/* NetWinder Floating Point Emulator (c) Rebel.COM, 1998,1999 (c) Philip Blundell, 1999 Direct questions, comments to Scott Bambrough This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ #include "fpa11.h" #include "milieu.h" #include "softfloat.h" #include "fpopcode.h" #include "fpa11.inl" #include "fpmodule.h" #include "fpmodule.inl" extern flag floatx80_is_nan(floatx80); extern flag float64_is_nan( float64); extern flag float32_is_nan( float32); void SetRoundingMode(const unsigned int opcode); unsigned int PerformFLT(const unsigned int opcode); unsigned int PerformFIX(const unsigned int opcode); static unsigned int PerformComparison(const unsigned int opcode); unsigned int EmulateCPRT(const unsigned int opcode) { unsigned int nRc = 1; //printk("EmulateCPRT(0x%08x)\n",opcode); if (opcode & 0x800000) { /* This is some variant of a comparison (PerformComparison will sort out which one). Since most of the other CPRT instructions are oddball cases of some sort or other it makes sense to pull this out into a fast path. */ return PerformComparison(opcode); } /* Hint to GCC that we'd like a jump table rather than a load of CMPs */ switch ((opcode & 0x700000) >> 20) { case FLT_CODE >> 20: nRc = PerformFLT(opcode); break; case FIX_CODE >> 20: nRc = PerformFIX(opcode); break; case WFS_CODE >> 20: writeFPSR(readRegister(getRd(opcode))); break; case RFS_CODE >> 20: writeRegister(getRd(opcode),readFPSR()); break; #if 0 /* We currently have no use for the FPCR, so there's no point in emulating it. */ case WFC_CODE >> 20: writeFPCR(readRegister(getRd(opcode))); case RFC_CODE >> 20: writeRegister(getRd(opcode),readFPCR()); break; #endif default: nRc = 0; } return nRc; } unsigned int PerformFLT(const unsigned int opcode) { FPA11 *fpa11 = GET_FPA11(); unsigned int nRc = 1; SetRoundingMode(opcode); switch (opcode & MASK_ROUNDING_PRECISION) { case ROUND_SINGLE: { fpa11->fType[getFn(opcode)] = typeSingle; fpa11->fpreg[getFn(opcode)].fSingle = int32_to_float32(readRegister(getRd(opcode))); } break; case ROUND_DOUBLE: { fpa11->fType[getFn(opcode)] = typeDouble; fpa11->fpreg[getFn(opcode)].fDouble = int32_to_float64(readRegister(getRd(opcode))); } break; case ROUND_EXTENDED: { fpa11->fType[getFn(opcode)] = typeExtended; fpa11->fpreg[getFn(opcode)].fExtended = int32_to_floatx80(readRegister(getRd(opcode))); } break; default: nRc = 0; } return nRc; } unsigned int PerformFIX(const unsigned int opcode) { FPA11 *fpa11 = GET_FPA11(); unsigned int nRc = 1; unsigned int Fn = getFm(opcode); SetRoundingMode(opcode); switch (fpa11->fType[Fn]) { case typeSingle: { writeRegister(getRd(opcode), float32_to_int32(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fSingle)); } break; case typeDouble: { writeRegister(getRd(opcode), float64_to_int32(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fDouble)); } break; case typeExtended: { writeRegister(getRd(opcode), floatx80_to_int32(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fExtended)); } break; default: nRc = 0; } return nRc; } static unsigned int __inline__ PerformComparisonOperation(floatx80 Fn, floatx80 Fm) { unsigned int flags = 0; /* test for less than condition */ if (floatx80_lt(Fn,Fm)) { flags |= CC_NEGATIVE; } /* test for equal condition */ if (floatx80_eq(Fn,Fm)) { flags |= CC_ZERO; } /* test for greater than or equal condition */ if (floatx80_lt(Fm,Fn)) { flags |= CC_CARRY; } writeConditionCodes(flags); return 1; } /* This instruction sets the flags N, Z, C, V in the FPSR. */ static unsigned int PerformComparison(const unsigned int opcode) { FPA11 *fpa11 = GET_FPA11(); unsigned int Fn, Fm; floatx80 rFn, rFm; int e_flag = opcode & 0x400000; /* 1 if CxFE */ int n_flag = opcode & 0x200000; /* 1 if CNxx */ unsigned int flags = 0; //printk("PerformComparison(0x%08x)\n",opcode); Fn = getFn(opcode); Fm = getFm(opcode); /* Check for unordered condition and convert all operands to 80-bit format. ?? Might be some mileage in avoiding this conversion if possible. Eg, if both operands are 32-bit, detect this and do a 32-bit comparison (cheaper than an 80-bit one). */ switch (fpa11->fType[Fn]) { case typeSingle: //printk("single.\n"); if (float32_is_nan(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fSingle)) goto unordered; rFn = float32_to_floatx80(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fSingle); break; case typeDouble: //printk("double.\n"); if (float64_is_nan(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fDouble)) goto unordered; rFn = float64_to_floatx80(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fDouble); break; case typeExtended: //printk("extended.\n"); if (floatx80_is_nan(fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fExtended)) goto unordered; rFn = fpa11->fpreg[Fn].fExtended; break; default: return 0; } if (CONSTANT_FM(opcode)) { //printk("Fm is a constant: #%d.\n",Fm); rFm = getExtendedConstant(Fm); if (floatx80_is_nan(rFm)) goto unordered; } else { //printk("Fm = r%d which contains a ",Fm); switch (fpa11->fType[Fm]) { case typeSingle: //printk("single.\n"); if (float32_is_nan(fpa11->fpreg[Fm].fSingle)) goto unordered; rFm = float32_to_floatx80(fpa11->fpreg[Fm].fSingle); break; case typeDouble: //printk("double.\n"); if (float64_is_nan(fpa11->fpreg[Fm].fDouble)) goto unordered; rFm = float64_to_floatx80(fpa11->fpreg[Fm].fDouble); break; case typeExtended: //printk("extended.\n"); if (floatx80_is_nan(fpa11->fpreg[Fm].fExtended)) goto unordered; rFm = fpa11->fpreg[Fm].fExtended; break; default: return 0; } } if (n_flag) { rFm.high ^= 0x8000; } return PerformComparisonOperation(rFn,rFm); unordered: /* ?? The FPA data sheet is pretty vague about this, in particular about whether the non-E comparisons can ever raise exceptions. This implementation is based on a combination of what it says in the data sheet, observation of how the Acorn emulator actually behaves (and how programs expect it to) and guesswork. */ flags |= CC_OVERFLOW; flags &= ~(CC_ZERO | CC_NEGATIVE); if (BIT_AC & readFPSR()) flags |= CC_CARRY; if (e_flag) float_raise(float_flag_invalid); writeConditionCodes(flags); return 1; }