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# Copyright (c) 2014, 2016, 2018-2019 ARM Limited
# All rights reserved
#
# The license below extends only to copyright in the software and shall
# not be construed as granting a license to any other intellectual
# property including but not limited to intellectual property relating
# to a hardware implementation of the functionality of the software
# licensed hereunder. You may use the software subject to the license
# terms below provided that you ensure that this notice is replicated
# unmodified and in its entirety in all distributions of the software,
# modified or unmodified, in source code or in binary form.
#
# Copyright (c) 2003-2005 The Regents of The University of Michigan
# Copyright (c) 2013,2015 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
# All rights reserved.
#
# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
# met: redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer;
# redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution;
# neither the name of the copyright holders nor the names of its
# contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
# this software without specific prior written permission.
#
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
# "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
# LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
# A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
# OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
# SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
# LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
# DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
# THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
# (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
# OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
import os
import re
import sys
import traceback
# get type names
from types import *
from grammar import Grammar
from .operand_list import *
from .operand_types import *
from .util import *
debug=False
####################
# Template objects.
#
# Template objects are format strings that allow substitution from
# the attribute spaces of other objects (e.g. InstObjParams instances).
labelRE = re.compile(r'(?<!%)%\(([^\)]+)\)[sd]')
class Template(object):
def __init__(self, parser, t):
self.parser = parser
self.template = t
def subst(self, d):
myDict = None
# Protect non-Python-dict substitutions (e.g. if there's a printf
# in the templated C++ code)
template = protectNonSubstPercents(self.template)
# Build a dict ('myDict') to use for the template substitution.
# Start with the template namespace. Make a copy since we're
# going to modify it.
myDict = self.parser.templateMap.copy()
if isinstance(d, InstObjParams):
# If we're dealing with an InstObjParams object, we need
# to be a little more sophisticated. The instruction-wide
# parameters are already formed, but the parameters which
# are only function wide still need to be generated.
compositeCode = ''
myDict.update(d.__dict__)
# The "operands" and "snippets" attributes of the InstObjParams
# objects are for internal use and not substitution.
del myDict['operands']
del myDict['snippets']
snippetLabels = [l for l in labelRE.findall(template)
if l in d.snippets]
snippets = dict([(s, self.parser.mungeSnippet(d.snippets[s]))
for s in snippetLabels])
myDict.update(snippets)
compositeCode = ' '.join(list(map(str, snippets.values())))
# Add in template itself in case it references any
# operands explicitly (like Mem)
compositeCode += ' ' + template
operands = SubOperandList(self.parser, compositeCode, d.operands)
myDict['reg_idx_arr_decl'] = \
'RegId srcRegIdxArr[%d]; RegId destRegIdxArr[%d]' % \
(d.operands.numSrcRegs + d.srcRegIdxPadding,
d.operands.numDestRegs + d.destRegIdxPadding)
# The reinterpret casts are largely because an array with a known
# size cannot be passed as an argument which is an array with an
# unknown size in C++.
myDict['set_reg_idx_arr'] = '''
setRegIdxArrays(
reinterpret_cast<RegIdArrayPtr>(
&std::remove_pointer_t<decltype(this)>::srcRegIdxArr),
reinterpret_cast<RegIdArrayPtr>(
&std::remove_pointer_t<decltype(this)>::destRegIdxArr));
'''
pcstate_decl = f'{self.parser.namespace}::PCState ' \
'__parserAutoPCState;\n'
myDict['op_decl'] = operands.concatAttrStrings('op_decl')
if operands.readPC or operands.setPC:
myDict['op_decl'] += pcstate_decl
# In case there are predicated register reads and write, declare
# the variables for register indicies. It is being assumed that
# all the operands in the OperandList are also in the
# SubOperandList and in the same order. Otherwise, it is
# expected that predication would not be used for the operands.
if operands.predRead:
myDict['op_decl'] += 'uint8_t _sourceIndex = 0;\n'
if operands.predWrite:
myDict['op_decl'] += \
'[[maybe_unused]] uint8_t _destIndex = 0;\n'
is_src = lambda op: op.is_src
is_dest = lambda op: op.is_dest
myDict['op_src_decl'] = \
operands.concatSomeAttrStrings(is_src, 'op_src_decl')
myDict['op_dest_decl'] = \
operands.concatSomeAttrStrings(is_dest, 'op_dest_decl')
if operands.readPC:
myDict['op_src_decl'] += pcstate_decl
if operands.setPC:
myDict['op_dest_decl'] += pcstate_decl
myDict['op_rd'] = operands.concatAttrStrings('op_rd')
if operands.readPC:
myDict['op_rd'] = \
'set(__parserAutoPCState, xc->pcState());\n' + \
myDict['op_rd']
# Compose the op_wb string. If we're going to write back the
# PC state because we changed some of its elements, we'll need to
# do that as early as possible. That allows later uncoordinated
# modifications to the PC to layer appropriately.
reordered = list(operands.items)
reordered.reverse()
op_wb_str = ''
pcWbStr = 'xc->pcState(__parserAutoPCState);\n'
for op_desc in reordered:
if op_desc.isPCPart() and op_desc.is_dest:
op_wb_str = op_desc.op_wb + pcWbStr + op_wb_str
pcWbStr = ''
else:
op_wb_str = op_desc.op_wb + op_wb_str
myDict['op_wb'] = op_wb_str
elif isinstance(d, dict):
# if the argument is a dictionary, we just use it.
myDict.update(d)
elif hasattr(d, '__dict__'):
# if the argument is an object, we use its attribute map.
myDict.update(d.__dict__)
else:
raise TypeError("Template.subst() arg must be or have dictionary")
return template % myDict
# Convert to string.
def __str__(self):
