1 /* Caching code for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2 
3    Copyright 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003 Free
4    Software Foundation, Inc.
5 
6    This file is part of GDB.
7 
8    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9    it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10    the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
11    (at your option) any later version.
12 
13    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
16    GNU General Public License for more details.
17 
18    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19    along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
20    Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
21    Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.  */
22 
23 #include "defs.h"
24 #include "dcache.h"
25 #include "gdbcmd.h"
26 #include "gdb_string.h"
27 #include "gdbcore.h"
28 #include "target.h"
29 
30 /* The data cache could lead to incorrect results because it doesn't
31    know about volatile variables, thus making it impossible to debug
32    functions which use memory mapped I/O devices.  Set the nocache
33    memory region attribute in those cases.
34 
35    In general the dcache speeds up performance, some speed improvement
36    comes from the actual caching mechanism, but the major gain is in
37    the reduction of the remote protocol overhead; instead of reading
38    or writing a large area of memory in 4 byte requests, the cache
39    bundles up the requests into 32 byte (actually LINE_SIZE) chunks.
40    Reducing the overhead to an eighth of what it was.  This is very
41    obvious when displaying a large amount of data,
42 
43    eg, x/200x 0
44 
45    caching     |   no    yes
46    ----------------------------
47    first time  |   4 sec  2 sec improvement due to chunking
48    second time |   4 sec  0 sec improvement due to caching
49 
50    The cache structure is unusual, we keep a number of cache blocks
51    (DCACHE_SIZE) and each one caches a LINE_SIZEed area of memory.
52    Within each line we remember the address of the line (always a
53    multiple of the LINE_SIZE) and a vector of bytes over the range.
54    There's another vector which contains the state of the bytes.
55 
56    ENTRY_BAD means that the byte is just plain wrong, and has no
57    correspondence with anything else (as it would when the cache is
58    turned on, but nothing has been done to it.
59 
60    ENTRY_DIRTY means that the byte has some data in it which should be
61    written out to the remote target one day, but contains correct
62    data.
63 
64    ENTRY_OK means that the data is the same in the cache as it is in
65    remote memory.
66 
67 
68    The ENTRY_DIRTY state is necessary because GDB likes to write large
69    lumps of memory in small bits.  If the caching mechanism didn't
70    maintain the DIRTY information, then something like a two byte
71    write would mean that the entire cache line would have to be read,
72    the two bytes modified and then written out again.  The alternative
73    would be to not read in the cache line in the first place, and just
74    write the two bytes directly into target memory.  The trouble with
75    that is that it really nails performance, because of the remote
76    protocol overhead.  This way, all those little writes are bundled
77    up into an entire cache line write in one go, without having to
78    read the cache line in the first place.
79  */
80 
81 /* NOTE: Interaction of dcache and memory region attributes
82 
83    As there is no requirement that memory region attributes be aligned
84    to or be a multiple of the dcache page size, dcache_read_line() and
85    dcache_write_line() must break up the page by memory region.  If a
86    chunk does not have the cache attribute set, an invalid memory type
87    is set, etc., then the chunk is skipped.  Those chunks are handled
88    in target_xfer_memory() (or target_xfer_memory_partial()).
89 
90    This doesn't occur very often.  The most common occurance is when
91    the last bit of the .text segment and the first bit of the .data
92    segment fall within the same dcache page with a ro/cacheable memory
93    region defined for the .text segment and a rw/non-cacheable memory
94    region defined for the .data segment. */
95 
96 /* This value regulates the number of cache blocks stored.
