| TCG Interpreter (TCI) - Copyright (c) 2011 Stefan Weil. |
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| This file is released under the BSD license. |
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| 1) Introduction |
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| TCG (Tiny Code Generator) is a code generator which translates |
| code fragments ("basic blocks") from target code (any of the |
| targets supported by QEMU) to a code representation which |
| can be run on a host. |
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| QEMU can create native code for some hosts (arm, i386, ia64, ppc, ppc64, |
| s390, sparc, x86_64). For others, unofficial host support was written. |
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| By adding a code generator for a virtual machine and using an |
| interpreter for the generated bytecode, it is possible to |
| support (almost) any host. |
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| This is what TCI (Tiny Code Interpreter) does. |
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| 2) Implementation |
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| Like each TCG host frontend, TCI implements the code generator in |
| tcg-target.c.inc, tcg-target.h. Both files are in directory tcg/tci. |
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| The additional file tcg/tci.c adds the interpreter and disassembler. |
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| The bytecode consists of opcodes (with only a few exceptions, with |
| the same same numeric values and semantics as used by TCG), and up |
| to six arguments packed into a 32-bit integer. See comments in tci.c |
| for details on the encoding. |
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| 3) Usage |
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| For hosts without native TCG, the interpreter TCI must be enabled by |
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| configure --enable-tcg-interpreter |
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| If configure is called without --enable-tcg-interpreter, it will |
| suggest using this option. Setting it automatically would need |
| additional code in configure which must be fixed when new native TCG |
| implementations are added. |
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| For hosts with native TCG, the interpreter TCI can be enabled by |
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| configure --enable-tcg-interpreter |
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| The only difference from running QEMU with TCI to running without TCI |
| should be speed. Especially during development of TCI, it was very |
| useful to compare runs with and without TCI. Create /tmp/qemu.log by |
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| qemu-system-i386 -d in_asm,op_opt,cpu -D /tmp/qemu.log -singlestep |
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| once with interpreter and once without interpreter and compare the resulting |
| qemu.log files. This is also useful to see the effects of additional |
| registers or additional opcodes (it is easy to modify the virtual machine). |
| It can also be used to verify native TCGs. |
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| Hosts with native TCG can also enable TCI by claiming to be unsupported: |
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| configure --cpu=unknown --enable-tcg-interpreter |
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| configure then no longer uses the native linker script (*.ld) for |
| user mode emulation. |
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| 4) Status |
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| TCI needs special implementation for 32 and 64 bit host, 32 and 64 bit target, |
| host and target with same or different endianness. |
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| | host (le) host (be) |
| | 32 64 32 64 |
| ------------+------------------------------------------------------------ |
| target (le) | s0, u0 s1, u1 s?, u? s?, u? |
| 32 bit | |
| | |
| target (le) | sc, uc s1, u1 s?, u? s?, u? |
| 64 bit | |
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| target (be) | sc, u0 sc, uc s?, u? s?, u? |
| 32 bit | |
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| target (be) | sc, uc sc, uc s?, u? s?, u? |
| 64 bit | |
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| System emulation |
| s? = untested |
| sc = compiles |
| s0 = bios works |
| s1 = grub works |
| s2 = Linux boots |
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| Linux user mode emulation |
| u? = untested |
| uc = compiles |
| u0 = static hello works |
| u1 = linux-user-test works |
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| 5) Todo list |
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| * TCI is not widely tested. It was written and tested on a x86_64 host |
| running i386 and x86_64 system emulation and Linux user mode. |
| A cross compiled QEMU for i386 host also works with the same basic tests. |
| A cross compiled QEMU for mipsel host works, too. It is terribly slow |
| because I run it in a mips malta emulation, so it is an interpreted |
| emulation in an emulation. |
| A cross compiled QEMU for arm host works (tested with pc bios). |
| A cross compiled QEMU for ppc host works at least partially: |
| i386-linux-user/qemu-i386 can run a simple hello-world program |
| (tested in a ppc emulation). |
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| * Some TCG opcodes are either missing in the code generator and/or |
| in the interpreter. These opcodes raise a runtime exception, so it is |
| possible to see where code must be added. |
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| * It might be useful to have a runtime option which selects the native TCG |
| or TCI, so QEMU would have to include two TCGs. Today, selecting TCI |
| is a configure option, so you need two compilations of QEMU. |