Visible to Intel only — GUID: iga1409332620358
Ixiasoft
3.4.2.1. The status Register
3.4.2.2. The estatus Register
3.4.2.3. The bstatus Register
3.4.2.4. The ienable Register
3.4.2.5. The ipending Register
3.4.2.6. The cpuid Register
3.4.2.7. The exception Register
3.4.2.8. The pteaddr Register
3.4.2.9. The tlbacc Register
3.4.2.10. The tlbmisc Register
3.4.2.11. The badaddr Register
3.4.2.12. The config Register
3.4.2.13. The mpubase Register
3.4.2.14. The mpuacc Register
3.7.1. Terminology
3.7.2. Exception Overview
3.7.3. Exception Latency
3.7.4. Reset Exceptions
3.7.5. Break Exceptions
3.7.6. Interrupt Exceptions
3.7.7. Instruction-Related Exceptions
3.7.8. Other Exceptions
3.7.9. Exception Processing Flow
3.7.10. Handling Nested Exceptions
3.7.11. Handling Nonmaskable Interrupts
3.7.12. Masking and Disabling Exceptions
3.7.7.1. Trap Instruction
3.7.7.2. Break Instruction
3.7.7.3. Unimplemented Instruction
3.7.7.4. Illegal Instruction
3.7.7.5. Supervisor-Only Instruction
3.7.7.6. Supervisor-Only Instruction Address
3.7.7.7. Supervisor-Only Data Address
3.7.7.8. Misaligned Data Address
3.7.7.9. Misaligned Destination Address
3.7.7.10. Division Error
3.7.7.11. Fast TLB Miss
3.7.7.12. Double TLB Miss
3.7.7.13. TLB Permission Violation
3.7.7.14. MPU Region Violation
3.9.1. Data Transfer Instructions
3.9.2. Arithmetic and Logical Instructions
3.9.3. Move Instructions
3.9.4. Comparison Instructions
3.9.5. Shift and Rotate Instructions
3.9.6. Program Control Instructions
3.9.7. Other Control Instructions
3.9.8. Custom Instructions
3.9.9. No-Operation Instruction
3.9.10. Potential Unimplemented Instructions
8.5.1. add
8.5.2. addi
8.5.3. and
8.5.4. andhi
8.5.5. andi
8.5.6. beq
8.5.7. bge
8.5.8. bgeu
8.5.9. bgt
8.5.10. bgtu
8.5.11. ble
8.5.12. bleu
8.5.13. blt
8.5.14. bltu
8.5.15. bne
8.5.16. br
8.5.17. break
8.5.18. bret
8.5.19. call
8.5.20. callr
8.5.21. cmpeq
8.5.22. cmpeqi
8.5.23. cmpge
8.5.24. cmpgei
8.5.25. cmpgeu
8.5.26. cmpgeui
8.5.27. cmpgt
8.5.28. cmpgti
8.5.29. cmpgtu
8.5.30. cmpgtui
8.5.31. cmple
8.5.32. cmplei
8.5.33. cmpleu
8.5.34. cmpleui
8.5.35. cmplt
8.5.36. cmplti
8.5.37. cmpltu
8.5.38. cmpltui
8.5.39. cmpne
8.5.40. cmpnei
8.5.41. custom
8.5.42. div
8.5.43. divu
8.5.44. eret
8.5.45. flushd
8.5.46. flushda
8.5.47. flushi
8.5.48. flushp
8.5.49. initd
8.5.50. initda
8.5.51. initi
8.5.52. jmp
8.5.53. jmpi
8.5.54. ldb / ldbio
8.5.55. ldbu / ldbuio
8.5.56. ldh / ldhio
8.5.57. ldhu / ldhuio
8.5.58. ldw / ldwio
8.5.59. mov
8.5.60. movhi
8.5.61. movi
8.5.62. movia
8.5.63. movui
8.5.64. mul
8.5.65. muli
8.5.66. mulxss
8.5.67. mulxsu
8.5.68. mulxuu
8.5.69. nextpc
8.5.70. nop
8.5.71. nor
8.5.72. or
8.5.73. orhi
8.5.74. ori
8.5.75. rdctl
8.5.76. rdprs
8.5.77. ret
8.5.78. rol
8.5.79. roli
8.5.80. ror
8.5.81. sll
8.5.82. slli
8.5.83. sra
8.5.84. srai
8.5.85. srl
8.5.86. srli
8.5.87. stb / stbio l
8.5.88. sth / sthio
8.5.89. stw / stwio
8.5.90. sub
8.5.91. subi
8.5.92. sync
8.5.93. trap
8.5.94. wrctl
8.5.95. wrprs
8.5.96. xor
8.5.97. xorhi
8.5.98. xori
Visible to Intel only — GUID: iga1409332620358
Ixiasoft
3.2.3.1. Virtual Memory Address Space
The 4-GB virtual memory space is divided into partitions. The upper 2 GB of memory is reserved for the operating system and the lower 2 GB is reserved for user processes.
Partition | Virtual Address Range | Used By | Memory Access | User Mode Access | Default Data Cacheability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
I/O | 0xE0000000–0xFFFFFFFF | Operating system | Bypasses TLB | No | Disabled |
Kernel | 0xC0000000–0xDFFFFFFF | Operating system | Bypasses TLB | No | Enabled |
Kernel MMU | 0x80000000–0xBFFFFFFF | Operating system | Uses TLB | No | Set by TLB |
User | 0x00000000–0x7FFFFFFF | User processes | Uses TLB | Set by TLB | Set by TLB |
Note: All partitions except the user partition in the "Virtual Memory Partition" table are supervisor-only partitions.
Each partition has a specific size, purpose, and relationship to the TLB:
- The 512-MB I/O partition provides access to peripherals.
- The 512-MB kernel partition provides space for the operating system kernel.
- The 1-GB kernel MMU partition is used by the TLB miss handler and kernel processes.
- The 2-GB user partition is used by application processes.
I/O and kernel partitions bypass the TLB. The kernel MMU and user partitions use the TLB. If all software runs in the kernel partition, the MMU is effectively disabled.