Commit graph

8544 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Gabe Black 6a2b223112 PseudoInst: Add compiler guards to pseudo_inst.hh. 2011-09-10 02:31:15 -07:00
Gabe Black 49a7ed0397 StaticInst: Merge StaticInst and StaticInstBase.
Having two StaticInst classes, one nominally ISA dependent and the other ISA
dependent, has not been historically useful and makes the StaticInst class
more complicated that it needs to be. This change merges StaticInstBase into
StaticInst.
2011-09-09 02:40:11 -07:00
Gabe Black b7b545bc38 Decode: Pull instruction decoding out of the StaticInst class into its own.
This change pulls the instruction decoding machinery (including caches) out of
the StaticInst class and puts it into its own class. This has a few intrinsic
benefits. First, the StaticInst code, which has gotten to be quite large, gets
simpler. Second, the code that handles decode caching is now separated out
into its own component and can be looked at in isolation, making it easier to
understand. I took the opportunity to restructure the code a bit which will
hopefully also help.

Beyond that, this change also lays some ground work for each ISA to have its
own, potentially stateful decode object. We'd be able to include less
contextualizing information in the ExtMachInst objects since that context
would be applied at the decoder. Also, the decoder could "know" ahead of time
that all the instructions it's going to see are going to be, for instance, 64
bit mode, and it will have one less thing to check when it decodes them.
Because the decode caching mechanism has been separated out, it's now possible
to have multiple caches which correspond to different types of decoding
context. Having one cache for each element of the cross product of different
configurations may become prohibitive, so it may be desirable to clear out the
cache when relatively static state changes and not to have one for each
setting.

Because the decode function is no longer universally accessible as a static
member of the StaticInst class, a new function was added to the ThreadContexts
that returns the applicable decode object.
2011-09-09 02:30:01 -07:00
Gabe Black c5fd6f4fec MIPS: Update MIPS stats for cleaned up operand checks. 2011-09-09 01:35:05 -07:00
Gabe Black a1ad9e652a Stack: Tidy up some comments, a warning, and make stack extension consistent.
Do some minor cleanup of some recently added comments, a warning, and change
other instances of stack extension to be like what's now being done for x86.
2011-09-09 01:01:43 -07:00
Gabe Black f370ac5c18 ISA parser: Don't look for operands in strings. 2011-09-08 03:21:14 -07:00
Gabe Black f4dc64655f ISA parser: Match /* */ and // style comments.
Comments should not be scanned for operands, and we should look for both /* */
style and // style.
2011-09-08 03:20:05 -07:00
Gabe Black 87d687e242 X86: Make sure instruction flags are set properly even on 32 bit machines.
The way flag bits were being set for microops in x86 ended up implicitly
calling the bitset constructor which was truncating flags beyond the width of
an unsigned long. This change sets the bits in chunks which are always small
enough to avoid being truncated. On 64 bit machines this should reduce to be
the same as before, and on 32 bit machines it should work properly and not be
unreasonably inefficient.
2011-09-05 18:36:26 -07:00
Gabe Black 3bd0b9654c 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().
2011-09-05 02:48:57 -07:00
Lisa Hsu 365966304e TLB: comments and a helpful warning.
Nothing big here, but when you have an address that is not in the page table request to be allocated, if it falls outside of the maximum stack range all you get is a page fault and you don't know why.  Add a little warn() to explain it a bit.  Also add some comments and alter logic a little so that you don't totally ignore the return value of checkAndAllocNextPage().
2011-09-02 17:04:00 -07:00
Lisa Hsu f6a2ef22ff Fix build for gcc-4.2 opt/fast
Even though the code is safe, compiler flags a warning here, which are treated as errors for fast/opt. I know it's redundant but it has no side effects and fixes the compile.
2011-09-01 15:25:54 -07:00
Lisa Hsu ae12ae3023 Functional Accesses: Update states to support Broadcast/Snooping protocols.
In the current implementation of Functional Accesses, it's very hard to
implement broadcast or snooping protocols where the memory has no idea if it
has exclusive access to a cache block or not. Without this knowledge, making
sure the RW vs. RO permissions are right are next to impossible. So we add a
new state called Backing_Store to enable the conveyance that this is the backup
storage for a block, so that it can be written if it is the only possibly RW
block in the system, or written even if there is another RW block in the
system, without causing problems.

