The M profile CPU's MPU has an awkward corner case which we
would like to implement with a different MMU index.
We can avoid having to bump the number of MMU modes ARM
uses, because some of our existing MMU indexes are only
used by non-M-profile CPUs, so we can borrow one.
To avoid that getting too confusing, clean up the code
to try to keep the two meanings of the index separate.
Instead of ARMMMUIdx enum values being identical to core QEMU
MMU index values, they are now the core index values with some
high bits set. Any particular CPU always uses the same high
bits (so eventually A profile cores and M profile cores will
use different bits). New functions arm_to_core_mmu_idx()
and core_to_arm_mmu_idx() convert between the two.
In general core index values are stored in 'int' types, and
ARM values are stored in ARMMMUIdx types.
Backports commit 8bd5c82030b2cb09d3eef6b444f1620911cc9fc5 from qemu
When identifying the DFSR format for an alignment fault, use
the mmu index that we are passed, rather than calling cpu_mmu_index()
to get the mmu index for the current CPU state. This doesn't actually
make any difference since the only cases where the current MMU index
differs from the index used for the load are the "unprivileged
load/store" instructions, and in that case the mmu index may
differ but the translation regime is the same (apart from the
"use from Hyp mode" case which is UNPREDICTABLE).
However it's the more logical thing to do.
Backports commit e517d95b63427fae9f03958dbc005c36b4ebf2cf from qemu
In tlb_fill() we construct a syndrome register value from a
fault status register value which is filled in by arm_tlb_fill().
arm_tlb_fill() returns FSR values which might be in the format
used with short-format page descriptors, or the format used
with long-format (LPAE) descriptors. The syndrome register
always uses LPAE-format FSR status codes.
It isn't actually possible to end up delivering a syndrome
register value to the guest for a fault which is reported
with a short-format FSR (that kind of stage 1 fault will only
happen for an AArch32 translation regime which doesn't have
a syndrome register, and can never be redirected to an AArch64
or Hyp exception level). Add an assertion which checks this,
and adjust the code so that we construct a syndrome with
an invalid status code, rather than allowing set bits in
the FSR input to randomly corrupt other fields in the syndrome.
Backports commit 65ed2ed90d9d81fd4b639029be850ea5651f919f from qemu
The WFE and YIELD instructions are really only hints and in TCG's case
they were useful to move the scheduling on from one vCPU to the next. In
the parallel context (MTTCG) this just causes an unnecessary cpu_exit
and contention of the BQL.
Backports commit c22edfebff29f63d793032e4fbd42a035bb73e27 from qemu
In BE32 mode, sub-word size watchpoints can fail to trigger because the
address of the access is adjusted in the opcode helpers before being
compared with the watchpoint registers. This patch reverses the address
adjustment before performing the comparison with the help of a new CPUClass
hook.
This version of the patch augments and tidies up comments a little.
Backports commit 40612000599e52e792d23c998377a0fa429c4036 from qemu
We've currently got 18 architectures in QEMU, and thus 18 target-xxx
folders in the root folder of the QEMU source tree. More architectures
(e.g. RISC-V, AVR) are likely to be included soon, too, so the main
folder of the QEMU sources slowly gets quite overcrowded with the
target-xxx folders.
To disburden the main folder a little bit, let's move the target-xxx
folders into a dedicated target/ folder, so that target-xxx/ simply
becomes target/xxx/ instead.
Backports commit fcf5ef2ab52c621a4617ebbef36bf43b4003f4c0 from qemu
2018-03-01 22:50:58 -05:00
Renamed from qemu/target-arm/op_helper.c (Browse further)