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% This file is part of the MMIXware package (c) Donald E Knuth 1999
@i boilerplate.w %<< legal stuff: PLEASE READ IT BEFORE MAKING ANY CHANGES!

\def\title{MMIX-PIPE}
\def\MMIX{\.{MMIX}}
\def\NNIX{\hbox{\mc NNIX}}
\def\Hex#1{\hbox{$^{\scriptscriptstyle\#}$\tt#1}} % experimental hex constant
@s and normal @q unreserve a C++ keyword @>
@s or normal @q unreserve a C++ keyword @>
@s bool normal @q unreserve a C++ keyword @>
@s xor normal @q unreserve a C++ keyword @>

@* Introduction. This program is the heart of the meta-simulator for the
ultra-configurable \MMIX\ pipeline: It defines the |MMIX_run| routine, which
does most of the
work. Another routine, |MMIX_init|, is also defined here, and so is a header
file called \.{mmix\_pipe.h}. The header file is used by the main routine and
by other routines like |MMIX_config|, which are compiled separately.

Readers of this program should be familiar with the explanation of \MMIX\
architecture as presented in the main program module for {\mc MMMIX}.

A lot of subtle things can happen when instructions are executed in parallel.
Therefore this simulator ranks among the most interesting and instructive
programs in the author's experience. The author has tried his best to make
everything correct \dots\ but the chances for error are great. Anyone who
discovers a bug is therefore urged to report it as soon as possible to
\.{knuth-bug@@cs.stanford.edu}; then the program will be as useful as
possible. Rewards will be paid to bug-finders! (Except for bugs in version~0.)

It sort of boggles the mind when one realizes that the present program might
someday be translated by a \CEE/~compiler for \MMIX\ and used to simulate
{\it itself}.

@ This high-performance prototype of \MMIX\ achieves its efficiency by
means of ``pipelining,'' a technique of overlapping that is explained
for the related \.{DLX} computer in Chapter~3 of Hennessy \char`\&\ Patterson's
book {\sl Computer Architecture\/} (second edition). Other techniques
such as ``dynamic scheduling'' and ``multiple issue,'' explained in
Chapter~4 of that book, are used too.

One good way to visualize the procedure is to imagine that somebody has
organized a high-tech car repair shop according to similar principles.
There are eight independent functional units, which we can think of as
eight groups of auto mechanics, each specializing in a particular task;
each group has its own workspace with room to deal with one car at a time.
Group~F (the ``fetch'' group) is in charge of rounding up customers and
getting them to enter the assembly-line garage in an orderly fashion.
Group~D (the ``decode and dispatch'' group) does the initial vehicle
inspection and
writes up an order that explains what kind of servicing is required.
The vehicles go next to one of the four ``execution'' groups:
Group~X handles routine maintenance, while groups XF, XM, and XD are
specialists in more complex tasks that tend to take longer. (The XF
people are good at floating the points, while the XM and XD groups are
experts in multilink suspensions and differentials.) When the relevant X~group
has finished its work, cars drive to M~station, where they send or receive
messages and possibly pay money to members of the ``memory'' group. Finally
all necessary parts are installed by members of group~W, the ``write''
group, and the car leaves the shop. Everything is tightly organized so
that in most cases the cars move in synchronized fashion from station
to station, at regular 100-nanocentury intervals. % about 5.3 minutes

In a similar way, most \MMIX\ instructions can be handled in a five-stage
pipeline, F--D--X--M--W, with X replaced by XF for floating-point
addition or conversion, or by XM for multiplication, or by XD for
division or square root. Each stage ideally takes one clock cycle,
although XF, XM, and (especially) XD are slower. If the instructions enter
in a suitable pattern, we might see one instruction being fetched,
another being decoded, and up to four being executed, while another is accessing
memory, and yet another is finishing up by writing new information into
registers; all this is going on simultaneously during one clock cycle. Pipelining
with eight separate stages might therefore make the machine run
up to 8 times as fast as it could if each instruction were being dealt with
individually and without overlap. (Well, perfect speedup turns out to
be impossible, because of the shared M and~W stages; the theory of
knapsack programming, to be discussed in Section~7.7 of {\sl The Art
of Computer Programming}, tells us that the maximal achievable speedup is
at most $8-1/p-1/q-1/r$ when XF, XM, and~XD have delays bounded by $p$,
$q$, and~$r$ cycles. But we can achieve a factor of more than~7
if we are very lucky.)

Consider, for example, the \.{ADD} instruction. This instruction enters
the computer's processing unit in F stage, taking only one clock cycle if
it is in the cache of instructions recently seen. Then the D~stage
recognizes the command as an \.{ADD} and acquires the current values
of \$Y and \$Z; meanwhile, of course, another instruction is being fetched
by~F.
On the next clock cycle, the X stage adds the values together.
This prepares the way for the M stage to watch for overflow and to
get ready for any exceptional action that might be needed with respect
to the settings of special register~rA\null.
Finally, on the fifth clock cycle, the sum is either written into~\$X
or the trip handler for integer overflow is invoked.
Although this process has taken five clock
cycles (that is, $5\upsilon$),
the net increase in running time has been only~$1\upsilon$.

Of course congestion can occur, inside a computer as in a repair shop.
For example, auto parts might not be readily available; or a car might
have to sit in D station while waiting to move to XM, thereby blocking
somebody else from moving from F to~D.  Sometimes there won't
necessarily be a steady stream of customers.  In such cases the
employees in some parts of the shop will occasionally be idle.  But we
assume that they always do their jobs as fast as possible, given the
sequence of customers that they encounter. With a clever person
setting up appointments---translation: with a clever
programmer and/or compiler arranging \MMIX\ instructions---the
organization can often be expected to run at nearly peak capacity.

In fact, this program is designed for experiments with many kinds of
pipelines, potentially using additional functional units (such as
several independent X~groups), and potentially fetching, dispatching, and
executing several nonconflicting instructions simultaneously.
Such complications
make this program more difficult than a simple pipeline simulator
would be, but they also make it a lot more instructive because we
can get a better understanding of the issues involved if we are
required to treat them in greater generality.

@ Here's the overall structure of the present program module.

@c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
#include "abstime.h"
@h@#
@<Header definitions@>@;
@<Type definitions@>@;
@<Global variables@>@;
@<External variables@>@;
@<Internal prototypes@>@;
@<External prototypes@>@;
@<Subroutines@>@;
@<External routines@>@;

@ The identifier \&{Extern} is used in {\mc MMIX-PIPE} to
declare variables that are accessed in other modules. Actually
all appearances of `\&{Extern}' are defined to be blank here, but
`\&{Extern}' will become `\&{extern}' in the header file.

@d Extern  /* blank for us, \&{extern} for them */
@f Extern extern

@<External variables@>=
Extern int verbose; /* controls the level of diagnostic output */

@ The header file repeats the basic definitions and declarations.

@(mmix-pipe.h@>=
#define Extern extern
@<Header definitions@>@;
@<Type definitions@>@;
@<External variables@>@;
@<External prototypes@>@;

@ Subroutines of this program are declared first with a prototype,
as in {\mc ANSI C}, then with an old-style \CEE/ function definition.
The following preprocessor commands make this work correctly with both
new-style and old-style compilers.
@^prototypes for functions@>

@<Header def...@>=
#ifdef __STDC__
#define ARGS(list) list
#else
#define ARGS(list) ()
#endif

@ Some of the names that are natural for this program are in
conflict with library names on at least
one of the host computers in the author's tests. So we
bypass the library names here.

@<Header def...@>=
#define random my_random
#define fsqrt my_fsqrt
#define div my_div

@ The amount of verbosity depends on the following bit codes.

@<Header def...@>=
#define issue_bit (1<<0)
   /* show control blocks when issued, deissued, committed */
#define pipe_bit (1<<1)
   /* show the pipeline and locks on every cycle */
#define coroutine_bit (1<<2)
   /* show the coroutines when started on every cycle */
#define schedule_bit (1<<3)
   /* show the coroutines when scheduled */
#define uninit_mem_bit (1<<4)
   /* complain when reading from an uninitialized chunk of memory */
#define interactive_read_bit (1<<5)
   /* prompt user when reading from I/O location */
#define show_spec_bit (1<<6)
   /* display special read/write transactions as they happen */
#define show_pred_bit (1<<7)
   /* display branch prediction details */
#define show_wholecache_bit (1<<8)
   /* display cache blocks even when their key tag is invalid */

@ The |MMIX_init()| routine should be called exactly once, after
|MMIX_config()| has done its work but before the simulator starts to execute
any programs. Then |MMIX_run| can be called as often as the user likes.

@s octa int

@<External proto...@>=
Extern void MMIX_init @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];
Extern void MMIX_run @,@,@[ARGS((int cycs, octa breakpoint))@];

@ @<External routines@>=
void MMIX_init()
{
  register int i,j;
  @<Initialize everything@>;
}
@#
void MMIX_run(cycs,breakpoint)
  int cycs;
  octa breakpoint;
{
  @<Local variables@>;
  while (cycs) {
    if (verbose&(issue_bit|pipe_bit|coroutine_bit|schedule_bit))
      printf("*** Cycle %d\n", ticks.l);
    @<Perform one machine cycle@>;
    if (verbose&pipe_bit) {
      print_pipe();@+ print_locks();
    }
    if (breakpoint_hit||halted) {
      if (breakpoint_hit)
        printf("Breakpoint instruction fetched at time %d\n",ticks.l-1);
      if (halted) printf("Halted at time %d\n", ticks.l-1);
      break;
    }
    cycs--;
  }
 cease:;
}

@ @<Type...@>=
typedef enum {@!false, @!true, @!wow}@+bool; /* slightly extended booleans */

@ @<Local var...@>=
register int i,j,m;
bool breakpoint_hit=false;
bool halted=false;

@ Error messages that abort this program are called panic messages.
The macro called |confusion| will never be needed unless this program is
internally inconsistent.

@d errprint0(f) fprintf(stderr,f)
@d errprint1(f,a) fprintf(stderr,f,a)
@d errprint2(f,a,b) fprintf(stderr,f,a,b)
@d panic(x)@+ {@+errprint0("Panic: ");@+x;@+errprint0("!\n");@+expire();@+}
@d confusion(m) errprint1("This can't happen: %s",m)
@.This can't happen@>

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void expire @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void expire() /* the last gasp before dying */
{
  if (ticks.h) errprint2("(Clock time is %dH+%d.)\n",ticks.h,ticks.l);
  else errprint1("(Clock time is %d.)\n",ticks.l);
@.Clock time is...@>
  exit(-2);
}

@ The data structures of this program are not precisely equivalent to
logical gates that could be implemented directly in silicon;
we will use data structures and
algorithms appropriate to the \CEE/ programming language. For example,
we'll use pointers and arrays, instead of buses and ports and latches. However,
the net effect of our data structures and algorithms is intended to
be equivalent to the net effect of a silicon implementation. The methods
used below are essentially equivalent to those used in real machines today,
except that diagnostic facilities are added so that we can readily
watch what is happening.

Each functional unit in the \MMIX\ pipeline is programmed here as a coroutine
in~\CEE/. At every clock cycle, we will call on each active coroutine to do one
phase of its operation; in terms of the repair-station analogy
described in the main program,
this corresponds to getting each group of
auto mechanics to do one unit of operation on a car.
The coroutines are performed sequentially, although
a real pipeline would have them act in parallel.
We will not ``cheat'' by letting one coroutine access a value early in its
cycle that another one computes late in its cycle, unless computer hardware
could ``cheat'' in an equivalent way.

@* Low-level routines. Where should we begin? It is tempting to start with a
global view of the simulator and then to break it down into component parts.
But that task is too daunting, because there are so many unknowns about what
basic ingredients ought to be combined when we construct the larger
components. So let us look first at the primitive operations on which
the superstructure will be built. Once we have created some infrastructure,
we'll be able to proceed with confidence to the larger tasks ahead.

@ This program for the 64-bit \MMIX\ architecture is based on 32-bit integer
arithmetic, because nearly every computer available to the author at the time
of writing (1998--1999) was limited in that way.
Details of the basic arithmetic appear in a separate program module
called {\mc MMIX-ARITH}, because the same routines are needed also
for the assembler and for the non-pipelined simulator. The
definition of type \&{tetra} should be changed, if necessary, to conform with
the definitions found there.
@^system dependencies@>

@<Type...@>=
typedef unsigned int tetra;
  /* for systems conforming to the LP-64 data model */
typedef struct { tetra h,l;} octa; /* two tetrabytes make one octabyte */

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_octa @,@,@[ARGS((octa))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_octa(o)
  octa o;
{
  if (o.h) printf("%x%08x",o.h,o.l);@+
  else printf("%x",o.l);
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
extern octa zero_octa; /* |zero_octa.h=zero_octa.l=0| */
extern octa neg_one; /* |neg_one.h=neg_one.l=-1| */
extern octa aux; /* auxiliary output of a subroutine */
extern bool overflow; /* set by certain subroutines for signed arithmetic */
extern int exceptions; /* bits set by floating point operations */
extern int cur_round; /* the current rounding mode */

@ Most of the subroutines in {\mc MMIX-ARITH} return an octabyte as
a function of two octabytes; for example, |oplus(y,z)| returns the
sum of octabytes |y| and~|z|. Multiplication returns the high 
half of a product in the global variable~|aux|; division returns
the remainder in~|aux|.

@<Sub...@>=
extern octa oplus @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* unsigned $y+z$ */
extern octa ominus @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* unsigned $y-z$ */
extern octa incr @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,int delta))@];
  /* unsigned $y+\delta$ ($\delta$ is signed) */
extern octa oand @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* $y\land z$ */
extern octa oandn @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* $y\land \bar z$ */
extern octa shift_left @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,int s))@];
  /* $y\LL s$, $0\le s\le64$ */
extern octa shift_right @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,int s,int uns))@];
  /* $y\GG s$, signed if |!uns| */
extern octa omult @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* unsigned $(|aux|,x)=y\times z$ */
extern octa signed_omult @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* signed $x=y\times z$, setting |overflow| */
extern octa odiv @,@,@[ARGS((octa x,octa y,octa z))@];
  /* unsigned $(x,y)/z$; $|aux|=(x,y)\bmod z$ */
extern octa signed_odiv @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* signed $y/z$, when $z\ne0$; $|aux|=y\bmod z$ */
extern int count_bits @,@,@[ARGS((tetra z))@];
  /* $x=\nu(z)$ */
extern tetra byte_diff @,@,@[ARGS((tetra y,tetra z))@];
  /* half of \.{BDIF} */
extern tetra wyde_diff @,@,@[ARGS((tetra y,tetra z))@];
  /* half of \.{WDIF} */
extern octa bool_mult @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z,bool xor))@];
  /* \.{MOR} or \.{MXOR} */
extern octa load_sf @,@,@[ARGS((tetra z))@];
  /* load short float */
extern tetra store_sf @,@,@[ARGS((octa x))@];
  /* store short float */
extern octa fplus @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* floating point $x=y\oplus z$ */
extern octa fmult @,@,@[ARGS((octa y ,octa z))@];
  /* floating point $x=y\otimes z$ */
extern octa fdivide @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* floating point $x=y\oslash z$ */
extern octa froot @,@,@[ARGS((octa,int))@];
  /* floating point $x=\sqrt z$ */
extern octa fremstep @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z,int delta))@];
  /* floating point $x\,{\rm rem}\,z=y\,{\rm rem}\,z$ */
extern octa fintegerize @,@,@[ARGS((octa z,int mode))@];
  /* floating point $x={\rm round}(z)$ */
extern int fcomp @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z))@];
  /* $-1$, 0, 1, or 2 if $y<z$, $y=z$, $y>z$, $y\parallel z$ */
extern int fepscomp @,@,@[ARGS((octa y,octa z,octa eps,int sim))@];
  /* $x=|sim|?\ [y\sim z\ (\epsilon)]:\ [y\approx z\ (\epsilon)]$ */
extern octa floatit @,@,@[ARGS((octa z,int mode,int unsgnd,int shrt))@];
  /* fix to float */
extern octa fixit @,@,@[ARGS((octa z,int mode))@];
  /* float to fix */

@ We had better check that our 32-bit assumption holds.

@<Initialize e...@>=
if (shift_left(neg_one,1).h!=0xffffffff)
  panic(errprint0("Incorrect implementation of type tetra"));
@.Incorrect implementation...@>

@* Coroutines. As stated earlier, this program can be regarded as a system of
interacting coroutines. Coroutines---sometimes called threads---are more or
less independent processes that share and pass data and control back and
forth. They correspond to the individual workers in an organization.

We don't need the full power of recursive coroutines, in which new threads are
spawned dynamically and have independent stacks for computation; we are, after
all, simulating a fixed piece of hardware. The total number of coroutines we
deal with is established once and for all by the |MMIX_config| routine, and
each coroutine has a fixed amount of local data.

The simulation operates one clock tick at a time, by executing all
coroutines scheduled for time~$t$ before advancing to time~$t+1$. The
coroutines at time~$t$ may decide to become dormant or they may reschedule
themselves and/or other coroutines for future times.

Each coroutine has a symbolic |name| for diagnostic purposes (e.g.,
\.{ALU1}); a nonnegative |stage| number (e.g., 2~for the second stage
of a pipeline); a pointer to the next coroutine scheduled at the same time (or
|NULL| if the coroutine is unscheduled); a pointer to a lock variable
(or |NULL| if no lock is currently relevant);
and a reference to a control block containing the data to be processed.

@s control_struct int

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct coroutine_struct {
 char *name; /* symbolic identification of a coroutine */
 int stage; /* its rank */
 struct coroutine_struct *next; /* its successor */
 struct coroutine_struct **lockloc; /* what it might be locking */
 struct control_struct *ctl; /* its data */
} coroutine;

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_coroutine_id @,@,@[ARGS((coroutine*))@];
static void errprint_coroutine_id @,@,@[ARGS((coroutine*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_coroutine_id(c)
  coroutine *c;
{
  if (c) printf("%s:%d",c->name,c->stage);
  else printf("??");
}
@#
static void errprint_coroutine_id(c)
  coroutine *c;
{
  if (c) errprint2("%s:%d",c->name,c->stage);
  else errprint0("??");
@.??@>
}

@ Coroutine control is masterminded by a ring of queues, one each for
times $t$, $t+1$, \dots, $t+|ring_size|-1$, when $t$ is the current
clock time.

All scheduling is first-come-first-served, except that coroutines with higher
|stage| numbers have priority. We want to process the later stages of a
pipeline first, in this sequential implementation, for the same reason that a
car must drive from M~station into W~station before another car can enter
M~station.

Each queue is a circular list of \&{coroutine} nodes, linked together by their
|next| fields. A list head~$h$ with |stage=max_stage| comes at the end and the
beginning of the queue. (All |stage| numbers of legitimate coroutines
are less than~|max_stage|.) The queued items are |h->next|, |h->next->next|,
etc., from back to front, and we have |c->stage<=c->next->stage| unless |c=h|.

Initially all queues are empty.

@<Initialize e...@>=
{@+register coroutine *p;
  for (p=ring;p<ring+ring_size;p++) p->next=p;
}

@ To schedule a coroutine |c| with positive delay |d<ring_size|, we call
|schedule(c,d,s)|. (The |s| parameter is used only if scheduling is
being logged; it does not affect the computation, but we will
generally set |s| to the state at which the scheduled coroutine will begin.)

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void schedule @,@,@[ARGS((coroutine*,int,int))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void schedule(c,d,s)
  coroutine *c;
  int d,s;
{
  register int tt=(cur_time+d)%ring_size;
  register coroutine *p=&ring[tt]; /* start at the list head */
  if (d<=0 || d>=ring_size) /* do a sanity check */
   panic(confusion("Scheduling ");errprint_coroutine_id(c);
         errprint1(" with delay %d",d));
  while (p->next->stage<c->stage) p=p->next;
  c->next = p->next;
  p->next = c;
  if (verbose&schedule_bit) {
    printf(" scheduling ");@+print_coroutine_id(c);
    printf(" at time %d, state %d\n",ticks.l+d,s);
  }
}

@ @<External var...@>=
Extern int ring_size; /* set by |MMIX_config|, must be sufficiently large */
Extern coroutine *ring;
Extern int cur_time;

@ The all-important |ctl| field of a coroutine, which contains the
data being manipulated, will be explained below. One of its key
components is the |state| field, which helps to specify the next
actions the coroutine will perform. When we schedule a coroutine for
a new task, we often want it to begin in state~0.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void startup @,@,@[ARGS((coroutine*,int))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void startup(c,d)
  coroutine *c;
  int d;
{
  c->ctl->state=0;
  schedule(c,d,0);
}

@ The following routine removes a coroutine from whatever queue it's in.
The case |c->next=c| is also permitted; such a self-loop can occur when a
coroutine goes to sleep and expects to be awakened (that is, scheduled)
by another coroutine. Sleeping coroutines have important data in their
|ctl| field; they are therefore quite different from unscheduled
or ``unemployed'' coroutines, which have |c->next=NULL|. An unemployed
coroutine is not assumed to have any valid data in its |ctl| field.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void unschedule @,@,@[ARGS((coroutine*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void unschedule(c)
  coroutine *c;
{@+register coroutine *p;
  if (c->next) {
    for (p=c; p->next!=c; p=p->next) ;
    p->next = c->next;
    c->next=NULL;
    if (verbose&schedule_bit) {
      printf(" unscheduling ");@+print_coroutine_id(c);@+printf("\n");
    }
  }
}

@ When it is time to process all coroutines that have queued up for a
particular time~|t|, we empty the queue called |ring[t]| and link its items in
the opposite order (from front to back). The following subroutine uses the
well known algorithm discussed in exercise 2.2.3--7 of {\sl The Art
of Computer Programming}.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static coroutine *queuelist @,@,@[ARGS((int))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static coroutine* queuelist(t)
  int t;
{@+register coroutine *p, *q=&sentinel, *r;
  for (p=ring[t].next;p!=&ring[t];p=r) {
    r=p->next;
    p->next=q;
    q=p;
  }
  ring[t].next=&ring[t];
  sentinel.next=q;
  return q;
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
coroutine sentinel; /* dummy coroutine at origin of circular list */

@ Coroutines often start working on tasks that are {\it speculative}, in the
sense that we want certain results to be ready if they prove to be
useful; we understand that speculative computations might not actually
be needed. Therefore a coroutine might need to be aborted before it
has finished its work.

All coroutines must be written in such a way that important data structures
remain intact even when the coroutine is abruptly terminated. In particular,
we need to be sure that ``locks'' on shared resources are restored to
an unlocked state when a coroutine holding the lock is aborted.

A \&{lockvar} variable is |NULL| when it is unlocked; otherwise it
points to the coroutine responsible for unlocking~it.

@d set_lock(c,l) {@+l=c;@+(c)->lockloc=&(l);@+}
@d release_lock(c,l) {@+l=NULL;@+ (c)->lockloc=NULL;@+}

@<Type...@>=
typedef coroutine *lockvar;

@ @<External proto...@>=
Extern void print_locks @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
void print_locks()
{
  print_cache_locks(ITcache);
  print_cache_locks(DTcache);
  print_cache_locks(Icache);
  print_cache_locks(Dcache);
  print_cache_locks(Scache);
  if (mem_lock) printf("mem locked by %s:%d\n",mem_lock->name,mem_lock->stage);
  if (dispatch_lock) printf("dispatch locked by %s:%d\n",
                    dispatch_lock->name,dispatch_lock->stage);
  if (wbuf_lock) printf("head of write buffer locked by %s:%d\n",
                    wbuf_lock->name,wbuf_lock->stage);
  if (clean_lock) printf("cleaner locked by %s:%d\n",
                    clean_lock->name,clean_lock->stage);
  if (speed_lock) printf("write buffer flush locked by %s:%d\n",
                    speed_lock->name,speed_lock->stage);
}

@ Many of the quantities we deal with are speculative values
that might not yet have been certified as part of the ``real''
calculation; in fact, they might not yet have been calculated.

A \&{spec} consists of a 64-bit quantity |o| and a pointer~|p| to
a \&{specnode}. The value~|o| is meaningful only if the
pointer~|p| is~|NULL|; otherwise |p| points to a source of further information.

A \&{specnode} is a 64-bit quantity |o| together with links to other
\&{specnode}s
that are above it or below it in a doubly linked list. An additional
|known| bit tells whether the |o|~field has been calculated. There also is
a 64-bit |addr| field, to identify the list and give further information.
A \&{specnode} list keeps track of speculative values related to a specific
register or to all of main memory; we will discuss such lists in detail~later.

@s specnode_struct int

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct {
  octa o;
  struct specnode_struct *p;
} spec;
@#
typedef struct specnode_struct {
  octa o;
  bool known;
  octa addr;
  struct specnode_struct *up,*down;
} specnode;

@ @<Glob...@>=
spec zero_spec; /* |zero_spec.o.h=zero_spec.o.l=0| and |zero_spec.p=NULL| */

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_spec @,@,@[ARGS((spec))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_spec(s)
  spec s;
{
  if (!s.p) print_octa(s.o);
  else {
    printf(">");@+ print_specnode_id(s.p->addr);
  }
}
@#
static void print_specnode(s)
  specnode s;
{
  if (s.known) {@+print_octa(s.o);@+printf("!");@+}
  else if (s.o.h || s.o.l) {@+print_octa(s.o);@+printf("?");@+}
  else printf("?");
  print_specnode_id(s.addr);
}

@ The analog of an automobile in our simulator is a block of data called
\&{control}, which represents all the relevant facts about an \MMIX\
instruction.  We can think of it as the work order attached to a car's
windshield. Each group of employees updates the work order as the car moves
through the shop.

A \&{control} record contains the original location of an instruction,
and its four bytes OP~X~Y~Z. An instruction has up to four inputs, which are
\&{spec} records called |y|, |z|, |b| and~|ra|; it also has up to three
outputs, which are \&{specnode} records called |x|, |a|, and~|rl|.
(We usually don't mention the special input~|ra| or the special output~|rl|,
which refer to \.{MMIX}'s internal registers rA and~rL.) For example, the
main inputs to a \.{DIVU} command are \$Y, \$Z, and~rD; the outputs are the
quotient~\$X and the remainder~rR. The inputs to a
\.{STO} command are \$Y, \$Z, and~\$X; there is one ``output,'' and
the field~|x.addr| will be set to the physical address of the memory location
corresponding to virtual address $\rm \$Y+\$Z$.

Each \&{control} block also points to the coroutine that owns it, if any.
And it has various other fields that contain other tidbits of information;
for example, we have already mentioned
the |state|~field, which often governs a coroutine's actions. The |i|~field,
which contains an internal operation code number, is generally used together
with |state| to switch between alternative computational steps. If, for
example, the |op|~field is \.{SUB} or \.{SUBI} or \.{NEG} or \.{NEGI},
the internal opcode~|i| will be simply~|sub|.
We shall define all the fields of \&{control} records
now and discuss them later.

An actual hardware implementation of \MMIX\ wouldn't need all the information
we are putting into a \&{control} block. Some of that information would
typically be latched between stages of a pipeline; other portions would
probably appear in so-called ``rename registers.''
@^rename registers@>
We simulate rename registers only indirectly,
by counting how many registers of that
kind would be in use if we were mimicking low-level hardware details more
precisely. The |go| field is a \&{specnode} for convenience in programming,
although we use only its |known| and |o| subfields. It generally contains
the address of the subsequent instruction.

@s mmix_opcode int
@s internal_opcode int

@<Type...@>=
@<Declare \&{mmix\_opcode} and \&{internal\_opcode}@>@;
typedef struct control_struct {
 octa loc; /* virtual address where an instruction originated */
 mmix_opcode op;@+ unsigned char xx,yy,zz; /* the original instruction bytes */
 spec y,z,b,ra; /* inputs */
 specnode x,a,go,rl; /* outputs */
 coroutine *owner; /* a coroutine whose |ctl| this is */
 internal_opcode i; /* internal opcode */
 int state; /* internal mindset */
 bool usage; /* should rU be increased? */
 bool need_b; /* should we stall until |b.p==NULL|? */
 bool need_ra; /* should we stall until |ra.p==NULL|? */
 bool ren_x; /* does |x| correspond to a rename register? */
 bool mem_x; /* does |x| correspond to a memory write? */
 bool ren_a; /* does |a| correspond to a rename register? */
 bool set_l; /* does |rl| correspond to a new value of rL? */
 bool interim; /* does this instruction need to be reissued on interrupt? */
 unsigned int arith_exc; /* arithmetic exceptions for event bits of rA */
 unsigned int hist; /* history bits for use in branch prediction */
 int denin,denout; /* execution time penalties for subnormal handling */
 octa cur_O,cur_S; /* speculative rO and rS before this instruction */
 unsigned int interrupt; /* does this instruction generate an interrupt? */
 void *ptr_a, *ptr_b, *ptr_c; /* generic pointers for miscellaneous use */
} control;

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_control_block @,@,@[ARGS((control*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_control_block(c)
  control *c;
{
  octa default_go;
  if (c->loc.h || c->loc.l || c->op || c->xx || c->yy || c->zz || c->owner) {
    print_octa(c->loc);
    printf(": %02x%02x%02x%02x(%s)",c->op,c->xx,c->yy,c->zz,
              internal_op_name[c->i]);
  }
  if (c->usage) printf("*");
  if (c->interim) printf("+");
  if (c->y.o.h || c->y.o.l || c->y.p) {@+printf(" y=");@+print_spec(c->y);@+}
  if (c->z.o.h || c->z.o.l || c->z.p) {@+printf(" z=");@+print_spec(c->z);@+}
  if (c->b.o.h || c->b.o.l || c->b.p || c->need_b) {
    printf(" b=");@+print_spec(c->b);
    if (c->need_b) printf("*");
  }
  if (c->need_ra) {@+printf(" rA=");@+print_spec(c->ra);@+}
  if (c->ren_x || c->mem_x) {@+printf(" x=");@+print_specnode(c->x);@+}
  else if (c->x.o.h || c->x.o.l) {
    printf(" x=");@+print_octa(c->x.o);@+printf("%c",c->x.known? '!': '?');
  }
  if (c->ren_a) {@+printf(" a=");@+print_specnode(c->a);@+}
  if (c->set_l) {@+printf(" rL=");@+print_specnode(c->rl);@+}
  if (c->interrupt) {@+printf(" int=");@+print_bits(c->interrupt);@+}
  if (c->arith_exc) {@+printf(" exc=");@+print_bits(c->arith_exc<<8);@+}
  default_go=incr(c->loc,4);
  if (c->go.o.l!=default_go.l || c->go.o.h!=default_go.h) {
    printf(" ->");@+print_octa(c->go.o);
  }
  if (verbose&show_pred_bit) printf(" hist=%x",c->hist);
  if (c->i==pop) {
     printf(" rS="); print_octa(c->cur_S);
     printf(" rO="); print_octa(c->cur_O);
  }
  printf(" state=%d",c->state);
}

@* Lists. Here is a (boring) list of all the \MMIX\ opcodes, in order.

@<Declare \&{mmix\_opcode} and \&{internal\_opcode}@>=
typedef enum{@/
@!TRAP,@!FCMP,@!FUN,@!FEQL,@!FADD,@!FIX,@!FSUB,@!FIXU,@/
@!FLOT,@!FLOTI,@!FLOTU,@!FLOTUI,@!SFLOT,@!SFLOTI,@!SFLOTU,@!SFLOTUI,@/
@!FMUL,@!FCMPE,@!FUNE,@!FEQLE,@!FDIV,@!FSQRT,@!FREM,@!FINT,@/
@!MUL,@!MULI,@!MULU,@!MULUI,@!DIV,@!DIVI,@!DIVU,@!DIVUI,@/
@!ADD,@!ADDI,@!ADDU,@!ADDUI,@!SUB,@!SUBI,@!SUBU,@!SUBUI,@/
@!IIADDU,@!IIADDUI,@!IVADDU,@!IVADDUI,@!VIIIADDU,@!VIIIADDUI,@!XVIADDU,@!XVIADDUI,@/
@!CMP,@!CMPI,@!CMPU,@!CMPUI,@!NEG,@!NEGI,@!NEGU,@!NEGUI,@/
@!SL,@!SLI,@!SLU,@!SLUI,@!SR,@!SRI,@!SRU,@!SRUI,@/
@!BN,@!BNB,@!BZ,@!BZB,@!BP,@!BPB,@!BOD,@!BODB,@/
@!BNN,@!BNNB,@!BNZ,@!BNZB,@!BNP,@!BNPB,@!BEV,@!BEVB,@/
@!PBN,@!PBNB,@!PBZ,@!PBZB,@!PBP,@!PBPB,@!PBOD,@!PBODB,@/
@!PBNN,@!PBNNB,@!PBNZ,@!PBNZB,@!PBNP,@!PBNPB,@!PBEV,@!PBEVB,@/
@!CSN,@!CSNI,@!CSZ,@!CSZI,@!CSP,@!CSPI,@!CSOD,@!CSODI,@/
@!CSNN,@!CSNNI,@!CSNZ,@!CSNZI,@!CSNP,@!CSNPI,@!CSEV,@!CSEVI,@/
@!ZSN,@!ZSNI,@!ZSZ,@!ZSZI,@!ZSP,@!ZSPI,@!ZSOD,@!ZSODI,@/
@!ZSNN,@!ZSNNI,@!ZSNZ,@!ZSNZI,@!ZSNP,@!ZSNPI,@!ZSEV,@!ZSEVI,@/
@!LDB,@!LDBI,@!LDBU,@!LDBUI,@!LDW,@!LDWI,@!LDWU,@!LDWUI,@/
@!LDT,@!LDTI,@!LDTU,@!LDTUI,@!LDO,@!LDOI,@!LDOU,@!LDOUI,@/
@!LDSF,@!LDSFI,@!LDHT,@!LDHTI,@!CSWAP,@!CSWAPI,@!LDUNC,@!LDUNCI,@/
@!LDVTS,@!LDVTSI,@!PRELD,@!PRELDI,@!PREGO,@!PREGOI,@!GO,@!GOI,@/
@!STB,@!STBI,@!STBU,@!STBUI,@!STW,@!STWI,@!STWU,@!STWUI,@/
@!STT,@!STTI,@!STTU,@!STTUI,@!STO,@!STOI,@!STOU,@!STOUI,@/
@!STSF,@!STSFI,@!STHT,@!STHTI,@!STCO,@!STCOI,@!STUNC,@!STUNCI,@/
@!SYNCD,@!SYNCDI,@!PREST,@!PRESTI,@!SYNCID,@!SYNCIDI,@!PUSHGO,@!PUSHGOI,@/
@!OR,@!ORI,@!ORN,@!ORNI,@!NOR,@!NORI,@!XOR,@!XORI,@/
@!AND,@!ANDI,@!ANDN,@!ANDNI,@!NAND,@!NANDI,@!NXOR,@!NXORI,@/
@!BDIF,@!BDIFI,@!WDIF,@!WDIFI,@!TDIF,@!TDIFI,@!ODIF,@!ODIFI,@/
@!MUX,@!MUXI,@!SADD,@!SADDI,@!MOR,@!MORI,@!MXOR,@!MXORI,@/
@!SETH,@!SETMH,@!SETML,@!SETL,@!INCH,@!INCMH,@!INCML,@!INCL,@/
@!ORH,@!ORMH,@!ORML,@!ORL,@!ANDNH,@!ANDNMH,@!ANDNML,@!ANDNL,@/
@!JMP,@!JMPB,@!PUSHJ,@!PUSHJB,@!GETA,@!GETAB,@!PUT,@!PUTI,@/
@!POP,@!RESUME,@!SAVE,@!UNSAVE,@!SYNC,@!SWYM,@!GET,@!TRIP}@+@!mmix_opcode;

@ @<Glob...@>=
char *opcode_name[]={
"TRAP","FCMP","FUN","FEQL","FADD","FIX","FSUB","FIXU",@/
"FLOT","FLOTI","FLOTU","FLOTUI","SFLOT","SFLOTI","SFLOTU","SFLOTUI",@/
"FMUL","FCMPE","FUNE","FEQLE","FDIV","FSQRT","FREM","FINT",@/
"MUL","MULI","MULU","MULUI","DIV","DIVI","DIVU","DIVUI",@/
"ADD","ADDI","ADDU","ADDUI","SUB","SUBI","SUBU","SUBUI",@/
"2ADDU","2ADDUI","4ADDU","4ADDUI","8ADDU","8ADDUI","16ADDU","16ADDUI",@/
"CMP","CMPI","CMPU","CMPUI","NEG","NEGI","NEGU","NEGUI",@/
"SL","SLI","SLU","SLUI","SR","SRI","SRU","SRUI",@/
"BN","BNB","BZ","BZB","BP","BPB","BOD","BODB",@/
"BNN","BNNB","BNZ","BNZB","BNP","BNPB","BEV","BEVB",@/
"PBN","PBNB","PBZ","PBZB","PBP","PBPB","PBOD","PBODB",@/
"PBNN","PBNNB","PBNZ","PBNZB","PBNP","PBNPB","PBEV","PBEVB",@/
"CSN","CSNI","CSZ","CSZI","CSP","CSPI","CSOD","CSODI",@/
"CSNN","CSNNI","CSNZ","CSNZI","CSNP","CSNPI","CSEV","CSEVI",@/
"ZSN","ZSNI","ZSZ","ZSZI","ZSP","ZSPI","ZSOD","ZSODI",@/
"ZSNN","ZSNNI","ZSNZ","ZSNZI","ZSNP","ZSNPI","ZSEV","ZSEVI",@/
"LDB","LDBI","LDBU","LDBUI","LDW","LDWI","LDWU","LDWUI",@/
"LDT","LDTI","LDTU","LDTUI","LDO","LDOI","LDOU","LDOUI",@/
"LDSF","LDSFI","LDHT","LDHTI","CSWAP","CSWAPI","LDUNC","LDUNCI",@/
"LDVTS","LDVTSI","PRELD","PRELDI","PREGO","PREGOI","GO","GOI",@/
"STB","STBI","STBU","STBUI","STW","STWI","STWU","STWUI",@/
"STT","STTI","STTU","STTUI","STO","STOI","STOU","STOUI",@/
"STSF","STSFI","STHT","STHTI","STCO","STCOI","STUNC","STUNCI",@/
"SYNCD","SYNCDI","PREST","PRESTI","SYNCID","SYNCIDI","PUSHGO","PUSHGOI",@/
"OR","ORI","ORN","ORNI","NOR","NORI","XOR","XORI",@/
"AND","ANDI","ANDN","ANDNI","NAND","NANDI","NXOR","NXORI",@/
"BDIF","BDIFI","WDIF","WDIFI","TDIF","TDIFI","ODIF","ODIFI",@/
"MUX","MUXI","SADD","SADDI","MOR","MORI","MXOR","MXORI",@/
"SETH","SETMH","SETML","SETL","INCH","INCMH","INCML","INCL",@/
"ORH","ORMH","ORML","ORL","ANDNH","ANDNMH","ANDNML","ANDNL",@/
"JMP","JMPB","PUSHJ","PUSHJB","GETA","GETAB","PUT","PUTI",@/
"POP","RESUME","SAVE","UNSAVE","SYNC","SWYM","GET","TRIP"};

@ And here is a (likewise boring) list of all the internal opcodes.
The smallest numbers, less than or equal to |max_pipe_op|, correspond
to operations for which arbitrary pipeline delays can be configured
with |MMIX_config|. The largest numbers, greater than |max_real_command|,
correspond to internally
generated operations that have no official OP code; for example,
there are internal operations to shift the $\gamma$ pointer in the
register stack, and to compute page table entries.

