Optimization issue in RISC-V BSP

Denis Obrezkov denisobrezkov at gmail.com
Sat Jul 29 09:04:45 UTC 2017


2017-07-29 3:45 GMT+02:00 Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>:

>
>
> On Jul 28, 2017 7:11 PM, "Denis Obrezkov" <denisobrezkov at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> 2017-07-29 1:41 GMT+02:00 Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>:
>
>>
>>
>> On Jul 28, 2017 6:39 PM, "Denis Obrezkov" <denisobrezkov at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> 2017-07-29 1:28 GMT+02:00 Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Jul 28, 2017 6:14 PM, "Denis Obrezkov" <denisobrezkov at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> 2017-07-29 0:57 GMT+02:00 Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Jul 28, 2017 5:55 PM, "Denis Obrezkov" <denisobrezkov at gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> 2017-07-28 22:36 GMT+02:00 Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>:
>>>>
>>>>> Can you check the memory immediately after a download'?
>>>>>
>>>>> Then after the loop that copies initialized data into place?
>>>>>
>>>>> I suspect something off there. Could be a linker script issue or the
>>>>> copy gone crazy.
>>>>>
>>>>> --joel
>>>>>
>>>>> On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 3:20 PM, Denis Obrezkov <
>>>>> denisobrezkov at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> 2017-07-28 22:16 GMT+02:00 Joel Sherrill <joel at rtems.org>:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 2:50 PM, Denis Obrezkov <
>>>>>>> denisobrezkov at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> I can see that during task initialization I have a call:
>>>>>>>>>>  _Thread_Initialize_information (information=information at entry=0x80000ad4
>>>>>>>>>> <_RTEMS_tasks_Information>, the_api=the_api at entry=OBJECTS_CLASSIC_API,
>>>>>>>>>> the_class=the_class at entry=1, maximum=124,
>>>>>>>>>>     is_string=is_string at entry=false,
>>>>>>>>>> maximum_name_length=maximum_name_length at entry=4)
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> And maximum is 124, but I have a configuration parameter:
>>>>>>>>>> #define CONFIGURE_MAXIMUM_TASKS             4
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> I can't imagine any standard RTEMS test configuring that many
>>>>>>>>> tasks.
>>>>>>>>> Is there a data corruption issue?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> 124 = 0x7c which doesn't ring any bells for me on odd memory
>>>>>>>>> issues.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> What is the contents of "Configuration_RTEMS_API"?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Oh, I change my configuration options a bit, they are:
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_APPLICATION_NEEDS_CLOCK_DRIVER
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_APPLICATION_DISABLE_FILESYSTEM
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_DISABLE_NEWLIB_REENTRANCY
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_TERMIOS_DISABLED
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_LIBIO_MAXIMUM_FILE_DESCRIPTORS 0
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_MINIMUM_TASK_STACK_SIZE 512
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_MAXIMUM_PRIORITY 3
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_DISABLE_CLASSIC_API_NOTEPADS
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_IDLE_TASK_BODY Init
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_IDLE_TASK_INITIALIZES_APPLICATION
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_TASKS 4
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_MAXIMUM_TASKS             4
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>   #define CONFIGURE_UNIFIED_WORK_AREAS
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Also it is the test from a lower ticker example.
>>>>>>>> Configuration_RTEMS_API with -O0 option:
>>>>>>>> {maximum_tasks = 5, maximum_timers = 0, maximum_semaphores = 7,
>>>>>>>> maximum_message_queues = 0, maximum_partitions = 0, maximum_regions = 0,
>>>>>>>> maximum_ports = 0, maximum_periods = 0,
>>>>>>>>   maximum_barriers = 0, number_of_initialization_tasks = 0,
>>>>>>>> User_initialization_tasks_table = 0x0}
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> with -Os option:
>>>>>>>> {maximum_tasks = 124, maximum_timers = 0, maximum_semaphores = 7,
>>>>>>>> maximum_message_queues = 0, maximum_partitions = 0, maximum_regions = 0,
>>>>>>>> maximum_ports = 0, maximum_periods = 0,
>>>>>>>>   maximum_barriers = 0, number_of_initialization_tasks = 0,
>>>>>>>> User_initialization_tasks_table = 0x0}
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hmmm.. If you look at this structure in gdb without attaching to the
