Commit graph

249 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Korey Sewell 89d0f95bf0 inorder: branch predictor update
only update BTB on a taken branch and update branch predictor w/pcstate from instruction
---
only pay attention to branch predictor updates if the the inst. is in fact a branch
2011-06-19 21:43:37 -04:00
Korey Sewell 479195d4cf inorder: priority for grad/squash events
define separate priority resource pool squash and graduate events
2011-06-19 21:43:37 -04:00
Korey Sewell 71018f5e8b inorder: remove stalls on trap squash 2011-06-19 21:43:37 -04:00
Korey Sewell 34b2500f09 inorder: no dep. tracking for zero reg
this causes forwarding a bad value register value
2011-06-19 21:43:37 -04:00
Korey Sewell d02fa0f6b6 imported patch recoverPCfromTrap 2011-06-19 21:43:37 -04:00
Korey Sewell 264e8178ff imported patch squash_from_next_stage 2011-06-19 21:43:36 -04:00
Korey Sewell f0f33ae2b9 inorder: add flatDestReg member to dyninst
use it in reg. dep. tracking
2011-06-19 21:43:36 -04:00
Korey Sewell 555bd4d842 inorder: update event priorities
dont use offset to calculate this but rather an enum
that can be updated
2011-06-19 21:43:36 -04:00
Korey Sewell 7dea79535c inorder: implement trap handling 2011-06-19 21:43:36 -04:00
Korey Sewell 061b369d28 inorder: cleanup intercomm. structs/squash info 2011-06-19 21:43:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell b195da9345 inorder: use setupSquash for misspeculation
implement a clean interface to handle branch misprediction and eventually all pipeline
flushing
2011-06-19 21:43:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell 73cfab8b23 inorder: DynInst handling of stores for big-endian ISAs
The DynInst was not performing the host-to-guest translation
which ended up breaking stores for SPARC
2011-06-19 21:43:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell 4f34bc8b7b inorder: make marking of dest. regs an explicit request
formerly, this was implicit when you accessed the execution unit
or the use-def unit but it's better that this just be something
that a user can specify.
2011-06-19 21:43:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell 946b0ed4f4 inorder: simplify handling of split accesses 2011-06-19 21:43:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell 1a6d25dc47 inorder: addtl functionaly for inst. skeds
add find and end functions for inst. schedules
that can search by stage number
2011-06-19 21:43:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell 8b54858831 inorder: register file stats
keep stats for int/float reg file usage instead
of aggregating across reg file types
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell 085f30ff9c inorder: scheduling for nonspec insts
make handling of speculative and nonspeculative insts
more explicit
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell 3c417ea23a inorder: find register dependencies "lazily"
Architectures like SPARC need to read the window pointer
in order to figure out it's register dependence. However,
this may not get updated until after an instruction gets
executed, so now we lazily detect the register dependence
in the EXE stage (execution unit or use_def). This
makes sure we get the mapping after the most current change.
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell bd67ee9852 inorder: assert on macro-ops
provide a sanity check for someone coding
a new architecture
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell ee7062d94d inorder: handle faults at writeback stage
call trap function when a fault is received
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell 17f5749dbb inorder: ISA-zero reg handling
ignore writes to the ISA zero register
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell 2a59fcfbe9 inorder: update support for branch delay slots 2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell d4b4ef1324 inorder: inst. iterator cleanup
get rid of accessing iterators (for instructions) by reference
