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
In do_v7m_exception_exit(), there's no need to force the high 4
bits of 'type' to 1 when calling v7m_exception_taken(), because
we know that they're always 1 or we could not have got to this
"handle return to magic exception return address" code. Remove
the unnecessary ORs.
Backports commit 7115cdf5782922611bcc44c89eec5990db7f6466 from qemu
For a bus fault, the M profile BFSR bit PRECISERR means a bus
fault on a data access, and IBUSERR means a bus fault on an
instruction access. We had these the wrong way around; fix this.
Backports commit c6158878650c01b2c753b2ea7d0967c8fe5ca59e from qemu
For M profile we must clear the exclusive monitor on reset, exception
entry and exception exit. We weren't doing any of these things; fix
this bug.
Backports commit dc3c4c14f0f12854dbd967be3486f4db4e66d25b from qemu
For M profile we must clear the exclusive monitor on reset, exception
entry and exception exit. We weren't doing any of these things; fix
this bug.
Backports commit dc3c4c14f0f12854dbd967be3486f4db4e66d25b from qemu
Use a symbolic constant M_REG_NUM_BANKS for the array size for
registers which are banked by M profile security state, rather
than hardcoding lots of 2s.
Backports commit 4a16724f06ead684a5962477a557c26c677c2729 from qemu
Older compilers (rhel6) don't like redefinition of typedefs
Fixes: 12a6c15ef31c98ecefa63e91ac36955383038384
Backports commit 9d81b2d2000f41be55a0624a26873f993fb6e928 from qemu
GCC 4.7.2 on SunOS reports that the values assigned to array members are not
real constants:
target/m68k/fpu_helper.c:32:5: error: initializer element is not constant
target/m68k/fpu_helper.c:32:5: error: (near initialization for 'fpu_rom[0]')
rules.mak:66: recipe for target 'target/m68k/fpu_helper.o' failed
Convert the array to make_floatx80_init() to fix it.
Replace floatx80_pi-like constants with make_floatx80_init() as they are
defined as make_floatx80().
This fixes build on SmartOS (Joyent).
Backports commit 6fa9ba09dbf4eb8b52bcb47d6820957f1b77ee0b from qemu
We are not going to use ldrd for loading the comparator
for 32-bit guests, so don't limit cmp_off to 8 bits then.
This eliminates one insn in the tlb load for some guests.
Backports commit 95ede84f4de18747d03d79c148013cff99acd60b from qemu
Use UBFX to avoid limitation on CPU_TLB_BITS. Since we're dropping
the initial shift, we need to replace the page masking. We can use
MOVW+BIC to do this without shifting. The result is the same size
as the armv6 path with one less conditional instruction.
Backports commit 647ab96aaf5defeb138e48d610f7f633c587b40d from qemu
Split out maybe_out_small_movi for use with other operations
that want to add to the constant pool.
Backports commit 28eef8aaece5e83df4568d9842ab9611ec130b2c from qemu
We were passing in -2 instead of +2, but then ignoring
the actual contents of addend in the calculation.
Backports commit e692a3492d04500355bcf23575eed7cf137b38d5 from qemu
Already it saves 2 bytes per call, but also the constant pool
entry may well be shared across multiple calls.
Backports commit 4e45f23943c0bb91588627de3801826546155ad8 from qemu
A new shared header tcg-pool.inc.c adds new_pool_label,
for registering a tcg_target_ulong to be emitted after
the generated code, plus relocation data to install a
pointer to the data.
A new pointer is added to the TCGContext, so that we
dump the constant pool as data, not code.
Backports commit 57a269469dbf70013dab3a176e1735636010a772 from qemu
Dispense with TCGBackendData, as it has never been used for more than
holding a single pointer. Use a define in the cpu/tcg-target.h to
signal requirement for TCGLabelQemuLdst, so that we can drop the no-op
tcg-be-null.h stubs. Rename tcg-be-ldst.h to tcg-ldst.inc.c.
Backports commit 659ef5cbb893872d25e9d95191cc23b16546c8a1 from qemu
Replace the USE_DIRECT_JUMP ifdef with a TCG_TARGET_HAS_direct_jump
boolean test. Replace the tb_set_jmp_target1 ifdef with an unconditional
function tb_target_set_jmp_target.
While we're touching all backends, add a parameter for tb->tc_ptr;
we're going to need it shortly for some backends.
Move tb_set_jmp_target and tb_add_jump from exec-all.h to cpu-exec.c.
Backports commit a85833933628384d74ec412024d55cf012640287 from qemu
Nobody has mentioned AIX host support on the mailing list for years,
and we have no test systems for it so it is most likely broken.
We've advertised in configure for two releases now that we plan
to drop support for this host OS, and have had no complaints.
Drop the AIX host support code.
We can also drop the now-unused AIX version of sys_cache_info().
Note that the _CALL_AIX define used in the PPC tcg backend is
also used for Linux PPC64, and so that code should not be removed.
Backports commit 7872375219c03682bda3f6191fa5f6a58238ed36 from qemu
Implement the new do_transaction_failed hook for ARM, which should
cause the CPU to take a prefetch abort or data abort.
Backports commit c79c0a314c43b78f6326d5f137bdbafdbf8e9766 from qemu
Define a new MachineClass field ignore_memory_transaction_failures.
If this is flag is true then the CPU will ignore memory transaction
failures which should cause the CPU to take an exception due to an
access to an unassigned physical address; the transaction will
instead return zero (for a read) or be ignored (for a write). This
should be set only by legacy board models which rely on the old
RAZ/WI behaviour for handling devices that QEMU does not yet model.
New board models should instead use "unimplemented-device" for all
memory ranges where the guest will attempt to probe for a device that
QEMU doesn't implement and a stub device is required.
We need this for ARM boards, where we're about to implement support for
generating external aborts on memory transaction failures. Too many
of our legacy board models rely on the RAZ/WI behaviour and we
would break currently working guests when their "probe for device"
code provoked an external abort rather than a RAZ.
Backports commit ed860129acd3fcd0b1e47884e810212aaca4d21b from qemu
Implement the BXNS v8M instruction, which is like BX but will do a
jump-and-switch-to-NonSecure if the branch target address has bit 0
clear.
This is the first piece of code which implements "switch to the
other security state", so the commit also includes the code to
switch the stack pointers around, which is the only complicated
part of switching security state.
BLXNS is more complicated than just "BXNS but set the link register",
so we leave it for a separate commit.
Backports commit fb602cb726b3ebdd01ef3b1732d74baf9fee7ec9 from qemu
Move the regime_is_secure() utility function to internals.h;
we are going to want to call it from translate.c.
Backports commit 61fcd69b0db268e7612b07fadc436b93def91768 from qemu
Make the CFSR register banked if v8M security extensions are enabled.
Not all the bits in this register are banked: the BFSR
bits [15:8] are shared between S and NS, and we store them
in the NS copy of the register.
Backports commit 334e8dad7a109d15cb20b090131374ae98682a50 from qemu
Make the CCR register banked if v8M security extensions are enabled.
This is slightly more complicated than the other "add banking"
patches because there is one bit in the register which is not
banked. We keep the live data in the NS copy of the register,
and adjust it on register reads and writes. (Since we don't
currently implement the behaviour that the bit controls, there
is nowhere else that needs to care.)
This patch includes the enforcement of the bits which are newly
RES1 in ARMv8M.
Backports commit 9d40cd8a68cfc7606f4548cc9e812bab15c6dc28 from qemu
Make the MPU registers MPU_MAIR0 and MPU_MAIR1 banked if v8M security
extensions are enabled.
We can freely add more items to vmstate_m_security without
breaking migration compatibility, because no CPU currently
has the ARM_FEATURE_M_SECURITY bit enabled and so this
subsection is not yet used by anything.
Backports commit 62c58ee0b24eafb44c06402fe059fbd7972eb409 from qemu
Make the MPU registers MPU_MAIR0 and MPU_MAIR1 banked if v8M security
extensions are enabled.
Backports commit 4125e6feb71c810ca38f0d8e66e748b472a9cc54 from qemu
Make the FAULTMASK register banked if v8M security extensions are enabled.
Note that we do not yet implement the functionality of the new
AIRCR.PRIS bit (which allows the effect of the NS copy of FAULTMASK to
be restricted).
This patch includes the code to determine for v8M which copy
of FAULTMASK should be updated on exception exit; further
changes will be required to the exception exit code in general
to support v8M, so this is just a small piece of that.
The v8M ARM ARM introduces a notation where individual paragraphs
are labelled with R (for rule) or I (for information) followed
by a random group of subscript letters. In comments where we want
to refer to a particular part of the manual we use this convention,
which should be more stable across document revisions than using
section or page numbers.
Backports commit 42a6686b2f6199d086a58edd7731faeb2dbe7c14 from qemu
Make the PRIMASK register banked if v8M security extensions are enabled.
Note that we do not yet implement the functionality of the new
AIRCR.PRIS bit (which allows the effect of the NS copy of PRIMASK to
be restricted).
Backports commit 6d8048341995b31a77dc2e0dcaaf4e3df0e3121a from qemu
Make the BASEPRI register banked if v8M security extensions are enabled.
Note that we do not yet implement the functionality of the new
AIRCR.PRIS bit (which allows the effect of the NS copy of BASEPRI to
be restricted).
Backports commit acf949411ffb675edbfb707e235800b02e6a36f8 from qemu
Now that MPU lookups can return different results for v8M
when the CPU is in secure vs non-secure state, we need to
have separate MMU indexes; add the secure counterparts
to the existing three M profile MMU indexes.
Backports commit 66787c7868d05d29974e09201611b718c976f955 from qemu
If a v8M CPU supports the security extension then we need to
give it two AddressSpaces, the same way we do already for
an A profile core with EL3.
Backports commit 1d2091bc75ab7f9e2c43082f361a528a63c79527 from qemu
As the first step in implementing ARM v8M's security extension:
* add a new feature bit ARM_FEATURE_M_SECURITY
* add the CPU state field that indicates whether the CPU is
currently in the secure state
* add a migration subsection for this new state
(we will add the Secure copies of banked register state
to this subsection in later patches)
* add a #define for the one new-in-v8M exception type
* make the CPU debug log print S/NS status
Backports commit 1e577cc7cffd3de14dbd321de5c3ef191c6ab07f from qemu
As part of ARMv8M, we need to add support for the PMSAv8 MPU
architecture.
PMSAv8 differs from PMSAv7 both in register/data layout (for instance
using base and limit registers rather than base and size) and also in
behaviour (for example it does not have subregions); rather than
trying to wedge it into the existing PMSAv7 code and data structures,
we define separate ones.
This commit adds the data structures which hold the state for a
PMSAv8 MPU and the register interface to it. The implementation of
the MPU behaviour will be added in a subsequent commit.
Backports commit 0e1a46bbd2d6c39614b87f4e88ea305acce8a35f from qemu
ARM is a fixed-length ISA and we can compute the page crossing
condition exactly once during init_disas_context.
Backports commit d0264d86b026e9d948de577b05ff86d708658576 from qemu
We need not check for ARM vs Thumb state in order to dispatch
disassembly of every instruction.
Backports commit 722ef0a562a8cd810297b00516e36380e2f33353 from qemu
Since AArch64 uses a fixed-width ISA, we can pre-compute the number of
insns remaining on the page. Also, we can check for single-step once.
Backports commit dcc3a21209a8eeae0fe43966012f8e08d3566f98 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 58350fa4b2852fede96cfebad0b26bf79bca419c from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 4013f7fc811e90b89da3a516dc71b01ca0e7e54e from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit be4079641f1bc755fc5d3ff194cf505c506227d8 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 70d3c035ae36a2c5c0f991ba958526127c92bb67 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 24299c892cbfe29120f051b6b7d0bcf3e0cc8e85 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 13189a9080b35b13af23f2be4806fa0cdbb31af3 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 0cb56b373da70047979b61b042f59aaff4012e1b from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit a68956ad7f8510bdc0b54793c65c62c6a94570a4 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit f62bd897e64c6fb1f93e8795e835980516fe53b5 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit b14768544fd715a3f1742c10fc36ae81c703cbc1 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 5c03990665aa9095e4d2734c8ca0f936a8e8f000 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 1d8a5535238fc5976e0542a413f4ad88f5d4b233 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic
instruction translation loop.
Backports commit dcba3a8d443842f7a30a2c52d50a6b50b6982b35 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit e0d110d943891b719de7ca075fc17fa8ea5749b8 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 47e981b42553f00110024c33897354f9014e83e9 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 2c2f8cacd8cf4f67d6f1384b19d38f9a0a25878b from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit e6b41ec37f0a9742374dfdb90e662745969cd7ea from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit e6b41ec37f0a9742374dfdb90e662745969cd7ea from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 9d75f52b34053066b8e8fc37610d5f300d67538b from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 9761d39b09c4beb1340bf3074be3d3e0a5d453a4 from qemu
Incrementally paves the way towards using the generic instruction translation
loop.
Backports commit 6cf147aa299e49f7794858609a1e8ef19f81c007 from qemu
There's nothing magic about the exception that we generate in order
to execute the magic kernel page. We can and should allow gdb to
set a breakpoint at this location.
Backports commit 3805c2eba8999049bbbea29fdcdea4d47d943c88 from qemu
Used later. An enum makes expected values explicit and
bounds the value space of switches.
Backports commit 77fc6f5e28667634916f114ae04c6029cd7b9c45 from qemu
Fold DISAS_EXC and DISAS_TB_JUMP into DISAS_NORETURN.
In both cases all following code is dead. In the first
case because we have exited the TB via exception; in the
second case because we have exited the TB via goto_tb
and its associated machinery.
Backports commit a0c231e651b249960906f250b8e5eef5ed9888c4 from qemu
This target is not sophisticated in its use of cleanups at the
end of the translation loop. For the most part, any condition
that exits the TB is dealt with by emitting the exiting opcode
right then and there. Therefore the only is_jmp indicator that
is needed is DISAS_NORETURN.
For two stack segment modifying cases, we have not yet exited
the TB (therefore DISAS_NORETURN feels wrong), but intend to exit.
The caller of gen_movl_seg_T0 currently checks for any non-zero
value, therefore DISAS_TOO_MANY seems acceptable for that usage.
Backports commit 1e39d97af086d525cd0408eaa5d19783ea165906 from qemu
This will allow some amount of cleanup to happen before
switching the backends over to enum DisasJumpType.
Backports commit 5dc66895b0113034cd37fd5e65911d7959fc26a9 from qemu
This allows LOAD HALFWORD IMMEDIATE ON CONDITION,
eliminating one insn in some common cases.
Backports commit 7af525af01b9615c4f4df5da2e8a50f2fe00b023 from qemu
Currently, we cannot use mttcg for running strong memory model guests
on weak memory model hosts due to missing ordering semantics.
We implicitly generate fence instructions for stronger guests if an
ordering mismatch is detected. We generate fences only for the orders
for which fence instructions are necessary, for example a fence is not
necessary between a store and a subsequent load on x86 since its
absence in the guest binary tells that ordering need not be
ensured. Also note that if we find multiple subsequent fence
instructions in the generated IR, we combine them in the TCG
optimization pass.
This patch allows us to boot an x86 guest on ARM64 hosts using mttcg.
Backports commit b32dc3370a666e237b2099c22166b15e58cb6df8 from qemu
For external aborts, we will want to be able to specify the EA
(external abort type) bit in the syndrome field. Allow callers of
deliver_fault() to do that by adding a field to ARMMMUFaultInfo which
we use when constructing the syndrome values.
Backports commit c528af7aa64f159eb30b46e567b650c5440fc117 from qemu
We currently have some similar code in tlb_fill() and in
arm_cpu_do_unaligned_access() for delivering a data abort or prefetch
abort. We're also going to want to do the same thing to handle
external aborts. Factor out the common code into a new function
deliver_fault().
Backports commit aac43da1d772a50778ab1252c13c08c2eb31fb39 from qemu
Call the new cpu_transaction_failed() hook at the places where
CPU generated code interacts with the memory system:
io_readx()
io_writex()
get_page_addr_code()
Any access from C code (eg via cpu_physical_memory_rw(),
address_space_rw(), ld/st_*_phys()) will *not* trigger CPU exceptions
via cpu_transaction_failed(). Handling for transactions failures for
this kind of call should be done by using a function which returns a
MemTxResult and treating the failure case appropriately in the
calling code.
In an ideal world we would not generate CPU exceptions for
instruction fetch failures in get_page_addr_code() but instead wait
until the code translation process tried a load and it failed;
however that change would require too great a restructuring and
redesign to attempt at this point.
Backports commit 04e3aabde397e7abc78ba1ce6cbd144d5fbb1722 from qemu
Currently we have a rather half-baked setup for allowing CPUs to
generate exceptions on accesses to invalid memory: the CPU has a
cpu_unassigned_access() hook which the memory system calls in
unassigned_mem_write() and unassigned_mem_read() if the current_cpu
pointer is non-NULL. This was originally designed before we
implemented the MemTxResult type that allows memory operations to
report a success or failure code, which is why the hook is called
right at the bottom of the memory system. The major problem with
this is that it means that the hook can be called even when the
access was not actually done by the CPU: for instance if the CPU
writes to a DMA engine register which causes the DMA engine to begin
a transaction which has been set up by the guest to operate on
invalid memory then this will casue the CPU to take an exception
incorrectly. Another minor problem is that currently if a device
returns a transaction error then this won't turn into a CPU exception
at all.
The right way to do this is to have allow the CPU to respond
to memory system transaction failures at the point where the
CPU specific code calls into the memory system.
Define a new QOM CPU method and utility function
cpu_transaction_failed() which is called in these cases.
The functionality here overlaps with the existing
cpu_unassigned_access() because individual target CPUs will
need some work to convert them to the new system. When this
transition is complete we can remove the old cpu_unassigned_access()
code.
Backports commit 0dff0939f6fc6a7abd966d4295f06a06d7a01df9 from qemu
Move the MemTxResult type to memattrs.h. We're going to want to
use it in cpu/qom.h, which doesn't want to include all of
memory.h. In practice MemTxResult and MemTxAttrs are pretty
closely linked since both are used for the new-style
read_with_attrs and write_with_attrs callbacks, so memattrs.h
is a reasonable home for this rather than creating a whole
new header file for it.
Backports commit 3114d092b1740f9db9aa559aeb48ee387011e1da from qemu
Add a utility function for testing whether the CPU is in Handler
mode; this is just a check whether v7m.exception is non-zero, but
we do it in several places and it makes the code a bit easier
to read to not have to mentally figure out what the test is testing.
Backports commit 15b3f556bab4f961bf92141eb8521c8da3df5eb2 from qemu
For v7M, writes to the CONTROL register are only permitted for
privileged code. However even if the code is privileged, the
write must not affect the SPSEL bit in the CONTROL register
if the CPU is in Thread mode (as documented in the pseudocode
for the MSR instruction). Implement this, instead of permitting
SPSEL to be written in all cases.
This was causing mbed applications not to run, because the
RTX RTOS they use relies on this behaviour.
Backports commit 792dac309c8660306557ba058b8b5a6a75ab3c1f from qemu
Move the code in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt() that calculates the
magic LR value down to when we're actually going to use it.
Having the calculation and use so far apart makes the code
a little harder to understand than it needs to be.
Backports commit bd70b29ba92e4446f9e4eb8b9acc19ef6ff4a4d5 from qemu
Make the arm_cpu_dump_state() debug logging handle the M-profile XPSR
rather than assuming it's an A-profile CPSR. On M profile the PSR
line of a register dump will now look like this:
XPSR=41000000 -Z-- T priv-thread
Backports commit 5b906f3589443a3c69d8feeaac37263843ecfb8d from qemu
We currently store the M profile CPU register state PRIMASK and
FAULTMASK in the daif field of the CPU state in its I and F
bits. This is a legacy from the original implementation, which
tried to share the cpu_exec_interrupt code between A profile
and M profile. We've since separated out the two cases because
they are significantly different, so now there is no common
code between M and A profile which looks at env->daif: all the
uses are either in A-only or M-only code paths. Sharing the state
fields now is just confusing, and will make things awkward
when we implement v8M, where the PRIMASK and FAULTMASK
registers are banked between security states.
Switch M profile over to using v7m.faultmask and v7m.primask
fields for these registers.
Backports commit e6ae5981ea4b0f6feb223009a5108582e7644f8f from qemu
The M profile XPSR is almost the same format as the A profile CPSR,
but not quite. Define some XPSR_* macros and use them where we
definitely dealing with an XPSR rather than reusing the CPSR ones.
Backports commit 987ab45e108953c1c98126c338c2119c243c372b from qemu
When we switched our handling of exception exit to detect
the magic addresses at translate time rather than via
a do_unassigned_access hook, we forgot to update a
comment; correct the omission.
Backports commit 9d17da4b68a05fc78daa47f0f3d914eea5d802ea from qemu
Remove the comment that claims that some MPU_CTRL bits are stored
in sctlr_el[1]. This has never been true since MPU_CTRL was added
in commit 29c483a50607 -- the comment is a leftover from
Michael Davidsaver's original implementation, which I modified
not to use sctlr_el[1]; I forgot to delete the comment then.
Backports commit 59e4972c3fc63d981e8b613ebb3bb01a05848075 from qemu
Tighten up the T32 decoder in the places where new v8M instructions
will be:
* TT/TTT/TTA/TTAT are in what was nominally LDREX/STREX r15, ...
which is UNPREDICTABLE:
make the UNPREDICTABLE behaviour be to UNDEF
* BXNS/BLXNS are distinguished from BX/BLX via the low 3 bits,
which in previous architectural versions are SBZ:
enforce the SBZ via UNDEF rather than ignoring it, and move
the "ARCH(5)" UNDEF case up so we don't leak a TCG temporary
* SG is in the encoding which would be LDRD/STRD with rn = r15;
this is UNPREDICTABLE and we currently UNDEF:
move this check further up the code so that we don't leak
TCG temporaries in the UNDEF case and have a better place
to put the SG decode.
This means that if a v8M binary is accidentally run on v7M
or if a test case hits something that we haven't implemented
yet the behaviour will be obvious (UNDEF) rather than obscure
(plough on treating it as a different instruction).
In the process, add some comments about the instruction patterns
at these points in the decode. Our Thumb and ARM decoders are
very difficult to understand currently, but gradually adding
comments like this should help to clarify what exactly has
been decoded when.
Backports commit ebfe27c593e5b222aa2a1fc545b447be3d995faa from qemu
Currently get_phys_addr() has PMSAv7 handling before the
"is translation disabled?" check, and then PMSAv5 after it.
Tidy this up by making the PMSAv5 code handle the "MPU disabled"
case itself, so that we have all the PMSA code in one place.
This will make adding the PMSAv8 code slightly cleaner, and
also means that pre-v7 PMSA cores benefit from the MPU lookup
logging that the PMSAv7 codepath had.
Backports commit 3279adb95e34dd3d67c66d729458f7784747cf8d from qemu
M profile cores can never trap on WFI or WFE instructions. Check for
M profile in check_wfx_trap() to ensure this.
The existing code will do the right thing for v7M cores because
the hcr_el2 and scr_el3 registers will be all-zeroes and so we
won't attempt to trap, but when we start setting ARM_FEATURE_V8
for v8M cores the v8A handling of SCTLR.nTWE and .nTWI will not
give the right results.
Backports commit 0e2845689ebdb4ea7174f96f6797e2d8942bd114 from qemu
In the ARM get_phys_addr() code, switch to using the MMUAccessType
enum and its MMU_* values rather than int and literal 0/1/2.
Backports commit 03ae85f858fc46495258a5dd4551fff2c34bd495 from qemu
Add a new base CPU model called 'EPYC' to model processors from AMD EPYC
family (which includes EPYC 76xx,75xx,74xx, 73xx and 72xx).
The following features bits have been added/removed compare to Opteron_G5
Added: monitor, movbe, rdrand, mmxext, ffxsr, rdtscp, cr8legacy, osvw,
fsgsbase, bmi1, avx2, smep, bmi2, rdseed, adx, smap, clfshopt, sha
xsaveopt, xsavec, xgetbv1, arat
Removed: xop, fma4, tbm
Backports commit 2e2efc7dbe2b0adc1200b5aa286cdbed729f6751 from qemu
The helper can be used for CPU object lookup using the CPU's
arch-specific ID (the one returned by CPUClass::get_arch_id()).
Backports commit 5ce46cb34eecec0bc94a4b1394763f9a1bbe20c3 from qemu
This moves a FlatView allocation and initialization to a helper.
While we are nere, replace g_new with g_new0 to not to bother if we add
new fields in the future.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit de7e6815b84c797cbda56dc96fcacaf5f37d3a20 from qemu
We are going to share FlatView's between AddressSpace's and per-AS
memory listeners won't suit the purpose anymore so open code
the dispatch tree rendering.
Since there is a good chance that dispatch_listener was the only
listener, this avoids address_space_update_topology_pass() if there is
no registered listeners; this should improve starting time.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 1b04a1580917d9e41fd37ca62cbff9b4bf061e96 from qemu
This adds an AS** parameter to address_space_do_translate()
to make it easier for the next patch to share FlatViews.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 6424975ce912061ac9e4a375237b0c89d83d93e3 from qemu
When using bit-wise operations that exploit the power-of-two
nature of the second argument of ROUND_UP(), we still need to
ensure that the mask is as wide as the first argument (done
by using a ternary to force proper arithmetic promotion).
Unpatched, ROUND_UP(2ULL*1024*1024*1024*1024, 512U) produces 0,
instead of the intended 2TiB, because negation of an unsigned
32-bit quantity followed by widening to 64-bits does not
sign-extend the mask.
Broken since its introduction in commit 292c8e50 (v1.5.0).
Callers that passed the same width type to both macro parameters,
or that had other code to ensure the first parameter's maximum
runtime value did not exceed the second parameter's width, are
unaffected, but I did not audit to see which (if any) existing
clients of the macro could trigger incorrect behavior (I found
the bug while adding a new use of the macro).
While preparing the patch, checkpatch complained about poor
spacing, so I also fixed that here and in the nearby DIV_ROUND_UP.
Backports commit 33a599667a9e70588483a31286dfff8cfc27d513 from qemu
According to the ARM ARM exclusive loads require the same alignment as
exclusive stores. Let's update the memops used for the load to match
that of the store. This adds the alignment requirement to the memops.
Backports commit 4a2fdb78e794c1ad93aa9e160235d6a61a2125de from qemu
We are not providing the required single-copy atomic semantics for
the 64-bit operation that is the 32-bit paired load.
At the same time, leave the entire 64-bit value in cpu_exclusive_val
and stop writing to cpu_exclusive_high. This means that we do not
have to re-assemble the 64-bit quantity when it comes time to store.
At the same time, drop a redundant temporary and perform all loads
directly into the cpu_exclusive_* globals.
Backports commit 19514cde3b92938df750acaecf2caaa85e1d36a6 from qemu
When we perform the atomic_cmpxchg operation we want to perform the
operation on a pair of 32-bit registers. Previously we were just passing
the register size in which was set to MO_32. This would result in the
high register to be ignored. To fix this issue we hardcode the size to
be 64-bits long when operating on 32-bit pairs.
Backports commit 955fd0ad5d610f62ba2f4ce46a872bf50434dcf8 from qemu
This reverts commit e2a7f28693aea7e194ec1435697ec4feb24f8a6f.
This was not supposed to go upstream yet. Reverting.
Backports commit cde0a63ad721dbb538419a00f9405587680be436 from qemu
When emulating various SSE4.1 instructions such as pinsrd, the address
of a memory operand is computed without allowing for the 8-bit
immediate operand located after the memory operand, meaning that the
memory operand uses the wrong address in the case where it is
rip-relative. This patch adds the required rip_offset setting for
those instructions, so fixing some GCC test failures (13 in the gcc
testsuite in my GCC 6-based testing) when testing with a default CPU
setting enabling those instructions.
Backports commit ab6ab3e9972a49a359f59895a88bed311472ca97 from qemu
For a 64-bit ILP32 host, aligning to sizeof(long) is not enough.
Guess the minimum for any host is 8, as that covers uint64_t.
Qemu doesn't use a host long double or host vectors, except in
extremely limited circumstances.
Fixes a bus error for a sparc v8plus host.
Backports commit 13aaef678ed377b12b76dc7fb9e615b2f2f9047b from qemu
Patch 85aa80813dd changed the IF emitting the TST instruction,
but failed to change the ?: converting CMP to CMPEQ, so the
result of the TST is ignored.
Backports commit ca671de8af96798e0f493378240034620a3a04ee from qemu
RDHWR CC reads the CPU timer like MFC0 CP0_Count, so with icount enabled
it must set can_do_io while it calls the helper to avoid the "Bad icount
read" error. It should also break out of the translation loop to ensure
that timer interrupts are immediately handled.
Backports commit d673a68db6963e86536b125af464bb6ed03eba33 from qemu
DMTC0 CP0_Cause does a redundant gen_io_start() and gen_io_end() pair,
even though this is done for all DMTC0 operations outside of the switch
statement. Remove these redundant calls.
Backports commit 51ca717b079dccae5b6cc9f45153f5044abd34f0 from qemu
Commit e350d8ca3ac7 ("target/mips: optimize indirect branches") made
indirect branches able to directly find the next TB and jump straight to
it without breaking out of translated code and going around the main
execution loop. This breaks the assumption in target/mips/translate.c
that BS_STOP is sufficient to cause pending interrupts to be handled,
since interrupts are only checked in the main loop.
Fix a few of these assumptions by using gen_save_pc to update the saved
PC and using BS_EXCP instead of BS_STOP:
- [D]MFC0 CP0_Count may trigger a timer interrupt which should be
immediately handled.
- [D]MTC0 CP0_Cause may trigger an interrupt (but in fact translation
was only even being stopped in the DMTC0 case).
- [D]MTC0 CP0_<any> when icount is used is assumed could potentially
cause interrupts.
- EI may trigger an interrupt which was pending. I specifically hit
this case when running KVM nested in mipsel-softmmu. A timer
interrupt while the 2nd guest was executing is caught by KVM which
switches back to the normal Linux exception base and re-enables
interrupts with EI. Since the above commit QEMU doesn't leave
translated code until the nested KVM has already restored the KVM
exception base and returned to the 2nd guest, at which point it is
too late to check for pending interrupts and it gets stuck in an
infinite loop of unhandled interrupts.
Something similar was needed for ARM in commit b29fd33db578
("target/arm: use DISAS_EXIT for eret handling").
Backports commit b74cddcbf6063f684725e3f8bca49a68e30cba71 from qemu
Improve the segment definitions used by get_physical_address() to yield
target_ulong types, e.g. 0xffffffff80000000 instead of 0x80000000. This
is in preparation for enabling emulation of MIPS KVM T&E segments in TCG
MIPS targets, which unlike KVM could potentially have 64-bit
target_ulong. In such a case the offset guest KSEG0 address ends up at
e.g. 0x000000008xxxxxxx instead of 0xffffffff8xxxxxxx.
This also allows the casts to int32_t that force sign extension to be
removed, which removes any confusion due to relational comparison of
unsigned (target_ulong) and signed (int32_t) types.
