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// -*- mode:c++ -*-
// Copyright (c) 2007 The Hewlett-Packard Development Company
// All rights reserved.
//
// Redistribution and use of this software in source and binary forms,
// with or without modification, are permitted provided that the
// following conditions are met:
//
// The software must be used only for Non-Commercial Use which means any
// use which is NOT directed to receiving any direct monetary
// compensation for, or commercial advantage from such use. Illustrative
// examples of non-commercial use are academic research, personal study,
// teaching, education and corporate research & development.
// Illustrative examples of commercial use are distributing products for
// commercial advantage and providing services using the software for
// commercial advantage.
//
// If you wish to use this software or functionality therein that may be
// covered by patents for commercial use, please contact:
// Director of Intellectual Property Licensing
// Office of Strategy and Technology
// Hewlett-Packard Company
// 1501 Page Mill Road
// Palo Alto, California 94304
//
// 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 HOLDER(s), HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY, nor the names of its
// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
// this software without specific prior written permission. No right of
// sublicense is granted herewith. Derivatives of the software and
// output created using the software may be prepared, but only for
// Non-Commercial Uses. Derivatives of the software may be shared with
// others provided: (i) the others agree to abide by the list of
// conditions herein which includes the Non-Commercial Use restrictions;
// and (ii) such Derivatives of the software include the above copyright
// notice to acknowledge the contribution from this software where
// applicable, this list of conditions and the disclaimer below.
//
// 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.
//
// Authors: Gabe Black
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// Code to "specialize" a microcode sequence to use a particular
// variety of operands
//
let {{
# This builds either a regular or macro op to implement the sequence of
# ops we give it.
def genInst(name, Name, ops):
# If we can implement this instruction with exactly one microop, just
# use that directly.
newStmnt = ''
if len(ops) == 1:
decode_block = "return (X86StaticInst *)(%s);" % \
ops[0].getAllocator()
return ('', '', decode_block, '')
else:
# Build a macroop to contain the sequence of microops we've
# been given.
return genMacroOp(name, Name, ops)
}};
let {{
# This code builds up a decode block which decodes based on switchval.
# vals is a dict which matches case values with what should be decoded to.
# builder is called on the exploded contents of "vals" values to generate
# whatever code should be used.
def doSplitDecode(name, Name, builder, switchVal, vals, default = None):
header_output = ''
decoder_output = ''
decode_block = 'switch(%s) {\n' % switchVal
exec_output = ''
for (val, todo) in vals.items():
(new_header_output,
new_decoder_output,
new_decode_block,
new_exec_output) = builder(name, Name, *todo)
header_output += new_header_output
decoder_output += new_decoder_output
decode_block += '\tcase %s: %s\n' % (val, new_decode_block)
exec_output += new_exec_output
if default:
(new_header_output,
new_decoder_output,
new_decode_block,
new_exec_output) = builder(name, Name, *default)
header_output += new_header_output
decoder_output += new_decoder_output
decode_block += '\tdefault: %s\n' % new_decode_block
exec_output += new_exec_output
decode_block += '}\n'
return (header_output, decoder_output, decode_block, exec_output)
}};
let {{
class OpType(object):
parser = re.compile(r"(?P<tag>[A-Z][A-Z]*)(?P<size>[a-z][a-z]*)|(r(?P<reg>[A-Za-z0-9][A-Za-z0-9]*))")
def __init__(self, opTypeString):
match = OpType.parser.search(opTypeString)
if match == None:
raise Exception, "Problem parsing operand type %s" % opTypeString
self.reg = match.group("reg")
self.tag = match.group("tag")
self.size = match.group("size")
}};
let {{
# This function specializes the given piece of code to use a particular
# set of argument types described by "opTypes". These are "implemented"
# in reverse order.
def specializeInst(name, Name, code, opTypes):
opNum = len(opTypes) - 1
while len(opTypes):
# print "Building a composite op with tags", opTypes
# print "And code", code
opNum = len(opTypes) - 1
# A regular expression to find the operand placeholders we're
# interested in.
opRe = re.compile("\\^(?P<operandNum>%d)(?=[^0-9]|$)" % opNum)
# Parse the operand type strign we're working with
opType = OpType(opTypes[opNum])
if opType.reg:
#Figure out what to do with fixed register operands
if opType.reg in ("Ax", "Bx", "Cx", "Dx"):
code = opRe.sub("%%{INTREG_R%s}" % opType.reg.upper(), code)
elif opType.reg == "Al":
# We need a way to specify register width
code = opRe.sub("%{INTREG_RAX}", code)
else:
print "Didn't know how to encode fixed register %s!" % opType.reg
elif opType.tag == None or opType.size == None:
raise Exception, "Problem parsing operand tag: %s" % opType.tag
elif opType.tag in ("C", "D", "G", "P", "S", "T", "V"):
# Use the "reg" field of the ModRM byte to select the register
code = opRe.sub("%{(uint8_t)MODRM_REG}", code)
elif opType.tag in ("E", "Q", "W"):
# This might refer to memory or to a register. We need to
# divide it up farther.
regCode = opRe.sub("%{(uint8_t)MODRM_RM}", code)
regTypes = copy.copy(opTypes)
regTypes.pop(-1)
# This needs to refer to memory, but we'll fill in the details
# later. It needs to take into account unaligned memory
# addresses.
memCode = opRe.sub("%0", code)
memTypes = copy.copy(opTypes)
memTypes.pop(-1)
return doSplitDecode(name, Name, specializeInst, "MODRM_MOD",
{"3" : (regCode, regTypes)}, (memCode, memTypes))
elif opType.tag in ("I", "J"):
# Immediates are already in the instruction, so don't leave in
# those parameters
code = opRe.sub("${IMMEDIATE}", code)
elif opType.tag == "M":