2011-06-19 21:43:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell e2f9266dbf inorder: update bpred code
clean up control flow to make it easier to understand
2011-06-19 21:43:33 -04:00
Korey Sewell 6df6365095 inorder: add types for dependency checks 2011-06-19 21:43:33 -04:00
Korey Sewell 19e3eb2915 inorder: use flattenIdx for reg indexing
- also use "threadId()" instead of readTid() everywhere
- this will help support more complex ISA indexing
2011-06-19 21:43:33 -04:00
Korey Sewell 76c60c5f93 inorder: use m5_hash_map for skedCache
since we dont care about if the cache of instruction schedules is sorted or not,
then the hash map should be faster
2011-06-19 21:43:33 -04:00
Korey Sewell 1a451cd2c5 sparc: compilation fixes for inorder
Add a few constants and functions that the InOrder model wants for SPARC.
* * *
sparc: add eaComp function
InOrder separates the address generation from the actual access so give
Sparc that functionality
* * *
sparc: add control flags for branches
branch predictors and other cpu model functions need to know specific information
about branches, so add the necessary flags here
2011-06-09 01:34:06 -04:00
Gabe Black a59a143a25 gcc 4.0: Add some virtual destructors to make gcc 4.0 happy. 2011-06-07 00:24:49 -07:00
Nathan Binkert 2b1aa35e20 scons: rename TraceFlags to DebugFlags 2011-06-02 17:36:21 -07:00
Nathan Binkert 9c4c1419a7 work around gcc 4.5 warning 2011-05-09 16:34:11 -04:00
Nathan Binkert 63371c8664 stats: rename stats so they can be used as python expressions 2011-04-19 18:45:21 -07:00
Nathan Binkert eddac53ff6 trace: reimplement the DTRACE function so it doesn't use a vector
At the same time, rename the trace flags to debug flags since they
have broader usage than simply tracing.  This means that
--trace-flags is now --debug-flags and --trace-help is now --debug-help
2011-04-15 10:44:32 -07:00
Nathan Binkert 39a055645f includes: sort all includes 2011-04-15 10:44:06 -07:00
Ali Saidi 5962fecc1d CPU: Remove references to memory copy operations 2011-04-04 11:42:26 -05:00
Korey Sewell e0fdd86fd9 mips: cleanup ISA-specific code
***
(1): get rid of expandForMT function
MIPS is the only ISA that cares about having a piece of ISA state integrate
multiple threads so add constants for MIPS and relieve the other ISAs from having
to define this. Also, InOrder was the only core that was actively calling
this function
* * *
(2): get rid of corespecific type
The CoreSpecific type was used as a proxy to pass in HW specific params to
a MIPS CPU, but since MIPS FS hasnt been touched for awhile, it makes sense
to not force every other ISA to use CoreSpecific as well use a special
reset function to set it. That probably should go in a PowerOn reset fault
 anyway.
2011-03-26 09:23:52 -04:00
Korey Sewell 0a74246fb9 inorder: InstSeqNum bug
Because int and not InstSeqNum was used in a couple of places, you can
overflow the int type and thus get wierd bugs when the sequence number
is negative (or some wierd value)
2011-02-23 16:35:18 -05:00
Korey Sewell 3e1ad73d08 inorder: dyn inst initialization
remove constructors that werent being used (it just gets confusing)
use initialization list for all the variables instead of relying on initVars()
function
2011-02-23 16:35:04 -05:00
Korey Sewell e0a021005d inorder: cache packet handling
-use a pointer to CacheReqPacket instead of PacketPtr so correct destructors
get called on packet deletion
- make sure to delete the packet if the cache blocks the sendTiming request
or for some reason we dont use the packet
- dont overwrite memory requests since in the worst case an instruction will
be replaying a request so no need to keep allocating a new request
- we dont use retryPkt so delete it
- fetch code was split out already, so just assert that this is a memory
reference inst. and that the staticInst is available
2011-02-23 16:30:45 -05:00
Korey Sewell bc16bbc158 inorder: add names and slot #s to res. dprints 2011-02-18 14:31:31 -05:00
Korey Sewell 64d31e75b9 inorder: ignore nops in execution unit 2011-02-18 14:30:38 -05:00
