Now we have a working '-cpu max', the linux-user-only
'any' CPU is pretty much the same thing, so implement it
that way.
For the moment we don't add any of the extra feature bits
to the system-emulation "max", because we don't set the
ID register bits we would need to to advertise those
features as present.
Backports commit a0032cc5427d0d396aa0a9383ad9980533448ea4 from qemu
Add support for "-cpu max" for ARM guests. This CPU type behaves
like "-cpu host" when KVM is enabled, and like a system CPU with
the maximum possible feature set otherwise. (Note that this means
it won't be migratable across versions, as we will likely add
features to it in future.)
Backports commit bab52d4bba3f22921a690a887b4bd0342f2754cd from qemu
The cortex A53 TRM specifies that bits 24 and 25 of the L2CTLR register
specify the number of cores in the processor, not the total number of
cores in the system. To report this correctly on machines with multiple
CPU clusters (ARM's big.LITTLE or Xilinx's ZynqMP) we need to allow
the machine to overwrite this value. To do this let's add an optional
property.
Backports commit f9a697112ee64180354f98309a5d6b691cc8699d from qemu
A few block drivers will need to rename .bdrv_create options for their
QAPIfication, so let's have a helper function for that.
Backports commit bcebf102ccc3c6db327f341adc379fdf0673ca6b from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_tentox()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 6c25be6e30bda0e470f8f0b6b93d53a6efe469e8 from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_twotox()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 068f161536d9a28a5bc482f3de9c387b2fe5908d from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_etox()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 40ad087330bee5394c9e78c97f909f580be69b58 from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_log2()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 67b453ed73fe65949c24e6ca2b43f6816a89a301 from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_log10()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 248efb66fb88bc17c04a0d0f09a3539a43c80769 from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_logn()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 50067bd16fead5d78a283130efbf3e3b026de450 from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_lognp1()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 4b5c65b8f02a057bc1b77839b5012544f96fec80 from qemu
This functions is needed by upcoming m68k softfloat functions.
Source code copied for WinUAE (tag 3500)
(The WinUAE file has been copied from QEMU and has
the QEMU licensing notice)
Backports commit 9a069775a8087cbd6fa8c479b69be8d37bd90351 from qemu
This shares an cached empty FlatView among address spaces. The empty
FV is used every time when a root MR renders into a FV without memory
sections which happens when MR or its children are not enabled or
zero-sized. The empty_view is not NULL to keep the rest of memory
API intact; it also has a dispatch tree for the same reason.
On POWER8 with 255 CPUs, 255 virtio-net, 40 PCI bridges guest this halves
the amount of FlatView's in use (557 -> 260) and dispatch tables
(~800000 -> ~370000). In an unrelated experiment with 112 non-virtio
devices on x86 ("-M pc"), only 4 FlatViews are alive, and about ~2000
are created at startup.
Backports commit 092aa2fc65b7a35121616aad8f39d47b8f921618 from qemu
A container can be used instead of an alias to allow switching between
multiple subregions. In this case we cannot directly share the
subregions (since they only belong to a single parent), but if the
subregions are aliases we can in turn walk those.
This is not enough to remove all source of quadratic FlatView creation,
but it enables sharing of the PCI bus master FlatViews (and their
AddressSpaceDispatch structures) across all PCI devices. For 112
virtio-net-pci devices, boot time is reduced from 25 to 10 seconds and
memory consumption from 1.4 to 1 G.
Backports commit e673ba9af9bf8fd8e0f44025ac738b8285b3ed27 from qemu
This avoids usual memory_region_transaction_commit() which rebuilds
all FVs.
On POWER8 with 255 CPUs, 255 virtio-net, 40 PCI bridges guest this brings
down the boot time from 25s to 20s and reduces the amount of temporary FVs
allocated during machine constructon (~800000 -> ~640000) and amount of
temporary dispatch trees (~370000 -> ~300000), the total memory footprint
goes down (18G -> 17G).
Backports commit 202fc01b05572ecb258fdf4c5bd56cf6de8140c7 from qemu
Since FlatViews are shared now and ASes not, this gets rid of
address_space_init_shareable().
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit b516572f31c0ea0937cd9d11d9bd72dd83809886 from qemu
This creates a new AS object without any FlatView as
memory_region_transaction_commit() may want to reuse the empty FV.
Backports commit 67ace39b253ed5ae465275bc870f7e495547658b from qemu
This allows sharing flat views between address spaces (AS) when
the same root memory region is used when creating a new address space.
This is done by walking through all ASes and caching one FlatView per
a physical root MR (i.e. not aliased).
This removes search for duplicates from address_space_init_shareable() as
FlatViews are shared elsewhere and keeping as::ref_count correct seems
an unnecessary and useless complication.
This should cause no change and memory use or boot time yet.
Backports commit 967dc9b1194a9281124b2e1ce67b6c3359a2138f from qemu
Address spaces get to keep a root MR (alias or not) but FlatView stores
the actual MR as this is going to be used later on to decide whether to
share a particular FlatView or not.
Backports commit 89c177bbdd6cf8e50b3fd4831697d50e195d6432 from qemu
This renames some helpers to reflect better what they do.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 8629d3fcb77e9775e44d9051bad0fb5187925eae from qemu
We store AddressSpaceDispatch* in FlatView anyway so there is no need
to carry it from mem_add() to register_subpage/register_multipage.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 9950322a593ff900a860fb52938159461798a831 from qemu
FlatView's will be shared between AddressSpace's and subpage_t
and MemoryRegionSection cannot store AS anymore, hence this change.
In particular, for:
typedef struct subpage_t {
MemoryRegion iomem;
- AddressSpace *as;
+ FlatView *fv;
hwaddr base;
uint16_t sub_section[];
} subpage_t;
struct MemoryRegionSection {
MemoryRegion *mr;
- AddressSpace *address_space;
+ FlatView *fv;
hwaddr offset_within_region;
Int128 size;
hwaddr offset_within_address_space;
bool readonly;
};
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 166206845f7fd75e720e6feea0bb01957c8da07f from qemu
AS in ASD is only used to pass AS from mem_begin() to register_subpage()
to store it in MemoryRegionSection, we can do this directly now.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit c7752523787dc148f5ee976162e80ab594c386a1 from qemu
As we are going to share FlatView's between AddressSpace's,
and AddressSpaceDispatch is a structure to perform quick lookup
in FlatView, this moves ASD to FlatView.
After previosly open coded ASD rendering, we can also remove
as->next_dispatch as the new FlatView pointer is stored
on a stack and set to an AS atomically.
flatview_destroy() is executed under RCU instead of
address_space_dispatch_free() now.
This makes mem_begin/mem_commit to work with ASD and mem_add with FV
as later on mem_add will be taking FV as an argument anyway.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 66a6df1dc6d5b28cc3e65db0d71683fbdddc6b62 from qemu
machine_class_base_init() member name is allocated by
machine_class_base_init(), but not freed by
machine_class_finalize(). Simply freeing there doesn't work,
because DEFINE_PC_MACHINE() overwrites it with a literal string.
Fix DEFINE_PC_MACHINE() not to overwrite it, and add the missing
free to machine_class_finalize().
Backports commit 8ea753718b2d1a42e9ce7b8db9f5e4e1f330e827 from qemu
The script used for converting from QEMUMachine had used one
DEFINE_MACHINE() per machine registered. In cases where multiple
machines are registered from one source file, avoid the excessive
generation of module init functions by reverting this unrolling.
Backports commit 8a661aea0e7f6e776c6ebc9abe339a85b34fea1d from qemu
Convert all machines to use DEFINE_MACHINE() instead of QEMUMachine
automatically using a script.
Backports commit e264d29de28c5b0be3d063307ce9fb613b427cc3 from qemu
The macro will allow easy registration of a TYPE_MACHINE subclass, using
only the machine name and a MachineClass initialization function as
parameter.
Backports commit ed0b6de343448d1014b53bcf541041373322fa1c from qemu
Now all TYPE_MACHINE subclasses use MACHINE_TYPE_NAME to generate the
class name. So instead of requiring each subclass to set
MachineClass::name manually, we can now set it automatically at the
TYPE_MACHINE class_base_init() function.
Backports commit 98cec76a7076c4a38e16f1a9de170a7942b3be54 from qemu
Now that all non-abstract TYPE_MACHINE subclasses have the -machine
suffix, add an assert to ensure this will be always true.
Backports commit dcb3d601115eed77aef543fe3a920adc17544e06 from qemu
Machine class names should use the "-machine" suffix to allow
class-name-based machine class lookup to work. Rename the arm virt
machine class using the MACHINE_TYPE_NAME macro.
Backports commit 64d3459c8586c8821970cbc99450340278507cfe from qemu
Add "secure" virt machine specific property to allow override of the
default secure state configuration. By default, when using the QEMU
-kernel command line argument, virt machines boot into NS/SVC. When using
the QEMU -bios command line argument, virt machines boot into S/SVC.
The secure state can be changed from the default specifying the secure
state as a machine property. For example, the below command line would disable
security extensions on a -kernel Linux boot:
aarch64-softmmu/qemu-system-aarch64
-machine type=virt,secure=off
-kernel ...
Backports commit 083a58906cb32731dd98a93fcf451ec7718c0924 from qemu
Switch virt qemu machine support to use the newer object type, class, and
instance model. Added virt TypeInfo with static registration along with virt
specific class and machine structs. Also added virt class initialization
method.
Backports commit c29196904b2bad015edc553a5693c5c9e6f8177a from qemu
The macro will be useful to ensure the machine class names follow the
right format to make machine class lookup by class name work correctly.
Backports commit c84a8f01b2a5d8bf98c447796d4a747333a5b1fd from qemu
All pc-i440fx and pc-q35 init functions simply call the corresponding
compat function and then call the main init function. Use a macro to
generate that code.
Backports commit 99fbeafee8b568e796863980365080abdb8d675e from qemu
This removes the following fields from QEMUMachine: family, alias,
reset, hot_add_cpu, units_per_default_bus, no_serial, no_parallel,
use_virtcon, use_sclp, no_floppy, no_cdrom, default_display,
compat_props, and hw_version.
The only users of those fields were already converted to use QOM and
MachineClass directly, so they are not needed anymore.
Backports commit d48f4fa69eb3efb03a2efe2e4606a97a17cf222f from qemu
Now that we have a DEFINE_PC_MACHINE helper macro that just requires an
initialization function, it is trivial to convert them to register a QOM
machine class directly, instead of using QEMUMachine.
Backports commit 865906f7fdadd2732441ab158787f81f6a212bfe from qemu
This removes the following fields from QEMUMachine: family, alias,
reset, hot_add_cpu, units_per_default_bus, no_serial, no_parallel,
use_virtcon, use_sclp, no_floppy, no_cdrom, default_display,
compat_props, and hw_version.
The only users of those fields were already converted to use QOM and
MachineClass directly, so they are not needed anymore.
Backports commit d48f4fa69eb3efb03a2efe2e4606a97a17cf222f from qemu
Simplify a bit the code by using g_strdup_printf() and store it in a
non-const value so casting is no longer needed, and ownership is
clearer.
Backports commit f73480c36f49562556b80bb5bf8acc45e20dcca1 from qemu
Now that CPUs show up in the help text of "-device ?",
we should group them into an appropriate category.
Backports commit ba31cc7226ebcee639f18faa90c1542bd364fba3 from qemu
For a very long time we have used 'uname -s' as our fallback if
we don't identify the target OS using a compiler #define. This
obviously doesn't work for cross-compilation, and we've had
a comment suggesting we fix this in configure for a long time.
Since we now have an exhaustive list of which OSes we can run
on (thanks to commit 898be3e0415 making an unrecognized OS
be a fatal error), we know which ones we're missing.
Add check_define tests for the remaining OSes we support. The
defines checked are based on ones we already use in the codebase for
identifying the host OS (with the exception of GNU/kFreeBSD).
We can now set bogus_os immediately rather than doing it later.
We leave the comment about uname being bad untouched, since
there is still a use of it for the fallback for unrecognized
host CPU type.
Backports commit 951fedfceeda1b09ac8aa1f5263288b65e13caca from qemu
Currently if the user's compiler works for creating .o files but
their linker is broken such that compiling an executable from a
C file does not work, we will report a misleading error message
about the compiler not supporting __thread (since that happens
to be the first test we run which requires a working linker).
Explicitly check that compile_prog works as well as compile_object,
so that people whose toolchain setup is broken get a more helpful
error message.
Backports commit 0ef74c7496fd3c526b2259f86326eca4b3a03b78 from qemu
The change in commit 898be3e0415c6d which made completely
unrecognized OSes cause an error_exit "Unsupported host OS"
has some unfortunate unintended effects:
* if you run 'configure --help' on an unsupported host OS
(eg if intending to use it as a build machine for a
cross compile to a supported host) then the message
is printed instead of --help
* if the C compiler doesn't work or is missing (eg if
you passed an incorrect --cross-prefix by mistake)
the message is printed instead of the more useful
'compiler does not exist or does not work' message
Fix this by postponing the error_exit in this situation
until later, when we have already identified the more
useful cases for this.
The long term fix for this would be to move handling
of --help much further up in the configure script,
and make its output not dependent on checks that configure
runs. However for 2.9 this would be too invasive.
Backports commit fb59dabd4fa7e6586824ac3012073b943fc8dc79 from qemu
We plan to drop support in a future QEMU release for host OSes
and host architectures for which we have no test machine where
we can build and run tests. For the 2.9 release, make configure
print a warning if it is run on such a host, so that the user
has some warning of the plans and can volunteer to help us
maintain the port if they need it to continue to function.
This commit flags up as deprecated the CPU architectures:
* ia64
* sparc
* anything which we don't have a TCG port for
(and which was presumably using TCI)
and the OSes:
* GNU/kFreeBSD
* DragonFly BSD
* NetBSD
* OpenBSD
* Solaris
* AIX
* Haiku
It also makes entirely unrecognized host OS strings be
rejected rather than treated as if they were Linux (which
likely never worked).
Backports commit 898be3e0415c6d614395c087ef1e91210797cda7 from qemu
Solaris 9 was released in 2002, its successor Solaris 10 was
released in 2005, and Solaris 9 was end-of-lifed in 2014.
Nobody has stepped forward to express interest in supporting
Solaris of any flavour, so removing support for the ancient
versions seems uncontroversial.
In particular, this allows us to remove a use of 'uname'
in configure that won't work if you're cross-compiling.
Backports commit 91939262ffcd3c85ea6a4793d3029326eea1d649 from qemu
Clang 3.9 passes the CONFIG_AVX2_OPT configure test. However, the
supplied <cpuid.h> does not contain the bit_AVX2 define that we use
when detecting whether the routine can be enabled.
Introduce a qemu-specific header that uses the compiler's definition
of __cpuid et al, but supplies any missing bit_* definitions needed.
