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Hardware
========
General
-------
32 bits virtual addresses
30 bits physical addresses
32 bits data path width
32 bits instruction width
32 integer registers
byte addressable, big endian machine
Physical Address Space Utilisation
----------------------------------
The main memory extends from address 0 to MEMORY_SIZE,
which has an upper limit of 512 MB. The ROM is located
at 0x20000000; its size, ROM_SIZE, is at most 256 MB.
The I/O is memory-mapped and located at 0x30000000; its
size is again at most 256 MB. The I/O address space is
divided evenly into 256 devices; each device may occupy
up to 1 MB of address space.
Machine Data Types
------------------
word 32 bits
half 16 bits
byte 8 bits
Paging
------
4 KB page size
TLB
---
A TLB (translation lookaside buffer) is used to map virtual addresses to
physical ones. The mapping does not apply to addresses with both high-order
bits set; these addresses refer to physical memory and are never mapped by
the TLB. The TLB has 32 entries, each of which can be used to map a virtual
page number to a physical frame number. More than one page can be mapped to
the same physical frame ('aliasing'). It is a severe programming error,
however, to have more than one entry for the same virtual page number in
the TLB. The result of a translation under these circumstances is undefined.
Whenever an address translation takes place, all entries in the TLB are
searched in parallel ('fully associative memory'). Therefore a given page
number need not to be placed into a specific location in the TLB, any
location will do. If no entry matches the page number, the processor takes
an exception (see below).
TLB Entries
-----------
A TLB entry consists of two parts: the key (also called 'input' or 'EntryHi')
and the value (also called 'output' or 'EntryLo'). The key consists of the
upper 20 bits of the page number of a virtual address; the lower 12 bits are
zero and not stored in the entry. The key is used to locate an entry in the
TLB during an address translation. The only way to make sure that an entry
does not match any virtual address is to set both high-order bits of the
address; such an address is never mapped by the TLB (see above). The value
consists of the frame address and two flags. The low-order 12 bits of the
frame address are always zero; they are not stored in the entry. Furthermore,
the two most significant bits are always zero because the physical address
range is 1 GByte.
TLB Registers
-------------
Four registers allow programming of the TLB and assist in managing address
translations of large address spaces in spite of a moderately sized TLB.
Index:
This register specifies the location in the TLB where the next
write-by-index or read-by-index instruction will take place.
Furthermore, it will hold the index after a TLB search instruction
(see below).
EntryHi:
This register holds the input part of a TLB entry, either before
writing it or after reading it. Furthermore, any of the TLB-related
exceptions (miss, invalid, write) will write the page number in
question into this register in order to facilitate a rapid insertion
of an appropriate mapping for this page into the TLB.
EntryLo:
This register holds the output part of a TLB entry, either before
writing it or after reading it.
BadAddr:
Any of the addres translation exceptions (including the non-TLB related
ones such as illegal addresses, but excluding bus address errors) write
the offending address into this register. The operating system may find
this information useful.
TLB Instructions
----------------
Four instructions are used to program the TLB. All four are privileged
instructions that will cause an exception if executed in user mode.
tbs (translation buffer search):
The Index register is loaded with the address of the TLB entry whose
contents match the contents of the EntryHi register. If no TLB entry
matches, the high order bit of the Index register is set.
tbwr (translation buffer write random):
This instruction loads a pseudo-randomly specified TLB entry with the
contents of the EntryHi and EntryLo registers. A free running counter
supplies the pseudo-random index. Entries 0..3 are never written to
by this instruction.
tbri (translation buffer read index):
This instruction loads the EntryHi and EntryLo registers with the
contents of the TLB entry specified by the contents of the Index
register.
tbwi (translation buffer write index):
This instruction loads the specified TLB entry with the contents of
the EntryHi and EntryLo registers. The contents of the Index register
specify the TLB entry.
TLB Function
------------
Software
========
C Data Types
------------
long 32 bits
int 32 bits
short 16 bits
char 8 bits
Page Tables
-----------
2 levels of page tables
1024 entries per table
topmost 10 bits of virtual address select an entry in the page directory
this entry points to a page table
next 10 bits of virtual address select an entry in the page table
this entry points to a page frame
least significant 12 bits of virtual address select a byte in the page frame
a single page table occupies exactly one page
therefore we have 4 bytes per entry
a page table entry has the following parts:
20 bits physical page frame address
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