1b46c175fc
memInhibitAsserted() has been removed from packet.hh. This change has been reflected in TLM based SystemC memory. This patch also adds a number of panics asserting the SystemC memory only sees requests it expects. Committed by Jason Lowe-Power <power.jg@gmail.com> |
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.. | ||
main.cc | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
run_gem5.sh | ||
sc_ext.cc | ||
sc_ext.hh | ||
sc_mm.cc | ||
sc_mm.hh | ||
sc_port.cc | ||
sc_port.hh | ||
sc_target.cc | ||
sc_target.hh | ||
tgen.cfg | ||
tlm.py |
This directory contains a demo of a coupling between gem5 and SystemC-TLM. It is based on the gem5-systemc implementation in utils/systemc. First a simple example with gem5's traffic generator is shown, later an full system example. Files: main.cc -- demonstration top level sc_port.{cc,hh} -- transactor that translates beween gem5 and tlm sc_mm.{cc,hh} -- implementation of a tlm memory manager sc_ext.{cc,hh} -- a TLM extension that carries the gem5 packet sc_target.{cc,hh} -- an example TLM LT/AT memory module tlm.py -- simple gem5 configuration tgen.cfg -- configuration file for the traceplayer Other Files will be used from utils/systemc example: sc_logger.{cc,hh}, sc_module.{cc,hh}, sc_gem5_control.{cc,hh}, stats.{cc,hh} I. Traffic Generator Setup ========================== To build: First build a normal gem5 (cxx-config not needed, Python needed). Second build gem5 as a library with cxx-config support and (optionally) without python. > cd ../.. > scons build/ARM/gem5.opt > scons --with-cxx-config --without-python build/ARM/libgem5_opt.so > cd util/tlm Set a proper LD_LIBRARY_PATH e.g. for bash: > export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/path/to/gem5/build/ARM/" Then edit the Makefile to set the paths for SystemC and run make > make Make a config file for the C++-configured gem5 using normal gem5 > ../../build/ARM/gem5.opt ./tlm.py The message "fatal: Can't find port handler type 'tlm'" is okay. The configuration will be stored in the m5out/ directory The binary 'gem5.opt.sc', that has been created in the make step, can now be used to load in the generated config file from the previous normal gem5 run. Try: > ./gem5.opt.sc m5out/config.ini -e 1000000 It should run a simulation for 1us. To see more information what happens inside the TLM module use the -D flag: > ./gem5.opt.sc m5out/config.ini -e 1000000 -D To see more information about the port coupling use: > ./gem5.opt.sc m5out/config.ini -e 1000000 -d ExternalPort II. Full System Setup ===================== Build gem5 as discribed in Section I. Then, make a config file for the C++-configured gem5 using normal gem5 > ../../build/ARM/gem5.opt ../../configs/example/fs.py --tlm-memory=memory \ --cpu-type=timing --num-cpu=1 --mem-type=SimpleMemory --mem-size=512MB \ --mem-channels=1 --caches --l2cache --machine-type=VExpress_EMM \ --dtb-filename=vexpress.aarch32.ll_20131205.0-gem5.1cpu.dtb \ --kernel=vmlinux.aarch32.ll_20131205.0-gem5 \ --disk-image=linux-aarch32-ael.img The message "fatal: Can't find port handler type 'tlm'" is okay. The configuration will be stored in the m5out/ directory The binary 'gem5.opt.sc' can now be used to load in the generated config file from the previous normal gem5 run. Try: > ./gem5.opt.sc m5out/config.ini -o 2147483648 The parameter -o specifies the begining of the memory region (0x80000000). The system should boot now. For conveniance a run_gem5.sh file holds all those commands