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Use this function to get the binary representation of the instruction
rather than referencing the ExtMachInst typed machInst member of the
StaticInst directly. ExtMachInst is an ISA specific type and can't
always be straightforwardly squished into a 32 bit integer.
Change-Id: Ic1f74d6d86eb779016677ae45c022939ce3e2b9f
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/7563
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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This function takes a pointer to a buffer and the current size of the
buffer as a pass by reference argument. If the size of the buffer is
sufficient, the function stores a binary representation of itself
(generally the ISA defined instruction encoding) in the buffer, and
sets the size argument to how much space it used. This could be used
by ISAs which have two instruction sizes (ARM and thumb, for example).
If the buffer size isn't sufficient, then the size parameter should be
set to what size is required, and then the function should return
without modifying the buffer.
The buffer itself should be aligned to the same standard as memory
returned by new, specifically "The pointer returned shall be suitably
aligned so that it can be converted to a pointer of any complete object
type and then used to access the object or array in the storage
allocated...". This will avoid having to memcpy buffers to avoid
unaligned accesses.
To standardize the representation of the data, it should be stored in
the buffer as little endian. Since most hosts (including ARM and x86
hosts) will be little endian, this will almost always be a no-op.
Change-Id: I2f31aa0b4f9c0126b44f47a881c2901243279bd6
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/7562
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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Change-Id: I67759a4532e8a46c1643d4c3a9c546ad6b565b81
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9321
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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Added fix in the invalid transition panic and various places in ruby
random tester.
Change-Id: I879264da58369faf7de49d1a28b2da1cb935ef0a
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8941
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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Adds the MSI protocol from "A Primer on Memory Consistency and Cache
Coherence" by Daniel J. Sorin, Mark D. Hill, and David A. Wood.
This code follows Learning gem5 Part 3.
http://learning.gem5.org/book/part3/index.html
This is meant to be a simple, clean, example of how to make a Ruby
protocol.
Currently, it only works in SE mode.
The next changeset will contain the required configuration files.
Change-Id: If2cc53f5e6b9c6891749f929d872671615a2b4ab
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8942
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Implementation of a First-In, First-Out replacement policy.
Change-Id: Id234ec9d29c092dd4516e609da14b8a75a96b5e4
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8888
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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Rebase of MRU missed a const qualifier, introducing a compilation
error.
Change-Id: Ia25aa30523613a1a87593a353abe439946656f63
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9301
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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TLBI broadcasting was the default implementation of most of TLBI
instructions. This patch applies the broadcasting behaviour only to the
Inner-Shareable subset, while simpler TLB invalidation instructions only
affect the PE that executes them.
Change-Id: Idb01d0d4f593131f657e8fc9668112de8e4ccdcb
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9182
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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This patch is intended to avoid code duplication and extends the set of
TLBI ISA functions adding the entry invalidation by ASID match.
Change-Id: I9bcb498059ea480dd2118639c7b3c64fea80a5e1
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9181
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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The "segment" private element in this class was only ever set to zero
on construction, and then used to index into a list of segment names
to get the string "none" in a DPRINTF. If debugging was turned off,
there would be no consumers of that variable, and that upset g++. This
change removes the essentially useless variable, and also that bit of
text in the DPRINTF.
Change-Id: I3f85db4af5f0678768243daf84b8d698350af931
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9221
Reviewed-by: Anthony Gutierrez <anthony.gutierrez@amd.com>
Maintainer: Anthony Gutierrez <anthony.gutierrez@amd.com>
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This change adds an inst_bytes field which is of type bytes, and puts
it in a oneof with the previously required inst field. If an
instruction's encoding happens to be 4 bytes long, the original inst
field will be used. Otherwise, the new variably sized inst_bytes field
will be used.
Because this tracer doesn't have visibility into how the data in
inst_bytes is structured, it can't do any endian conversion itself.
To maintain compatibility between producers and consumers who may have
different endiannesses, all data should be manually converted to
little endian before being stored in this field.
inst will be converted into little endian by protobuf, and so
compatibility doesn't have to be handled manually.
Change-Id: I290713f70e7124d8aa9550c022c71334939d84a6
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/7561
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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Implementation of a Most Recently Used replacement policy.
Change-Id: Id52cb247ca25d4523dcc53490d113695dac6a3f1
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8889
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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Replacement policies (LRU, Random) are currently considered as array
indexing methods, but have completely different functionalities:
- Array indexers determine the possible locations for block allocation.
This information is used to generate replacement candidates when
conflicts happen.
- Replacement policies determine which of the replacement candidates
should be evicted to make room for new allocations.
For this reason, they were split into different classes. Advantages:
- Easier and more straightforward to implement other replacement
policies (RRIP, LFU, ARC, ...)
