Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Add 4 power states to the ClockedObject, provides necessary access functions
to check and update the power state. Default power state is UNDEFINED, it is
responsibility of the respective simulation model to provide the startup state
and any other logic for state change.
Add number of transition stat.
Add distribution of time spent in clock gated state.
Add power state residency stat.
Add dump call back function to allow stats update of distribution and residency
stats.
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This patch enables Linux to read the temperature using hwmon infrastructure.
In order to use this in your gem5 you need to compile the kernel using the
following configs:
CONFIG_HWMON=y
CONFIG_SENSORS_VEXPRESS=y
And a proper dts file (containing an entry such as):
dcc {
compatible = "arm,vexpress,config-bus";
arm,vexpress,config-bridge = <&v2m_sysreg>;
temp@0 {
compatible = "arm,vexpress-temp";
arm,vexpress-sysreg,func = <4 0>;
label = "DCC";
};
};
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This changeset adds support for notifying the disk images that the simulator has
been forked. We need to disable the saving of the CoW disk image from the child
process, and we need to make sure that systems which use a raw disk image are
not allowed to fork to avoid two or more gem5 processes writing to the same disk
image.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas@sandberg.pp.se>
[sascha.bischoff@arm.com: Rebased patches onto a newer gem5 version]
Signed-off-by: Sascha Bischoff <sascha.bischoff@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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This changeset adds support for changing the simulator output
directory. This can be useful when the simulation goes through several
stages (e.g., a warming phase, a simulation phase, and a verification
phase) since it allows the output from each stage to be located in a
different directory. Relocation is done by calling core.setOutputDir()
from Python or simout.setOutputDirectory() from C++.
This change affects several parts of the design of the gem5's output
subsystem. First, files returned by an OutputDirectory instance (e.g.,
simout) are of the type OutputStream instead of a std::ostream. This
allows us to do some more book keeping and control re-opening of files
when the output directory is changed. Second, new subdirectories are
OutputDirectory instances, which should be used to create files in
that sub-directory.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas@sandberg.pp.se>
[sascha.bischoff@arm.com: Rebased patches onto a newer gem5 version]
Signed-off-by: Sascha Bischoff <sascha.bischoff@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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Add a callback handler for the NoMali reset callback. This callback is
called whenever the GPU is reset using the register interface or the
NoMali API. The callback can be used to override ID registers using
the raw register API.
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Refactor and cleanup the NoMaliGpu class:
* Use a std::map instead of a switch block to map the parameter enum
describing the GPU type to a NoMali type.
* Remove redundant NoMali handle from the interrupt callback.
* Make callbacks and API wrappers protected instead of private to
enable future extensions.
* Wrap remaining NoMali API calls.
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Make clang happy...again.
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Since the last round of fixes a few new issues have snuck in. We
should consider switching the regression runs to clang.
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Result of running 'hg m5style --skip-all --fix-control -a' to get
rid of '== true' comparisons, plus trivial manual edits to get
rid of '== false'/'== False' comparisons.
Left a couple of explicit comparisons in where they didn't seem
unreasonable:
invalid boolean comparison in src/arch/mips/interrupts.cc:155
>> DPRINTF(Interrupt, "Interrupts OnCpuTimerINterrupt(tc) == true\n");<<
invalid boolean comparison in src/unittest/unittest.hh:110
>> "EXPECT_FALSE(" #expr ")", (expr) == false)<<
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Result of running 'hg m5style --skip-all --fix-control -a'.
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Result of running 'hg m5style --skip-all --fix-white -a'.
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By ignoring SIG_TRAP, using --debug-break <N> when not connected to
a debugger becomes a no-op. Apparently this was intended to be a
feature, though the rationale is not clear.
If we don't ignore SIG_TRAP, then using --debug-break <N> when not
connected to a debugger causes the simulation process to terminate
at tick N. This is occasionally useful, e.g., if you just want to
collect a trace for a specific window of execution then you can combine
this with --debug-start to do exactly that.
In addition to not ignoring the signal, this patch also updates
the --debug-break help message and deletes a handful of unprotected
calls to Debug::breakpoint() that relied on the prior behavior.
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Add a platform with support for both aarch32 and aarch64. This
platform implements a subset of the devices in a real Versatile
Express and extends it with some gem5-specific functionality. It is in
many ways similar to the old VExpress_EMM64 platform, but supports the
following new features:
* Automatic PCI interrupt assignment
* PCI interrupts allocated in a contiguous range.