This avoids introducing any extra ifdefs to util/bufferiszero.c, and
allows quite a few to be removed from tcg/i386/tcg-target.inc.c.
Backports commit 5dd8990841a9e331d9d4838a116291698208cbb6 from qemu
We dropped support for ia64 host CPUs in the 2.11 release (removing
the TCG backend for it, and advertising the support as being
completely removed in the changelog). However there are a few bits
and pieces of code still floating about. Remove those, too.
We can drop the check in configure for "ia64 or hppa host?"
entirely, because we don't support hppa hosts either any more.
Backports commit b1cef6d02f84bd842fb94a6109ad4e2ad873e8e5 from qemu
Since 218bb57dd79d6843e0592c30a82ea8c1fddc74a5, the -fsanitize=address
check fails with:
config-temp/qemu-conf.c:3:20: error: integer overflow in expression [-Werror=overflow]
return INT32_MIN / -1;
Interestingly, UBSAN check doesn't produce a compile time warning.
Use a test that doesn't have compile time warnings, and make it
specific to UBSAN check.
Backports commit b9f44da2f2cdc1a1a1be5aed0c46bd7fcc69cf4a from qemu
We used to generate first test and later QGA QAPI code into
qapi-generated/. Commit b93b63f574 moved the test code to tests/.
Commit 54c2e50205 moved the QGA code to qga/qapi-generated/. The
directory has been unused since.
Backports commit 418b1d0ae3a2cc992659f626a2a3f11944e0b259 from qemu
Move qapi-schema.json to qapi/, so it's next to its modules, and all
files get generated to qapi/, not just the ones generated for modules.
Consistently name the generated files qapi-MODULE.EXT:
qmp-commands.[ch] become qapi-commands.[ch], qapi-event.[ch] become
qapi-events.[ch], and qmp-introspect.[ch] become qapi-introspect.[ch].
This gets rid of the temporary hacks in scripts/qapi/commands.py,
scripts/qapi/events.py, and scripts/qapi/common.py.
Backports commit eb815e248f50cde9ab86eddd57eca5019b71ca78 from qemu
The previous commit improved compile time by including less of the
generated QAPI headers. This is impossible for stuff defined directly
in qapi-schema.json, because that ends up in headers that that pull in
everything.
Move everything but include directives from qapi-schema.json to new
sub-module qapi/misc.json, then include just the "misc" shard where
possible.
It's possible everywhere, except:
* monitor.c needs qmp-command.h to get qmp_init_marshal()
* monitor.c, ui/vnc.c and the generated qapi-event-FOO.c need
qapi-event.h to get enum QAPIEvent
Perhaps we'll get rid of those some other day.
Adding a type to qapi/migration.json now recompiles some 120 instead
of 2300 out of 5100 objects.
Backports commit 112ed241f5d9a411dbca92bdf597151cb853c6a7 from qemu
In my "build everything" tree, a change to the types in
qapi-schema.json triggers a recompile of about 4800 out of 5100
objects.
The previous commit split up qmp-commands.h, qmp-event.h, qmp-visit.h,
qapi-types.h. Each of these headers still includes all its shards.
Reduce compile time by including just the shards we actually need.
To illustrate the benefits: adding a type to qapi/migration.json now
recompiles some 2300 instead of 4800 objects. The next commit will
improve it further.
Backports commit 9af2398977a78d37bf184d6ff6bd04c72bfbf006 from qemu
Our qapi-schema.json is composed of modules connected by include
directives, but the generated code is monolithic all the same: one
qapi-types.h with all the types, one qapi-visit.h with all the
visitors, and so forth. These monolithic headers get included all
over the place. In my "build everything" tree, adding a QAPI type
recompiles about 4800 out of 5100 objects.
We wouldn't write such monolithic headers by hand. It stands to
reason that we shouldn't generate them, either.
Split up generated qapi-types.h to mirror the schema's modular
structure: one header per module. Name the main module's header
qapi-types.h, and sub-module D/B.json's header D/qapi-types-B.h.
Mirror the schema's includes in the headers, so that qapi-types.h gets
you everything exactly as before. If you need less, you can include
one or more of the sub-module headers. To be exploited shortly.
Split up qapi-types.c, qapi-visit.h, qapi-visit.c, qmp-commands.h,
qmp-commands.c, qapi-event.h, qapi-event.c the same way.
qmp-introspect.h, qmp-introspect.c and qapi.texi remain monolithic.
The split of qmp-commands.c duplicates static helper function
qmp_marshal_output_str() in qapi-commands-char.c and
qapi-commands-misc.c. This happens when commands returning the same
type occur in multiple modules. Not worth avoiding.
Since I'm going to rename qapi-event.[ch] to qapi-events.[ch], and
qmp-commands.[ch] to qapi-commands.[ch], name the shards that way
already, to reduce churn. This requires temporary hacks in
commands.py and events.py. Similarly, c_name() must temporarily
be taught to munge '/' in common.py. They'll go away with the rename.
Backports commit 252dc3105fc494182e236e97fe20f2d6b1d652cb from qemu
guardname() fails to return a valid C identifier for arguments
containing anything but [A-Za-z0-9_.-']. Fix that. Don't bother
protecting ticklish identifiers; header guards are all-caps, and no
ticklish identifiers are.
Backports commit f9c146399dabefb8cd13c9c467a9e710af15ea70 from qemu
Linking code from multiple separate QAPI schemata into the same
program is possible, but involves some weirdness around built-in
types:
* We generate code for built-in types into .c only with option
--builtins. The user is responsible for generating code for exactly
one QAPI schema per program with --builtins.
* We generate code for built-in types into .h regardless of
--builtins, but guarded by #ifndef QAPI_VISIT_BUILTIN. Because all
copies of this code are exactly the same, including any combination
of these headers works.
Replace this contraption by something more conventional: generate code
for built-in types into their very own files: qapi-builtin-types.c,
qapi-builtin-visit.c, qapi-builtin-types.h, qapi-builtin-visit.h, but
only with --builtins. Obey --output-dir, but ignore --prefix for
them.
Make qapi-types.h include qapi-builtin-types.h. With multiple
schemata you now have multiple qapi-types.[ch], but only one
qapi-builtin-types.[ch]. Same for qapi-visit.[ch] and
qapi-builtin-visit.[ch].
Bonus: if all you need is built-in stuff, you can include a much
smaller header. To be exploited shortly.
Backports commit cdb6610ae4283720037bae2af1f78bd40eb5fe71 from qemu
The use of QAPIGen is rather shallow so far: most of the output
accumulation is not converted. Take the next step: convert output
accumulation in the code-generating visitor classes. Helper functions
outside these classes are not converted.
Backports commit 71b3f0459c460c9e16a47372ccddbfa6e2c7aadf from qemu
The include directive permits modular QAPI schemata, but the generated
code is monolithic all the same. To permit generating modular code,
the front end needs to pass more information on inclusions to the back
ends. The commit before last added the necessary information to the
parse tree. This commit adds it to the intermediate representation
and its QAPISchemaVisitor. A later commit will use this to to
generate modular code.
New entity QAPISchemaInclude represents inclusions. Call new visitor
method visit_include() for it, so visitors can see the sub-modules a
module includes.
Note that unlike other entities, QAPISchemaInclude has no name, and is
therefore not added to entity_dict.
New QAPISchemaEntity attribute @module names the entity's source file.
Call new visitor method visit_module() when it changes during a visit,
so visitors can keep track of the module being visited.
Backports commit cf40a0a5c2e1091846974cc8cc95a60e0b1db4af from qemu
The generators' conversion to visitors (merge commit 9e72681d16)
changed the processing order of entities from source order to
alphabetical order. The next commit needs source order, so change it
back.
Backports commit 8a84767cc4f7e00e5dd62435c32be9e7d2cbe4d3 from qemu
The parse tree is a list of expressions. Except include expressions
currently get replaced by the included file's parse tree.
Instead of throwing away the include expression, keep it with the file
name expanded so you don't have to track the including file's
directory to make sense of it.
A future commit will put this include expression to use.
Backports commit 97f0249474d19c1d60fb9d934c8bc08625a619ca from qemu
Error messages print absolute file names of included files even if the
user gave a relative one on the command line:
$ PYTHONPATH=scripts python -B tests/qapi-schema/test-qapi.py tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle.json
In file included from tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle.json:1:
In file included from /work/armbru/qemu/tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle-b.json:1:
/work/armbru/qemu/tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle-c.json:1: Inclusion loop for include-cycle.json
Improve this to
In file included from tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle.json:1:
In file included from tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle-b.json:1:
tests/qapi-schema/include-cycle-c.json:1: Inclusion loop for include-cycle.json
The error message when an include file can't be opened prints the
include directive's file name, which is relative to the including
file. Change this to print the file name relative to the working
directory. Visible in tests/qapi-schema/include-no-file.err.
Backports commit af97502ce9c648ae5c746b9e562d6e4586f02eee from qemu
A massive number of objects depends on QAPI-generated headers. In my
"build everything" tree, it's roughly 4800 out of 5100. This is
particularly annoying when only some of the generated files change,
say for a doc fix.
Improve qapi-gen.py to touch its output files only if they actually
change. Rebuild time for a QAPI doc fix drops from many minutes to a
few seconds. Rebuilds get faster for certain code changes, too. For
instance, adding a simple QMP event now recompiles less than 200
instead of 4800 objects. But adding a QAPI type is as bad as ever;
we've clearly got more work to do.
Backports commit 907b846653fb3757bf2ab98d6d66f92df34d875f from qemu
Whenever qapi-schema.json changes, we run six programs eleven times to
update eleven files. Similar for qga/qapi-schema.json. This is
silly. Replace the six programs by a single program that spits out
all eleven files.
The programs become modules in new Python package qapi, along with the
helper library. This requires moving them to scripts/qapi/. While
moving them, consistently drop executable mode bits.
Backports commit fb0bc835e56b894cbc7236294921e5393c786ad8 from qemu
The next commit will introduce a common driver program for all
generators. The generators need to be modules for that. qapi2texi.py
already is. Make the other generators follow suit.
The changes are actually trivial. Obvious in the diffs once you view
them with whitespace changes ignored.
Backports commit 26df4e7fab06422b21e11d039c64243ca4003147 from qemu
In preparation of the next commit, which will turn the generators into
modules. These global variables will become local to main() then.
Backports commit 93b564c444edc41901d0f7e922833eeb751f8249 from qemu
These classes encapsulate accumulating and writing output.
Convert C code generation to QAPIGenC and QAPIGenH. The conversion is
rather shallow: most of the output accumulation is not converted.
Left for later.
The indentation machinery uses a single global variable indent_level,
even though we generally interleave creation of a .c and its .h. It
should become instance variable of QAPIGenC. Also left for later.
Documentation generation isn't converted, and QAPIGenDoc isn't used.
This will change shortly.
Backports commit 47a6ea9aab1d857015684cda387ffba05a036721 from qemu
Rename the variable holding the QAPISchemaGenFOOVisitor from gen to
vis, to avoid confusion in the next commit.
Backports commit d46eec4260540d83bafba91608842ab03dabf339 from qemu
Each generator carries a copyright notice for the generator itself,
and another one for the files it generates. Only the former have been
updated along the way, the latter have not, and are all out of date.
Fix by copying the generator's copyright notice to the generated files
instead. Note that the fix doesn't copy the "Authors:" part; the
generated files' outdated Authors list goes away without replacement.
Backports commit 5ddeec83eb0284b52bb3d496a49ba1657069ed45 from qemu
Every generator has separate boilerplate for .h and .c, and their
differences are boring. All of them repeat the license note.
Reduce the repetition as follows. Move common text like the license
note to common open_output(), next to the existing common text there.
For each generator, replace the two separate descriptions by a single
one.
While there, emit an "automatically generated" note into generated
documentation, too.
Backports commit c263de3f419be945499ff7e6bd7512702f8bd522 from qemu
Since the commit af7a06bac7d3abb2da48ef3277d2a415772d2ae8:
`casa [..](10), .., ..` (and probably others alternate space instructions)
triggers a data access exception when the MMU is disabled.
When we enter get_asi(...) dc->mem_idx is set to MMU_PHYS_IDX when the MMU
is disabled. Just keep mem_idx unchanged in this case so we passthrough the
MMU when it is disabled.
Backports commit 6e10f37c86068e35151f982c976a85f1bec07ef2 from qemu
Using local m68k floatx80_getman(), floatx80_getexp(), floatx80_scale()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
Backports commit 0d379c1709aa6b2d09dd3b493bfdf3a5fe6debcd from qemu
Since f3218a8 ("softfloat: add floatx80 constants")
floatx80_infinity is defined but never used.
This patch updates floatx80 functions to use
this definition.
This allows to define a different default Infinity
value on m68k: the m68k FPU defines infinity with
all bits set to zero in the mantissa.
Backports commit 0f605c889ca3fe9744166ad4149d0dff6dacb696 from qemu
Using a local m68k floatx80_mod()
[copied from previous:
Written by Andreas Grabher for Previous, NeXT Computer Emulator.]
The quotient byte of the FPSR is updated with
the result of the operation.
Backports commit 591596b77a1872d0652e666271ca055e57ea1e21 from qemu
Move fpu/softfloat-macros.h to include/fpu/
Export floatx80 functions to be used by target floatx80
specific implementations.
Exports:
propagateFloatx80NaN(), extractFloatx80Frac(),
extractFloatx80Exp(), extractFloatx80Sign(),
normalizeFloatx80Subnormal(), packFloatx80(),
roundAndPackFloatx80(), normalizeRoundAndPackFloatx80()
Also exports packFloat32() that will be used to implement
m68k fsinh, fcos, fsin, ftan operations.
Backports commit 88857aca93f6ec8f372fb9c8201394b0e5582034 from qemu
The integer size check was already outside of the opcode switch;
move the floating-point size check outside as well. Unify the
size vs index adjustment between fp and integer paths.
Backports commit 449f264b1749ac0e59c58bbc2eacdb3dc302c2bf from qemu
Add a Cortex-M33 definition. The M33 is an M profile CPU
which implements the ARM v8M architecture, including the
M profile Security Extension.
Backports commit c7b26382fee8b745c6e903c85281babf30c2cb7c from qemu
The Cortex-M33 allows the system to specify the reset value of the
secure Vector Table Offset Register (VTOR) by asserting config
signals. In particular, guest images for the MPS2 AN505 board rely
on the MPS2's initial VTOR being correct for that board.
Implement a QEMU property so board and SoC code can set the reset
value to the correct value.
Backports commit 38e2a77c9d6876e58f45cabb1dd9a6a60c22b39e from qemu
This includes FMOV, FABS, FNEG, FSQRT and FRINT[NPMZAXI]. We re-use
existing helpers to achieve this.