# This needs to refer to memory, but we'll fill in the details
# later. It needs to take into account unaligned memory
# addresses.
code = opRe.sub("%0", code)
elif opType.tag in ("PR", "R", "VR"):
# There should probably be a check here to verify that mod
# is equal to 11b
code = opRe.sub("%{(uint8_t)MODRM_RM}", code)
else:
raise Exception, "Unrecognized tag %s." % opType.tag
opTypes.pop(-1)
# At this point, we've built up "code" to have all the necessary extra
# instructions needed to implement whatever types of operands were
# specified. Now we'll assemble it it into a microOp sequence.
ops = assembleMicro(code)
# Build a macroop to contain the sequence of microops we've
# constructed. The decode block will be used to fill in our
# inner decode structure, and the rest will be concatenated and
# passed back.
return genInst(name, Name, ops)
}};
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// The microcode assembler
//
let {{
class MicroOpStatement(object):
def __init__(self):
self.className = ''
self.label = ''
self.args = []
# This converts a list of python bools into
# a comma seperated list of C++ bools.
def microFlagsText(self, vals):
text = ""
for val in vals:
if val:
text += ", true"
else:
text += ", false"
return text
def getAllocator(self, *microFlags):
args = ''
signature = "<"
emptySig = True
for arg in self.args:
if not emptySig:
signature += ", "
emptySig = False
if arg.has_key("operandImm"):
args += ", %s" % arg["operandImm"]
signature += ImmOpType
elif arg.has_key("operandReg"):
args += ", %s" % arg["operandReg"]
signature += RegOpType
elif arg.has_key("operandLabel"):
raise Exception, "Found a label while creating allocator string."
else:
raise Exception, "Unrecognized operand type."
signature += ">"
return 'new %s%s(machInst%s%s)' % (self.className, signature, self.microFlagsText(microFlags), args)
}};
let {{
def buildLabelDict(ops):
labels = {}
micropc = 0
for op in ops:
if op.label:
labels[op.label] = count
micropc += 1
return labels
}};
let{{
def assembleMicro(code):
# This function takes in a block of microcode assembly and returns
# a python list of objects which describe it.
# Keep this around in case we need it later
orig_code = code
# A list of the statements we've found thus far
statements = []
# Regular expressions to pull each piece of the statement out at a
# time. Each expression expects the thing it's looking for to be at
# the beginning of the line, so the previous component is stripped
# before continuing.
labelRe = re.compile(r'^[ \t]*(?P<label>\w\w*)[ \t]:')
lineRe = re.compile(r'^(?P<line>[^\n][^\n]*)$')
classRe = re.compile(r'^[ \t]*(?P<className>[a-zA-Z_]\w*)')
# This recognizes three different flavors of operands:
# 1. Raw decimal numbers composed of digits between 0 and 9
# 2. Code beginning with "{" and continuing until the first "}"
# ^ This one might need revising
# 3. A label, which starts with a capital or small letter, or
# underscore, which is optionally followed by a sequence of
# capital or small letters, underscores, or digts between 0 and 9
opRe = re.compile( \
r'^[ \t]*((\@(?P<operandLabel0>\w\w*))|' +
r'(\@\{(?P<operandLabel1>[^}]*)\})|' +
r'(\%(?P<operandReg0>\w\w*))|' +
r'(\%\{(?P<operandReg1>[^}]*)\})|' +
r'(\$(?P<operandImm0>\w\w*))|' +
r'(\$\{(?P<operandImm1>[^}]*)\}))')
lineMatch = lineRe.search(code)
while lineMatch != None:
statement = MicroOpStatement()
# Get a line and seperate it from the rest of the code
line = lineMatch.group("line")
orig_line = line
# print "Parsing line %s" % line
code = lineRe.sub('', code, 1)
# Find the label, if any
labelMatch = labelRe.search(line)
if labelMatch != None:
statement.label = labelMatch.group("label")
# print "Found label %s." % statement.label
# Clear the label from the statement
line = labelRe.sub('', line, 1)
# Find the class name which is roughly equivalent to the op name
classMatch = classRe.search(line)
if classMatch == None:
raise Exception, "Couldn't find class name in statement: %s" \
% orig_line
else:
statement.className = classMatch.group("className")
# print "Found class name %s." % statement.className
# Clear the class name from the statement
line = classRe.sub('', line, 1)
#Find as many arguments as you can
statement.args = []
opMatch = opRe.search(line)
while opMatch is not None:
statement.args.append({})
# args is a list of dicts which collect different
# representations of operand values. Different forms might be
# needed in different places, for instance to replace a label
# with an offset.
for opType in ("operandLabel0", "operandReg0", "operandImm0",
"operandLabel1", "operandReg1", "operandImm1"):
if opMatch.group(opType):
statement.args[-1][opType[:-1]] = opMatch.group(opType)
if len(statement.args[-1]) == 0:
print "Problem parsing operand in statement: %s" \
% orig_line
line = opRe.sub('', line, 1)
# print "Found operand %s." % statement.args[-1]
opMatch = opRe.search(line)
# print "Found operands", statement.args
# Add this statement to our collection
statements.append(statement)
# Get the next line
lineMatch = lineRe.search(code)
# Decode the labels into displacements
labels = buildLabelDict(statements)
micropc = 0
for statement in statements:
for arg in statement.args:
if arg.has_key("operandLabel"):
if not labels.has_key(arg["operandLabel"]):
raise Exception, "Unrecognized label: %s." % arg["operandLabel"]
# This is assuming that intra microcode branches go to
# the next micropc + displacement, or
# micropc + 1 + displacement.
arg["operandImm"] = labels[arg["operandLabel"]] - micropc - 1
micropc += 1
return statements
}};
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