The input visitor has some problems right now, especially
- unsigned type "Range" is used to process signed ranges, resulting in
inconsistent behavior and ugly/magical code
- uint64_t are parsed like int64_t, so big uint64_t values are not
supported and error messages are misleading
- lists/ranges of int64_t are accepted although no list is parsed and
we should rather report an error
- lists/ranges are preparsed using int64_t, making it hard to
implement uint64_t values or uint64_t lists
- types that don't support lists don't bail out
- visiting beyond the end of a list is not handled properly
- we don't actually parse lists, we parse *sets*: members are sorted,
and duplicates eliminated
So let's rewrite it by getting rid of usage of the type "Range" and
properly supporting lists of int64_t and uint64_t (including ranges of
both types), fixing the above mentioned issues.
Lists of other types are not supported and will properly report an
error. Virtual walks are now supported.
Tests have to be fixed up:
- Two BUGs were hardcoded that are fixed now
- The string-input-visitor now actually returns a parsed list and not
an ordered set.
Please note that no users/callers have to be fixed up. Candidates using
visit_type_uint16List() and friends are:
- backends/hostmem.c:host_memory_backend_set_host_nodes()
-- Code can deal with duplicates/unsorted lists
- numa.c::query_memdev()
-- via object_property_get_uint16List(), the list will still be sorted
and without duplicates (via host_memory_backend_get_host_nodes())
- qapi-visit.c::visit_type_Memdev_members()
- qapi-visit.c::visit_type_NumaNodeOptions_members()
- qapi-visit.c::visit_type_RockerOfDpaGroup_members
- qapi-visit.c::visit_type_RxFilterInfo_members()
-- Not used with string-input-visitor.
Backports commit c9fba9de89db51a07689e2cba4865a1e564b8f0f from qemu
qemu_strtosz() & friends reject NaNs, but happily accept infinities.
They shouldn't. Fix that.
The fix makes use of qemu_strtod_finite(). To avoid ugly casts,
change the @end parameter of qemu_strtosz() & friends from char **
to const char **.
Also, add two test cases, testing that "inf" and "NaN" are properly
rejected. While at it, also fixup the function documentation.
Backports commit af02f4c5179675ad4e26b17ba26694a8fcde17fa from qemu
The code that used it has already been removed a while ago with commit
dc41aa7d34989b552ef ("tcg: Remove GET_TCGV_* and MAKE_TCGV_*").
Backports commit 78751ea855f89b5a352ccc332162fed3ad4c9496 from qemu
Since we require GCC version 4.8 or newer now, we can be sure that
the builtin functions are always available on GCC. And for Clang,
we can check the availablility with __has_builtin instead.
Backports commit f773b423cc61f3ca18af5337101c158a52aaae2c from qemu
Add support for MMU protection regions that are smaller than
TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We do this by marking the TLB entry for those
pages with a flag TLB_RECHECK. This flag causes us to always
take the slow-path for accesses. In the slow path we can then
special case them to always call tlb_fill() again, so we have
the correct information for the exact address being accessed.
This change allows us to handle reading and writing from small
regions; we cannot deal with execution from the small region.
Backports commit 55df6fcf5476b44bc1b95554e686ab3e91d725c5 from qemu
Add a new flag to mark memory region that are used as non-volatile, by
NVDIMM for example. That bit is propagated down to the flat view, and
reflected in HMP info mtree with a "nv-" prefix on the memory type.
This way, guest_phys_blocks_region_add() can skip the NV memory
regions for dumps and TCG memory clear in a following patch.
Backports commit c26763f8ec70b1011098cab0da9178666d8256a5 from qemu
GCC7+ will no longer advertise support for 16-byte __atomic operations
if only cmpxchg is supported, as for x86_64. Fortunately, x86_64 still
has support for __sync_compare_and_swap_16 and we can make use of that.
AArch64 does not have, nor ever has had such support, so open-code it.
Backports commit e6cd4bb59b8154fa00da611200beef7eb4e8ec56 from qemu
Isolate the computation of an index from an address into a
helper before we change that function.
Backports commit 383beda9cf32f795616c3b93f7d6154d70372d4b from qemu
It has not had users since f83311e476 ("target-m68k: use floatx80
internally", 2017-06-21).
Note that no other bit-width has floatX_trunc_to_int.
Backports commit c953da8f0be5e026d1c9128660736d72294feb3e from qemu
Now that all the users of old_mmio MemoryRegion accessors
have been converted, we can remove the core code support.
Backports commit 62a0db942dec6ebfec19aac2b604737d3c9a2d75 from qemu
We need to use these flags in other files rather than just in exec.c,
For example, RAM_SHARED should be used when create a ram block from file.
We expose them the exec/memory.h
Backports commit b0e5de93811077254a536c23b713b49e12efb742 from qemu
qstring_from_substr() parameters @start and @end are of type int.
blkdebug_parse_filename(), blkverify_parse_filename(), nbd_parse_uri(),
and qstring_from_str() pass @end values of type size_t or ptrdiff_t.
Values exceeding INT_MAX get truncated, with possibly disastrous
results.
Such huge substrings seem unlikely, but we found one in a core dump,
where "info tlb" executed via QMP's human-monitor-command apparently
produced 35 GiB of output.
Fix by changing the parameters size_t.
Backports commit ad63c549ecd4af4a22a675a815edeb06b0e7bb6e from qemu
The condition to check whether an address has hit against a particular
TLB entry is not completely trivial. We do this in various places, and
in fact in one place (get_page_addr_code()) we have got the condition
wrong. Abstract it out into new tlb_hit() and tlb_hit_page() inline
functions (one for a known-page-aligned address and one for an
arbitrary address), and use them in all the places where we had the
condition correct.
