gdb: add target_ops::supports_displaced_step
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / sim / ppc / INSTALL
1
2 PSIM - model the PowerPC environment
3
4 Copyright (C) 1994-1996, Andrew Cagney <cagney@highland.com.au>.
5
6 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
7
8
9 Building PSIM
10
11 This file describes how to build the program PSIM
12
13 o Walk through a basic build
14
15 o Discussion of PSIM's components and
16 how they relate to the build process
17
18 o Detailed description of each of PSIM's
19 compile time configuration options
20
21
22 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
23
24
25 BUILDING PSIM:
26
27 PSIM 1.0.2 is included in GDB-4.16. To build PSIM you will need the
28 following:
29
30 gdb-4.16.tar.gz Available from your favorite GNU
31 ftp site
32
33 gcc GCC version two includes suport
34 for long long (64bit integer)
35 arrithemetic which PSIM uses. Hence
36 it is recommended that you build PSIM
37 using GCC.
38
39 Method:
40
41 1. Unpack gdb
42
43 $ cd .../scratch
44 $ gunzip < gdb-4.16.tar.gz | tar xf -
45
46
47 2. Configure gdb
48
49 First consult the gdb documentation
50
51 $ cd .../scratch
52 $ cd gdb-4.16
53 $ more README
54 $ more gdb/README
55
56 then something like (I assume SH):
57
58 $ CC=gcc ./configure \
59 --enable-sim-powerpc \
60 --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
61 --prefix=/applications/psim
62
63
64 4. Build (again specifying GCC)
65
66 $ make CC=gcc
67
68 alternatively, if you are short on disk space or only
69 want to build the simulator:
70
71 $ ( cd libiberty && make CC=gcc )
72 $ ( cd bfd && make CC=gcc )
73 $ ( cd sim/ppc && make CC=gcc )
74
75
76 5. Install
77
78 $ make CC=gcc install
79
80 or just
81
82 $ cp gdb/gdb ~/bin/powerpc-unknown-eabisim-gdb
83 $ cp sim/ppc/run ~/bin/powerpc-unknown-eabisim-run
84
85
86 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
87
88
89 UPDATING PSIM:
90
91
92 A PSIM is an ongoing development. Occasional snapshots which both contain new
93 features and fix old bugs are made available. See the ftp directory:
94
95 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/beta
96 or ftp://cambridge.cygnus.com/pub/psim/beta
97
98 for the latest version. To build/install one of these snapshots, you
99 replace the sim/ppc found in the gdb archive with with one from the
100 snapshot. Then just re-configure and rebuild/install.
101
102 Procedure:
103
104 0. A starting point
105
106 $ cd gdb-4.16
107
108
109 1. Remove the old psim directory
110
111 $ mv sim/ppc sim/old.ppc
112
113
114 2. Unpack the new one
115
116 $ gunzip < ../psim-NNNNNN.tar.gz | tar tf -
117 $ gunzip < ../psim-NNNNNN.tar.gz | tar tf -
118
119
120 3. Reconfigure/rebuild (as seen above):
121
122 $ CC=gcc ./configure \
123 --enable-sim-powerpc \
124 --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
125 --prefix=/applications/psim
126 $ make CC=gcc
127
128
129 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
130
131
132 UPDATES TO GDB:
133
134 From time to time, problems involving the integration of PSIM into gdb
135 are found. While eventually each of these problems is resolved there
136 can be periouds during which a local hack may be needed.
137
138 At the time of writing the following were outstanding:
139
140 ATTACH command:
141
142 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/gdb-4.15+attach.diff.gz
143 or ftp://cambridge.cygnus.com/pub/psim/gdb-4.15+attach.diff.gz
144
145 PSIM, unlike the other simulators found in GDB, is able to load
146 the description of a target machine (including the initial
147 state of all processor registers) from a file.
148
149 Unfortunatly GDB does not yet have a standard command that
150 facilitates the use of this feature. Until such a command is
151 added, the patch (hack?) gdb-4.15+attach.diff.gz can be used to
152 extend GDB's attach command so that it can be used to initialize
153 the simulators configuration from a file.