return self.template
################
# Format object.
#
# A format object encapsulates an instruction format. It must provide
# a defineInst() method that generates the code for an instruction
# definition.
class Format(object):
def __init__(self, id, params, code):
self.id = id
self.params = params
label = 'def format ' + id
self.user_code = compile(fixPythonIndentation(code), label, 'exec')
param_list = ", ".join(params)
f = '''def defInst(_code, _context, %s):
my_locals = vars().copy()
exec(_code, _context, my_locals)
return my_locals\n''' % param_list
c = compile(f, label + ' wrapper', 'exec')
exec(c, globals())
self.func = defInst
def defineInst(self, parser, name, args, lineno):
parser.updateExportContext()
context = parser.exportContext.copy()
if len(name):
Name = name[0].upper()
if len(name) > 1:
Name += name[1:]
context.update({ 'name' : name, 'Name' : Name })
try:
vars = self.func(self.user_code, context, *args[0], **args[1])
except Exception as exc:
if debug:
raise
error(lineno, 'error defining "%s": %s.' % (name, exc))
for k in list(vars.keys()):
if k not in ('header_output', 'decoder_output',
'exec_output', 'decode_block'):
del vars[k]
return GenCode(parser, **vars)
# Special null format to catch an implicit-format instruction
# definition outside of any format block.
class NoFormat(object):
def __init__(self):
self.defaultInst = ''
def defineInst(self, parser, name, args, lineno):
error(lineno,
'instruction definition "%s" with no active format!' % name)
###############
# GenCode class
#
# The GenCode class encapsulates generated code destined for various
# output files. The header_output and decoder_output attributes are
# strings containing code destined for decoder.hh and decoder.cc
# respectively. The decode_block attribute contains code to be
# incorporated in the decode function itself (that will also end up in
# decoder.cc). The exec_output attribute is the string of code for the
# exec.cc file. The has_decode_default attribute is used in the decode block
# to allow explicit default clauses to override default default clauses.
class GenCode(object):
# Constructor.
def __init__(self, parser,
header_output = '', decoder_output = '', exec_output = '',
decode_block = '', has_decode_default = False):
self.parser = parser
self.header_output = header_output
self.decoder_output = decoder_output
self.exec_output = exec_output
self.decode_block = decode_block
self.has_decode_default = has_decode_default
# Write these code chunks out to the filesystem. They will be properly
# interwoven by the write_top_level_files().
def emit(self):
if self.header_output:
self.parser.get_file('header').write(self.header_output)
if self.decoder_output:
self.parser.get_file('decoder').write(self.decoder_output)
if self.exec_output:
self.parser.get_file('exec').write(self.exec_output)
if self.decode_block:
self.parser.get_file('decode_block').write(self.decode_block)
# Override '+' operator: generate a new GenCode object that
# concatenates all the individual strings in the operands.
def __add__(self, other):
return GenCode(self.parser,
self.header_output + other.header_output,
self.decoder_output + other.decoder_output,
self.exec_output + other.exec_output,
self.decode_block + other.decode_block,
self.has_decode_default or other.has_decode_default)
# Prepend a string (typically a comment) to all the strings.
def prepend_all(self, pre):
self.header_output = pre + self.header_output
self.decoder_output = pre + self.decoder_output
self.decode_block = pre + self.decode_block
self.exec_output = pre + self.exec_output
# Wrap the decode block in a pair of strings (e.g., 'case foo:'
# and 'break;'). Used to build the big nested switch statement.
def wrap_decode_block(self, pre, post = ''):
self.decode_block = pre + indent(self.decode_block) + post
#####################################################################
#
# Bitfield Operator Support
#
#####################################################################
bitOp1ArgRE = re.compile(r'<\s*(\w+)\s*:\s*>')
bitOpWordRE = re.compile(r'(?<![\w\.])([\w\.]+)<\s*(\w+)\s*:\s*(\w+)\s*>')
bitOpExprRE = re.compile(r'\)<\s*(\w+)\s*:\s*(\w+)\s*>')
def substBitOps(code):
# first convert single-bit selectors to two-index form
# i.e., <n> --> <n:n>
code = bitOp1ArgRE.sub(r'<\1:\1>', code)
# simple case: selector applied to ID (name)
# i.e., foo<a:b> --> bits(foo, a, b)
code = bitOpWordRE.sub(r'bits(\1, \2, \3)', code)
# if selector is applied to expression (ending in ')'),
# we need to search backward for matching '('
match = bitOpExprRE.search(code)
while match:
exprEnd = match.start()
here = exprEnd - 1
nestLevel = 1
while nestLevel > 0:
if code[here] == '(':
nestLevel -= 1
elif code[here] == ')':
nestLevel += 1
here -= 1
if here < 0:
sys.exit("Didn't find '('!")
exprStart = here+1
newExpr = r'bits(%s, %s, %s)' % (code[exprStart:exprEnd+1],
match.group(1), match.group(2))
code = code[:exprStart] + newExpr + code[match.end():]
match = bitOpExprRE.search(code)
return code
#####################################################################
#
# Code Parser
#
# The remaining code is the support for automatically extracting
# instruction characteristics from pseudocode.
#
#####################################################################
# Force the argument to be a list. Useful for flags, where a caller
# can specify a singleton flag or a list of flags. Also usful for
# converting tuples to lists so they can be modified.
def makeList(arg):
if isinstance(arg, list):
return arg
elif isinstance(arg, tuple):
return list(arg)
elif not arg:
return []
else:
return [ arg ]
def makeFlagConstructor(flag_list):
if len(flag_list) == 0:
return ''
# filter out repeated flags
flag_list.sort()
i = 1
while i < len(flag_list):
if flag_list[i] == flag_list[i-1]:
del flag_list[i]
else:
i += 1
pre = '\n\tflags['
post = '] = true;'
code = pre + (post + pre).join(flag_list) + post
return code
# Assume all instruction flags are of the form 'IsFoo'
instFlagRE = re.compile(r'Is.*')
# OpClass constants end in 'Op' except No_OpClass
opClassRE = re.compile(r'.*Op|No_OpClass')
class InstObjParams(object):
def __init__(self, parser, mnem, class_name, base_class = '',
snippets = {}, opt_args = []):
self.mnemonic = mnem
self.class_name = class_name
self.base_class = base_class
if not isinstance(snippets, dict):
snippets = {'code' : snippets}
compositeCode = ' '.join(list(map(str, snippets.values())))
self.snippets = snippets
self.operands = OperandList(parser, compositeCode)
self.srcRegIdxPadding = 0
self.destRegIdxPadding = 0
# The header of the constructor declares the variables to be used
# in the body of the constructor.
header = ''
self.constructor = header + \
self.operands.concatAttrStrings('constructor')
self.flags = self.operands.concatAttrLists('flags')
self.op_class = None
# Optional arguments are assumed to be either StaticInst flags
# or an OpClass value. To avoid having to import a complete
# list of these values to match against, we do it ad-hoc
# with regexps.
for oa in opt_args:
if instFlagRE.match(oa):
self.flags.append(oa)
elif opClassRE.match(oa):
self.op_class = oa
else:
error('InstObjParams: optional arg "%s" not recognized '
'as StaticInst::Flag or OpClass.' % oa)