This is a no-behaviour-change patch; we leave fixing the buggy
code in get_page_addr_code() to a subsequent patch
Backports commit 334692bce7f0653a93b8d84ecde8c847b08dec38 from qemu
Coverity does not like the new _Float* types that are used by
recent glibc, and croaks on every single file that includes
stdlib.h. Add dummy typedefs to please it.
Backports commit a1a98357e3fdfce92b5ed0c6728489b9992fecb5 from qemu
Determining the size of a field is useful when you don't have a struct
variable handy. Open-coding this is ugly.
This patch adds the sizeof_field() macro, which is similar to
typeof_field(). Existing instances are updated to use the macro.
Backports commit f18793b096e69c7acfce66cded483ba9fc01762a from qemu
This is part of topoext support. To keep the compatibility, it is better
we support all the combination of nr_cores and nr_threads currently
supported. By allowing more nr_cores and nr_threads, we might end up with
more nodes than we can actually support with the real hardware. We need to
fix up the node id to make this work. We can achieve this by shifting the
socket_id bits left to address more nodes.
Backports commit 631be32155dbafa1fe886f2488127956c9120ba6 from qemu
There's a common pattern in QEMU where a function needs to perform
a data load or store of an N byte integer in a particular endianness.
At the moment this is handled by doing a switch() on the size and
calling the appropriate ld*_p or st*_p function for each size.
Provide a new family of functions ldn_*_p() and stn_*_p() which
take the size as an argument and do the switch() themselves.
Backports commit afa4f6653dca095f63f3fe7f2001e9334f5676c1 from qemu
The 'addr' field in the CPUIOTLBEntry struct has a rather non-obvious
use; add a comment documenting it (reverse-engineered from what
the code that sets it is doing).
Backports commit ace4109011b4912b24e76f152e2cf010e78819c5 from qemu
The API for cpu_transaction_failed() says that it takes the physical
address for the failed transaction. However we were actually passing
it the offset within the target MemoryRegion. We don't currently
have any target CPU implementations of this hook that require the
physical address; fix this bug so we don't get confused if we ever
do add one.
Backports commit 2d54f19401bc54b3b56d1cc44c96e4087b604b97 from qemu
Do the cast to uintptr_t within the helper, so that the compiler
can type check the pointer argument. We can also do some more
sanity checking of the index argument.
Backports commit 07ea28b41830f946de3841b0ac61a3413679feb9 from qemu
Depending on the host abi, float16, aka uint16_t, values are
passed and returned either zero-extended in the host register
or with garbage at the top of the host register.
The tcg code generator has so far been assuming garbage, as that
matches the x86 abi, but this is incorrect for other host abis.
Further, target/arm has so far been assuming zero-extended results,
so that it may store the 16-bit value into a 32-bit slot with the
high 16-bits already clear.
Rectify both problems by mapping "f16" in the helper definition
to uint32_t instead of (a typedef for) uint16_t. This forces
the host compiler to assume garbage in the upper 16 bits on input
and to zero-extend the result on output.
Backports commit 6c2be133a7478e443c99757b833d0f265c48e0a6 from qemu
Only MIPS requires snan_bit_is_one to be variable. While we are
specializing softfloat behaviour, allow other targets to eliminate
this runtime check.
Backports commit 03385dfdaaa2dc31bbd07d13244a6b037bfab4cc from qemu
This allows us to delete a lot of additional boilerplate
code which is no longer needed.
Backports commit 6fed16b265a4fcc810895bbca4d67e1ae7a89f07 from qemu
Usually the logging of the CPU state produced by -d cpu is sufficient
to diagnose problems, but sometimes you want to see the state of
the floating point registers as well. We don't want to enable that
by default as it adds a lot of extra data to the log; instead,
allow it to be optionally enabled via -d fpu.
Backports relevant parts of commit ae7651804748c6b479d5ae09aeac4edb9c44f76e from qemu
Some versions of gcc produce a spurious warning if the result of
__atomic_compare_echange_n() is not used and the type involved
is a signed 8 bit value:
error: value computed is not used [-Werror=unused-value]
This has been seen on at least
gcc (Ubuntu 5.4.0-6ubuntu1~16.04.9) 5.4.0 20160609
Work around this by using an explicit cast to void to indicate
that we don't care about the return value.
We don't currently use our atomic_cmpxchg() macro on any signed
8 bit types, but the upcoming support for the Arm v8.1-Atomics
will require it.
Backports commit cd95fc28fb6d8afced0d70ce52c294d0761a9daa from qemu
While at it, use int for both num_insns and max_insns to make
sure we have same-type comparisons.
Backports commit b542683d77b4f56cef0221b267c341616d87bce9 from qemu
For convenience and clarity, make it possible to call qobject_ref() at
the time when the reference is associated with a variable, or
argument, by making qobject_ref() return the same pointer as given.
Use that to simplify the callers.
Backports commit f5a74a5a50387c6f980b2e2f94f062487a1826da from qemu
Now that we can safely call QOBJECT() on QObject * as well as its
subtypes, we can have macros qobject_ref() / qobject_unref() that work
everywhere instead of having to use QINCREF() / QDECREF() for QObject
and qobject_incref() / qobject_decref() for its subtypes.