Backports commit c2c08713a6a5846bbe601d4d1b4f9708ba77efdc from qemu
This covers the encoding group:
Advanced SIMD scalar three same FP16
As all the helpers are already there it is simply a case of calling the
existing helpers in the scalar context.
Backports commit 7c93b7741b29b3ffda81a6e9525771b4409db99f from qemu
I only needed to do a little light re-factoring to support the
half-precision helpers.
Backports commit 5c36d89567cfd049a7c59ff219639f788225068f from qemu
Much like recpe the ARM ARM has simplified the pseudo code for the
calculation which is done on a fixed point 9 bit integer maths. So
while adding f16 we can also clean this up to be a little less heavy
on the floating point and just return the fractional part and leave
the calle's to do the final packing of the result.
Backports commit d719cbc7641991d16b891ffbbfc3a16a04e37b9a from qemu
Also removes a load of symbols that seem unnecessary from the header_gen script
It looks like the ARM ARM has simplified the pseudo code for the
calculation which is done on a fixed point 9 bit integer maths. So
while adding f16 we can also clean this up to be a little less heavy
on the floating point and just return the fractional part and leave
the calle's to do the final packing of the result.
Backports commit 5eb70735af1c0b607bf2671a53aff3710cc1672f from qemu
Neither of these operations alter the floating point status registers
so we can do a pure bitwise operation, either squashing any sign
bit (ABS) or inverting it (NEG).
Backports commit 15f8a233c8c023dbc77b6fe6cd7c79eac9bee263 from qemu
I re-use the existing handle_2misc_fcmp_zero handler and tweak it
slightly to deal with the half-precision case.
Backports commit 7d4dd1a73a023f75c893623710e43743501b318e from qemu
This adds the full range of half-precision floating point to integral
instructions.
Backports commit 6109aea2d954891027acba64a13f1f1c7463cfac from qemu
This actually covers two different sections of the encoding table:
Advanced SIMD scalar two-register miscellaneous FP16
Advanced SIMD two-register miscellaneous (FP16)
The difference between the two is covered by a combination of Q (bit
30) and S (bit 28). Notably the FRINTx instructions are only
available in the vector form.
This is just the decode skeleton which will be filled out by later
patches.
Backports commit 5d432be6fd6efe37833ac82623c3abd35117b421 from qemu
A bunch of the vectorised bitwise operations just operate on larger
chunks at a time. We can do the same for the new half-precision
operations by introducing some TWOHALFOP helpers which work on each
half of a pair of half-precision operations at once.
Hopefully all this hoop jumping will get simpler once we have
generically vectorised helpers here.
Backports commit 6089030c7322d8f96b54fb9904e53b0f464bb8fe from qemu
The helpers use the new re-factored muladd support in SoftFloat for
the float16 work.
Backports commit 5d265064cf30daaacce5a4ce9945fc573015fb5f from qemu
As some of the constants here will also be needed
elsewhere (specifically for the upcoming SVE support) we move them out
to softfloat.h.
Backports commit 026e2d6ef74000afb9049f46add4b94f594c8fb3 from qemu
Backports commit 2deb992b767d28035fac3b374c7730494ff0b43d from qemu
Also backports the fp16 changes introduced in commit f566c0474a9b9bbd9ed248607e4007e24d3358c0
These use the generic float16_compare functionality which in turn uses
the common float_compare code from the softfloat re-factor.
Backports commit d32adeae1a71a8e71374fa48d3d6ab0ad4c23e94 from qemu
The fprintf is only there for debugging as the skeleton is added to,
it will be removed once the skeleton is complete.
Backports commit 372087348d561e7f4051d7b32609bda417092ddf from qemu
This is the initial decode skeleton for the Advanced SIMD three same
instruction group.
The fprintf is purely to aid debugging as the additional instructions
are added. It will be removed once the group is complete.
Backports commit 376e8d6cda985df31c8561db4b7ea365b6fe6f87 from qemu
This implements the half-precision variants of the across vector
reduction operations. This involves a re-factor of the reduction code
which more closely matches the ARM ARM order (and handles 8 element
reductions).
Backports commit 807cdd504283c11addcd7ea95ba594bbddc86fe4 from qemu
As the rounding mode is now split between FP16 and the rest of
floating point we need to be explicit when tweaking it. Instead of
passing the CPU env we now pass the appropriate fpst pointer directly.
Backports commit 9b04991686785e18b18a36d193b68f08f7c91648 from qemu
Half-precision flush to zero behaviour is controlled by a separate
FZ16 bit in the FPCR. To handle this we pass a pointer to
fp_status_fp16 when working on half-precision operations. The value of
the presented FPCR is calculated from an amalgam of the two when read.
Backports commit d81ce0ef2c4f1052fcdef891a12499eca3084db7 from qemu
This allows us to explicitly pass float16 to helpers rather than
assuming uint32_t and dealing with the result. Of course they will be
passed in i32 sized registers by default.
Backports commit 35737497008aeabce5dc381a41d3827bec486192 from qemu
The register definitions for VMIDR and VMPIDR have separate
reginfo structs for the AArch32 and AArch64 registers. However
the 32-bit versions are wrong:
* they use offsetof instead of offsetoflow32 to mark where
the 32-bit value lives in the uint64_t CPU state field
* they don't mark themselves as ARM_CP_ALIAS
In particular this means that if you try to use an Arm guest CPU
which enables EL2 on a big-endian host it will assert at reset:
target/arm/cpu.c:114: cp_reg_check_reset: Assertion `oldvalue == newvalue' failed.
because the reset of the 32-bit register writes to the top
half of the uint64_t.
Correct the errors in the structures.
Backports commit 36476562d57a3b64bbe86db26e63677dd21907c5 from qemu
This is a little bit of a departure from softfloat's original approach
as we skip the estimate step in favour of a straight iteration. There
is a minor optimisation to avoid calculating more bits of precision
than we need however this still brings a performance drop, especially
for float64 operations.
Backports commit c13bb2da9eedfbc5886c8048df1bc1114b285fb0 from qemu
The compare function was already expanded from a macro. I keep the
macro expansion but move most of the logic into a compare_decomposed.
Backports commit 0c4c90929143a530730e2879204a55a30bf63758 from qemu
Let's do the same re-factor treatment for minmax functions. I still
use the MACRO trick to expand but now all the checking code is common.
Backports commit 89360067071b1844bf745682e18db7dde74cdb8d from qemu
This is one of the simpler manipulations you could make to a floating
point number.
Backports commit 0bfc9f195209593e91a98cf2233753f56a2e5c02 from qemu
These are considerably simpler as the lower order integers can just
use the higher order conversion function. As the decomposed fractional
part is a full 64 bit rounding and inexact handling comes from the
pack functions.
Backports commit c02e1fb80b553d47420f7492de4bc590c2461a86 from qemu
We share the common int64/uint64_pack_decomposed function across all
the helpers and simply limit the final result depending on the final
size.
Backports commit ab52f973a504f8de0c5df64631ba4caea70a7d9e from qemu
We can now add float16_round_to_int and use the common round_decomposed and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 round_to_int functions.
Backports commit dbe4d53a590f5689772b683984588b3cf6df163e from qemu
We can now add float16_muladd and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 muladd functions.
Backports commit d446830a3aac33e7221e361dad3ab1e1892646cb from qemu
We can now add float16_div and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 versions.
Backports commit cf07323d494f4bc225e405688c2e455c3423cc40 from qemu
We can now add float16_mul and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 versions.
Backports commit 74d707e2cc1e406068acad8e5559cd2584b1073a from qemu
We can now add float16_add/sub and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 add and sub functions.
Backports commit 6fff216769cf7eaa3961c85dee7a72838696d365 from qemu
We can now add float16_add/sub and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 add and sub functions.
Backports commit 6fff216769cf7eaa3961c85dee7a72838696d365 from qemu
These structures pave the way for generic softfloat helper routines
that will operate on fully decomposed numbers.
Backports commit a90119b5a2c174250601be6503b91e5c9df6e83b from qemu
This is pure code-motion during re-factoring as the helpers will be
needed earlier.
Backports commit d97544c94a37371347402bcbee19dd3748d70e48 from qemu
This defines the same set of common constants for float 16 as defined
for 32 and 64 bit floats. These are often used by target helper
functions. I've also removed constants that are not used by anybody.
Backports commit efd4829edfa036c5506a16d05c91268faa1f6332 from qemu
This will be required when expanding the MINMAX() macro for 16
bit/half-precision operations.
Backports commit 28136775cd99c628f7d7c642b04eb87f062efef8 from qemu
As cpu.h is another typically widely included file which doesn't need
full access to the softfloat API we can remove the includes from here
as well. Where they do need types it's typically for float_status and
the rounding modes so we move that to softfloat-types.h as well.
As a result of not having softfloat in every cpu.h call we now need to
add it to various helpers that do need the full softfloat.h
definitions.
Backports commit 24f91e81b65fcdd0552d1f0fcb0ea7cfe3829c19 from qemu
The main culprit here is bswap.h which pulled in softfloat.h so it
could use the types in its CPU_Float* and ldfl/stfql functions. As
bswap.h is very widely included this added a compile dependency every
time we touch softfloat.h. Move the typedefs for each float type into
their own file so we don't re-build the world every time we tweak the
main softfloat.h header.
Backports commit cfd88fc6f2722def193f5ef271381d8f6e2a2526 from qemu
It's not actively built and when enabled things fail to compile. I'm
not sure the type-checking is really helping here. Seeing as we "own"
our softfloat now lets remove the cruft.
Backports commit a9579fff616563ca34977af68c9646c8f7be1120 from qemu
This will be required when expanding the MINMAX() macro for 16
bit/half-precision operations.
Backports commit 210cbd4910ae9e41e0a1785b96890ea2c291b381 from qemu
The v8M architecture includes hardware support for enforcing
stack pointer limits. We don't implement this behaviour yet,
but provide the MSPLIM and PSPLIM stack pointer limit registers
as reads-as-written, so that when we do implement the checks
in future this won't break guest migration.
Backports commit 57bb31568114023f67680d6fe478ceb13c51aa7d from qemu
In commit 50f11062d4c896 we added support for MSR/MRS access
to the NS banked special registers, but we forgot to implement
the support for writing to CONTROL_NS. Correct the omission.
Backports commit 6eb3a64e2a96f5ced1f7896042b01f002bf0a91f from qemu
We were previously making the system control register (SCR)
just RAZ/WI. Although we don't implement the functionality
this register controls, we should at least provide the state,
including the banked state for v8M.
Backports register related changes in commit 24ac0fb129f9ce9dd96901b2377fc6271dc55b2b from qemu
M profile cores have a similar setup for cache ID registers
to A profile:
* Cache Level ID Register (CLIDR) is a fixed value
* Cache Type Register (CTR) is a fixed value
* Cache Size ID Registers (CCSIDR) are a bank of registers;
which one you see is selected by the Cache Size Selection
Register (CSSELR)
The only difference is that they're in the NVIC memory mapped
register space rather than being coprocessor registers.
Implement the M profile view of them.
Since neither Cortex-M3 nor Cortex-M4 implement caches,
we don't need to update their init functions and can leave
the ctr/clidr/ccsidr[] fields in their ARMCPU structs at zero.
Newer cores (like the Cortex-M33) will want to be able to
set these ID registers to non-zero values, though.
Backports commit 43bbce7fbef22adf687dd84934fd0b2f8df807a8 from qemu
Instead of hardcoding the values of M profile ID registers in the
NVIC, use the fields in the CPU struct. This will allow us to
give different M profile CPU types different ID register values.
This commit includes the addition of the missing ID_ISAR5,
which exists as RES0 in both v7M and v8M.
(The values of the ID registers might be wrong for the M4 --
this commit leaves the behaviour there unchanged.)
Backports commit 5a53e2c1dc939fea1af92cc126ee546d8211d412 from qemu
When storing to an AdvSIMD FP register, all of the high
bits of the SVE register are zeroed. Therefore, call it
more often with is_q as a parameter.
Backports commit 4ff55bcb0ee6452b768835f86d94bd727185f812 from qemu
This reverts commit 42a77f1ce4934b243df003f95bda88530631387a.
The primary intention of this change was to silence messages
like
make[1]: '/home/berrange/src/virt/qemu/capstone/libcapstone.a' is up to date.
which we get when calling make recursively with explicit
targets.
The problem is that this change affected every make target,
not merely the targets that triggered these "is up to date"
messages. As a result any targets that were not invoking
commands via "$(call quiet-command ...)" suddenly become
silent. This is particularly bad for "make install" which
now appears todo nothing.
Rather than go through every make rule and try to identify
places where we now need to explicitly print a message to
show work taking place, just revert the change.
To address the original problem of silencing "is up to date"
messages, we simply add --quiet to the SUBDIR_MAKEVARS
variable, so it only affects us on recursive make calls.
Backports commit 8cc357b5a8dfba8ed11d1ce376afbc4ea35677a9 from qemu
Check for the presence of posix_memalign() in the configure script,
not using "defined(_POSIX_C_SOURCE) && !defined(__sun__)". This
lets qemu use posix_memalign() on NetBSD versions that have it,
instead of falling back to valloc() which is wasteful when the
required alignment is smaller than a page.
Backports commit 9bc5a7193fb422ee53187601eba577ee5d195522 from qemu
This cleanup makes the number of objects depending on qapi/qmp/qdict.h
drop from 4550 (out of 4743) to 368 in my "build everything" tree.
For qapi/qmp/qobject.h, the number drops from 4552 to 390.
While there, separate #include from file comment with a blank line.
Backports commit 452fcdbc49c59884c8c284268d64baa24fea11e1 from qemu
This cleanup makes the number of objects depending on qapi/qmp/qlist.h
drop from 4551 (out of 4743) to 16 in my "build everything" tree.
While there, separate #include from file comment with a blank line.
Backports commit 47e6b297e76007c04a1e9c492006fe093d932cd9 from qemu
This generic function (along with its implementations for different
types) determines whether two QObjects are equal.
Backports commit b38dd678a21582e03ecd2dec76ccf8290455628a from qemu
The macro expansions of qdict_put_TYPE() and qlist_append_TYPE() need
qbool.h, qnull.h, qnum.h and qstring.h to compile. We include qnull.h
and qnum.h in the headers, but not qbool.h and qstring.h. Works,
because we include those wherever the macros get used.
Open-coding these helpers is of dubious value. Turn them into
functions and drop the includes from the headers.
This cleanup makes the number of objects depending on qapi/qmp/qnum.h
from 4551 (out of 4743) to 46 in my "build everything" tree. For
qapi/qmp/qnull.h, the number drops from 4552 to 21.
Backports commit 15280c360e54a65e2c7be1a47bfbe41dce1ef986 from qemu
SPARCCPU::env was initialized from previously set properties
(with help of sparc_cpu_parse_features) in cpu_sparc_register().
