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author | Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> | 2019-02-23 13:00:10 -0800 |
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committer | Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> | 2019-03-12 09:46:58 -0700 |
commit | 3fdbf5d6794db253b0a5173204bbbcc8a17bc9d1 (patch) | |
tree | f922adb2533645804b804bde8a42187b45a1c122 /docs | |
parent | 55fd189205493890a10245a6828b8f282ff518c2 (diff) | |
download | qemu-3fdbf5d6794db253b0a5173204bbbcc8a17bc9d1.zip qemu-3fdbf5d6794db253b0a5173204bbbcc8a17bc9d1.tar.gz qemu-3fdbf5d6794db253b0a5173204bbbcc8a17bc9d1.tar.bz2 |
decodetree: Move documentation to docs/devel/decodetree.rst
One great big block comment isn't the best way to document
the syntax of a language.
Reviewed-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/decodetree.rst | 156 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/index.rst | 2 |
2 files changed, 157 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/docs/devel/decodetree.rst b/docs/devel/decodetree.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d9be30b --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/devel/decodetree.rst @@ -0,0 +1,156 @@ +======================== +Decodetree Specification +======================== + +A *decodetree* is built from instruction *patterns*. A pattern may +represent a single architectural instruction or a group of same, depending +on what is convenient for further processing. + +Each pattern has both *fixedbits* and *fixedmask*, the combination of which +describes the condition under which the pattern is matched:: + + (insn & fixedmask) == fixedbits + +Each pattern may have *fields*, which are extracted from the insn and +passed along to the translator. Examples of such are registers, +immediates, and sub-opcodes. + +In support of patterns, one may declare *fields*, *argument sets*, and +*formats*, each of which may be re-used to simplify further definitions. + +Fields +====== + +Syntax:: + + field_def := '%' identifier ( unnamed_field )+ ( !function=identifier )? + unnamed_field := number ':' ( 's' ) number + +For *unnamed_field*, the first number is the least-significant bit position +of the field and the second number is the length of the field. If the 's' is +present, the field is considered signed. If multiple ``unnamed_fields`` are +present, they are concatenated. In this way one can define disjoint fields. + +If ``!function`` is specified, the concatenated result is passed through the +named function, taking and returning an integral value. + +FIXME: the fields of the structure into which this result will be stored +is restricted to ``int``. Which means that we cannot expand 64-bit items. + +Field examples: + ++---------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ +| Input | Generated code | ++===========================+=============================================+ +| %disp 0:s16 | sextract(i, 0, 16) | ++---------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ +| %imm9 16:6 10:3 | extract(i, 16, 6) << 3 | extract(i, 10, 3) | ++---------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ +| %disp12 0:s1 1:1 2:10 | sextract(i, 0, 1) << 11 | | +| | extract(i, 1, 1) << 10 | | +| | extract(i, 2, 10) | ++---------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ +| %shimm8 5:s8 13:1 | expand_shimm8(sextract(i, 5, 8) << 1 | | +| !function=expand_shimm8 | extract(i, 13, 1)) | ++---------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ + +Argument Sets +============= + +Syntax:: + + args_def := '&' identifier ( args_elt )+ ( !extern )? + args_elt := identifier + +Each *args_elt* defines an argument within the argument set. +Each argument set will be rendered as a C structure "arg_$name" +with each of the fields being one of the member arguments. + +If ``!extern`` is specified, the backing structure is assumed +to have been already declared, typically via a second decoder. + +Argument set examples:: + + ®3 ra rb rc + &loadstore reg base offset + + +Formats +======= + +Syntax:: + + fmt_def := '@' identifier ( fmt_elt )+ + fmt_elt := fixedbit_elt | field_elt | field_ref | args_ref + fixedbit_elt := [01.-]+ + field_elt := identifier ':' 's'? number + field_ref := '%' identifier | identifier '=' '%' identifier + args_ref := '&' identifier + +Defining a format is a handy way to avoid replicating groups of fields +across many instruction patterns. + +A *fixedbit_elt* describes a contiguous sequence of bits that must +be 1, 0, or don't care. The difference between '.' and '-' +is that '.' means that the bit will be covered with a field or a +final 0 or 1 from the pattern, and '-' means that the bit is really +ignored by the cpu and will not be specified. + +A *field_elt* describes a simple field only given a width; the position of +the field is implied by its position with respect to other *fixedbit_elt* +and *field_elt*. + +If any *fixedbit_elt* or *field_elt* appear, then all bits must be defined. +Padding with a *fixedbit_elt* of all '.' is an easy way to accomplish that. + +A *field_ref* incorporates a field by reference. This is the only way to +add a complex field to a format. A field may be renamed in the process +via assignment to another identifier. This is intended to allow the +same argument set be used with disjoint named fields. + +A single *args_ref* may specify an argument set to use for the format. +The set of fields in the format must be a subset of the arguments in +the argument set. If an argument set is not specified, one will be +inferred from the set of fields. + +It is recommended, but not required, that all *field_ref* and *args_ref* +appear at the end of the line, not interleaving with *fixedbit_elf* or +*field_elt*. + +Format examples:: + + @opr ...... ra:5 rb:5 ... 0 ....... rc:5 + @opi ...... ra:5 lit:8 1 ....... rc:5 + +Patterns +======== + +Syntax:: + + pat_def := identifier ( pat_elt )+ + pat_elt := fixedbit_elt | field_elt | field_ref | args_ref | fmt_ref | const_elt + fmt_ref := '@' identifier + const_elt := identifier '=' number + +The *fixedbit_elt* and *field_elt* specifiers are unchanged from formats. +A pattern that does not specify a named format will have one inferred +from a referenced argument set (if present) and the set of fields. + +A *const_elt* allows a argument to be set to a constant value. This may +come in handy when fields overlap between patterns and one has to +include the values in the *fixedbit_elt* instead. + +The decoder will call a translator function for each pattern matched. + +Pattern examples:: + + addl_r 010000 ..... ..... .... 0000000 ..... @opr + addl_i 010000 ..... ..... .... 0000000 ..... @opi + +which will, in part, invoke:: + + trans_addl_r(ctx, &arg_opr, insn) + +and:: + + trans_addl_i(ctx, &arg_opi, insn) diff --git a/docs/devel/index.rst b/docs/devel/index.rst index 6b11e49..ebbab63 100644 --- a/docs/devel/index.rst +++ b/docs/devel/index.rst @@ -19,4 +19,4 @@ Contents: migration stable-process testing - + decodetree |