Version 21.0.1.0
Version 21.0.1 is a minor gem5 release consisting of bug fixes. The 21.0.1 release:
- Fixes the GCN-GPU Dockerfile to pull from the v21-0 bucket.
- Fixes the tests to download from the v21-0 bucket instead of the develop bucket.
- Fixes the Temperature class:
- Eliminates a duplicated name warning in ClockTick.
- Fixes the Ubuntu 18.04 Dockerfile to use Python3 instead of Python2.
- Makes verify.py compatible with Python3.
- Fixes GCN3_X86 builds for aarch64 hosts.
- Fixes building with
SLICC_HTML=True
. - Fixes the cpt_upgrader.py string formatter.
- Fixes typo in cpy_upgrader.py where module
errno
was incorrectly put as ennro
. - Sets the
--restore-simpoint-checkpoint
flag default to “False” instead of the ambiguous “None”. - Fixes a nonsensical check in MOESI_CMP_token-L1cache which caused compilation bugs in Clang-11.
- Fixes the
scx_get_parameter_list
for ARM fast models. - Fixes bloated object binaries, known to cause issues during linking.
- Due to LTO causing unacceptably long link times for some users, and stripping debug symbols in some setups, it is no longer enabled by default. It may be enabled with the
--with-lto
flag. The --no-lto
flag has been removed.
Version 21.0.0.0
Version 21.0 marks one full year of gem5 releases, and on this anniversary, I think we have some of the biggest new features yet! This has been a very productive release with 100 issues, over 813 commits, and 49 unique contributors.
21.0 New features
AMBA CHI protocol implemented in SLICC: Contributed by Tiago Mück
This new protocol provides a single cache controller that can be reused at multiple levels of the cache hierarchy and configured to model multiple instances of MESI and MOESI cache coherency protocols. This implementation is based of Arm’s AMBA 5 CHI specification and provides a scalable framework for the design space exploration of large SoC designs.
See the gem5 documentation for more details. There is also a gem5 blog post on this new protocol as well.
Full support for AMD's GCN3 GPU model
In previous releases, this model was only partially supported. As of gem5 21.0, this model has been fully integrated and is tested nightly. This model currently only works in syscall emulation mode and requires using the gcn docker container to get the correct version of the ROCm stack. More information can be found in this blog post.
With this full support, we are also providing many applications as well. See gem5-resources for more information.
RISC-V Full system Linux boot support: Contributed by Peter Yuen
The RISC-V model in gem5 can now boot unmodified Linux! Additionally, we have implemented DTB generation and support the Berkeley Boot Loader as the stage 1 boot loader. We have also released a set of resources for you to get started: https://gem5.googlesource.com/public/gem5-resources/+/refs/heads/develop/src/riscv-fs/
New/Changed APIs
There are multiple places where the developers have reduced boilerplate.
- [API CHANGE]: No more
create()
functions! Previously, every SimObject
required a <SimObjectParams>::create()
function to be manually defined. Forgetting to do this resulted in confusing errors. Now, this function is created for you automatically. You can still override it if you need to handle any special cases. - [API CHANGE]:
params()
: Rather than defining a typedef and the params()
function for every SimObject
, you can now use the PARAMS
macro.
See http://doxygen.gem5.org/release/current/classSimObject.html#details for more details on these two API changes.
- [API CHANGE]: All stats are now using new style groups instead of the older manual stat interface.
- The previous API (creating stats that are not part of a
Group
) is still supported, but it is now deprecated. - If a stat is not created with the new
Group
API, it may not be automatically dumped using new stat APIs (e.g., the Python API). - Next release, there will be a warning for all old-style stats.
Platforms no longer support
- [USER-FACING CHANGE]: Python 2.7 is no longer supported. You must use Python 3.6+.
- CLANG minimum version is now 3.9
- Bump minimum C++ to C++14
Other improvements and new features
- Extra options to build m5ops
- m5term improvements
- There is a new python-based library for handling statistics. This library works, but hasn't been thoroughly tested yet. Stay tuned for more on this next release.