However there is not reason to keep it there as this task is
typically done at realize time. So move post properties
initialization into sparc_cpu_realizefn, which brings
cpu_sparc_init() closer to cpu_generic_init().
Backports commit 700549620b3ee15924f19b9eb79961655ce671c5 from qemu
Make CPUSPARCState::def embedded so it would be allocated as part
of cpu instance and we won't have to worry about cleaning def pointer
up mannualy on cpu destruction.
Backports commit 576e1c4c239621482474ba7b495a41bab2d16ae5 from qemu
We check that all members of the QLit list are also in the QList. We
neglect to check the other direction. Fix that.
While there, use QLIST_FOREACH_ENTRY() to simplify the code and break
the loop on the first mismatch.
Backports commit cbb654052600c376d5ee3401c98a25d09d11a154 from qemu
We check that all members of the QLit dictionary are also in the
QDict. We neglect to check the other direction.
Comparing the number of members suffices, because QDict can't
contain duplicate members, and putting duplicates in a QLit is a
programming error.
Backports commit 6da8a7a3b444211914418d2b3c7dc615d70a7d2d from qemu
compare_litqobj_to_qobj() lacks a qlit_ prefix. Moreover, "compare"
suggests -1, 0, +1 for less than, equal and greater than. The
function actually returns non-zero for equal, zero for unequal.
Rename to qlit_equal_qobject().
Its return type will be cleaned up in the next patch.
Backports commit 60cc2eb7afd40b9cbaa35a5e0b54f365ac6e49f1 from qemu
The QLIT_QFOO() macros expand into compound literals. Sadly, gcc
doesn't recognizes these as constant expressions (clang does), which
makes the macros useless for initializing objects with static storage
duration.
There is a gcc bug about it:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=71713
Change the macros to expand into initializers.
Backports commit d5cd8fbf130312bea91823c41de87d55818d599b from qemu
The conflict check added by commit c0644771 ("qapi: Reject
alternates that can't work with keyval_parse()") doesn't work
with the following declaration:
{ 'alternate': 'Alt',
'data': { 'one': 'bool',
'two': 'str' } }
It crashes with:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./scripts/qapi-types.py", line 295, in <module>
schema = QAPISchema(input_file)
File "/home/ehabkost/rh/proj/virt/qemu/scripts/qapi.py", line 1468, in __init__
self.exprs = check_exprs(parser.exprs)
File "/home/ehabkost/rh/proj/virt/qemu/scripts/qapi.py", line 958, in check_exprs
check_alternate(expr, info)
File "/home/ehabkost/rh/proj/virt/qemu/scripts/qapi.py", line 830, in check_alternate
% (name, key, types_seen[qtype]))
KeyError: 'QTYPE_QSTRING'
This happens because the previously-seen conflicting member
('one') can't be found at types_seen[qtype], but at
types_seen['QTYPE_BOOL'].
Fix the bug by moving the error check to the same loop that adds
new items to types_seen, raising an exception if types_seen[qt]
is already set.
Backports commit fda72ab4510bcc680a3c4fe55997aa29589884f7 from qemu
Make visit_type_null() take an @obj argument like its buddies. This
helps keep the next commit simple.
Backports commit d2f95f4d482374485234790a6fc3cca29ebb7355 from qemu
qapi/qmp/types.h is a convenience header to include a number of
qapi/qmp/ headers. Since we rarely need all of the headers
qapi/qmp/types.h includes, we bypass it most of the time. Most of the
places that use it don't need all the headers, either.
Include the necessary headers directly, and drop qapi/qmp/types.h.
Backports commit 6b67395762a4c8b6ca94364e0a0f616a6470c46a from qemu
This renders many inclusions of qapi/qmp/q*.h superfluous. They'll be
dropped in the next few commits.
Backports commit 9f5c734d591e26186a71f9e36d752f4798df3672 from qemu
This cleanup makes the number of objects depending on qapi/error.h
drop from 1910 (out of 4743) to 1612 in my "build everything" tree.
While there, separate #include from file comment with a blank line,
and drop a useless comment on why qemu/osdep.h is included first.
Backports commit e688df6bc4549f28534cdb001f168b8caae55b0c from qemu
This patch implements movep instruction. It moves data between a data register
and alternate bytes within the address space starting at the location
specified and incrementing by two.
It was designed for the original 68000 and used in firmwares for
interfacing the 8-bit peripherals through the 16-bit data bus.
Without this patch opcode for this instruction is recognized as some bitop.
Backports commit 1226e212292e271b8795265c9639d5c0553df199 from qemu
The code where we added the TT instruction was accidentally
missing a 'break', which meant that after generating the code
to execute the TT we would fall through to 'goto illegal_op'
and generate code to take an UNDEF insn.
Backports commit 384c6c03fb687bea239a5990a538c4bc50fdcecb from qemu
Change vfp.regs as a uint64_t to vfp.zregs as an ARMVectorReg.
The previous patches have made the change in representation
relatively painless.
Backports commit c39c2b9043ec59516c80f2c6f3e8193e99d04d4b from qemu
Add support for the new ARMv8.2 SHA-3, SM3, SM4 and SHA-512 instructions to
AArch64 user mode emulation.
Backports commit 955f56d44a73d74016b2e71765d984ac7a6db1dc from qemu
This implements emulation of the new SM4 instructions that have
been added as an optional extension to the ARMv8 Crypto Extensions
in ARM v8.2.
Backports commit b6577bcd251ca0d57ae1de149e3c706b38f21587 from qemu
This implements emulation of the new SM3 instructions that have
been added as an optional extension to the ARMv8 Crypto Extensions
in ARM v8.2.
Backports commit 80d6f4c6bbb718f343a832df8dee15329cc7686c from qemu
This implements emulation of the new SHA-3 instructions that have
been added as an optional extensions to the ARMv8 Crypto Extensions
in ARM v8.2.
Backports commit cd270ade74ea86467f393a9fb9c54c4f1148c28f from qemu
This implements emulation of the new SHA-3 instructions that have
been added as an optional extensions to the ARMv8 Crypto Extensions
in ARM v8.2.
Backports commit cd270ade74ea86467f393a9fb9c54c4f1148c28f from qemu
This implements emulation of the new SHA-512 instructions that have
been added as an optional extensions to the ARMv8 Crypto Extensions
in ARM v8.2.
Backports commit 90b827d131812d7f0a8abb13dba1942a2bcee821 from qemu
Handle possible MPU faults, SAU faults or bus errors when
popping register state off the stack during exception return.
Backports commit 95695effe8caa552b8f243bceb3a08de4003c882 from qemu
Make the load of the exception vector from the vector table honour
the SAU and any bus error on the load (possibly provoking a derived
exception), rather than simply aborting if the load fails.
Backports commit 600c33f24752a00e81e9372261e35c2befea612b from qemu
The Application Interrupt and Reset Control Register has some changes
for v8M:
* new bits SYSRESETREQS, BFHFNMINS and PRIS: these all have
real state if the security extension is implemented and otherwise
are constant
* the PRIGROUP field is banked between security states
* non-secure code can be blocked from using the SYSRESET bit
to reset the system if SYSRESETREQS is set
Implement the new state and the changes to register read and write.
For the moment we ignore the effects of the secure PRIGROUP.
We will implement the effects of PRIS and BFHFNMIS later.
Backports register-related additions in commit 3b2e934463121f06d04e4d17658a9a7cdc3717b0 from qemu
Make v7m_push_callee_stack() honour the MPU by using the
new v7m_stack_write() function. We return a flag to indicate
whether the pushes failed, which we can then use in
v7m_exception_taken() to cause us to handle the derived
exception correctly.
Backports commit 65b4234ff73a4d4865438ce30bdfaaa499464efa from qemu
The memory writes done to push registers on the stack
on exception entry in M profile CPUs are supposed to
go via MPU permissions checks, which may cause us to
take a derived exception instead of the original one of
the MPU lookup fails. We were implementing these as
always-succeeds direct writes to physical memory.
Rewrite v7m_push_stack() to do the necessary checks.
Backports commit fd592d890ec40e3686760de84044230a8ebb1eb3 from qemu
In the v8M architecture, if the process of taking an exception
results in a further exception this is called a derived exception
(for example, an MPU exception when writing the exception frame to
memory). If the derived exception happens while pushing the initial
stack frame, we must ignore any subsequent possible exception
pushing the callee-saves registers.
In preparation for making the stack writes check for exceptions,
add a return value from v7m_push_stack() and a new parameter to
v7m_exception_taken(), so that the former can tell the latter that
it needs to ignore failures to write to the stack. We also plumb
the argument through to v7m_push_callee_stack(), which is where
the code to ignore the failures will be.
(Note that the v8M ARM pseudocode structures this slightly differently:
derived exceptions cause the attempt to process the original
exception to be abandoned; then at the top level it calls
DerivedLateArrival to prioritize the derived exception and call
TakeException from there. We choose to let the NVIC do the prioritization
and continue forward with a call to TakeException which will then
take either the original or the derived exception. The effect is
the same, but this structure works better for QEMU because we don't
have a convenient top level place to do the abandon-and-retry logic.)
Backports commit 0094ca70e165cfb69882fa2e100d935d45f1c983 from qemu
Currently armv7m_nvic_acknowledge_irq() does three things:
* make the current highest priority pending interrupt active
* return a bool indicating whether that interrupt is targeting
Secure or NonSecure state
* implicitly tell the caller which is the highest priority
pending interrupt by setting env->v7m.exception
We need to split these jobs, because v7m_exception_taken()
needs to know whether the pending interrupt targets Secure so
it can choose to stack callee-saves registers or not, but it
must not make the interrupt active until after it has done
that stacking, in case the stacking causes a derived exception.
Similarly, it needs to know the number of the pending interrupt
so it can read the correct vector table entry before the
interrupt is made active, because vector table reads might
also cause a derived exception.
Create a new armv7m_nvic_get_pending_irq_info() function which simply
returns information about the highest priority pending interrupt, and
use it to rearrange the v7m_exception_taken() code so we don't
acknowledge the exception until we've done all the things which could
possibly cause a derived exception.
Backports part of commit 6c9485188170e11ad31ce477c8ce200b8e8ce59d from qemu
In order to support derived exceptions (exceptions generated in
the course of trying to take an exception), we need to be able
to handle prioritizing whether to take the original exception
or the derived exception.
We do this by introducing a new function
armv7m_nvic_set_pending_derived() which the exception-taking code in
helper.c will call when a derived exception occurs. Derived
exceptions are dealt with mostly like normal pending exceptions, so
we share the implementation with the armv7m_nvic_set_pending()
function.
Note that the way we structure this is significantly different
from the v8M Arm ARM pseudocode: that does all the prioritization
logic in the DerivedLateArrival() function, whereas we choose to
let the existing "identify highest priority exception" logic
do the prioritization for us. The effect is the same, though.
Backports part of commit 5ede82b8ccb652382c106d53f656ed67997d76e8 from qemu
The x86 vector instruction set is extremely irregular. With newer
editions, Intel has filled in some of the blanks. However, we don't
get many 64-bit operations until SSE4.2, introduced in 2009.
The subsequent edition was for AVX1, introduced in 2011, which added
three-operand addressing, and adjusts how all instructions should be
encoded.
Given the relatively narrow 2 year window between possible to support
and desirable to support, and to vastly simplify code maintainence,
I am only planning to support AVX1 and later cpus.
Backports commit 770c2fc7bb70804ae9869995fd02dadd6d7656ac from qemu
Trivial move and constant propagation. Some identity and constant
function folding, but nothing that requires knowledge of the size
of the vector element.
Backports commit 170ba88f45bd7b1c5593021ed8e174f663b0bd1a from qemu
Use dup to convert a non-constant scalar to a third vector.
Add addition, multiplication, and logical operations with an immediate.
Add addition, subtraction, multiplication, and logical operations with
a non-constant scalar. Allow for the front-end to build operations in
which the scalar operand comes first.
Backports commit 22fc3527034678489ec554e82fd52f8a7f05418e from qemu
No vector ops as yet. SSE only has direct support for 8- and 16-bit
saturation; handling 32- and 64-bit saturation is much more expensive.
Backports commit f49b12c6e6a75a5bd109bcbbda072b24e5fb8dfd from qemu
Opcodes are added for scalar and vector shifts, but considering the
varied semantics of these do not expose them to the front ends. Do
go ahead and provide them in case they are needed for backend expansion.
Backports commit d0ec97967f940bbc11dced83422b39c224127f1e from qemu
Some functions use intN_t arguments, some use uintN_t, some just
used "unsigned". To aid putting function pointers in tables, we
need consistency.
Backports commit 474b2e8f0f765515515b495e6872b5e18a660baf from qemu
Typical slowdown introduced by AddressSanitizer is 2x.
UBSan shouldn't have much impact on runtime cost.
Enable it by default when --enable-debug, unless --disable-sanitizers.
Backports commit 247724cb302af5d70c8853154b640dfabf2bbb56 from qemu
Python2 did not validate locale correctness when reading input data, so
would happily read UTF-8 data in non-UTF-8 locales. Python3 is strict so
if you try to read UTF-8 data in the C locale, it will raise an error
for any UTF-8 bytes that aren't representable in 7-bit ascii encoding.
e.g.
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 54: ordinal not in range(128)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/tmp/qemu-test/src/scripts/qapi-commands.py", line 317, in <module>
schema = QAPISchema(input_file)
File "/tmp/qemu-test/src/scripts/qapi.py", line 1468, in __init__
parser = QAPISchemaParser(open(fname, 'r'))
File "/tmp/qemu-test/src/scripts/qapi.py", line 301, in __init__
previously_included)
File "/tmp/qemu-test/src/scripts/qapi.py", line 348, in _include
exprs_include = QAPISchemaParser(fobj, previously_included, info)
File "/tmp/qemu-test/src/scripts/qapi.py", line 271, in __init__
self.src = fp.read()
File "/usr/lib64/python3.5/encodings/ascii.py", line 26, in decode
return codecs.ascii_decode(input, self.errors)[0]
More background on this can be seen in
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0538/
Many distros support a new C.UTF-8 locale that is like the C locale,
but with UTF-8 instead of 7-bit ASCII. That is not entirely portable
though. This patch thus sets the LANG to "C", but overrides LC_CTYPE
to be en_US.UTF-8 locale. This gets us pretty close to C.UTF-8, but
in a way that should be portable to everywhere QEMU builds.
This patch only forces UTF-8 for QAPI scripts, since that is the one
showing the immediate error under Python3 with C locale, but potentially
we ought to force this for all python scripts used in the build process.
Backports commit d4e5ec877ca698a87dabe68814c6f93668f50c60 from qemu
Some early python 3.x versions will have different default
ordering when calling the 'values()' method on a dict, compared
to python 2.x and later 3.x versions. Explicitly sort the items
to get a stable ordering.
