qemu-e2k/target-lm32
Michael Walle a5086f9542 lm32: use lookup table for opcodes
Instead of a for loop use a faster lookup table.

Signed-off-by: Michael Walle <michael@walle.cc>
Signed-off-by: Edgar E. Iglesias <edgar.iglesias@gmail.com>
2011-03-31 08:54:05 +02:00
..
cpu.h
exec.h
helper.c lm32: translation routines 2011-03-07 13:42:36 +01:00
helper.h lm32: translation code helper 2011-03-07 13:42:36 +01:00
machine.c lm32: machine state loading/saving 2011-03-07 13:42:36 +01:00
op_helper.c lm32: translation code helper 2011-03-07 13:42:36 +01:00
README lm32: todo and documentation 2011-03-07 13:42:37 +01:00
TODO lm32: todo and documentation 2011-03-07 13:42:37 +01:00
translate.c lm32: use lookup table for opcodes 2011-03-31 08:54:05 +02:00

LatticeMico32 target
--------------------

General
-------
All opcodes including the JUART CSRs are supported.


JTAG UART
---------
JTAG UART is routed to a serial console device. For the current boards it
is the second one. Ie to enable it in the qemu virtual console window use
the following command line parameters:
  -serial vc -serial vc
This will make serial0 (the lm32_uart) and serial1 (the JTAG UART)
available as virtual consoles.


Programmatically terminate the emulator
----------------------------------------
Originally neither the LatticeMico32 nor its peripherals support a
mechanism to shut down the machine. Emulation aware programs can write to a
to a special register within the system control block to shut down the
virtual machine.  For more details see hw/lm32_sys.c. The lm32-evr is the
first BSP which instantiate this model. A (32 bit) write to 0xfff0000
causes a vm shutdown.


Special instructions
--------------------
The translation recognizes one special instruction to halt the cpu:
  and r0, r0, r0
On real hardware this instruction is a nop. It is not used by GCC and
should (hopefully) not be used within hand-crafted assembly.
Insert this instruction in your idle loop to reduce the cpu load on the
host.


Ignoring the MSB of the address bus
-----------------------------------
Some SoC ignores the MSB on the address bus. Thus creating a shadow memory
area. As a general rule, 0x00000000-0x7fffffff is cached, whereas
0x80000000-0xffffffff is not cached and used to access IO devices. This
behaviour can be enabled with:
  cpu_lm32_set_phys_msb_ignore(env, 1);