Backports commit 6743334568933199927af4992a04bfb3c30610f5 from qemu
Writing to the MIPS DESAVE register (and now the KScratch registers)
will stop translation, supposedly due to risk of execution mode
switches. However these registers are basically RW scratch registers
with no side effects so there is no risk of them triggering execution
mode changes.
Drop the bstate = BS_STOP for these registers for both mtc0 and dmtc0.
Backports commit cb539fd241900f51de7d21244f7a55422ad0d40a from qemu
Commit 04bf2526ce87f21b32c9acba1c5518708c243ad0 (exec: use
qemu_ram_ptr_length to access guest ram) start using qemu_ram_ptr_length
instead of qemu_map_ram_ptr, but when used with Xen, the behavior of
both function is different. They both call xen_map_cache, but one with
"lock", meaning the mapping of guest memory is never released
implicitly, and the second one without, which means, mapping can be
release later, when needed.
In the context of address_space_{read,write}_continue, the ptr to those
mapping should not be locked because it is used immediatly and never
used again.
The lock parameter make it explicit in which context qemu_ram_ptr_length
is called.
Backports commit f5aa69bdc3418773f26747ca282c291519626ece from qemu
When the PMSAv7 implementation was originally added it was for R profile
CPUs only, and reset was handled using the cpreg .resetfn hooks.
Unfortunately for M profile cores this doesn't work, because they do
not register any cpregs. Move the reset handling into arm_cpu_reset(),
where it will work for both R profile and M profile cores.
Backports commit 69ceea64bf565559a2b865ffb2a097d2caab805b from qemu
Almost all of the PMSAv7 state is in the pmsav7 substruct of
the ARM CPU state structure. The exception is the region
number register, which is in cp15.c6_rgnr. This exception
is a bit odd for M profile, which otherwise generally does
not store state in the cp15 substruct.
Rename cp15.c6_rgnr to pmsav7.rnr accordingly.
Backports commit 8531eb4f614a60e6582d4832b15eee09f7d27874 from qemu
For an M profile v7PMSA, the system space (0xe0000000 - 0xffffffff) can
never be executable, even if the guest tries to set the MPU registers
up that way. Enforce this restriction.
Backports commit bf446a11dfb17ae7d8ed2b61a2444804eb458075 from qemu
The M profile PMSAv7 specification says that if the address being looked
up is in the PPB region (0xe0000000 - 0xe00fffff) then we do not use
the MPU regions but always use the default memory map. Implement this
(we were previously behaving like an R profile PMSAv7, which does not
special case this).
Backports commit 38aaa60ca464b48e6feef346709e97335d01b289 from qemu
Correct off-by-one bug in the PSMAv7 MPU tracing where it would print
a write access as "reading", an insn fetch as "writing", and a read
access as "execute".
Since we have an MMUAccessType enum now, we can make the code clearer
in the process by using that rather than the raw 0/1/2 values.
Backports commit 709e4407add7acacc593cb6cdac026558c9a8fb6 from qemu
Enable the CP0_EBase.WG (write gate) on the I6400 and MIPS64R2-generic
CPUs. This allows 64-bit guests to run KVM itself, which uses
CP0_EBase.WG to point CP0_EBase at XKPhys.
Backports commit bad63a8008a0aaefcd00542c89bee01623d7c9de from qemu
Add the Enhanced Virtual Addressing (EVA) feature to the P5600 core
configuration, along with the related Segmentation Control (SC) feature
and writable CP0_EBase.WG bit.
This allows it to run Malta EVA kernels.
Backports commit 574da58e4678b3c09048f268821295422d8cde6d from qemu
Implement the optional segmentation control feature in the virtual to
physical address translation code.
The fixed legacy segment and xkphys handling is replaced with a dynamic
layout based on the segmentation control registers (which should be set
up even when the feature is not exposed to the guest).
Backports commit 480e79aedd322fcfac17052caff21626ea7c78e2 from qemu
The optional segmentation control registers CP0_SegCtl0, CP0_SegCtl1 &
CP0_SegCtl2 control the behaviour and required privilege of the legacy
virtual memory segments.
Add them to the CP0 interface so they can be read and written when
CP0_Config3.SC=1, and initialise them to describe the standard legacy
layout so they can be used in future patches regardless of whether they
are exposed to the guest.
Backports commit cec56a733dd2c3fa81dbedbecf03922258747f7d from qemu
The segmentation control feature allows a legacy memory segment to
become unmapped uncached at error level (according to CP0_Status.ERL),
and in fact the user segment is already treated in this way by QEMU.
Add a new MMU mode for this state so that QEMU's mappings don't persist
between ERL=0 and ERL=1.
Backports commit 42c86612d507c2a8789f2b8d920a244693c4ef7b from qemu
The MIPS mmu_idx is sometimes calculated from hflags without an env
pointer available as cpu_mmu_index() requires.
Create a common hflags_mmu_index() for the purpose of this calculation
which can operate on any hflags, not just with an env pointer, and
update cpu_mmu_index() itself and gen_intermediate_code() to use it.
Also update debug_post_eret() and helper_mtc0_status() to log the MMU
mode with the status change (SM, UM, or nothing for kernel mode) based
on cpu_mmu_index() rather than directly testing hflags.
This will also allow the logic to be more easily updated when a new MMU
mode is added.
Backports commit b0fc6003224543d2bdb172eca752656a6223e4a1 from qemu
When performing virtual to physical address translation, check the
required privilege level based on the mem_idx rather than the mode in
the hflags. This will allow EVA loads & stores to operate safely only on
user memory from kernel mode.
For the cases where the mmu_idx doesn't need to be overridden
(mips_cpu_get_phys_page_debug() and cpu_mips_translate_address()), we
calculate the required mmu_idx using cpu_mmu_index(). Note that this
only tests the MIPS_HFLAG_KSU bits rather than MIPS_HFLAG_MODE, so we
don't test the debug mode hflag MIPS_HFLAG_DM any longer. This should be
fine as get_physical_address() only compares against MIPS_HFLAG_UM and
MIPS_HFLAG_SM, neither of which should get set by compute_hflags() when
MIPS_HFLAG_DM is set.
Backports commit 9fbf4a58c90183b30bb2c8ad971ccce7e6716a16 from qemu
Implement decoding of microMIPS EVA load and store instruction groups in
the POOL31C pool. These use the same gen_ld(), gen_st(), gen_st_cond()
helpers as the MIPS32 decoding, passing the equivalent MIPS32 opcodes as
opc.
Backports commit 8fffc64696783b1ff1d17262d098976479895660 from qemu
Add CP0.ErrCtl register with WST, SPR and ITC bits. In 34K and interAptiv
processors these bits are used to enable CACHE instruction access to
different arrays. When WST=0, SPR=0 and ITC=1 the CACHE instruction will
access ITC tag values.
Generally we do not model caches and we have been treating the CACHE
instruction as NOP. But since CACHE can operate on ITC Tags new
MIPS_HFLAG_ITC_CACHE hflag is introduced to generate the helper only when
CACHE is in the ITC Access mode.
Backports commit 0d74a222c27e26fc40f4f6120c61c3f9ceaa3776 from qemu
Implement decoding of MIPS32 EVA loads and stores. These access the user
address space from kernel mode when implemented, so for each instruction
we need to check that EVA is available from Config5.EVA & check for
sufficient COP0 privilege (with the new check_eva()), and then override
the mem_idx used for the operation.
Unfortunately some Loongson 2E instructions use overlapping encodings,
so we must be careful not to prevent those from being decoded when EVA
is absent.
Backports commit 7696414729b2d0f870c80ad1dd637d854bc78847 from qemu
EVA load and store instructions access the user mode address map, so
they need to use mem_idx of MIPS_HFLAG_UM. Update the various utility
functions to allow mem_idx to be more easily overridden from the
decoding logic.
Specifically we add a mem_idx argument to the op_ld/st_* helpers used
for atomics, and a mem_idx local variable to gen_ld(), gen_st(), and
gen_st_cond().
Backports commit dd4096cd2ccc19384770f336c930259da7a54980 from qemu
Add support for the CP0_EBase.WG bit, which allows upper bits to be
written (bits 31:30 on MIPS32, or bits 63:30 on MIPS64), along with the
CP0_Config5.CV bit to control whether the exception vector for Cache
Error exceptions is forced into KSeg1.
This is necessary on MIPS32 to support Segmentation Control and Enhanced
Virtual Addressing (EVA) extensions (where KSeg1 addresses may not
represent an unmapped uncached segment).
It is also useful on MIPS64 to allow the exception base to reside in
XKPhys, and possibly out of range of KSEG0 and KSEG1.
Backports commit 74dbf824a1313b6064bbebb981a7440951d70896 from qemu
There is no need to invalidate any shadow TLB entries when the ASID
changes or when access to one of the 64-bit segments has been disabled,
since doing so doesn't reveal to software whether any TLB entries have
been evicted into the shadow half of the TLB.
Therefore weaken the tlb flushes in these cases to only flush the QEMU
TLB.
Backports commit 9658e4c342e6ae0d775101f8f6bb6efb16789af1 from qemu
Writing specific TLB entries with TLBWI flushes shadow TLB entries
unless an existing entry is having its access permissions upgraded. This
is necessary as software would from then on expect the previous mapping
in that entry to no longer be in effect (even if QEMU has quietly
evicted it to the shadow TLB on a TLBWR).
However it won't do this if only EHINV, XI, or RI bits have been set,
even if that results in a reduction of permissions, so add the necessary
checks to invoke the flush when these bits are set.
Backports commit eff6ff9431aa9776062a5f4a08d1f6503ca9995a from qemu
Using MFC0 to read CP0_UserLocal uses tcg_gen_ld32s_tl, however
CP0_UserLocal is a target_ulong. On a big endian host with a MIPS64
target this reads and sign extends the more significant half of the
64-bit register.
Fix this by using ld_tl to load the whole target_ulong and ext32s_tl to
sign extend it, as done for various other target_ulong COP0 registers.
Backports commit e40df9a80bb7cdb0a4ca650985fa9fe572097fa7 from qemu
This include was forgotten when splitting cacheinfo.c out of
tcg/ppc/tcg-target.inc.c (see commit b255b2c8).
For a Centos7 host, the include path
<signal.h>
<bits/sigcontext.h>
<asm/sigcontext.h>
<asm/elf.h>
<asm/auxvec.h>
implicitly pulls in the desired AT_* defines.
Not so for Debian Jessie.
Backports commit 810d5cad4087236236e00fd3046a16adf26e9060 from qemu
Reserve a register for the guest_base using ppc code for reference.
By doing so, we do not have to recompute it for every memory load.
Backports commit 4df9cac57f5220c17d856292e90fce455f708421 from qemu
Introduce Skylake-Server cpu mode which inherits the features from
Skylake-Client and supports some additional features that are: AVX512,
CLWB and PGPE1GB.
Backports commit 53f9a6f45fb214540cb40af45efc11ac40ac454c from qemu
Currently when running KVM, we expose "KVMKVMKVM\0\0\0" in
the 0x40000000 CPUID leaf. Other hypervisors (VMWare,
HyperV, Xen, BHyve) all do the same thing, which leaves
TCG as the odd one out.
The CPUID signature is used by software to detect which
virtual environment they are running in and (potentially)
change behaviour in certain ways. For example, systemd
supports a ConditionVirtualization= setting in unit files.
The virt-what command can also report the virt type it is
running on
Currently both these apps have to resort to custom hacks
like looking for 'fw-cfg' entry in the /proc/device-tree
file to identify TCG.
This change thus proposes a signature "TCGTCGTCGTCG" to be
reported when running under TCG.
To hide this, the -cpu option tcg-cpuid=off can be used.
Backports commits 4ed3d478c63dc65a02eba774c35116618ea5ff10 and 1ce36bfe6424243082d3d7c2330e1a0a4ff72a43 from qemu
object_resolve_path*() ambiguous path detection breaks when
ambiguous==NULL and the object tree have 3 objects of the same type and
only 2 of them are under the same parent. e.g.:
/container/obj1 (TYPE_FOO)
/container/obj2 (TYPE_FOO)
/obj2 (TYPE_FOO)
With the above tree, object_resolve_path_type("", TYPE_FOO, NULL) will
incorrectly return /obj2, because the search inside "/container" will
return NULL, and the match at "/obj2" won't be detected as ambiguous.
Fix that by always calling object_resolve_partial_path() with a non-NULL
ambiguous parameter.
Backports commit ebcc479eee740937e70a94a468effcf2126a572b from qemu
This patch fixes setting DExcCode field of CP0 Debug register
when SDBBP instruction is executed. According to EJTAG specification,
this field must be set to the value 9 (Bp).
Backports commit c6c2c0fc32362ba234ae3bdad1a55c2d6aefaa12 from qemu
Previously DISAS_JUMP did ensure this but with the optimisation of
8a6b28c7 (optimize indirect branches) we might not leave the loop.
This means if any pending interrupts are cleared by changing IRQ flags
we might never get around to servicing them. You usually notice this
by seeing the lookup_tb_ptr() helper gainfully chaining TBs together
while cpu->interrupt_request remains high and the exit_request has not
been set.
This breaks amongst other things the OPTEE test suite which executes
an eret from the secure world after a non-secure world IRQ has gone
pending which then never gets serviced.
Instead of using the previously implied semantics of DISAS_JUMP we use
DISAS_EXIT which will always exit the run-loop.
Backports commit b29fd33db578decacd14f34933b29aece3e7c25e from qemu
While an ISB will ensure any raised IRQs happen on the next
instruction it doesn't cause any to get raised by itself. We can
therefore use a simple tb exit for ISB instructions and rely on the
exit_request check at the top of each TB to deal with exiting if
needed.
Backports commit 0b609cc128ba5ef16cc841bcade898d1898f1dc3 from qemu
As the gen_goto_tb function can do both static and dynamic jumps it
should also set the is_jmp field. This matches the behaviour of the
a64 code.
Backports commit 4cae8f56fbab2798586576a56cc669f0127d04fb from qemu
We already have an exit condition, DISAS_UPDATE which will exit the
run-loop. Expand on the difference with DISAS_EXIT in the comments
Backports commit abd1fb0ee2c58b99f4b2d15718f1825fe4984e12 from qemu
DISAS_UPDATE should be used when the wider CPU state other than just
the PC has been updated and we should therefore exit the TCG runtime
and return to the main execution loop rather assuming DISAS_JUMP would
do that.
Backports commit e8d5230221851e8933811f1579fd13371f576955 from qemu
As a precursor to later patches attempt to come up with a more
concrete wording for what each of the common exit cases would be.
Backports commit df0311e634828fdc99ca59352aef68503d631aad from qemu
The Cortex-M3 and M4 CPUs always have 8 PMSA MPU regions (this isn't
a configurable option for the hardware). Make the default value of
the pmsav7-dregion property be set per-cpu, so we don't need to have
every user of these CPUs set it manually. (The existing default of
16 is correct for the other PMSAv7 core, the Cortex-R5.)
This fixes a bug where we were creating the M3 and M4 with
too many regions; most guest software would not notice or
care, though, since it would just not use the registers
associated with the unexpected extra regions.
Backports commit 8d92e26b452f8961ec90df3f93cf5f3b7a9d158f from qemu
Rename memory_region_init_rom() to memory_region_init_rom_nomigrate()
and memory_region_init_rom_device() to
memory_region_init_rom_device_nomigrate().
Backports commit b59821a95bd1d7cb4697fd7748725c910582e0e7 from qemu
Rename memory_region_init_ram() to memory_region_init_ram_nomigrate().
This leaves the way clear for us to provide a memory_region_init_ram()
which does handle migration.
Backports commit 1cfe48c1ce219b60a9096312f7a61806fae64ab3 from qemu
The various functions for initializing RAM MemoryRegions do not do
anything to cause the data in the MemoryRegion to be migrated.
Note in their documentation comments that this is the responsibility
of the caller.
(We will shortly add a new function that *does* do this for you.)
Backports commit a5c0234bb2754f5248e67929a34c843dbe039da5 from qemu
Add a documentation comment for memory_region_allocate_system_memory().
In particular, the reason for this function's existence and the
requirement on board code to call it exactly once are non-obvious.
Backports commit 09ad643823dcda0a86eddce1291c28d0ccb09a3b from qemu
link's check callback is supposed to verify/permit setting it,
however currently nothing restricts it from misusing it
and modifying target object from within.
Make sure that readonly semantics are checked by compiler
to prevent callback's misuse.
Backports commit 8f5d58ef2c92d7b82d9a6eeefd7c8854a183ba4a from qemu
Now that we have proper locking after MTTCG patches have landed, we
can revert the commit. This reverts commit
a9353fe897ca2687e5b3385ed39e3db3927a90e0.
Backports commit 406bc339b0505fcfc2ffcbca1f05a3756e338a65 from qemu
This warning is included in -Wall by clang, but not by GCC (which only
enables it for -Wextra). Include it in the list of warnings we enable
to minimize the differences between the compilers:
Backports commit b98fcfd8840f290c406c32301340e96f00238a93 from qemu
The gen_ prefix is awkward. Generated C should go through cgen()
exactly once (see commit 1f9a7a1). The common way to get this wrong is
passing a foo=gen_foo() keyword argument to mcgen(). I'd like us to
adopt a naming convention where gen_ means "something that's been piped
through cgen(), and thus must not be passed to cgen() or mcgen()".
Requires renaming gen_params(), gen_marshal_proto() and
gen_event_send_proto().
Backports commit 086ee7a6200fa5ad795b12110b5b3d5a93dcac3e from qemu
This patch fixes the msa copy_[s|u]_df instruction emulation when
the destination register rd is zero. Without this patch the zero
register would get clobbered, which should never happen because it
is supposed to be hardwired to 0.
Fix this corner case by explicitly checking rd = 0 and effectively
making these instructions emulation no-op in that case.
Backports commit cab4888136a92250fdd401402622824994f7ce0b from qemu
When running a helloworld program with qemu-i386 in linux-user
mode on Loongson 3A3000, it will crash. This patch fix the bug.
Backports commit 8b8d768f19037a825a0bc81654492caa7c8fab8b from qemu
Clang generates the following warning on aarch64 host:
CC util/cacheinfo.o
/home/pranith/qemu/util/cacheinfo.c:121:48: warning: value size does not match register size specified by the constraint and modifier [-Wasm-operand-widths]
asm volatile("mrs\t%0, ctr_el0" : "=r"(ctr));
^
/home/pranith/qemu/util/cacheinfo.c:121:28: note: use constraint modifier "w"
asm volatile("mrs\t%0, ctr_el0" : "=r"(ctr));
^~
%w0
Constraint modifier 'w' is not (yet?) accepted by gcc. Fix this by increasing the ctr size.
Backports commit 2ae96c157ab3155baf6595c08cf5d3fe3c023a60 from qemu
This patch enables the indirect jump path using an LDR (literal)
instruction. It will be interesting to test and see which performs
better among the two paths.
Backports commit 2acee8b2b5e6bba2935bb6ce5be92d0f0f9799cb from qemu
We use ADRP+ADD to compute the target address for goto_tb. This patch
introduces the NOP instruction which is used to align the above
instruction pair so that we can use one atomic instruction to patch
the destination offsets.
Backports commit b68686bd4bfeb70040b4099df993dfa0b4f37b03 from qemu
We can use a branch to register instruction for exit_tb for offsets
greater than 128MB.
Backports commit 23b7aa1d2af04ba57cc94f74d9f0ab25dce72fa0 from qemu
Move cpu_get_fp80()/cpu_set_fp80() from fpu_helper.c to
machine.c because fpu_helper.c will be disabled if tcg is
disabled in the build.
Backports commit db573d2cf7ae6b5a4fc324be6f55e078fc218464 from qemu.
In unicorn's case, they can be moved into unicorn.c
Move cpu_sync_bndcs_hflags() function from mpx_helper.c
to helper.c because mpx_helper.c need be disabled when
tcg is disabled.
Backports commit ab0a19d4f08d924e052eb369420d264240872f8a from qemu
Add CONFIG_TCG around TLB-related functions and structure declarations.
Some of these functions are defined in ./accel/tcg/cputlb.c, which will
not be linked in if TCG is disabled, and have no stubs; therefore, their
callers will also be compiled out for --disable-tcg.
Backports commit b11ec7f2e44b285a3967d629b55d1a6970b06787 from qemu
This lets you build without TCG (hardware accelerationor qtest only). When
this flag is passed to configure, it will automatically filter out the target
list to only those that support KVM or Xen or HAX.
Backports commit b3f6ea7e55e8228d6f84d5cee7cb11cae917ba95 from qemu
translate-all.c will be disabled if tcg is disabled in the build,
so page_size_init() function and related variables will be moved
to exec.c file.
Backports commit a0be0c585f5dcc4d50a37f6a20d3d625c5ef3a2c from qemu
Commit 1f5c00cfdb8114c ("qom/cpu: move tlb_flush to cpu_common_reset")
moved the call to tlb_flush() from the target-specific reset handlers
into the common code qom/cpu.c file, and protected the call with
"#ifdef CONFIG_SOFTMMU" to avoid that it is called for linux-user
only targets. But since qom/cpu.c is common code, CONFIG_SOFTMMU is
*never* defined here, so the tlb_flush() was simply never executed
anymore. Fix it by introducing a wrapper for tlb_flush() in a file
that is re-compiled for each target, i.e. in translate-all.c.
Backports commit 2cd53943115be5118b5b2d4b80ee0a39c94c4f73 from qemu
Move the handling of conforming code segments before the handling
of stack switch.
Because dpl == cpl after the new "if", it's now unnecessary to check
the C bit when testing dpl < cpl. Furthermore, dpl > cpl is checked
slightly above the modified code, so the final "else" is unreachable
and we can remove it.
Backports commit 1110bfe6f5600017258fa6578f9c17ec25b32277 from qemu
In do_interrupt64(), when interrupt stack table(ist) is enabled
and the the target code segment is conforming(e2 & DESC_C_MASK), the
old implementation always set new CPL to 0, and SS.RPL to 0.
This is incorrect for when CPL3 code access a CPL0 conforming code
segment, the CPL should remain unchanged. Otherwise higher privileged
code can be compromised.
The patch fix this for always set dpl = cpl when the target code segment
is conforming, and modify the last parameter `flags`, which contains
correct new CPL, in cpu_x86_load_seg_cache().
Backports commit e95e9b88ba5f4a6c17f4d0c3a3a6bf3f648bb328 from qemu
Some code paths can lead to atomic accesses racing with memset()
on cpu->tb_jmp_cache, which can result in torn reads/writes
and is undefined behaviour in C11.
These torn accesses are unlikely to show up as bugs, but from code
inspection they seem possible. For example, tb_phys_invalidate does:
/* remove the TB from the hash list */
h = tb_jmp_cache_hash_func(tb->pc);
CPU_FOREACH(cpu) {
if (atomic_read(&cpu->tb_jmp_cache[h]) == tb) {
atomic_set(&cpu->tb_jmp_cache[h], NULL);
}
}
Here atomic_set might race with a concurrent memset (such as the
ones scheduled via "unsafe" async work, e.g. tlb_flush_page) and
therefore we might end up with a torn pointer (or who knows what,
because we are under undefined behaviour).
This patch converts parallel accesses to cpu->tb_jmp_cache to use
atomic primitives, thereby bringing these accesses back to defined
behaviour. The price to pay is to potentially execute more instructions
when clearing cpu->tb_jmp_cache, but given how infrequently they happen
and the small size of the cache, the performance impact I have measured
is within noise range when booting debian-arm.
Note that under "safe async" work (e.g. do_tb_flush) we could use memset
because no other vcpus are running. However I'm keeping these accesses
atomic as well to keep things simple and to avoid confusing analysis
tools such as ThreadSanitizer.
Backports commit f3ced3c59287dabc253f83f0c70aa4934470c15e from qemu
We are relying on cpu_env being defined as a global, yet most
targets (i.e. all but arm/a64) have it defined as a local variable.
Luckily all of them use the same "cpu_env" name, but really
compilation shouldn't break if the name of that local variable
changed.
Fix it by using tcg_ctx.tcg_env, which all targets set in their
translate_init function. This change also helps paving the way
for the upcoming "translation loop common to all targets" work.
Backports commit 53f6672bcf57d82b794a2cc3a3469be7d35c8653 from qemu
Add fsabs, fdabs, fsneg, fdneg, fsmove and fdmove.
The value is converted using the new floatx80_round() function.
Backports commit 77bdb2292492fafc4bc0fbb4d8c44fdd0ef1fa8e from qemu
Add a function to round a floatx80 to the defined precision
(floatx80_rounding_precision)
Backports commit 0f72129281765ed64d26353284059f2bdcde7a23 from qemu
fmovecr moves a floating point constant from the
FPU ROM to a floating point register.
Backports commit 9d403660d91229922c2786e81c23cc9dd8e644f1 from qemu
This may be used for deprecated object properties that are kept for
backwards compatibility.
Backports commit a733371214b68881d84725a3c71f60e2faf3b8e2 from qemu
This replaces env1 and page_index variables by env and index
so we can use VICTIM_TLB_HIT macro later.
Backports commit 3416343255cbe01fbe12e5e36cd4bb5042425b27 from qemu
Coldfire uses float64, but 680x0 use floatx80.
This patch introduces the use of floatx80 internally
and enables 680x0 80bits FPU.
Backports commit f83311e4764f1f25a8abdec2b32c64483be1759b from qemu
Switch to use QNum/uint where appropriate to remove i64 limitation.
The input visitor will cast i64 input to u64 for compatibility
reasons (existing json QMP client already use negative i64 for large
u64, and expect an implicit cast in qemu).
Note: before the patch, uint64_t values above INT64_MAX are sent over
json QMP as negative values, e.g. UINT64_MAX is sent as -1. After the
patch, they are sent unmodified. Clearly a bug fix, but we have to
consider compatibility issues anyway. libvirt should cope fine,
because its parsing of unsigned integers accepts negative values
modulo 2^64. There's hope that other clients will, too.
Backports commit 5923f85fb82df7c8c60a89458a5ae856045e5ab1 from qemu
In order to store integer values between INT64_MAX and UINT64_MAX, add
a uint64_t internal representation.
Backports commit 61a8f418b26a2d974e38e4ae55020aca8d402d88 from qemu
Before the previous commit, parameter promote_int = true made
visit_start_alternate() with an input visitor avoid QTYPE_QINT
variants and create QTYPE_QFLOAT variants instead. This was used
where QTYPE_QINT variants were invalid.
The previous commit fused QTYPE_QINT with QTYPE_QFLOAT, rendering
promote_int useless and unused.
Backports commit 60390d2dc85ffade8981ca41e02335cb07353a6d from qemu
We would like to use a same QObject type to represent numbers, whether
they are int, uint, or floats. Getters will allow some compatibility
between the various types if the number fits other representations.
Add a few more tests while at it.
Backports commit 01b2ffcedd94ad7b42bc870e4c6936c87ad03429 from qemu
QAPI_CLONE() returns a newly allocated QAPI object. Inconvenient when
we want to clone into an existing object. QAPI_CLONE_MEMBERS() does
exactly that.
Backports commit 4626a19c86c30d96cedbac2bd44ef8103303cb37 from qemu
Rather than making lots of callers wrap a scalar in a QInt, QString,
or QBool, provide helper macros that do the wrapping automatically.
Update the Coccinelle script to make mass conversions easy, although
the conversion itself will be done as a separate patches to ease
review and backport efforts.
Backports commit a92c21591b5bb9543996538f14854ca6b528318b from qemu
Visiting a list when input is the empty string should result in an
empty list, not an error. Noticed when commit 3d089ce belatedly added
tests, but simply accepted as weird then. It's actually a regression:
broken in commit 74f24cb, v2.7.0. Fix it, and throw in another test
case for empty string.
Backports commit d2788227c6185c72d88ef3127e9fed41686f8e39 from qemu
We can call tb_htable_lookup even when the tb_jmp_cache is completely
empty. Therefore, un-nest most of the code dependent on tb != NULL
from the read from the cache.
This improves the hit rate of lookup_tb_ptr; for instance, when booting
and immediately shutting down debian-arm, the hit rate improves from
93.2% to 99.4%.
Backports commit b97a879de980e99452063851597edb98e7e8039c from qemu
The new placement of the TB means that we can use one insn
to load the goto_tb destination directly from the TB.
Backports commit 308714e6bc945389c64faf1b9213e2c0d3f03391 from qemu
Since we're no longer using a direct branch, we have no
limit on the branch distance.
Backports commit acb0b292b6d0f49972dc98f742e79ed53973e438 from qemu
The new placement of the TB means that we can use one insn
to load the return value for exit_tb returning the TB pointer.
Backports commit cc74d332ff9a78684374847375ef63fc4bd10436 from qemu
We are partially initializing tb in tb_alloc. Instead, fully
initialize it in tb_gen_code, which is tb_alloc's only caller.
This saves an unnecessary write to tb->cflags.
Backports commit 2b48e10f888059a98043b4816769fa2a326a1d2c from qemu
Allocating an arbitrarily-sized array of tbs results in either
(a) a lot of memory wasted or (b) unnecessary flushes of the code
cache when we run out of TB structs in the array.
An obvious solution would be to just malloc a TB struct when needed,
and keep the TB array as an array of pointers (recall that tb_find_pc()
needs the TB array to run in O(log n)).
Perhaps a better solution, which is implemented in this patch, is to
allocate TB's right before the translated code they describe. This
results in some memory waste due to padding to have code and TBs in
separate cache lines--for instance, I measured 4.7% of padding in the
used portion of code_gen_buffer when booting aarch64 Linux on a
host with 64-byte cache lines. However, it can allow for optimizations
in some host architectures, since TCG backends could safely assume that
the TB and the corresponding translated code are very close to each
other in memory. See this message by rth for a detailed explanation:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-03/msg05172.html
Subject: Re: GSoC 2017 Proposal: TCG performance enhancements
Backports commit 6e3b2bfd6af488a896f7936e99ef160f8f37e6f2 from qemu
Add helpers to gather cache info from the host at init-time.
For now, only export the host's I/D cache line sizes, which we
will use to improve cache locality to avoid false sharing.
Backports commit b255b2c8a5484742606e8760870ba3e14d0c9605 from qemu
V flag for subtraction is:
v = (res ^ src1) & (src1 ^ src2)
(see COMPUTE_CCR() in target/m68k/helper.c)
But gen_flush_flags() uses:
v = (res ^ src2) & (src1 ^ src2)
The problem has been found with the following program:
.global _start
_start:
move.l #-2147483648,%d0
subq.l #1,%d0
jvc 1f
move.l #1,%d1
move.l #1,%d0
trap #0
1:
move.l #0,%d1
move.l #1,%d0
trap #0
It works fine (exit(1)) on real hardware, and with "-singlestep".
"-singlestep" uses gen_helper_flush_flags(), whereas
without "-singlestep", V flag is computed directly in
gen_flush_flags().
This patch updates gen_flush_flags() to have the same result
as with gen_helper_flush_flags().
Backports commit 043b936ef6fe53396b3c6b8f5562ea3e238a071d from qemu
Running Windows with icount causes a crash in instruction of write cr.
This patch fixes it.
Reading and writing cr cause an icount read because there are called
cpu_get_apic_tpr and cpu_set_apic_tpr functions. So, there is need
gen_io_start()/gen_io_end() calls.
