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Re: [PATCH v5 23/23] target/ppc: Move cmp/cmpi/cmpl/cmpli to decodetree


From: Richard Henderson
Subject: Re: [PATCH v5 23/23] target/ppc: Move cmp/cmpi/cmpl/cmpli to decodetree
Date: Wed, 26 May 2021 09:11:59 -0700
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.8.1

On 5/26/21 8:17 AM, Matheus K. Ferst wrote:
On 24/05/2021 15:51, Richard Henderson wrote:
On 5/21/21 10:25 AM, Matheus K. Ferst wrote:
On 18/05/2021 07:12, Richard Henderson wrote:
On 5/17/21 3:50 PM, matheus.ferst@eldorado.org.br wrote:
+    if(a->l && (ctx->insns_flags & PPC_64B)) {

Space after IF.
> If I look back to the 6xx manual, I see

   NOTE: If L = 1, the instruction form is invalid.

The fact that we're allowing L=1 for ppc32 is an existing bug, afaics. We should fix that.


r~

The previous commit on this line in translate.c says that "on most 32bit CPUs we should always treat the compare as 32bit compare, as the CPU will ignore the L bit", so maybe it was intentional. Should we change it anyway?

The actual change of 36f48d9c78c is about NARROW_MODE, which is about the MSR.SF bit, and is correct.

The commit message mentions the e500mc specifically does check the L bit, and then hand-waves about the others not checking.  But the text I found in the 6xx manual says that one checks too.

I wonder if the IBM folk can shed any further light on this?


r~

I was pointed to the 601 manual, which says:

"While the PowerPC architecture specifies that the value in the L field determines whether the operands are treated as 32- or 64-bit values, the 601 ignores the value in the L field and treats the operands as 32-bit values."

There is also a section in Appendix B called "Reserved Bits in Instructions", which says:

"These are shown with '/'s in the instruction opcode definitions. In the POWER architecture such bits are ignored by the processor. In PowerPC architecture they must be 0 or the instruction form is invalid. In several cases the PowerPC architecture assumes that such bits in POWER instructions are indeed 0. The cases include the following:
- cmpi, cmp, cmpli, and cmpl assume that bit 10 in the POWER instructions is 0.
- mtspr and mfspr assume that bits 16–20 in the POWER instructions are 0."

Searching the manuals for other processors, I identified that the manuals for 405, 440, e500, and e500mc explicit says that the L bit should always be 0, and manuals for 603e, 604, 604e, 740/745/750/755, 750CX, 750CL, 750FX, 7400/7410, 7447/7447A/7448/7450/7455, e300, and e600 list the bit L in operand syntax but do not mention any restrictions on its value.

Alfredo Dal Ava Junior (adalva) did some tests for us on his G4 MacBook, confirming that the bit is ignored in PowerPC 7447A v1.2, one of which the manual does not specify the behavior, but I don't know if can assume the same for other processors.

If we do bother to emulate the specific behavior for each CPU, what would be the default for those whose manual is not explicit and we cannot test? Also, I not sure how to check for it, do we need a new POWERPC_FLAG in pcc->flags?

Thanks for the research.

There's an argument for following the architecture, even when implementations vary. Especially when implementations very, as this makes testing with qemu more likely to catch software bugs.

There's another argument for following implementations. I would generally reserve this interpretation for historical cpus, where we are trying to emulate something specific (e.g. a games console) where the legacy software relies on specific behavior.

I'll let David have the final call on this, but my inclination is to follow the architecture and require 0s for reserved bits.


r~



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