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Transcript L1 master page table

MMU
Memory Management Unit
Chapter # 14
1
Memory Management Unit
Presented by:
Group#13
•Asmaa Rabie Abdualaziz
•Islam Ameen Abdualaziz
•Doaa Ahmed Mohamed
•Sherif Mohamed Medhat
Presented to:
• Dr.Amr Wassal
• CMP 2012
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
What will we learn from
chapter?
Learn basics of ARM MMU and some
basic concepts that underlie the use of the
virtual memory
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Introduction
• Virtual addresses: Assign by Compiler and
Linker
•Physical addresses : Access the actual hardware
components
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Moving From An MPU To An MMU
•What is the difference between active and dormant
region?
•Difference Between MPU & MMU
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
How Virtual Memory works
0x0400 00e3
0x0800 00e3
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Memory Management Unit
The components of a virtual
memory system
Virtual memory
MMU
Physical memory
Page
tables
PTE
Page
frame
Page
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Relocation
register
Memory Management Unit
Defining Regions Using Pages
Virtual Memory
Physical Memory
Page tables
Stack
Region 3
RAM
Region 2
Data
Flash
Text
Region 1
Page
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PTE
Memory Management Unit
Page
frame
Multitasking and The MMU
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Memory Management Unit
Memory Organization in a Virtual
Memory System
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Details Of The ARM MMU
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Page tables
Translation Lookaside Table (TLB)
Domain and access permission
Caches and write buffer
CP15: c1 control register
Fast Context Switch Extension
Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Page Table
• L1
Entries for translating 1 MB pages
Pointers to the starting address to level 2 page tables
• L2
Fine page table
Coarse page table
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Memory Management Unit
Level 1
Level 1 page table accepts four types of entry
• A 1MB section translation entry
• A directory entry that points to a fine L2 page table
• A directory entry that points to a coarse L2 page
table
• A fault entry that generates an abort exception
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Memory Management Unit
L1 page entries
Section Entry
Access Permission
The upper 12 bits of the page table
entry replace the upper 12 bits of the
virtual address to generate the
physical address
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Memory Management Unit
Domain
Cached
Buffered
L1 page entries
Domain information for the 1 MB section
of virtual memory represented by the L1 table entry.
Coarse Entry
a pointer to the base address of a
second-level coarse page table
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Memory Management Unit
L1 page entries
Domain information for the 1 MB section
of virtual memory represented by the L1 table entry.
Fine Entry
a pointer to the base address of a second-level fine page table
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Memory Management Unit
L1 page entries
Fault Entry
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Memory Management Unit
Translation Table Base Address
The CP15:c2 register holds the translation table
base address (TTB)—an address pointing to the
location of the master L1 table in virtual memory.
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Memory Management Unit
Level 2
Level 2 page table accepts four types of entry
•A large page entry defines the attributes for a 64
KB page frame.
•A small page entry defines a 4 KB page frame.
• A tiny page entry defines a 1 KB page frame.
•A fault page entry generates a page fault abort
exception when accessed.
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Memory Management Unit
L2 page entries
The entry also has four sets of
permission bit fields
A large PTE includes the base
address of a 64 KB block of physical
memory.
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Memory Management Unit
Large page
L2 page entries
The entry also has four sets of
permission bit fields
A small PTE holds the base address
of a 4 KB block of physical
memory
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Memory Management Unit
Small page
L2 page entries
The entry also has 1 permission bit
fields
A tiny PTE provides the base address
of a 1 KB block of physical memory.
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Memory Management Unit
Small page
L2 page entries
Fault
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Translation Lookaside Buffer
•Fully associative cache of recently used translations
•Stores Access permission set
•Use round-robin replacement algorithm
•Supports flush and lock operations
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Memory Management Unit
L1 Page table virtual-to-physical
memory translation using 1 MB
sections
Virtual address
Base
offset
L1 master page table
Page table entry
Translation table
base address
physical address
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Base
Selects
physical
offset
memory
Copied to TLB
Memory Management Unit
Two-level virtual-to-physical
address translation using
coarse page tables
Virtual address
L1 offset
L2 offset
Page offset
Step 1
L1 master page table
Coarse L2 page table
L2 Page
table
entry
Step 2
L1 Page
table
entry
Translation table
base address
L2 Page
table
base
address
physical address
Physical Base
Page offset
Copied to TLB
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Memory Management Unit
TLB Operations
42f4
6726
3889
ab56
35de
9001
f8d9
8845
8787
7842
8fd3
9999
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Lock down
6726
Flush
9001
8fd3
Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Domain & Access permission
There are two different controls to manage a task’s
access permission to memory.
