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2013-01-07arch: Add support for invalidating TLBs when drainingAndreas Sandberg
This patch adds support for the memInvalidate() drain method. TLB flushing is requested by calling the virtual flushAll() method on the TLB. Note: This patch renames invalidateAll() to flushAll() on x86 and SPARC to make the interface consistent across all supported architectures.
2013-01-07mem: Remove the IIC replacement policyAndreas Sandberg
The IIC replacement policy seems to be unused and has probably gathered too much bit rot to be useful. This patch removes the IIC and its associated cache parameters.
2013-01-07dev: Do not serialize timer parametersAndreas Hansson
This patch removes the intNum and clock from the serialized scalars as these are set by the Python parameters and should not be part of the checkpoint.
2013-01-07scons: Enforce gcc >= 4.4 or clang >= 2.9 and c++0x supportAndreas Hansson
This patch checks that the compiler in use is either gcc >= 4.4 or clang >= 2.9. and enables building with --std=c++0x in all cases. As a consequence, we can tidy up the hashmap and always have static_assert available. If anyone wants to use alternative compilers, icc for example supports c++0x to a similar level and could be added if needed. This patch opens up for a more elaborate use of c++0x features that are present in gcc 4.4 and clang 2.9, e.g. auto typed variables, variadic templates, rvalues and move semantics, and strongly typed enums. There will be no going back on this one...
2013-01-07scons: Remove stale compiler optionsAndreas Hansson
This patch simply prunes the SUNCC and ICC compiler options as they are both sufficiently stale that they would have to be re-written from scratch anyhow. The patch serves to clean things up before shifting to a build environment that enforces basic c++11 compliance as done in the following patch.
2013-01-07sim: Fatal if a clocked object is set to have a clock of 0Andreas Hansson
This patch adds a check to the clocked object constructor to ensure it is not configured to have a clock period of 0.
2013-01-07dev: Make the ethernet devices use a non-zero clockAndreas Hansson
This patch changes the NS gige controller to have a non-clock, and sets the default to 500 MHz. The blocks that could prevoiusly be by-passed with a zero clock are now always present, and the user is left with the option of setting a very high clock frequency to achieve a similar performance.
2013-01-07scons: Whitelist useful environment variablesAndreas Sandberg
Scons normally removes all environment variables that aren't whitelisted from the build environment. This messes up things like ccache, distcc, and the clang static analyzer. This changeset adds the DISTCC_, CCACHE_, and CCC_ prefixes to the environment variable whitelist.
2013-01-07ARM: pl111/LCD framebuffer checkpointing fixChander Sudanthi
Fixed check pointing of the framebuffer. Previously, the pixel size was not considered in determining the size of the buffer to checkpoint. This patch checkpoints the entire framebuffer instead of the first quarter.
2013-01-07arch: Fix broken M5VarArgsFault initializationAndreas Sandberg
At least gcc 4.4.3 seems to get confused by the use of func both as a template parameter and a member variable in the M5VarArgsFault class. This causes the value of the member variable func to be unpredictable in M5VarArgsFault objects. This changeset renames the template parameter to remove this ambiguity.
2013-01-07mem: Merge ranges that are part of the conf tableAndreas Hansson
This patch adds basic merging of address ranges when determining which address ranges should be reported in the configuration table. By performing this merging it is possible to distribute an address range across many memory channels (controllers). This is essential to enable address interleaving.
2013-01-07base: Add support for merging of interleaved address rangesAndreas Hansson
This patch adds support for merging a vector of interleaved address ranges into a contigous range. The functionality will be used in the interconnect and the PhysicalMemory to transform interleaved memory ranges to contigous ranges before passing them on. The actual use of the merging is appearing in future patches.
2013-01-07mem: Add interleaving bits to the address rangesAndreas Hansson
This patch adds support for interleaving bits for the address ranges. What was previously just a start and end address, now has an additional three fields, for the high bit, and number of bits to use for interleaving, and a match value to compare against. If the number of interleaving bits is set to zero it is effectively disabled. A number of convenience functions are added to the range to enquire about the interleaving, its granularity and the number of stripes it is part of.
2013-01-07config: Traverse lists when visiting children in all proxyAndreas Hansson
This patch makes the all proxy traverse any potential list that is encountered in the object hierarchy instead of only looking at children that are SimObjects. An example of where this is useful is when creating a multi-channel memory system as a list of controllers, whilst ensuring that the memories are still visible in the system.
