isa_parser.py revision 6983:102004662eda
1# Copyright (c) 2003-2005 The Regents of The University of Michigan 2# All rights reserved. 3# 4# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are 6# met: redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 7# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer; 8# redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 9# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 10# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution; 11# neither the name of the copyright holders nor the names of its 12# contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from 13# this software without specific prior written permission. 14# 15# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 16# "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 17# LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR 18# A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT 19# OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, 20# SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT 21# LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 22# DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 23# THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 24# (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE 25# OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 26# 27# Authors: Steve Reinhardt 28 29import os 30import sys 31import re 32import string 33import traceback 34# get type names 35from types import * 36 37from m5.util.grammar import Grammar 38 39class ISAParser(Grammar): 40 def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): 41 super(ISAParser, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) 42 self.templateMap = {} 43 44 ##################################################################### 45 # 46 # Lexer 47 # 48 # The PLY lexer module takes two things as input: 49 # - A list of token names (the string list 'tokens') 50 # - A regular expression describing a match for each token. The 51 # regexp for token FOO can be provided in two ways: 52 # - as a string variable named t_FOO 53 # - as the doc string for a function named t_FOO. In this case, 54 # the function is also executed, allowing an action to be 55 # associated with each token match. 56 # 57 ##################################################################### 58 59 # Reserved words. These are listed separately as they are matched 60 # using the same regexp as generic IDs, but distinguished in the 61 # t_ID() function. The PLY documentation suggests this approach. 62 reserved = ( 63 'BITFIELD', 'DECODE', 'DECODER', 'DEFAULT', 'DEF', 'EXEC', 'FORMAT', 64 'HEADER', 'LET', 'NAMESPACE', 'OPERAND_TYPES', 'OPERANDS', 65 'OUTPUT', 'SIGNED', 'TEMPLATE' 66 ) 67 68 # List of tokens. The lex module requires this. 69 tokens = reserved + ( 70 # identifier 71 'ID', 72 73 # integer literal 74 'INTLIT', 75 76 # string literal 77 'STRLIT', 78 79 # code literal 80 'CODELIT', 81 82 # ( ) [ ] { } < > , ; . : :: * 83 'LPAREN', 'RPAREN', 84 'LBRACKET', 'RBRACKET', 85 'LBRACE', 'RBRACE', 86 'LESS', 'GREATER', 'EQUALS', 87 'COMMA', 'SEMI', 'DOT', 'COLON', 'DBLCOLON', 88 'ASTERISK', 89 90 # C preprocessor directives 91 'CPPDIRECTIVE' 92 93 # The following are matched but never returned. commented out to 94 # suppress PLY warning 95 # newfile directive 96 # 'NEWFILE', 97 98 # endfile directive 99 # 'ENDFILE' 100 ) 101 102 # Regular expressions for token matching 103 t_LPAREN = r'\(' 104 t_RPAREN = r'\)' 105 t_LBRACKET = r'\[' 106 t_RBRACKET = r'\]' 107 t_LBRACE = r'\{' 108 t_RBRACE = r'\}' 109 t_LESS = r'\<' 110 t_GREATER = r'\>' 111 t_EQUALS = r'=' 112 t_COMMA = r',' 113 t_SEMI = r';' 114 t_DOT = r'\.' 115 t_COLON = r':' 116 t_DBLCOLON = r'::' 117 t_ASTERISK = r'\*' 118 119 # Identifiers and reserved words 120 reserved_map = { } 121 for r in reserved: 122 reserved_map[r.lower()] = r 123 124 def t_ID(self, t): 125 r'[A-Za-z_]\w*' 126 t.type = self.reserved_map.get(t.value, 'ID') 127 return t 128 129 # Integer literal 130 def t_INTLIT(self, t): 131 r'-?(0x[\da-fA-F]+)|\d+' 132 try: 133 t.value = int(t.value,0) 134 except ValueError: 135 error(t.lexer.lineno, 'Integer value "%s" too large' % t.value) 136 t.value = 0 137 return t 138 139 # String literal. Note that these use only single quotes, and 140 # can span multiple lines. 141 def t_STRLIT(self, t): 142 r"(?m)'([^'])+'" 143 # strip off quotes 144 t.value = t.value[1:-1] 145 t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n') 146 return t 147 148 149 # "Code literal"... like a string literal, but delimiters are 150 # '{{' and '}}' so they get formatted nicely under emacs c-mode 151 def t_CODELIT(self, t): 152 r"(?m)\{\{([^\}]|}(?!\}))+\}\}" 153 # strip off {{ & }} 154 t.value = t.value[2:-2] 155 t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n') 156 return t 157 158 def t_CPPDIRECTIVE(self, t): 159 r'^\#[^\#].*\n' 160 t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n') 161 return t 162 163 def t_NEWFILE(self, t): 164 r'^\#\#newfile\s+"[\w/.-]*"' 165 fileNameStack.push((t.value[11:-1], t.lexer.lineno)) 166 t.lexer.lineno = 0 167 168 def t_ENDFILE(self, t): 169 r'^\#\#endfile' 170 (old_filename, t.lexer.lineno) = fileNameStack.pop() 171 172 # 173 # The functions t_NEWLINE, t_ignore, and t_error are 174 # special for the lex module. 175 # 176 177 # Newlines 178 def t_NEWLINE(self, t): 179 r'\n+' 180 t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n') 181 182 # Comments 183 def t_comment(self, t): 184 r'//.*' 185 186 # Completely ignored characters 187 t_ignore = ' \t\x0c' 188 189 # Error handler 190 def t_error(self, t): 191 error(t.lexer.lineno, "illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0]) 192 t.skip(1) 193 194 ##################################################################### 195 # 196 # Parser 197 # 198 # Every function whose name starts with 'p_' defines a grammar 199 # rule. The rule is encoded in the function's doc string, while 200 # the function body provides the action taken when the rule is 201 # matched. The argument to each function is a list of the values 202 # of the rule's symbols: t[0] for the LHS, and t[1..n] for the 203 # symbols on the RHS. For tokens, the value is copied from the 204 # t.value attribute provided by the lexer. For non-terminals, the 205 # value is assigned by the producing rule; i.e., the job of the 206 # grammar rule function is to set the value for the non-terminal 207 # on the LHS (by assigning to t[0]). 208 ##################################################################### 209 210 # The LHS of the first grammar rule is used as the start symbol 211 # (in this case, 'specification'). Note that this rule enforces 212 # that there will be exactly one namespace declaration, with 0 or 213 # more global defs/decls before and after it. The defs & decls 214 # before the namespace decl will be outside the namespace; those 215 # after will be inside. The decoder function is always inside the 216 # namespace. 217 def p_specification(self, t): 218 'specification : opt_defs_and_outputs name_decl opt_defs_and_outputs decode_block' 219 global_code = t[1] 220 isa_name = t[2] 221 namespace = isa_name + "Inst" 222 # wrap the decode block as a function definition 223 t[4].wrap_decode_block(''' 224StaticInstPtr 225%(isa_name)s::decodeInst(%(isa_name)s::ExtMachInst machInst) 226{ 227 using namespace %(namespace)s; 228''' % vars(), '}') 229 # both the latter output blocks and the decode block are in 230 # the namespace 231 namespace_code = t[3] + t[4] 232 # pass it all back to the caller of yacc.parse() 233 t[0] = (isa_name, namespace, global_code, namespace_code) 234 235 # ISA name declaration looks like "namespace <foo>;" 236 def p_name_decl(self, t): 237 'name_decl : NAMESPACE ID SEMI' 238 t[0] = t[2] 239 240 # 'opt_defs_and_outputs' is a possibly empty sequence of 241 # def and/or output statements. 242 def p_opt_defs_and_outputs_0(self, t): 243 'opt_defs_and_outputs : empty' 244 t[0] = GenCode() 245 246 def p_opt_defs_and_outputs_1(self, t): 247 'opt_defs_and_outputs : defs_and_outputs' 248 t[0] = t[1] 249 250 def p_defs_and_outputs_0(self, t): 251 'defs_and_outputs : def_or_output' 252 t[0] = t[1] 253 254 def p_defs_and_outputs_1(self, t): 255 'defs_and_outputs : defs_and_outputs def_or_output' 256 t[0] = t[1] + t[2] 257 258 # The list of possible definition/output statements. 259 def p_def_or_output(self, t): 260 '''def_or_output : def_format 261 | def_bitfield 262 | def_bitfield_struct 263 | def_template 264 | def_operand_types 265 | def_operands 266 | output_header 267 | output_decoder 268 | output_exec 269 | global_let''' 270 t[0] = t[1] 271 272 # Output blocks 'output <foo> {{...}}' (C++ code blocks) are copied 273 # directly to the appropriate output section. 