/[gxemul]/trunk/doc/intro.html
This is repository of my old source code which isn't updated any more. Go to git.rot13.org for current projects!
ViewVC logotype

Diff of /trunk/doc/intro.html

Parent Directory Parent Directory | Revision Log Revision Log | View Patch Patch

revision 10 by dpavlin, Mon Oct 8 16:18:27 2007 UTC revision 22 by dpavlin, Mon Oct 8 16:19:37 2007 UTC
# Line 1  Line 1 
1  <html>  <html><head><title>Gavare's eXperimental Emulator:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction</title>
2  <head><title>GXemul documentation: Introduction</title>  <meta name="robots" content="noarchive,nofollow,noindex"></head>
 <meta name="robots" content="noarchive,nofollow,noindex">  
 </head>  
3  <body bgcolor="#f8f8f8" text="#000000" link="#4040f0" vlink="#404040" alink="#ff0000">  <body bgcolor="#f8f8f8" text="#000000" link="#4040f0" vlink="#404040" alink="#ff0000">
4  <table border=0 width=100% bgcolor="#d0d0d0"><tr>  <table border=0 width=100% bgcolor="#d0d0d0"><tr>
5  <td width=100% align=center valign=center><table border=0 width=100%><tr>  <td width=100% align=center valign=center><table border=0 width=100%><tr>
6  <td align="left" valign=center bgcolor="#d0efff"><font color="#6060e0" size="6">  <td align="left" valign=center bgcolor="#d0efff"><font color="#6060e0" size="6">
7  <b>GXemul documentation:</b></font>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  <b>Gavare's eXperimental Emulator:</b></font><br>
8  <font color="#000000" size="6"><b>Introduction</b>  <font color="#000000" size="6"><b>Introduction</b>
9  </font></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><p>  </font></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><p>
10    
11  <!--  <!--
12    
13  $Id: intro.html,v 1.53 2005/06/26 08:42:26 debug Exp $  $Id: intro.html,v 1.73 2006/02/18 14:02:19 debug Exp $
14    
15  Copyright (C) 2003-2005  Anders Gavare.  All rights reserved.  Copyright (C) 2003-2006  Anders Gavare.  All rights reserved.
16    
17  Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without  Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
18  modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:  modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
# Line 47  SUCH DAMAGE. Line 45  SUCH DAMAGE.
45  <h2>Introduction</h2>  <h2>Introduction</h2>
46    
47  <p>  <p>
48    <table border="0" width="99%"><tr><td valign="top" align="left">
49  <ul>  <ul>
50    <li><a href="#overview">Overview</a>    <li><a href="#overview">Overview</a>
51    <li><a href="#free">Is GXemul Free software?</a>    <li><a href="#free">Is GXemul Free software?</a>
52    <li><a href="#build">How to compile/build the emulator</a>    <li><a href="#build">How to compile/build the emulator</a>
53    <li><a href="#run">How to run the emulator</a>    <li><a href="#run">How to run the emulator</a>
54    <li><a href="#cpus">Which CPU types does GXemul emulate?</a>    <li><a href="#cpus">Which processor architectures does GXemul emulate?</a>
55    <li><a href="#accuracy">Emulation accuracy</a>    <li><a href="#accuracy">Emulation accuracy</a>
56    <li><a href="#emulmodes">Which machines does GXemul emulate?</a>    <li><a href="#emulmodes">Which machines does GXemul emulate?</a>
   <li><a href="#guestos">Which guest OSes are possible to run in GXemul?</a>  
57  </ul>  </ul>
58    </td><td valign="center" align="center">
59    <a href="20050317-example.png"><img src="20050317-example_small.png"></a>
60    <p>NetBSD/pmax 1.6.2 with X11<br>running in GXemul</td></tr></table>
61    
62    
63    
# Line 66  SUCH DAMAGE. Line 66  SUCH DAMAGE.
66  <a name="overview"></a>  <a name="overview"></a>
67  <h3>Overview:</h3>  <h3>Overview:</h3>
68    
69  GXemul is an experimental instruction-level machine emulator. It can be  GXemul is an experimental instruction-level machine emulator. Several
70  used to run binary code for (among others) MIPS-based machines, regardless  emulation modes are available. In some modes, processors and surrounding
71  of host platform. Several emulation modes are available. For some modes,  hardware components are emulated well enough to let unmodified operating
72  processors and surrounding hardware components are emulated well enough to  systems (e.g. NetBSD) run as if they were running on a real machine.
73  let unmodified operating systems run as if they were running on a real  
74  machine.  <p>The processor architecture best emulated by GXemul is MIPS, but other
75    architectures such as ARM and PowerPC are also partially emulated.
76    
77  <p>Devices and CPUs are not simulated with 100% accuracy. They are only  <p>Devices and CPUs are not simulated with 100% accuracy. They are only