2013-01-07base: Simplify the AddrRangeMap by removing unused codeAndreas Hansson
This patch cleans up the AddrRangeMap in preparation for the addition of interleaving by removing unused code. The non-const editions of find are never used, and hence the duplication is not needed.
2013-01-07config: Do not use hardcoded physmem in fs scriptAndreas Hansson
This patch generalises the address range resolution for the I/O cache and I/O bridge such that they do not assume a single memory. The patch involves adding a parameter to the system which is then defined based on the memories that are to be visible from the I/O subsystem, whether behind a cache or a bridge. The change is needed to allow interleaved memory controllers in the system.
2013-01-07mem: Tidy up bus addr range debug messagesAndreas Hansson
This patch tidies up a number of the bus DPRINTFs related to range manipulation. In particular, it shifts the message about range changes to the start of the member function, and also adds information about when all ranges are received.
2013-01-07mem: Skip address mapper range checks to allow more flexibilityAndreas Hansson
This patch makes the address mapper less stringent about checking the before and after ranges, i.e. the original and remapped ranges. The checks were not really necessary, and there are situations when the previous checks were too strict.
2013-01-07base: Encapsulate the underlying fields in AddrRangeAndreas Hansson
This patch makes the start and end address private in a move to prevent direct manipulation and matching of ranges based on these fields. This is done so that a transition to ranges with interleaving support is possible. As a result of hiding the start and end, a number of member functions are needed to perform the comparisons and manipulations that previously took place directly on the members. An accessor function is provided for the start address, and a function is added to test if an address is within a range. As a result of the latter the != and == operator is also removed in favour of the member function. A member function that returns a string representation is also created to allow debug printing. In general, this patch does not add any functionality, but it does take us closer to a situation where interleaving (and more cleverness) can be added under the bonnet without exposing it to the user. More on that in a later patch.
2013-01-07mem: Remove the joining of neighbouring rangesAndreas Hansson
This patch temporarily removes the joining of ranges when creating the backing store, to reserve this functionality for the interleaved ranges that are about to be introduced. When creating the mmaps for the backing store, there is no point in creating larger contigous chunks that what is necessary. The larger chunks will only make life more difficult for the host. Merging will be re-added later, but then only for interleaved ranges.
2013-01-07cpu: Share the send functionality between traffic generatorsAndreas Hansson
This patch moves the packet creating and sending to a member function in the shared base class to avoid code duplication.
2013-01-07cpu: Add support for protobuf input for the trace generatorAndreas Hansson
This patch adds support for reading input traces encoded using protobuf according to what is done in the CommMonitor. A follow-up patch adds a Python script that can be used to convert the previously used ASCII traces to protobuf equivalents. The appropriate regression input is updated as part of this patch.
2013-01-07tests: Add support for skipping tests, skip EIO tests if not enabledAndreas Sandberg
The EIO tests depend on the EIO support from the "encumbered" repository, which means that they are not normally built with gem5. This causes all EIO related tests to fail, which is both annoying and confusing. This patch addresses this by adding support for skipping tests if certain conditions (e.g., the presence of a SimObject) can not be met. It introduces the following Python functions that can be called from within a test case: * skip_test -- Skip a test and optionally print why the test was skipped. * has_sim_object -- Test if a SimObject exists. * require_sim_object -- Test if a SimObject exists and skip, or optionally fail, the test if not. Additionally, this patch updates the EIO tests to check for the presence of EioProcess.
2013-01-07cpu: Encapsulate traffic generator input in a streamAndreas Hansson
This patch encapsulates the traffic generator input in a stream class such that the parsing is not visible to the trace generator. The change takes us one step closer to using protobuf-based input traces for the trace replay. The functionality of the current input stream is identical to what it was, and the ASCII format remains the same for now.
2013-01-07base: Add wrapped protobuf input streamAndreas Hansson
This patch adds support for inputting protobuf messages through a ProtoInputStream which hides the internal streams used by the library. The stream is created based on the name of an input file and optionally includes decompression using gzip. The input stream will start by getting a magic number from the file, and also verify that it matches with the expected value. Once opened, messages can be read incrementally from the stream, returning true/false until an error occurs or the end of the file is reached.