154
155
156
157 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
158
159
160 RUNNING PROGRAMS:
161
162
163 See the file:
164
165 ftp://ftp.ci.com.au/pub/psim/RUN
166 or ftp://cambridge.cygnus.com/pub/psim/RUN
167
168
169 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
170
171
172 COMPILE TIME CONFIGURATION OPTIONS:
173
174
175 PSIM's compile time configuration is controlled by autoconf. PSIM's
176 configure script recognises options of the form:
177
178 --enable-sim-<option>[=<val>]
179
180 And can be specified on the configure command line (at the top level
181 of the gdb directory tree) vis:
182
183 $ cd gdb-4.15
184 $ CC=gcc ./configure \
185 --target=powerpc-unknown-eabisim \
186 --prefix=/applications/psim \
187 --enable-sim-inline
188 $ make CC=gcc
189
190 For a brief list of PSIM's configuration options, configure --help
191 will list them vis:
192
193 $ cd sim/ppc
194 $ ./configure --help
195
196 Each PSIM specific option is discussed in detail below.
197
198
199
200 --enable-sim-warnings=<flags>
201
202
203 Turn on additional GCC specific checks.
204
205 Some hosts (NetBSD, Linux, Solaris-2.5) have complete header files
206 that include correct prototypes for all library functions. On such
207 hosts, PSIM can be built with many more than the standard C checks
208 enabled. The option --enable-sim-warnings controls this.
209
210 Ex: Default warnings
211
212 With just --enable-sim-warnings, the following -W options are enabled:
213 -Werror -Wall -Wpointer-arith -Wmissing-prototypes.
214
215
216
217 --enable-sim-opcode=which
218
219
220 Specify the file containing the rules for generating the instruction
221 decode and execute functions from the file ppc-instructions.
222
223 The form of the instruction decode and execute functions is controlled
224 by an opcode table. It specifies: the combination of switch
225 statements and jump tables to use when decoding an instruction and how
226 much of each instruction should be decoded before calling the
227 instruction execute function.
228
229 PSIM includes a number of opcode tables:
230
231 psim-opcode-simple
232 Generates a small compact two level switch statement
233 that will compile quickly and run reasonably fast.
234
235 This may be useful on a small machine.
236
237 psim-opcode-complex
238 (the default) A fairly aggressive instruction decode
239 table that includes the breaking out of a number
240 of special instruction cases (eg RA==0 vs RA!=0).
241
242 psim-opcode-flat
243 Identical to complex except a switch statement
244 is used. Ideal for when the icache is being
245 disabled.
246
247 psim-opcode-stupid
248 In addition to the instruction decodes performed
249 by psim-opcode-complex, this also full decodes mtspr,
250 mfspr, and branch instructions. The table generated
251 is very large and, as a consequence, only performs
252 well on machines with large caches.
253
254 ppc-opcode-test-1
255 ppc-opcode-test-2
256 Generate test (but workable) tables. These exercise
257 PSIM's ability to generate instruction decode functions
258 that are a combination of jump-tables and switch statements.
259
260 The program igen generates the instruction tables from the opcode
261 table and the ppc-instruction table.
262
263
264
265 --enable-sim-switch
266
267
268 Enable/disable the use of a switch statement when looking up the
269 attributes of a SPR register.
270
271 The PowerPC architecture defines a number of Special Purpose Registers
272 (SPR's). Associated with each of these registers are a number of
273 attributes (such as validity or size) which the instructions
274 mtspr/mfspr query as part of their execution.
275
276 For PSIM, this information is kept in a table (ppc-spr-table). The
277 program dgen converts this table into lookup routines (contained in
278 the generated files spreg.h spreg.c) that can be used to query an
279 SPR's attributes. Those lookup routines are either implemented as
280 a table or alternatively as a number of switch statements:
281
282 spr_table spr_info[] = { .... };
283 int spr_length(sprs spr) { return spr_info[spr].length; }
284
285 vs
286
287 int spr_length(sprs spr) { switch (spr) { case ..: return ..; } }
288
289 In general the first implementation (a table) is the most efficient.
290 It may, however, prove that when performing an aggressive optimization
291 where both the SPR is known and the above function is being inlined
292 (with the consequence that GCC can eliminate the switch statement)
293 that the second choice is improves performance.
294
295 In practice, only a marginal (if any benefit) has ever been seen.
296
297
298
299 --enable-sim-duplicate
300
301
302 Create a duplicate copy of each instruction function hardwiring
303 instruction fields that would have otherwise have been variable.