The replacement is mechanical, except I broke a long line, and added a
cast in monitor_qmp_cleanup_req_queue_locked(). Unlike
qobject_decref(), qobject_unref() doesn't accept void *.
Note that the new macros evaluate their argument exactly once, thus no
need to shout them.
Backports commit cb3e7f08aeaab0ab13e629ce8496dca150a449ba from qemu
By moving the base fields to a QObjectBase_, QObject can be a type
which also has a 'base' field. This allows writing a generic QOBJECT()
macro that will work with any QObject type, including QObject
itself. The container_of() macro ensures that the object to cast has a
QObjectBase_ base field, giving some type safety guarantees. QObject
must have no members but QObjectBase_ base, or else QOBJECT() breaks.
QObjectBase_ is not a typedef and uses a trailing underscore to make
it obvious it is not for normal use and to avoid potential abuse.
Backports commit 3d3eacaeccaab718ea0e2ddaa578bfae9e311c59 from qemu
All QObject types have the base QObject as their first field. This
allows the simplification of qobject_to().
Backports commit 7ee9edfdb117da47c86c9764d90f0be11a648666 from qemu
In icount mode, instructions that access io memory spaces in the middle
of the translation block invoke TB recompilation. After recompilation,
such instructions become last in the TB and are allowed to access io
memory spaces.
When the code includes instruction like i386 'xchg eax, 0xffffd080'
which accesses APIC, QEMU goes into an infinite loop of the recompilation.
This instruction includes two memory accesses - one read and one write.
After the first access, APIC calls cpu_report_tpr_access, which restores
the CPU state to get the current eip. But cpu_restore_state_from_tb
resets the cpu->can_do_io flag which makes the second memory access invalid.
Therefore the second memory access causes a recompilation of the block.
Then these operations repeat again and again.
This patch moves resetting cpu->can_do_io flag from
cpu_restore_state_from_tb to cpu_loop_exit* functions.
It also adds a parameter for cpu_restore_state which controls restoring
icount. There is no need to restore icount when we only query CPU state
without breaking the TB. Restoring it in such cases leads to the
incorrect flow of the virtual time.
In most cases new parameter is true (icount should be recalculated).
But there are two cases in i386 and openrisc when the CPU state is only
queried without the need to break the TB. This patch fixes both of
these cases.
Backports commit afd46fcad2dceffda35c0586f5723c127b6e09d8 from qemu
We are still seeing signals during translation time when we walk over
a page protection boundary. This expands the check to ensure the host
PC is inside the code generation buffer. The original suggestion was
to check versus tcg_ctx.code_gen_ptr but as we now segment the
translation buffer we have to settle for just a general check for
being inside.
I've also fixed up the declaration to make it clear it can deal with
invalid addresses. A later patch will fix up the call sites.
Backports commit d25f2a72272b9ffe0d06710d6217d1169bc2cc7d from qemu
Currently CPUState::cpu_index is monotonically increasing and a newly
created CPU always gets the next higher index. The next available
index is calculated by counting the existing number of CPUs. This is
fine as long as we only add CPUs, but there are architectures which
are starting to support CPU removal, too. For an architecture like PowerPC
which derives its CPU identifier (device tree ID) from cpu_index, the
existing logic of generating cpu_index values causes problems.
With the currently proposed method of handling vCPU removal by parking
the vCPU fd in QEMU
(Ref: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2015-02/msg02604.html),
generating cpu_index this way will not work for PowerPC.
This patch changes the way cpu_index is handed out by maintaining
a bit map of the CPUs that tracks both addition and removal of CPUs.
The CPU bitmap allocation logic is part of cpu_exec_init(), which is
called by instance_init routines of various CPU targets. Newly added
cpu_exec_exit() API handles the deallocation part and this routine is
called from generic CPU instance_finalize.
Note: This new CPU enumeration is for !CONFIG_USER_ONLY only.
CONFIG_USER_ONLY continues to have the old enumeration logic.
Backports commit b7bca7333411bd19c449147e8202ae6b0e4a8e09 from qemu
Add an Error argument to cpu_exec_init() to let users collect the
error. This is in preparation to change the CPU enumeration logic
in cpu_exec_init(). With the new enumeration logic, cpu_exec_init()
can fail if cpu_index values corresponding to max_cpus have already
been handed out.
Since all current callers of cpu_exec_init() are from instance_init,
use error_abort Error argument to abort in case of an error.
Backports commit 5a790cc4b942e651fec7edc597c19b637fad5a76 from qemu
With all targets defining CPU_RESOLVING_TYPE, refactor
cpu_parse_cpu_model(type, cpu_model) to parse_cpu_model(cpu_model)
so that callers won't have to know internal resolving cpu
type. Place it in exec.c so it could be called from both
target independed vl.c and *-user/main.c.
That allows us to stop abusing cpu type from
MachineClass::default_cpu_type
as resolver class in vl.c which were confusing part of
cpu_parse_cpu_model().
Also with new parse_cpu_model(), the last users of cpu_init()
in null-machine.c and bsd/linux-user targets could be switched
to cpu_create() API and cpu_init() API will be removed by
follow up patch.
With no longer users left remove MachineState::cpu_model field,
new code should use MachineState::cpu_type instead and
leave cpu_model parsing to generic code in vl.c.
Backports commit 2278b93941d42c30e2950d4b8dff4943d064e7de from qemu
All machines that support user specified cpu_model either call
cpu_generic_init() or cpu_class_by_name()/CPUClass::parse_features
to parse feature string and to get CPU type to create.
Which leads to code duplication and hard-codding default CPU model
within machine_foo_init() code. Which makes it impossible to
get CPU type before machine_init() is run.
