gem5/src/mem/ruby/structures/RubyMemoryControl.cc
Andreas Hansson 2698e73966 base: Use the global Mersenne twister throughout
This patch tidies up random number generation to ensure that it is
done consistently throughout the code base. In essence this involves a
clean-up of Ruby, and some code simplifications in the traffic
generator.

As part of this patch a bunch of skewed distributions (off-by-one etc)
have been fixed.

Note that a single global random number generator is used, and that
the object instantiation order will impact the behaviour (the sequence
of numbers will be unaffected, but if module A calles random before
module B then they would obviously see a different outcome). The
dependency on the instantiation order is true in any case due to the
execution-model of gem5, so we leave it as is. Also note that the
global ranom generator is not thread safe at this point.

Regressions using the memtest, TrafficGen or any Ruby tester are
affected and will be updated accordingly.
2014-09-03 07:42:54 -04:00

793 lines
26 KiB
C++

/*
* Copyright (c) 1999-2008 Mark D. Hill and David A. Wood
* Copyright (c) 2012 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
* met: redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer;
* redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution;
* neither the name of the copyright holders nor the names of its
* contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
* this software without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
* "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
* A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
* OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
* SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
* OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/*
* Description: This module simulates a basic DDR-style memory controller
* (and can easily be extended to do FB-DIMM as well).
*
* This module models a single channel, connected to any number of
* DIMMs with any number of ranks of DRAMs each. If you want multiple
* address/data channels, you need to instantiate multiple copies of
* this module.
*
* Each memory request is placed in a queue associated with a specific
* memory bank. This queue is of finite size; if the queue is full
* the request will back up in an (infinite) common queue and will
* effectively throttle the whole system. This sort of behavior is
* intended to be closer to real system behavior than if we had an
* infinite queue on each bank. If you want the latter, just make
* the bank queues unreasonably large.
*
* The head item on a bank queue is issued when all of the
* following are true:
* the bank is available
* the address path to the DIMM is available
* the data path to or from the DIMM is available
*
* Note that we are not concerned about fixed offsets in time. The bank
* will not be used at the same moment as the address path, but since
* there is no queue in the DIMM or the DRAM it will be used at a constant
* number of cycles later, so it is treated as if it is used at the same
* time.
*
* We are assuming closed bank policy; that is, we automatically close
* each bank after a single read or write. Adding an option for open
* bank policy is for future work.
*
* We are assuming "posted CAS"; that is, we send the READ or WRITE
* immediately after the ACTIVATE. This makes scheduling the address
* bus trivial; we always schedule a fixed set of cycles. For DDR-400,
* this is a set of two cycles; for some configurations such as
* DDR-800 the parameter tRRD forces this to be set to three cycles.
*
* We assume a four-bit-time transfer on the data wires. This is
* the minimum burst length for DDR-2. This would correspond
* to (for example) a memory where each DIMM is 72 bits wide
* and DIMMs are ganged in pairs to deliver 64 bytes at a shot.
* This gives us the same occupancy on the data wires as on the
* address wires (for the two-address-cycle case).
*
* The only non-trivial scheduling problem is the data wires.
* A write will use the wires earlier in the operation than a read
* will; typically one cycle earlier as seen at the DRAM, but earlier
* by a worst-case round-trip wire delay when seen at the memory controller.
* So, while reads from one rank can be scheduled back-to-back
* every two cycles, and writes (to any rank) scheduled every two cycles,
* when a read is followed by a write we need to insert a bubble.
* Furthermore, consecutive reads from two different ranks may need
* to insert a bubble due to skew between when one DRAM stops driving the
* wires and when the other one starts. (These bubbles are parameters.)
*
* This means that when some number of reads and writes are at the
* heads of their queues, reads could starve writes, and/or reads
* to the same rank could starve out other requests, since the others
* would never see the data bus ready.
* For this reason, we have implemented an anti-starvation feature.
* A group of requests is marked "old", and a counter is incremented
* each cycle as long as any request from that batch has not issued.
* if the counter reaches twice the bank busy time, we hold off any
* newer requests until all of the "old" requests have issued.
