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
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
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
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
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
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
The Neon instructions VCVTA, VCVTM, VCVTN, VCVTP, VRINTA, VRINTM,
VRINTN, VRINTP, VRINTX, and VRINTZ were only introduced with ARMv8,
so they need a guard to make them UNDEF if the CPU only supports ARMv7.
(We got this right for all the other new-in-v8 insns, but forgot
it for these Neon 2-reg-misc ops.)
Backports commit fe8fcf3d642b4de1369841bf6acac13e0ec8770d from qemu
Add support for generating the ISS (Instruction Specific Syndrome) for
Data Abort exceptions taken from AArch64.
These syndromes are used by hypervisors for example to trap and emulate
memory accesses.
We save the decoded data out-of-band with the TBs at translation time.
When exceptions hit, the extra data attached to the TB is used to
recreate the state needed to encode instruction syndromes.
This avoids the need to emit moves with every load/store.
Based on a suggestion from Peter Maydell.
Backports commit aaa1f954d4cab243e3d5337a72bc6d104e1c4808 from qemu
exec-all.h contains TCG-specific definitions. It is not needed outside
TCG-specific files such as translate.c, exec.c or *helper.c.
One generic function had snuck into include/exec/exec-all.h; move it to
include/qom/cpu.h.
Backports commit 63c915526d6a54a95919ebece83fa9ca631b2508 from qemu
In user mode, there's only a static address translation, TBs are always
invalidated properly and direct jumps are reset when mapping change.
Thus the destination address is always valid for direct jumps and
there's no need to restrict it to the pages the TB resides in.
Backports commit 90aa39a1cc4837360889f0e033ca25cc82100308 from qemu
We don't take care of direct jumps when address mapping changes. Thus we
must be sure to generate direct jumps so that they always keep valid
even if address mapping changes. Luckily, we can only allow to execute a
TB if it was generated from the pages which match with current mapping.
Document tcg_gen_goto_tb() declaration and note the reason for
destination PC limitations.
Some targets with variable length instructions allow TB to straddle a
page boundary. However, we make sure that both of TB pages match the
current address mapping when looking up TBs. So it is safe to do direct
jumps into the both pages. Correct the checks for some of those targets.
Given that, we can safely patch a TB which spans two pages. Remove the
unnecessary check in cpu_exec() and allow such TBs to be patched.
Backports commit 5b053a4a28278bca606eeff7d1c0730df1b047e9 from qemu
Starting with the ARMv7 Virtualization Extensions, the A32 and T32
instruction sets provide instructions "MSR (banked)" and "MRS
(banked)" which can be used to access registers for a mode other
than the current one:
* R<m>_<mode>
* ELR_hyp
* SPSR_<mode>
Implement the missing instructions.
Backports commit 8bfd0550be821cf27d71444e2af350de3c3d2ee3 from qemu
Commit cbc0326b6fb9 caused SRS instructions executed from Secure
EL1 to trap to EL3 even if the specified mode was not monitor mode.
According to the ARMv8 Architecture reference manual [F6.1.203], ALL
of the following conditions need to be met for SRS to trap to EL3:
* It is executed at Secure PL1.
* The specified mode is monitor mode.
* EL3 is using AArch64.
Correct the condition governing the trap to EL3 to check the
specified mode.
Backports commit ba63cf47a93041137a94e86b7d0cd87fc896949b from qemu
System emulation only has a little-endian target; BE32 mode
is implemented by adjusting the low bits of the address
for every byte and halfword load and store. 64-bit accesses
flip the low and high words.
Backports commit e334bd3190f6c4ca12f1d40d316dc471c70009ab from qemu
Since this is not a high-performance path, just use a helper to
flip the E bit and force a lookup in the hash table since the
flags have changed.
Backports commit 9886ecdf31165de2d4b8bccc1a220bd6ac8bc192 from qemu
Introduce a tbflags for endianness, set based upon the CPUs current
endianness. This in turn propagates through to the disas endianness
flag.
Backports commit 91cca2cda9823b1e7a049cb308a05104b5076cba from qemu
Introduce a disas flag for setting the CPU data endianness. This allows
control of the endianness from the CPU state rather than hard-coding it
to TARGET_WORDS_BIGENDIAN.
Backports commit dacf0a2ff7d39ab12bd90f2f5496a3889facd54a from qemu
bswap_code is a CPU property of sorts ("is the iside endianness the
opposite way round to TARGET_WORDS_BIGENDIAN?") but it is not the
actual CPU state involved here which is SCTLR.B (set for BE32
binaries, clear for BE8).
Replace bswap_code with SCTLR.B, and pass that to arm_ld*_code.