Also, a small change to actually set the m_name field for each Controller so
that debugging can be easier. Now you can access a controller's name just by
controller->getName().
2011-09-01 11:41:44 -07:00
Nilay Vaish ebda5c14a5 SLICC: Pass arguments by reference
Arguments to functions were being passed by value. This patch
changes SLICC so that arguments are passed by reference.
2011-08-29 06:34:40 -05:00
Nilay Vaish 1bbca50491 Ruby: Remove some unused code 2011-08-29 05:10:23 -05:00
Nilay Vaish a08cc94936 Ruby: Eliminate modulo op for computing set size. 2011-08-26 12:27:58 -05:00
Ali Saidi ba265abbfd ARM: Add some MP regressions and clean up the disk images and kernels a bit 2011-08-19 15:08:09 -05:00
Ali Saidi c9d5985b82 ARM: Mark some variables uncacheable until boot all CPUs are enabled.
There are a set of locations is the linux kernel that are managed via
cache maintence instructions until all processors enable their MMUs & TLBs.
Writes to these locations are manually flushed from the cache to main
memory when the occur so that cores operating without their MMU enabled
and only issuing uncached accesses can receive the correct data. Unfortuantely,
gem5 doesn't support any kind of software directed maintence of the cache.
Until such time as that support exists this patch marks the specific cache blocks
that need to be coherent as non-cacheable until all CPUs enable their MMU and
thus allows gem5 to boot MP systems with caches enabled (a requirement for
booting an O3 cpu and thus an O3 CPU regression).
2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi c9c2d979b8 Mem: Put prefetcher notify call before packet is deleted. 2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi 2fd2b44b86 ARM: Add VExpress_E support with PCIe to gem5 2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi d2a0a2ec22 ARM: Add support for Versatile Express boards 2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi 23755eb434 ARM: Make GIC function that should only be called by GIC protected. 2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi 243223ae63 IDE: Fix issues with new PIIX kernel driver and our model.
The driver can read the IDE config register as a 32 bit register since
some adapters use bit 18 as a disable channel bit. If the size isn't
set in a PRD it should be 64K according to the SPEC (and driver) not
128K.
2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi 999cd8aef5 StoreSet: Update stats for store-set clearing 2011-08-19 15:08:08 -05:00
Ali Saidi b94f841969 ARM: Add support for DIV/SDIV instructions. 2011-08-19 15:08:07 -05:00
Ali Saidi b6203360ef LSQ: Set store predictor to periodically clear itself as recommended in the storesets paper.
This patch improves performance by as much as 10% on some spec benchmarks.
2011-08-19 15:08:07 -05:00
Geoffrey Blake 5f425b8bd1 Fix bugs due to interaction between SEV instructions and O3 pipeline
SEV instructions were originally implemented to cause asynchronous squashes
via the generateTCSquash() function in the O3 pipeline when updating the
SEV_MAILBOX miscReg. This caused race conditions between CPUs in an MP system
that would lead to a pipeline either going inactive indefinitely or not being
able to commit squashed instructions. Fixed SEV instructions to behave like
interrupts and cause synchronous sqaushes inside the pipeline, eliminating
the race conditions. Also fixed up the semantics of the WFE instruction to
behave as documented in the ARMv7 ISA description to not sleep if SEV_MAILBOX=1
or unmasked interrupts are pending.
2011-08-19 15:08:07 -05:00
Ali Saidi f125ef22b9 O3: Update stats for LSQ changes. 2011-08-19 15:08:06 -05:00
Mrinmoy Ghosh d0e0485902 LSQ: Add some better dprintfs for storeset predictor. 2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Mrinmoy Ghosh 0db95030fc LSQ: Fix a few issues with the storeset predictor.
Two issues are fixed in this patch:
1. The load and store pc passed to the predictor are passed in reverse order.
2. The flag indicating that a barrier is inflight was never cleared when
   the barrier was squashed instead of committed. This made all load insts
   dependent on a non-existent barrier in-flight.
2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Thomas Grass 3f1ae35c6d Stats: Add a sparse histogram stat object. 2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Giacomo Gabrielli 676a530b77 O3: Squash the violator and younger instructions instead not all insts.
Change the way instructions are squashed on memory ordering violations
to squash the violator and younger instructions, not all instructions
that are younger than the instruction they violated (no reason to throw
away valid work).
2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Geoffrey Blake f778c46b5e ARM: Add per-cpu local timers for ARM.
Cortex-A9 processors can have a local timer and watchdog counter. It
is enabled by default in Linux and up to this point we've had to disable
them since a model wasn't available. This change allows a default
MP ARM Linux configuration to boot.
2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Prakash Ramrakhani efd91d2237 ARM: Add per-processor interrupt support to GIC. 2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Ali Saidi 9b356adf54 ARM: Fix a memory leak with the table walker. 2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Ali Saidi 6779bd3e5d Prefetcher: Fix some memory leaks with the prefetcher. 2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Ali Saidi b3a058f220 ARM: quiet what can be a very noise CLCD controller. 2011-08-19 15:08:05 -05:00
Gabe Black f2c89a01d1 InOrder: Make cache_unit.hh include hashmap.hh explicitly, not transitively. 2011-08-16 02:47:15 -07:00
Gabe Black 78a4636a13 O3: Make lsq_unit.hh include arch/isa_traits.hh directly, not transitively. 2011-08-16 02:46:57 -07:00
Nilay Vaish 769c1844f0 Ruby: Initialize some variables. 2011-08-15 12:56:47 -05:00
Gabe Black cbf7982081 X86: Add an X86_FS o3 regression. 2011-08-14 18:34:17 -07:00
Gabe Black 0e6dc00497 O3: When squashing, restore the macroop that should be used for fetching. 2011-08-14 17:41:34 -07:00
Gabe Black ec204f003c O3: Add a pointer to the macroop for a microop in the dyninst. 2011-08-14 04:08:14 -07:00
Gabe Black a81d4a8fcd Stats: Small update to stats for change to x86 inst flags. 2011-08-13 23:03:21 -07:00
Gabe Black 1b9de61a71 X86: Use IsSquashAfter if an instruction could affect fetch translation.
Control register operands are set up so that writing to them is serialize
after, serialize before, and non-speculative. These are probably overboard,
but they should usually be safe. Unfortunately there are times when even these
aren't enough. If an instruction modifies state that affects fetch, later
serialized instructions which come after it might have already gone through
fetch and decode by the time it commits. These instructions may have been
translated incorrectly or interpretted incorrectly and need to be destroyed.
This change modifies instructions which will or may have this behavior so that
they use the IsSquashAfter flag when necessary.
2011-08-13 23:03:11 -07:00
Gabe Black e0043f8dbe O3: At the end of an instruction, force fetchAddr to something sensible.
It's possible (though until now very unlikely) for fetchAddr to get out of
sync with the actual PC of the current instruction. This change forcefull
resets fetchAddr at the end of every instruction.
2011-08-13 13:36:37 -07:00
Gabe Black 6bbd74e2d9 SCons,tests: Tell scons about pc-o3-timing regressions. 2011-08-09 11:33:12 -07:00
Gabe Black a898b14adf X86: Build O3 by default in X86_FS. 2011-08-09 11:32:30 -07:00
Gabe Black c3e7b57fe7 Stats: Update stats for the end of macroop O3 fix. 2011-08-09 11:31:48 -07:00
Gabe Black 96df6bedb7 O3: Stop using the current macroop no matter why you're leaving it.
Until now, the only reason a macroop would be left was because it ended at a
microop marked as the last microop. In O3 with branch prediction, it's
possible for the branch predictor to have entries which originally came from
different instructions which happened to have the same RIP. This could
theoretically happen in many ways, but it was encountered specifically when
different programs in different address spaces ran one after the other in
X86_FS.