Backports commit 5b003a40bb1ab14d0398e91f03393d3c6b9577cd from qemu
This speeds up SMM switches. Later on it may remove the need to take
the BQL, and it may also allow to reuse code between TCG and KVM.
Backports commit f8c45c6550b9ff1e1f0b92709ff3213a79870879 from qemu
It really only plays with the dispatchers, so the parameter list does
not need that complexity. This helps for readability at least.
Backports commit 003a0cf2cd1828a1141a874428571267b117f765 from qemu
In theory this would re-enable usage of QEMU on an armv4 host.
Whether this is worthwhile is debatable -- we've been unconditionally
issuing the armv5t BX instruction in the prologue since 2011 without
complaint. Possibly we should simply require an armv6 host.
Backports commit 702a947484eb3e615183dafc93de590ab0679f60 from qemu
Instead of unconditionally exiting to the exec loop, use the
gen_jr helper to jump to the target if it is valid.
Perf impact: see next commit's log.
Backports commit fe62089563ffc6a42f16ff28a6b6be34d2697766 from qemu
Instead of unconditionally exiting to the exec loop, use the
lookup_and_goto_ptr helper to jump to the target if it is valid.
Perf impact: see next commit's log.
Backports commit 7ad55b4ffd982c80f26f7f3658138d94cdc678e8 from qemu
Instead of exporting goto_ptr directly to TCG frontends, export
tcg_gen_lookup_and_goto_ptr(), which calls goto_ptr with the pointer
returned by the lookup_tb_ptr() helper. This is the only use case
we have for goto_ptr and lookup_tb_ptr, so having this function is
very convenient. Furthermore, it trivially allows us to avoid calling
the lookup helper if goto_ptr is not implemented by the backend.
Backports commit cedbcb01529cb6cf9a2289cdbebbc63f6149fc18 from qemu
We need to coordinate with the TCG_OVERSIZED_GUEST test in cputlb.c,
and allow 64-bit atomics even though sizeof(void *) == 4.
Backports commit 374aae653499f4d405caf32b7fff0c8639113fe4 from qemu
The cp15, CRn=15, opc1=0, CRm=5, opc2=0 instruction invalidates all the
data cache on the cortex-r5. Implementing it as a NOP.
Backports commit 95e9a242e2a393c7d4e5cc04340e39c3a9420f03 from qemu
M profile doesn't implement ARM, and the architecturally required
behaviour for attempts to execute with the Thumb bit clear is to
generate a UsageFault with the CFSR INVSTATE bit set. We were
incorrectly implementing this as generating an UNDEFINSTR UsageFault;
fix this.
Backports commit e13886e3a790b52f0b2e93cb5e84fdc2ada5471a from qemu
Implement the exception return consistency checks
described in the v7M pseudocode ExceptionReturn().
Inspired by a patch from Michael Davidsaver's series, but
this is a reimplementation from scratch based on the
ARM ARM pseudocode.
Backports commit aa488fe3bb5460c6675800ccd80f6dccbbd70159 from qemu
Extract the code from the tail end of arm_v7m_do_interrupt() which
enters the exception handler into a pair of utility functions
v7m_exception_taken() and v7m_push_stack(), which correspond roughly
to the pseudocode PushStack() and ExceptionTaken().
This also requires us to move the arm_v7m_load_vector() utility
routine up so we can call it.
Handling illegal exception returns has some cases where we want to
take a UsageFault either on an existing stack frame or with a new
stack frame but with a specific LR value, so we want to be able to
call these without having to go via arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt().
Backports commit 39ae2474e337247e5930e8be783b689adc9f6215 from qemu
All the places in armv7m_cpu_do_interrupt() which pend an
exception in the NVIC are doing so for synchronous
exceptions. We know that we will always take some
exception in this case, so we can just acknowledge it
immediately, rather than returning and then immediately
being called again because the NVIC has raised its outbound
IRQ line.
Backports commit a25dc805e2e63a55029e787a52335e12dabf07dc from qemu
The M profile condition for when we can take a pending exception or
interrupt is not the same as that for A/R profile. The code
originally copied from the A/R profile version of the
cpu_exec_interrupt function only worked by chance for the
very simple case of exceptions being masked by PRIMASK.
Replace it with a call to a function in the NVIC code that
correctly compares the priority of the pending exception
against the current execution priority of the CPU.
Backports commit 7ecdaa4a9635f1ded0dfa9218c25273b6d4dcd44 from qemu
Having armv7m_nvic_acknowledge_irq() return the new value of
env->v7m.exception and its one caller assign the return value
back to env->v7m.exception is pointless. Just make the return
type void instead.
Backports commit a5d8235545e98c1ce02560d5f4f57552d937efe9 from qemu
Implement HFNMIENA support for the M profile MPU. This bit controls
whether the MPU is treated as enabled when executing at execution
priorities of less than zero (in NMI, HardFault or with the FAULTMASK
bit set).
Doing this requires us to use a different MMU index for "running
at execution priority < 0", because we will have different
access permissions for that case versus the normal case.
Backports commit 3bef7012560a7f0ea27b265105de5090ba117514 from qemu
The M series MPU is almost the same as the already implemented R
profile MPU (v7 PMSA). So all we need to implement here is the MPU
register interface in the system register space.
This implementation has the same restriction as the R profile MPU
that it doesn't permit regions to be sized down smaller than 1K.
We also do not yet implement support for MPU_CTRL.HFNMIENA; this
bit should if zero disable use of the MPU when running HardFault,
NMI or with FAULTMASK set to 1 (ie at an execution priority of
less than zero) -- if the MPU is enabled we don't treat these
cases any differently.
Backports commit 29c483a506070e8f554c77d22686f405e30b9114 from qemu
General logic is that operations stopped by the MPU are MemManage,
and those which go through the MPU and are caught by the unassigned
handle are BusFault. Distinguish these by looking at the
exception.fsr values, and set the CFSR bits and (if appropriate)
fill in the BFAR or MMFAR with the exception address.
Backports commit 5dd0641d234e355597be62e5279d8a519c831625 from qemu
All M profile CPUs are PMSA, so set the feature bit.
(We haven't actually implemented the M profile MPU register
interface yet, but setting this feature bit gives us closer
to correct behaviour for the MPU-disabled case.)
Backports commit 790a11503cfb5e1dcd031ea2212bbebae4ca3cec from qemu
Add support for the M profile default memory map which is used
if the MPU is not present or disabled.
The main differences in behaviour from implementing this
correctly are that we set the PAGE_EXEC attribute on
the right regions of memory, such that device regions
are not executable.
Backports commit 3a00d560bcfca7ad04327062c1986a016c104b1f from qemu
Improve the "-d mmu" tracing for the PMSAv7 MPU translation
process as an aid in debugging guest MPU configurations:
* fix a missing newline for a guest-error log
* report the region number with guest-error or unimp
logs of bad region register values
* add a log message for the overall result of the lookup
* print "0x" prefix for hex values
Backports commit c9f9f1246d630960bce45881e9c0d27b55be71e2 from qemu
Now that we enforce both:
* pmsav7_dregion == 0 implies has_mpu == false
* PMSA with has_mpu == false means SCTLR.M cannot be set
we can remove a check on pmsav7_dregion from get_phys_addr_pmsav7(),
because we can only reach this code path if the MPU is enabled
(and so region_translation_disabled() returned false).
Backports commit e9235c6983b261e04e897e8ff900b2b7a391e644 from qemu
If the CPU is a PMSA config with no MPU implemented, then the
SCTLR.M bit should be RAZ/WI, so that the guest can never
turn on the non-existent MPU.
Backports commit 06312febfb2d35367006ef23608ddd6a131214d4 from qemu
Fix the handling of QOM properties for PMSA CPUs with no MPU:
Allow no-MPU to be specified by either:
* has-mpu = false
* pmsav7_dregion = 0
and make setting one imply the other. Don't clear the PMSA
feature bit in this situation.
Backports commit f50cd31413d8bc9d1eef8edd1f878324543bf65d from qemu
ARM CPUs come in two flavours:
* proper MMU ("VMSA")
* only an MPU ("PMSA")
For PMSA, the MPU may be implemented, or not (in which case there
is default "always acts the same" behaviour, but it isn't guest
programmable).
QEMU is a bit confused about how we indicate this: we have an
ARM_FEATURE_MPU, but it's not clear whether this indicates
"PMSA, not VMSA" or "PMSA and MPU present" , and sometimes we
use it for one purpose and sometimes the other.
Currently trying to implement a PMSA-without-MPU core won't
work correctly because we turn off the ARM_FEATURE_MPU bit
and then a lot of things which should still exist get
turned off too.
As the first step in cleaning this up, rename the feature
bit to ARM_FEATURE_PMSA, which indicates a PMSA CPU (with
or without MPU).
Backports commit 452a095526a0537f16c271516a2200877a272ea8 from qemu
Make M profile use completely separate ARMMMUIdx values from
those that A profile CPUs use. This is a prelude to adding
support for the MPU and for v8M, which together will require
6 MMU indexes which don't map cleanly onto the A profile
uses:
non secure User
non secure Privileged
non secure Privileged, execution priority < 0
secure User
secure Privileged
secure Privileged, execution priority < 0
Backports commit e7b921c2d9efc249f99b9feb0e7dca82c96aa5c4 from qemu
The v7M exception architecture requires that if a synchronous
exception cannot be taken immediately (because it is disabled
or at too low a priority) then it should be escalated to
HardFault (and the HardFault exception is then taken).
Implement this escalation logic.
Backports commit a73c98e159d18155445d29b6044be6ad49fd802f from qemu
The M profile CPU's MPU has an awkward corner case which we
would like to implement with a different MMU index.
We can avoid having to bump the number of MMU modes ARM
uses, because some of our existing MMU indexes are only
used by non-M-profile CPUs, so we can borrow one.
To avoid that getting too confusing, clean up the code
to try to keep the two meanings of the index separate.
Instead of ARMMMUIdx enum values being identical to core QEMU
MMU index values, they are now the core index values with some
high bits set. Any particular CPU always uses the same high
bits (so eventually A profile cores and M profile cores will
use different bits). New functions arm_to_core_mmu_idx()
and core_to_arm_mmu_idx() convert between the two.
In general core index values are stored in 'int' types, and
ARM values are stored in ARMMMUIdx types.
Backports commit 8bd5c82030b2cb09d3eef6b444f1620911cc9fc5 from qemu
The PMUv3 driver of linux kernel (in arch/arm64/kernel/perf_event.c)
relies on the PMUVER field of id_aa64dfr0_el1 to decide if PMU support
is present or not. This patch clears the PMUVER field under TCG mode
when vPMU=off. Without it, PMUv3 will init insider guest VMs even
with vPMU=off. This patch also removes a redundant line inside the
if-statement.
Backports commit 2b3ffa929249b15a75d8bde3e8e57a744f52aff0 from qemu
When identifying the DFSR format for an alignment fault, use
the mmu index that we are passed, rather than calling cpu_mmu_index()
to get the mmu index for the current CPU state. This doesn't actually
make any difference since the only cases where the current MMU index
differs from the index used for the load are the "unprivileged
load/store" instructions, and in that case the mmu index may
differ but the translation regime is the same (apart from the
"use from Hyp mode" case which is UNPREDICTABLE).
However it's the more logical thing to do.
Backports commit e517d95b63427fae9f03958dbc005c36b4ebf2cf from qemu
This patch converts the old "is_write" bool into IOMMUAccessFlags. The
difference is that "is_write" can only express either read/write, but
sometimes what we really want is "none" here (neither read nor write).
Replay is an good example - during replay, we should not check any RW
permission bits since thats not an actual IO at all.
Backports commit bf55b7afce53718ef96f4e6616da62c0ccac37dd from qemu
This function is an abstraction helper for address_space_translate() and
address_space_get_iotlb_entry(). It does the lookup of address into
memory region section, then does proper IOMMU translation if necessary.
Refactor the two existing functions to use it.
This fixes vhost when IOMMU is disabled by guest.
Backports commit a764040cc831cfe5b8bf1c80e8341b9bf2de3ce8 from qemu
In case where the conditional write is the first write to the page,
TLB_NOTDIRTY will be set and stop_the_world is triggered. Handle this as
a special case and set the dirty bit. After that fall through to the
actual atomic instruction below.
Backports commit 7f9af1abdcc69fd1d3d8d2be68464329600616d6 from qemu
Users of tcg_gen_atomic_cmpxchg and do_atomic_op rightfully utilize
the output. Even though this code is dead, it gets translated, and
without the initialization we encounter a tcg_error.
Backports commit 79b1af906245558c30e0a5faf26cb52b63f83cce from qemu
We already require gcc 4.1 or newer (for the atomic
support), so the fallback codepaths for older gcc
versions than that are now dead code and we can
just delete them.
NB: clang reports itself as gcc 4.2 (regardless of
clang version), so clang won't be using the fallbacks
either.
Backports commit fa54abb8c298f892639ffc4bc2f61448ac3be4a1 from qemu
Now that we've rewritten M-profile exception return so that the magic
PC values are not visible to other parts of QEMU, we can delete the
special casing of them elsewhere.
Backports commit f4e8e4edda875cab9df91dc4ae9767f7cb1f50aa from qemu
On M profile, return from exceptions happen when code in Handler mode
executes one of the following function call return instructions:
* POP or LDM which loads the PC
* LDR to PC
* BX register
and the new PC value is 0xFFxxxxxx.
QEMU tries to implement this by not treating the instruction
specially but then catching the attempt to execute from the magic
address value. This is not ideal, because:
* there are guest visible differences from the architecturally
specified behaviour (for instance jumping to 0xFFxxxxxx via a
different instruction should not cause an exception return but it
will in the QEMU implementation)
* we have to account for it in various places (like refusing to take
an interrupt if the PC is at a magic value, and making sure that
the MPU doesn't deny execution at the magic value addresses)
Drop these hacks, and instead implement exception return the way the
architecture specifies -- by having the relevant instructions check
for the magic value and raise the 'do an exception return' QEMU
internal exception immediately.
The effect on the generated code is minor:
bx lr, old code (and new code for Thread mode):
TCG:
mov_i32 tmp5,r14
movi_i32 tmp6,$0xfffffffffffffffe
and_i32 pc,tmp5,tmp6
movi_i32 tmp6,$0x1
and_i32 tmp5,tmp5,tmp6
st_i32 tmp5,env,$0x218
exit_tb $0x0
set_label $L0
exit_tb $0x7f2aabd61993
x86_64 generated code:
0x7f2aabe87019: mov %ebx,%ebp
0x7f2aabe8701b: and $0xfffffffffffffffe,%ebp
0x7f2aabe8701e: mov %ebp,0x3c(%r14)
0x7f2aabe87022: and $0x1,%ebx
0x7f2aabe87025: mov %ebx,0x218(%r14)
0x7f2aabe8702c: xor %eax,%eax
0x7f2aabe8702e: jmpq 0x7f2aabe7c016
bx lr, new code when in Handler mode:
TCG:
mov_i32 tmp5,r14
movi_i32 tmp6,$0xfffffffffffffffe
and_i32 pc,tmp5,tmp6
movi_i32 tmp6,$0x1
and_i32 tmp5,tmp5,tmp6
st_i32 tmp5,env,$0x218
movi_i32 tmp5,$0xffffffffff000000
brcond_i32 pc,tmp5,geu,$L1
exit_tb $0x0
set_label $L1
movi_i32 tmp5,$0x8
call exception_internal,$0x0,$0,env,tmp5
x86_64 generated code:
0x7fe8fa1264e3: mov %ebp,%ebx
0x7fe8fa1264e5: and $0xfffffffffffffffe,%ebx
0x7fe8fa1264e8: mov %ebx,0x3c(%r14)
0x7fe8fa1264ec: and $0x1,%ebp
0x7fe8fa1264ef: mov %ebp,0x218(%r14)
0x7fe8fa1264f6: cmp $0xff000000,%ebx
0x7fe8fa1264fc: jae 0x7fe8fa126509
0x7fe8fa126502: xor %eax,%eax
0x7fe8fa126504: jmpq 0x7fe8fa122016
0x7fe8fa126509: mov %r14,%rdi
0x7fe8fa12650c: mov $0x8,%esi
0x7fe8fa126511: mov $0x56095dbeccf5,%r10
0x7fe8fa12651b: callq *%r10
which is a difference of one cmp/branch-not-taken. This will
be lost in the noise of having to exit generated code and
look up the next TB anyway.
Backports commit 3bb8a96f5348913ee130169504f3642f501b113e from qemu
For M profile exception-return handling we'd like to generate different
code for some instructions depending on whether we are in Handler
mode or Thread mode. This isn't the same as "are we privileged
or user", so we need an extra bit in the TB flags to distinguish.
Backports commit 064c379c99b835bdcc478d21a3849507ea07d53a from qemu
Move the code to generate the "condition failed" instruction
codepath out of the if (singlestepping) {} else {}. This
will allow adding support for handling a new is_jmp type
which can't be neatly split into "singlestepping case"
versus "not singlestepping case".
Backports commit f021b2c4627890d82fbcc300db3bd782b37b7f8a from qemu
arm: Abstract out "are we singlestepping" test to utility function
We now test for "are we singlestepping" in several places and
it's not a trivial check because we need to care about both
architectural singlestep and QEMU gdbstub singlestep. We're
also about to add another place that needs to make this check,
so pull the condition out into a function.
Backports commit b636649f5a2e108413dd171edaf320f781f57942 from qemu
Move the utility routines gen_set_condexec() and gen_set_pc_im()
up in the file, as we will want to use them from a function
placed earlier in the file than their current location.
Backports commit 4d5e8c969a74c86124fc2284ea603cc6dd3c5dfa from qemu
We currently have two places that do:
if (dc->ss_active) {
gen_step_complete_exception(dc);
} else {
gen_exception_internal(EXCP_DEBUG);
}
Factor this out into its own function, as we're about to add
a third place that needs the same logic.
Backports commit 5425415ebba5fa20558e1ef25e1997a6f5ea4c7c from qemu
In Thumb mode, the only instructions which can cause an interworking
branch by writing the PC are BLX, BX, BXJ, LDR, POP and LDM. Unlike
ARM mode, data processing instructions which target the PC do not
cause interworking branches.
When we added support for doing interworking branches on writes to
PC from data processing instructions in commit 21aeb3430ce7ba, we
accidentally changed a Thumb instruction to have interworking
branch behaviour for writes to PC. (MOV, MOVS register-shifted
register, encoding T2; this is the standard encoding for
LSL/LSR/ASR/ROR (register).)
For this encoding, behaviour with Rd == R15 is specified as
UNPREDICTABLE, so allowing an interworking branch is within
spec, but it's confusing and differs from our handling of this
class of UNPREDICTABLE for other Thumb ALU operations. Make
it perform a simple (non-interworking) branch like the others.
Backports commit bedb8a6b09c1754c3b9f155750c62dc087706698 from qemu
For M-profile CPUs, the BXJ instruction does not exist at all, and
the encoding should always UNDEF. We were accidentally implementing
it to behave like A-profile BXJ; correct the error.
Backports commit 9d7c59c84d4530d05e8702b1c3a31e6da00a397e from qemu
In tlb_fill() we construct a syndrome register value from a
fault status register value which is filled in by arm_tlb_fill().
arm_tlb_fill() returns FSR values which might be in the format
used with short-format page descriptors, or the format used
with long-format (LPAE) descriptors. The syndrome register
always uses LPAE-format FSR status codes.
It isn't actually possible to end up delivering a syndrome
register value to the guest for a fault which is reported
with a short-format FSR (that kind of stage 1 fault will only
happen for an AArch32 translation regime which doesn't have
a syndrome register, and can never be redirected to an AArch64
or Hyp exception level). Add an assertion which checks this,
and adjust the code so that we construct a syndrome with
an invalid status code, rather than allowing set bits in
the FSR input to randomly corrupt other fields in the syndrome.
Backports commit 65ed2ed90d9d81fd4b639029be850ea5651f919f from qemu
The excnames[] array is defined in internals.h because we used
to use it from two different source files for handling logging
of AArch32 and AArch64 exception entry. Refactoring means that
it's now used only in arm_log_exception() in helper.c, so move
the array into that function.
Backports commit 2c4a7cc5afb1bfc1728a39abd951ddd7714c476e from qemu
Recent changes have added new EXCP_ values to ARM but forgot
to update the excnames[] array which is used to provide
human-readable strings when printing information about the
exception for debug logging. Add the missing entries, and
add a comment to the list of #defines to help avoid the mistake
being repeated in future.
Backports commit 32b81e620ea562d56ab2733421b5da1082b237a2 from qemu
For "ldp x0, x1, [x0]", if the second load is on a second page and
the second page is unmapped, the exception would be raised with x0
already modified. This means the instruction couldn't be restarted.
Backports commit 2d1bbf51c2cb948da4b6fd5f91cf3ecc80b28156 from qemu
MemoryRegionCache did not know about virtio support for IOMMUs (because the
two features were developed at the same time). Revert MemoryRegionCache
to "normal" address_space_* operations for 2.9, as it is simpler than
undoing the virtio patches.
Backports commit 90c4fe5fc517a045e7a7cf2f23472e114042ca29 from qemu
The C store helper functions take the address argument as a
target_ulong type; if this is 32 bit but the host is 64 bit
then the SPARC calling convention requires that the caller
must zero extend the value. We weren't doing this, which
meant we could pass values to the caller with high bits set
and QEMU would crash if it was compiled with optimizations.
In particular, the i386 BIOS would not start.
Backports commit 5c32be5baf41aec4f4675d2bf24f9948756abf3c from qemu
The C store helper functions take the data argument as a uint8_t,
uint16_t, etc depending on the store size. The SPARC calling
convention requires that data types smaller than the register
size must be extended by the caller. We weren't doing this,
which meant that if QEMU was compiled with optimizations enabled
we could end up storing incorrect values to guest memory.
(In particular the i386 guest BIOS would crash on startup.)
Add code to the trampolines that call the store helpers to
do the zero extension as required.
Backports commit 709a340d679d95a0c6cbb9b5f654498f04345b50 from qemu
The existing code for "host" and "max" CPU models overrides every
single feature in the CPU object at realize time, even the ones
that were explicitly enabled or disabled by the user using
"feat=on" or "feat=off", while features set using +feat/-feat are
kept.
This means "-cpu host,+invtsc" works as expected, while
"-cpu host,invtsc=on" doesn't.
This was a known bug, already documented in a comment inside
x86_cpu_expand_features(). What makes this bug worse now is that
libvirt 3.0.0 and newer now use "feat=on|off" instead of
+feat/-feat when it detects a QEMU version that supports it (see
libvirt commit d47db7b16dd5422c7e487c8c8ee5b181a2f9cd66).
Change the feature property getter/setter to set a
env->user_features field, to keep track of features that were
explicitly changed using QOM properties. Then make the
max_features code not override user features when handling "-cpu
host" and "-cpu max".
This will also allow us to remove the plus_features/minus_features
hack in the future, but I plan to do that after 2.9.0 is
released.
Backports commit d4a606b38b5d4b3689b86cc1575908e82179ecfb from qemu
The Cygwin target is really compiling for native Win32 with -mno-cygwin.
Except, GCC 4.7.0 has finally removed the long deprecated -mno-cygwin
option, and that happened about five years ago.
Let it rest in peace.
Backports commit c8645752ce31cc044ecc5f969a986fdcb6aab590 from qemu
It is unnecessary to test R6 from delay/forbidden slot check
in gen_msa_branch().
https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1663287
Backports commit 075a1fe788d36b271ec25507466c30b9a90b5d54 from qemu
this fixes many warnings like:
target/mips/translate.c:6253:13: warning: Value stored to 'rn' is never read
rn = "invalid sel";
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Backports commit 3570d7f6672836140f0a1ec9bf95dd5ea50a2aaa from qemu
static code analyzer complain:
target/mips/helper.c:453:5: warning: Function call argument is an uninitialized value
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_MMU,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'physical' and 'prot' are uninitialized if 'ret' is not TLBRET_MATCH.
Backports commit def74c0cf05722b2e502d4b4f1219966c5b0cbd3 from qemu
Our implementation of writes to the APSR for M-profile via the MSR
instruction was badly broken.
First and worst, we had the sense wrong on the test of bit 2 of the
SYSm field -- this is supposed to request an APSR write if bit 2 is 0
but we were doing it if bit 2 was 1. This bug was introduced in
commit 58117c9bb429cd, so hasn't been in a QEMU release.
Secondly, the choice of exactly which parts of APSR should be written
is defined by bits in the 'mask' field. We were not passing these
through from instruction decode, making it impossible to check them
in the helper.
Pass the mask bits through from the instruction decode to the helper
function and process them appropriately; fix the wrong sense of the
SYSm bit 2 check.
Invalid mask values and invalid combinations of mask and register
number are UNPREDICTABLE; we choose to treat them as if the mask
values were valid.
Backports commit b28b3377d7e9ba35611d454d5a63ef50cab1f8c5 from qemu
For M profile (unlike A profile) the reset value of R14 is specified
as 0xffffffff. (The rationale is that this is an illegal exception
return value, so if guest code tries to return to it it will result
in a helpful exception.)
Registers r0 to r12 and the flags are architecturally UNKNOWN on
reset, so we leave those at zero.
Backports commit 056f43df9168413f304500b69c33158d66efb7cf from qemu
For M profile CPUs, FAULTMASK should be 0 on reset, like PRIMASK.
QEMU stores FAULTMASK in the PSTATE F bit, so (as with PRIMASK in the
I bit) we have to clear these to undo the A profile default of 1.
Update the comment accordingly and move it so that it's closer to the
code it's referring to.
Backports commit dc7abe4d65ad39390b2db120f5ad18f8f6576f8b from qemu
For v7M attempts to access a nonexistent coprocessor are reported
differently from plain undefined instructions (as UsageFaults of type
NOCP rather than type UNDEFINSTR). Split them out into a new
EXCP_NOCP so we can report the FSR value correctly.
Backports commit 7517748e3f71a3099e57915fba95c4c308e6d842 from qemu
For v7M attempts to access a nonexistent coprocessor are reported
differently from plain undefined instructions (as UsageFaults of type
NOCP rather than type UNDEFINSTR). Split them out into a new
EXCP_NOCP so we can report the FSR value correctly.
Backports commit 7517748e3f71a3099e57915fba95c4c308e6d842 from qemu
When we take an exception for an undefined instruction, set the
appropriate CFSR bit.
Backports commit 81dd9648c69bb89afdd6f4bb3ed6f3efdac96524 from qemu
The CCR.STACKALIGN bit controls whether the CPU is supposed to force
8-alignment of the stack pointer on entry to the exception handler.
Backports commit dc858c6633a9af8b80c1509cf6f825e4390d3ad1 from qemu
Add the structure fields, VMState fields, reset code and macros for
the v7M system control registers CCR, CFSR, HFSR, DFSR, MMFAR and
BFAR.
Backports commit 2c4da50d9477fb830d778bb5d6a11215aa359b44 from qemu
Give an explicit error and abort when a load
from the vector table fails. Architecturally this
should HardFault (which will then immediately
fail to load the HardFault vector and go into Lockup).
Since we don't model Lockup, just report this guest
error via cpu_abort(). This is more helpful than the
previous behaviour of reading a zero, which is the
address of the reset stack pointer and not a sensible
location to jump to.
Backports commit 1b9ea408fca1ce8caae67b792355b023c69c5ac5 from qemu
For v7m we need to catch attempts to execute from special
addresses at 0xfffffff0 and above. Previously we did this
with the aid of a hacky special purpose lump of memory
in the address space and a check in translate.c for whether
we were translating code at those addresses.
We can implement this more cleanly using a CPU
unassigned access handler which throws the exception
if the unassigned access is for one of the special addresses.
Backports commit 542b3478a00cb7ef51c259255b3ab1e2a7daada2 from qemu
The MRS and MSR instruction handling has a number of flaws:
* unprivileged accesses should only be able to read
CONTROL and the xPSR subfields, and only write APSR
(others RAZ/WI)
* privileged access should not be able to write xPSR
subfields other than APSR
* accesses to unimplemented registers should log as
guest errors, not abort QEMU
Backports commit 58117c9bb429cd9552d998687aa99088eb1d8528 from qemu
The v7m CONTROL register bit 1 is SPSEL, which indicates
the stack being used. We were storing this information
not in v7m.control but in the separate v7m.other_sp
structure field. Unfortunately, the code handling reads
of the CONTROL register didn't take account of this, and
so if SPSEL was updated by an exception entry or exit then
a subsequent guest read of CONTROL would get the wrong value.
Using a separate structure field doesn't really gain us
anything in efficiency, so drop this unnecessary complexity
in favour of simply storing all the bits in v7m.control.
This is a migration compatibility break for M profile
CPUs only.
Backports commit abc24d86cc0364f402e438fae3acb14289b40734 from qemu
The MRS instruction requires that bits [19..16] are all 1s, and for
A/R profile also that bits [7..0] are all 0s. At this point in the
decode tree we have checked all of the rest of the instruction but
were allowing these to be any value. If these bits are not set then
the result is architecturally UNPREDICTABLE, but choosing to UNDEF is
more helpful to the user and avoids unexpected odd behaviour if the
encodings are used for some purpose in future architecture versions.
Backports commit 3d54026fb06d1aea7ebb4e9825970b06bebcacac from qemu
M profile doesn't have the MSR(banked) and MRS(banked) instructions
and uses the encodings for different kinds of M-profile MRS/MSR.
Guard the relevant bits of the decode logic to make sure we don't
accidentally fall into them by accident on M-profile.
(The bit being checked for this (bit 5) is part of the SYSm field on
M-profile, but since no currently allocated system registers have
encodings with bit 5 of SYSm set, this hasn't been a problem in
practice.)
Backports commit 43ac65742319ef5ac4461daf43316b189cd21e89 from qemu
M profile doesn't have the HVC or SMC encodings, so make them always
UNDEF rather than generating calls to helper functions that assume
A/R profile.
Backports commit 001b3cab51ebfcb13e8dd03ea25bfa3bd0c517a3 from qemu
The 'name' parameter to memory_region_init_* had been marked as debug
only, however vmstate_region_ram uses it as a parameter to
qemu_ram_set_idstr to set RAMBlock names and these form part of the
migration stream.
Backports commit e8f5fe2de125a0bfbefbaa6a69af81f4817cb7a0 from qemu
The power state spec section 5.1.5 AFFINITY_INFO defines the
affinity info return values as
0 ON
1 OFF
2 ON_PENDING
I grepped QEMU for power_state to ensure that no assumptions
of OFF=0 were being made.
Backports commit d5affb0d8677e1a8a8fe03fa25005b669e7cdc02 from qemu
In armv8, this register implements more than a single bit, with
fine-grained enables for read access to event counters, cycles
counters, and write access to the software increment. This change
implements those checks using custom access functions for the relevant
registers.
Backports commit 6ecd0b6ba0591ef280ed984103924d4bdca5ac32 from qemu
glibc blacklists TSX on Haswell CPUs with model==60 and
stepping < 4. To make the Haswell CPU model more useful, make
those guests actually use TSX by changing CPU stepping to 4.
