1This is a loose collection of notes for people hacking on simulators. 2If this document gets big enough it can be prettied up then. 3 4Contents 5 6- The "common" directory 7- Common Makefile Support 8- TAGS support 9- Generating "configure" files 10- tconfig.in 11- C Language Assumptions 12- "dump" commands under gdb 13 14The "common" directory 15====================== 16 17The common directory contains: 18 19- common documentation files (e.g. run.1, and maybe in time .texi files) 20- common source files (e.g. run.c) 21- common Makefile fragment and configury (e.g. Make-common.in, aclocal.m4). 22 23In addition "common" contains portions of the system call support 24(e.g. callback.c, nltvals.def). 25 26Even though no files are built in this directory, it is still configured 27so support for regenerating nltvals.def is present. 28 29Common Makefile Support 30======================= 31 32A common configuration framework is available for simulators that want 33to use it. The common framework exists to remove a lot of duplication 34in configure.in and Makefile.in, and it also provides a foundation for 35enhancing the simulators uniformly (e.g. the more they share in common 36the easier a feature added to one is added to all). 37 38The configure.in of a simulator using the common framework should look like: 39 40--- snip --- 41dnl Process this file with autoconf to produce a configure script. 42sinclude(../common/aclocal.m4) 43AC_PREREQ(2.5)dnl 44AC_INIT(Makefile.in) 45 46SIM_AC_COMMON 47 48... target specific additions ... 49 50SIM_AC_OUTPUT 51--- snip --- 52 53SIM_AC_COMMON: 54 55- invokes the autoconf macros most often used by the simulators 56- defines --enable/--with options usable by all simulators 57- initializes sim_link_files/sim_link_links as the set of symbolic links 58 to set up 59 60SIM_AC_OUTPUT: 61 62- creates the symbolic links defined in sim_link_{files,links} 63- creates config.h 64- creates the Makefile 65 66The Makefile.in of a simulator using the common framework should look like: 67 68--- snip --- 69# Makefile for blah ... 70# Copyright blah ... 71 72## COMMON_PRE_CONFIG_FRAG 73 74# These variables are given default values in COMMON_PRE_CONFIG_FRAG. 75# We override the ones we need to here. 76# Not all of these need to be mentioned, only the necessary ones. 77# In fact it is better to *not* mention ones if the value is the default. 78 79# List of object files, less common parts. 80SIM_OBJS = 81# List of extra dependencies. 82# Generally this consists of simulator specific files included by sim-main.h. 83SIM_EXTRA_DEPS = 84# List of flags to always pass to $(CC). 85SIM_EXTRA_CFLAGS = 86# List of extra libraries to link with. 87SIM_EXTRA_LIBS = 88# List of extra program dependencies. 89SIM_EXTRA_LIBDEPS = 90# List of main object files for `run'. 91SIM_RUN_OBJS = run.o 92# Dependency of `all' to build any extra files. 93SIM_EXTRA_ALL = 94# Dependency of `install' to install any extra files. 95SIM_EXTRA_INSTALL = 96# Dependency of `clean' to clean any extra files. 97SIM_EXTRA_CLEAN = 98 99## COMMON_POST_CONFIG_FRAG 100 101# Rules need to build $(SIM_OBJS), plus whatever else the target wants. 102 103... target specific rules ... 104--- snip --- 105 106COMMON_{PRE,POST}_CONFIG_FRAG are markers for SIM_AC_OUTPUT to tell it 107where to insert the two pieces of common/Make-common.in. 108The resulting Makefile is created by doing autoconf substitions on 109both the target's Makefile.in and Make-common.in, and inserting 110the two pieces of Make-common.in into the target's Makefile.in at 111COMMON_{PRE,POST}_CONFIG_FRAG. 112 113Note that SIM_EXTRA_{INSTALL,CLEAN} could be removed and "::" targets 114could be used instead. However, it's not clear yet whether "::" targets 115are portable enough. 116 117TAGS support 118============ 119 120Many files generate program symbols at compile time. 121Such symbols can't be found with grep nor do they normally appear in 122the TAGS file. To get around this, source files can add the comment 123 124/* TAGS: foo1 foo2 */ 125 126where foo1, foo2 are program symbols. Symbols found in such comments 127are greppable and appear in the TAGS file. 128 129Generating "configure" files 130============================ 131 132For targets using the common framework, "configure" can be generated 133by running `autoconf'. 