This patch introduces a UFS host controller and a UFS device. More
information about the UFS standard can be found at the JEDEC site:
http://www.jedec.org/standards-documents/results/jesd220
Note that the model does not implement the complete standard, and as
such is not an actual implementation of UFS. The following SCSI
commands are implemented: inquiry, read, read capacity, report LUNs,
start/stop, test unit ready, verify, write, format unit, send
diagnostic, synchronize cache, mode select, mode sense, request sense,
unmap, write buffer and read buffer. This is sufficient for usage with
Linux and Android.
To interact with this model a kernel version 3.9 or above is
needed.
This adds a NAND flash timing model. This model takes the number of
planes into account and is ultimately intended to be used as a
high-level performance model for any device using flash. To access the
memory, use either readMemory or writeMemory.
To make use of the model you will need an interface model
such as UFSHostDevice, which is part of a separate patch.
At the moment the flash device is part of the ARM device tree since
the only use if the UFSHostDevice, and that in turn relies on the ARM
GIC.
This patch adds an I2C bus and base device. I2C is used to connect a
variety of sensors, and this patch serves as a starting point to
enable a range of I2C devices.
This patch fixes a few small issues to ensure gem5 compiles when using
gcc 5.1.
First, the GDB_REG_BYTES in the RemoteGDB header are, rather
surprisingly, flagged as unused for both ARM and X86. Removing them,
however, causes compilation errors as they are actually used in the
source file. Moving the constant into the class definition fixes the
issue. Possibly a gcc bug.
Second, we have an unused EthPktData constructor using auto_ptr, and
the latter is deprecated. Since the code is never used it is simply
removed.
The o3 cpu instruction queue model uses the count variable to track the number
of unissued instructions in the queue. Previously, the squash method used
this variable to avoid executing the doSquash method when there were no
unissued instructions in the pipeline. A corner case problem exists when
only issued instructions exist in the pipeline and a squash occurs; the
doSquash code is not invoked and subsequently does not clean up state properly.
Very small changes to iew.predictedNotTakenIncorrect
and iew.branchMispredicts. Looks like similar updates
were committed on April 3 (changeset 235ff1c046df), but
only for the quick tests.
This patch takes the final step in removing the InOrderCPU from the
tree. Rest in peace.
The MinorCPU is now used to model an in-order microarchitecture, and
long term the MinorCPU will eventually be renamed InOrderCPU.
The change in 20.parser is from new x87 instructions. The change to
pc-o3-timing is not clear to me. It seems that this test might be invoking
some undefined behavior.
This patch ensures that the CPU progress Event is triggered for the new set of
switched_cpus that get scheduled (e.g. during fast-forwarding). it also avoids
printing the interval state if the cpu is currently switched out.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
Restoring from a checkpoint with ruby + the DRAMCtrl memory model was not
working, because ruby and DRAMCtrl disagreed on the current tick during warmup.
Since there is no reason to do timing requests during warmup, use functional
requests instead.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
This patch adds an example configuration in ext/sst/tests/ that allows
an SST/gem5 instance to simulate a 4-core AArch64 system with SST's
memHierarchy components providing all the caches and memories.
This patch adds a connector that allows gem5 to be used as a component
in SST (Structural Simulation Toolkit, sst-simulator.org). At a high
level, this allows memory traffic to pass between the two simulators.
SST Links are roughly analogous to gem5 Ports, although Links do not
have a notion of master and slave. This distinction is important to
gem5, so when connecting a gem5 CPU to an SST cache, an ExternalSlave
must be used, and similarly when connecting the memory side of SST cache
to a gem5 port (for memory <-> I/O), an ExternalMaster must be used.
These connectors handle the administrative aspects of gem5
(initialization, simulation, shutdown) as well as translating SST's
MemEvents into gem5 Packets and vice-versa.