78  ``faked'' well enough to make operating systems (e.g. NetBSD) run without  ``faked'' well enough to allow guest operating systems run without
79  complaining too much. Still, the emulator could be of interest for  complaining too much. Still, the emulator could be of interest for
80  academic research and experiments, such as when learning how to write  academic research and experiments, such as when learning how to write
81  operating system code.  operating system code.
82    
83  <p>The emulator is written in C, does not depend on external libraries  <p>The emulator is written in C, does not depend on third-party libraries,
84  (except X11, but that is optional), and should compile and run on most  and should compile and run on most 64-bit and 32-bit Unix-like systems.
 Unix-like systems. If it doesn't, then that is a bug. (You do not need any  
 MIPS compiler toolchain to build or use GXemul. If you need to compile  
 MIPS binaries from sources, then of course you need such a toolchain, but  
 that is completely separate from GXemul.)  
85    
86  <p>The emulator contains code which tries to emulate the workings of CPUs  <p>The emulator contains code which tries to emulate the workings of CPUs
87  and surrounding hardware found in real machines, but it does not contain  and surrounding hardware found in real machines, but it does not contain
# Line 119  confusing to you, you might want to read Line 116  confusing to you, you might want to read
116  four freedoms associated with Free software, <a  four freedoms associated with Free software, <a
117  href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html">http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html</a>.)  href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html">http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html</a>.)
118    
119  <p>  <p>The code I have written is released under a 3-clause BSD-style license
120  The code I have written is released under a 3-clause BSD-style license  (or "revised BSD-style" if one wants to use <a
121  (or "revised BSD-style" if one wants to use  href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/bsd.html">GNU jargon</a>). Apart from
122  <a href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/bsd.html">GNU jargon</a>).  the code I have written, some files are copied from other sources such as
123  Apart from the code I have written, some files are copied from other sources  NetBSD, for example header files containing symbolic names of bitfields in
124  such as NetBSD, for example header files containing symbolic names of  device registers. They are also covered by similar licenses, but with some
125  bitfields in device registers. They are also covered by similar licenses,  additional clauses. The main point, however, is that the licenses require
126  but with some additional clauses. If you plan to redistribute GXemul  that the original Copyright and license terms are included when you make a
127  (for example as a binary package), or reuse code from GXemul,  copy or modification.
128  then you should check those files for their license terms.  
129    <p>If you plan to redistribute GXemul <i>without</i> supplying the source
130  <p>  code, then you need to comply with each individual source file some other
131  (The licenses usually require that the original Copyright and license  way, for example by writing additional documentation containing copyright
132  terms are included when you make a copy or modification. The "easiest way  notes. I have not done this, since I do not plan on making distributions
133  out" if you plan to redistribute code from GXemul is to simply supply  without source code. You need to check all individual files for details.
134  the source code. You should however check individual files for details.)  The "easiest way out" if you plan to redistribute code from GXemul is, of
135    course, to let it remain open source and simply supply the source code.
136    
137    <p>In case you want to reuse parts of GXemul, but you need to do that
138    under a different license (e.g. the GPL), then contact me and I might
139    re-license/dual-license files on a case-by-case basis.
140    
141    
142    
# Line 150  Uncompress the .tar.gz distribution file Line 152  Uncompress the .tar.gz distribution file
152          $ <b>make</b>          $ <b>make</b>
153  </pre>  </pre>
154    
155  <p>  <p>This should work on most Unix-like systems. GXemul does not require any
156  This should work on most Unix-like systems. If it doesn't, then  specific libraries to build, however, if you build on a system which does
157  mail me a bug report.  not have X11 libraries installed, some functionality will be lost.
   