* Automatic boot loader selection (32-bit / 64-bit)
* Cleaner memory map where gem5-specific devices live in CS5 which
isn't used by current Versatile Express platforms.
* No fake devices. Devices that were previously faked will be
removed from the device tree instead.
* Support for 510 GiB contiguous memory
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Add support for automatic PCI interrupt routing using a device's ID on
the PCI bus. Our current DTBs typically tell the kernel that we do
this or something similar when declaring the PCI controller. This
changeset adds an option to make the simulator behave in the same way.
Interrupt routing can be selected by setting the int_policy parameter
in the GenericArmPciHost. The following values are supported:
* ARM_PCI_INT_STATIC: Use the old static routing policy using the
interrupt line from a device's configurtion space.
* ARM_PCI_INT_DEV: Use device number on the PCI bus to map to an
interrupt in the GIC. The interrupt is computed as:
gic_int = int_base + (pci_dev % int_count)
* ARM_PCI_INT_PIN: Use device interrupt pin on the PCI bus to map to
an interrupt in the GIC. The PCI specification reserves pin ID 0
for devices without interrupts, the interrupt therefore computed
as:
gic_int = int_base + ((pin - 1) % int_count)
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Make best use of the compiler, and enable -Wextra as well as
-Wall. There are a few issues that had to be resolved, but they are
all trivial.
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Distributed gem5 (abbreviated dist-gem5) is the result of the
convergence effort between multi-gem5 and pd-gem5 (from Univ. of
Wisconsin). It relies on the base multi-gem5 infrastructure for packet
forwarding, synchronisation and checkpointing but combines those with
the elaborated network switch model from pd-gem5.
--HG--
rename : src/dev/net/multi_etherlink.cc => src/dev/net/dist_etherlink.cc
rename : src/dev/net/multi_etherlink.hh => src/dev/net/dist_etherlink.hh
rename : src/dev/net/multi_iface.cc => src/dev/net/dist_iface.cc
rename : src/dev/net/multi_iface.hh => src/dev/net/dist_iface.hh
rename : src/dev/net/multi_packet.hh => src/dev/net/dist_packet.hh
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This patch changes the name of a bunch of packet flags and MSHR member
functions and variables to make the coherency protocol easier to
understand. In addition the patch adds and updates lots of
descriptions, explicitly spelling out assumptions.
The following name changes are made:
* the packet memInhibit flag is renamed to cacheResponding
* the packet sharedAsserted flag is renamed to hasSharers
* the packet NeedsExclusive attribute is renamed to NeedsWritable
* the packet isSupplyExclusive is renamed responderHadWritable
* the MSHR pendingDirty is renamed to pendingModified
The cache states, Modified, Owned, Exclusive, Shared are also called
out in the cache and MSHR code to make it easier to understand.
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Move the IDE controller and the disk implementations to
src/dev/storage.
--HG--
rename : src/dev/DiskImage.py => src/dev/storage/DiskImage.py
rename : src/dev/Ide.py => src/dev/storage/Ide.py
rename : src/dev/SimpleDisk.py => src/dev/storage/SimpleDisk.py
rename : src/dev/disk_image.cc => src/dev/storage/disk_image.cc
rename : src/dev/disk_image.hh => src/dev/storage/disk_image.hh
rename : src/dev/ide_atareg.h => src/dev/storage/ide_atareg.h
rename : src/dev/ide_ctrl.cc => src/dev/storage/ide_ctrl.cc
rename : src/dev/ide_ctrl.hh => src/dev/storage/ide_ctrl.hh
rename : src/dev/ide_disk.cc => src/dev/storage/ide_disk.cc
rename : src/dev/ide_disk.hh => src/dev/storage/ide_disk.hh
rename : src/dev/ide_wdcreg.h => src/dev/storage/ide_wdcreg.h
