/[gxemul]/trunk/RELEASE
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revision 20 by dpavlin, Mon Oct 8 16:19:23 2007 UTC revision 28 by dpavlin, Mon Oct 8 16:20:26 2007 UTC
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1  Release notes for Gavare's eXperimental Emulator (GXemul), 0.3.7  Release notes for Gavare's eXperimental Emulator (GXemul), 0.4.1
2  ================================================================  ================================================================
3    
4  Copyright (C) 2003-2005  Anders Gavare.  Copyright (C) 2003-2006  Anders Gavare.
5    
6    
7  GXemul is an experimental instruction-level machine emulator. Several  GXemul is an experimental instruction-level machine emulator. Several
# Line 9  emulation modes are available. In some m Line 9  emulation modes are available. In some m
9  hardware components are emulated well enough to let unmodified operating  hardware components are emulated well enough to let unmodified operating
10  systems (e.g. NetBSD) run as if they were running on a real machine.  systems (e.g. NetBSD) run as if they were running on a real machine.
11    
12  MIPS processors are emulated using either a simple binary translation  The documentation lists the machines and guest operating systems that can
13  layer ("recompilation"), which is used on Alpha and i386 hosts, or by  be regarded as "working" in GXemul. The best working guest operating
14  traditional interpretation (very very slow, but works on any host platform).  systems are probably NetBSD/pmax, NetBSD/cats, and OpenBSD/cats.
   
 ARM and PowerPC processors are emulated using a newer dynamic translation  
 system. Performance is somewhere between traditional interpretation and  
 dynamic recompilation; however, the dynamic translation system used in  
 GXemul does NOT require platform-specific back-end code. In plain English,  
 this means that the dyntrans system works on any host platform.  
   
 I have verified that the following "guest" operating systems can run inside  
 the emulator. Instructions on how to install and run these can be found in  
 the documentation.  
   
     Guest operating system             Emulated machine  
     ----------------------             ----------------  
     NetBSD/pmax 2.1 (and 1.6.2)        DECstation 5000/200  
     OpenBSD/pmax 2.8-BETA              DECstation 5000/200  
     Ultrix 4.2-4.5                     DECstation 5000/200  
     Sprite demo harddisk image         DECstation 5000/200  
     Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation    DECstation 5000/200  
     Redhat Linux 7.1 for mips          DECstation 5000/200  
     NetBSD/arc 1.6.2                   Acer PICA-61  
     OpenBSD/arc 2.3                    Acer PICA-61  
     NetBSD/hpcmips 2.1                 NEC MobilePro 770, 780, 800, 880  
     NetBSD/cobalt 2.1                  Cobalt  
     NetBSD/evbmips 2.1                 Malta 5Kc/4Kc evaluation board  
     NetBSD/sgimips 2.1                 SGI O2 ("IP32")  
     NetBSD/cats 2.1                    CATS (ARM)  
     OpenBSD/cats 3.8                   CATS (ARM)  
     NetBSD/prep 2.1                    PReP (PowerPC Reference Platform)  
   
 Some of these guest operating systems are easier to install and run than  
 others. The best supported guest operating systems are probably NetBSD/pmax,  
 NetBSD/cats and OpenBSD/cats.  
   
 The emulator can also be used in other experiments; it does not have to run  
 entire guest operating systems. However, as GXemul is an instruction-level  
 emulator, it does not simulate things smaller than an instruction. What this  
 means is that pipe-line stalls, penalties caused by branch-prediction misses  
 or cache misses, and other micro-architectural effects are not simulated.  
   
 User-visible change between release 0.3.6.2 and 0.3.7 include:  
   
     o)  The experimental PowerPC emulation mode is now working well enough  
         to allow NetBSD/prep 2.1 to be installed and run inside the emulator.  
         It is not 100% stable, and it is not optimized for performance yet,  
         but hopefully enough for simple experiments.  
   
     o)  I finally took the time to implement a DEC 21143 NIC; this brings  
         network connectivity to NetBSD/cats. (The userland "NAT"-like  
         networking layer is still a bit buggy, and does not work with  
         everything. However, NetBSD/cats can now be installed via ftp.)  
   
     o)  CD-ROM images can now in some cases be detected as ATAPI CD-ROMs  
         instead of IDE harddisks. It works for at least NetBSD, OpenBSD,  
         and Linux on CATS, and NetBSD on hpcmips.  
   