134 135To regenerate the configure files for all targets using the common framework: 136 137 $ cd devo/sim 138 $ make -f Makefile.in SHELL=/bin/sh autoconf-common 139 140To add a change-log entry to the ChangeLog file for each updated 141directory (WARNING - check the modified new-ChangeLog files before 142renaming): 143 144 $ make -f Makefile.in SHELL=/bin/sh autoconf-changelog 145 $ more */new-ChangeLog 146 $ make -f Makefile.in SHELL=/bin/sh autoconf-install 147 148In a similar vein, both the configure and config.in files can be 149updated using the sequence: 150 151 $ cd devo/sim 152 $ make -f Makefile.in SHELL=/bin/sh autoheader-common 153 $ make -f Makefile.in SHELL=/bin/sh autoheader-changelog 154 $ more */new-ChangeLog 155 $ make -f Makefile.in SHELL=/bin/sh autoheader-install 156 157To add the entries to an alternative ChangeLog file, use: 158 159 $ make ChangeLog=MyChangeLog .... 160 161 162tconfig.in 163========== 164 165File tconfig.in defines one or more target configuration macros 166(e.g. a tm.h file). There are very few that need defining. 167For a list of all of them, see common/tconfig.in. 168It contains them all, commented out. 169The intent is that a new port can just copy this file and 170define the ones it needs. 171 172C Language Assumptions 173====================== 174 175The programmer may assume that the simulator is being built using an 176ANSI C compiler that supports a 64 bit data type. Consequently: 177 178 o prototypes can be used 179 180 o If sim-types.h is included, the two 181 types signed64 and unsigned64 are 182 available. 183 184 o The type `unsigned' is valid. 185 186However, the user should be aware of the following: 187 188 o GCC's `<number>LL' is NOT acceptable. 189 Microsoft-C doesn't reconize it. 190 191 o MSC's `<number>i64' is NOT acceptable. 192 GCC doesn't reconize it. 193 194 o GCC's `long long' MSC's `_int64' can 195 NOT be used to define 64 bit integer data 196 types. 197 198 o An empty array (eg int a[0]) is not valid. 199 200When building with GCC it is effectivly a requirement that 201--enable-build-warnings=,-Werror be specified during configuration. 202 203"dump" commands under gdb 204========================= 205 206gdbinit.in contains the following 207 208define dump 209set sim_debug_dump () 210end 211 212Simulators that define the sim_debug_dump function can then have their 213internal state pretty printed from gdb. 214 215FIXME: This can obviously be made more elaborate. As needed it will be. 216 217Rebuilding nltvals.def 218====================== 219 220Checkout a copy of the SIM and LIBGLOSS modules (Unless you've already 221got one to hand): 222 223 $ mkdir /tmp/$$ 224 $ cd /tmp/$$ 225 $ cvs checkout sim-no-testsuite libgloss-no-testsuite newlib-no-testsuite 226 227Configure things for an arbitrary simulator target (I've d10v for 228convenience): 229 230 $ mkdir /tmp/$$/build 231 $ cd /tmp/$$/build 232 $ /tmp/$$/devo/configure --target=d10v-elf 233 234In the sim/common directory rebuild the headers: 235 236 $ cd sim/common 237 $ make headers 238 239To add a new target: 240 241 devo/sim/common/gennltvals.sh 242 243 Add your new processor target (you'll need to grub 244 around to find where your syscall.h lives). 245 246 devo/sim/<processor>/Makefile.in 247 248 Add the definition: 249 250 ``NL_TARGET = -DNL_TARGET_d10v'' 251 252 just before the line COMMON_POST_CONFIG_FRAG. 253 254 devo/sim/<processor>/*.[ch] 255 256 Include targ-vals.h instead of syscall.h. 257 258Tracing 259======= 260 261For ports based on CGEN, tracing instrumentation should largely be for free, 262so we will cover the basic non-CGEN setup here. The assumption is that your 263target is using the common autoconf macros and so the build system already 264includes the sim-trace configure flag. 265 266The full tracing API is covered in sim-trace.h, so this section is an overview. 267 268Before calling any trace function, you should make a call to the trace_prefix() 269function. This is usually done in the main sim_engine_run() loop before 270simulating the next instruction. You should make this call before every 271simulated insn. You can probably copy & paste this: 272 if (TRACE_ANY_P (cpu)) 273 trace_prefix (sd, cpu, NULL_CIA, oldpc, TRACE_LINENUM_P (cpu), NULL, 0, ""); 274 275You will then need to instrument your simulator code with calls to the 276trace_generic() function with the appropriate trace index. Typically, this 277will take a form similar to the above snippet. So to trace instructions, you 278would use something like: 279 if (TRACE_INSN_P (cpu)) 280 trace_generic (sd, cpu, TRACE_INSN_IDX, "NOP;"); 281 282The exact output format is up to you. See the trace index enum in sim-trace.h 283to see the different tracing info available. 284 285To utilize the tracing features at runtime, simply use the --trace-xxx flags. 