304
305 As discussed above, igen outputs a C function generated from the file
306 ppc-instructions (using the opcode rules) for each of the
307 instructions. Thus multiple entries in the instruction decode tables
308 may be pointing back at the same function. Enabling duplicate, will
309 result in psim creating a duplicate of the instruction's function for
310 each different entry in the instruction decode tables.
311
312 For instance, given the branch instruction:
313
314 0.19,6.BO,11.BI,16./,21.528,31.LK
315 ...
316 if (LK) LR = (spreg)IEA(CIA + 4);
317 ...
318
319 igen as part of its instruction lookup table may have generated two
320 different entries - one for LK=0 and one for LK=1. With duplicate
321 enabled, igen outputs (almost) duplicate copies of branch function,
322 one with LK hardwired to 0 and one with LK hardwired to 1.
323
324 By doing this the compiler is provided with additional information that
325 will allow it possibly eliminate dead code. (such as the assignment
326 to LK if LR==0).
327
328 Ex: default
329
330 Because this feature is such a big win, --enable-sim-duplicate is
331 turned on by default.
332
333 Ex: A small machine
334
335 Only rarely (eg on a very small host) would this feature need to be
336 disabled (using: --disable-sim-duplicate).
337
338
339
340 --enable-sim-filter=rule
341
342
343 Include/exclude PowerPC instructions that are specific to a particular
344 implementation.
345
346 Some of the PowerPC instructions included in the file ppc-instructions
347 are limited to certain specific PPC implementations. For instance,
348 the instruction:
349
350 0.58,6.RT,11.RA,16.DS,30.2:DS:64::Load Word Algebraic
351
352 Is only valid for the 64bit architecture. The enable-sim-filter flag
353 is passed to igen so that it can `filter out' any invalid
354 instructions. The filter rule has the form:
355
356 -f <name>
357
358 thus:
359
360 --enable-sim-filter='-f 64'
361
362 (the default) would filter out all 64bit instructions.
363
364 Ex: Remove floating point instructions
365
366 A given 32bit PowerPC implementation may not include floating point
367 hardware. Consequently there is little point in including floating
368 point instructions in the instruction table. The option:
369
370 --enable-sim-filter='-f 64 -f f'
371
372 will eliminate all floating point instructions from the instruction
373 table.
374
375
376
377 --enable-sim-icache=size
378
379
380 Set the size of the cache used to hold decoded instructions.
381
382 Psim executes instructions in two separate steps:
383
384 o instruction fetch/decode
385
386 o instruction execution
387
388 For a given instruction, the first stage need only be executed once
389 (the first time the instruction is encountered) while the second stage
390 must be executed every time the program `executes' that instruction.
391
392 Exploiting this, PSIM can maintain a cache of decoded instructions.
393 It will then use the decoded instruction from the cache in preference
394 to fetching/decoding the real instruction from memory.
395
396 Ex: default
397
398 Because this feature is normally such a big win, it is enabled by
399 default (with the cache size set to 1024 entries).
400
401 The 1024 entries equals 4096 bytes (or one page) of instructions.
402 Larger caches can be used but with caution - PSIM does not check for
403 address aliasing within its instruction cache.
404
405 Ex: disable the cache
406
407 There may be cases (for instance where the cache has a low hit rate)
408 where the psim performs better with no instruction cache. For such
409 situations, the cache can be disabled vis: --disable-sim-icache.
410
411
412
413 --enable-sim-inline[=module]
414
415
416 Specify the inlining of one or more modules.
417
418 Many architectures (in particular the x86) suffer from a large
419 function call overhead. By eliminating function calls (through
420 inlining of functions) a large performance gain can be achieved.
421
422 In PSIM, modules are inlined in one of two possible ways. Some
423 modules (such as the byte swapping code) can be inlined into any
424 module that calls them. Other modules, due to complex
425 interdependencies, are only inlined as a group when compiling the
426 external interface module psim.c.
427
428 Ex: default
429
430 By default the modules endian (handle be/le), bits (manipulate
431 bit-fields within words), cpu (the processor object) and events
432 (timers) are inlined in any module that calls them. This gives a
433 reasonable performance gain with little additional compilation
434 overhead.