So instead of setting default CPUs models and doing parsing in
target specific machine_foo_init() in various ways, provide
a generic data driven cpu_model parsing before machine_init()
is called.
in follow up per target patches, it will allow to:
* define default CPU type in consistent/generic manner
per machine type and drop custom code that fallbacks
to default if cpu_model is NULL
* drop custom features parsing in targets and do it
in centralized way.
* for cases of
cpu_generic_init(TYPE_BASE/DEFAULT_CPU, "some_cpu")
replace it with
cpu_create(machine->cpu_type) || cpu_create(TYPE_FOO)
depending if CPU type is user settable or not.
not doing useless parsing and clearly documenting where
CPU model is user settable or fixed one.
Patch allows machine subclasses to define default CPU type
per machine class at class_init() time and if that is set
generic code will parse cpu_model into a MachineState::cpu_type
which will be used to create CPUs for that machine instance
and allows gradual per board conversion.
Backports commit 6063d4c0f98b35a27ca018393d328a1825412a7e from qemu
it would allow to reuse feature parsing part in various machines
that have CPU features instead of re-implementing the same feature
parsing each time.
Backports commit 3c72234c98004a01d79a24f78b07053cfebd0f22 from qemu
Considering that features are converted to global properties and
global properties are automatically applied to every new instance
of created CPU (at object_new() time), there is no point in
parsing cpu_model string every time a CPU created. So move
parsing outside CPU creation loop and do it only once.
Parsing also should be done before any CPU is created so that
features would affect the first CPU a well.
Backports commit 6aff24c6a61c6fec31e555c7748ba6085b7b2c06 from qemu
Currently CPUClass->parse_features() is used to parse -cpu
features string and set properties on created CPU instances.
But considering that features specified by -cpu apply to every
created CPU instance, it doesn't make sense to parse the same
features string for every CPU created. It also makes every target
that cares about parsing features string explicitly call
CPUClass->parse_features() parser, which gets in a way if we
consider using generic device_add for CPU hotplug as device_add
has not a clue about CPU specific hooks.
Turns out we can use global properties mechanism to set
properties on every created CPU instance for a given type. That
way it's possible to convert CPU features into a set of global
properties for CPU type specified by -cpu cpu_model and common
Device.device_post_init() will apply them to CPU of given type
automatically regardless whether it's manually created CPU or CPU
created with help of device_add.
Backports commits 62a48a2a5798425997152dea3fc48708f9116c04 and
f313369fdb78f849ecbbd8e5d88f01ddf38786c8 from qemu
The only difference from qstring_get_str() is that it allows the qstring
to be NULL. If so, NULL is returned.
Backports commit 775932020dd6bd7e9c1acc0d7779677d8b4c094c from qemu
This is a dynamic casting macro that, given a QObject type, returns an
object as that type or NULL if the object is of a different type (or
NULL itself).
The macro uses lower-case letters because:
1. There does not seem to be a hard rule on whether qemu macros have to
be upper-cased,
2. The current situation in qapi/qmp is inconsistent (compare e.g.
QINCREF() vs. qdict_put()),
3. qobject_to() will evaluate its @obj parameter only once, thus it is
generally not important to the caller whether it is a macro or not,
4. I prefer it aesthetically.
The macro parameter order is chosen with typename first for
consistency with other QAPI macros like QAPI_CLONE(), as well as
for legibility (read it as "qobject to" type "applied to" obj).
Backports commit 1a56b1e2ab5e9d6d89386ca953b4afb419e15abe from qemu
_Static_assert() allows us to specify messages, and that may come in
handy. Even without _Static_assert(), encouraging developers to put a
helpful message next to the QEMU_BUILD_BUG_* may make debugging easier
whenever it breaks.
Backports commit 9139b5672360aaa263da1d96cdfdbe16accb6e3b from qemu
QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON should use C11's _Static_assert, if the compiler supports it,
to provide more readable messages on failure.
We check for _Static_assert in configure, and set CONFIG_STATIC_ASSERT
accordingly. QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON invokes _Static_assert if CONFIG_STATIC_ASSERT
is defined, and reverts to the old way otherwise.
That way, systems without C11 conforming compiler will still have the old
messages, as verified by intentionally breaking the configure check.
the following example output was generated by inverting the condition in
QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON:
without _Static_assert:
> In file included from /qemu/include/qemu/osdep.h:36:0,
> from /qemu/qga/commands.c:13:
> /qemu/qga/commands.c: In function ‘qmp_guest_exec_status’:
> /qemu/include/qemu/compiler.h:89:12: error: negative width in bit-field ‘<anonymous>’
> struct { \
> ^
> /qemu/include/qemu/compiler.h:96:38: note: in expansion of macro QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON_STRUCT’
> #define QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(x) typedef QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON_STRUCT(x) \
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> /qemu/include/qemu/atomic.h:146:5: note: in expansion of macro ‘QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON’
> QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(*ptr) > sizeof(void *)); \
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> /qemu/include/qemu/atomic.h:417:5: note: in expansion of macro ‘atomic_load_acquire’
> atomic_load_acquire(ptr)
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> /qemu/qga/commands.c:160:21: note: in expansion of macro ‘atomic_mb_read’
> bool finished = atomic_mb_read(&gei->finished);
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
with _Static_assert:
> In file included from /qemu/include/qemu/osdep.h:36:0,
> from /qemu/qga/commands.c:13:
> /qemu/qga/commands.c: In function ‘qmp_guest_exec_status’:
> /qemu/include/qemu/compiler.h:94:30: error: static assertion failed: "not expecting: sizeof(*&gei->finished) > sizeof(void *)"
> #define QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(x) _Static_assert((x), #x)
> ^
> /qemu/include/qemu/atomic.h:146:5: note: in expansion of macro ‘QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON’
> QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(sizeof(*ptr) > sizeof(void *)); \
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> /qemu/include/qemu/atomic.h:417:5: note: in expansion of macro ‘atomic_load_acquire’
> atomic_load_acquire(ptr)
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> /qemu/qga/commands.c:160:21: note: in expansion of macro ‘atomic_mb_read’
> bool finished = atomic_mb_read(&gei->finished);
> ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Backports commit 49e00a18708e27c815828d9440d5c9300d19547c from qemu
Instantiate a QObject* from a literal QLitObject.