rename : src/dev/simple_disk.cc => src/dev/storage/simple_disk.cc
rename : src/dev/simple_disk.hh => src/dev/storage/simple_disk.hh
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--HG--
rename : src/dev/Ethernet.py => src/dev/net/Ethernet.py
rename : src/dev/etherbus.cc => src/dev/net/etherbus.cc
rename : src/dev/etherbus.hh => src/dev/net/etherbus.hh
rename : src/dev/etherdevice.cc => src/dev/net/etherdevice.cc
rename : src/dev/etherdevice.hh => src/dev/net/etherdevice.hh
rename : src/dev/etherdump.cc => src/dev/net/etherdump.cc
rename : src/dev/etherdump.hh => src/dev/net/etherdump.hh
rename : src/dev/etherint.cc => src/dev/net/etherint.cc
rename : src/dev/etherint.hh => src/dev/net/etherint.hh
rename : src/dev/etherlink.cc => src/dev/net/etherlink.cc
rename : src/dev/etherlink.hh => src/dev/net/etherlink.hh
rename : src/dev/etherobject.hh => src/dev/net/etherobject.hh
rename : src/dev/etherpkt.cc => src/dev/net/etherpkt.cc
rename : src/dev/etherpkt.hh => src/dev/net/etherpkt.hh
rename : src/dev/ethertap.cc => src/dev/net/ethertap.cc
rename : src/dev/ethertap.hh => src/dev/net/ethertap.hh
rename : src/dev/i8254xGBe.cc => src/dev/net/i8254xGBe.cc
rename : src/dev/i8254xGBe.hh => src/dev/net/i8254xGBe.hh
rename : src/dev/i8254xGBe_defs.hh => src/dev/net/i8254xGBe_defs.hh
rename : src/dev/multi_etherlink.cc => src/dev/net/multi_etherlink.cc
rename : src/dev/multi_etherlink.hh => src/dev/net/multi_etherlink.hh
rename : src/dev/multi_iface.cc => src/dev/net/multi_iface.cc
rename : src/dev/multi_iface.hh => src/dev/net/multi_iface.hh
rename : src/dev/multi_packet.cc => src/dev/net/multi_packet.cc
rename : src/dev/multi_packet.hh => src/dev/net/multi_packet.hh
rename : src/dev/ns_gige.cc => src/dev/net/ns_gige.cc
rename : src/dev/ns_gige.hh => src/dev/net/ns_gige.hh
rename : src/dev/ns_gige_reg.h => src/dev/net/ns_gige_reg.h
rename : src/dev/pktfifo.cc => src/dev/net/pktfifo.cc
rename : src/dev/pktfifo.hh => src/dev/net/pktfifo.hh
rename : src/dev/sinic.cc => src/dev/net/sinic.cc
rename : src/dev/sinic.hh => src/dev/net/sinic.hh
rename : src/dev/sinicreg.hh => src/dev/net/sinicreg.hh
rename : src/dev/tcp_iface.cc => src/dev/net/tcp_iface.cc
rename : src/dev/tcp_iface.hh => src/dev/net/tcp_iface.hh
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--HG--
rename : src/dev/I2C.py => src/dev/i2c/I2C.py
rename : src/dev/i2cbus.cc => src/dev/i2c/bus.cc
rename : src/dev/i2cbus.hh => src/dev/i2c/bus.hh
rename : src/dev/i2cdev.hh => src/dev/i2c/device.hh
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--HG--
rename : src/dev/CopyEngine.py => src/dev/pci/CopyEngine.py
rename : src/dev/copy_engine.cc => src/dev/pci/copy_engine.cc
rename : src/dev/copy_engine.hh => src/dev/pci/copy_engine.hh
rename : src/dev/copy_engine_defs.hh => src/dev/pci/copy_engine_defs.hh
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Move pcidev.(hh|cc) to src/dev/pci/device.(hh|cc) and update existing
devices to use the new header location. This also renames the PCIDEV
debug flag to have a capitalization that is consistent with the PCI
host and other devices.
--HG--
rename : src/dev/Pci.py => src/dev/pci/PciDevice.py
rename : src/dev/pcidev.cc => src/dev/pci/device.cc
rename : src/dev/pcidev.hh => src/dev/pci/device.hh
rename : src/dev/pcireg.h => src/dev/pci/pcireg.h
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Previous ARM-based simulations were limited to 8 cores due to
limitations in GICv2 and earlier. This changeset adds a set of
gem5-specific extensions that enable support for up to 256 cores.
When the gem5 extensions are enabled, the GIC uses CPU IDs instead of
a CPU bitmask in the GIC's register interface. To OS can enable the
extensions by setting bit 0x200 in ICDICTR.
This changeset is based on previous work by Matt Evans.