Korey Sewell 0fe19836c7 inorder: update graduation unit
make sure instructions are able to commit before writing back to the RF
do not commit more than 1 non-speculative instruction per cycle
2011-02-18 14:30:05 -05:00
Korey Sewell 89335118a5 inorder: recognize isSerializeAfter flag
keep track of when an instruction needs the execution
behind it to be serialized. Without this, in SE Mode
instructions can execute behind a system call exit().
2011-02-18 14:29:48 -05:00
Korey Sewell bbffd9419d inorder: update default thread size(=1)
a lot of structures get allocated based off that MaxThreads parameter so this is an
effort to not abuse it
2011-02-18 14:29:44 -05:00
Korey Sewell a278df0b95 inorder: don't overuse getLatency()
resources don't need to call getLatency because the latency is already a member
in the class. If there is some type of special case where different instructions
impose a different latency inside a resource then we can revisit this and
add getLatency() back in
2011-02-18 14:29:40 -05:00
Korey Sewell 37df925953 inorder: update max. resource bandwidths
each resource has a certain # of requests it can take per cycle. update the #s here
to be more realistic based off of the pipeline width and if the resource needs to
be accessed on multiple cycles
2011-02-18 14:29:31 -05:00
Korey Sewell 91c48b1c3b inorder: cleanup in destructors
cleanup hanging pointers and other cruft in the destructors
2011-02-18 14:29:26 -05:00
Korey Sewell 8b4b4a1ba5 inorder: fix cache/fetch unit memory leaks
---
need to delete the cache request's data on clearRequest() now that we are recycling
requests
---
fetch unit needs to deallocate the fetch buffer blocks when they are replaced or
squashed.
2011-02-18 14:29:17 -05:00
Korey Sewell 72b5233112 inorder: remove events for zero-cycle resources
if a resource has a zero cycle latency (e.g. RegFile write), then dont allocate an event
for it to use
2011-02-18 14:29:02 -05:00
Korey Sewell d5961b2b20 inorder: update pipeline interface for handling finished resource reqs
formerly, to free up bandwidth in a resource, we could just change the pointer in that resource
but at the same time the pipeline stages had visibility to see what happened to a resource request.
Now that we are recycling these requests (to avoid too much dynamic allocation), we can't throw
away the request too early or the pipeline stage gets bad information. Instead, mark when a request
is done with the resource all together and then let the pipeline stage call back to the resource
that it's time to free up the bandwidth for more instructions
*** inteface notes ***
- When an instruction completes and is done in a resource for that cycle, call done()
- When an instruction fails and is done with a resource for that cycle, call done(false)
- When an instruction completes, but isnt finished with a resource, call completed()
- When an instruction fails, but isnt finished with a resource, call completed(false)
* * *
inorder: tlbmiss wakeup bug fix
2011-02-18 14:28:37 -05:00
Korey Sewell d64226750e inorder: remove request map, use request vector
take away all instances of reqMap in the code and make all references use the built-in
request vectors inside of each resource. The request map was dynamically allocating
a request per instruction. The request vector just allocates N number of requests
during instantiation and then the surrounding code is fixed up to reuse those N requests
***
setRequest() and clearRequest() are the new accessors needed to define a new
request in a resource
2011-02-18 14:28:30 -05:00
Korey Sewell c883729025 inorder: add valid bit for resource requests
this will allow us to reuse resource requests within a resource instead
of always dynamically allocating
2011-02-18 14:28:22 -05:00
Korey Sewell ff48afcf4f inorder: remove reqRemoveList
we are going to be getting away from creating new resource requests for every
instruction so no more need to keep track of a reqRemoveList and clean it up
every tick
2011-02-18 14:28:10 -05:00