The next patches will make data fetches honor both SCTLR.B and
CPSR.E appropriately.
Backports commit f9fd40ebe4f55e0048e002925b8d65e66d56e7a7 from qemu
The rules for setting the CPSR on a 32-bit exception return are
subtly different from those for setting the CPSR via an instruction
like MSR or CPS. (In particular, in Hyp mode changing the mode bits
is not valid via MSR or CPS.) Split the exception-return case into
its own helper for setting CPSR, so we can eventually handle them
differently in the helper function.
Backports commit 235ea1f5c89abf30e452539b973b0dbe43d3fe2b from qemu
Make get_r13_banked() raise an exception at runtime for the
corner case of SRS from System mode, so that we can UNDEF it;
this brings us in to line with the ARM ARM's set of permitted
CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE choices.
Backports commit f01377f591fe15c652f947646c4a69a7d4a71ad9 from qemu
The SRS instruction is:
* UNDEFINED in Hyp mode
* UNPREDICTABLE in User or System mode
* UNPREDICTABLE if the specified mode isn't accessible
* trapped to EL3 if EL3 is AArch64 and we are at Secure EL1
Clean up the code to handle all these cases cleanly, including
picking UNDEF as our choice of UNPREDICTABLE behaviour rather
blindly trusting the mode field passed in the instruction.
As part of this, move the check for IS_USER into gen_srs()
itself rather than having it done by the caller.
The exception is that we don't UNDEF for calls from System
mode, which need a runtime check. This will be dealt with in
the following commits.
Backports commit cbc0326b6fb905f80b7cef85b24571f7ebb62077 from qemu
All Thumb Neon and VFP instructions are 32 bits, so the IL
bit in the syndrome register should be set. Pass false to the
syn_* function's is_16bit argument rather than s->thumb
so we report the correct IL bit.
Backports commit 7d197d2db5e99e4c8b20f6771ddc7303acaa1c89 from qemu
All Thumb coprocessor instructions are 32 bits, so the IL
bit in the syndrome register should be set. Pass false to the
syn_* function's is_16bit argument rather than s->thumb
so we report the correct IL bit.
Backports commit 4df322593037d2700f72dfdfb967300b7ad2e696 from qemu
System registers might have access requirements which need to
be described via a CPAccessFn and which differ for reads and
writes. For this to be possible we need to pass the access
function a parameter to tell it whether the access being checked
is a read or a write.
Backports commit 3f208fd76bcc91a8506681bb8472f2398fe6f487 from qemu
Clean up includes so that osdep.h is included first and headers
which it implies are not included manually.
This commit was created with scripts/clean-includes.
Backports commit 74c21bd07491739c6e56bcb1f962e4df730e77f3 from qemu
Qemu does not generally perform alignment checks. However, the ARM ARM
requires implementation of alignment exceptions for a number of cases
including LDREX, and Windows-on-ARM relies on this.
This change adds plumbing to enable alignment checks on loads using
MO_ALIGN, a do_unaligned_access hook to raise the exception (data
abort), and uses the new aligned loads in LDREX (for all but
single-byte loads).
Backports commit 30901475b91ef1f46304404ab4bfe89097f61b96 from qemu
Architectural breakpoint check could raise an exceptions, thus condexec
bits should be updated before calling gen_helper_check_breakpoints().
Backports commit ce8a1b5449cd8c4c2831abb581d3208c3a3745a0 from qemu
Coprocessor access instructions are allowed inside IT block.
gen_helper_access_check_cp_reg() can raise an exceptions thus condexec
bits should be updated before.
Backports commit 43bfa4a100687af8d293fef0a197839b51400fca from qemu
AArch32 translation code does not distinguish between DISAS_UPDATE and
DISAS_JUMP. Thus, we cannot use any of them without first updating PC in
CPU state. Furthermore, it is too complicated to update PC in CPU state
before PC gets updated in disas context. So it is hardly possible to
correctly end TB early if is is not likely to be executed before calling
disas_*_insn(), e.g. just after calling breakpoint check helper.
Modify DISAS_UPDATE and DISAS_JUMP usage in AArch32 translation and
apply to them the same semantic as AArch64 translation does:
- DISAS_UPDATE: update PC in CPU state when finishing translation
- DISAS_JUMP: preserve current PC value in CPU state when finishing
translation
This patch fixes a bug in AArch32 breakpoint handling: when
check_breakpoints helper does not generate an exception, ending the TB
early with DISAS_UPDATE couldn't update PC in CPU state and execution
hangs.
Backports commit 577bf808958d06497928c639efaa473bf8c5e099 from qemu
If this CPU supports EL3, enhance the printing of the current
CPU mode in debug logging to distinguish S from NS modes as
appropriate.