@<Declare \&{mmix\_opcode} and \&{internal\_opcode}@>=
#define max_pipe_op feps
#define max_real_command trip

typedef enum{@/
@!mul0, /* multiplication by zero */
@!mul1, /* multiplication by 1--8 bits */
@!mul2, /* multiplication by 9--16 bits */
@!mul3, /* multiplication by 17--24 bits */
@!mul4, /* multiplication by 25--32 bits */
@!mul5, /* multiplication by 33--40 bits */
@!mul6, /* multiplication by 41--48 bits */
@!mul7, /* multiplication by 49--56 bits */
@!mul8, /* multiplication by 57--64 bits */
@!div, /* \.{DIV[U][I]} */
@!sh, /* \.{S[L,R][U][I]} */
@!mux, /* \.{MUX[I]} */
@!sadd, /* \.{SADD[I]} */
@!mor, /* \.{M[X]OR[I]} */
@!fadd, /* \.{FADD}, \.{FSUB} */
@!fmul, /* \.{FMUL} */
@!fdiv, /* \.{FDIV} */
@!fsqrt, /* \.{FSQRT} */
@!fint, /* \.{FINT} */
@!fix, /* \.{FIX[U]} */
@!flot, /* \.{[S]FLOT[U][I]} */
@!feps, /* \.{FCMPE}, \.{FUNE}, \.{FEQLE} */
@!fcmp, /* \.{FCMP} */
@!funeq, /* \.{FUN}, \.{FEQL} */
@!fsub, /* \.{FSUB} */
@!frem, /* \.{FREM} */
@!mul, /* \.{MUL[I]} */
@!mulu, /* \.{MULU[I]} */
@!divu, /* \.{DIVU[I]} */
@!add, /* \.{ADD[I]} */
@!addu, /* \.{[2,4,8,16,]ADDU[I]}, \.{INC[M][H,L]} */
@!sub, /* \.{SUB[I]}, \.{NEG[I]} */
@!subu, /* \.{SUBU[I]}, \.{NEGU[I]} */
@!set, /* \.{SET[M][H,L]}, \.{GETA[B]} */
@!or, /* \.{OR[I]}, \.{OR[M][H,L]} */
@!orn, /* \.{ORN[I]} */
@!nor, /* \.{NOR[I]} */
@!and, /* \.{AND[I]} */
@!andn, /* \.{ANDN[I]}, \.{ANDN[M][H,L]} */
@!nand, /* \.{NAND[I]} */
@!xor, /* \.{XOR[I]} */
@!nxor, /* \.{NXOR[I]} */
@!shlu, /* \.{SLU[I]} */
@!shru, /* \.{SRU[I]} */
@!shl, /* \.{SL[I]} */
@!shr, /* \.{SR[I]} */
@!cmp, /* \.{CMP[I]} */
@!cmpu, /* \.{CMPU[I]} */
@!bdif, /* \.{BDIF[I]} */
@!wdif, /* \.{WDIF[I]} */
@!tdif, /* \.{TDIF[I]} */
@!odif, /* \.{ODIF[I]} */
@!zset, /* \.{ZS[N][N,Z,P][I]}, \.{ZSEV[I]}, \.{ZSOD[I]} */
@!cset, /* \.{CS[N][N,Z,P][I]}, \.{CSEV[I]}, \.{CSOD[I]} */
@!get, /* \.{GET} */
@!put, /* \.{PUT[I]} */
@!ld, /* \.{LD[B,W,T,O][U][I]}, \.{LDHT[I]}, \.{LDSF[I]} */
@!ldptp, /* load page table pointer */
@!ldpte, /* load page table entry */
@!ldunc, /* \.{LDUNC[I]} */
@!ldvts, /* \.{LDVTS[I]} */
@!preld, /* \.{PRELD[I]} */
@!prest, /* \.{PREST[I]} */
@!st, /* \.{STO[U][I]}, \.{STCO[I]}, \.{STUNC[I]} */
@!syncd, /* \.{SYNCD[I]} */
@!syncid, /* \.{SYNCID[I]} */
@!pst, /* \.{ST[B,W,T][U][I]}, \.{STHT[I]} */
@!stunc, /* \.{STUNC[I]}, in write buffer */
@!cswap, /* \.{CSWAP[I]} */
@!br, /* \.{B[N][N,Z,P][B]} */
@!pbr, /* \.{PB[N][N,Z,P][B]} */
@!pushj, /* \.{PUSHJ[B]} */
@!go, /* \.{GO[I]} */
@!prego, /* \.{PREGO[I]} */
@!pushgo, /* \.{PUSHGO[I]} */
@!pop, /* \.{POP} */
@!resume, /* \.{RESUME} */
@!save, /* \.{SAVE} */
@!unsave, /* \.{UNSAVE} */
@!sync, /* \.{SYNC} */
@!jmp, /* \.{JMP[B]} */
@!noop, /* \.{SWYM} */
@!trap, /* \.{TRAP} */
@!trip, /* \.{TRIP} */
@!incgamma, /* increase $\gamma$ pointer */
@!decgamma, /* decrease $\gamma$ pointer */
@!incrl, /* increase rL and $\beta$ */
@!sav, /* intermediate stage of \.{SAVE} */
@!unsav, /* intermediate stage of \.{UNSAVE} */
@!resum /* intermediate stage of \.{RESUME} */
}@! internal_opcode;

@ @<Glob...@>=
char *internal_op_name[]={
"mul0",
"mul1",
"mul2",
"mul3",
"mul4",
"mul5",
"mul6",
"mul7",
"mul8",
"div",
"sh",
"mux",
"sadd",
"mor",
"fadd",
"fmul",
"fdiv",
"fsqrt",
"fint",
"fix",
"flot",
"feps",
"fcmp",
"funeq",
"fsub",
"frem",
"mul",
"mulu",
"divu",
"add",
"addu",
"sub",
"subu",
"set",
"or",
"orn",
"nor",
"and",
"andn",
"nand",
"xor",
"nxor",
"shlu",
"shru",
"shl",
"shr",
"cmp",
"cmpu",
"bdif",
"wdif",
"tdif",
"odif",
"zset",
"cset",
"get",
"put",
"ld",
"ldptp",
"ldpte",
"ldunc",
"ldvts",
"preld",
"prest",
"st",
"syncd",
"syncid",
"pst",
"stunc",
"cswap",
"br",
"pbr",
"pushj",
"go",
"prego",
"pushgo",
"pop",
"resume",
"save",
"unsave",
"sync",
"jmp",
"noop",
"trap",
"trip",
"incgamma",
"decgamma",
"incrl",
"sav",
"unsav",
"resum"};

@ We need a table to convert the external opcodes to
internal ones.

@<Glob...@>=
internal_opcode internal_op[256]={@/
  trap,fcmp,funeq,funeq,fadd,fix,fsub,fix,@/
  flot,flot,flot,flot,flot,flot,flot,flot,@/
  fmul,feps,feps,feps,fdiv,fsqrt,frem,fint,@/
  mul,mul,mulu,mulu,div,div,divu,divu,@/
  add,add,addu,addu,sub,sub,subu,subu,@/
  addu,addu,addu,addu,addu,addu,addu,addu,@/
  cmp,cmp,cmpu,cmpu,sub,sub,subu,subu,@/
  shl,shl,shlu,shlu,shr,shr,shru,shru,@/
  br,br,br,br,br,br,br,br,@/
  br,br,br,br,br,br,br,br,@/
  pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,@/
  pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,pbr,@/
  cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,@/
  cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,cset,@/
  zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,@/
  zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,zset,@/
  ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,@/
  ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,ld,@/
  ld,ld,ld,ld,cswap,cswap,ldunc,ldunc,@/
  ldvts,ldvts,preld,preld,prego,prego,go,go,@/
  pst,pst,pst,pst,pst,pst,pst,pst,@/
  pst,pst,pst,pst,st,st,st,st,@/
  pst,pst,pst,pst,st,st,st,st,@/
  syncd,syncd,prest,prest,syncid,syncid,pushgo,pushgo,@/
  or,or,orn,orn,nor,nor,xor,xor,@/
  and,and,andn,andn,nand,nand,nxor,nxor,@/
  bdif,bdif,wdif,wdif,tdif,tdif,odif,odif,@/
  mux,mux,sadd,sadd,mor,mor,mor,mor,@/
  set,set,set,set,addu,addu,addu,addu,@/
  or,or,or,or,andn,andn,andn,andn,@/
  jmp,jmp,pushj,pushj,set,set,put,put,@/
  pop,resume,save,unsave,sync,noop,get,trip};

@ While we're into boring lists, we might as well define all the
special register numbers, together with an inverse table for
use in diagnostic outputs. These codes have been designed so that
special registers 0--7 are unencumbered, 8--11 can't be \.{PUT} by anybody,
12--18 can't be \.{PUT} by the user. Pipeline delays might occur
when \.{GET} is applied to special registers 21--31 or when
\.{PUT} is applied to special registers 15--20. The \.{SAVE} and
\.{UNSAVE} commands store and restore special registers 0--6 and 23--27.

@<Header def...@>=
#define rA 21 /* arithmetic status register */
#define rB 0  /* bootstrap register (trip) */
#define rC 8  /* cycle counter */
#define rD 1  /* dividend register */
#define rE 2  /* epsilon register */
#define rF 22 /* failure location register */
#define rG 19 /* global threshold register */
#define rH 3  /* himult register */
#define rI 12 /* interval counter */
#define rJ 4  /* return-jump register */
#define rK 15 /* interrupt mask register */
#define rL 20 /* local threshold register */
#define rM 5  /* multiplex mask register */
#define rN 9  /* serial number */
#define rO 10 /* register stack offset */
#define rP 23 /* prediction register */
#define rQ 16 /* interrupt request register */
#define rR 6  /* remainder register */
#define rS 11 /* register stack pointer */
#define rT 13 /* trap address register */
#define rU 17 /* usage counter */
#define rV 18 /* virtual translation register */
#define rW 24 /* where-interrupted register (trip) */
#define rX 25 /* execution register (trip) */
#define rY 26 /* Y operand (trip) */
#define rZ 27 /* Z operand (trip) */
#define rBB 7  /* bootstrap register (trap) */
#define rTT 14 /* dynamic trap address register */
#define rWW 28 /* where-interrupted register (trap) */
#define rXX 29 /* execution register (trap) */
#define rYY 30 /* Y operand (trap) */
#define rZZ 31 /* Z operand (trap) */

@ @<Glob...@>=
char *special_name[32]={"rB","rD","rE","rH","rJ","rM","rR","rBB",
 "rC","rN","rO","rS","rI","rT","rTT","rK","rQ","rU","rV","rG","rL",
 "rA","rF","rP","rW","rX","rY","rZ","rWW","rXX","rYY","rZZ"};

@ Here are the bit codes that affect trips and traps. The first eight
cases also apply to the upper half of~rQ; the next eight apply to~rA.

@d P_BIT (1<<0) /* instruction in privileged location */
@d S_BIT (1<<1) /* security violation */
@d B_BIT (1<<2) /* instruction breaks the rules */
@d K_BIT (1<<3) /* instruction for kernel only */
@d N_BIT (1<<4) /* virtual translation bypassed */
@d PX_BIT (1<<5) /* permission lacking to execute from page */
@d PW_BIT (1<<6) /* permission lacking to write on page */
@d PR_BIT (1<<7) /* permission lacking to read from page */
@d PROT_OFFSET 5 /* distance from |PR_BIT| to protection code position */
@d X_BIT (1<<8) /* floating inexact */
@d Z_BIT (1<<9) /* floating division by zero */
@d U_BIT (1<<10) /* floating underflow */
@d O_BIT (1<<11) /* floating overflow */
@d I_BIT (1<<12) /* floating invalid operation */
@d W_BIT (1<<13) /* float-to-fix overflow */
@d V_BIT (1<<14) /* integer overflow */
@d D_BIT (1<<15) /* integer divide check */
@d H_BIT (1<<16) /* trip handler bit */
@d F_BIT (1<<17) /* forced trap bit */
@d E_BIT (1<<18) /* external (dynamic) trap bit */

@<Glob...@>=
char bit_code_map[]="EFHDVWIOUZXrwxnkbsp";

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_bits @,@,@[ARGS((int))@];

@ @<Subr...@>=
static void print_bits(x)
  int x;
{
  register int b,j;
  for (j=0,b=E_BIT;(x&(b+b-1))&&b;j++,b>>=1)
    if (x&b) printf("%c",bit_code_map[j]);
}

@ The lower half of rQ holds external interrupts of highest priority.
Most of them are implementation-dependent, but a few are defined in general.

@<Header def...@>=
#define POWER_FAILURE (1<<0) /* try to shut down calmly and quickly */
#define PARITY_ERROR (1<<1) /* try to save the file systems */
#define NONEXISTENT_MEMORY (1<<2) /* a memory address can't be used */
#define REBOOT_SIGNAL (1<<4) /* it's time to start over */
#define INTERVAL_TIMEOUT (1<<7) /* the timer register, rI, has reached zero */

@* Dynamic speculation.
Now that we understand some basic low-level structures,
we're ready to look at the larger picture.

This simulator is based on the idea of ``dynamic scheduling with register
renaming,'' as introduced in the 1960s by R.~M. Tomasulo [{\sl IBM Journal
@^Tomasulo, Robert Marco@>
of Research and Development\/ \bf11} (1967), 25--33]. Moreover, the dynamic
scheduling method is extended here to ``speculative execution,'' as
implemented in several processors of the 1990s and described in section~4.6 of
Hennessy and Patterson's {\sl Computer Architecture}, second edition (1995).
@^Hennessy, John LeRoy@>
@^Patterson, David Andrew@>
The essential idea is to keep track of the pipeline contents by recording all
dependencies between unfinished computations in a queue called the {\it
reorder buffer}. An entry in the reorder buffer might, for example, correspond
to an instruction that adds together two numbers whose values are still being
computed; those numbers have been allocated space in earlier positions of the
reorder buffer. The addition will take place as soon as both of its operands
are known, but the sum won't be written immediately into the destination
register. It will stay in the reorder buffer until reaching the {\it hot
seat\/} at the front of the queue. Finally, the addition leaves the
hot seat and is said to be {\it committed}.

Some instructions in the reorder buffer may in fact be executed only
on speculation, meaning that they won't really be called for unless a prior
branch instruction has the predicted outcome. Indeed, we can say that
all instructions not yet in the hot seat are being executed speculatively,
because an external interrupt might occur at any time and change the entire
course of computation. Organizing the pipeline as a reorder buffer allows us
to look ahead and keep busy computing values that have a good chance of being
needed later, instead of waiting for slow instructions or slow memory
references to be completed.

The reorder buffer is in fact a queue of \&{control} records, conceptually
forming part of a circle of such records inside the simulator, corresponding
to all instructions that have been dispatched or {\it issued\/} but not yet
committed, in strict program order.

The best way to get an understanding of speculative execution is perhaps to
imagine that the reorder buffer is large enough to hold hundreds of
instructions in various stages of execution, and to think of an implementation
of \MMIX\ that has dozens of functional units---more than would ever actually
@^thinking big@>
be built into a chip. Then one can readily visualize the kinds of control
structures and checks that must be made to ensure correct execution. Without
such a broad viewpoint, a programmer or hardware designer will be inclined to
think only of the simple cases and to devise algorithms that lack the proper
generality. Thus we have a somewhat paradoxical situation in which a difficult
general problem turns out to be easier to solve than its simpler special cases,
because it enforces clarity of thinking.

Instructions that have completed execution and have not yet been committed are
analogous to cars that have gone through our hypothetical repair shop and are
waiting for their owners to pick them up. However, all analogies break down,
and the world of automobiles does not have a natural counterpart for the
notion of speculative execution. That notion corresponds roughly to situations
in which people are led to believe that their cars need a new piece of
equipment, but they suddenly change their mind once they see the price tag,
and they insist on having the equipment removed even after it has been
partially or completely installed.

Speculatively executed instructions might make no sense: They might divide
by zero or refer to protected memory areas, etc. Such anomalies are not
considered catastrophic or even exceptional until the instruction reaches the
hot~seat.

The person who designs a computer with speculative execution is an optimist,
who has faith that the vast majority of the machine's predictions will come
true. The person who designs a reliable implementation of such a computer
is a pessimist, who understands that all predictions might come to naught. 
The pessimist does, however, take pains to optimize the cases that do turn out
well.

@ Let's consider what happens to a single instruction, say
\.{ADD} \.{\$1,\$2,\$3}, as it travels through the pipeline in a normal
situation. The first time this instruction is encountered, it is placed into
the I-cache (that is, the instruction cache), so that we won't have to access
memory when we need to perform it again. We will assume for simplicity in this
discussion that each I-cache access takes one clock cycle, although other
possibilities are allowed by |MMIX_config|.

Suppose the simulated machine fetches the example \.{ADD} instruction
at time 1000. Fetching is done by a coroutine whose |stage| number is~0.
A cache block typically contains 8 or 16 instructions. The fetch unit
of our machine is able to fetch up to |fetch_max| instructions on each clock
cycle and place them in the fetch buffer, provided that there is room in the
buffer and that all the instructions belong to the same cache block.

The dispatch unit of our simulator is able to issue up to |dispatch_max|
instructions on each clock cycle and move them from the fetch buffer to the
reorder buffer, provided that functional units are available for those
instructions and there is room in the reorder buffer. A functional unit that
handles \.{ADD} is usually called an ALU (arithmetic logic unit), and our
simulated machine might have several of them. If they aren't all stalled
in stage~1 of their pipelines, and if the reorder buffer isn't full, and if
the machine isn't in the process of deissuing instructions that were
mispredicted, and if
fewer than |dispatch_max| instructions are ahead of the \.{ADD} in the fetch
buffer, and if all such prior instructions can be issued without using up all
the free ALUs, our \.{ADD} instruction will be issued at time 1001.
(In fact, all of these conditions are usually true.)

We assume that $\rm L>3$, so that \$1, \$2, and~\$3 are local registers.
For simplicity we'll assume in fact that the register stack is empty, so that
the \.{ADD} instruction is supposed to set $\rm l[1]\gets l[2]+l[3]$. The
operands l[2] and~l[3] might not be known at time 1001; they are \&{spec}
values, which might point to \&{specnode} entries in the reorder buffer for
previous instructions whose destinations are l[2] and~l[3].
The dispatcher fills the next available control block of the reorder buffer
with information for the \.{ADD}, containing appropriate \&{spec} values
corresponding to l[2] and~l[3] in its |y| and~|z| fields. The |x|~field of
this control block will be inserted into a doubly linked list of \&{specnode}
records, corresponding to l[1] and to all instructions in the reorder buffer
that have l[1] as a destination. The boolean value |x.known| will be set to
|false|, meaning that this speculative value still needs to be
computed. Subsequent instructions that need l[1] as a source will point to
|x|, if they are issued before the sum |x.o| has been computed. Double
linking is used in the \&{specnode} list because the \.{ADD} instruction might
be cancelled before it is finally committed; thus deletions might occur
at either end of the list for~l[1].

At time 1002, the ALU handling the \.{ADD} will stall if its inputs |y|
and~|z| are not both known (namely if |y.p!=NULL| or |z.p!=NULL|).
In fact, it will also stall if its third input rA is not known;
the current speculative value of rA, except for its event bits,
is represented in the |ra|~field of the control block, and we must
have |ra.p==NULL|. In such a case the ALU will look to see if the
\&{spec} values pointed to by |y.p| and/or |z.p| and/or |ra.p| become
defined on this clock cycle, and it will update its own input values
accordingly.

But let's assume that |y|, |z|, and |ra| are already known at time 1002.
Then |x.o| will be set to |y.o+z.o| and |x.known| will become~|true|.
This will make the result destined for~l[1] available to be used in other
commands at time~1003.

If no overflow occurs when adding |y.o| to |z.o|, the |interrupt| and
|arith_exc| fields of the control block for \.{ADD} are set to zero.  But when
overflow does occur (shudder), there are two cases, based on the V-enable bit
of rA, which is found in field |b.o| of the control block. If this bit is~0,
the V-bit of the |arith_exc| field in the control block is set to~1; the
|arith_exc| field will be ored into~rA when the \.{ADD} instruction is
eventually committed.  But if the V-enable bit is~1, the trip handler should
be called, interrupting the normal sequence. In such a case, the |interrupt|
field of the control block is set to specify a trip, and the fetcher and
dispatcher are told to forget what they have been doing; all instructions
following the \.{ADD} in the reorder buffer must now be deissued. The virtual starting
address of the overflow trip handler, namely location~32, is hastily passed to
the fetch routine, and instructions will be fetched from that location
as soon as possible. (Of course the overflow and the trip handler are
still speculative until the \.{ADD} instruction is committed. Other exceptional
conditions might cause the \.{ADD} itself to be terminated before it
gets to the hot seat. But the pipeline keeps charging ahead, always trying to
guess the most probable outcome.)

The commission unit of this simulator is able to commit and/or deissue up to
|commit_max| instructions on each clock cycle. With luck, fewer than
|commit_max| instructions will be ahead of our \.{ADD} instruction at
time~1003, and they will all be completed normally. Then l[1]~can be set
to |x.o|, and the event bits of~rA can be updated from |arith_exc|,
and the \.{ADD} command can pass through the hot seat and out of the
reorder buffer.

@<External var...@>=
Extern int fetch_max, dispatch_max, peekahead, commit_max;
 /* limits on instructions that can be handled per clock cycle */

@ The instruction currently occupying the hot seat is the only
issued-but-not-yet-committed instruction that is guaranteed to be truly
essential to the machine's computation. All other instructions in the reorder
buffer are being executed on speculation; if they prove to be needed, well and
good, but we might want to jettison them all if, say, an external interrupt
occurs.

Thus all instructions that change the global state in complicated ways---like
\.{LDVTS}, which changes the virtual address translation caches---are
performed only when they reach the hot seat. Fortunately the vast majority
of instructions are sufficiently simple that we can deal with them more
efficiently while other computations are taking place.

In this implementation the reorder buffer is simply housed in an array of
control records. The first array element is |reorder_bot|, and the last is
|reorder_top|. Variable |hot| points to the control block in the hot seat, and
|hot-1| to its predecessor, etc. Variable |cool| points to the next control
block that will be filled in the reorder buffer. If |hot==cool| the reorder
buffer is empty; otherwise it contains the control records |hot|, |hot-1|,
\dots,~|cool+1|, except of course that we wrap around from |reorder_bot| to
|reorder_top| when moving down in the buffer.

@<External var...@>=
Extern control *reorder_bot, *reorder_top; /* least and greatest
                   entries in the ring containing the reorder buffer */
Extern control *hot, *cool; /* front and rear of the reorder buffer */
Extern control *old_hot; /* value of |hot| at beginning of cycle */
Extern int deissues; /* the number of instructions that need to be deissued */

@ @<Initialize e...@>=
hot=cool=reorder_top;
deissues=0;

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_reorder_buffer @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_reorder_buffer()
{
  printf("Reorder buffer");
  if (hot==cool) printf(" (empty)\n");
  else {@+register control *p;
    if (deissues) printf(" (%d to be deissued)",deissues);
    if (doing_interrupt) printf(" (interrupt state %d)",doing_interrupt);
    printf(":\n");
    for (p=hot;p!=cool; p=(p==reorder_bot? reorder_top: p-1)) {
      print_control_block(p);
      if (p->owner) {
        printf(" ");@+ print_coroutine_id(p->owner);
      }
      printf("\n");
    }
  }
  printf(" %d available rename register%s, %d memory slot%s\n",
     rename_regs, rename_regs!=1? "s": "",
     mem_slots, mem_slots!=1? "s": "");
}

@ Here is an overview of what happens on each clock cycle.

@<Perform one machine cycle@>=
{
  @<Check for external interrupt@>;
  dispatch_count=0;
  old_hot=hot; /* remember the hot seat position at beginning of cycle */
  old_tail=tail; /* remember the fetch buffer contents at beginning of cycle */
  suppress_dispatch=(deissues || dispatch_lock);
  if (doing_interrupt) @<Perform one cycle of the interrupt preparations@>@;
  else @<Commit and/or deissue up to |commit_max| instructions@>;
  @<Execute all coroutines scheduled for the current time@>;
  if (!suppress_dispatch) @<Dispatch one cycle's worth of instructions@>;
  ticks=incr(ticks,1); /* and the beat moves on */
  dispatch_stat[dispatch_count]++;
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
int dispatch_count; /* how many dispatched on this cycle */
bool suppress_dispatch; /* should dispatching be bypassed? */
int doing_interrupt; /* how many cycles of interrupt preparations remain */
lockvar dispatch_lock; /* lock to prevent instruction issues */

@ @<External v...@>=
Extern int *dispatch_stat;
  /* how often did we dispatch 0, 1, ... instructions? */
Extern bool security_disabled; /* omit security checks for testing purposes? */

@ @<Commit and/or deissue up to |commit_max| instructions@>=
{
  for (m=commit_max;m>0 && deissues>0; m--)
    @<Deissue the coolest instruction@>;
  for (;m>0;m--) {
    if (hot==cool) break; /* reorder buffer is empty */
    if (!security_disabled) @<Check for security violation, |break| if so@>;
    if (hot->owner) break; /* hot seat instruction isn't finished */
    @<Commit the hottest instruction, or |break| if it's not ready@>;
    i=hot->i;
    if (hot==reorder_bot) hot=reorder_top;
    else hot--;
    if (i==resum) break; /* allow the resumed instruction to see the new rK */
  }
}

@* The dispatch stage. It would be nice to present the parts of this simulator
by dealing with the fetching, dispatching, executing, and committing
stages in that order. After all, instructions are first fetched,
then dispatched, then executed, and finally committed.
However, the fetch stage depends heavily on difficult questions of
memory management that are best deferred until we have looked at
the simpler parts of simulation. Therefore we will take our initial
plunge into the details of this program by looking first at the dispatch phase,
assuming that instructions have somehow appeared magically in the fetch buffer.

The fetch buffer, like the circular priority queue of all coroutines
and the circular queue used for the reorder buffer, lives in an
array that is best regarded as a ring of elements. The elements
are structures of type \&{fetch}, which have five fields:
A 32-bit |inst|, which is an \MMIX\ instruction; a 64-bit |loc|,
which is the virtual address of that instruction; an |interrupt| field,
which is nonzero if, for example, the protection bits in the relevant page
table entry for this address do not permit execution access; a boolean
|noted| field, which becomes |true| after the dispatch unit has peeked
at the instruction to see whether it is a jump or probable branch;
and a |hist| field, which records the recent branch history.
(The least significant bits of~|hist| correspond to the most recent branches.)

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct {
  octa loc; /* virtual address of instruction */
  tetra inst; /* the instruction itself */
  unsigned int interrupt; /* bit codes that might cause interruption */
  bool noted; /* have we peeked at this instruction? */
  unsigned int hist; /* if we peeked, this was the |peek_hist| */
} fetch;

@ The oldest and youngest entries in the fetch buffer are pointed
to by |head| and |tail|, just as the oldest and youngest entries in the
reorder buffer are called |hot| and |cool|. The fetch coroutine will
be adding entries at the |tail| position, which starts at |old_tail|
when a cycle begins, in parallel with the actions simulated by
the dispatcher. Therefore the dispatcher is allowed to look only at
instructions in |head|, |head-1|, \dots,~|old_tail+1|, although a few
more recently fetched instructions will usually be present in the fetch
buffer by the time this part of the program is executed.

@<External v...@>=
Extern fetch *fetch_bot, *fetch_top; /* least and greatest
                   entries in the ring containing the fetch buffer */
Extern fetch *head, *tail; /* front and rear of the fetch buffer */

@ @<Glob...@>=
fetch *old_tail; /* rear of the fetch buffer available on the current cycle */

@ @d UNKNOWN_SPEC ((specnode*)1)

@<Initialize e...@>=
head=tail=fetch_top;
inst_ptr.p=UNKNOWN_SPEC;

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_fetch_buffer @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_fetch_buffer()
{
  printf("Fetch buffer");
  if (head==tail) printf(" (empty)\n");
  else {@+register fetch *p;
    if (resuming) printf(" (resumption state %d)",resuming);
    printf(":\n");
    for (p=head;p!=tail; p=(p==fetch_bot? fetch_top: p-1)) {
      print_octa(p->loc);
      printf(": %08x(%s)",p->inst,opcode_name[p->inst>>24]);
      if (p->interrupt) print_bits(p->interrupt);
      if (p->noted) printf("*");
      printf("\n");
    }
  }
  printf("Instruction pointer is ");
  if (inst_ptr.p==NULL) print_octa(inst_ptr.o);
  else {
    printf("waiting for ");
    if (inst_ptr.p==UNKNOWN_SPEC) printf("dispatch");
    else if (inst_ptr.p->addr.h==(tetra)-1)
      print_coroutine_id(((control*)inst_ptr.p->up)->owner);
    else print_specnode_id(inst_ptr.p->addr);
  }
  printf("\n");
}

@ The best way to understand the dispatching process is once again
to ``think big,'' by imagining a huge fetch buffer and the
@^thinking big@>
potential ability to issue dozens of instructions per cycle, although
the actual numbers are typically quite small.

If the fetch buffer is not empty after |dispatch_max| instructions have
been dispatched, the dispatcher also looks at up to |peekahead| further
instructions to see if they are jumps or other commands that change the
flow of control. Much of this action would happen in parallel on a
real machine, but our simulator works sequentially.

In the following program, |true_head| records the head of the fetch buffer as
instructions are actually dispatched, while |head| refers to the position
currently being examined (possibly peeking into the future).

If the fetch buffer is empty at the beginning of the current clock
cycle, a ``dispatch bypass'' allows the dispatcher to issue the
first instruction that enters the fetch buffer on this cycle. Otherwise
the dispatcher is restricted to previously fetched instructions.

@s func int

@<Dispatch one cycle's worth of instructions@>=
{@+register fetch *true_head, *new_head;
  true_head=head;
  if (head==old_tail && head!=tail)
    old_tail=(head==fetch_bot? fetch_top: head-1);
  peek_hist=cool_hist;
  for (j=0;j<dispatch_max+peekahead;j++)
    @<Look at the |head| instruction, and try
              to dispatch it if |j<dispatch_max|@>;
  head=true_head;
}

@ @<Look at the |head| instruction...@>=
{
  register mmix_opcode op;
  register int yz,f;
  register bool freeze_dispatch=false;
  register func *u=NULL;
  if (head==old_tail) break; /* fetch buffer empty */
  if (head==fetch_bot) new_head=fetch_top;@+else new_head=head-1;
  op=head->inst>>24; @+yz=head->inst&0xffff;
  @<Determine the flags, |f|, and the internal opcode, |i|@>;
  @<Install default fields in the |cool| block@>;
  if (f&rel_addr_bit) @<Convert relative address to absolute address@>;
  if (head->noted) peek_hist=head->hist;
  else @<Redirect the fetch if control changes at this inst@>;
  if (j>=dispatch_max || dispatch_lock || nullifying) {
    head=new_head;@+ continue; /* can't dispatch, but can peek ahead */
  }
  if (cool==reorder_bot) new_cool=reorder_top;@+else new_cool=cool-1;
  @<Dispatch an instruction to the |cool| block if possible,
    otherwise |goto stall|@>;
  @<Assign a functional unit if available, otherwise |goto stall|@>;
  @<Check for sufficient rename registers and memory slots, or |goto stall|@>;
  if ((op&0xe0)==0x40) @<Record the result of branch prediction@>;
  @<Issue the |cool| instruction@>;
  cool=new_cool;@+ cool_O=new_O;@+ cool_S=new_S;
  cool_hist=peek_hist;@+ continue;
stall: @<Undo data structures set prematurely in the |cool| block
    and |break|@>;
}

@ An instruction can be dispatched only if a functional unit
is available to handle it. A functional unit consists of a 256-bit
vector that specifies a subset of \MMIX's opcodes, and an array
of coroutines for the pipeline stages. There are $k$ coroutines in the
array, where $k$ is the maximum number of stages needed by any of the opcodes
supported.

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct func_struct{
  char name[16]; /* symbolic designation */
  tetra ops[8]; /* big-endian bitmap for the opcodes supported */
  int k; /* number of pipeline stages */
  coroutine *co; /* pointer to the first of $k$ consecutive coroutines */
} @!func;

@ @<External v...@>=
Extern func *funit; /* pointer to array of functional units */
Extern int funit_count; /* the number of functional units */

@ It is convenient to have
a 256-bit vector of all the supported opcodes, because we need to
shut off a lot of special actions when an opcode is not supported.

