Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 2 | MOTOROLA MICROPROCESSOR & MEMORY TECHNOLOGY GROUP |
| 3 | M68000 Hi-Performance Microprocessor Division |
| 4 | M68060 Software Package |
| 5 | Production Release P1.00 -- October 10, 1994 |
| 6 | |
Jan Engelhardt | 96de0e2 | 2007-10-19 23:21:04 +0200 | [diff] [blame] | 7 | M68060 Software Package Copyright © 1993, 1994 Motorola Inc. All rights reserved. |
Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 8 | |
| 9 | THE SOFTWARE is provided on an "AS IS" basis and without warranty. |
| 10 | To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, |
| 11 | MOTOROLA DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, |
| 12 | INCLUDING IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE |
| 13 | and any warranty against infringement with regard to the SOFTWARE |
| 14 | (INCLUDING ANY MODIFIED VERSIONS THEREOF) and any accompanying written materials. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, |
| 17 | IN NO EVENT SHALL MOTOROLA BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER |
| 18 | (INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF BUSINESS PROFITS, |
| 19 | BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, LOSS OF BUSINESS INFORMATION, OR OTHER PECUNIARY LOSS) |
| 20 | ARISING OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE SOFTWARE. |
| 21 | Motorola assumes no responsibility for the maintenance and support of the SOFTWARE. |
| 22 | |
| 23 | You are hereby granted a copyright license to use, modify, and distribute the SOFTWARE |
| 24 | so long as this entire notice is retained without alteration in any modified and/or |
| 25 | redistributed versions, and that such modified versions are clearly identified as such. |
| 26 | No licenses are granted by implication, estoppel or otherwise under any patents |
| 27 | or trademarks of Motorola, Inc. |
| 28 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 29 | 68060 SOFTWARE PACKAGE (Kernel version) SIMPLE TESTS |
| 30 | ----------------------------------------------------- |
| 31 | |
| 32 | The files itest.sa and ftest.sa contain simple tests to check |
| 33 | the state of the 68060ISP and 68060FPSP once they have been installed. |
| 34 | |
| 35 | Release file format: |
| 36 | -------------------- |
| 37 | The release files itest.sa and ftest.sa are essentially |
| 38 | hexadecimal images of the actual tests. This format is the |
| 39 | ONLY format that will be supported. The hex images were created |
| 40 | by assembling the source code and then converting the resulting |
| 41 | binary output images into ASCII text files. The hexadecimal |
| 42 | numbers are listed using the Motorola Assembly syntax assembler |
| 43 | directive "dc.l" (define constant longword). The files can be |
| 44 | converted to other assembly syntaxes by using any word processor |
| 45 | with a global search and replace function. |
| 46 | |
| 47 | To assist in assembling and linking these modules with other modules, |
| 48 | the installer should add symbolic labels to the top of the files. |
| 49 | This will allow the calling routines to access the entry points |
| 50 | of these packages. |
| 51 | |
| 52 | The source code itest.s and ftest.s have been included but only |
| 53 | for documentation purposes. |
| 54 | |
| 55 | Release file structure: |
| 56 | ----------------------- |
| 57 | |
| 58 | (top of module) |
| 59 | ----------------- |
| 60 | | | - 128 byte-sized section |
| 61 | (1) | Call-Out | - 4 bytes per entry (user fills these in) |
| 62 | | | |
| 63 | ----------------- |
| 64 | | | - 8 bytes per entry |
| 65 | (2) | Entry Point | - user does "bsr" or "jsr" to this address |
| 66 | | | |
| 67 | ----------------- |
| 68 | | | - code section |
| 69 | (3) ~ ~ |
| 70 | | | |
| 71 | ----------------- |
| 72 | (bottom of module) |
| 73 | |
| 74 | The first section of this module is the "Call-out" section. This section |
| 75 | is NOT INCLUDED in {i,f}test.sa (an example "Call-out" section is provided at |
| 76 | the end of this file). The purpose of this section is to allow the test |
| 77 | routines to reference external printing functions that must be provided |
| 78 | by the host operating system. This section MUST be exactly 128 bytes in |
| 79 | size. There are 32 fields, each 4 bytes in size. Each field corresponds |
| 80 | to a function required by the test packages (these functions and their |
| 81 | location are listed in "68060{ISP,FPSP}-TEST call-outs" below). Each field |
| 82 | entry should contain the address of the corresponding function RELATIVE to |
| 83 | the starting address of the "call-out" section. The "Call-out" section must |
| 84 | sit adjacent to the {i,f}test.sa image in memory. Since itest.sa and ftest.sa |
| 85 | are individual tests, they each require their own "Call-out" sections. |
| 86 | |
| 87 | The second section, the "Entry-point" section, is used by external routines |
