This patch adds support for the riscv_cpu_unassigned_access call
and will raise a load or store access fault.
Backports commit cbf5827693addaff4e4d2102afedbf078a204eb2 from qemu
A wrong address is passed to `pmp_is_in_range` while checking if a
memory access is within a PMP range.
Since the ending address of the pmp range (i.e., pmp_state.addr[i].ea)
is set to the last address in the range (i.e., pmp base + pmp size - 1),
memory accesses containg the last address in the range will always fail.
For example, assume that a PMP range is 4KB from 0x87654000 such that
the last address within the range is 0x87654fff.
1-byte access to 0x87654fff should be considered to be fully inside the
PMP range.
However the access now fails and complains partial inclusion because
pmp_is_in_range(env, i, addr + size) returns 0 whereas
pmp_is_in_range(env, i, addr) returns 1.
Backports commit 49db9fa1fd7c252596b53cf80876e06f407d09ed from qemu
In the next commit we will split the M-profile functions from this
file. Some function will be called out of helper.c. Declare them in
the "internals.h" header.
Backports commit 787a7e76c2e93a48c47b324fea592c9910a70483 from qemu
This code is specific to the SoftFloat floating-point
implementation, which is only used by TCG.
Backports commit 4a15527c9feecfd2fa2807d5e698abbc19feb35f from qemu
The vfp_set_fpscr() helper contains code specific to the host
floating point implementation (here the SoftFloat library).
Extract this code to vfp_set_fpscr_from_host().
Backports commit 0c6ad94809b37a1f0f1f75d3cd0e4a24fb77e65c from qemu
The vfp_set_fpscr() helper contains code specific to the host
floating point implementation (here the SoftFloat library).
Extract this code to vfp_set_fpscr_to_host().
Backports commit e9d652824b05845f143ef4797d707fae47d4b3ed from qemu
To ease the review of the next commit,
move the vfp_exceptbits_to_host() function directly after
vfp_exceptbits_from_host(). Amusingly the diff shows we
are moving vfp_get_fpscr().
Backports commit 20e62dd8c831c9065ed4a8e64813c93ad61c50d7 from qemu.
These routines are TCG specific.
The arm_deliver_fault() function is only used within the new
helper. Make it static.
Backports commit e21b551cb652663f2f2405a64d63ef6b4a1042b7 from qemu
In the next commit we will split the TLB related routines of
this file, and this function will also be called in the new
file. Declare it in the "internals.h" header.
Backports commit ebae861fc6c385a7bcac72dde4716be06e6776f1 from qemu
Those helpers are a software implementation of the ARM v8 memory zeroing
op code. They should be moved to the op helper file, which is going to
eventually be built only when TCG is enabled.
Backports commit 6cdca173ef81a9dbcee9e142f1a5a34ad9c44b75 from qemu
Since commit 8c06fbdf36b checkpatch.pl enforce a new multiline
comment syntax. Since we'll move this code around, fix its style
first.
Backports commit 9a223097e44d5320f5e0546710263f22d11f12fc from qemu
Group ARM objects together, TCG related ones at the bottom.
This will help when restricting TCG-only objects.
Backports commit 07774d584267488c8c2f104ae5b552791961908a from qemu
Group Aarch64 rules together, TCG related ones at the bottom.
This will help when restricting TCG-only objects.
Backports commit 87f4f183484dba7a460c59e99dac0dbb9f42ed87 from qemu
The configure script breaks when the qemu source directory is in a path
containing white spaces, in particular the list of targets is not
correctly generated when calling "./configure --help" because of how the
default_target_list variable is built.
In addition to that, *building* qemu from a directory with spaces breaks
some assumptions in the Makefiles, even if the original source path does
not contain spaces like in the case of an out-of-tree build, or when
symlinks are involved.
To avoid these issues, refuse to run the configure script and the
Makefile if there are spaces or colons in the source path or the build
path, taking as inspiration what the kbuild system in linux does.
Buglink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1817345
Backports commit 4ace32e22713ffd79deb221ae0134652c7c15428 from qemu
Altering all comments in target/m68k to match Qemu coding styles so that future
patches wont fail due to style breaches.
Backports commit 808d77bc5f878a666035d478480b8ed229bd49fe from qemu
Fix emulation of ILVR.<B|H|W> on big endian host by applying
mapping of data element indexes from one endian to another.
Backports commit 14f5d874bcd533054648bb7cc767c7169eaf2f1c from qemu
Fix emulation of ILVL.<B|H|W> on big endian host by applying
mapping of data element indexes from one endian to another.
Backports commit 8e74bceb00120b23f0931e4e4478d1b10e0970d4 from qemu
Fix emulation of ILVOD.<B|H|W> on big endian host by applying
mapping of data element indexes from one endian to another.
Backports commit b000169e4ed44a3925b6fd22fa0dd6e22bb02b81 from qemu
Fix emulation of ILVEV.<B|H|W> on big endian host by applying
mapping of data element indexes from one endian to another.