 <p>  
 (Note for Windows users: there is a possibility that some releases  
 and/or snapshots will also work with Cygwin, but I can't promise that.)  
158    
159  <p>  <p>The emulator's performance is highly dependent on both runtime settings
 The emulator's performance is highly dependent on both runtime settings  
160  and on compiler settings, so you might want to experiment with different  and on compiler settings, so you might want to experiment with different
161  CC and CFLAGS environment variable values. For example, on a modern PC,  CC and CFLAGS environment variable values. For example, on an AMD Athlon
162  you could try the following:  host, you might want to try setting <tt>CFLAGS</tt> to <tt>-march=athlon
163  <p>  -O3</tt> before running <tt>configure</tt>.
 <pre>  
         $ <b>CFLAGS="-mcpu=pentium4 -O3" ./configure</b>  
         $ <b>make</b>  
 </pre>  
164    
 <p>  
 Run <b><tt>./configure --help</tt></b> to get a list of configure options. (The  
 possible options differ between different releases and snapshots.)  
165    
166    
167    
# Line 221  their original meaning in those xterm wi Line 211  their original meaning in those xterm wi
211    
212  <p><br>  <p><br>
213  <a name="cpus"></a>  <a name="cpus"></a>
214  <h3>Which CPU types does GXemul emulate?</h3>  <h3>Which processor architectures does GXemul emulate?</h3>
215    
216  <h4>MIPS:</h4>  <h4>MIPS:</h4>
217    
218  Emulation of R4000, which is a 64-bit CPU, was my initial goal.  Emulation of R4000, which is a 64-bit CPU, was my initial goal.
219  R2000/R3000-like CPUs (32-bit), R1x000, and generic MIPS32/MIPS64-style  R2000/R3000-like CPUs (32-bit), R1x000, and generic MIPS32/MIPS64-style
220  CPUs are also emulated, and are hopefully almost as stable as the R4000  CPUs are also emulated, and are hopefully almost as stable as the R4000
221  emulation.  emulation. Several guest operating systems for MIPS can run inside
222    the emulator.
 <p>  
 I have written an experimental dynamic binary translation subsystem.  
 This gives higher total performance than interpreting one instruction at a  
 time and executing it. (If you wish to enable bintrans, add <b>-b</b> to  
 the command line, but keep in mind that it is still experimental.)  
223    
224    <p>(For MIPS emulation, I have written an experimental dynamic binary
225    translation subsystem, for Alpha and i386 hosts. This gives higher total
226    performance than interpreting one instruction at a time and executing it.
227    If you wish to disable bintrans, add <b>-B</b> to the command line.)
228    
229  <h4>URISC:</h4>  <h4>ARM:</h4>
230    
231  I have implemented an <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URISC">URISC</a>  ARM emulation is good enough to run NetBSD/cats, OpenBSD/cats, and
232  emulation mode, just for fun. The only instruction available in an URISC  NetBSD/evbarm, but it is not as tested or fine-tuned as the MIPS emulation
233  machine is "reverse subtract and skip on borrow". (It is probably not  mode.
 worth trying to do bintrans with URISC, because any reasonable URISC  
 program relies on self-modifying code, which is bad for bintrans  
 performance.)  
234    
235    <h4>PowerPC:</h4>
236    
237  <h4>Other CPU types:</h4>  PowerPC emulation is still in its beginning stages, but good enough
238    to run NetBSD/prep 2.1.
 Some other CPU architectures can also be partially emulated. These are not  
 working well enough yet to run guest operating systems.  
239    
240    <p>Non-MIPS emulation modes use dynamic translation, but not recompilation
241    into native code. This makes it possible to run on any host platform.
242    
243    
244    
# Line 267  stalls or out-of-order execution). Still Line 254  stalls or out-of-order execution). Still
254  to be enough to be able to run complete guest operating systems inside the  to be enough to be able to run complete guest operating systems inside the
255  emulator.  emulator.
256    
257  <p>  <p>Caches are by default not emulated. In some cases, the existance of
258  Caches are by default not emulated. In some cases, the existance of caches  caches is "faked" to let operating systems think that they are there.
259  is "faked" to let operating systems think that they are there. (There is  (There is some old code for R2000/R3000 caches, but it has probably
260  some old code for R2000/R3000 caches, but it has probably suffered from  suffered from bitrot by now.)
261  bitrot by now.)  
262    <p>The emulator is <i>not</i> timing-accurate. It can be run in a
