qemu-arm
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Qemu-arm] [PATCH 1/8] tcg: Clean up direct block chaining data fiel


From: Sergey Fedorov
Subject: Re: [Qemu-arm] [PATCH 1/8] tcg: Clean up direct block chaining data fields
Date: Thu, 24 Mar 2016 18:10:33 +0300
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.6.0

On 24/03/16 18:01, Alex Bennée wrote:
> Sergey Fedorov <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> On 24/03/16 16:42, Alex Bennée wrote:
>>>> diff --git a/include/exec/exec-all.h b/include/exec/exec-all.h
>>>>> index 05a151da4a54..cc3d2ca25917 100644
>>>>> --- a/include/exec/exec-all.h
>>>>> +++ b/include/exec/exec-all.h
>>>>> @@ -257,20 +257,32 @@ struct TranslationBlock {
>>>>>      struct TranslationBlock *page_next[2];
>>>>>      tb_page_addr_t page_addr[2];
>>>>>
>>>>> -    /* the following data are used to directly call another TB from
>>>>> -       the code of this one. */
>>>>> -    uint16_t tb_next_offset[2]; /* offset of original jump target */
>>>>> +    /* The following data are used to directly call another TB from
>>>>> +     * the code of this one. This can be done either by emitting direct 
>>>>> or
>>>>> +     * indirect native jump instructions. These jumps are reset so that 
>>>>> the TB
>>>>> +     * just continue its execution. The TB can be linked to another one 
>>>>> by
>>>>> +     * setting one of the jump targets (or patching the jump 
>>>>> instruction). Only
>>>>> +     * two of such jumps are supported.
>>>>> +     */
>>>>> +    uint16_t jmp_reset_offset[2]; /* offset of original jump target */
>>>>> +#define TB_JMP_RESET_OFFSET_INVALID 0xffff /* indicates no jump 
>>>>> generated */
>>>>>  #ifdef USE_DIRECT_JUMP
>>>>> -    uint16_t tb_jmp_offset[2]; /* offset of jump instruction */
>>>>> +    uint16_t jmp_insn_offset[2]; /* offset of native jump instruction */
>>>>>  #else
>>>>> -    uintptr_t tb_next[2]; /* address of jump generated code */
>>>>> +    uintptr_t jmp_target_addr[2]; /* target address for indirect jump */
>>>>>  #endif
>>>>> -    /* list of TBs jumping to this one. This is a circular list using
>>>>> -       the two least significant bits of the pointers to tell what is
>>>>> -       the next pointer: 0 = jmp_next[0], 1 = jmp_next[1], 2 =
>>>>> -       jmp_first */
>>>>> -    struct TranslationBlock *jmp_next[2];
>>>>> -    struct TranslationBlock *jmp_first;
>>>>> +    /* Each TB has an assosiated circular list of TBs jumping to this 
>>>>> one.
>>>>> +     * jmp_list_first points to the first TB jumping to this one.
>>>>> +     * jmp_list_next is used to point to the next TB in a list.
>>>>> +     * Since each TB can have two jumps, it can participate in two lists.
>>>>> +     * The two least significant bits of a pointer are used to choose 
>>>>> which
>>>>> +     * data field holds a pointer to the next TB:
>>>>> +     * 0 => jmp_list_next[0], 1 => jmp_list_next[1], 2 => jmp_list_first.
>>>>> +     * In other words, 0/1 tells which jump is used in the pointed TB,
>>>>> +     * and 2 means that this is a pointer back to the target TB of this 
>>>>> list.
>>>>> +     */
>>>>> +    struct TranslationBlock *jmp_list_next[2];
>>>>> +    struct TranslationBlock *jmp_list_first;
>>> OK I found that tricky to follow. Where does the value of the pointer
>>> come from that sets these bottom bits? The TB jumping to this TB sets it?
>> Yeah, that's not easy to describe. Initially, we set:
>>
>>     tb->jmp_list_first = tb | 2
>>
>> That makes an empty list: jmp_list_first just points to the this TB and
>> the low bits are 2.
>>
>> After that we can add a TB to the list in tb_add_jump():
>>
>>     tb->jmp_list_next[n] = tb_next->jmp_list_first;
>>     tb_next->jmp_list_first = tb | n;
>>
>> where 'tb' is going to jump to 'tb_next', 'n' (can be 0 or 1) is an
>> index of jump target of 'tb'.
> Where I get confused it what is the point of jmp_list_first? If these
> are two circular lists do we care which the first in the list is? The
> exit condition when coming out of searching seems when ntb with index =
> orig tb with index.

So 'tb->jmp_list_first' points to the first TB jumping to 'tb'. Then we
use 'jmp_list_next[n]' of that TB to traverse the list further.
Eventually, we get 'jmp_list_next[n] & 3 == 2' which means
jmp_list_next[n] points back to the target TB. Hope it helps :)

Kind regards,
Sergey



reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]