Korey Sewell 991d0185c6 inorder: initialize res. req. vectors based on resource bandwidth
first change in an optimization that will stop InOrder from allocating new memory for every instruction's
request to a resource. This gets expensive since every instruction needs to access ~10 requests before
graduation. Instead, the plan is to allocate just enough resource request objects to satisfy each resource's
bandwidth (e.g. the execution unit would need to allocate 3 resource request objects for a 1-issue pipeline
since on any given cycle it could have 2 read requests and 1 write request) and then let the instructions
contend and reuse those allocated requests. The end result is a smaller memory footprint for the InOrder model
and increased simulation performance
2011-02-18 14:27:52 -05:00
Korey Sewell 470aa289da inorder: clean up the old way of inst. scheduling
remove remnants of old way of instruction scheduling which dynamically allocated
a new resource schedule for every instruction
2011-02-12 10:14:48 -05:00
Korey Sewell e26aee514d inorder: utilize cached skeds in pipeline
allow the pipeline and resources to use the cached instruction schedule and resource
sked iterator
2011-02-12 10:14:45 -05:00
Korey Sewell 516b611462 inorder: define iterator for resource schedules
resource skeds are divided into two parts: front end (all insts) and back end (inst. specific)
each of those are implemented as separate lists,  so this iterator wraps around
the traditional list iterator so that an instruction can walk it's schedule but seamlessly
transfer from front end to back end when necessary
2011-02-12 10:14:43 -05:00
Korey Sewell ec9b2ec251 inorder: stage scheduler for front/back end schedule creation
add a stage scheduler class to replace InstStage in pipeline_traits.cc
use that class to define a default front-end, resource schedule that all
instructions will follow. This will also replace the back end schedule in
pipeline_traits.cc. The reason for adding this is so that we can cache
instruction schedules in the future instead of calling the same function
over/over again as well as constantly dynamically alllocating memory on
every instruction to try to figure out it's schedule
2011-02-12 10:14:40 -05:00
Korey Sewell 6713dbfe08 inorder: cache instruction schedules
first step in a optimization to not dynamically allocate an instruction schedule
for every instruction but rather used cached schedules
2011-02-12 10:14:36 -05:00
Korey Sewell af67631790 inorder: comments for resource sked class 2011-02-12 10:14:34 -05:00
Korey Sewell 800e93f358 inorder: remove unused file
inst_buffer file isn't used , so remove it
2011-02-12 10:14:32 -05:00
Korey Sewell e396a34b01 inorder: fault handling
Maintain all information about an instruction's fault in the DynInst object rather
than any cpu-request object. Also, if there is a fault during the execution stage
then just save the fault inside the instruction and trap once the instruction
tries to graduate
2011-02-04 00:09:20 -05:00
Korey Sewell e57613588b inorder: pcstate and delay slots bug
not taken delay slots were not being advanced correctly to pc+8, so for those ISAs
we 'advance()' the pcstate one more time for the desired effect
2011-02-04 00:09:19 -05:00
Korey Sewell 68d962f8af inorder: add a fetch buffer to fetch unit
Give fetch unit it's own parameterizable fetch buffer to read from. Very inefficient
(architecturally and in simulation) to continually fetch at the granularity of the
wordsize. As expected, the number of fetch memory requests drops dramatically
2011-02-04 00:08:22 -05:00
Korey Sewell 56ce8acd41 inorder: overload find-req fn
no need to have separate function name findSplitRequest, just overload the function
2011-02-04 00:08:21 -05:00
Korey Sewell ab3d37d398 inorder: implement separate fetch unit
instead of having one cache-unit class be responsible for both data and code
accesses, separate code that is just for fetch in it's own derived class off the
original base class. This makes the code easier to manage as well as handle
