This will allow TBI to be used in user-only mode, as well as
avoid ping-ponging the softmmu TLB when TBI is in use. It
will also enable other armv8 extensions.
Backports commit 3a471103ac1823bafc907962dcaf6bd4fc0942a2 from qemu
Split out gen_top_byte_ignore in preparation of handling these
data accesses; the new tbflags field is not yet honored.
Backports commit 4a9ee99db38ba513bf1e8f43665b79c60accd017 from qemu
The branch target exception for guarded pages has high priority,
and only 8 instructions are valid for that case. Perform this
check before doing any other decode.
Clear BTYPE after all insns that neither set BTYPE nor exit via
exception (DISAS_NORETURN).
Not yet handled are insns that exit via DISAS_NORETURN for some
other reason, like direct branches.
Backports commit 51bf0d7aa91a9d4e2563240a42e6cb705cef84aa from qemu
Caching the bit means that we will not have to re-walk the
page tables to look up the bit during translation.
Backports commit 1bafc2ba7e6bfe89fff3503fdac8db39c973de48 from qemu
Place this in its own field within ENV, as that will
make it easier to reset from within TCG generated code.
With the change to pstate_read/write, exception entry
and return are automatically handled.
Backports commit f6e52eaac13b6947f4406c127e3090c898e439c9 from qemu
A flawed test lead to the instructions always being treated as
unallocated encodings.
Fixes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1813460
Backports commit 1cf86a8618644beb860951ff4383457ee88a7f4a from qemu
Since QEMU does not support the ARMv8.2-LVA, Large Virtual Address,
extension (yet), the VA address space is 48-bits plus a sign bit. User
mode can only handle the positive half of the address space, so that
makes a limit of 48 bits.
(With LVA, it would be 53 and 52 bits respectively.)
The incorrectly large address space conflicts with PAuth instructions,
which use bits 48-54 and 56-63 for the pointer authentication code. This
also conflicts with (as yet unsupported by QEMU) data tagging and with
the ARMv8.5-MTE extension.
Backports commit f6768aa1b4c6a80448eabd22bb9b4123c709caea from qemu
Drop the pac properties. This approach cannot work as written
because the properties are applied before arm_cpu_reset, which
zeros SCTLR_EL1 (amongst everything else).
We can re-introduce the properties if they turn out to be useful.
But since linux 5.0 enables all of the keys, they may not be.
Backports commit 276c6e813719568bdc9743e87ff8f42115006206 from qemu
Until now, the set_pc logic was unclear, which raised questions about
whether it should be used directly, applying a value to PC or adding
additional checks, for example, set the Thumb bit in Arm cpu. Let's set
the set_pc logic for “Configure the PC, as was done in the ELF file”
and implement synchronize_with_tb hook for preserving PC to cpu_tb_exec.
Backports commit 42f6ed919325413392bea247a1e6f135deb469cd from qemu
Whenever we notice that a counter overflow has occurred, send an
interrupt. This is made more reliable with the addition of a timer in a
follow-on commit.
Backports commit f4efb4b2a17528837cb445f9bdfaef8df4a5acf7 from qemu
In disas_simd_indexed(), for the case of "complex fp", each indexable
element is a complex pair, so the total size is twice that indicated
in the 'size' field in the encoding. We were trying to do this
"double the size" operation with a left shift by 1, but this is
incorrect because the 'size' field is a MO_8/MO_16/MO_32/MO_64
value, and doubling the size should be done by a simple increment.
This meant we were mishandling FCMLA (by element) of values where
the real and imaginary parts are 32-bit floats, and would incorrectly
UNDEF this encoding. (No other insns take this code path, and for
16-bit floats it happens that 1 << 1 and 1 + 1 are both the same).
Backports commit eaefb97a8b97dbf42c016fe65b68b92f99a346f6 from qemu
The FCMLA (by element) instruction exists in the
"vector x indexed element" encoding group, but not in
the "scalar x indexed element" group. Correctly UNDEF
the unallocated encodings.
Backports commit 4dfabb6d568e6b315594d7d464dacaf3368aff60 from qemu
In the AdvSIMD scalar x indexed element and vector x indexed element
encoding group, the SDOT and UDOT instructions are vector only,
and their opcode is unallocated in the scalar group. Correctly
UNDEF this unallocated encoding.
Backports commit 4977986ca38fb1d5357532e1a8032b984047a369 from qemu
In the encoding groups
* floating-point data-processing (1 source)
* floating-point data-processing (2 source)
* floating-point data-processing (3 source)
* floating-point immediate
* floating-point compare
* floating-ponit conditional compare
* floating-point conditional select
bit 31 is M and bit 29 is S (and bit 30 is 0, already checked at
this point in the decode). None of these groups allocate any
encoding for M=1 or S=1. We checked this in disas_fp_compare(),
disas_fp_ccomp() and disas_fp_csel(), but missed it in disas_fp_1src(),
disas_fp_2src(), disas_fp_3src() and disas_fp_imm().
We also missed that in the fp immediate encoding the imm5 field
must be all zeroes.
Correctly UNDEF the unallocated encodings here.
Backports commit c1e20801f5ee53472dbf2757df605543f3f4ce0b from qemu
In the "add/subtract (extended register)" encoding group, the "opt"
field in bits [23:22] must be zero. Correctly UNDEF the unallocated
encodings where this field is not zero.
Backports commit 4f61106614410945b1d1c93081544ad5b13044fc from qemu
In the AdvSIMD load/store single structure encodings, the
non-post-indexed case should have zeroes in [20:16] (which is the
Rm field for the post-indexed case). Bit 31 must also be zero
(a check we got right in ldst_multiple but not here). Correctly
UNDEF these unallocated encodings.
Backports commit 9c72b68ad746a51f63822cffab4d144b5957823a from qemu
In the AdvSIMD load/store multiple structures encodings,
the non-post-indexed case should have zeroes in [20:16]
(which is the Rm field for the post-indexed case).
Correctly UNDEF the currently unallocated encodings which
have non-zeroes in those bits.
Backports commit e1f220811dbd5d85fb02ff286358f9ee6188938f from qemu
The PRFM prefetch insn in the load/store with imm9 encodings
requires idx field 0b00; we were underdecoding this by
only checking !is_unpriv (which is equivalent to idx != 2).
Correctly UNDEF the unallocated encodings where idx == 0b01
and 0b11 as well as 0b10.
Backports commit a80c4256543987ca88407349ee012a673a10a2ae from qemu
The "system instructions" and "system register move" subcategories
of "branches, exception generating and system instructions" for A64
only apply if bits [23:22] are zero; other values are currently
unallocated. Correctly UNDEF these unallocated encodings.
Backports commit 08d5e3bde6b4ad32996bf69d93aa66ae43d3f3ff from qemu
It's either "GNU *Library* General Public License version 2" or
"GNU Lesser General Public License version *2.1*", but there was
no "version 2.0" of the "Lesser" license. So assume that version
2.1 is meant here.
Also some files mention the GPL instead of the LGPL after declaring
that the files are licensed under the LGPL, so change these spots to
use LGPL, too.
Backports commit d749fb85bd35f2f175a4ed3d170561e4f54f7297 from qemu
Modern AMD CPUs support NPT and NRIPSAVE features and KVM exposes these
when present. NRIPSAVE apeared somewhere in Opteron_G3 lifetime (e.g.