# Make a basic guess on the operand class if not set.
# These are good enough for most cases.
if not self.op_class:
if 'IsStore' in self.flags:
# The order matters here: 'IsFloating' and 'IsInteger' are
# usually set in FP instructions because of the base
# register
if 'IsFloating' in self.flags:
self.op_class = 'FloatMemWriteOp'
else:
self.op_class = 'MemWriteOp'
elif 'IsLoad' in self.flags or 'IsPrefetch' in self.flags:
# The order matters here: 'IsFloating' and 'IsInteger' are
# usually set in FP instructions because of the base
# register
if 'IsFloating' in self.flags:
self.op_class = 'FloatMemReadOp'
else:
self.op_class = 'MemReadOp'
elif 'IsFloating' in self.flags:
self.op_class = 'FloatAddOp'
elif 'IsVector' in self.flags:
self.op_class = 'SimdAddOp'
else:
self.op_class = 'IntAluOp'
# add flag initialization to contructor here to include
# any flags added via opt_args
self.constructor += makeFlagConstructor(self.flags)
# if 'IsFloating' is set, add call to the FP enable check
# function (which should be provided by isa_desc via a declare)
# if 'IsVector' is set, add call to the Vector enable check
# function (which should be provided by isa_desc via a declare)
if 'IsFloating' in self.flags:
self.fp_enable_check = 'fault = checkFpEnableFault(xc);'
else:
self.fp_enable_check = ''
def padSrcRegIdx(self, padding):
self.srcRegIdxPadding = padding
def padDestRegIdx(self, padding):
self.destRegIdxPadding = padding
#######################
#
# ISA Parser
# parses ISA DSL and emits C++ headers and source
#
class ISAParser(Grammar):
def __init__(self, output_dir):
super().__init__()
self.output_dir = output_dir
self.filename = None # for output file watermarking/scaremongering
# variable to hold templates
self.templateMap = {}
# variable to hold operands
self.operandNameMap = {}
# Regular expressions for working with operands
self._operandsRE = None
self._operandsWithExtRE = None
# This dictionary maps format name strings to Format objects.
self.formatMap = {}
# Track open files and, if applicable, how many chunks it has been
# split into so far.
self.files = {}
self.splits = {}
# isa_name / namespace identifier from namespace declaration.
# before the namespace declaration, None.
self.isa_name = None
self.namespace = None
# The format stack.
self.formatStack = Stack(NoFormat())
# The default case stack.
self.defaultStack = Stack(None)
# Stack that tracks current file and line number. Each
# element is a tuple (filename, lineno) that records the
# *current* filename and the line number in the *previous*
# file where it was included.
self.fileNameStack = Stack()
symbols = ('makeList', 're')
self.exportContext = dict([(s, eval(s)) for s in symbols])
self.exportContext.update({
'overrideInOperand': overrideInOperand,
'IntRegOp': IntRegOperandDesc,
'FloatRegOp': FloatRegOperandDesc,
'CCRegOp': CCRegOperandDesc,
'VecElemOp': VecElemOperandDesc,
'VecRegOp': VecRegOperandDesc,
'VecPredRegOp': VecPredRegOperandDesc,
'ControlRegOp': ControlRegOperandDesc,
'MemOp': MemOperandDesc,
'PCStateOp': PCStateOperandDesc,
})
self.maxMiscDestRegs = 0
def operandsRE(self):
if not self._operandsRE:
self.buildOperandREs()
return self._operandsRE
def operandsWithExtRE(self):
if not self._operandsWithExtRE:
self.buildOperandREs()
return self._operandsWithExtRE
def __getitem__(self, i): # Allow object (self) to be
return getattr(self, i) # passed to %-substitutions
# Change the file suffix of a base filename:
# (e.g.) decoder.cc -> decoder-g.cc.inc for 'global' outputs
def suffixize(self, s, sec):
extn = re.compile('(\.[^\.]+)$') # isolate extension
if self.namespace:
return extn.sub(r'-ns\1.inc', s) # insert some text on either side
else:
return extn.sub(r'-g\1.inc', s)
# Get the file object for emitting code into the specified section
# (header, decoder, exec, decode_block).
def get_file(self, section):
if section == 'decode_block':
filename = 'decode-method.cc.inc'
else:
if section == 'header':
file = 'decoder.hh'
else:
file = '%s.cc' % section
filename = self.suffixize(file, section)
try:
return self.files[filename]
except KeyError: pass
f = self.open(filename)
self.files[filename] = f
# The splittable files are the ones with many independent
# per-instruction functions - the decoder's instruction constructors
# and the instruction execution (execute()) methods. These both have
# the suffix -ns.cc.inc, meaning they are within the namespace part
# of the ISA, contain object-emitting C++ source, and are included
# into other top-level files. These are the files that need special
# #define's to allow parts of them to be compiled separately. Rather
# than splitting the emissions into separate files, the monolithic
# output of the ISA parser is maintained, but the value (or lack
# thereof) of the __SPLIT definition during C preprocessing will
# select the different chunks. If no 'split' directives are used,
# the cpp emissions have no effect.
if re.search('-ns.cc.inc$', filename):
print('#if !defined(__SPLIT) || (__SPLIT == 1)', file=f)
self.splits[f] = 1
# ensure requisite #include's
elif filename == 'decoder-g.hh.inc':
print('#include "base/bitfield.hh"', file=f)
