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4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Hesham Almatary 614c2954b0
RISC-V: Check for the effective memory privilege mode during PMP checks
The current PMP check function checks for env->priv which is not the effective
memory privilege mode.

For example, mstatus.MPRV could be set while executing in M-Mode, and in that
case the privilege mode for the PMP check should be S-Mode rather than M-Mode
(in env->priv) if mstatus.MPP == PRV_S.

This patch passes the effective memory privilege mode to the PMP check.
Functions that call the PMP check should pass the correct memory privilege mode
after reading mstatus' MPRV/MPP or hstatus.SPRV (if Hypervisor mode exists).

Backports commit cc0fdb298517ce56c770803447f8b02a90271152 from qemu
2019-08-08 16:52:57 -04:00
Dayeol Lee 6528c78fd5
target/riscv: Fix PMP range boundary address bug
A wrong address is passed to `pmp_is_in_range` while checking if a
memory access is within a PMP range.
Since the ending address of the pmp range (i.e., pmp_state.addr[i].ea)
is set to the last address in the range (i.e., pmp base + pmp size - 1),
memory accesses containg the last address in the range will always fail.

For example, assume that a PMP range is 4KB from 0x87654000 such that
the last address within the range is 0x87654fff.
1-byte access to 0x87654fff should be considered to be fully inside the
PMP range.
However the access now fails and complains partial inclusion because
pmp_is_in_range(env, i, addr + size) returns 0 whereas
pmp_is_in_range(env, i, addr) returns 1.

Backports commit 49db9fa1fd7c252596b53cf80876e06f407d09ed from qemu
2019-08-08 16:42:24 -04:00
Alistair Francis a4f2dcde28
riscv: pmp: Log pmp access errors as guest errors
Backports commit aad5ac2311f3ad2c0be12d0eaaf4ef4398438fc2 from qemu
2019-03-19 23:45:03 -04:00
Lioncash b6f752970b
target/riscv: Initial introduction of the RISC-V target
This ports over the RISC-V architecture from Qemu. This is currently a
very barebones transition. No code hooking or any fancy stuff.
Currently, you can feed it instructions and query the CPU state itself.

This also allows choosing whether or not RISC-V 32-bit or RISC-V 64-bit
is desirable through Unicorn's interface as well.

Extremely basic examples of executing a single instruction have been
added to the samples directory to help demonstrate how to use the basic
functionality.
2019-03-08 21:46:10 -05:00