Message ID | 20240315130910.15750-7-philmd@linaro.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | qapi: Make @query-cpu-definitions command target-agnostic | expand |
Hi Philippe, On Fri, Mar 15, 2024 at 02:08:54PM +0100, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: > Date: Fri, 15 Mar 2024 14:08:54 +0100 > From: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> > Subject: [PATCH-for-9.1 06/21] target/i386: Make X86_CPU common to new > I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU types > X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.41.0 > > "target/foo/cpu-qom.h" can not use any target specific definitions. > > Currently "target/i386/cpu-qom.h" defines TYPE_X86_CPU depending > on the i386/x86_64 build type. This doesn't scale in a heterogeneous > context where we need to access both types concurrently. Does this mean that there would be a TCG case contains both 64-bit and 32-bit i386 core? ;-) > In order to do that, introduce the new I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU > types, both inheriting a common TYPE_X86_CPU base type. > > Keep the current "base" and "max" CPU types as 32 or 64-bit, > depending on the binary built. > > Adapt the cpu-plug-test, since the 'base' architecture is now > common to both 32/64-bit x86 targets. > > Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> > Acked-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> > --- > target/i386/cpu-qom.h | 16 ++++++++++------ > target/i386/cpu.c | 20 ++++++++++++++++++-- > tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c | 2 +- > 3 files changed, 29 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/target/i386/cpu-qom.h b/target/i386/cpu-qom.h > index d4e216d000..de28d7ea20 100644 > --- a/target/i386/cpu-qom.h > +++ b/target/i386/cpu-qom.h > @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ > /* > - * QEMU x86 CPU > + * QEMU x86 CPU QOM header (target agnostic) > * > * Copyright (c) 2012 SUSE LINUX Products GmbH > * > @@ -22,14 +22,18 @@ > > #include "hw/core/cpu.h" > > -#ifdef TARGET_X86_64 > -#define TYPE_X86_CPU "x86_64-cpu" > -#else > -#define TYPE_X86_CPU "i386-cpu" > -#endif > +#define TYPE_X86_CPU "x86-cpu" > +#define TYPE_I386_CPU "i386-cpu" > +#define TYPE_X86_64_CPU "x86_64-cpu" > > OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_CPU) > > +OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(I386CPU, X86CPUClass, I386_CPU) > +OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86_64CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_64_CPU) > + > +#define X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX "-" TYPE_X86_CPU > +#define X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME(name) (name X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX) > + X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME seems to be duplicated because the following line is the existing X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME definition. > #define X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX "-" TYPE_X86_CPU > #define X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME(name) (name X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX) > > diff --git a/target/i386/cpu.c b/target/i386/cpu.c > index ebf555f50f..07f64c1ea5 100644 > --- a/target/i386/cpu.c > +++ b/target/i386/cpu.c > @@ -8057,12 +8057,28 @@ static const TypeInfo x86_cpu_types[] = { > .class_size = sizeof(X86CPUClass), > .class_init = x86_cpu_common_class_init, > }, { > - .name = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("base"), > + .name = TYPE_I386_CPU, > .parent = TYPE_X86_CPU, > + .abstract = true, > + }, { > + .name = TYPE_X86_64_CPU, > + .parent = TYPE_X86_CPU, > + .abstract = true, > + }, { Should TYPE_I386_CPU/TYPE_X86_64_CPU be also wrapped with TARGET_X86_64? Otherwise, we would keep the 32-bit CPU type definition of TYPE_I386_CPU in the 64-bit case. > + .name = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("base"), > +#ifdef TARGET_X86_64 > + .parent = TYPE_X86_64_CPU, > +#else > + .parent = TYPE_I386_CPU, > +#endif > .class_init = x86_cpu_base_class_init, > }, { > .name = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("max"), > - .parent = TYPE_X86_CPU, > +#ifdef TARGET_X86_64 > + .parent = TYPE_X86_64_CPU, > +#else > + .parent = TYPE_I386_CPU, > +#endif > .instance_init = max_x86_cpu_initfn, > .class_init = max_x86_cpu_class_init, > }
Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> writes: > "target/foo/cpu-qom.h" can not use any target specific definitions. > > Currently "target/i386/cpu-qom.h" defines TYPE_X86_CPU depending > on the i386/x86_64 build type. This doesn't scale in a heterogeneous > context where we need to access both types concurrently. > > In order to do that, introduce the new I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU > types, both inheriting a common TYPE_X86_CPU base type. > > Keep the current "base" and "max" CPU types as 32 or 64-bit, > depending on the binary built. > > Adapt the cpu-plug-test, since the 'base' architecture is now > common to both 32/64-bit x86 targets. > > Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> > Acked-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> [...] > diff --git a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c > index 7f5dd5f85a..97316d131f 100644 > --- a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c > +++ b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c > @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ static void add_pc_test_case(const char *mname) > data->machine = g_strdup(mname); > data->cpu_model = "Haswell"; /* 1.3+ theoretically */ > data->device_model = g_strdup_printf("%s-%s-cpu", data->cpu_model, > - qtest_get_arch()); > + qtest_get_base_arch()); > data->sockets = 1; > data->cores = 3; > data->threads = 2; Doesn't build for me: ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c: In function ‘add_pc_test_case’: ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c:93:42: error: implicit declaration of function ‘qtest_get_base_arch’; did you mean ‘qtest_get_arch’? [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] 93 | qtest_get_base_arch()); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | qtest_get_arch ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c:93:42: error: nested extern declaration of ‘qtest_get_base_arch’ [-Werror=nested-externs] ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c:92:47: error: format ‘%s’ expects argument of type ‘char *’, but argument 3 has type ‘int’ [-Werror=format=] 92 | data->device_model = g_strdup_printf("%s-%s-cpu", data->cpu_model, | ~^ | | | char * | %d 93 | qtest_get_base_arch()); | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | | | int