- Many improvements and additions to unit tests
- Cleaning up the
StaticInst
type - Workload API changes
- Many updates and changes to the m5 guest utility
- Support for running arm64 Linux kernel v5.8
- Arm SCMI implemented
Version 20.1.0.5
[HOTFIX] This hotfix release fixes three known bugs:
src/python/m5/util/convert.py
incorrectly stated kibibytes as ‘kiB’ instead of ‘KiB’. This has been fixed.- Atomic accesses were not checking the access permission bits in the page table descriptors. They were incorrectly using the nature of the request itself. This is now fixed.
num_l2chaches_per_cluster
and num_cpus_per_cluster
were cast to floats in configs/ruby/MESI_Three_Level_HTM.py
, which caused errors. This has been fixed so they are correctly cast to integers.
Version 20.1.0.4
[HOTFIX] gem5 was failing to build with SCons 4.0.1 and 4.1.0. This hotfix makes the necessary changes to site_scons/site_tools/default.py
for gem5 to compile successfully on these versions of SCons.
Version 20.1.0.3
[HOTFIX] A patch was apply to fix an error where booting Linux stalled when using the ARM ISA. This fix adds the parameter have_vhe
to enable FEAT_VHE on demand, and is disabled by default to resolve this issue.
Version 20.1.0.2
[HOTFIX] This hotfix release fixes known two bugs:
- A “ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base...” error was being thrown in certain circumstances due to a non-integer being passed to “MemorySize” via a division operation. This has been rectified.
- An assertion in Stats could be triggered due to a name collision between two ThreadStateStats objects, due to both erroneously sharing the same ThreadID. This has been fixed.
Version 20.1.0.1
[HOTFIX] A patch was applied to fix the Garnet network interface stats. Previously, the flit source delay was computed using both tick and cycles. This bug affected the overall behavior of the Garnet Network Model.
Version 20.1.0.0
Thank you to everyone that made this release possible! This has been a very productive release with 150 issues, over 650 commits (a 25% increase from the 20.0 release), and 58 unique contributors (a 100% increase!).
Process changes
We are no longer using the “master” branch. Instead, we will have two branches:
- “stable”: This will point to the latest stable release (gem5-20.1 as of today)
- “develop”: This is the latest development code that will be merged in to the “stable” branch at each release.
We suggest all users use the stable (default) branch. However, to contribute your fixes and new changes to gem5, it should be contributed to the develop branch. See CONTRIBUTING.md for more details.
gem5 has also implemented a project code of conduct. See the CODE-OF-CONDUCT.md file for details. In the code of conduct “we pledge to act and interact in ways that contribute to an open, welcoming, diverse, inclusive, and healthy community.”
New features in 20.1
New DRAM interface: Contributed by Wendy Elsasser
You can find details about this on the gem5 blog or Wendy's talks on YouTube: Talk on new interface and NVM and the talk on LPDDR5
- [PYTHON API CHANGE]: The DRAM models are now DRAM interfaces which is a child of the memory controller. Example change shown in the blog post.
- The DRAM is split into a memory controller and a DRAM interface
SimpleMemory
is no longer a drop-in replacement for a DRAM-based memory controller.
- LPDDR5 model added
- NVM model added
- New memory controller model that can use both NVM and DRAM
Improved on-chip interconnect model, HeteroGarnet: Contributed by Srikant Bharadwaj
You can find details about this on the gem5 blog and Srikant's talk on YouTube.
- [USER-FACING CHANGE]: The network type options are now “simple” and “garnet” instead of “garnet2.0”. (If “garnet2.0” is used, you will get a warning until gem5-20.2)
- Added models for clock domain crossings and serialization/deserialization (SERDES)
Transactional memory support: Contributed by Timothy Hayes
You can find details on the Jira issue
- gem5 now supports Arm TME (transactional memory extensions)
- Transactional memory is only implemented in the
MESI_Three_Level_HTM
Ruby protocol, and it is only implemented in Ruby. - This implements a checkpointing mechanism for the architectural state and buffering of speculative memory updates.
- IBM POWER and x86 HTM extensions have not been implemented.
