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/*
* Copyright (c) 2012, 2015 ARM Limited
* All rights reserved
*
* The license below extends only to copyright in the software and shall
* not be construed as granting a license to any other intellectual
* property including but not limited to intellectual property relating
* to a hardware implementation of the functionality of the software
* licensed hereunder. You may use the software subject to the license
* terms below provided that you ensure that this notice is replicated
* unmodified and in its entirety in all distributions of the software,
* modified or unmodified, in source code or in binary form.
*
* 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.
*
* Authors: Andreas Sandberg
*/
#ifndef __SIM_DRAIN_HH__
#define __SIM_DRAIN_HH__
#include <atomic>
#include <mutex>
#include <unordered_set>
#include "base/flags.hh"
class Drainable;
#ifndef SWIG // SWIG doesn't support strongly typed enums
/**
* Object drain/handover states
*
* An object starts out in the Running state. When the simulator
* prepares to take a snapshot or prepares a CPU for handover, it
* calls the drain() method to transfer the object into the Draining
* or Drained state. If any object enters the Draining state
* (Drainable::drain() returning >0), simulation continues until it
* all objects have entered the Drained state.
*
* Before resuming simulation, the simulator calls resume() to
* transfer the object to the Running state.
*
* \note Even though the state of an object (visible to the rest of
* the world through Drainable::getState()) could be used to determine
* if all objects have entered the Drained state, the protocol is
* actually a bit more elaborate. See Drainable::drain() for details.
*/
enum class DrainState {
Running, /** Running normally */
Draining, /** Draining buffers pending serialization/handover */
Drained /** Buffers drained, ready for serialization/handover */
};
#endif
/**
* This class coordinates draining of a System.
*
* When draining the simulator, we need to make sure that all
* Drainable objects within the system have ended up in the drained
* state before declaring the operation to be successful. This class
* keeps track of how many objects are still in the process of
* draining. Once it determines that all objects have drained their
* state, it exits the simulation loop.
*
* @note A System might not be completely drained even though the
* DrainManager has caused the simulation loop to exit. Draining needs
* to be restarted until all Drainable objects declare that they don't
* need further simulation to be completely drained. See Drainable for
* more information.
*/
class DrainManager
{
private:
DrainManager();
#ifndef SWIG
DrainManager(DrainManager &) = delete;
#endif
~DrainManager();
public:
/** Get the singleton DrainManager instance */
static DrainManager &instance() { return _instance; }
/**
* Try to drain the system.
*
* Try to drain the system and return true if all objects are in a
* the Drained state at which point the whole simulator is in a
* consistent state and ready for checkpointing or CPU
* handover. The simulation script must continue simulating until
* the simulation loop returns "Finished drain", at which point
* this method should be called again. This cycle should continue
* until this method returns true.
*
* @return true if all objects were drained successfully, false if
* more simulation is needed.
*/
bool tryDrain();
/**
* Resume normal simulation in a Drained system.
*/
void resume();
/**
* Run state fixups before a checkpoint restore operation
*
* The drain state of an object isn't stored in a checkpoint since
* the whole system is always going to be in the Drained state
* when the checkpoint is created. When the checkpoint is restored
* at a later stage, recreated objects will be in the Running
* state since the state isn't stored in checkpoints. This method
* performs state fixups on all Drainable objects and the
* DrainManager itself.
*/
void preCheckpointRestore();
/** Check if the system is drained */
bool isDrained() { return _state == DrainState::Drained; }
/** Get the simulators global drain state */
DrainState state() { return _state; }
/**
* Notify the DrainManager that a Drainable object has finished
* draining.
*/
void signalDrainDone();
public:
void registerDrainable(Drainable *obj);
void unregisterDrainable(Drainable *obj);
private:
/**
* Thread-safe helper function to get the number of Drainable
* objects in a system.
*/
size_t drainableCount() const;
/** Lock protecting the set of drainable objects */
mutable std::mutex globalLock;
/** Set of all drainable objects */
std::unordered_set<Drainable *> _allDrainable;
/**
* Number of objects still draining. This is flagged atomic since
* it can be manipulated by SimObjects living in different
* threads.
*/
std::atomic_uint _count;
/** Global simulator drain state */
DrainState _state;
/** Singleton instance of the drain manager */
static DrainManager _instance;
};
/**
* Interface for objects that might require draining before
* checkpointing.
*
* An object's internal state needs to be drained when creating a
* checkpoint, switching between CPU models, or switching between
* timing models. Once the internal state has been drained from
* <i>all</i> objects in the simulator, the objects are serialized to
* disc or the configuration change takes place. The process works as
* follows (see simulate.py for details):
*
* <ol>
* <li>Call Drainable::drain() for every object in the
* system. Draining has completed if all of them return
* zero. Otherwise, the sum of the return values is loaded into
* the counter of the DrainManager. A pointer to the drain
* manager is passed as an argument to the drain() method.
*
* <li>Continue simulation. When an object has finished draining its
* internal state, it calls DrainManager::signalDrainDone() on the
* manager. When the counter in the manager reaches zero, the
* simulation stops.
*
* <li>Check if any object still needs draining, if so repeat the
* process above.
*
* <li>Serialize objects, switch CPU model, or change timing model.
*
* <li>Call Drainable::drainResume() and continue the simulation.
* </ol>
*
*/
class Drainable
{
friend class DrainManager;
public:
Drainable();
virtual ~Drainable();
/**
* Determine if an object needs draining and register a
* DrainManager.
*
* When draining the state of an object, the simulator calls drain
* with a pointer to a drain manager. If the object does not need
* further simulation to drain internal buffers, it switched to
* the Drained state and returns 0, otherwise it switches to the
* Draining state and returns the number of times that it will
* call Event::process() on the drain event. Most objects are
* expected to return either 0 or 1.
*
* @note An object that has entered the Drained state can be
* disturbed by other objects in the system and consequently be
* forced to enter the Draining state again. The simulator
* therefore repeats the draining process until all objects return
* 0 on the first call to drain().
*
* @param drainManager DrainManager to use to inform the simulator
* when draining has completed.
*
* @return 0 if the object is ready for serialization now, >0 if
* it needs further simulation.
*/
virtual unsigned int drain(DrainManager *drainManager) = 0;
/**
* Resume execution after a successful drain.
*
* @note This method is normally only called from the simulation
* scripts.
*/
virtual void drainResume();
DrainState getDrainState() const { return _drainState; }
protected:
void setDrainState(DrainState new_state) { _drainState = new_state; }
private:
DrainManager &_drainManager;
DrainState _drainState;
};
#endif
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