>>>>>>> target, what
>>>>>>> is maximum_tasks?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> --joel
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> It seems that other tasks are LIBBLOCK tasks.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Also, this is my Configuration during run:
>>>>>>>>>> (gdb) p Configuration.stack_space_size
>>>>>>>>>> $1 = 2648
>>>>>>>>>> (gdb) p Configuration.work_space_size
>>>>>>>>>> $2 = 4216
>>>>>>>>>> (gdb) p Configuration.interrupt_stack_size
>>>>>>>>>> $3 = 512
>>>>>>>>>> (gdb) p Configuration.idle_task_stack_size
>>>>>>>>>> $4 = 512
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> That looks reasonable. Add CONFIGURE_MAXIMUM_PRIORITY and set it
>>>>>>>>> to 4. That should
>>>>>>>>> reduce the workspace.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>  long term, we might want to consider lowering it permanently like
>>>>>>>>> one of the Coldfires
>>>>>>>>> had to. Or change the default scheduler to the Simple one to save
>>>>>>>>> memory.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> I haven't dealt with the Scheduler option yet.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> Regards, Denis Obrezkov
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> maximum_tasks = 4
>>>>>> So, is it a linker file issue?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This is it:
>>>>>> https://github.com/embeddedden/rtems-riscv/blob/hifive1/c/sr
>>>>>> c/lib/libbsp/riscv32/hifive1/startup/linkcmds
>>>>>>
>>>>>> --
>>>>>> Regards, Denis Obrezkov
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> After download:
>>>> {maximum_tasks = 938162044, maximum_timers = 1270834941,
>>>> maximum_semaphores = 2534801264 <(253)%20480-1264>,
>>>> maximum_message_queues = 425684620, maximum_partitions = 1496738036,
>>>>   maximum_regions = 3085560870 <(308)%20556-0870>, maximum_ports =
>>>> 4269782132, maximum_periods = 2362012542 <(236)%20201-2542>,
>>>> maximum_barriers = 1138223297, number_of_initialization_tasks = 4224313421,
>>>>   User_initialization_tasks_table = 0x43bd1bd3}
>>>>
>>>> right after data copying:
>>>> {maximum_tasks = 124, maximum_timers = 0, maximum_semaphores = 1,
>>>> maximum_message_queues = 0, maximum_partitions = 0, maximum_regions = 0,
>>>> maximum_ports = 0, maximum_periods = 0,
>>>>   maximum_barriers = 0, number_of_initialization_tasks = 0,
>>>> User_initialization_tasks_table = 0x0}
>>>>
>>>> But I found the mistake - I made it in .data initialization code
>>>> (https://github.com/embeddedden/rtems-riscv/blob/hifive1/c/s
>>>> rc/lib/libbsp/riscv32/hifive1/start/start.S#L116 - first byte in the
>>>> loop was uninitialized)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Awesome! Does that mean it is running?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Regards, Denis Obrezkov
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Yes, it is running now. Not far, but running.
>>> Now I am having an exception during atexit( Clock_exit )
>>>
>>>
>>> Does it get to bsp_cleanup and bsp_reset? Are you seeing the Terminate?
>>>
>>> I think those are the names. Basically some BSPs deliberately throw an
>>> exception as the way to end.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Regards, Denis Obrezkov
>>>
>>>
>>> Unfortunately, I have an exception in the beginning during clock driver
>> initialization around this line:
>> 0x204053a0      80      in ../../../../../gcc-7.1.0/newli
>> b/libc/stdlib/__atexit.c
>>
>>
>> No obvious suggestions from me right now except to debug.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Regards, Denis Obrezkov
>>
>>
>> Is it possible that newlib has a wrong linker file? That a variable
> placed out of the rtems-linkcmd-defined bounds?
>
>
> I don't think so. Look at the atexit source and see what it assume is
> initialized
>
>
>
>
> --
> Regards, Denis Obrezkov
>
>
> I found out that the error occurs in
gcc-7.1.0/newlib/libc/stdlib/__atexit.c:80:
p = _GLOBAL_ATEXIT;

p defined like:
register struct _atexit *p;

on the one hand the value of p is:
(gdb) print p
$56 = <optimized out>

on the other hand:
_GLOBAL_ATEXIT:

#ifdef _REENT_GLOBAL_ATEXIT
extern struct _atexit *_global_atexit; /* points to head of LIFO stack */
# define _GLOBAL_ATEXIT _global_atexit
#else
# define _GLOBAL_ATEXIT (_GLOBAL_REENT->_atexit)
#endif

and _REENT_GLOBAL_ATEXIT should be defined due to (newlib/libc/include/sys):
#if defined(__rtems__)
#define __FILENAME_MAX__ 255
#define _READ_WRITE_RETURN_TYPE _ssize_t
#define __DYNAMIC_REENT__
#define _REENT_GLOBAL_ATEXIT
#endif

but _global_atexit  located at random locations outside of my memory
regions.


-- 
Regards, Denis Obrezkov
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