Do not assume that EL2 is available in and only in non-secure context.
That equivalence is broken by ARMv8.4-SEL2.
Backports e6ef0169264b00cce552404f689ce137018ff290
The crypto overhead of emulating pauth can be significant for
some workloads. Add two boolean properties that allows the
feature to be turned off, on with the architected algorithm,
or on with an implementation defined algorithm.
We need two intermediate booleans to control the state while
parsing properties lest we clobber ID_AA64ISAR1 into an invalid
intermediate state.
Backports relevent members from eb94284d0812b4e7c11c5d075b584100ac1c1b9a
Without hardware acceleration, a cryptographically strong
algorithm is too expensive for pauth_computepac.
Even with hardware accel, we are not currently expecting
to link the linux-user binaries to any crypto libraries,
and doing so would generally make the --static build fail.
So choose XXH64 as a reasonably quick and decent hash.
Backports 283fc52ade85eb50141f3b8b85f82b07d016cb17
When FEAT_MTE is implemented, the AArch64 view of CTR_EL0 adds the
TminLine field in bits [37:32].
Extend the ctr field to be able to hold this context.
Backports a5fd319ae7f6d496ff5448ec1dedcae8e2f59e9f
The AArch64 view of CLIDR_EL1 extends the ICB field to include also bit
32, as well as adding a Ttype<n> field when FEAT_MTE is implemented.
Extend the clidr field to be able to hold this context.
Backports f6450bcb6b2d3e4beae77141edce9e99cb8c277e
For v8.1M the architecture mandates that CPUs must provide at
least the "minimal RAS implementation" from the Reliability,
Availability and Serviceability extension. This consists of:
* an ESB instruction which is a NOP
-- since it is in the HINT space we need only add a comment
* an RFSR register which will RAZ/WI
* a RAZ/WI AIRCR.IESB bit
-- the code which handles writes to AIRCR does not allow setting
of RES0 bits, so we already treat this as RAZ/WI; add a comment
noting that this is deliberate
* minimal implementation of the RAS register block at 0xe0005000
-- this will be in a subsequent commit
* setting the ID_PFR0.RAS field to 0b0010
-- we will do this when we add the Cortex-M55 CPU model
Backports 46f4976f22a4549322307b34272e053d38653243
v8.1M introduces a new TRD flag in the CCR register, which enables
checking for stack frame integrity signatures on SG instructions.
Add the code in the SG insn implementation for the new behaviour.
Backports 7f484147369080d36c411c4ba969f90d025aed55
v8.1M defines a new FP system register FPSCR_nzcvqc; this behaves
like the existing FPSCR, except that it reads and writes only bits
[31:27] of the FPSCR (the N, Z, C, V and QC flag bits). (Unlike the
FPSCR, the special case for Rt=15 of writing the CPSR.NZCV is not
permitted.)
Implement the register. Since we don't yet implement MVE, we handle
the QC bit as RES0, with todo comments for where we will need to add
support later.
Backports 9542c30bcf13c495400d63616dd8dfa825b04685
Currently M-profile borrows the A-profile code for VMSR and VMRS
(access to the FP system registers), because all it needs to support
is the FPSCR. In v8.1M things become significantly more complicated
in two ways:
* there are several new FP system registers; some have side effects
on read, and one (FPCXT_NS) needs to avoid the usual
vfp_access_check() and the "only if FPU implemented" check
* all sysregs are now accessible both by VMRS/VMSR (which
reads/writes a general purpose register) and also by VLDR/VSTR
(which reads/writes them directly to memory)
Refactor the structure of how we handle VMSR/VMRS to cope with this:
* keep the M-profile code entirely separate from the A-profile code
* abstract out the "read or write the general purpose register" part
of the code into a loadfn or storefn function pointer, so we can
reuse it for VLDR/VSTR.
Backports 32a290b8c3c2dc85cd88bd8983baf900d575cab
Implement the v8.1M VSCCLRM insn, which zeros floating point
registers if there is an active floating point context.
This requires support in write_neon_element32() for the MO_32
element size, so add it.
Because we want to use arm_gen_condlabel(), we need to move
the definition of that function up in translate.c so it is
before the #include of translate-vfp.c.inc.
Backports 83ff3d6add965c9752324de11eac5687121ea826
There is no "version 2" of the "Lesser" General Public License.
It is either "GPL version 2.0" or "Lesser GPL version 2.1".
This patch replaces all occurrences of "Lesser GPL version 2" with
"Lesser GPL version 2.1" in comment section.
