restart another one in wxWindows. Fixed that. Also, on restart, the
apic id's left over from the first run were causing panics. Fixed that.
- modified: main.cc cpu/apic.cc cpu/cpu.h cpu/init.cc
up pc_system.h. Moved all variables under the private: section,
as well as a few member functions. The string instructions
were accessing a field directly (only reads), so I indirected
that via an inline member function for better abstraction.
"-pthread" flag to the link line, but as of wxWindows 2.3.3 their
wx-config script adds it for us. Given the keyboard mapping improvements
in wx 2.3.3, I don't expect to support any previous version.
To: bochs-developers@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [Bochs-developers] Fix for configure.in bug
This patches fixes a bug in configure.in which prevents configure from setting
default values for CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS. Normally, the way autoconf builds
configure, it will set default values for CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS of `-g -O2'.
But, if the user specified them (via the environment), it won't touch them.
The clause in configure.in that tries to set platform-specific flags breaks
this because it always assigns a value (usually blank for most platforms),
which fools the defaulting mechanism later on.
all available optimizations in one shot.
Finished one last case of an instruction which could but didn't use
the Read-Modify-Write variants of access.cc functions.
Started going through the integer instructions, merging obvious cases
where there are two "if (modrm==11b) {" clauses and very little
action in between, and cleaning up the aweful indentation leftover
from many years ago when those instructions were implemented using
cut-and-paste. We may get a little extra performance out of these
mods, but they'll also be easier after I'm finished to enhance
with asm() statements to knock out the lazy flags processing on x86.
now simply return a cached value which is set upon mode changes.
The biggest problem was protected_mode() which did something like:
return CR0.PM && ! EFLAGS.VM
This adds up when it was being executed many times in branch functions
etc. Now, cached values are set and sampled instead.
- parallel port detection fixed:
* write the value of AX to 0x0410, not BX
* the timeout value is a byte and now stored in CL
* the offset of the port address list is 2 bytes
Used patch.disasm to do
1) clean up the disasm output to make the dispaly of extra stuff optional.
2) included the part of the patch which displays displacements as
proper addresses.
and Jas Sandys-Lumsdaine to split out common instructions into
variants which deal with the mod=11b case (Reg-Reg) and the
other cases (which do memory ops). Actually, I only split
MOV_GwEw and MOV_GdEd for now. According to some instrumentation
of a Win95 boot, they were the most frequently used opcode by far.
Essentially, when I coded a few of the instructions to use
asm()s for acceleration of the eflags, I got lazy and only
used the asm() to compute eflags and let the normal C operation
do the actual operation. Jas's patch, moved the asm()s such
that they now do the work of the operation as well.
The patches look great. The code reads a lot better as well.
Further work can be done to give the compiler more options with
register scheduling.
were simply replacements of the eflags mask constants with
the macro names already in cpu.h for asm() statements. I forgot
to use the macros for some instructions.
0x000008d5 -> EFlagsOSZAPCMask
0x000008d4 -> EFlagsOSZAPMask
Some things changed in the ctrl_xfer*.cc, fetchdecode*.cc,
and cpu.cc since the original patches, so I did some patch
integration by hand. Check the placement of the
macros BX_INSTR_FETCH_DECODE_COMPLETED() and BX_INSTR_OPCODE()
in cpu.cc to make sure I go them right. Also, I changed the
parameters to BX_INSTR_OPCODE() to update them to the new code.
I put some comments before each of these to help determine if
the placement is right.
These macros are only compiled in if you are gathering instrumentation
data from bochs, so they shouldn't effect others.
just the wxwindows ones. This is required on cygwin, for example, because
the CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS include gcc flags that change code generation:
-fno-pcc-struct-return and -fvtable-thunks. It is not safe to mix code
compiled with these flags with code compiled without. I learned this the
hard way when I found that sometimes code that called a virtual member
function was jumping to the WRONG member function.