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author | Taylor Simpson | 2021-02-08 06:45:52 +0100 |
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committer | Richard Henderson | 2021-02-18 16:48:22 +0100 |
commit | c3fb76b9b779198c8c7b9e0eee19dc57abc921fc (patch) | |
tree | 47471e8f8ccca403db610b3ee64567c56fcd94ba /target | |
parent | Hexagon Update MAINTAINERS file (diff) | |
download | qemu-c3fb76b9b779198c8c7b9e0eee19dc57abc921fc.tar.gz qemu-c3fb76b9b779198c8c7b9e0eee19dc57abc921fc.tar.xz qemu-c3fb76b9b779198c8c7b9e0eee19dc57abc921fc.zip |
Hexagon (target/hexagon) README
Gives an introduction and overview to the Hexagon target
Signed-off-by: Taylor Simpson <tsimpson@quicinc.com>
Message-Id: <1612763186-18161-3-git-send-email-tsimpson@quicinc.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'target')
-rw-r--r-- | target/hexagon/README | 235 |
1 files changed, 235 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/target/hexagon/README b/target/hexagon/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b0b2435070 --- /dev/null +++ b/target/hexagon/README @@ -0,0 +1,235 @@ +Hexagon is Qualcomm's very long instruction word (VLIW) digital signal +processor(DSP). + +The following versions of the Hexagon core are supported + Scalar core: v67 + https://developer.qualcomm.com/downloads/qualcomm-hexagon-v67-programmer-s-reference-manual + +We presented an overview of the project at the 2019 KVM Forum. + https://kvmforum2019.sched.com/event/Tmwc/qemu-hexagon-automatic-translation-of-the-isa-manual-pseudcode-to-tiny-code-instructions-of-a-vliw-architecture-niccolo-izzo-revng-taylor-simpson-qualcomm-innovation-center + +*** Tour of the code *** + +The qemu-hexagon implementation is a combination of qemu and the Hexagon +architecture library (aka archlib). The three primary directories with +Hexagon-specific code are + + qemu/target/hexagon + This has all the instruction and packet semantics + qemu/target/hexagon/imported + These files are imported with very little modification from archlib + *.idef Instruction semantics definition + macros.def Mapping of macros to instruction attributes + encode*.def Encoding patterns for each instruction + iclass.def Instruction class definitions used to determine + legal VLIW slots for each instruction + qemu/linux-user/hexagon + Helpers for loading the ELF file and making Linux system calls, + signals, etc + +We start with scripts that generate a bunch of include files. This +is a two step process. The first step is to use the C preprocessor to expand +macros inside the architecture definition files. This is done in +target/hexagon/gen_semantics.c. This step produces + <BUILD_DIR>/target/hexagon/semantics_generated.pyinc. +That file is consumed by the following python scripts to produce the indicated +header files in <BUILD_DIR>/target/hexagon + gen_opcodes_def.py -> opcodes_def_generated.h.inc + gen_op_regs.py -> op_regs_generated.h.inc + gen_printinsn.py -> printinsn_generated.h.inc + gen_op_attribs.py -> op_attribs_generated.h.inc + gen_helper_protos.py -> helper_protos_generated.h.inc + gen_shortcode.py -> shortcode_generated.h.inc + gen_tcg_funcs.py -> tcg_funcs_generated.c.inc + gen_tcg_func_table.py -> tcg_func_table_generated.c.inc + gen_helper_funcs.py -> helper_funcs_generated.c.inc + +Qemu helper functions have 3 parts + DEF_HELPER declaration indicates the signature of the helper + gen_helper_<NAME> will generate a TCG call to the helper function + The helper implementation + +Here's an example of the A2_add instruction. + Instruction tag A2_add + Assembly syntax "Rd32=add(Rs32,Rt32)" + Instruction semantics "{ RdV=RsV+RtV;}" + +By convention, the operands are identified by letter + RdV is the destination register + RsV, RtV are source registers + +The generator uses the operand naming conventions (see large comment in +hex_common.py) to determine the signature of the helper function. Here are the +results for A2_add + +helper_protos_generated.h.inc + DEF_HELPER_3(A2_add, s32, env, s32, s32) + +tcg_funcs_generated.c.inc + static void generate_A2_add( + CPUHexagonState *env, + DisasContext *ctx, + Insn *insn, + Packet *pkt) + { + TCGv RdV = tcg_temp_local_new(); + const int RdN = insn->regno[0]; + TCGv RsV = hex_gpr[insn->regno[1]]; + TCGv RtV = hex_gpr[insn->regno[2]]; + gen_helper_A2_add(RdV, cpu_env, RsV, RtV); + gen_log_reg_write(RdN, RdV); + ctx_log_reg_write(ctx, RdN); + tcg_temp_free(RdV); + } + +helper_funcs_generated.c.inc + int32_t HELPER(A2_add)(CPUHexagonState *env, int32_t RsV, int32_t RtV) + { + uint32_t slot __attribute__((unused)) = 4; + int32_t RdV = 0; + { RdV=RsV+RtV;} + return RdV; + } + +Note that generate_A2_add updates the disassembly context to be processed +when the packet commits (see "Packet Semantics" below). + +The generator checks for fGEN_TCG_<tag> macro. This allows us to generate +TCG code instead of a call to the helper. If defined, the macro takes 1 +argument. + C semantics (aka short code) + +This allows the code generator to override the auto-generated code. In some +cases this is necessary for correct execution. We can also override for +faster emulation. For example, calling a helper for add is more expensive +than generating a TCG add operation. + +The gen_tcg.h file has any overrides. For example, we could write + #define fGEN_TCG_A2_add(GENHLPR, SHORTCODE) \ + tcg_gen_add_tl(RdV, RsV, RtV) + +The instruction semantics C code relies heavily on macros. In cases where the +C semantics are specified only with macros, we can override the default with +the short semantics option and #define the macros to generate TCG code. One +example is L2_loadw_locked: + Instruction tag L2_loadw_locked + Assembly syntax "Rd32=memw_locked(Rs32)" + Instruction semantics "{ fEA_REG(RsV); fLOAD_LOCKED(1,4,u,EA,RdV) }" + +In gen_tcg.h, we use the shortcode +#define fGEN_TCG_L2_loadw_locked(SHORTCODE) \ + SHORTCODE + +There are also cases where we brute force the TCG code generation. +Instructions with multiple definitions are examples. These require special +handling because qemu helpers can only return a single value. + +In addition to instruction semantics, we use a generator to create the decode +tree. This generation is also a two step process. The first step is to run +target/hexagon/gen_dectree_import.c to produce + <BUILD_DIR>/target/hexagon/iset.py +This file is imported by target/hexagon/dectree.py to produce + <BUILD_DIR>/target/hexagon/dectree_generated.h.inc + +*** Key Files *** + +cpu.h + +This file contains the definition of the CPUHexagonState struct. It is the +runtime information for each thread and contains stuff like the GPR and +predicate registers. + +macros.h + +The Hexagon arch lib relies heavily on macros for the instruction semantics. +This is a great advantage for qemu because we can override them for different +purposes. You will also notice there are sometimes two definitions of a macro. +The QEMU_GENERATE variable determines whether we want the macro to generate TCG +code. If QEMU_GENERATE is not defined, we want the macro to generate vanilla +C code that will work in the helper implementation. + +translate.c + +The functions in this file generate TCG code for a translation block. Some +important functions in this file are + + gen_start_packet - initialize the data structures for packet semantics + gen_commit_packet - commit the register writes, stores, etc for a packet + decode_and_translate_packet - disassemble a packet and generate code + +genptr.c +gen_tcg.h + +These files create a function for each instruction. It is mostly composed of +fGEN_TCG_<tag> definitions followed by including tcg_funcs_generated.c.inc. + +op_helper.c + +This file contains the implementations of all the helpers. There are a few +general purpose helpers, but most of them are generated by including +helper_funcs_generated.c.inc. There are also several helpers used for debugging. + + +*** Packet Semantics *** + +VLIW packet semantics differ from serial semantics in that all input operands +are read, then the operations are performed, then all the results are written. +For exmaple, this packet performs a swap of registers r0 and r1 + { r0 = r1; r1 = r0 } +Note that the result is different if the instructions are executed serially. + +Packet semantics dictate that we defer any changes of state until the entire +packet is committed. We record the results of each instruction in a side data +structure, and update the visible processor state when we commit the packet. + +The data structures are divided between the runtime state and the translation +context. + +During the TCG generation (see translate.[ch]), we use the DisasContext to +track what needs to be done during packet commit. Here are the relevant +fields + + reg_log list of registers written + reg_log_idx index into ctx_reg_log + pred_log list of predicates written + pred_log_idx index into ctx_pred_log + store_width width of stores (indexed by slot) + +During runtime, the following fields in CPUHexagonState (see cpu.h) are used + + new_value new value of a given register + reg_written boolean indicating if register was written + new_pred_value new value of a predicate register + pred_written boolean indicating if predicate was written + mem_log_stores record of the stores (indexed by slot) + +*** Debugging *** + +You can turn on a lot of debugging by changing the HEX_DEBUG macro to 1 in +internal.h. This will stream a lot of information as it generates TCG and +executes the code. + +To track down nasty issues with Hexagon->TCG generation, we compare the +execution results with actual hardware running on a Hexagon Linux target. +Run qemu with the "-d cpu" option. Then, we can diff the results and figure +out where qemu and hardware behave differently. + +The stacks are located at different locations. We handle this by changing +env->stack_adjust in translate.c. First, set this to zero and run qemu. +Then, change env->stack_adjust to the difference between the two stack +locations. Then rebuild qemu and run again. That will produce a very +clean diff. + +Here are some handy places to set breakpoints + + At the call to gen_start_packet for a given PC (note that the line number + might change in the future) + br translate.c:602 if ctx->base.pc_next == 0xdeadbeef + The helper function for each instruction is named helper_<TAG>, so here's + an example that will set a breakpoint at the start + br helper_A2_add + If you have the HEX_DEBUG macro set, the following will be useful + At the start of execution of a packet for a given PC + br helper_debug_start_packet if env->gpr[41] == 0xdeadbeef + At the end of execution of a packet for a given PC + br helper_debug_commit_end if env->this_PC == 0xdeadbeef |