This patch is a temporary fix until Andreas' four-phase patches
get reviewed and committed. Removing FastAlloc seems to have exposed
an issue which previously was reasonable rare in which packets are freed
before the sending cache is done with them. This change puts incoming packets
no a pendingDelete queue which are deleted at the start of the next call and
thus breaks the dependency between when the caller returns true and when the
packet is actually used by the sending cache.
Running valgrind on a multi-core linux boot and the memtester results in no
valgrind warnings.
Due to recent changes to X86 TLB, gem5 stopped compiling on
gcc version 4.4.3. This patch provides the fix for that problem. The patch
is tested on gcc 4.4.3. The change is not required for more recent
versions of gcc (like on 4.6.3).
As status matrix, MIPS fs does not work. Hence, these options are not
required. Secondly, the function is setting param values for a CPU class.
This seems strange, should probably be done in a different way.
initCPU() will be called to initialize switched out CPUs for the simple and
inorder CPU models. this patch prevents those CPUs from being initialized
because they should get their state from the active CPU when it is switched
out.
This change allows designating a system as MP capable or not as some
bootloaders/kernels care that it's set right. You can have a single
processor MP capable system, but you can't have a multi-processor
UP only system. This change also fixes the initialization of the MIDR
register.
This package is available in Ubuntu, Debian, and Redhat as google-perftools.
With multiple tests on a single machine I've seen a little over 10% performance
gain with tcmalloc.
While FastAlloc provides a small performance increase (~1.5%) over regular malloc it isn't thread safe.
After removing FastAlloc and using tcmalloc I've seen a performance increase of 12% over libc malloc
when running twolf for ARM.
The CPUID instruction was implemented so that it would only write its results
if the instruction was successful. This works fine on the simple CPU where
unwritten registers retain their old values, but on a CPU like O3 with
renaming this is broken. The instruction needs to write the old values back
into the registers explicitly if they aren't being changed.
There are some bits of some fields of the ExtMachInst which are not actually
used for anything but are included in the hash of an ExtMachInst for
simplicity and efficiency. This change makes sure the decoder's internal
working ExtMachInst is completely initialized, even these unused bits, so that
there isn't any nondeterministic behavior, no valgrind messages about
uninitialized variables, and no potential false misses/redundant entries in
the decode cache.
This patch introduces a class hierarchy of buses, a non-coherent one,
and a coherent one, splitting the existing bus functionality. By doing
so it also enables further specialisation of the two types of buses.
A non-coherent bus connects a number of non-snooping masters and
slaves, and routes the request and response packets based on the
address. The request packets issued by the master connected to a
non-coherent bus could still snoop in caches attached to a coherent
bus, as is the case with the I/O bus and memory bus in most system
configurations. No snoops will, however, reach any master on the
non-coherent bus itself. The non-coherent bus can be used as a
template for modelling PCI, PCIe, and non-coherent AMBA and OCP buses,
and is typically used for the I/O buses.
A coherent bus connects a number of (potentially) snooping masters and
slaves, and routes the request and response packets based on the
address, and also forwards all requests to the snoopers and deals with
the snoop responses. The coherent bus can be used as a template for
modelling QPI, HyperTransport, ACE and coherent OCP buses, and is
typically used for the L1-to-L2 buses and as the main system
interconnect.
The configuration scripts are updated to use a NoncoherentBus for all
peripheral and I/O buses.
A bit of minor tidying up has also been done.
--HG--
rename : src/mem/bus.cc => src/mem/coherent_bus.cc
rename : src/mem/bus.hh => src/mem/coherent_bus.hh
rename : src/mem/bus.cc => src/mem/noncoherent_bus.cc
rename : src/mem/bus.hh => src/mem/noncoherent_bus.hh
This patch updates the stats for parser to be aligned with the most
up-to-date behaviour. Somehow the wrong results got committed as part
of 8800b05e1cb3 (see details below) when fixing the no_value -> nan
stats.
changeset: 8983:8800b05e1cb3
user: Nathan Binkert <nate@binkert.org>
summary: stats: update stats for no_value -> nan
This patch makes two very minor changes to please gcc 4.7. The
CopyData function no longer exists and this has been replaced. For
some reason previous versions of gcc did not complain on the const
char casting not having an implementation, but this is now addressed.
This patch merely remove the Packet* from the isOccupied member
function. Historically this was used to check if the packet was an
express snoop, but this is now done outside this function (where
relevant).
The main aim of this patch is to arrive at a suitable port interface
for vector ports, including both the packet and the port id. This
patch changes the bus transport functions
(recvFunctional/Atomic/Timing) to require a PortId parameter
indicating the source port. Previously this information was passed by
setting the source field of the packet, and this is only required in
the case of a timing request.