References:
* glibc commit 2702856bf45c82cf8e69f2064f5aa15c0ceb6359
https://sourceware.org/git/?p=glibc.git;a=commit;h=2702856bf45c82cf8e69f2064f5aa15c0ceb6359
Backports commit ec56a4a7b07e2943f49da273a31e3195083b1f2e from qemu
Helper function for code that needs to check the host CPU
vendor/family/model/stepping values.
Backports commit 20271d484069f154fb262507e63adc3a37e885d2 from qemu
..just like the rest of the displayed ESR register. Otherwise people
might scratch their heads if a not obviously hex number is displayed
for the EC field.
Backports commit 6568da459b611845ef55526cd23afc9fa9f4647f from qemu
Paths through the softmmu code during code generation now need to be audited
to check for double locking of tb_lock. In particular, VMEXIT can take tb_lock
through cpu_vmexit -> cpu_x86_update_cr4 -> tlb_flush.
To avoid this, split VMEXIT delivery in two parts, similar to what is done with
exceptions. cpu_vmexit only records the VMEXIT exit code and information, and
cc->do_interrupt can then deliver it when it is safe to take the lock.
Backports commit 10cde894b63146139f981857e4eedf756fa53dcb from qemu
The translation code uses cpu_ld*_code which can trigger a tlb_fill
which if it fails will erroneously attempts a fault resolution. This
never works during translation as the TB being generated hasn't been
added yet. The target should have checked retaddr before calling
cpu_restore_state but for those that have yet to be fixed we do it
here to avoid a recursive tb_lock() under MTTCG's new locking regime
Backports commit d8b2239bcd8872a5c5f7534d1658fc2365caab2d from qemu
This suppresses the incorrect warning when forcing MTTCG for x86
guests on x86 hosts. A future patch will still warn when
TARGET_SUPPORT_MTTCG hasn't been defined for the guest (which is still
pending for x86).
Backports commit 72c1701f62e8d44eb24a0583a958edc280105455 from qemu
Fix the design flaw demonstrated in the previous commit: new method
check_list() lets input visitors report that unvisited input remains
for a list, exactly like check_struct() lets them report that
unvisited input remains for a struct or union.
Implement the method for the qobject input visitor (straightforward),
and the string input visitor (less so, due to the magic list syntax
there). The opts visitor's list magic is even more impenetrable, and
all I can do there today is a stub with a FIXME comment. No worse
than before.
Backports commit a4a1c70dc759e5b81627e96564f344ab43ea86eb from qemu
The split between tests/test-qobject-input-visitor.c and
tests/test-qobject-input-strict.c now makes less sense than ever. The
next commit will take care of that.
Backports commit 048abb7b20c9f822ad9d4b730bade73b3311a47a from qemu
Commit 240f64b made all qobject input visitors created outside tests
strict, except for the one in object_property_set_qobject(). That one
was left behind only because Eric couldn't spare the time to figure
out whether making it strict would break anything, with a TODO
comment. Time to resolve it.
Strict makes a difference only for otherwise successful visits of QAPI
structs or unions. Let's examine what the callers of
object_property_set_qobject() visit:
* object_property_set_str(), object_property_set_bool(),
object_property_set_int() visit a QString, QBool, QInt,
respectively. Strictness can't matter.
* qmp_qom_set visits its @value argument. Comes straight from QMP and
can be anything ('any' in the QAPI schema). Strictness matters when
the property's set() method visits a struct or union QAPI type.
No such methods exist, thus switching to strict can't break
anything.
If we acquire such methods in the future, we'll *want* the visitor
to be strict, so that unexpected members get rejected as they should
be.
Switch to strict.
Backports commit 05601ed2de60df0e344d6b783a6bc0c1ff2b5d1f from qemu
The string input visitor tries to cope with null input. Null input
isn't used anywhere, and isn't covered by tests. Unsurprisingly, it
doesn't fully work: start_list() crashes because it passes the input
via parse_str() to strtoll() unchecked.
Make string_input_visitor_new() assert its argument isn't null, and
drop the code trying to deal with null input.
The opts visitor crashes when you try to actually visit something with
null input. Make opts_visitor_new() assert its argument isn't null,
mostly for clarity.
qobject_input_visitor_new() already asserts its argument isn't null.
Backports commit f332e830e38b3ff3953ef02ac04e409ae53769c5 from qemu
visit_optional() is to be called only between visit_start_struct() and
visit_end_struct(). Visitors that don't support struct visits,
i.e. don't implement start_struct(), end_struct(), have no use for it.
Clarify documentation.
The string input visitor doesn't support struct visits. Its
parse_optional() is therefore useless. Drop it.
Backports commit a8aec6de2ac1a5e36989fdfba29067b361009b75 from qemu
Error messages refer to nodes of the QObject being visited by name.
Trouble is the names are sometimes less than helpful:
* The name of the root QObject is whatever @name argument got passed
to the visitor, except NULL gets mapped to "null". We commonly pass
NULL. Not good.
Avoiding errors "at the root" mitigates. For instance,
visit_start_struct() can only fail when the visited object is not a
dictionary, and we commonly ensure it is beforehand.
* The name of a QDict's member is the member key. Good enough only
when this happens to be unique.
* The name of a QList's member is "null". Not good.
Improve error messages by referring to nodes by path instead, as
follows:
* The path of the root QObject is whatever @name argument got passed
to the visitor, except NULL gets mapped to "<anonymous>".
* The path of a root QDict's member is the member key.
* The path of a root QList's member is "[%u]", where %u is the list
index, starting at zero.
* The path of a non-root QDict's member is the path of the QDict
concatenated with "." and the member key.
* The path of a non-root QList's member is the path of the QList
concatenated with "[%u]", where %u is the list index.
For example, the incorrect QMP command
{ "execute": "blockdev-add", "arguments": { "node-name": "foo", "driver": "raw", "file": {"driver": "file" } } }
now fails with
{"error": {"class": "GenericError", "desc": "Parameter 'file.filename' is missing"}}
instead of
{"error": {"class": "GenericError", "desc": "Parameter 'filename' is missing"}}
and
{ "execute": "input-send-event", "arguments": { "device": "bar", "events": [ [] ] } }
now fails with
{"error": {"class": "GenericError", "desc": "Invalid parameter type for 'events[0]', expected: object"}}
instead of
{"error": {"class": "GenericError", "desc": "Invalid parameter type for 'null', expected: QDict"}}
Aside: calling the thing "parameter" is suboptimal for QMP, because
the root object is "arguments" there.
The qobject output visitor doesn't have this problem because it should
not fail. Same for dealloc and clone visitors.
The string visitors don't have this problem because they visit just
one value, whose name needs to be passed to the visitor as @name. The
string output visitor shouldn't fail anyway.
The options visitor uses QemuOpts names. Their name space is flat, so
the use of QDict member keys as names is fine. NULL names used with
roots and lists could conceivably result in bad error messages. Left
for another day.
Backports commit a9fc37f6bc3f2ab90585cb16493da9f6dcfbfbcf from qemu
qobject_input_start_struct() sets *list, except when it fails because
qobject_input_get_object() fails, i.e. the input object doesn't exist.
All the other input visitor start_struct(), start_list(),
start_alternate() always set *obj / *list.
Change qobject_input_start_struct() to match.
Backports commit 58561c27669ddf1c6d39ff8ce25837c6f2d9d92c from qemu
The QObject input visitor has three error message formats:
* Parameter '%s' is missing
* "Invalid parameter type for '%s', expected: %s"
* "QMP input object member '%s' is unexpected"
The '%s' are member names (or "null", but I'll fix that later).
The last error message calls the thing "QMP input object member"
instead of "parameter". Misleading when the visitor is used on
QObjects that don't come from QMP. Change it to "Parameter '%s' is
unexpected".
Backports commit 910f738b851a263396fc85b2052e47f884ffead3 from qemu
The QERR_ macros are leftovers from the days of "rich" error objects.
QERR_QMP_BAD_INPUT_OBJECT, QERR_QMP_BAD_INPUT_OBJECT_MEMBER,
QERR_QMP_EXTRA_MEMBER are used in just one place now, except for one
use that has crept into qobject-input-visitor.c.
Drop these macros, to make the (bad) error messages more visible.
Backports commit 99fb0c53c038105bae68b02a3d9f1cbf7951ba10 from qemu
At the moment ram device's memory regions are DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN. It's
incorrect. This memory region is backed by a MMIO area in host, so the
uint64_t data that MemoryRegionOps read from/write to this area should be
host-endian rather than target-endian. Hence, current code does not work
when target and host endianness are different which is the most common case
on PPC64. To fix it, this introduces DEVICE_HOST_ENDIAN for the ram device.
This has been tested on PPC64 BE/LE host/guest in all possible combinations
including TCG.
Backports commit c99a29e702528698c0ce2590f06ca7ff239f7c39 from qemu
The cpu->exit_request check in cpu_loop_exec_tb is unnecessary,
because cpu->tcg_exit_req is always set after cpu->exit_request.
So let the TB exit and we will pick up the exit request later
in cpu_handle_interrupt.
Backports commit 55ac0a9bf4e1b1adfc7d73586a7aa085f58c9851 from qemu
CPU runnability checks and CPU model expansion have slightly
different requirements. Document the steps involved in loading a
CPU model and realizing a CPU, so their requirements and purpose
are clearly defined.
This patch doesn't change any implementation. It just add
comments, rename the x86_cpu_load_features() function for clarity
(so it won't be confused with x86_cpu_load_def()), and move
x86_cpu_filter_features() closer to it.
Backports commit b8d834a00fa3ed4dad7d371e1a00938a126a54a0 from qemu
To fix the following warnings:
In file included from /users/pranith/qemu/tcg/tcg.c:255:
/users/pranith/qemu/tcg/aarch64/tcg-target.inc.c:879:24: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'TCGMemOp' (aka 'enum TCGMemOp') to different enumeration type 'TCGType' (aka 'enum TCGType')
[-Wenum-conversion]
tcg_out_cmp(s, ext, a, b, b_const);
~~~~~~~~~~~ ^~~
/users/pranith/qemu/tcg/aarch64/tcg-target.inc.c:893:36: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'TCGMemOp' (aka 'enum TCGMemOp') to different enumeration type 'TCGType' (aka 'enum TCGType')
[-Wenum-conversion]
tcg_out_insn(s, 3201, CBZ, ext, a, offset);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/users/pranith/qemu/tcg/aarch64/tcg-target.inc.c:389:65: note: expanded from macro 'tcg_out_insn'
glue(tcg_out_insn_,FMT)(S, glue(glue(glue(I,FMT),_),OP), ## __VA_ARGS__)
^
/users/pranith/qemu/tcg/aarch64/tcg-target.inc.c:895:37: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'TCGMemOp' (aka 'enum TCGMemOp') to different enumeration type 'TCGType' (aka 'enum TCGType')
[-Wenum-conversion]
tcg_out_insn(s, 3201, CBNZ, ext, a, offset);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/users/pranith/qemu/tcg/aarch64/tcg-target.inc.c:389:65: note: expanded from macro 'tcg_out_insn'
glue(tcg_out_insn_,FMT)(S, glue(glue(glue(I,FMT),_),OP), ## __VA_ARGS__)
^
/users/pranith/qemu/tcg/aarch64/tcg-target.inc.c:1610:27: warning: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'TCGType' (aka 'enum TCGType') to different enumeration type 'TCGMemOp' (aka 'enum TCGMemOp')
[-Wenum-conversion]
tcg_out_brcond(s, ext, a2, a0, a1, const_args[1], arg_label(args[3]));
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^~~
backports commit dc1eccd661ada3b746ca4438e444993c36a0f04f from qemu
In float64_to_uint64_round_to_zero() a typo meant that we were
taking the uint64_t return value from float64_to_uint64() and
putting it into an int64_t variable before returning it as
uint64_t again. Use uint64_t instead of pointlessly casting it
back and forth to int64_t.
Backports commit d000b477f2693dbca97cd8ea751c2e0b71890662 from qemu
In get_page_addr_code(), if the guest PC doesn't correspond to RAM
then we currently run the CPU's do_unassigned_access() hook if it has
one, and otherwise we give up and exit QEMU with a more-or-less
useful message. This code assumes that the do_unassigned_access hook
will never return, because if it does then we'll plough on attempting
to use a non-RAM TLB entry to get a RAM address and will abort() in
qemu_ram_addr_from_host_nofail(). Unfortunately some CPU
implementations of this hook do return: Microblaze, SPARC and the ARM
v7M.
Change the code to call report_bad_exec() if the hook returns, as
well as if it didn't have one. This means we can tidy it up to use
the cpu_unassigned_access() function which wraps the "get the CPU
class and call the hook if it has one" work, since we aren't trying
to distinguish "no hook" from "hook existed and returned" any more.
This brings the handling of this hook into line with the handling
used for data accesses, where "hook returned" is treated the
same as "no hook existed" and gets you the default behaviour.
Backports commit 44d7ce0ef39cb45e13d384574d79799eb3d39834 from qemu
The aarch64 crypto instructions for AES and SHA are missing the
check for if the FPU is enabled.
Backports commit a4f5c5b72380deeccd53a6890ea3782f10ca8054 from qemu
This enables the multi-threaded system emulation by default for ARMv7
and ARMv8 guests using the x86_64 TCG backend. This is because on the
guest side:
- The ARM translate.c/translate-64.c have been converted to
- use MTTCG safe atomic primitives
- emit the appropriate barrier ops
- The ARM machine has been updated to
- hold the BQL when modifying shared cross-vCPU state
- defer powerctl changes to async safe work
All the host backends support the barrier and atomic primitives but
need to provide same-or-better support for normal load/store
operations.
Backports commit ca759f9e387db87e1719911f019bc60c74be9ed8 from qemu
The WFE and YIELD instructions are really only hints and in TCG's case
they were useful to move the scheduling on from one vCPU to the next. In
the parallel context (MTTCG) this just causes an unnecessary cpu_exit
and contention of the BQL.
Backports commit c22edfebff29f63d793032e4fbd42a035bb73e27 from qemu
This moves the helper function closer to where it is called and updates
the error message to report via error_report instead of the deprecated
fprintf.
Backports commit 857baec1d9e80947f0c1007c3a3d2331d62b4b53 from qemu
While the vargs approach was flexible the original MTTCG ended up
having munge the bits to a bitmap so the data could be used in
deferred work helpers. Instead of hiding that in cputlb we push the
change to the API to make it take a bitmap of MMU indexes instead.
For ARM some the resulting flushes end up being quite long so to aid
readability I've tended to move the index shifting to a new line so
all the bits being or-ed together line up nicely, for example:
tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx(other_cs, pageaddr,
(1 << ARMMMUIdx_S1SE1) |
(1 << ARMMMUIdx_S1SE0));
Backports commit 0336cbf8532935d8e23c2aabf3e2ce2c0697b6ac from qemu
The patch enables handling atomic code in the guest. This should be
preferably done in cpu_handle_exception(), but the current assumptions
regarding when we can execute atomic sections cause a deadlock.
The current mechanism discards the flags which were set in atomic
execution. We ensure they are properly saved by calling the
cc->cpu_exec_enter/leave() functions around the loop.
As we are running cpu_exec_step_atomic() from the outermost loop we
need to avoid an abort() when single stepping over atomic code since
debug exception longjmp will point to the the setlongjmp in
cpu_exec(). We do this by setting a new jmp_env so that it jumps back
here on an exception.
Backports relevant parts of commit 08e73c48b053566bfe0c994f154f73991cd0ff0e from qemu
There are a couple of changes that occur at the same time here:
- introduce a single vCPU qemu_tcg_cpu_thread_fn
One of these is spawned per vCPU with its own Thread and Condition
variables. qemu_tcg_rr_cpu_thread_fn is the new name for the old
single threaded function.
- the TLS current_cpu variable is now live for the lifetime of MTTCG
vCPU threads. This is for future work where async jobs need to know
the vCPU context they are operating in.
The user to switch on multi-thread behaviour and spawn a thread
per-vCPU. For a simple test kvm-unit-test like:
./arm/run ./arm/locking-test.flat -smp 4 -accel tcg,thread=multi
Will now use 4 vCPU threads and have an expected FAIL (instead of the
unexpected PASS) as the default mode of the test has no protection when
incrementing a shared variable.
We enable the parallel_cpus flag to ensure we generate correct barrier
and atomic code if supported by the front and backends. This doesn't
automatically enable MTTCG until default_mttcg_enabled() is updated to
check the configuration is supported.
Backports relevant parts of commit 372579427a5040a26dfee78464b50e2bdf27ef26
There are now only two uses of the global exit_request left.
The first ensures we exit the run_loop when we first start to process
pending work and in the kick handler. This is just as easily done by
setting the first_cpu->exit_request flag.
The second use is in the round robin kick routine. The global
exit_request ensured every vCPU would set its local exit_request and
cause a full exit of the loop. Now the iothread isn't being held while
running we can just rely on the kick handler to push us out as intended.
We lightly re-factor the main vCPU thread to ensure cpu->exit_requests
cause us to exit the main loop and process any IO requests that might
come along. As an cpu->exit_request may legitimately get squashed
while processing the EXCP_INTERRUPT exception we also check
cpu->queued_work_first to ensure queued work is expedited as soon as
possible.
Backports commit e5143e30fb87fbf179029387f83f98a5a9b27f19 from qemu
..and make the definition local to cpus. In preparation for MTTCG the
concept of a global tcg_current_cpu will no longer make sense. However
we still need to keep track of it in the single-threaded case to be able
to exit quickly when required.
qemu_cpu_kick_no_halt() moves and becomes qemu_cpu_kick_rr_cpu() to
emphasise its use-case. qemu_cpu_kick now kicks the relevant cpu as
well as qemu_kick_rr_cpu() which will become a no-op in MTTCG.
For the time being the setting of the global exit_request remains.
Backports commit 791158d93b27f22a17c2ada06621831d54f09a2c from qemu
Also atomically sets the unicorn equivalents
We know there will be cases where MTTCG won't work until additional work
is done in the front/back ends to support. It will however be useful to
be able to turn it on.
As a result MTTCG will default to off unless the combination is
supported. However the user can turn it on for the sake of testing.
Backports commit 8d4e9146b3568022ea5730d92841345d41275d66 from qemu
We'll be using the memory ordering definitions to define values for
both the host and guest. To avoid fighting with circular header
dependencies just move these types into their own minimal header.
Backports commit 20937143145b8f5a4194e5c407731ba38797864e from qemu
Enable tcg lock debug asserts in a debug build by default instead of
relying on DEBUG_LOCKING. None of the other DEBUG_* macros have
asserts, so this patch removes DEBUG_LOCKING and enable these asserts
in a debug build.
Backports commit 6ac3d7e845549f08473f020c1c70f14b8911a67e from qemu
This makes qemu_strtosz(), qemu_strtosz_mebi() and
qemu_strtosz_metric() similar to qemu_strtoi64(), except negative
values are rejected.
Backports commit f17fd4fdf0df3d2f3444399d04c38d22b9a3e1b7 from qemu
Change the qemu_strtosz() & friends to return -EINVAL when @endptr is
null and the conversion doesn't consume the string completely.
Matches how qemu_strtol() & friends work.
Only test_qemu_strtosz_simple() passes a null @endptr. No functional
change there, because its conversion consumes the string.
Simplify callers that use @endptr only to fail when it doesn't point
to '\0' to pass a null @endptr instead.
Backports commit 4fcdf65ae2c00ae69f7625f26ed41f37d77b403c from qemu
Writing QEMU_STRTOSZ_DEFSUFFIX_* instead of '*' gains nothing. Get
rid of these eyesores.
Backports commit 17f942560e54f8ee72996bc3276c697503606d7b from qemu
Most callers of qemu_strtosz_suffix() pass QEMU_STRTOSZ_DEFSUFFIX_B.
Capture the pattern in new qemu_strtosz().
Inline qemu_strtosz_suffix() into its only remaining caller.
Backports commit 466dea14e677555dd24465aca75d00a3537ad062 from qemu
With qemu_strtosz(), no suffix means mebibytes. It's used rarely.
I'm going to add a similar function where no suffix means bytes.
Rename qemu_strtosz() to qemu_strtosz_MiB() to make the name
qemu_strtosz() available for the new function.
Backports commit e591591b323772eea733de6027f5e8b50692d0ff from qemu
To parse numbers with metric suffixes, we use
qemu_strtosz_suffix_unit(nptr, &eptr, QEMU_STRTOSZ_DEFSUFFIX_B, 1000)
Capture this in a new function for legibility:
qemu_strtosz_metric(nptr, &eptr)
Replace test_qemu_strtosz_suffix_unit() by test_qemu_strtosz_metric().
Rename qemu_strtosz_suffix_unit() to do_strtosz() and give it internal
linkage.
Backports commit d2734d2629266006b0413433778474d5801c60be from qemu
Reorder check_strtox_error() to make it obvious that we always store
through a non-null @endptr.
Transform
if (some error) {
error case ...
err = value for error case;
} else {
normal case ...
err = value for normal case;
}
return err;
to
if (some error) {
error case ...
return value for error case;
}
normal case ...
return value for normal case;
Backports commit 4baef2679e029c76707be1e2ed54bf3dd21693fe from qemu
Name same things the same, different things differently.
* qemu_strtol()'s parameter @nptr is called @p in
check_strtox_error(). Rename the latter.
* qemu_strtol()'s parameter @endptr is called @next in
check_strtox_error(). Rename the latter.
* qemu_strtol()'s variable @p is called @endptr in
check_strtox_error(). Rename both to @ep.
* qemu_strtol()'s variable @err is *negative* errno,
check_strtox_error()'s parameter @err is *positive*. Rename the
latter to @libc_errno.
Same for qemu_strtoul(), qemu_strtoi64(), qemu_strtou64(), of course.
Backports commit 717adf960933da0650d995f050d457063d591914 from qemu
The name qemu_strtoll() suggests conversion to long long, but it
actually converts to int64_t. Rename to qemu_strtoi64().
The name qemu_strtoull() suggests conversion to unsigned long long,
but it actually converts to uint64_t. Rename to qemu_strtou64().
Backports commit b30d188677456b17c1cd68969e08ddc634cef644 from qemu
Fixes the following documentation bugs:
* Fails to document that null @nptr is safe.
* Fails to document that we return -EINVAL when no conversion could be
performed (commit 47d4be1).
* Confuses long long with int64_t, and unsigned long long with
uint64_t.
* Claims the unsigned conversions can underflow. They can't.
While there, mark problematic assumptions that int64_t is long long,
and uint64_t is unsigned long long with FIXME comments.
Backports commit 4295f879becfbbb9f4330489311586b96915d920 from qemu
Commit 89cad9f changed qdict_get_qdict() to return NULL instead of
crash when the key doesn't exist or its value isn't a QDict.
Commit 2d6421a neglected to do the same for qdict_get_qlist().
Correct that, and update the function comments.
qdict_get_obj() is now unused, remove.
Backports commit b25f23e7dbc6bc0dcda010222a4f178669d1aedc from qemu
float128_to_uint32_round_to_zero() is needed by xscvqpuwz instruction
of PowerPC ISA 3.0.
Backports commit fd425037d25cecaaffdb3831697e0adc10ca2ba3 from qemu
Implement float128_to_uint64() and use that to implement
float128_to_uint64_round_to_zero()
This is required by xscvqpudz instruction of PowerPC ISA 3.0.
Backports commit 2e6d85683576c970c714c1cc071dca742835b9d4 from qemu
Power ISA 3.0 introduces a few quadruple precision floating point
instructions that support round-to-odd rounding mode. The
round-to-odd mode is explained as under:
Let Z be the intermediate arithmetic result or the operand of a convert
operation. If Z can be represented exactly in the target format, the
result is Z. Otherwise the result is either Z1 or Z2 whichever is odd.
Here Z1 and Z2 are the next larger and smaller numbers representable
in the target format respectively.
Backports commit 9ee6f678f473007e252934d6acd09c24490d9d42 from qemu
Provide a new cpu_supports_isa function which allows callers to
determine whether a CPU supports one of the ISA_ flags, by testing
whether the associated struct mips_def_t sets the ISA flags in its
insn_flags field.
An example use of this is to allow boards which generate bootloader code
to determine the properties of the CPU that will be used, for example
whether the CPU is 64 bit or which architecture revision it implements.
Backports commit bed9e5ceb158c886d548fe59675a6eba18baeaeb from qemu
Clear cache->mr so that address_space_cache_destroy does nothing
the second time it is called.
Backports commit 91047df38dffa80222179f63fbb74c1dfefa25ed from qemu
Reorganize the sigsetjmp so that the restart case falls through
to cpu_handle_exception and the execution loop.
Backports commit 4515e58d60dc3aac53dbd5e53e4c3bec126967d8 from qemu
The sigsetjmp only needs to be prepared once for the whole execution
of cpu_exec. This patch takes care of the "== 0" side, using a
nested loop so that cpu_handle_interrupt goes straight back to
cpu_handle_exception without doing another sigsetjmp.
Backports commit a42cf3f3f266a97ceb13e8b99bc7b13f7bf4192a from qemu
The siglongjmp goes straight back to the beginning of cpu_exec's
outermost loop. We do not need a siglongjmp, we can simply
leave the inner TB execution loop.
Backports commit 209b71b60ef3341246038e1c926c3b704969cdd3 from qemu
This seems to have worked just fine so far on weakly-ordered
architectures, but I don't see anything that prevents the
reordering from:
store 1 to exit_request
store 1 to tcg_exit_req
load tcg_exit_req
store 0 to tcg_exit_req
load exit_request
store 0 to exit_request
store 1 to exit_request
store 1 to tcg_exit_req
to this:
store 1 to exit_request
store 1 to tcg_exit_req
load tcg_exit_req
load exit_request
store 1 to exit_request
store 1 to tcg_exit_req
store 0 to tcg_exit_req
store 0 to exit_request
therefore losing a request. It's possible that other memory barriers
(e.g. in rcu_read_unlock) are hiding it, but better safe than
sorry.
Backports commit a70fe14b7dddcb944fbd6c9f3739cd3a22089af5 from qemu
This patch contains several fixes to enable vPMU under TCG mode. It
first removes the checking of kvm_enabled() while unsetting
ARM_FEATURE_PMU. With it, the .pmu option can be used to turn on/off vPMU
under TCG mode. Secondly the PMU node of DT table is now created under TCG.
The last fix is to disable the masking of PMUver field of ID_AA64DFR0_EL1.
Backports commit d6f02ce3b8a43ddd8f83553fe754a34b26fb273f from qemu
In order to support Linux perf, which uses PMXEVTYPER register,
this patch adds read/write access support for PMXEVTYPER. The access
is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE when PMSELR is not 0x1f. Additionally
this patch adds support for PMXEVTYPER_EL0.
Backports commit fdb8665672ded05f650d18f8b62d5c8524b4385b from qemu
This patch adds support for AArch64 register PMSELR_EL0. The existing
PMSELR definition is revised accordingly.
Backports commit 6b0407805d46bbeba70f4be426285d0a0e669750 from qemu
Add support for generating the ISS (Instruction Specific Syndrome)
for Data Abort exceptions taken from AArch32. These syndromes are
used by hypervisors for example to trap and emulate memory accesses.
This is the equivalent for AArch32 guests of the work done for AArch64
guests in commit aaa1f954d4cab243.
Backports commit 9bb6558a218bf7e466e5ac1100639517d8a30d33 from qemu
In the ARM ldr/str decode path, rather than directly testing
"insn & (1 << 21)" and "insn & (1 << 24)", abstract these
bits out into wbit and pbit local flags. (We will want to
do more tests against them to determine whether we need to
provide syndrome information.)
Backports commit 63f26fcfda8e19f94ce23336726d14805250a5b6 from qemu
In BE32 mode, sub-word size watchpoints can fail to trigger because the
address of the access is adjusted in the opcode helpers before being
compared with the watchpoint registers. This patch reverses the address
adjustment before performing the comparison with the help of a new CPUClass
hook.
This version of the patch augments and tidies up comments a little.
Backports commit 40612000599e52e792d23c998377a0fa429c4036 from qemu
Thumb-1 code has some issues in BE32 mode (as currently implemented). In
short, since bytes are swapped within words at load time for BE32
executables, this also swaps pairs of adjacent Thumb-1 instructions.
This patch un-swaps those pairs of instructions again, both for execution,
and for disassembly. (The previous version of the patch always read four
bytes in arm_read_memory_func and then extracted the proper two bytes,
in a probably misguided attempt to match the behaviour of actual hardware
as described by e.g. the ARM9TDMI TRM, section 3.3 "Endian effects for
instruction fetches". It's less complicated to just read the correct
two bytes though.)
Backports commit f7478a92dd9ee2276bfaa5b7317140d3f9d6a53b from qemu
Add a new "cfgend" property which selects whether the CPU resets into
big-endian mode or not. This setting affects whether we reset with
SCTLR_B (ARMv6 and earlier) or SCTLR_EE (ARMv7 and later) set.
Backports commit 3a062d5730266b2386eeda68b1a1c6e96451db31 from qemu
Currently float128_default_nan() returns 0xFFFF800000000000 in the
higher double word, but it should return 0x7FFF800000000000 which
is the correct higher double word for default qNAN on PowerPC.
Backports commit 5d51eaea84899d88cb161fab3f089168e3812e9e from qemu
stub version of MISMATCH_CHECK is empty so it's easy to misuse for
people not building kvm on arm. Use QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON similar to the
non-stub version to make it easier to catch bugs.
Backports commit 705ae59fecae341a4b1a45ce48b46de4b1bb3cf4 from qemu
Macro calls without a trailing ; look weird in C, this works as a side
effect of how QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON is implemented. Fix this up.
Backports commit 1b28762a333bd238611103e9ed2348d7af93b0db from qemu
It's a familiar pattern: some code uses ARRAY_SIZE, then refactoring
changes the argument from an array to a pointer to a dynamically
allocated buffer. Code keeps compiling but any ARRAY_SIZE calls now
return the size of the pointer divided by element size.
Let's add build time checks to ARRAY_SIZE before we allow more
of these in the code-base.
Backports commit ed63ec0d22ccdce3b2222d9a514423b7fbba3a0d from qemu
QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON uses a typedef in order to be safe
to use outside functions, but sometimes it's useful
to have a version that can be used within an expression.
Following what Linux does, introduce QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON_ZERO
that return zero after checking condition at build time.
Backports commit d757573e69f2ef58a4a7b41f6c55d65fa1e1c5c2 from qemu
There are theoretical concerns that some compilers might not trigger
build failures on attempts to define an array of size (x ? -1 : 1) where
x is a variable and make it a variable sized array instead. Let rewrite
using a struct with a negative bit field size instead as there are no
dynamic bit field sizes. This is similar to what Linux does.
Backports commit f291887e8eef5d37d31484638f6e62401b4b99a2 from qemu
Some headers use QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON. This causes a problem
if the C file including that header happens to have
QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON at the same line number.
Fix using a widely available extension: __COUNTER__.
If unavailable, provide a stub.
Backports commit 60abf0a5e05134187e274ce5f32524ccf0cae1a6 from qemu
ldl_p has a signed return type so assigning it to uint64_t implicitly
sign-extends the value. This results in devices with min_access_size = 8
seeing unexpected values passed to their write handlers.