263    "deterministic" mode, <tt><b>-D</b></tt>. The meaning of deterministic is
264    simply that running two emulations with the same settings will result in
265    identical runs. Obviously, this requires that no user interaction is
266    taking place, and that clock speeds are fixed with the <tt><b>-I</b></tt>
267    option. (Deterministic in this case does <i>not</i> mean that the
268    emulation will be identical to some actual real-world machine.)
269    
270    <p><font color="#ff0000">(Oops/TODO: User interaction means <i>both</i>
271    input to the emulated program/OS, and interacting with the emulator
272    itself. Breaking into the debugger and then continuing execution may
273    affect when/how interrupts occur.)</font>
274    
 <p>  
 The emulator is <i>not</i> timing-accurate. It can be run in a  
 "deterministic" mode, <tt><b>-D</b></tt>. The meaning of deterministic is  
 simply that running two emulations with the same settings will result in  
 identical runs. Obviously, this requires that no user interaction is  
 taking place, and that clock speeds are fixed with the <tt><b>-I</b></tt>  
 option. (Deterministic in this case does <i>not</i> mean that the emulation  
 will be identical to some actual real-world machine.)  
275    
276    
277    
# Line 295  are emulated well enough to run at least Line 286  are emulated well enough to run at least
286    
287  <p>  <p>
288  <ul>  <ul>
289    <li><b>DECstation 5000/200</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;("3max")    <li><b><u>MIPS</u></b>
290          <br>Serial controller (including keyboard and mouse), ethernet,    <ul>
291          SCSI, and graphical framebuffers.      <li><b>DECstation 5000/200</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;("3max")
292    <p>      <li><b>Acer Pica-61</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;(an ARC machine)
293    <li><b>Acer Pica-61</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;(an ARC machine)      <li><b>NEC MobilePro 770, 780, 800, and 880</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;(HPCmips machines)
294          <br>Serial controller, "VGA" text console, and SCSI.      <li><b>Cobalt</b>
295    <p>      <li><b>Malta</b> (evbmips)
296    <li><b>NEC MobilePro 770, 780, 800, and 880</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;(HPCmips machines)      <li><b>SGI O2 ("IP32")</b> <font color="#0000e0">(<super>*</super>)</font>
297          <br>Framebuffer, keyboard, and a PCMCIA IDE controller.    </ul>
298    <p>    <p>
299    <li><b>Cobalt</b>    <li><b><u>ARM</u></b>
300          <br>Serial controller and PCI IDE.    <ul>
301        <li><b>CATS</b>
302        <li><b>IQ80321</b> (evbarm)
303      </ul>
304    <p>    <p>
305    <li><b>Malta (evbmips)</b>    <li><b><u>PowerPC</u></b>
306          <br>Serial controller and PCI IDE.    <ul>
307    <p>      <li><b>PReP (PowerPC Reference Platform)</b>
308    <li><b>SGI O2 ("IP32")</b>    </ul>
         <br>Serial controller and ethernet.&nbsp;&nbsp;<small>(Enough for  
         root-on-nfs, but not for disk boot.)</small>  
309  </ul>  </ul>
310    
311    <p><small><font color="#0000e0">(<super>*</super>)</font> =
312    Enough for root-on-nfs, but not for disk boot.)</small>
313    
314  <p>There is code in GXemul for emulation of many other machine types; the  <p>There is code in GXemul for emulation of many other machine types; the
315  degree to which these work range from almost being able to run a complete  degree to which these work range from almost being able to run a complete
316  OS, to almost completely unsupported (perhaps just enough support to  OS, to almost completely unsupported (perhaps just enough support to
# Line 330  such as: Line 325  such as:
325    <li>a console I/O device (putchar() and getchar()...)    <li>a console I/O device (putchar() and getchar()...)
326    <li>an inter-processor communication device, for SMP experiments    <li>an inter-processor communication device, for SMP experiments
327    <li>a very simple linear framebuffer device (for graphics output)    <li>a very simple linear framebuffer device (for graphics output)
328      <li>a simple SCSI disk controller
329      <li>a simple ethernet controller
330  </ul>  </ul>
331    
332  <p>This mode is useful if you wish to run experimental code, but do not  <p>This mode is useful if you wish to run experimental code, but do not
# Line 344  href="experiments.html#expdevices">here< Line 341  href="experiments.html#expdevices">here<
341    
342    
343    
   