Backports 50f57e09fda4b7ffbc5ba62aad6cebf660824023
If the M-profile low-overhead-branch extension is implemented, FPSCR
bits [18:16] are a new field LTPSIZE. If MVE is not implemented
(currently always true for us) then this field always reads as 4 and
ignores writes.
These bits used to be the vector-length field for the old
short-vector extension, so we need to take care that they are not
misinterpreted as setting vec_len. We do this with a rearrangement
of the vfp_set_fpscr() code that deals with vec_len, vec_stride
and also the QC bit; this obviates the need for the M-profile
only masking step that we used to have at the start of the function.
We provide a new field in CPUState for LTPSIZE, even though this
will always be 4, in preparation for MVE, so we don't have to
come back later and split it out of the vfp.xregs[FPSCR] value.
(This state struct field will be saved and restored as part of
the FPSCR value via the vmstate_fpscr in machine.c.)
Backports 8128c8e8cc9489a8387c74075974f86dc0222e7f
v8.1M implements a new 'branch future' feature, which is a
set of instructions that request the CPU to perform a branch
"in the future", when it reaches a particular execution address.
In hardware, the expected implementation is that the information
about the branch location and destination is cached and then
acted upon when execution reaches the specified address.
However the architecture permits an implementation to discard
this cached information at any point, and so guest code must
always include a normal branch insn at the branch point as
a fallback. In particular, an implementation is specifically
permitted to treat all BF insns as NOPs (which is equivalent
to discarding the cached information immediately).
For QEMU, implementing this caching of branch information
would be complicated and would not improve the speed of
execution at all, so we make the IMPDEF choice to implement
all BF insns as NOPs.
Backports commit 05903f036edba8e3ed940cc215b8e27fb49265b9
From v8.1M, disabled-coprocessor handling changes slightly:
* coprocessors 8, 9, 14 and 15 are also governed by the
cp10 enable bit, like cp11
* an extra range of instruction patterns is considered
to be inside the coprocessor space
We previously marked these up with TODO comments; implement the
correct behaviour.
Unfortunately there is no ID register field which indicates this
behaviour. We could in theory test an unrelated ID register which
indicates guaranteed-to-be-in-v8.1M behaviour like ID_ISAR0.CmpBranch
>= 3 (low-overhead-loops), but it seems better to simply define a new
ARM_FEATURE_V8_1M feature flag and use it for this and other
new-in-v8.1M behaviour that isn't identifiable from the ID registers.
Backports commit 5d2555a1fe7370feeb1efbbf276a653040910017
The M-profile definition of the MVFR1 ID register differs slightly
from the A-profile one, and in particular the check for "does the CPU
support fp16 arithmetic" is not the same.
We don't currently implement any M-profile CPUs with fp16 arithmetic,
so this is not yet a visible bug, but correcting the logic now
disarms this beartrap for when we eventually do.
Backports commit dfc523a84b06b6a4b583ed4c29d24fd980dd37a0
Move the id_pfr0 and id_pfr1 fields into the ARMISARegisters
sub-struct. We're going to want id_pfr1 for an isar_features
check, and moving both at the same time avoids an odd
inconsistency.
Changes other than the ones to cpu.h and kvm64.c made
automatically with:
perl -p -i -e 's/cpu->id_pfr/cpu->isar.id_pfr/' target/arm/*.c hw/intc/armv7m_nvic.c
Backports commit 8a130a7be6e222965641e1fd9469fd3ee752c7d4
The ARM_FEATURE_PXN bit indicates whether the CPU supports the PXN
bit in short-descriptor translation table format descriptors. This
is indicated by ID_MMFR0.VMSA being at least 0b0100. Replace the
feature bit with an ID register check, in line with our preference
for ID register checks over feature bits.
Backports commit 0ae0326b984e77a55c224b7863071bd3d8951231
The aa32_fp16_arith feature check function currently looks at the
AArch64 ID_AA64PFR0 register. This is (as the comment notes) not
correct. The bogus check was put in mostly to allow testing of the
fp16 variants of the VCMLA instructions and it was something of
a mistake that we allowed them to exist in master.
Switch the feature check function to testing VMFR1.FPHP, which is
what it ought to be.
This will remove emulation of the VCMLA and VCADD insns from
AArch32 code running on an AArch64 '-cpu max' using system emulation.
(They were never enabled for aarch32 linux-user and system-emulation.)
Since we weren't advertising their existence via the AArch32 ID
register, well-behaved guests wouldn't have been using them anyway.
Once we have implemented all the AArch32 support for the FP16 extension
we will advertise it in the MVFR1 ID register field, which will reenable
these insns along with all the others.