274 275 # Massage output block by substituting in template definitions and 276 # bit operators. We handle '%'s embedded in the string that don't 277 # indicate template substitutions (or CPU-specific symbols, which 278 # get handled in GenCode) by doubling them first so that the 279 # format operation will reduce them back to single '%'s. 280 def process_output(self, s): 281 s = protect_non_subst_percents(s) 282 # protects cpu-specific symbols too 283 s = protect_cpu_symbols(s) 284 return substBitOps(s % self.templateMap) 285 286 def p_output_header(self, t): 287 'output_header : OUTPUT HEADER CODELIT SEMI' 288 t[0] = GenCode(header_output = self.process_output(t[3])) 289 290 def p_output_decoder(self, t): 291 'output_decoder : OUTPUT DECODER CODELIT SEMI' 292 t[0] = GenCode(decoder_output = self.process_output(t[3])) 293 294 def p_output_exec(self, t): 295 'output_exec : OUTPUT EXEC CODELIT SEMI' 296 t[0] = GenCode(exec_output = self.process_output(t[3])) 297 298 # global let blocks 'let {{...}}' (Python code blocks) are 299 # executed directly when seen. Note that these execute in a 300 # special variable context 'exportContext' to prevent the code 301 # from polluting this script's namespace. 302 def p_global_let(self, t): 303 'global_let : LET CODELIT SEMI' 304 updateExportContext() 305 exportContext["header_output"] = '' 306 exportContext["decoder_output"] = '' 307 exportContext["exec_output"] = '' 308 exportContext["decode_block"] = '' 309 try: 310 exec fixPythonIndentation(t[2]) in exportContext 311 except Exception, exc: 312 error(t.lexer.lineno, 313 'error: %s in global let block "%s".' % (exc, t[2])) 314 t[0] = GenCode(header_output = exportContext["header_output"], 315 decoder_output = exportContext["decoder_output"], 316 exec_output = exportContext["exec_output"], 317 decode_block = exportContext["decode_block"]) 318 319 # Define the mapping from operand type extensions to C++ types and 320 # bit widths (stored in operandTypeMap). 321 def p_def_operand_types(self, t): 322 'def_operand_types : DEF OPERAND_TYPES CODELIT SEMI' 323 try: 324 user_dict = eval('{' + t[3] + '}') 325 except Exception, exc: 326 error(t.lexer.lineno, 327 'error: %s in def operand_types block "%s".' % (exc, t[3])) 328 buildOperandTypeMap(user_dict, t.lexer.lineno) 329 t[0] = GenCode() # contributes nothing to the output C++ file 330 331 # Define the mapping from operand names to operand classes and 332 # other traits. Stored in operandNameMap. 333 def p_def_operands(self, t): 334 'def_operands : DEF OPERANDS CODELIT SEMI' 335 if not globals().has_key('operandTypeMap'): 336 error(t.lexer.lineno, 337 'error: operand types must be defined before operands') 338 try: 339 user_dict = eval('{' + t[3] + '}', exportContext) 340 except Exception, exc: 341 error(t.lexer.lineno, 342 'error: %s in def operands block "%s".' % (exc, t[3])) 343 buildOperandNameMap(user_dict, t.lexer.lineno) 344 t[0] = GenCode() # contributes nothing to the output C++ file 345 346 # A bitfield definition looks like: 347 # 'def [signed] bitfield <ID> [<first>:<last>]' 348 # This generates a preprocessor macro in the output file. 349 def p_def_bitfield_0(self, t): 350 'def_bitfield : DEF opt_signed BITFIELD ID LESS INTLIT COLON INTLIT GREATER SEMI' 351 expr = 'bits(machInst, %2d, %2d)' % (t[6], t[8]) 352 if (t[2] == 'signed'): 353 expr = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (t[6] - t[8] + 1, expr) 354 hash_define = '#undef %s\n#define %s\t%s\n' % (t[4], t[4], expr) 355 t[0] = GenCode(header_output = hash_define) 356 357 # alternate form for single bit: 'def [signed] bitfield <ID> [<bit>]' 358 def p_def_bitfield_1(self, t): 359 'def_bitfield : DEF opt_signed BITFIELD ID LESS INTLIT GREATER SEMI' 360 expr = 'bits(machInst, %2d, %2d)' % (t[6], t[6]) 361 if (t[2] == 'signed'): 362 expr = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (1, expr) 363 hash_define = '#undef %s\n#define %s\t%s\n' % (t[4], t[4], expr) 364 t[0] = GenCode(header_output = hash_define) 365 366 # alternate form for structure member: 'def bitfield <ID> <ID>' 367 def p_def_bitfield_struct(self, t): 368 'def_bitfield_struct : DEF opt_signed BITFIELD ID id_with_dot SEMI' 369 if (t[2] != ''): 370 error(t.lexer.lineno, 371 'error: structure bitfields are always unsigned.') 372 expr = 'machInst.%s' % t[5] 373 hash_define = '#undef %s\n#define %s\t%s\n' % (t[4], t[4], expr) 374 t[0] = GenCode(header_output = hash_define) 375 376 def p_id_with_dot_0(self, t): 377 'id_with_dot : ID' 378 t[0] = t[1] 379 380 def p_id_with_dot_1(self, t): 381 'id_with_dot : ID DOT id_with_dot' 382 t[0] = t[1] + t[2] + t[3] 383 384 def p_opt_signed_0(self, t): 385 'opt_signed : SIGNED' 386 t[0] = t[1] 387 388 def p_opt_signed_1(self, t): 389 'opt_signed : empty' 390 t[0] = '' 391 392 def p_def_template(self, t): 393 'def_template : DEF TEMPLATE ID CODELIT SEMI' 394 self.templateMap[t[3]] = Template(t[4]) 395 t[0] = GenCode() 396 397 # An instruction format definition looks like 398 # "def format <fmt>(<params>) {{...}};" 399 def p_def_format(self, t): 400 'def_format : DEF FORMAT ID LPAREN param_list RPAREN CODELIT SEMI' 401 (id, params, code) = (t[3], t[5], t[7]) 402 defFormat(id, params, code, t.lexer.lineno) 403 t[0] = GenCode() 404 405 # The formal parameter list for an instruction format is a 406 # possibly empty list of comma-separated parameters. Positional 407 # (standard, non-keyword) parameters must come first, followed by 408 # keyword parameters, followed by a '*foo' parameter that gets 409 # excess positional arguments (as in Python). Each of these three 410 # parameter categories is optional. 411 # 412 # Note that we do not support the '**foo' parameter for collecting 413 # otherwise undefined keyword args. Otherwise the parameter list 414 # is (I believe) identical to what is supported in Python. 415 # 416 # The param list generates a tuple, where the first element is a 417 # list of the positional params and the second element is a dict 418 # containing the keyword params. 419 def p_param_list_0(self, t): 420 'param_list : positional_param_list COMMA nonpositional_param_list' 421 t[0] = t[1] + t[3] 422 423 def p_param_list_1(self, t): 424 '''param_list : positional_param_list 425 | nonpositional_param_list''' 426 t[0] = t[1] 427 428 def p_positional_param_list_0(self, t): 429 'positional_param_list : empty' 430 t[0] = [] 431 432 def p_positional_param_list_1(self, t): 433 'positional_param_list : ID' 434 t[0] = [t[1]] 435 436 def p_positional_param_list_2(self, t): 437 'positional_param_list : positional_param_list COMMA ID' 438 t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]] 439 440 def p_nonpositional_param_list_0(self, t): 441 'nonpositional_param_list : keyword_param_list COMMA excess_args_param' 442 t[0] = t[1] + t[3] 443 444 def p_nonpositional_param_list_1(self, t): 445 '''nonpositional_param_list : keyword_param_list 446 | excess_args_param''' 447 t[0] = t[1] 448 449 def p_keyword_param_list_0(self, t): 450 'keyword_param_list : keyword_param' 451 t[0] = [t[1]] 452 453 def p_keyword_param_list_1(self, t): 454 'keyword_param_list : keyword_param_list COMMA keyword_param' 455 t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]] 456 457 def p_keyword_param(self, t): 458 'keyword_param : ID EQUALS expr' 459 t[0] = t[1] + ' = ' + t[3].__repr__() 460 461 def p_excess_args_param(self, t): 462 'excess_args_param : ASTERISK ID' 463 # Just concatenate them: '*ID'. Wrap in list to be consistent 464 # with positional_param_list and keyword_param_list. 465 t[0] = [t[1] + t[2]] 466 467 # End of format definition-related rules. 468 ############## 469 470 # 471 # A decode block looks like: 472 # decode <field1> [, <field2>]* [default <inst>] { ... } 473 # 474 def p_decode_block(self, t): 475 'decode_block : DECODE ID opt_default LBRACE decode_stmt_list RBRACE' 476 default_defaults = defaultStack.pop() 477 codeObj = t[5] 478 # use the "default defaults" only if there was no explicit 479 # default statement in decode_stmt_list 480 if not codeObj.has_decode_default: 481 codeObj += default_defaults 482 codeObj.wrap_decode_block('switch (%s) {\n' % t[2], '}\n') 483 t[0] = codeObj 484 485 # The opt_default statement serves only to push the "default 486 # defaults" onto defaultStack. This value will be used by nested 487 # decode blocks, and used and popped off when the current 488 # decode_block is processed (in p_decode_block() above). 