LitObject only supports int64_t for now. uint64_t and double aren't
implemented.
Backports commit 3cf42b8b3af1bd61e736a9ca0f94806c7931ae56 from qemu
This function needs to be converted to QOM hook and virtualised for
multi-arch. This rename interferes, as cpu-qom will not have access
to the renaming causing name divergence. This rename doesn't really do
anything anyway so just delete it.
Backports commit 8642c1b81e0418df066a7960a7426d85a923a253 from qemu
Move vcpu's associated numa_node field out of generic CPUState
into inherited classes that actually care about cpu<->numa mapping,
i.e: ARMCPU, PowerPCCPU, X86CPU.
Backports relevant parts of commit 15f8b14228b856850df3fa5ba999ad96521f2208 from qemu
Actually enable the global memory barriers if supported by the OS.
Because only recent versions of Linux include the support, they
are disabled by default. Note that it also has to be disabled
for QEMU to run under Wine.
Before this patch, rcutorture reports 85 ns/read for my machine,
after the patch it reports 12.5 ns/read. On the other hand updates
go from 50 *micro*seconds to 20 *milli*seconds.
Backports commit a40161cbe9ccbcbab798c3e4d257c4bba99d153a from qemu
This new header file provides heavy-weight "global" memory barriers that
enforce memory ordering on each running thread belonging to the current
process. For now, use a dummy implementation that issues memory barriers
on both sides (matching what QEMU has been doing so far).
Backports commit c8d3877e48c4f57381d72eaf8d016bff12ce2d7c from qemu
Unify half a dozen copies of very similar code (the only difference being
whether comparisons were case-sensitive) and use it also in Tricore,
which did not do any sorting of CPU model names.
Backports commit 47c66009ab793241e8210b3018c77a9ce9506aa8 from qemu
There are qemu_strtoNN functions for various sized integers. This adds two
more for plain int & unsigned int types, with suitable range checking.
Backports commit 473a2a331ee382703f7ca0067ba2545350cfa06c from qemu
We already handle this in the backends, and the lifetime datum
for the TCGOp is already large enough.
Backports commit 1df3caa946e08b387511dfba3a37d78910e51796 from qemu
A few block drivers will need to rename .bdrv_create options for their
QAPIfication, so let's have a helper function for that.
Backports commit bcebf102ccc3c6db327f341adc379fdf0673ca6b from qemu
This shares an cached empty FlatView among address spaces. The empty
FV is used every time when a root MR renders into a FV without memory
sections which happens when MR or its children are not enabled or
zero-sized. The empty_view is not NULL to keep the rest of memory
API intact; it also has a dispatch tree for the same reason.
On POWER8 with 255 CPUs, 255 virtio-net, 40 PCI bridges guest this halves
the amount of FlatView's in use (557 -> 260) and dispatch tables
(~800000 -> ~370000). In an unrelated experiment with 112 non-virtio
devices on x86 ("-M pc"), only 4 FlatViews are alive, and about ~2000
are created at startup.
Backports commit 092aa2fc65b7a35121616aad8f39d47b8f921618 from qemu
Since FlatViews are shared now and ASes not, this gets rid of
address_space_init_shareable().
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit b516572f31c0ea0937cd9d11d9bd72dd83809886 from qemu
This allows sharing flat views between address spaces (AS) when
the same root memory region is used when creating a new address space.
This is done by walking through all ASes and caching one FlatView per
a physical root MR (i.e. not aliased).
This removes search for duplicates from address_space_init_shareable() as
FlatViews are shared elsewhere and keeping as::ref_count correct seems
an unnecessary and useless complication.
This should cause no change and memory use or boot time yet.
Backports commit 967dc9b1194a9281124b2e1ce67b6c3359a2138f from qemu
This renames some helpers to reflect better what they do.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 8629d3fcb77e9775e44d9051bad0fb5187925eae from qemu
FlatView's will be shared between AddressSpace's and subpage_t
and MemoryRegionSection cannot store AS anymore, hence this change.
In particular, for:
typedef struct subpage_t {
MemoryRegion iomem;
- AddressSpace *as;
+ FlatView *fv;
hwaddr base;
uint16_t sub_section[];
} subpage_t;
struct MemoryRegionSection {
MemoryRegion *mr;
- AddressSpace *address_space;
+ FlatView *fv;
hwaddr offset_within_region;
Int128 size;
hwaddr offset_within_address_space;
bool readonly;
};
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 166206845f7fd75e720e6feea0bb01957c8da07f from qemu
As we are going to share FlatView's between AddressSpace's,
and AddressSpaceDispatch is a structure to perform quick lookup
in FlatView, this moves ASD to FlatView.