QuadCore AMD Opteron 2378 has is but QuadCore AMD Opteron HE 2344 doesn't),
NPT was introduced a bit earlier.
Add the FEAT_SVM leaf to Opteron_G4/G5 and EPYC/EPYC-IBPB cpu models.
Backports commit 9fe8b7be17eaac4cfde4083000cc96747d7cf4f8 from qemu
Update the stepping from 5 to 6, in order that
the Cascadelake-Server CPU model can support AVX512VNNI
and MSR based features exposed by ARCH_CAPABILITIES.
Backports commit b0a1980384fc265d91de7e09aa5fe531a69e6288 from qemu
A bug was introduced during a respin of:
commit 57a4a11b2b281bb548b419ca81bfafb214e4c77a
target/arm: Add array for supported PMU events, generate PMCEID[01]_EL0
This patch introduced two calls to get_pmceid() during CPU
initialization - one each for PMCEID0 and PMCEID1. In addition to
building the register values, get_pmceid() clears an internal array
mapping event numbers to their implementations (supported_event_map)
before rebuilding it. This is an optimization since much of the logic is
shared. However, since it was called twice, the contents of
supported_event_map reflect only the events in PMCEID1 (the second call
to get_pmceid()).
Fix this bug by moving the initialization of PMCEID0 and PMCEID1 back
into a single function call, and name it more appropriately since it is
doing more than simply generating the contents of the PMCEID[01]
registers.
Backports commit bf8d09694ccc07487cd73d7562081fdaec3370c8 from qemu
When tsz == 0, aarch32 selects the address space via exclusion,
and there are no "top_bits" remaining that require validation.
Fixes: ba97be9f4a4
Backports commit 36d820af0eddf4fc6a533579b052d8f0085a9fb8 from qemu
Add I6500 core configuration. Note that this configuration is
supported only on best-effort basis due to the lack of certain
features in QEMU.
Backports commit ca1ffd14ed8a11ad88619c0478e5ea58f0af5137 from qemu
Extend gen_scwp() functionality to support EVA by adding an
additional argument, modify internals of the function to handle
new functionality, and accordingly change its invocations.
Backports commit 8d5388c1de8bf207316369213bd950bafa6badda from qemu
"insn_flags" bitfield was expanded from 32-bit to 64-bit in commit
f9c9cd63e3. However, this was not reflected on the second argument
of the function cpu_supports_isa(). By chance, this did not create
some wrong behavior, since the left-most halves of all instances of
the second argument are currently all zeros. However, this is still
a bug waiting to happen. Correct this by changing the type of the
second argument to be always 64-bit.
Backports commit 5b1e098128367d6ef7cb2d1e99a55fcf4fa9cdde from qemu
Rename macros for extracting 3-bit-coded GPR numbers, to achieve
better consistency with the nanoMIPS documentation.
Backports commit 99e49abf119f700bf8664b7dfc60c22d9eaf9159 from qemu
Several macros were defined twice, with identical values, so
remove duplicates.
Previously added in 80845edf37b.
This reverts commit 6bfa9f4c9cf24d6cfaaa227722e9cdcca1ad6fe9.
Backports commit 362d2e72546923f8f410733cc286ae5528c7811a from qemu
The 32 R5900 128-bit registers are split into two 64-bit halves:
the lower halves are the GPRs and the upper halves are accessible
by the R5900-specific multimedia instructions.
Backports commit a168a796e1c251787fcdf2d9ca1e9e69cb86ffcd from qemu
Add CP0 register MemoryMapID. Only data field is added.
The corresponding functionality will be added in future
patches.
Backports commit 3ef521ee9fe2d01d4bbcf3e4d5c91ed982bf3f60 from qemu
Correct existing CP0-related preprocessor constants (replace
"CPO" with "CP0" (form letter "O" to digit "0", when needed).
Besides, add preprocessor constants for CP0 subregisters.
The names of the subregisters were chosen to be in sync with
the table of corresponding assembler mnemonics found in the
documentation for I6500 and I6400 (release 1.0).
Backports commit 04992c8cd1c43ecdba39dd8c916db092db6ebae0 from qemu
Move comment containing summary of CP0 registers. Checkpatch
script reported some tabs in the resutling diff, so convert
these tabs to spaces too.
Backports commit ea9c5e836e205a87038c8153282d0b6d9234cda2 from qemu
This both advertises that we support four counters and enables them
because the pmu_num_counters() reads this value from PMCR.
Backports commit ac689a2e5155d129acaa39603e2a7a29abd90d89 from qemu
The instruction event is only enabled when icount is used, cycles are
always supported. Always defining get_cycle_count (but altering its
behavior depending on CONFIG_USER_ONLY) allows us to remove some
CONFIG_USER_ONLY #defines throughout the rest of the code.
Backports commit b2e2372511946fae86fbb8709edec7a41c6f3167 from qemu
Add arrays to hold the registers, the definitions themselves, access
functions, and logic to reset counters when PMCR.P is set. Update
filtering code to support counters other than PMCCNTR. Support migration
with raw read/write functions.
Backports commit 5ecdd3e47cadae83a62dc92b472f1fe163b56f59 from qemu
This commit doesn't add any supported events, but provides the framework
for adding them. We store the pm_event structs in a simple array, and
provide the mapping from the event numbers to array indexes in the
supported_event_map array. Because the value of PMCEID[01] depends upon
which events are supported at runtime, generate it dynamically.
Backports commit 57a4a11b2b281bb548b419ca81bfafb214e4c77a from qemu
This is immediately necessary for the PMUv3 implementation to check
ID_DFR0.PerfMon to enable/disable specific features, but defines the
full complement of fields for possible future use elsewhere.
Backports commit beceb99c0c1218d0b55cc04ce6ef77579d3416cb from qemu
Rename arm_ccnt_enabled to pmu_counter_enabled, and add logic to only
return 'true' if the specified counter is enabled and neither prohibited
or filtered.
Backports commit 033614c47de78409ad3fb39bb7bd1483b71c6789 from qemu
Because of the PMU's design, many register accesses have side effects
which are inter-related, meaning that the normal method of saving CP
registers can result in inconsistent state. These side-effects are
largely handled in pmu_op_start/finish functions which can be called
before and after the state is saved/restored. By doing this and adding
raw read/write functions for the affected registers, we avoid
migration-related inconsistencies.
Backports relevant parts of commit
980ebe87053792a5bdefaa87777c40914fd4f673 from qemu
pmccntr_read and pmccntr_write contained duplicate code that was already
being handled by pmccntr_sync. Consolidate the duplicated code into two
functions: pmccntr_op_start and pmccntr_op_finish. Add a companion to
c15_ccnt in CPUARMState so that we can simultaneously save both the
architectural register value and the last underlying cycle count - this
ensures time isn't lost and will also allow us to access the 'old'
architectural register value in order to detect overflows in later
patches.
Backports commit 5d05b9d462666ed21b7fef61aa45dec9aaa9f0ff from qemu
Add 4 attributes that controls the EL1 enable bits, as we may not
always want to turn on pointer authentication with -cpu max.
However, by default they are enabled.
Backports relevant parts of commit
1ae9cfbd470bffb8d9bacd761344e9b5e8adecb6 from qemu.