435
436 Ex: recommended --enable-sim-inline
437
438 Assuming you machine is reasonably well configured, this option is
439 highly recommended. On the x86 several orders of magnitude
440 improvement in performance is possible.
441
442 Ex: fine tuning
443
444 The file std-config.h contains a detailed description of how the
445 inlining works. Individual modules can be inlined by specifying them.
446 For if you have a very large cache the model module could be inlined
447 with:
448
449 --enable-sim-inline=MODEL
450
451
452
453 --enable-sim-endian=endian
454
455
456 Specify the byte order of the target.
457
458 By default, PSIM is able to execute both big and little endian
459 executables. As a consequence, every byte swap routine includes a
460 test to see if the byte swap is really needed. By specifying the byte
461 order of the target (and the host below) the need for this test can be
462 eliminated.
463
464 Clearly setting the byte order of the target is only useful when known
465 before hand.
466
467
468
469 --enable-sim-hostendain=end
470
471
472 As above but for the host.
473
474 Normally this option should not be needed. configure (autoconf) should
475 determine the byte order of the host automatically. However if for
476 some reason there is a problem, this option can be used to override
477 autoconf.
478
479
480
481 --enable-sim-smp=n
482
483
484 Set the maximum number of processors that PSIM can model.
485
486 Psim can model (with small limitation discussed else where) a
487 multi-processor PowerPC environment. While the overhead of
488 co-ordinating the execution of a number of processors is relatively
489 small it is still significant when compared to handling only one
490 processor.
491
492 This option only sets the maximum number of processors that can be
493 simulated. The number active during a given simulation run us
494 determined at run time.
495
496 Ex: default
497
498 By default 5 processors are configured but only one is enabled.
499 Additional processors can be enabled with the runtime option:
500
501 -o '/openprom/options/smp 5'
502
503 Ex: recommended
504
505 Unless you intend studying multi-processor systems there is little reason for
506 having PSIM configured with SMP support. Specifying:
507
508 --disable-sim-smp
509 or --enable-sim-smp=0
510
511 will eliminate any SMP such as:
512
513 for (cpu = 0; cpu < nr_cpus; cpu++)
514 ...
515
516
517
518 --enable-sim-xor-endian=n
519
520
521 Set the byte-size of the bus involved in the PowerPC's xor endian byte
522 swapping.
523
524 The PowerPC's implementation of BE/LE mode is different to what a
525 programmer may first expect. The details of this implementation are
526 discussed at length in PowerPC documentation.
527
528 Ex: default
529
530 By default this is configured with a value of 8 (the bus size of most
531 60x processors).
532
533 Ex: recommended
534
535 Unless you are expecting to test/debug PowerPC be/le switching code
536 this option is of little use and should be disabled:
537
538 --disable-sim-xor-endian
539
540
541
542 --enable-sim-bitsize=n
543
544
545 Specify the bit size (32/64) of the PowerPC to be modelled.
546
547 Note: By default 32 is specified. The implementation of the 64bit
548 architecture is still under development.
549
550
551 --enable-sim-hostbitsize=32|64
552
553 As above but for the host.
554
555 NOTE: Psim has yet to be built on a 64bit host.
556
557
558
559 --enable-sim-env=env
560
561
562 Hardwire the PowerPC environment being modelled (user, virtual or
563 operating).
564
565 The PowerPC architecture defines three different levels of compliance to its
566 architectural specification. These environments are discussed in detail in
567 PowerPC publications.
568
569 user - normal user programs
570 virtual - an extension of the user environment (includes timers)
571 operating - kernel code
572
573 Ex: default
574
575 By default all three environments are supported.
576
577 Ex: recommended
578
579 If you only intend running psim with user (or operating) code then
580 PSIM should be configured accordingly. For user code, it eliminates:
581 support for timers and events and redundant VM calls.
582
583
584
585 --enable-sim-timebase
586
587
588 Enable/disable the time base register.
589
590 The PowerPC architecture (virtual environment) includes a time base
591 register. Maintaining that register incurs an overhead in
592 performance that can be eliminated by eliminating time-base register
593 support.
594
595 Ex: default
596
597 Normally this option is not used. Instead --enable-sim-env (above) us
598 used to disable/enable features such as the timebase register.