Backports commit f7a5376d4b667cf6c83c1d640e32d22456d7b5ee from qemu
The OrderedDict class appeared in the 'collections' module
from python 2.7 onwards, so use that in preference to our
local backport if available.
Backports commit 38710a8994911d98acbe183a39ec3a53638de510 from qemu
The iteritems()/itervalues() methods are gone in py3, but the
items()/values() methods are still around. The latter are less
efficient than the former in py2, but this has unmeasurably
small impact on QEMU build time, so taking portability over
efficiency is a net win.
Backports commit 2f8480447067d6f42af52a886385284ead052af9 from qemu
Python 3 no longer supports the bare "print" statement, it must be
called as a normal function with round brackets. It is possible to
opt-in to this new syntax with Python 2.6 onwards by importing the
"print_function" from the "__future__" module, making it easy to
support Python 2 and 3 in parallel.
Backports commit ef9d9108917d6d5f903bca31602827e512a51c50 from qemu
The instruction "moves" can select source and destination
address space (user or kernel). This patch modifies
all the load/store functions to be able to provide
the address space the caller wants to use instead
of using the current one. All the callers are modified
to provide the default address space to these functions.
Backports commit 54e1e0b5b5ce4fc76335b1fbbf09cb8fdd5ab89d from qemu
Only add MC68040 MMU page table processing and related
registers (Special Status Word, Translation Control Register,
User Root Pointer and Supervisor Root Pointer).
Transparent Translation Registers, DFC/SFC and pflush/ptest
will be added later.
Backports commit 88b2fef6c3c3b45ac0dc2196ace7248a09c8e41d from qemu
The MC68040 MMU provides the size of the access that
triggers the page fault.
This size is set in the Special Status Word which
is written in the stack frame of the access fault
exception.
So we need the size in m68k_cpu_unassigned_access() and
m68k_cpu_handle_mmu_fault().
To be able to do that, this patch modifies the prototype of
handle_mmu_fault handler, tlb_fill() and probe_write().
do_unassigned_access() already includes a size parameter.
This patch also updates handle_mmu_fault handlers and
tlb_fill() of all targets (only parameter, no code change).
Backports commit 98670d47cd8d63a529ff230fd39ddaa186156f8c from qemu
Rather than passing a regno to the helper, pass pointers to the
vector register directly. This eliminates the need to pass in
the environment pointer and reduces the number of places that
directly access env->vfp.regs[].
Backports commit e7c06c4e4c98c47899417f154df1f2ef4e8d09a0 from qemu
Rather than passing regnos to the helpers, pass pointers to the
vector registers directly. This eliminates the need to pass in
the environment pointer and reduces the number of places that
directly access env->vfp.regs[].
Backports commit b13708bbbdda54c7f7e28222b22453986c026391 from qemu
Rather than passing regnos to the helpers, pass pointers to the
vector registers directly. This eliminates the need to pass in
the environment pointer and reduces the number of places that
directly access env->vfp.regs[].
Backports commit 1a66ac61af45af04688d1d15896737310e366c06 from qemu
Commit ("3b39d734141a target/arm: Handle page table walk load failures
correctly") modified both versions of the page table walking code (i.e.,
arm_ldl_ptw and arm_ldq_ptw) to record the result of the translation in
a temporary 'data' variable so that it can be inspected before being
returned. However, arm_ldq_ptw() returns an uint64_t, and using a
temporary uint32_t variable truncates the upper bits, corrupting the
result. This causes problems when using more than 4 GB of memory in
a TCG guest. So use a uint64_t instead.
Backports commit 9aea1ea31af25fe344a88da086ff913cca09c667 from qemu
The code sequence we were generating was only good for unsigned
comparisons. For signed comparisions, use the sequence from gcc.
Fixes booting of ppc64 firmware, with a patch changing the code
sequence for ppc comparisons.
Backports commit 7170ac33135e6ecf89752d3949bcecf9b9766d1c from qemu
It is more typical to provide the ';' by the caller of a macro
than to embed it in the macro itself; this is because syntax
highlight engines can get confused if a macro is called without
a semicolon before the closing '}'.
Backports commit 94f5c480e9b5ce95394026b3f025816470e23eaf from qemu
Move generic make flags in MAKEFLAGS (SUBDIR_MAKEFLAGS is more qemu specific).
Use --quiet to silence make 'is up to date' message.
Backports commit 42a77f1ce4934b243df003f95bda88530631387a from qemu
Instead of ignoring the response from address_space_ld*()
(indicating an attempt to read a page table descriptor from
an invalid physical address), use it to report the failure
correctly.
Since this is another couple of locations where we need to
decide the value of the ARMMMUFaultInfo ea bit based on a
MemTxResult, we factor out that operation into a helper
function.
Backports commit 3b39d734141a71296d08af3d4c32f872fafd782e from qemu
For PMSAv7, the v7A/R Arm ARM defines that setting AP to 0b111
is an UNPREDICTABLE reserved combination. However, for v7M
this value is documented as having the same behaviour as 0b110:
read-only for both privileged and unprivileged. Accept this
value on an M profile core rather than treating it as a guest
error and a no-access page.
Backports commit 8638f1ad7403b63db880dadce38e6690b5d82b64 from qemu
Refactor disas_thumb2_insn() so that it generates the code for raising
an UNDEF exception for invalid insns, rather than returning a flag
which the caller must check to see if it needs to generate the UNDEF
code. This brings the function in to line with the behaviour of
disas_thumb_insn() and disas_arm_insn().
Backports commit 2eea841c11096e8dcc457b80e21f3fbdc32d2590 from qemu
ldxp loads two consecutive doublewords from memory regardless of CPU
endianness. On store, stlxp currently assumes to work with a 128bit
value and consequently switches order in big-endian mode. With this
change it packs the doublewords in reverse order in anticipation of the
128bit big-endian store operation interposing them so they end up in
memory in the right order. This makes it work for both MTTCG and !MTTCG.
It effectively implements the ARM ARM STLXP operation pseudo-code:
data = if BigEndian() then el1:el2 else el2:el1;
With this change an aarch64_be Linux 4.14.4 kernel succeeds to boot up
in system emulation mode.
Backports commit 0785557f8811133bd69be02aeccf018d47a26373 from qemu
This code is preventing the MMU debug code from displaying virtual
mappings of IO devices (anything that is not located in the RAM).
Before this patch, Qemu would output 0xffffffffffffffff (-1) as the
physical address corresponding to an IO device virtual address.
With this patch the intended physical address is displayed.
Backports commit 7e450a8f50ac12fc8f69b6ce555254c84efcf407 from qemu
Add the third stack pointer, the Interrupt Stack Pointer (ISP)
(680x0 only). This stack will be needed in softmmu mode.
Update movec to set/get the value of the three stacks.
Backports commit 6e22b28e22aa6ed1b8db6f24da2633868019d4c9 from qemu
Some cleanup, and allows SR to be moved from any addressing mode.
Previous code was wrong for coldfire: coldfire also allows to
use addressing mode to set SR/CCR. It only supports Data register
to get SR/CCR (move from)
Backports commit b6a21d8d8f69ac04fd6180e752a65d582c07e948 from qemu
The instruction traps if the CPU is not in
Supervisor state but the helper is empty because
there is no easy way to reset all the peripherals
without resetting the CPU itself.
Backports commit 0bdb2b3bf5660f892ddbfa09baea56cdca57ad1d from qemu
Add cache lines invalidate and cache lines push
as no-op operations, as we don't have cache.
These instructions are 68040 only.
Backports commit f58ed1c50add3e76331afdc92387c0da9dd9e443 from qemu
move16 moves the source line to the destination line. Lines are aligned
to 16-byte boundaries and are 16 bytes long.
Backports commit 9d4f0429f3dc1dc6c67de3eaa3106e6c1cfa1524 from qemu
chk and chk2 compare a value to boundaries, and
trigger a CHK exception if the value is out of bounds.
Backports commit 8bf6cbaf396a8b54b138bb8a7c3377f2868ed16e from qemu
As gen_helper_get_ccr() is able to compute CCR from cc_op and
flags, we don't need to flush flags before to call it.
flush_flags() and get_ccr() use COMPUTE_CCR() to compute
flags. get_ccr() computes CCR value,
whereas flush_flags update live cc_op and flags.
Backports commit 4131c242cc850aaf76e59d4c787d220f07850cf5 from qemu
And remove update_cc_op() from gen_exception() because there is
one in gen_jmp_im().
Backports commit 7cd7b5ca9be805e8a4ced4c07014c24e34812f27 from qemu
We had two fields specific to INDEX_op_call. Rename these and
add some macros so that the fields may be reused for other opcodes.
Backports commit cd9090aa9dbba30db8aec9a2fc103aaf1ab0f5a7 from qemu
With no fixed array allocation, we can't overflow a buffer.
This will be important as optimizations related to host vectors
may expand the number of ops used.
Use QTAILQ to link the ops together.
Backports commit 15fa08f8451babc88d733bd411d4c94976f9d0f8 from qemu
cpu_restore_state officially supports being passed an address it can't
resolve the state for. As a result the checks in the helpers are
superfluous and can be removed. This makes the code consistent with
other users of cpu_restore_state.
Of course this does nothing to address what to do if cpu_restore_state
can't resolve the state but so far it seems this is handled elsewhere.
The change was made with included coccinelle script.
Backports commit 65255e8efdd5fca602bcc4ff61a879939ff75f4f from qemu
The first call of set_cc_op() in a new translation sequence
is done with old_op set to CC_OP_DYNAMIC (-1).
This will do an out of bound access to the array cc_op_live[].
We fix that by adding an entry in cc_op_live[] for CC_OP_DYNAMIC.
Backports commit 7deddf96e94f3e1eb3677db0ea7b53e61751b544 from qemu
Renaming cpu address space names so that they won't be the same when
there are more than one.
Backports commit 87a621d857be1b2b3dd1d0847ca311a863dbcb53 from qemu
Normally we create an address space for that CPU and pass that address
space into the function. Let's just do it inside to unify address space
creations. It'll simplify my next patch to rename those address spaces.
Backports commit 80ceb07a83375e3a0091591f96bd47bce2f640ce from qemu
These gcc warnings are fixed:
target/i386/translate.c:4461:12: warning:
variable 'prefixes' might be clobbered by 'longjmp' or 'vfork' [-Wclobbered]
target/i386/translate.c:4466:9: warning:
variable 'rex_w' might be clobbered by 'longjmp' or 'vfork' [-Wclobbered]
target/i386/translate.c:4466:16: warning:
variable 'rex_r' might be clobbered by 'longjmp' or 'vfork' [-Wclobbered]
Tested with x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc from Debian stretch.
Backports commit a4926d99129a1d8072fc4681cd4efdb214f65ed4 from qemu
Intel IceLake cpu has added new cpu features,AVX512_VBMI2/GFNI/
VAES/VPCLMULQDQ/AVX512_VNNI/AVX512_BITALG. Those new cpu features
need expose to guest VM.
The bit definition:
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 06] AVX512_VBMI2
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 08] GFNI
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 09] VAES
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 10] VPCLMULQDQ
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 11] AVX512_VNNI
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 12] AVX512_BITALG
The release document ref below link:
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/c5/15/\
architecture-instruction-set-extensions-programming-reference.pdf
Backports commit aff9e6e46a343e1404498be4edd03db1112f0950 from qemu
For some systems (i.e. FreeBSD) the default 'make' is not compatible with the
GNU extensions used by QEMU makefiles.
Calling the GNU make (gmake) works, however the help displayed refers to the
host 'make' and copy/paste leads to lot of unobvious errors:
$ gmake check-help
[...]
make check Run all tests
$ make check
make: "Makefile" line 28: Missing dependency operator
make: "Makefile" line 37: Need an operator
make: "Makefile" line 41: warning: duplicate script for target "git-submodule-update" ignored
make: "rules.mak" line 70: warning: duplicate script for target "%.o" ignored
make: Unknown modifier ' '
make: Unclosed substitution for eval modules (= missing)
make: "tests/Makefile.include" line 24: Variable/Value missing from "export"
make: "tests/" line 1: warning: Zero byte read from file, skipping rest of line.
make: "tests/" line 1: Need an operator
make: "Makefile" line 660: warning: duplicate script for target "ifneq" ignored
make: "Makefile" line 78: warning: using previous script for "ifneq" defined here
make: Fatal errors encountered -- cannot continue
Using the $(MAKE) variable, the help displayed is consistent with the 'make'
program used.
Backports commit b98a3bae2596fd9bf60f140d042c8e993daba930 from qemu
This was never used since its introduction in commit
196ea13104f8 ("memory: Add global-locking property to memory
regions").
Backports commit e2fbe20851ceec5ccd7b539a89db0420393fb85d from qemu
SPARC Linux has an oddity that it insists that mmap()
of MAP_FIXED memory must be at an alignment defined by
SHMLBA, which is more aligned than the page size
(typically, SHMLBA alignment is to 16K, and pages are 8K).
This is a relic of ancient hardware that had cache
aliasing constraints, but even on modern hardware the
kernel still insists on the alignment.
To ensure that we get mmap() alignment sufficient to
make the kernel happy, change QEMU_VMALLOC_ALIGN,
qemu_fd_getpagesize() and qemu_mempath_getpagesize()
to use the maximum of getpagesize() and SHMLBA.
In particular, this allows 'make check' to pass on Sparc:
we were previously failing the ivshmem tests.
Backports commit 57d1f6d7ce23e79a8ebe4a57bd2363b269b4664b from qemu
Now that do_ats_write() is entirely in control of whether to
generate a 32-bit PAR or a 64-bit PAR, we can make it use the
correct (complicated) condition for doing so.
Backports commit 1313e2d7e2cd8b21741e0cf542eb09dfc4188f79 from qemu
All of the callers of get_phys_addr() and arm_tlb_fill() now ignore
the FSR values they return, so we can just remove the argument
entirely.
Backports commit bc52bfeb3be2052942b7dac8ba284f342ac9605b from qemu
In do_ats_write(), rather than using the FSR value from get_phys_addr(),
construct the PAR values using the information in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
struct. This allows us to create a PAR of the correct format regardless
of what the translation table format is.
For the moment we leave the condition for "when should this be a
64 bit PAR" as it was previously; this will need to be fixed to
properly support AArch32 Hyp mode.
Backports commit 5efe9ed45dec775ebe91ce72bd805ee780d16064 from qemu
Now that ARMMMUFaultInfo is guaranteed to have enough information
to construct a fault status code, we can pass it in to the
deliver_fault() function and let it generate the correct type
of FSR for the destination, rather than relying on the value
provided by get_phys_addr().
I don't think there are any cases the old code was getting
wrong, but this is more obviously correct.