@<Glob...@>=
control *new_cool; /* the reorder position following |cool| */
int resuming; /* set nonzero if resuming an interrupted instruction */
tetra support[8]; /* big-endian bitmap for all opcodes supported */

@ @<Initialize...@>=
{@+register func *u;
  for (u=funit;u<=funit+funit_count;u++)
    for (i=0;i<8;i++) support[i] |= u->ops[i];
}

@ @d sign_bit ((unsigned)0x80000000)

@<Determine the flags, |f|, and the internal opcode, |i|@>=
if (!(support[op>>5]&(sign_bit>>(op&31)))) {
  /* oops, this opcode isn't supported by any function unit */
  f=flags[TRAP], i=trap;
}@+else f=flags[op], i=internal_op[op];
if (i==trip && (head->loc.h&sign_bit)) f=0,i=noop;

@ @<Issue the |cool| instruction@>=
if (cool->interim) {
  cool->usage=false;
  if (cool->op==SAVE) @<Get ready for the next step of \.{SAVE}@>@;
  else if (cool->op==UNSAVE) @<Get ready for the next step of \.{UNSAVE}@>@;
  else if (cool->i==preld || cool->i==prest)
     @<Get ready for the next step of \.{PRELD} or \.{PREST}@>@;
  else if (cool->i==prego) @<Get ready for the next step of \.{PREGO}@>@;
}
else if (cool->i<=max_real_command) {
  if ((flags[cool->op]&ctl_change_bit)||cool->i==pbr)
    if (inst_ptr.p==NULL && (inst_ptr.o.h&sign_bit) && !(cool->loc.h&sign_bit)
           && cool->i!=trap)
      cool->interrupt|=P_BIT; /* jumping from nonnegative to negative */
  true_head=head=new_head; /* delete instruction from fetch buffer */
  resuming=0;
}
if (freeze_dispatch) set_lock(u->co,dispatch_lock);
cool->owner=u->co;@+ u->co->ctl=cool;
startup(u->co,1); /* schedule execution of the new inst */
if (verbose&issue_bit) {
  printf("Issuing ");@+print_control_block(cool);
  printf(" ");@+print_coroutine_id(u->co);@+printf("\n");
}
dispatch_count++;

@ We assign the first functional unit that supports |op| and is
totally unoccupied, if possible; otherwise we assign the first
functional unit that supports |op| and has stage~1 unoccupied.

@<Assign a functional unit if available...@>=
{@+register int t=op>>5, b=sign_bit>>(op&31);
  if (cool->i==trap && op!=TRAP) { /* opcode needs to be emulated */
    u=funit+funit_count; /* this unit supports just \.{TRIP} and \.{TRAP} */
    goto unit_found;
  }
  for (u=funit;u<=funit+funit_count;u++) if (u->ops[t]&b) {
    for (i=0;i<u->k;i++) if (u->co[i].next) goto unit_busy;
    goto unit_found;
  unit_busy: ;
  }
  for (u=funit;u<funit+funit_count;u++)
    if ((u->ops[t]&b) && (u->co->next==NULL)) goto unit_found;
  goto stall; /* all units for this |op| are busy */
}
unit_found:    

@ The |flags| table records special properties of each operation code
in binary notation: \Hex{1}~means Z~is an immediate value, \Hex{2}~means rZ is
a source operand, \Hex{4}~means Y~is an immediate value, \Hex{8}~means rY is a
source operand, \Hex{10}~means rX is a source operand, \Hex{20}~means
rX is a destination, \Hex{40}~means YZ is part of a relative address,
\Hex{80}~means the control changes at this point.

@d X_is_dest_bit 0x20
@d rel_addr_bit 0x40
@d ctl_change_bit 0x80

@<Glob...@>=
unsigned char flags[256]={
0x8a, 0x2a, 0x2a, 0x2a, 0x2a, 0x26, 0x2a, 0x26, /* \.{TRAP}, \dots\ */
0x26, 0x25, 0x26, 0x25, 0x26, 0x25, 0x26, 0x25, /* \.{FLOT}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x2a, 0x2a, 0x2a, 0x2a, 0x26, 0x2a, 0x26, /* \.{FMUL}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{MUL}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{ADD}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{2ADDU}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x26, 0x25, 0x26, 0x25, /* \.{CMP}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{SL}, \dots\ */
0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, /* \.{BN}, \dots\ */
0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, /* \.{BNN}, \dots\ */
0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, /* \.{PBN}, \dots\ */
0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, 0x50, /* \.{PBNN}, \dots\ */
0x3a, 0x39, 0x3a, 0x39, 0x3a, 0x39, 0x3a, 0x39, /* \.{CSN}, \dots\ */
0x3a, 0x39, 0x3a, 0x39, 0x3a, 0x39, 0x3a, 0x39, /* \.{CSNN}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{ZSN}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{ZSNN}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{LDB}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{LDT}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x1a, 0x19, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{LDSF}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x0a, 0x09, 0x0a, 0x09, 0xaa, 0xa9, /* \.{LDVTS}, \dots\ */
0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, /* \.{STB}, \dots\ */
0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, /* \.{STT}, \dots\ */
0x1a, 0x19, 0x1a, 0x19, 0x0a, 0x09, 0x1a, 0x19, /* \.{STSF}, \dots\ */
0x0a, 0x09, 0x0a, 0x09, 0x0a, 0x09, 0xaa, 0xa9, /* \.{SYNCD}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{OR}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{AND}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{BDIF}, \dots\ */
0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, 0x2a, 0x29, /* \.{MUX}, \dots\ */
0x20, 0x20, 0x20, 0x20, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, /* \.{SETH}, \dots\ */
0x30, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, 0x30, /* \.{ORH}, \dots\ */
0xc0, 0xc0, 0xe0, 0xe0, 0x60, 0x60, 0x02, 0x01, /* \.{JMP}, \dots\ */
0x80, 0x80, 0x00, 0x02, 0x01, 0x00, 0x20, 0x8a}; /* \.{POP}, \dots\ */

@ @<Convert relative...@>=
{
  if (i==jmp) yz=head->inst&0xffffff;
  if (op&1) yz-=(i==jmp? 0x1000000: 0x10000);
  cool->y.o=incr(head->loc,4), cool->y.p=NULL;
  cool->z.o=incr(head->loc,yz<<2), cool->z.p=NULL;
}

@ The location of the next instruction to be fetched is in a \&{spec} variable
called |inst_ptr|. A slightly tricky optimization of the \.{POP} instruction
is made in the common case that the speculative value of~rJ is known.

@<Redirect the fetch if control changes at this inst@>=
{@+register int predicted=0;
  if ((op&0xe0)==0x40) @<Predict a branch outcome@>;
  head->noted=true;
  head->hist=peek_hist;
  if (predicted||(f&ctl_change_bit) || (i==syncid&&!(cool->loc.h&sign_bit))) {
    old_tail=tail=new_head; /* discard all remaining fetches */
    @<Restart the fetch coroutine@>;
    switch (i) {
 case jmp: case br: case pbr: case pushj: inst_ptr=cool->z;@+ break;
 case pop:@+if (g[rJ].up->known &&
          j<dispatch_max && !dispatch_lock && !nullifying) {
      inst_ptr.o=incr(g[rJ].up->o,yz<<2), inst_ptr.p=NULL;@+break;
      } /* otherwise fall through, will wait on |cool->go| */   
 case go: case pushgo: case trap: case resume: case syncid:
    inst_ptr.p=UNKNOWN_SPEC;@+ break;
 case trip: inst_ptr=zero_spec;@+ break;
    }
  }
}

@ At any given time the simulated machine is in two main states, the
``hot state'' corresponding to instructions that have been committed and the
``cool state'' corresponding to all the speculative changes currently
being considered. The dispatcher works with cool instructions and puts them
into the reorder buffer, where they gradually get warmer and warmer.
Intermediate instructions, between |hot| and |cool|, have intermediate
temperatures.

A machine register like l[101] or g[250] is represented by a specnode whose
|o|~field is the current hot value of the register. If the |up| and |down|
fields of this specnode point to the node itself,
the hot and cool values of the register are
identical. Otherwise |up| and |down| are pointers to the coolest and hottest
ends of a doubly linked list of specnodes, representing intermediate
speculative values (sometimes called ``rename registers'').
@^rename registers@>
The rename registers are implemented as the |x| or~|a| specnodes inside control
blocks, for speculative instructions that use this register as a
destination. Speculative instructions that use the register as a
source operand point to the next-hottest specnode on the list, until
the value becomes known. The doubly linked list of specnodes is an
input-restricted deque: A node is inserted at the cool end when the
dispatcher issues an instruction with this register as destination;
a node is removed from the cool end if an instruction needs to be deissued;
a node is removed from the hot end when an instruction is committed.

The special registers rA, rB, \dots\ occupy the same array as the
global registers g[32], g[33], \dots~\thinspace. For example,
rB is internally the same as g[0], because |rB=0|.

@<External v...@>=
Extern specnode g[256]; /* global registers and special registers */
Extern specnode *l; /* the ring of local registers */
Extern int lring_size; /* the number of on-chip local registers
         (must be a power of~2) */
Extern int max_rename_regs, max_mem_slots; /* capacity of reorder buffer */
Extern int rename_regs, mem_slots; /* currently unused capacity */

@ @<Header def...@>=
#define ticks @[g[rC].o@] /* the internal clock */

@ @<Glob...@>=
int lring_mask; /* for calculations modulo |lring_size| */

@ The |addr| fields in the specnode lists for registers are used
to identify that register in diagnostic messages. Such addresses
are negative; memory addresses are positive.

All registers are initially zero except rG, which is initially 255,
and rN, which has a constant value identifying the time of compilation.
(The macro \.{ABSTIME} is defined externally in the file \.{abstime.h},
which should have just been created by {\mc ABSTIME}\kern.05em;
{\mc ABSTIME} is
a trivial program that computes the value of the standard library function
|time(NULL)|. We assume that this number, which is the number of seconds in
the ``{\mc UNIX} epoch,'' is less than~$2^{32}$. Beware: Our assumption will
fail in February of 2106.)
@^system dependencies@>

@d VERSION 1 /* version of the \MMIX\ architecture that we support */
@d SUBVERSION 0 /* secondary byte of version number */
@d SUBSUBVERSION 0 /* further qualification to version number */

@<Initialize everything@>=
rename_regs=max_rename_regs;
mem_slots=max_mem_slots;
lring_mask=lring_size-1;
for (j=0;j<256;j++) {
  g[j].addr.h=sign_bit, g[j].addr.l=j, g[j].known=true;
  g[j].up=g[j].down=&g[j];
}
g[rG].o.l=255;
g[rN].o.h=(VERSION<<24)+(SUBVERSION<<16)+(SUBSUBVERSION<<8);
g[rN].o.l=ABSTIME; /* see comment and warning above */
for (j=0;j<lring_size;j++) {
  l[j].addr.h=sign_bit, l[j].addr.l=256+j, l[j].known=true;
  l[j].up=l[j].down=&l[j];
}

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_specnode_id @,@,@[ARGS((octa))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_specnode_id(a)
  octa a;
{
  if (a.h==sign_bit) {
    if (a.l<32) printf(special_name[a.l]);
    else if (a.l<256) printf("g[%d]",a.l);
    else printf("l[%d]",a.l-256);
  }@+else if (a.h!=(tetra)-1) {
    printf("m[");@+print_octa(a);@+printf("]");
  }
}

@ The |specval| subroutine produces a \&{spec} corresponding to the
currently coolest value of a given local or global register.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static spec specval @,@,@[ARGS((specnode*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static spec specval(r)
  specnode *r;
{@+spec res;
  if (r->up->known) res.o=r->up->o,res.p=NULL;
  else res.p=r->up;
  return res;
}

@ The |spec_install| subroutine introduces a new speculative value at
the cool end of a given doubly linked~list.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void spec_install @,@,@[ARGS((specnode*,specnode*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void spec_install(r,t) /* insert |t| into list |r| */
  specnode *r,*t;
{
  t->up=r->up;
  t->up->down=t;
  r->up=t;
  t->down=r;
  t->addr=r->addr;
}

@ Conversely, |spec_rem| takes such a value out.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void spec_rem @,@,@[ARGS((specnode*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void spec_rem(t) /* remove |t| from its list */
  specnode *t;
{@+register specnode *u=t->up, *d=t->down;
  u->down=d;@+ d->up=u;
}

@ Some special registers are so central to \MMIX's operation, they are
carried along with each control block in the reorder buffer instead of being
treated as source and destination registers of each instruction. For example,
the register stack pointers rO and~rS are treated in this way.
The normal specnodes for rO and~rS, namely |g[rO]| and~|g[rS]|,
are not actually used;
the cool values are called |cool_O| and |cool_S|.
(Actually |cool_O| and |cool_S| correspond to the register
values divided by~8, since rO and~rS are always multiples of~8.)

The arithmetic status register, rA, is also treated specially. Its
event bits are kept up to date only at the ``hot'' end, by accumulating
values of |arith_exc|; an instruction
to \.{GET} the value of~rA will be executed only in the hot seat.
The other bits of~rA, which are needed to control trip handlers and
floating point rounding, are treated in the normal way.

@<External v...@>=
Extern octa cool_O,cool_S; /* values of rO, rS before the |cool| instruction */

@ @<Glob...@>=
int cool_L,cool_G; /* values of rL and rG before the |cool| instruction */
unsigned int cool_hist,peek_hist; /* history bits for branch prediction */
octa new_O,new_S; /* values of rO, rS after |cool| */

@ @<Install default fields in the |cool| block@>=
cool->op=op; @+cool->i=i;
cool->xx=(head->inst>>16)&0xff;@+
cool->yy=(head->inst>>8)&0xff;@+
cool->zz=(head->inst)&0xff;
cool->loc=head->loc;
cool->y=cool->z=cool->b=cool->ra=zero_spec;
cool->x.o=cool->a.o=cool->rl.o=zero_octa;
cool->x.known=false; cool->x.up=NULL;
cool->a.known=false; cool->a.up=NULL;
cool->rl.known=true; cool->rl.up=NULL;
cool->need_b=cool->need_ra=
  cool->ren_x=cool->mem_x=cool->ren_a=cool->set_l=false;
cool->arith_exc=cool->denin=cool->denout=0;
if ((head->loc.h&sign_bit) && !(g[rU].o.h&0x8000)) cool->usage=false;
else cool->usage=((op&(g[rU].o.h>>16))==g[rU].o.h>>24? true: false);
new_O=cool->cur_O=cool_O;@+ new_S=cool->cur_S=cool_S;
cool->interrupt=head->interrupt;
cool->hist=peek_hist;
cool->go.o=incr(cool->loc,4);
cool->go.known=false, cool->go.addr.h=-1,cool->go.up=(specnode*)cool;
cool->interim=false;

@ @<Dispatch an inst...@>=
if (new_cool==hot) goto stall; /* reorder buffer is full */
@<Make sure |cool_L| and |cool_G| are up to date@>;
@<Install the operand fields of the |cool| block@>;
if (f&X_is_dest_bit) @<Install register X as the destination, or insert
  an internal command and |goto dispatch_done| if X is marginal@>;
switch (i) {
@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>@;
default: break;
}
dispatch_done:@;

@ The \.{UNSAVE} operation begins by loading register~rG from memory.
We don't really need to know the value of~rG until twelve other registers
have been unsaved, so we aren't fussy about it here.

@<Make sure |cool_L| and |cool_G| are up to date@>=
if (!g[rL].up->known) goto stall;
cool_L=g[rL].up->o.l;
if (!g[rG].up->known && !(op==UNSAVE && cool->xx==1)) goto stall;
cool_G=g[rG].up->o.l;

@ @<Install the operand fields of the |cool| block@>=
if (resuming)
  @<Insert special operands when resuming an interrupted operation@>@;
else{
  if (f&0x10) @<Set |cool->b| from register X@>@;
  if (third_operand[op] && (cool->i!=trap))
    @<Set |cool->b| and/or |cool->ra| from special register@>;
  if (f&0x1) cool->z.o.l=cool->zz;
  else if (f&0x2) @<Set |cool->z| from register Z@>@;
  else if ((op&0xf0)==0xe0) @<Set |cool->z| as an immediate wyde@>;
  if (f&0x4) cool->y.o.l=cool->yy;
  else if (f&0x8) @<Set |cool->y| from register Y@>@;
}

@ @<Set |cool->z| from register Z@>=
{
  if (cool->zz>=cool_G) cool->z=specval(&g[cool->zz]);
  else if (cool->zz<cool_L) cool->z=specval(&l[(cool_O.l+cool->zz)&lring_mask]);
}

@ @<Set |cool->y| from register Y@>=
{
  if (cool->yy>=cool_G) cool->y=specval(&g[cool->yy]);
  else if (cool->yy<cool_L) cool->y=specval(&l[(cool_O.l+cool->yy)&lring_mask]);
}

@ @<Set |cool->b| from register X@>=
{
  if (cool->xx>=cool_G) cool->b=specval(&g[cool->xx]);
  else if (cool->xx<cool_L)
    cool->b=specval(&l[(cool_O.l+cool->xx)&lring_mask]);
  if (f&rel_addr_bit) cool->need_b=true; /* |br|, |pbr| */
}

@ If an operation requires a special register as third operand,
that register is listed in the |third_operand| table.

@<Glob...@>=
unsigned char third_operand[256]={@/
  0,rA,0,0,rA,rA,rA,rA, /* \.{TRAP}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,rA,rA,rA,rA,rA,rA, /* \.{FLOT}, \dots\ */
  rA,rE,rE,rE,rA,rA,rA,rA, /* \.{FMUL}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,0,0,rA,rA,rD,rD, /* \.{MUL}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,0,0,rA,rA,0,0, /* \.{ADD}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{2ADDU}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,rA,rA,0,0, /* \.{CMP}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{SL}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{BN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{BNN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{PBN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{PBNN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{CSN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{CSNN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{ZSN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{ZSNN}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{LDB}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{LDT}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{LDSF}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{LDVTS}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,0,0,rA,rA,0,0, /* \.{STB}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{STT}, \dots\ */
  rA,rA,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{STSF}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{SYNCD}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{OR}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{AND}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{BDIF}, \dots\ */
  rM,rM,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{MUX}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{SETH}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{ORH}, \dots\ */
  0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* \.{JMP}, \dots\ */
  rJ,0,0,0,0,0,0,255}; /* \.{POP}, \dots\ */

@ The |cool->b| field is busy in operations like \.{STB} or \.{STSF},
which need~rA. So we use |cool->ra| instead, when rA is needed.

@<Set |cool->b| and/or |cool->ra| from special register@>=
{
  if (third_operand[op]==rA || third_operand[op]==rE)
    cool->need_ra=true, cool->ra=specval(&g[rA]);
  if (third_operand[op]!=rA)
    cool->need_b=true, cool->b=specval(&g[third_operand[op]]);
}

@ @<Set |cool->z| as an immediate wyde@>=
{  switch (op&3) {
case 0: cool->z.o.h=yz<<16;@+break;
case 1: cool->z.o.h=yz;@+break;
case 2: cool->z.o.l=yz<<16;@+break;
case 3: cool->z.o.l=yz;@+break;
}
  if (i!=set) { /* register X should also be the Y operand */
    cool->y=cool->b; cool->b=zero_spec;
  }
}

@ @<Install register X...@>=
{
  if (cool->xx>=cool_G) {
    if (i!=pushgo && i!=pushj)
      cool->ren_x=true,spec_install(&g[cool->xx],&cool->x);
  }@+else if (cool->xx<cool_L)
    cool->ren_x=true,
      spec_install(&l[(cool_O.l+cool->xx)&lring_mask],&cool->x);
  else { /* we need to increase L before issuing |head->inst| */
 increase_L:@+ if (((cool_S.l-cool_O.l-cool_L-1)&lring_mask)==0)
      @<Insert an instruction to advance gamma@>@;
    else @<Insert an instruction to advance beta and L@>;
  }
}

@ @<Check for sufficient rename registers...@>=
if (rename_regs<cool->ren_x+cool->ren_a) goto stall;
if (cool->mem_x)
  if (mem_slots) mem_slots--;@+else goto stall;
rename_regs-=cool->ren_x+cool->ren_a;

@ The |incrl| instruction
advances $\beta$ and~rL by~1 at a time when we know that $\beta\ne\gamma$,
in the ring of local registers.

@<Insert an instruction to advance beta and L@>=
{
  cool->i=incrl;
  spec_install(&l[(cool_O.l+cool_L)&lring_mask],&cool->x);
  cool->need_b=cool->need_ra=false;
  cool->y=cool->z=zero_spec;
  cool->x.known=true; /* |cool->x.o=zero_octa| */
  spec_install(&g[rL],&cool->rl);
  cool->rl.o.l=cool_L+1;
  cool->ren_x=cool->set_l=true;
  op=SETH; /* this instruction to be handled by the simplest units */
  cool->interim=true;
  goto dispatch_done;
}

@ The |incgamma| instruction advances $\gamma$ and rS by storing an octabyte
from the local register ring to virtual memory location |cool_S<<3|.

@<Insert an instruction to advance gamma@>=
{
  cool->need_b=cool->need_ra=false;
  cool->i=incgamma;
  new_S=incr(cool_S,1);
  cool->b=specval(&l[cool_S.l&lring_mask]);
  cool->y.p=NULL, cool->y.o=shift_left(cool_S,3);
  cool->z=zero_spec;
  cool->mem_x=true, spec_install(&mem,&cool->x);
  op=STOU; /* this instruction needs to be handled by load/store unit */
  cool->interim=true;
  goto dispatch_done;
}

@ The |decgamma| instruction decreases $\gamma$ and rS by loading an octabyte
from virtual memory location |(cool_S-1)<<3| into the local register ring.

@<Insert an instruction to decrease gamma@>=
{
  cool->i=decgamma;
  new_S=incr(cool_S,-1);
  cool->z=cool->b=zero_spec; cool->need_b=false;
  cool->y.p=NULL, cool->y.o=shift_left(new_S,3);
  cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&l[new_S.l&lring_mask],&cool->x);
  op=LDOU; /* this instruction needs to be handled by load/store unit */
  cool->interim=true;
  cool->ptr_a=(void*)mem.up;
  goto dispatch_done;
}

@ Storing into memory requires a doubly linked data list of specnodes
like the lists we use for local and global registers. In this case
the head of the list is called |mem|, and the |addr| fields are
physical addresses in memory.

@<External v...@>=
Extern specnode mem;

@ The |addr| field of a memory specnode
is all 1s until the physical address has been computed.

@<Initialize e...@>=
mem.addr.h=mem.addr.l=-1;
mem.up=mem.down=&mem;

@ The \.{CSWAP} operation is treated as a partial store, with \$X
as a secondary output. Partial store (|pst|) commands read an octabyte
from memory before they write it.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case cswap: cool->ren_a=true;
  spec_install(cool->xx>=cool_G? &g[cool->xx]:
      &l[(cool_O.l+cool->xx)&lring_mask],&cool->a);
  cool->i=pst;
case st:@+ if ((op&0xfe)==STCO) cool->b.o.l=cool->xx;
case pst:
 cool->mem_x=true, spec_install(&mem,&cool->x);@+ break;
case ld: case ldunc: cool->ptr_a=(void *)mem.up;@+ break;

@ When new data is \.{PUT} into special registers 15--20 (namely rK,
rQ, rU, rV, rG, or~rL) it can affect many things. Therefore we stop
issuing further instructions until such \.{PUT}s are committed.
Moreover, we will see later that such drastic \.{PUT}s defer execution until
they reach the hot seat.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case put:@+ if (cool->yy!=0 || cool->xx>=32) goto illegal_inst;
 if (cool->xx>=8) {
   if (cool->xx<=11) goto illegal_inst;
   if (cool->xx<=18 && !(cool->loc.h&sign_bit)) goto privileged_inst;
 }
 if (cool->xx>=15 && cool->xx<=20) freeze_dispatch=true;
 cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&g[cool->xx],&cool->x);@+break;
@#
case get:@+ if (cool->yy || cool->zz>=32) goto illegal_inst;
 if (cool->zz==rO) cool->z.o=shift_left(cool_O,3);
 else if (cool->zz==rS) cool->z.o=shift_left(cool_S,3);
 else cool->z=specval(&g[cool->zz]);@+break;
illegal_inst: cool->interrupt |= B_BIT;@+goto noop_inst;
case ldvts:@+ if (cool->loc.h&sign_bit) break;
privileged_inst:  cool->interrupt |= K_BIT;
noop_inst: cool->i=noop;@+break;

@ A \.{PUSHGO} instruction with $\rm X\ge G$ causes L to increase
momentarily by~1, even if $\rm L=G$.
But the value of~L will be decreased before the \.{PUSHGO}
is complete, so it will never actually exceed~G. Moreover, we needn't
insert an~|incrl| command.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case pushgo: inst_ptr.p=&cool->go;
case pushj: {@+register int x=cool->xx;
  if (x>=cool_G) {
    if (((cool_S.l-cool_O.l-cool_L-1)&lring_mask)==0)
      @<Insert an instruction to advance gamma@>@;
    x=cool_L;@+ cool_L++;
    cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&l[(cool_O.l+x)&lring_mask],&cool->x);
  }
  cool->x.known=true, cool->x.o.h=0, cool->x.o.l=x;
  cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[rJ],&cool->a);
  cool->a.known=true, cool->a.o=incr(cool->loc,4);
  cool->set_l=true, spec_install(&g[rL],&cool->rl);
  cool->rl.o.l=cool_L-x-1;
  new_O=incr(cool_O,x+1);
}@+break;
case syncid: if (cool->loc.h&sign_bit) break;
case go: inst_ptr.p=&cool->go;@+break;
  
@ We need to know the topmost ``hidden'' element of the register stack
when a \.{POP} instruction is dispatched. This element is usually
present in the local register ring, unless $\gamma=\alpha$.

Once it is known, let $x$ be its least significant byte. We will
be decreasing rO by $x+1$, so we may have to decrease $\gamma$ repeatedly
in order to maintain the condition $\rm rS\le rO$.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case pop:@+if (cool->xx && cool_L>=cool->xx)
      cool->y=specval(&l[(cool_O.l+cool->xx-1)&lring_mask]);
pop_unsave:@+if (cool_S.l==cool_O.l)
    @<Insert an instruction to decrease gamma@>;
  {@+register tetra x; register int new_L;
    register specnode *p=l[(cool_O.l-1)&lring_mask].up;
    if (p->known) x=(p->o.l)&0xff;@+ else goto stall;
    if ((tetra)(cool_O.l-cool_S.l)<=x)
      @<Insert an instruction to decrease gamma@>;
    new_O=incr(cool_O,-x-1);
    if (cool->i==pop) new_L=x+(cool->xx<=cool_L? cool->xx: cool_L+1);
    else new_L=x;
    if (new_L>cool_G) new_L=cool_G;
    if (x<new_L)
      cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&l[(cool_O.l-1)&lring_mask],&cool->x);
    cool->set_l=true, spec_install(&g[rL],&cool->rl);
    cool->rl.o.l=new_L;
    if (cool->i==pop) {
      cool->z.o.l=yz<<2;
      if (inst_ptr.p==UNKNOWN_SPEC && new_head==tail) inst_ptr.p=&cool->go;
    }
    break;
  }

@ @<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case mulu: cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[rH],&cool->a);@+break;
case div: case divu: cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[rR],&cool->a);@+break;

@ It's tempting to say that we could avoid taking up space in the reorder
buffer when no operation needs to be done.
A \.{JMP} instruction qualifies as a no-op in this sense,
because the change of control occurs before the execution stage.
However, even a no-op might have to be counted in the usage register~rU,
so it might get into the execution stage for that reason.
A no-op can also cause a protection interrupt, if it appears in a negative
location. Even more importantly, a program might get into a loop that consists
entirely of jumps and no-ops; then we wouldn't be able to interrupt it,
because the interruption mechanism needs to find the current location
in the reorder buffer! At least one functional unit therefore needs to provide
explicit support for \.{JMP}, \.{JMPB}, and \.{SWYM}.

The \.{SWYM} instruction with |F_BIT| set is a special case: This is
a request from the fetch coroutine for an update to the IT-cache,
when the page table method isn't implemented in hardware.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case noop:@+if (cool->interrupt&F_BIT) {
   cool->go.o=cool->y.o=cool->loc;
   inst_ptr=specval(&g[rT]);
 }
 break;

@ @<Undo data structures set prematurely in the |cool| block...@>=
if (cool->ren_x || cool->mem_x) spec_rem(&cool->x);
if (cool->ren_a) spec_rem(&cool->a);
if (cool->set_l) spec_rem(&cool->rl);
if (inst_ptr.p==&cool->go) inst_ptr.p=UNKNOWN_SPEC;
break;

@* The execution stages. \MMIX's {\it raison d'\^etre\/} is its ability
to execute instructions. So now we want to simulate the behavior of its
functional units.

Each coroutine scheduled for action at the current tick of the clock has a
|stage| number corresponding to a particular subset of the \MMIX\ hardware.
For example, the coroutines with |stage=2| are the second stages in the
pipelines of the functional units. A coroutine with |stage=0| works
in the fetch unit. Several artificially large stage numbers
are used to control special coroutines that do things like write data
from buffers into memory.

In this program the current coroutine of interest is called |self|; hence
|self->stage| is the current stage number of interest. Another key variable,
|self->ctl|, is called~|data|; this is the control block being operated on by
the current coroutine. We typically are simulating an operation in which
|data->x| is being computed as a function of |data->y| and |data->z|.
The |data| record has many fields, as described earlier when we defined
\&{control} structures; for example, |data->owner| is the same as
|self|, during the execution stage, if it is nonnull.

This part of the simulator is written as if each functional unit is able to
handle all 256 operations. In practice, of course, a functional unit tends to
be much more specialized; the actual specialization is governed by the
dispatcher, which issues an instruction only to a functional unit that
supports it. Once an instruction has been dispatched, however, we can simulate
it most easily if we imagine that its functional unit is universal.

Coroutines with higher |stage| numbers are processed first.
The three most important variables that govern a coroutine's behavior, once
|self->stage| is given, are the external operation code |data->op|, the
internal operation code |data->i|, and the value of |data->state|. We
typically have |data->state=0| when a coroutine is first fired~up.

@<Local var...@>=
register coroutine *self; /* the current coroutine being executed */
register control *data; /* the |control| block of the current coroutine */

@ When a coroutine has done all it wants to on a single cycle,
it says |goto done|. It will not be scheduled to do any further work
unless the |schedule| routine has been called since it began execution.
The |wait| macro is a convenient way to say ``Please schedule me to resume
again at the current |data->state|'' after a specified time; for example,
|wait(1)| will restart a coroutine on the next clock tick.

@d wait(t)@+ {@+schedule(self,t,data->state);@+ goto done;@+}
@d pass_after(t)  schedule(self+1,t,data->state)
@d sleep@+ {@+self->next=self;@+ goto done;@+} /* wait forever */
@d awaken(c,t)  schedule(c,t,c->ctl->state)

@<Execute all coroutines scheduled for the current time@>=
cur_time++;@+ if (cur_time==ring_size) cur_time=0;
for (self=queuelist(cur_time);self!=&sentinel;self=sentinel.next) {
  sentinel.next=self->next;@+self->next=NULL; /* unschedule this coroutine */
  data=self->ctl;
  if (verbose&coroutine_bit) {
    printf(" running ");@+print_coroutine_id(self);@+printf(" ");
    print_control_block(data);@+printf("\n");
  }
  switch(self->stage) {
 case 0:@<Simulate an action of the fetch coroutine@>;
 case 1:@<Simulate the first stage of an execution pipeline@>;
 default:@<Simulate later stages of an execution pipeline@>;
 @t\4@>@<Cases for control of special coroutines@>;
  }
 terminate:@+if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 done:;
}

@ A special coroutine whose |stage| number is |vanish| simply goes away
at its scheduled time.

@<Cases for control of special...@>=
case vanish: goto terminate;

@ @<Glob...@>=
coroutine mem_locker; /* trivial coroutine that vanishes */
coroutine Dlocker; /* another */
control vanish_ctl; /* such coroutines share a common control block */

@ @<Init...@>=
mem_locker.name="Locker";
mem_locker.ctl=&vanish_ctl;
mem_locker.stage=vanish;
Dlocker.name="Dlocker";
Dlocker.ctl=&vanish_ctl;
Dlocker.stage=vanish;
vanish_ctl.go.o.l=4;
for (j=0;j<DTcache->ports;j++) DTcache->reader[j].ctl=&vanish_ctl;
if (Dcache) for (j=0;j<Dcache->ports;j++) Dcache->reader[j].ctl=&vanish_ctl;
for (j=0;j<ITcache->ports;j++) ITcache->reader[j].ctl=&vanish_ctl;
if (Icache) for (j=0;j<Icache->ports;j++) Icache->reader[j].ctl=&vanish_ctl;

@ Here is a list of the |stage| numbers for special coroutines to be
defined below.

@<Header def...@>=
#define max_stage 99 /* exceeds all |stage| numbers */
#define vanish 98 /* special coroutine that just goes away */
#define flush_to_mem 97 /* coroutine for flushing from a cache to memory */
#define flush_to_S 96 /* coroutine for flushing from a cache to the S-cache */
#define fill_from_mem 95 /* coroutine for filling a cache from memory */
#define fill_from_S 94 /* coroutine for filling a cache from the S-cache */
#define fill_from_virt 93 /* coroutine for filling a translation cache */
#define write_from_wbuf 92 /* coroutine for emptying the write buffer */
#define cleanup 91 /* coroutine for cleaning the caches */

@ At the very beginning of stage 1, a functional unit will stall if necessary
until its operands are available. As soon as the operands are all present, the
|state| is set nonzero and execution proper begins.

@<Simulate the first stage of an execution pipeline@>=
switch1:@+ switch(data->state) {
 case 0: @<Wait for input data if necessary; set |state=1| if it's there@>;
 case 1: @<Begin execution of an operation@>;
 case 2: @<Pass |data| to the next stage of the pipeline@>;
 case 3: @<Finish execution of an operation@>;
  @<Special cases for states in the first stage@>;
}

@ If some of our input data has been computed by another coroutine on the
current cycle, we grab it now but wait for the next cycle. (An actual machine
wouldn't have latched the data until then.)

@<Wait for input data if necessary; set |state=1| if it's there@>=
j=0;
if (data->y.p) {
  j++;
  if (data->y.p->known) data->y.o=data->y.p->o, data->y.p=NULL;
  else j+=10;
}
if (data->z.p) {
  j++;
  if (data->z.p->known) data->z.o=data->z.p->o, data->z.p=NULL;
  else j+=10;
}
if (data->b.p) {
  if (data->need_b) j++;
  if (data->b.p->known) data->b.o=data->b.p->o, data->b.p=NULL;
  else if (data->need_b) j+=10;
}
if (data->ra.p) {
  if (data->need_ra) j++;
  if (data->ra.p->known) data->ra.o=data->ra.p->o, data->ra.p=NULL;
  else if (data->need_ra) j+=10;
}
if (j<10) data->state=1;
if (j) wait(1); /* otherwise we fall through to case 1 */

@ Simple register-to-register instructions like \.{ADD} are assumed to take
just one cycle, but others like \.{FADD} almost certainly require more time.
This simulator can be configured so that \.{FADD} might take, say, four
pipeline stages of one cycle each ($1+1+1+1$), or two pipeline stages of two
cycles each ($2+2$), or a single unpipelined stage lasting four cycles (4),
etc. In any case the simulator computes the results now, for simplicity,
placing them in |data->x| and possibly also in |data->a| and/or
|data->interrupt|. The results will not be officially made |known| until
the proper time.

@<Begin execution of an operation@>=
switch (data->i) {
  @<Cases to compute the results of register-to-register operation@>;
  @<Cases to compute the virtual address of a memory operation@>;
  @<Cases for stage 1 execution@>;
}
@<Set things up so that the results become |known| when they should@>;

@ If the internal opcode |data->i| is |max_pipe_op| or less, a special
pipeline sequence like $1+1+1+1$ or $2+2$ or $15+10$, etc., has been
configured. Otherwise we assume that the pipeline sequence is simply~1.

Suppose the pipeline sequence is $t_1+t_2+\cdots+t_k$. Each $t_j$ is
positive and less than~256, so we represent the sequence as a
string |pipe_seq[data->i]| of unsigned ``characters,'' terminated by~0.
Given such a string, we want to do the following: Wait $(t_1-1)$ cycles
and pass |data| to stage~2; wait $t_2$ cycles and pass |data| to stage~3;
\dots; wait $t_{k-1}$ cycles and pass |data| to stage~$k$; wait $t_k$ cycles
and make the results |known|.

The value of |denin| is added to $t_1$; the value of |denout| is
added to~$t_k$.

@<Set things up so that the results become |known| when they should@>=
data->state=3;
if (data->i<=max_pipe_op) {@+register unsigned char *s=pipe_seq[data->i];
  j=s[0]+data->denin;
  if (s[1]) data->state=2; /* more than one stage */
  else j+=data->denout;
  if (j>1) wait(j-1);
}
goto switch1;

@ When we're in stage $j$, the coroutine for stage $j+1$ of the same functional
unit is |self+1|.

