Because we now store uint64_t in TCGTemp, we can now always
store the full 64-bit duplicate immediate. So remove the
difference between 32- and 64-bit hosts.
Backports 0b4286dd15e2bcaf2aa53dfac0fb3103690f5a34
Do not allocate a large block for indexing. Instead, allocate
for each temporary as they are seen.
In general, this will use less memory, if we consider that most
TBs do not touch every target register. This also allows us to
allocate TempOptInfo for new temps created during optimization.
Backports 8f17a975e60b773d7c366a81c0d9bbe304f30859
These will hold a single constant for the duration of the TB.
They are hashed, so that each value has one temp across the TB.
Not used yet, this is all infrastructure.
Backports c0522136adf550c7a0ef7c0755c1f9d1560d2757
This propagates the extended value of TCGTemp.val that we did before.
In addition, it will be required for vector constants.
Backports 54795544e4cfb2fa198f7ca244b5ea9eaad322d4
This will reduce the differences between 32-bit and 64-bit hosts,
allowing full 64-bit constants to be created with the same interface.
Backports bdb38b95f72ebbef2d24e057828dd18ba9c81f63
In most, but not all, places that we check for TEMP_FIXED,
we are really testing that we do not modify the temporary.
Backports e01fa97dea857a35be5bb8cce0d632a62e72c689
The temp_fixed, temp_global, temp_local bits are all related.
Combine them into a single enumeration.
Backports ee17db83d2dce35792e9bf03366af193e5e0e5c9
While we don't store more than tcg_target_long in TCGTemp,
we shouldn't be limited to that for code generation. We will
be able to use this for INDEX_op_dup2_vec with 2 constants.
Also pass along the minimal vece that may be said to apply
to the constant. This allows some simplification in the
various backends.
Backports 4e18617555955503628a004ed97e1fc2fa7818b9
In commit cd8be50e58f63413c0 we converted the A32 coprocessor
insns to decodetree. This accidentally broke XScale/iWMMXt insns,
because it moved the handling of "cp insns which are handled
by looking up the cp register in the hashtable" from after the
call to the legacy disas_xscale_insn() decode to before it,
with the result that all XScale/iWMMXt insns now UNDEF.
Update valid_cp() so that it knows that on XScale cp 0 and 1
are not standard coprocessor instructions; this will cause
the decodetree trans_ functions to ignore them, so that
execution will correctly get through to the legacy decode again.
Backports e4d51ac6921dc861bfb3d20e4c7dcf345840a9da
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
Now that we have implemented all the features needed by the v8.1M
architecture, we can add the model of the Cortex-M55. This is the
configuration without MVE support; we'll add MVE later
Backports 590e05d6b48937f6d3c631354fd706f8e005b8f6
Implement the v8.1M FPCXT_NS floating-point system register. This is
a little more complicated than FPCXT_S, because it has specific
handling for "current FP state is inactive", and it only wants to do
PreserveFPState(), not the full set of actions done by
ExecuteFPCheck() which vfp_access_check() implements.
Backports eb20dafdbff92063a88624176fdc396e01961bf3
In commit 64f863baeedc8659 we implemented the v8.1M FPCXT_S register,
but we got the write behaviour wrong. On read, this register reads
bits [27:0] of FPSCR plus the CONTROL.SFPA bit. On write, it doesn't
just write back those bits -- it writes a value to the whole FPSCR,
whose upper 4 bits are zeroes.
We also incorrectly implemented the write-to-FPSCR as a simple store
to vfp.xregs; this skips the "update the softfloat flags" part of
the vfp_set_fpscr helper so the value would read back correctly but
not actually take effect.
Fix both of these things by doing a complete write to the FPSCR
using the helper function.
Backports 7fbf95a037d79c5e923ffb51ac902dbe9599c87f
In 50244cc76abc we updated mte_check_fail to match the ARM
pseudocode, using the correct EL to select the TCF field.
But we failed to update MTE0_ACTIVE the same way, which led
to g_assert_not_reached().
Backports cc97b0019bb590b9b3c2a623e9ebee48831e0ce3
Enable this on i386 to restrict the set of input registers
for an 8-bit store, as required by the architecture. This
removes the last use of scratch registers for user-only mode.
Backports 07ce0b05300de5bc8f1932a4cfbe38f3323e5ab1
When the 'int N' instruction is executed in protected mode, the
pseudocode in the architecture manual specifies that we need to check:
* vector number within IDT limits
* selected IDT descriptor is a valid type (interrupt, trap or task gate)
* if this was a software interrupt then gate DPL < CPL
The way we had structured the code meant that the privilege check for
software interrupts ended up not in the code path taken for task gate
handling, because all of the task gate handling code was in the 'case 5'
of the switch which was checking "is this descriptor a valid type".
Move the task gate handling code out of that switch (so that it is now
purely doing the "valid type?" check) and below the software interrupt
privilege check.
The effect of this missing check was that in a guest userspace binary
executing 'int 8' would cause a guest kernel panic rather than the
userspace binary being handed a SEGV.
This is essentially the same bug fixed in VirtualBox in 2012:
https://www.halfdog.net/Security/2012/VirtualBoxSoftwareInterrupt0x8GuestCrash/
Note that for QEMU this is not a security issue because it is only
present when using TCG.
Backports 3df1a3d070575419859cbbab1083fafa7ec2669a
The alias is intended to indicate that the bswap is for the
entire target_long. This should avoid ifdefs on some targets.
