Enable more or less takes the place of check, but also allows stats to
do some other configuration. Prepare moves all of the code that readies
a stat for dumping into a separate function in preparation for supporting
serialization of certain pieces of statistics data.
While we're at it, clean up the visitor code and some of the python code.
This basically works by taking advantage of the curiously recurring template
pattern in an intelligent way so as to reduce the number of lines of code
and hopefully make things a little bit clearer.
This provides an easy way to provide the callbacks into the data side
of things from the info side of things. Rename Wrap to DataWrap so it
is more easily distinguishable from InfoWrap
Basically, this means renaming several things called data to info, which
is information about the statistics. Things that are named data now are
actual data stored for the statistic.
The gzstream package provides an ostream-interface for writing gzipped files.
The package comes from:
http://www.cs.unc.edu/Research/compgeom/gzstream/
And is distributed under the LGPL license. Both the license and version
information has been preservered, though all other files in the package have
been purged. Minor modifications to the code have been made. The output module
detects when a filename ends in .gz and constructs an ogzstream object instead
of an ofstream object. This works for both the create(...) and find(...)
commands. Additionally, since gzstream objects needs to be closed to ensure
proper file termination, I have the output deconstructor deleting all ostream's
that it manages on behalf of find(...). At the moment, the only output file
that I know this functionality works for is stats, i.e. by specifying
"--stats-file=m5stats.txt.gz" on the command line.
I did some of the flags and assertions wrong. Thanks to Brad Beckmann
for pointing this out. I should have run the opt regressions instead
of the fast. I also screwed up some of the logical functions in the Flags
class.
In many cases it might be preferable to use bitset, but this object
allows the user more easily manipulate groups of flags because the
underlying type (e.g. uint64_t) is exposed.
In DEBUG mode, this does a dynamic_cast and asserts that the result is
non null. Otherwise, it just does a static_cast. Again, this is only
intended for cases where the cast should always succeed and what's
desired is a debugging check to make sure.