*
* We also model tFAW. This is an obscure DRAM parameter that says
* that no more than four activate requests can happen within a window
* of a certain size. For most configurations this does not come into play,
* or has very little effect, but it could be used to throttle the power
* consumption of the DRAM. In this implementation (unlike in a DRAM
* data sheet) TFAW is measured in memory bus cycles; i.e. if TFAW = 16
* then no more than four activates may happen within any 16 cycle window.
* Refreshes are included in the activates.
*
*/
#include "base/cast.hh"
#include "base/cprintf.hh"
#include "base/random.hh"
#include "debug/RubyMemory.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/common/Address.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/common/Global.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/profiler/Profiler.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/slicc_interface/NetworkMessage.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/slicc_interface/RubySlicc_ComponentMapping.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/structures/RubyMemoryControl.hh"
#include "mem/ruby/system/System.hh"
using namespace std;
// Value to reset watchdog timer to.
// If we're idle for this many memory control cycles,
// shut down our clock (our rescheduling of ourselves).
// Refresh shuts down as well.
// When we restart, we'll be in a different phase
// with respect to ruby cycles, so this introduces
// a slight inaccuracy. But it is necessary or the
// ruby tester never terminates because the event
// queue is never empty.
#define IDLECOUNT_MAX_VALUE 1000
// Output operator definition
ostream&
operator<<(ostream& out, const RubyMemoryControl& obj)
{
obj.print(out);
out << flush;
return out;
}
// ****************************************************************
// CONSTRUCTOR
RubyMemoryControl::RubyMemoryControl(const Params *p)
: MemoryControl(p)
{
m_banks_per_rank = p->banks_per_rank;
m_ranks_per_dimm = p->ranks_per_dimm;
m_dimms_per_channel = p->dimms_per_channel;
m_bank_bit_0 = p->bank_bit_0;
m_rank_bit_0 = p->rank_bit_0;
m_dimm_bit_0 = p->dimm_bit_0;
m_bank_queue_size = p->bank_queue_size;
m_bank_busy_time = p->bank_busy_time;
m_rank_rank_delay = p->rank_rank_delay;
m_read_write_delay = p->read_write_delay;
m_basic_bus_busy_time = p->basic_bus_busy_time;
m_mem_ctl_latency = p->mem_ctl_latency;
m_refresh_period = p->refresh_period;
m_tFaw = p->tFaw;
m_mem_random_arbitrate = p->mem_random_arbitrate;
m_mem_fixed_delay = p->mem_fixed_delay;
m_profiler_ptr = new MemCntrlProfiler(name(),
m_banks_per_rank,
m_ranks_per_dimm,
m_dimms_per_channel);
}
void
RubyMemoryControl::init()
{
m_msg_counter = 0;
assert(m_tFaw <= 62); // must fit in a uint64 shift register
m_total_banks = m_banks_per_rank * m_ranks_per_dimm * m_dimms_per_channel;
m_total_ranks = m_ranks_per_dimm * m_dimms_per_channel;
m_refresh_period_system = m_refresh_period / m_total_banks;
m_bankQueues = new list<MemoryNode *> [m_total_banks];
assert(m_bankQueues);
m_bankBusyCounter = new int [m_total_banks];
assert(m_bankBusyCounter);
m_oldRequest = new int [m_total_banks];
assert(m_oldRequest);
for (int i = 0; i < m_total_banks; i++) {
m_bankBusyCounter[i] = 0;
m_oldRequest[i] = 0;
}
m_busBusyCounter_Basic = 0;
m_busBusyCounter_Write = 0;
m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank = 0;
m_busBusy_WhichRank = 0;
m_roundRobin = 0;
m_refresh_count = 1;
m_need_refresh = 0;
m_refresh_bank = 0;
m_idleCount = 0;
m_ageCounter = 0;
// Each tfaw shift register keeps a moving bit pattern
// which shows when recent activates have occurred.