This is the main crypto routine, an implementation of QARMA.
This matches, as much as possible, ARM pseudocode.
Backports commit 990870b205ddfdba3fd3c1321e6083005ef59d1a from qemu
This is not really functional yet, because the crypto is not yet
implemented. This, however follows the AddPAC pseudo function.
Backports commit 63ff0ca94cb84764d2aee45b37c5502a54811dab from qemu
This is not really functional yet, because the crypto is not yet
implemented. This, however follows the Auth pseudo function.
Backports commit a7bfa086c973a51fc18116c9d2e22a0e0069edba from qemu
Stripping out the authentication data does not require any crypto,
it merely requires the virtual address parameters.
Backports commit 04d13549fa10bb9775a90701e4e6fd0a2cbf83cb from qemu
The arm_regime_tbi{0,1} functions are replacable with the new function
by giving the lowest and highest address.
Backports commit 5d8634f5a3a8474525edcfd581a659830e9e97c0 from qemu
Use TBID in aa64_va_parameters depending on the data parameter.
This automatically updates all existing users of the function.
Backports commit 8220af7e4d34c858898fbfe55943aeea8f4e875f from qemu
We need to reuse this from helper-a64.c. Provide a stub
definition for CONFIG_USER_ONLY. This matches the stub
definitions that we removed for arm_regime_tbi{0,1} before.
Backports commit bf0be433878935e824479e8ae890493e1fb646ed from qemu
We will shortly want to talk about TBI as it relates to data.
Passing around a pair of variables is less convenient than a
single variable.
Backports commit 476a4692f06e381117fb7ad0d04d37c9c2612198 from qemu
Split out functions to extract the virtual address parameters.
Let the functions choose T0 or T1 address space half, if present.
Extract (most of) the control bits that vary between EL or Tx.
Backports commit ba97be9f4a4ecaf16a1454dc669e5f3d935d3b63 from qemu
While we could expose stage_1_mmu_idx, the combination is
probably going to be more useful.
Backports commit 64be86ab1b5ef10b660a4230ee7f27c0da499043 from qemu
The pattern
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = core_to_arm_mmu_idx(env, cpu_mmu_index(env, false));
is computing the full ARMMMUIdx, stripping off the ARM bits,
and then putting them back.
Avoid the extra two steps with the appropriate helper function.
Backports commit 50494a279dab22a015aba9501a94fcc3cd52140e from qemu
Not that there are any stores involved, but why argue with ARM's
naming convention.
Backports commit bd889f4810839a2b68e339696ccf7c406cd62879 from qemu
Now properly signals unallocated for REV64 with SF=0.
Allows for the opcode2 field to be decoded shortly.
Backports commit 18de2813c35e359621a24a0a2a77570e83cb73b9 from qemu
The cryptographic internals are stubbed out for now,
but the enable and trap bits are checked.
Backports commit 0d43e1a2d29a05f7b0d5629caaff18733cbdf3bb from qemu
There are 5 bits of state that could be added, but to save
space within tbflags, add only a single enable bit.
Helpers will determine the rest of the state at runtime.
Backports commit 0816ef1bfcd3ac53e7454b62ca436727887f6056 from qemu
In U-boot, we switch from S-SVC -> Mon -> Hyp mode when we want to
enter Hyp mode. The change into Hyp mode is done by doing an
exception return from Mon. This doesn't work with current QEMU.
The problem is that in bad_mode_switch() we refuse to allow
the change of mode.
Note that bad_mode_switch() is used to do validation for two situations:
(1) changes to mode by instructions writing to CPSR.M
(ie not exception take/return) -- this corresponds to the
Armv8 Arm ARM pseudocode Arch32.WriteModeByInstr
(2) changes to mode by exception return
Attempting to enter or leave Hyp mode via case (1) is forbidden in
v8 and UNPREDICTABLE in v7, and QEMU is correct to disallow it
there. However, we're already doing that check at the top of the
bad_mode_switch() function, so if that passes then we should allow
the case (2) exception return mode changes to switch into Hyp mode.
We want to test whether we're trying to return to the nonexistent
"secure Hyp" mode, so we need to look at arm_is_secure_below_el3()
rather than arm_is_secure(), since the latter is always true if
we're in Mon (EL3).
Backports commit 2d2a4549cc29850aab891495685a7b31f5254b12 from qemu
Hyper-V .feat_names are, unlike hardware features, commented out and it is
not obvious why we do that. Document the current status quo.
Backports commit abd5fc4c862d033a989552914149f01c9476bb16 from qemu
It was found that QMP users of QEMU (e.g. libvirt) may need
HV_CPUID_ENLIGHTMENT_INFO.EAX/HV_CPUID_NESTED_FEATURES.EAX information. In
particular, 'hv_tlbflush' and 'hv_evmcs' enlightenments are only exposed in
HV_CPUID_ENLIGHTMENT_INFO.EAX.
HV_CPUID_NESTED_FEATURES.EAX is exposed for two reasons: convenience
(we don't need to export it from hyperv_handle_properties() and as
future-proof for Enlightened MSR-Bitmap, PV EPT invalidation and
direct virtual flush features.
Backports commit a2b107dbbd342ff2077aa5af705efaf68c375459 from qemu
MPX support is being phased out by Intel; GCC has dropped it, Linux
is also going to do that. Even though KVM will have special code
to support MPX after the kernel proper stops enabling it in XCR0,
we probably also want to deprecate that in a few years. As a start,
do not enable it by default for any named CPU model starting with
the 4.0 machine types; this include Skylake, Icelake and Cascadelake.
Backports commit ecb85fe48cacb2f8740186e81f2f38a2e02bd963 from qemu
The missing functionality was added ~3 years ago with the Linux commit
46896c73c1a4 ("KVM: svm: add support for RDTSCP")
so reenable RDTSCP support on those CPU models.
Opteron_G2 - being family 15, model 6, doesn't have RDTSCP support
(the real hardware doesn't have it. K8 got RDTSCP support with the NPT
models, i.e., models >= 0x40).
Document the host's minimum required kernel version, while at it.
Backports commit 483c6ad426dbab72d912fe4793d7d558671aa727 from qemu
Now that MTTCG is here, the comment in the 32-bit Arm decoder that
"Since the emulation does not have barriers, the acquire/release
semantics need no special handling" is no longer true. Emit the
correct barriers for the load-acquire/store-release insns, as
we already do in the A64 decoder.
Backports commit 96c552958dbb63453b5f02bea6e704006d50e39a from qemu
While brk[ab] zeroing has a flags setting option, the merging variant
does not. Retain the same argument structure, to share expansion but
force the flag zero and do not decode bit 22.
Backports commit 407e6ce7f1f428cb242d424cd35381a77b5b2071 from qemu
Use "register" TBFLAG_ANY to indicate shared state between
A32 and A64, and "registers" TBFLAG_A32 & TBFLAG_A64 for
fields that are specific to the given cpu state.
Move ARM_TBFLAG_BE_DATA to shared state, instead of its current
placement within "Bit usage when in AArch32 state".
Backports commit aad821ac4faad369fad8941d25e59edf2514246b from qemu
The three-operand MADD and MADDU are specific to Sony R5900 core,
and Toshiba TX19/TX39/TX79 cores as well.