489 def p_opt_default_0(self, t): 490 'opt_default : empty' 491 # no default specified: reuse the one currently at the top of 492 # the stack 493 defaultStack.push(defaultStack.top()) 494 # no meaningful value returned 495 t[0] = None 496 497 def p_opt_default_1(self, t): 498 'opt_default : DEFAULT inst' 499 # push the new default 500 codeObj = t[2] 501 codeObj.wrap_decode_block('\ndefault:\n', 'break;\n') 502 defaultStack.push(codeObj) 503 # no meaningful value returned 504 t[0] = None 505 506 def p_decode_stmt_list_0(self, t): 507 'decode_stmt_list : decode_stmt' 508 t[0] = t[1] 509 510 def p_decode_stmt_list_1(self, t): 511 'decode_stmt_list : decode_stmt decode_stmt_list' 512 if (t[1].has_decode_default and t[2].has_decode_default): 513 error(t.lexer.lineno, 'Two default cases in decode block') 514 t[0] = t[1] + t[2] 515 516 # 517 # Decode statement rules 518 # 519 # There are four types of statements allowed in a decode block: 520 # 1. Format blocks 'format <foo> { ... }' 521 # 2. Nested decode blocks 522 # 3. Instruction definitions. 523 # 4. C preprocessor directives. 524 525 526 # Preprocessor directives found in a decode statement list are 527 # passed through to the output, replicated to all of the output 528 # code streams. This works well for ifdefs, so we can ifdef out 529 # both the declarations and the decode cases generated by an 530 # instruction definition. Handling them as part of the grammar 531 # makes it easy to keep them in the right place with respect to 532 # the code generated by the other statements. 533 def p_decode_stmt_cpp(self, t): 534 'decode_stmt : CPPDIRECTIVE' 535 t[0] = GenCode(t[1], t[1], t[1], t[1]) 536 537 # A format block 'format <foo> { ... }' sets the default 538 # instruction format used to handle instruction definitions inside 539 # the block. This format can be overridden by using an explicit 540 # format on the instruction definition or with a nested format 541 # block. 542 def p_decode_stmt_format(self, t): 543 'decode_stmt : FORMAT push_format_id LBRACE decode_stmt_list RBRACE' 544 # The format will be pushed on the stack when 'push_format_id' 545 # is processed (see below). Once the parser has recognized 546 # the full production (though the right brace), we're done 547 # with the format, so now we can pop it. 548 formatStack.pop() 549 t[0] = t[4] 550 551 # This rule exists so we can set the current format (& push the 552 # stack) when we recognize the format name part of the format 553 # block. 554 def p_push_format_id(self, t): 555 'push_format_id : ID' 556 try: 557 formatStack.push(formatMap[t[1]]) 558 t[0] = ('', '// format %s' % t[1]) 559 except KeyError: 560 error(t.lexer.lineno, 561 'instruction format "%s" not defined.' % t[1]) 562 563 # Nested decode block: if the value of the current field matches 564 # the specified constant, do a nested decode on some other field. 565 def p_decode_stmt_decode(self, t): 566 'decode_stmt : case_label COLON decode_block' 567 label = t[1] 568 codeObj = t[3] 569 # just wrap the decoding code from the block as a case in the 570 # outer switch statement. 571 codeObj.wrap_decode_block('\n%s:\n' % label) 572 codeObj.has_decode_default = (label == 'default') 573 t[0] = codeObj 574 575 # Instruction definition (finally!). 576 def p_decode_stmt_inst(self, t): 577 'decode_stmt : case_label COLON inst SEMI' 578 label = t[1] 579 codeObj = t[3] 580 codeObj.wrap_decode_block('\n%s:' % label, 'break;\n') 581 codeObj.has_decode_default = (label == 'default') 582 t[0] = codeObj 583 584 # The case label is either a list of one or more constants or 585 # 'default' 586 def p_case_label_0(self, t): 587 'case_label : intlit_list' 588 def make_case(intlit): 589 if intlit >= 2**32: 590 return 'case ULL(%#x)' % intlit 591 else: 592 return 'case %#x' % intlit 593 t[0] = ': '.join(map(make_case, t[1])) 594 595 def p_case_label_1(self, t): 596 'case_label : DEFAULT' 597 t[0] = 'default' 598 599 # 600 # The constant list for a decode case label must be non-empty, but 601 # may have one or more comma-separated integer literals in it. 602 # 603 def p_intlit_list_0(self, t): 604 'intlit_list : INTLIT' 605 t[0] = [t[1]] 606 607 def p_intlit_list_1(self, t): 608 'intlit_list : intlit_list COMMA INTLIT' 609 t[0] = t[1] 610 t[0].append(t[3]) 611 612 # Define an instruction using the current instruction format 613 # (specified by an enclosing format block). 614 # "<mnemonic>(<args>)" 615 def p_inst_0(self, t): 616 'inst : ID LPAREN arg_list RPAREN' 617 # Pass the ID and arg list to the current format class to deal with. 618 currentFormat = formatStack.top() 619 codeObj = currentFormat.defineInst(t[1], t[3], t.lexer.lineno) 620 args = ','.join(map(str, t[3])) 621 args = re.sub('(?m)^', '//', args) 622 args = re.sub('^//', '', args) 623 comment = '\n// %s::%s(%s)\n' % (currentFormat.id, t[1], args) 624 codeObj.prepend_all(comment) 625 t[0] = codeObj 626 627 # Define an instruction using an explicitly specified format: 628 # "<fmt>::<mnemonic>(<args>)" 629 def p_inst_1(self, t): 630 'inst : ID DBLCOLON ID LPAREN arg_list RPAREN' 631 try: 632 format = formatMap[t[1]] 633 except KeyError: 634 error(t.lexer.lineno, 635 'instruction format "%s" not defined.' % t[1]) 636 codeObj = format.defineInst(t[3], t[5], t.lexer.lineno) 637 comment = '\n// %s::%s(%s)\n' % (t[1], t[3], t[5]) 638 codeObj.prepend_all(comment) 639 t[0] = codeObj 640 641 # The arg list generates a tuple, where the first element is a 642 # list of the positional args and the second element is a dict 643 # containing the keyword args. 644 def p_arg_list_0(self, t): 645 'arg_list : positional_arg_list COMMA keyword_arg_list' 646 t[0] = ( t[1], t[3] ) 647 648 def p_arg_list_1(self, t): 649 'arg_list : positional_arg_list' 650 t[0] = ( t[1], {} ) 651 652 def p_arg_list_2(self, t): 653 'arg_list : keyword_arg_list' 654 t[0] = ( [], t[1] ) 655 656 def p_positional_arg_list_0(self, t): 657 'positional_arg_list : empty' 658 t[0] = [] 659 660 def p_positional_arg_list_1(self, t): 661 'positional_arg_list : expr' 662 t[0] = [t[1]] 663 664 def p_positional_arg_list_2(self, t): 665 'positional_arg_list : positional_arg_list COMMA expr' 666 t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]] 667 668 def p_keyword_arg_list_0(self, t): 669 'keyword_arg_list : keyword_arg' 670 t[0] = t[1] 671 672 def p_keyword_arg_list_1(self, t): 673 'keyword_arg_list : keyword_arg_list COMMA keyword_arg' 674 t[0] = t[1] 675 t[0].update(t[3]) 676 677 def p_keyword_arg(self, t): 678 'keyword_arg : ID EQUALS expr' 679 t[0] = { t[1] : t[3] } 680 681 # 682 # Basic expressions. These constitute the argument values of 683 # "function calls" (i.e. instruction definitions in the decode 684 # block) and default values for formal parameters of format 685 # functions. 686 # 687 # Right now, these are either strings, integers, or (recursively) 688 # lists of exprs (using Python square-bracket list syntax). Note 689 # that bare identifiers are trated as string constants here (since 690 # there isn't really a variable namespace to refer to). 691 # 692 def p_expr_0(self, t): 693 '''expr : ID 694 | INTLIT 695 | STRLIT 696 | CODELIT''' 697 t[0] = t[1] 698 699 def p_expr_1(self, t): 700 '''expr : LBRACKET list_expr RBRACKET''' 701 t[0] = t[2] 702 703 def p_list_expr_0(self, t): 704 'list_expr : expr' 705 t[0] = [t[1]] 706 707 def p_list_expr_1(self, t): 708 'list_expr : list_expr COMMA expr' 709 t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]] 710 711 def p_list_expr_2(self, t): 712 'list_expr : empty' 713 t[0] = [] 714 715 # 716 # Empty production... use in other rules for readability. 717 # 718 def p_empty(self, t): 719 'empty :' 720 pass 721 722 # Parse error handler. Note that the argument here is the 723 # offending *token*, not a grammar symbol (hence the need to use 724 # t.value) 725 def p_error(self, t): 726 if t: 727 error(t.lexer.lineno, "syntax error at '%s'" % t.value) 728 else: 729 error(0, "unknown syntax error", True) 730 731 # END OF GRAMMAR RULES 732 733# Now build the parser. 734parser = ISAParser() 735 736##################################################################### 737# 738# Support Classes 739# 740##################################################################### 741 742# Expand template with CPU-specific references into a dictionary with 743# an entry for each CPU model name. The entry key is the model name 744# and the corresponding value is the template with the CPU-specific 745# refs substituted for that model. 746def expand_cpu_symbols_to_dict(template): 747 # Protect '%'s that don't go with CPU-specific terms 748 t = re.sub(r'%(?!\(CPU_)', '%%', template) 749 result = {} 750 for cpu in cpu_models: 751 result[cpu.name] = t % cpu.strings 752 return result 753 754# *If* the template has CPU-specific references, return a single 755# string containing a copy of the template for each CPU model with the 756# corresponding values substituted in. If the template has no 757# CPU-specific references, it is returned unmodified. 758def expand_cpu_symbols_to_string(template): 759 if template.find('%(CPU_') != -1: 760 return reduce(lambda x,y: x+y, 761 expand_cpu_symbols_to_dict(template).values()) 762 else: 763 return template 764 765# Protect CPU-specific references by doubling the corresponding '%'s 766# (in preparation for substituting a different set of references into 767# the template). 