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[16/18] target/i386: Make X86_CPU common to new I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU types

Message ID 20231010092901.99189-17-philmd@linaro.org
State New
Headers show
Series target: Make 'cpu-qom.h' really target agnostic | expand

Commit Message

Philippe Mathieu-Daudé Oct. 10, 2023, 9:28 a.m. UTC
"target/foo/cpu-qom.h" can not use any target specific definitions.

Currently "target/i386/cpu-qom.h" defines TYPE_X86_CPU depending
on the i386/x86_64 build type. This doesn't scale in a heterogeneous
context where we need to access both types concurrently.

In order to do that, introduce the new I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU
types, both inheriting a common TYPE_X86_CPU base type.

Keep the current "base" and "max" CPU types as 32 or 64-bit,
depending on the binary built.

Adapt the cpu-plug-test, since the 'base' architecture is now
common to both 32/64-bit x86 targets.

Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org>
---
 target/i386/cpu-qom.h       | 16 +++++++++-------
 target/i386/cpu.h           |  3 +++
 target/i386/cpu.c           | 20 ++++++++++++++++++--
 tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c |  2 +-
 4 files changed, 31 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)

Comments

Richard Henderson Oct. 13, 2023, 4:31 a.m. UTC | #1
On 10/10/23 02:28, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
> "target/foo/cpu-qom.h" can not use any target specific definitions.
> 
> Currently "target/i386/cpu-qom.h" defines TYPE_X86_CPU depending
> on the i386/x86_64 build type. This doesn't scale in a heterogeneous
> context where we need to access both types concurrently.
> 
> In order to do that, introduce the new I386_CPU / X86_64_CPU
> types, both inheriting a common TYPE_X86_CPU base type.
> 
> Keep the current "base" and "max" CPU types as 32 or 64-bit,
> depending on the binary built.
> 
> Adapt the cpu-plug-test, since the 'base' architecture is now
> common to both 32/64-bit x86 targets.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org>
> ---
>   target/i386/cpu-qom.h       | 16 +++++++++-------
>   target/i386/cpu.h           |  3 +++
>   target/i386/cpu.c           | 20 ++++++++++++++++++--
>   tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c |  2 +-
>   4 files changed, 31 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)

I suppose the concurrent existence of these two types will be used by follow-on cleanups?

Acked-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>


r~
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/target/i386/cpu-qom.h b/target/i386/cpu-qom.h
index 78207c0a7c..81f40bf91e 100644
--- a/target/i386/cpu-qom.h
+++ b/target/i386/cpu-qom.h
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ 
 /*
- * QEMU x86 CPU
+ * QEMU x86 CPU QOM header (target agnostic)
  *
  * Copyright (c) 2012 SUSE LINUX Products GmbH
  *
@@ -24,13 +24,15 @@ 
 #include "qemu/notify.h"
 #include "qom/object.h"
 
-#ifdef TARGET_X86_64
-#define TYPE_X86_CPU "x86_64-cpu"
-#else
-#define TYPE_X86_CPU "i386-cpu"
-#endif
+#define TYPE_X86_CPU    "x86-cpu"
+#define TYPE_I386_CPU   "i386-cpu"
+#define TYPE_X86_64_CPU "x86_64-cpu"
 
-OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_CPU)
+OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(I386CPU, X86CPUClass, I386_CPU)
+OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86_64CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_64_CPU)
+
+#define X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX "-" TYPE_X86_CPU
+#define X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME(name) (name X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX)
 
 #define X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX "-" TYPE_X86_CPU
 #define X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME(name) (name X86_CPU_TYPE_SUFFIX)
diff --git a/target/i386/cpu.h b/target/i386/cpu.h
index 7c976971c7..5deb39a380 100644
--- a/target/i386/cpu.h
+++ b/target/i386/cpu.h
@@ -28,6 +28,9 @@ 
 #include "qemu/cpu-float.h"
 #include "qemu/timer.h"
 
+/* Abstract QOM X86 CPU, not exposed to other targets */
+OBJECT_DECLARE_CPU_TYPE(X86CPU, X86CPUClass, X86_CPU)
+
 #define XEN_NR_VIRQS 24
 
 /* The x86 has a strong memory model with some store-after-load re-ordering */
diff --git a/target/i386/cpu.c b/target/i386/cpu.c
index 8f1fd5f304..1b1dae92c6 100644
--- a/target/i386/cpu.c
+++ b/target/i386/cpu.c
@@ -8033,12 +8033,28 @@  static const TypeInfo x86_cpu_types[] = {
         .class_size     = sizeof(X86CPUClass),
         .class_init     = x86_cpu_common_class_init,
     }, {
-        .name           = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("base"),
+        .name           = TYPE_I386_CPU,
         .parent         = TYPE_X86_CPU,
+        .abstract       = true,
+    }, {
+        .name           = TYPE_X86_64_CPU,
+        .parent         = TYPE_X86_CPU,
+        .abstract       = true,
+    }, {
+        .name           = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("base"),
+#ifdef TARGET_X86_64
+        .parent         = TYPE_X86_64_CPU,
+#else
+        .parent         = TYPE_I386_CPU,
+#endif
         .class_init     = x86_cpu_base_class_init,
     }, {
         .name           = X86_CPU_TYPE_NAME("max"),
-        .parent         = TYPE_X86_CPU,
+#ifdef TARGET_X86_64
+        .parent         = TYPE_X86_64_CPU,
+#else
+        .parent         = TYPE_I386_CPU,
+#endif
         .instance_init  = max_x86_cpu_initfn,
         .class_init     = max_x86_cpu_class_init,
     }
diff --git a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c
index 7f5dd5f85a..97316d131f 100644
--- a/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c
+++ b/tests/qtest/cpu-plug-test.c
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@  static void add_pc_test_case(const char *mname)
     data->machine = g_strdup(mname);
     data->cpu_model = "Haswell"; /* 1.3+ theoretically */
     data->device_model = g_strdup_printf("%s-%s-cpu", data->cpu_model,
-                                         qtest_get_arch());
+                                         qtest_get_base_arch());
     data->sockets = 1;
     data->cores = 3;
     data->threads = 2;