// m_tfaw_count keeps track of how many 1 bits are set
// in each shift register. When m_tfaw_count is >= 4,
// new activates are not allowed.
m_tfaw_shift = new uint64[m_total_ranks];
m_tfaw_count = new int[m_total_ranks];
for (int i = 0; i < m_total_ranks; i++) {
m_tfaw_shift[i] = 0;
m_tfaw_count[i] = 0;
}
}
void
RubyMemoryControl::reset()
{
m_msg_counter = 0;
assert(m_tFaw <= 62); // must fit in a uint64 shift register
m_total_banks = m_banks_per_rank * m_ranks_per_dimm * m_dimms_per_channel;
m_total_ranks = m_ranks_per_dimm * m_dimms_per_channel;
m_refresh_period_system = m_refresh_period / m_total_banks;
assert(m_bankQueues);
assert(m_bankBusyCounter);
assert(m_oldRequest);
for (int i = 0; i < m_total_banks; i++) {
m_bankBusyCounter[i] = 0;
m_oldRequest[i] = 0;
}
m_busBusyCounter_Basic = 0;
m_busBusyCounter_Write = 0;
m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank = 0;
m_busBusy_WhichRank = 0;
m_roundRobin = 0;
m_refresh_count = 1;
m_need_refresh = 0;
m_refresh_bank = 0;
m_idleCount = 0;
m_ageCounter = 0;
// Each tfaw shift register keeps a moving bit pattern
// which shows when recent activates have occurred.
// m_tfaw_count keeps track of how many 1 bits are set
// in each shift register. When m_tfaw_count is >= 4,
// new activates are not allowed.
for (int i = 0; i < m_total_ranks; i++) {
m_tfaw_shift[i] = 0;
m_tfaw_count[i] = 0;
}
}
RubyMemoryControl::~RubyMemoryControl()
{
delete [] m_bankQueues;
delete [] m_bankBusyCounter;
delete [] m_oldRequest;
delete m_profiler_ptr;
}
// enqueue new request from directory
void
RubyMemoryControl::enqueue(const MsgPtr& message, Cycles latency)
{
Cycles arrival_time = curCycle() + latency;
const MemoryMsg* memMess = safe_cast<const MemoryMsg*>(message.get());
physical_address_t addr = memMess->getAddr().getAddress();
MemoryRequestType type = memMess->getType();
bool is_mem_read = (type == MemoryRequestType_MEMORY_READ);
MemoryNode *thisReq = new MemoryNode(arrival_time, message, addr,
is_mem_read, !is_mem_read);
enqueueMemRef(thisReq);
}
// Alternate entry point used when we already have a MemoryNode
// structure built.
void
RubyMemoryControl::enqueueMemRef(MemoryNode *memRef)
{
m_msg_counter++;
memRef->m_msg_counter = m_msg_counter;
physical_address_t addr = memRef->m_addr;
int bank = getBank(addr);
DPRINTF(RubyMemory,
"New memory request%7d: %#08x %c arrived at %10d bank = %3x sched %c\n",
m_msg_counter, addr, memRef->m_is_mem_read ? 'R':'W',
memRef->m_time * g_system_ptr->clockPeriod(),
bank, m_event.scheduled() ? 'Y':'N');
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemReq(bank);
m_input_queue.push_back(memRef);
if (!m_event.scheduled()) {
schedule(m_event, clockEdge());
}
}
// dequeue, peek, and isReady are used to transfer completed requests
// back to the directory
void
RubyMemoryControl::dequeue()
{
assert(isReady());
MemoryNode *req = m_response_queue.front();
m_response_queue.pop_front();
delete req;
}
const Message*
RubyMemoryControl::peek()
{
MemoryNode *node = peekNode();
Message* msg_ptr = node->m_msgptr.get();
assert(msg_ptr != NULL);
return msg_ptr;
}
MemoryNode *
RubyMemoryControl::peekNode()
{
assert(isReady());
MemoryNode *req = m_response_queue.front();
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "Peek: memory request%7d: %#08x %c sched %c\n",
req->m_msg_counter, req->m_addr, req->m_is_mem_read ? 'R':'W',
m_event.scheduled() ? 'Y':'N');
return req;
}
bool
RubyMemoryControl::isReady()
{
return ((!m_response_queue.empty()) &&
(m_response_queue.front()->m_time <= g_system_ptr->curCycle()));
}
void
RubyMemoryControl::setConsumer(Consumer* consumer_ptr)
{
m_consumer_ptr = consumer_ptr;
}
void
RubyMemoryControl::print(ostream& out) const
{
}
// Queue up a completed request to send back to directory
void
RubyMemoryControl::enqueueToDirectory(MemoryNode *req, Cycles latency)
{
Tick arrival_time = clockEdge(latency);
Cycles ruby_arrival_time = g_system_ptr->ticksToCycles(arrival_time);
req->m_time = ruby_arrival_time;
m_response_queue.push_back(req);
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "Enqueueing msg %#08x %c back to directory at %15d\n",
req->m_addr, req->m_is_mem_read ? 'R':'W', arrival_time);
// schedule the wake up
m_consumer_ptr->scheduleEventAbsolute(arrival_time);
}
// getBank returns an integer that is unique for each
// bank across this memory controller.