768def protect_cpu_symbols(template): 769 return re.sub(r'%(?=\(CPU_)', '%%', template) 770 771# Protect any non-dict-substitution '%'s in a format string 772# (i.e. those not followed by '(') 773def protect_non_subst_percents(s): 774 return re.sub(r'%(?!\()', '%%', s) 775 776############### 777# GenCode class 778# 779# The GenCode class encapsulates generated code destined for various 780# output files. The header_output and decoder_output attributes are 781# strings containing code destined for decoder.hh and decoder.cc 782# respectively. The decode_block attribute contains code to be 783# incorporated in the decode function itself (that will also end up in 784# decoder.cc). The exec_output attribute is a dictionary with a key 785# for each CPU model name; the value associated with a particular key 786# is the string of code for that CPU model's exec.cc file. The 787# has_decode_default attribute is used in the decode block to allow 788# explicit default clauses to override default default clauses. 789 790class GenCode(object): 791 # Constructor. At this point we substitute out all CPU-specific 792 # symbols. For the exec output, these go into the per-model 793 # dictionary. For all other output types they get collapsed into 794 # a single string. 795 def __init__(self, 796 header_output = '', decoder_output = '', exec_output = '', 797 decode_block = '', has_decode_default = False): 798 self.header_output = expand_cpu_symbols_to_string(header_output) 799 self.decoder_output = expand_cpu_symbols_to_string(decoder_output) 800 if isinstance(exec_output, dict): 801 self.exec_output = exec_output 802 elif isinstance(exec_output, str): 803 # If the exec_output arg is a single string, we replicate 804 # it for each of the CPU models, substituting and 805 # %(CPU_foo)s params appropriately. 806 self.exec_output = expand_cpu_symbols_to_dict(exec_output) 807 self.decode_block = expand_cpu_symbols_to_string(decode_block) 808 self.has_decode_default = has_decode_default 809 810 # Override '+' operator: generate a new GenCode object that 811 # concatenates all the individual strings in the operands. 812 def __add__(self, other): 813 exec_output = {} 814 for cpu in cpu_models: 815 n = cpu.name 816 exec_output[n] = self.exec_output[n] + other.exec_output[n] 817 return GenCode(self.header_output + other.header_output, 818 self.decoder_output + other.decoder_output, 819 exec_output, 820 self.decode_block + other.decode_block, 821 self.has_decode_default or other.has_decode_default) 822 823 # Prepend a string (typically a comment) to all the strings. 824 def prepend_all(self, pre): 825 self.header_output = pre + self.header_output 826 self.decoder_output = pre + self.decoder_output 827 self.decode_block = pre + self.decode_block 828 for cpu in cpu_models: 829 self.exec_output[cpu.name] = pre + self.exec_output[cpu.name] 830 831 # Wrap the decode block in a pair of strings (e.g., 'case foo:' 832 # and 'break;'). Used to build the big nested switch statement. 833 def wrap_decode_block(self, pre, post = ''): 834 self.decode_block = pre + indent(self.decode_block) + post 835 836################ 837# Format object. 838# 839# A format object encapsulates an instruction format. It must provide 840# a defineInst() method that generates the code for an instruction 841# definition. 842 843exportContextSymbols = ('InstObjParams', 'makeList', 're', 'string') 844 845exportContext = {} 846 847def updateExportContext(): 848 exportContext.update(exportDict(*exportContextSymbols)) 849 exportContext.update(parser.templateMap) 850 851def exportDict(*symNames): 852 return dict([(s, eval(s)) for s in symNames]) 853 854 855class Format(object): 856 def __init__(self, id, params, code): 857 # constructor: just save away arguments 858 self.id = id 859 self.params = params 860 label = 'def format ' + id 861 self.user_code = compile(fixPythonIndentation(code), label, 'exec') 862 param_list = string.join(params, ", ") 863 f = '''def defInst(_code, _context, %s): 864 my_locals = vars().copy() 865 exec _code in _context, my_locals 866 return my_locals\n''' % param_list 867 c = compile(f, label + ' wrapper', 'exec') 868 exec c 869 self.func = defInst 870 871 def defineInst(self, name, args, lineno): 872 context = {} 873 updateExportContext() 874 context.update(exportContext) 875 if len(name): 876 Name = name[0].upper() 877 if len(name) > 1: 878 Name += name[1:] 879 context.update({ 'name': name, 'Name': Name }) 880 try: 881 vars = self.func(self.user_code, context, *args[0], **args[1]) 882 except Exception, exc: 883 error(lineno, 'error defining "%s": %s.' % (name, exc)) 884 for k in vars.keys(): 885 if k not in ('header_output', 'decoder_output', 886 'exec_output', 'decode_block'): 887 del vars[k] 888 return GenCode(**vars) 889 890# Special null format to catch an implicit-format instruction 891# definition outside of any format block. 892class NoFormat(object): 893 def __init__(self): 894 self.defaultInst = '' 895 896 def defineInst(self, name, args, lineno): 897 error(lineno, 898 'instruction definition "%s" with no active format!' % name) 899 900# This dictionary maps format name strings to Format objects. 901formatMap = {} 902 903# Define a new format 904def defFormat(id, params, code, lineno): 905 # make sure we haven't already defined this one 906 if formatMap.get(id, None) != None: 907 error(lineno, 'format %s redefined.' % id) 908 # create new object and store in global map 909 formatMap[id] = Format(id, params, code) 910 911 912############## 913# Stack: a simple stack object. Used for both formats (formatStack) 914# and default cases (defaultStack). Simply wraps a list to give more 915# stack-like syntax and enable initialization with an argument list 916# (as opposed to an argument that's a list). 917 918class Stack(list): 919 def __init__(self, *items): 920 list.__init__(self, items) 921 922 def push(self, item): 923 self.append(item); 924 925 def top(self): 926 return self[-1] 927 928# The global format stack. 929formatStack = Stack(NoFormat()) 930 931# The global default case stack. 932defaultStack = Stack( None ) 933 934# Global stack that tracks current file and line number. 935# Each element is a tuple (filename, lineno) that records the 936# *current* filename and the line number in the *previous* file where 937# it was included. 938fileNameStack = Stack() 939 940################### 941# Utility functions 942 943# 944# Indent every line in string 's' by two spaces 945# (except preprocessor directives). 946# Used to make nested code blocks look pretty. 947# 948def indent(s): 949 return re.sub(r'(?m)^(?!#)', ' ', s) 950 951# 952# Munge a somewhat arbitrarily formatted piece of Python code 953# (e.g. from a format 'let' block) into something whose indentation 954# will get by the Python parser. 955# 956# The two keys here are that Python will give a syntax error if 957# there's any whitespace at the beginning of the first line, and that 958# all lines at the same lexical nesting level must have identical 959# indentation. Unfortunately the way code literals work, an entire 960# let block tends to have some initial indentation. Rather than 961# trying to figure out what that is and strip it off, we prepend 'if 962# 1:' to make the let code the nested block inside the if (and have 963# the parser automatically deal with the indentation for us). 964# 965# We don't want to do this if (1) the code block is empty or (2) the 966# first line of the block doesn't have any whitespace at the front. 967 968def fixPythonIndentation(s): 969 # get rid of blank lines first 970 s = re.sub(r'(?m)^\s*\n', '', s); 971 if (s != '' and re.match(r'[ \t]', s[0])): 972 s = 'if 1:\n' + s 973 return s 974 975# Error handler. Just call exit. Output formatted to work under 976# Emacs compile-mode. Optional 'print_traceback' arg, if set to True, 977# prints a Python stack backtrace too (can be handy when trying to 978# debug the parser itself). 979def error(lineno, string, print_traceback = False): 980 spaces = "" 981 for (filename, line) in fileNameStack[0:-1]: 982 print spaces + "In file included from " + filename + ":" 983 spaces += " " 984 # Print a Python stack backtrace if requested. 985 if (print_traceback): 986 traceback.print_exc() 987 if lineno != 0: 988 line_str = "%d:" % lineno 989 else: 990 line_str = "" 991 sys.exit(spaces + "%s:%s %s" % (fileNameStack[-1][0], line_str, string)) 992 993 994##################################################################### 995# 996# Bitfield Operator Support 997# 998##################################################################### 999 1000bitOp1ArgRE = re.compile(r'<\s*(\w+)\s*:\s*>') 1001 1002bitOpWordRE = re.compile(r'(?<![\w\.])([\w\.]