return f
# Weave together the parts of the different output sections by
# #include'ing them into some very short top-level .cc/.hh files.
# These small files make it much clearer how this tool works, since
# you directly see the chunks emitted as files that are #include'd.
def write_top_level_files(self):
# decoder header - everything depends on this
file = 'decoder.hh'
with self.open(file) as f:
f.write('#ifndef __ARCH_%(isa)s_GENERATED_DECODER_HH__\n'
'#define __ARCH_%(isa)s_GENERATED_DECODER_HH__\n\n' %
{'isa': self.isa_name.upper()})
fn = 'decoder-g.hh.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
fn = 'decoder-ns.hh.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
f.write('namespace gem5\n{\n')
f.write('namespace %s {\n#include "%s"\n} // namespace %s\n'
% (self.namespace, fn, self.namespace))
f.write('} // namespace gem5')
f.write('\n#endif // __ARCH_%s_GENERATED_DECODER_HH__\n' %
self.isa_name.upper())
# decoder method - cannot be split
file = 'decoder.cc'
with self.open(file) as f:
fn = 'base/compiler.hh'
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
fn = 'decoder-g.cc.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
fn = 'decoder.hh'
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
fn = 'decode-method.cc.inc'
# is guaranteed to have been written for parse to complete
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
extn = re.compile('(\.[^\.]+)$')
# instruction constructors
splits = self.splits[self.get_file('decoder')]
file_ = 'inst-constrs.cc'
for i in range(1, splits+1):
if splits > 1:
file = extn.sub(r'-%d\1' % i, file_)
else:
file = file_
with self.open(file) as f:
fn = 'decoder-g.cc.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
fn = 'decoder.hh'
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
fn = 'decoder-ns.cc.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
print('namespace gem5\n{\n', file=f)
print('namespace %s {' % self.namespace, file=f)
if splits > 1:
print('#define __SPLIT %u' % i, file=f)
print('#include "%s"' % fn, file=f)
print('} // namespace %s' % self.namespace, file=f)
print('} // namespace gem5', file=f)
# instruction execution
splits = self.splits[self.get_file('exec')]
for i in range(1, splits+1):
file = 'generic_cpu_exec.cc'
if splits > 1:
file = extn.sub(r'_%d\1' % i, file)
with self.open(file) as f:
fn = 'exec-g.cc.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
f.write('#include "%s"\n' % fn)
f.write('#include "cpu/exec_context.hh"\n')
f.write('#include "decoder.hh"\n')
fn = 'exec-ns.cc.inc'
assert(fn in self.files)
print('namespace gem5\n{\n', file=f)
print('namespace %s {' % self.namespace, file=f)
if splits > 1:
print('#define __SPLIT %u' % i, file=f)
print('#include "%s"' % fn, file=f)
print('} // namespace %s' % self.namespace, file=f)
print('} // namespace gem5', file=f)
scaremonger_template ='''// DO NOT EDIT
// This file was automatically generated from an ISA description:
// %(filename)s
''';
#####################################################################
#
# Lexer
#
# The PLY lexer module takes two things as input:
# - A list of token names (the string list 'tokens')
# - A regular expression describing a match for each token. The
# regexp for token FOO can be provided in two ways:
# - as a string variable named t_FOO
# - as the doc string for a function named t_FOO. In this case,
# the function is also executed, allowing an action to be
# associated with each token match.
#
#####################################################################
# Reserved words. These are listed separately as they are matched
# using the same regexp as generic IDs, but distinguished in the
# t_ID() function. The PLY documentation suggests this approach.
reserved = (
'BITFIELD', 'DECODE', 'DECODER', 'DEFAULT', 'DEF', 'EXEC', 'FORMAT',
'HEADER', 'LET', 'NAMESPACE', 'OPERAND_TYPES', 'OPERANDS',
'OUTPUT', 'SIGNED', 'SPLIT', 'TEMPLATE'
)
# List of tokens. The lex module requires this.
tokens = reserved + (
# identifier
'ID',
# integer literal
'INTLIT',
# string literal
'STRLIT',
# code literal
'CODELIT',
# ( ) [ ] { } < > , ; . : :: *
'LPAREN', 'RPAREN',
'LBRACKET', 'RBRACKET',
'LBRACE', 'RBRACE',
'LESS', 'GREATER', 'EQUALS',
'COMMA', 'SEMI', 'DOT', 'COLON', 'DBLCOLON',
'ASTERISK',
# C preprocessor directives
'CPPDIRECTIVE'
# The following are matched but never returned. commented out to
# suppress PLY warning
# newfile directive
# 'NEWFILE',
# endfile directive
# 'ENDFILE'
)
# Regular expressions for token matching
t_LPAREN = r'\('
t_RPAREN = r'\)'
t_LBRACKET = r'\['
t_RBRACKET = r'\]'
t_LBRACE = r'\{'
t_RBRACE = r'\}'
t_LESS = r'\<'
t_GREATER = r'\>'
t_EQUALS = r'='
t_COMMA = r','
t_SEMI = r';'
t_DOT = r'\.'
t_COLON = r':'
t_DBLCOLON = r'::'
t_ASTERISK = r'\*'
# Identifiers and reserved words
reserved_map = { }
for r in reserved:
reserved_map[r.lower()] = r
def t_ID(self, t):
r'[A-Za-z_]\w*'
t.type = self.reserved_map.get(t.value, 'ID')
return t
# Integer literal
def t_INTLIT(self, t):
r'-?(0x[\da-fA-F]+)|\d+'
try:
t.value = int(t.value,0)
except ValueError:
error(t.lexer.lineno, 'Integer value "%s" too large' % t.value)
t.value = 0
return t
# String literal. Note that these use only single quotes, and
# can span multiple lines.
def t_STRLIT(self, t):
r"(?m)'([^'])+'"
# strip off quotes
t.value = t.value[1:-1]
t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n')
return t
# "Code literal"... like a string literal, but delimiters are
# '{{' and '}}' so they get formatted nicely under emacs c-mode
def t_CODELIT(self, t):
r"(?m)\{\{([^\}]|}(?!\}))+\}\}"
# strip off {{ & }}
t.value = t.value[2:-2]
t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n')
return t
def t_CPPDIRECTIVE(self, t):
r'^\#[^\#].*\n'
t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n')
return t
def t_NEWFILE(self, t):
r'^\#\#newfile\s+"[^"]*"\n'
self.fileNameStack.push(t.lexer.lineno)
t.lexer.lineno = LineTracker(t.value[11:-2])
def t_ENDFILE(self, t):
r'^\#\#endfile\n'
t.lexer.lineno = self.fileNameStack.pop()
#
# The functions t_NEWLINE, t_ignore, and t_error are
# special for the lex module.
#
# Newlines
def t_NEWLINE(self, t):
r'\n+'
t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n')
# Comments
def t_comment(self, t):
r'//.*'
# Completely ignored characters
t_ignore = ' \t\x0c'
# Error handler
def t_error(self, t):
error(t.lexer.lineno, "illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0])
t.skip(1)
