Move MUL, S32M2I, S32I2M handling out of switch. These are all
instructions that do not depend on MXU_EN flag of MXU_CR.
Backports commit 87860df5511b972f0234a6b2cfaad5227c79b6b4 from qemu
Add support for emulating the S32I2M and S32M2I MXU instructions.
This commit also contains utility functions for reading/writing
to MXU registers. This is required for overall MXU instruction
support.
Backports commit 96992d1aa1b250c0fffc1ff2dad5e6e4f0b9815b from qemu
Add MXU decoding engine: add handlers for all instruction pools,
and main decode handler. The handlers, for now, for the purpose
of this patch, contain only sceleton in the form of a single
switch statement.
Backports commit 03f400883a1dd92fac5b0d9127b38e34c9a722d7 from qemu
Amend MXU instruction opcodes. Pool04 is actually only instruction
OPC_MXU_S16MAD. Two cases within S16MAD are recognized by 1-bit
subfield 'aptn1'.
Backports commit eab0bdb07cbed1131be2d1f541059c7b96b05e32 from qemu
Define a bit for MXU in insn_flags. This is the first non-MIPS
(third party) ASE supported in QEMU for MIPS, so it is placed in
the section "bits 56-63: vendor-specific ASEs".
Backports commit a031ac61619294ae473a78d1834e757fad8b59e5 from qemu
Define and initialize the 16 MXU registers - 15 general computational
register, and 1 control register). There is also a zero register, but
it does not have any corresponding variable.
Backports commit eb5559f67dc8dc12335dd996877bb6daaea32eb2 from qemu.
Implement emulation of nanoMIPS EVA instructions. They are all
part of P.LS.E0 instruction pool, or one of its subpools.
Backports commit d046a9ea1b8877a570a8b12a2d0125ec59fe5b22 from qemu
Opcode for ALIGN and DALIGN must be in fact ranges of opcodes, to
allow paremeter 'bp' to occupy two and three bits, respectively.
Backports commit 373ecd3823f949fd550ec49685299e287af5753e from qemu
Replace MIPS32 with MIPS, since the file covers all generations
of MIPS architectures.
Backports commit ab99e0e44bc7b0e2e52d9083a673866b18470536 from qemu
The primary purpose of this change is to support programs compiled by
GCC for the R5900 target and thereby run R5900 Linux distributions, for
example Gentoo.
GCC in version 7.3, by itself, by inspection of the GCC source code
and inspection of the generated machine code, for the R5900 target,
only emits two instructions that are specific to the R5900: the three-
operand MULT and MULTU. GCC and libc also emit certain MIPS III
instructions that are not part of the R5900 ISA. They are normally
trapped and emulated by the Linux kernel, and therefore need to be
treated accordingly by QEMU.
A program compiled by GCC is taken to mean source code compiled by GCC
under the restrictions above. One can, with the apparent limitations,
with a bit of effort obtain a fully functioning operating system such
as R5900 Gentoo. Strictly speaking, programs need not be compiled by
GCC to make use of this change.
Instructions and other facilities of the R5900 not implemented by this
change are intended to signal provisional exceptions. One such example
is the FPU that is not compliant with IEEE 754-1985 in system mode. It
is therefore provisionally disabled. In user space the FPU is trapped
and emulated by IEEE 754-1985 compliant software in the kernel, and
this is handled accordingly by QEMU. Another example is the 93
multimedia instructions specific to the R5900 that generate provisional
reserved instruction exception signals.
One of the benefits of running a Linux distribution under QEMU is that
programs can be compiled with a native compiler, where the host and
target are the same, as opposed to a cross-compiler, where they are
not the same. This is especially important in cases where the target
hardware does not have the resources to run a native compiler.
Problems with cross-compilation are often related to host and target
differences in integer sizes, pointer sizes, endianness, machine code,
ABI, etc. Sometimes cross-compilation is not even supported by the
build script for a given package. One effective way to avoid those
problems is to replace the cross-compiler with a native compiler. This
change of compilation methods does not resolve the inherent problems
with cross-compilation.
The native compiler naturally replaces the cross-compiler, because one
typically uses one or the other, and preferably the native compiler
when the circumstances admit this. The native compiler is also a good
test case for the R5900 QEMU user mode. Additionally, Gentoo is well-
known for compiling and installing its packages from sources.
This change has been tested with Gentoo compiled for R5900, including
native compilation of several packages under QEMU.
Backports commit ed4f49ba9bb56ebca6987b1083255daf6c89b5de from qemu.
The Linux kernel traps certain reserved instruction exceptions to
emulate the corresponding instructions. QEMU plays the role of the
kernel in user mode, so those traps are emulated by accepting the
instructions.
This change adds the function check_insn_opc_user_only to signal a
reserved instruction exception for flagged CPUs in QEMU system mode.
The MIPS III instructions DMULT[U], DDIV[U], LL[D] and SC[D] are not
implemented in R5900 hardware. They are trapped and emulated by the
Linux kernel and, accordingly, therefore QEMU user only instructions.