+)<\s*(\w+)\s*:\s*(\w+)\s*>') 1003bitOpExprRE = re.compile(r'\)<\s*(\w+)\s*:\s*(\w+)\s*>') 1004 1005def substBitOps(code): 1006 # first convert single-bit selectors to two-index form 1007 # i.e., <n> --> <n:n> 1008 code = bitOp1ArgRE.sub(r'<\1:\1>', code) 1009 # simple case: selector applied to ID (name) 1010 # i.e., foo<a:b> --> bits(foo, a, b) 1011 code = bitOpWordRE.sub(r'bits(\1, \2, \3)', code) 1012 # if selector is applied to expression (ending in ')'), 1013 # we need to search backward for matching '(' 1014 match = bitOpExprRE.search(code) 1015 while match: 1016 exprEnd = match.start() 1017 here = exprEnd - 1 1018 nestLevel = 1 1019 while nestLevel > 0: 1020 if code[here] == '(': 1021 nestLevel -= 1 1022 elif code[here] == ')': 1023 nestLevel += 1 1024 here -= 1 1025 if here < 0: 1026 sys.exit("Didn't find '('!") 1027 exprStart = here+1 1028 newExpr = r'bits(%s, %s, %s)' % (code[exprStart:exprEnd+1], 1029 match.group(1), match.group(2)) 1030 code = code[:exprStart] + newExpr + code[match.end():] 1031 match = bitOpExprRE.search(code) 1032 return code 1033 1034 1035#################### 1036# Template objects. 1037# 1038# Template objects are format strings that allow substitution from 1039# the attribute spaces of other objects (e.g. InstObjParams instances). 1040 1041labelRE = re.compile(r'(?<!%)%\(([^\)]+)\)[sd]') 1042 1043class Template(object): 1044 def __init__(self, t): 1045 self.template = t 1046 1047 def subst(self, d): 1048 myDict = None 1049 1050 # Protect non-Python-dict substitutions (e.g. if there's a printf 1051 # in the templated C++ code) 1052 template = protect_non_subst_percents(self.template) 1053 # CPU-model-specific substitutions are handled later (in GenCode). 1054 template = protect_cpu_symbols(template) 1055 1056 # Build a dict ('myDict') to use for the template substitution. 1057 # Start with the template namespace. Make a copy since we're 1058 # going to modify it. 1059 myDict = parser.templateMap.copy() 1060 1061 if isinstance(d, InstObjParams): 1062 # If we're dealing with an InstObjParams object, we need 1063 # to be a little more sophisticated. The instruction-wide 1064 # parameters are already formed, but the parameters which 1065 # are only function wide still need to be generated. 1066 compositeCode = '' 1067 1068 myDict.update(d.__dict__) 1069 # The "operands" and "snippets" attributes of the InstObjParams 1070 # objects are for internal use and not substitution. 1071 del myDict['operands'] 1072 del myDict['snippets'] 1073 1074 snippetLabels = [l for l in labelRE.findall(template) 1075 if d.snippets.has_key(l)] 1076 1077 snippets = dict([(s, mungeSnippet(d.snippets[s])) 1078 for s in snippetLabels]) 1079 1080 myDict.update(snippets) 1081 1082 compositeCode = ' '.join(map(str, snippets.values())) 1083 1084 # Add in template itself in case it references any 1085 # operands explicitly (like Mem) 1086 compositeCode += ' ' + template 1087 1088 operands = SubOperandList(compositeCode, d.operands) 1089 1090 myDict['op_decl'] = operands.concatAttrStrings('op_decl') 1091 1092 is_src = lambda op: op.is_src 1093 is_dest = lambda op: op.is_dest 1094 1095 myDict['op_src_decl'] = \ 1096 operands.concatSomeAttrStrings(is_src, 'op_src_decl') 1097 myDict['op_dest_decl'] = \ 1098 operands.concatSomeAttrStrings(is_dest, 'op_dest_decl') 1099 1100 myDict['op_rd'] = operands.concatAttrStrings('op_rd') 1101 myDict['op_wb'] = operands.concatAttrStrings('op_wb') 1102 1103 if d.operands.memOperand: 1104 myDict['mem_acc_size'] = d.operands.memOperand.mem_acc_size 1105 myDict['mem_acc_type'] = d.operands.memOperand.mem_acc_type 1106 1107 elif isinstance(d, dict): 1108 # if the argument is a dictionary, we just use it. 1109 myDict.update(d) 1110 elif hasattr(d, '__dict__'): 1111 # if the argument is an object, we use its attribute map. 1112 myDict.update(d.__dict__) 1113 else: 1114 raise TypeError, "Template.subst() arg must be or have dictionary" 1115 return template % myDict 1116 1117 # Convert to string. This handles the case when a template with a 1118 # CPU-specific term gets interpolated into another template or into 1119 # an output block. 1120 def __str__(self): 1121 return expand_cpu_symbols_to_string(self.template) 1122 1123##################################################################### 1124# 1125# Code Parser 1126# 1127# The remaining code is the support for automatically extracting 1128# instruction characteristics from pseudocode. 1129# 1130##################################################################### 1131 1132# Force the argument to be a list. Useful for flags, where a caller 1133# can specify a singleton flag or a list of flags. Also usful for 1134# converting tuples to lists so they can be modified. 1135def makeList(arg): 1136 if isinstance(arg, list): 1137 return arg 1138 elif isinstance(arg, tuple): 1139 return list(arg) 1140 elif not arg: 1141 return [] 1142 else: 1143 return [ arg ] 1144 1145# Generate operandTypeMap from the user's 'def operand_types' 1146# statement. 1147def buildOperandTypeMap(user_dict, lineno): 1148 global operandTypeMap 1149 operandTypeMap = {} 1150 for (ext, (desc, size)) in user_dict.iteritems(): 1151 if desc == 'signed int': 1152 ctype = 'int%d_t' % size 1153 is_signed = 1 1154 elif desc == 'unsigned int': 1155 ctype = 'uint%d_t' % size 1156 is_signed = 0 1157 elif desc == 'float': 1158 is_signed = 1 # shouldn't really matter 1159 if size == 32: 1160 ctype = 'float' 1161 elif size == 64: 1162 ctype = 'double' 1163 elif desc == 'twin64 int': 1164 is_signed = 0 1165 ctype = 'Twin64_t' 1166 elif desc == 'twin32 int': 1167 is_signed = 0 1168 ctype = 'Twin32_t' 1169 if ctype == '': 1170 error(lineno, 'Unrecognized type description "%s" in user_dict') 1171 operandTypeMap[ext] = (size, ctype, is_signed) 1172 1173class Operand(object): 1174 '''Base class for operand descriptors. An instance of this class 1175 (or actually a class derived from this one) represents a specific 1176 operand for a code block (e.g, "Rc.sq" as a dest). Intermediate 1177 derived classes encapsulates the traits of a particular operand 1178 type (e.g., "32-bit integer register").''' 1179 1180 def buildReadCode(self, func = None): 1181 code = self.read_code % {"name": self.base_name, 1182 "func": func, 1183 "op_idx": self.src_reg_idx, 1184 "reg_idx": self.reg_spec, 1185 "size": self.size, 1186 "ctype": self.ctype} 1187 if self.size != self.dflt_size: 1188 return '%s = bits(%s, %d, 0);\n' % \ 1189 (self.base_name, code, self.size-1) 1190 else: 1191 return '%s = %s;\n' % \ 1192 (self.base_name, code) 1193 1194 def buildWriteCode(self, func = None): 1195 if (self.size != self.dflt_size and self.is_signed): 1196 final_val = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (self.size, self.base_name) 1197 else: 1198 final_val = self.base_name 1199 code = self.write_code % {"name": self.base_name, 1200 "func": func, 1201 "op_idx": self.dest_reg_idx, 1202 "reg_idx": self.reg_spec, 1203 "size": self.size, 1204 "ctype": self.ctype, 1205 "final_val": final_val} 1206 return ''' 1207 { 1208 %s final_val = %s; 1209 %s; 1210 if (traceData) { traceData->setData(final_val); } 1211 }''' % (self.dflt_ctype, final_val, code) 1212 1213 def __init__(self, full_name, ext, is_src, is_dest): 1214 self.full_name = full_name 1215 self.ext = ext 1216 self.is_src = is_src 1217 self.is_dest = is_dest 1218 # The 'effective extension' (eff_ext) is either the actual 1219 # extension, if one was explicitly provided, or the default. 1220 if ext: 1221 self.eff_ext = ext 1222 else: 1223 self.eff_ext = self.dflt_ext 1224 1225 (self.size, self.ctype, self.is_signed) = operandTypeMap[self.eff_ext] 1226 1227 # note that mem_acc_size is undefined for non-mem operands... 1228 # template must be careful not to use it if it doesn't apply. 1229 if self.isMem(): 1230 self.mem_acc_size = self.makeAccSize() 1231 if self.ctype in ['Twin32_t', 'Twin64_t']: 1232 self.mem_acc_type = 'Twin' 1233 else: 1234 self.mem_acc_type = 'uint' 1235 1236 # Finalize additional fields (primarily code fields). This step 1237 # is done separately since some of these fields may depend on the 1238 # register index enumeration that hasn't been performed yet at the 1239 # time of __init__(). 1240 def finalize(self): 1241 self.flags = self.getFlags() 1242 self.constructor = self.makeConstructor() 1243 self.op_decl = self.makeDecl() 1244 1245 if self.is_src: 1246 self.op_rd = self.makeRead() 1247 self.op_src_decl = self.makeDecl() 1248 else: 1249 self.op_rd = '' 1250 self.op_src_decl = '' 1251 1252 if self.is_dest: 1253 self.op_wb = self.makeWrite() 1254 self.op_dest_decl = self.makeDecl() 1255 else: 1256 self.op_wb = '' 1257 self.op_dest_decl = '' 1258 1259 def isMem(self): 1260 return 0 1261 1262 def isReg(self): 1263 return 0 1264 1265 def isFloatReg(self): 1266 return 0 1267 1268 def isIntReg(self): 1269 return 0 1270 1271 def isControlReg(self): 1272 return 0 1273 1274 def getFlags(self): 1275 # note the empty slice '[:]' gives us a copy of self.flags[0] 1276 # instead of a reference to it 1277 my_flags = self.flags[0][:] 1278 if self.is_src: 1279 my_flags += self.flags[1] 1280 if self.is_dest: 1281 my_flags += self.flags[2] 1282 return my_flags 1283 1284 def makeDecl(self): 1285 # Note that initializations in the declarations are solely 1286 # to avoid 'uninitialized variable' errors from the compiler. 