Version 9 (modified by 10 years ago) (diff) | ,
---|
GIET_VM / Mapping
The GIET_VM is a fully static operating system supporting clusterized, shared address space, many-cores architectures. These architecture are generally NUMA (Non Uniform memory Acces), because the memory is logically shared, but physically distributed, and the main goal of the GIET_VM is to address these NUMA issues.
the GIET_VM bootloader map one or several multi-threaded user applications on the target architecture. All software objects (user applications code and data, but also kernel code and critical kernel structures such as the page tables or the processors schedulers) are statically build and loaded from disk into physical memory by the GIET_VM bootloader in the boot phase.
The main advantage of this static approach is to provide the system designed a full control on the placement of tasks on processors but also of the data (software objects) on the distributed physical memory banks. It supports optional replication of critical objects such as kernel code, or page tables.
To control the mapping, the system designer must provide a map.bin file containing a dedicated C binary data structure, that is loaded in memory by the bootloader.
The next section describes this C binary structure. The following sections describe how this binary file can be generated by the genmap tool from a python language description. Finally the genmap tool can generate a readable map.xml representation of the map.bin file.
C mapping data structure
The C mapping data structure contains the following informations:
- It contains a description of the target, clusterized, hardware architecture, with the following constraints: Processor cores are MIP32. The clusters are organised in a 2D mesh topology, and the number of clusters is variable (can be one). The number of processors per cluster is variable (can be one). The number of physical memory banks is variable (up to one physical memory bank per cluster. Most peripherals are external and localized in one specific I/O cluster. The physical address width is between 32 and 48 bits, and is the concatenation of 3 fields: the LSB field (32 bits) define a 4 Gbits physical address space inside a single cluster. The X and Y fields (up to 8 bits for each field) define the cluster coordinate.
- It contains a description of the user applications to be launched on the platform. An user application is characterized by a a virtual address space, called a vspace. An user application can be multi-threaded, and the number of parallel tasks sharing the same address space in a given application is variable (can be one). The GIET_VM provide a specific Multi-Writer/Multi?-Reader communication middleware for send/receive inter-tasks communication. Each vspace contains a variable number of virtual segments, called vsegs. The number of simultaneously mapped vspaces on a given architecture is variable (can be one).
- It contains the mapping directives: The tasks are statically allocated to processors. The various software objects (user and kernel code segments, tasks stacks, tasks heaps, communication channels, etc.) are called vobjs, and are statically placed on the distributed physical memory banks (called psegs), using the page tables (one page table per vspace) that define the mapping of the vsegs on the psegs.
The C binary mapping data structure is defined in the mapping_info.h file, and is organised as the concatenation of a fixed size header, and 11 variable size arrays:
- mapping_cluster_t cluster[]
- mapping_pseg_t pseg[]
- mapping_vspace_t vspace[]
- mapping_vseg_t vseg[]
- mapping_vobj_t vobj[]
- mapping_task_t task[]
- mapping_proc_t proc[]
- mapping_irq_t irq[]
- mapping_coproc_t coproc[]
- mapping_cp_port_t cp_port[]
- mapping_periph_t periph[]
The map.bin file must be stored on disk and will be loaded in memory by the GIET_VM bootloader in the seg_boot_mapping segment.
Python mapping introduction
A specific mapping requires at least two python files:
- The arch.py file is attached to a given hardware architecture. It describes both the (possibly generic) hardware architectures, and the mapping of the kernel software objects on this hardware architecture.
- The appli.py file is attached to a given user application. It describes both the application structure (tasks and communication channels), and the mapping of the application tasks and software objects on the architecture.
The various Python Classes used by these these files are defined in the mapping.py file.
Python architecture description
To define an architecture, you must use the following constructors:
1. mapping
The Mapping( ) constructor build a mapping object and define the target architecture general parameters:
name | mapping name == architecture name |
x_size | number of clusters in a row of the 2D mesh |
y_size | number of clusters in a column of the 2D mesh |
nprocs | max number of processors per cluster |
x_width | number of bits to encode X coordinate in paddr |
y_width | number of bits to encode Y coordinate in paddr |
p_width | number of bits to encode local processor index |
paddr_width | number of bits in physical address |
coherence | Boolean true if hardware cache coherence |
irq_per_proc | number of IRQ lines between XCU and one proc (GIET_VM use only one) |
use_ramdisk | Boolean true if the architecture contains a RamDisk? |
x_io | io_cluster X coordinate |
y_io | io_cluster Y coordinate |
peri_increment | virtual address increment for peripherals replicated in all clusters |
reset_address | physical base address of the ROM containing the preloader code |
ram_base | physical memory bank base address in cluster [0,0] |
ram_size | physical memory bank size in one cluster (bytes) |
2. Processor core
The mapping.addProc( ) construct define one MIPS32 processor core in a cluster (number of processor cores can different in different clusters). It has the following arguments:
x | cluster x coordinate |
y | physical |
p | physical memory bank size (bytes) |
The physical global processor index will be : ( ( x << y_width ) + y ) << p_width ) + p
Physical memory bank
The mapping.addRam( ) construct define one physical memory bank, and the associated physical segment in a cluster. It has the following arguments:
name | segment name |
base | physical memory bank base address |
size | physical memory bank size (bytes) |
The target cluster coordinates (x,y) is defined by the base address MSB bits.
Physical peripheral
The mapping.addPeriph( ) construct adds one peripheral, and the associated physical segment in a cluster. It has the following arguments:
name | segment name |
base | peripheral segment physical base address |
size | peripheral segment size (bytes) |
ptype | Peripheral type |
subtype | Peripheral subtype |
channels | number of channels for multi-channels peripherals |
arg | optionnal argument depending on peripheral type |
The target cluster coordinates (x,y) is defined by the base address MSB bits. The supported peripheral types and subtypes are defined in the mapping.py file.
Interrupt line
The mapping.addIrq() construct adds one IRQ line input to an XCU peripheral, or to a PIC peripheral. It has the following arguments:
periph | peripheral receiving the IRQ line |
index | input port index |
isrtype | Interrupt Service Routine type |
channel | channel index for multi-channel ISR |
The supported ISR types are defined in the mapping.py file.
Kernel vseg
The mapping.addGlobal() construct define a kernel virtual segment (a kernel vseg is defined in all vspaces, and is called global). It has the following arguments:
name | virtual segment name |
vbase | virtual base address |
size | segment size (bytes |
mode | access rights (CXWU) |
vtype | software object type |
x | destination cluster X coordinate |
y | destination cluster Y coordinate |
pseg | destination pseg name |
identity | identity mapping required (default = False) |
binpath | pathname for binary file if required (default = ' ') |
align | alignment constraint if required (default = 0) |
local | only mapped in local page table if true (default = False) |
big | to be mapped in one or several big pages (2 Mbytes) |
The supported values for the mode argument, and for the vtype arguments are defined in the mapping.py file. The x, y, and pseg define actually the mapping. As a global vseg can be mapped (replicated) in more than one cluster, the local argumentpage tables can be r, the local argument Any vseg can be mapped or in a set of consecutive small pages (4 Kbytes), either on a set of consecutives big pages (2 Mbytes).