The "32-Bit TX System RISC TX39 Family Architecture manual"
is available at https://wiki.qemu.org/File:DSAE0022432.pdf
Backports commit 3b948f053fc588154d95228da8a6561c61c66104 from qemu
Add translation handlers for four logic MXU instructions.
It should be noted that there is an error in MXU documentation (dated
June 2017) regarding opcodes for this group of instructions. This was
confirmed by running tests on hardware, and also by looking up other
related public source trees (binutils, Android NDK). In initial MXU
patches to QEMU, opcodes for MXU logic instructions were created to
be in accordance with the MXU documentation, therefore the error from
was propagated. This patch corrects that, changing the involved code.
Besides that, as MXU was designed and implemented only for 32-bit
CPUs, corresponding preprosessor conditions were added around MXU
code, which allows more flexible implementation of MXU handlers.
Backports commit b621f0187ef789aeef733cf79e5ac83984752394 from qemu
Improve textual description of MXU extension. These are mostly
comment formatting changes.
Backports commit 84e2c895b12fb7056daeb7e5094656eae7b50d3d from qemu
Add generic naming involving generig suffixes OPTN0, OPTN1, OPTN2,
OPTN3 for four optn2 constants. Existing suffixes WW, LW, HW, XW
are not quite appropriate for some instructions using optn2.
Add missing opcodes and decoding engine for LXB, LXH, LXW, LXBU,
and LXHU instructions. They were for some reason forgotten in
previous commits. The MXU opcode list and decoding engine should
be now complete.
Backports commit c233bf07af7cf2358b69c38150dbd2e3e4a399b6 from qemu
When we add a new entry to the ARMCPRegInfo hash table in
add_cpreg_to_hashtable(), we allocate memory for tehe
ARMCPRegInfo struct itself, and we also g_strdup() the
name string. So the hashtable's value destructor function
must free the name string as well as the struct.
Spotted by clang's leak sanitizer. The leak here is a
small one-off leak at startup, because we don't support
CPU hotplug, and so the only time when we destroy
hash table entries is for the case where ARM_CP_OVERRIDE
means we register a wildcard entry and then override it later.
Backports commit ac87e5072e2cbfcf8e80caac7ef43ceb6914c7af from qemu
Provide a trivial implementation with zero limited ordering regions,
which causes the LDLAR and STLLR instructions to devolve into the
LDAR and STLR instructions from the base ARMv8.0 instruction set.
Backports commit 2d7137c10fafefe40a0a049ff8a7bd78b66e661f from qemu
Since arm_hcr_el2_eff includes a check against
arm_is_secure_below_el3, we can often remove a
nearby check against secure state.
In some cases, sort the call to arm_hcr_el2_eff
to the end of a short-circuit logical sequence.
Backports commit 7c208e0f4171c9e2cc35efc12e1bf264a45c229f from qemu
Replace arm_hcr_el2_{fmo,imo,amo} with a more general routine
that also takes SCR_EL3.NS (aka arm_is_secure_below_el3) into
account, as documented for the plethora of bits in HCR_EL2.
Backports commit f77784446045231f7dfa46c9b872091241fa1557 from qemu
The bulk of the work here, beyond base HPD, is defining the
TTBCR2 register. In addition we must check TTBCR.T2E, which
is not present (RES0) for AArch64.
Backports commit ab638a328fd099ba0b23c8c818eb39f2c35414f3 from qemu
Since the TCR_*.HPD bits were RES0 in ARMv8.0, we can simply
interpret the bits as if ARMv8.1-HPD is present without checking.
We will need a slightly different check for hpd for aarch32.
Backports commit 037c13c5904f5fc67bb0ab7dd91ae07347aedee9 from qemu
Because EL3 has a fixed execution mode, we can properly decide
which of the bits are RES{0,1}.
Backports commit ea22747c63c9a894777aa41a7af85c3d08e39f81 from qemu
The enable for TGE has already occurred within arm_hcr_el2_amo
and friends. Moreover, when E2H is also set, the sense is
supposed to be reversed, which has also already occurred within
the helpers.
Backports commit 619959c3583dad325c36f09ce670e7d091382cae from qemu
At the same time, define the fields for these registers,
and use those defines in arm_pamax().
Backports commit 3dc91ddbc68391f934bf6945853e99cf6810fc00 from qemu
The STIBP flag may be supported by the host KVM module, so QEMU
can allow it to be configured manually, and it can be exposed to
guests when using "-cpu host".
No additional migration code is required because the whole
contents of spec_ctrl is already migrated in the "cpu/spec_ctrl"
section.
Backports commit 0e8916582991b9fd0b94850a8444b8b80d0a0955 from qemu
MOVDIR64B moves 64-bytes as direct-store with 64-bytes write atomicity.
Direct store is implemented by using write combining (WC) for writing
data directly into memory without caching the data.
The bit definition:
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 28] MOVDIR64B
The release document ref below link:
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/c5/15/\
architecture-instruction-set-extensions-programming-reference.pdf
Backports commit 1c65775ffc2dbd276a8bffe592feba0e186a151c from qemu
MOVDIRI moves doubleword or quadword from register to memory through
direct store which is implemented by using write combining (WC) for
writing data directly into memory without caching the data.
The bit definition:
CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):ECX[bit 27] MOVDIRI
The release document ref below link:
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/c5/15/\
architecture-instruction-set-extensions-programming-reference.pdf
Backports commit 24261de4916596d8ab5f5fee67e9e7a19e8325a5 from qemu
Fixes a TCG crash due to attempting the atomic operation without
having set up the address first. This does not attempt to fix
all of the other missing checks for LOCK.
Fixes: a7cee522f35
Fixes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1803160
Backports commit e84fcd7f662a0d8198703f6f89416d7ac2c32767 from qemu
This commit fixes a case where the CPU would try to go to EL3 when
executing an smc instruction, even though ARM_FEATURE_EL3 is false. This
case is raised when the PSCI conduit is set to smc, but the smc
instruction does not lead to a valid PSCI call.
QEMU crashes with an assertion failure latter on because of incoherent
mmu_idx.
This commit refactors the pre_smc helper by enumerating all the possible
way of handling an scm instruction, and covering the previously missing
case leading to the crash.
The following minimal test would crash before this commit:
.global _start
.text
_start:
ldr x0, =0xdeadbeef ; invalid PSCI call
smc #0
run with the following command line:
aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc -nostdinc -nostdlib -Wl,-Ttext=40000000 \
-o test test.s
qemu-system-aarch64 -M virt,virtualization=on,secure=off \
-cpu cortex-a57 -kernel test
Backports commit 7760da729ac88f112f98f36395ac3b55fc9e4211 from qemu
Disable R5900 support. There are some outstanding issues related
to ABI support and emulation accuracy, that were not understood
well during review process. Disable to avoid backward compatibility
issues.
Reverts commit ed4f49ba9bb56ebca6987b1083255daf6c89b5de.
Backports commit 823f2897bdd78185f3ba33292a25105ba8bad1b5 from qemu
Explicitely mark handling of PREF instruction for R5900 as
treating the same as NOP.
Backports commit 992e8176d36882983bb04f0259f7151a36d003a1 from qemu
Avoid using check_opc_user_only() as a decision making code wrt
various architectures. Use ctx->insn_flags checks instead.