1287 return self.ctype + ' ' + self.base_name + ' = 0;\n'; 1288 1289class IntRegOperand(Operand): 1290 def isReg(self): 1291 return 1 1292 1293 def isIntReg(self): 1294 return 1 1295 1296 def makeConstructor(self): 1297 c = '' 1298 if self.is_src: 1299 c += '\n\t_srcRegIdx[%d] = %s;' % \ 1300 (self.src_reg_idx, self.reg_spec) 1301 if self.is_dest: 1302 c += '\n\t_destRegIdx[%d] = %s;' % \ 1303 (self.dest_reg_idx, self.reg_spec) 1304 return c 1305 1306 def makeRead(self): 1307 if (self.ctype == 'float' or self.ctype == 'double'): 1308 error(0, 'Attempt to read integer register as FP') 1309 if self.read_code != None: 1310 return self.buildReadCode('readIntRegOperand') 1311 if (self.size == self.dflt_size): 1312 return '%s = xc->readIntRegOperand(this, %d);\n' % \ 1313 (self.base_name, self.src_reg_idx) 1314 elif (self.size > self.dflt_size): 1315 int_reg_val = 'xc->readIntRegOperand(this, %d)' % \ 1316 (self.src_reg_idx) 1317 if (self.is_signed): 1318 int_reg_val = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (self.dflt_size, int_reg_val) 1319 return '%s = %s;\n' % (self.base_name, int_reg_val) 1320 else: 1321 return '%s = bits(xc->readIntRegOperand(this, %d), %d, 0);\n' % \ 1322 (self.base_name, self.src_reg_idx, self.size-1) 1323 1324 def makeWrite(self): 1325 if (self.ctype == 'float' or self.ctype == 'double'): 1326 error(0, 'Attempt to write integer register as FP') 1327 if self.write_code != None: 1328 return self.buildWriteCode('setIntRegOperand') 1329 if (self.size != self.dflt_size and self.is_signed): 1330 final_val = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (self.size, self.base_name) 1331 else: 1332 final_val = self.base_name 1333 wb = ''' 1334 { 1335 %s final_val = %s; 1336 xc->setIntRegOperand(this, %d, final_val);\n 1337 if (traceData) { traceData->setData(final_val); } 1338 }''' % (self.dflt_ctype, final_val, self.dest_reg_idx) 1339 return wb 1340 1341class FloatRegOperand(Operand): 1342 def isReg(self): 1343 return 1 1344 1345 def isFloatReg(self): 1346 return 1 1347 1348 def makeConstructor(self): 1349 c = '' 1350 if self.is_src: 1351 c += '\n\t_srcRegIdx[%d] = %s + FP_Base_DepTag;' % \ 1352 (self.src_reg_idx, self.reg_spec) 1353 if self.is_dest: 1354 c += '\n\t_destRegIdx[%d] = %s + FP_Base_DepTag;' % \ 1355 (self.dest_reg_idx, self.reg_spec) 1356 return c 1357 1358 def makeRead(self): 1359 bit_select = 0 1360 if (self.ctype == 'float' or self.ctype == 'double'): 1361 func = 'readFloatRegOperand' 1362 else: 1363 func = 'readFloatRegOperandBits' 1364 if (self.size != self.dflt_size): 1365 bit_select = 1 1366 base = 'xc->%s(this, %d)' % (func, self.src_reg_idx) 1367 if self.read_code != None: 1368 return self.buildReadCode(func) 1369 if bit_select: 1370 return '%s = bits(%s, %d, 0);\n' % \ 1371 (self.base_name, base, self.size-1) 1372 else: 1373 return '%s = %s;\n' % (self.base_name, base) 1374 1375 def makeWrite(self): 1376 final_val = self.base_name 1377 final_ctype = self.ctype 1378 if (self.ctype == 'float' or self.ctype == 'double'): 1379 func = 'setFloatRegOperand' 1380 elif (self.ctype == 'uint32_t' or self.ctype == 'uint64_t'): 1381 func = 'setFloatRegOperandBits' 1382 else: 1383 func = 'setFloatRegOperandBits' 1384 final_ctype = 'uint%d_t' % self.dflt_size 1385 if (self.size != self.dflt_size and self.is_signed): 1386 final_val = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (self.size, self.base_name) 1387 if self.write_code != None: 1388 return self.buildWriteCode(func) 1389 wb = ''' 1390 { 1391 %s final_val = %s; 1392 xc->%s(this, %d, final_val);\n 1393 if (traceData) { traceData->setData(final_val); } 1394 }''' % (final_ctype, final_val, func, self.dest_reg_idx) 1395 return wb 1396 1397class ControlRegOperand(Operand): 1398 def isReg(self): 1399 return 1 1400 1401 def isControlReg(self): 1402 return 1 1403 1404 def makeConstructor(self): 1405 c = '' 1406 if self.is_src: 1407 c += '\n\t_srcRegIdx[%d] = %s + Ctrl_Base_DepTag;' % \ 1408 (self.src_reg_idx, self.reg_spec) 1409 if self.is_dest: 1410 c += '\n\t_destRegIdx[%d] = %s + Ctrl_Base_DepTag;' % \ 1411 (self.dest_reg_idx, self.reg_spec) 1412 return c 1413 1414 def makeRead(self): 1415 bit_select = 0 1416 if (self.ctype == 'float' or self.ctype == 'double'): 1417 error(0, 'Attempt to read control register as FP') 1418 if self.read_code != None: 1419 return self.buildReadCode('readMiscRegOperand') 1420 base = 'xc->readMiscRegOperand(this, %s)' % self.src_reg_idx 1421 if self.size == self.dflt_size: 1422 return '%s = %s;\n' % (self.base_name, base) 1423 else: 1424 return '%s = bits(%s, %d, 0);\n' % \ 1425 (self.base_name, base, self.size-1) 1426 1427 def makeWrite(self): 1428 if (self.ctype == 'float' or self.ctype == 'double'): 1429 error(0, 'Attempt to write control register as FP') 1430 if self.write_code != None: 1431 return self.buildWriteCode('setMiscRegOperand') 1432 wb = 'xc->setMiscRegOperand(this, %s, %s);\n' % \ 1433 (self.dest_reg_idx, self.base_name) 1434 wb += 'if (traceData) { traceData->setData(%s); }' % \ 1435 self.base_name 1436 return wb 1437 1438class MemOperand(Operand): 1439 def isMem(self): 1440 return 1 1441 1442 def makeConstructor(self): 1443 return '' 1444 1445 def makeDecl(self): 1446 # Note that initializations in the declarations are solely 1447 # to avoid 'uninitialized variable' errors from the compiler. 1448 # Declare memory data variable. 1449 if self.ctype in ['Twin32_t','Twin64_t']: 1450 return "%s %s; %s.a = 0; %s.b = 0;\n" % \ 1451 (self.ctype, self.base_name, self.base_name, self.base_name) 1452 return '%s %s = 0;\n' % (self.ctype, self.base_name) 1453 1454 def makeRead(self): 1455 if self.read_code != None: 1456 return self.buildReadCode() 1457 return '' 1458 1459 def makeWrite(self): 1460 if self.write_code != None: 1461 return self.buildWriteCode() 1462 return '' 1463 1464 # Return the memory access size *in bits*, suitable for 1465 # forming a type via "uint%d_t". Divide by 8 if you want bytes. 1466 def makeAccSize(self): 1467 return self.size 1468 1469class PCOperand(Operand): 1470 def makeConstructor(self): 1471 return '' 1472 1473 def makeRead(self): 1474 return '%s = xc->readPC();\n' % self.base_name 1475 1476 def makeWrite(self): 1477 return 'xc->setPC(%s);\n' % self.base_name 1478 1479class UPCOperand(Operand): 1480 def makeConstructor(self): 1481 return '' 1482 1483 def makeRead(self): 1484 if self.read_code != None: 1485 return self.buildReadCode('readMicroPC') 1486 return '%s = xc->readMicroPC();\n' % self.base_name 1487 1488 def makeWrite(self): 1489 if self.write_code != None: 1490 return self.buildWriteCode('setMicroPC') 1491 return 'xc->setMicroPC(%s);\n' % self.base_name 1492 1493class NUPCOperand(Operand): 1494 def makeConstructor(self): 1495 return '' 1496 1497 def makeRead(self): 1498 if self.read_code != None: 1499 return self.buildReadCode('readNextMicroPC') 1500 return '%s = xc->readNextMicroPC();\n' % self.base_name 1501 1502 def makeWrite(self): 1503 if self.write_code != None: 1504 return self.buildWriteCode('setNextMicroPC') 1505 return 'xc->setNextMicroPC(%s);\n' % self.base_name 1506 1507class NPCOperand(Operand): 1508 def makeConstructor(self): 1509 return '' 1510 1511 def makeRead(self): 1512 if self.read_code != None: 1513 return self.buildReadCode('readNextPC') 1514 return '%s = xc->readNextPC();\n' % self.base_name 1515 1516 def makeWrite(self): 1517 if self.write_code != None: 1518 return self.buildWriteCode('setNextPC') 1519 return 'xc->setNextPC(%s);\n' % self.base_name 1520 1521class NNPCOperand(Operand): 1522 def makeConstructor(self): 1523 return '' 1524 1525 def makeRead(self): 1526 if self.read_code != None: 1527 return self.buildReadCode('readNextNPC') 1528 return '%s = xc->readNextNPC();\n' % self.base_name 1529 1530 def makeWrite(self): 1531 if self.write_code != None: 1532 return self.buildWriteCode('setNextNPC') 1533 return 'xc->setNextNPC(%s);\n' % self.base_name 1534 1535def buildOperandNameMap(user_dict, lineno): 1536 global operandNameMap 1537 operandNameMap = {} 1538 for (op_name, val) in user_dict.iteritems(): 1539 (base_cls_name, dflt_ext, reg_spec, flags, sort_pri) = val[:5] 1540 if len(val) > 5: 1541 read_code = val[5] 1542 else: 1543 read_code = None 1544 if len(val) > 6: 1545 write_code = val[6] 1546 else: 1547 write_code = None 1548 if len(val) > 7: 1549 error(lineno, 1550 'error: too many attributes for operand "%s"' % 1551 base_cls_name) 1552 1553 (dflt_size, dflt_ctype, dflt_is_signed) = operandTypeMap[dflt_ext] 1554 # Canonical flag structure is a triple of lists, where each list 1555 # indicates the set of flags implied by this operand always, when 1556 # used as a source, and when used as a dest, respectively. 