Backports commit 681f9a89d201d7891e2c60dff5e5415d8f618518 from qemu
Make get_phys_addr_pmsav8() return a fault type in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
structure, which we convert to the FSC at the callsite.
Backports commit 3f551b5b7380ff131fe22944aa6f5b166aa13caf from qemu
Make get_phys_addr_pmsav7() return a fault type in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
structure, which we convert to the FSC at the callsite.
Backports commit 9375ad15338b24e06109071ac3a85df48a2cc2e6 from qemu
Make get_phys_addr_pmsav5() return a fault type in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
structure, which we convert to the FSC at the callsite.
Note that PMSAv5 does not define any guest-visible fault status
register, so the different "fsr" values we were previously
returning are entirely arbitrary. So we can just switch to using
the most appropriae fi->type values without worrying that we
need to special-case FaultInfo->FSC conversion for PMSAv5.
Backports commit 53a4e5c5b07b2f50c538511b74b0d3d4964695ea from qemu
Make get_phys_addr_v6() return a fault type in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
structure, which we convert to the FSC at the callsite.
Backports commit da909b2c23a68e57bbcb6be98229e40df606f0c8 from qemu
Make get_phys_addr_v6() return a fault type in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
structure, which we convert to the FSC at the callsite.
Backports commit f06cf243945ccb24cb9578304306ae7fcb4cf3fd from qemu
Make get_phys_addr_v5() return a fault type in the ARMMMUFaultInfo
structure, which we convert to the FSC at the callsite.
Backports commit f989983e8dc9be6bc3468c6dbe46fcb1501a740c from qemu
All the callers of arm_ldq_ptw() and arm_ldl_ptw() ignore the value
that those functions store in the fsr argument on failure: if they
return failure to their callers they will always overwrite the fsr
value with something else.
Remove the argument from these functions and S1_ptw_translate().
This will simplify removing fsr from the calling functions.
Backports commit 3795a6de9f7ec4a7e3dcb8bf02a88a014147b0b0 from qemu
Currently get_phys_addr() and its various subfunctions return
a hard-coded fault status register value for translation
failures. This is awkward because FSR values these days may
be either long-descriptor format or short-descriptor format.
Worse, the right FSR type to use doesn't depend only on the
translation table being walked -- some cases, like fault
info reported to AArch32 EL2 for some kinds of ATS operation,
must be in long-descriptor format even if the translation
table being walked was short format. We can't get those cases
right with our current approach.
Provide fields in the ARMMMUFaultInfo struct which allow
get_phys_addr() to provide sufficient information for a caller to
construct an FSR value themselves, and utility functions which do
this for both long and short format FSR values, as a first step in
switching get_phys_addr() and its children to only returning the
failure cause in the ARMMMUFaultInfo struct.
Backports commit 1fa498fe0de979030bd1f481046e9f1c5574a584 from qemu
Implement the TT instruction which queries the security
state and access permissions of a memory location.
Backports commit 5158de241b0fb344a6c948dfcbc4e611ab5fafbe from qemu
For the TT instruction we're going to need to do an MPU lookup that
also tells us which MPU region the access hit. This requires us
to do the MPU lookup without first doing the SAU security access
check, so pull the MPU lookup parts of get_phys_addr_pmsav8()
out into their own function.
The TT instruction also needs to know the MPU region number which
the lookup hit, so provide this information to the caller of the
MPU lookup code, even though get_phys_addr_pmsav8() doesn't
need to know it.
Backports commit 54317c0ff3a3c0f6b2c3a1d3c8b5d93686a86d24 from qemu
The TT instruction is going to need to look up the MMU index
for a specified security and privilege state. Refactor the
existing arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate() into a version that
lets you specify the privilege state and one that uses the
current state of the CPU.
Backports commit ec8e3340286a87d3924c223d60ba5c994549f796 from qemu
For M profile, we currently have an mmu index MNegPri for
"requested execution priority negative". This fails to
distinguish "requested execution priority negative, privileged"
from "requested execution priority negative, usermode", but
the two can return different results for MPU lookups. Fix this
by splitting MNegPri into MNegPriPriv and MNegPriUser, and
similarly for the Secure equivalent MSNegPri.
This takes us from 6 M profile MMU modes to 8, which means
we need to bump NB_MMU_MODES; this is OK since the point
where we are forced to reduce TLB sizes is 9 MMU modes.
(It would in theory be possible to stick with 6 MMU indexes:
{mpu-disabled,user,privileged} x {secure,nonsecure} since
in the MPU-disabled case the result of an MPU lookup is
always the same for both user and privileged code. However
we would then need to rework the TB flags handling to put
user/priv into the TB flags separately from the mmuidx.
Adding an extra couple of mmu indexes is simpler.)
Backports commit 62593718d77c06ad2b5e942727cead40775d2395 from qemu
When we added the ARMMMUIdx_MSUser MMU index we forgot to
add it to the case statement in regime_is_user(), so we
weren't treating it as unprivileged when doing MPU lookups.
Correct the omission.
Backports commit 871bec7c44a453d9cab972ce1b5d12e1af0545ab from qemu
In ARMv7M the CPU ignores explicit writes to CONTROL.SPSEL
in Handler mode. In v8M the behaviour is slightly different:
writes to the bit are permitted but will have no effect.
We've already done the hard work to handle the value in
CONTROL.SPSEL being out of sync with what stack pointer is
actually in use, so all we need to do to fix this last loose
end is to update the condition we use to guard whether we
call write_v7m_control_spsel() on the register write.
Backports commit 83d7f86d3d27473c0aac79c1baaa5c2ab01b02d9 from qemu
For v8M it is possible for the CONTROL.SPSEL bit value and the
current stack to be out of sync. This means we need to update
the checks used in reads and writes of the PSP and MSP special
registers to use v7m_using_psp() rather than directly checking
the SPSEL bit in the control register.
Backports commit 1169d3aa5b19adca9384d954d80e1f48da388284 from qemu
EPYC-IBPB is a copy of the EPYC CPU model with
just CPUID_8000_0008_EBX_IBPB added.
Backports commit 8ebfafa796ca0cb2b035a7f06f836a675d8b48be from qemu
The new MSR IA32_SPEC_CTRL MSR was introduced by a recent Intel
microcode updated and can be used by OSes to mitigate
CVE-2017-5715. Unfortunately we can't change the existing CPU
models without breaking existing setups, so users need to
explicitly update their VM configuration to use the new *-IBRS
CPU model if they want to expose IBRS to guests.
The new CPU models are simple copies of the existing CPU models,
with just CPUID_7_0_EDX_SPEC_CTRL added and model_id updated.
Backports commit 61efbbf869293f1deb9ee39d44bd4e635de59fa7 from qemu
Add the new feature word and the "ibpb" feature flag.
Based on a patch by Paolo Bonzini.
Backports commit 1ade973f5202404e772aae7b1acd331270d246dc from qemu
It is valid to have a 48-character model ID on CPUID, however the
definition of X86CPUDefinition::model_id is char[48], which can
make the compiler drop the null terminator from the string.
If a CPU model happens to have 48 bytes on model_id, "-cpu help"
will print garbage and the object_property_set_str() call at
x86_cpu_load_def() will read data outside the model_id array.
We could increase the array size to 49, but this would mean the
compiler would not issue a warning if a 49-char string is used by
mistake for model_id.
To make things simpler, simply change model_id to be const char*,
and validate the string length using an assert() on
x86_register_cpudef_type().
Backports commit 4b220d88ba76fb2623ce4b8ba1f1eea66b82144e from qemu
In commit e3af7c788b73a6495eb9d94992ef11f6ad6f3c56 we
replaced direct calls to to cpu_ld*_code() with calls
to the x86_ld*_code() wrappers which incorporate an
advance of s->pc. Unfortunately we didn't notice that
in one place the old code was deliberately not incrementing
s->pc:
@@ -4501,7 +4528,7 @@ static target_ulong disas_insn(DisasContext *s, CPUState *cpu)
static const int pp_prefix[4] = {
0, PREFIX_DATA, PREFIX_REPZ, PREFIX_REPNZ
};
- int vex3, vex2 = cpu_ldub_code(env, s->pc);
+ int vex3, vex2 = x86_ldub_code(env, s);
if (!CODE64(s) && (vex2 & 0xc0) != 0xc0) {
/* 4.1.4.6: In 32-bit mode, bits [7:6] must be 11b,
This meant we were mishandling this set of instructions.
Remove the manual advance of s->pc for the "is VEX" case
(which is now done by x86_ldub_code()) and instead rewind
PC in the case where we decide that this isn't really VEX.
Backports commit 817a9fcba8043faa467929e7b0193df6bdc92211 from qemu
The refactoring of commit 296e5a0a6c3935 has a nasty bug:
it accidentally dropped the generation of code to raise
the UNDEF exception when disas_thumb2_insn() returns nonzero.
This means that 32-bit Thumb2 instruction patterns that
ought to UNDEF just act like nops instead. This is likely
to break any number of things, including the kernel's "disable
the FPU and use the UNDEF exception to identify when to turn
it back on again" trick.
Backports commit 7472e2efb049ea65a6a5e7261b78ebf5c561bc2f from qemu
In our various supported host OSes, the time_t type may be either 32
or 64 bit, and could in theory also be either signed or unsigned.
Notably, in OpenBSD time_t is a 64 bit type even if 'long' is 32
bits, so using LONG_MAX for TIME_MAX is incorrect.
Use an approach suggested by Paolo Bonzini which calculates
the maximum value of the type rather than hardcoding it;
to do this we use the TYPE_MAXIMUM macro from Gnulib.
Backports commit e7b47c22e2df14d55e3e4426688c929bf8e3f7fb from qemu
In do_ats_write(), rather than using extended_addresses_enabled() to
decide whether the value we get back from get_phys_addr() is a 64-bit
format PAR or a 32-bit one, use arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format().
This is not really the correct answer, because the PAR format
depends on the AT instruction being used, not just on the
translation regime. However getting this correct requires a
significant refactoring, so that get_phys_addr() returns raw
information about the fault which the caller can then assemble
into a suitable FSR/PAR/syndrome for its purposes, rather than
get_phys_addr() returning a pre-formatted FSR.
However this change at least improves the situation by making
the PAR work correctly for address translation operations done
at AArch64 EL2 on the EL2 translation regime. In particular,
this is necessary for Xen to be able to run in our emulation,
so this seems like a safer interim fix given that we are in freeze.
Backports commit 50cd71b0d347c74517dcb7da447fe657fca57d9c from qemu
The CPU ID registers ID_AA64PFR0_EL1, ID_PFR1_EL1 and ID_PFR1
have a field for reporting presence of GICv3 system registers.
We need to report this field correctly in order for Xen to
work as a guest inside QEMU emulation. We mustn't incorrectly
claim the sysregs exist when they don't, though, or Linux will
crash.
Unfortunately the way we've designed the GICv3 emulation in QEMU
puts the system registers as part of the GICv3 device, which
may be created after the CPU proper has been realized. This
means that we don't know at the point when we define the ID
registers what the correct value is. Handle this by switching
them to calling a function at runtime to read the value, where
we can fill in the GIC field appropriately.
Backports commit 96a8b92ed8f02d5e86ad380d3299d9f41f99b072 from qemu
We use raw memory primitives along the !parallel_cpus paths in order to
simplify the endianness handling. Because of that, we did not benefit
from the generic changes to cpu_ldst_user_only_template.h.
The simplest fix is to manipulate helper_retaddr here.
Backports commit 3bdb5fcc9a08a9a47ce30c4e0c2d64c95190b49d from qemu
When we handle a signal from a fault within a user-only memory helper,
we cannot cpu_restore_state with the PC found within the signal frame.
Use a TLS variable, helper_retaddr, to record the unwind start point
to find the faulting guest insn.
Backports commit ec603b5584fa71213ef8f324fe89e4b27cc9d2bc from qemu
When we handle a signal from a fault within a user-only memory helper,
we cannot cpu_restore_state with the PC found within the signal frame.
Use a TLS variable, helper_retaddr, to record the unwind start point
to find the faulting guest insn.
Backports commit ec603b5584fa71213ef8f324fe89e4b27cc9d2bc from qemu
Fixes the following warning when compiling with gcc 5.4.0 with -O1
optimizations and --enable-debug:
target/arm/translate-a64.c: In function ‘aarch64_tr_translate_insn’:
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2361:8: error: ‘post_index’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
if (!post_index) {
^
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2307:10: note: ‘post_index’ was declared here
bool post_index;
^
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2386:8: error: ‘writeback’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
if (writeback) {
^
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2308:10: note: ‘writeback’ was declared here
bool writeback;
^
Note that idx comes from selecting 2 bits, and therefore its value
can be at most 3.
Backports commit 5ca66278c859bb1ded243755aeead2be6992ce73 from qemu
For AArch32 LDREXD and STREXD, architecturally the 32-bit word at the
lowest address is always Rt and the one at addr+4 is Rt2, even if the
CPU is big-endian. Our implementation does these with a single
64-bit store, so if we're big-endian then we need to put the two
32-bit halves together in the opposite order to little-endian,
so that they end up in the right places. We were trying to do
this with the gen_aa32_frob64() function, but that is not correct
for the usermode emulator, because there there is a distinction
between "load a 64 bit value" (which does a BE 64-bit access
and doesn't need swapping) and "load two 32 bit values as one
64 bit access" (where we still need to do the swapping, like
system mode BE32).
Backports commit 3448d47b3172015006b79197eb5a69826c6a7b6d from qemu
On a successful address translation instruction, PAR is supposed to
contain cacheability and shareability attributes determined by the
translation. We previously returned 0 for these bits (in line with the
general strategy of ignoring caches and memory attributes), but some
guest OSes may depend on them.
This patch collects the attribute bits in the page-table walk, and
updates PAR with the correct attributes for all LPAE translations.
Short descriptor formats still return 0 for these bits, as in the
prior implementation.
Backports commit 5b2d261d60caf9d988d91ca1e02392d6fc8ea104 from qemu
GCC 4.9 and newer stopped warning for missing braces around the
"universal" C zero initializer {0}. One such initializer sneaked
into scsi/qemu-pr-helper.c and is breaking the build with such
older GCC versions.
Detect the lack of support for the idiom, and disable the warning
in that case.
Backports commit 20bc94a2b8449b7700b6bfa25a87ce2320a1c649 from qemu
Rather than have separate code only used for guest_base,
rely on a recent change to handle constant pool entries.
Backports commit ba2c747992f8c315c2fbddba196ce9137430d61d from qemu
Both ARMv6 and AArch64 currently may drop complex guest_base values
into the constant pool. But generic code wasn't expecting that, and
the pool is not emitted. Correct that.