Backports commit 55fc7a69aa38f5ec726e862caf4e4394caca04a8 from qemu
MOVN, MOVZ, MFHI, MFLO, MTHI, MTLO, MULT, MULTU, DIV, DIVU, DMULT,
DMULTU, DDIV, DDIVU and JR are decoded in decode_opc_special_tx79
instead of the generic decode_opc_special_legacy.
Backports commit 9dc324ce66807cc231fe890d4031de595ad1cf72 from qemu
MFLO1, MFHI1, MTLO1 and MTHI1 are generated in gen_HILO1_tx79 instead of
the generic gen_HILO.
Backports commit 86efbfb619a42061ac6439c074cfbf52df2ef2c2 from qemu
The Cortex-A15 and Cortex-A7 both have EL2; now we've implemented
it properly we can enable the feature bit.
Backports commit 436c0cbbeb38dd97c02fe921a7cb253a18afdd86 from qemu
Hyp mode is an exception to the general rule that each AArch32
mode has its own r13, r14 and SPSR -- it has a banked r13 and
SPSR but shares its r14 with User and System mode. We were
incorrectly implementing it as banked, which meant that on
entry to Hyp mode r14 was 0 rather than the USR/SYS r14.
We provide a new function r14_bank_number() which is like
the existing bank_number() but provides the index into
env->banked_r14[]; bank_number() provides the index to use
for env->banked_r13[] and env->banked_cpsr[].
All the points in the code that were using bank_number()
to index into env->banked_r14[] are updated for consintency:
* switch_mode() -- this is the only place where we fix
an actual bug
* aarch64_sync_32_to_64() and aarch64_sync_64_to_32():
no behavioural change as we already special-cased Hyp R14
* kvm32.c: no behavioural change since the guest can't ever
be in Hyp mode, but conceptually the right thing to do
* msr_banked()/mrs_banked(): we can never get to the case
that accesses banked_r14[] with tgtmode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP,
so no behavioural change
Backports commit 593cfa2b637b92d37eef949653840dc065cdb960 from qemu
In commit 8a0fc3a29fc2315325400 we tried to implement HCR_EL2.{VI,VF},
but we got it wrong and had to revert it.
In that commit we implemented them as simply tracking whether there
is a pending virtual IRQ or virtual FIQ. This is not correct -- these
bits cause a software-generated VIRQ/VFIQ, which is distinct from
whether there is a hardware-generated VIRQ/VFIQ caused by the
external interrupt controller. So we need to track separately
the HCR_EL2 bit state and the external virq/vfiq line state, and
OR the two together to get the actual pending VIRQ/VFIQ state.
Fixes: 8a0fc3a29fc2315325400c738f807d0d4ae0ab7f
Backports commit 89430fc6f80a5aef1d4cbd6fc26b40c30793786c from qemu
Currently we track the state of the four irq lines from the GIC
only via the cs->interrupt_request or KVM irq state. That means
that we assume that an interrupt is asserted if and only if the
external line is set. This assumption is incorrect for VIRQ
and VFIQ, because the HCR_EL2.{VI,VF} bits allow assertion
of VIRQ and VFIQ separately from the state of the external line.
To handle this, start tracking the state of the external lines
explicitly in a CPU state struct field, as is common practice
for devices.
The complicated part of this is dealing with inbound migration
from an older QEMU which didn't have this state. We assume in
that case that the older QEMU did not implement the HCR_EL2.{VI,VF}
bits as generating interrupts, and so the line state matches
the current state in cs->interrupt_request. (This is not quite
true between commit 8a0fc3a29fc2315325400c7 and its revert, but
that commit is broken and never made it into any released QEMU
version.)
Backports relevant parts of commit ed89f078ff3d6684ce3e538e4777a3bb4ec3e2b1 from qemu
This reverts commit 8a0fc3a29fc2315325400c738f807d0d4ae0ab7f.
The implementation of HCR.VI and VF in that commit is not
correct -- they do not track the overall "is there a pending
VIRQ or VFIQ" status, but whether there is a pending interrupt
due to "this mechanism", ie the hypervisor having set the VI/VF
bits. The overall pending state for VIRQ and VFIQ is effectively
the logical OR of the inbound lines from the GIC with the
VI and VF bits. Commit 8a0fc3a29fc231 would result in pending
VIRQ/VFIQ possibly being lost when the hypervisor wrote to HCR.
As a preliminary to implementing the HCR.VI/VF feature properly,
revert the broken one entirely.
Backports commit c624ea0fa7ffc9e2cc3e2b36c92b5c960954489f from qemu
The test was incomplete and incorrectly caused debug exceptions to be
generated when returning to EL2 after a failed attempt to single-step
an EL1 instruction. Fix this while cleaning up the function a little.
Backports commit 22af90255ec2100a44cbbb7f0460ba15eed79538 from qemu
Before we supported direct execution from MMIO regions, we
implemented workarounds in commit 720424359917887c926a33d2
which let us avoid doing so, even if the SAU or MPU region
was less than page-sized.
Once we implemented execute-from-MMIO, we removed part
of those workarounds in commit d4b6275df320cee76; but
we forgot the one in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() which
suppressed use of small SAU regions in executable regions.
Remove that workaround now.
Backports commit 521ed6b4015ba39a2e39c65a94643f3e6412edc4 from qemu
Now that we have full support for small regions, including execution,
we can remove the workarounds where we marked all small regions as
non-executable for the M-profile MPU and SAU.
Backports commit d4b6275df320cee764d56b194b1898547f545857 from qemu
Remove a TODO comment about implementing the vectored interrupt
controller. We have had an implementation of that for a decade;
it's in hw/intc/pl190.c.
Backports commit e24ad484909e7a00ca4f6332f3698facf0ba3394 from qemu
Fix the SYSCALL instruction in 64-bit (long mode). The RF flag
should be cleared in R11 as well as in the RFLAGS. Intel
and AMD CPUs behave same. AMD has this documented in the
APM vol 3.
Backports commit 1a1435dd61e28c1e3b70971107d72a7d05b28d03 from qemu
ATS1HR and ATS1HW (which allow AArch32 EL2 to do address translations
on the EL2 translation regime) were implemented in commit 14db7fe09a2c8.
However, we got them wrong: these should do stage 1 address translations
as defined for NS-EL2, which is ARMMMUIdx_S1E2. We were incorrectly
making them perform stage 2 translations.
A few years later in commit 1313e2d7e2cd we forgot entirely that
we'd implemented ATS1Hx, and added a comment that ATS1Hx were
"not supported yet". Remove the comment; there is no extra code
needed to handle these operations in do_ats_write(), because
arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format() returns true for ARMMMUIdx_S1E2,
which forces 64-bit PAR format.
Backports commit 23463e0e4aeb2f0a9c60549a2c163f4adc0b8512 from qemu
In do_ats_write() we construct a PAR value based on the result
of the translation. A comment says "S2WLK and FSTAGE are always
zero, because we don't implement virtualization".
Since we do in fact now implement virtualization, add the missing
code that sets these bits based on the reported ARMMMUFaultInfo.
(These bits are named PTW and S in ARMv8, so we follow that
convention in the new comments in this patch.)