future cases of special fetch handling
2011-02-04 00:08:20 -05:00
Korey Sewell f80508de65 inorder: cache port blocking
set the request to false when the cache port blocks so we dont deadlock.
also, comment out the outstanding address list sanity check for now.
2011-02-04 00:08:19 -05:00
Korey Sewell 0c6a679359 inorder: stage width as a python parameter
allow the user to specify how many instructions a pipeline stage can process
on any given cycle (stageWidth...i.e.bandwidth) by setting the parameter through
the python interface rather than compile the code after changing the *.cc file.
(we always had the parameter there, but still used the static 'ThePipeline::StageWidth'
instead)
-
Since StageWidth is now dynamically defined, change the interstage communication
structure to use a vector and get rid of array and array handling index (toNextStageIndex)
since we can just make calls to the list for the same information
2011-02-04 00:08:18 -05:00
Korey Sewell 8ac717ef4c inorder: multi-issue branch resolution
Only execute (resolve) one branch per cycle because handling more than one is
a little more complicated
2011-02-04 00:08:17 -05:00
Korey Sewell be17617990 inorder: pipe. stage inst. buffering
use skidbuffer as only location for instructions between stages. before,
we had the insts queue from the prior stage and the skidbuffer for the
current stage, but that gets confusing and this consolidation helps
when handling squash cases
2011-02-04 00:08:16 -05:00
Korey Sewell 050944dd73 inorder: change skidBuffer to list instead of queue
manage insertion and deletion like a queue but will need
access to internal elements for future changes
Currently, skidbuffer manages any instruction that was
in a stage but could not complete processing, however
we will want to manage all blocked instructions (from prev stage
and from cur. stage) in just one buffer.
2011-02-04 00:08:15 -05:00
Korey Sewell 7f937e11e2 inorder: activity tracking bug
Previous code was marking CPU activity on almost every cycle due to a bug in
tracking the status of pipeline stages. This disables the CPU from sleeping
on long latency stalls and increases simulation time
2011-02-04 00:08:13 -05:00
Gabe Black 00f24ae92c Config: Keep track of uncached and cached ports separately.
This makes sure that the address ranges requested for caches and uncached ports
don't conflict with each other, and that accesses which are always uncached
(message signaled interrupts for instance) don't waste time passing through
caches.
2011-02-03 20:23:00 -08:00
Korey Sewell cd5a7f7221 inorder: fix RUBY_FS build
the current code was using incorrect dummy instruction in interrupts function
2011-01-12 11:52:29 -05:00
Steve Reinhardt 6f1187943c Replace curTick global variable with accessor functions.
This step makes it easy to replace the accessor functions
(which still access a global variable) with ones that access
per-thread curTick values.
2011-01-07 21:50:29 -08:00
Steve Reinhardt d60c293bbc inorder: replace schedEvent() code with reschedule().
There were several copies of similar functions that looked
like they all replicated reschedule(), so I replaced them
with direct calls.  Keeping this separate from the previous
cset since there may be some subtle functional differences
if the code ever reschedules an event that is scheduled but
not squashed (though none were detected in the regressions).
2011-01-07 21:50:29 -08:00
Steve Reinhardt 214cc0fafc inorder: get rid of references to mainEventQueue.
Events need to be scheduled on the queue assigned
to the SimObject, not on the global queue (which
should be going away).
Also cleaned up a number of redundant expressions
that made the code unnecessarily verbose.
2011-01-07 21:50:29 -08:00
Steve Reinhardt 89cf3f6e85 Move sched_list.hh and timebuf.hh from src/base to src/cpu.
These files really aren't general enough to belong in src/base.
This patch doesn't reorder include lines, leaving them unsorted
in many cases, but Nate's magic script will fix that up shortly.