@<Pass |data| to the next stage of the pipeline@>=
pass_data:@+
if ((self+1)->next) wait(1); /* stall if the next stage is occupied */
{@+register unsigned char *s=pipe_seq[data->i];
  j=s[self->stage];
  if (s[self->stage+1]==0) j+=data->denout,data->state=3;
          /* the next stage is the last */
  pass_after(j);
}
passit: (self+1)->ctl=data;
data->owner=self+1;
goto done;

@ @<Simulate later stages of an execution pipeline@>=
switch2:@+if (data->b.p && data->b.p->known)
    data->b.o=data->b.p->o, data->b.p=NULL;
 switch(data->state) {
 case 0: panic(confusion("switch2"));
 case 1: @<Begin execution of a stage-two operation@>;
 case 2: goto pass_data;
 case 3: goto fin_ex;
  @<Special cases for states in later stages@>;
}

@ The default pipeline times use only one stage; they
can be overridden by |MMIX_config|. The total number of stages
supported by this simulator is limited to 90, since
it must never interfere with the |stage| numbers for special coroutines
defined below. (The author doesn't feel guilty about making this restriction.)

@<External v...@>=
#define pipe_limit 90
Extern unsigned char pipe_seq[max_pipe_op+1][pipe_limit+1];

@ The simplest of all register-to-register operations is |set|,
which occurs for commands like \.{SETH} as well as for commands
like \.{GETA}. (We might as well start with the easy cases and work our
way up.)

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case set: data->x.o=data->z.o;@+break;

@ Here are the basic boolean operations, which account for 24 of \MMIX's
256 opcodes.

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case or: data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h | data->z.o.h;
   data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l | data->z.o.l; break;
case orn: data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h |~data->z.o.h;
   data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l |~data->z.o.l; break;
case nor: data->x.o.h=~(data->y.o.h | data->z.o.h);
   data->x.o.l=~(data->y.o.l | data->z.o.l); break;
case and: data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h & data->z.o.h;
   data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l & data->z.o.l; break;
case andn: data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h &~data->z.o.h;
   data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l &~data->z.o.l; break;
case nand: data->x.o.h=~(data->y.o.h & data->z.o.h);
   data->x.o.l=~(data->y.o.l & data->z.o.l); break;
case xor: data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h ^ data->z.o.h;
   data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l ^ data->z.o.l; break;
case nxor: data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h ^~data->z.o.h;
   data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l ^~data->z.o.l; break;

@ The implementation of \.{ADDU} is only slightly more difficult.
It would be trivial except for the fact that internal opcode
|addu| is used not only for the \.{ADDU[I]} and \.{INC[M][H,L]} operations,
in which we simply want to add |data->y.o| to |data->z.o|, but also for
operations like \.{4ADDU}.

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case addu: data->x.o=oplus((data->op&0xf8)==0x28?@|
          shift_left(data->y.o,1+((data->op>>1)&0x3)): data->y.o, data->z.o);
 break;
case subu: data->x.o=ominus(data->y.o,data->z.o);@+ break;

@ Signed addition and subtraction produce the same results as their
unsigned counterparts, but overflow must also be detected. Overflow
occurs when adding |y| to~|z| if and only if |y| and~|z| have the
same sign but their sum has a different sign. Overflow occurs in
the calculation |x=y-z| if and only if it occurs in the calculation~|y=x+z|.

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case add: data->x.o=oplus(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  if (((data->y.o.h ^ data->z.o.h)&sign_bit)==0 &&
      ((data->y.o.h ^ data->x.o.h)&sign_bit)!=0) data->interrupt|=V_BIT;
  break;
case sub: data->x.o=ominus(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  if (((data->x.o.h ^ data->z.o.h)&sign_bit)==0 &&
      ((data->y.o.h ^ data->x.o.h)&sign_bit)!=0) data->interrupt|=V_BIT;
  break;

@ The shift commands might take more than one cycle, or they might even be
pipelined, if the default value of |pipe_seq[sh]| is changed. But we compute
shifts all at once here, because other parts of the simulator will take care
of the pipeline timing. (Notice that |shlu| is changed to |sh|, for this
reason. Similar changes to the internal op codes are made for other operators
below.)

@d shift_amt (data->z.o.h || data->z.o.l>=64? 64: data->z.o.l)

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case shlu: data->x.o=shift_left(data->y.o,shift_amt);@+data->i=sh;@+ break;
case shl: data->x.o=shift_left(data->y.o,shift_amt);@+data->i=sh;
 {@+octa tmpo;
    tmpo=shift_right(data->x.o,shift_amt,0);
   if (tmpo.h!=data->y.o.h || tmpo.l!=data->y.o.l) data->interrupt|=V_BIT;
 }@+break;
case shru: data->x.o=shift_right(data->y.o,shift_amt,1);@+data->i=sh;@+ break;
case shr:  data->x.o=shift_right(data->y.o,shift_amt,0);@+data->i=sh;@+ break;

@ The \.{MUX} operation has three operands, namely |data->y|, |data->z|,
and |data->b|; the third operand is the current (speculative) value of~rM, the
special mask register. Otherwise \.{MUX} is unexceptional.

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case mux: data->x.o.h=(data->y.o.h&data->b.o.h)+(data->z.o.h&~data->b.o.h);
          data->x.o.l=(data->y.o.l&data->b.o.l)+(data->z.o.l&~data->b.o.l);
  break;

@ Comparisons are a breeze.

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case cmp:@+if ((data->y.o.h&sign_bit)>(data->z.o.h&sign_bit)) goto cmp_neg;
  if ((data->y.o.h&sign_bit)<(data->z.o.h&sign_bit)) goto cmp_pos;
case cmpu:@+if (data->y.o.h<data->z.o.h) goto cmp_neg;
  if (data->y.o.h>data->z.o.h) goto cmp_pos;
  if (data->y.o.l<data->z.o.l) goto cmp_neg;
  if (data->y.o.l>data->z.o.l) goto cmp_pos;
 cmp_zero: break; /* |data->x| is zero */
 cmp_pos: data->x.o.l=1;@+ break; /* |data->x.o.h| is zero */
 cmp_neg: data->x.o=neg_one;@+ break;

@ The other operations will be deferred until later, now that we understand
the basic ideas. But one more piece of code ought to be
written before we move on, because
it completes the execution stage for the simple cases already considered.

The |ren_x| and |ren_a| fields tell us whether the |x| and/or |a|
fields contain valid information that should become officially known.

@<Finish execution of an operation@>=
fin_ex:@+if (data->ren_x) data->x.known=true;
else if (data->mem_x) data->x.known=true, data->x.addr.l&=-8;
if (data->ren_a) data->a.known=true;
if (data->loc.h&sign_bit)
  data->ra.o.l=0; /* no trips enabled for the operating system */
if (data->interrupt&0xffff) @<Handle interrupt at end of execution stage@>;
die: data->owner=NULL;@+goto terminate; /* this coroutine now fades away */

@* The commission/deissue stage. Control blocks leave the reorder buffer
either at the hot end (when they're committed) or at the cool end
(when they're deissued). We hope most of them are committed, but
from time to time our speculation is incorrect and we must deissue
a sequence of instructions that prove to be unwanted. Deissuing must
take priority over committing, because the dispatcher cannot do anything
until the machine's cool state has stabilized.

Deissuing changes the cool state by undoing the most recently issued
instructions, in reverse order. Committing changes the hot state by
doing the least recently issued instructions, in their original order.
Both operations are similar, so we assume that they take the same time;
at most |commit_max| instructions are deissued and/or committed on
each clock cycle.

@<Deissue the coolest instruction@>=
{
  cool=(cool==reorder_top? reorder_bot: cool+1);
  if (verbose&issue_bit) {
    printf("Deissuing ");@+print_control_block(cool);
    if (cool->owner) {@+printf(" ");@+print_coroutine_id(cool->owner);@+}
    printf("\n");
  }
  if (cool->ren_x) rename_regs++,spec_rem(&cool->x);
  if (cool->ren_a) rename_regs++,spec_rem(&cool->a);
  if (cool->mem_x) mem_slots++,spec_rem(&cool->x);
  if (cool->set_l) spec_rem(&cool->rl);
  if (cool->owner) {
    if (cool->owner->lockloc)
      *(cool->owner->lockloc)=NULL, cool->owner->lockloc=NULL;
    if (cool->owner->next) unschedule(cool->owner);
  }
  cool_O=cool->cur_O;@+ cool_S=cool->cur_S;
  deissues--;
}

@ @<Commit the hottest instruction...@>=
{
  if (nullifying) @<Nullify the hottest instruction@>@;
  else {
    if (hot->i==get && hot->zz==rQ)
      new_Q=oandn(g[rQ].o,hot->x.o);
    else if (hot->i==put && hot->xx==rQ)
      hot->x.o.h |= new_Q.h, hot->x.o.l |= new_Q.l;
    if (hot->mem_x) @<Commit to memory if possible, otherwise |break|@>;
    if (verbose&issue_bit) {
      printf("Committing ");@+print_control_block(hot);@+printf("\n");
    }
    if (hot->ren_x) rename_regs++,hot->x.up->o=hot->x.o,spec_rem(&(hot->x));
    if (hot->ren_a) rename_regs++,hot->a.up->o=hot->a.o,spec_rem(&(hot->a));
    if (hot->set_l) hot->rl.up->o=hot->rl.o,spec_rem(&(hot->rl));
    if (hot->arith_exc) g[rA].o.l |= hot->arith_exc;
    if (hot->usage) {
      g[rU].o.l++;@+ if (g[rU].o.l==0) {
        g[rU].o.h++;@+ if ((g[rU].o.h&0x7fff)==0) g[rU].o.h-=0x8000;
      }
    }
  }
  if (hot->interrupt>=H_BIT) @<Begin an interruption and |break|@>;
}

@ A load or store instruction is ``nullified'' if it is about to be captured
by a trap interrupt. In such cases it will be the only item in the reorder
buffer; thus nullifying is sort of a cross between deissuing and
committing. (It is important to have stopped dispatching when nullification
is necessary, because instructions such as |incgamma| and
|decgamma| change~rS, and we need to change it back when an unexpected
interruption occurs.)

@<Nullify the hottest instruction@>=
{
  if (verbose&issue_bit) {
    printf("Nullifying ");@+print_control_block(hot);@+printf("\n");
  }
  if (hot->ren_x) rename_regs++,spec_rem(&hot->x);
  if (hot->ren_a) rename_regs++,spec_rem(&hot->a);
  if (hot->mem_x) mem_slots++,spec_rem(&hot->x);
  if (hot->set_l) spec_rem(&hot->rl);
  cool_O=hot->cur_O, cool_S=hot->cur_S;
  nullifying=false;
}

@ Interrupt bits in rQ might be lost if they are set between a \.{GET}
and a~\.{PUT}. Therefore we don't allow \.{PUT} to zero out bits that
have become~1 since the most recently committed \.{GET}.

@<Glob...@>=
octa new_Q; /* when rQ increases in any bit position, so should this */

@ An instruction will not be committed immediately if it violates the basic
security rule of \MMIX: An instruction in a nonnegative location
should not be performed unless all eight of the internal interrupts
have been enabled in the interrupt mask register~rK.
Conversely, an instruction in a negative location should not be performed
if the |P_BIT| is enabled in~rK.

Such instructions take one extra cycle before they are committed.
The nonnegative-location case turns on the |S_BIT| of both rK and~rQ\null,
leading to an immediate interrupt (unless the current instruction
is |trap|, |put|, or~|resume|).

@<Check for security violation, |break| if so@>=
{
  if (hot->loc.h&sign_bit) {
    if ((g[rK].o.h&P_BIT) && !(hot->interrupt&P_BIT)) {
      hot->interrupt |= P_BIT;
      g[rQ].o.h |= P_BIT;
      new_Q.h |= P_BIT;
      if (verbose&issue_bit) {
        printf(" setting rQ=");@+print_octa(g[rQ].o);@+printf("\n");
      }
      break;
    }
  }@+else if ((g[rK].o.h&0xff)!=0xff && !(hot->interrupt&S_BIT)) {
    hot->interrupt |= S_BIT;
    g[rQ].o.h |= S_BIT;
    new_Q.h |= S_BIT;
    g[rK].o.h |= S_BIT;
    if (verbose&issue_bit) {
      printf(" setting rQ=");@+print_octa(g[rQ].o);
      printf(", rK=");@+print_octa(g[rK].o);@+printf("\n");
    }
    break;
  }
}

@* Branch prediction. An \MMIX\ programmer distinguishes statically between
``branches'' and ``probable branches,'' but many modern computers attempt to
do better by implementing dynamic branch prediction. (See, for example,
section~4.3 of Hennessy and Patterson's {\sl Computer Architecture},
second edition.) Experience has shown that dynamic branch prediction can
@^Hennessy, John LeRoy@>
@^Patterson, David Andrew@>
significantly improve the performance of speculative execution, by
reducing the number of instructions that need to be deissued.

This simulator has an optional |bp_table| containing $2^{\mkern1mua+b+c}$ entries of
$n$~bits each, where $n$ is between 1 and~8. Usually $n$ is 1 or~2 in
practice, but 8 bits are allocated per entry for convenience in this program.
The |bp_table| is consulted and updated on every branch instruction
(every \.{B}~or \.{PB} instruction, but not~\.{JMP}), for advice on
past history of similar situations. It is indexed by the $a$ least
significant bits of the address of the instruction, the $b$ most recent
bits of global branch history, and the next $c$ bits of both address
and history (exclusive-ored).

A |bp_table| entry begins at zero and is regarded as a signed $n$-bit number.
If it is nonnegative, we will follow the prediction in the instruction,
namely to predict a branch taken only in the \.{PB} case. If it is
negative, we will predict the opposite of the instruction's recommendation.
The $n$-bit number is increased (if possible) if the instruction's
prediction was correct, decreased (if possible) if the instruction's
prediction was incorrect.

(Incidentally, a large value of~$n$ is not necessarily a good idea.
For example, if $n=8$ the machine might need 128 steps to
recognize that a branch taken the first 150 times is not taken
the next 150 times. And if we modify the update criteria to avoid this
problem, we obtain a scheme that is rarely better than a simple scheme
with smaller~$n$.)

The values $a$, $b$, $c$, and $n$ in this discussion are called
|bp_a|, |bp_b|, |bp_c|, and |bp_n| in the program.

@<External v...@>=
Extern int bp_a,bp_b,bp_c,bp_n; /* parameters for branch prediction */
Extern char *bp_table; /* either |NULL| or an array of $2^{\mkern1mua+b+c}$ items */

@ Branch prediction is made when we are either about to issue an
instruction or peeking ahead. We look at the |bp_table|, but we
don't want to update it yet.

@<Predict a branch outcome@>=
{
  predicted=op&0x10; /* start with the instruction's recommendation */
  if (bp_table) {@+register int h;
    m=((head->loc.l&bp_cmask)<<bp_b)+(head->loc.l&bp_amask);
    m=((cool_hist&bp_bcmask)<<bp_a)^(m>>2);
    h=bp_table[m];
    if (h&bp_npower) predicted^=0x10;
  }
  if (predicted) peek_hist=(peek_hist<<1)+1;
  else peek_hist<<=1;
}

@ We update the |bp_table| when an instruction is issued.
And we store the opposite table
value in |cool->x.o.l|, just in case our prediction turns out to be wrong.

@<Record the result of branch prediction@>=
if (bp_table) {@+register int reversed,h,h_up,h_down;
  reversed=op&0x10;
  if (peek_hist&1) reversed^=0x10;
  m=((head->loc.l&bp_cmask)<<bp_b)+(head->loc.l&bp_amask);
  m=((cool_hist&bp_bcmask)<<bp_a)^(m>>2);
  h=bp_table[m];
  h_up=(h+1)&bp_nmask;@+ if (h_up==bp_npower) h_up=h;
  if (h==bp_npower) h_down=h;@+ else h_down=(h-1)&bp_nmask;
  if (reversed) {
    bp_table[m]=h_down, cool->x.o.l=h_up;
    cool->i=pbr+br-cool->i; /* reverse the sense */
    bp_rev_stat++;
  }@+else {
    bp_table[m]=h_up, cool->x.o.l=h_down; /* go with the flow */
    bp_ok_stat++;
  }
  if (verbose&show_pred_bit) {
    printf(" predicting ");@+print_octa(cool->loc);
    printf(" %s; bp[%x]=%d\n",reversed? "NG": "OK",m,
          bp_table[m]-((bp_table[m]&bp_npower)<<1));
  }
  cool->x.o.h=m;
}

@ The calculations in the previous sections need several precomputed constants,
depending on the parameters $a$, $b$, $c$, and~$n$.

@<Initialize e...@>=
bp_amask=((1<<bp_a)-1)<<2; /* least $a$ bits of instruction address */
bp_cmask=((1<<bp_c)-1)<<(bp_a+2); /* the next $c$ address bits */
bp_bcmask=(1<<(bp_b+bp_c))-1; /* least $b+c$ bits of history info */
bp_nmask=(1<<bp_n)-1; /* least significant $n$ bits */
bp_npower=1<<(bp_n-1); /* $2^{n-1}$, the sign bit of an $n$-bit number */

@ @<Glob...@>=
int bp_amask,bp_cmask,bp_bcmask,bp_nmask,bp_npower;
int bp_rev_stat,bp_ok_stat; /* how often we overrode and agreed */
int bp_bad_stat,bp_good_stat; /* how often we failed and succeeded */

@ After a branch or probable branch instruction has been issued and
the value of the relevant register has been computed in the
reorder buffer as |data->b.o|, we're ready to determine if the
prediction was correct or not.

@<Cases for stage 1 execution@>=
case br: case pbr: j=register_truth(data->b.o,data->op);
  if (j) data->go.o=data->z.o;@+ else data->go.o=data->y.o;
  if (j==(data->i==pbr)) bp_good_stat++;
  else { /* oops, misprediction */
    bp_bad_stat++;
    @<Recover from incorrect branch prediction@>;
  }
  goto fin_ex;

@ The |register_truth| subroutine is used by \.B, \.{PB}, \.{CS}, and
\.{ZS} commands to decide whether an octabyte satisfies the
conditions of the opcode, |data->op|.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static int register_truth @,@,@[ARGS((octa,mmix_opcode))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static int register_truth(o,op)
  octa o;
  mmix_opcode op;
{@+register int b;
  switch ((op>>1) & 0x3) {
 case 0: b=o.h>>31;@+break; /* negative? */
 case 1: b=(o.h==0 && o.l==0);@+break; /* zero? */
 case 2: b=(o.h<sign_bit && (o.h||o.l));@+break; /* positive? */
 case 3: b=o.l&0x1;@+break; /* odd? */
}
  if (op&0x8) return b^1;
  else return b;
}

@ The |issued_between| subroutine determines how many speculative instructions
were issued between a given control block in the reorder buffer and
the current |cool| pointer, when |cc=cool|.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static int issued_between @,@,@[ARGS((control*,control*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static int issued_between(c,cc)
  control *c,*cc;
{
  if (c>cc) return c-1-cc;
  return (c-reorder_bot)+(reorder_top-cc);
}

@ If more than one functional unit is able to process branch instructions and
if two of them simultaneously discover misprediction, or if misprediction is
detected by one unit just as another unit is generating an interrupt, we
assume that an arbitration takes place so that only the hottest one actually
deissues the cooler instructions.

Changes to the |bp_table| aren't undone when they were made on speculation in
an instruction being deissued; nor do we worry about cases where the same
|bp_table| entry is being updated by two or more active coroutines. After all,
the |bp_table| is just a heuristic, not part of the real computation.
We correct the |bp_table| only if we discover that a prediction was wrong, so
that we will be less likely to make the same mistake later.

@<Recover from incorrect branch prediction@>=
i=issued_between(data,cool);
if (i<deissues) goto die;
deissues=i;
old_tail=tail=head;@+resuming=0; /* clear the fetch buffer */
@<Restart the fetch coroutine@>;
inst_ptr.o=data->go.o, inst_ptr.p=NULL;
if (!(data->loc.h&sign_bit)) {
  if (inst_ptr.o.h&sign_bit) data->interrupt |= P_BIT;
  else data->interrupt &=~P_BIT;
}
if (bp_table) {
  bp_table[data->x.o.h]=data->x.o.l; /* this is what we should have stored */
  if (verbose&show_pred_bit) {
    printf(" mispredicted ");@+print_octa(data->loc);
    printf("; bp[%x]=%d\n",data->x.o.h,
          data->x.o.l-((data->x.o.l&bp_npower)<<1));
  }
}
cool_hist=(j? (data->hist<<1)+1: data->hist<<1);

@ @<External proto...@>=
Extern void print_stats @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
void print_stats()
{
  register int j;
  if (bp_table)
    printf("Predictions: %d in agreement, %d in opposition; %d good, %d bad\n",
                 bp_ok_stat,bp_rev_stat,bp_good_stat,bp_bad_stat);
  else printf("Predictions: %d good, %d bad\n",bp_good_stat,bp_bad_stat);
  printf("Instructions issued per cycle:\n");
  for (j=0;j<=dispatch_max;j++)
    printf("  %d   %d\n",j,dispatch_stat[j]);
}
  
@* Cache memory. It's time now to consider \MMIX's MMU, the memory management
unit. This part of the machine deals with the critical problem of getting data
to and from the computational units. In a RISC architecture all interaction
between main memory and the computer registers is specified by load and store
instructions; thus memory accesses are much easier to deal with than they
would be on a machine with more complex kinds of interaction. But memory
management is still difficult, if we want to do it well, because main memory
typically operates at a much slower speed than the registers do. High-speed
implementations of \MMIX\ introduce intermediate ``caches'' of storage in
order to keep the most important data accessible, and cache maintenance can be
complicated when all the details are taken into account.
(See, for example, Chapter 5 of Hennessy and Patterson's
{\sl Computer Architecture}, second edition.)
@^Hennessy, John LeRoy@>
@^Patterson, David Andrew@>
@^caches@>

This simulator can be configured to have up to three auxiliary caches between
registers and memory: An I-cache for instructions, a D-cache for data, and an
S-cache for both instructions and data. The S-cache, also called a {\it
secondary cache}, is supported only if both I-cache and D-cache are present.
Arbitrary access times for each cache can be specified independently;
we might assume, for example, that data items in the I-cache or D-cache can
be sent to a register in one or two clock cycles, but the access time for the
S-cache might be say 5 cycles, and main memory might require 20 cycles or more.
Our speculative pipeline can have many functional units handling load
and store instructions, but only one load or store instruction can be
updating the D-cache or S-cache or main memory at a time. (However, the
D-cache can have several read ports; furthermore, data might
be passing between the S-cache and memory while other data is passing
between the reorder buffer and the D-cache.)

Besides the optional I-cache, D-cache, and S-cache, there are required caches
called the IT-cache and DT-cache, for translation of virtual addresses to
physical addresses. A translation cache is often called a ``translation
@^TLB@>
@^translation caches@>
lookaside buffer'' or TLB; but we call it a cache since it is implemented in
nearly the same way as an I-cache.

@ Consider a cache that has blocks of $2^b$~bytes each and
associativity~$2^a$; here $b\ge3$ and $a\ge0$. The I-cache, D-cache, and
S-cache are addressed by 48-bit physical addresses, as if they were part of
main memory; but the IT and DT caches are addressed by 64-bit keys, obtained
from a virtual address by blanking out the lower $s$ bits and inserting the
value of~$n$, where the page size~$s$ and the process number~$n$ are found
in~rV. We will consider all caches to be addressed by 64-bit keys, so that
both cases are handled with the same basic methods.

Given a 64-bit key,
we ignore the low-order $b$~bits and use the next $c$~bits
to address the {\it cache set\/}; then the remaining $64-b-c$ bits should
match one of $2^a$ {\it tags\/} in that set. The case $a=0$ corresponds to a
so-called {\it direct-mapped\/} cache; the case $c=0$ corresponds to a
so-called {\it fully associative\/} cache. With $2^c$ sets of $2^a$ blocks
each, and $2^b$ bytes per block, the cache contains $2^{a+b+c}$ bytes of data,
in addition to the space needed for tags. Translation caches have $b=3$ and
they also usually have $c=0$.

If a tag matches the specified bits, we ``hit'' in the cache and can
use and/or update the data found there. Otherwise we ``miss,'' and 
we probably want to replace one of the cache blocks by the block containing
the item sought. The item chosen for replacement is called a {\it victim}.
The choice of victim is forced when the cache is direct-mapped, but four
strategies for victim selection are available when we must choose from
among $2^a$ entries for $a>0$:

\smallskip\textindent{$\bullet$} ``Random'' selection chooses the victim
by extracting the least significant $a$~bits of the clock.

\smallskip\textindent{$\bullet$} ``Serial'' selection chooses 0, 1, \dots,
$2^a-1$, 0, 1, \dots, $2^a-1$, 0, \dots~on successive trials.

\smallskip\textindent{$\bullet$} ``LRU (Least Recently Used)'' selection
chooses the victim that ranks last if items are ranked inversely to the time
that has elapsed since their previous use.

\smallskip\textindent{$\bullet$} ``Pseudo-LRU'' selection chooses the
victim by a rough approximation to LRU that is simpler to implement
in hardware. It requires a bit table $r_1\ldots r_{2^a-1}$.
Whenever we use an item
with binary address $(i_1\ldots i_a)_2$ in the set, we adjust the
bit table as follows:
$$r_1\gets1-i_1,\quad r_{1i_1}\gets1-i_2,\quad\ldots,\quad
r_{1i_1\ldots i_{a-1}}\gets1-i_a;$$
here the subscripts on~$r$ are binary numbers. (For example, when $a=3$,
the use of element $(010)_2$ sets $r_1\gets1$, $r_{10}\gets0$, $r_{101}\gets1$,
where $r_{101}$ means the same as $r_5$.) To select a victim, we start with
$l\gets1$ and then repeatedly set $l\gets2l+r_l$, $a$~times; then we
choose element $l-2^a$. When $a=1$, this scheme is equivalent to LRU.
When $a=2$, this scheme was implemented in the Intel 80486 chip.

@<Type...@>=
typedef enum {@!random,@!serial,@!pseudo_lru,@!lru} replace_policy;

@ A cache might also include a ``victim'' area, which contains the
last $2^v$ victim blocks removed from the main cache area. The victim
area can be searched in parallel with the specified cache set, thereby
increasing the chance of a hit without making the search go slower.
Each of the three replacement policies can be used also in the victim cache.

@ A cache also has a {\it granularity\/} $2^g$, where $b\ge g\ge3$.  This
means that we maintain, for each cache block, a set of $2^{b-g}$ ``dirty
bits,'' which identify the $2^g$-byte groups that have possibly changed since
they were last read from memory. Thus if $g=b$, an entire cache block is
either dirty or clean; if $g=3$, the dirtiness of each octabyte is maintained
separately.

Two policies are available when new data is written into all or part
of a cache block. We can {\it write-through}, meaning that we send all new data
to memory immediately and never mark anything dirty; or we can {\it
write-back}, meaning that we update the memory from the cache only when
absolutely necessary. Furthermore we can {\it write-allocate},
meaning that we keep the new data in the cache, even if the cache block being
written has to be fetched first because of a miss; or we can {\it
write-around}, meaning that we keep the new data only if it was part of an
existing cache block.

(In this discussion, ``memory'' is shorthand for ``the next level
of the memory hierarchy''; if there is an S-cache, the I-cache and
D-cache write new data to the S-cache, not directly to memory. The I-cache,
IT-cache, and DT-cache are read-only, so they do not need the facilities
discussed in this section. Moreover, the D-cache and S-cache can be assumed to
have the same granularity.)

@<Header def...@>=
#define WRITE_BACK 1 /* use this if not write-through */
#define WRITE_ALLOC 2 /* use this if not write-around */

@ We have seen that many flavors of cache can be simulated. They are
represented by \&{cache} structures, containing arrays of \&{cacheset}
structures that contain arrays of \&{cacheblock} structures
for the individual blocks. We use a full byte to store each |dirty| bit,
and we use full integer words to store |rank| fields for LRU processing, etc.;
memory economy is less important than simplicity in this simulator.

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct{
  octa tag; /* bits of key not included in the cache block address */
  char *dirty; /* array of $2^{g-b}$ dirty bits, one per granule */
  octa *data; /* array of $2^{b-3}$ octabytes, the data in a cache block */
  int rank; /* auxiliary information for non-|random| policies */
} cacheblock;
@#
typedef cacheblock *cacheset; /* array of $2^a$ or $2^v$ blocks */
@#
typedef struct{
  int a,b,c,g,v; /* lg of associativity, blocksize, setsize, granularity,
         and victimsize */
  int aa,bb,cc,gg,vv; /* associativity, blocksize, setsize, granularity,
         and victimsize (all powers of~2) */
  int tagmask; /* $-2^{b+c}$ */
  replace_policy repl,vrepl; /* how to choose victims and victim-victims */
  int mode; /* optional |WRITE_BACK| and/or |WRITE_ALLOC| */
  int access_time; /* cycles to know if there's a hit */
  int copy_in_time; /* cycles to copy a new block into the cache */
  int copy_out_time; /* cycles to copy an old block from the cache */
  cacheset *set; /* array of $2^c$ sets of arrays of cache blocks */
  cacheset victim; /* the victim cache, if present */
  coroutine filler; /* a coroutine for copying new blocks into the cache */
  control filler_ctl; /* its control block */
  coroutine flusher; /* a coroutine for writing dirty old data
                           from the cache */
  control flusher_ctl; /* its control block */
  cacheblock inbuf; /* filling comes from here */  
  cacheblock outbuf; /* flushing goes to here */
  lockvar lock; /* nonzero when the cache is being changed significantly */
  lockvar fill_lock; /* nonzero when filler should pass data back */
  int ports; /* how many coroutines can be reading the cache? */
  coroutine *reader; /* array of coroutines that might be reading
                                    simultaneously */  
  char *name; /* |"Icache"|, for example */
} cache;

@ @<External v...@>=
Extern cache *Icache, *Dcache, *Scache, *ITcache, *DTcache;

@ Now we are ready to define some basic subroutines for cache maintenance.
Let's begin with a trivial routine that tests if a given cache block is dirty.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static bool is_dirty @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static bool is_dirty(c,p)
  cache *c; /* the cache containing it */
  cacheblock *p; /* a cache block */
{
  register int j;
  register char *d=p->dirty;
  for (j=0;j<c->bb;d++,j+=c->gg) if (*d) return true;
  return false;
}

@ For diagnostic purposes we might want to display an entire cache block.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_cache_block @,@,@[ARGS((cacheblock,cache*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_cache_block(p,c)
  cacheblock p;
  cache *c;
{@+register int i,j,b=c->bb>>3,g=c->gg>>3;
  printf("%08x%08x: ",p.tag.h,p.tag.l);
  for (i=j=0; j<b;j++,i+=((j&(g-1))?0:1))
    printf("%08x%08x%c",p.data[j].h,p.data[j].l,p.dirty[i]?'*':' ');
  printf(" (%d)\n",p.rank);
}

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_cache_locks @,@,@[ARGS((cache*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_cache_locks(c)
  cache *c;
{
  if (c) {
    if (c->lock) printf("%s locked by %s:%d\n",
                    c->name,c->lock->name,c->lock->stage);
    if (c->fill_lock) printf("%sfill locked by %s:%d\n",
                    c->name,c->fill_lock->name,c->fill_lock->stage);
  }
}

@ The |print_cache| routine prints the entire contents of a cache. This can be
a huge amount of data, but it can be very useful when debugging. Fortunately,
the task of debugging favors the use of small caches, since interesting cases
arise more often when a cache is fairly small.

@<External proto...@>=
Extern void print_cache @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,bool))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
void print_cache(c,dirty_only)
  cache *c;
  bool dirty_only;
{
  if (c) {@+register int i,j;
    printf("%s of %s:",dirty_only?"Dirty blocks":"Contents",c->name);
    if (c->filler.next) {
      printf(" (filling ");
      print_octa(c->name[1]=='T'? c->filler_ctl.y.o: c->filler_ctl.z.o);
      printf(")");
    }
    if (c->flusher.next) {
      printf(" (flushing ");
      print_octa(c->outbuf.tag);
      printf(")");
    }
    printf("\n");
    @<Print all of |c|'s cache blocks@>;
  }
}

@ We don't print the cache blocks that have an invalid tag, unless
requested to be verbose.

@<Print all of |c|'s cache blocks@>=
for (i=0;i<c->cc;i++) for (j=0;j<c->aa;j++)
  if ((!(c->set[i][j].tag.h&sign_bit)||(verbose&show_wholecache_bit))&&@|
       (!dirty_only || is_dirty(c,&c->set[i][j]))) {
    printf("[%d][%d] ",i,j);
    print_cache_block(c->set[i][j],c);
  }
for (j=0;j<c->vv;j++)
  if ((!(c->victim[j].tag.h&sign_bit)||(verbose&show_wholecache_bit))&&@|
       (!dirty_only || is_dirty(c,&c->victim[j]))) {
    printf("V[%d] ",j);
    print_cache_block(c->victim[j],c);
  }

@ The |clean_block| routine simply initializes a given cache block.

@<External proto...@>=
Extern void clean_block @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
void clean_block(c,p)
  cache *c;
  cacheblock *p;
{
  register int j;
  p->tag.h=sign_bit, p->tag.l=0;
  for (j=0;j<c->bb>>3;j++) p->data[j]=zero_octa;
  for (j=0;j<c->bb>>c->g;j++) p->dirty[j]=false;
}

@ The |zap_cache| routine invalidates all tags of a given cache,
effectively restoring it to its initial condition.

@<External proto...@>=
Extern void zap_cache @,@,@[ARGS((cache*))@];

@ We clear the |dirty| entries here, just to be tidy, although
they could actually be left in arbitrary condition when the tags are invalid.

@<External r...@>=
void zap_cache(c)
  cache *c;
{
  register int i,j;
  for (i=0;i<c->cc;i++) for (j=0;j<c->aa;j++) {
    clean_block(c,&(c->set[i][j]));
  }
  for (j=0;j<c->vv;j++) {
    clean_block(c,&(c->victim[j]));
  }
}  

@ The |get_reader| subroutine finds the index of
an available reader coroutine for a given cache, or returns a negative value
if no readers are available.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static int get_reader @,@,@[ARGS((cache*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static int get_reader(c)
  cache *c;
{@+ register int j;
  for (j=0;j<c->ports;j++)
    if (c->reader[j].next==NULL) return j;
  return -1;
}

@ The subroutine |copy_block(c,p,cc,pp)| copies the dirty
items from block~|p| of cache~|c| into block~|pp| of cache~|cc|, assuming
that the destination cache has a sufficiently large block size.
(In other words, we assume that |cc->b>=c->b|.) We also assume that both
blocks have compatible tags, and that both caches have the same granularity.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void copy_block @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*,cache*,cacheblock*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void copy_block(c,p,cc,pp)
  cache *c,*cc;
  cacheblock *p,*pp;
{
  register int j,jj,i,ii,lim; register int off=p->tag.l&(cc->bb-1);
  if (c->g!=cc->g || p->tag.h!=pp->tag.h || p->tag.l-off!=pp->tag.l)
    panic(confusion("copy block"));
  for (j=0,jj=off>>c->g;j<c->bb>>c->g;j++,jj++) if (p->dirty[j]) {
    pp->dirty[jj]=true;
    for (i=j<<(c->g-3),ii=jj<<(c->g-3),lim=(j+1)<<(c->g-3);
              i<lim;i++,ii++) pp->data[ii]=p->data[i];
  }
}

@ The |choose_victim| subroutine selects the victim to be replaced when we
need to change a cache~set. We need only one bit of the |rank| fields to
implement the $r$~table when |policy=pseudo_lru|,
and we don't need |rank| at all when |policy=random|. Of course we use an
$a$-bit counter to implement |policy=serial|. In the other case,
|policy=lru|, we need an $a$-bit |rank| field; the least recently used entry
has rank~0, and the most recently used entry has rank~$2^a-1=|aa|-1$.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static cacheblock* choose_victim @,@,@[ARGS((cacheset,int,replace_policy))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static cacheblock* choose_victim(s,aa,policy)
  cacheset s; 
  int aa; /* setsize */
  replace_policy policy;
{
  register cacheblock *p;
  register int l,m;
  switch (policy) {
 case random: return &s[ticks.l&(aa-1)];
 case serial: l=s[0].rank;@+ s[0].rank=(l+1)&(aa-1);@+ return &s[l];
 case lru: for (p=s;p<s+aa;p++)
    if (p->rank==0) return p;
  panic(confusion("lru victim")); /* what happened? nobody has rank zero */
 case pseudo_lru: for (l=1,m=aa>>1; m; m>>=1) l=l+l+s[l].rank;
   return &s[l-aa];
  }
}

@ The |note_usage| subroutine updates the |rank| entries to record the
fact that a particular block in a cache set is now being used.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void note_usage @,@,@[ARGS((cacheblock*,cacheset,int,replace_policy))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void note_usage(l,s,aa,policy)
  cacheblock *l; /* a cache block that's probably worth preserving */
  cacheset s; /* the set that contains $l$ */
  int aa; /* setsize */
  replace_policy policy;
{
  register cacheblock *p;
  register int j,m,r;
  if (aa==1 || policy<=serial) return;
  if (policy==lru) {
    r=l->rank;
    for (p=s;p<s+aa;p++) if (p->rank>r) p->rank--;
    l->rank=aa-1;
  } else { /* |policy==pseudo_lru| */
    r=l-s;
    for (j=1,m=aa>>1;m;m>>=1)
      if (r&m) s[j].rank=0,j=j+j+1;
      else s[j].rank=1, j=j+j;
  }
  return;
}

@ The |demote_usage| subroutine is sort of the opposite of |note_usage|;
it changes the rank of a given block to {\it least\/} recently used.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void demote_usage @,@,@[ARGS((cacheblock*,cacheset,int,replace_policy))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void demote_usage(l,s,aa,policy)
  cacheblock *l; /* a cache block we probably don't need */
  cacheset s; /* the set that contains $l$ */
  int aa; /* setsize */
  replace_policy policy;
{
  register cacheblock *p;
  register int j,m,r;
  if (aa==1 || policy<=serial) return;
  if (policy==lru) {
    r=l->rank;
    for (p=s;p<s+aa;p++) if (p->rank<r) p->rank++;
    l->rank=0;
  } else { /* |policy==pseudo_lru| */
    r=l-s;
    for (j=1,m=aa>>1;m;m>>=1)
      if (r&m) s[j].rank=1,j=j+j+1;
      else s[j].rank=0, j=j+j;
  }
  return;
}

@ The |cache_search| routine looks for a given key $\alpha$
in a given cache, and returns a cache block if there's a hit; otherwise
it returns~|NULL|. If the search hits, the set in which the block was
found is stored in global variable |hit_set|. Notice that we need to check
more bits of the tag when we search in the victim area.