Example: guest performs a 32-bit write of 0x80000000 to an mmio region
and the handler receives 0xFFFFFFFF80000000 in its value argument.
Backports commit 6da67de6803e93cbb7e93ac3497865832f8c00ea from qemu
We only use the IS_M() macro in two places, and it's a bit of a
namespace grab to put in cpu.h. Drop it in favour of just explicitly
calling arm_feature() in the places where it was used.
Backports commit 531c60a97ab51618b4b9ccef1c5fe00607079706 from qemu
1st mmap returns *ptr* which aligns to host page size,
| size + align |
------------------------------------------
ptr
input param *align* could be 1M, or 2M, or host page size. After
QEMU_ALIGN_UP, offset will >= 0
2nd mmap use flag MAP_FIXED, then it return ptr+offset, or else fail.
If it success, then we will have something like:
| offset | size |
--------------------------------------
ptr ptr1
*ptr1* is what we really want to return, it equals ptr+offset.
Backports commit 6e4c890e15b23f078650499fbde11760b8eccf10 from qemu
When CPU vendor is set to AMD, the AMD feature alias bits on
CPUID[0x80000001].EDX are already automatically copied from CPUID[1].EDX
on x86_cpu_realizefn(). When CPU vendor is Intel, those bits are
reserved and should be zero. On either case, those bits shouldn't be set
in the CPU model table.
Commit 726a8ff68677d8d5fba17eb0ffb85076bfb598dc removed those
bits from most CPU models, but the Opteron_* entries still have
them. Remove the alias bits from Opteron_* too.
Add an assert() to x86_register_cpudef_type() to ensure we don't
make the same mistake again.
Backports commit 2a923a293df95334fa22634016efdd138f49da7f from qemu
AVX512_VPOPCNTDQ: Vector POPCNT instructions for word and qwords.
variable precision.
Backports commit f77543772dcd38fa438470d9b80bafbd3a3ebbd7 from qemu
Like the original MIPS, HPPA has the MSB of an SNaN set.
However, it has different rules for silencing an SNaN:
(1) msb is cleared and (2) msb-1 must be set if the fraction
is now zero, and (implementation defined) may be set always.
I haven't checked real hardware but chose the set always
alternative because it's easy and within spec.
Backports commit 005fa38d86257d471ac461c066a5409a9f5ebb02 from qemu
C11 allows errno to be clobbered by pretty much any library function
call, so in general callers need to take care to save errno before
calling other functions.
However, for error reporting functions this is rather awkward and can
make the code on the caller side more complicated than
necessary. error_setg_errno() already takes care of preserving errno
and some functions rely on that, so just promise that we continue to
do so in the future.
Backports commit 98cb89af4df7e1776ce418ed6167b6e214a64435 from qemu
Enable the ARM_FEATURE_EL2 bit on Cortex-A52 and
Cortex-A57, since this is all now sufficiently implemented
to work with the GICv3. We provide the usual CPU property
to disable it for backwards compatibility with the older
virt boards.
In this commit, we disable the EL2 feature on the
virt and ZynpMP boards, so there is no overall effect.
Another commit will expose a board-level property to
allow the user to enable EL2.
Backports commit c25bd18a04c8bd0f19556d719864b7b08528222d from qemu
The PSCI spec states that a CPU_ON call should cause the new
CPU to be started in the highest implemented Non-secure
exception level. We were incorrectly starting it at the
exception level of the caller, which happens to be correct
if EL2 is not implemented. Implement the correct logic
as described in the PSCI 1.0 spec section 6.4:
* if EL2 exists and SCR_EL3.HCE is set: start in EL2
* otherwise start in EL1
Backports commit 3f591a20221511c639cc7959755e570801a21cd2 from qemu
Split ARM on/off function from PSCI support code.
This will allow to reuse these functions in other code.
Backports commit 825482adde1f971cbddf27e15fb4453ab3fae994 from qemu
The DBGVCR_EL2 system register is needed to run a 32-bit
EL1 guest under a Linux EL2 64-bit hypervisor. Its only
purpose is to provide AArch64 with access to the state of
the DBGVCR AArch32 register. Since we only have a dummy
DBGVCR, implement a corresponding dummy DBGVCR32_EL2.
Backports commit 4d2ec4da1c2d60c9fd8bad137506870c2f980410 from qemu
To run a VM in 32-bit EL1 our AArch32 interrupt handling code
needs to be able to cope with VIRQ and VFIQ exceptions.
These behave like IRQ and FIQ except that we don't need to try
to route them to Monitor mode.
Backports commit 87a4b270348c69a446ebcddc039bfae31b1675cb from qemu
We've currently got 18 architectures in QEMU, and thus 18 target-xxx
folders in the root folder of the QEMU source tree. More architectures
(e.g. RISC-V, AVR) are likely to be included soon, too, so the main
folder of the QEMU sources slowly gets quite overcrowded with the
target-xxx folders.
To disburden the main folder a little bit, let's move the target-xxx
folders into a dedicated target/ folder, so that target-xxx/ simply
becomes target/xxx/ instead.
Backports commit fcf5ef2ab52c621a4617ebbef36bf43b4003f4c0 from qemu
In OpenSPARC T1+ TWINX ASIs in store instructions are aliased
with Block Initializing Store ASIs.
"UltraSPARC T1 Supplement Draft D2.1, 14 May 2007" describes them
in the chapter "5.9 Block Initializing Store ASIs"
Integer stores of all sizes are allowed with these ASIs.
Backports commit 3390537b5df4014e24a30f9bdcfa05c2bd0cd6d8 from qemu
According to chapter 13.3 of the
UltraSPARC T1 Supplement to the UltraSPARC Architecture 2005,
only the sun4u format is available for data-access loads.
Store UA2005 entries in the sun4u format to simplify processing.
Backports commit 7285fba083de3f14f6e98abb4469173b56da9480 from qemu
Implement the behavior described in the chapter 13.9.11 of
UltraSPARC T1™ Supplement to the UltraSPARC Architecture 2005:
"If a TLB Data-In replacement is attempted with all TLB
entries locked and valid, the last TLB entry (entry 63) is
replaced."
Backports commit 4797a6851975c1239df440c5f01d8566e63717bb from qemu
Please note that QEMU doesn't impelement Real->Physical address
translation. The "Real Address" is always the "Physical Address".
Backports commit 84f8f5876628963e67f66edde8a71208c4274ac8 from qemu
Accordinf to UA2005, 9.3.3 "Address Space Identifiers",
"In hyperprivileged mode, all instruction fetches and loads and stores with implicit
ASIs use a physical address, regardless of the value of TL".
Backports commit 9a10756d1204c3528e47892195349bf882069846 from qemu
As described in Chapter 5.7.6 of the UltraSPARC Architecture 2005,
outstanding disrupting exceptions that are destined for privileged mode can only
cause a trap when the virtual processor is in nonprivileged or privileged mode and
PSTATE.ie = 1. At all other times, they are held pending.
Backports commit 1a2aefae6627170fdee689b394a65f76080c068a from qemu
Use explicit register pointers while accessing D/I-MMU registers.
Call cpu_unassigned_access on access to missing registers.
Backports commit 20395e63375358bf6dd147057aaf998abf7abdb9 from qemu
while IMMU/DMMU is disabled
- ignore MMU-faults in hypervisorv mode or if CPU doesn't have hypervisor
- signal TT_INSN_REAL_TRANSLATION_MISS/TT_DATA_REAL_TRANSLATION_MISS otherwise
Backports commit 1ceca928538a3633b74a7dc718a05ce6767f2f76 from qemu
We have never has the concept of global TLB entries which would avoid
the flush so we never actually use this flag. Drop it and make clear
that tlb_flush is the sledge-hammer it has always been.
Backports commit d10eb08f5d8389c814b554d01aa2882ac58221bf from qemu
Both the cpu->tb_jmp_cache and SoftMMU TLB structures are only used
when running TCG code so we might as well skip them for anything else.
Backports commit ba7d3d1858c257e39b47f7f12fa2016ffd960b11 from qemu
It is a common thing amongst the various cpu reset functions want to
flush the SoftMMU's TLB entries. This is done either by calling
tlb_flush directly or by way of a general memset of the CPU
structure (sometimes both).
This moves the tlb_flush call to the common reset function and
additionally ensures it is only done for the CONFIG_SOFTMMU case and
when tcg is enabled.
In some target cases we add an empty end_of_reset_fields structure to the
target vCPU structure so have a clear end point for any memset which
is resetting value in the structure before CPU_COMMON (where the TLB
structures are).
While this is a nice clean-up in general it is also a precursor for
changes coming to cputlb for MTTCG where the clearing of entries
can't be done arbitrarily across vCPUs. Currently the cpu_reset
function is usually called from the context of another vCPU as the
architectural power up sequence is run. By using the cputlb API
functions we can ensure the right behaviour in the future.
Backports commit 1f5c00cfdb8114c1e3a13426588ceb64f82c9ddb from qemu
On 680x0 family only.
Address Register indirect With postincrement:
When using the stack pointer (A7) with byte size data, the register
is incremented by two.
Address Register indirect With predecrement:
When using the stack pointer (A7) with byte size data, the register
is decremented by two.
Backports commit 727d937b59f1f722f983e20f9cd23b0e7ef60165 from qemu
gen_flush_flags() is setting unconditionally cc_op_synced to 1
and s->cc_op to CC_OP_FLAGS, whereas env->cc_op can be set
to something else by a previous tcg fragment.
We fix that by not setting cc_op_synced to 1
(except for gen_helper_flush_flags() that updates env->cc_op)
FIX: https://github.com/vivier/qemu-m68k/issues/19
Backports commit 695576db2daaf2bdc63e7f6d36038b61caed622a from qemu
M680x0 bit operations with an immediate value use 9 bits of the 16bit
value, while coldfire ones use only 8 bits.
Backports commit fe53c2be8c12da345bd788b949e0b2360e4b3db3 from qemu
In commit c52ab08aee6f7d4717fc6b517174043126bd302f,
the patch snippet for the "syscall" insn got applied to "iret".
Backports commit 410e98146ffde201ab4c778823ac8beaa74c4c3f from qemu
Particularly when andc is also available, this is two insns
shorter than using clz to compute ctz.
Backports commit 14e99210f6c6cede461a54b2e0f9b4cd55175f00 from qemu
The number of actual invocations of ctpop itself does not warrent
an opcode, but it is very helpful for POWER7 to use in generating
an expansion for ctz.
Backports commit a768e4e99247911f00c5c0267c12d4e207d5f6cc from qemu
The number of actual invocations does not warrent an opcode,
and the backends generating it. But at least we can eliminate
redundant helpers.
Backports commit 086920c2c8008f125fd38781072fa25c3ad158ea from qemu
Previously we could not have different constraints for different ISA levels,
which prevented us from eliding the matching constraint for shifts.
We do now have to make sure that the operands match for constant shifts.
We can also handle some small left shifts via lea.
Backports commit 6a5aed4bdc7078838a8098336588d56c9ce09d1d from qemu
Use a switch instead of searching a table. Share constraints between
32-bit and 64-bit, when at all possible.
Backports commit cd26449a505f808e479af4fdd539e05767e09c06 from qemu
This allows an output operand to match an input operand
only when the input operand needs a register.
Backports commit 17280ff4a5f264e01e55ae514ee6d3586f9577b2 from qemu
This will let us choose how to interpret a given constraint
depending on whether the opcode is 32- or 64-bit. Which will
let us share more constraint combinations between opcodes.
At the same time, change the interface to return the advanced
pointer instead of passing it in/out by reference.
Backports commit 069ea736b50b75fdec99c9b8cc603b97bd98419e from qemu
This will allow the target to tailor the constraints to the
auto-detected ISA extensions.
Backports commit f69d277ece43c42c7ab0144c2ff05ba740f6706b from qemu
A couple of places where it was easy to identify a right-shift
followed by an extract or and-with-immediate, and the obvious
sign-extract from a high byte register.
Backports commit 04fc2f1c8fc030a11e08e81bb926392c0991282a from qemu
Use the new primitives for UBFX and SBFX.
Backports commits 59a71b4c5b4ef2ef6425b9e21c972dd5bf450275 and 86c9ab277615af4e0389eb80a83073873ff96c86 from qemu
Since we can no longer use matching constraints, this does
mean we must handle that data movement by hand.
Backports commit 752b1be94757de906b9c24ebc8f5e6aa54b96b23 from qemu
This lets us expose facilities to TCG_TARGET_HAS_* defines
directly, rather than hiding behind function calls.
Backports commit b2c98d9d392c87c9b9e975d30f79924719d9cbbe from qemu
This allows us to use this detection within the TCG_TARGET_HAS_*
macros, instead of requiring a function call into tcg-target.inc.c.
Backports commit 40b2ccb156534f5d5f1d110a6ce008d87ee10af1 from qemu
While we don't require a new opcode, it is handy to have an expander
that knows the first source is zero.
Backports commit 07cc68d52852bf47dea7c402b46ddd28248d4212 from qemu
Adds tcg_gen_extract_* and tcg_gen_sextract_* for extraction of
fixed position bitfields, much like we already have for deposit.
Backports commit 7ec8bab3deae643b1ce579c2d65a244f30708330 from qemu
This patch introduces a helper to query the iotlb entry for a
possible iova. This will be used by later device IOTLB API to enable
the capability for a dataplane (e.g vhost) to query the IOTLB.
Backports commit 052c8fa9983f553fdfa0d61034774070dd639c2b from qemu
gcc 5.3.0 diagnoses
translate-all.c: In function ‘alloc_code_gen_buffer’:
translate-all.c:756:17: error: switch condition has boolean value
switch (buf2 != MAP_FAILED) {
^
Backports commit f68808c7494b38764e1895a9852b994638b86536 from qemu
tcg_out_ldst: using a generic ALIAS_PADD to avoid ifdefs
tcg_out_ld: generates LD or LW
tcg_out_st: generates SD or SW
Backports commit 32b69707df3365aadaad1d058044a7704397ec62 from qemu
tcg_out_mov: using OPC_OR as most mips assemblers do;
tcg_out_movi: extended to 64-bit immediate.
Backports commit 2294d05dab503d11664e73712c7f250fd0bf9e3b from qemu
Without the mips32r2 instructions to perform swapping, bswap is quite large,
dominating the size of each reverse-endian qemu_ld/qemu_st operation.
Create two subroutines in the prologue block. The subroutines require extra
reserved registers (TCG_TMP[2, 3]). Using these within qemu_ld means that
we need not place additional restrictions on the qemu_ld outputs.
Backports commit 7f54eaa3b78d71cb57e45a719980f9b5ff06d21c from qemu
Bulk patch adding 64-bit opcodes into tcg_out_op. Note that
mips64 is as yet neither complete nor enabled.
Backports commit 0119b1927d531f3fac22b9b4da01dafc23644973 from qemu
Since the mips manual tables are in octal, reorg all of the opcodes
into that format for clarity. Note that the 64-bit opcodes are as
yet unused.
Backports commit 57a701fc2b34902310d4dbd1411088055616938a from qemu
Without the mips32r2 instructions to perform swapping, bswap is quite large,
dominating the size of each reverse-endian qemu_ld/qemu_st operation.
Create a subroutine in the prologue block. The subroutine requires extra
reserved registers (TCG_TMP[2, 3]). Using these within qemu_ld means that
we need not place additional restrictions on the qemu_ld outputs.
Backports commit bb08afe9f0aee1a3f5c23508e2511b882ca31e1b from qemu
Also manage word and byte operands and fix the computation of
overflow in the case of M68000 arithmetic shifts.
Backports commit 367790cce8e14131426f5190dfd7d1bdbf656e4d from qemu
Report this properly via exception and, importantly, allow
the disassembler the chance to tell us what insn is not handled.
Backports commit 72d2e4b6a437f11f97d3138f6b2ec177b78210c7 from qemu
680x0 movem can load/store words and long words and can use more
addressing modes. Coldfire can only use long words with (Ax) and
(d16,Ax) addressing modes.
Backports commit 7b542eb96d7d5d9266a9c0425f05d49c8e6df2f9 from qemu
Implement CAS using cmpxchg.
Implement CAS2 using helper and either cmpxchg when
the 32bit addresses are consecutive, or with
parallel_cpus+cpu_loop_exit_atomic() otherwise.
Backports commit 14f944063affbcc7bd6df42b060793dbfee8a822 from qemu
Update helper to set the throwing location in case of div-by-0.
Cleanup divX.w and add quad word variants of divX.l.
Backports commit 0ccb9c1d8128a020720d5c6abf99a470742a1b94 from qemu
Update helper to set the throwing location in case of div-by-0.
Cleanup divX.w and add quad word variants of divX.l.
Backports commit 0ccb9c1d8128a020720d5c6abf99a470742a1b94 from qemu
Provide gen_lea_mode and gen_ea_mode, where the mode can be
specified manually, rather than taken from the instruction.
Backports commit f84aab269ddab8509b77408b886e9071bf5c48fb from qemu
ARM1176 CPUs have TrustZone support and can use the Vector Base
Address Register, but currently, qemu only adds VBAR support to ARMv7
CPUs. Fix this by adding a new feature ARM_FEATURE_VBAR which can used
for ARMv7 and ARM1176 CPUs.
The VBAR feature is always set for ARMv7 because some legacy boards
require it even if this is not architecturally correct.
Backports commit 91db4642f868cf2e591b62d31a19d35b02ea791e from qemu
We already log exception entry; add logging of the AArch64 exception
return path as well.
Backports commit c9b61d9aa1ad234b0961f8add023cdc999cda3da from qemu
The value of the MVFR1 (Media and VFP Feature Register 1) register for
the Cortex-A8 appears to be incorrect (according to the TRM, DDI0344K),
with the "full denormal arithmetic" and "propagation of NaN" fields
holding both 0 instead of both 1.
I had a go tracing the history of the use of this value, and it seems
it's always just been wrong in QEMU: maybe it was derived from early
documentation, or guessed based on the use of a "VFP Lite" implementation
in the Cortex-A8.
Depending on the startup/early-boot code in use, this can manifest as
failure to perform denormal arithmetic properly: in our case, selecting
a Cortex-A8 CPU when using QEMU as an instruction-set simulator for
bare-metal GCC testing caused tests using denormal arithmetic to
fail. Problems might be masked (or not occur) when using a full OS kernel
with suitable trap handlers (I'm not sure).
Backports commit 0f1944735b6bac810b067e8a7a5154744536fd59 from qemu
We can't use LOAD AND TEST for unsigned data and then expect to
extract the result with ADD LOGICAL WITH CARRY. Fall through to
using COMPARE LOGICAL IMMEDIATE instead.
Backports commit 65839b56b9a740e6b898b5d81afc160502bd2935 from qemu
The new paging more is extension of IA32e mode with more additional page
table level.
It brings support of 57-bit vitrual address space (128PB) and 52-bit
physical address space (4PB).
The structure of new page table level is identical to pml4.
The feature is enumerated with CPUID.(EAX=07H, ECX=0):ECX[bit 16].
CR4.LA57[bit 12] need to be set when pageing enables to activate 5-level
paging mode.
Backports commit 6c7c3c21f95dd9af8a0691c0dd29b07247984122 from qemu
The syscall and sysret instructions behave a bit differently:
TF is checked after the instruction completes.
This allows the o/s to disable #DB at a syscall by adding TF to FMASK.
And then when the sysret is executed the #DB is taken "as if" the
syscall insn just completed.
Backports commit c52ab08aee6f7d4717fc6b517174043126bd302f from qemu
Device models often have to perform multiple access to a single
memory region that is known in advance, but would to use "DMA-style"
functions instead of address_space_map/unmap. This can happen
for example when the data has to undergo endianness conversion.
Introduce a new data structure to cache the result of
address_space_translate without forcing usage of a host address
like address_space_map does.
Backports commit 1f4e496e1fc2eb6c8bf377a0f9695930c380bfd3 from qemu
This extracts the common part of address_space_map and
address_space_cache_init into a new function.
Backports commit 715c31ec8e12107f47ac74b464c97e813c76f898 from qemu
Templatize the address_space_* and *_phys functions, so that we can add
similar functions in the next patch that work with a lightweight,
cache-like version of address_space_map/unmap.
Backports commit 0ce265ffef87f19f4dd1ff0663e09a63d66ae408 from qemu
Since CPUARMState.vfp.regs is not 16 byte aligned, the ^ 8 fixup used
for a big-endian host doesn't do what's intended. Fix this by adding
in the vfp.regs offset after computing the inter-register offset.
Backports commit d437262fa8edd0d9fbe038a515dda3dbf7c5bb54 from qemu
We add s->be_data within do_vec_ld/st. Adding it here means that
we have the wrong bits set in SIZE for a big-endian host, leading
to g_assert_not_reached in write_vec_element and read_vec_element.
Backports commit 74b13f92c2428abae41a61c46a5cf47545da5fcb from qemu
Commit 2afbdf8 ("target-i386: exception handling for memory helpers",
2015-09-15) changed tlb_fill's cpu_restore_state+raise_exception_err
to raise_exception_err_ra. After this change, the cpu_restore_state
and raise_exception_err's cpu_loop_exit are merged into
raise_exception_err_ra's cpu_loop_exit_restore.
This actually fixed some bugs, but when SVM is enabled there is a
second path from raise_exception_err_ra to cpu_loop_exit. This is
the VMEXIT path, and now cpu_vmexit is called without a
cpu_restore_state before.
The fix is to pass the retaddr to cpu_vmexit (via
cpu_svm_check_intercept_param). All helpers can now use GETPC() to pass
the correct retaddr, too.
Backports commit 823fb688ebc52a7d79c1308acb28c92b56820167 from qemu
When icount is active, tb_add_jump is surprisingly called with an
out of bounds basic block index. I have no idea how that can work,
but it does not seem like a good idea. Clear *last_tb for all
TB_EXIT_ICOUNT_EXPIRED cases, even when all you have to do is
refill icount_extra.
Backports commit d8dea6fbcbed177ca5d23ab77b3834a9437f0e88 from qemu
There were some patterns, like 0x0000_ffff_ffff_00ff, for which we
would select to begin a multi-insn sequence with MOVN, but would
fail to set the 0x0000 lane back from 0xffff.
Backports commit 50b468d42107a2c646b1c566ed17d9ec362c51c4 from qemu
When al == xzr, we cannot use addi/subi because that encodes xsp.
Force a zero into the temp register for that (rare) case.
Backports commit 028fbea47713f909d6ea761a457779a82b276247 from qemu
rcu_read_unlock was not called if the address_space_access_valid result is
negative.
This caused (at least) a problem when qemu on PPC/E500+TAP failed to terminate
properly and instead got stuck in a deadlock.
Backports commit 662a97d74f9b34cafe9aeb6d96620a97d768a1fa from qemu
A bug (1647683) was reported showing a crash when removing
breakpoints. The reproducer was bisected to 3359baad when tb_flush
was finally made thread safe. While in MTTCG the locking in
breakpoint_invalidate would have prevented any problems, but
currently tb_lock() is a NOP for system emulation.
The race is between a tb_flush from the gdbstub and the
tb_invalidate_phys_addr() in breakpoint_invalidate().
Ideally we'd have actual locking here; for the moment the
simple fix is to do a full tb_flush() for a bp invalidate,
since that is thread-safe even if no lock is taken.
Backports commit a9353fe897ca2687e5b3385ed39e3db3927a90e0 from qemu
While testing rth's latest TCG patches with risu I found ldaxp was
broken. Investigating further I found it was broken by 1dd089d0 when
the cmpxchg atomic work was merged. As part of that change the code
attempted to be clever by doing a single 64 bit load and then shuffle
the data around to set the two 32 bit registers.
As I couldn't quite follow the endian magic I've simply partially
reverted the change to the original code gen_load_exclusive code. This
doesn't affect the cmpxchg functionality as that is all done on in
gen_store_exclusive part which is untouched.
I've also restored the comment that was removed (with a slight tweak
to mention cmpxchg).
Backports commit 5460da501a57cd72eda6fec736d76539122e2f99 from qemu
The documentation parser we are going to add expects a section name to
end with ':', otherwise the comment is treated as free-form text body.
Backports commit 5072f7b38b1b9b26b8fbe1a89086386a420aded8 from qemu
Fixed issues in the MIPSDSP64 instructions dextp and dextpdp.
Shifting can go out of 32 bit range.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1631625
Backports commit e6e2784cacd4cfec149a7690976b9ff15e541c4d from qemu
Needed to emit FPU exception on Loongson multimedia instructions
executing if Status:CU1 is clear. or FPR changes may be missed
on Linux.
Backports commit b5a587b613f6151c2ce164552579ae64f2ddfd1c from qemu
"The multiplier and multiplicand are both word operands, and the result
is a long-word operand."
So compute flags on a long-word result, not on a word result.
Backports commit 4a18cd44f3c905d443c26e26bb9b09932606d1a3 from qemu
"The size of the operation can be specified as word or long.
Word length source operands are sign-extended to 32 bits for
comparison."
So comparison is always done using OS_LONG.
Backports commit 5436c29d78957a6825a93f0eb79dfab388641017 from qemu
In the user emulation code path, tlb_vaddr_to_host erronesously passed
vaddr as the guest address to be translated, instead of addr, the parameter
which actually contained the guest address.
This resulted in incorrect addresses being used when emulating block copy
(mvc/mvpg) and block clear (xc) instructions for the s390x target.
Backports commit c2a85316902e67530da9d6548139fcce73c0cac6 from qemu
Include sys/user.h for declaration of 'struct kinfo_proc'.
Add -lutil to qemu-ga link for kinfo_getproc.
Backports commit a7764f1548ef9946af30a8f96be9cef10761f0c1 from qemu
The spec can be found in Intel Software Developer Manual or in
Instruction Set Extensions Programming Reference.
Backports commit 95ea69fb46266aaa46d0c8b7f0ba8c4903dbe4e3 from qemu
The memory_dispatch field is meant to be protected by RCU so we should
use the correct primitives when accessing it. This race was flagged up
by the ThreadSanitizer.
Backports commit f35e44e7645edbb08e35b111c10c2fc57e2905c7 from qemu
The version of tcg_gen_ld8s_i64 for 32-bit systems does a load into
the low part of the return value - then attempts a sign extension into
the high part, but wrongly sets the high part to a sign extension of
itself rather than of the low part. This results in TCG internal
errors from the use of the uninitialized high part (in some GCC tests
of AArch64 NEON shift intrinsics, in particular). This patch corrects
the sign-extension logic, making it match other functions such as
tcg_gen_ld16s_i64.
Backports commit 3ff91d7e85176f8b4b131163d7fd801757a2c949 from qemu
The typedefs we use for the TCGv_i32, TCGv_i64 and TCGv_ptr
types are somewhat confusing, because we define them as
pointers to structs, but the structs themselves are never
defined. Explain in the comments a bit more clearly why
this is OK and what is going on under the hood.
Backports commit a40d4701bc9f6e6a3bbfb7b4fbe756a5b72b5df1 from qemu
This multiply has one signed input and one unsigned input,
producing the full double-width result.
Backports commit 5087abfb7dfd1d368ae6939420057036b4d8e509 from qemu
The cpu is allowed to require stricter alignment on these 8- and 16-byte
operations, and the OS is required to fix up the accesses as necessary,
so the previous code was not wrong.
However, we can easily handle this misalignment for all direct 8-byte
operations and for direct 16-byte loads.
We must retain 16-byte alignment for 16-byte stores, so that we don't have
to probe for writability of a second page before performing the first of
two 8-byte stores. We also retain 8-byte alignment for no-fault loads,
since they are rare and it's not worth extending the helpers for this.
Backports commit cb21b4da6cca1bb4e3f5fefb698fb9e4d00c8f66 from qemu
At the same time, fix a problem with stqf_asi, when
a write might access two pages.
Backports commit f939ffe5a022a8798824e2720ed5a14186fca6b6 from qemu
Now that we never call out to helpers when direct accesses can
handle an asi, remove the corresponding code in those helpers.
For ldda, this removes the entire helper.
Backports commit 918d9a2c9d36378a3cf6636018900a4731c83b9d from qemu
As used by HelenOS, presumably for ultra 2 and 3,
prior to the sun4v platform and the current twinx names.
Backports commit 34a6e13da70b2c798630a8dbd03d09f201c0198f from qemu
It's handy to have a mmu idx for physical addresses, so
that mmu disabled and physical access asis can use the
same path as normal accesses.
Backports commit af7a06bac7d3abb2da48ef3277d2a415772d2ae8 from qemu
Several helpers call helper_raise_exception directly, which requires
in turn that their callers have performed save_state. The new function
allows a TCG return address to be passed in so that we can restore
PC + NPC + flags data from that.
This fixes a bug in the usage of helper_check_align, whose callers had
not been calling save_state. It fixes another bug in which the divide
helpers used GETPC at a level other than the direct callee from TCG.
This allows the translator to avoid save_state prior to SAVE, RESTORE,
and FLUSHW instructions.
Backports commit 2f9d35fc4006122bad33f9ae3e2e51d2263e98ee from qemu
In the linux-user case all things that involve ''l1_map' and PageDesc
tweaks are protected by the memory lock (mmpa_lock). For SoftMMU mode
we previously relied on single threaded behaviour, with MTTCG we now use
the tb_lock().
As a result we need to do a little re-factoring and push the taking of
this lock up the call tree. This requires a slightly different entry for
the SoftMMU and user-mode cases from tb_invalidate_phys_range.
This also means user-mode breakpoint insertion needs to take two locks
but it hadn't taken any previously so this is an improvement.
Backpoirts commit ba051fb5e56d5ff5e4fa672d37954452e58543b2 from qemu
softmmu requires more functions to be thread-safe, because translation
blocks can be invalidated from e.g. notdirty callbacks. Probably the
same holds for user-mode emulation, it's just that no one has ever
tried to produce a coherent locking there.
This patch will guide the introduction of more tb_lock and tb_unlock
calls for system emulation.
Note that after this patch some (most) of the mentioned functions are
still called outside tb_lock/tb_unlock. The next one will rectify this.
Backports commit 7d7500d99895f888f97397ef32bb536bb0df3b74 from qemu
This adds asserts to check the locking on the various translation
engines structures. There are two sets of structures that are protected
by locks.
The first the l1map and PageDesc structures used to track which
translation blocks are associated with which physical addresses. In
user-mode this is covered by the mmap_lock.
The second case are TB context related structures which are protected by
tb_lock which is also user-mode only.
Currently the asserts do nothing in SoftMMU mode but this will change
for MTTCG.
Backports commit 301e40ed8005306c009978be295ed9a4b725178b from qemu
Make the debug define consistent with the others. The flush operation is
all about invalidating TranslationBlocks on flush events.
Also fix up the commenting on the other DEBUG for the benefit of
checkpatch.
Backports commit 955939a2b51f72bea1c200b559ea39985df5a633 from qemu
Some files contain multiple #includes of the same header file.
Removed most of those unnecessary duplicate entries using
scripts/clean-includes.
Backports commit 814bb12a561d36aeb5ae4440ad43d2b0761d76da from qemu
This patch adds a pmu=[on/off] option to enable/disable vPMU support
in guest vCPU. It allows virt tools, such as libvirt, to determine the
exsitence of vPMU and configure it. Note this option is only available
for cortex-a57/cortex-53/ host CPUs, but unavailable on ARMv7 and other
processors. Also even though "pmu=" option is available for TCG mode,
setting it doesn't turn PMU on.