--HG--
rename : src/base/sched_list.hh => src/cpu/sched_list.hh
rename : src/base/timebuf.hh => src/cpu/timebuf.hh
2011-01-03 14:35:47 -08:00
Steve Reinhardt c69d48f007 Make commenting on close namespace brackets consistent.
Ran all the source files through 'perl -pi' with this script:

s|\s*(};?\s*)?/\*\s*(end\s*)?namespace\s*(\S+)\s*\*/(\s*})?|} // namespace $3|;
s|\s*};?\s*//\s*(end\s*)?namespace\s*(\S+)\s*|} // namespace $2\n|;
s|\s*};?\s*//\s*(\S+)\s*namespace\s*|} // namespace $1\n|;

Also did a little manual editing on some of the arch/*/isa_traits.hh files
and src/SConscript.
2011-01-03 14:35:43 -08:00
Gabe Black 672d6a4b98 Style: Replace some tabs with spaces. 2010-12-20 16:24:40 -05:00
Giacomo Gabrielli 719f9a6d4f O3: Make all instructions that write a misc. register not perform the write until commit.
ARM instructions updating cumulative flags (ARM FP exceptions and saturation
flags) are not serialized.

Added aliases for ARM FP exceptions and saturation flags in FPSCR.  Removed
write accesses to the FP condition codes for most ARM VFP instructions: only
VCMP and VCMPE instructions update the FP condition codes.  Removed a potential
cause of seg. faults in the O3 model for NEON memory macro-ops (ARM).
2010-12-07 16:19:57 -08:00
Ali Saidi cdacbe734a ARM/Alpha/Cpu: Change prefetchs to be more like normal loads.
This change modifies the way prefetches work. They are now like normal loads
that don't writeback a register. Previously prefetches were supposed to call
prefetch() on the exection context, so they executed with execute() methods
instead of initiateAcc() completeAcc(). The prefetch() methods for all the CPUs
are blank, meaning that they get executed, but don't actually do anything.

On Alpha dead cache copy code was removed and prefetches are now normal ops.
They count as executed operations, but still don't do anything and IsMemRef is
not longer set on them.

On ARM IsDataPrefetch or IsInstructionPreftech is now set on all prefetch
instructions. The timing simple CPU doesn't try to do anything special for
prefetches now and they execute with the normal memory code path.
2010-11-08 13:58:22 -06:00
Gabe Black 6f4bd2c1da ISA,CPU,etc: Create an ISA defined PC type that abstracts out ISA behaviors.
This change is a low level and pervasive reorganization of how PCs are managed
in M5. Back when Alpha was the only ISA, there were only 2 PCs to worry about,
the PC and the NPC, and the lsb of the PC signaled whether or not you were in
PAL mode. As other ISAs were added, we had to add an NNPC, micro PC and next
micropc, x86 and ARM introduced variable length instruction sets, and ARM
started to keep track of mode bits in the PC. Each CPU model handled PCs in
its own custom way that needed to be updated individually to handle the new
dimensions of variability, or, in the case of ARMs mode-bit-in-the-pc hack,
the complexity could be hidden in the ISA at the ISA implementation's expense.
Areas like the branch predictor hadn't been updated to handle branch delay
slots or micropcs, and it turns out that had introduced a significant (10s of
percent) performance bug in SPARC and to a lesser extend MIPS. Rather than
perpetuate the problem by reworking O3 again to handle the PC features needed
by x86, this change was introduced to rework PC handling in a more modular,
transparent, and hopefully efficient way.


PC type:

Rather than having the superset of all possible elements of PC state declared
in each of the CPU models, each ISA defines its own PCState type which has
exactly the elements it needs. A cross product of canned PCState classes are
defined in the new "generic" ISA directory for ISAs with/without delay slots
and microcode. These are either typedef-ed or subclassed by each ISA. To read
or write this structure through a *Context, you use the new pcState() accessor
which reads or writes depending on whether it has an argument. If you just
want the address of the current or next instruction or the current micro PC,
you can get those through read-only accessors on either the PCState type or
the *Contexts. These are instAddr(), nextInstAddr(), and microPC(). Note the
move away from readPC. That name is ambiguous since it's not clear whether or
not it should be the actual address to fetch from, or if it should have extra
bits in it like the PAL mode bit. Each class is free to define its own
functions to get at whatever values it needs however it needs to to be used in
ISA specific code. Eventually Alpha's PAL mode bit could be moved out of the
PC and into a separate field like ARM.

These types can be reset to a particular pc (where npc = pc +
sizeof(MachInst), nnpc = npc + sizeof(MachInst), upc = 0, nupc = 1 as
appropriate), printed, serialized, and compared. There is a branching()
function which encapsulates code in the CPU models that checked if an
instruction branched or not. Exactly what that means in the context of branch
delay slots which can skip an instruction when not taken is ambiguous, and
ideally this function and its uses can be eliminated. PCStates also generally
know how to advance themselves in various ways depending on if they point at
an instruction, a microop, or the last microop of a macroop. More on that
later.