286 run --trace-insn ./some-program 287 288Profiling 289========= 290 291Similar to the tracing section, this is merely an overview for non-CGEN based 292ports. The full API may be found in sim-profile.h. Its API is also similar 293to the tracing API. 294 295Note that unlike the tracing command line options, in addition to the profile 296flags, you have to use the --verbose option to view the summary report after 297execution. Tracing output is displayed on the fly, but the profile output is 298only summarized. 299 300To profile core accesses (such as data reads/writes and insn fetches), add 301calls to PROFILE_COUNT_CORE() to your read/write functions. So in your data 302fetch function, you'd use something like: 303 PROFILE_COUNT_CORE (cpu, target_addr, size_in_bytes, map_read); 304Then in your data write function: 305 PROFILE_COUNT_CORE (cpu, target_addr, size_in_bytes, map_write); 306And in your insn fetcher: 307 PROFILE_COUNT_CORE (cpu, target_addr, size_in_bytes, map_exec); 308 309To use the PC profiling code, you simply have to tell the system where to find 310your simulator's PC and its size. So in your sim_open() function: 311 STATE_WATCHPOINTS (sd)->pc = address_of_cpu0_pc; 312 STATE_WATCHPOINTS (sd)->sizeof_pc = number_of_bytes_for_pc_storage; 313In a typical 32bit system, the sizeof_pc will be 4 bytes. 314 315To profile branches, in every location where a branch insn is executed, call 316one of the related helpers: 317 PROFILE_BRANCH_TAKEN (cpu); 318 PROFILE_BRANCH_UNTAKEN (cpu); 319If you have stall information, you can utilize the other helpers too. 320 321Environment Simulation 322====================== 323 324The simplest simulator doesn't include environment support -- it merely 325simulates the Instruction Set Architecture (ISA). Once you're ready to move 326on to the next level, call the common macro in your configure.ac: 327SIM_AC_OPTION_ENVIRONMENT 328 329This will support for the user, virtual, and operating environments. See the 330sim-config.h header for a more detailed description of them. The former are 331pretty straight forward as things like exceptions (making system calls) are 332handled in the simulator. Which is to say, an exception does not trigger an 333exception handler in the simulator target -- that is what the operating env 334is about. See the following userspace section for more information. 335 336Userspace System Calls 337====================== 338 339By default, the libgloss userspace is simulated. That means the system call 340numbers and calling convention matches that of libgloss. Simulating other 341userspaces (such as Linux) is pretty straightforward, but let's first focus 342on the basics. The basic API is covered in include/gdb/callback.h. 343 344When an instruction is simulated that invokes the system call method (such as 345forcing a hardware trap or exception), your simulator code should set up the 346CB_SYSCALL data structure before calling the common cb_syscall() function. 347For example: 348static int 349syscall_read_mem (host_callback *cb, struct cb_syscall *sc, 350 unsigned long taddr, char *buf, int bytes) 351{ 352 SIM_DESC sd = (SIM_DESC) sc->p1; 353 SIM_CPU *cpu = (SIM_CPU *) sc->p2; 354 return sim_core_read_buffer (sd, cpu, read_map, buf, taddr, bytes); 355} 356static int 357syscall_write_mem (host_callback *cb, struct cb_syscall *sc, 358 unsigned long taddr, const char *buf, int bytes) 359{ 360 SIM_DESC sd = (SIM_DESC) sc->p1; 361 SIM_CPU *cpu = (SIM_CPU *) sc->p2; 362 return sim_core_write_buffer (sd, cpu, write_map, buf, taddr, bytes); 363} 364void target_sim_syscall (SIM_CPU *cpu) 365{ 366 SIM_DESC sd = CPU_STATE (cpu); 367 host_callback *cb = STATE_CALLBACK (sd); 368 CB_SYSCALL sc; 369 370 CB_SYSCALL_INIT (&sc); 371 372 sc.func = <fetch system call number>; 373 sc.arg1 = <fetch first system call argument>; 374 sc.arg2 = <fetch second system call argument>; 375 sc.arg3 = <fetch third system call argument>; 376 sc.arg4 = <fetch fourth system call argument>; 377 sc.p1 = (PTR) sd; 378 sc.p2 = (PTR) cpu; 379 sc.read_mem = syscall_read_mem; 380 sc.write_mem = syscall_write_mem; 381 382 cb_syscall (cb, &sc); 383 384 <store system call result from sc.result>; 385 <store system call error from sc.errcode>; 386} 387Some targets store the result and error code in different places, while others 388only store the error code when the result is an error. 389 390Keep in mind that the CB_SYS_xxx defines are normalized values with no real 391meaning with respect to the target. They provide a unique map on the host so 392that it can parse things sanely. For libgloss, the common/nltvals.def file 393creates the target's system call numbers to the CB_SYS_xxx values. 