Backports commit 929e754d5a621cd53f30e69b766ccf381b58d124 from qemu
Stop specializing on TARGET_LONG_BITS == 32; unconditionally allocate
a temp and expand with tcg_gen_extu_i32_tl. Split out gen_aa32_addr,
gen_aa32_frob64, gen_aa32_ld_i32 and gen_aa32_st_i32 as separate interfaces.
Backports commit 7f5616f53896a4e08ad37de3ac50d3a4cc8eff7a from qemu
The diff here is uglier than necessary. All this does is to turn
FOO
into:
if (s->prefix & PREFIX_LOCK) {
BAR
} else {
FOO
}
where FOO is the original implementation of an unlocked cmpxchg.
Backports commit ae03f8de45427042ecd10b0941a005f21ecc064c from qemu
Allow qemu to build on 32-bit hosts without 64-bit atomic ops.
Even if we only allow 32-bit hosts to multi-thread emulate 32-bit
guests, we still need some way to handle the 32-bit guest using a
64-bit atomic operation. Do so by dropping back to single-step.
Backports commit df79b996a7b21c6ea7847f7927a2e1a294b86c72 from qemu
Force the use of cmpxchg16b on x86_64.
Wikipedia suggests that only very old AMD64 (circa 2004) did not have
this instruction. Further, it's required by Windows 8 so no new cpus
will ever omit it.
If we truely care about these, then we could check this at startup time
and then avoid executing paths that use it.
Backports commit 7ebee43ee3e2fcd7b5063058b7ef74bc43216733 from qemu
Add all of cmpxchg, op_fetch, fetch_op, and xchg.
Handle both endian-ness, and sizes up to 8.
Handle expanding non-atomically, when emulating in serial.
Backports commit c482cb117cc418115ca9c6d21a7a2315414c0a40 from qemu
We already include exec/address-spaces.h and exec/memory.h in
cputlb.c; the include of qemu/timer.h appears to be a fossil.
Backports commit 40978428853e2f7b4597ab2a9ffeb187333802dc from qemu
TGT_LE and TGT_BE are not size dependent and do not need to be
redefined. The others are no longer used at all.
Backports commit c86c6e4c80fee4d9423bedb10ba9e9c4aa68f861 from qemu
Probe for whether the specified guest write access is permitted.
If it is not permitted then an exception will be taken in the same
way as if this were a real write access (and we will not return).
Otherwise the function will return, and there will be a valid
entry in the TLB for this access.
Backports commit 3b4afc9e75ab1a95f33e41f462921093f8a109c4 from qemu
When we cannot emulate an atomic operation within a parallel
context, this exception allows us to stop the world and try
again in a serial context.
Backports commit fdbc2b5722f6092e47181a947c90fd4bdcc1c121 from qemu
Also backports parts of commit 02d57ea115b7669f588371c86484a2e8ebc369be
Allows Int128 to be used more generally, rather than having to
begin with 64-bit inputs and accumulate.
Backports commit 1edaeee0955fba7d834b7c8f4e372e7eae030745 from qemu
While the check against sizeof(void *) is appropriate for
normal usage within qemu, there are places in which we want
wider operaions and have checked for their existance.
Backports commit 84bca3927b36fb1d9a2ca85cbbdf9023d2b84678 from qemu
Making these functional rather than object macros will
prevent later problems with complex macro expansion.
Backports commit d1a9f2d12fcfc942924956fbe321aedf4226ccb7 from qemu
Separate all ccr bits. Continue to batch updates via cc_op.
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <rth@twiddle.net>
Fix gen_logic_cc() to really extend the size of the result.
Fix gen_get_ccr(): update cc_op as it is used by the helper.
Factorize flags computing and src/ccr cleanup
Backports commit 620c6cf66584bfbee90db84a7e87a6eabf230ca9 from qemu
Update cc_op directly from tcg_gen_insn_start() and
restore_state_to_opc()
Copied from target-i386
Backports commit 20a8856eba0980fbe9d2b8ed2b33ecdb9c9fe5ad from qemu
Read a 8, 16 or 32bit immediat constant.
An immediate constant is stored in the instruction opcode and
can be in one or two extension words.
Backports commit 28b68cd79ef01e8b1f5bd26718cd8c09a12c625f from qemu
Scaled index is not supported by 68000, 68008, and 68010.
EA = (bd + PC) + Xn.SIZE*SCALE + od
Ignore it:
M68000 FAMILY PROGRAMMER’S REFERENCE MANUAL
2.4 BRIEF EXTENSION WORD FORMAT COMPATIBILITY
"If the MC68000 were to execute an instruction that
encoded a scaling factor, the scaling factor would be
ignored and would not access the desired memory address.
The earlier microprocessors do not recognize the brief
extension word formats implemented by newer processors.
Although they can detect illegal instructions, they do not
decode invalid encodings of the brief extension word formats
as exceptions."
Backports commit d8633620a112296fcf6a6ae9a1cbba614c0ca502 from qemu
The QmpOutputVisitor has no direct dependency on QMP. It is
valid to use it anywhere that one wants a QObject. Rename it
to better reflect its functionality as a generic QAPI
to QObject converter.
The commit before previous renamed the files, this one renames C
identifiers.
Backports commit 7d5e199ade76c53ec316ab6779800581bb47c50a from qemu
The QmpInputVisitor has no direct dependency on QMP. It is
valid to use it anywhere that one has a QObject. Rename it
to better reflect its functionality as a generic QObject
to QAPI converter.
The previous commit renamed the files, this one renames C identifiers.
Backports commit 09e68369a88d7de0f988972bf28eec1b80cc47f9 from qemu
The QMP visitors have no direct dependency on QMP. It is
valid to use them anywhere that one has a QObject. Rename them
to better reflect their functionality as a generic QObject
to QAPI converter.
This is the first of three parts: rename the files. The next two
parts will rename C identifiers. The split is necessary to make git
rename detection work.
Backports commit b3db211f3c80bb996a704d665fe275619f728bd4 from qemu
Version 2.0 of the semihosting specification introduces new trap
instructions for AArch32: HLT 0xF000 for A32 and HLT 0x3C for T32.
Implement these (in the same way we implement the existing HLT
semihosting trap for A64).
The old traps via SVC and BKPT are unaffected.
Backports commit 19a6e31c9d2701ef648b70ddcfc3bf64cec8c37e from qemu
Support target CPUs having a page size which isn't knownn
at compile time. To use this, the CPU implementation should:
* define TARGET_PAGE_BITS_VARY
* not define TARGET_PAGE_BITS
* define TARGET_PAGE_BITS_MIN to the smallest value it
might possibly want for TARGET_PAGE_BITS
* call set_preferred_target_page_bits() in its realize
function to indicate the actual preferred target page
size for the CPU (and report any error from it)
In CONFIG_USER_ONLY, the CPU implementation should continue
to define TARGET_PAGE_BITS appropriately for the guest
OS page size.
Machines which want to take advantage of having the page
size something larger than TARGET_PAGE_BITS_MIN must
set the MachineClass minimum_page_bits field to a value
which they guarantee will be no greater than the preferred
page size for any CPU they create.
Note that changing the target page size by setting
minimum_page_bits is a migration compatibility break
for that machine.
For debugging purposes, attempts to use TARGET_PAGE_SIZE
before it has been finally confirmed will assert.
Backports commit 20bccb82ff3ea09bcb7c4ee226d3160cab15f7da from qemu
Remove L1 page mapping table properties computing
statically using macros which is dependent on
TARGET_PAGE_BITS. Drop macros V_L1_SIZE, V_L1_SHIFT,
V_L1_BITS macros and replace with variables which are
computed at early stage of VM boot.
Removing dependency can help to make TARGET_PAGE_BITS
dynamic.
Backports commit 66ec9f49399f0a9fa13ee77c472caba0de2773fc from qemu
Allocate sub_section dynamically. Remove dependency
on TARGET_PAGE_SIZE to make run-time page size detection
for arm platforms.
Backports commit 2615fabd42ea0078dd9e659bdb21a5b7a1f87a9a from qemu
This speeds up MEMORY_LISTENER_CALL noticeably. Right now,
with many PCI devices you have N regions added to M AddressSpaces
(M = # PCI devices with bus-master enabled) and each call looks
up the whole listener list, with at least M listeners in it.
Because most of the regions in N are BARs, which are also roughly
proportional to M, the whole thing is O(M^3). This changes it
to O(M^2), which is the best we can do without rewriting the
whole thing.
Backports commit 9a54635dcb51a3fcf7507af630168f514a8cd4e7 from qemu
This comes from free from unifying tcg_reg_alloc_mov and
tcg_reg_alloc_movi's handling of TEMP_VAL_CONST. It triggers
often on moves to cc_dst, such as the following translation
of "sub $0x3c,%esp":
before: after:
subl $0x3c,%ebp subl $0x3c,%ebp
movl %ebp,0x10(%r14) movl %ebp,0x10(%r14)
movl $0x3c,%ebx movl $0x3c,0x2c(%r14)
movl %ebx,0x2c(%r14)
Backports commit 0fe4fca4e1a5e06a270127dd80bb753d4dda61c6 from qemu
This was found with test-i386. The issue is that instructions
such as
addr32 lea (%eax), %rax
did not perform a 32-bit extension, because the LEA translation
skipped the gen_lea_v_seg step. That step does not just add
segments, it also takes care of extending from address size to
pointer size.
Backports commit 620abfb004543404bef1953e25da2ad77352941a from qemu
This introduces load-acquire and store-release operations in QEMU.
For now, just use them as an implementation detail of atomic_mb_read
and atomic_mb_set.
Since docs/atomics.txt documents that atomic_mb_read only synchronizes
with an atomic_mb_set of the same variable, we can use the new implementation
everywhere instead of seq-cst loads and stores.
Backports commit 803cf26a9e019b5d2256a8edeb22e3538c4f3261 from qemu
When explicitly enabling unmigratable flags using "-cpu host"
(e.g. "-cpu host,+invtsc"), the requested feature won't be
enabled because cpu->migratable is true by default.
This is inconsistent with all other CPU models, which don't have
the "migratable" option, making "+invtsc" work without the need
for extra options.
This happens because x86_cpu_filter_features() uses
cpu->migratable as an argument for
x86_cpu_get_supported_feature_word(). This is not useful
because:
2) on "-cpu host" it only makes QEMU disable features that were
explicitly enabled in the command-line;
1) on all the other CPU models, cpu->migratable is already false.
The fix is to just use 'false' as an argument to
x86_cpu_get_supported_feature_word() in
x86_cpu_filter_features().
Note that:
* This won't change anything for people using using
"-cpu host" or "-cpu host,migratable=<on|off>" (with no extra
features) because the x86_cpu_get_supported_feature_word() call
on the cpu->host_features check uses cpu->migratable as
argument.
* This won't change anything for any CPU model except "host"
because they all have cpu->migratable == false (and only "host"
has the "migratable" property that allows it to be changed).
* This will only change things for people using "-cpu host,+<feature>",
where <feature> is a non-migratable feature. The only existing
named non-migratable feature is "invtsc".
In other words, this change will only affect people using
"-cpu host,+invtsc" (that will now get what they asked for: the
invtsc flag will be enabled). All other use cases are unaffected.
Backports commit 46c032f3afcc05a0123914609f1003906ba63fda from qemu
When probing for CPU model information, we need to reuse the code
that initializes CPUID fields, but not the remaining side-effects
of x86_cpu_realizefn(). Move that code to a separate function
that can be reused later.
Backports commit 41f3d4d69a423dadb8431fda65d8d7c68c0de0fc from qemu
x86_cpu_filter_features() will be reused by code that shouldn't
print any warning. Move the warning code to a new
x86_cpu_report_filtered_features() function, and call it from
x86_cpu_realizefn().
Backports commit 8ca30e8673aff9bfcf8f969f8db4266b5f62e49c from qemu
Instead of treating the FP and SSE bits as special cases, add
them to the x86_ext_save_areas array. This will simplify the code
that calculates the supported xsave components and the size of
the xsave area.
Backports commit e3c9022b4e2b6a4deb6518361d2bbf33522b9198 from qemu
Instead of keeping the aliases inside the feature name arrays and
require parsing the strings, just register alias properties
manually. This simplifies the code for property registration and
lookup.
Backports commit 16d2fcaa509b1ca56eb2fcd8fe877279cf65cccc from qemu
Instead of translating the feature name entries when adding
property names, store the actual property names in the feature
name array.
For reference, here is the full list of functions that use
FeatureWordInfo::feat_names:
* x86_cpu_get_migratable_flags(): not affected, as it just
check for non-NULL values.
* report_unavailable_features(): informative only. It will
start printing feature names with hyphens.
* x86_cpu_list(): informative only. It will start printing
feature names with hyphens
* x86_cpu_register_feature_bit_props(): not affected, as it
was already calling feat2prop(). Now we can remove the
feat2prop() calls safely.
So, the only user-visible effect of this patch are the new names
being used in help and error messages for users.
Backports commit fc7dfd205f3287893c436d932a167bffa30579c8 from qemu
VME is already disabled automatically when using TCG. So, instead
of pretending it is there when reporting CPU model data on
query-cpu-* QMP commands (making every CPU model to be reported
as not runnable), we can disable it by default on all CPU models
when using TCG.
Do that by adding a tcg_default_props array that will work like
kvm_default_props.
Backports commit 04d99c3c61f4bdc0450dbeb6512b6dd743baca65 from qemu
Instead of using the builtin_x86_defs array, use the QOM subclass
list to list CPU models on "-cpu ?" and "query-cpu-definitions".
Backports commit ee465a3ef77c2b2975ffa71c72208c05b3f3970d from qemu
MDCCINT_EL1 is part of the DCC debugger communication
channel between the CPU and an attached external debugger.
QEMU doesn't implement this, but since Linux may try
to access this register we need to provide at least
a dummy implementation.
Backports commit 5dbdc4342f479d799a1970dd5fd22e64c9dcd50d from qemu
In commit 9b6a3ea7a699594 store_reg() was changed to mask
both bits 0 and 1 of the new PC value when in ARM mode.
Unfortunately this broke the exception return code paths
when doing a return from ARM mode to Thumb mode: in some
of these we write a new CPSR including new Thumb mode
bit via gen_helper_cpsr_write_eret(), and then use store_reg()
to write the new PC. In this case if the new CPSR specified
Thumb mode then masking bit 1 of the PC is incorrect
(these code paths correspond to the v8 ARM ARM pseudocode
function AArch32.ExceptionReturn(), which always aligns the
new PC appropriately for the new instruction set state).
Instead of using store_reg() in exception-return code paths,
call a new store_pc_exc_ret() which stores the raw new PC
value to env->regs[15], and then mask it appropriately in
the subsequent helper_cpsr_write_eret() where the new
env->thumb state is available.
This fixes a bug introduced by 9b6a3ea7a699594 which caused
crashes/hangs or otherwise bad behaviour for Linux when
userspace was using Thumb.
Backports commit fb0e8e79a9d77ee240dbca036fa8698ce654e5d1 from qemu
3 cases in a switch in disas_exc() require reference to the
ARM ARM spec in order to determine what case they're handling.
Backports commit 957956b3013c8122a749dfe61a41aef8b4100e31 from qemu
For BR, BLR and RET instructions, if tagged addresses are enabled, the
tag field in the address must be cleared out prior to loading the
address into the PC. Depending on the current EL, it will be set to
either all 0's or all 1's.
Backports commit 6feecb8b941f2d21e5645d0b6e0cdb776998121b from qemu
When capturing the current CPU state for the TB, extract the TBI0 and TBI1
values from the correct TCR for the current EL and then add them to the TB
flags field.
Then, at the start of code generation for the block, copy the TBI fields
into the DisasContext structure.
Backports commit 86fb3fa4ed5873b021a362ea26a021f4aeab1bb4 from qemu
The 'old' dispatch code returned a QERR_MISSING_PARAMETER for missing
parameters, but the qapi qmp_dispatch() code uses
QERR_INVALID_PARAMETER_TYPE.
Improve qapi code to return QERR_MISSING_PARAMETER where
appropriate.
Fix expected error message in iotests.
Backports commit 1382d4abdf9619985e4078e37e49e487cea9935e from qemu
Unlike the other visit methods, visit_type_any() and visit_type_null()
neglect to check whether qmp_input_get_object() succeeded. They crash
when it fails. Reproducer:
{ "execute": "qom-set",
"arguments": { "path": "/machine", "property": "rtc-time" } }
Will crash with:
qapi/qapi-visit-core.c:277: visit_type_any: Assertion `!err != !*obj'
failed
Broken in commit 5c678ee. Fix by adding the missing error checks.
Backports commit c489780203f9b22aca5539ec7589b7140bdc951f from qemu
Only very modern GCC's actually set this define when building with the
ThreadSanitizer so this little typo slipped though.
Backports commit 23ea7f57949f2f5934f4d5bbc29fe321b3a7067b from qemu
ThreadSanitizer picks up potential races although we already use
barriers to ensure things are in the correct order when processing exit
requests. For true C11 defined behaviour across threads we need to use
relaxed atomic_set/atomic_read semantics to reassure tsan.
Backports commit 027d9a7d2911e993cdcbd21c7c35d1dd058f05bb from qemu
The ThreadSanitizer rightly complains that something initialised with a
normal access is later updated and read atomically.
Backports commit ce7cf6a973f4b614162b9518954d441fa5e32fc6 from qemu
The idiom CPU_GET_CLASS(cpu) is fairly extensively used in various
threads and trips of ThreadSanitizer due to the fact it updates
obj->class->object_cast_cache behind the scenes. As this is just a
fast-path cache there is no need to lock updates.
However to ensure defined C11 behaviour across threads we need to use
the plain atomic_read/set primitives and keep the sanitizer happy.
Backports commit b6b3ccfda015dcd5ab50f70c189ee5cc6c622e91 from qemu
This is to appease sanitizer builds which complain that:
"error: control reaches end of non-void function"
Backports commit 550276ae0a88851edda2cb7fcdd64256dbb8e314 from qemu
Add some notes on the use of the relaxed atomic access helpers and their
importance for defined behaviour in C11's multi-threaded memory model.
Backports commit e653bc6b0ff645c25b8a2eb607c18a5c98b59db6 from qemu
In the ARM v6 architecture, 'sub pc, pc, 1' is not an interworking
branch, so the computed new value is written to r15 as a normal
value. The architecture says that in this case, bits [1:0] of
the value written must be ignored if we are in ARM mode (or
bit [0] ignored if in Thumb mode); this is a change from the
ARMv4/v5 specification that behaviour is UNPREDICTABLE.
Use the correct mask on the PC value when doing a non-interworking
store to PC.
A popular library used on RaspberryPi uses this instruction
as part of a trick to determine whether it is running on
ARMv6 or ARMv7, and we were mishandling the sequence.
Fixes bug: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1625295
Backports commit 9b6a3ea7a699594162ed3d11e4e04b98568dc5c0 from qemu
Fix the decoding of iss_sf in disas_ld_lit.
The SF (Sixty-Four) field in the ISS (Instruction Specific Syndrome)
is a bit that specifies the width of the register that the
instruction loads to.
If cleared it specifies 32 bits.
If set it specifies 64 bits.
Backports commit 173ff58580b383a7841b18fddb293038c9d40d1c from qemu
Current CPU definition for AMD Opteron third generation includes
features like SSE4a and LAHF_LM support in emulated CPUID. These
features are present in K8 rev.E or K10 CPUs and later. However,
current G3 family and model describe 2nd generation K8 cores instead.
This is incorrect but was considered harmless until our tests found a
problem with linux kernels >= 3.10 (and maybe earlier) which specifically
check for Opteron K8 model when parsing CPUID leaf 0x80000001:
http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/amd.c?v=3.16#L552
This code will disable LAHF_LM feature in /proc/cpuinfo if model number
is inconsistent.
This change sets Opteron_G3 family/model/stepping to 16/2/3 which is
a proper Opteron 3rd generation 2350 CPU.
Backports commit 339892d758efb2d0954160d41736a0eac9875d67 from qemu
A regression was introduced by commit 96193c22a "target-i386:
Move xsave component mask to features array": all
CPUID[EAX=0xD,ECX=0]:EAX bits were being reported as unmigratable
because they don't have feature names defined. This broke
"-cpu host" because it enables only migratable features by
default.
This adds a new field to FeatureWordInfo: migratable_flags, which
will make those features be reported as migratable even if they
don't have a property name defined.
Backports commit 6fb2fff75dceed1716e757882a6dfbadd9042407 from qemu
CPUState is a fairly common pointer to pass to these helpers. This means
if you need other arguments for the async_run_on_cpu case you end up
having to do a g_malloc to stuff additional data into the routine. For
the current users this isn't a massive deal but for MTTCG this gets
cumbersome when the only other parameter is often an address.
This adds the typedef run_on_cpu_func for helper functions which has an
explicit CPUState * passed as the first parameter. All the users of
run_on_cpu and async_run_on_cpu have had their helpers updated to use
CPUState where available.
Backports commit e0eeb4a21a3ca4b296220ce4449d8acef9de9049 from qemu
As discussed on the list [1], having a comment stating that this file
is "public domain" is arguably wrong and not legally binding. This patch
replaces that comment with a clear GPLv2+ license as proposed in [2].
[1] http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2016-09/msg06151.html
[2] http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2016-09/msg06217.html
Worth noting, compiler.h was originally created on 5c026320 by splitting
qemu-common.h. At the time, qemu-common.h was already GPLv2+.
Backports commit cc9d8a3b2c41c22fb09f90f3085e6036c199c3ca from qemu
This will ensure all checks for features[FEAT_KVM] in the code
will be correct in case the KVM CPUID leaf is completely
disabled.
Backports commit aec661de86894e914d2d82431d9cefa9a9a40213 from qemu
This will reuse the existing check/enforce logic in
x86_cpu_filter_features() to check the xsave component bits
against GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID.
Backports commit 96193c22ab39ea24f81e386ad7883260ff24f5fd from qemu
Instead of doing complex calculations and calling
kvm_arch_get_supported_cpuid() inside cpu_x86_cpuid(), calculate
the set of required XSAVE components earlier, at realize time.
Backports commit 2ca8a8becc2eeb5262e478ce502f5daa53f3d0bc from qemu
Move the xsave area size calculation from cpu_x86_cpuid() inside
its own function. While doing it, change it to use the XSAVE area
struct sizes for the initial size, instead of the magic 0x240
number.
Backports commit 1fda6198e4126af9988754c8824cfc9928649890 from qemu
Instead of assigning individual bits in a loop, just copy the
values from ena_mask.
Backports commit 8057c621b1b17cbcb35fe67d1a09ada9055873a9 from qemu
Instead of checking both env->features and ena_mask at two
different places in the CPUID code, initialize ena_mask based on
the features that are enabled for the CPU, and then clear
unsupported bits based on kvm_arch_get_supported_cpuid().
The results should be exactly the same, but it will make it
easier to move the mask calculation elsewhare, and reuse
x86_cpu_filter_features() for the kvm_arch_get_supported_cpuid()
check.
Backports commit 4928cd6de6b4211a79f98c8dc39115be1e815c2b from qemu
The code that calculates the set of supported XSAVE components on
CPUID looks at ext_save_areas to find out which components should
be enabled. However, if there are zeroed entries in the
ext_save_areas array, the
((env->features[esa->feature] & esa->bits) == esa->bits)
check will always succeed and QEMU will unconditionally try to
enable the component.
Luckily this never caused any problems because the only missing
entry in ext_save_areas is the PT State component (bit 8), and
KVM currently doesn't support it (so it was cleared on ena_mask).
But the code was still incorrect and would break if KVM starts
returning CPUID[EAX=0xD,ECX=0].EAX[bit 8] as supported on
GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID.
Fix the problem by changing the code to not enable a XSAVE
component if ExtSaveArea::bits is zero.
Backports commit 9646f4927faf68e8690588c2fd6dc9834c440b58 from qemu
It makes it easier to guarantee the arrays are the right size,
and to find information when looking at the code.
Backports commit 2d5312da566e4424a807d078da05f92ee7be3eec from qemu
SVM needs CPUID[0x8000000A] to be available. So if SVM is enabled
in a CPU model or explicitly in the command-line, adjust CPUID
xlevel to expose the CPUID[0x8000000A] leaf.
Backports commit 0c3d7c0051576d220e6da0a8ac08f2d8482e2f0b from qemu
Instead of requiring users and management software to be aware of
required CPUID level/xlevel/xlevel2 values for each feature,
automatically increase those values when features need them.
This was already done for CPUID[7].EBX, and is now made generic
for all CPUID feature flags. Unit test included, to make sure we
don't break ABI on older machine-types and don't mess with the
CPUID level values if they are explicitly set by the user.
Backports commit c39c0edf9bb3b968ba95484465a50c7b19f4aa3a from qemu
Instead of using cpuid_level, use an empty struct as a marker
(like we already did with {start,end}_init_save). This will avoid
accidentaly resetting the wrong fields if we change the field
ordering on CPUX86State.
Backports commit 5e992a8e337e710ea2d02f35668ac55a80e15f99 from qemu
No CPU model in builtin_x86_defs has xlevel2 set, so it is always
zero. Delete the field.
Note that this is not an user-visible change. It doesn't remove
the ability to set xlevel2 on the command-line, it just removes
an unused field in builtin_x86_defs.
Backports commit 0456441b5eb6694a561ad5bb8dad52483e6a08d0 from qemu
Define a new CPU definition supporting 24KEc cores, similar to
the existing 24Kc, but with added support for DSP instructions
and MIPS16e (and without FPU).
Backports commit e9deaad8a58c899dc32e9fdeff9e533070e79dca from qemu
Add the "cortex-a7" CPU with features and registers matching the Cortex-A7
MPCore Technical Reference Manual and the Cortex-A7 Floating-Point Unit
Technical Reference Manual. The A7 is very similar to the A15.
Backports commit dcf578ed8cec89543158b103940e854ebd21a8cf from qemu
This avoids a double hand-full of magic numbers in the
xsave and xrstor helper functions.
Backports commit 3f32bd21df655e62eb271182a5c63280d631c7b3 from qemu
TARGET_PAGE_MASK, as defined, has type "int". We need to extend
that to the proper target width before oring in an "unsigned".
Backports commit ebb90a005da67147245cd38fb04a965a87a961b7 from qemu
This commit optimizes fence instructions. Two optimizations are
currently implemented: (1) unnecessary duplicate fence instructions,
and (2) merging weaker fences into a stronger fence.
[rth: Merge tcg_optimize_mb back into tcg_optimize, so that we only
loop over the opcode stream once. Merge "unrelated" weaker barriers
into one stronger barrier.]
Backports commit 34f939218ce78163171addd63750e1e0300376ab from qemu
Generate a 'lock orl $0,0(%esp)' instruction for ordering instead of
mfence which has similar ordering semantics.
Backports commit a7d00d4effb58889ac6df64f98ac50c9d1594149 from qemu
This commit introduces the TCGOpcode for memory barrier instruction.
This opcode takes an argument which is the type of memory barrier
which should be generated.
Backports commit f65e19bc2c9e8358e634d309606144ac2a3c2936 from qemu
The return address argument to the softmmu template helpers was
confused. In the legacy case, we wanted to indicate that there
is no return address, and so passed in NULL. However, we then
immediately subtracted GETPC_ADJ from NULL, resulting in a non-zero
value, indicating the presence of an (invalid) return address.
Push the GETPC_ADJ subtraction down to the only point it's required:
immediately before use within cpu_restore_state_from_tb, after all
NULL pointer checks have been completed.
This makes GETPC and GETRA identical. Remove GETRA as the lesser
used macro, replacing all uses with GETPC.
Backports commit 01ecaf438b1eb46abe23392c8ce5b7628b0c8cf5 from qemu
Previously we allowed fully unaligned operations, but not operations
that are aligned but with less alignment than the operation size.
In addition, arm32, ia64, mips, and sparc had been omitted from the
previous overalignment patch, which would have led to that alignment
being enforced.
Backports commit 85aa80813dd9f5c1f581c743e45678a3bee220f8 from qemu
In user-mode emulation env->idt.base memory is
allocated in linux-user/main.c with
size 8*512 = 4096 (for 64-bit).
When fake interrupt EXCP_SYSCALL is thrown
do_interrupt_user checks destination privilege level
for this fake exception, and tries to read 4 bytes
at address base + (256 * 2^4)=4096, that causes
segfault.
Privlege level was checked only for int's, so lets
read dpl from memory only for this case.
Backports commit 885b7c44e4f8b7a012a92770a0dba8b238662caa from qemu
Make sure reset zeroes TSC_AUX, XCR0, PKRU. Move XSTATE_BV from the
"vmstate only" section to the "KVM only" section.
Backports commit 7616f1c2da1c0f336a474a56ad6d32e15ccd666e from qemu
Unused function declarations were found using a simple gcc plugin and
manually verified by grepping the sources.
Backports commit d4b84d564ee3eb7a58e4585d671fb3c220b6c3b9 from qemu
All operations that take a floatx80 as an operand need to have their
inputs checked for malformed encodings. In all of these cases, use the
function floatx80_invalid_encoding to perform the check. If an invalid
operand is found, raise an invalid operation exception, and then return
either NaN (for fp-typed results) or the integer indefinite value (the
minimum representable signed integer value, for int-typed results).
For the non-quiet comparison operations, this touches adjacent code in
order to pass style checks.
Backports cast correction portion of commit d1eb8f2acba579830cf3798c3c15ce51be852c56m from qemu
Use the __atomic_*_n() primitives which take the value as argument. It
is not necessary to store the value locally before calling the
primitive, hence saving us a stack store and load.
Backports commit 89943de17c4e276f2c47f05b4604e8816a6a636c from qemu
For module build, .mo objects are passed to LINK and consumed in
process-archive-undefs. The reason behind that is documented in the
comment above process-archive-undefs.
Similarly, extract-libs should be called with .mo filtered out too.
Otherwise, the .mo-libs are added to the link command incorrectly,
spoiling the purpose of modularization.
Currently we don't have any .mo-libs usage, but it will be used soon
when we modularize more multi-source objects, like sdl and gtk.
Backports commit 5b1b6dbd94e2e2e98920f886cb32fcf4a1520b50 from qemu
In fact, this function does not exactly perform a lookup by physical
address as it is descibed for comment on get_page_addr_code(). Thus
it may be a bit confusing to have "physical" in it's name. So rename it
to tb_htable_lookup() to better reflect its actual functionality.
Backports commit b34de45fc40d01c14b31d3a682e284180a2ed8c5 from qemu
These functions are not too big and can be merged together. This makes
locking scheme more clear and easier to follow.
Backports commit bd2710d5da06ad7706d4864f65b3f0c9f7cb4d7f from qemu
Lock contention in the hot path of moving between existing patched
TranslationBlocks is the main drag in multithreaded performance. This
patch pushes the tb_lock() usage down to the two places that really need
it:
- code generation (tb_gen_code)
- jump patching (tb_add_jump)
The rest of the code doesn't really need to hold a lock as it is either
using per-CPU structures, atomically updated or designed to be used in
concurrent read situations (qht_lookup).