| 88 | to access the test routines. Since the {i,f}test.sa hex files contain |
| 89 | no symbol names, this section contains function entry points that are fixed |
| 90 | with respect to the top of the package. The currently defined entry-points |
| 91 | are listed in section "68060{ISP,FPSP}-TEST entry points" below. A calling |
| 92 | routine would simply execute a "bsr" or "jsr" that jumped to the selected |
| 93 | function entry-point. |
| 94 | |
| 95 | For example, to run the 060ISP test, write a program that includes the |
| 96 | itest.sa data and execute something similar to: |
| 97 | |
| 98 | bsr _060ISP_TEST+128+0 |
| 99 | |
| 100 | (_060ISP_TEST is the starting address of the "Call-out" section; the "Call-out" |
| 101 | section is 128 bytes long; and the 68060ISP test entry point is located |
| 102 | 0 bytes from the top of the "Entry-point" section.) |
| 103 | |
| 104 | The third section is the code section. After entering through an "Entry-point", |
| 105 | the entry code jumps to the appropriate test code within the code section. |
| 106 | |
| 107 | 68060ISP-TEST Call-outs: |
| 108 | ------------------------ |
| 109 | 0x0: _print_string() |
| 110 | 0x4: _print_number() |
| 111 | |
| 112 | 68060FPSP-TEST Call-outs: |
| 113 | ------------------------- |
| 114 | 0x0: _print_string() |
| 115 | 0x4: _print_number() |
| 116 | |
| 117 | The test packages call _print_string() and _print_number() |
| 118 | as subroutines and expect the main program to print a string |
| 119 | or a number to a file or to the screen. |
| 120 | In "C"-like fashion, the test program calls: |
| 121 | |
| 122 | print_string("Test passed"); |
| 123 | |
| 124 | or |
| 125 | |
| 126 | print_number(20); |
| 127 | |
| 128 | For _print_string(), the test programs pass a longword address |
| 129 | of the string on the stack. For _print_number(), the test programs pass |
| 130 | a longword number to be printed. |
| 131 | |
| 132 | For debugging purposes, after the main program performs a "print" |
| 133 | for a test package, it should flush the output so that it's not |
| 134 | buffered. In this way, if the test program crashes, at least the previous |
| 135 | statements printed will be seen. |
| 136 | |
| 137 | 68060ISP-TEST Entry-points: |
| 138 | --------------------------- |
| 139 | 0x0: integer test |
| 140 | |
| 141 | 68060FPSP-TEST Entry-points: |
| 142 | ---------------------------- |
| 143 | 0x00: main fp test |
| 144 | 0x08: FP unimplemented test |
| 145 | 0x10: FP enabled snan/operr/ovfl/unfl/dz/inex |
| 146 | |
| 147 | The floating-point unit test has 3 entry points which will require |
| 148 | 3 different calls to the package if each of the three following tests |
| 149 | is desired: |
| 150 | |
| 151 | main fp test: tests (1) unimp effective address exception |
| 152 | (2) unsupported data type exceptions |
| 153 | (3) non-maskable overflow/underflow exceptions |
| 154 | |
| 155 | FP unimplemented: tests FP unimplemented exception. this one is |
| 156 | separate from the previous tests for systems that don't |
| 157 | want FP unimplemented instructions. |
| 158 | |
| 159 | FP enabled: tests enabled snan/operr/ovfl/unfl/dz/inex. |
| 160 | basically, it enables each of these exceptions and forces |
| 161 | each using an implemented FP instruction. this process |
| 162 | exercises _fpsp_{snan,operr,ovfl,unfl,dz,inex}() and |
| 163 | _real_{snan,operr,ovfl,unfl,dz,inex}(). the test expects |
| 164 | _real_XXXX() to do nothing except clear the exception |
| 165 | and "rte". if a system's _real_XXXX() handler creates an |
| 166 | alternate result, the test will print "failed" but this |
| 167 | is acceptable. |
| 168 | |
| 169 | Miscellaneous: |
| 170 | -------------- |
| 171 | Again, itest.sa and ftest.sa are simple tests and do not thoroughly |
| 172 | test all 68060SP connections. For example, they do not test connections |
| 173 | to _real_access(), _real_trace(), _real_trap(), etc. because these |
| 174 | will be system-implemented several different ways and the test packages |
| 175 | must remain system independent. |
| 176 | |
| 177 | Example test package set-up: |
| 178 | ---------------------------- |
| 179 | _print_str: |
| 180 | . # provided by system |
| 181 | rts |
| 182 | |
| 183 | _print_num: |
| 184 | . # provided by system |
| 185 | rts |
| 186 | |
| 187 | . |
| 188 | . |
| 189 | bsr _060FPSP_TEST+128+0 |
| 190 | . |
| 191 | . |
| 192 | rts |
| 193 | |
| 194 | # beginning of "Call-out" section; provided by integrator. |
| 195 | # MUST be 128 bytes long. |
| 196 | _060FPSP_TEST: |
| 197 | long _print_str - _060FPSP_TEST |
| 198 | long _print_num - _060FPSP_TEST |
| 199 | space 120 |
| 200 | |
| 201 | # ftest.sa starts here; start of "Entry-point" section. |
| 202 | long 0x60ff0000, 0x00002346 |
| 203 | long 0x60ff0000, 0x00018766 |
| 204 | long 0x60ff0000, 0x00023338 |
| 205 | long 0x24377299, 0xab2643ea |
| 206 | . |
| 207 | . |
| 208 | . |