As a prelude to making coproc insns use decodetree, split out the
part of disas_coproc_insn() which does instruction decoding from the
part which does the actual work, and make do_coproc_insn() handle the
UNDEF-on-bad-permissions and similar cases itself rather than
returning 1 to eventually percolate up to a callsite that calls
unallocated_encoding() for it.
Backports 19c23a9baafc91dd3881a7a4e9bf454e42d24e4e
At the moment we check for XScale/iwMMXt insns inside
disas_coproc_insn(): for CPUs with ARM_FEATURE_XSCALE all copro insns
with cp 0 or 1 are handled specially. This works, but is an odd
place for this check, because disas_coproc_insn() is called from both
the Arm and Thumb decoders but the XScale case never applies for
Thumb (all the XScale CPUs were ARMv5, which has only Thumb1, not
Thumb2 with the 32-bit coprocessor insn encodings). It also makes it
awkward to convert the real copro access insns to decodetree.
Move the identification of XScale out to its own function
which is only called from disas_arm_insn().
Backports commit 7b4f933db865391a90a3b4518bb2050a83f2a873 from qemu
Vector AMOs operate as if aq and rl bits were zero on each element
with regard to ordering relative to other instructions in the same hart.
Vector AMOs provide no ordering guarantee between element operations
in the same vector AMO instruction
Backports 268fcca66bde62257960ec8d859de374315a5e3d
The unit-stride fault-only-fault load instructions are used to
vectorize loops with data-dependent exit conditions(while loops).
These instructions execute as a regular load except that they
will only take a trap on element 0.
Backports commit 022b4ecf775ffeff522eaea4f0d94edcfe00a0a9 from qemu
Vector indexed operations add the contents of each element of the
vector offset operand specified by vs2 to the base effective address
to give the effective address of each element.
Backports f732560e3551c0823cee52efba993fbb8f689a36
Vector strided operations access the first memory element at the base address,
and then access subsequent elements at address increments given by the byte
offset contained in the x register specified by rs2.
Vector unit-stride operations access elements stored contiguously in memory
starting from the base effective address. It can been seen as a special
case of strided operations.
Backports 751538d5da557e5c10e5045c2d27639580ea54a7
The internals.h keeps things that are not relevant to the actual architecture,
only to the implementation, separate.
Backports f476f17740ad42288d42dd8fedcdae8ca7007a16
vsetvl and vsetvli are two configure instructions for vl, vtype. TB flags
should update after configure instructions. The (ill, lmul, sew ) of vtype
and the bit of (VSTART == 0 && VL == VLMAX) will be placed within tb_flags.
Backports 2b7168fc43fb270fb89e1dddc17ef54714712f3a from qemu
The v0.7.1 specification does not define vector status within mstatus.
A future revision will define the privileged portion of the vector status.
Backports 8e3a1f18871e0ea251b95561fe1ec5a9bc896c4a from qemu
vlen is the vector register length in bits.
elen is the max element size in bits.
vext_spec is the vector specification version, default value is v0.7.1.
Backports 32931383270e2ca8209267ca99f23f3c5f780982 from qemu
The 32 vector registers will be viewed as a continuous memory block.
It avoids the convension between element index and (regno, offset).
Thus elements can be directly accessed by offset from the first vector
base address.
Backports ad9e5aa2ae8032f19a8293b6b8f4661c06167bf0 from qemu
When a coprocessor instruction in an AArch32 guest traps to AArch32
Hyp mode, the syndrome register (HSR) includes Rt and Rt2 fields
which are simply copies of the Rt and Rt2 fields from the trapped
instruction. However, if the instruction is trapped from AArch32 to
an AArch64 higher exception level, the Rt and Rt2 fields in the
syndrome register (ESR_ELx) must be the AArch64 view of the register.
This makes a difference if the AArch32 guest was in a mode other than
User or System and it was using r13 or r14, or if it was in FIQ mode
and using r8-r14.
We don't know at translate time which AArch32 CPU mode we are in, so
we leave the values we generate in our prototype syndrome register
value at translate time as the raw Rt/Rt2 from the instruction, and
instead correct them to the AArch64 view when we find we need to take
an exception from AArch32 to AArch64 with one of these syndrome
values.