97    Smaller values reduce the time spent searching for a cache
98    line, and reduce memory requirements, but increase the risk
99    of a line not being in memory */
100 
101 #define DCACHE_SIZE 64
102 
103 /* This value regulates the size of a cache line.  Smaller values
104    reduce the time taken to read a single byte, but reduce overall
105    throughput.  */
106 
107 #define LINE_SIZE_POWER (5)
108 #define LINE_SIZE (1 << LINE_SIZE_POWER)
109 
110 /* Each cache block holds LINE_SIZE bytes of data
111    starting at a multiple-of-LINE_SIZE address.  */
112 
113 #define LINE_SIZE_MASK  ((LINE_SIZE - 1))
114 #define XFORM(x) 	((x) & LINE_SIZE_MASK)
115 #define MASK(x)         ((x) & ~LINE_SIZE_MASK)
116 
117 
118 #define ENTRY_BAD   0		/* data at this byte is wrong */
119 #define ENTRY_DIRTY 1		/* data at this byte needs to be written back */
120 #define ENTRY_OK    2		/* data at this byte is same as in memory */
121 
122 
123 struct dcache_block
124   {
125     struct dcache_block *p;	/* next in list */
126     CORE_ADDR addr;		/* Address for which data is recorded.  */
127     gdb_byte data[LINE_SIZE];	/* bytes at given address */
128     unsigned char state[LINE_SIZE];	/* what state the data is in */
129 
130     /* whether anything in state is dirty - used to speed up the
131        dirty scan. */
132     int anydirty;
133 
134     int refs;
135   };
136 
137 
138 /* FIXME: dcache_struct used to have a cache_has_stuff field that was
139    used to record whether the cache had been accessed.  This was used
140    to invalidate the cache whenever caching was (re-)enabled (if the
141    cache was disabled and later re-enabled, it could contain stale
142    data).  This was not needed because the cache is write through and
143    the code that enables, disables, and deletes memory region all
144    invalidate the cache.
145 
146    This is overkill, since it also invalidates cache lines from
147    unrelated regions.  One way this could be addressed by adding a
148    new function that takes an address and a length and invalidates
149    only those cache lines that match. */
150 
151 struct dcache_struct
152   {
153     /* free list */
154     struct dcache_block *free_head;
155     struct dcache_block *free_tail;
156 
157     /* in use list */
158     struct dcache_block *valid_head;
159     struct dcache_block *valid_tail;
160 
161     /* The cache itself. */
162     struct dcache_block *the_cache;
163   };
164 
165 static struct dcache_block *dcache_hit (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr);
166 
167 static int dcache_write_line (DCACHE *dcache, struct dcache_block *db);
168 
169 static int dcache_read_line (DCACHE *dcache, struct dcache_block *db);
170 
171 static struct dcache_block *dcache_alloc (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr);
172 
173 static int dcache_writeback (DCACHE *dcache);
174 
175 static void dcache_info (char *exp, int tty);
176 
177 void _initialize_dcache (void);
178 
179 static int dcache_enabled_p = 0;
180 static void
show_dcache_enabled_p(struct ui_file * file,int from_tty,struct cmd_list_element * c,const char * value)181 show_dcache_enabled_p (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
182 		       struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
183 {
184   fprintf_filtered (file, _("Cache use for remote targets is %s.\n"), value);
185 }
186 
187 
188 DCACHE *last_cache;		/* Used by info dcache */
189 
190 
191 /* Free all the data cache blocks, thus discarding all cached data.  */
192 
193 void
dcache_invalidate(DCACHE * dcache)194 dcache_invalidate (DCACHE *dcache)
195 {
196   int i;
197   dcache->valid_head = 0;
198   dcache->valid_tail = 0;
199 
200   dcache->free_head = 0;
201   dcache->free_tail = 0;
202 
203   for (i = 0; i < DCACHE_SIZE; i++)
204     {