•Primary: is the Domain.
•Secondary: is access permission set in the page tables.
Domain control basic access to virtual memory by isolating
on area of memory from another when sharing common
virtual memory map
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Memory Management Unit
Domain bit access bit assignment
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Memory Management Unit
Page Table-Based Access permission
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Caches and Write Buffer
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
Fast Context Switch Extension
(FCSE)
•Enables multiple independent tasks to run in a fixed
overlapping area of memory
•FCSE eliminates the need of flushing the cache and TLB
•Uses process ID to convert overlapping virtual
address(VA) to a unique modified virtual address(MVA)
•MVA = VA + (0x200000 * process ID)
Memory Management Unit
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Steps to perform context switch when
using FCSE
1.
Save active tasks context and put the task in dormant
state
2.
Write the awakening task’s process ID to CP15:c13
3.
Locate set the current tasks' domain to no access
and the awakening task’s domain to client access
by writing to cp15:c3:c0
4.
Restore the context of awakening task
5.
Resume execution of re stored task
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Memory Management Unit
Agenda
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1. What we will learn from chapter ?
2. Introduction
3. Moving From An MPU To An MMU
4. How Virtual Memory works
4.1 The components of a virtual memory system
4.2 Defining Regions Using Pages
4.3 Multitasking and The MMU
4.4Memory Organization in a Virtual Memory System
5. Details Of The ARM MMU
6. Page Table
6.1 Level 1
6.2 Translation Table Base Address
6.3 Level 2
7. Translation Lookaside Buffer
7.1 L1 Page table virtual-to-physical memory translation using 1 MB sections
7.2 Two-level virtual-to-physical address translation using coarse page tables
7.3 TLB Operations
8. Domain & Access permission
9. Caches and Write Buffer
10. Coprocessor 15 and MMU configuration
11. Fast Context Switch Extension (FCSE)
12. A small virtual memory system
Memory Management Unit
A small virtual memory system
• 3 Tasks
• The same execution region
• 256 MB of memory for peripheral
devices
Very simple example!
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Memory Management Unit
How to setup the MMU?
1.
Define a fixed system software region
2.
Define 3 virtual memory maps for the 3 tasks
3.
Locate regions in step 1 & 2 into the physical
memory
4.
Define and locate the page tables within the page
table region
5.
Data structures for regions and page tables
6.
Initialize the MMU, caches, and write buffer
7.
Set up a context switch routine to switch between
tasks
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Memory Management Unit
1- Fixed system software region
1MB
••• The
OSfor
kernel
code and
Shared
libraries
16
KB
the
master
Controls the system
data
table
device I/O space
• The transition routines
•for
addressing
tofour
avoid
switching
from
• Fixed
1
KB
each
for
the
Noncached &
the
complexity
ofto user
privileged
mode
L2
tables.
Nonbuffered
region
remapping
when
changing
mode during
a context
to
a system
context.
switch
• 12
KB freemode
memory
32 KB
32 KB
32 KB
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Memory Management Unit
2- Define Virtual Memory Maps for Each
Task
• Text, data, and stack of
the running
user task.
Discussed!
• Remap the Task region
on task switch
32 KB
32 KB
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Memory Management Unit
3- Locate Regions in Physical Memory
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Memory Management Unit
4- Define and Locate the Page Tables
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Memory Management Unit
5- Define Page Table and Region Data
Structures
1) Page Table struct
typedef struct {
unsigned int vAddress;
//Address of a 1 MBsection of virtual
memory
unsigned int ptAddress;
unsigned int masterPtAddress;
//Location in virtual memory.