Backports commit 98880cb5a669a35b5bc75432027f2b9fff566aea from qemu
MSR IA32_CORE_CAPABILITY is a feature-enumerating MSR, which only
enumerates the feature split lock detection (via bit 5) by now.
The existence of MSR IA32_CORE_CAPABILITY is enumerated by CPUID.7_0:EDX[30].
The latest kernel patches about them can be found here:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/4/24/1909
Backports commit 597360c0d8ebda9ca6f239db724a25bddec62b2f from qemu
In commit 1120827fa182f0e7622 we accidentally put the
"UNDEF unless FPU has double-precision support" check in
the single-precision VFM function. Put it in the dp
function where it belongs.
Backports commit 34bea4edb9bbe8edf4b8606276482acdff5ca58b from qemu
The architecture permits FPUs which have only single-precision
support, not double-precision; Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M33 are
both like that. Add the necessary checks on the MVFR0 FPDP
field so that we UNDEF any double-precision instructions on
CPUs like this.
Note that even if FPDP==0 the insns like VMOV-to/from-gpreg,
VLDM/VSTM, VLDR/VSTR which take double precision registers
still exist.
Backports commit 1120827fa182f0e76226df7ffe7a86598d1df54f from qemu
In several places cut and paste errors meant we were using the wrong
type for the 'arg' struct in trans_ functions called by the
decodetree decoder, because we were using the _sp version of the
struct in the _dp function. These were harmless, because the two
structs were identical and so decodetree made them typedefs of the
same underlying structure (and we'd have had a compile error if they
were not harmless), but we should clean them up anyway.
Backports commit 83655223ac6143a563e981906ce13fd6f2cfbefd from qemu
Remove the now unused TCG globals cpu_F0s, cpu_F0d, cpu_F1s, cpu_F1d.
cpu_M0 is still used by the iwmmxt code, and cpu_V0 and
cpu_V1 are used by both iwmmxt and Neon.
Backports commit d9eea52c67c04c58ecceba6ffe5a93d1d02051fa from qemu
Remove some old constructns from NEON_2RM_VCVT_F16_F32 code:
* don't use CPU_F0s
* don't use tcg_gen_st_f32
Backports commit b66f6b9981004bbf120b8d17c20f92785179bdf2 from qemu
Remove some old constructs from NEON_2RM_VCVT_F16_F32 code:
* don't use cpu_F0s
* don't use tcg_gen_ld_f32
Backports commit 58f2682eee738e8890f9cfe858e0f4f68b00d45d from qemu
Stop using cpu_F0s for the Neon f32/s32 VCVT operations.
Since this is the last user of cpu_F0s in the Neon 2rm-op
loop, we can remove the handling code for it too.
Backports commit 60737ed5785b9c1c6f1c85575dfdd1e9eec91878 from qemu
Where Neon instructions are floating point operations, we
mostly use the old VFP utility functions like gen_vfp_abs()
which work on the TCG globals cpu_F0s and cpu_F1s. The
Neon for-each-element loop conditionally loads the inputs
into either a plain old TCG temporary for most operations
or into cpu_F0s for float operations, and similarly stores
back either cpu_F0s or the temporary.
Switch NEON_2RM_VABS_F away from using cpu_F0s, and
update neon_2rm_is_float_op() accordingly.
Backports commit fd8a68cdcf81d70eebf866a132e9780d4108da9c from qemu
The AArch32 VMOV (immediate) instruction uses the same VFP encoded
immediate format we already handle in vfp_expand_imm(). Use that
function rather than hand-decoding it.
Backports commit 9bee50b498410ed6466018b26464d7384c7879e9 from qemu
We want to use vfp_expand_imm() in the AArch32 VFP decode;
move it from the a64-only header/source file to the
AArch32 one (which is always compiled even for AArch64).
Backports commit d6a092d479333b5f20a647a912a31b0102d37335 from qemu
For VFP short vectors, the VFP registers are divided into a
series of banks: for single-precision these are s0-s7, s8-s15,
s16-s23 and s24-s31; for double-precision they are d0-d3,
d4-d7, ... d28-d31. Some banks are "scalar" meaning that
use of a register within them triggers a pure-scalar or
mixed vector-scalar operation rather than a full vector
operation. The scalar banks are s0-s7, d0-d3 and d16-d19.
When using a bank as part of a vector operation, we
iterate through it, increasing the register number by
the specified stride each time, and wrapping around to
the beginning of the bank.
Unfortunately our calculation of the "increment" part of this
was incorrect:
vd = ((vd + delta_d) & (bank_mask - 1)) | (vd & bank_mask)
will only do the intended thing if bank_mask has exactly
one set high bit. For instance for doubles (bank_mask = 0xc),
if we start with vd = 6 and delta_d = 2 then vd is updated
to 12 rather than the intended 4.
This only causes problems in the unlikely case that the
starting register is not the first in its bank: if the
register number doesn't have to wrap around then the
expression happens to give the right answer.
Fix this bug by abstracting out the "check whether register
is in a scalar bank" and "advance register within bank"
operations to utility functions which use the right
bit masking operations
Backports commit 18cf951af9a27ae573a6fa17f9d0c103f7b7679b from qemu