Commit graph

2 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Clark 2e0c040062
RISC-V: Allow interrupt controllers to claim interrupts
We can't allow the supervisor to control SEIP as this would allow the
supervisor to clear a pending external interrupt which will result in
lost a interrupt in the case a PLIC is attached. The SEIP bit must be
hardware controlled when a PLIC is attached.

This logic was previously hard-coded so SEIP was always masked even
if no PLIC was attached. This patch adds riscv_cpu_claim_interrupts
so that the PLIC can register control of SEIP. In the case of models
without a PLIC (spike), the SEIP bit remains software controlled.

This interface allows for hardware control of supervisor timer and
software interrupts by other interrupt controller models.

Backports commit e3e7039cc24ecf47d81c091e8bb04552d6564ad8 from qemu
2019-03-19 23:48:12 -04:00
Lioncash b6f752970b
target/riscv: Initial introduction of the RISC-V target
This ports over the RISC-V architecture from Qemu. This is currently a
very barebones transition. No code hooking or any fancy stuff.
Currently, you can feed it instructions and query the CPU state itself.

This also allows choosing whether or not RISC-V 32-bit or RISC-V 64-bit
is desirable through Unicorn's interface as well.

Extremely basic examples of executing a single instruction have been
added to the samples directory to help demonstrate how to use the basic
functionality.
2019-03-08 21:46:10 -05:00