//Address of the parent master L1 page
table.
unsigned int type;
unsigned int dom;
} Pagetable;
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Memory Management Unit
//COARSE, FINE, or MASTER
// Domain value
5- Define Page Table and Region Data
Structures
1) Page Table struct
typedef struct {
unsigned int vAddress;
unsigned int ptAddress;
unsigned int masterPtAddress;
unsigned int type;
unsigned int dom;
} Pagetable;
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//Address of a 1 MBsection of virtual memory
//Location in virtual memory.
//Address of the parent master L1 page table.
//COARSE, FINE, or MASTER
// Domain value
Memory Management Unit
5- Define Page Table and Region Data
Structures
Example:
/* vAddress,
ptAddress, masterPtAddress, type ,
dom*/
Pagetable systemPT = {0x00000000, 0x1c000, 0x18000, COARSE, 3};
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Memory Management Unit
5- Define Page Table and Region Data
Structures
1) Region struct
typedef struct {
unsigned int vAddress;
unsigned int pageSize;
unsigned int numPages;
unsigned int AP;
unsigned int CB;
unsigned int pAddress;
Pagetable *PT;
} Region;
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// Address of the region in virtual memory
//Size of a virtual page
// Number of pages in the region
// Region access permissions
// Cache and write buffer attribute
// Address of the region in virtual memory
// pointer to the Pagetable in which the region resides
Memory Management Unit
5- Define Page Table and Region Data
Structures
Example:
/* vAddress, pageSize, numPages, AP, CB , pAddress , *PT */
Region kernelRegion = {0x00000000, 4, 16, RWNA, WT, 0x00000000, &systemPT};
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Memory Management Unit
6- Initialize the MMU, caches, and write
buffer
1.
Initialize the page tables in main memory by filling them with
FAULT entries
2.
Fill in the page tables with translations that map regions to
physical memory.
3.
Activate the page tables.
4.
Assign domain access rights.
5.
Enable the MMU and cache hardware
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Memory Management Unit
6- Initialize the MMU, caches, and write
buffer
1)Initialize the page tables:
mmuInitPT(Pagetable *);
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Fill the Page Table by Fault entries
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The size of the table is determined by reading the
type of Page table defined in pt->type (Master,
Coarse, Fine)
Memory Management Unit
6- Initialize the MMU, caches, and write
buffer
2)Filling Page Tables with Translations
mmuMapRegion(Region * region ){
switch (region->PT->type){
case SECTION
mmuMapSectionTableRegion(region);
case COARSE:
mmuMapCoarseTableRegion(region);
case FINE:
mmuMapFineTableRegion(region);
}
}
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Memory Management Unit
6- Initialize the MMU, caches, and write
buffer
3) Activating a Page Table
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•
Why?
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mmuAttachPT(Pagetable *pt);
•
It activates an L1 master page table by placing its address
into the TTB in the CP15:c2:c0 register
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Or activates an L2 page table by placing its base address
into an L1 master page table entry
Memory Management Unit
6- Initialize the MMU, caches, and write
buffer
4) Assigning Domain Access and Enabling the MMU
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•
All active memory areas must have a domain assignment
•
The minimum domain configuration places all regions in
the same domain and sets the domain access to client
access.
•
void domainAccessSet(unsigned int value, unsigned int
mask);
Memory Management Unit
6- Initialize the MMU, caches, and write
buffer
5) Enable the MMU
/* Call the previous functions */
void mmuInit(){
mmuInitPT(Pagetable *);
//Init the Page Tables
mmuMapRegion(Region * region ) //Map The regions
mmuAttachPT(Pagetable *pt); //Activate the Page Table
void domainAccessSet(unsigned int value, unsigned int
mask);
//Set Domain Access
}
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Memory Management Unit
7- Establish a Context Switch Procedure
1.
Save the active task context and place the task in a
dormant state.
2.
Flush the caches
3.
Flush the TLB to remove translations for the retiring
task
4.
Configure the MMU to use new page tables
5.
Restore the context of the awakening task
6.
Resume execution of the restored task
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Memory Management Unit
Any Questions
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Memory Management Unit