#####################################################################
#
# Parser
#
# Every function whose name starts with 'p_' defines a grammar
# rule. The rule is encoded in the function's doc string, while
# the function body provides the action taken when the rule is
# matched. The argument to each function is a list of the values
# of the rule's symbols: t[0] for the LHS, and t[1..n] for the
# symbols on the RHS. For tokens, the value is copied from the
# t.value attribute provided by the lexer. For non-terminals, the
# value is assigned by the producing rule; i.e., the job of the
# grammar rule function is to set the value for the non-terminal
# on the LHS (by assigning to t[0]).
#####################################################################
# The LHS of the first grammar rule is used as the start symbol
# (in this case, 'specification'). Note that this rule enforces
# that there will be exactly one namespace declaration, with 0 or
# more global defs/decls before and after it. The defs & decls
# before the namespace decl will be outside the namespace; those
# after will be inside. The decoder function is always inside the
# namespace.
def p_specification(self, t):
'specification : opt_defs_and_outputs top_level_decode_block'
for f in self.splits.keys():
f.write('\n#endif\n')
for f in self.files.values(): # close ALL the files;
f.close() # not doing so can cause compilation to fail
self.write_top_level_files()
t[0] = True
# 'opt_defs_and_outputs' is a possibly empty sequence of def and/or
# output statements. Its productions do the hard work of eventually
# instantiating a GenCode, which are generally emitted (written to disk)
# as soon as possible, except for the decode_block, which has to be
# accumulated into one large function of nested switch/case blocks.
def p_opt_defs_and_outputs_0(self, t):
'opt_defs_and_outputs : empty'
def p_opt_defs_and_outputs_1(self, t):
'opt_defs_and_outputs : defs_and_outputs'
def p_defs_and_outputs_0(self, t):
'defs_and_outputs : def_or_output'
def p_defs_and_outputs_1(self, t):
'defs_and_outputs : defs_and_outputs def_or_output'
# The list of possible definition/output statements.
# They are all processed as they are seen.
def p_def_or_output(self, t):
'''def_or_output : name_decl
| def_format
| def_bitfield
| def_bitfield_struct
| def_template
| def_operand_types
| def_operands
| output
| global_let
| split'''
# Utility function used by both invocations of splitting - explicit
# 'split' keyword and split() function inside "let {{ }};" blocks.
def split(self, sec, write=False):
assert(sec != 'header' and "header cannot be split")
f = self.get_file(sec)
self.splits[f] += 1
s = '\n#endif\n#if __SPLIT == %u\n' % self.splits[f]
if write:
f.write(s)
else:
return s
# split output file to reduce compilation time
def p_split(self, t):
'split : SPLIT output_type SEMI'
assert(self.isa_name and "'split' not allowed before namespace decl")
self.split(t[2], True)
def p_output_type(self, t):
'''output_type : DECODER
| HEADER
| EXEC'''
t[0] = t[1]
# ISA name declaration looks like "namespace <foo>;"
def p_name_decl(self, t):
'name_decl : NAMESPACE ID SEMI'
assert(self.isa_name == None and "Only 1 namespace decl permitted")
self.isa_name = t[2]
self.namespace = t[2] + 'Inst'
# Output blocks 'output <foo> {{...}}' (C++ code blocks) are copied
# directly to the appropriate output section.
# Massage output block by substituting in template definitions and
# bit operators. We handle '%'s embedded in the string that don't
# indicate template substitutions by doubling them first so that the
# format operation will reduce them back to single '%'s.
def process_output(self, s):
s = protectNonSubstPercents(s)
return substBitOps(s % self.templateMap)
def p_output(self, t):
'output : OUTPUT output_type CODELIT SEMI'
kwargs = { t[2]+'_output' : self.process_output(t[3]) }
GenCode(self, **kwargs).emit()
def make_split(self):
def _split(sec):
return self.split(sec)
return _split
# global let blocks 'let {{...}}' (Python code blocks) are
# executed directly when seen. Note that these execute in a
# special variable context 'exportContext' to prevent the code
# from polluting this script's namespace.
def p_global_let(self, t):
'global_let : LET CODELIT SEMI'
self.updateExportContext()
self.exportContext["header_output"] = ''
self.exportContext["decoder_output"] = ''
self.exportContext["exec_output"] = ''
self.exportContext["decode_block"] = ''
self.exportContext["split"] = self.make_split()
split_setup = '''
def wrap(func):
def split(sec):
globals()[sec + '_output'] += func(sec)
return split
split = wrap(split)
del wrap
'''
# This tricky setup (immediately above) allows us to just write
# (e.g.) "split('exec')" in the Python code and the split #ifdef's
# will automatically be added to the exec_output variable. The inner
# Python execution environment doesn't know about the split points,
# so we carefully inject and wrap a closure that can retrieve the
# next split's #define from the parser and add it to the current
# emission-in-progress.
try:
exec(split_setup+fixPythonIndentation(t[2]), self.exportContext)
except Exception as exc:
traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stdout)
if debug:
raise
error(t.lineno(1), 'In global let block: %s' % exc)
GenCode(self,
header_output=self.exportContext["header_output"],
decoder_output=self.exportContext["decoder_output"],
exec_output=self.exportContext["exec_output"],
decode_block=self.exportContext["decode_block"]).emit()
# Define the mapping from operand type extensions to C++ types and
# bit widths (stored in operandTypeMap).
def p_def_operand_types(self, t):
'def_operand_types : DEF OPERAND_TYPES CODELIT SEMI'
try:
self.operandTypeMap = eval('{' + t[3] + '}')
except Exception as exc:
if debug:
raise
error(t.lineno(1),
'In def operand_types: %s' % exc)
# Define the mapping from operand names to operand classes and
# other traits. Stored in operandNameMap.
def p_def_operands(self, t):
'def_operands : DEF OPERANDS CODELIT SEMI'
if not hasattr(self, 'operandTypeMap'):
error(t.lineno(1),
'error: operand types must be defined before operands')
try:
user_dict = eval('{' + t[3] + '}', self.exportContext)
except Exception as exc:
if debug:
raise
error(t.lineno(1), 'In def operands: %s' % exc)
self.buildOperandNameMap(user_dict, t.lexer.lineno)
# A bitfield definition looks like:
# 'def [signed] bitfield <ID> [<first>:<last>]'
# This generates a preprocessor macro in the output file.
def p_def_bitfield_0(self, t):
'def_bitfield : DEF opt_signed ' \
'BITFIELD ID LESS INTLIT COLON INTLIT GREATER SEMI'
expr = 'bits(machInst, %2d, %2d)' % (t[6], t[8])
if (t[2] == 'signed'):
expr = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (t[6] - t[8] + 1, expr)
hash_define = '#undef %s\n#define %s\t%s\n' % (t[4], t[4], expr)
GenCode(self, header_output=hash_define).emit()
# alternate form for single bit: 'def [signed] bitfield <ID> [<bit>]'
def p_def_bitfield_1(self, t):
'def_bitfield : DEF opt_signed BITFIELD ID LESS INTLIT GREATER SEMI'
expr = 'bits(machInst, %2d, %2d)' % (t[6], t[6])
if (t[2] == 'signed'):
expr = 'sext<%d>(%s)' % (1, expr)
hash_define = '#undef %s\n#define %s\t%s\n' % (t[4], t[4], expr)
GenCode(self, header_output=hash_define).emit()
# alternate form for structure member: 'def bitfield <ID> <ID>'
def p_def_bitfield_struct(self, t):
'def_bitfield_struct : DEF opt_signed BITFIELD ID id_with_dot SEMI'
if (t[2] != ''):
error(t.lineno(1),
'error: structure bitfields are always unsigned.')