Backports commit 0f7b791b35f24cb1333f779705a3f6472e6935de from qemu
In handle_vec_simd_shli() we have a check:
if (size > 3 && !is_q) {
unallocated_encoding(s);
return;
}
However this can never be true, because we calculate
int size = 32 - clz32(immh) - 1;
where immh is a 4 bit field which we know cannot be all-zeroes.
So the clz32() return must be in {28,29,30,31} and the resulting
size is in {0,1,2,3}, and "size > 3" is never true.
This unnecessary code confuses Coverity's analysis:
in CID 1396476 it thinks we might later index off the
end of an array because the condition implies that we
might have a size > 3.
Remove the code, and instead assert that the size is in [0..3],
since the decode that enforces that is somewhat distant from
this function.
Backports commit f6c98f91f56031141a47f86225fdc30f0f9f84fb from qemu
When populating id registers from kvm, on a host that doesn't support
aarch32 mode at all, neither arm_div nor jazelle will be supported either.
Backports commit 0f8d06f16c9d1041d728d09d464462ebe713c662 from qemu
Coldfire defines an "Unsupported instruction" exception if execution
of a valid instruction is attempted but the required hardware is not
present in the processor.
We use it with instructions that are in fact undefined or illegal,
and the exception expected in this case by the kernel is the
illegal exception, so this patch fixes that.
Backports commit b9f8e55bf7e994e192ab7360830731580384b813 from qemu
This allows trans_* expanders to be shared between decoders
for 32 and 16-bit insns, by not tying the expander to the
size of the insn that produced it.
This change requires adjusting the two existing users to match.
Backports commit 3a7be5546506be62d5c6c4b804119cedf9e367d6 from qemu
As the release document ref below link (page 13):
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/c5/15/\
architecture-instruction-set-extensions-programming-reference.pdf
PKU is supported in Skylake Server (Only Server) and later, and
on Intel(R) Xeon(R) Processor Scalable Family. So PKU is supposed
to be in Skylake-Server CPU model. And PKU's CPUID has been
exposed to QEMU. But PKU can't be find in Skylake-Server CPU
model in the code. So this patch will fix this issue in
Skylake-Server CPU model.
Backports commit 09b9ee643f90ef95e30e594df2a3c83ccaf75b1f from qemu
New CPU models mostly inherit features from ancestor Skylake-Server,
while addin new features: AVX512_VNNI, Intel PT.
SSBD support for speculative execution
side channel mitigations.
Note:
On Cascadelake, some capabilities (RDCL_NO, IBRS_ALL, RSBA,
SKIP_L1DFL_VMENTRY and SSB_NO) are enumerated by MSR.
These features rely on MSR based feature support patch.
Will be added later after that patch's in.
http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-09/msg00074.html
Backports commit c7a88b52f62b30c04158eeb07f73e3f72221b6a8 from qemu
Note RSBA is specially treated -- no matter host support it or not, qemu
pretends it is supported.
Backports commit d86f963694df27f11b3681ffd225c9362de1b634 from qemu
Intel SDM says for CPUID function 0DH, sub-function 0:
| • ECX enumerates the size (in bytes) required by the XSAVE instruction for an
| XSAVE area containing all the user state components supported by this
| processor.
| • EBX enumerates the size (in bytes) required by the XSAVE instruction for an
| XSAVE area containing all the user state components corresponding to bits
| currently set in XCR0.
Backports commit de2e68c902f7b6e438b0fa3cfedd74a06a20704f from qemu
Add prefix, suffix, operation descriptions, and other corrections
and amendments to the comment that describes MXU ASE.
Backports commit 093ade12179b6a3f679c100c0fe2a0a7d72068ba from qemu
Move MUL, S32M2I, S32I2M handling out of switch. These are all
instructions that do not depend on MXU_EN flag of MXU_CR.
Backports commit 87860df5511b972f0234a6b2cfaad5227c79b6b4 from qemu
Add support for emulating the S32I2M and S32M2I MXU instructions.
This commit also contains utility functions for reading/writing
to MXU registers. This is required for overall MXU instruction
support.
Backports commit 96992d1aa1b250c0fffc1ff2dad5e6e4f0b9815b from qemu
Add MXU decoding engine: add handlers for all instruction pools,
and main decode handler. The handlers, for now, for the purpose
of this patch, contain only sceleton in the form of a single
switch statement.
Backports commit 03f400883a1dd92fac5b0d9127b38e34c9a722d7 from qemu
Amend MXU instruction opcodes. Pool04 is actually only instruction
OPC_MXU_S16MAD. Two cases within S16MAD are recognized by 1-bit
subfield 'aptn1'.
Backports commit eab0bdb07cbed1131be2d1f541059c7b96b05e32 from qemu
Define a bit for MXU in insn_flags. This is the first non-MIPS
(third party) ASE supported in QEMU for MIPS, so it is placed in
the section "bits 56-63: vendor-specific ASEs".
Backports commit a031ac61619294ae473a78d1834e757fad8b59e5 from qemu
Define and initialize the 16 MXU registers - 15 general computational
register, and 1 control register). There is also a zero register, but
it does not have any corresponding variable.
Backports commit eb5559f67dc8dc12335dd996877bb6daaea32eb2 from qemu.
Implement emulation of nanoMIPS EVA instructions. They are all
part of P.LS.E0 instruction pool, or one of its subpools.
Backports commit d046a9ea1b8877a570a8b12a2d0125ec59fe5b22 from qemu
Opcode for ALIGN and DALIGN must be in fact ranges of opcodes, to
allow paremeter 'bp' to occupy two and three bits, respectively.
Backports commit 373ecd3823f949fd550ec49685299e287af5753e from qemu
Replace MIPS32 with MIPS, since the file covers all generations
of MIPS architectures.
Backports commit ab99e0e44bc7b0e2e52d9083a673866b18470536 from qemu
The primary purpose of this change is to support programs compiled by
GCC for the R5900 target and thereby run R5900 Linux distributions, for
example Gentoo.
GCC in version 7.3, by itself, by inspection of the GCC source code
and inspection of the generated machine code, for the R5900 target,
only emits two instructions that are specific to the R5900: the three-
operand MULT and MULTU. GCC and libc also emit certain MIPS III
instructions that are not part of the R5900 ISA. They are normally
trapped and emulated by the Linux kernel, and therefore need to be
treated accordingly by QEMU.
A program compiled by GCC is taken to mean source code compiled by GCC
under the restrictions above. One can, with the apparent limitations,
with a bit of effort obtain a fully functioning operating system such
as R5900 Gentoo. Strictly speaking, programs need not be compiled by
GCC to make use of this change.
Instructions and other facilities of the R5900 not implemented by this
change are intended to signal provisional exceptions. One such example
is the FPU that is not compliant with IEEE 754-1985 in system mode. It
is therefore provisionally disabled. In user space the FPU is trapped
and emulated by IEEE 754-1985 compliant software in the kernel, and
this is handled accordingly by QEMU. Another example is the 93
multimedia instructions specific to the R5900 that generate provisional
reserved instruction exception signals.
One of the benefits of running a Linux distribution under QEMU is that
programs can be compiled with a native compiler, where the host and
target are the same, as opposed to a cross-compiler, where they are
not the same. This is especially important in cases where the target
hardware does not have the resources to run a native compiler.