const int
RubyMemoryControl::getBank(const physical_address_t addr) const
{
int dimm = (addr >> m_dimm_bit_0) & (m_dimms_per_channel - 1);
int rank = (addr >> m_rank_bit_0) & (m_ranks_per_dimm - 1);
int bank = (addr >> m_bank_bit_0) & (m_banks_per_rank - 1);
return (dimm * m_ranks_per_dimm * m_banks_per_rank)
+ (rank * m_banks_per_rank)
+ bank;
}
const int
RubyMemoryControl::getRank(const physical_address_t addr) const
{
int bank = getBank(addr);
int rank = (bank / m_banks_per_rank);
assert (rank < (m_ranks_per_dimm * m_dimms_per_channel));
return rank;
}
// getRank returns an integer that is unique for each rank
// and independent of individual bank.
const int
RubyMemoryControl::getRank(int bank) const
{
int rank = (bank / m_banks_per_rank);
assert (rank < (m_ranks_per_dimm * m_dimms_per_channel));
return rank;
}
// Not used!
const int
RubyMemoryControl::getChannel(const physical_address_t addr) const
{
assert(false);
return -1;
}
// Not used!
const int
RubyMemoryControl::getRow(const physical_address_t addr) const
{
assert(false);
return -1;
}
// queueReady determines if the head item in a bank queue
// can be issued this cycle
bool
RubyMemoryControl::queueReady(int bank)
{
if ((m_bankBusyCounter[bank] > 0) && !m_mem_fixed_delay) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemBankBusy();
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "bank %x busy %d\n", bank, m_bankBusyCounter[bank]);
return false;
}
if (m_mem_random_arbitrate >= 2) {
if (random_mt.random(0, 100) < m_mem_random_arbitrate) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemRandBusy();
return false;
}
}
if (m_mem_fixed_delay)
return true;
if ((m_ageCounter > (2 * m_bank_busy_time)) && !m_oldRequest[bank]) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemNotOld();
return false;
}
if (m_busBusyCounter_Basic == m_basic_bus_busy_time) {
// Another bank must have issued this same cycle. For
// profiling, we count this as an arb wait rather than a bus
// wait. This is a little inaccurate since it MIGHT have also
// been blocked waiting for a read-write or a read-read
// instead, but it's pretty close.
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemArbWait(1);
return false;
}
if (m_busBusyCounter_Basic > 0) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemBusBusy();
return false;
}
int rank = getRank(bank);
if (m_tfaw_count[rank] >= ACTIVATE_PER_TFAW) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemTfawBusy();
return false;
}
bool write = !m_bankQueues[bank].front()->m_is_mem_read;
if (write && (m_busBusyCounter_Write > 0)) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemReadWriteBusy();
return false;
}
if (!write && (rank != m_busBusy_WhichRank)
&& (m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank > 0)) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemDataBusBusy();
return false;
}
return true;
}
// issueRefresh checks to see if this bank has a refresh scheduled
// and, if so, does the refresh and returns true
bool
RubyMemoryControl::issueRefresh(int bank)
{
if (!m_need_refresh || (m_refresh_bank != bank))
return false;
if (m_bankBusyCounter[bank] > 0)
return false;
// Note that m_busBusyCounter will prevent multiple issues during
// the same cycle, as well as on different but close cycles:
if (m_busBusyCounter_Basic > 0)
return false;
int rank = getRank(bank);
if (m_tfaw_count[rank] >= ACTIVATE_PER_TFAW)
return false;
// Issue it:
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "Refresh bank %3x\n", bank);
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemRefresh();
m_need_refresh--;
m_refresh_bank++;
if (m_refresh_bank >= m_total_banks)
m_refresh_bank = 0;
m_bankBusyCounter[bank] = m_bank_busy_time;
m_busBusyCounter_Basic = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
m_busBusyCounter_Write = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
markTfaw(rank);
return true;
}
// Mark the activate in the tFaw shift register
void
RubyMemoryControl::markTfaw(int rank)
{
if (m_tFaw) {
m_tfaw_shift[rank] |= (1 << (m_tFaw-1));
m_tfaw_count[rank]++;
}
}
// Issue a memory request: Activate the bank, reserve the address and
// data buses, and queue the request for return to the requesting
// processor after a fixed latency.