599
600
601
602 --enable-sim-alignment=align
603
604
605 Control the PowerPC's memory access alignment restrictions.
606
607 The PowerPC in LE mode only allows memory transfers of a correctly
608 aligned size/address. The above option controls how misaligned
609 accesses are handled.
610
611 strict All accesses must be correctly aligned
612
613 nonstrict Unaligned access allowed (the are split
614 into a number of aligned accesses).
615
616 Ex: default
617
618 Unless otherwise specified PSIM will auto configure a BE program to
619 allow miss-aligned accesses while a LE program will not.
620
621 Ex: 604e
622
623 The recently announced 604e processor allows miss-aligned accesses in both
624 BE and LE modes. If modeling the 604e then you should specify:
625
626 --enable-sim-alignment=nonstrict
627
628
629
630 --enable-sim-trace
631
632
633 Include code to trace PSIM's internal progress (also controlled by the
634 -t option).
635
636 Checking to see if a trace message should be output slows down a
637 simulation. Disabling this option (--disable-sim-trace) eliminates
638 completely that code.
639
640
641
642 --enable-sim-assert
643
644
645 Include the code that checks the correctness of parts of PSIM.
646
647 Eliminating such code (--disable-sim-assert) eliminates internal
648 consistency tests and their overhead.
649
650
651
652 --enable-sim-reserved-bits
653
654
655 Include code to check that the reserved fields of the instruction are
656 zero.
657
658 The PowerPC architecture defines certain fields of some instructions
659 as reserved (`/'). By default, for each instruction, PSIM will check
660 the reserved fields causing an invalid instruction exception if a
661 field is invalid. Disabling this option eliminates this test. This
662 is at the slight risk of PSIM treating an invalid instruction as
663 valid.
664
665
666
667 --enable-sim-float
668
669
670 Include support for hardware floating point.
671
672
673
674 --enable-sim-monitor=mon
675
676
677 Include support for basic instruction counting.
678
679 If you are not interested in the performance of either you program or
680 the simulator then you can disable this option.
681
682
683
684 --enable-sim-model=which
685
686 Hardwire the processor that will be used as a reference when modeling
687 execution units.
688
689
690
691 --enable-sim-default-model=which
692
693
694 Specify the processor of choice for the execution unit model.
695
696
697
698 --enable-sim-model-issue
699
700
701 Include support for the modeling of processor execution units.
702
703 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
704
705 TYPICAL CONFIGURATION OPTIONS:
706
707
708 VEA CODE ONLY:
709
710 Here of note are:
711
712 o ramp up the compiler options (some
713 of the below are P5 specific).
714
715 o disable anything not used
716
717 CC=gcc ./configure \
718 --prefix=/applications/psim \
719 --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
720 --enable-sim-powerpc \
721 --enable-sim-warnings \
722 --enable-sim-inline \
723 --disable-sim-smp \
724 --enable-sim-duplicate \
725 --enable-sim-endian=big \
726 --disable-sim-xor-endian \
727 --enable-sim-env=user \
728 --disable-sim-reserved-bits \
729 --disable-sim-assert \
730 --disable-sim-trace
731
732
733 OEA CODE ONLY:
734
735 The key configuration changes are:
736
737 o turn off the instruction cache. The overhead
738 of flushing and reloading it is greater than
739 not having a cache.
740
741 o use a switch statement (ppc-opcode-flat) for
742 the instruction decode and then (-O3) fully
743 inline all functions.
744
745 o --enable-sim-warnings is not present. GCC (2.7.2)
746 gets confused by the instruction decode table
747 generated by igen (contains a perfect switch)
748 and, as a consequence, generates a bogus warning.
749
750 CC=gcc ./configure \
751 --prefix=/applications/psim \
752 --target=powerpc-unknown-eabi \
753 --enable-sim-powerpc \
754 --enable-sim-inline \
755 --disable-sim-smp \
756 --enable-sim-duplicate \
757 --enable-sim-endian=big \
758 --disable-sim-xor-endian \
759 --enable-sim-env=operating \
760 --disable-sim-reserved-bits \
761 --disable-sim-assert \
762 --disable-sim-trace \
763 --enable-sim-opcode=ppc-opcode-flat \
764 --disable-sim-icache
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