Other new features
- External simulator integrations
- Added support for DRAMSim3
- Added back support for DRAMSim2
- Armv8-A Self Hosted Debug extension added
- KVM support for Armv8-A hosts without GICv2 hardware
- Implemented Secure EL2 for Armv8-A
Removed features
- Dropped support for mercurial version control
New supported platforms
- GCC up to 10.2 is now supported. Minimum GCC is now 5.0.
- Clang up to version 9. Minimum Clang is now 3.9.
Platforms no longer support
- [USER-FACING CHANGE]: Python 2 is officially deprecated. We will drop support for Python 2 in the next release. In this release you will get a warning if you're using Python 2.
- [USER-FACING CHANGE]: We have dropped support for GCC 4.X
- [USER-FACING CHANGE]: We have dropped support for Scons 2.x (Note: this is the default in Ubuntu 16.04. Use pip to install a newer scons.)
See http://www.gem5.org/documentation/general_docs/building for gem5's current dependencies.
Other changes
Deprecating “master” and “slave”
- [API CHANGE]: The names “master” and “slave” have been deprecated
- Special thanks to Lakin Smith, Shivani Parekh, Eden Avivi, and Emily Brickey.
- Below is a guide to most of the name changes.
- The goal was to replace problematic language with more descriptive and precise terms.
- There may be some bugs introduced with this change as there were many places in the Python configurations which relied on “duck typing”.
- This change is mostly backwards compatible and warning will be issued until at least gem5-20.2.
MasterPort -> RequestorPort
SlavePort -> ResponsePort
xbar.slave -> xbar.cpu_side
xbar.master -> xbar.mem_side
MasterId -> RequestorId
Testing improvements
- We now have Jenkins server (http://jenkins.gem5.org/) running nightly and other large tests. Special thanks to Mike Upton for setting this up!
- Nightly tests run the “long” regression tests (many tests added).
- Compiler tests run gem5 build for many targets and all compilers once a week.
- Updated CI tester (kokoro) to use a more up-to-date environment.
- Improved the testing infrastructure.
- Almost all testing resources now available in gem5-resources repository.
- Generally cleaned up the
tests/
directory in mainline gem5. - Many general testlib improvements.
More changes
- [PYTHON API CHANGE]: m5.stats.dump() root argument renamed to roots to reflect the fact that it now takes a list of SimObjects
- [USER-FACING CHANGE]: Checkpoint compatibility may be broken by the following changes
- [API CHANGE] Changed
setCPU
to setThreadContext
in Interrupts - Added a
Compressor
namespace. - [API CHANGE] The
Callback
class was removed and replaced with C++ lambdas. - Many objects' stats have been updated to the “new” stats style.
- Many more objects have had their APIs formalized. See http://www.gem5.org/documentation/general_docs/gem5-apis
Version 20.0.0.3
[HOTFIX] When using the ARM ISA, gem5 could crash when a guest tried to call m5ops. This was due to m5ops_base
being incorrectly declared in src/arch/arm/ArmSystem.py
. A fix was applied to remove this declaration.
Version 20.0.0.2
[HOTFIX] A patch was applied to fix the RubyPrefetcher with MESI_Three_Level. Prior to this fix a segfault occurred.
Version 20.0.0.1
[HOTFIX] A fix was applied to stop incorrect clock frequences being reported due to rounding errors.
Version 20.0.0.0
Welcome to our first “official” gem5 release! gem5 v19.0.0.0 was a “test” release, but this one has release notes, so it must be official!
Thank you to everyone that made this release possible! This has been a very productive release with over 70 issues closed, over 500 commits, and 31 unique contributors. Below are some of the highlights, though I‘m sure I’ve missed some important changes.
New features
- gem5-resources repository
- This new repository will store all of the sources (e.g., code) used to create testing and research resources. This includes disk images, testing binaries, kernel binaries, etc.
- Binaries created with the sources are hosted on dist.gem5.org.
- Details on the new page for resources: http://www.gem5.org/documentation/general_docs/gem5_resources.