Fixes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1879587
Backports commit a65dabf71a9f9b949d556b1b57fd72595df92398 from qemu
GCC version 4.9.4 isn't clever enough to figure out that all
execution paths in disas_ldst() that use 'fn' will have initialized
it first, and so it warns:
/home/LiKaige/qemu/target/arm/translate-a64.c: In function ‘disas_ldst’:
/home/LiKaige/qemu/target/arm/translate-a64.c:3392:5: error: ‘fn’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
fn(cpu_reg(s, rt), clean_addr, tcg_rs, get_mem_index(s),
^
/home/LiKaige/qemu/target/arm/translate-a64.c:3318:22: note: ‘fn’ was declared here
AtomicThreeOpFn *fn;
^
Make it happy by initializing the variable to NULL.
Backports commit 88a90e3de6ae99cbcfcc04c862c51f241fdf685f from qemu
The definition of top_bit used in this function is one higher
than that used in the Arm ARM psuedo-code, which put the error
indication at top_bit - 1 at the wrong place, which meant that
it wasn't visible to Auth.
Fixing the definition of top_bit requires more changes, because
its most common use is for the count of bits in top_bit:bot_bit,
which would then need to be computed as top_bit - bot_bit + 1.
For now, prefer the minimal fix to the error indication alone.
Fixes: 63ff0ca94cb
Backports commit 8796fe40dd30cd9ffd3c958906471715c923b341 from qemu
When we changed the interface of get_phys_addr_lpae to require
the cacheattr parameter, this spot was missed. The compiler is
unable to detect the use of NULL vs the nonnull attribute here.
Fixes: 7e98e21c098
Backports commit a6d6f37aed4b171d121cd4a9363fbb41e90dcb53 from qemu
Quoting ISO C99 6.7.8p4, "All the expressions in an initializer for an
object that has static storage duration shall be constant expressions or
string literals".
The compound literal produced by the make_floatx80() macro is not such a
constant expression, per 6.6p7-9. (An implementation may accept it,
according to 6.6p10, but is not required to.)
Therefore using "floatx80_zero" and make_floatx80() for initializing
"f2xm1_table" and "fpatan_table" is not portable. And gcc-4.8 in RHEL-7.6
actually chokes on them:
> target/i386/fpu_helper.c:871:5: error: initializer element is not constant
> { make_floatx80(0xbfff, 0x8000000000000000ULL),
> ^
We've had the make_floatx80_init() macro for this purpose since commit
3bf7e40ab914 ("softfloat: fix for C99", 2012-03-17), so let's use that
macro again.
Fixes: eca30647fc0 ("target/i386: reimplement f2xm1 using floatx80 operations")
Fixes: ff57bb7b632 ("target/i386: reimplement fpatan using floatx80 operations")
Backports commit 163b3d1af2552845a60967979aca8d78a6b1b088 from qemu
We forgot to update cc_op before these branch insns,
which lead to losing track of the current eflags.
Buglink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1888165
Backports commit 3cb3a7720b01830abd5fbb81819dbb9271bf7821 from qemu
For CPUs support fast short REP MOV[CPUID.(EAX=7,ECX=0):EDX(bit4)], e.g
Icelake and Tigerlake, expose it to the guest VM.
Backports commit 5cb287d2bd578dfe4897458793b4fce35bc4f744 from qemu
Raw writes to this register when in KVM mode can cause interrupts to be
raised (even when the PMU is disabled). Because the underlying state is
already aliased to PMINTENSET (which already provides raw write
functions), we can safely disable raw accesses to PMINTENCLR entirely.
Backports commit 887c0f1544991f567543b7c214aa11ab0cea0a29 from qemu
The mtedesc that was constructed was not actually passed in.
Found by Coverity (CID 1429996).
Backports commit cdecb3fc1eb182d90666348a47afe63c493686e7 from qemu
In 32-bit mode, the higher 16 bits of the destination
register are undefined. In practice CR0[31:0] is stored,
just like in 64-bit mode, so just remove the "if" that
currently differentiates the behavior.
Backports commit c0c8445255b2b5b440c355431c8b01b7b7b7c8cf from qemu
The SSE instruction implementations all fail to raise the expected
IEEE floating-point exceptions because they do nothing to convert the
exception state from the softfloat machinery into the exception flags
in MXCSR.
Fix this by adding such conversions. Unlike for x87, emulated SSE
floating-point operations might be optimized using hardware floating
point on the host, and so a different approach is taken that is
compatible with such optimizations. The required invariant is that
all exceptions set in env->sse_status (other than "denormal operand",
for which the SSE semantics are different from those in the softfloat
code) are ones that are set in the MXCSR; the emulated MXCSR is
updated lazily when code reads MXCSR, while when code sets MXCSR, the
exceptions in env->sse_status are set accordingly.