Problems with cross-compilation are often related to host and target
differences in integer sizes, pointer sizes, endianness, machine code,
ABI, etc. Sometimes cross-compilation is not even supported by the
build script for a given package. One effective way to avoid those
problems is to replace the cross-compiler with a native compiler. This
change of compilation methods does not resolve the inherent problems
with cross-compilation.
The native compiler naturally replaces the cross-compiler, because one
typically uses one or the other, and preferably the native compiler
when the circumstances admit this. The native compiler is also a good
test case for the R5900 QEMU user mode. Additionally, Gentoo is well-
known for compiling and installing its packages from sources.
This change has been tested with Gentoo compiled for R5900, including
native compilation of several packages under QEMU.
Backports commit ed4f49ba9bb56ebca6987b1083255daf6c89b5de from qemu.
The Linux kernel traps certain reserved instruction exceptions to
emulate the corresponding instructions. QEMU plays the role of the
kernel in user mode, so those traps are emulated by accepting the
instructions.
This change adds the function check_insn_opc_user_only to signal a
reserved instruction exception for flagged CPUs in QEMU system mode.
The MIPS III instructions DMULT[U], DDIV[U], LL[D] and SC[D] are not
implemented in R5900 hardware. They are trapped and emulated by the
Linux kernel and, accordingly, therefore QEMU user only instructions.
Backports commit 96631327be14c4f54cc31f873c278d9ffedd1e00 from qemu
The R5900 is taken to be MIPS III with certain modifications. From
MIPS IV it implements the instructions MOVN, MOVZ and PREF.
Backports commit 5601e6217d90ed322b4b9a6d68e8db607db91842 from qemu
The three-operand MULT and MULTU are the only R5900-specific
instructions emitted by GCC 7.3. The R5900 also implements the three-
operand MADD and MADDU instructions, but they are omitted in QEMU for
now since they are absent in programs compiled by current GCC versions.
Likewise, the R5900-specific pipeline 1 instruction variants MULT1,
MULTU1, DIV1, DIVU1, MADD1, MADDU1, MFHI1, MFLO1, MTHI1 and MTLO1
are omitted here as well.
Backports commit 21e8e8b230af38b6bd8c953fa5f31e4a5a128e1c from qemu
The R5900 implements the 64-bit MIPS III instruction set except
DMULT, DMULTU, DDIV, DDIVU, LL, SC, LLD and SCD. The MIPS IV
instructions MOVN, MOVZ and PREF are implemented. It has the
R5900-specific three-operand instructions MADD, MADDU, MULT and
MULTU as well as pipeline 1 versions MULT1, MULTU1, DIV1, DIVU1,
MADD1, MADDU1, MFHI1, MFLO1, MTHI1 and MTLO1. A set of 93 128-bit
multimedia instructions specific to the R5900 is also implemented.
The Toshiba TX System RISC TX79 Core Architecture manual:
https://wiki.qemu.org/File:C790.pdf
describes the C790 processor that is a follow-up to the R5900. There
are a few notable differences in that the R5900 FPU
- is not IEEE 754-1985 compliant,
- does not implement double format, and
- its machine code is nonstandard.
Backports commit 6f692818a7b53630702d25a709cd61282fd139ad from qemu
Since QEMU does not implement ASIDs, changes to the ASID must flush the
tlb. However, if the ASID does not change there is no reason to flush.
In testing a boot of the Ubuntu installer to the first menu, this reduces
the number of flushes by 30%, or nearly 600k instances.
Backports commit 93f379b0c43617b1361f742f261479eaed4959cb from qemu
The EL3 version of this register does not include an ASID,
and so the tlb_flush performed by vmsa_ttbr_write is not needed.
Backports commit f478847f1ee0df9397f561025ab2f687fd923571 from qemu
Instead of shifts and masks, use direct loads and stores from
the neon register file.
Backports commit 2d6ac920837f558be214ad2ddd28cad7f3b15e5c from qemu
For a sequence of loads or stores from a single register,
little-endian operations can be promoted to an 8-byte op.
This can reduce the number of operations by a factor of 8.
Backports commit e23f12b3a252352b575908ca7b94587acd004641 from qemu
Instead of shifts and masks, use direct loads and stores from the neon
register file. Mirror the iteration structure of the ARM pseudocode
more closely. Correct the parameters of the VLD2 A2 insn.
Note that this includes a bugfix for handling of the insn
"VLD2 (multiple 2-element structures)" -- we were using an
incorrect stride value.
Backports commit ac55d00709e78cd39dfa298dcaac7aecb58762e8 from qemu
Also introduces neon_element_offset to find the env offset
of a specific element within a neon register.
Backports commit 32f91fb71f4c32113ec8c2af5f74f14abe6c7162 from qemu
For a sequence of loads or stores from a single register,
little-endian operations can be promoted to an 8-byte op.
This can reduce the number of operations by a factor of 8.
Backports commit 87f9a7f0c8d5122c36743885158782c2348a6d21 from qemu
This can reduce the number of opcodes required for certain
complex forms of load-multiple (e.g. ld4.16b).
Backports commit a7d8143aed2268f147cc1abfebc848ed6282a313 from qemu
For traps of FP/SIMD instructions to AArch32 Hyp mode, the syndrome
provided in HSR has more information than is reported to AArch64.
Specifically, there are extra fields TA and coproc which indicate
whether the trapped instruction was FP or SIMD. Add this extra
information to the syndromes we construct, and mask it out when
taking the exception to AArch64.
Backports commit 4be42f4013fa1a9df47b48aae5148767bed8e80c from qemu
For the v7 version of the Arm architecture, the IL bit in
syndrome register values where the field is not valid was
defined to be UNK/SBZP. In v8 this is RES1, which is what
QEMU currently implements. Handle the desired v7 behaviour
by squashing the IL bit for the affected cases:
* EC == EC_UNCATEGORIZED
* prefetch aborts
* data aborts where ISV is 0
(The fourth case listed in the v8 Arm ARM DDI 0487C.a in
section G7.2.70, "illegal state exception", can't happen
on a v7 CPU.)
This deals with a corner case noted in a comment.
Backports commit 2ed08180db096ea5e44573529b85e09b1ed10b08 from qemu
Create and use a utility function to extract the EC field
from a syndrome, rather than open-coding the shift.
Backports commit 64b91e3f890a8c221b65c6820a5ee39107ee40f5 from qemu
If the HCR_EL2 PTW virtualizaiton configuration register bit
is set, then this means that a stage 2 Permission fault must
be generated if a stage 1 translation table access is made
to an address that is mapped as Device memory in stage 2.
Implement this.
Backports commit eadb2febf05452bd8062c4c7823d7d789142500c from qemu
The HCR_EL2 VI and VF bits are supposed to track whether there is
a pending virtual IRQ or virtual FIQ. For QEMU we store the
pending VIRQ/VFIQ status in cs->interrupt_request, so this means:
* if the register is read we must get these bit values from
cs->interrupt_request
* if the register is written then we must write the bit
values back into cs->interrupt_request
Backports commit 8a0fc3a29fc2315325400c738f807d0d4ae0ab7f from qemu
The A/I/F bits in ISR_EL1 should track the virtual interrupt
status, not the physical interrupt status, if the associated
HCR_EL2.AMO/IMO/FMO bit is set. Implement this, rather than
always showing the physical interrupt status.