expr = 'machInst.%s' % t[5]
hash_define = '#undef %s\n#define %s\t%s\n' % (t[4], t[4], expr)
GenCode(self, header_output=hash_define).emit()
def p_id_with_dot_0(self, t):
'id_with_dot : ID'
t[0] = t[1]
def p_id_with_dot_1(self, t):
'id_with_dot : ID DOT id_with_dot'
t[0] = t[1] + t[2] + t[3]
def p_opt_signed_0(self, t):
'opt_signed : SIGNED'
t[0] = t[1]
def p_opt_signed_1(self, t):
'opt_signed : empty'
t[0] = ''
def p_def_template(self, t):
'def_template : DEF TEMPLATE ID CODELIT SEMI'
if t[3] in self.templateMap:
print("warning: template %s already defined" % t[3])
self.templateMap[t[3]] = Template(self, t[4])
# An instruction format definition looks like
# "def format <fmt>(<params>) {{...}};"
def p_def_format(self, t):
'def_format : DEF FORMAT ID LPAREN param_list RPAREN CODELIT SEMI'
(id, params, code) = (t[3], t[5], t[7])
self.defFormat(id, params, code, t.lexer.lineno)
# The formal parameter list for an instruction format is a
# possibly empty list of comma-separated parameters. Positional
# (standard, non-keyword) parameters must come first, followed by
# keyword parameters, followed by a '*foo' parameter that gets
# excess positional arguments (as in Python). Each of these three
# parameter categories is optional.
#
# Note that we do not support the '**foo' parameter for collecting
# otherwise undefined keyword args. Otherwise the parameter list
# is (I believe) identical to what is supported in Python.
#
# The param list generates a tuple, where the first element is a
# list of the positional params and the second element is a dict
# containing the keyword params.
def p_param_list_0(self, t):
'param_list : positional_param_list COMMA nonpositional_param_list'
t[0] = t[1] + t[3]
def p_param_list_1(self, t):
'''param_list : positional_param_list
| nonpositional_param_list'''
t[0] = t[1]
def p_positional_param_list_0(self, t):
'positional_param_list : empty'
t[0] = []
def p_positional_param_list_1(self, t):
'positional_param_list : ID'
t[0] = [t[1]]
def p_positional_param_list_2(self, t):
'positional_param_list : positional_param_list COMMA ID'
t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]]
def p_nonpositional_param_list_0(self, t):
'nonpositional_param_list : keyword_param_list COMMA excess_args_param'
t[0] = t[1] + t[3]
def p_nonpositional_param_list_1(self, t):
'''nonpositional_param_list : keyword_param_list
| excess_args_param'''
t[0] = t[1]
def p_keyword_param_list_0(self, t):
'keyword_param_list : keyword_param'
t[0] = [t[1]]
def p_keyword_param_list_1(self, t):
'keyword_param_list : keyword_param_list COMMA keyword_param'
t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]]
def p_keyword_param(self, t):
'keyword_param : ID EQUALS expr'
t[0] = t[1] + ' = ' + t[3].__repr__()
def p_excess_args_param(self, t):
'excess_args_param : ASTERISK ID'
# Just concatenate them: '*ID'. Wrap in list to be consistent
# with positional_param_list and keyword_param_list.
t[0] = [t[1] + t[2]]
# End of format definition-related rules.
##############
#
# A decode block looks like:
# decode <field1> [, <field2>]* [default <inst>] { ... }
#
def p_top_level_decode_block(self, t):
'top_level_decode_block : decode_block'
codeObj = t[1]
codeObj.wrap_decode_block('''
using namespace gem5;
StaticInstPtr
%(isa_name)s::Decoder::decodeInst(%(isa_name)s::ExtMachInst machInst)
{
using namespace %(namespace)s;
''' % self, '}')
codeObj.emit()
def p_decode_block(self, t):
'decode_block : DECODE ID opt_default LBRACE decode_stmt_list RBRACE'
default_defaults = self.defaultStack.pop()
codeObj = t[5]
# use the "default defaults" only if there was no explicit
# default statement in decode_stmt_list
if not codeObj.has_decode_default:
codeObj += default_defaults
codeObj.wrap_decode_block('switch (%s) {\n' % t[2], '}\n')
t[0] = codeObj
# The opt_default statement serves only to push the "default
# defaults" onto defaultStack. This value will be used by nested
# decode blocks, and used and popped off when the current
# decode_block is processed (in p_decode_block() above).
def p_opt_default_0(self, t):
'opt_default : empty'
# no default specified: reuse the one currently at the top of
# the stack
self.defaultStack.push(self.defaultStack.top())
# no meaningful value returned
t[0] = None
def p_opt_default_1(self, t):
'opt_default : DEFAULT inst'
# push the new default
codeObj = t[2]
codeObj.wrap_decode_block('\ndefault:\n', 'break;\n')
self.defaultStack.push(codeObj)
# no meaningful value returned
t[0] = None
def p_decode_stmt_list_0(self, t):
'decode_stmt_list : decode_stmt'
t[0] = t[1]
def p_decode_stmt_list_1(self, t):
'decode_stmt_list : decode_stmt decode_stmt_list'
if (t[1].has_decode_default and t[2].has_decode_default):
error(t.lineno(1), 'Two default cases in decode block')
t[0] = t[1] + t[2]