void
RubyMemoryControl::issueRequest(int bank)
{
int rank = getRank(bank);
MemoryNode *req = m_bankQueues[bank].front();
m_bankQueues[bank].pop_front();
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "Mem issue request%7d: %#08x %c "
"bank=%3x sched %c\n", req->m_msg_counter, req->m_addr,
req->m_is_mem_read? 'R':'W',
bank, m_event.scheduled() ? 'Y':'N');
if (req->m_msgptr) { // don't enqueue L3 writebacks
enqueueToDirectory(req, Cycles(m_mem_ctl_latency + m_mem_fixed_delay));
}
m_oldRequest[bank] = 0;
markTfaw(rank);
m_bankBusyCounter[bank] = m_bank_busy_time;
m_busBusy_WhichRank = rank;
if (req->m_is_mem_read) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemRead();
m_busBusyCounter_Basic = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
m_busBusyCounter_Write = m_basic_bus_busy_time + m_read_write_delay;
m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank =
m_basic_bus_busy_time + m_rank_rank_delay;
} else {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemWrite();
m_busBusyCounter_Basic = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
m_busBusyCounter_Write = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank = m_basic_bus_busy_time;
}
}
// executeCycle: This function is called once per memory clock cycle
// to simulate all the periodic hardware.
void
RubyMemoryControl::executeCycle()
{
// Keep track of time by counting down the busy counters:
for (int bank=0; bank < m_total_banks; bank++) {
if (m_bankBusyCounter[bank] > 0) m_bankBusyCounter[bank]--;
}
if (m_busBusyCounter_Write > 0)
m_busBusyCounter_Write--;
if (m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank > 0)
m_busBusyCounter_ReadNewRank--;
if (m_busBusyCounter_Basic > 0)
m_busBusyCounter_Basic--;
// Count down the tFAW shift registers:
for (int rank=0; rank < m_total_ranks; rank++) {
if (m_tfaw_shift[rank] & 1) m_tfaw_count[rank]--;
m_tfaw_shift[rank] >>= 1;
}
// After time period expires, latch an indication that we need a refresh.
// Disable refresh if in mem_fixed_delay mode.
if (!m_mem_fixed_delay) m_refresh_count--;
if (m_refresh_count == 0) {
m_refresh_count = m_refresh_period_system;
// Are we overrunning our ability to refresh?
assert(m_need_refresh < 10);
m_need_refresh++;
}
// If this batch of requests is all done, make a new batch:
m_ageCounter++;
int anyOld = 0;
for (int bank=0; bank < m_total_banks; bank++) {
anyOld |= m_oldRequest[bank];
}
if (!anyOld) {
for (int bank=0; bank < m_total_banks; bank++) {
if (!m_bankQueues[bank].empty()) m_oldRequest[bank] = 1;
}
m_ageCounter = 0;
}
// If randomness desired, re-randomize round-robin position each cycle
if (m_mem_random_arbitrate) {
m_roundRobin = random_mt.random(0, m_total_banks - 1);
}
// For each channel, scan round-robin, and pick an old, ready
// request and issue it. Treat a refresh request as if it were at
// the head of its bank queue. After we issue something, keep
// scanning the queues just to gather statistics about how many
// are waiting. If in mem_fixed_delay mode, we can issue more
// than one request per cycle.
int queueHeads = 0;
int banksIssued = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < m_total_banks; i++) {
m_roundRobin++;
if (m_roundRobin >= m_total_banks) m_roundRobin = 0;
issueRefresh(m_roundRobin);
int qs = m_bankQueues[m_roundRobin].size();
if (qs > 1) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemBankQ(qs-1);
}
if (qs > 0) {
// we're not idle if anything is queued
m_idleCount = IDLECOUNT_MAX_VALUE;
queueHeads++;
if (queueReady(m_roundRobin)) {
issueRequest(m_roundRobin);
banksIssued++;
if (m_mem_fixed_delay) {
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemWaitCycles(m_mem_fixed_delay);
}
}
}
}
// memWaitCycles is a redundant catch-all for the specific
// counters in queueReady
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemWaitCycles(queueHeads - banksIssued);
// Check input queue and move anything to bank queues if not full.