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The gem5's current PCI host functionality is very ad hoc. The current
implementations require PCI devices to be hooked up to the
configuration space via a separate configuration port. Devices query
the platform to get their config-space address range. Un-mapped parts
of the config space are intercepted using the XBar's default port
mechanism and a magic catch-all device (PciConfigAll).
This changeset redesigns the PCI host functionality to improve code
reuse and make config-space and interrupt mapping more
transparent. Existing platform code has been updated to use the new
PCI host and configured to stay backwards compatible (i.e., no
guest-side visible changes). The current implementation does not
expose any new functionality, but it can easily be extended with
features such as automatic interrupt mapping.
PCI devices now register themselves with a PCI host controller. The
host controller interface is defined in the abstract base class
PciHost. Registration is done by PciHost::registerDevice() which takes
the device, its bus position (bus/dev/func tuple), and its interrupt
pin (INTA-INTC) as a parameter. The registration interface returns a
PciHost::DeviceInterface that the PCI device can use to query memory
mappings and signal interrupts.
The host device manages the entire PCI configuration space. Accesses
to devices decoded into the devices bus position and then forwarded to
the correct device.
Basic PCI host functionality is implemented in the GenericPciHost base
class. Most platforms can use this class as a basic PCI controller. It
provides the following functionality:
* Configurable configuration space decoding. The number of bits
dedicated to a device is a prameter, making it possible to support
both CAM, ECAM, and legacy mappings.
* Basic interrupt mapping using the interruptLine value from a
device's configuration space. This behavior is the same as in the
old implementation. More advanced controllers can override the
interrupt mapping method to dynamically assign host interrupts to
PCI devices.
* Simple (base + addr) remapping from the PCI bus's address space to
physical addresses for PIO, memory, and DMA.
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The HDLCD model implements a workaround that swaps the red and blue
channels. This works around an issue in certain old kernels. The new
driver doesn't seem to have this behavior, so disable the workaround
by default and enable it in the affected platforms.
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Devices behind the Versatile Express configuration controllers are
currently all lumped into one SimObject. This will make DTB generation
challenging since the DTB assumes them to be in different parts of the
hierarchy. It also makes it hard to model other CoreTiles without also
replicating devices from the motherboard.
This changeset splits the VExpressCoreTileCtrl into two subsystems:
VExpressMCC for all motherboard-related devices and CoreTile2A15DCC
for Core Tile specific devices.
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The MaltaPChip class is currently unused and identical (except for the
class name) to the TsunamiPChip. If someone decides to implement PCI
for Malta, they should make sure to share code with the Tsunami
implementation if they are similar.
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--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 64046371962e98413757bc3ab0c0d48dfb11ff1e
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The flash model has typos in its serialization code for
unknownPages, locationTable, blockValidEntries, and blockEmptyEntries
arrays where it would save each entry in the array under the same
name in the checkpoint. This patch fixes these typos.
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The IICRPR register in the GIC is currently not being initialized when
the GIC is instantiated. Initialize to the value mandated by the
architecture specification.
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This patch adds very basic checkpoint support for the VirtIO9PProxy
device. Previously, attempts to checkpoint gem5 with a present 9P
device caused gem5 to fatal as none of the state is tracked. We still
do not track any state, but we replace the fatal with a warning which
is triggered if the device has been used by the guest system. In the
event that it has not been used, we assume that no state is lost
during checkpointing. The warning is triggered on both a serialize and
an unserialize to ensure maximum visibility for the user.
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Devices should never need to include dev/pciconfall.hh.
--HG--
extra : amend_source : 3a6e56485d432b49e2af22407982fa785c0ccb68
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Cleanup PCI devices to avoid using the PciDevice::platform pointer
directly. The PCI-specific functionality provided by the Platform
should be accessed through the wrappers in PciDevice.
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This patch updates the I/O devices, bridge and simple memory to take
the packet header and payload delay into account in their latency
calculations. In all cases we add the header delay, i.e. the
accumulated pipeline delay of any crossbars, and the payload delay
needed for deserialisation of any payload.
Due to the additional unknown latency contribution, the packet queue
of the simple memory is changed to use insertion sorting based on the
time stamp. Moreover, since the memory hands out exclusive (non
shared) responses, we also need to ensure ordering for reads to the
same address.