205       struct dcache_block *db = dcache->the_cache + i;
206 
207       if (!dcache->free_head)
208 	dcache->free_head = db;
209       else
210 	dcache->free_tail->p = db;
211       dcache->free_tail = db;
212       db->p = 0;
213     }
214 
215   return;
216 }
217 
218 /* If addr is present in the dcache, return the address of the block
219    containing it. */
220 
221 static struct dcache_block *
dcache_hit(DCACHE * dcache,CORE_ADDR addr)222 dcache_hit (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr)
223 {
224   struct dcache_block *db;
225 
226   /* Search all cache blocks for one that is at this address.  */
227   db = dcache->valid_head;
228 
229   while (db)
230     {
231       if (MASK (addr) == db->addr)
232 	{
233 	  db->refs++;
234 	  return db;
235 	}
236       db = db->p;
237     }
238 
239   return NULL;
240 }
241 
242 /* Make sure that anything in this line which needs to
243    be written is. */
244 
245 static int
dcache_write_line(DCACHE * dcache,struct dcache_block * db)246 dcache_write_line (DCACHE *dcache, struct dcache_block *db)
247 {
248   CORE_ADDR memaddr;
249   gdb_byte *myaddr;
250   int len;
251   int res;
252   int reg_len;
253   struct mem_region *region;
254 
255   if (!db->anydirty)
256     return 1;
257 
258   len = LINE_SIZE;
259   memaddr = db->addr;
260   myaddr  = db->data;
261 
262   while (len > 0)
263     {
264       int s;
265       int e;
266       int dirty_len;
267 
268       region = lookup_mem_region(memaddr);
269       if (memaddr + len < region->hi)
270 	reg_len = len;
271       else
272 	reg_len = region->hi - memaddr;
273 
274       if (!region->attrib.cache || region->attrib.mode == MEM_RO)
275 	{
276 	  memaddr += reg_len;
277 	  myaddr  += reg_len;
278 	  len     -= reg_len;
279 	  continue;
280 	}
281 
282       while (reg_len > 0)
283 	{
284 	  s = XFORM(memaddr);
285 	  while (reg_len > 0) {
286 	    if (db->state[s] == ENTRY_DIRTY)
287 	      break;
288 	    s++;
289 	    reg_len--;
290 
291 	    memaddr++;
292 	    myaddr++;
293 	    len--;
294 	  }
295 
296 	  e = s;
297 	  while (reg_len > 0) {
298 	    if (db->state[e] != ENTRY_DIRTY)
299 	      break;
300 	    e++;
301 	    reg_len--;
302 	  }
303 
304 	  dirty_len = e - s;
305 	  while (dirty_len > 0)
306 	    {
307 	      res = do_xfer_memory(memaddr, myaddr, dirty_len, 1,
308 				   &region->attrib);
309 	      if (res <= 0)
310 		return 0;
311 
312 	      memset (&db->state[XFORM(memaddr)], ENTRY_OK, res);
313 	      memaddr   += res;
314 	      myaddr    += res;
315 	      len       -= res;
316 	      dirty_len -= res;
317 	    }
318 	}
319     }
320 
321   db->anydirty = 0;
322   return 1;
323 }
324 
325 /* Read cache line */
326 static int
dcache_read_line(DCACHE * dcache,struct dcache_block * db)327 dcache_read_line (DCACHE *dcache, struct dcache_block *db)
328 {
329   CORE_ADDR memaddr;
330   gdb_byte *myaddr;
331   int len;
332   int res;
333   int reg_len;
334   struct mem_region *region;
335 
336   /* If there are any dirty bytes in the line, it must be written
337      before a new line can be read */
338   if (db->anydirty)
339     {
340       if (!dcache_write_line (dcache, db))
341 	return 0;
342     }
343 
344   len = LINE_SIZE;
345   memaddr = db->addr;
346   myaddr  = db->data;
347 
348   while (len > 0)
349     {
350       region = lookup_mem_region(memaddr);
351       if (memaddr + len < region->hi)
352 	reg_len = len;
353       else
354 	reg_len = region->hi - memaddr;
355 
356       if (!region->attrib.cache || region->attrib.mode == MEM_WO)
357 	{
358 	  memaddr += reg_len;
359 	  myaddr  += reg_len;
360 	  len     -= reg_len;
361 	  continue;
362 	}
363 
364       while (reg_len > 0)
365 	{
366 	  res = do_xfer_memory (memaddr, myaddr, reg_len, 0,
367 				&region->attrib);
368 	  if (res <= 0)
369 	    return 0;
370 