Backports commit 96631327be14c4f54cc31f873c278d9ffedd1e00 from qemu
The R5900 is taken to be MIPS III with certain modifications. From
MIPS IV it implements the instructions MOVN, MOVZ and PREF.
Backports commit 5601e6217d90ed322b4b9a6d68e8db607db91842 from qemu
The three-operand MULT and MULTU are the only R5900-specific
instructions emitted by GCC 7.3. The R5900 also implements the three-
operand MADD and MADDU instructions, but they are omitted in QEMU for
now since they are absent in programs compiled by current GCC versions.
Likewise, the R5900-specific pipeline 1 instruction variants MULT1,
MULTU1, DIV1, DIVU1, MADD1, MADDU1, MFHI1, MFLO1, MTHI1 and MTLO1
are omitted here as well.
Backports commit 21e8e8b230af38b6bd8c953fa5f31e4a5a128e1c from qemu
The R5900 implements the 64-bit MIPS III instruction set except
DMULT, DMULTU, DDIV, DDIVU, LL, SC, LLD and SCD. The MIPS IV
instructions MOVN, MOVZ and PREF are implemented. It has the
R5900-specific three-operand instructions MADD, MADDU, MULT and
MULTU as well as pipeline 1 versions MULT1, MULTU1, DIV1, DIVU1,
MADD1, MADDU1, MFHI1, MFLO1, MTHI1 and MTLO1. A set of 93 128-bit
multimedia instructions specific to the R5900 is also implemented.
The Toshiba TX System RISC TX79 Core Architecture manual:
https://wiki.qemu.org/File:C790.pdf
describes the C790 processor that is a follow-up to the R5900. There
are a few notable differences in that the R5900 FPU
- is not IEEE 754-1985 compliant,
- does not implement double format, and
- its machine code is nonstandard.
Backports commit 6f692818a7b53630702d25a709cd61282fd139ad from qemu
Fix misplaced 'break' in handling of NM_SHRA_R_PH. Found by
Coverity (CID 1395627).
Backports commit d5ebcbaf09e8c14e62b2966446195be5eeabcbab from qemu
Fix emulation of microMIPS R6 <SELEQZ|SELNEZ>.<D|S> instructions.
Their handling was permuted.
Backports commit fdac60cd0458f34b2e79d74a55bec10836e26471 from qemu
Implement hardware page table walker. This implementation is
limiter only to MIPS32.
Backports commit 074cfcb4daedf59ccbbbc83c24eee80e0e8f4c71 from qemu
Add reset state for PWSize and PWField registers. The reset state
is different for pre-R6 and R6 (and post-R6) ISAa
Backports commit 630107955757b9dfc5c09f105caa267eded2e3b1 from qemu
Add PWCtl register (CP0 Register 5, Select 6).
The PWCtl register configures hardware page table walking for TLB
refills.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1. It contains following
fields:
PWEn (31) - Hardware Page Table walker enable
PWDirExt (30) - If 1, 4-th level implemented (MIPS64 only)
XK (28) - If 1, walker handles xkseg (MIPS64 only)
XS (27) - If 1, walker handles xsseg (MIPS64 only)
XU (26) - If 1, walker handles xuseg (MIPS64 only)
DPH (7) - Dual Page format of Huge Page support
HugePg (6) - Huge Page PTE supported in Directory levels
PSn (5..0) - Bit position of PTEvld in Huge Page PTE
Backports commit 103be64c26c166f12b3e1308edadef3443723ff1 from qemu
Add PWSize register (CP0 Register 5, Select 7).
The PWSize register configures hardware page table walking for TLB
refills.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1. It contains following
fields:
BDW (37..32) Base Directory index width (MIPS64 only)
GDW (29..24) Global Directory index width
UDW (23..18) Upper Directory index width
MDW (17..12) Middle Directory index width
PTW (11..6 ) Page Table index width
PTEW ( 5..0 ) Left shift applied to the Page Table index
Backports commit 20b28ebc49945583d7191b57755cfd92433de9ff from qemu
Add PWField register (CP0 Register 5, Select 6).
The PWField register configures hardware page table walking for TLB
refills.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1. It contains following
fields:
MIPS64:
BDI (37..32) - Base Directory index
GDI (29..24) - Global Directory index
UDI (23..18) - Upper Directory index
MDI (17..12) - Middle Directory index
PTI (11..6 ) - Page Table index
PTEI ( 5..0 ) - Page Table Entry shift
MIPS32:
GDW (29..24) - Global Directory index
UDW (23..18) - Upper Directory index
MDW (17..12) - Middle Directory index
PTW (11..6 ) - Page Table index
PTEW ( 5..0 ) - Page Table Entry shift
Backports commit fa75ad1459f4f6abbeb6d375a812dfad61320f58 from qemu
Add PWBase register (CP0 Register 5, Select 5).
The PWBase register contains the Page Table Base virtual address.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1.
Backports commit 5e31fdd59fda5c4ba9eb0daadc2a26273a29a0b6 from qemu
Add field corresponding to CP0 Config2 to DisasContext. This is
needed for availability control via Config2 bits.
