Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andreas Sandberg b81a977e6a sim: Move the draining interface into a separate base class
This patch moves the draining interface from SimObject to a separate
class that can be used by any object needing draining. However,
objects not visible to the Python code (i.e., objects not deriving
from SimObject) still depend on their parents informing them when to
drain. This patch also gets rid of the CountedDrainEvent (which isn't
really an event) and replaces it with a DrainManager.
2012-11-02 11:32:01 -05:00
Nathan Binkert 4e02e7c217 python: Fix the reference counting for python events placed on the eventq.
We need to add a reference when an object is put on the C++ queue, and remove
a reference when the object is removed from the queue.  This was not happening
before and caused a memory problem.
2008-11-10 11:51:18 -08:00
Clint Smullen cfa32d8de7 Checkpointing: createCountedDrain function, it was only returning an Event, which does not expose a setCount method to Python.
Signed-off By: Ali Saidi
2008-10-27 19:46:01 -04:00
Nathan Binkert 8291d9db0a eventq: Major API change for the Event and EventQueue structures.
Since the early days of M5, an event needed to know which event queue
it was on, and that data was required at the time of construction of
the event object.  In the future parallelized M5, this sort of
requirement does not work well since the proper event queue will not
always be known at the time of construction of an event.  Now, events
are created, and the EventQueue itself has the schedule function,
e.g. eventq->schedule(event, when).  To simplify the syntax, I created
a class called EventManager which holds a pointer to an EventQueue and
provides the schedule interface that is a proxy for the EventQueue.
The intent is that objects that frequently schedule events can be
derived from EventManager and then they have the schedule interface.
SimObject and Port are examples of objects that will become
EventManagers.  The end result is that any SimObject can just call
schedule(event, when) and it will just call that SimObject's
eventq->schedule function.  Of course, some objects may have more than
one EventQueue, so this interface might not be perfect for those, but
they should be relatively few.
2008-10-09 04:58:23 -07:00
Nathan Binkert 18e245ad0b Pass an exception from a python event through the event queue
back into python so we don't just silently ignore those errors

--HG--
extra : convert_revision : e2f5566a4681f1b8ea80af50071119118afa7d8a
2007-02-17 20:27:11 -08:00
Nathan Binkert ecd1420341 Expose the C++ event queue to python via the python function
m5.internal.event.create().  It takes a python object and a
Tick and calls process() when the Tick occurs.

--HG--
extra : convert_revision : 5e4c9728982b206163ff51e6850a1497d85ad7a3
2006-12-21 22:38:50 -08:00