#
# Decode statement rules
#
# There are four types of statements allowed in a decode block:
# 1. Format blocks 'format <foo> { ... }'
# 2. Nested decode blocks
# 3. Instruction definitions.
# 4. C preprocessor directives.
# Preprocessor directives found in a decode statement list are
# passed through to the output, replicated to all of the output
# code streams. This works well for ifdefs, so we can ifdef out
# both the declarations and the decode cases generated by an
# instruction definition. Handling them as part of the grammar
# makes it easy to keep them in the right place with respect to
# the code generated by the other statements.
def p_decode_stmt_cpp(self, t):
'decode_stmt : CPPDIRECTIVE'
t[0] = GenCode(self, t[1], t[1], t[1], t[1])
# A format block 'format <foo> { ... }' sets the default
# instruction format used to handle instruction definitions inside
# the block. This format can be overridden by using an explicit
# format on the instruction definition or with a nested format
# block.
def p_decode_stmt_format(self, t):
'decode_stmt : FORMAT push_format_id LBRACE decode_stmt_list RBRACE'
# The format will be pushed on the stack when 'push_format_id'
# is processed (see below). Once the parser has recognized
# the full production (though the right brace), we're done
# with the format, so now we can pop it.
self.formatStack.pop()
t[0] = t[4]
# This rule exists so we can set the current format (& push the
# stack) when we recognize the format name part of the format
# block.
def p_push_format_id(self, t):
'push_format_id : ID'
try:
self.formatStack.push(self.formatMap[t[1]])
t[0] = ('', '// format %s' % t[1])
except KeyError:
error(t.lineno(1), 'instruction format "%s" not defined.' % t[1])
# Nested decode block: if the value of the current field matches
# the specified constant(s), do a nested decode on some other field.
def p_decode_stmt_decode(self, t):
'decode_stmt : case_list COLON decode_block'
case_list = t[1]
codeObj = t[3]
# just wrap the decoding code from the block as a case in the
# outer switch statement.
codeObj.wrap_decode_block('\n%s\n' % ''.join(case_list),
'GEM5_UNREACHABLE;\n')
codeObj.has_decode_default = (case_list == ['default:'])
t[0] = codeObj
# Instruction definition (finally!).
def p_decode_stmt_inst(self, t):
'decode_stmt : case_list COLON inst SEMI'
case_list = t[1]
codeObj = t[3]
codeObj.wrap_decode_block('\n%s' % ''.join(case_list), 'break;\n')
codeObj.has_decode_default = (case_list == ['default:'])
t[0] = codeObj
# The constant list for a decode case label must be non-empty, and must
# either be the keyword 'default', or made up of one or more
# comma-separated integer literals or strings which evaluate to
# constants when compiled as C++.
def p_case_list_0(self, t):
'case_list : DEFAULT'
t[0] = ['default:']
def prep_int_lit_case_label(self, lit):
if lit >= 2**32:
return 'case %#xULL: ' % lit
else:
return 'case %#x: ' % lit
def prep_str_lit_case_label(self, lit):
return 'case %s: ' % lit
def p_case_list_1(self, t):
'case_list : INTLIT'
t[0] = [self.prep_int_lit_case_label(t[1])]
def p_case_list_2(self, t):
'case_list : STRLIT'
t[0] = [self.prep_str_lit_case_label(t[1])]
def p_case_list_3(self, t):
'case_list : case_list COMMA INTLIT'
t[0] = t[1]
t[0].append(self.prep_int_lit_case_label(t[3]))
def p_case_list_4(self, t):
'case_list : case_list COMMA STRLIT'
t[0] = t[1]
t[0].append(self.prep_str_lit_case_label(t[3]))
# Define an instruction using the current instruction format
# (specified by an enclosing format block).
# "<mnemonic>(<args>)"
def p_inst_0(self, t):
'inst : ID LPAREN arg_list RPAREN'
# Pass the ID and arg list to the current format class to deal with.
currentFormat = self.formatStack.top()
codeObj = currentFormat.defineInst(self, t[1], t[3], t.lexer.lineno)
args = ','.join(list(map(str, t[3])))
args = re.sub('(?m)^', '//', args)
args = re.sub('^//', '', args)
comment = '\n// %s::%s(%s)\n' % (currentFormat.id, t[1], args)
codeObj.prepend_all(comment)
t[0] = codeObj
# Define an instruction using an explicitly specified format:
# "<fmt>::<mnemonic>(<args>)"
def p_inst_1(self, t):
'inst : ID DBLCOLON ID LPAREN arg_list RPAREN'
try:
format = self.formatMap[t[1]]
except KeyError:
error(t.lineno(1), 'instruction format "%s" not defined.' % t[1])
codeObj = format.defineInst(self, t[3], t[5], t.lexer.lineno)
comment = '\n// %s::%s(%s)\n' % (t[1], t[3], t[5])
codeObj.prepend_all(comment)
t[0] = codeObj
# The arg list generates a tuple, where the first element is a
# list of the positional args and the second element is a dict
# containing the keyword args.
def p_arg_list_0(self, t):
'arg_list : positional_arg_list COMMA keyword_arg_list'
t[0] = ( t[1], t[3] )
def p_arg_list_1(self, t):
'arg_list : positional_arg_list'
t[0] = ( t[1], {} )
def p_arg_list_2(self, t):
'arg_list : keyword_arg_list'
t[0] = ( [], t[1] )
def p_positional_arg_list_0(self, t):
'positional_arg_list : empty'
t[0] = []
def p_positional_arg_list_1(self, t):
'positional_arg_list : expr'
t[0] = [t[1]]
def p_positional_arg_list_2(self, t):
'positional_arg_list : positional_arg_list COMMA expr'
t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]]
def p_keyword_arg_list_0(self, t):
'keyword_arg_list : keyword_arg'
t[0] = t[1]
def p_keyword_arg_list_1(self, t):
'keyword_arg_list : keyword_arg_list COMMA keyword_arg'
t[0] = t[1]
t[0].update(t[3])
def p_keyword_arg(self, t):
'keyword_arg : ID EQUALS expr'
t[0] = { t[1] : t[3] }
#
# Basic expressions. These constitute the argument values of
# "function calls" (i.e. instruction definitions in the decode
# block) and default values for formal parameters of format
# functions.
#
# Right now, these are either strings, integers, or (recursively)
# lists of exprs (using Python square-bracket list syntax). Note
# that bare identifiers are trated as string constants here (since
# there isn't really a variable namespace to refer to).
#
def p_expr_0(self, t):
'''expr : ID
| INTLIT
| STRLIT
| CODELIT'''
t[0] = t[1]
def p_expr_1(self, t):
'''expr : LBRACKET list_expr RBRACKET'''
t[0] = t[2]
def p_list_expr_0(self, t):
'list_expr : expr'
t[0] = [t[1]]
def p_list_expr_1(self, t):
'list_expr : list_expr COMMA expr'
t[0] = t[1] + [t[3]]
def p_list_expr_2(self, t):
'list_expr : empty'
t[0] = []