- Allow easier future implementation of cache organization schemes
As now we can't assure the use of sets, the previous way to create a
true LRU is not viable. Now a timestamp_bits parameter controls how
many bits are dedicated for the timestamp, and a true LRU can be
achieved through an infinite number of bits (although a few bits suffice
in practice).
Change-Id: I23750db121f1474d17831137e6ff618beb2b3eda
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8501
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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Block allocation can fail when there is an in-service MSHR that
operates on the victim block. This can happed due to:
* an upgrade operation: a request that needs a writable copy of the
block finds a shared (non-writable) copy of the block in the cache
and has allocates an MSHR for the pending upgrade operation, or
* a clean operation: a clean request finds a dirty copy of the block
and allocates an MSHR for the pending clean operation.
This changes relaxes an assertion to allow for the 2nd case (cache
clean operations).
Change-Id: Ib51482160b5f2b3702ed744b0eac2029d34bc9d4
Reviewed-by: Curtis Dunham <curtis.dunham@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9021
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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Prior to this changeset the bootloader rom (instantiated as a
SimpleMemory) in ruby Arm systems was treated as an IO device and it
was fronted by a DMA controller. This changeset moves the bootloader
rom and adds it to the system as another memory with a dedicated
directory controller.
Change-Id: I094fed031cdef7f77a939d94f948d967b349b7e0
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8741
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
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GCC 7 generates spurious fallthrough warnings in nested switch blocks
where the inner switch block return. There is already a GCC fix [1]
submitted for review but, until it is merged into GCC trunk, GEM5 will
not build with GCC 7 due to these fallthrough warnings. This patch
silences the spurious fallthrough warnings by appending a M5_UNREACHABLE
statement in the outer switch cases.
Note there is another GEM5 patch [2] to fix other fallthrough warnings.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2018-02/msg01105.html
[2] https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/c/public/gem5/+/8541
Change-Id: I97cd8bfa90a88e93cee60cf27a8c93611d11a242
Signed-off-by: Chun-Chen Hsu <chunchenhsu@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9101
Reviewed-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Maintainer: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
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If an instruction is invalid, some assertions may in the decoder may
fail the entire simulation. Instead, we want to raise an
IllegalInstFault instead of failing immediately in the decoder if the
invalid instruction is being speculatively executed.
Change-Id: I5cb72ba06f07f173922f86897ddfdf677e8c702f
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9261
Maintainer: Alec Roelke <ar4jc@virginia.edu>
Reviewed-by: Monir Zaman <monir.zaman.m@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
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gcc 7 onwards have additional heuristics to detect implicit
fallthroughs and it fails the build with warnings for ARM as a result.
There was one gcc bug[1] that I fixed but the rest are cases that gcc
cannot detect due to the point at which it does the fallthrough check.
Most of this patch adds __builtin_unreachable() hints in places that throw
this warning to indicate to gcc that the fallthrough will never
happen.
The remaining cases are actually possible fallthroughs due to
incorrect code running on the simulator; in which case an Unknown
instruction is returned.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2018-02/msg01105.html
Change-Id: I1baa9fa0ed15181c10c755c0bd777f88b607c158
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh.poyarekar@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8541
Reviewed-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Maintainer: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
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Change-Id: I15f0e5ddb72578de90ed68866c8a0c1501717d61
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8921
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Maintainer: Brandon Potter <Brandon.Potter@amd.com>
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Change-Id: Ieec4651000b3b4de05ba5ba11fdfa5392a5477e7
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8904
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Maintainer: Brandon Potter <Brandon.Potter@amd.com>
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Current glibc expects at least kernel 3.2. Bump this so syscall emulation
with dynamically-linked binaries works.
Change-Id: I07077ed2de14c308f6ff79cae677915612557332
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8903
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Maintainer: Brandon Potter <Brandon.Potter@amd.com>
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Add the special file /sys/devices/system/cpu/online to the files that gem5
knows how to handle in SE mode. This file lists the CPUs that are active.
For instance, in an 8 CPU system it is the following:
0-7
This implementation simply returns a file that is 0-%d where %d is the
current number of thread contexts.
This file is required for C++11 threads with gcc 4.8 and above.
Change-Id: I0b566f77e75e9eca480509814d0fd038a231b940
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8902
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brandon Potter <Brandon.Potter@amd.com>
Maintainer: Brandon Potter <Brandon.Potter@amd.com>
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Change-Id: Ife4a2189e140cdefcf53fa88213d8a5225067457
Reviewed-by: Jack Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9201
Reviewed-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Maintainer: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
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Add bitfields which can gather/scatter base and limit fields within
"normal" segment descriptors, and in TSS descriptors which have the
same bitfields in the same positions for those two values.