We don't currently implement anything to do with external
aborts, so this applies only to the I and F bits (though it
ought to be possible for the outer guest to present a virtual
external abort to the inner guest, even if QEMU doesn't
emulate physical external aborts, so there is missing
functionality in this area).
Backports commit 636540e9c40bd0931ef3022cb953bb7dbecd74ed from qemu
The HCR.DC virtualization configuration register bit has the
following effects:
* SCTLR.M behaves as if it is 0 for all purposes except
direct reads of the bit
* HCR.VM behaves as if it is 1 for all purposes except
direct reads of the bit
* the memory type produced by the first stage of the EL1&EL0
translation regime is Normal Non-Shareable,
Inner Write-Back Read-Allocate Write-Allocate,
Outer Write-Back Read-Allocate Write-Allocate.
Implement this behaviour.
Backports commit 9d1bab337caf2324a233e5937f415fad4ce1641b from qemu
The HCR.FB virtualization configuration register bit requests that
TLB maintenance, branch predictor invalidate-all and icache
invalidate-all operations performed in NS EL1 should be upgraded
from "local CPU only to "broadcast within Inner Shareable domain".
For QEMU we NOP the branch predictor and icache operations, so
we only need to upgrade the TLB invalidates:
AArch32 TLBIALL, TLBIMVA, TLBIASID, DTLBIALL, DTLBIMVA, DTLBIASID,
ITLBIALL, ITLBIMVA, ITLBIASID, TLBIMVAA, TLBIMVAL, TLBIMVAAL
AArch64 TLBI VMALLE1, TLBI VAE1, TLBI ASIDE1, TLBI VAAE1,
TLBI VALE1, TLBI VAALE1
Backports commit b4ab8ce98b8c482c8986785800f238d32a1578a9 from qemu
For AArch32, exception return happens through certain kinds
of CPSR write. We don't currently have any CPU_LOG_INT logging
of these events (unlike AArch64, where we log in the ERET
instruction). Add some suitable logging.
This will log exception returns like this:
Exception return from AArch32 hyp to usr PC 0x80100374
paralleling the existing logging in the exception_return
helper for AArch64 exception returns:
Exception return from AArch64 EL2 to AArch64 EL0 PC 0x8003045c
Exception return from AArch64 EL2 to AArch32 EL0 PC 0x8003045c
(Note that an AArch32 exception return can only be
AArch32->AArch32, never to AArch64.)
Backports commit 81e3728407bf4a12f83e14fd410d5f0a7d29b5b4 from qemu
Having V6 alone imply jazelle was wrong for cortex-m0.
Change to an assertion for V6 & !M.
This was harmless, because the only place we tested ARM_FEATURE_JAZELLE
was for 'bxj' in disas_arm(), which is unreachable for M-profile cores.
Backports commit 09cbd50198d5dcac8bea2e47fa5dd641ec505fae from qemu
Both arm and thumb2 division are controlled by the same ISAR field,
which takes care of the arm implies thumb case. Having M imply
thumb2 division was wrong for cortex-m0, which is v6m and does not
have thumb2 at all, much less thumb2 division.
Backports commit 7e0cf8b47f0e67cebbc3dfa73f304e56ad1a090f from qemu
Most of the v8 extensions are self-contained within the ISAR
registers and are not implied by other feature bits, which
makes them the easiest to convert.
Backports commit 962fcbf2efe57231a9f5df0ae0f40c05e35628ba from qemu
Instantiating mps2-an505 (cortex-m33) will fail make check when
V7VE asserts that ID_ISAR0.Divide includes ARM division. It is
also wrong to include ARM_FEATURE_LPAE.
Backports commit 5256df880d1312a58472af3fb0a3c51e708f2161 from qemu
This patch extends the qemu-kvm state sync logic with support for
KVM_GET/SET_VCPU_EVENTS, giving access to yet missing SError exception.
And also it can support the exception state migration.
The SError exception states include SError pending state and ESR value,
the kvm_put/get_vcpu_events() will be called when set or get system
registers. When do migration, if source machine has SError pending,
QEMU will do this migration regardless whether the target machine supports
to specify guest ESR value, because if target machine does not support that,
it can also inject the SError with zero ESR value.
Backports the relevant parts of commit
202ccb6bab5fe26bca2c82bff23302f7acfd1940 from qemu
Fix misplaced 'break' in handling of NM_SHRA_R_PH. Found by
Coverity (CID 1395627).
Backports commit d5ebcbaf09e8c14e62b2966446195be5eeabcbab from qemu
Fix emulation of microMIPS R6 <SELEQZ|SELNEZ>.<D|S> instructions.
Their handling was permuted.
Backports commit fdac60cd0458f34b2e79d74a55bec10836e26471 from qemu
Implement hardware page table walker. This implementation is
limiter only to MIPS32.
Backports commit 074cfcb4daedf59ccbbbc83c24eee80e0e8f4c71 from qemu
Add reset state for PWSize and PWField registers. The reset state
is different for pre-R6 and R6 (and post-R6) ISAa
Backports commit 630107955757b9dfc5c09f105caa267eded2e3b1 from qemu
Add PWCtl register (CP0 Register 5, Select 6).
The PWCtl register configures hardware page table walking for TLB
refills.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1. It contains following
fields:
PWEn (31) - Hardware Page Table walker enable
PWDirExt (30) - If 1, 4-th level implemented (MIPS64 only)
XK (28) - If 1, walker handles xkseg (MIPS64 only)
XS (27) - If 1, walker handles xsseg (MIPS64 only)
XU (26) - If 1, walker handles xuseg (MIPS64 only)
DPH (7) - Dual Page format of Huge Page support
HugePg (6) - Huge Page PTE supported in Directory levels
PSn (5..0) - Bit position of PTEvld in Huge Page PTE
Backports commit 103be64c26c166f12b3e1308edadef3443723ff1 from qemu
Add PWSize register (CP0 Register 5, Select 7).
The PWSize register configures hardware page table walking for TLB
refills.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1. It contains following
fields:
BDW (37..32) Base Directory index width (MIPS64 only)
GDW (29..24) Global Directory index width
UDW (23..18) Upper Directory index width
MDW (17..12) Middle Directory index width
PTW (11..6 ) Page Table index width
PTEW ( 5..0 ) Left shift applied to the Page Table index
Backports commit 20b28ebc49945583d7191b57755cfd92433de9ff from qemu
Add PWField register (CP0 Register 5, Select 6).
The PWField register configures hardware page table walking for TLB
refills.
This register is required for the hardware page walker feature. It
exists only if Config3 PW bit is set to 1. It contains following
fields:
MIPS64:
BDI (37..32) - Base Directory index
GDI (29..24) - Global Directory index
UDI (23..18) - Upper Directory index
MDI (17..12) - Middle Directory index
PTI (11..6 ) - Page Table index
PTEI ( 5..0 ) - Page Table Entry shift
MIPS32:
GDW (29..24) - Global Directory index
UDW (23..18) - Upper Directory index
MDW (17..12) - Middle Directory index
PTW (11..6 ) - Page Table index
PTEW ( 5..0 ) - Page Table Entry shift
Backports commit fa75ad1459f4f6abbeb6d375a812dfad61320f58 from qemu