@d cache_addr(c,alf) c->set[(alf.l&~(c->tagmask))>>c->b]

@<Internal proto...@>=
static cacheblock* cache_search @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,octa))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static cacheblock* cache_search(c,alf)
  cache *c; /* the cache to be searched */
  octa alf; /* the key */
{
  register cacheset s;
  register cacheblock* p;
  s=cache_addr(c,alf); /* the set corresponding to |alf| */
  for (p=s;p<s+c->aa;p++)
    if (((p->tag.l ^ alf.l)&c->tagmask)==0 && p->tag.h==alf.h) goto hit;
  s=c->victim;
  if (!s) return NULL; /* cache miss, and no victim area */
  for (p=s;p<s+c->vv;p++)
    if (((p->tag.l^alf.l)&(-c->bb))==0 && p->tag.h==alf.h) goto hit;
  return NULL; /* double miss */
 hit: hit_set=s;@+ return p;
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
cacheset hit_set;

@ If |p=cache_search(c,alf)| hits and if we call |use_and_fix(c,p)|
immediately afterwards, cache~|c| is updated to record the usage of
key~|alf|. A hit in the victim area moves the cache block to the main area,
unless the |filler| routine of cache~|c| is active.
A pointer to the (possibly moved) cache block is returned.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static cacheblock* use_and_fix @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static cacheblock *use_and_fix(c,p)
  cache *c;
  cacheblock *p;
{
  if (hit_set!=c->victim) note_usage(p,hit_set,c->aa,c->repl);
  else { note_usage(p,hit_set,c->vv,c->vrepl); /* found in victim cache */
    if (!c->filler.next) {
      register cacheset s=cache_addr(c,p->tag);
      register cacheblock *q=choose_victim(s,c->aa,c->repl);
      note_usage(q,s,c->aa,c->repl);
      @<Swap cache blocks |p| and |q|@>;
      return q;
    }
  }
  return p;
}

@ We can simply permute the pointers inside the cacheblock structures of a
cache, instead of copying the data, if we are careful not to let any of those
pointers escape into other data structures.

@<Swap cache blocks |p| and |q|@>=
{
  octa t;
  register char *d=p->dirty;
  register octa *dd=p->data;
  t=p->tag;@+p->tag=q->tag;@+q->tag=t;
  p->dirty=q->dirty;@+q->dirty=d;
  p->data=q->data;@+q->data=dd;
}

@ The |demote_and_fix| routine is analogous to |use_and_fix|,
except that we don't want to promote the data we found.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static cacheblock* demote_and_fix @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static cacheblock *demote_and_fix(c,p)
  cache *c;
  cacheblock *p;
{
  if (hit_set!=c->victim) demote_usage(p,hit_set,c->aa,c->repl);
  else demote_usage(p,hit_set,c->vv,c->vrepl);
  return p;
}

@ The subroutine |load_cache(c,p)| is called at a moment when
|c->lock| has been set and |c->inbuf| has been filled with clean data
to be placed in the cache block~|p|. 

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void load_cache @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void load_cache(c,p)
  cache *c;
  cacheblock *p;
{
  register int i;
  register octa *d;
  for (i=0;i<c->bb>>c->g;i++) p->dirty[i]=false;
  d=p->data;@+ p->data=c->inbuf.data;@+ c->inbuf.data=d;
  p->tag=c->inbuf.tag;
  hit_set=cache_addr(c,p->tag);@+
  use_and_fix(c,p); /* |p| not moved */
}  

@ The subroutine |flush_cache(c,p,keep)| is called at a ``quiet''
moment when |c->flusher.next=NULL|.
It puts cache block~|p| into |c->outbuf| and
fires up the |c->flusher| coroutine, which will take care of
sending the data to lower levels of the memory hierarchy.
Cache block~|p| is also marked clean.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static void flush_cache @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,cacheblock*,bool))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void flush_cache(c,p,keep)
  cache *c;
  cacheblock *p; /* a block inside cache |c| */
  bool keep; /* should we preserve the data in |p|? */
{
    register octa *d;
    register char *dd;
    register int j;
    c->outbuf.tag=p->tag;
    if (keep)@+ for (j=0;j<c->bb>>3;j++) c->outbuf.data[j]=p->data[j];
    else d=c->outbuf.data, c->outbuf.data=p->data, p->data=d;
    dd=c->outbuf.dirty, c->outbuf.dirty=p->dirty, p->dirty=dd;
    for (j=0;j<c->bb>>c->g;j++) p->dirty[j]=false;
    startup(&c->flusher,c->copy_out_time); /* will not be aborted */
}

@ The |alloc_slot| routine is called when we wish to put new information
into a cache after a cache miss. It returns a pointer to a cache block
in the main area where the new information should be put. The tag of
that cache block is invalidated; the calling routine should take care
of filling it and giving it a valid tag in due time. The cache's |filler|
routine should not be active when |alloc_slot| is called.

Inserting new information might also require writing old information
into the next level of the memory hierarchy, if the block being replaced
is dirty. This routine returns |NULL| in such cases if the cache is
flushing a previously discarded block.
Otherwise it schedules the |flusher| coroutine.

This routine returns |NULL| also if the given key happens to be in the
cache. Such cases are rare, but the following scenario shows that
they aren't impossible: Suppose the DT-cache access time is 5, the D-cache
access time is~1, and two processes simultaneously look for the
same physical address. One process hits in DT-cache but misses in D-cache,
waiting 5 cycles before trying |alloc_slot| in the D-cache; meanwhile
the other process missed in D-cache but didn't need to use the DT-cache,
so it might have updated the D-cache.

A key value is never negative. Therefore we can invalidate the tag in
the chosen slot by forcing it to be negative.

@<Internal proto...@>=
static cacheblock* alloc_slot @,@,@[ARGS((cache*,octa))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static cacheblock* alloc_slot(c,alf)
  cache *c;
  octa alf; /* key that probably isn't in the cache */
{
  register cacheset s;
  register cacheblock *p,*q;
  if (cache_search(c,alf)) return NULL;
  s=cache_addr(c,alf); /* the set corresponding to |alf| */
  if (c->victim) p=choose_victim(c->victim,c->vv,c->vrepl);
  else p=choose_victim(s,c->aa,c->repl);
  if (is_dirty(c,p)) {
    if (c->flusher.next) return NULL;
    flush_cache(c,p,false);
  }
  if (c->victim) {
    q=choose_victim(s,c->aa,c->repl);
    @<Swap cache blocks...@>;
    q->tag.h |= sign_bit; /* invalidate the tag */
    return q;
  }
  p->tag.h |= sign_bit;@+ return p;
}  

@* Simulated memory. How should we deal with the potentially gigantic
memory of~\MMIX? We can't simply declare an array~$m$ that has
$2^{48}$ bytes. (Indeed, up to $2^{63}$ bytes are needed, if we
consider also the physical addresses $\ge2^{48}$ that are reserved for
memory-mapped input/output.)

We could regard memory as a special kind of cache,
in which every access is required to hit. For example, such an ``M-cache''
could be fully associative, with $2^a$ blocks each
having a different tag; simulation could proceed until more than~$2^a-1$ tags
are required. But then the predefined value of~$a$ might well be so large that
the sequential search of our |cache_search| routine would be too slow.

Instead, we will allocate memory in chunks of $2^{16}$ bytes at a time,
as needed, and we will use hashing to search for the relevant chunk
whenever a physical address is given. If the address is $2^{48}$ or greater,
special routines called |spec_read| and |spec_write|, supplied by the
user, will be called upon to do the reading or writing. Otherwise
the 48-bit address consists of a 32-bit {\it chunk address\/} and a
16-bit {\it chunk offset}.

Chunk addresses that are not used take no space in this simulator. But if,
say, 1000 such patterns occur, the simulator will dynamically allocate
approximately 65MB for the portions of main memory that are used.
Parameter |mem_chunks_max| specifies the largest number of different chunk
addresses that are supported. This parameter does not constrain the range of
simulated physical addresses, which cover the entire 256 large-terabyte range
permitted by~\MMIX.

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct {
  tetra tag; /* 32-bit chunk address */
  octa *chunk; /* either |NULL| or an array of $2^{13}$ octabytes */
} chunknode;

@ The parameter |hash_prime| should be a prime number larger than the
parameter
|mem_chunks_max|, preferably more than twice as large but not much bigger
than~that. The default values |mem_chunks_max=1000| and |hash_prime=2003| are
set by |MMIX_config| unless the user specifies otherwise.

@<External v...@>=
Extern int mem_chunks; /* this many chunks are allocated so far */
Extern int mem_chunks_max; /* up to this many different chunks per run */
Extern int hash_prime; /* larger than |mem_chunks_max|, but not enormous */
Extern chunknode *mem_hash; /* the simulated main memory */

@ The separately compiled procedures |spec_read()| and |spec_write()| have the
same calling conventions as the general procedures
|mem_read()| and |mem_write()|.

@<Sub...@>=
extern octa spec_read @,@,@[ARGS((octa addr))@]; /* for memory mapped I/O */
extern void spec_write @,@,@[ARGS((octa addr,octa val))@]; /* likewise */

@ If the program tries to read from a chunk that hasn't been allocated,
the value zero is returned, optionally with a comment to the user.

Chunk address 0 is always allocated first. Then we can assume that
a matching chunk tag implies a nonnull |chunk| pointer.

This routine sets |last_h| to the chunk found, so that we can rapidly read
other words that we know must belong to the same chunk. For this purpose
it is convenient to let |mem_hash[hash_prime]| be a chunk full of zeros,
representing uninitialized memory.

@<External proto...@>=
Extern octa mem_read @,@,@[ARGS((octa addr))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
octa mem_read(addr)
  octa addr;
{
  register tetra off,key;
  register int h;
  if (addr.h>=(1<<16)) return spec_read(addr);
  off=(addr.l&0xffff)>>3;
  key=(addr.l&0xffff0000)+addr.h;
  for (h=key%hash_prime;mem_hash[h].tag!=key;h--) {
    if (mem_hash[h].chunk==NULL) {
      if (verbose&uninit_mem_bit)
        errprint2("uninitialized memory read at %08x%08x",addr.h,addr.l);
@.uninitialized memory...@>
      h=hash_prime;@+ break; /* zero will be returned */
    }
    if (h==0) h=hash_prime;
  }
  last_h=h;
  return mem_hash[h].chunk[off];
}

@ @<External v...@>=
Extern int last_h; /* the hash index that was most recently correct */

@ @<External proto...@>=
Extern void mem_write @,@,@[ARGS((octa addr,octa val))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
void mem_write(addr,val)
  octa addr,val;
{
  register tetra off,key;
  register int h;
  if (addr.h>=(1<<16)) {@+spec_write(addr,val);@+return;@+}
  off=(addr.l&0xffff)>>3;
  key=(addr.l&0xffff0000)+addr.h;
  for (h=key%hash_prime;mem_hash[h].tag!=key;h--) {
    if (mem_hash[h].chunk==NULL) {
      if (++mem_chunks>mem_chunks_max)
        panic(errprint1("More than %d memory chunks are needed",
@.More...chunks are needed@>
                 mem_chunks_max));
      mem_hash[h].chunk=(octa *)calloc(1<<13,sizeof(octa));
      if (mem_hash[h].chunk==NULL)
        panic(errprint1("I can't allocate memory chunk number %d",
@.I can't allocate...@>
                 mem_chunks));
      mem_hash[h].tag=key;
      break;
    }
    if (h==0) h=hash_prime;
  }
  last_h=h;
  mem_hash[h].chunk[off]=val;
}
  
@ The memory is characterized by several parameters, depending on the
characteristics of the memory bus being simulated. Let |bus_words|
be the number of octabytes read or written simultaneously (usually
|bus_words| is 1 or~2; it must be a power of~2). The number of clock
cycles needed to read or write |c*bus_words| octabytes that all belong to the
same cache block is assumed to be |mem_addr_time+c*mem_read_time| or
|mem_addr_time+c*mem_write_time|, respectively.

@<External v...@>=
Extern int mem_addr_time; /* cycles to transmit an address on memory bus */
Extern int bus_words; /* width of memory bus, in octabytes */
Extern int mem_read_time; /* cycles to read from main memory */
Extern int mem_write_time; /* cycles to write to main memory */
Extern lockvar mem_lock; /* is nonnull when the bus is busy */

@ One of the principal ways to write memory is to invoke
a |flush_to_mem| coroutine,
which is the |Scache->flusher| if there is an S-cache, or the
|Dcache->flusher| if there is a D-cache but no S-cache.

When such a coroutine is started, its |data->ptr_a| will be |Scache|
or~|Dcache|. The data to be written will just have been copied to the cache's
|outbuf|.

@<Cases for control of special coroutines@>=
case flush_to_mem: {@+register cache *c=(cache *)data->ptr_a;
 switch (data->state) {
  case 0:@+ if (mem_lock) wait(1);
    data->state=1;
  case 1: set_lock(self,mem_lock);
    data->state=2;
    @<Write the dirty data of |c->outbuf| and wait for the bus@>;
  case 2: goto terminate; /* this frees |mem_lock| and |c->outbuf| */
 }
}

@ @<Write the dirty data of |c->outbuf| and wait for the bus@>=
{
  register int off,last_off,count,first,ii;
  register int del=c->gg>>3; /* octabytes per granule */
  octa addr;
  addr=c->outbuf.tag;@+ off=(addr.l&0xffff)>>3;
  for (i=j=0,first=1,count=0;j<c->bb>>c->g;j++) {
    ii=i+del;
    if (!c->outbuf.dirty[j]) i=ii,off+=del,addr.l+=del<<3;
    else@+ while (i<ii) {
      if (first) {
        count++;@+ last_off=off;@+ first=0;
        mem_write(addr,c->outbuf.data[i]);
      }@+else {
        if ((off^last_off)&(-bus_words)) count++;
        last_off=off;
        mem_hash[last_h].chunk[off]=c->outbuf.data[i];
      }
      i++;@+ off++;@+ addr.l+=8;
    }
  }
  wait(mem_addr_time+count*mem_write_time);
}

@* Cache transfers. We have seen that the |Dcache->flusher| sends
data directly to the main memory if there is no S-cache.
But if both D-cache and S-cache exist, the |Dcache->flusher| is a
more complicated coroutine of type |flush_to_S|. In this case we need
to deal with the fact that the S-cache blocks might be larger than
the D-cache blocks; furthermore, the S-cache might have a
write-around and/or write-through policy, etc. But one simplifying
fact does help us: We know that the flusher coroutine will not be
aborted until it has run to completion.

Some machines, such as the Alpha 21164, have an additional cache between
the S-cache and memory, called the B-cache (the ``backup cache''). A B-cache
could be simulated by extending the logic used here; but such extensions
of the present program are left to the interested reader.

@<Cases for control of special coroutines@>=
case flush_to_S: {@+register cache *c=(cache *)data->ptr_a;
  register int block_diff=Scache->bb-c->bb;
  p=(cacheblock*)data->ptr_b;
 switch (data->state) {
  case 0:@+ if (Scache->lock) wait(1);
    data->state=1;
  case 1: set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
    data->ptr_b=(void*)cache_search(Scache,c->outbuf.tag);
    if (data->ptr_b) data->state=4;
    else if (Scache->mode & WRITE_ALLOC) data->state=(block_diff? 2: 3);
    else data->state=6;
    wait(Scache->access_time);
  case 2: @<Fill |Scache->inbuf| with clean memory data@>;
  case 3: @<Allocate a slot |p| in the S-cache@>;
    if (block_diff) @<Copy |Scache->inbuf| to slot |p|@>;         
  case 4: copy_block(c,&(c->outbuf),Scache,p);
    hit_set=cache_addr(Scache,c->outbuf.tag);@+ use_and_fix(Scache,p);
                   /* |p| not moved */
    data->state=5;@+ wait(Scache->copy_in_time);
  case 5:@+ if ((Scache->mode&WRITE_BACK)==0) { /* write-through */
      if (Scache->flusher.next) wait(1);
      flush_cache(Scache,p,true);
    }
    goto terminate;
  case 6:@<Handle write-around when flushing to the S-cache@>;
 }
}

@ @<Allocate a slot |p| in the S-cache@>=
if (Scache->filler.next) wait(1); /* perhaps an unnecessary precaution? */
p=alloc_slot(Scache,c->outbuf.tag);
if (!p) wait(1);
data->ptr_b=(void*)p;
p->tag=c->outbuf.tag;@+ p->tag.l=c->outbuf.tag.l&(-Scache->bb);

@ We only need to read |block_diff| bytes, but it's easier to
read them all and to charge only for reading the ones we needed.

@<Fill |Scache->inbuf| with clean memory data@>=
{@+register int count=block_diff>>3;
  register int off,delay;
  octa addr;
  if (mem_lock) wait(1);
  addr.h=c->outbuf.tag.h;@+ addr.l=c->outbuf.tag.l&-Scache->bb;
  off=(addr.l&0xffff)>>3;
  for (j=0;j<Scache->bb>>3;j++)
    if (j==0) Scache->inbuf.data[j]=mem_read(addr);
    else Scache->inbuf.data[j]=mem_hash[last_h].chunk[j+off];
  set_lock(&mem_locker,mem_lock);
  delay=mem_addr_time+(int)((count+bus_words-1)/(bus_words))*mem_read_time;
  startup(&mem_locker,delay);
  data->state=3;@+ wait(delay);
}  

@ @<Copy |Scache->inbuf| to slot |p|@>=
{
  register octa *d=p->data;
  p->data=Scache->inbuf.data;@+Scache->inbuf.data=d;
}

@ Here we assume that the granularity is~8.

@<Handle write-around when flushing to the S-cache@>=
if (Scache->flusher.next) wait(1);
Scache->outbuf.tag.h=c->outbuf.tag.h;
Scache->outbuf.tag.l=c->outbuf.tag.l&(-Scache->bb);
for (j=0;j<Scache->bb>>Scache->g;j++) Scache->outbuf.dirty[j]=false;
copy_block(c,&(c->outbuf),Scache,&(Scache->outbuf));
startup(&Scache->flusher,Scache->copy_out_time);
goto terminate;

@ The S-cache gets new data from memory by invoking a |fill_from_mem|
coroutine; the I-cache or D-cache may also invoke a |fill_from_mem| coroutine,
if there is no S-cache. When such a coroutine is invoked, it holds
|mem_lock|, and its caller has gone to sleep.
A physical memory address is given in |data->z.o|,
and |data->ptr_a| specifies either |Icache| or |Dcache|.
Furthermore, |data->ptr_b| specifies a block within that
cache, determined by the |alloc_slot| routine. The coroutine
simulates reading the contents of the specified memory location,
places the result in the |x.o| field of its caller's control block,
and wakes up the caller. It proceeds to fill the cache's |inbuf| and,
ultimately, the specified cache block, before waking the caller again.

Let |c=data->ptr_b|. The caller is then |c->fill_lock|, if this variable is
nonnull. However, the caller might not wish to be awoken or to receive
the data (for example, if it has been aborted). In such cases |c->fill_lock|
will be~|NULL|; the filling action continues without the wakeup calls.
If |c=Scache|, the S-cache will be locked and the caller will not
have been aborted.

@<Cases for control of special coroutines@>=
case fill_from_mem: {@+register cache *c=(cache *)data->ptr_a;
  register coroutine *cc=c->fill_lock;
 switch (data->state) {
  case 0: data->x.o=mem_read(data->z.o);
    if (cc) {
      cc->ctl->x.o=data->x.o;
      awaken(cc,mem_read_time);
    }      
    data->state=1;
    @<Read data into |c->inbuf| and wait for the bus@>;
  case 1: release_lock(self,mem_lock);
    data->state=2;
  case 2:@+if (c!=Scache) {
      if (c->lock) wait(1);
      set_lock(self,c->lock);
    }
    if (cc) awaken(cc,c->copy_in_time); /* the second wakeup call */
    load_cache(c,(cacheblock*)data->ptr_b);
    data->state=3;@+ wait(c->copy_in_time);
  case 3: goto terminate;
 }
}

@ If |c|'s cache size is no larger than the memory bus, we wait an extra
cycle, so that there will be two wakeup calls.

@<Read data into |c->inbuf|...@>=
{
  register int count, off;
  c->inbuf.tag=data->z.o;@+ c->inbuf.tag.l &= -c->bb;
  count=c->bb>>3, off=(c->inbuf.tag.l&0xffff)>>3;
  for (i=0;i<count;i++,off++) c->inbuf.data[i]=mem_hash[last_h].chunk[off];
  if (count<=bus_words) wait(1+mem_read_time)@;
  else wait((int)(count/bus_words)*mem_read_time);
}

@ The |fill_from_S| coroutine has the same conventions as |fill_from_mem|,
except that the data comes directly from the S-cache if it is present there.
This is the |filler| coroutine for the I-cache and D-cache if an S-cache
is present.

@<Cases for control of special coroutines@>=
case fill_from_S: {@+register cache *c=(cache *)data->ptr_a;
  register coroutine *cc=c->fill_lock;
  p=(cacheblock*)data->ptr_c;
  switch (data->state) {
  case 0: p=cache_search(Scache,data->z.o);
    if (p) goto S_non_miss;
    data->state=1;
  case 1: @<Start the S-cache filler@>;
    data->state=2;@+sleep;
  case 2:@+if (cc) {
      cc->ctl->x.o=data->x.o;
            /* this data has been supplied by |Scache->filler| */
      awaken(cc,Scache->access_time); /* we propagate it back */
    }      
    data->state=3;@+sleep; /* when we awake, the S-cache will have our data */
  S_non_miss:@+if (cc) {
      cc->ctl->x.o=p->data[(data->z.o.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3];
      awaken(cc,Scache->access_time);
    }
  case 3: @<Copy data from |p| into |c->inbuf|@>;
    data->state=4;@+wait(Scache->access_time);
  case 4:@+ if (c->lock) wait(1);
    set_lock(self,c->lock);
    Scache->lock=NULL; /* we had been holding that lock */
    load_cache(c,(cacheblock*)data->ptr_b);
    data->state=5;@+ wait(c->copy_in_time);
  case 5:@+if (cc) awaken(cc,1); /* second wakeup call */
    goto terminate;
  }
}

@ We are already holding the |Scache->lock|, but we're about to take on the
|Scache->fill_lock| too (with the understanding that one is ``stronger''
than the other). For a short time the |Scache->lock| will point to us
but we will point to |Scache->fill_lock|; this will not cause difficulty,
because the present coroutine is not abortable.

@<Start the S-cache filler@>=
if (Scache->filler.next || mem_lock) wait(1);
p=alloc_slot(Scache,data->z.o);
if (!p) wait(1);
set_lock(&Scache->filler,mem_lock);
set_lock(self,Scache->fill_lock);
data->ptr_c=Scache->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void *)p;
Scache->filler_ctl.z.o=data->z.o;
startup(&Scache->filler,mem_addr_time);

@ The S-cache blocks might be wider than the blocks of the I-cache or
D-cache, so the copying in this step isn't quite trivial.

@<Copy data from |p| into |c->inbuf|@>=
{@+register int off;
  c->inbuf.tag=data->z.o;@+c->inbuf.tag.l &=-c->bb;
  for (j=0,off=(c->inbuf.tag.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3;j<c->bb>>3;j++,off++)
    c->inbuf.data[j]=p->data[off];
  release_lock(self,Scache->fill_lock);
  set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
}

@ The instruction \.{PRELD} \.{X,\$Y,\$Z} generates $\lfloor{\rm X}/2^b\rfloor$
commands if there are $2^b$ bytes per block in the D-cache. These
commands will try to preload blocks $\rm\$Y+\$Z$, ${\rm\$Y}+{\rm\$Z}+2^b$,
\dots, into the cache if it is not too busy.

Similar considerations apply to the instructions \.{PREGO} \.{X,\$Y,\$Z}
and \.{PREST} \.{X,\$Y,\$Z}.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case preld: case prest:@+ if (!Dcache) goto noop_inst;
  if (cool->xx>=Dcache->bb) cool->interim=true;
  cool->ptr_a=(void *)mem.up;@+ break;
case prego:@+ if (!Icache) goto noop_inst;
  if (cool->xx>=Icache->bb) cool->interim=true;
  cool->ptr_a=(void *)mem.up;@+ break;

@ If the block size is 64, a command like \.{PREST}~\.{200,\$Y,\$Z}
is actually issued as four commands \.{PREST}~\.{200,\$Y,\$Z;}
\.{PREST}~\.{191,\$Y,\$Z;}  \.{PREST}~\.{127,\$Y,\$Z;}
\.{PREST}~\.{63,\$Y,\$Z}. An interruption will then be able to resume
properly. In the pipeline, the instruction \.{PREST}~\.{200,\$Y,\$Z} 
is considered to affect bytes $\rm\$Y+\$Z+192$ through $\rm\$Y+\$Z+200$,
or fewer bytes if $\rm\$Y+\$Z$ is not a multiple of~64. (Remember that
these instructions are only hints; we act on them only if it is
reasonably convenient to do so.)

@<Get ready for the next step of \.{PRELD} or \.{PREST}@>=
head->inst = (head->inst&~((Dcache->bb-1)<<16))-0x10000;

@ @<Get ready for the next step of \.{PREGO}@>=
head->inst = (head->inst&~((Icache->bb-1)<<16))-0x10000;

@ Another coroutine, called |cleanup|, is occasionally called into
action to remove dirty data from the D-cache and S-cache. If it is
invoked by starting in state 0, with its |i| field set to |sync|, it
will clean everything. It can also be
invoked in state~4, with its |i| field set to |syncd| and with a physical
address in its |z.o| field; then it simply makes sure that no D-cache
or S-cache blocks associated with that address are dirty.

Field |x.o.h| should be set to zero if items are expected to remain
in the cache after being cleaned; otherwise field |x.o.h| should be
set to |sign_bit|.

The coroutine that invokes |cleanup| should hold |clean_lock|. If that
coroutine dies, because of an interruption, the |cleanup| coroutine
will terminate prematurely.

We assume that the D-cache and S-cache have some sort of way to
identify their first dirty block, if any, in |access_time| cycles.

@<Glob...@>=
coroutine clean_co;
control clean_ctl;
lockvar clean_lock;

@ @<Initialize e...@>=
clean_co.ctl=&clean_ctl;
clean_co.name="Clean";
clean_co.stage=cleanup;
clean_ctl.go.o.l=4;

@ @<Cases for control of special...@>=
case cleanup: p=(cacheblock*)data->ptr_b;
  switch(data->state) {
@<Cases 0 through 4, for the D-cache@>;
@<Cases 5 through 9, for the S-cache@>;
case 10: goto terminate;
}

@ @<Cases 0 through 4, for the D-cache@>=
case 0:@+ if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache)<0)) wait(1);
  startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
  set_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
  i=j=0;
Dclean_loop: p=(i<Dcache->cc? &(Dcache->set[i][j]): &(Dcache->victim[j]));
  if (p->tag.h&sign_bit) goto Dclean_inc;
  if (!is_dirty(Dcache,p)) {
    p->tag.h|=data->x.o.h;@+goto Dclean_inc;
  }
  data->y.o.h=i, data->y.o.l=j;
Dclean: data->state=1;@+
  data->ptr_b=(void*)p;@+
  wait(Dcache->access_time);
case 1:@+if (Dcache->flusher.next) wait(1);
  flush_cache(Dcache,p,data->x.o.h==0);
  p->tag.h|=data->x.o.h;
  release_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
  data->state=2;@+
  wait(Dcache->copy_out_time);
case 2:@+ if (!clean_lock) goto done; /* premature termination */
  if (Dcache->flusher.next) wait(1);
  if (data->i!=sync) goto Sprep;
  data->state=3;
case 3:@+ if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache)<0)) wait(1);
  startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
  set_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
  i=data->y.o.h, j=data->y.o.l;
Dclean_inc: j++;
  if (i<Dcache->cc && j==Dcache->aa) j=0, i++;
  if (i==Dcache->cc && j==Dcache->vv) {
    data->state=5;@+
    wait(Dcache->access_time);
  }
  goto Dclean_loop;
case 4:@+ if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache)<0)) wait(1);
  startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
  set_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
  p=cache_search(Dcache,data->z.o);
  if (p) {
    demote_and_fix(Dcache,p);
    if (is_dirty(Dcache,p)) goto Dclean;
  }
  data->state=9;@+
  wait(Dcache->access_time);

@ @<Cases 5 through 9...@>=
case 5:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL, self->lockloc=NULL;
  if (!Scache) goto done;
  if (Scache->lock) wait(1);
  set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
  i=j=0;
Sclean_loop: p=(i<Scache->cc? &(Scache->set[i][j]): &(Scache->victim[j]));
  if (p->tag.h&sign_bit) goto Sclean_inc;
  if (!is_dirty(Scache,p)) {
    p->tag.h|=data->x.o.h;@+goto Sclean_inc;
  }
  data->y.o.h=i, data->y.o.l=j;
Sclean: data->state=6;@+
  data->ptr_b=(void*)p;@+
  wait(Scache->access_time);
case 6:@+if (Scache->flusher.next) wait(1);
  flush_cache(Scache,p,data->x.o.h==0);
  p->tag.h|=data->x.o.h;
  release_lock(self,Scache->lock);
  data->state=7;@+
  wait(Scache->copy_out_time);
case 7:@+ if (!clean_lock) goto done; /* premature termination */
  if (Scache->flusher.next) wait(1);
  if (data->i!=sync) goto done;
  data->state=8;
case 8:@+ if (Scache->lock) wait(1);
  set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
  i=data->y.o.h, j=data->y.o.l;
Sclean_inc: j++;
  if (i<Scache->cc && j==Scache->aa) j=0, i++;
  if (i==Scache->cc && j==Scache->vv) {
    data->state=10;@+
    wait(Scache->access_time);
  }
  goto Sclean_loop;
Sprep: data->state=9;
case 9:@+if (self->lockloc) release_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
  if (!Scache) goto done;
  if (Scache->lock) wait(1);
  set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
  p=cache_search(Scache,data->z.o);
  if (p) {
    demote_and_fix(Scache,p);
    if (is_dirty(Scache,p)) goto Sclean;
  }
  data->state=10;@+
  wait(Scache->access_time);

@* Virtual address translation. Special arrays of coroutines and control
blocks come into play when we need to implement \MMIX's rather complicated
page table mechanism for virtual address translation. In effect, we have up to
ten control blocks {\it outside\/} of the reorder buffer that are capable of
executing instructions just as if they were part of that buffer. The
``opcodes'' of these non-abortable instructions are special internal
operations called |ldptp| and |ldpte|, for loading page table pointers and
page table entries.

Suppose, for example, that we need to translate a virtual address for the
DT-cache in which the virtual page address $(a_4a_3a_2a_1a_0)_{1024}$ of
segment~$i$ has $a_4=a_3=0$ and $a_2\ne0$. Then the rules say that we should
first find a page table pointer $p_2$ in physical location
$2^{13}(r+b_i+2)+8a_2$, then another page table pointer~$p_1$ in location
$p_2+8a_1$, and finally the page table entry~$p_0$ in location $p_1+8a_0$. The
simulator achieves this by setting up three coroutines $c_0$, $c_1$, $c_2$
whose control blocks correspond to the pseudo-instructions
$$\vbox{\halign{\tt#\hfil\cr
LDPTP $x$,[$2^{63}+2^{13}(r+b_i+2)$],$8a_2$\cr
LDPTP $x$,$x$,$8a_1$\cr
LDPTE $x$,$x$,$8a_0$\cr}}$$
where $x$ is a hidden internal register and the other quantities are immediate
values. Slight changes to the normal functionality of \.{LDO} give us the
actions needed to implement \.{LDPTP} and \.{LDPTE}. Coroutine~$c_j$
corresponds to the instruction that involves $a_j$ and computes~$p_j$; when
$c_0$ has computed its value~$p_0$, we know how to translate the original
virtual address.

The \.{LDPTP} and \.{LDPTE} commands return zero
if their $y$~operand is zero or if the page table does not properly match~rV.

@d LDPTP PREGO /* internally this won't cause confusion */
@d LDPTE GO

@<Global...@>=
control IPTctl[5], DPTctl[5]; /* control blocks for I and D page translation */
coroutine IPTco[10], DPTco[10]; /* each coroutine is a two-stage pipeline */
char *IPTname[5]={"IPT0","IPT1","IPT2","IPT3","IPT4"};
char *DPTname[5]={"DPT0","DPT1","DPT2","DPT3","DPT4"};

@ @<Initialize e...@>=
for (j=0;j<5;j++) {
  DPTco[2*j].ctl=&DPTctl[j];@+  IPTco[2*j].ctl=&IPTctl[j];
  if (j>0) DPTctl[j].op=IPTctl[j].op=LDPTP,DPTctl[j].i=IPTctl[j].i=ldptp;
  else DPTctl[0].op=IPTctl[0].op=LDPTE,DPTctl[0].i=IPTctl[0].i=ldpte;
  IPTctl[j].loc=DPTctl[j].loc=neg_one;
  IPTctl[j].go.o=DPTctl[j].go.o=incr(neg_one,4);
  IPTctl[j].ptr_a=DPTctl[j].ptr_a=(void*)&mem;
  IPTctl[j].ren_x=DPTctl[j].ren_x=true;
  IPTctl[j].x.addr.h=DPTctl[j].x.addr.h=-1;
  IPTco[2*j].stage=DPTco[2*j].stage=1;
  IPTco[2*j+1].stage=DPTco[2*j+1].stage=2;
  IPTco[2*j].name=IPTco[2*j+1].name=IPTname[j];
  DPTco[2*j].name=DPTco[2*j+1].name=DPTname[j];
}
ITcache->filler_ctl.ptr_c=(void*)&IPTco[0];@+
DTcache->filler_ctl.ptr_c=(void*)&DPTco[0];

@ Page table calculations are invoked by a coroutine of type |fill_from_virt|,
which is used to fill the IT-cache or DT-cache. The calling conventions of
|fill_from_virt| are analogous to those of |fill_from_mem| or |fill_from_S|:
A virtual address is supplied in |data->y.o|, and |data->ptr_a| points
to a cache (|ITcache| or |DTcache|), while |data->ptr_b| is a block in that
cache. We wake up the caller, who holds the cache's |fill_lock|, as soon as
the translation of the given address has been calculated, unless the caller
has been aborted. (No second wakeup call is necessary.)