1557 # For simplicity this can be initialized using a variety of fairly 1558 # obvious shortcuts; we convert these to canonical form here. 1559 if not flags: 1560 # no flags specified (e.g., 'None') 1561 flags = ( [], [], [] ) 1562 elif isinstance(flags, str): 1563 # a single flag: assumed to be unconditional 1564 flags = ( [ flags ], [], [] ) 1565 elif isinstance(flags, list): 1566 # a list of flags: also assumed to be unconditional 1567 flags = ( flags, [], [] ) 1568 elif isinstance(flags, tuple): 1569 # it's a tuple: it should be a triple, 1570 # but each item could be a single string or a list 1571 (uncond_flags, src_flags, dest_flags) = flags 1572 flags = (makeList(uncond_flags), 1573 makeList(src_flags), makeList(dest_flags)) 1574 # Accumulate attributes of new operand class in tmp_dict 1575 tmp_dict = {} 1576 for attr in ('dflt_ext', 'reg_spec', 'flags', 'sort_pri', 1577 'dflt_size', 'dflt_ctype', 'dflt_is_signed', 1578 'read_code', 'write_code'): 1579 tmp_dict[attr] = eval(attr) 1580 tmp_dict['base_name'] = op_name 1581 # New class name will be e.g. "IntReg_Ra" 1582 cls_name = base_cls_name + '_' + op_name 1583 # Evaluate string arg to get class object. Note that the 1584 # actual base class for "IntReg" is "IntRegOperand", i.e. we 1585 # have to append "Operand". 1586 try: 1587 base_cls = eval(base_cls_name + 'Operand') 1588 except NameError: 1589 error(lineno, 1590 'error: unknown operand base class "%s"' % base_cls_name) 1591 # The following statement creates a new class called 1592 # <cls_name> as a subclass of <base_cls> with the attributes 1593 # in tmp_dict, just as if we evaluated a class declaration. 1594 operandNameMap[op_name] = type(cls_name, (base_cls,), tmp_dict) 1595 1596 # Define operand variables. 1597 operands = user_dict.keys() 1598 1599 operandsREString = (r''' 1600 (?<![\w\.]) # neg. lookbehind assertion: prevent partial matches 1601 ((%s)(?:\.(\w+))?) # match: operand with optional '.' then suffix 1602 (?![\w\.]) # neg. lookahead assertion: prevent partial matches 1603 ''' 1604 % string.join(operands, '|')) 1605 1606 global operandsRE 1607 operandsRE = re.compile(operandsREString, re.MULTILINE|re.VERBOSE) 1608 1609 # Same as operandsREString, but extension is mandatory, and only two 1610 # groups are returned (base and ext, not full name as above). 1611 # Used for subtituting '_' for '.' to make C++ identifiers. 1612 operandsWithExtREString = (r'(?<![\w\.])(%s)\.(\w+)(?![\w\.])' 1613 % string.join(operands, '|')) 1614 1615 global operandsWithExtRE 1616 operandsWithExtRE = re.compile(operandsWithExtREString, re.MULTILINE) 1617 1618maxInstSrcRegs = 0 1619maxInstDestRegs = 0 1620 1621class OperandList(object): 1622 '''Find all the operands in the given code block. Returns an operand 1623 descriptor list (instance of class OperandList).''' 1624 def __init__(self, code): 1625 self.items = [] 1626 self.bases = {} 1627 # delete comments so we don't match on reg specifiers inside 1628 code = commentRE.sub('', code) 1629 # search for operands 1630 next_pos = 0 1631 while 1: 1632 match = operandsRE.search(code, next_pos) 1633 if not match: 1634 # no more matches: we're done 1635 break 1636 op = match.groups() 1637 # regexp groups are operand full name, base, and extension 1638 (op_full, op_base, op_ext) = op 1639 # if the token following the operand is an assignment, this is 1640 # a destination (LHS), else it's a source (RHS) 1641 is_dest = (assignRE.match(code, match.end()) != None) 1642 is_src = not is_dest 1643 # see if we've already seen this one 1644 op_desc = self.find_base(op_base) 1645 if op_desc: 1646 if op_desc.ext != op_ext: 1647 error(0, 'Inconsistent extensions for operand %s' % \ 1648 op_base) 1649 op_desc.is_src = op_desc.is_src or is_src 1650 op_desc.is_dest = op_desc.is_dest or is_dest 1651 else: 1652 # new operand: create new descriptor 1653 op_desc = operandNameMap[op_base](op_full, op_ext, 1654 is_src, is_dest) 1655 self.append(op_desc) 1656 # start next search after end of current match 1657 next_pos = match.end() 1658 self.sort() 1659 # enumerate source & dest register operands... used in building 1660 # constructor later 1661 self.numSrcRegs = 0 1662 self.numDestRegs = 0 1663 self.numFPDestRegs = 0 1664 self.numIntDestRegs = 0 1665 self.memOperand = None 1666 for op_desc in self.items: 1667 if op_desc.isReg(): 1668 if op_desc.is_src: 1669 op_desc.src_reg_idx = self.numSrcRegs 1670 self.numSrcRegs += 1 1671 if op_desc.is_dest: 1672 op_desc.dest_reg_idx = self.numDestRegs 1673 self.numDestRegs += 1 1674 if op_desc.isFloatReg(): 1675 self.numFPDestRegs += 1 1676 elif op_desc.isIntReg(): 1677 self.numIntDestRegs += 1 1678 elif op_desc.isMem(): 1679 if self.memOperand: 1680 error(0, "Code block has more than one memory operand.") 1681 self.memOperand = op_desc 1682 global maxInstSrcRegs 1683 global maxInstDestRegs 1684 if maxInstSrcRegs < self.numSrcRegs: 1685 maxInstSrcRegs = self.numSrcRegs 1686 if maxInstDestRegs < self.numDestRegs: 1687 maxInstDestRegs = self.numDestRegs 1688 # now make a final pass to finalize op_desc fields that may depend 1689 # on the register enumeration 1690 for op_desc in self.items: 1691 op_desc.finalize() 1692 1693 def __len__(self): 1694 return len(self.items) 1695 1696 def __getitem__(self, index): 1697 return self.items[index] 1698 1699 def append(self, op_desc): 1700 self.items.append(op_desc) 1701 self.bases[op_desc.base_name] = op_desc 1702 1703 def find_base(self, base_name): 1704 # like self.bases[base_name], but returns None if not found 1705 # (rather than raising exception) 1706 return self.bases.get(base_name) 1707 1708 # internal helper function for concat[Some]Attr{Strings|Lists} 1709 def __internalConcatAttrs(self, attr_name, filter, result): 1710 for op_desc in self.items: 1711 if filter(op_desc): 1712 result += getattr(op_desc, attr_name) 1713 return result 1714 1715 # return a single string that is the concatenation of the (string) 1716 # values of the specified attribute for all operands 1717 def concatAttrStrings(self, attr_name): 1718 return self.__internalConcatAttrs(attr_name, lambda x: 1, '') 1719 1720 # like concatAttrStrings, but only include the values for the operands 1721 # for which the provided filter function returns true 1722 def concatSomeAttrStrings(self, filter, attr_name): 1723 return self.__internalConcatAttrs(attr_name, filter, '') 1724 1725 # return a single list that is the concatenation of the (list) 1726 # values of the specified attribute for all operands 1727 def concatAttrLists(self, attr_name): 1728 return self.__internalConcatAttrs(attr_name, lambda x: 1, []) 1729 1730 # like concatAttrLists, but only include the values for the operands 1731 # for which the provided filter function returns true 1732 def concatSomeAttrLists(self, filter, attr_name): 1733 return self.__internalConcatAttrs(attr_name, filter, []) 1734 1735 def sort(self): 1736 self.items.sort(lambda a, b: a.sort_pri - b.sort_pri) 1737 1738class SubOperandList(OperandList): 1739 '''Find all the operands in the given code block. Returns an operand 1740 descriptor list (instance of class OperandList).''' 1741 def __init__(self, code, master_list): 1742 self.items = [] 1743 self.bases = {} 1744 # delete comments so we don't match on reg specifiers inside 1745 code = commentRE.sub('', code) 1746 # search for operands 1747 next_pos = 0 1748 while 1: 1749 match = operandsRE.search(code, next_pos) 1750 if not match: 1751 # no more matches: we're done 1752 break 1753 op = match.groups() 1754 # regexp groups are operand full name, base, and extension 1755 (op_full, op_base, op_ext) = op 1756 # find this op in the master list 1757 op_desc = master_list.find_base(op_base) 1758 if not op_desc: 1759 error(0, 'Found operand %s which is not in the master list!' \ 1760 ' This is an internal error' % \ 1761 op_base) 1762 else: 1763 # See if we've already found this operand 1764 op_desc = self.find_base(op_base) 1765 if not op_desc: 1766 # if not, add a reference to it to this sub list 1767 self.append(master_list.bases[op_base]) 1768 1769 # start next search after end of current match 1770 next_pos = match.end() 1771 self.sort() 1772 self.memOperand = None 1773 for op_desc in self.items: 1774 if op_desc.isMem(): 1775 if self.memOperand: 1776 error(0, "Code block has more than one memory operand.") 1777 self.memOperand = op_desc 1778 1779# Regular expression object to match C++ comments 1780# (used in findOperands()) 1781commentRE = re.compile(r'//.