371 	  memaddr += res;
372 	  myaddr  += res;
373 	  len     -= res;
374 	  reg_len -= res;
375 	}
376     }
377 
378   memset (db->state, ENTRY_OK, sizeof (db->data));
379   db->anydirty = 0;
380 
381   return 1;
382 }
383 
384 /* Get a free cache block, put or keep it on the valid list,
385    and return its address.  */
386 
387 static struct dcache_block *
dcache_alloc(DCACHE * dcache,CORE_ADDR addr)388 dcache_alloc (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr)
389 {
390   struct dcache_block *db;
391 
392   /* Take something from the free list */
393   db = dcache->free_head;
394   if (db)
395     {
396       dcache->free_head = db->p;
397     }
398   else
399     {
400       /* Nothing left on free list, so grab one from the valid list */
401       db = dcache->valid_head;
402 
403       if (!dcache_write_line (dcache, db))
404 	return NULL;
405 
406       dcache->valid_head = db->p;
407     }
408 
409   db->addr = MASK(addr);
410   db->refs = 0;
411   db->anydirty = 0;
412   memset (db->state, ENTRY_BAD, sizeof (db->data));
413 
414   /* append this line to end of valid list */
415   if (!dcache->valid_head)
416     dcache->valid_head = db;
417   else
418     dcache->valid_tail->p = db;
419   dcache->valid_tail = db;
420   db->p = 0;
421 
422   return db;
423 }
424 
425 /* Writeback any dirty lines. */
426 static int
dcache_writeback(DCACHE * dcache)427 dcache_writeback (DCACHE *dcache)
428 {
429   struct dcache_block *db;
430 
431   db = dcache->valid_head;
432 
433   while (db)
434     {
435       if (!dcache_write_line (dcache, db))
436 	return 0;
437       db = db->p;
438     }
439   return 1;
440 }
441 
442 
443 /* Using the data cache DCACHE return the contents of the byte at
444    address ADDR in the remote machine.
445 
446    Returns 0 on error. */
447 
448 static int
dcache_peek_byte(DCACHE * dcache,CORE_ADDR addr,gdb_byte * ptr)449 dcache_peek_byte (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr, gdb_byte *ptr)
450 {
451   struct dcache_block *db = dcache_hit (dcache, addr);
452 
453   if (!db)
454     {
455       db = dcache_alloc (dcache, addr);
456       if (!db)
457 	return 0;
458     }
459 
460   if (db->state[XFORM (addr)] == ENTRY_BAD)
461     {
462       if (!dcache_read_line(dcache, db))
463          return 0;
464     }
465 
466   *ptr = db->data[XFORM (addr)];
467   return 1;
468 }
469 
470 
471 /* Write the byte at PTR into ADDR in the data cache.
472    Return zero on write error.
473  */
474 
475 static int
dcache_poke_byte(DCACHE * dcache,CORE_ADDR addr,gdb_byte * ptr)476 dcache_poke_byte (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr, gdb_byte *ptr)
477 {
478   struct dcache_block *db = dcache_hit (dcache, addr);
479 
480   if (!db)
481     {
482       db = dcache_alloc (dcache, addr);
483       if (!db)
484 	return 0;
485     }
486 
487   db->data[XFORM (addr)] = *ptr;
488   db->state[XFORM (addr)] = ENTRY_DIRTY;
489   db->anydirty = 1;
490   return 1;
491 }
492 
493 /* Initialize the data cache.  */
494 DCACHE *
dcache_init(void)495 dcache_init (void)
496 {
497   int csize = sizeof (struct dcache_block) * DCACHE_SIZE;
498   DCACHE *dcache;
499 
500   dcache = (DCACHE *) xmalloc (sizeof (*dcache));
501 
502   dcache->the_cache = (struct dcache_block *) xmalloc (csize);
503   memset (dcache->the_cache, 0, csize);
504 
505   dcache_invalidate (dcache);
506 
507   last_cache = dcache;
508   return dcache;
509 }
510 
511 /* Free a data cache */
512 void
dcache_free(DCACHE * dcache)513 dcache_free (DCACHE *dcache)
514 {
515   if (last_cache == dcache)
516     last_cache = NULL;
517 
518   xfree (dcache->the_cache);
519   xfree (dcache);
520 }
521 
522 /* Read or write LEN bytes from inferior memory at MEMADDR, transferring
523    to or from debugger address MYADDR.  Write to inferior if SHOULD_WRITE is
524    nonzero.