@<Cases for control of special coroutines@>=
case fill_from_virt: {@+register cache *c=(cache *)data->ptr_a;
  register coroutine *cc=c->fill_lock;
  register coroutine *co=(coroutine*)data->ptr_c;
                          /* |&IPTco[0]| or |&DPTco[0]| */
  octa aaaaa;
 switch (data->state) {
  case 0: @<Start up auxiliary coroutines to compute the page table entry@>;
    data->state=1;
  case 1:@+if (data->b.p) {
      if (data->b.p->known) data->b.o=data->b.p->o, data->b.p=NULL;
      else wait(1);
    }
    @<Compute the new entry for |c->inbuf| and give the caller a sneak
              preview@>;
    data->state=2;
  case 2:@+if (c->lock) wait(1);
    set_lock(self,c->lock);
    load_cache(c,(cacheblock*)data->ptr_b);
    data->state=3;@+ wait(c->copy_in_time);
  case 3: data->b.o=zero_octa;@+goto terminate;
 }
}

@ The current contents of rV, the special virtual translation register, are
kept unpacked in several global variables |page_r|, |page_s|, etc., for
convenience. Whenever rV changes, we recompute all these variables.

@<Glob...@>=
int page_n; /* the 10-bit |n| field of rV, times 8 */
int page_r; /* the 27-bit |r| field of rV */
int page_s; /* the 8-bit |s| field of rV */
int page_b[5]; /* the 4-bit |b| fields of rV; |page_b[0]=0| */
octa page_mask; /* the least significant |s| bits */
bool page_bad=true; /* does rV violate the rules? */

@ @<Update the \\{page} variables@>=
{@+octa rv;
  rv=data->z.o;
  page_bad=(rv.l&7? true: false);
  page_n=rv.l&0x1ff8;
  rv=shift_right(rv,13,1);
  page_r=rv.l&0x7ffffff;
  rv=shift_right(rv,27,1);
  page_s=rv.l&0xff;
  if (page_s<13 || page_s>48) page_bad=true;
  else if (page_s<32) page_mask.h=0,page_mask.l=(1<<page_s)-1;
  else page_mask.h=(1<<(page_s-32))-1,page_mask.l=0xffffffff;
  page_b[4]=(rv.l>>8)&0xf;
  page_b[3]=(rv.l>>12)&0xf;
  page_b[2]=(rv.l>>16)&0xf;
  page_b[1]=(rv.l>>20)&0xf;
}

@ Here's how we compute a tag of the IT-cache or DT-cache
from a virtual address, and how we compute a physical address
from a translation found in the cache.

@d trans_key(addr) incr(oandn(addr,page_mask),page_n)

@<Internal proto...@>=
static octa phys_addr @,@,@[ARGS((octa,octa))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static octa phys_addr(virt,trans)
  octa virt,trans;
{@+octa t;
  t=trans;@+ t.l &= -8; /* zero out the protection bits */
  return oplus(t,oand(virt,page_mask));
}

@ Cheap (and slow) versions of \MMIX\ leave the page table calculations
to software. If the global variable |no_hardware_PT| is set true,
|fill_from_virt| begins its actions in state~1, not state~0. (See the
|RESUME_TRANS| operation.)

@<External v...@>=
Extern bool no_hardware_PT;

@ Note: The operating system is supposed to ensure that changes to the page
table entries do not appear in the pipeline when a translation cache is being
updated. The internal \.{LDPTP} and \.{LDPTE} instructions use only the
``hot state'' of the memory system.
@^operating system@>

@<Start up auxiliary coroutines to compute the page table entry@>=
aaaaa=data->y.o;
i=aaaaa.h>>29; /* the segment number */
aaaaa.h&=0x1fffffff; /* the address within segment $i$ */
aaaaa=shift_right(aaaaa,page_s,1); /* the page address */
for (j=0;aaaaa.l!=0 || aaaaa.h!=0; j++) {
  co[2*j].ctl->z.o.h=0, co[2*j].ctl->z.o.l=(aaaaa.l&0x3ff)<<3;
  aaaaa=shift_right(aaaaa,10,1);
}
if (page_b[i+1]<page_b[i]+j) /* address too large */
  ; /* nothing needs to be done, since |data->b.o| is zero */
else {
  if (j==0) j=1,co[0].ctl->z.o=zero_octa;
  @<Issue $j$ pseudo-instructions to compute a page table entry@>;
}

@ The first stage of coroutine $c_j$ is |co[2*j]|. It will pass the $j$th
control block to the second stage, |co[2*j+1]|, which will load page table
information from memory (or hopefully from the D-cache).

@<Issue $j$ pseudo-instructions to compute a page table entry@>=
j--;
aaaaa.l=page_r+page_b[i]+j;
co[2*j].ctl->y.p=NULL;
co[2*j].ctl->y.o=shift_left(aaaaa,13);
co[2*j].ctl->y.o.h+=sign_bit;
for (;;j--) {
  co[2*j].ctl->x.o=zero_octa;@+ co[2*j].ctl->x.known=false;
  co[2*j].ctl->owner=&co[2*j];
  startup(&co[2*j],1);
  if (j==0) break;
  co[2*(j-1)].ctl->y.p=&co[2*j].ctl->x;
}
data->b.p=&co[0].ctl->x;

@ At this point the translation of the given virtual address |data->y.o| is
the octabyte |data->b.o|. Its least significant three bits are the
protection code~$p=p_rp_wp_x$; its page address field is scaled by~$2^s$. It
is entirely zero, including the protection bits, if there was a
page table failure.

@<Compute the new entry for |c->inbuf| and give the caller a sneak preview@>=
c->inbuf.tag=trans_key(data->y.o);
c->inbuf.data[0]=data->b.o;
if (cc) {
  cc->ctl->z.o=data->b.o;
  awaken(cc,1);
}

@* The write buffer. The dispatcher has arranged things so that speculative
stores into memory are recorded in a doubly linked list leading upward from
|mem|. When such instructions finally are committed, they enter the ``write
buffer,'' which holds octabytes that are ready to be written into designated
physical memory addresses (or into the D-cache and/or S-cache). The ``hot
state'' of the computation is reflected not only by the registers and caches
but also by the instructions that are pending in the write buffer.

@<Type...@>=
typedef struct{
  octa o; /* data to be stored */
  octa addr; /* its physical address */
  tetra stamp; /* when last committed (mod $2^{32}$) */
  internal_opcode i; /* is this write special? */
} write_node;

@ We represent the buffer in the usual way as a circular list, with elements
|write_tail+1|, |write_tail+2|, \dots,~|write_head|.

The data will sit at least |holding_time| cycles before it leaves
the write buffer. This speeds things up when different fields of the same
octabyte are being stored by different instructions.

@<External v...@>=
Extern write_node *wbuf_bot, *wbuf_top;
 /* least and greatest write buffer nodes */
Extern write_node *write_head, *write_tail;
 /* front and rear of the write buffer */
Extern lockvar wbuf_lock; /* is the data in |write_head| being written? */
Extern int holding_time; /* minimum holding time */
Extern lockvar speed_lock; /* should we ignore |holding_time|? */

@ @<Glob...@>=
coroutine write_co; /* coroutine that empties the write buffer */
control write_ctl; /* its control block */

@ @<Initialize e...@>=
write_co.ctl=&write_ctl;
write_co.name="Write";
write_co.stage=write_from_wbuf;
write_ctl.ptr_a=(void*)&mem;
write_ctl.go.o.l=4;
startup(&write_co,1);
write_head=write_tail=wbuf_top;

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
static void print_write_buffer @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static void print_write_buffer()
{
  printf("Write buffer");
  if (write_head==write_tail) printf(" (empty)\n");
  else {@+register write_node *p;
    printf(":\n");
    for (p=write_head;p!=write_tail; p=(p==wbuf_bot? wbuf_top: p-1)) {
      printf("m[");@+print_octa(p->addr);@+printf("]=");@+print_octa(p->o);
      if (p->i==stunc) printf(" unc");
      else if (p->i==sync) printf(" sync");
      printf(" (age %d)\n",ticks.l-p->stamp);
    }
  }
}

@ The entire present state of the pipeline computation can be visualized
by printing first the write buffer, then the reorder buffer, then the
fetch buffer. This shows the progression of results from oldest to youngest,
from sizzling hot to ice cold.

@<External proto...@>=
Extern void print_pipe @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];

@ @<External r...@>=
void print_pipe()
{
  print_write_buffer();
  print_reorder_buffer();
  print_fetch_buffer();
}

@ The |write_search| routine looks to see if any instructions ahead of a given
place in the |mem| list of the reorder buffer are storing into a given
physical address, or if there's a pending instruction in the write buffer for
that address. If so, it returns a pointer to the value to be written. If not,
it returns~|NULL|. If the answer is currently unknown, because at least one
possibly relevant physical address has not yet been computed, the subroutine
returns the special code value~|DUNNO|.

The search starts at the |x.up| field of a control block for a store
instruction, otherwise at the |ptr_a| field of the control block,
unless |ptr_a| points to a committed instruction.

The |i| field in the write buffer is usually |st| or |pst|, inherited from
a store or partial store command. It may also be |sync| (from \.{SYNC}~\.1
or \.{SYNC}~\.3) or |stunc| (from \.{STUNC}).

@d DUNNO ((octa *)1) /* an impossible non-|NULL| pointer */

@<Internal proto...@>=
static octa* write_search @,@,@[ARGS((control*,octa))@];

@ @<Sub...@>=
static octa *write_search(ctl,addr)
  control *ctl;
  octa addr;
{@+register specnode *p=(ctl->mem_x? ctl->x.up: (specnode*)ctl->ptr_a);
  register write_node *q=write_tail;
  addr.l &=-8;
  if (p==&mem) goto qloop;
  if (p > &hot->x && ctl <= hot) goto qloop; /* already committed */
  if (p < &ctl->x && (ctl <= hot || p > &hot->x)) goto qloop;
  for (; p!=&mem; p=p->up) {
    if (p->addr.h==(tetra)-1) return DUNNO;
    if ((p->addr.l&-8)==addr.l && p->addr.h==addr.h)
      return (p->known? &(p->o): DUNNO);
  }
qloop:@+ for (;;) {
    if (q==write_head) return NULL;
    if (q==wbuf_top) q=wbuf_bot;@+ else q++;
    if (q->addr.l==addr.l && q->addr.h==addr.h) return &(q->o);
  }
}

@ When we're committing new data to memory, we can update an existing item in
the write buffer if it has the same physical address, unless that item is
already in the process of being written out. Increasing the value of
|holding_time| will increase the chance that this economy is possible, but
it will also increase the number of buffered items when writes are to
different locations.

A store instruction that sets any of the eight interrupt bits
\.{rwxnkbsp} will not affect memory, even if it doesn't cause an interrupt.

When ``store'' is followed by ``store uncached'' at the same address,
or vice versa, we believe the most recent hint.

@<Commit to memory...@>=
{@+register write_node *q=write_tail;
  if (hot->interrupt&(F_BIT+0xff)) goto done_with_write;
  if (hot->i!=sync) for (;;) {
    if (q==write_head) break;
    if (q==wbuf_top) q=wbuf_bot;@+ else q++;
    if (q->i==sync) break;
    if (q->addr.l==hot->x.addr.l && q->addr.h==hot->x.addr.h
             && (q!=write_head || !wbuf_lock)) goto addr_found;
  }
  {@+ register write_node *p=(write_tail==wbuf_bot? wbuf_top: write_tail-1);
    if (p==write_head) break; /* the write buffer is full */
    q=write_tail;@+ write_tail=p;
    q->addr=hot->x.addr;
  }
addr_found: q->o=hot->x.o;
  q->stamp=ticks.l;
  q->i=hot->i;
done_with_write: spec_rem(&(hot->x));
  mem_slots++;
}

@ A special coroutine whose duty is to empty the write buffer is always
active. It holds the |wbuf_lock| while it is writing the contents of
|write_head|. It holds |Dcache->fill_lock| while waiting for the D-cache
to fill a block.

@<Cases for control...@>=
case write_from_wbuf:
  p=(cacheblock*)data->ptr_b;
  switch(data->state) {
  case 4: @<Forward the new data past the D-cache if it is write-through@>;
    data->state=5;
  case 5:@+if (write_head==wbuf_bot) write_head=wbuf_top;@+ else write_head--;
 write_restart: data->state=0;
  case 0:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
    if (write_head==write_tail) wait(1); /* write buffer is empty */
    if (write_head->i==sync) @<Ignore the item in |write_head|@>;
    if (ticks.l-write_head->stamp<holding_time && !speed_lock)
      wait(1); /* data too raw */
    if (!Dcache || (write_head->addr.h&0xffff0000)) goto mem_direct;
          /* not cached */
    if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache)<0)) wait(1); /* D-cache busy */
    startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
    @<Write the data into the D-cache and set |state=4|,
                if there's a cache hit@>;
    data->state=((Dcache->mode&WRITE_ALLOC) && write_head->i!=stunc? 1: 3);
    wait(Dcache->access_time);
  case 1: @<Try to put the contents of location |write_head->addr|
           into the D-cache@>;
    data->state=2;@+sleep;
  case 2: data->state=0;@+sleep; /* wake up when the D-cache has the block */
  case 3: @<Handle write-around when writing to the D-cache@>;
  mem_direct: @<Write directly from |write_head| to memory@>;
}

@ @<Local var...@>=
register cacheblock *p,*q;

@ The granularity is guaranteed to be 8 in write-around mode
(see |MMIX_config|). Although an uncached store will not be stored in the
D-cache (unless it hits in the D-cache), it will go into a secondary cache.

@<Handle write-around when writing to the D-cache@>=
if (Dcache->flusher.next) wait(1);
Dcache->outbuf.tag.h=write_head->addr.h;
Dcache->outbuf.tag.l=write_head->addr.l&(-Dcache->bb);
for (j=0;j<Dcache->bb>>Dcache->g;j++) Dcache->outbuf.dirty[j]=false;
Dcache->outbuf.data[(write_head->addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3]=write_head->o;
Dcache->outbuf.dirty[(write_head->addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>Dcache->g]=true;
set_lock(self,wbuf_lock);
startup(&Dcache->flusher,Dcache->copy_out_time);
data->state=5;@+ wait(Dcache->copy_out_time);

@ @<Write directly from |write_head| to memory@>=
if (mem_lock) wait(1);
set_lock(self,wbuf_lock);
set_lock(&mem_locker,mem_lock); /* a coroutine of type |vanish| */
startup(&mem_locker,mem_addr_time+mem_write_time);
mem_write(write_head->addr,write_head->o);
data->state=5;@+ wait(mem_addr_time+mem_write_time);

@ A subtlety needs to be mentioned here: While we're trying to
update the D-cache, another instruction might be filling the
same cache block (although not because of the same physical address).
Therefore we |goto write_restart| here instead of saying |wait(1)|.

@<Try to put the contents of location |write_head->addr| into the D-cache@>=
if (Dcache->filler.next) goto write_restart;
if ((Scache&&Scache->lock) || (!Scache&&mem_lock)) goto write_restart;
p=alloc_slot(Dcache,write_head->addr);
if (!p) goto write_restart;
if (Scache) set_lock(&Dcache->filler,Scache->lock)@;
else set_lock(&Dcache->filler,mem_lock);
set_lock(self,Dcache->fill_lock);
data->ptr_b=Dcache->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void *)p;
Dcache->filler_ctl.z.o=write_head->addr;
startup(&Dcache->filler,Scache? Scache->access_time: mem_addr_time);

@ Here it is assumed that |Dcache->access_time| is enough to search
the D-cache and update one octabyte in case of a hit. The D-cache is
not locked, since other coroutines that might be simultaneously reading
the D-cache are not going to use the octabyte that changes.
Perhaps the simulator is being too lenient here.

@<Write the data into the D-cache...@>=
p=cache_search(Dcache,write_head->addr);
if (p) {
  p=use_and_fix(Dcache,p);
  set_lock(self,wbuf_lock);
  data->ptr_b=(void *)p;
  p->data[(write_head->addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3]=write_head->o;
  p->dirty[(write_head->addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>Dcache->g]=true;
  data->state=4;@+ wait(Dcache->access_time);
}

@ @<Forward the new data past the D-cache if it is write-through@>=
if ((Dcache->mode&WRITE_BACK)==0) { /* write-through */
  if (Dcache->flusher.next) wait(1);
  flush_cache(Dcache,p,true);
}

@ @<Ignore the item in |write_head|@>=
{
  set_lock(self,wbuf_lock);
  data->state=5;
  wait(1);
}

@* Loading and storing. A RISC machine is often said to have a ``load/store
architecture,'' perhaps because loading and storing are among the most
difficult things a RISC machine is called upon to do.

We want memory accesses
to be efficient, so we try to access the D-cache at the same time as we are
translating a virtual address via the DT-cache. Usually we hit in both
caches, but numerous cases must be dealt with when we miss. Is there
an elegant way to handle all the contingencies? Alas, the author of this
program was unable to think of anything better than to throw lots
of code at the problem --- knowing full well that such a spaghetti-like
approach is fraught with possibilities for error.

Instructions like \.{LDO} $x,y,z$ operate in two pipeline stages. The first
stage computes the virtual address $y+z$, waiting if necessary until $y$
and~$z$ are both known; then it starts to access the necessary caches.
In the second stage we ascertain the corresponding physical address and
hopefully find the data in the cache (or in the speculative |mem| list or the
write buffer).

An instruction like \.{STB} $x,y,z$ shares some of the computation of
\.{LDO}~$x,y,z$, because only one byte is being stored but the other seven
bytes must be found in the cache. In this case, however, $x$~is treated as an
input, and |mem| is the output. The second stage of a store command can begin
even though $x$ is not known during the first stage.

Here's what we do at the beginning of stage~1.

@d ld_st_launch 7 /* state when load/store command has its memory address */

@<Cases to compute the virtual...@>=
case preld: case prest: case prego:
  data->z.o=incr(data->z.o,data->xx&-(data->i==prego? Icache: Dcache)->bb);
  /* (I hope the adder is fast enough) */
case ld: case ldunc: case ldvts:
case st: case pst: case syncd: case syncid:
start_ld_st: data->y.o=oplus(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  data->state=ld_st_launch;@+ goto switch1;
case ldptp: case ldpte:@+if (data->y.o.h) goto start_ld_st;
  data->x.o=zero_octa;@+ data->x.known=true;@+ goto die; /* page table fault */

@ @d PRW_BITS (data->i<st? PR_BIT: data->i==pst? PR_BIT+PW_BIT:
                  (data->i==syncid && (data->loc.h&sign_bit))? 0: PW_BIT)

@<Special cases for states in the first stage@>=
case ld_st_launch:@+if ((self+1)->next)
    wait(1); /* second stage must be clear */
  @<Handle special cases for operations like |prego| and |ldvts|@>;
  if (data->y.o.h&sign_bit)
    @<Do load/store stage~1 with known physical address@>;
  if (page_bad) {
    if (data->i==st || (data->i<preld && data->i>syncid))
       data->interrupt|=PRW_BITS;
    goto fin_ex;
  }
  if (DTcache->lock || (j=get_reader(DTcache))<0) wait(1);
  startup(&DTcache->reader[j],DTcache->access_time);
  @<Look up the address in the DT-cache, and also in the D-cache if possible@>;
  pass_after(DTcache->access_time);@+ goto passit;

@ When stage 2 of a load/store command begins, the state will depend
on what transpired in stage~1.
For example, |data->state| will be |DT_miss| if the virtual address key
can't be found in the DT-cache; then stage~2 will have to compute the
physical address the hard way.

The |data->state| will be |DT_hit| if
the physical address is known via the DT-cache, but the data may or may not
be in the D-cache. The |data->state| will be |hit_and_miss| if the DT-cache
hits and the D-cache doesn't. And |data->state| will be |ld_ready| if
|data->x.o| is the desired octabyte (for example, if both caches hit).

@d DT_miss 10 /* second stage |state| when DT-cache doesn't hold the key */
@d DT_hit 11 /* second stage |state| when physical address is known */
@d hit_and_miss 12 /* second stage |state| when D-cache misses */
@d ld_ready 13 /* second stage |state| when data has been read */
@d st_ready 14 /* second stage |state| when data needn't be read */
@d prest_win 15 /* second stage |state| when we can fill a block with zeroes */

@<Look up the address in the DT-cache...@>=
p=cache_search(DTcache,trans_key(data->y.o));
if (!Dcache || Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache))<0 ||
     (data->i>=st && data->i<=syncid))
  @<Do load/store stage 1 without D-cache lookup@>;
startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
if (p) @<Do a simultaneous lookup in the D-cache@>@;
else data->state=DT_miss;

@ We assume that it is possible to look up a virtual address in the DT-cache
at the same time as we look for a corresponding physical address in the
D-cache, provided that the lower $b+c$ bits of the two addresses are the same.
(They will always be the same if |b+c<=page_s|; otherwise the operating system
can try to make them the same by ``page coloring'' whenever possible.) If both
caches hit, the physical address is known in
@^page coloring@>
max(|DTcache->access_time,Dcache->access_time|) cycles.

If the lower $b+c$ bits of the virtual and physical addresses differ,
the machine will not know this until the DT-cache has hit.
Therefore we simulate the operation of accessing the D-cache, but we go to
|DT_hit| instead of to |hit_and_miss| because the D-cache will
experience a spurious miss.

@d max(x,y) ((x)<(y)? (y):(x))

@<Do a simultaneous lookup in the D-cache@>=
{@+octa *m;
  @<Update DT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>;
  data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,p->data[0]);
  m=write_search(data,data->z.o);
  if (m==DUNNO) data->state=DT_hit;
  else if (m) data->x.o=*m, data->state=ld_ready;
  else if (Dcache->b+Dcache->c>page_s &&@|
      ((data->y.o.l^data->z.o.l)&((Dcache->bb<<Dcache->c)-(1<<page_s))))
    data->state=DT_hit; /* spurious D-cache lookup */
  else {
    q=cache_search(Dcache,data->z.o);
    if (q) {
      if (data->i==ldunc) q=demote_and_fix(Dcache,q);
      else q=use_and_fix(Dcache,q);
      data->x.o=q->data[(data->z.o.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3];
      data->state=ld_ready;
    }@+else data->state=hit_and_miss;
  }
  pass_after(max(DTcache->access_time,Dcache->access_time));
  goto passit;
}

@ The protection bits $p_rp_wp_x$ in a translation cache are shifted
four positions right from the interrupt codes |PR_BIT|, |PW_BIT|, |PX_BIT|.
If the data is protected, we abort the load/store operation immediately;
this protects the privacy of other users.

@<Update DT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>=
p=use_and_fix(DTcache,p);
j=PRW_BITS;
if (((p->data[0].l<<PROT_OFFSET)&j)!=j) {
  if (data->i==syncd || data->i==syncid) goto sync_check;
  if (data->i!=preld && data->i!=prest)
    data->interrupt|=j&~(p->data[0].l<<PROT_OFFSET);
  goto fin_ex;
}

@ @<Do load/store stage 1 without D-cache lookup@>=
{@+octa *m;
  if (p) {
    @<Update DT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>;
    data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,p->data[0]);
    if (data->i>=st && data->i<=syncid) data->state=st_ready;
    else {
      m=write_search(data,data->z.o);
      if (m && m!= DUNNO) data->x.o=*m, data->state=ld_ready;
      else data->state=DT_hit;
    }
  }@+ else data->state=DT_miss;
  pass_after(DTcache->access_time);@+ goto passit;
}

@ @<Do load/store stage~1 with known physical address@>=
{@+octa *m;
  if (!(data->loc.h&sign_bit)) {
    if (data->i==syncd || data->i==syncid) goto sync_check;
    if (data->i!=preld && data->i!=prest) data->interrupt |= N_BIT;
    goto fin_ex;
  }
  data->z.o=data->y.o;@+ data->z.o.h -= sign_bit;
  if (data->i>=st && data->i<=syncid) {
    data->state=st_ready;@+pass_after(1);@+goto passit;
  }
  m=write_search(data,data->z.o);
  if (m) {
    if (m==DUNNO) data->state=DT_hit;
    else data->x.o=*m, data->state=ld_ready;
  }@+ else if ((data->z.o.h&0xffff0000) || !Dcache) {
    if (mem_lock) wait(1);
    set_lock(&mem_locker,mem_lock);
    data->x.o=mem_read(data->z.o);
    data->state=ld_ready;
    startup(&mem_locker,mem_addr_time+mem_read_time);
    pass_after(mem_addr_time+mem_read_time);@+ goto passit;
  }
  if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache))<0) {
    data->state=DT_hit;@+pass_after(1);@+ goto passit;
  }
  startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
  q=cache_search(Dcache,data->z.o);
  if (q) {
    if (data->i==ldunc) q=demote_and_fix(Dcache,q);
    else q=use_and_fix(Dcache,q);
    data->x.o=q->data[(data->z.o.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3];
    data->state=ld_ready;
  }@+else data->state=hit_and_miss;
  pass_after(Dcache->access_time);@+ goto passit;
}

@ The program for the second stage is, likewise, rather long-winded, yet quite
similar to the cache manipulations we have already seen several times.

Several instructions might be trying to fill the DT-cache for the same page.
(A similar situation faced us in the |write_from_wbuf| coroutine.)
The second stage therefore needs to do some
translation cache searching just as the first stage did. In this
stage, however, we don't go all out for speed, because DT-cache misses
are rare.

@d DT_retry 8 /* second stage |state| when DT-cache should be searched again */
@d got_DT 9   /* second stage |state| when DT-cache entry has been computed */

@<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
square_one: data->state=DT_retry;
 case DT_retry:@+if (DTcache->lock || (j=get_reader(DTcache))<0) wait(1);
   startup(&DTcache->reader[j],DTcache->access_time);
   p=cache_search(DTcache,trans_key(data->y.o));
   if (p) {
     @<Update DT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>;
     data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,p->data[0]);
     if (data->i>=st && data->i<=syncid) data->state=st_ready;
     else data->state=DT_hit;
   }@+ else data->state=DT_miss;
   wait(DTcache->access_time);
 case DT_miss:@+if (DTcache->filler.next)
     if (data->i==preld || data->i==prest) goto fin_ex;@+ else goto square_one;
   if (no_hardware_PT)
     if (data->i==preld || data->i==prest) goto fin_ex;@+else goto emulate_virt;
   p=alloc_slot(DTcache,trans_key(data->y.o));
   if (!p) goto square_one;
   data->ptr_b=DTcache->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void *)p;
   DTcache->filler_ctl.y.o=data->y.o;
   set_lock(self,DTcache->fill_lock);
   startup(&DTcache->filler,1);
   data->state=got_DT;
   if (data->i==preld || data->i==prest) goto fin_ex;@+else sleep;
 case got_DT: release_lock(self,DTcache->fill_lock);
   j=PRW_BITS;
   if (((data->z.o.l<<PROT_OFFSET)&j)!=j) {
     if (data->i==syncd || data->i==syncid) goto sync_check;
     data->interrupt |= j&~(data->z.o.l<<PROT_OFFSET);
     goto fin_ex;
   }
   data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,data->z.o);
   if (data->i>=st && data->i<=syncid) goto finish_store;
    /* otherwise we fall through to |ld_retry| below */

@ The second stage might also want to fill the D-cache (and perhaps
the S-cache) as we get the data.

Several load instructions might be trying to fill the same cache block.
So we should go back and look in the D-cache again if we miss and
cannot allocate a slot immediately.

A \.{PRELD} or \.{PREST} instruction, which is just a ``hint,'' doesn't do
anything more if the caches are already busy.

@<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
ld_retry: data->state=DT_hit;
 case DT_hit:@+ if (data->i==preld || data->i==prest) goto fin_ex;
  @<Check for a hit in pending writes@>;
  if ((data->z.o.h&0xffff0000) || !Dcache)
      @<Do load/store stage 2 without D-cache lookup@>;
  if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache))<0) wait(1);
  startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
  q=cache_search(Dcache,data->z.o);
  if (q) {
    if (data->i==ldunc) q=demote_and_fix(Dcache,q);
    else q=use_and_fix(Dcache,q);
    data->x.o=q->data[(data->z.o.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3];
    data->state=ld_ready;
  }@+else data->state=hit_and_miss;
  wait(Dcache->access_time);
 case hit_and_miss:@+if (data->i==ldunc) goto avoid_D;
    @<Try to get the contents of location |data->z.o| in the D-cache@>;

@ @<Try to get the contents of location |data->z.o| in the D-cache@>=
@<Check for |prest| with a fully spanned cache block@>;
if (Dcache->filler.next) goto ld_retry;
if ((Scache&&Scache->lock) || (!Scache&&mem_lock)) goto ld_retry;
q=alloc_slot(Dcache,data->z.o);
if (!q) goto ld_retry;
if (Scache) set_lock(&Dcache->filler,Scache->lock)@;
else set_lock(&Dcache->filler,mem_lock);
set_lock(self,Dcache->fill_lock);
data->ptr_b=Dcache->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void *)q;
Dcache->filler_ctl.z.o=data->z.o;
startup(&Dcache->filler,Scache? Scache->access_time: mem_addr_time);
data->state=ld_ready;
if (data->i==preld || data->i==prest) goto fin_ex;@+else sleep;

@ If a |prest| instruction makes it to the hot seat,
we have been assured by the user of |PREST| that the current
values of bytes in virtual addresses |data->y.o-(data->xx&-Dcache->bb)| through
|data->y.o+(data->xx&(Dcache->bb-1))|
are irrelevant. Hence we can pretend that we know they are zero. This
is advantageous if it saves us from filling a cache block from
the S-cache or from memory.

@<Check for |prest| with a fully spanned cache block@>=
if (data->i==prest &&@|
   (data->xx>=Dcache->bb || ((data->y.o.l&(Dcache->bb-1))==0)) &&@|
   ((data->y.o.l+(data->xx&(Dcache->bb-1))+1)^data->y.o.l)>=Dcache->bb)
  goto prest_span;

@ @<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
prest_span: data->state=prest_win;
case prest_win:@+ if (data!=old_hot || Dlocker.next) wait(1);
  if (Dcache->lock) goto fin_ex;
  q=alloc_slot(Dcache,data->z.o); /* OK if |Dcache->filler| is busy */
  if (q) {
    clean_block(Dcache,q);
    q->tag=data->z.o;@+q->tag.l &=-Dcache->bb;
    set_lock(&Dlocker,Dcache->lock);
    startup(&Dlocker,Dcache->copy_in_time);
  }
  goto fin_ex;

@ @<Do load/store stage 2 without D-cache lookup@>=
{
avoid_D:@+ if (mem_lock) wait(1);
  set_lock(&mem_locker,mem_lock);
  startup(&mem_locker, mem_addr_time+mem_read_time);
  data->x.o=mem_read(data->z.o);
  data->state=ld_ready;@+ wait(mem_addr_time+mem_read_time);
}

@ @<Check for a hit in pending writes@>=
{
  octa *m=write_search(data,data->z.o);
  if (m==DUNNO) wait(1);
  if (m) {
    data->x.o=*m;
    data->state=ld_ready;
    wait(1);
  }
}

@ The requested octabyte will arrive sooner or later in |data->x.o|.
Then a load instruction is almost done, except that we might need
to massage the input a little bit.

@<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
case ld_ready:@+if (self->lockloc)
    *(self->lockloc)=NULL, self->lockloc=NULL;
  if (data->i>=st) goto finish_store;
  switch(data->op>>1) {
    case LDB>>1: case LDBU>>1: j=(data->z.o.l&0x7)<<3;@+i=56;@+goto fin_ld;
    case LDW>>1: case LDWU>>1: j=(data->z.o.l&0x6)<<3;@+i=48;@+goto fin_ld;
    case LDT>>1: case LDTU>>1: j=(data->z.o.l&0x4)<<3;@+i=32;
 fin_ld: data->x.o=shift_right(shift_left(data->x.o,j),i,data->op&0x2);
    default: goto fin_ex;
    case LDHT>>1:@+if (data->z.o.l&4) data->x.o.h=data->x.o.l;
      data->x.o.l=0;@+ goto fin_ex;
    case LDSF>>1:@+if (data->z.o.l&4) data->x.o.h=data->x.o.l;
      if ((data->x.o.h&0x7f800000)==0 && (data->x.o.h&0x7fffff)) {
        data->x.o=load_sf(data->x.o.h);
        data->state=3;@+wait(denin_penalty);
      }
      else data->x.o=load_sf(data->x.o.h);@+goto fin_ex;
    case LDPTP>>1:@+
      if ((data->x.o.h&sign_bit)==0 || (data->x.o.l&0x1ff8)!=page_n)
        data->x.o=zero_octa;
      else data->x.o.l &= -(1<<13);
      goto fin_ex;
    case LDPTE>>1:@+if ((data->x.o.l&0x1ff8)!=page_n) data->x.o=zero_octa;
      else data->x.o=incr(oandn(data->x.o,page_mask),data->x.o.l&0x7);
      data->x.o.h &= 0xffff;@+ goto fin_ex;
    case UNSAVE>>1: @<Handle an internal \.{UNSAVE} when it's time to load@>;
  }

@ @<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
 finish_store: data->state=st_ready;
case st_ready:@+ switch (data->i) {
 case st: case pst: @<Finish a store command@>;
 case syncd: data->b.o.l=(Dcache? Dcache->bb: 8192);@+goto do_syncd;
 case syncid: data->b.o.l=(Icache? Icache->bb: 8192);
   if (Dcache && Dcache->bb<data->b.o.l) data->b.o.l=Dcache->bb;
   goto do_syncid;
}

@ Store instructions have an extra complication, because some of them need
to check for overflow.

@<Finish a store command@>=
data->x.addr=data->z.o;
if (data->b.p) wait(1);
switch(data->op>>1) {
 case STUNC>>1: data->i=stunc;
 default: data->x.o=data->b.o;@+goto fin_ex;
 case STSF>>1: set_round;@+ data->b.o.h=store_sf(data->b.o);
    data->interrupt |= exceptions;
    if ((data->b.o.h&0x7f800000)==0 && (data->b.o.h&0x7fffff)) {
      if (data->z.o.l&4) data->x.o.l=data->b.o.h;
      else data->x.o.h=data->b.o.h;
      data->state=3;@+wait(denout_penalty);
    }
 case STHT>>1:@+if (data->z.o.l&4) data->x.o.l=data->b.o.h;
  else data->x.o.h=data->b.o.h;
  goto fin_ex; 
 case STB>>1: case STBU>>1: j=(data->z.o.l&0x7)<<3;@+i=56;@+goto fin_st;
 case STW>>1: case STWU>>1: j=(data->z.o.l&0x6)<<3;@+i=48;@+goto fin_st;
 case STT>>1: case STTU>>1: j=(data->z.o.l&0x4)<<3;@+i=32;
  fin_st: @<Insert |data->b.o| into the proper field of |data->x.o|,
                 checking for arithmetic exceptions if signed@>;
  goto fin_ex;
 case CSWAP>>1: @<Finish a \.{CSWAP}@>;
 case SAVE>>1: @<Handle an internal \.{SAVE} when it's time to store@>;
  }

@ @<Insert |data->b.o| into the proper field...@>=
{
  octa mask;
  if (!(data->op&2)) {@+octa before,after;
    before=data->b.o;@+after=shift_right(shift_left(data->b.o,i),i,0);
    if (before.l!=after.l || before.h!=after.h) data->interrupt|=V_BIT;
  }
  mask=shift_right(shift_left(neg_one,i),j,1);
  data->b.o=shift_right(shift_left(data->b.o,i),j,1);
  data->x.o.h^=mask.h&(data->x.o.h^data->b.o.h);
  data->x.o.l^=mask.l&(data->x.o.l^data->b.o.l);
}

@ The \.{CSWAP} operation has four inputs $\rm(\$X, \$Y, \$Z, rP)$ as well as
three outputs $\rm(\$X,M_8[A],rP)$. To keep from exceeding the capacity
of the control blocks in our pipeline, we wait until this instruction reaches
the hot seat, thereby allowing us non-speculative access to~rP.