To keep things simple I removed the #ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY stuff as the
locks become NOPs anyway until the MTTCG work is completed.
Backports commit 518615c6503ad78d3bb67ddf1cd848c4a41de02e from qemu
This ensures that if we find the TB on the slow path that tb->page_addr
is correctly set before being tested.
Backports commit 2e1ae44a4f4a6149fbb9dc812243522f07284700 from qemu
When invalidating a translation block, set an invalid flag into the
TranslationBlock structure first. It is also necessary to check whether
the target TB is still valid after acquiring 'tb_lock' but before calling
tb_add_jump() since TB lookup is to be performed out of 'tb_lock' in
future. Note that we don't have to check 'last_tb'; an already invalidated
TB will not be executed anyway and it is thus safe to patch it.
Backports commit 6d21e4208f382dd8ca1f7995a6dd9ea7ca281163 from qemu
Ensure atomicity and ordering of CPU's 'tb_flushed' access for future
translation block lookup out of 'tb_lock'.
This field can only be touched from another thread by tb_flush() in user
mode emulation. So the only access to be sequential atomic is:
* a single write in tb_flush();
* reads/writes out of 'tb_lock'.
In future, before enabling MTTCG in system mode, tb_flush() must be safe
and this field becomes unnecessary.
Backports commit 118b07308a8cedc16ef63d7ab243a95f1701db40 from qemu
Ensure atomicity of CPU's 'tb_jmp_cache' access for future translation
block lookup out of 'tb_lock'.
Note that this patch does *not* make CPU's TLB invalidation safe if it
is done from some other thread while the CPU is in its execution loop.
Backports commit 89a16b1e4294e3664667a151c2f70c84dfac6fd9 from qemu
This is a small clean up. tb_find_fast() is a final consumer of this
variable so no need to pass it by reference. 'last_tb' is always updated
by subsequent cpu_loop_exec_tb() in cpu_exec().
This change also simplifies calling cpu_exec_nocache() in
cpu_handle_exception().
Backports commit 4b7e69509df2fcbfdab8c62c294dbfcfdab8a6e1 from qemu
val is assigned twice; the second one should be combined with "|".
Reported by Coverity.
Backports commit 5ce747cfac697f61668ab4fa4a71c1dba15cc272 from qemu
There is no need to make sure that the memory is zeroed after the
allocation if we also immediatly fill the whole buffer afterwards
with memcpy(). Thus g_new0 should be g_new instead. But since we
are also doing a memcpy() here, we can also simply replace both
with g_memdup() instead.
Backports commit a337f295defad7eb977da4d6317cf70f7f2fa4b4 from qemu
QEMU's code relies on left shifts of signed integers always
being defined behaviour with the obvious 2s-complement
semantics. The only way to tell the compiler (and any
associated undefined-behaviour sanitizer) that we require a
C dialect with these semantics is to use the -fwrapv option.
This is a bit of a heavy hammer for the job as it also gives
us guaranteed semantics on integer arithmetic overflow which
in theory we don't require.
In an ideal world this would allow us to drop the warning
flag -Wno-shift-negative-value, but we must retain this to
avoid spurious warnings on clang versions predating the
fix to https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25552.
Backports commit 2d31515bc0880a1cea86ce638d2a109f4f4e6f7d from qemu
Some software algorithms are based on the hardware's cache info, for example,
for x86 linux kernel, when cpu1 want to wakeup a task on cpu2, cpu1 will trigger
a resched IPI and told cpu2 to do the wakeup if they don't share low level
cache. Oppositely, cpu1 will access cpu2's runqueue directly if they share llc.
The relevant linux-kernel code as bellow:
static void ttwu_queue(struct task_struct *p, int cpu)
{
struct rq *rq = cpu_rq(cpu);
......
if (... && !cpus_share_cache(smp_processor_id(), cpu)) {
......
ttwu_queue_remote(p, cpu); /* will trigger RES IPI */
return;
}
......
ttwu_do_activate(rq, p, 0); /* access target's rq directly */
......
}
In real hardware, the cpus on the same socket share L3 cache, so one won't
trigger a resched IPIs when wakeup a task on others. But QEMU doesn't present a
virtual L3 cache info for VM, then the linux guest will trigger lots of RES IPIs
under some workloads even if the virtual cpus belongs to the same virtual socket.
For KVM, there will be lots of vmexit due to guest send IPIs.
The workload is a SAP HANA's testsuite, we run it one round(about 40 minuates)
and observe the (Suse11sp3)Guest's amounts of RES IPIs which triggering during
the period:
No-L3 With-L3(applied this patch)
cpu0: 363890 44582
cpu1: 373405 43109
cpu2: 340783 43797
cpu3: 333854 43409
cpu4: 327170 40038
cpu5: 325491 39922
cpu6: 319129 42391
cpu7: 306480 41035
cpu8: 161139 32188
cpu9: 164649 31024
cpu10: 149823 30398
cpu11: 149823 32455
cpu12: 164830 35143
cpu13: 172269 35805
cpu14: 179979 33898
cpu15: 194505 32754
avg: 268963.6 40129.8
The VM's topology is "1*socket 8*cores 2*threads".
After present virtual L3 cache info for VM, the amounts of RES IPIs in guest
reduce 85%.
For KVM, vcpus send IPIs will cause vmexit which is expensive, so it can cause
severe performance degradation. We had tested the overall system performance if
vcpus actually run on sparate physical socket. With L3 cache, the performance
improves 7.2%~33.1%(avg:15.7%).
Backports commit 14c985cffa6cb177fc01a163d8bcf227c104718c from qemu
If an alignment fault occurred and target EL is using AArch32,
then DFSR/IFSR bit LPAE[9] must be set correctly.
Backports commit e0fe723c24562c8f909bb40f131bfdbe75650677 from qemu
With a vfio assigned device we lay down a base MemoryRegion registered
as an IO region, giving us read & write accessors. If the region
supports mmap, we lay down a higher priority sub-region MemoryRegion
on top of the base layer initialized as a RAM device pointer to the
mmap. Finally, if we have any quirks for the device (ie. address
ranges that need additional virtualization support), we put another IO
sub-region on top of the mmap MemoryRegion. When this is flattened,
we now potentially have sub-page mmap MemoryRegions exposed which
cannot be directly mapped through KVM.
This is as expected, but a subtle detail of this is that we end up
with two different access mechanisms through QEMU. If we disable the
mmap MemoryRegion, we make use of the IO MemoryRegion and service
accesses using pread and pwrite to the vfio device file descriptor.
If the mmap MemoryRegion is enabled and results in one of these
sub-page gaps, QEMU handles the access as RAM, using memcpy to the
mmap. Using either pread/pwrite or the mmap directly should be
correct, but using memcpy causes us problems. I expect that not only
does memcpy not necessarily honor the original width and alignment in
performing a copy, but it potentially also uses processor instructions
not intended for MMIO spaces. It turns out that this has been a
problem for Realtek NIC assignment, which has such a quirk that
creates a sub-page mmap MemoryRegion access.
To resolve this, we disable memory_access_is_direct() for ram_device
regions since QEMU assumes that it can use memcpy for those regions.
Instead we access through MemoryRegionOps, which replaces the memcpy
with simple de-references of standard sizes to the host memory.
With this patch we attempt to provide unrestricted access to the RAM
device, allowing byte through qword access as well as unaligned
access. The assumption here is that accesses initiated by the VM are
driven by a device specific driver, which knows the device
capabilities. If unaligned accesses are not supported by the device,
we don't want them to work in a VM by performing multiple aligned
accesses to compose the unaligned access. A down-side of this
philosophy is that the xp command from the monitor attempts to use
the largest available access weidth, unaware of the underlying
device. Using memcpy had this same restriction, but at least now an
operator can dump individual registers, even if blocks of device
memory may result in access widths beyond the capabilities of a
given device (RTL NICs only support up to dword).
Backports commit 1b16ded6a512809f99c133a97f19026fe612b2de from qemu
Setting skip_dump on a MemoryRegion allows us to modify one specific
code path, but the restriction we're trying to address encompasses
more than that. If we have a RAM MemoryRegion backed by a physical
device, it not only restricts our ability to dump that region, but
also affects how we should manipulate it. Here we recognize that
MemoryRegions do not change to sometimes allow dumps and other times
not, so we replace setting the skip_dump flag with a new initializer
so that we know exactly the type of region to which we're applying
this behavior.
Backports commit ca83f87a66d19fdaabf23d4f5ebb49396fe232c1 from qemu
Rather than rely on recursion during the middle of register allocation,
lower indirect registers to loads and stores off the indirect base into
plain temps.
For an x86_64 host, with sufficient registers, this results in identical
code, modulo the actual register assignments.
For an i686 host, with insufficient registers, this means that temps can
be (temporarily) spilled to the stack in order to satisfy an allocation.
This as opposed to the possibility of not being able to spill, to allocate
a register for the indirect base, in order to perform a spill.
Backports commit 5a18407f55ade924aa6397c9a043a9ffd59645fe from qemu
We only need two bits per temporary. Fold the two bytes into one,
and reduce the memory and cachelines required during compilation.
Backports commit c70fbf0a9938baf3b4f843355a77c17a7e945b98 from qemu
Reduce the size of other bitfields to make room.
This reduces the cache footprint of compilation.
Backports commit bee158cb4dde35c41632a3a129c869f14a32f8f0 from qemu
Instead of using -1 as end of chain, use 0, and link through the 0
entry as a fully circular double-linked list.
Backports commit dcb8e75870e2de199db853697f8839cb603beefe from qemu
This reduces both memory usage and per-insn cacheline usage
during code generation.
Backports commit a1b3c48d2b23d6eaeb4529d3e1183d2648731bf8 from qemu
Make it obvious which macros are safe in which situations.
Useful since QEMU_ALIGN_UP and ROUND_UP both purport to do
the same thing, but differ on whether the alignment must be
a power of 2.
While implementing TLB invalidation feature we forgot to modify
part of code responsible for updating EntryHi during TLB exception.
Consequently EntryHi.EHINV is unexpectedly cleared on the exception.
Backports commit 701074a6fc7470d0ed54e4a4bcd4d491ad8da22e from qemu
If device doesn't have parent assined before its realize
is called, device_set_realized() will implicitly set parent
to '/machine/unattached'.
However device_set_realized() may fail after that point at
several other points leaving not realized object dangling
in '/machine/unattached' and as result caller of
obj = object_new()
obj->ref == 1
object_property_set_bool(obj,..., true, "realized",...)
obj->ref == 2
if (fail)
object_unref(obj);
obj->ref == 1
will get object leak instead of expected object destruction.
Fix it by making device_set_realized() to cleanup after itself
in case of failure.
Backports commit 69382d8b3e8600b349c191394d761dcb480502cf from qemu
object_property_add_child() silently fails with error that it can't
create duplicate propery 'apic' as we already have 'apic' property
registered for 'apic' feature. As result generic device_realize puts
apic into unattached container.
As it's programming error, abort if name collision happens in future
and fix property name for apic_state to 'lapic', this way apic is
a child of cpu instance.
Backports commit 6816b1b3811e839540df22855d975b6d76ae438b from qemu
These are both stored in CPUID[EAX=7,EBX=0].ECX. KVM is going to
be able to emulate both (albeit with a performance loss in the case
of RDPID, which therefore will be in KVM_GET_EMULATED_CPUID rather
than KVM_GET_SUPPORTED_CPUID).
It's also possible to implement both in TCG, but this is for 2.8.
Backports commit c2f193b538032accb9db504998bf2ea7c0ef65af from qemu
These properties will be used by as address where to plug
CPU with help -device/device_add commands.
Backports commit d89c2b8b98e097b9cad5104b0f178bde1cfa011b from qemu
Custom apic-id setter/getter doesn't do any property specific
checks anymore, so clean it up and use more compact static
property DEFINE_PROP_UINT32 instead.
Backports commit 2da00e3176abac34ca7a6aab1f5bbb94a0d03fc5 from qemu
Machine code knows about all possible APIC IDs so use that
instead of hack which does O(n^2) complexity duplicate
checks, interating over global CPUs list.
As result duplicate check is done only once with O(log n) complexity.
Backports commit 4ec60c76d5ab513e375f17b043d2b9cb849adf6c from qemu
Add the host-phys-bits boolean property, if true, take phys-bits
from the hosts physical bits value, overriding either the default
or the user specified value.
We can also use the value we read from the host to check the users
explicitly set value and warn them if it doesn't match.
Note:
a) We only read the hosts value in KVM mode (because on non-x86
we get an abort if we try)
b) We don't warn about trying to use host-phys-bits in TCG mode,
we just fall back to the TCG default. This allows the machine
type to set the host-phys-bits flag if it wants and then to
work in both TCG and KVM.
Backports commit 11f6fee576680a2d482123535da920f8ceb33eb5 from qemu
It's reverse of apicid_from_topo_ids() and will be used in follow up
patches to fill in data structures for query-hotpluggable-cpus and
for user friendly error reporting.
Backports commit 9f3aab58539b4cc716e42e772be8116dc2e7d159 from qemu
Redo 9886e834 (target-i386: Require APIC ID to be explicitly set before
CPU realize) in another way that doesn't use int64_t to detect
if apic-id property has been set.
Use the fact that 0xFFFFFFFF is the broadcast
value that a CPU can't have and set default
uint32_t apic_id to it instead of using int64_t.
Later uint32_t apic_id will be used to drop custom
property setter/getter in favor of static property.
Backports commit d9c84f196970f78d4b55ab87e03cbcad7c65f86f from qemu
Fill the bits between 51..number-of-physical-address-bits in the
MTRR_PHYSMASKn variable range mtrr masks so that they're consistent
in the migration stream irrespective of the physical address space
of the source VM in a migration.
Backports commit fcc35e7ccaed771790940524f3b0eef7aebfc9b1 from qemu
Currently QEMU sets the x86 number of physical address bits to the
magic number 40. This is only correct on some small AMD systems;
Intel systems tend to have 36, 39, 46 bits, and large AMD systems
tend to have 48.
Having the value different from your actual hardware is detectable
by the guest and in principal can cause problems;
The current limit of 40 stops TB VMs being created by those lucky
enough to have that much.
This patch lets you set the physical bits by a cpu property but
defaults to the same 40bits which matches TCGs setup.
I've removed the ancient warning about the 42 bit limit in exec.c;
I can't find that limit in there and no one else seems to know where
it is.
We use a magic value of 0 as the property default so that we can
later distinguish between the default and a user set value.
Backports commit af45907a132857cfd47acc998bf5f7c26cd13071 from qemu
Turn on the ability to pass command and event arguments in
a single boxed parameter, which must name a non-empty type
(although the type can be a struct with all optional members).
For structs, it makes it possible to pass a single qapi type
instead of a breakout of all struct members (useful if the
arguments are already in a struct or if the number of members
is large); for other complex types, it is now possible to use
a union or alternate as the data for a command or event.
The empty type may be technically feasible if needed down the
road, but it's easier to forbid it now and relax things to allow
it later, than it is to allow it now and have to special case
how the generated 'q_empty' type is handled (see commit 7ce106a9
for reasons why nothing is generated for the empty type). An
alternate type is never considered empty, but now that a boxed
type can be either an object or an alternate, we have to provide
a trivial QAPISchemaAlternateType.is_empty(). The new call to
arg_type.is_empty() during QAPISchemaCommand.check() requires
that we first check the type in question; but there is no chance
of introducing a cycle since objects do not refer back to commands.
We still have a split in syntax checking between ad-hoc parsing
up front (merely validates that 'boxed' has a sane value) and
during .check() methods (if 'boxed' is set, then 'data' must name
a non-empty user-defined type).
Generated code is unchanged, as long as no client uses the
new feature.
Backports commit c818408e449ea55371253bd4def1c1dc87b7bb03 from qemu
The next patch will add support for passing a qapi union type
as the 'data' of a command. But to do that, the user function
for implementing the command, as called by the generated
marshal command, must take the corresponding C struct as a
single boxed pointer, rather than a breakdown into one
parameter per member. Even without a union, being able to use
a C struct rather than a list of parameters can make it much
easier to handle coding with QAPI.
This patch adds the internal plumbing of a 'boxed' flag
associated with each command and event. In several cases,
this means adding indentation, with one new dead branch and
the remaining branch being the original code more deeply
nested; this was done so that the new implementation in the
next patch is easier to review without also being mixed with
indentation changes.
For this patch, no behavior or generated output changes, other
than the testsuite outputting the value of the new flag
(always False for now).
Backports commit 48825ca419fd9c8140d4fecb24e982d68ebca74f from qemu
Commit 7ce106a9 documented why we don't generated a visit_type_FOO()
for implicit types; and therefore events with an anonymous type for
'data' have to open-code a visit. Note that the open-coded visit in
qapi-event.c is slightly different from what is done in
qapi-visit.c for normal types, in part because we don't have to
check for *obj being NULL or free things on error. But where the
type is not implicit, it is nicer to reuse the normal visit instead
of open-coding a duplicate.
At the moment, the only event with a non-implicit 'data' is in the
testsuite, where test-qapi-event.c changes as follows:
|@@ -155,6 +155,7 @@ void qapi_event_send___org_qemu_x_event(
| __org_qemu_x_Struct param = {
| __org_qemu_x_member1, (char *)__org_qemu_x_member2, has_q_wchar_t, q_wchar_t
| };
|+ __org_qemu_x_Struct *arg = ¶m;
|
| emit = qmp_event_get_func_emit();
| if (!emit) {
|@@ -164,16 +165,7 @@ void qapi_event_send___org_qemu_x_event(
| qmp = qmp_event_build_dict("__ORG.QEMU_X-EVENT");
|
| v = qmp_output_visitor_new(&obj);
|-
|- visit_start_struct(v, "__ORG.QEMU_X-EVENT", NULL, 0, &err);
|- if (err) {
|- goto out;
|- }
|- visit_type___org_qemu_x_Struct_members(v, ¶m, &err);
|- if (!err) {
|- if (!err) {
|- visit_check_struct(v, &err);
|- }
|- visit_end_struct(v, NULL);
|+ visit_type___org_qemu_x_Struct(v, "__ORG.QEMU_X-EVENT", &arg, &err);
| if (err) {
| goto out;
| }
Backports commit 4d0b268fdb17a1fed10fe980e77fd388e5427bfd from qemu
Ever since commit 12f254f removed the last parameterization
of gen_err_check(), it no longer makes sense to hide the three
lines of generated C code behind a macro call. Just inline it
into the remaining users.
No change to generated code.
Backports commit fa274ed6fb788866ed3a2cfd54a2ddf78f04f2c0 from qemu
In the near future, we want to lift our artificial restriction of
no variants at the top level of an event, at which point the
currently open-coded check for empty members will become
insufficient. Factor it out into a new helper method is_empty()
now, and future-proof it by checking variants, too, along with an
assert that it is not used prior to the completion of .check().
Update places that were checking for (non-)empty .members to use
the new helper.
All of the current callers assert that there are no variants (either
directly, or by qapi.py asserting that base types have no variants),
so this is not a semantic change.
No change to generated code.
Backports commit b6167706829c6e0d3572daa2b6769594ced276f7 from qemu
Clean up the only remaining external use of the tag_name field of
QAPISchemaObjectTypeVariants, by explicitly listing the generated
'type' tag for all variants in the testsuite (you can still tell
simple unions by the -wrapper types). Then we can mark the
tag_name field as private by adding a leading underscore to prevent
any further use.
Backports commit da9cb19385fc66b2cb2584bbbbcbf50246d057e2 from qemu
Commit 7ce106a rendered QAPISchemaObjectType.c_name() redundant,
since it now does nothing more than delegate to its superclass.
However, rather than deleting it, we can restore part of the
assertion that was removed in that commit, to prove that we never
emit the empty type directly in generated code, but rather
special-case it as a built-in that makes other aspects of code
generation easier to reason about.
Backports commit cd50a2564560986e865ff64fa73b59d2564076f0 from qemu
We were previously enforcing that all flat union branches were
found in the corresponding enum, but not that all enum values
were covered by branches. The resulting generated code would
abort() if the user passes the uncovered enum value.
We don't automatically treat non-present branches in a flat
union as empty types, for symmetry with simple unions (there,
the enum type is generated from the list of all branches, so
there is no way to omit a branch but still have it be part of
the union).
A later patch will add shorthand so that branches that are empty
in flat unions can be declared as 'branch':{} instead of
'branch':'Empty', to avoid the need for an otherwise useless
explicit empty type. [Such shorthand for simple unions is a bit
harder to justify, since we would still have to generate a
wrapper type that parses 'data':{}, rather than truly being an
empty branch with no additional siblings to the 'type' member.]
Backports commit d0b182392d0281ef780e3effcb82677a004f1f97 from qemu
This saves a lot of memory compared to a statically-sized array,
or at least 24kb could be considered a lot on an Atari ST.
It also makes the code more similar to QmpOutputVisitor.
This removes the limit on the depth of a QObject that can be processed
into a QAPI tree. This is not a problem because QObjects can be
considered trusted; the text received on the QMP wire is untrusted
input, but the JSON parser already takes pains to limit the QObject tree
it creates. We don't need the QMP input visitor to limit it again.
Backports commit 3d344c2aabb7bc9b414321e3c52872901edebdda from qemu
'HF_SOFTMMU_MASK' is only set when 'CONFIG_SOFTMMU' is defined. So
there's no need in this flag: test 'CONFIG_SOFTMMU' instead.
Backports commit da6d48e3348bbc266896cf8adf0c33f1eaf5b31f from qemu
Some PL2 related TLBI system registers are missed in AArch32
implementation. The patch fixes it.
Backports commit 541ef8c2e73fb99d173b125bef7c262fdd2fe33c from qemu
this is the first step in reducing the brk heap fragmentation
created by the map->nodes memory allocation. Since the introduction
of RCU the freeing of the PhysPageMaps is delayed so that sometimes
several hundred are allocated at the same time.
Even worse the memory for map->nodes is allocated and shortly
afterwards reallocated. Since the number of nodes it grows
to in the end is the same for all PhysPageMaps remember this value
and at least avoid the reallocation.
The large number of simultaneous allocations (about 450 x 70kB in
my configuration) has to be addressed later.
Backports commit 101420b886eec36990419bc9ed5b503622af8a0d from qemu
Assertions help both Coverity and the clang static analyzer avoid
false positives, but on the other hand both are confused when
the condition is compiled as (void)(x != FOO). Always expand
assertion macros when using Coverity or clang, through a new
QEMU_STATIC_ANALYSIS preprocessor symbol.
This fixes a couple false positives in TCG.
Backports commit 8bff06a0bbf257a2083223534c1607bf87d913e6 from qemu
Use Neon instructions to perform zero checking of
buffer. This is helps in reducing total migration time.
Use case: Idle VM live migration with 4 VCPUS and 8GB ram
running CentOS 7.
Without Neon, the Total migration time is 3.5 Sec
Migration status: completed
total time: 3560 milliseconds
downtime: 33 milliseconds
setup: 5 milliseconds
transferred ram: 297907 kbytes
throughput: 685.76 mbps
remaining ram: 0 kbytes
total ram: 8519872 kbytes
duplicate: 2062760 pages
skipped: 0 pages
normal: 69808 pages
normal bytes: 279232 kbytes
dirty sync count: 3
With Neon, the total migration time is 2.9 Sec
Migration status: completed
total time: 2960 milliseconds
downtime: 65 milliseconds
setup: 4 milliseconds
transferred ram: 299869 kbytes
throughput: 830.19 mbps
remaining ram: 0 kbytes
total ram: 8519872 kbytes
duplicate: 2064313 pages
skipped: 0 pages
normal: 70294 pages
normal bytes: 281176 kbytes
dirty sync count: 3
Backports commit 7069532e3b944c25707d4f69998e68a739eabff9 from qemu
By arranging for explicit writes to cpu_fsr after floating point
operations, we are able to mark the helpers as not writing to
tcg globals, which means that we don't need to invalidate the
integer register set across said calls.
Backports commit 7385aed20db5d83979f683b9d0048674411e963c from qemu
We've now implemented all fp asis inline, except for the no-fault
memory reads. The latter can be passed directly to helper_ld_asi.
Backports commit f2fe396f0fae6b389169f65abf294df9ae6cfee5 from qemu
Replace gen_get_asi, and use it for both 32-bit and 64-bit.
For v8, do supervisor and immediate checks here.
Also, move save_state and TB ending into the respective
subroutines, out of disas_sparc_insn.
Backports commit 7ec1e5ea4bd0700fa48da86bffa2fcc6146c410a from qemu
Knowing the value of %asi at translation time means that we
can handle the common settings without a function call.
The steady state appears to be %asi == ASI_P, so that sparcv9
code can use offset forms of lda/sta. The %asi register gets
pushed and popped on entry to certain functions, but it rarely
takes on values other than ASI_P or ASI_AIUP. Therefore we're
unlikely to be expanding the set of TBs created.
Backports commit a6d567e523ed7e928861f3caa5d49368af3f330d from qemu
We now have a single copy of gen_ld_asi, gen_st_asi,
gen_swap_asi, and everything uses gen_get_asi.
Backports commit 22e700607aeaff5f5e139d0fdc3d861e5502040c from qemu
Doing this instead of saving the raw PS_PRIV and TL. This means
that all nucleus mode TBs (TL > 0) can be shared. This fixes a
bug in that we didn't include HS_PRIV in the TB flags, and so could
produce incorrect TB matches for hypervisor state.
The LSU and DMMU states were unused by the translator. Including
them in TB flags meant unnecessary mismatches from tb_find_fast.
Backports commit 99a230638a3674e921224dbe628159c867d734b1 from qemu
The global is only ever read for one insn; we can just as well
use a load from env instead and generate the same code. This
also allows us to indicate the the associated helpers do not
touch TCG globals.
Backports commit e86ceb0d652baa5738e05a59ee0e7989dafbeaa1 from qemu
Header guard symbols should match their file name to make guard
collisions less likely. Offenders found with
scripts/clean-header-guards.pl -vn.
Cleaned up with scripts/clean-header-guards.pl, followed by some
renaming of new guard symbols picked by the script to better ones.
Backports commit 121d07125bb6d7079c7ebafdd3efe8c3a01cc440 from qemu
These use guard symbols like TCG_TARGET_$target.
scripts/clean-header-guards.pl doesn't like them because they don't
match their file name (they should, to make guard collisions less
likely).
Clean them up: use guard symbol $target_TCG_TARGET_H for
tcg/$target/tcg-target.h.
Backports commit 14e54f8ecfe9c5e17348f456781344737ed10b3b from qemu
Most of them use guard symbols like CPU_$target_H, but we also have
__MIPS_CPU_H__ and __TRICORE_CPU_H__. They all upset
scripts/clean-header-guards.pl.
The script dislikes CPU_$target_H because they don't match their file
name (they should, to make guard collisions less likely). The others
are reserved identifiers.
Clean them all up: use guard symbol $target_CPU_H for
target-$target/cpu.h.
Backports commit 07f5a258750b3b9a6e10fd5ec3e29c9a943b650e from qemu
Tracked down with an ugly, brittle and probably buggy Perl script.
Also move includes converted to <...> up so they get included before
ours where that's obviously okay.
Backports commit a9c94277f07d19d3eb14f199c3e93491aa3eae0e from qemu
Add a documentation comment describing the functions for
converting between the cpu and little or bigendian formats.
Backports commit 7d820b766a2049f33ca7e078aa51018f2335f8c5 from qemu
Now that all uses of cpu_to_*w() and *_to_cpup() have been replaced
with either ld*_p()/st*_p() or by doing direct dereferences and
using the cpu_to_*()/*_to_cpu() byteswap functions, we can remove
the unused implementations.
Backports commit f76bde702916d0230bf359d478bcac8d7f3b30ae from qemu
There are functions tlb_fill(), cpu_unaligned_access() and
do_unaligned_access() that are called with access type and mmu index
arguments. But these arguments are named 'is_write' and 'is_user' in their
declarations. The patches fix the arguments to avoid a confusion.
Backports commit b35399bb4e9968296a12303b00f9f2066470e987 from qemu
ASID currently has uint8_t type which is too small since some processors
support more than 8 bits ASID. Therefore change its type to uint16_t.
Backports commit 2d72e7b047d800c9f99262466f65a98684ecca14 from qemu
MIPS64R6-generic gradually gets closer to I6400 CPU, feature-wise. Rename
it to make it clear which MIPS processor it is supposed to emulate.
Backports commit 8f95ad1c79b4166350b982a6defe0e21faa04dac from qemu
Replace hardcoded 0xbfc00000 with exception_base which is initialized with
this default address so there is no functional change here.
However, it is now exposed and consequently it will be possible to modify
it from outside of the CPU.
Backports commit 89777fd10fc3dd573c3b4d1b2efdd10af823c001 from qemu
In user-mode emulation Translation Block can consist of 2 guest pages.
In that case QEMU also mprotects 2 host pages that are dedicated for
guest memory, containing instructions. QEMU detects self-modifying code
with SEGFAULT signal processing.
In case if instruction in 1st page is modifying memory of 2nd
page (or vice versa) QEMU will mark 2nd page with PAGE_WRITE,
invalidate TB, generate new TB contatining 1 guest instruction and
exit to CPU loop. QEMU won't call mprotect, and new TB will cause
same SEGFAULT. Page will have both PAGE_WRITE_ORG and PAGE_WRITE
flags, so QEMU will handle the signal as guest binary problem,
and exit with guest SEGFAULT.
Solution is to do following: In case if current TB was invalidated
continue to invalidate TBs from remaining guest pages and mark pages
as PAGE_WRITE. After that disable host page protection with mprotect.
If current tb was invalidated longjmp to main loop. That is more
efficient, since we won't get SEGFAULT when executing new TB.
Backports commit 7399a337e4126f7c8c8af3336726f001378c4798 from qemu
As it currently stands, QEMU does not properly handle self-modifying code
when the write is unaligned and crosses a page boundary. The procedure
for handling a write to the current translation block is to write-protect
the current translation block, catch the write, split up the translation
block into the current instruction (which remains write-protected so that
the current instruction is not modified) and the remaining instructions
in the translation block, and then restore the CPU state to before the
write occurred so the write will be retried and successfully executed.
However, since unaligned writes across pages are split into one-byte
writes for simplicity, writes to the second page (which is not the
current TB) may succeed before a write to the current TB is attempted,
and since these writes are not invalidated before resuming state after
splitting the TB, these writes will be performed a second time, thus
corrupting the second page. Credit goes to Patrick Hulin for
discovering this.
In recent 64-bit versions of Windows running in emulated mode, this
results in either being very unstable (a BSOD after a couple minutes of
uptime), or being entirely unable to boot. Windows performs one or more
8-byte unaligned self-modifying writes (xors) which intersect the end
of the current TB and the beginning of the next TB, which runs into the
aforementioned issue. This commit fixes that issue by making the
unaligned write loop perform the writes in forwards order, instead of
reverse order. This way, QEMU immediately tries to write to the current
TB, and splits the TB before any write to the second page is executed.
The write then proceeds as intended. With this patch applied, I am able
to boot and use Windows 7 64-bit and Windows 10 64-bit in QEMU without
KVM.
Per Richard Henderson's input, this patch also ensures the second page
is in the TLB before executing the write loop, to ensure the second
page is mapped.