#
# Empty production... use in other rules for readability.
#
def p_empty(self, t):
'empty :'
pass
# Parse error handler. Note that the argument here is the
# offending *token*, not a grammar symbol (hence the need to use
# t.value)
def p_error(self, t):
if t:
error(t.lexer.lineno, "syntax error at '%s'" % t.value)
else:
error("unknown syntax error")
# END OF GRAMMAR RULES
def updateExportContext(self):
# Create a wrapper class that allows us to grab the current parser.
class InstObjParamsWrapper(InstObjParams):
def __init__(iop, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
self.exportContext['InstObjParams'] = InstObjParamsWrapper
self.exportContext.update(self.templateMap)
def defFormat(self, id, params, code, lineno):
'''Define a new format'''
# make sure we haven't already defined this one
if id in self.formatMap:
error(lineno, 'format %s redefined.' % id)
# create new object and store in global map
self.formatMap[id] = Format(id, params, code)
def buildOperandNameMap(self, user_dict, lineno):
operand_name = {}
for op_name, op_desc in user_dict.items():
assert(isinstance(op_desc, OperandDesc))
base_cls = op_desc.attrs['base_cls']
op_desc.setName(op_name)
# New class name will be e.g. "IntRegOperand_Ra"
cls_name = base_cls.__name__ + '_' + op_name
# The following statement creates a new class called
# <cls_name> as a subclass of <base_cls> with the attributes
# in op_desc.attrs, just as if we evaluated a class declaration.
operand_name[op_name] = type(cls_name, (base_cls,), op_desc.attrs)
self.operandNameMap.update(operand_name)
def buildOperandREs(self):
# Define operand variables.
operands = list(self.operandNameMap.keys())
# Add the elems defined in the vector operands and
# build a map elem -> vector (used in OperandList)
elem_to_vec = {}
for op_name, op in self.operandNameMap.items():
if hasattr(op, 'elems'):
for elem in op.elems.keys():
operands.append(elem)
elem_to_vec[elem] = op_name
self.elemToVector = elem_to_vec
extensions = self.operandTypeMap.keys()
operandsREString = r'''
(?<!\w|:) # neg. lookbehind assertion: prevent partial matches
((%s)(?:_(%s))?) # match: operand with optional '_' then suffix
(?!\w) # neg. lookahead assertion: prevent partial matches
''' % ('|'.join(operands), '|'.join(extensions))
self._operandsRE = re.compile(operandsREString,
re.MULTILINE | re.VERBOSE)
# Same as operandsREString, but extension is mandatory, and only two
# groups are returned (base and ext, not full name as above).
# Used for subtituting '_' for '.' to make C++ identifiers.
operandsWithExtREString = r'(?<!\w)(%s)_(%s)(?!\w)' \
% ('|'.join(operands), '|'.join(extensions))
self._operandsWithExtRE = \
re.compile(operandsWithExtREString, re.MULTILINE)
def substMungedOpNames(self, code):
'''Munge operand names in code string to make legal C++
variable names. This means getting rid of the type extension
if any. Will match base_name attribute of Operand object.)'''
return self.operandsWithExtRE().sub(r'\1', code)
def mungeSnippet(self, s):
'''Fix up code snippets for final substitution in templates.'''
if isinstance(s, str):
return self.substMungedOpNames(substBitOps(s))
else:
return s
def open(self, name, bare=False):
'''Open the output file for writing and include scary warning.'''
filename = os.path.join(self.output_dir, name)
f = open(filename, 'w')
if f:
if not bare:
f.write(ISAParser.scaremonger_template % self)
return f
def update(self, file, contents):
'''Update the output file only. Scons should handle the case when
the new contents are unchanged using its built-in hash feature.'''
f = self.open(file)
f.write(contents)
f.close()
# This regular expression matches '##include' directives
includeRE = re.compile(r'^\s*##include\s+"(?P<filename>[^"]*)".*$',
re.MULTILINE)
def replace_include(self, matchobj, dirname):
"""Function to replace a matched '##include' directive with the
contents of the specified file (with nested ##includes
replaced recursively). 'matchobj' is an re match object
(from a match of includeRE) and 'dirname' is the directory
relative to which the file path should be resolved."""
fname = matchobj.group('filename')
full_fname = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirname, fname))
contents = '##newfile "%s"\n%s\n##endfile\n' % \
(full_fname, self.read_and_flatten(full_fname))
return contents
def read_and_flatten(self, filename):
"""Read a file and recursively flatten nested '##include' files."""
current_dir = os.path.dirname(filename)
try:
contents = open(filename).read()
except IOError:
error('Error including file "%s"' % filename)
self.fileNameStack.push(LineTracker(filename))
# Find any includes and include them
def replace(matchobj):
return self.replace_include(matchobj, current_dir)
contents = self.includeRE.sub(replace, contents)
self.fileNameStack.pop()
return contents
AlreadyGenerated = {}
def _parse_isa_desc(self, isa_desc_file):
'''Read in and parse the ISA description.'''
# The build system can end up running the ISA parser twice: once to
# finalize the build dependencies, and then to actually generate
# the files it expects (in src/arch/$ARCH/generated). This code
# doesn't do anything different either time, however; the SCons
# invocations just expect different things. Since this code runs
# within SCons, we can just remember that we've already run and
# not perform a completely unnecessary run, since the ISA parser's
# effect is idempotent.
if isa_desc_file in ISAParser.AlreadyGenerated:
return
# grab the last three path components of isa_desc_file
self.filename = '/'.join(isa_desc_file.split('/')[-3:])
# Read file and (recursively) all included files into a string.
# PLY requires that the input be in a single string so we have to
# do this up front.
isa_desc = self.read_and_flatten(isa_desc_file)
# Initialize lineno tracker
self.lex.lineno = LineTracker(isa_desc_file)
# Parse.
self.parse_string(isa_desc)
ISAParser.AlreadyGenerated[isa_desc_file] = None
def parse_isa_desc(self, *args, **kwargs):
try:
self._parse_isa_desc(*args, **kwargs)
except ISAParserError as e:
print(backtrace(self.fileNameStack))
print("At %s:" % e.lineno)
print(e)
sys.exit(1)
# Called as script: get args from command line.
# Args are: <isa desc file> <output dir>
if __name__ == '__main__':
ISAParser(sys.argv[2]).parse_isa_desc(sys.argv[1])