@<Finish a \.{CSWAP}@>=
if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
if (data->x.o.h==g[rP].o.h && data->x.o.l==g[rP].o.l) {
  data->a.o.l=1; /* |data->a.o.h| is zero */
  data->x.o=data->b.o;
}@+else {
  g[rP].o=data->x.o; /* |data->a.o| is zero */
  if (verbose&issue_bit) {
    printf(" setting rP=");@+print_octa(g[rP].o);@+printf("\n");
  }
}
data->i=cswap; /* cosmetic change, affects the trace output only */
goto fin_ex;

@* The fetch stage. Now that we've mastered the most difficult memory
operations, we can relax and apply our knowledge to the slightly simpler task
of filling the fetch buffer. Fetching is like loading/storing, except that we
use the I-cache instead of the D-cache. It's slightly simpler because the
I-cache is read-only. Further simplifications would be possible if there
were no \.{PREGO} instruction, because there is only one fetch unit.
However, we want to implement \.{PREGO} with reasonable efficiency, in order
to see if that instruction is worthwhile; so we include the complications of
simultaneous I-cache and IT-cache readers, which we
have already implemented for the D-cache and DT-cache.

The fetch coroutine is always present, as the one and only coroutine with
|stage| number~zero.

In normal circumstances, the fetch coroutine accesses a cache block containing
the instruction whose virtual address is given by |inst_ptr| (the instruction
pointer), and transfers up to |fetch_max| instructions from that block to the
fetch buffer. Complications arise if the instruction isn't in the cache, or if
we can't translate the virtual address because of a miss in the IT-cache.
Moreover, |inst_ptr| is a \&{spec} variable whose value might not even be
known; if |inst_ptr.p| is nonnull, we don't know what to fetch.
@^program counter@>

@<External v...@>=
Extern spec inst_ptr; /* the instruction pointer (aka program counter) */
Extern octa *fetched; /* buffer for incoming instructions */

@ The fetch coroutine usually begins a cycle in state |fetch_ready|, with
the most recently fetched octabytes in positions |fetch_lo|, |fetch_lo+1|,
\dots, |fetch_hi-1| of a buffer called |fetched|. Once that buffer has been
exhausted, the coroutine reverts to state~0; with luck, the buffer might have
more data by the time the next cycle rolls around.

@<Glob...@>=
int fetch_lo, fetch_hi; /* the active region of that buffer */
coroutine fetch_co;
control fetch_ctl;

@ @<Initialize e...@>=
fetch_co.ctl=&fetch_ctl;
fetch_co.name="Fetch";
fetch_ctl.go.o.l=4;
startup(&fetch_co,1);

@ @<Restart the fetch coroutine@>=
if (fetch_co.lockloc) *(fetch_co.lockloc)=NULL,fetch_co.lockloc=NULL;
unschedule(&fetch_co);
startup(&fetch_co,1);

@ Some of the actions here are done not only by the fetcher but also by the
first and second stages of a |prego| operation.

@d wait_or_pass(t) if (data->i==prego) {@+pass_after(t);@+goto passit;@+}
                   else wait(t)

@<Simulate an action of the fetch coroutine@>=
switch0:@+ switch(data->state) {
 new_fetch: data->state=0;
 case 0: @<Wait, if necessary, until the instruction pointer is known@>;
   data->y.o=inst_ptr.o;
   data->state=1;@+ data->interrupt=0;@+ data->x.o=data->z.o=zero_octa;
 case 1: start_fetch:@+ if (data->y.o.h&sign_bit)
    @<Begin fetch with known physical address@>;
  if (page_bad) goto bad_fetch;
  if (ITcache->lock || (j=get_reader(ITcache))<0) wait(1);
  startup(&ITcache->reader[j],ITcache->access_time);
  @<Look up the address in the IT-cache, and also in the I-cache if possible@>;
  wait_or_pass(ITcache->access_time);
  @<Other cases for the fetch coroutine@>@;
}

@ @<Handle special cases for operations like |prego| and |ldvts|@>=
if (data->i==prego) goto start_fetch;

@ @<Wait, if necessary, until the instruction pointer is known@>=
if (inst_ptr.p) {
  if (inst_ptr.p!=UNKNOWN_SPEC && inst_ptr.p->known)
    inst_ptr.o=inst_ptr.p->o, inst_ptr.p=NULL;
  wait(1);
}

@ @d got_IT 19   /* |state| when IT-cache entry has been computed */
@d IT_miss 20 /* |state| when IT-cache doesn't hold the key */
@d IT_hit 21 /* |state| when physical instruction address is known */
@d Ihit_and_miss 22 /* |state| when I-cache misses */
@d fetch_ready 23 /* |state| when instructions have been read */
@d got_one 24 /* |state| when a ``preview'' octabyte is ready */

@<Look up the address in the IT-cache...@>=
p=cache_search(ITcache,trans_key(data->y.o));
if (!Icache || Icache->lock || (j=get_reader(Icache))<0)
  @<Begin fetch without I-cache lookup@>;
startup(&Icache->reader[j],Icache->access_time);
if (p) @<Do a simultaneous lookup in the I-cache@>@;
else data->state=IT_miss;

@ We assume that it is possible to look up a virtual address in the IT-cache
at the same time as we look for a corresponding physical address in the
I-cache, provided that the lower $b+c$ bits of the two addresses are the same.
(See the remarks about ``page coloring,'' when we made similar assumptions
about the DT-cache and D-cache.)
@^page coloring@>

@<Do a simultaneous lookup in the I-cache@>=
{
  @<Update IT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>;
  data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,p->data[0]);
  if (Icache->b+Icache->c>page_s &&@|
      ((data->y.o.l^data->z.o.l)&((Icache->bb<<Icache->c)-(1<<page_s))))
    data->state=IT_hit; /* spurious I-cache lookup */
  else {
    q=cache_search(Icache,data->z.o);
    if (q) {
      q=use_and_fix(Icache,q);
      @<Copy the data from block~|q| to |fetched|@>;
      data->state=fetch_ready;
    }@+else data->state=Ihit_and_miss;
  }
  wait_or_pass(max(ITcache->access_time,Icache->access_time));
}

@ @<Update IT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>=
p=use_and_fix(ITcache,p);
if (!(p->data[0].l&(PX_BIT>>PROT_OFFSET))) goto bad_fetch;

@ At this point |inst_ptr.o| equals |data->y.o|.

@<Copy the data from block~|q| to |fetched|@>=
if (data->i!=prego) {
  for (j=0;j<Icache->bb;j++) fetched[j]=q->data[j];
  fetch_lo=(inst_ptr.o.l&(Icache->bb-1))>>3;
  fetch_hi=Icache->bb>>3;
}

@ @<Begin fetch without I-cache lookup@>=
{
  if (p) {
    @<Update IT-cache usage and check the protection bits@>;
    data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,p->data[0]);
    data->state=IT_hit;
  }@+ else data->state=IT_miss;
  wait_or_pass(ITcache->access_time);
}

@ @<Begin fetch with known physical address@>=
{
  if (data->i==prego && !(data->loc.h&sign_bit)) goto fin_ex;
  data->z.o=data->y.o;@+ data->z.o.h -= sign_bit;
 known_phys:@+  if (data->z.o.h&0xffff0000) goto bad_fetch;
  if (!Icache) @<Read from memory into |fetched|@>;
  if (Icache->lock || (j=get_reader(Icache))<0) {
    data->state=IT_hit;@+ wait_or_pass(1);
  }
  startup(&Icache->reader[j],Icache->access_time);
  q=cache_search(Icache,data->z.o);
  if (q) {
    q=use_and_fix(Icache,q);
    @<Copy the data from block~|q| to |fetched|@>;
    data->state=fetch_ready;
  }@+else data->state=Ihit_and_miss;
  wait_or_pass(Icache->access_time);
}

@ @<Read from memory into |fetched|@>=
{@+octa addr;
  addr=data->z.o;
  if (mem_lock) wait(1);
  set_lock(&mem_locker,mem_lock);
  startup(&mem_locker,mem_addr_time+mem_read_time);
  addr.l&=-(bus_words<<3);
  fetched[0]=mem_read(addr);
  for (j=1;j<bus_words;j++)
    fetched[j]=mem_hash[last_h].chunk[((addr.l&0xffff)>>3)+j];
  fetch_lo=(data->z.o.l>>3)&(bus_words-1);@+ fetch_hi=bus_words;
  data->state=fetch_ready;
  wait(mem_addr_time+mem_read_time);
}

@ @<Other cases for the fetch coroutine@>=
 case IT_miss:@+if (ITcache->filler.next)
     if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;@+else wait(1);
   if (no_hardware_PT) @<Insert dummy instruction for page table emulation@>;
   p=alloc_slot(ITcache,trans_key(data->y.o));
   if (!p) /* hey, it was present after all */
     if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;@+else goto new_fetch;
   data->ptr_b=ITcache->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void *)p;
   ITcache->filler_ctl.y.o=data->y.o;
   set_lock(self,ITcache->fill_lock);
   startup(&ITcache->filler,1);
   data->state=got_IT;
   if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;@+else sleep;
 case got_IT: release_lock(self,ITcache->fill_lock);
   if (!(data->z.o.l&(PX_BIT>>PROT_OFFSET))) goto bad_fetch;
   data->z.o=phys_addr(data->y.o,data->z.o);
 fetch_retry: data->state=IT_hit;
 case IT_hit:@+if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;@+else goto known_phys;
 case Ihit_and_miss:
    @<Try to get the contents of location |data->z.o| in the I-cache@>;

@ @<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
case IT_miss: case Ihit_and_miss: case IT_hit: case fetch_ready: goto switch0;

@ @<Try to get the contents of location |data->z.o| in the I-cache@>=
if (Icache->filler.next) goto fetch_retry;
if ((Scache&&Scache->lock) || (!Scache&&mem_lock)) goto fetch_retry;
q=alloc_slot(Icache,data->z.o);
if (!q) goto fetch_retry;
if (Scache) set_lock(&Icache->filler,Scache->lock)@;
else set_lock(&Icache->filler,mem_lock);
set_lock(self,Icache->fill_lock);
data->ptr_b=Icache->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void *)q;
Icache->filler_ctl.z.o=data->z.o;
startup(&Icache->filler,Scache? Scache->access_time: mem_addr_time);
data->state=got_one;
if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;@+else sleep;

@ The I-cache filler will wake us up with the octabyte we want, before
it has filled the entire cache block. In that case we can fetch one
or two instructions before the rest of the block has been loaded.

@<Other cases for the fetch coroutine@>=
bad_fetch:@+ if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;
  data->interrupt |= PX_BIT;
swym_one: fetched[0].h=fetched[0].l=SWYM<<24;
  goto fetch_one;
case got_one: fetched[0]=data->x.o; /* a ``preview'' of the new cache data */
fetch_one:  fetch_lo=0;@+fetch_hi=1;
  data->state=fetch_ready;
case fetch_ready:@+if (self->lockloc)
    *(self->lockloc)=NULL, self->lockloc=NULL;
  if (data->i==prego) goto fin_ex;
  for (j=0;j<fetch_max;j++) {
    register fetch *new_tail;
    if (tail==fetch_bot) new_tail=fetch_top;
    else new_tail=tail-1;
    if (new_tail==head) break; /* fetch buffer is full */
    @<Install a new instruction into the |tail| position@>;
    tail=new_tail;
    if (sleepy) {
      sleepy=false;@+ sleep;
    }
    inst_ptr.o=incr(inst_ptr.o,4);
    if (fetch_lo==fetch_hi) goto new_fetch;
  }
  wait(1);

@ @<Insert dummy instruction for page table emulation@>=
{
  if (cache_search(ITcache,trans_key(inst_ptr.o))) goto new_fetch;
  data->interrupt|=F_BIT;
  sleepy=true;
  goto swym_one;
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
bool sleepy; /* have we just emitted the page table emulation call? */
  
@ At this point we check for egregiously invalid instructions. (Sometimes
the dispatcher will actually allow such instructions to occupy
the fetch buffer, for internally generated commands.)

@<Install a new instruction into the |tail| position@>=
tail->loc=inst_ptr.o;
if (inst_ptr.o.l&4) tail->inst=fetched[fetch_lo++].l;
else tail->inst=fetched[fetch_lo].h;
@^big-endian versus little-endian@>
@^little-endian versus big-endian@>
tail->interrupt=data->interrupt;
i=tail->inst>>24;
if (i>=RESUME && i<=SYNC && (tail->inst&bad_inst_mask[i-RESUME]))
  tail->interrupt |= B_BIT;
tail->noted=false;
if (inst_ptr.o.l==breakpoint.l && inst_ptr.o.h==breakpoint.h)
  breakpoint_hit=true;

@ The commands |RESUME|, |SAVE|, |UNSAVE|, and |SYNC| should not have
nonzero bits in the positions defined here.

@<Global...@>=
int bad_inst_mask[4]={0xfffffe,0xffff,0xffff00,0xfffff8};

@* Interrupts. The scariest thing about the design of a pipelined machine is
the existence of interrupts, which disrupt the smooth flow of a computation in
ways that are difficult to anticipate. Fortunately, however, the discipline of
a reorder buffer, which forces instructions to be committed in order,
allows us to deal with interrupts in a fairly natural way. Our solution to the
problems of dynamic scheduling and speculative execution therefore solves the
interrupt problem as well.
@^interrupts@>

\MMIX\ has three kinds of interrupts, which show up as bit codes in the
|interrupt| field when an instruction is ready to be committed:
|H_BIT| invokes a trip handler, for \.{TRIP} instructions and
arithmetic exceptions; |F_BIT| invokes a forced-trap handler, for \.{TRAP}
instructions and unimplemented instructions that need to be emulated
in software; |E_BIT| invokes a dynamic-trap handler, for external
interrupts like I/O signals or for internal interrupts caused by
improper instructions.
In all three cases, the pipeline control has already been redirected to fetch
new instructions starting at the correct handler address by the time an
interrupted instruction is ready to be committed.

@ Most instructions come to the following part of the program, if they
have finished execution with any~1s among the eight trip bits or the
eight trap bits.

If the trip bits aren't all zero, we want to update the event bits
of~rA, or perform an enabled trip handler, or both. If the trap bits
are nonzero, we need to hold onto them until we get to the hot seat,
when they will be joined with the bits of~rQ and probably cause an interrupt.
A load or store instruction with nonzero trap bits will be nullified,
not committed.

Underflow that is exact and not enabled is ignored, in accordance with
the IEEE standard conventions. (This applies also to underflow
triggered by |RESUME_SET|.)

@d is_load_store(i) (i>=ld && i<=cswap)

@<Handle interrupt at end of execution stage@>=
{
  if ((data->interrupt&0xff) && is_load_store(data->i)) goto state_5;
  j=data->interrupt&0xff00;
  data->interrupt -= j;
  if ((j&(U_BIT+X_BIT))==U_BIT && !(data->ra.o.l & U_BIT)) j&=~U_BIT;
  data->arith_exc=(j&~data->ra.o.l)>>8;
  if (j&data->ra.o.l) @<Prepare for exceptional trip handler@>;
  if (data->interrupt&0xff) goto state_5;
}

@ Since execution is speculative, an exceptional condition might not
be part of the ``real'' computation. Indeed, the present coroutine
might have already been deissued.

@<Prepare for exceptional trip handler@>=
{
  i=issued_between(data,cool);
  if (i<deissues) goto die;
  deissues=i;
  old_tail=tail=head;@+resuming=0; /* clear the fetch buffer */
  @<Restart the fetch coroutine@>;
  cool_hist=data->hist;
  for (i=j&data->ra.o.l,m=16;!(i&D_BIT);i<<=1,m+=16);
  data->go.o.h=0, data->go.o.l=m;
  inst_ptr.o=data->go.o, inst_ptr.p=NULL;
  data->interrupt |= H_BIT;
  goto state_4;
}

@ @<Prepare to emulate the page translation@>=
i=issued_between(data,cool);
if (i<deissues) goto die;
deissues=i;
old_tail=tail=head;@+resuming=0; /* clear the fetch buffer */
@<Restart the fetch coroutine@>;
cool_hist=data->hist;
inst_ptr.p=UNKNOWN_SPEC;
data->interrupt |= F_BIT;

@ We need to stop dispatching when calling a trip handler from within
the reorder buffer,
lest we issue an instruction that uses
|g[255]| or |rB| as an operand.

@<Special cases for states in the first stage@>=
emulate_virt: @<Prepare to emulate the page translation@>;
state_4: data->state=4;
case 4:@+if (dispatch_lock) wait(1);
  set_lock(self,dispatch_lock);
state_5: data->state=5;
case 5:@+if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
  if ((data->interrupt&F_BIT) && data->i!=trap) {
    inst_ptr.o=g[rT].o, inst_ptr.p=NULL;
    if (is_load_store(data->i)) nullifying=true;
  }
  if (data->interrupt&0xff) {
    g[rQ].o.h |= data->interrupt&0xff;
    new_Q.h |= data->interrupt&0xff;
    if (verbose&issue_bit) {
      printf(" setting rQ=");@+print_octa(g[rQ].o);@+printf("\n");
    }
  }
  goto die;

@ The instructions of the previous section appear in the switch for
coroutine stage~1 only. We need to use them also in later stages.

@<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
case 4: goto state_4;
case 5: goto state_5;

@ @<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case trap:@+ if ((flags[op]&X_is_dest_bit) &&
                cool->xx<cool_G && cool->xx>=cool_L)
    goto increase_L;
  if (!g[rT].up->known || !g[rJ].up->known) goto stall;
  inst_ptr=specval(&g[rT]); /* traps and emulated ops */
  cool->need_b=true, cool->b=specval(&g[255]);
case trip: if (!g[rJ].up->known) goto stall;
  cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&g[255],&cool->x);
  cool->x.known=true, cool->x.o=g[rJ].up->o;
  if (i==trip) cool->go.o=zero_octa;
  cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[i==trap? rBB: rB],&cool->a);@+break;

@ @<Cases for stage 1 execution@>=
case trap: data->interrupt |= F_BIT;@+ data->a.o=data->b.o;@+ goto fin_ex;
case trip: data->interrupt |= H_BIT;@+ data->a.o=data->b.o;@+ goto fin_ex;

@ The following check is performed at the beginning of every cycle.
An instruction in the hot seat can be externally interrupted only if
it is ready to be committed and not already marked for tripping
or trapping.

@<Check for external interrupt@>=
g[rI].o=incr(g[rI].o,-1);
if (g[rI].o.l==0 && g[rI].o.h==0) {
  g[rQ].o.l |= INTERVAL_TIMEOUT, new_Q.l |= INTERVAL_TIMEOUT;
    if (verbose&issue_bit) {
      printf(" setting rQ=");@+print_octa(g[rQ].o);@+printf("\n");
    }
  }
trying_to_interrupt=false;
if (((g[rQ].o.h&g[rK].o.h)||(g[rQ].o.l&g[rK].o.l)) && cool!=hot &&@|
     !(hot->interrupt&(E_BIT+F_BIT+H_BIT)) && !doing_interrupt &&@|
     !(hot->i==resum)) {
  if (hot->owner) trying_to_interrupt=true;
  else {
    hot->interrupt |= E_BIT;
    @<Deissue all but the hottest command@>;
    inst_ptr.o=g[rTT].o;@+inst_ptr.p=NULL;
  }
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
bool trying_to_interrupt; /* encouraging interruptible operations to pause */
bool nullifying; /* stopping dispatch to nullify a load/store command */

@ It's possible that the command in the hot seat has been deissued,
but only if the simulator has done so at the user's request. Otherwise
the test `|i>=deissues|' here will always succeed.

The value of |cool_hist| becomes flaky here. We could try to keep it
strictly up to date, but the unpredictable nature of external interrupts
suggests that we are better off leaving it alone. (It's only a heuristic
for branch prediction, and a sufficiently strong prediction will survive
one-time glitches due to interrupts.)

@<Deissue all but the hottest command@>=
i=issued_between(hot,cool);
if (i>=deissues) {
  deissues=i;
  tail=head;@+resuming=0; /* clear the fetch buffer */
  @<Restart the fetch coroutine@>;
  if (is_load_store(hot->i)) nullifying=true;
}

@ Even though an interrupted instruction has officially been either
``committed'' or ``nullified,'' it stays in the hot seat for
two or three extra cycles,
while we save enough of the machine state to resume the computation later.

%Notice, incidentally, that |H_BIT| and |E_BIT| might both be present
%simultaneously. In such cases we first prepare for a trip handler, but
%interrupt that for a dynamic trap handler. (Ah, the joys of computer
%architecture.)

@<Begin an interruption and |break|@>=
{
  if (!(hot->interrupt&H_BIT)) g[rK].o=zero_octa; /* trap */
  if (((hot->interrupt&H_BIT)&&hot->i!=trip) ||@|
      ((hot->interrupt&F_BIT)&&hot->i!=trap) ||@|
      (hot->interrupt&E_BIT)) doing_interrupt=3, suppress_dispatch=true;
  else doing_interrupt=2; /* trip or trap started by dispatcher */
  break;
}

@ If a memory failure occurs, we should set rF here, either in
case~2 or case~1. The simulator doesn't do anything with~rF at present.

@<Perform one cycle of the interrupt preparations@>=
switch (doing_interrupt--) {
 case 3: @<Set resumption registers $\rm(rB,\$255)$ or $\rm(rBB,\$255)$@>;
  @+break;
 case 2: @<Set resumption registers $\rm(rW,rX)$ or $\rm(rWW,rXX)$@>;@+break;
 case 1: @<Set resumption registers $\rm(rY,rZ)$ or $\rm(rYY,rZZ)$@>;
  if (hot==reorder_bot) hot=reorder_top;@+ else hot--;
  break;
}

@ @<Set resumption registers $\rm(rB,\$255)$ or $\rm(rBB,\$255)$@>=
j=hot->interrupt&H_BIT;
g[j?rB:rBB].o=g[255].o;
g[255].o=g[rJ].o;
if (verbose&issue_bit) {
  if (j) {
    printf(" setting rB=");@+print_octa(g[rB].o);
  }@+else {
    printf(" setting rBB=");@+print_octa(g[rBB].o);
  }
  printf(", $255=");@+print_octa(g[255].o);@+printf("\n");
}

@ Here's where we manufacture the ``ropcodes'' for resumption.

@d RESUME_AGAIN 0 /* repeat the command in rX as if in location $\rm rW-4$ */
@d RESUME_CONT 1 /* same, but substitute rY and rZ for operands */
@d RESUME_SET 2 /* set r[X] to rZ */
@d RESUME_TRANS 3 /* install $\rm(rY,rZ)$ into IT-cache or DT-cache,
        then |RESUME_AGAIN| */
@d pack_bytes(a,b,c,d) ((((((unsigned)(a)<<8)+(b))<<8)+(c))<<8)+(d)

@<Set resumption registers $\rm(rW,rX)$ or $\rm(rWW,rXX)$@>=
j=pack_bytes(hot->op,hot->xx,hot->yy,hot->zz);
if (hot->interrupt&H_BIT) { /* trip */
  g[rW].o=incr(hot->loc,4);
  g[rX].o.h=sign_bit, g[rX].o.l=j;
  if (verbose&issue_bit) {
    printf(" setting rW=");@+print_octa(g[rW].o);
    printf(", rX=");@+print_octa(g[rX].o);@+printf("\n");
  }
}@+else { /* trap */
  g[rWW].o=hot->go.o;
  g[rXX].o.l=j;
  if (hot->interrupt&F_BIT) { /* forced */
    if (hot->i!=trap) j=RESUME_TRANS; /* emulate page translation */
    else if (hot->op==TRAP) j=0x80; /* |TRAP| */
    else if (flags[internal_op[hot->op]]&X_is_dest_bit)
      j=RESUME_SET; /* emulation */
    else j=0x80; /* emulation when r[X] is not a destination */
  }@+else { /* dynamic */
    if (hot->interim)
      j=(hot->i==frem || hot->i==syncd || hot->i==syncid? RESUME_CONT:
             RESUME_AGAIN);
    else if (is_load_store(hot->i)) j=RESUME_AGAIN;
    else j=0x80; /* normal external interruption */
  }
  g[rXX].o.h=(j<<24)+(hot->interrupt&0xff);
  if (verbose&issue_bit) {
    printf(" setting rWW=");@+print_octa(g[rWW].o);
    printf(", rXX=");@+print_octa(g[rXX].o);@+printf("\n");
  }
}
      
@ @<Set resumption registers $\rm(rY,rZ)$ or $\rm(rYY,rZZ)$@>=
j=hot->interrupt&H_BIT;
if ((hot->interrupt&F_BIT) && hot->op==SWYM) g[rYY].o=hot->go.o;
else g[j?rY:rYY].o=hot->y.o;
if (hot->i==st || hot->i==pst) g[j?rZ:rZZ].o=hot->x.o;
else g[j?rZ:rZZ].o=hot->z.o;
if (verbose&issue_bit) {
  if (j) {
    printf(" setting rY=");@+print_octa(g[rY].o);
    printf(", rZ=");@+print_octa(g[rZ].o);@+printf("\n");
  }@+else {
    printf(" setting rYY=");@+print_octa(g[rYY].o);
    printf(", rZZ=");@+print_octa(g[rZZ].o);@+printf("\n");
  }
}

@ Whew; we've successfully interrupted the computation. The remaining
task is to restart it again, as transparently as possible.

The \.{RESUME} instruction waits for the pipeline to drain, because
it has to do such drastic things. For example, an interrupt may be
occurring at this very moment, changing the registers needed for resumption.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case resume:@+ if (cool!=old_hot) goto stall;
  inst_ptr=specval(&g[cool->zz? rWW:rW]);
  if (!(cool->loc.h&sign_bit)) {
    if (cool->zz) cool->interrupt |= K_BIT;
    else if (inst_ptr.o.h&sign_bit) cool->interrupt |= P_BIT;
  }
  if (cool->interrupt) {
    inst_ptr.o=incr(cool->loc,4);@+cool->i=noop;
  }@+ else {
    cool->go.o=inst_ptr.o;
    if (cool->zz) {
      @<Magically do an I/O operation, if |cool->loc| is rT@>;
      cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[rK],&cool->a);
      cool->a.known=true, cool->a.o=g[255].o;
      cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&g[255],&cool->x);
      cool->x.known=true, cool->x.o=g[rBB].o;
    }
    cool->b= specval(&g[cool->zz? rXX:rX]);
    if (!(cool->b.o.h&sign_bit)) @<Resume an interrupted operation@>;
  }@+break;

@ Here we set |cool->i=resum|, since we want to issue another instruction
after the \.{RESUME} itself.

The restrictions on inserted instructions are designed to ensure that
those instructions will be the very next ones issued. (If, for example,
an |incgamma| instruction were necessary, it might cause a page fault
and we'd lose the operand values for |RESUME_SET| or |RESUME_CONT|.)

A subtle point arises here: If |RESUME_TRANS| is being used to compute
the page translation of virtual address zero, we don't want to execute
the dummy \.{SWYM} instruction from virtual address $-4$! So we avoid
the \.{SWYM} altogether.

@<Resume an interrupted operation@>=
{
  cool->xx=cool->b.o.h>>24, cool->i=resum;
  head->loc=incr(inst_ptr.o,-4);
  switch(cool->xx) {
 case RESUME_SET: cool->b.o.l=(SETH<<24)+(cool->b.o.l&0xff0000);
  head->interrupt|=cool->b.o.h&0xff00;
  resuming=2;
 case RESUME_CONT: resuming+=1+cool->zz;
  if (((cool->b.o.l>>24)&0xfa)!=0xb8) { /* not |syncd| or |syncid| */
    m=cool->b.o.l>>28;
    if ((1<<m)&0x8f30) goto bad_resume;
    m=(cool->b.o.l>>16)&0xff;
    if (m>=cool_L && m<cool_G) goto bad_resume;
  }
 case RESUME_AGAIN: resume_again: head->inst=cool->b.o.l;
  m=head->inst>>24;
  if (m==RESUME) goto bad_resume; /* avoid uninterruptible loop */
  if (!cool->zz &&
    m>RESUME && m<=SYNC && (head->inst&bad_inst_mask[m-RESUME]))
      head->interrupt|=B_BIT;
  head->noted=false;@+break;
 case RESUME_TRANS:@+if (cool->zz) {
    cool->y=specval(&g[rYY]), cool->z=specval(&g[rZZ]);
    if ((cool->b.o.l>>24)!=SWYM) goto resume_again;
    cool->i=resume;@+break; /* see ``subtle point'' above */
  }       
 default: bad_resume: cool->interrupt |= B_BIT, cool->i=noop;
  resuming=0;@+break;
  }
}

@ @<Insert special operands when resuming an interrupted operation@>=
{
  if (resuming&1) {
    cool->y=specval(&g[rY]);
    cool->z=specval(&g[rZ]);
  }@+else {
    cool->y=specval(&g[rYY]);
    cool->z=specval(&g[rZZ]);
  }
  if (resuming>=3) { /* |RESUME_SET| */
    cool->need_ra=true, cool->ra=specval(&g[rA]);
  }
  cool->usage=false;
}

@ @d do_resume_trans 17 /* |state| for performing |RESUME_TRANS| actions */

@<Cases for stage 1 execution@>=
case resume: case resum:@+if (data->xx!=RESUME_TRANS) goto fin_ex;
 data->ptr_a=(void*)((data->b.o.l>>24)==SWYM? ITcache: DTcache);
 data->state=do_resume_trans;
 data->z.o=incr(oandn(data->z.o,page_mask),data->z.o.l&7);
 data->z.o.h &= 0xffff;
 goto resume_trans;

@ @<Special cases for states in the first stage@>=
case do_resume_trans: resume_trans: {@+register cache*c=(cache*)data->ptr_a;
   if (c->lock) wait(1);
   if (c->filler.next) wait(1);
   p=alloc_slot(c,trans_key(data->y.o));
   if (p) {
     c->filler_ctl.ptr_b=(void*)p;
     c->filler_ctl.y.o=data->y.o;
     c->filler_ctl.b.o=data->z.o;
     c->filler_ctl.state=1;
     schedule(&c->filler,c->access_time,1);
   }
   goto fin_ex;
 }


@* Administrative operations.
The internal instructions that handle the register stack simply reduce
to things we already know how to do. (Well, the internal instructions
for saving and unsaving do sometimes lead to special cases, based on
|data->op|; for the most part, though, the necessary mechanisms are
already present.)

@<Cases for stage 1 execution@>=
case noop:@+if (data->interrupt&F_BIT) goto emulate_virt;
case jmp: case pushj: case incrl: case unsave: goto fin_ex;
case sav:@+if (!(data->mem_x)) goto fin_ex;
case incgamma: case save: data->i=st; goto switch1;
case decgamma: case unsav: data->i=ld; goto switch1;

@ We can \.{GET} special registers $\ge21$ (that is, rA, rF, rP, rW--rZ,
or rWW--rZZ) only in the hot seat, because those registers are
implicit outputs of many instructions.

The same applies to rK, since it is changed by \.{TRAP} and
by emulated instructions.

@<Cases for stage 1...@>=
case get:@+ if (data->zz>=21 || data->zz==rK) {
   if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
   data->z.o=g[data->zz].o;
 }
 data->x.o=data->z.o;@+goto fin_ex;

@ A \.{PUT} is, similarly, delayed in the cases that hold |dispatch_lock|.
This program does not restrict the 1~bits that might be
\.{PUT} into~rQ, although the contents of that register can have
drastic implications.

@<Cases for stage 1...@>=
case put:@+if (data->xx>=15 && data->xx<=20) {
   if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
   switch (data->xx) {
  case rV: @<Update the \\{page} variables@>;@+break;
  case rQ: new_Q.h |= data->z.o.h &~ g[rQ].o.h;@+
           new_Q.l |= data->z.o.l &~ g[rQ].o.l;
           data->z.o.l |= new_Q.l;@+
           data->z.o.h |= new_Q.h;@+break;
  case rL:@+ if (data->z.o.h!=0) data->z.o.h=0, data->z.o.l=g[rL].o.l;
     else if (data->z.o.l>g[rL].o.l) data->z.o.l=g[rL].o.l;
  default: break;
  case rG: @<Update rG@>;@+break;
   }
 }@+else if (data->xx==rA && (data->z.o.h!=0 || data->z.o.l>=0x40000))
   data->interrupt |= B_BIT;
 data->x.o=data->z.o;@+goto fin_ex;

@ When rG decreases, we assume that up to |commit_max| marginal registers can
be zeroed during each clock cycle. (Remember that we're currently in the hot
seat, and holding |dispatch_lock|.)

@<Update rG@>=
if (data->z.o.h!=0 || data->z.o.l>=256 ||
      data->z.o.l<g[rL].o.l || data->z.o.l<32)
  data->interrupt |= B_BIT;
else if (data->z.o.l<g[rG].o.l) {
    data->interim=true; /* potentially interruptible */
    for (j=0;j<commit_max;j++) {
      g[rG].o.l--;
      g[g[rG].o.l].o=zero_octa;
      if (data->z.o.l==g[rG].o.l) break;
    }
    if (j==commit_max) {
      if (!trying_to_interrupt) wait(1);
    }@+else data->interim=false;
  }

@ Computed jumps put the desired destination address into the |go| field.

@<Cases for stage 1...@>=
case go: data->x.o=data->go.o;@+ goto add_go;
case pop: data->x.o=data->y.o; data->y.o=data->b.o; /* move rJ to |y| field */
case pushgo: add_go: data->go.o=oplus(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  if ((data->go.o.h&sign_bit) && !(data->loc.h&sign_bit))
    data->interrupt |= P_BIT;
  data->go.known=true;@+goto fin_ex;

@ The instruction \.{UNSAVE} $z$ generates a sequence of internal instructions
that accomplish the actual unsaving. This sequence is controlled by the
instruction currently in the fetch buffer, which changes its X and~Y fields
until all global registers have been loaded. The first instructions of the
sequence are \.{UNSAVE}~$0,0,z$; \.{UNSAVE}~$1,rZ,z-8$;
\.{UNSAVE}~$1,rY,z-16$; \dots;
\.{UNSAVE}~$1,rB,z-96$; \.{UNSAVE}~$2,255,z-104$; \.{UNSAVE}~$2,254,z-112$;
etc. If an interrupt occurs before these instructions have all been committed,
the execution register will contain enough information to restart the process.

After the global registers have all been loaded, \.{UNSAVE} continues by
acting rather like~\.{POP}. An interrupt occurring during this last stage
will find $\rm rS<rO$; a context switch might then take us back to
restoring the local registers again. But no information will be lost,
even though the register from which we began unsaving has long since
been replaced.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case unsave:@+if (cool->interrupt&B_BIT) cool->i=noop;
 else {
   cool->interim=true;
   op=LDOU; /* this instruction needs to be handled by load/store unit */
   cool->i=unsav;
   switch(cool->xx) {
 case 0:@+ if (cool->z.p) goto stall;
  @<Set up the first phase of unsaving@>;@+break;
 case 1: case 2: @<Generate an instruction to unsave |g[yy]|@>;@+break;
 case 3: cool->i=unsave, cool->interim=false, op=UNSAVE;
   goto pop_unsave;
 default: cool->interim=false,cool->i=noop,cool->interrupt|=B_BIT;@+break;
   }
 }
break; /* this takes us to |dispatch_done| */   

@ @<Generate an instruction to unsave |g[yy]|@>=
cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&g[cool->yy],&cool->x);
new_O=new_S=incr(cool_O,-1);
cool->z.o=shift_left(new_O,3);
cool->ptr_a=(void*)mem.up;

@ @<Set up the first phase of unsaving@>=
cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&g[rG],&cool->x);
cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[rA],&cool->a);
new_O=new_S=shift_right(cool->z.o,3,1);
cool->set_l=true, spec_install(&g[rL],&cool->rl);
cool->ptr_a=(void*)mem.up;

@ @<Get ready for the next step of \.{UNSAVE}@>=
switch (cool->xx) {
 case 0: head->inst=pack_bytes(UNSAVE,1,rZ,0);@+ break;
 case 1:@+ if (cool->yy==rP) head->inst=pack_bytes(UNSAVE,1,rR,0);
  else if (cool->yy==0) head->inst=pack_bytes(UNSAVE,2,255,0);
  else head->inst=pack_bytes(UNSAVE,1,cool->yy-1,0);@+ break;
 case 2:@+ if (cool->yy==cool_G) head->inst=pack_bytes(UNSAVE,3,0,0);
  else head->inst=pack_bytes(UNSAVE,2,cool->yy-1,0);@+ break;
}

@ @<Handle an internal \.{UNSAVE} when it's time to load@>=
if (data->xx==0) {
  data->a.o=data->x.o;@+data->a.o.h &=0xffffff; /* unsaved rA */
  data->x.o.l=data->x.o.h>>24;@+data->x.o.h=0; /* unsaved rG */
  if (data->a.o.h || (data->a.o.l&0xfffc0000)) {
    data->a.o.h=0, data->a.o.l&=0x3ffff;@+ data->interrupt |= B_BIT;
  }
  if (data->x.o.l<32) {
    data->x.o.l=32;@+ data->interrupt |= B_BIT;
  }
}
goto fin_ex;

@ Of course \.{SAVE} is handled essentially like \.{UNSAVE}, but backwards.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case save:@+if (cool->xx<cool_G) cool->interrupt|=B_BIT;
 if (cool->interrupt&B_BIT) cool->i=noop;
 else if (((cool_S.l-cool_O.l-cool_L-1)&lring_mask)==0)
      @<Insert an instruction to advance gamma@>@;
 else {
   cool->interim=true;
   cool->i=sav;
   switch(cool->zz) {
 case 0: @<Set up the first phase of saving@>;@+break;
 case 1:@+if (cool_O.l!=cool_S.l) @<Insert an instruction to advance gamma@>@;
   cool->zz=2;@+ cool->yy=cool_G;
 case 2: case 3: @<Generate an instruction to save |g[yy]|@>;@+break;
 default: cool->interim=false,cool->i=noop,cool->interrupt|=B_BIT;@+break;
   }
 }
break;

@ If an interrupt occurs during the first phase, say between two |incgamma|
instructions, the value |cool->zz=1| will get things restarted properly.
(Indeed, if context is saved and unsaved during the interrupt, many
|incgamma| instructions may no longer be necessary.)