On 26/3/24 11:57, Markus Armbruster wrote: > Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> writes: > >> "target/foo/cpu-qom.h" can not use any target specific definitions. >> >> Currently "target/i386/cpu-qom.h" defines TYPE_X86_CPU depending >> on the i386/x86_64 build type. This doesn't scale in a heterogeneous >> context where we need to access both types concurrently. >> >> In order to do that, introduce the new I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU >> types, both inheriting a common TYPE_X86_CPU base type. >> >> Keep the current "base" and "max" CPU types as 32 or 64-bit, >> depending on the binary built. >> >> Adapt the cpu-plug-test, since the 'base' architecture is now >> common to both 32/64-bit x86 targets. >> >> Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org> >> Acked-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> > > [...] > >> diff --git a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c >> index 7f5dd5f85a..97316d131f 100644 >> --- a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c >> +++ b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c >> @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ static void add_pc_test_case(const char *mname) >> data->machine = g_strdup(mname); >> data->cpu_model = "Haswell"; /* 1.3+ theoretically */ >> data->device_model = g_strdup_printf("%s-%s-cpu", data->cpu_model, >> - qtest_get_arch()); >> + qtest_get_base_arch()); >> data->sockets = 1; >> data->cores = 3; >> data->threads = 2; > > Doesn't build for me: > > ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c: In function ‘add_pc_test_case’: > ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c:93:42: error: implicit declaration of function ‘qtest_get_base_arch’; did you mean ‘qtest_get_arch’? [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] > 93 | qtest_get_base_arch()); > | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > | qtest_get_arch > ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c:93:42: error: nested extern declaration of ‘qtest_get_base_arch’ [-Werror=nested-externs] > ../tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c:92:47: error: format ‘%s’ expects argument of type ‘char *’, but argument 3 has type ‘int’ [-Werror=format=] > 92 | data->device_model = g_strdup_printf("%s-%s-cpu", data->cpu_model, > | ~^ > | | > | char * > | %d > 93 | qtest_get_base_arch()); > | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > | | > | int Sorry, I forgot to mention this series is based on: https://lore.kernel.org/qemu-devel/20231010074952.79165-1-philmd@linaro.org/ "qtest: Introduce qtest_get_base_arch() and qtest_get_arch_bits()"
diff --git a/target/i386/cpu-qom.h b/target/i386/cpu-qom.h index d4e216d000..de28d7ea20 100644 --- a/target/i386/cpu-qom.h +++ b/target/i386/cpu-qom.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /* - * QEMU x86 CPU + * QEMU x86 CPU QOM header (target agnostic) * * Copyright (c) 2012 SUSE LINUX Products GmbH * @@ -22,14 +22,18 @@ #include "hw/core/cpu.h" -#ifdef TARGET_X86_64 -#define TYPE_X86_CPU "x86_64-cpu" -#else -#define TYPE_X86_CPU "i386-cpu" -#endif +#define TYPE_X86_CPU "x86-cpu" +#define TYPE_I386_CPU "i386-cpu" +#define TYPE_X86_64_CPU "x86_64-cpu" OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_CPU) +OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(I386CPU, X86CPUClass, I386_CPU) +OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86_64CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_64_CPU) + +#define X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX "-" TYPE_X86_CPU +#define X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME(name) (name X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX) + #define X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX "-" TYPE_X86_CPU #define X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME(name) (name X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX) diff --git a/target/i386/cpu.c b/target/i386/cpu.c index ebf555f50f..07f64c1ea5 100644 --- a/target/i386/cpu.c +++ b/target/i386/cpu.c @@ -8057,12 +8057,28 @@ static const TypeInfo x86_cpu_types[] = { .class_size = sizeof(X86CPUClass), .class_init = x86_cpu_common_class_init, }, { - .name = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("base"), + .name = TYPE_I386_CPU, .parent = TYPE_X86_CPU, + .abstract = true, + }, { + .name = TYPE_X86_64_CPU, + .parent = TYPE_X86_CPU, + .abstract = true, + }, { + .name = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("base"), +#ifdef TARGET_X86_64 + .parent = TYPE_X86_64_CPU, +#else + .parent = TYPE_I386_CPU, +#endif .class_init = x86_cpu_base_class_init, }, { .name = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("max"), - .parent = TYPE_X86_CPU, +#ifdef TARGET_X86_64 + .parent = TYPE_X86_64_CPU, +#else + .parent = TYPE_I386_CPU, +#endif .instance_init = max_x86_cpu_initfn, .class_init = max_x86_cpu_class_init, } diff --git a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c index 7f5dd5f85a..97316d131f 100644 --- a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c +++ b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ static void add_pc_test_case(const char *mname) data->machine = g_strdup(mname); data->cpu_model = "Haswell"; /* 1.3+ theoretically */ data->device_model = g_strdup_printf("%s-%s-cpu", data->cpu_model, - qtest_get_arch()); + qtest_get_base_arch()); data->sockets = 1; data->cores = 3; data->threads = 2;