After previosly open coded ASD rendering, we can also remove
as->next_dispatch as the new FlatView pointer is stored
on a stack and set to an AS atomically.
flatview_destroy() is executed under RCU instead of
address_space_dispatch_free() now.
This makes mem_begin/mem_commit to work with ASD and mem_add with FV
as later on mem_add will be taking FV as an argument anyway.
This should cause no behavioural change.
Backports commit 66a6df1dc6d5b28cc3e65db0d71683fbdddc6b62 from qemu
machine_class_base_init() member name is allocated by
machine_class_base_init(), but not freed by
machine_class_finalize(). Simply freeing there doesn't work,
because DEFINE_PC_MACHINE() overwrites it with a literal string.
Fix DEFINE_PC_MACHINE() not to overwrite it, and add the missing
free to machine_class_finalize().
Backports commit 8ea753718b2d1a42e9ce7b8db9f5e4e1f330e827 from qemu
The script used for converting from QEMUMachine had used one
DEFINE_MACHINE() per machine registered. In cases where multiple
machines are registered from one source file, avoid the excessive
generation of module init functions by reverting this unrolling.
Backports commit 8a661aea0e7f6e776c6ebc9abe339a85b34fea1d from qemu
Convert all machines to use DEFINE_MACHINE() instead of QEMUMachine
automatically using a script.
Backports commit e264d29de28c5b0be3d063307ce9fb613b427cc3 from qemu
The macro will allow easy registration of a TYPE_MACHINE subclass, using
only the machine name and a MachineClass initialization function as
parameter.
Backports commit ed0b6de343448d1014b53bcf541041373322fa1c from qemu
Now all TYPE_MACHINE subclasses use MACHINE_TYPE_NAME to generate the
class name. So instead of requiring each subclass to set
MachineClass::name manually, we can now set it automatically at the
TYPE_MACHINE class_base_init() function.
Backports commit 98cec76a7076c4a38e16f1a9de170a7942b3be54 from qemu
Now that all non-abstract TYPE_MACHINE subclasses have the -machine
suffix, add an assert to ensure this will be always true.
Backports commit dcb3d601115eed77aef543fe3a920adc17544e06 from qemu
The macro will be useful to ensure the machine class names follow the
right format to make machine class lookup by class name work correctly.
Backports commit c84a8f01b2a5d8bf98c447796d4a747333a5b1fd from qemu
This removes the following fields from QEMUMachine: family, alias,
reset, hot_add_cpu, units_per_default_bus, no_serial, no_parallel,
use_virtcon, use_sclp, no_floppy, no_cdrom, default_display,
compat_props, and hw_version.
The only users of those fields were already converted to use QOM and
MachineClass directly, so they are not needed anymore.
Backports commit d48f4fa69eb3efb03a2efe2e4606a97a17cf222f from qemu
Now that we have a DEFINE_PC_MACHINE helper macro that just requires an
initialization function, it is trivial to convert them to register a QOM
machine class directly, instead of using QEMUMachine.
Backports commit 865906f7fdadd2732441ab158787f81f6a212bfe from qemu
This removes the following fields from QEMUMachine: family, alias,
reset, hot_add_cpu, units_per_default_bus, no_serial, no_parallel,
use_virtcon, use_sclp, no_floppy, no_cdrom, default_display,
compat_props, and hw_version.
The only users of those fields were already converted to use QOM and
MachineClass directly, so they are not needed anymore.
Backports commit d48f4fa69eb3efb03a2efe2e4606a97a17cf222f from qemu
Simplify a bit the code by using g_strdup_printf() and store it in a
non-const value so casting is no longer needed, and ownership is
clearer.
Backports commit f73480c36f49562556b80bb5bf8acc45e20dcca1 from qemu
Now that CPUs show up in the help text of "-device ?",
we should group them into an appropriate category.
Backports commit ba31cc7226ebcee639f18faa90c1542bd364fba3 from qemu
Solaris 9 was released in 2002, its successor Solaris 10 was
released in 2005, and Solaris 9 was end-of-lifed in 2014.
Nobody has stepped forward to express interest in supporting
Solaris of any flavour, so removing support for the ancient
versions seems uncontroversial.
In particular, this allows us to remove a use of 'uname'
in configure that won't work if you're cross-compiling.
Backports commit 91939262ffcd3c85ea6a4793d3029326eea1d649 from qemu
Clang 3.9 passes the CONFIG_AVX2_OPT configure test. However, the
supplied <cpuid.h> does not contain the bit_AVX2 define that we use
when detecting whether the routine can be enabled.
Introduce a qemu-specific header that uses the compiler's definition
of __cpuid et al, but supplies any missing bit_* definitions needed.
This avoids introducing any extra ifdefs to util/bufferiszero.c, and
allows quite a few to be removed from tcg/i386/tcg-target.inc.c.
Backports commit 5dd8990841a9e331d9d4838a116291698208cbb6 from qemu
We dropped support for ia64 host CPUs in the 2.11 release (removing
the TCG backend for it, and advertising the support as being
completely removed in the changelog). However there are a few bits
and pieces of code still floating about. Remove those, too.
We can drop the check in configure for "ia64 or hppa host?"
entirely, because we don't support hppa hosts either any more.
Backports commit b1cef6d02f84bd842fb94a6109ad4e2ad873e8e5 from qemu
Move qapi-schema.json to qapi/, so it's next to its modules, and all
files get generated to qapi/, not just the ones generated for modules.