Ideally, accessing all the PCs at once when setting them will improve
performance of M5 even though more data needs to be moved around. This is
because often all the PCs need to be manipulated together, and by getting them
all at once you avoid multiple function calls. Also, the PCs of a particular
thread will have spatial locality in the cache. Previously they were grouped
by element in arrays which spread out accesses.


Advancing the PC:

The PCs were previously managed entirely by the CPU which had to know about PC
semantics, try to figure out which dimension to increment the PC in, what to
set NPC/NNPC, etc. These decisions are best left to the ISA in conjunction
with the PC type itself. Because most of the information about how to
increment the PC (mainly what type of instruction it refers to) is contained
in the instruction object, a new advancePC virtual function was added to the
StaticInst class. Subclasses provide an implementation that moves around the
right element of the PC with a minimal amount of decision making. In ISAs like
Alpha, the instructions always simply assign NPC to PC without having to worry
about micropcs, nnpcs, etc. The added cost of a virtual function call should
be outweighed by not having to figure out as much about what to do with the
PCs and mucking around with the extra elements.

One drawback of making the StaticInsts advance the PC is that you have to
actually have one to advance the PC. This would, superficially, seem to
require decoding an instruction before fetch could advance. This is, as far as
I can tell, realistic. fetch would advance through memory addresses, not PCs,
perhaps predicting new memory addresses using existing ones. More
sophisticated decisions about control flow would be made later on, after the
instruction was decoded, and handed back to fetch. If branching needs to
happen, some amount of decoding needs to happen to see that it's a branch,
what the target is, etc. This could get a little more complicated if that gets
done by the predecoder, but I'm choosing to ignore that for now.


Variable length instructions:

To handle variable length instructions in x86 and ARM, the predecoder now
takes in the current PC by reference to the getExtMachInst function. It can
modify the PC however it needs to (by setting NPC to be the PC + instruction
length, for instance). This could be improved since the CPU doesn't know if
the PC was modified and always has to write it back.


ISA parser:

To support the new API, all PC related operand types were removed from the
parser and replaced with a PCState type. There are two warts on this
implementation. First, as with all the other operand types, the PCState still
has to have a valid operand type even though it doesn't use it. Second, using
syntax like PCS.npc(target) doesn't work for two reasons, this looks like the
syntax for operand type overriding, and the parser can't figure out if you're
reading or writing. Instructions that use the PCS operand (which I've
consistently called it) need to first read it into a local variable,
manipulate it, and then write it back out.


Return address stack:

The return address stack needed a little extra help because, in the presence
of branch delay slots, it has to merge together elements of the return PC and
the call PC. To handle that, a buildRetPC utility function was added. There
are basically only two versions in all the ISAs, but it didn't seem short
enough to put into the generic ISA directory. Also, the branch predictor code
in O3 and InOrder were adjusted so that they always store the PC of the actual
call instruction in the RAS, not the next PC. If the call instruction is a
microop, the next PC refers to the next microop in the same macroop which is
probably not desirable. The buildRetPC function advances the PC intelligently
to the next macroop (in an ISA specific way) so that that case works.


Change in stats:

There were no change in stats except in MIPS and SPARC in the O3 model. MIPS
runs in about 9% fewer ticks. SPARC runs with 30%-50% fewer ticks, which could
likely be improved further by setting call/return instruction flags and taking
advantage of the RAS.