What would happen in that case was that the macroop would continue to be
looped over and microops fetched from it until it reached the last microop
even though the macropc had moved out from under it. If things lined up
properly, this could mean that the end bytes of an instruction actually fell
into the instruction sized block of memory after the one in the predecoder.
The fetch loop implicitly assumes that the last instruction sized chunk of
memory processed was the last one needed for the instruction it just finished
executing. It would then tell the predecoder to move to an offset within the
bytes it was given that is larger than those bytes, and that would trip an
assert in the x86 predecoder.

This change fixes this problem by making fetch stop processing the current
macroop if the address it should be fetching from changed when the PC is
updated. That happens when the last microop was reached because the instruction
handled it properly, and it also catches the case where the branch predictor
makes fetch do a macro level branch when it shouldn't.

The check of isLastMicroop is retained because otherwise, a macroop that
branches back to itself would act like a single, long macroop instead of
multiple instances of the same microop. There may be situations (which may
turn out to be purely hypothetical) where that matters.

This also fixes a relatively minor issue where the curMacroop variable would
be set to NULL immediately after seeing that a microop was the last one before
curMacroop was used to build the dyninst. The traceData structure would have a
NULL pointer to the macroop for that microop.
2011-08-09 11:30:43 -07:00
Gabe Black 8586a800b7 Stats: Update stats for the recent O3 interrupt change. 2011-08-09 03:37:45 -07:00