Backports 02bc236d0131a666d4ac2bb7197bbad2897c336a
Architecturally, Neon FP16 operations use the "standard FPSCR" like
all other Neon operations. However, this is defined in the Arm ARM
pseudocode as "a fixed value, except that FZ16 (and AHP) follow the
FPSCR bits". In QEMU, the softfloat float_status doesn't include
separate flush-to-zero for FP16 operations, so we must keep separate
fp_status for "Neon non-FP16" and "Neon fp16" operations, in the
same way we do already for the non-Neon "fp_status" vs "fp_status_f16".
Add the extra float_status field to the CPU state structure,
ensure it is correctly initialized and updated on FPSCR writes,
and make fpstatus_ptr(FPST_STD_F16) return a pointer to it.
Backports commit aaae563bc73de0598bbc09a102e68f27fafe704a
In commit 962fcbf2efe57231a9f5df we converted the uses of the
ARM_FEATURE_CRC bit to use the aa32_crc32 isar_feature test
instead. However we forgot to remove the now-unused definition
of the feature name in the enum. Delete it now.
Backports commit cf6303d262e31f4812dfeb654c6c6803e52000af
Because the elements are sequential, we can eliminate many tests all
at once when the tag hits TCMA, or if the page(s) are not Tagged.
Backports commit 206adacfb8d35e671e3619591608c475aa046b63 from qemu
Cache the composite ATA setting.
Cache when MTE is fully enabled, i.e. access to tags are enabled
and tag checks affect the PE. Do this for both the normal context
and the UNPRIV context.
Backports commit 81ae05fa2d21ac1a0054935b74342aa38a5ecef7 from qemu
This is TFSRE0_EL1, TFSR_EL1, TFSR_EL2, TFSR_EL3,
RGSR_EL1, GCR_EL1, GMID_EL1, and PSTATE.TCO.
Backports commit 4b779cebb3e5ab30b945181f1ba3932f5f8a1cb5 from qemu
Using the MSR instruction to write to CPSR.E is deprecated, but it is
required to work from any mode including unprivileged code. We were
incorrectly forbidding usermode code from writing it because
CPSR_USER did not include the CPSR_E bit.
We use CPSR_USER in only three places:
* as the mask of what to allow userspace MSR to write to CPSR
* when deciding what bits a linux-user signal-return should be
able to write from the sigcontext structure
* in target_user_copy_regs() when we set up the initial
registers for the linux-user process
In the first two cases not being able to update CPSR.E is a bug, and
in the third case it doesn't matter because CPSR.E is always 0 there.
So we can fix both bugs by adding CPSR_E to CPSR_USER.
Because the cpsr_write() in restore_sigcontext() is now changing
a CPSR bit which is cached in hflags, we need to add an
arm_rebuild_hflags() call there; the callsite in
target_user_copy_regs() was already rebuilding hflags for other
reasons.
(The recommended way to change CPSR.E is to use the 'SETEND'
instruction, which we do correctly allow from usermode code.)
Backports commit 268b1b3dfbb92a9348406f728a33f39e3d8dcd8a from qemu
Move the common set_feature() and unset_feature() functions
from cpu.c and cpu64.c to cpu.h.
Backports commit 5fda95041d7237ab35733ceb66e0cb89f6107169 from qemu
MIDR_EL1 is a 64-bit system register with the top 32-bit being RES0.
Represent it in QEMU's ARMCPU struct with a uint64_t, not a
uint32_t.
This fixes an error when compiling with -Werror=conversion
because we were manipulating the register value using a
local uint64_t variable:
target/arm/cpu64.c: In function ‘aarch64_max_initfn’:
target/arm/cpu64.c:628:21: error: conversion from ‘uint64_t’ {aka ‘long unsigned int’} to ‘uint32_t’ {aka ‘unsigned int’} may change value [-Werror=conversion]
628 | cpu->midr = t;
| ^
and future-proofs us against a possible future architecture
change using some of the top 32 bits.
Backports commit e544f80030121040c8932ff1bd4006f390266c0f from qemu
The ARMv8.2-TTS2UXN feature extends the XN field in stage 2
translation table descriptors from just bit [54] to bits [54:53],
allowing stage 2 to control execution permissions separately for EL0
and EL1. Implement the new semantics of the XN field and enable
the feature for our 'max' CPU.
Backports commit ce3125bed935a12e619a8253c19340ecaa899347 from qemu
We define ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 as being an MMU index which uses a QEMU
TLB. However we never actually use the TLB -- all stage 2 lookups
are done by direct calls to get_phys_addr_lpae() followed by a
physical address load via address_space_ld*().