Backports commit 49735f76db25bf10f57973d5249f17151b801760 from qemu
Do following replacements:
ASE_DSPR2 -> ASE_DSP_R2
ASE_DSPR3 -> ASE_DSP_R3
MIPS_HFLAG_DSPR2 -> MIPS_HFLAG_DSP_R2
MIPS_HFLAG_DSPR3 -> MIPS_HFLAG_DSP_R3
check_dspr2() -> check_dsp_r2()
check_dspr3() -> check_dsp_r3()
and several other similar minor replacements.
Backports commit 908f6be1b9cbc270470230f805d6f7474ab3178d from qemu
Add infrastructure for availability control for DSP R3 ASE MIPS
instructions. Only BPOSGE32C currently belongs to DSP R3 ASE, but
this is likely to be changed in near future.
Backports commit 59e781fbf13a2dede15437d055b09d7ea120dcac from qemu
Increase the size of insn_flags holder size to 64 bits. This is
needed for future extensions since existing bits are almost all used.
Backports commit f9c9cd63e3dd84c5f052deec880ec92046bbe305 from qemu
Add a comment that contains a list all MXU instructions,
expressed in assembler mnemonics.
Backports commit 1d0e663c5f25345a6702d8a83c051b83f3462299 from qemu
Add a comment before each CP0 register section in CPUMIPSState
definition, thus visually separating these sections.
Backports commit 50e7edc5ac25af2faaacd1f91e177c7de7d696c3 from qemu
Add a comment with an overview of CP0 registers close to the
definition of their corresponding fields in CPUMIPSState.
Backports commit a86d421e18d58b32d6eaba1e79160e2b4e5a0a6c from qemu
Update BadInstr and BadInstrX registers for nanoMIPS. The same
support for pre-nanoMIPS remains unimplemented.
Backports commit 7a5f784aa215df6bf5d674b4003f8df43bf3b2d4 from qemu
Use bits from configuration registers for availability control
of MT ASE instructions, rather than only ISA_MT bit in insn_flags.
This is done by adding a field in hflags for MT bit, and adding
functions check_mt() and check_cp0_mt().
Backports commit 9affc1c59279f482ff145e0371926f79b6448e3e from qemu
Implement support for nanoMIPS LLWP/SCWP instructions. Beside
adding core functionality of these instructions, this patch adds
support for availability control via configuration bit XNP.
Backports commit 0b16dcd180bdbe3add9edea42c2374d427882661 from qemu
Add CP0_Config3 and CP0_Config5 to DisasContext structure. This is
needed for implementing availability control of various instructions.
Backports commit ab77fc611bf004dfd25ecad5b2c11261e32012e9 from qemu
Implement emulation of nanoMIPS EXTW instruction. EXTW instruction
is similar to the MIPS r6 ALIGN instruction, except that it counts
the other way and in bits instead of bytes. We therefore generalise
gen_align() function into a new gen_align_bits() function (which
counts in bits instead of bytes and optimises when bits = size of
the word), and implement gen_align() and a new gen_ext() based on
that. Since we need to know the word size to check for when the
number of bits == the word size, the opc argument is replaced with
a wordsz argument (either 32 or 64).
Backports commit 821f2008c3c708e0e33158039ab55673a0f04519 from qemu
Added a helper for ROTX based on the pseudocode from the
architecture spec. This instraction was not present in previous
MIPS instruction sets.
Backports commit e222f5067269392af489731221750976d0cf3c05 from qemu
Add emulation of nanoMIPS instructions situated in pool p_lsx, and
emulation of LSA instruction as well.
Backports commit eac5266459fb83e70fbf33f95c7c846f89df5c6a from qemu
Add emulation of SAVE16 and RESTORE.JRC16 instructions. Routines
gen_save(), gen_restore(), and gen_adjust_sp() are provided to support
this feature.
This patch at the same time provides function gen_op_addr_addi(). This
function will be used in emulation of some other nanoMIPS instructions.
Backports commit bf0718c59a4b27dd01346a7b5b9a183ed1b18fb7 from qemu
Add empty body and invocation of decode_nanomips_opc() if the bit
ISA_NANOMIPS32 is set in ctx->insn_flags.
Backports commit c533c0f4741be62501ef6c7f6ce77ffbfc2e4964 from qemu
Only if Config3.ISA is 3 (microMIPS), the mode should be switched in
cpu_state_reset(). Config3.ISA is 1 for nanoMIPS processors, and no mode
change should happen.
Backports commit 0bbc0396809f6caaaf96863dafe738e94f9b73ea from qemu
Add nanoMIPS opcodes. nanoMIPS instruction are organized by so-called
instruction pools. Each pool contains a set of opcodes, that in turn
can be instruction opcodes or instruction pool opcodes.
Backports commit 261c95a0e98e5e9b13c9c005a991b7e7dc27f38a from qemu
MFHC0 and MTHC0 used to handle EntryLo0 and EntryLo1 registers only,
and placing ELPA flag checks before switch statement were technically
correct. However, after adding handling more registers, these checks
should be moved to act only in cases of handling EntryLo0 and
EntryLo1.
Backports commit 59488dda1f16c0259bc2610d8d71686ef436c649 from qemu