices.
This changeset splits execute and IO (and other services) across
multiple ticks. This is implemented by adding a separate
RunningService state to the CPU state machine. When a VM requires
service, it enters into this state and pending IO is then serviced in
the future instead of immediately. The delay between getting the
request and servicing it depends on the number of cycles executed in
the guest, which allows other components to catch up with the CPU.
Update the system's totalNumInst counter when exiting from KVM and
maintain an internal absolute instruction count instead of relying on
the one from perf.
The TSC value stored in MISCREG_TSC is actually just an offset from
the current CPU cycle to the actual TSC value. Writes with
side-effects to the TSC subtract the current cycle count before
storing the new value, while reads add the current cycle count. When
switching CPUs, the current value is copied without side-effects. This
works as long as the source and the destination CPUs have the same
clock frequencies. The TSC will jump, sometimes backwards, if they
have different clock frequencies. Most OSes assume the TSC to be
monotonic and break when this happens.
This changeset makes sure that the TSC is copied with side-effects to
ensure that the offset is updated to match the new CPU.