With this patch, the use of the source and destination field is also
more restrictive, as they are only needed for timing accesses. The
modifications to these fields for atomic snoops is now removed
entirely, also making minor modifications to the cache.
This patch removes the Packet::NodeID typedef and unifies it with the
Port::PortId. The src and dest fields in the packet are used to hold a
port id (e.g. in the bus), and thus the two should actually be the
same.
The typedef PortID is now global (in base/types.hh) and aligned with
the ThreadID in terms of capitalisation and naming of the
InvalidPortID constant.
Before this patch, two flags were used for valid destination and
source, rather than relying on a named value (InvalidPortID), and
this is now redundant, as the src and dest field themselves are
sufficient to tell whether the current value is a valid port
identifier or not. Consequently, the VALID_SRC and VALID_DST are
removed.
As part of the cleaning up, a number of int parameters and local
variables are updated to use PortID.
Note that Ruby still has its own NodeID typedef. Furthermore, the
MemObject getMaster/SlavePort still has an int idx parameter with a
default value of -1 which should eventually change to PortID idx =
InvalidPortID.
This patch updates the comments for the src and dest fields to reflect
their actual use. Due to a number of patches (e.g. removing the
Broadcast flag), the old comments are no longer indicative of the
current usage.
This patch splits the PacketBuffer class into a RequestState and a
DeferredRequest and DeferredResponse. Only the requests need a
SenderState, and the deferred requests and responses only need an
associated point in time for the request and the response queue.
Besides the cleaning up, the goal is to simplify the transition to a
new port handshake, and with these changes, the two packet queues are
starting to look very similar to the generic packet queue, but
currently they do a few unique things relating to the NACK and
counting of requests/responses that the packet queue cannot be
conveniently used. This will be addressed in a later patch.
The GDT can be accessed by user level software running in compatibility mode
by moving segment selectors into segment registers. The GDT needs to be set up
at an address accessible in this mode.
A small change was added a while ago to keep addresses from overflowing 32
bits when larger addresses shouldn't be accessible to software. That change
truncated when not in long mode, but really it should have truncated when not
in 64 bit mode. The difference is whether compatibility mode is included, a
mode that's supposed to act like a legacy 32 bit mode.
This will allow it to be specialized by the ISAs. The existing caching scheme
is provided by the BasicDecodeCache in the GenericISA namespace and is built
from the generalized components.
--HG--
rename : src/cpu/decode_cache.cc => src/arch/generic/decode_cache.cc
These classes are always used together, and merging them will give the ISAs
more flexibility in how they cache things and manage the process.
--HG--
rename : src/arch/x86/predecoder_tables.cc => src/arch/x86/decoder_tables.cc
This patch removes unused commands and attributes from the packet to
avoid any confusion. It is part of an effort to clear up how and where
different commands and attributes are used.
This patch changes the organisation of the JSON output slightly to
make it easier to traverse and use the files. Most importantly, the
hierarchical dictionaries now use keys that correspond to the
attribute names also in the case of VectorParams (used to be
e.f. "cpu0 cpu1"). It also adds the name and the path to each
SimObject directory entry. Before this patch, to get cpu0, you would
have to query dict['system']['cpu0 cpu1'][0] and this could be a dict
with 'cpu0' : { cpu parameters }. Now you use dict['system']['cpu'][0]
and get { cpu parameters } (where one is "name" : "cpu0").
Additionally this patch includes more verbose information about the
ports, specifying their role, and using a JSON array rather than a
concatenated string for the peer.
This patch moves the DMA device to its own set of files, splitting it
from the IO device. There are no behavioural changes associated with
this patch.
The patch also grabs the opportunity to do some very minor tidying up,
including some white space removal and pruning some redundant
parameters.
Besides the immediate benefits of the separation-of-concerns, this
patch also makes upcoming changes more streamlined as it split the
devices that are only slaves and the DMA device that also acts as a
master.
--HG--
rename : src/dev/io_device.cc => src/dev/dma_device.cc
rename : src/dev/io_device.hh => src/dev/dma_device.hh
This patch makes the (device) DmaPort non-snooping and removes the
recvSnoop constructor parameter and instead introduces a
SnoopingDmaPort subclass for the ARM table walker.
Functionality is unchanged, as are the stats, and the patch merely
clarifies that the normal DMA ports are not snooping (although they
may issue requests that are snooped by others, as done with PCI, PCIe,
AMBA4 ACE etc).
Currently this port is declared in the ARM table walker as it is not
used anywhere else. If other ports were to have similar behaviour it
could be moved in a future patch.