A few instructions do not raise all the exceptions that would be
raised by the softfloat code, and those instructions are made to save
and restore the softfloat exception state accordingly.
Nothing is done about "denormal operand"; setting that (only for the
case when input denormals are *not* flushed to zero, the opposite of
the logic in the softfloat code for such an exception) will require
custom code for relevant instructions, or else architecture-specific
conditionals in the softfloat code for when to set such an exception
together with custom code for various SSE conversion and rounding
instructions that do not set that exception.
Nothing is done about trapping exceptions (for which there is minimal
and largely broken support in QEMU's emulation in the x87 case and no
support at all in the SSE case).
Backports commit 418b0f93d12a1589d5031405de857844f32e9ccc from qemu
The code to set floating-point state when MXCSR changes calls
set_flush_to_zero on &env->fp_status, so affecting the x87
floating-point state rather than the SSE state. Fix to call it for
&env->sse_status instead.
Backports commit 3ddc0eca2229846bfecc3485648a6cb85a466dc7 from qemu
Since all callers to get_physical_address() now apply the same page offset to
the translation result, move the logic into get_physical_address() itself to
avoid duplication.
Backports commit 852002b5664bf079da05c5201dbf2345b870e5ed from qemu
The result of the get_physical_address() function should be combined with the
offset of the original page access before being returned. Otherwise the
m68k_cpu_get_phys_page_debug() function can round to the wrong page causing
incorrect lookups in gdbstub and various "Disassembler disagrees with
translator over instruction decoding" warnings to appear at translation time.
Fixes: 88b2fef6c3 ("target/m68k: add MC68040 MMU")
The temp that gets assigned to clean_addr has been allocated with
new_tmp_a64, which means that it will be freed at the end of the
instruction. Freeing it earlier leads to assertion failure.
The loop creates a complication, in which we allocate a new local
temp, which does need freeing, and the final code path is shared
between the loop and non-loop.
Fix this complication by adding new_tmp_a64_local so that the new
local temp is freed at the end, and can be treated exactly like
the non-loop path.
Fixes: bba87d0a0f4
Backports commit 4b4dc9750a0aa0b9766bd755bf6512a84744ce8a from qemu
We now implement all of the components of MTE, without actually
supporting any tagged memory. All MTE instructions will work,
trivially, so we can enable support.
Backports commit c7459633baa71d1781fde4a245d6ec9ce2f008cf from qemu
Look up the physical address for the given virtual address,
convert that to a tag physical address, and finally return
the host address that backs it.
Backports commit e4d5bf4fbd5abfc3727e711eda64a583cab4d637 from qemu
We need to check the memattr of a page in order to determine
whether it is Tagged for MTE. Between Stage1 and Stage2,
this becomes simpler if we always collect this data, instead
of occasionally being presented with NULL.
Use the nonnull attribute to allow the compiler to check that
all pointer arguments are non-null.
Backports commit 7e98e21c09871cddc20946c8f3f3595e93154ecb from qemu
There are a number of paths by which the TBI is still intact
for user-only in the SVE helpers.
Because we currently always set TBI for user-only, we do not
need to pass down the actual TBI setting from above, and we
can remove the top byte in the inner-most primitives, so that
none are forgotten. Moreover, this keeps the "dirty" pointer
around at the higher levels, where we need it for any MTE checking.
Since the normal case, especially for user-only, goes through
RAM, this clearing merely adds two insns per page lookup, which
will be completely in the noise.
Backports commit c4af8ba19b9d22aac79cab679a20b159af9d6809 from qemu
Because the elements are non-sequential, we cannot eliminate many
tests straight away like we can for sequential operations. But
we often have the PTE details handy, so we can test for Tagged.
Backports commit d28d12f008ee44dc2cc2ee5d8f673be9febc951e from qemu
Because the elements are sequential, we can eliminate many tests all
at once when the tag hits TCMA, or if the page(s) are not Tagged.
Backports commit aa13f7c3c378fa41366b9fcd6c29af1c3d81126a from qemu
Because the elements are sequential, we can eliminate many tests all
at once when the tag hits TCMA, or if the page(s) are not Tagged.
Backports commit 71b9f3948c75bb97641a3c8c7de96d1cb47cdc07 from qemu
Because the elements are sequential, we can eliminate many tests all
at once when the tag hits TCMA, or if the page(s) are not Tagged.
Backports commit 206adacfb8d35e671e3619591608c475aa046b63 from qemu