This centralizes the code which manages those bitfields and makes it
less likely that a local implementation will be buggy.
Change-Id: I9809aa626fc31388595c3d3b225c25a0ec6a1275
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/7661
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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These instructions originally read the TSC into t1 and then unpacked it
into eax and edx using a move, a right shift, and then another move.
We can combine the second shift and move. The shift will move the
upper 32 bits into the lower 32 bits, and clear the upper 32 bits to
zero. This has the same effect as moving the lower 32 bits post-shift
into another register, since the upper 32 bits will be cleared to zero
based on x86 partial register access semantics.
Change-Id: Iba85e501c7e84147ad0047f5c555e61bdf8f032b
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9044
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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This is very similar to RDTSC, except that it requires all younger
instructions to retire before it completes, and it writes the TSC_AUX
MSR into ECX. I've added an mfence as an iniitial microop to ensure
that memory accesses complete before RDTSCP runs, and added an rdval
microop at the end to read the TSC_AUX value into ECX.
Change-Id: I9766af562b7fd0c22e331b56e06e8818a9e268c9
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9043
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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Change-Id: I20bf6a57ea4354aac9267845bb37b70b83d6fcde
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9042
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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This makes it explicit which type of serialization you want, and also
makes it possible to make a macroop serialize before. The old
serializing directive was renamed .serialize_after in the microcode
assembler, and throughout the microcode implementation, and its
behavior is unchanged. More specifically, it still marks the last
microop within the macroop as IsSerializing and IsSerializeAfter.
The new .serialize_before directive does something similar and marks
the first microop as IsSerializing and IsSerializeBefore.
Change-Id: Ia53466c734c651c65400809de7ef903c4a6c3e7e
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9041
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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GCC 7 generates maybe-uninitialized warnings at the code that updates
the "dest" variables in the writeVecElem function of neon64_mem.hh file.
It is because the generated code does not appropriately initialize the
output variable before passing it to the writeVecElem function. This
patch initializes the output variable to fix this.
Change-Id: I50a8f4e456ccdcaa3db1392ec097017450c56ecb
Signed-off-by: Chun-Chen Hsu <chunchenhsu@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9121
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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The inner loop range limit should be width instead of height.
Change-Id: I091c590713c945d4bd04ffcc974d4eb8aa23d1b2
Signed-off-by: Chun-Chen Hsu <chunchenhsu@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/9081
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
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The 32 most significant bits of ELR_ELx must be ignored when returning
from AArch64 to AArch32.
Change-Id: I412d72908997916404e16e9eeca2789a9c529e58
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8881
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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Only a small quantity of prefetches were issued, as the positive
feedback mechanism was not implemented. This commit adds a new
action po_observeHit, which notifies the RubyPrefetcher of
successful prefetches and resets the prefetch flag.
When a cache line was replaced by a prefetch, the wrong queue could
be stalled. This commit adds a new event PF_L1_Replacement, which
stalls the correct queue.
The behavior when receiving a prefetch or instruction fetch while
in PF_IS_I (prefetch caused GETs, but got invalidated before the
response was received) was undefined. This was changed to drop the
prefetch request or change the state to non-prefetch, respectively.
This behavior is analogous to IS_I (non-prefetch caused GETs, but
got invalidated before the response was received) and the data case,
respectively.
In my local branch a major (20+%) performance increase can be
observed in SPEC2006 gobmk and leslie3d when enabling the
prefetcher. Some other benchmarks like bwaves, GemsFDTD, sphinx and
wrf show smaller (~10%) performance increases. Unfortunately, the
performance in most other SPEC benchmarks is still poor, most likely
as the prefetcher does not detect strides fast/often enough. In
order to push the change timely (most benchmarks have runtimes in
the order of days on my machine even with the smallest parameters)
after checkout, I have only run gobmk with the base repository
+ this commit. The results match those of my local branch.
Change-Id: I9903a2fcd02060ea5e619b409f31f7d6fac47ae8
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8801
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-by: Swapnil Haria <swapnilster@gmail.com>
Maintainer: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
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This patch introduces the TLB IPA-Based invalidating instructions in
aarch32. In the entry selection policy the level of translation is not
taken into account.
This means that no difference stands between (e.g.) TLBIIPAS2 and
TLBIPAS2L.
Change-Id: Ieeb54665480874d2041056f356d86448c45043cb
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8822
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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In the pool of TLB Invalidate system register a category of instruction
was missing: the ones operating on entries added to the TLB during the
last level only of a table walk. (E.g. TLBIVMAL). This patch is not
considering this matching criteria when invalidating the entries and it
is rather performing the invalidation on all levels.
Change-Id: I5f2186cfdd73793e76c90b260f7128be187903fe
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8821
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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Skewed caches need to know the way to regenerate a block address.