Remove Stage2 from the list of ARM MMU indexes which correspond to
real core MMU indexes, and instead put it in the set of "NOTLB" ARM
MMU indexes.
This allows us to drop NB_MMU_MODES to 11. It also means we can
safely add support for the ARMv8.3-TTS2UXN extension, which adds
permission bits to the stage 2 descriptors which define execute
permission separatel for EL0 and EL1; supporting that while keeping
Stage2 in a QEMU TLB would require us to use separate TLBs for
"Stage2 for an EL0 access" and "Stage2 for an EL1 access", which is a
lot of extra complication given we aren't even using the QEMU TLB.
In the process of updating the comment on our MMU index use,
fix a couple of other minor errors:
* NS EL2 EL2&0 was missing from the list in the comment
* some text hadn't been updated from when we bumped NB_MMU_MODES
above 8
Backports commit bf05340cb655637451162c02dadcd6581a05c02c from qemu
The ARMv8.3-CCIDX extension makes the CCSIDR_EL1 system ID registers
have a format that uses the full 64 bit width of the register, and
adds a new CCSIDR2 register so AArch32 can get at the high 32 bits.
QEMU doesn't implement caches, so we just treat these ID registers as
opaque values that are set to the correct constant values for each
CPU. The only thing we need to do is allow 64-bit values in our
cssidr[] array and provide the CCSIDR2 accessors.
We don't set the CCIDX field in our 'max' CPU because the CCSIDR
constant values we use are the same as the ones used by the
Cortex-A57 and they are in the old 32-bit format. This means
that the extra regdef added here is unused currently, but it
means that whenever in the future we add a CPU that does need
the new 64-bit format it will just work when we set the cssidr
values and the ID registers for it.
Backports commit 957e615503bd0de22393fd8dbcb22a5064fd2b5c from qemu
The v8.4-RCPC extension implements some new instructions:
* LDAPUR, LDAPURB, LDAPURH, LDAPRSB, LDAPRSH, LDAPRSW
* STLUR, STLURB, STLURH
These are all in a new subgroup of encodings that sits below the
top-level "Loads and Stores" group in the Arm ARM.
The STLUR* instructions have standard store-release semantics; the
LDAPUR* have Load-AcquirePC semantics, but (as with LDAPR*) we choose
to implement them as the slightly stronger Load-Acquire.
Backports commit a1229109dec4375259d3fff99f362405aab7917a from qemu
The v8.3-RCPC extension implements three new load instructions
which provide slightly weaker consistency guarantees than the
existing load-acquire operations. For QEMU we choose to simply
implement them with a full LDAQ barrier.
Backports commit 2677cf9f92a5319bb995927f9225940414ce879d from qemu
We missed an instance of using FIELD_EX32 on a 64-bit ID
register, in isar_feature_aa64_pmu_8_4(). Fix it.
Backports commit 54117b90ffd8a3977917971c3bd99bb5242710d9 from qemu.
All remaining tests for VFP4 are for fused multiply-add insns.
Since the MVFR1 field is used for both VFP and NEON, move its adjustment
from the !has_neon block to the (!has_vfp && !has_neon) block.
Test for vfp of the appropraite width alongside the test for simdfmac
within translate-vfp.inc.c. Within disas_neon_data_insn, we have
already tested for ARM_FEATURE_NEON.
Backports commit c52881bbc22b50db99a6c37171ad3eea7d959ae6 from qemu
We cannot easily create "any" functions for these, because the
ID_AA64PFR0 fields for FP and SIMD signal "enabled" with zero.
Which means that an aarch32-only cpu will return incorrect results
when testing the aarch64 registers.
To use these, we must either have context or additionally test
vs ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64.
Backports commit 7d63183ff1a61b3f7934dc9b40b10e4fd5e100cd from qemu
The old name, isar_feature_aa32_fpdp, does not reflect
that the test includes VFPv2. We will introduce another
feature tests for VFPv3.
Backports commit c4ff873583834c8275586914fff714e3ae65dee4 from qemu
Use this in the places that were checking ARM_FEATURE_VFP, and
are obviously testing for the existance of the register set
as opposed to testing for some particular instruction extension.
Backports commit 7fbc6a403a0aab834e764fa61d81ed8586cfe352 from qemu
The old name, isar_feature_aa32_fp_d32, does not reflect
the MVFR0 field name, SIMDReg.
Backports commit 0e13ba7889432c5e2f1bdb1b25e7076ca1b1dcba from qemu