525 
526    Returns length of data written or read; 0 for error.
527 
528    This routine is indended to be called by remote_xfer_ functions. */
529 
530 int
dcache_xfer_memory(DCACHE * dcache,CORE_ADDR memaddr,gdb_byte * myaddr,int len,int should_write)531 dcache_xfer_memory (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR memaddr, gdb_byte *myaddr,
532 		    int len, int should_write)
533 {
534   int i;
535   int (*xfunc) (DCACHE *dcache, CORE_ADDR addr, gdb_byte *ptr);
536   xfunc = should_write ? dcache_poke_byte : dcache_peek_byte;
537 
538   for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
539     {
540       if (!xfunc (dcache, memaddr + i, myaddr + i))
541 	return 0;
542     }
543 
544   /* FIXME: There may be some benefit from moving the cache writeback
545      to a higher layer, as it could occur after a sequence of smaller
546      writes have been completed (as when a stack frame is constructed
547      for an inferior function call).  Note that only moving it up one
548      level to target_xfer_memory() (also target_xfer_memory_partial())
549      is not sufficent, since we want to coalesce memory transfers that
550      are "logically" connected but not actually a single call to one
551      of the memory transfer functions. */
552 
553   if (should_write)
554     dcache_writeback (dcache);
555 
556   return len;
557 }
558 
559 static void
dcache_info(char * exp,int tty)560 dcache_info (char *exp, int tty)
561 {
562   struct dcache_block *p;
563 
564   printf_filtered (_("Dcache line width %d, depth %d\n"),
565 		   LINE_SIZE, DCACHE_SIZE);
566 
567   if (last_cache)
568     {
569       printf_filtered (_("Cache state:\n"));
570 
571       for (p = last_cache->valid_head; p; p = p->p)
572 	{
573 	  int j;
574 	  printf_filtered (_("Line at %s, referenced %d times\n"),
575 			   paddr (p->addr), p->refs);
576 
577 	  for (j = 0; j < LINE_SIZE; j++)
578 	    printf_filtered ("%02x", p->data[j] & 0xFF);
579 	  printf_filtered (("\n"));
580 
581 	  for (j = 0; j < LINE_SIZE; j++)
582 	    printf_filtered ("%2x", p->state[j]);
583 	  printf_filtered ("\n");
584 	}
585     }
586 }
587 
588 void
_initialize_dcache(void)589 _initialize_dcache (void)
590 {
591   add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("remotecache", class_support,
592 			   &dcache_enabled_p, _("\
593 Set cache use for remote targets."), _("\
594 Show cache use for remote targets."), _("\
595 When on, use data caching for remote targets.  For many remote targets\n\
596 this option can offer better throughput for reading target memory.\n\
597 Unfortunately, gdb does not currently know anything about volatile\n\
598 registers and thus data caching will produce incorrect results with\n\
599 volatile registers are in use.  By default, this option is off."),
600 			   NULL,
601 			   show_dcache_enabled_p,
602 			   &setlist, &showlist);
603 
604   add_info ("dcache", dcache_info,
605 	    _("Print information on the dcache performance."));
606 
607 }
608