2013-01-07mem: Add tracing support in the communication monitorAndreas Hansson
This patch adds packet tracing to the communication monitor using a protobuf as the mechanism for creating the trace. If no file is specified, then the tracing is disabled. If a file is specified, then for every packet that is successfully sent, a protobuf message is serialized to the file.
2013-01-07base: Add wrapped protobuf output streamsAndreas Hansson
This patch adds support for outputting protobuf messages through a ProtoOutputStream which hides the internal streams used by the library. The stream is created based on the name of an output file and optionally includes compression using gzip. The output stream will start by putting a magic number in the file, and then for every message that is serialized prepend the size such that the stream can be written and read incrementally. At this point this merely serves as a proof of concept.
2013-01-07scons: Add support for google protobuf buildingAndreas Hansson
This patch enables the use of protobuf input files in the build process, thus allowing .proto files to be added to input. Each .proto file is compiled using the protoc tool and the newly created C++ source is added to the list of sources. The first location where the protobufs will be used is in the capturing and replay of memory traces, involving the communication monitor and the trace-generator state of the traffic generator. This will follow in the next patch. This patch does add a dependency on the availability of the BSD licensed protobuf library (and headers), and the protobuf compiler, protoc. These dependencies are checked in the SConstruct, similar to e.g. swig. The user can override the use of protoc from the PATH by specifying the PROTOC environment variable. Although the dependency on libprotobuf and protoc might seem like a big step, they add significant value to the project going forward. Execution traces and other types of traces could easily be added and parsers for C++ and Python are automatically generated. We could also envision using protobufs for the checkpoints, description of the traffic-generator behaviour etc. The sky is the limit. We could also use the GzipOutputStream from the protobuf library instead of the current GPL gzstream. Currently, only the C++ source and header is generated. Going forward we might want to add the Python output to support simple command-line tools for displaying and editing the traces.
2013-01-07arm: Fix DMA event handling bug in the PL111 modelAndreas Sandberg
The PL111 model currently maintains a list of pre-allocated DmaDoneEvents to prevent unnecessary heap allocations. This list effectively works like a stack where the top element is the latest scheduled event. When an event triggers, the top pointer is moved down the stack. This obviously breaks since events usually retire from the bottom (events don't necessarily have to retire in order), which triggers the following assertion: gem5.debug: build/ARM/dev/arm/pl111.cc:460: void Pl111::fillFifo(): \ Assertion `!dmaDoneEvent[dmaPendingNum-1].scheduled()' failed. This changeset adds a vector listing the currently unused events. This vector acts like a stack where the an element is popped off the stack when a new event is needed an pushed on the stack when they trigger.
2013-01-07dev: Fix the Pl111 timings by separating pixel and DMA clockAndreas Hansson
This patch fixes the Pl111 timings by creating a separate clock for the pixel timings. The device clock is used for all interactions with the memory system, just like the AHB clock on the actual module. The result without this patch is that the module only is allowed to send one request every tick of the 24MHz clock which causes a huge backlog.
2013-01-07stats: Update DRAM regression stats to match new configAndreas Hansson
This patch updates the regression stats to reflect the change in the traffic gen configuration.
2013-01-07config: Reduce DRAM controller regression traffic rateAndreas Hansson
This patch changes the traffic generator period such that it does not completely saturate the DRAM controller and create an ever-growing backlog in the queued port. A separate patch updates the stats.
2013-01-07cpu: Fix the traffic gen read percentageAndreas Hansson
This patch fixes the computation that determines whether to perform a read or a write such that the two corner cases (0 and 100) are both more efficient and handled correctly.
2013-01-07mem: Add sanity check to packet queue sizeAndreas Hansson
This patch adds a basic check to ensure that the packet queue does not grow absurdly large. The queue should only be used to store packets that were delayed due to blocking from the neighbouring port, and not for actual storage. Thus, a limit of 100 has been chosen for now (which is already quite substantial).
2013-01-07ruby: Fix missing cxx_header in SwitchAndreas Hansson
This patch addresses a warning related to the swig interface generation for the Switch class. The cxx_header is now specified correctly, and the header in question has got a few includes added to make it all compile.