Backports commit 5b38ee31616d1532c3c3a6dc644a9160d608ed2f from qemu
WFI/E are often, but not always, 4 bytes long. When they are, we need to
set ARM_EL_IL_SHIFT in the syndrome register.
Pass the instruction length to HELPER(wfi), use it to decrement pc
appropriately and to pass an is_16bit flag to syn_wfx, which sets
ARM_EL_IL_SHIFT if needed.
Set dc->insn in both arm_tr_translate_insn and thumb_tr_translate_insn.
Backports commit 58803318e5a546b2eb0efd7a053ed36b6c29ae6f from qemu
Using the offset of a temporary, relative to TCGContext, rather than
its index means that we don't use 0. That leaves offset 0 free for
a NULL representation without having to leave index 0 unused.
Backports commit e89b28a63501c0ad6d2501fe851d0c5202055e70 from qemu
When we used structures for TCGv_*, we needed a macro in order to
perform a comparison. Now that we use pointers, this is just clutter
Backports commit 11f4e8f8bfaa2caaab24bef6bbbb8a0205015119 from qemu
The GET and MAKE functions weren't really specific enough.
We now have a full complement of functions that convert exactly
between temporaries, arguments, tcgv pointers, and indices.
The target/sparc change is also a bug fix, which would have affected
a host that defines TCG_TARGET_HAS_extr[lh]_i64_i32, i.e. MIPS64.
Backports commit dc41aa7d34989b552efe712ffe184236216f960b from qemu
Transform TCGv_* to an "argument" or a temporary.
For now, an argument is simply the temporary index.
Backports commit ae8b75dc6ec808378487064922f25f1e7ea7a9be from qemu
While we're touching many of the lines anyway, adjust the naming
of the functions to better distinguish when "TCGArg" vs "TCGTemp"
should be used.
Backports commit 6349039d0b06eda59820629b934944246b14a1c1 from qemu
Copy s->nb_globals or s->nb_temps to a local variable for the purposes
of iteration. This should allow the compiler to use low-overhead
looping constructs on some hosts.
Backports commit ac3b88911ebc6fc841f28898ee8aed40839debe2 from qemu
Rather than have a separate buffer of 10*max_ops entries,
give each opcode 10 entries. The result is actually a bit
smaller and should have slightly more cache locality.
Backports commit 75e8b9b7aa0b95a761b9add7e2f09248b101a392 from qemu
Besides being more correct, arbitrarily long instruction allow the
generation of a translation block that spans three pages. This
confuses the generator and even allows ring 3 code to poison the
translation block cache and inject code into other processes that are
in guest ring 3.
This is an improved (and more invasive) fix for commit 30663fd ("tcg/i386:
Check the size of instruction being translated", 2017-03-24). In addition
to being more precise (and generating the right exception, which is #GP
rather than #UD), it distinguishes better between page faults and too long
instructions, as shown by this test case:
int main()
{
char *x = mmap(NULL, 8192, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC,
MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANON, -1, 0);
memset(x, 0x66, 4096);
x[4096] = 0x90;
x[4097] = 0xc3;
char *i = x + 4096 - 15;
mprotect(x + 4096, 4096, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE);
((void(*)(void)) i) ();
}
... which produces a #GP without the mprotect, and a #PF with it.
Backports commit b066c5375737ad0d630196dab2a2b329515a1d00 from qemu
These take care of advancing s->pc, and will provide a unified point
where to check for the 15-byte instruction length limit.
Backports commit e3af7c788b73a6495eb9d94992ef11f6ad6f3c56 from qemu
Most of the users of page_set_flags offset (page, page + len) as
the end points. One might consider this an error, since the other
users do supply an endpoint as the last byte of the region.
However, the first thing that page_set_flags does is round end UP
to the start of the next page. Which means computing page + len - 1
is in the end pointless. Therefore, accept this usage and do not
assert when given the exact size of the vm as the endpoint.
Backports commit de258eb07db6cf893ef1bfad8c0cedc0b983db55 from qemu
DEFINE_TYPES() will help to simplify following routine patterns:
static void foo_register_types(void)
{
type_register_static(&foo1_type_info);
type_register_static(&foo2_type_info);
...
}
type_init(foo_register_types)
or
static void foo_register_types(void)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(type_infos); i++) {
type_register_static(&type_infos[i]);
}
}
type_init(foo_register_types)
with a single line
DEFINE_TYPES(type_infos)
where types have static definition which could be consolidated in
a single array of TypeInfo structures.
It saves us ~6-10LOC per use case and would help to replace
imperative foo_register_types() there with declarative style of
type registration.
Backports commit 38b5d79b2e8cf6085324066d84e8bb3b3bbe8548 from qemu
it will help to remove code duplication of registration
static types in places that have open coded loop to
perform batch type registering.
Backports commit aa04c9d20704fa5b9ab239d5111adbcce5f49808 from qemu
The common situation of the SG instruction is that it is
executed from S&NSC memory by a CPU in NS state. That case
is handled by v7m_handle_execute_nsc(). However the instruction
also has defined behaviour in a couple of other cases:
* SG instruction in NS memory (behaves as a NOP)
* SG in S memory but CPU already secure (clears IT bits and
does nothing else)
* SG instruction in v8M without Security Extension (NOP)
These can be implemented in translate.c.
Backports commit 76eff04d166b8fe747adbe82de8b7e060e668ff9 from qemu
A few Thumb instructions are always unconditional even inside an
IT block (as opposed to being UNPREDICTABLE if used inside an
IT block): BKPT, the v8M SG instruction, and the A profile
HLT (debug halt) instruction.
This means we need to suppress the jump-over-instruction-on-condfail
code generation (though the IT state still advances as usual and
subsequent insns in the IT block may be conditional).
Backports commit dcf14dfb704519846f396a376339ebdb93eaf049 from qemu
Recent changes have left insn_crosses_page() more complicated
than it needed to be:
* it's only called from thumb_tr_translate_insn() so we know
for certain that we're looking at a Thumb insn
* the caller's check for dc->pc >= dc->next_page_start - 3
means that dc->pc can't possibly be 4 aligned, so there's
no need to check that (the check was partly there to ensure
that we didn't treat an ARM insn as Thumb, I think)
* we now have thumb_insn_is_16bit() which lets us do a precise
check of the length of the next insn, rather than opencoding
an inaccurate check
Simplify it down to just loading the first half of the insn
and calling thumb_insn_is_16bit() on it.
Backports commit 5b8d7289e9e92a0d7bcecb93cd189e245fef10cd from qemu
Refactor the Thumb decode to do the loads of the instruction words at
the top level rather than only loading the second half of a 32-bit
Thumb insn in the middle of the decode.
This is simple apart from the awkward case of Thumb1, where the
BL/BLX prefix and suffix instructions live in what in Thumb2 is the
32-bit insn space. To handle these we decode enough to identify
whether we're looking at a prefix/suffix that we handle as a 16 bit
insn, or a prefix that we're going to merge with the following suffix
to consider as a 32 bit insn. The translation of the 16 bit cases
then moves from disas_thumb2_insn() to disas_thumb_insn().
The refactoring has the benefit that we don't need to pass the
CPUARMState* down into the decoder code any more, but the major
reason for doing this is that some Thumb instructions must be always
unconditional regardless of the IT state bits, so we need to know the
whole insn before we emit the "skip this insn if the IT bits and cond
state tell us to" code. (The always unconditional insns are BKPT,
HLT and SG; the last of these is 32 bits.)
Backports commit 296e5a0a6c393553079a641c50521ae33ff89324 from qemu
The code which implements the Thumb1 split BL/BLX instructions
is guarded by a check on "not M or THUMB2". All we really need
to check here is "not THUMB2" (and we assume that elsewhere too,
eg in the ARCH(6T2) test that UNDEFs the Thumb2 insns).
This doesn't change behaviour because all M profile cores
have Thumb2 and so ARM_FEATURE_M implies ARM_FEATURE_THUMB2.
(v6M implements a very restricted subset of Thumb2, but we
can cross that bridge when we get to it with appropriate
feature bits.)
Backports commit 6b8acf256df09c8a8dd7dcaa79b06eaff4ad63f7 from qemu
Secure function return happens when a non-secure function has been
called using BLXNS and so has a particular magic LR value (either
0xfefffffe or 0xfeffffff). The function return via BX behaves
specially when the new PC value is this magic value, in the same
way that exception returns are handled.
Adjust our BX excret guards so that they recognize the function
return magic number as well, and perform the function-return
unstacking in do_v7m_exception_exit().
Backports commit d02a8698d7ae2bfed3b11fe5b064cb0aa406863b from qemu
Implement the SG instruction, which we emulate 'by hand' in the
exception handling code path.
Backports commit 333e10c51ef5876ced26f77b61b69ce0f83161a9 from qemu
Add the M profile secure MMU index values to the switch in
get_a32_user_mem_index() so that LDRT/STRT work correctly
rather than asserting at translate time.
Backports commit b9f587d62cebed427206539750ebf59bde4df422 from qemu
In preparation for adding tc.size to be able to keep track of
TB's using the binary search tree implementation from glib.
Backports commit e7e168f41364c6e83d0f75fc1b3ce7f9c41ccf76 from qemu
This prevents bit rot by ensuring the debug code is compiled when
building a user-mode target.
Unfortunately the helpers are user-mode-only so we cannot fully
get rid of the ifdef checks. Add a comment to explain this.
Backports commit 6eb062abd66611333056633899d3f09c2e795f4c from qemu
This gets rid of an ifdef check while ensuring that the debug code
is compiled, which prevents bit rot.
Backports commit dae9e03aed8e652f5dce2e5cab05dff83aa193b8 from qemu
And fix the following warning when DEBUG_TB_INVALIDATE is enabled
in translate-all.c:
CC mipsn32-linux-user/accel/tcg/translate-all.o
/data/src/qemu/accel/tcg/translate-all.c: In function ‘tb_alloc_page’:
/data/src/qemu/accel/tcg/translate-all.c:1201:16: error: format ‘%lx’ expects argument of type ‘long unsigned int’, but argument 2 has type ‘tb_page_addr_t {aka unsigned int}’ [-Werror=format=]
printf("protecting code page: 0x" TARGET_FMT_lx "\n",
^
cc1: all warnings being treated as errors
/data/src/qemu/rules.mak:66: recipe for target 'accel/tcg/translate-all.o' failed
make[1]: *** [accel/tcg/translate-all.o] Error 1
Makefile:328: recipe for target 'subdir-mipsn32-linux-user' failed
make: *** [subdir-mipsn32-linux-user] Error 2
cota@flamenco:/data/src/qemu/build ((18f3fe1...) *$)$
Backports commit 67a5b5d2f6eb6d3b980570223ba5c478487ddb6f from qemu
This gets rid of some ifdef checks while ensuring that the debug code
is compiled, which prevents bit rot.
Backports commit 424079c13b692cfcd08866bc9ffec77b887fed4e from qemu
It is unlikely that we will ever want to call this helper passing
an argument other than the current PC. So just remove the argument,
and use the pc we already get from cpu_get_tb_cpu_state.
This change paves the way to having a common "tb_lookup" function.
Backports commit 7f11636dbee89b0e4d03e9e2b96e14649a7db778 from qemu
Reusing the have_tb_lock name, which is also defined in translate-all.c,
makes code reviewing unnecessarily harder.
Avoid potential confusion by renaming the local have_tb_lock variable
to something else.
Backports commit 841710c78e022cbc1f798cced035789725702dac from qemu
It looks like there was a transcription error when writing this code
initially. The code previously only decoded src or dst of rax. This
resolves
https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1719984.
Backports commit e0dd5fd41a1a38766009f442967fab700d2d0550 from qemu
For the SG instruction and secure function return we are going
to want to do memory accesses using the MMU index of the CPU
in secure state, even though the CPU is currently in non-secure
state. Write arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate() to do this job,
and use it in cpu_mmu_index().
Backports commit b81ac0eb6315e602b18439961e0538538e4aed4f from qemu
In cpu_mmu_index() we try to do this:
if (env->v7m.secure) {
mmu_idx += ARMMMUIdx_MSUser;
}
but it will give the wrong answer, because ARMMMUIdx_MSUser
includes the 0x40 ARM_MMU_IDX_M field, and so does the
mmu_idx we're adding to, and we'll end up with 0x8n rather
than 0x4n. This error is then nullified by the call to
arm_to_core_mmu_idx() which masks out the high part, but
we're about to factor out the code that calculates the
ARMMMUIdx values so it can be used without passing it through
arm_to_core_mmu_idx(), so fix this bug first.
Backports commit fe768788d29597ee56fc11ba2279d502c2617457 from qemu
Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses
in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate
various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses.
The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the
case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the
address don't match the current security state of the CPU.
In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction
accesses, the security attributes of the address determine
whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face
value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant
bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which
would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we
don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between
address attributes and CPU state means either:
* some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory
perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory)
* execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a
Secure & NonSecure code region
The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure
state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that
instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which
means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an
exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the
other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values.
This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG;
it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which
is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes
for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they
specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to.
Backports commit 35337cc391245f251bfb9134f181c33e6375d6c1 from qemu
Implement the register interface for the SAU: SAU_CTRL,
SAU_TYPE, SAU_RNR, SAU_RBAR and SAU_RLAR. None of the
actual behaviour is implemented here; registers just
read back as written.
When the CPU definition for Cortex-M33 is eventually
added, its initfn will set cpu->sau_sregion, in the same
way that we currently set cpu->pmsav7_dregion for the
M3 and M4.
Number of SAU regions is typically a configurable
CPU parameter, but this patch doesn't provide a
QEMU CPU property for it. We can easily add one when
we have a board that requires it.
Backports commit 9901c576f6c02d43206e5faaf6e362ab7ea83246 from qemu
Add support for v8M and in particular the security extension
to the exception entry code. This requires changes to:
* calculation of the exception-return magic LR value
* push the callee-saves registers in certain cases
* clear registers when taking non-secure exceptions to avoid
leaking information from the interrupted secure code
* switch to the correct security state on entry
* use the vector table for the security state we're targeting
Backports commit d3392718e1fcf0859fb7c0774a8e946bacb8419c from qemu
For v8M, exceptions from Secure to Non-Secure state will save
callee-saved registers to the exception frame as well as the
caller-saved registers. Add support for unstacking these
registers in exception exit when necessary.
Backports commit 907bedb3f3ce134c149599bd9cb61856d811b8ca from qemu
In v8M, more bits are defined in the exception-return magic
values; update the code that checks these so we accept
the v8M values when the CPU permits them.
Backports commit bfb2eb52788b9605ef2fc9bc72683d4299117fde from qemu
Add the new M profile Secure Fault Status Register
and Secure Fault Address Register.