Backports a66424ba17d661007dc13d78c9e3014ccbaf0efb
In f47db80cc07, we handled odd-sized tail clearing for
the case of hosts that have vector operations, but did
not handle the case of hosts that do not have vector ops.
This was ok until e2e7168a214b, which changed the encoding
of simd_desc such that the odd sizes are impossible.
Add memset as a tcg helper, and use that for all out-of-line
byte stores to vectors. This includes, but is not limited to,
the tail clearing operation in question.
Backports 6d3ef04893bdea3e7aa08be3cce5141902836a31
To be able to compile this file with -Werror=implicit-fallthrough,
we need to add some fallthrough annotations to the case statements
that might fall through. Unfortunately, the typical "/* fallthrough */"
comments do not work here as expected since some case labels are
wrapped in macros and the compiler fails to match the comments in
this case. But using __attribute__((fallthrough)) seems to work fine,
so let's use that instead (by introducing a new QEMU_FALLTHROUGH
macro in our compiler.h header file).
Backports d84568b773fe1fc469c4d8419c3545be52eec82c
Since commit efc6c07 ("configure: Add a test for the minimum compiler
version"), QEMU explicitely depends on GCC >= 4.8.
(clang >= 3.4 advertizes itself as GCC >= 4.2 compatible and supports
__builtin_expect too)
Backports 44cb2c9fe5dd2aa8b44eb42f34ec786ba21a2731
Since commit efc6c070aca ("configure: Add a test for the
minimum compiler version") the minimum compiler version
required for GCC is 4.8.
We can safely remove the special case for GCC 4.6 introduced
in commit 0448f5f8b81 ("cpu-exec: Fix compiler warning
(-Werror=clobbered)").
No change for Clang as we don't know.
Backports 19a84318c674c157f1b04c5c99595379f8ac8bb3
I found that there are many spelling errors in the comments of qemu/target/m68k.
I used spellcheck to check the spelling errors and found some errors in the folder.
Backports ce00ff729ee8461dc94a1593d25ceda65d973d3c
Per the SDM, when returning to outer privilege level, for segment
registers (ES, FS, GS, and DS) if the check fails, the segment
selector becomes null, but QEMU clears the base/limit/flags as well
as nullifying the segment selector, which should be a spec violation.
Real hardware seems to be compliant with the spec, at least on one
Coffee Lake board I tested.
Backports c2ba0515f2df58a661fcb5d6485139877d92ab1b
For PDEP and PEXT, the mask is provided in the memory (mod+r/m)
operand, and therefore is loaded in s->T0 by gen_ldst_modrm.
The source is provided in the second source operand (VEX.vvvv)
and therefore is loaded in s->T1. Fix the order in which
they are passed to the helpers.
Backports 75b208c28316095c4685e8596ceb9e3f656592e2
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 adds new encodings of VLLDM and VLSTM (where bit 7 is set).
The only difference is that:
* the old T1 encodings UNDEF if the implementation implements 32
Dregs (this is currently architecturally impossible for M-profile)
* the new T2 encodings have the implementation-defined option to
read from memory (discarding the data) or write UNKNOWN values to
memory for the stack slots that would be D16-D31
We choose not to make those accesses, so for us the two
instructions behave identically assuming they don't UNDEF.
Backports fe6fa228a71f0eb8b8ee315452e6a7736c537b1f
In v8.1M a new exception return check is added which may cause a NOCP
UsageFault (see rule R_XLTP): before we clear s0..s15 and the FPSCR
we must check whether access to CP10 from the Security state of the
returning exception is disabled; if it is then we must take a fault.
(Note that for our implementation CPPWR is always RAZ/WI and so can
never cause CP10 accesses to fail.)
The other v8.1M change to this register-clearing code is that if MVE
is implemented VPR must also be cleared, so add a TODO comment to
that effect.
Backports 3423fbf10427db7680d3237d4f62d8370052fca0
In v8.0M, on exception entry the registers R0-R3, R12, APSR and EPSR
are zeroed for an exception taken to Non-secure state; for an
exception taken to Secure state they become UNKNOWN, and we chose to
leave them at their previous values.
In v8.1M the behaviour is specified more tightly and these registers
are always zeroed regardless of the security state that the exception
targets (see rule R_KPZV). Implement this.
Backports a59b1ed618415212c5f0f05abc1192e14ad5fdbb
Implement the new-in-v8.1M FPCXT_S floating point system register.
This is for saving and restoring the secure floating point context,
and it reads and writes bits [27:0] from the FPSCR and the
CONTROL.SFPA bit in bit [31].
Backports 64f863baeedc86590a608e2f1722dd8640aa9431
Factor out the code which handles M-profile lazy FP state preservation
from full_vfp_access_check(); accesses to the FPCXT_NS register are
a special case which need to do just this part (corresponding in the
pseudocode to the PreserveFPState() function), and not the full
set of actions matching the pseudocode ExecuteFPCheck() which
normal FP instructions need to do.
Backports 96dfae686628fc14ba4f993824322b93395e221b
We defined a constant name for the mask of NZCV bits in the FPCR/FPSCR
in the previous commit; use it in a couple of places in existing code,
where we're masking out everything except NZCV for the "load to Rt=15
sets CPSR.NZCV" special case.
Backports 6a017acdf83e3bb6bd5e85289ca90b2ea3282b7e