// Since this is done here at the end of the cycle, there will
// always be at least one cycle of latency in the bank queue. We
// deliberately move at most one request per cycle (to simulate
// typical hardware). Note that if one bank queue fills up, other
// requests can get stuck behind it here.
if (!m_input_queue.empty()) {
// we're not idle if anything is pending
m_idleCount = IDLECOUNT_MAX_VALUE;
MemoryNode *req = m_input_queue.front();
int bank = getBank(req->m_addr);
if (m_bankQueues[bank].size() < m_bank_queue_size) {
m_input_queue.pop_front();
m_bankQueues[bank].push_back(req);
}
m_profiler_ptr->profileMemInputQ(m_input_queue.size());
}
}
unsigned int
RubyMemoryControl::drain(DrainManager *dm)
{
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "MemoryController drain\n");
if(m_event.scheduled()) {
deschedule(m_event);
}
return 0;
}
// wakeup: This function is called once per memory controller clock cycle.
void
RubyMemoryControl::wakeup()
{
DPRINTF(RubyMemory, "MemoryController wakeup\n");
// execute everything
executeCycle();
m_idleCount--;
if (m_idleCount > 0) {
assert(!m_event.scheduled());
schedule(m_event, clockEdge(Cycles(1)));
}
}
/**
* This function reads the different buffers that exist in the Ruby Memory
* Controller, and figures out if any of the buffers hold a message that
* contains the data for the address provided in the packet. True is returned
* if any of the messages was read, otherwise false is returned.
*
* I think we should move these buffers to being message buffers, instead of
* being lists.
*/
bool
RubyMemoryControl::functionalReadBuffers(Packet *pkt)
{
for (std::list<MemoryNode *>::iterator it = m_input_queue.begin();
it != m_input_queue.end(); ++it) {
Message* msg_ptr = (*it)->m_msgptr.get();
if (msg_ptr->functionalRead(pkt)) {
return true;
}
}
for (std::list<MemoryNode *>::iterator it = m_response_queue.begin();
it != m_response_queue.end(); ++it) {
Message* msg_ptr = (*it)->m_msgptr.get();
if (msg_ptr->functionalRead(pkt)) {
return true;
}
}
for (uint32_t bank = 0; bank < m_total_banks; ++bank) {
for (std::list<MemoryNode *>::iterator it = m_bankQueues[bank].begin();
it != m_bankQueues[bank].end(); ++it) {
Message* msg_ptr = (*it)->m_msgptr.get();
if (msg_ptr->functionalRead(pkt)) {
return true;
}
}
}
return false;
}
/**
* This function reads the different buffers that exist in the Ruby Memory
* Controller, and figures out if any of the buffers hold a message that
* needs to functionally written with the data in the packet.
*
* The number of messages written is returned at the end. This is required
* for debugging purposes.
*/
uint32_t
RubyMemoryControl::functionalWriteBuffers(Packet *pkt)
{
uint32_t num_functional_writes = 0;
for (std::list<MemoryNode *>::iterator it = m_input_queue.begin();
it != m_input_queue.end(); ++it) {
Message* msg_ptr = (*it)->m_msgptr.get();
if (msg_ptr->functionalWrite(pkt)) {
num_functional_writes++;
}
}
for (std::list<MemoryNode *>::iterator it = m_response_queue.begin();
it != m_response_queue.end(); ++it) {
Message* msg_ptr = (*it)->m_msgptr.get();
if (msg_ptr->functionalWrite(pkt)) {
num_functional_writes++;
}
}
for (uint32_t bank = 0; bank < m_total_banks; ++bank) {
for (std::list<MemoryNode *>::iterator it = m_bankQueues[bank].begin();
it != m_bankQueues[bank].end(); ++it) {
Message* msg_ptr = (*it)->m_msgptr.get();
if (msg_ptr->functionalWrite(pkt)) {
num_functional_writes++;
}
}
}
return num_functional_writes;
}
void
RubyMemoryControl::regStats()
{
m_profiler_ptr->regStats();
}
RubyMemoryControl *
RubyMemoryControlParams::create()
{
return new RubyMemoryControl(this);
}