Backports commit bed079da04dd9e0e249b9bc22bca8dce58b67f40 from qemu
In the v8M architecture, return from an exception to a PC which
has bit 0 set is not UNPREDICTABLE; it is defined that bit 0
is discarded [R_HRJH]. Restrict our complaint about this to v7M.
Backports commit 4e4259d3c574a8e89c3af27bcb84bc19a442efb1 from qemu
Attempting to do an exception return with an exception frame that
is not 8-aligned is UNPREDICTABLE in v8M; warn about this.
(It is not UNPREDICTABLE in v7M, and our implementation can
handle the merely-4-aligned case fine, so we don't need to
do anything except warn.)
Backports commit cb484f9a6e790205e69d9a444c3e353a3a1cfd84 from qemu
ARM v8M specifies that the INVPC usage fault for mismatched
xPSR exception field and handler mode bit should be checked
before updating the PSR and SP, so that the fault is taken
with the existing stack frame rather than by pushing a new one.
Perform this check in the right place for v8M.
Since v7M specifies in its pseudocode that this usage fault
check should happen later, we have to retain the original
code for that check rather than being able to merge the two.
(The distinction is architecturally visible but only in
very obscure corner cases like attempting an invalid exception
return with an exception frame in read only memory.)
Backports commit 224e0c300a0098fb577a03bd29d774d0769f632a from qemu
On exception return for v8M, the SPSEL bit in the EXC_RETURN magic
value should be restored to the SPSEL bit in the CONTROL register
banked specified by the EXC_RETURN.ES bit.
Add write_v7m_control_spsel_for_secstate() which behaves like
write_v7m_control_spsel() but allows the caller to specify which
CONTROL bank to use, reimplement write_v7m_control_spsel() in
terms of it, and use it in exception return.
Backports commit 3f0cddeee1f266d43c956581f3050058360a810d from qemu
Now that we can handle the CONTROL.SPSEL bit not necessarily being
in sync with the current stack pointer, we can restore the correct
security state on exception return. This happens before we start
to read registers off the stack frame, but after we have taken
possible usage faults for bad exception return magic values and
updated CONTROL.SPSEL.
Backports commit 3919e60b6efd9a86a0e6ba637aa584222855ac3a from qemu
In the v7M architecture, there is an invariant that if the CPU is
in Handler mode then the CONTROL.SPSEL bit cannot be nonzero.
This in turn means that the current stack pointer is always
indicated by CONTROL.SPSEL, even though Handler mode always uses
the Main stack pointer.
In v8M, this invariant is removed, and CONTROL.SPSEL may now
be nonzero in Handler mode (though Handler mode still always
uses the Main stack pointer). In preparation for this change,
change how we handle this bit: rename switch_v7m_sp() to
the now more accurate write_v7m_control_spsel(), and make it
check both the handler mode state and the SPSEL bit.
Note that this implicitly changes the point at which we switch
active SP on exception exit from before we pop the exception
frame to after it.
Backports commit de2db7ec894f11931932ca78cd14a8d2b1389d5b from qemu
Currently our M profile exception return code switches to the
target stack pointer relatively early in the process, before
it tries to pop the exception frame off the stack. This is
awkward for v8M for two reasons:
* in v8M the process vs main stack pointer is not selected
purely by the value of CONTROL.SPSEL, so updating SPSEL
and relying on that to switch to the right stack pointer
won't work
* the stack we should be reading the stack frame from and
the stack we will eventually switch to might not be the
same if the guest is doing strange things
Change our exception return code to use a 'frame pointer'
to read the exception frame rather than assuming that we
can switch the live stack pointer this early.
Backports commit 5b5223997c04b769bb362767cecb5f7ec382c5f0 from qemu
This properly forwards SMC events to EL2 when PSCI is provided by QEMU
itself and, thus, ARM_FEATURE_EL3 is off.
Found and tested with the Jailhouse hypervisor. Solution based on
suggestions by Peter Maydell.
Backports commit 77077a83006c3c9bdca496727f1735a3c5c5355d from qemu
We have object_get_objects_root() to keep user created objects, however
no place for objects that will be used internally. Create such a
container for internal objects.
Backports commit 7c47c4ead75d0b733ee8f2f51fd1de0644cc1308 from qemu
This avoids a name clash with the access macro on windows 64:
make
CHK version_gen.h
CC aarch64-softmmu/memory.o
/home/konrad/qemu/memory.c: In function 'access_with_adjusted_size':
/home/konrad/qemu/memory.c:591:73: error: macro "access" passed 7 arguments, \
but takes just 2
(size - access_size - i) * 8, access_mask, attrs);
^
Backports commit 05e015f73c3b5c50c237d3d8e555e25cfa543a5c from qemu
Provide helpers to convert bitmaps to little endian format. It can be
used when we want to send one bitmap via network to some other hosts.
One thing to mention is that, these helpers only solve the problem of
endianess, but it does not solve the problem of different word size on
machines (the bitmaps managing same count of bits may contains different
size when malloced). So we need to take care of the size alignment issue
on the callers for now.
Backports commit d7788151a0807d5d2d410e3f8944d8c8a651f8d2 from qemu
In the A64 decoder, we have a lot of references to section numbers
from version A.a of the v8A ARM ARM (DDI0487). This version of the
document is now long obsolete (we are currently on revision B.a),
and various intervening versions renumbered all the sections.
The most recent B.a version of the document doesn't assign
section numbers at all to the individual instruction classes
in the way that the various A.x versions did. The simplest thing
to do is just to delete all the out of date C.x.x references.
Backports commit 4ce31af4aeb8471f6a913de7c59d3bde1fc4f03d from qemu
Now that we have a banked FAULTMASK register and banked exceptions,
we can implement the correct check in cpu_mmu_index() for whether
the MPU_CTRL.HFNMIENA bit's effect should apply. This bit causes
handlers which have requested a negative execution priority to run
with the MPU disabled. In v8M the test has to check this for the
current security state and so takes account of banking.
Backports relevant part of commit 5d4791991d4de12e83d44738417c9e964167b6e8 from qemu
In v8M the MSR and MRS instructions have extra register value
encodings to allow secure code to access the non-secure banked
version of various special registers.
(We don't implement the MSPLIM_NS or PSPLIM_NS aliases, because
we don't currently implement the stack limit registers at all.)
Backports commit 50f11062d4c896408731d6a286bcd116d1e08465 from qemu
Although none of the existing macro call-sites were broken,
it's always better to write macros that properly parenthesize
arguments that can be complex expressions, so that the intended
order of operations is not broken.
Backports commit 2a2be359c4335607c7f746cf27c412c08ab89aff from qemu
now cpu_mips_init() reimplements subset of cpu_generic_init()
tasks, so just drop it and use cpu_generic_init() directly.
Backports commit c4c8146cfd0fc3f95418fbc82a2eded594675022 from qemu
Register separate QOM types for each mips cpu model,
so it would be possible to reuse generic CPU creation
routines.
Backports commit 41da212c9ce9482fcfd490170c2611470254f8dc from qemu
This changes the order between cpu_mips_realize_env() and
cpu_exec_initfn(), but cpu_exec_initfn() don't have anything that
depends on cpu_mips_realize_env() being called first.
Backports commit df4dc10284e1d871db8adb512816a561473ffe3e from qemu
no logical change, only code movement (and fix a comment typo).
Backports commit 26aa3d9aecbb6fe9bce808a1d127191bdf3cc3d2 from qemu
Also backports commit 5502b66fc7d0bebd08b9b7017cb7e8b5261c3a2d
We already have several files that knowingly require assert()
to work, sometimes because refactoring the code for proper
error handling has not been tackled yet; there are probably
other files that have a similar situation but with no comments
documenting the same. In fact, we have places in migration
that handle untrusted input with assertions, where disabling
the assertions risks a worse security hole than the current
behavior of losing the guest to SIGABRT when migration fails
because of the assertion. Promote our current per-file
safety-valve to instead be project-wide, and expand it to also
cover glib's g_assert().
Note that we do NOT want to encourage 'assert(side-effects);'
(that is a bad practice that prevents copy-and-paste of code to
other projects that CAN disable assertions; plus it costs
unnecessary reviewer mental cycles to remember whether a project
special-cases the crippling of asserts); and we would LIKE to
fix migration to not rely on asserts (but that takes a big code
audit). But in the meantime, we DO want to send a message
that anyone that disables assertions has to tweak code in order
to compile, making it obvious that they are taking on additional
risk that we are not going to support. At the same time, leave
comments mentioning NDEBUG in files that we know still need to
be scrubbed, so there is at least something to grep for.
It would be possible to come up with some other mechanism for
doing runtime checking by default, but which does not abort
the program on failure, while leaving side effects in place
(unlike how crippling assert() avoids even the side effects),
perhaps under the name q_verify(); but it was not deemed worth
the effort (developers should not have to learn a replacement
when the standard C macro works just fine, and it would be a lot
of churn for little gain). The patch specifically uses #error
rather than #warn so that a user is forced to tweak the header
to acknowledge the issue, even when not using a -Werror
compilation.
Backports commit 262a69f4282e44426c7a132138581d400053e0a1 from qemu
Starting with Windows Server 2012 and Windows 8, if
CPUID.40000005.EAX contains a value of -1, Windows assumes specific
limit to the number of VPs. In this case, Windows Server 2012
guest VMs may use more than 64 VPs, up to the maximum supported
number of processors applicable to the specific Windows
version being used.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/virtualization/hyper-v-on-windows/reference/tlfs
For compatibility, Let's introduce a new property for X86CPU,
named "x-hv-max-vps" as Eduardo's suggestion, and set it
to 0x40 before machine 2.10.
(The "x-" prefix indicates that the property is not supposed to
be a stable user interface.)
Backports relevant parts of commit 6c69dfb67e84747cf071958594d939e845dfcc0c from qemu
The SSE4.1 phminposuw instruction finds the minimum 16-bit element in
the source vector, putting the value of that element in the low 16
bits of the destination vector, the index of that element in the next
three bits and zeroing the rest of the destination. The helper for
this operation fills the destination from high to low, meaning that
when the source and destination are the same register, the minimum
source element can be overwritten before it is copied to the
destination. This patch fixes it to fill the destination from low to
high instead, so the minimum source element is always copied first.
This fixes one gcc test failure in my GCC 6-based testing (and so
concludes the present sequence of patches, as I don't have any further
gcc test failures left in that testing that I attribute to QEMU bugs).
Backports commit aa406feadfc5b095ca147ec56d6187c64be015a7 from qemu
One of the cases of the SSE4.2 pcmpestri / pcmpestrm / pcmpistri /
pcmpistrm instructions does a substring search. The implementation of
this case in the pcmpxstrx helper is incorrect. The operation in this
case is a search for a string (argument d to the helper) in another
string (argument s to the helper); if a copy of d at a particular
position would run off the end of s, the resulting output bit should
be 0 whether or not the strings match in the region where they
overlap, but the QEMU implementation was wrongly comparing only up to
the point where s ends and counting it as a match if an initial
segment of d matched a terminal segment of s. Here, "run off the end
of s" means that some byte of d would overlap some byte outside of s;
thus, if d has zero length, it is considered to match everywhere,
including after the end of s. This patch fixes the implementation to
correspond with the proper instruction semantics. This fixes four gcc
test failures in my GCC 6-based testing.
Backports commit ae35eea7e4a9f21dd147406dfbcd0c4c6aaf2a60 from qemu
The SSE4.1 packusdw instruction combines source and destination
vectors of signed 32-bit integers into a single vector of unsigned
16-bit integers, with unsigned saturation. When the source and
destination are the same register, this means each 32-bit element of
that register is used twice as an input, to produce two of the 16-bit
output elements, and so if the operation is carried out
element-by-element in-place, no matter what the order in which it is
applied to the elements, the first element's operation will overwrite
some future input. The helper for packssdw avoids this issue by
computing the result in a local temporary and copying it to the
destination at the end; this patch fixes the packusdw helper to do
likewise. This fixes three gcc test failures in my GCC 6-based
testing.
Backports commit 80e19606215d4df370dfe8fe21c558a129f00f0b from qemu
It turns out that my recent fix to set rip_offset when emulating some
SSE4.1 instructions needs generalizing to cover a wider class of
instructions. Specifically, every instruction in the sse_op_table7
table, coming from various instruction set extensions, has an 8-bit
immediate operand that comes after any memory operand, and so needs
rip_offset set for correctness if there is a memory operand that is
rip-relative, and my patch only set it for a subset of those
instructions. This patch moves the rip_offset setting to cover the
wider class of instructions, so fixing 9 further gcc testsuite
failures in my GCC 6-based testing. (I do not know whether there
might be still further classes of instructions missing this setting.)
Backports commit c6a8242915328cda0df0fbc0803da3448137e614 from qemu
The SSE4.1 pmovsx* and pmovzx* instructions take packed 1-byte, 2-byte
or 4-byte inputs and sign-extend or zero-extend them to a wider vector
output. The associated helpers for these instructions do the
extension on each element in turn, starting with the lowest. If the
input and output are the same register, this means that all the input
elements after the first have been overwritten before they are read.
This patch makes the helpers extend starting with the highest element,
not the lowest, to avoid such overwriting. This fixes many GCC test
failures (161 in the gcc testsuite in my GCC 6-based testing) when
testing with a default CPU setting enabling those instructions.
Backports commit c6a56c8e990b213a1638af2d34352771d5fa4d9c from qemu
It's not even clear what the interface REG and VAL32 were supposed to mean.
All uses had REG = 0 and VAL32 was the bitset assigned to the destination.
Backports commit f46934df662182097dce07d57ec00f37e4d2abf1 from qemu
Instead of copying addr to a local temp, reuse the value (which we
have just compared as equal) already saved in cpu_exclusive_addr.
Backports commit 37e29a64254bf82a1901784fcca17c25f8164c2f from qemu
Previously when single stepping through ERET instruction via GDB
would result in debugger entering the "next" PC after ERET instruction.
When debugging in kernel mode, this will also cause unintended behavior,
because debugger will try to access memory from EL0 point of view.
Backports commit dddbba9943ef6a81c8702e4a50cb0a8b1a4201fe from qemu
In the v7M and v8M ARM ARM, the magic exception return values are
referred to as EXC_RETURN values, and in QEMU we use V7M_EXCRET_*
constants to define bits within them. Rename the 'type' variable
which holds the exception return value in do_v7m_exception_exit()
to excret, making it clearer that it does hold an EXC_RETURN value.
Backports commit 351e527a613147aa2a2e6910f92923deef27ee48 from qemu
The exception-return magic values get some new bits in v8M, which
makes some bit definitions for them worthwhile.
We don't use the bit definitions for the switch on the low bits
which checks the return type for v7M, because this is defined
in the v7M ARM ARM as a set of valid values rather than via
per-bit checks.
Backports commit 4d1e7a4745c050f7ccac49a1c01437526b5130b5 from qemu