TODO:

Add != operators to the PCState classes, defined trivially to be !(a==b).
Smooth out places where PCs are split apart, passed around, and put back
together later. I think this might happen in SPARC's fault code. Add ISA
specific constructors that allow setting PC elements without calling a bunch
of accessors. Try to eliminate the need for the branching() function. Factor
out Alpha's PAL mode pc bit into a separate flag field, and eliminate places
where it's blindly masked out or tested in the PC.
2010-10-31 00:07:20 -07:00
Gabe Black ab8d7eee76 CPU: Fix O3 and possible InOrder segfaults in FS. 2010-09-20 02:46:42 -07:00
Gabe Black 8f3fbd2d13 CPU: Get rid of the now unnecessary getInst/setInst family of functions.
This code is no longer needed because of the preceeding change which adds a
StaticInstPtr parameter to the fault's invoke method, obviating the only use
for this pair of functions.
2010-09-13 21:58:34 -07:00
Gabe Black 6833ca7eed Faults: Pass the StaticInst involved, if any, to a Fault's invoke method.
Also move the "Fault" reference counted pointer type into a separate file,
sim/fault.hh. It would be better to name this less similarly to sim/faults.hh
to reduce confusion, but fault.hh matches the name of the type. We could change
Fault to FaultPtr to match other pointer types, and then changing the name of
the file would make more sense.
2010-09-13 19:26:03 -07:00
Gabe Black c4ba6967a5 Inorder: Fix compilation of m5.fast.
printMemData is only used in DPRINTFs. If those are removed by compiling
m5.fast, that function is unused, gcc generates a warning, that gets turned
into an error, and the build fails. This change surrounds the function
definition with #if TRACING_ON so it only gets compiled in if the DPRINTFs do
to.
2010-08-14 01:00:45 -07:00
Gabe Black aa8c6e9c95 CPU: Add readBytes and writeBytes functions to the exec contexts. 2010-08-13 06:16:02 -07:00
Gabe Black 65dbcc6ea1 InOrder: Clean up some DPRINTFs that print data sent to/from the cache. 2010-08-13 06:16:00 -07:00
Korey Sewell 84489c5874 inorder: remove another debug stat 2010-06-28 07:33:33 -04:00
Korey Sewell 792c18a1fc inorder: remove debugging stat
m5 doesnt do stats specific to binary and this resource request stat is probably only
useful for people who really know the ins/outs of the model anyway
2010-06-26 09:41:39 -04:00
Korey Sewell 868181f24d inorder: Return Address Stack bug
the nextPC was getting sent to the branch predictor not the current PC, so
the RAS was returning the wrong PC and mispredicting everything.
2010-06-25 17:42:35 -04:00
Korey Sewell 6bfd766f2c inorder: resource scheduling backend
replace priority queue with vector of lists(1 list per stage) and place inside a class
so that we have more control of when an instruction uses a particular schedule entry
...
also, this is the 1st step toward making the InOrderCPU fully parameterizable. See the
wiki for details on this process
2010-06-25 17:42:34 -04:00
Korey Sewell 71b67d408b inorder: cleanup virtual functions
remove the annotation 'virtual' from  function declaration that isnt being derived from
2010-06-24 15:34:19 -04:00
Korey Sewell f95430d97e inorder: enforce 78-character rule 2010-06-24 15:34:12 -04:00
Korey Sewell ecba3074c2 inorder: exe_unit_stats for resolved branches 2010-06-24 13:58:27 -04:00
Korey Sewell 1a73764403 inorder: squash from memory stall
this applies to multithreading models which would like to squash a thread on memory stall
2010-06-23 22:09:49 -04:00
Korey Sewell 1f778b3583 inorder: record load/store trace data 2010-06-23 18:21:12 -04:00
Korey Sewell defab3ffd5 inorder: update branch predictor
- use InOrderBPred instead of Resource for DPRINTFs
- account for DELAY SLOT in updating RAS and in squashing
- don't let squashed instructions update the predictor
- the BTB needs to use the ASID not the TID to work for multithreaded programs
- add stats for BTB hits
2010-06-23 18:19:18 -04:00
Korey Sewell 9f0d8f252c inorder-stats: add instruction type stats
also, remove inst-req stats as default.good for debugging
but in terms of pure processor stats they aren't useful
2010-06-23 18:18:20 -04:00