- Memory SimObjects can now be initialized using an image file using the image_file parameter.
- [USER-FACING CHANGE] The m5 utility has been revamped with a new build system based on scons, tests, and updated and more consistent feature support.
- To build, now use
scons build/<arch>/out/m5
, not make
. - Documentation coming soon.
- Robust support for marshalling data from a function call inside the simulation to a function within gem5 using a predefined set of rules.
- Developers can specify an ABI for guest<->simulator calls and then “just call functions”.
- Unifies pseudo-inst, syscall, and other support.
- Code within gem5 has been updated. However, users which added new pseudo-ops may have to update their code.
- [PYTHON API CHANGE] Workload configuration pulled out into its own object, simplifying the System object and making workload configuration more modular and flexible.
- Sv39 paging has been added to the RISC-V ISA, bringing gem5 close to running Linux on RISC-V.
- (Some) Baremetal OSes are now supported.
- Improvements to DRAM model:
- Added support for verifying available command bandwidth.
- Added support for multi-cycle commands.
- Added new timing parameters.
- Added ability to interleave bursts.
- Added LPDDR5 configurations.
- [Developer change] We are beginning to document gem5 APIs.
- Currently, only SimObjects and the APIs they depend on have been documented.
- We are using doxygen to mark “stable APIs” and will use manual code review to make sure the APIs stay stable.
- More information will be coming during gem5-20.1 development.
Removed features
- Support for the ALPHA ISA has been dropped.
- All ALPHA ISA code has been removed
- Old “rcS” scripts for ALPHA have been removed
New supported platforms
- Compiling and running gem5 with Python 3 is now fully supported.
- Lots of code changes required for this.
- There may still be some python code that‘s not up to date. Please open a Jira ticket if you find any code that doesn’t work with python3.
- gem5 now supports Ubuntu 20.04.
- Compiling gem5 with GCC 8 and 9 is now supported.
- Compiling with clang up to version 9 is now supported.
Testing improvements
- Scons-based tests have been migrated to the testlib framework.
- Tests can now be run with
tests/main.py
, except for the unittests. - Please consult TESTING.md for more information on how these may be run.
- We are continuing to work on CI tests. Most of the plumbing is there for Google Cloud Build integration. See the Jira issue for details.
Other API changes
- [API CHANGE] Ruby's prefetcher renamed to RubyPrefetcher.
- Any SLICC protocols with prefetchers need to be updated.
- Some config scripts for Ruby protocols with prefetchers may need to be updated.
- [API CHANGE] SE mode improvements.
- Better support for the mmap and related syscalls.
- A new virtual memory area API for tracking SE mode allocations.
- When implementing syscalls, the way that guest memory is allocated changes. All code in gem5 is updated, but if there are any external syscalls, they may need be updated.
- [COMMAND LINE CHANGE] The
--disk-image
argument to fs.py
is now optional.- However, the disk image names are no longer implied.
- The script still implicitly searches
M5_PATH
, but the name of the disk image must be specified.
- [API CHANGE] SLICC
queueMemory
is now enqueue
.- All protocol configs must be updated with another message buffer in the memory controllers (directories).
- All protocol SLICC files must replace
queueMemoryRead
and queueMemoryWrite
with enqueue
to another “special” message buffer named memQueue
. - This allows finite buffering between the cache controllers and DRAMCtrl.
- [API CHANGE] Added Prefetcher namespace
- All prefetchers' names have changed from
*Prefetcher
to Prefetcher::*
- If you have any prefetchers that are not in the gem5 mainline, your code will likely need to be updated.
Other changes
- Implemented ARMv8.3-CompNum, SIMD complex number extension.
- Support for Arm Trusted Firmware + u-boot with the new VExpress_GEM5_Foundation platform
- Removed author list from source files.
- This was originally so future people would know who to contact.
- However, it was difficult to maintain and quickly out of date.
- Copyright is unchanged.
- Improvements to gem5's power model.
- MESI_Three_Level Ruby protocol bugfixes.
- Ruby functional reads now work in more cases.
- Indirect branch stats work correctly now.