Restoring from a checkpoint fails if either the RTC or the RTC Timer
Interrrupt event is disabled. The restored machine tried incorrectly
to schedule the next event with negative offset.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
Add 32-bit access width for PrimaryTiming register and 16bit for UDMAControl
register as FreeBSD required.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
The totalInstructions counter is only incremented when the whole instruction is
commited and not on every microop. It was incorrectly reset in atomic and
timing cpus.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>"
When running with the Exec flag, the mwait instruction attempted
to print out its source registers, which were never actually
initialized. This led to sporadic assertion failures when the
value stored there was invalid.
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
The stride prefetcher had a hardcoded number of contexts (i.e. master-IDs)
that it could handle. Since master IDs need to be unique per system, and
every core, cache etc. requires a separate master port, a static limit on
these does not make much sense.
Instead, this patch adds a small hash map that will map all master IDs to
the right prefetch state and dynamically allocates new state for new master
IDs.
This patch changes the order of writeback allocation such that any
writebacks resulting from a tag lookup (e.g. for an uncacheable
access), are added to the writebuffer before any new MSHR entries are
allocated. This ensures that the writebacks logically precedes the new
allocations.
The patch also changes the uncacheable flush to use proper timed (or
atomic) writebacks, as opposed to functional writes.
This patch simplifies the code dealing with uncacheable timing
accesses, aiming to align it with the existing miss handling. Similar
to what we do in atomic, a timing request now goes through
Cache::access (where the block is also flushed), and then proceeds to
ignore any existing MSHR for the block in question. This unifies the
flow for cacheable and uncacheable accesses, and for atomic and timing.
This patch changes how we search for matching MSHRs, ignoring any MSHR
that is allocated for an uncacheable access. By doing so, this patch
fixes a corner case in the MSHRs where incorrect data ended up being
copied into a (cacheable) read packet due to a first uncacheable MSHR
target of size 4, followed by a cacheable target to the same MSHR of
size 64. The latter target was filled with nonsense data.
This patch removes the no-longer-needed
allocateUncachedReadBuffer. Besides the checks it is exactly the same
as allocateMissBuffer and thus provides no value.
This patch aligns all MSHR queue entries to block boundaries to
simplify checks for matches. Previously there were corner cases that
could lead to existing entries not being identified as matches.
There are, rather alarmingly, a few regressions that change with this
patch.
This patch subsumes the PREFETCH_SNOOP_SQUASH flag with the more
generic BLOCK_CACHED flag. Future patches implementing cache eviction
messages can use the BLOCK_CACHED flag in almost the same manner as
hardware prefetches use the PREFETCH_SNOOP_SQUASH flag. The
PREFTECH_SNOOP_FLAG is set if the prefetch target is found in the tags
or the MSHRs in any state, so we are simply replacing calls to
setPrefetchSquashed() with setBlockCached(). The case of where the
prefetch target is found in the writeback MSHRs of upper level caches
continues to be covered by the MEM_INHIBIT flag.
Currently if there are shell special characters in a
command-line argument, you can't copy and paste the
echoed command line onto a shell prompt because the
characters aren't quoted properly. This patch fixes
that problem.
When using gem5 as a slave simulator, it will not advance the
clock on its own and depends on the master simulator calling
simulate(). This new option lets us use the Python scripts
to do all the configuration while stopping short of actually
simulating anything.
This patch accomplishes two things:
1. Makes simulate()'s GlobalSimLoopExitEvent a singleton reused
across calls. This is slightly more efficient than recreating
it every time.
2. Gives callers to simulate() (especially other simulators) a
foolproof way of knowing that the simulation period ended
successfully by hitting the limit event. They can call
getLimitEvent() and compare it to the return
value of simulate().
This change was motivated by an ongoing effort to integrate gem5
and SST, with SST as the master sim and gem5 as the slave sim.
A recent changeset of mine (http://repo.gem5.org/gem5/rev/4cfe55719da5)
inadvertently fixed a bug in the Minor CPU model which caused it to treat
software prefetches as regular loads. Prior to this changeset, Minor
did an ad-hoc generation of memory commands that left out the PF check;
because it now uses the common code that the other CPU models use,
it generates prefetches properly. These stat changes reflect the fact
that the Minor model now issues SoftPFReqs.