394 395To simulate other userspace targets, you really only need to update the maps 396pointers that are part of the callback interface. So create CB_TARGET_DEFS_MAP 397arrays for each set (system calls, errnos, open bits, etc...) and in a place 398you find useful, do something like: 399 400... 401static CB_TARGET_DEFS_MAP cb_linux_syscall_map[] = { 402# define TARGET_LINUX_SYS_open 5 403 { CB_SYS_open, TARGET_LINUX_SYS_open }, 404 ... 405 { -1, -1 }, 406}; 407... 408 host_callback *cb = STATE_CALLBACK (sd); 409 cb->syscall_map = cb_linux_syscall_map; 410 cb->errno_map = cb_linux_errno_map; 411 cb->open_map = cb_linux_open_map; 412 cb->signal_map = cb_linux_signal_map; 413 cb->stat_map = cb_linux_stat_map; 414... 415 416Each of these cb_linux_*_map's are manually declared by the arch target. 417 418The target_sim_syscall() example above will then work unchanged (ignoring the 419system call convention) because all of the callback functions go through these 420mapping arrays. 421 422Events 423====== 424 425Events are scheduled and executed on behalf of either a cpu or hardware devices. 426The API is pretty much the same and can be found in common/sim-events.h and 427common/hw-events.h. 428 429For simulator targets, you really just have to worry about the schedule and 430deschedule functions. 431 432Device Trees 433============ 434 435The device tree model is based on the OpenBoot specification. Since this is 436largely inherited from the psim code, consult the existing psim documentation 437for some in-depth details. 438 http://sourceware.org/psim/manual/ 439 440Hardware Devices 441================ 442 443The simplest simulator doesn't include hardware device support. Once you're 444ready to move on to the next level, call the common macro in your configure.ac: 445SIM_AC_OPTION_HARDWARE(yes,,devone devtwo devthree) 446 447The basic hardware API is documented in common/hw-device.h. 448 449Each device has to have a matching file name with a "dv-" prefix. So there has 450to be a dv-devone.c, dv-devtwo.c, and dv-devthree.c files. Further, each file 451has to have a matching hw_descriptor structure. So the dv-devone.c file has to 452have something like: 453 const struct hw_descriptor dv_devone_descriptor[] = { 454 {"devone", devone_finish,}, 455 {NULL, NULL}, 456 }; 457 458The "devone" string as well as the "devone_finish" function are not hard 459requirements, just common conventions. The structure name is a hard 460requirement. 461 462The devone_finish() callback function is used to instantiate this device by 463parsing the corresponding properties in the device tree. 464 465Hardware devices typically attach address ranges to themselves. Then when 466accesses to those addresses are made, the hardware will have its callback 467invoked. The exact callback could be a normal I/O read/write access, as 468well as a DMA access. This makes it easy to simulate memory mapped registers. 469 470Keep in mind that like a proper device driver, it may be instantiated many 471times over. So any device state it needs to be maintained should be allocated 472during the finish callback and attached to the hardware device via set_hw_data. 473Any hardware functions can access this private data via the hw_data function. 474 475Ports (Interrupts / IRQs) 476========================= 477 478First, a note on terminology. A "port" is an aspect of a hardware device that 479accepts or generates interrupts. So devices with input ports may be the target 480of an interrupt (accept it), and/or they have output ports so that they may be 481the source of an interrupt (generate it). 482 483Each port has a symbolic name and a unique number. These are used to identify 484the port in different contexts. The output port name has no hard relationship 485to the input port name (same for the unique number). The callback that accepts 486the interrupt uses the name/id of its input port, while the generator function 487uses the name/id of its output port. 488 489The device tree is used to connect the output port of a device to the input 490port of another device. There are no limits on the number of inputs connected 491to an output, or outputs to an input, or the devices attached to the ports. 492In other words, the input port and output port could be the same device. 493 494The basics are: 495 - each hardware device declares an array of ports (hw_port_descriptor). 496 any mix of input and output ports is allowed. 497 - when setting up the device, attach the array (set_hw_ports). 498 - if the device accepts interrupts, it will have to attach a port callback 499 function (set_hw_port_event) 500 - connect ports with the device tree 501 - handle incoming interrupts with the callback 502 - generate outgoing interrupts with hw_port_event 503