2013-01-07scons: Fix libelf linking errors when using clang/llvmAndreas Hansson
This patch fixes a linking error that occurs when using clang/llvm in combination with older versions of glibc. The fix involves adding -std=gnu89 to the command line when compiling libelf as clang defaults to c99, causing issues with the symbols in sysmacros.h being defined multiple times.
2013-01-07config: Replace second keyboard with a mouse.Chris Emmons
The platform has two KMI devices that are both setup to be keyboards. This patch changes the second keyboard to a mouse. This patch will allow keyboard input as usual and additionally provide mouse support.
2013-01-07mem: Fix a bug in the memory serialization file namingAndreas Hansson
This patch fixes a bug that caused multiple systems to overwrite each other physical memory. The system name is now included in the filename such that this is avoided.
2013-01-07arm: Make ID registers ISA parametersAndreas Sandberg
This patch makes the values of ID_ISARx, MIDR, and FPSID configurable as ISA parameter values. Additionally, setMiscReg now ignores writes to all of the ID registers. Note: This moves the MIDR parameter from ArmSystem to ArmISA for consistency.
2013-01-07arch: Make the ISA class inherit from SimObjectAndreas Sandberg
The ISA class on stores the contents of ID registers on many architectures. In order to make reset values of such registers configurable, we make the class inherit from SimObject, which allows us to use the normal generated parameter headers. This patch introduces a Python helper method, BaseCPU.createThreads(), which creates a set of ISAs for each of the threads in an SMT system. Although it is currently only needed when creating multi-threaded CPUs, it should always be called before instantiating the system as this is an obvious place to configure ID registers identifying a thread/CPU.
2013-01-07o3: Fix issue with LLSC ordering and speculationAli Saidi
This patch unlocks the cpu-local monitor when the CPU sees a snoop to a locked address. Previously we relied on the cache to handle the locking for us, however some users on the gem5 mailing list reported a case where the cpu speculatively executes a ll operation after a pending sc operation in the pipeline and that makes the cache monitor valid. This should handle that case by invaliding the local monitor.
2013-01-07cpu: rename the misleading inSyscall to noSquashFromTCAli Saidi
isSyscall was originally created because during handling of a syscall in SE mode the threadcontext had to be updated. However, in many places this is used in FS mode (e.g. fault handlers) and the name doesn't make much sense. The boolean actually stops gem5 from squashing speculative and non-committed state when a write to a threadcontext happens, so re-name the variable to something more appropriate
2013-01-07tests: Always specify memory mode in every test system.Ali Saidi
Previous to this change we didn't always set the memory mode which worked as long as we never attempted to switch CPUs or checked that a CPU was in a memory system with the correct mode. Future changes will make CPUs verify that they're operating in the correct mode and thus we need to always set it.
2013-01-07tests: Create base classes to encapsulate common test configurationsAndreas Sandberg
Most of the test cases currently contain a large amount of duplicated boiler plate code. This changeset introduces a set of classes that encapsulates most of the functionality when setting up a test configuration. The following base classes are introduced: * BaseSystem - Basic system configuration that can be used for both SE and FS simulation. * BaseFSSystem - Basic FS configuration uni-processor and multi-processor configurations. * BaseFSSystemUniprocessor - Basic FS configuration for uni-processor configurations. This is provided as a way to make existing test cases backwards compatible. Architecture specific implementations are provided for ARM, Alpha, and X86.
2013-01-07cache: add note about where conflicts are handledAli Saidi
2013-01-04regressions: stats update due to decoder changesNilay Vaish
2013-01-04Decoder: Remove the thread context get/set from the decoder.Gabe Black
This interface is no longer used, and getting rid of it simplifies the decoders and code that sets up the decoders. The thread context had been used to read architectural state which was used to contextualize the instruction memory as it came in. That was changed so that the state is now sent to the decoders to keep locally if/when it changes. That's significantly more efficient. Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2013-01-04X86: Move address based decode caching in front of the predecoder.Gabe Black
The predecoder in x86 does a lot of work, most of which can be skipped if the decoder cache is put in front of it. Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2013-01-04SPARC: Keep a copy of the current ASI in the decoder.Gabe Black
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
2013-01-04ARM: Keep a copy of the fpscr len and stride fields in the decoder.Gabe Black
Avoid reading them every instruction, and also eliminate the last use of the thread context in the decoders. Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>