Consistently name the generated files qapi-MODULE.EXT:
qmp-commands.[ch] become qapi-commands.[ch], qapi-event.[ch] become
qapi-events.[ch], and qmp-introspect.[ch] become qapi-introspect.[ch].
This gets rid of the temporary hacks in scripts/qapi/commands.py,
scripts/qapi/events.py, and scripts/qapi/common.py.
Backports commit eb815e248f50cde9ab86eddd57eca5019b71ca78 from qemu
In my "build everything" tree, a change to the types in
qapi-schema.json triggers a recompile of about 4800 out of 5100
objects.
The previous commit split up qmp-commands.h, qmp-event.h, qmp-visit.h,
qapi-types.h. Each of these headers still includes all its shards.
Reduce compile time by including just the shards we actually need.
To illustrate the benefits: adding a type to qapi/migration.json now
recompiles some 2300 instead of 4800 objects. The next commit will
improve it further.
Backports commit 9af2398977a78d37bf184d6ff6bd04c72bfbf006 from qemu
Since f3218a8 ("softfloat: add floatx80 constants")
floatx80_infinity is defined but never used.
This patch updates floatx80 functions to use
this definition.
This allows to define a different default Infinity
value on m68k: the m68k FPU defines infinity with
all bits set to zero in the mantissa.
Backports commit 0f605c889ca3fe9744166ad4149d0dff6dacb696 from qemu
Move fpu/softfloat-macros.h to include/fpu/
Export floatx80 functions to be used by target floatx80
specific implementations.
Exports:
propagateFloatx80NaN(), extractFloatx80Frac(),
extractFloatx80Exp(), extractFloatx80Sign(),
normalizeFloatx80Subnormal(), packFloatx80(),
roundAndPackFloatx80(), normalizeRoundAndPackFloatx80()
Also exports packFloat32() that will be used to implement
m68k fsinh, fcos, fsin, ftan operations.
Backports commit 88857aca93f6ec8f372fb9c8201394b0e5582034 from qemu
As some of the constants here will also be needed
elsewhere (specifically for the upcoming SVE support) we move them out
to softfloat.h.
Backports commit 026e2d6ef74000afb9049f46add4b94f594c8fb3 from qemu
Backports commit 2deb992b767d28035fac3b374c7730494ff0b43d from qemu
Also backports the fp16 changes introduced in commit f566c0474a9b9bbd9ed248607e4007e24d3358c0
This allows us to explicitly pass float16 to helpers rather than
assuming uint32_t and dealing with the result. Of course they will be
passed in i32 sized registers by default.
Backports commit 35737497008aeabce5dc381a41d3827bec486192 from qemu
This is a little bit of a departure from softfloat's original approach
as we skip the estimate step in favour of a straight iteration. There
is a minor optimisation to avoid calculating more bits of precision
than we need however this still brings a performance drop, especially
for float64 operations.
Backports commit c13bb2da9eedfbc5886c8048df1bc1114b285fb0 from qemu
The compare function was already expanded from a macro. I keep the
macro expansion but move most of the logic into a compare_decomposed.
Backports commit 0c4c90929143a530730e2879204a55a30bf63758 from qemu
Let's do the same re-factor treatment for minmax functions. I still
use the MACRO trick to expand but now all the checking code is common.
Backports commit 89360067071b1844bf745682e18db7dde74cdb8d from qemu
This is one of the simpler manipulations you could make to a floating
point number.
Backports commit 0bfc9f195209593e91a98cf2233753f56a2e5c02 from qemu
These are considerably simpler as the lower order integers can just
use the higher order conversion function. As the decomposed fractional
part is a full 64 bit rounding and inexact handling comes from the
pack functions.
Backports commit c02e1fb80b553d47420f7492de4bc590c2461a86 from qemu
We share the common int64/uint64_pack_decomposed function across all
the helpers and simply limit the final result depending on the final
size.
Backports commit ab52f973a504f8de0c5df64631ba4caea70a7d9e from qemu
We can now add float16_round_to_int and use the common round_decomposed and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 round_to_int functions.
Backports commit dbe4d53a590f5689772b683984588b3cf6df163e from qemu
We can now add float16_muladd and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 muladd functions.
Backports commit d446830a3aac33e7221e361dad3ab1e1892646cb from qemu
We can now add float16_div and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 versions.
Backports commit cf07323d494f4bc225e405688c2e455c3423cc40 from qemu
We can now add float16_mul and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 versions.
Backports commit 74d707e2cc1e406068acad8e5559cd2584b1073a from qemu
We can now add float16_add/sub and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 add and sub functions.
Backports commit 6fff216769cf7eaa3961c85dee7a72838696d365 from qemu
We can now add float16_add/sub and use the common decompose and
canonicalize functions to have a single implementation for
float16/32/64 add and sub functions.
Backports commit 6fff216769cf7eaa3961c85dee7a72838696d365 from qemu
This defines the same set of common constants for float 16 as defined
for 32 and 64 bit floats. These are often used by target helper
functions. I've also removed constants that are not used by anybody.
Backports commit efd4829edfa036c5506a16d05c91268faa1f6332 from qemu
This will be required when expanding the MINMAX() macro for 16
bit/half-precision operations.
Backports commit 28136775cd99c628f7d7c642b04eb87f062efef8 from qemu
As cpu.h is another typically widely included file which doesn't need
full access to the softfloat API we can remove the includes from here
as well. Where they do need types it's typically for float_status and
the rounding modes so we move that to softfloat-types.h as well.