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Fix a bug in which the flash device would write out of bounds and
could either trigger a segfault and corrupt the memory of other
objects. This was caused by using pageSize in the place of
pagesPerBlock when running the garbage collector.
Also, added an assert to flag this condition in the future.
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This patch fixes the drain logic for the UFSHostDevice and the
FlashDevice. In the case of the FlashDevice, the logic for CheckDrain
needed to be reversed, whilst in the case of the UFSHostDevice check
drain was never being called. In both cases the system would never
complete draining if the initial attampt to drain failed.
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Make clang >= 3.5 happy when compiling build/X86/gem5.opt on OSX.
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Make clang >= 3.5 happy when compiling build/ARM/gem5.opt on OSX.
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This patch adds explicit overrides as this is now required when using
"-Wall" with clang >= 3.5, the latter now part of the most recent
XCode. The patch consequently removes "virtual" for those methods
where "override" is added. The latter should be enough of an
indication.
As part of this patch, a few minor issues that clang >= 3.5 complains
about are also resolved (unused methods and variables).
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This patch moves away from using M5_ATTR_OVERRIDE and the m5::hashmap
(and similar) abstractions, as these are no longer needed with gcc 4.7
and clang 3.1 as minimum compiler versions.
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Adds per-thread interrupt controllers and thread/context logic
so that interrupts properly get routed in SMT systems.
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IntDevice::recvResponse is called from two places in current mainline: (1) the
short circuit path of X86ISA::IntDevice::IntMasterPort::sendMessage for atomic
mode, and (2) the full request->response path to and from the x86 interrupts
device (finally called from MessageMasterPort::recvTimingResp). In the former
case, the packet was deleted correctly, but in the latter case, the packet and
request leak. To fix the leak, move request and packet deletion into IntDevice
inherited class implementations of recvResponse.
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Handle bad IDE disk image size 0. When image size is 0, gem5 will cause an
exception with log "Floating point exception (core dumped)".
Committed by: Nilay Vaish <nilay@cs.wisc.edu>
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Add a stat that counts buffer underruns in the HDLCD controller. The
stat counts at most one underrun per frame since the controller aborts
the current frame if it underruns.
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Rewrite the HDLCD controller to use the new DMA engine and pixel
pump. This fixes several bugs in the current implementation:
* Broken/missing interrupt support (VSync, underrun, DMA end)
* Fragile resolution changes (changing resolutions used
to cause assertion errors).
* Support for resolutions with a width that isn't divisible by 32.
* The pixel clock can now be set dynamically.
This breaks checkpoint compatibility. Checkpoints can be upgraded with
the checkpoint conversion script. However, upgraded checkpoints won't
contain the state of the current frame. That means that HDLCD
controllers restoring from a converted checkpoint immediately start
drawing a new frame (i.e, expect timing differences).
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EtherLink currently uses a fire-and-forget link delay event that
delays sending of packets by a fixed number of ticks. In order to
serialize this event, it relies on the event queue's auto
serialization support. However, support for event auto serialization
has been broken for more than two years, which means that checkpoints
of multi-system setups are likely to drop in-flight packets.
This changeset the replaces rewrites this part of the EtherLink to use
a packet queue instead. The queue contains a (tick, packet) tuple. The
tick indicates when the packet will be ready. Instead of relying on
event autoserialization, we now explicitly serialize the packet queue
in the EhterLink::Link class.
Note that this changeset changes the way in-flight packages are
serialized. Old checkpoints will still load, but in-flight packets
will be dropped (just as before). There has been no attempt to upgrade
checkpoints since this would actually change the behavior of existing
checkpoints.
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Timing generator for a pixel-based display. The timing generator is
intended for display processors driving a standard rasterized
display. The simplest possible display processor needs to derive from
this class and override the nextPixel() method to feed the display
with pixel data.
Pixels are ordered relative to the top left corner of the
display. Scan lines appear in the following order:
* Vertical Sync (starting at line 0)
* Vertical back porch
* Visible lines
* Vertical front porch
Pixel order within a scan line:
* Horizontal Sync
* Horizontal Back Porch
* Visible pixels
* Horizontal Front Porch
All events in the timing generator are automatically suspended on a
drain() request and restarted on drainResume(). This is conceptually
equivalent to clock gating when the pixel clock while the system is
draining. By gating the pixel clock, we prevent display controllers
from disturbing a memory system that is about to drain.
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