*\n') 1782 1783# Regular expression object to match assignment statements 1784# (used in findOperands()) 1785assignRE = re.compile(r'\s*=(?!=)', re.MULTILINE) 1786 1787# Munge operand names in code string to make legal C++ variable names. 1788# This means getting rid of the type extension if any. 1789# (Will match base_name attribute of Operand object.) 1790def substMungedOpNames(code): 1791 return operandsWithExtRE.sub(r'\1', code) 1792 1793# Fix up code snippets for final substitution in templates. 1794def mungeSnippet(s): 1795 if isinstance(s, str): 1796 return substMungedOpNames(substBitOps(s)) 1797 else: 1798 return s 1799 1800def makeFlagConstructor(flag_list): 1801 if len(flag_list) == 0: 1802 return '' 1803 # filter out repeated flags 1804 flag_list.sort() 1805 i = 1 1806 while i < len(flag_list): 1807 if flag_list[i] == flag_list[i-1]: 1808 del flag_list[i] 1809 else: 1810 i += 1 1811 pre = '\n\tflags[' 1812 post = '] = true;' 1813 code = pre + string.join(flag_list, post + pre) + post 1814 return code 1815 1816# Assume all instruction flags are of the form 'IsFoo' 1817instFlagRE = re.compile(r'Is.*') 1818 1819# OpClass constants end in 'Op' except No_OpClass 1820opClassRE = re.compile(r'.*Op|No_OpClass') 1821 1822class InstObjParams(object): 1823 def __init__(self, mnem, class_name, base_class = '', 1824 snippets = {}, opt_args = []): 1825 self.mnemonic = mnem 1826 self.class_name = class_name 1827 self.base_class = base_class 1828 if not isinstance(snippets, dict): 1829 snippets = {'code' : snippets} 1830 compositeCode = ' '.join(map(str, snippets.values())) 1831 self.snippets = snippets 1832 1833 self.operands = OperandList(compositeCode) 1834 self.constructor = self.operands.concatAttrStrings('constructor') 1835 self.constructor += \ 1836 '\n\t_numSrcRegs = %d;' % self.operands.numSrcRegs 1837 self.constructor += \ 1838 '\n\t_numDestRegs = %d;' % self.operands.numDestRegs 1839 self.constructor += \ 1840 '\n\t_numFPDestRegs = %d;' % self.operands.numFPDestRegs 1841 self.constructor += \ 1842 '\n\t_numIntDestRegs = %d;' % self.operands.numIntDestRegs 1843 self.flags = self.operands.concatAttrLists('flags') 1844 1845 # Make a basic guess on the operand class (function unit type). 1846 # These are good enough for most cases, and can be overridden 1847 # later otherwise. 1848 if 'IsStore' in self.flags: 1849 self.op_class = 'MemWriteOp' 1850 elif 'IsLoad' in self.flags or 'IsPrefetch' in self.flags: 1851 self.op_class = 'MemReadOp' 1852 elif 'IsFloating' in self.flags: 1853 self.op_class = 'FloatAddOp' 1854 else: 1855 self.op_class = 'IntAluOp' 1856 1857 # Optional arguments are assumed to be either StaticInst flags 1858 # or an OpClass value. To avoid having to import a complete 1859 # list of these values to match against, we do it ad-hoc 1860 # with regexps. 1861 for oa in opt_args: 1862 if instFlagRE.match(oa): 1863 self.flags.append(oa) 1864 elif opClassRE.match(oa): 1865 self.op_class = oa 1866 else: 1867 error(0, 'InstObjParams: optional arg "%s" not recognized ' 1868 'as StaticInst::Flag or OpClass.' % oa) 1869 1870 # add flag initialization to contructor here to include 1871 # any flags added via opt_args 1872 self.constructor += makeFlagConstructor(self.flags) 1873 1874 # if 'IsFloating' is set, add call to the FP enable check 1875 # function (which should be provided by isa_desc via a declare) 1876 if 'IsFloating' in self.flags: 1877 self.fp_enable_check = 'fault = checkFpEnableFault(xc);' 1878 else: 1879 self.fp_enable_check = '' 1880 1881####################### 1882# 1883# Output file template 1884# 1885 1886file_template = ''' 1887/* 1888 * DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE!!! 1889 * 1890 * It was automatically generated from the ISA description in %(filename)s 1891 */ 1892 1893%(includes)s 1894 1895%(global_output)s 1896 1897namespace %(namespace)s { 1898 1899%(namespace_output)s 1900 1901} // namespace %(namespace)s 1902 1903%(decode_function)s 1904''' 1905 1906max_inst_regs_template = ''' 1907/* 1908 * DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE!!! 1909 * 1910 * It was automatically generated from the ISA description in %(filename)s 1911 */ 1912 1913namespace %(namespace)s { 1914 1915 const int MaxInstSrcRegs = %(MaxInstSrcRegs)d; 1916 const int MaxInstDestRegs = %(MaxInstDestRegs)d; 1917 1918} // namespace %(namespace)s 1919 1920''' 1921 1922 1923# Update the output file only if the new contents are different from 1924# the current contents. Minimizes the files that need to be rebuilt 1925# after minor changes. 1926def update_if_needed(file, contents): 1927 update = False 1928 if os.access(file, os.R_OK): 1929 f = open(file, 'r') 1930 old_contents = f.read() 1931 f.close() 1932 if contents != old_contents: 1933 print 'Updating', file 1934 os.remove(file) # in case it's write-protected 1935 update = True 1936 else: 1937 print 'File', file, 'is unchanged' 1938 else: 1939 print 'Generating', file 1940 update = True 1941 if update: 1942 f = open(file, 'w') 1943 f.write(contents) 1944 f.close() 1945 1946# This regular expression matches '##include' directives 1947includeRE = re.compile(r'^\s*##include\s+"(?P<filename>[\w/.-]*)".*$', 1948 re.MULTILINE) 1949 1950# Function to replace a matched '##include' directive with the 1951# contents of the specified file (with nested ##includes replaced 1952# recursively). 'matchobj' is an re match object (from a match of 1953# includeRE) and 'dirname' is the directory relative to which the file 1954# path should be resolved. 1955def replace_include(matchobj, dirname): 1956 fname = matchobj.group('filename') 1957 full_fname = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirname, fname)) 1958 contents = '##newfile "%s"\n%s\n##endfile\n' % \ 1959 (full_fname, read_and_flatten(full_fname)) 1960 return contents 1961 1962# Read a file and recursively flatten nested '##include' files. 1963def read_and_flatten(filename): 1964 current_dir = os.path.dirname(filename) 1965 try: 1966 contents = open(filename).read() 1967 except IOError: 1968 error(0, 'Error including file "%s"' % filename) 1969 fileNameStack.push((filename, 0)) 1970 # Find any includes and include them 1971 contents = includeRE.sub(lambda m: replace_include(m, current_dir), 1972 contents) 1973 fileNameStack.pop() 1974 return contents 1975 1976# 1977# Read in and parse the ISA description. 1978# 1979def parse_isa_desc(isa_desc_file, output_dir): 1980 # Read file and (recursively) all included files into a string. 1981 # PLY requires that the input be in a single string so we have to 1982 # do this up front. 1983 isa_desc = read_and_flatten(isa_desc_file) 1984 1985 # Initialize filename stack with outer file. 1986 fileNameStack.push((isa_desc_file, 0)) 1987 1988 # Parse it. 1989 (isa_name, namespace, global_code, namespace_code) = parser.parse(isa_desc) 1990 1991 # grab the last three path components of isa_desc_file to put in 1992 # the output 1993 filename = '/'.join(isa_desc_file.split('/')[-3:]) 1994 1995 # generate decoder.hh 1996 includes = '#include "base/bitfield.hh" // for bitfield support' 1997 global_output = global_code.header_output 1998 namespace_output = namespace_code.header_output 1999 decode_function = '' 2000 update_if_needed(output_dir + '/decoder.hh', file_template % vars()) 2001 2002 # generate decoder.cc 2003 includes = '#include "decoder.hh"' 2004 global_output = global_code.decoder_output 2005 namespace_output = namespace_code.decoder_output 2006 # namespace_output += namespace_code.decode_block 2007 decode_function = namespace_code.decode_block 2008 update_if_needed(output_dir + '/decoder.cc', file_template % vars()) 2009 2010 # generate per-cpu exec files 2011 for cpu in cpu_models: 2012 includes = '#include "decoder.hh"\n' 2013 includes += cpu.includes 2014 global_output = global_code.exec_output[cpu.name] 2015 namespace_output = namespace_code.exec_output[cpu.name] 2016 decode_function = '' 2017 update_if_needed(output_dir + '/' + cpu.filename, 2018 file_template % vars()) 2019 2020 # The variable names here are hacky, but this will creat local variables 2021 # which will be referenced in vars() which have the value of the globals. 2022 global maxInstSrcRegs 2023 MaxInstSrcRegs = maxInstSrcRegs 2024 global maxInstDestRegs 2025 MaxInstDestRegs = maxInstDestRegs 2026 # max_inst_regs.hh 2027 update_if_needed(output_dir + '/max_inst_regs.hh', \ 2028 max_inst_regs_template % vars()) 2029 2030# global list of CpuModel objects (see cpu_models.py) 2031cpu_models = [] 2032 2033# Called as script: get args from command line. 2034# Args are: <path to cpu_models.py> <isa desc file> <output dir> <cpu models> 2035if __name__ == '__main__': 2036 execfile(sys.argv[1]) # read in CpuModel definitions 2037 cpu_models = [CpuModel.dict[cpu] for cpu in sys.argv[4:]] 2038 parse_isa_desc(sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3]) 2039