As a result of not having softfloat in every cpu.h call we now need to
add it to various helpers that do need the full softfloat.h
definitions.
Backports commit 24f91e81b65fcdd0552d1f0fcb0ea7cfe3829c19 from qemu
The main culprit here is bswap.h which pulled in softfloat.h so it
could use the types in its CPU_Float* and ldfl/stfql functions. As
bswap.h is very widely included this added a compile dependency every
time we touch softfloat.h. Move the typedefs for each float type into
their own file so we don't re-build the world every time we tweak the
main softfloat.h header.
Backports commit cfd88fc6f2722def193f5ef271381d8f6e2a2526 from qemu
It's not actively built and when enabled things fail to compile. I'm
not sure the type-checking is really helping here. Seeing as we "own"
our softfloat now lets remove the cruft.
Backports commit a9579fff616563ca34977af68c9646c8f7be1120 from qemu
This will be required when expanding the MINMAX() macro for 16
bit/half-precision operations.
Backports commit 210cbd4910ae9e41e0a1785b96890ea2c291b381 from qemu
This cleanup makes the number of objects depending on qapi/qmp/qlist.h
drop from 4551 (out of 4743) to 16 in my "build everything" tree.
While there, separate #include from file comment with a blank line.
Backports commit 47e6b297e76007c04a1e9c492006fe093d932cd9 from qemu
This generic function (along with its implementations for different
types) determines whether two QObjects are equal.
Backports commit b38dd678a21582e03ecd2dec76ccf8290455628a from qemu
The macro expansions of qdict_put_TYPE() and qlist_append_TYPE() need
qbool.h, qnull.h, qnum.h and qstring.h to compile. We include qnull.h
and qnum.h in the headers, but not qbool.h and qstring.h. Works,
because we include those wherever the macros get used.
Open-coding these helpers is of dubious value. Turn them into
functions and drop the includes from the headers.
This cleanup makes the number of objects depending on qapi/qmp/qnum.h
from 4551 (out of 4743) to 46 in my "build everything" tree. For
qapi/qmp/qnull.h, the number drops from 4552 to 21.
Backports commit 15280c360e54a65e2c7be1a47bfbe41dce1ef986 from qemu
compare_litqobj_to_qobj() lacks a qlit_ prefix. Moreover, "compare"
suggests -1, 0, +1 for less than, equal and greater than. The
function actually returns non-zero for equal, zero for unequal.
Rename to qlit_equal_qobject().
Its return type will be cleaned up in the next patch.
Backports commit 60cc2eb7afd40b9cbaa35a5e0b54f365ac6e49f1 from qemu
The QLIT_QFOO() macros expand into compound literals. Sadly, gcc
doesn't recognizes these as constant expressions (clang does), which
makes the macros useless for initializing objects with static storage
duration.
There is a gcc bug about it:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=71713
Change the macros to expand into initializers.
Backports commit d5cd8fbf130312bea91823c41de87d55818d599b from qemu
Make visit_type_null() take an @obj argument like its buddies. This
helps keep the next commit simple.
Backports commit d2f95f4d482374485234790a6fc3cca29ebb7355 from qemu
qapi/qmp/types.h is a convenience header to include a number of
qapi/qmp/ headers. Since we rarely need all of the headers
qapi/qmp/types.h includes, we bypass it most of the time. Most of the
places that use it don't need all the headers, either.
Include the necessary headers directly, and drop qapi/qmp/types.h.
Backports commit 6b67395762a4c8b6ca94364e0a0f616a6470c46a from qemu
This renders many inclusions of qapi/qmp/q*.h superfluous. They'll be
dropped in the next few commits.
Backports commit 9f5c734d591e26186a71f9e36d752f4798df3672 from qemu
The MC68040 MMU provides the size of the access that
triggers the page fault.
This size is set in the Special Status Word which
is written in the stack frame of the access fault
exception.
So we need the size in m68k_cpu_unassigned_access() and
m68k_cpu_handle_mmu_fault().
To be able to do that, this patch modifies the prototype of
handle_mmu_fault handler, tlb_fill() and probe_write().
do_unassigned_access() already includes a size parameter.
This patch also updates handle_mmu_fault handlers and
tlb_fill() of all targets (only parameter, no code change).
Backports commit 98670d47cd8d63a529ff230fd39ddaa186156f8c from qemu
With no fixed array allocation, we can't overflow a buffer.
This will be important as optimizations related to host vectors
may expand the number of ops used.
Use QTAILQ to link the ops together.
Backports commit 15fa08f8451babc88d733bd411d4c94976f9d0f8 from qemu
Normally we create an address space for that CPU and pass that address
space into the function. Let's just do it inside to unify address space
creations. It'll simplify my next patch to rename those address spaces.
Backports commit 80ceb07a83375e3a0091591f96bd47bce2f640ce from qemu
This was never used since its introduction in commit
196ea13104f8 ("memory: Add global-locking property to memory
regions").
Backports commit e2fbe20851ceec5ccd7b539a89db0420393fb85d from qemu
In our various supported host OSes, the time_t type may be either 32
or 64 bit, and could in theory also be either signed or unsigned.
Notably, in OpenBSD time_t is a 64 bit type even if 'long' is 32
bits, so using LONG_MAX for TIME_MAX is incorrect.
Use an approach suggested by Paolo Bonzini which calculates
the maximum value of the type rather than hardcoding it;
to do this we use the TYPE_MAXIMUM macro from Gnulib.
Backports commit e7b47c22e2df14d55e3e4426688c929bf8e3f7fb from qemu