Change-Id: I62c61ac9509eff2f37bad36862751956db7a6e40
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8782
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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clang doesn't like inconsistent overrides. Add override to all overidden
functions in lru.hh
Change-Id: I100ff4a7d90757439afee879ff9838c15f5c0b1d
Signed-off-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8861
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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g++ seems to think there are some missing brackets when initializing
the sparc fault information. Passify it by adding extra brackets.
Change-Id: I826995f88b8ac8a21721c949a244dec480831b80
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8763
Maintainer: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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Previous code was aborting simulation when a debug exception taken in
aarch64 mode was encountered. This because an invalid (0xff)
instruction fault status code was produced.
Change-Id: I289f93f672be70cfbdc404be536809835160bdaf
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8363
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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The fault status code generated by a Prefetch/Data Fault was containing
a wrong value when the fault was triggered in aarch32 but handled in
aarch64. This because the encoding differs between the two ISAs and the
encoder was just checking the starting ISA rather than the the ending
one. In this case the getFsr must be called after we know which is the
ending ISA, which happens only after ArmFault::invoke gets called. The
fsc update hence happens before writing into the Syndrome register.
Change-Id: I725f12b6dcc0178f608233bd3d15e466d1cd1ffc
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8362
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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There is a set of internal variables in ArmFault thats get updated once
the fault is invoked (ArmFault::invoke). Sometimes we rely on those even
if the fault is generated but not invoked (e.g. when checking if a
memory access is producing a fault). This patch is moving the update
functionalities inside a public method so that a client can make use of
it even when not invoking the fault.
Change-Id: I3ac5b6835023f28ec569fe25487dffa356e1b2fd
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8361
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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This patch enables PCAlignmentFault routing to Hypervisor in case
HCR_EL2.TGE == 1, as is happening for other arm exceptions.
Change-Id: I48364ef1a0bcb5d030135221ae4bc6429e32759e
Signed-off-by: Giacomo Travaglini <giacomo.travaglini@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8841
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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This change makes the cache block invalidation function in the
BaseTags and CacheBlk class virtual to enable derived classes.
Change-Id: I2e64b01c6ca637f16d10474fc8b08eeec3f23453
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8287
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Carvalho <odanrc@yahoo.com.br>
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invalidate was defined as a separate function in the base associative
and fully-associative tags classes although both functions should
implement identical functionality. This patch moves the invalidate
function in the base tags class.
Change-Id: I206ee969b00ab9e05873c6d87531474fcd712907
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8286
Reviewed-by: Daniel Carvalho <odanrc@yahoo.com.br>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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This lets them hook setCache, perhaps to set up additional state based
on the set cache.
Change-Id: Ic3b34fa43d052c71e8ef733a57fe47c70899cd27
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8701
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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Starting with version 3, scons imposes using the print function instead
of the print statement in code it processes. To get things building
again, this change moves all python code within gem5 to use the
function version. Another change by another author separately made this
same change to the site_tools and site_init.py files.
Change-Id: I2de7dc3b1be756baad6f60574c47c8b7e80ea3b0
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8761
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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If the switch block inside the RFDR case selects the non-default case
and breaks out, it will fall through into the BRAR case, which seems
incorrect. Put in a break to ensure that it breaks out of the parent
switch block as well.
Change-Id: Ie4cedf66954b7e8f4b884ad9e3a653968bbfaef7
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh.poyarekar@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8563
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
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gcc8 warns about ignored const qualifiers (-Wignored-qualifiers) and
that breaks builds. It was suggested that the warning be moved to
Wextra[1] but that's probably not going to happen anytime soon.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=82711
Change-Id: Ib808906deb9a1c2dccb1c34b6563db0c24c66655
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh.poyarekar@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8562
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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The length of the strncpy should be one less than the destination to
ensure that there is space for the last NULL byte in case the source
is longer than the destination.
Change-Id: Iea65fa6327c8242bd8ddf4bf9a5a2b5164996495
Signed-off-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh.poyarekar@gmail.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8561
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabeblack@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Maintainer: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
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Merge 1ae7fced4d32898531a6875a339ef00e43e20e66 generated
a bug in tagsInUse calculation.
Change-Id: I079e327a0a26a7968f2ed8e433dd6e790c80998b
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8781
Reviewed-by: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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Writebacks write data to either an existing block or a newly allocated
block. In either case we need to populate the whenReady field of the
block which will determine when the new value can be used.
Change-Id: I5788fad0b8086a1be96714639bf6a9470b334926
Reviewed-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Curtis Dunham <curtis.dunham@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/8285
Maintainer: Nikos Nikoleris <nikos.nikoleris@arm.com>
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