@<Set up the first phase of saving@>=
cool->zz=1;
cool->ren_x=true, spec_install(&l[(cool_O.l+cool_L)&lring_mask],&cool->x);
cool->x.known=true, cool->x.o.h=0, cool->x.o.l=cool_L;
cool->set_l=true, spec_install(&g[rL],&cool->rl);
new_O=incr(cool_O,cool_L+1);

@ @<Generate an instruction to save |g[yy]|@>=
op=STOU; /* this instruction needs to be handled by load/store unit */
cool->mem_x=true, spec_install(&mem,&cool->x);
cool->z.o=shift_left(cool_O,3);
new_O=new_S=incr(cool_O,1);
if (cool->zz==3 && cool->yy>rZ) @<Do the final \.{SAVE}@>@;
else cool->b=specval(&g[cool->yy]);

@ The final \.{SAVE} instruction not only stores rG and rA, it also
places the final address in global register~X.

@<Do the final \.{SAVE}@>=
{
  cool->i=save;
  cool->interim=false;
  cool->ren_a=true, spec_install(&g[cool->xx],&cool->a);
}

@ @<Get ready for the next step of \.{SAVE}@>=
switch (cool->zz) {
 case 1: head->inst=pack_bytes(SAVE,cool->xx,0,1);@+ break;
 case 2:@+ if (cool->yy==255) head->inst=pack_bytes(SAVE,cool->xx,0,3);
  else head->inst=pack_bytes(SAVE,cool->xx,cool->yy+1,2);@+break;
 case 3:@+ if (cool->yy==rR) head->inst=pack_bytes(SAVE,cool->xx,rP,3);
  else head->inst=pack_bytes(SAVE,cool->xx,cool->yy+1,3);@+break;
}

@ @<Handle an internal \.{SAVE} when it's time to store@>=
{
  if (data->interim) data->x.o=data->b.o;
  else {
    if (data!=old_hot) wait(1); /* we need the hottest value of rA */
    data->x.o.h=g[rG].o.l<<24;
    data->x.o.l=g[rA].o.l;
    data->a.o=data->y.o;
  }
  goto fin_ex;
}

@* More register-to-register ops.
Now that we've finished most of the hard stuff,
we can relax and fill in the holes that we left in the
all-register parts of the execution stages.

First let's complete the fixed point arithmetic operations,
by dispensing with multiplication and division.

@<Cases to compute the results of reg...@>=
case mulu: data->x.o=omult(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  data->a.o=aux;
  goto quantify_mul;
case mul: data->x.o=signed_omult(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  if (overflow) data->interrupt |= V_BIT;
quantify_mul: aux=data->z.o;
  for (j=mul0;aux.l||aux.h;j++) aux=shift_right(aux,8,1);
  data->i=j;@+break; /* |j| is |mul0| or |mul1| or \dots~or |mul8| */
case divu: data->x.o=odiv(data->b.o,data->y.o,data->z.o);
  data->a.o=aux;@+data->i=div;@+break;
case div:@+ if (data->z.o.l==0 && data->z.o.h==0) {
    data->interrupt |= D_BIT;@+ data->a.o=data->y.o;
    data->i=set; /* divide by zero needn't wait in the pipeline */
  }@+else {
    data->x.o=signed_odiv(data->y.o,data->z.o);
    if (overflow) data->interrupt |= V_BIT;
    data->a.o=aux;
  }@+break;

@ Next let's polish off the bitwise and bytewise operations.

@<Cases to compute the results of reg...@>=
case sadd: data->x.o.l=count_bits(data->y.o.h&~data->z.o.h)
                      +count_bits(data->y.o.l&~data->z.o.l);@+ break;
case mor: data->x.o=bool_mult(data->y.o,data->z.o,data->op&0x2);@+ break;
case bdif: data->x.o.h=byte_diff(data->y.o.h,data->z.o.h);
           data->x.o.l=byte_diff(data->y.o.l,data->z.o.l);@+ break;
case wdif: data->x.o.h=wyde_diff(data->y.o.h,data->z.o.h);
           data->x.o.l=wyde_diff(data->y.o.l,data->z.o.l);@+ break;
case tdif:@+ if (data->y.o.h>data->z.o.h)
             data->x.o.h=data->y.o.h-data->z.o.h;
 tdif_l:@+ if (data->y.o.l>data->z.o.l)
             data->x.o.l=data->y.o.l-data->z.o.l;@+ break;
case odif:@+ if (data->y.o.h>data->z.o.h)
    data->x.o=ominus(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  else if (data->y.o.h==data->z.o.h) goto tdif_l;
  break; 


@ The conditional set (\.{CS}) instructions are, rather surprisingly,
more difficult to implement than the zero~set (\.{ZS}) instructions,
although the \.{ZS} instructions do more. The reason is that dynamic
instruction dependencies are more complicated with \.{CS}. Consider, for
example, the instructions
$$\advance\abovedisplayskip-.5\baselineskip
  \advance\belowdisplayskip-.5\baselineskip
\hbox{\tt LDO x,a,b; \ FDIV y,c,d; \ CSZ y,x,0; \ INCL y,1.}$$
If the value of \.x is zero, the \.{INCL} instruction need not wait for the
division to be completed. (We do not, however, abort the division in such a
case; it might invoke a trip handler, or change the inexact bit, etc. Our
policy is to treat common cases efficiently and to treat all cases correctly,
but not to treat all cases with maximum efficiency.)

@<Cases to compute the results...@>=
case zset:@+if (register_truth(data->y.o,data->op)) data->x.o=data->z.o;
  /* otherwise |data->x.o| is already zero */
  goto fin_ex;
case cset:@+if (register_truth(data->y.o,data->op))
    data->x.o=data->z.o, data->b.p=NULL;
  else if (data->b.p==NULL) data->x.o=data->b.o;
  else {
    data->state=0;@+data->need_b=true;@+goto switch1;
  }@+break;

@ Floating point computations are mostly handled by the routines in
{\mc MMIX-ARITH}, which record anomalous events in the global
variable |exceptions|. But we consider the operation trivial if an
input is infinite or NaN; and we may need to increase the execution
time when subnormals are present.

@d ROUND_OFF 1
@d ROUND_UP 2
@d ROUND_DOWN 3
@d ROUND_NEAR 4
@d is_subnormal(x) ((x.h&0x7ff00000)==0 && ((x.h&0xfffff) || x.l))
@d is_trivial(x) ((x.h&0x7ff00000)==0x7ff00000)
@d set_round cur_round=(data->ra.o.l<0x10000? ROUND_NEAR: data->ra.o.l>>16)

@<Cases to compute the results of reg...@>=
case fadd: set_round;@+data->x.o=fplus(data->y.o,data->z.o);
 fin_bflot:@+ if (is_subnormal(data->y.o)) data->denin=denin_penalty;
 fin_uflot:@+ if (is_subnormal(data->x.o)) data->denout=denout_penalty;
 fin_flot:@+ if (is_subnormal(data->z.o)) data->denin=denin_penalty;
   data->interrupt|=exceptions;
   if (is_trivial(data->y.o) || is_trivial(data->z.o)) goto fin_ex;
   if (data->i==fsqrt && (data->z.o.h&sign_bit)) goto fin_ex;
   break;
case fsub: data->a.o=data->z.o;
  if (fcomp(data->z.o,zero_octa)!=2) data->a.o.h ^= sign_bit;
  set_round;@+data->x.o=fplus(data->y.o,data->a.o);
  data->i=fadd; /* use pipeline times for addition */
  goto fin_bflot;
case fmul: set_round;@+ data->x.o=fmult(data->y.o,data->z.o);@+ goto fin_bflot;
case fdiv: set_round;@+ data->x.o=fdivide(data->y.o,data->z.o);@+
  goto fin_bflot;
case fsqrt: set_round;@+ data->x.o=froot(data->z.o,data->y.o.l);@+
  goto fin_uflot;
case fint: set_round;@+ data->x.o=fintegerize(data->z.o,data->y.o.l);@+
  goto fin_uflot;
case fix: set_round;@+ data->x.o=fixit(data->z.o,data->y.o.l);
  if (data->op&0x2) exceptions&=~W_BIT; /* unsigned case doesn't overflow */
  goto fin_flot;
case flot: set_round;@+
  data->x.o=floatit(data->z.o,data->y.o.l,data->op&0x2, data->op&0x4);
  data->interrupt|=exceptions;@+break;

@ @<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case fsqrt: case fint: case fix: case flot:@+ if (cool->y.o.l>4)
    goto illegal_inst;
  break;

@ @<Cases to compute the results of reg...@>=
case feps: j=fepscomp(data->y.o,data->z.o,data->b.o,data->op!=FEQLE);
  if (j==2) data->i=fcmp;
  else if (is_subnormal(data->y.o) || is_subnormal(data->z.o))
    data->denin=denin_penalty;
  switch (data->op) {
 case FUNE:@+ if (j==2) goto cmp_pos;@+ else goto cmp_zero;
 case FEQLE: goto cmp_fin;
 case FCMPE:@+ if (j) goto cmp_zero_or_invalid;
  }
case fcmp: j=fcomp(data->y.o,data->z.o);
  if (j<0) goto cmp_neg;
 cmp_fin:@+ if (j==1) goto cmp_pos;
 cmp_zero_or_invalid:@+ if (j==2) data->interrupt |= I_BIT;
  goto cmp_zero;
case funeq:@+ if (fcomp(data->y.o,data->z.o)==(data->op==FUN? 2:0))
    goto cmp_pos;
  else goto cmp_zero;

@ @<External v...@>=
Extern int frem_max;
Extern int denin_penalty, denout_penalty;

@ The floating point remainder operation is especially interesting
because it can be interrupted when it's in the hot seat.

@<Cases to compute the results of reg...@>=
case frem:@+if(is_trivial(data->y.o) || is_trivial(data->z.o))
    {
      data->x.o=fremstep(data->y.o,data->z.o,2500);@+ goto fin_ex;
    }
  if ((self+1)->next) wait(1);
  data->interim=true;
  j=1;
  if (is_subnormal(data->y.o)||is_subnormal(data->z.o)) j+=denin_penalty;
  pass_after(j);
  goto passit;


@ @<Begin execution of a stage-two operation@>=
j=1;
if (data->i==frem) {
  data->x.o=fremstep(data->y.o,data->z.o,frem_max);
  if (exceptions&E_BIT) {
    data->y.o=data->x.o;
    if (trying_to_interrupt && data==old_hot) goto fin_ex;
  }@+else {
    data->state=3;
    data->interim=false;
    data->interrupt |= exceptions;
    if (is_subnormal(data->x.o)) j+=denout_penalty;
  }
  wait(j);
}

@* System operations. Finally we need to implement some operations for the
operating system; then the hardware simulation will be done!

A \.{LDVTS} instruction is delayed until it reaches the hot seat, because
it changes the IT and DT caches. The operating system should use \.{SYNC}
after \.{LDVTS} if the effects are needed immediately; the system is also
responsible for ensuring that the page table permission bits agree with
the \.{LDVTS} permission bits when the latter are nonzero. (Also, if
write permission is taken away from a page, the operating system must
have previously used \.{SYNCD} to write out any dirty bytes that might
have been cached from that page; \.{SYNCD} will be inoperative after write
permission goes away.)

@<Handle special cases for operations like |prego| and |ldvts|@>=
if (data->i==ldvts) @<Do stage 1 of \.{LDVTS}@>;

@ @<Do stage 1 of \.{LDVTS}@>=
{
  if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
  if (DTcache->lock || (j=get_reader(DTcache))<0) wait(1);
  startup(&DTcache->reader[j],DTcache->access_time);
  data->z.o.h=0, data->z.o.l=data->y.o.l&0x7;
  p=cache_search(DTcache,data->y.o); /* N.B.: Not |trans_key(data->y.o)| */
  if (p) {
    data->x.o.l=2;
    if (data->z.o.l) {
      p=use_and_fix(DTcache,p);
      p->data[0].l=(p->data[0].l&-8)+data->z.o.l;
    }@+else {
      p=demote_and_fix(DTcache,p);
      p->tag.h|=sign_bit; /* invalidate the tag */
    }
  }
  pass_after(DTcache->access_time);@+goto passit;
}

@ @<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
case ld_st_launch:@+ if (ITcache->lock || (j=get_reader(ITcache))<0) wait(1);
  startup(&ITcache->reader[j],ITcache->access_time);
  p=cache_search(ITcache,data->y.o); /* N.B.: Not |trans_key(data->y.o)| */
  if (p) {
    data->x.o.l|=1;
    if (data->z.o.l) {
      p=use_and_fix(ITcache,p);
      p->data[0].l=(p->data[0].l&-8)+data->z.o.l;
    }@+else {
      p=demote_and_fix(ITcache,p);
      p->tag.h|=sign_bit; /* invalidate the tag */
    }
  }
  data->state=3;@+wait(ITcache->access_time);

@ The \.{SYNC} operation interacts with the pipeline in interesting ways.
\.{SYNC}~\.0 and \.{SYNC}~\.4 are the simplest; they just lock the
dispatch and wait until they get to the hot seat, after which the
pipeline has drained. \.{SYNC}~\.1 and \.{SYNC}~\.3 put a ``barrier''
into the write buffer so that subsequent store instructions will not merge with
previous stores. \.{SYNC}~\.2 and \.{SYNC}~\.3 lock the dispatch until
all previous load instructions have left the pipeline. \.{SYNC}~\.5,
\.{SYNC}~\.6, and \.{SYNC}~\.7 remove things from caches once they
get to the hot seat.

@<Special cases of instruction dispatch@>=
case sync:@+ if (cool->zz>3) {
  if (!(cool->loc.h&sign_bit)) goto privileged_inst;
  if (cool->zz==4) freeze_dispatch=true;
}@+else {
  if (cool->zz!=1) freeze_dispatch=true;
  if (cool->zz&1) cool->mem_x=true, spec_install(&mem,&cool->x);
}@+break;

@ @<Cases for stage 1 execution@>=
case sync:@+ switch (data->zz) {
 case 0: case 4:@+ if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
  halted=(data->zz!=0);@+goto fin_ex;
 case 2: case 3: @<Wait if there's an unfinished load ahead of us@>;
  release_lock(self,dispatch_lock);
 case 1: data->x.addr=zero_octa;@+goto fin_ex;
 case 5:@+ if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
  @<Clean the data caches@>;
 case 6:@+ if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
  @<Zap the translation caches@>;
 case 7:@+ if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
  @<Zap the instruction and data caches@>;
}

@ @<Wait if there's an unfinished load ahead of us@>=
{
  register control *cc;
  for (cc=data;cc!=hot;) {
    cc=(cc==reorder_top? reorder_bot: cc+1);
    if (cc->owner && (cc->i==ld || cc->i==ldunc || cc->i==pst)) wait(1);
  }
}

@ Perhaps the delay should be longer here.

@<Zap the translation caches@>=
if (DTcache->lock || (j=get_reader(DTcache))<0) wait(1);
startup(&DTcache->reader[j],DTcache->access_time);
set_lock(self,DTcache->lock);
zap_cache(DTcache);
data->state=10;@+wait(DTcache->access_time);

@ @<Zap the instruction and data caches@>=
if (!Icache) {
  data->state=11;@+goto switch1;
}
if (Icache->lock || (j=get_reader(Icache))<0) wait(1);
startup(&Icache->reader[j],Icache->access_time);
set_lock(self,Icache->lock);
zap_cache(Icache);
data->state=11;@+wait(Icache->access_time);

@ @<Special cases for states in the first stage@>=
case 10:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 if (ITcache->lock || (j=get_reader(ITcache))<0) wait(1);
 startup(&ITcache->reader[j],ITcache->access_time);
 set_lock(self,ITcache->lock);
 zap_cache(ITcache);
 data->state=3;@+wait(ITcache->access_time);
case 11:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 if (wbuf_lock) wait(1);
 write_head=write_tail, write_ctl.state=0; /* zap the write buffer */
 if (!Dcache) {
   data->state=12;@+ goto switch1;
 }
 if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache))<0) wait(1);
 startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
 set_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
 zap_cache(Dcache);
 data->state=12;@+wait(Dcache->access_time);
case 12:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 if (!Scache) goto fin_ex;
 if (Scache->lock) wait(1);
 set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
 zap_cache(Scache);
 data->state=3;@+wait(Scache->access_time);

@ @<Clean the data caches@>=
if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
@<Wait till write buffer is empty@>;
if (clean_co.next || clean_lock) wait(1);
set_lock(self,clean_lock);
clean_ctl.i=sync;@+
clean_ctl.state=0;@+
clean_ctl.x.o.h=0;
startup(&clean_co,1);
data->state=13;
data->interim=true;
wait(1);

@ @<Wait till write buffer is empty@>=
if (write_head!=write_tail) {
  if (!speed_lock) set_lock(self,speed_lock);
  wait(1);
}

@ The cleanup process might take a huge amount of time, so we must allow
it to be interrupted. (Servicing the interruption might, of course,
put more stuff into the cache.)

@<Special cases for states in the first stage@>=
case 13:@+ if (!clean_co.next) {
   data->interim=false;@+ goto fin_ex; /* it's done! */
 }
 if (trying_to_interrupt) goto fin_ex; /* accept an interruption */
 wait(1);

@ Now we consider \.{SYNCD} and \.{SYNCID}. When control comes to this
part of the program, |data->y.o| is a virtual address and |data->z.o|
is the corresponding physical address; |data->xx+1| is the number of
bytes we are supposed to be syncing; |data->b.o.l| is the number of
bytes we can handle at once (either |Icache->bb| or |Dcache->bb| or 8192).

We need a more elaborate scheme to implement \.{SYNCD} and \.{SYNCID}
than we have used for the ``hint'' instructions \.{PRELD}, \.{PREGO},
and \.{PREST}, because \.{SYNCD} and \.{SYNCID} are not merely hints.
They cannot be converted into a sequence of cache-block-size commands at
dispatch time, because we cannot be sure that the starting virtual address
will be aligned with the beginning of a cache block. We need to realize
that the bytes specified by \.{SYNCD} or \.{SYNCID} might cross a
virtual page boundary---possibly with different protection bits
on each page. We need to allow for interrupts. And we also need to
keep the fetch buffer empty until a user's \.{SYNCID} has completely
brought the memory up to date.

@<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
do_syncid: data->state=30;
case 30:@+ if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
 if (!Icache) {
   data->state=(data->loc.h&sign_bit? 31:33);@+goto switch2;
 }
 @<Clean the I-cache block for |data->z.o|, if any@>;
 data->state=(data->loc.h&sign_bit? 31: 33);@+wait(Icache->access_time);
case 31:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 @<Wait till write buffer is empty@>;
 if (((data->b.o.l-1)&~data->y.o.l)<data->xx) data->interim=true;
 if (!Dcache) goto next_sync;
 @<Clean the D-cache block for |data->z.o|, if any@>;
 data->state=32;@+wait(Dcache->access_time);
case 32:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 if (!Scache) goto next_sync; 
 @<Clean the S-cache block for |data->z.o|, if any@>;
 data->state=35;@+wait(Scache->access_time);
do_syncd: data->state=33;
case 33:@+ if (data!=old_hot) wait(1);
 if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 @<Wait till write buffer is empty@>;
 if (((data->b.o.l-1)&~data->y.o.l)<data->xx) data->interim=true;
 if (!Dcache)
   if (data->i==syncd) goto fin_ex;@+ else goto next_sync;
 @<Use |cleanup| on the cache blocks for |data->z.o|, if any@>;
 data->state=34;
case 34:@+if (!clean_co.next) goto next_sync;
 if (trying_to_interrupt && data->interim && data==old_hot) {
   data->z.o=zero_octa; /* anticipate |RESUME_CONT| */
   goto fin_ex; /* accept an interruption */
 }
 wait(1);
next_sync: data->state=35;
case 35:@+ if (self->lockloc) *(self->lockloc)=NULL,self->lockloc=NULL;
 if (data->interim) @<Continue this command on the next cache block@>;
 data->go.known=true;
 goto fin_ex;

@ @<Clean the I-cache block for |data->z.o|, if any@>=
if (Icache->lock || (j=get_reader(Icache))<0) wait(1);
startup(&Icache->reader[j],Icache->access_time);
set_lock(self,Icache->lock);
p=cache_search(Icache,data->z.o);
if (p) {
  demote_and_fix(Icache,p);
  clean_block(Icache,p);
}

@ @<Clean the D-cache block for |data->z.o|, if any@>=
if (Dcache->lock || (j=get_reader(Dcache))<0) wait(1);
startup(&Dcache->reader[j],Dcache->access_time);
set_lock(self,Dcache->lock);
p=cache_search(Dcache,data->z.o);
if (p) {
  demote_and_fix(Dcache,p);
  clean_block(Dcache,p);
}
 
@ @<Clean the S-cache block for |data->z.o|, if any@>=
if (Scache->lock) wait(1);
set_lock(self,Scache->lock);
p=cache_search(Scache,data->z.o);
if (p) {
  demote_and_fix(Scache,p);
  clean_block(Scache,p);
}

@ @<Use |cleanup| on the cache blocks for |data->z.o|, if any@>=
if (clean_co.next || clean_lock) wait(1);
set_lock(self,clean_lock);
clean_ctl.i=syncd;
clean_ctl.state=4;
clean_ctl.x.o.h=data->loc.h&sign_bit;
clean_ctl.z.o=data->z.o;
schedule(&clean_co,1,4); 

@ We use the fact that cache block sizes are divisors of 8192.

@<Continue this command on the next cache block@>=
{
  data->interim=false;
  data->xx -= ((data->b.o.l-1)&~data->y.o.l)+1;
  data->y.o=incr(data->y.o,data->b.o.l);
  data->y.o.l &= -data->b.o.l;
  data->z.o.l = (data->z.o.l&-8192)+(data->y.o.l&8191);
  if ((data->y.o.l&8191)==0) goto square_one;
      /* maybe crossed a page boundary */
  if (data->i==syncd) goto do_syncd;@+else goto do_syncid;
}

@ If the first page lacks proper protection, we still must try the
second, in the rare case that a page boundary is spanned.

@<Special cases for states in later stages@>=
sync_check:@+ if ((data->y.o.l ^ (data->y.o.l+data->xx))>=8192) {
   data->xx -= (8191&~data->y.o.l)+1;
   data->y.o=incr(data->y.o,8192);
   data->y.o.l &= -8192;    
   goto square_one;
 }
 goto fin_ex;

@* Input and output. We're done implementing the hardware, but there's
still a small matter of software remaining, because we sometimes
want to pretend that a real operating
system is present without actually having one loaded. This simulator
therefore implements a special feature: If \.{RESUME}~\.1 is issued in
location~rT, the ten special I/O traps of {\mc MMIX-SIM} are performed
instantaneously behind the scenes.

Of course all claims of accurate simulation go out the door when this
feature is used.

@d max_sys_call Ftell

@<Type...@>=
typedef enum{
@!Halt,@!Fopen,@!Fclose,@!Fread,@!Fgets,@!Fgetws,
@!Fwrite,@!Fputs,@!Fputws,@!Fseek,@!Ftell} @!sys_call;

@ @<Magically do an I/O operation, if |cool->loc| is rT@>=
if (cool->loc.l==g[rT].o.l && cool->loc.h==g[rT].o.h) {
  register unsigned char yy,zz; octa ma,mb;
  if (g[rXX].o.l&0xffff0000) goto magic_done;
  yy=g[rXX].o.l>>8, zz=g[rXX].o.l&0xff;
  if (yy>max_sys_call) goto magic_done;
   @<Prepare memory arguments $|ma|={\rm M}[a]$ and $|mb|={\rm M}[b]$ 
           if needed@>;
  switch (yy) {
case Halt: @<Either halt or print warning@>;@+break;
case Fopen: g[rBB].o=mmix_fopen(zz,mb,ma);@+break;
case Fclose: g[rBB].o=mmix_fclose(zz);@+break;
case Fread: g[rBB].o=mmix_fread(zz,mb,ma);@+break;
case Fgets: g[rBB].o=mmix_fgets(zz,mb,ma);@+break;
case Fgetws: g[rBB].o=mmix_fgetws(zz,mb,ma);@+break;
case Fwrite: g[rBB].o=mmix_fwrite(zz,mb,ma);@+break;
case Fputs: g[rBB].o=mmix_fputs(zz,g[rBB].o);@+break;
case Fputws: g[rBB].o=mmix_fputws(zz,g[rBB].o);@+break;
case Fseek: g[rBB].o=mmix_fseek(zz,g[rBB].o);@+break;
case Ftell: g[rBB].o=mmix_ftell(zz);@+break;
}
magic_done: g[255].o=neg_one; /* this will enable interrupts */
}

@ @<Either halt or print warning@>=
if (!zz) halted=true;
else if (zz==1) {
  octa trap_loc;
  trap_loc=incr(g[rWW].o,-4);
  if (!(trap_loc.h || trap_loc.l>=0x90))
    print_trip_warning(trap_loc.l>>4,incr(g[rW].o,-4));
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
char arg_count[]={1,3,1,3,3,3,3,2,2,2,1};

@ The input/output operations invoked by \.{TRAP}s are
done by subroutines in an auxiliary program module called {\mc MMIX-IO}.
Here we need only declare those subroutines, and write three primitive
interfaces on which they depend.

@ @<Glob...@>=
extern octa mmix_fopen @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fclose @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char))@];
extern octa mmix_fread @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fgets @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fgetws @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fwrite @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fputs @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fputws @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_fseek @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char,octa))@];
extern octa mmix_ftell @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char))@];
extern void print_trip_warning @,@,@[ARGS((int,octa))@];

@ @<Internal proto...@>=
int mmgetchars @,@,@[ARGS((char*,int,octa,int))@];
void mmputchars @,@,@[ARGS((unsigned char*,int,octa))@];
char stdin_chr @,@,@[ARGS((void))@];
octa magic_read @,@,@[ARGS((octa))@];
void magic_write @,@,@[ARGS((octa,octa))@];

@ We need to cut through all the complications of buffers and
caches in order to do magical I/O. The |magic_read| routine finds
the current octabyte in a given physical address by looking at the
write buffer, D-cache, S-cache, and memory until finding it.

@<Sub...@>=
octa magic_read(addr)
  octa addr;
{
  register write_node *q;
  register cacheblock *p;
  for (q=write_tail;;) {
    if (q==write_head) break;
    if (q==wbuf_top) q=wbuf_bot;@+ else q++;
    if ((q->addr.l&-8)==(addr.l&-8) && q->addr.h==addr.h) return q->o;
  }
  if (Dcache) {
    p=cache_search(Dcache,addr);
    if (p) return p->data[(addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3];
    if (((Dcache->outbuf.tag.l^addr.l)&-Dcache->bb)==0 &&
          Dcache->outbuf.tag.h==addr.h)
      return Dcache->outbuf.data[(addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3];
    if (Scache) {
      p=cache_search(Scache,addr);
      if (p) return p->data[(addr.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3];
      if (((Scache->outbuf.tag.l^addr.l)&-Scache->bb)==0 &&
            Scache->outbuf.tag.h==addr.h)
        return Scache->outbuf.data[(addr.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3];
    }
  }
  return mem_read(addr);
}

@ The |magic_write| routine changes the octabyte in a given physical
address by changing it wherever it appears in a buffer or cache.
Any ``dirty'' or ``least recently used'' status remains unchanged.
(Yes, this {\it is\/} magic.)

@<Sub...@>=
void magic_write(addr,val)
  octa addr,val;
{
  register write_node *q;
  register cacheblock *p;
  for (q=write_tail;;) {
    if (q==write_head) break;
    if (q==wbuf_top) q=wbuf_bot;@+ else q++;
    if ((q->addr.l&-8)==(addr.l&-8) && q->addr.h==addr.h) q->o=val;
  }
  if (Dcache) {
    p=cache_search(Dcache,addr);
    if (p) p->data[(addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3]=val;
    if (((Dcache->inbuf.tag.l^addr.l)&-Dcache->bb)==0 &&
          Dcache->inbuf.tag.h==addr.h)
      Dcache->inbuf.data[(addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3]=val;
    if (((Dcache->outbuf.tag.l^addr.l)&-Dcache->bb)==0 &&
          Dcache->outbuf.tag.h==addr.h)
      Dcache->outbuf.data[(addr.l&(Dcache->bb-1))>>3]=val;
    if (Scache) {
      p=cache_search(Scache,addr);
      if (p) p->data[(addr.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3]=val;
      if (((Scache->inbuf.tag.l^addr.l)&-Scache->bb)==0 &&
            Scache->inbuf.tag.h==addr.h)
        Scache->inbuf.data[(addr.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3]=val;
      if (((Scache->outbuf.tag.l^addr.l)&-Scache->bb)==0 &&
            Scache->outbuf.tag.h==addr.h)
        Scache->outbuf.data[(addr.l&(Scache->bb-1))>>3]=val;
    }
  }
  mem_write(addr,val);
}

@ The conventions of our imaginary operating system require us to
apply the trivial memory mapping in which segment~$i$ appears in
a $2^{32}$-byte page of physical addresses starting at $2^{32}i$.

@<Prepare memory arguments...@>=
if (arg_count[yy]==3) {
  octa arg_loc;
  arg_loc=g[rBB].o;
  if (arg_loc.h&0x9fffffff) mb=zero_octa;
  else arg_loc.h>>=29, mb=magic_read(arg_loc);
  arg_loc=incr(g[rBB].o,8);
  if (arg_loc.h&0x9fffffff) ma=zero_octa;
  else arg_loc.h>>=29, ma=magic_read(arg_loc);
}

@ The subroutine |mmgetchars(buf,size,addr,stop)| reads characters
starting at address |addr| in the simulated memory and stores them
in |buf|, continuing until |size| characters have been read or
some other stopping criterion has been met. If |stop<0| there is
no other criterion; if |stop=0| a null character will also terminate
the process; otherwise |addr| is even, and two consecutive null bytes
starting at an even address will terminate the process. The number
of bytes read and stored, exclusive of terminating nulls, is returned.

@<Sub...@>=
int mmgetchars(buf,size,addr,stop)
  char *buf;
  int size;
  octa addr;
  int stop;
{
  register char *p;
  register int m;
  octa a,x;
  if (((addr.h&0x9fffffff)||(incr(addr,size-1).h&0x9fffffff))&&size) {
    fprintf(stderr,"Attempt to get characters from off the page!\n");
@.Attempt to get characters...@>
    return 0;    
  }
  for (p=buf,m=0,a=addr,a.h>>=29; m<size;) {
    x=magic_read(a);
    if ((a.l&0x7) || m>size-8) @<Read and store one byte; |return| if done@>@;
    else @<Read and store up to eight bytes; |return| if done@>@;
  }
  return size;
}

@ @<Read and store one byte...@>=
{
  if (a.l&0x4) *p=(x.l>>(8*((~a.l)&0x3)))&0xff;
  else *p=(x.h>>(8*((~a.l)&0x3)))&0xff;
  if (!*p && stop>=0) {
    if (stop==0) return m;
    if ((a.l&0x1) && *(p-1)=='\0') return m-1;
  }
  p++,m++,a=incr(a,1);
}

@ @<Read and store up to eight bytes...@>=
{
  *p=x.h>>24;
  if (!*p && (stop==0 || (stop>0 && x.h<0x10000))) return m;
  *(p+1)=(x.h>>16)&0xff;
  if (!*(p+1) && stop==0) return m+1;
  *(p+2)=(x.h>>8)&0xff;
  if (!*(p+2) && (stop==0 || (stop>0 && (x.h&0xffff)==0))) return m+2;
  *(p+3)=x.h&0xff;
  if (!*(p+3) && stop==0) return m+3;
  *(p+4)=x.l>>24;
  if (!*(p+4) && (stop==0 || (stop>0 && x.l<0x10000))) return m+4;
  *(p+5)=(x.l>>16)&0xff;
  if (!*(p+5) && stop==0) return m+5;
  *(p+6)=(x.l>>8)&0xff;
  if (!*(p+6) && (stop==0 || (stop>0 && (x.l&0xffff)==0))) return m+6;
  *(p+7)=x.l&0xff;
  if (!*(p+7) && stop==0) return m+7;
  p+=8,m+=8,a=incr(a,8);
}
      
@ The subroutine |mmputchars(buf,size,addr)| puts |size| characters
into the simulated memory starting at address |addr|.

@<Sub...@>=
void mmputchars(buf,size,addr)
  unsigned char *buf;
  int size;
  octa addr;
{
  register unsigned char *p;
  register int m;
  octa a,x;
  if (((addr.h&0x9fffffff)||(incr(addr,size-1).h&0x9fffffff))&&size) {
    fprintf(stderr,"Attempt to put characters off the page!\n");
@.Attempt to put characters...@>
    return;    
  }
  for (p=buf,m=0,a=addr,a.h>>=29; m<size;) {
    if ((a.l&0x7) || m>size-8) @<Load and write one byte@>@;
    else @<Load and write eight bytes@>;
  }
}

@ @<Load and write one byte@>=
{
  register int s=8*((~a.l)&0x3);
  x=magic_read(a);  
  if (a.l&0x4) x.l^=(((x.l>>s)^*p)&0xff)<<s;
  else x.h^=(((x.h>>s)^*p)&0xff)<<s;
  magic_write(a,x);
  p++,m++,a=incr(a,1);
}

@ @<Load and write eight bytes@>=
{
  x.h=(*p<<24)+(*(p+1)<<16)+(*(p+2)<<8)+*(p+3);
  x.l=(*(p+4)<<24)+(*(p+5)<<16)+(*(p+6)<<8)+*(p+7);
  magic_write(a,x);
  p+=8,m+=8,a=incr(a,8);
}

@ When standard input is being read by the simulated program at the same time
as it is being used for interaction, we try to keep the two uses separate
by maintaining a private buffer for the simulated program's \.{StdIn}.
Online input is usually transmitted from the keyboard to a \CEE/ program
a line at a time; therefore an
|fgets| operation works much better than |fread| when we prompt
for new input. But there is a slight complication, because |fgets|
might read a null character before coming to a newline character.
We cannot deduce the number of characters read by |fgets| simply
by looking at |strlen(stdin_buf)|.

@<Sub...@>=
char stdin_chr()
{
  register char* p;
  while (stdin_buf_start==stdin_buf_end) {
    printf("StdIn> ");@+fflush(stdout);
@.StdIn>@>
    fgets(stdin_buf,256,stdin);
    stdin_buf_start=stdin_buf;
    for (p=stdin_buf;p<stdin_buf+254;p++) if(*p=='\n') break;
    stdin_buf_end=p+1;
  }
  return *stdin_buf_start++;
}

@ @<Glob...@>=
char stdin_buf[256]; /* standard input to the simulated program */
char *stdin_buf_start; /* current position in that buffer */
char *stdin_buf_end; /* current end of that buffer */

@* Index.

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