 <p><br>  
 <a name="guestos"></a>  
 <h3>Which guest OSes are possible to run in GXemul?</h3>  
   
 This table lists the guest OSes that run well enough to be considered  
 working in the emulator. They can boot from a harddisk image and be  
 interacted with similar to a real machine.  
   
 <p>  
 <center><table border="0">  
         <tr>  
           <td width="10"></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20050317-example.png"><img src="20050317-example_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td width="15"></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/pmax/">NetBSD/pmax</a>  
                 <br>DECstation 5000/200</td>  
           <td width="30"></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20041024-netbsd-arc-installed.gif"><img src="20041024-netbsd-arc-installed_small.gif"></a></td>  
           <td width="15"></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/arc/">NetBSD/arc</a>  
                 <br>Acer Pica-61</td>  
   
         </tr>  
   
         <tr><td height="10"></td></tr>  
   
         <tr>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="openbsd-pmax-20040710.png"><img src="openbsd-pmax-20040710_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.openbsd.org/pmax.html">OpenBSD/pmax</a>  
                 <br>DECstation 5000/200</td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20041024-openbsd-arc-installed.gif"><img src="20041024-openbsd-arc-installed_small.gif"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.openbsd.org/arc.html">OpenBSD/arc</a>  
                 <br>Acer Pica-61</td>  
         </tr>  
   
         <tr><td height="10"></td></tr>  
   
         <tr>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="ultrix4.5-20040706.png"><img src="ultrix4.5-20040706_small.gif"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td>Ultrix/RISC<br>DECstation 5000/200</td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20041213-debian_4.png"><img src="20041213-debian_4_small.gif"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.debian.org/">Debian&nbsp;GNU/Linux</a>&nbsp;<super>*</super>  
                 <br>DECstation 5000/200</td>  
         </tr>  
   
         <tr><td height="10"></td></tr>  
   
         <tr>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="sprite-20040711.png"><img src="sprite-20040711_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/projects/sprite/retrospective.html">Sprite</a>  
                 <br>DECstation 5000/200</td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20041129-redhat_mips.png"><img src="20041129-redhat_mips_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td>Redhat&nbsp;Linux&nbsp;<super>*</super>  
                 <br>DECstation 5000/200</td>  
         </tr>  
   
         <tr><td height="10"></td></tr>  
   
         <tr>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20050427-netbsd-hpcmips-2.png"><img src="20050427-netbsd-hpcmips-2_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/hpcmips/">NetBSD/hpcmips</a>  
                 <br>NEC MobilePro 770, 780, 800, 880</td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20050413-netbsd-cobalt.png"><img src="20050413-netbsd-cobalt_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/cobalt/">NetBSD/cobalt</a>  
                 <br>Cobalt</td>  
         </tr>  
   
         <tr><td height="10"></td></tr>  
   
         <tr>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20050626-netbsd-sgimips-netboot.png"><img src="20050626-netbsd-sgimips-netboot_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/sgimips/">NetBSD/sgimips</a>  
                 <br>SGI O2 ("IP32")</td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td align="center"><a href="20050622-netbsd-evbmips-malta.png"><img src="20050622-netbsd-evbmips-malta_small.png"></a></td>  
           <td></td>  
           <td><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/evbmips/">NetBSD/evbmips</a>  
                 <br>5Kc (and 4Kc) Malta<br>evaluation boards</td>  
           <td></td>  
         </tr>  
   
 </table></center>  
   
   
 <p><br>  
   
 <super>*</super> Although Linux runs under DECstation emulation, the  
 default 2.4.27 kernel in Debian GNU/Linux does not support keyboards on  
 the 5000/200 (the specific DECstation model being emulated), so when the  
 login prompt is reached you cannot interact with the system. Kaj-Michael  
 Lang has compiled and made available a newer kernel from the current  
 mips-linux development tree. You can find it here: <a  
 href="http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/kernels/">http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/kernels</a>/<a  
 href="http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/kernels/vmlinux-2.4.29-rc2-r3k-mipsel-decstation">vmlinux-2.4.29-rc2-r3k-mipsel-decstation</a>  
 This newer kernel supports keyboard input, but it does not have Debian's  
 ethernet patches, so you will not be able to use keyboard/framebuffer  
 <i>and</i> networking at the same time.  
   
   
344  </body>  </body>
345  </html>  </html>

Legend:
Removed from v.10  
changed lines
  Added in v.22

  ViewVC Help
Powered by ViewVC 1.1.26