The original discussion of the issue is located at
http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2014-08/msg02161.html.
Backports commit 81daabaf7a572f138a8b88ba6eea556bdb0cce46 from qemu
There are currently 22 invocations of this function,
and we're about to increase that number.
Backports commit 7e9a7c50d9a400ef51242d661a261123c2cc9485 from qemu
It's a prerequisite that certain bits of MSR_IA32_FEATURE_CONTROL should
be set before some features (e.g. VMX and LMCE) can be used, which is
usually done by the firmware. This patch adds a fw_cfg file
"etc/msr_feature_control" which contains the advised value of
MSR_IA32_FEATURE_CONTROL and can be used by guest firmware (e.g. SeaBIOS).
Backports commit 217f1b4a72153cf8d556e9d45919e9222c38d25e from qemu
This patch adds the support to inject SRAR and SRAO as LMCE, i.e. they
are injected to only one VCPU rather than broadcast to all VCPUs. As KVM
reports LMCE support on Intel platforms, this features is only available
on Intel platforms.
LMCE is disabled by default and can be enabled/disabled by cpu option
'lmce=on/off'.
Backports commit 87f8b626041ceaea9adcfdbd549359f0ca7b871d from qemu
This change adds hyperv feature words report through qom rpc.
When VM is configured with hyperv features enabled
libvirt will check that required feature words are set
in cpuid leaf 40000003 through qom request.
Currently qemu does not report hyperv feature words
which prevents windows guests from starting with libvirt.
To avoid conflicting with current hyperv properties all added feature
words cannot be set directly with -cpu +feature yet.
Backports commit c35bd19a5c9140bce8b913cc5cefe6f071135bdb from qemu
x86_cpu_parse_featurestr has a "val = num;" assignment just before num
goes out of scope. Push num up to fix the issue.
Backports commit cf2887c9738451eb989c6c102af070dee2dc172a from qemu
ERMS just says "rep movsb" and "rep stosb" are fast. It does not
imply any new instruction, so we can support it easily.
Backports commit 7eb24386dbfb0b66464c7f856c1074c606efccda from qemu
Make SPARC target use sparc_cpu_parse_features() directly
so it won't get in the way of switching other propertified
targets to handling features as global properties.
Backports commit fb02d56e96d553088c5b4267a3c954a3e952a50a from qemu
Some architectures (e.g. ARMv8) need the address which is aligned
to a size more than the size of the memory access.
To support such check it's enough the current costless alignment
check implementation in QEMU, but we need to support
an alignment size specifying.
Backports commit 1f00b27f17518a1bcb4cedca49eaec96a4d560bd from qemu
While we can store constants via constrants on INDEX_op_st_i32 et al,
we weren't able to spill constants to backing store.
Add a new backend interface, tcg_out_sti, which may store the constant
(and is allowed to fail). Rearrange the temp_* helpers so that we only
attempt to directly store a constant when the temp is becoming dead/free.
Backports commit 59d7c14eeff8d2ad7f61aed86ce5a176113bc153 from qemu
We have a couple places in the code base that want to deep-clone
one QAPI object into another, and they were resorting to serializing
the struct out to QObject then reparsing it. A much more efficient
version can be done by adding a new clone visitor.
Since cloning is still relatively uncommon, expose the use of the
new visitor via a QAPI_CLONE() macro that takes care of type-punning
the underlying function pointer, rather than generating lots of
unused functions for types that won't be cloned. And yes, we're
relying on the compiler treating all pointers equally, even though
a strict C program cannot portably do so - but we're not the first
one in the qemu code base to expect it to work (hello, glib!).
The choice of adding a fourth visitor type deserves some explanation.
On the surface, the clone visitor is mostly an input visitor (it
takes arbitrary input - in this case, another QAPI object - and
creates a new QAPI object during the course of the visit). But
ever since commit da72ab0 consolidated enum visits based on the
visitor type, using VISITOR_INPUT would cause us to run
visit_type_str(), even though for cloning there is nothing to do
(we just copy the enum value across, without regards to its mapping
to strings). Also, since our input happens to be a QAPI object,
we can also satisfy the internal checks for VISITOR_OUTPUT. So in
the end, I settled with a new VISITOR_CLONE, and chose its value
such that many internal checks can use 'v->type & mask', sticking
to 'v->type == value' where the difference matters.
Note that we can only clone objects (including alternates) and lists,
not built-ins or enums. The visitor core hides integer width from
the actual visitor (since commit 04e070d), and as long as that's the
case, we can't clone top-level integers. Then again, those can
always be cloned by direct copy, since they are not objects with
deep pointers, so it's no real loss. And restricting cloning to
just objects and lists is cleaner than restricting it to non-integers.
As such, I documented that the clone visitor is for direct use only
by code internal to QAPI, and should not be used on incomplete objects
(other than a hack to work around the fact that we allow NULL in place
of "" in visit_type_str() in other output visitors). Note that as
written, the clone visitor will never fail on a complete object.
Scalars (including enums) not at the root of the clone copy just fine
with no additional effort while visiting the scalar, by virtue of a
g_memdup() each time we push another struct onto the stack. Cloning
a string requires deduplication of a pointer, which means it can also
provide the guarantee of an input visitor of never producing NULL
even when still accepting NULL in place of "" the way the QMP output
visitor does.
Cloning an 'any' type could be possible by incrementing the QObject
refcnt, but it's not obvious whether that is better than implementing
a QObject deep clone. So for now, we document it as unsupported,
and intentionally omit the .type_any() callback to let a developer
know their usage needs implementation.
Add testsuite coverage for several different clone situations, to
ensure that the code is working. I also tested that valgrind was
happy with the test.
Backports commit a15fcc3cf69ee3d408f60d6cc316488d2b0249b4 from qemu
Making each output visitor provide its own output collection
function was the only remaining reason for exposing visitor
sub-types to the rest of the code base. Add a polymorphic
visit_complete() function which is a no-op for input visitors,
and which populates an opaque pointer for output visitors. For
maximum type-safety, also add a parameter to the output visitor
constructors with a type-correct version of the output pointer,
and assert that the two uses match.
This approach was considered superior to either passing the
output parameter only during construction (action at a distance
during visit_free() feels awkward) or only during visit_complete()
(defeating type safety makes it easier to use incorrectly).
Most callers were function-local, and therefore a mechanical
conversion; the testsuite was a bit trickier, but the previous
cleanup patch minimized the churn here.
The visit_complete() function may be called at most once; doing
so lets us use transfer semantics rather than duplication or
ref-count semantics to get the just-built output back to the
caller, even though it means our behavior is not idempotent.
Generated code is simplified as follows for events:
|@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ void qapi_event_send_acpi_device_ost(ACP
| QDict *qmp;
| Error *err = NULL;
| QMPEventFuncEmit emit;
|- QmpOutputVisitor *qov;
|+ QObject *obj;
| Visitor *v;
| q_obj_ACPI_DEVICE_OST_arg param = {
| info
|@@ -39,8 +39,7 @@ void qapi_event_send_acpi_device_ost(ACP
|
| qmp = qmp_event_build_dict("ACPI_DEVICE_OST");
|
|- qov = qmp_output_visitor_new();
|- v = qmp_output_get_visitor(qov);
|+ v = qmp_output_visitor_new(&obj);
|
| visit_start_struct(v, "ACPI_DEVICE_OST", NULL, 0, &err);
| if (err) {
|@@ -55,7 +54,8 @@ void qapi_event_send_acpi_device_ost(ACP
| goto out;
| }
|
|- qdict_put_obj(qmp, "data", qmp_output_get_qobject(qov));
|+ visit_complete(v, &obj);
|+ qdict_put_obj(qmp, "data", obj);
| emit(QAPI_EVENT_ACPI_DEVICE_OST, qmp, &err);
and for commands:
| {
| Error *err = NULL;
|- QmpOutputVisitor *qov = qmp_output_visitor_new();
| Visitor *v;
|
|- v = qmp_output_get_visitor(qov);
|+ v = qmp_output_visitor_new(ret_out);
| visit_type_AddfdInfo(v, "unused", &ret_in, &err);
|- if (err) {
|- goto out;
|+ if (!err) {
|+ visit_complete(v, ret_out);
| }
|- *ret_out = qmp_output_get_qobject(qov);
|-
|-out:
| error_propagate(errp, err);
Backports commit 3b098d56979d2f7fd707c5be85555d114353a28d from qemu
Now that we have a polymorphic visit_free(), we no longer need
qmp_output_visitor_cleanup(); however, we still need to
expose the subtype for qmp_output_get_qobject().
Backports commit 1830f22a6777cedaccd67a08f675d30f7a85ebfd from qemu
Now that we have a polymorphic visit_free(), we no longer need
qmp_input_visitor_cleanup(); which in turn means we no longer
need to return a subtype from qmp_input_visitor_new() nor a
public upcast function.
Generated code changes to qmp-marshal.c look like:
|@@ -52,11 +52,10 @@ void qmp_marshal_add_fd(QDict *args, QOb
| {
| Error *err = NULL;
| AddfdInfo *retval;
|- QmpInputVisitor *qiv = qmp_input_visitor_new(QOBJECT(args), true);
| Visitor *v;
| q_obj_add_fd_arg arg = {0};
|
|- v = qmp_input_get_visitor(qiv);
|+ v = qmp_input_visitor_new(QOBJECT(args), true);
| visit_start_struct(v, NULL, NULL, 0, &err);
| if (err) {
| goto out;
Backports commit b70ce1018a251c0c33498d9c927a07cade655a5e from qemu
Now that we have a polymorphic visit_free(), we no longer need
string_input_visitor_cleanup(); which in turn means we no longer
need to return a subtype from string_input_visitor_new() nor a
public upcast function.
Backports commit 7a0525c7be6b38d32d586e3fd12e7377ded21faa from qemu
Making each visitor provide its own (awkwardly-named) FOO_cleanup()
is unusual, when we can instead have a polymorphic visit_free()
interface. Over the next few patches, we can use the polymorphic
functions to eliminate the need for a FOO_get_visitor() function
for accessing specific visitor functionality, once everything can
be accessed directly through the Visitor* interfaces.
The dealloc visitor is the first one converted to completely use
the new entry point, since qapi_dealloc_visitor_cleanup() was the
only reason that qapi_dealloc_get_visitor() existed, and only
generated and testsuite code was even using it. With the new
visit_free() entry point in place, we no longer need to expose
the QapiDeallocVisitor subtype through qapi_dealloc_visitor_new(),
and can get by with less generated code, with diffs that look like:
| void qapi_free_ACPIOSTInfo(ACPIOSTInfo *obj)
| {
|- QapiDeallocVisitor *qdv;
| Visitor *v;
|
| if (!obj) {
| return;
| }
|
|- qdv = qapi_dealloc_visitor_new();
|- v = qapi_dealloc_get_visitor(qdv);
|+ v = qapi_dealloc_visitor_new();
| visit_type_ACPIOSTInfo(v, NULL, &obj, NULL);
|- qapi_dealloc_visitor_cleanup(qdv);
|+ visit_free(v);
|}
Backports commit 2c0ef9f411ae6081efa9eca5b3eab2dbeee45a6c from qemu
Rather than making the dealloc visitor track of stack of pointers
remembered during visit_start_* in order to free them during
visit_end_*, it's a lot easier to just make all callers pass the
same pointer to visit_end_*. The generated code has access to the
same pointer, while all other users are doing virtual walks and
can pass NULL. The dealloc visitor is then greatly simplified.
All three visit_end_*() functions intentionally take a void**,
even though the visit_start_*() functions differ between void**,
GenericList**, and GenericAlternate**. This is done for several
reasons: when doing a virtual walk, passing NULL doesn't care
what the type is, but when doing a generated walk, we already
have to cast the caller's specific FOO* to call visit_start,
while using void** lets us use visit_end without a cast. Also,
an upcoming patch will add a clone visitor that wants to use
the same implementation for all three visit_end callbacks,
which is made easier if all three share the same signature.
For visitors with already track per-object state (the QMP visitors
via a stack, and the string visitors which do not allow nesting),
add an assertion that the caller is indeed passing the same
pointer to paired calls.
Backports commit 1158bb2a058fcdd0c8fc3e60dc77f7a57ddbb271 from qemu
Range represents a range as follows. Member @start is the inclusive
lower bound, member @end is the exclusive upper bound. Zero @end is
special: if @start is also zero, the range is empty, else @end is to
be interpreted as 2^64. No other empty ranges may occur.
The range [0,2^64-1] cannot be represented. If you try to create it
with range_set_bounds1(), you get the empty range instead. If you try
to create it with range_set_bounds() or range_extend(), assertions
fail. Before range_set_bounds() existed, the open-coded creation
usually got you the empty range instead. Open deathtrap.
Moreover, the code dealing with the janus-faced @end is too clever by
half.
Dumb this down to a more pedestrian representation: members @lob and
@upb are inclusive lower and upper bounds. The empty range is encoded
as @lob = 1, @upb = 0.
Backports commit 6dd726a2bf1b800289d90a84d5fcb5ce7b78a8e1 from qemu
Users of struct Range mess liberally with its members, which makes
refactoring hard. Create a set of methods, and convert all users to
call them instead of accessing members. The methods have carefully
worded contracts, and use assertions to check them.
Backports commit a0efbf16604770b9d805bcf210ec29942321134f from qemu
Add a macro that creates a 64bit value which has length number of ones
shifted across by the value of shift.
Backports commit ae2923b5c20a21c6457680330506a9c13873485c from qemu
It doesn't make sense to pass a NULL ops argument to
memory_region_init_rom_device(), because the effect will
be that if the guest tries to write to the memory region
then QEMU will segfault. Catch the bug earlier by sanity
checking the arguments to this function, and remove the
misleading documentation that suggests that passing NULL
might be sensible.
Backports commit 39e0b03dec518254fabd2acff29548d3f1d2b754 from qemu
Provide a new helper function memory_region_init_rom() for memory
regions which are read-only (and unlike those created by
memory_region_init_rom_device() don't have special behaviour
for writes). This has the same behaviour as calling
memory_region_init_ram() and then memory_region_set_readonly()
(which is what we do today in boards with pure ROMs) but is a
more easily discoverable API for the purpose.
Backports commit a1777f7f6462c66e1ee6e98f0d5c431bfe988aa5 from qemu
The IOMMU driver may change behavior depending on whether a notifier
client is present. In the case of POWER, this represents a change in
the visibility of the IOTLB, for other drivers such as intel-iommu and
future AMD-Vi emulation, notifier support is not yet enabled and this
provides the opportunity to flag that incompatibility.
Backports commit d22d8956b185c002b50a4d0883aff61f857347ef from qemu
Commit 7f8f9ef1 introduced the ability to store a list of
integers as a sorted list of ranges, but when merging ranges,
it leaks one or more ranges. It was also using range_get_last()
incorrectly within range_compare() (a range is a start/end pair,
but range_get_last() is for start/len pairs), and will also
mishandle a range ending in UINT64_MAX (remember, we document
that no range covers 2**64 bytes, but that ranges that end on
UINT64_MAX have end < begin).
The whole merge algorithm was rather complex, and included
unnecessary passes over data within glib functions, and enough
indirection to make it hard to easily plug the data leaks.
Since we are already hard-coding things to a list of ranges,
just rewrite the thing to open-code the traversal and
comparisons, by making the range_compare() helper function give
us an answer that is easier to use, at which point we avoid the
need to pass any callbacks to g_list_*(). Then by reusing
range_extend() instead of duplicating effort with range_merge(),
we cover the corner cases correctly.
Drop the now-unused range_merge() and ranges_can_merge().
Doing this lets test-string-{input,output}-visitor pass under
valgrind without leaks.
Backports commit db486cc334aafd3dbdaf107388e37fc3d6d3e171 from qemu
Calling our function g_list_insert_sorted_merged is a misnomer,
since we are NOT writing a glib function. Furthermore, we are
making every caller pass the same comparator function of
range_merge(): any caller that would try otherwise would break
in weird ways since our internal call to ranges_can_merge() is
hard-coded to operate only on ranges, rather than paying
attention to the caller's comparator.
Better is to fix things so that callers don't have to care about
our internal comparator, by picking a function name and updating
the parameter type away from a gratuitous use of void*, to make
it obvious that we are operating specifically on a list of ranges
and not a generic list. Plus, refactoring the code here will
make it easier to plug a memory leak in the next patch.
range_compare() is now internal only, and moves to the .c file.
Backports commit 7c47959d0cb05db43014141a156ada0b6d53a750 from qemu
g_list_insert_sorted_merged() is rather large to be an inline
function; move it to its own file. range_merge() and
ranges_can_merge() can likewise move, as they are only used
internally. Also, it becomes obvious that the condition within
range_merge() is already satisfied by its caller, and that the
return value is not used.
The diffstat is misleading, because of the copyright boilerplate.
Backports commit fec0fc0a13ac7f1a1130433a6740cd850c3db34a from qemu
If a QAPI struct has a mandatory alternate member which is not
present on input, the input visitor reports an error for the
missing alternate without setting the discriminator, but the
cleanup code for the struct still tries to use the dealloc
visitor to clean up the alternate.
Commit dbf11922 changed visit_start_alternate to set *obj to NULL
when an error occurs, where it was previously left untouched.
Thus, before the patch, the dealloc visitor is blindly trying to
cleanup whatever branch corresponds to (*obj)->type == 0 (that is,
QTYPE_NONE, because *obj still pointed to zeroed memory), which
selects the default branch of the switch and sets an error, but
this second error is ignored by the way the dealloc visitor is
used; but after the patch, the attempt to switch dereferences NULL.
When cleaning up after a partial object parse, we specifically
check for !*obj after visit_start_struct() (see gen_visit_object());
doing the same for alternates fixes the crash. Enhance the testsuite
to give coverage for both missing struct and missing alternate
members.
Also add an abort - we expect visit_start_alternate() to either set an
error or to set (*obj)->type to a valid QType that corresponds to
actual user input, and QTYPE_NONE should never be reachable from valid
input. Had the abort() been in place earlier, we might have noticed
the dealloc visitor dereferencing bogus zeroed memory prior to when
commit dbf11922 forced our hand by setting *obj to NULL and causing a
fault.
Test case:
{'execute':'blockdev-add', 'arguments':{'options':{'driver':'raw'}}}
The choice of 'driver':'raw' selects a BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat
struct, which has a mandatory 'file':'BlockdevRef' in QAPI. Since
'file' is missing as a sibling of 'driver', this should report a
graceful error rather than fault. After this patch, we are back to:
{"error": {"class": "GenericError", "desc": "Parameter 'file' is missing"}}
Generated code in qapi-visit.c changes as:
|@@ -2444,6 +2444,9 @@ void visit_type_BlockdevRef(Visitor *v,
| if (err) {
| goto out;
| }
|+ if (!*obj) {
|+ goto out_obj;
|+ }
| switch ((*obj)->type) {
| case QTYPE_QDICT:
| visit_start_struct(v, name, NULL, 0, &err);
|@@ -2459,10 +2462,13 @@ void visit_type_BlockdevRef(Visitor *v,
| case QTYPE_QSTRING:
| visit_type_str(v, name, &(*obj)->u.reference, &err);
| break;
|+ case QTYPE_NONE:
|+ abort();
| default:
| error_setg(&err, QERR_INVALID_PARAMETER_TYPE, name ? name : "null",
| "BlockdevRef");
| }
|+out_obj:
| visit_end_alternate(v);
Backports commit 9b4e38fe6a35890bb1d995316d7be08de0b30ee5 from qemu
Add preprocessor definition of FCR31's FS bit, and update related
code for setting this bit.
Backports commit 77be419980114d75605811e1681115d0919cfa1a from qemu
This patch implements read and write access rules for Mips floating
point control and status register (FCR31). The change can be divided
into following parts:
- Add fields that will keep FCR31's R/W bitmask in procesor
definitions and processor float_status structure.
- Add appropriate value for FCR31's R/W bitmask for each supported
processor.
- Add function for setting snan_bit_is_one, and integrate it in
appropriate places.
- Modify handling of CTC1 (case 31) instruction to use FCR31's R/W
bitmask.
- Modify handling user mode executables for Mips, in relation to the
bit EF_MIPS_NAN2008 from ELF header, that is in turn related to
reading and writing to FCR31.
- Modify gdb behavior in relation to FCR31.
Backports commit 599bc5e89c46f95f86ccad0d747d041c89a28806 from qemu
New set of helpers for handling nan2008-syle versions of instructions
<CEIL|CVT|FLOOR|ROUND|TRUNC>.<L|W>.<S|D>, for Mips R6.
All involved instructions have float operand and integer result. Their
core functionality is implemented via invocations of appropriate SoftFloat
functions. The problematic cases are when the operand is a NaN, and also
when the operand (float) is out of the range of the result.
Here one can distinguish three cases:
CASE MIPS-A: (FCR31.NAN2008 == 1)
1. Operand is a NaN, result should be 0;
2. Operand is larger than INT_MAX, result should be INT_MAX;
3. Operand is smaller than INT_MIN, result should be INT_MIN.
CASE MIPS-B: (FCR31.NAN2008 == 0)
1. Operand is a NaN, result should be INT_MAX;
2. Operand is larger than INT_MAX, result should be INT_MAX;
3. Operand is smaller than INT_MIN, result should be INT_MAX.
CASE SoftFloat:
1. Operand is a NaN, result is INT_MAX;
2. Operand is larger than INT_MAX, result is INT_MAX;
3. Operand is smaller than INT_MIN, result is INT_MIN.
Current implementation of <CEIL|CVT|FLOOR|ROUND|TRUNC>.<L|W>.<S|D>
implements case MIPS-B. This patch relates to case MIPS-A. For case
MIPS-A, only return value for NaN-operands should be corrected after
appropriate SoftFloat library function is called.
Related MSA instructions FTRUNC_S and FTINT_S already handle well
all cases, in the fashion similar to the code from this patch.
Backports commit 87552089b62fa229d2ff86906e4e779177fb5835 from qemu
Updated handling of instructions <ABS|NEG>.<S|D>. Note that legacy
(pre-abs2008) ABS and NEG instructions are arithmetic (and, therefore,
any NaN operand causes signaling invalid operation), while abs2008
ones are non-arithmetic, always and only changing the sign bit, even
for NaN-like operands. Details on these instructions are documented
in [1] p. 35 and 359.
Implementation-wise, abs2008 versions are implemented without helpers,
for simplicity and performance sake.
[1] "MIPS Architecture For Programmers Volume II-A:
The MIPS64 Instruction Set Reference Manual",
Imagination Technologies LTD, Revision 6.04, November 13, 2015
Backports commit 6be77480052b1a71557081896e7080363a8a2f95 from qemu
Function msa_reset() is updated so that flag snan_bit_is_one is
properly set to 0.
By applying this patch, a number of incorrect MSA behaviors that
require IEEE 754-2008 compliance will be fixed. Those are behaviors
that (up to the moment of applying this patch) did not get the desired
functionality from SoftFloat library with respect to distinguishing
between quiet and signaling NaN, getting default NaN values (both
quiet and signaling), establishing if a floating point number is NaN
or not, etc.
Two examples:
* FMAX, FMIN will now correctly detect and propagate NaNs.
* FCLASS.D ans FCLASS.S will now correcty detect NaN flavors
Backports commit 40bd6dd456e61a36e454fb9dd2cc739b67c224cf from qemu
Only for Mips platform, and only for cases when snan_bit_is_one is 0,
correct the order of argument comparisons in pickNaNMulAdd().
For more info, see [1], page 53, section "3.5.3 NaN Propagation".
[1] "MIPS Architecture for Programmers Volume IV-j:
The MIPS32 SIMD Architecture Module",
Imagination Technologies LTD, Revision 1.12, February 3, 2016
Backports commit c27644f0e9659471e1c9355da5b667960d311937 from qemu
Only for Mips platform, and only for cases when snan_bit_is_one is 0,
correct default NaN values (in their 16-, 32-, and 64-bit flavors).
For more info, see [1], page 84, Table 6.3 "Value Supplied When a New
Quiet NaN Is Created", and [2], page 52, Table 3.7 "Default NaN
Encodings".
[1] "MIPS Architecture For Programmers Volume II-A:
The MIPS64 Instruction Set Reference Manual",
Imagination Technologies LTD, Revision 6.04, November 13, 2015
[2] "MIPS Architecture for Programmers Volume IV-j:
The MIPS32 SIMD Architecture Module",
Imagination Technologies LTD, Revision 1.12, February 3, 2016
Backports commit a7c04d545a97126c9df9d96623747d8613aaf7db from qemu
fpu/softfloat-specialize.h is the most critical file in SoftFloat
library, since it handles numerous differences between platforms in
relation to floating point arithmetics. This patch makes the code
in this file more consistent format-wise, and hopefully easier to
debug and maintain.
Backports commit a59eaea64686c8966b7653303660f8c26f285c77 from qemu
This patch modifies SoftFloat library so that it can be configured in
run-time in relation to the meaning of signaling NaN bit, while, at the
same time, strictly preserving its behavior on all existing platforms.
Background:
In floating-point calculations, there is a need for denoting undefined or
unrepresentable values. This is achieved by defining certain floating-point
numerical values to be NaNs (which stands for "not a number"). For additional
reasons, virtually all modern floating-point unit implementations use two
kinds of NaNs: quiet and signaling. The binary representations of these two
kinds of NaNs, as a rule, differ only in one bit (that bit is, traditionally,
the first bit of mantissa).
Up to 2008, standards for floating-point did not specify all details about
binary representation of NaNs. More specifically, the meaning of the bit
that is used for distinguishing between signaling and quiet NaNs was not
strictly prescribed. (IEEE 754-2008 was the first floating-point standard
that defined that meaning clearly, see [1], p. 35) As a result, different
platforms took different approaches, and that presented considerable
challenge for multi-platform emulators like QEMU.
Mips platform represents the most complex case among QEMU-supported
platforms regarding signaling NaN bit. Up to the Release 6 of Mips
architecture, "1" in signaling NaN bit denoted signaling NaN, which is
opposite to IEEE 754-2008 standard. From Release 6 on, Mips architecture
adopted IEEE standard prescription, and "0" denotes signaling NaN. On top of
that, Mips architecture for SIMD (also known as MSA, or vector instructions)
also specifies signaling bit in accordance to IEEE standard. MSA unit can be
implemented with both pre-Release 6 and Release 6 main processor units.
QEMU uses SoftFloat library to implement various floating-point-related
instructions on all platforms. The current QEMU implementation allows for
defining meaning of signaling NaN bit during build time, and is implemented
via preprocessor macro called SNAN_BIT_IS_ONE.
On the other hand, the change in this patch enables SoftFloat library to be
configured in run-time. This configuration is meant to occur during CPU
initialization, at the moment when it is definitely known what desired
behavior for particular CPU (or any additional FPUs) is.
The change is implemented so that it is consistent with existing
implementation of similar cases. This means that structure float_status is
used for passing the information about desired signaling NaN bit on each
invocation of SoftFloat functions. The additional field in float_status is
called snan_bit_is_one, which supersedes macro SNAN_BIT_IS_ONE.
IMPORTANT:
This change is not meant to create any change in emulator behavior or
functionality on any platform. It just provides the means for SoftFloat
library to be used in a more flexible way - in other words, it will just
prepare SoftFloat library for usage related to Mips platform and its
specifics regarding signaling bit meaning, which is done in some of
subsequent patches from this series.
Further break down of changes:
1) Added field snan_bit_is_one to the structure float_status, and
correspondent setter function set_snan_bit_is_one().
2) Constants <float16|float32|float64|floatx80|float128>_default_nan
(used both internally and externally) converted to functions
<float16|float32|float64|floatx80|float128>_default_nan(float_status*).
This is necessary since they are dependent on signaling bit meaning.
At the same time, for the sake of code cleanup and simplicity, constants
<floatx80|float128>_default_nan_<low|high> (used only internally within
SoftFloat library) are removed, as not needed.
3) Added a float_status* argument to SoftFloat library functions
XXX_is_quiet_nan(XXX a_), XXX_is_signaling_nan(XXX a_),
XXX_maybe_silence_nan(XXX a_). This argument must be present in
order to enable correct invocation of new version of functions
XXX_default_nan(). (XXX is <float16|float32|float64|floatx80|float128>
here)
4) Updated code for all platforms to reflect changes in SoftFloat library.
This change is twofolds: it includes modifications of SoftFloat library
functions invocations, and an addition of invocation of function
set_snan_bit_is_one() during CPU initialization, with arguments that
are appropriate for each particular platform. It was established that
all platforms zero their main CPU data structures, so snan_bit_is_one(0)
in appropriate places is not added, as it is not needed.
[1] "IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic",
IEEE Computer Society, August 29, 2008.
Backports commit af39bc8c49224771ec0d38f1b693ea78e221d7bc from qemu
Every IOMMU has some granularity which MemoryRegionIOMMUOps::translate
uses when translating, however this information is not available outside
the translate context for various checks.
This adds a get_min_page_size callback to MemoryRegionIOMMUOps and
a wrapper for it so IOMMU users (such as VFIO) can know the minimum
actual page size supported by an IOMMU.
As IOMMU MR represents a guest IOMMU, this uses TARGET_PAGE_SIZE
as fallback.
This removes vfio_container_granularity() and uses new helper in
memory_region_iommu_replay() when replaying IOMMU mappings on added
IOMMU memory region.
Backports the relevant parts of commit f682e9c244af7166225f4a50cc18ff296bb9d43e from qemu
Information is tracked inside the TCGContext structure, and later used
by tracing events with the 'tcg' and 'vcpu' properties.
The 'cpu' field is used to check tracing of translation-time
events ("*_trans"). The 'tcg_env' field is used to pass it to
execution-time events ("*_exec").
Backports commit 7c2550432abe62f53e6df878ceba6ceaf71f0e7e from qemu
This patch simplifies code that uses a local_err variable just to
immediately use it for an error_propagate() call.
Coccinelle patch used to perform the changes added to
scripts/coccinelle/remove_local_err.cocci.
Backports commit 6b62d961373e0327f2af8fb77d6d5d6308864180 from qemu
The GICv3 CPU interface needs to know when the CPU it is attached
to makes an exception level or mode transition that changes the
security state, because whether it is asserting IRQ or FIQ can change
depending on these things. Provide a mechanism for letting the GICv3
device register a hook to be called on such changes.
Backports commit bd7d00fc50c9960876dd194ebf0c88889b53e765 from qemu
The GICv3 system registers need to know if the CPU is AArch64
in EL3 or AArch32 in Monitor mode. This happens to be the first
part of the check for arm_is_secure(), so factor it out into a
new arm_is_el3_or_mon() function that the GIC can also use.
Backports commit 712058764da29b2908f6fbf56760ca4f15980709 from qemu
A half-shuffle operation takes a word with zeros in the high half:
0000 0000 0000 0000 ABCD EFGH IJKL MNOP
and spreads the bits out so they are in every other bit of the word:
0A0B 0C0D 0E0F 0G0H 0I0J 0K0L 0M0N 0O0P
A half-unshuffle performs the reverse operation.
Provide functions in bitops.h which implement these operations
for 32-bit and 64-bit inputs, and add tests for them.
Backports commit b355438de52d0782983bf4bdc47936189a0c988b from qemu