 Internal (code related) changes include:  
   
     o)  Cleanup of the PCI and ISA bus frameworks; in practice this means  
         that more code can be shared between different emulated machine  
         models than before, and that adding new machine types will become  
         easier.  
15    
     o)  Dyntrans updates; 32-bit PowerPC mostly, but also many performance  
         related updates for ARM.  
16    
17  There have also been lots of other changes, too many and small to mention here.  Changes between release 0.4.0.1 and 0.4.1 include, among other things:
18    
19        o)  Some bugs in the dynamic translation core have been fixed, making
20            all emulation modes (especially the MIPS mode) more stable.
21    
22        o)  In the refactoring effort between 0.4.0 and 0.4.0.1, single-stepping
23            (and instruction tracing) of 64-bit programs was accidentally broken.
24            Single-stepping in 64-bit mode could result in strange exceptions.
25            This has been fixed in 0.4.1.
26    
27        o)  MIPS emulation performance has been improved somewhat:
28    
29            R3000: After removing some buggy code (hints for physical page
30            translations), it was possible to remove the workaround for R3000
31            caches which was needed in 0.4.0.1 to make Linux and Ultrix run.
32            This gives an overall speedup for R2000/R3000.
33    
34            For non-R3000, there have been some speedups as well. After fixing
35            reference count bugs for 64-bit addressing in the dyntrans system,
36            workarounds/hacks in the tlbwr/tlbwi instructions and in the ASID
37            change helper function could be removed.
38    
39        o)  A new -s command line option is now available, for dumping
40            raw runtime data/statistics on every instruction to a file.
41    
42            Currently, the following kinds of data can be dumped:
43    
44            1. the program counter (virtual address)
45            2. the physical address representation of the program counter
46            3. the internal dyntrans instruction call pointer, useful when
47               developing/optimizing the emulator
48    
49            This data can then be analyzed by external tools.
50    
51            (There was a -s command line option in previous releases of
52            the emulator, but it did not work as intended, and was not
53            usable from dyntrans emulation modes.)
54    
55    Please read the HISTORY files for more details.
56    
57    
58  Files included in this release are:  Files included in this release are:
59    
   BUGS                        A list of known bugs.  
60    HISTORY                     Detailed revision history / changelog.    HISTORY                     Detailed revision history / changelog.
61    LICENSE                     Copyright message / license.    LICENSE                     Copyright message / license.
62    README                      Quick start instructions, for the impatient.    README                      Quick start instructions, for the impatient.
63    RELEASE                     This file.    RELEASE                     This file.
64    TODO                        TODO notes.    TODO                        TODO notes.
65    configure, Makefile.skel    sh and make scripts for building GXemul.    configure, Makefile.skel    sh and make scripts for building GXemul.
66      demos                       Tutorial-like demos of testmachine functionality.
67    doc                         Documentation.    doc                         Documentation.
68    experiments                 Experimental code. (Usually not needed.)    experiments                 Experimental code. (Usually not needed.)
69    src                         Source code.    src                         Source code.
70    
71  To build the emulator, run the ./configure script, and then run make.  To build the emulator, run the configure script, and then run make. This
72    should work on most Unix-like systems.
73    
 Building the emulator should work on most Unix-like systems. (One system which  
 is specifically known to NOT work is Ultrix/RISC inside the emulator; Ultrix  
 chokes on the configure script and the default cc in Ultrix doesn't work.)  
74    
75  Regarding files in the src/include/ directory: only some of these are written  Regarding files in the src/include/ directory: only some of these are written
76  by me, the rest are from other sources (such as NetBSD). The license text says  by me, the rest are from other sources (such as NetBSD). The license text says
# Line 171  them like this is in order: Line 145  them like this is in order:
145    
146      This product includes software developed by Manuel Bouyer.      This product includes software developed by Manuel Bouyer.
147    
148        This product includes software developed by the Alice Group.
149    
150        This product includes software developed by Ichiro FUKUHARA.
151    
152  Also, src/include/alpha_rpb.h requires the following:  Also, src/include/alpha_rpb.h requires the following:
153    
154      Copyright (c) 1994, 1995, 1996 Carnegie-Mellon University.      Copyright (c) 1994, 1995, 1996 Carnegie-Mellon University.
# Line 187  Also, src/include/alpha_rpb.h requires t Line 165  Also, src/include/alpha_rpb.h requires t
165  See individual files for license details, if you plan to redistribute GXemul  See individual files for license details, if you plan to redistribute GXemul
166  or reuse code.  or reuse code.
167    
168  Thanks to (in no specific order) Joachim Buss, Juli Mallett, Juan Romero  
169  Pardines, Alec Voropay, Göran Weinholt, Alexander Yurchenko, and everyone  Thanks to (in no specific order) Joachim Buss, Olivier Houchard, Juli Mallett,
170  else who has provided me with feedback.  Juan Romero Pardines, Alec Voropay, Göran Weinholt, Alexander Yurchenko, and
171    everyone else who has provided me with feedback.
172    
173  If you have found GXemul useful in some way, or feel like sending me comments  If you have found GXemul useful in some way, or feel like sending me comments
174  or feedback in general, then mail me at anders(at)gavare.se.  or feedback in general, then mail me at anders(at)gavare.se.

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