Backports commit 06e5cf7acd1f94ab7c1cd6945974a1f039672940 from qemu
Some targets already had this within their logic, but make sure
it's present for all targets.
Backports commit 522a0d4e3c0d397ffb45ec400d8cbd426dad9d17 from qemu
Reduce the boilerplate required for each target. At the same time,
move the test for breakpoint after calling tcg_gen_insn_start.
Note that arm and aarch64 do not use cpu_breakpoint_test, but still
move the inline test down after tcg_gen_insn_start.
Backports commit b933066ae03d924a92b2616b4a24e7d91cd5b841 from qemu
When the memory we're trying to translate code from is not executable we have
to turn this into a guest fault. In order to report the correct PC for this
fault, and to make sure it is not reported until after any other possible
faults for instructions earlier in execution, we must terminate TBs at
the end of a page, in case the next instruction is in a non-executable page.
This is simple for T16, A32 and A64 instructions, which are always aligned
to their size. However T32 instructions may be 32-bits but only 16-aligned,
so they can straddle a page boundary.
Correct the condition that checks whether the next instruction will touch
the following page, to ensure that if we're 2 bytes before the boundary
and this insn is T32 then we end the TB.
Backports commit 541ebcd401ee47f3c1a3ce503ef5466b75e9d20a from qemu
A QEMU breakpoint match is not definitely an architectural breakpoint
match. If an exception is generated unconditionally during translation,
it is hardly possible to ignore it in the debug exception handler.
Generate a call to a helper to check CPU breakpoints and raise an
exception only if any breakpoint matches architecturally.
Backports commit 5d98bf8f38c17a348ab6e8af196088cd4953acd0 from qemu
If any store instruction writes the code inside the same TB
after this store insn, the execution of the TB must be stopped
to execute new code correctly.
As described in ARMv8 manual D3.4.6 self-modifying code must do an
IC invalidation to be valid, and an ISB after it. So it's enough to end
the TB after ISB instruction on the code translation.
Also this TB break is necessary to take any pending interrupts immediately
after an ISB (as required by ARMv8 ARM D1.14.4).
Backports commit 6df99dec9e81838423d723996e96236693fa31fe from qemu
It is no longer used, so tidy up everything reached by it.
This includes the gen_opc_* arrays, the search_pc parameter
and the inline gen_intermediate_code_internal functions.
Backports commit 4e5e1215156662b2b153255c49d4640d82c5568b from qemu
The gen_opc_* arrays are already redundant with the data stored in
the insn_start arguments. Transition restore_state_to_opc to use
data from the latter.
Backports commit bad729e272387de7dbfa3ec4319036552fc6c107 from qemu
If EL3 is not supported in current configuration,
we should not try to get EL3 bitness.
Backports commit cef9ee706792b1e205fe472b67053a0e82cd058e from qemu
Implement the YIELD instruction in the ARM and Thumb translators to
actually yield control back to the top level loop rather than being
a simple no-op. (We already do this for A64.)
Backports commit c87e5a61c2b3024116f52f7e68273f864ff7ab82 from qemu
The architecture defines that when taking an exception trying to
access a coprocessor register, the "preferred return address" for
the exception is the address of the instruction that caused the
exception. Correct an off-by-4 error which meant we were returning
the address after the instruction for traps which happened because
of a failure of a runtime access-check function on an AArch32
register. (Traps caused by translate-time checkable permissions
failures had the correct address, as did traps on AArch64 registers.)
This fixes https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1463338
Backports commit 3977ee5d7a9f2e3664dd8b233f3224694e23b62b from qemu
Just NOP the WFI instruction if we have work to do.
This doesn't make much difference currently (though it does avoid
jumping out to the top level loop and immediately restarting),
but the distinction between "halt" and "don't halt" will become
more important when the decision to halt requires us to trap
to a higher exception level instead.
Backport commit 84549b6dcf9147559ec08b066de673587be6b763 from qemu
Extend the ARM disassemble context to take a target exception EL instead of a
boolean enable. This change reverses the polarity of the check making a value
of 0 indicate floating point enabled (no exception).
Backports commit 9dbbc748d671c70599101836cd1c2719d92f3017 from qemu
Add a CPU state exception target EL field that will be used for communicating
the EL to which an exception should be routed.
Add a disassembly context field for tracking the EL3 architecture needed for
determining the target exception EL.
Add a target EL argument to the generic exception helper for callers to specify
the EL to which the exception should be routed. Extended the helper to set
the newly added CPU state exception target el.
Added a function for setting the target exception EL and updated calls to helpers
to call it.
Backports commit 737103619869600668cc7e8700e4f6eab3943896 from qemu