1SPU_RUN(2) Linux Programmer's Manual SPU_RUN(2)
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6 spu_run - execute an SPU context
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9 #include <sys/spu.h>
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11 int spu_run(int fd, unsigned int *npc, unsigned int *event);
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14 The spu_run() system call is used on PowerPC machines that implement
15 the Cell Broadband Engine Architecture in order to access Synergistic
16 Processor Units (SPUs). The fd argument is a file descriptor returned
17 by spu_create(2) that refers to a specific SPU context. When the con‐
18 text gets scheduled to a physical SPU, it starts execution at the
19 instruction pointer passed in npc.
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21 Execution of SPU code happens synchronously, meaning that spu_run()
22 blocks while the SPU is still running. If there is a need to execute
23 SPU code in parallel with other code on either the main CPU or other
24 SPUs, a new thread of execution must be created first (e.g., using
25 pthread_create(3)).
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27 When spu_run() returns, the current value of the SPU program counter is
28 written to npc, so successive calls to spu_run() can use the same npc
29 pointer.
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31 The event argument provides a buffer for an extended status code. If
32 the SPU context was created with the SPU_CREATE_EVENTS_ENABLED flag,
33 then this buffer is populated by the Linux kernel before spu_run()
34 returns.
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36 The status code may be one (or more) of the following constants:
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38 SPE_EVENT_DMA_ALIGNMENT
39 A DMA alignment error occurred.
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41 SPE_EVENT_INVALID_DMA
42 An invalid MFC DMA command was attempted.
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44 SPE_EVENT_SPE_DATA_STORAGE
45 A DMA storage error occurred.
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47 SPE_EVENT_SPE_ERROR
48 An illegal instruction was executed.
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50 NULL is a valid value for the event argument. In this case, the events
51 will not be reported to the calling process.
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54 On success, spu_run() returns the value of the spu_status register. On
55 error it returns -1 and sets errno to one of the error codes listed
56 below.
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58 The spu_status register value is a bit mask of status codes and option‐
59 ally a 14-bit code returned from the stop-and-signal instruction on the
60 SPU. The bit masks for the status codes are:
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62 0x02 SPU was stopped by a stop-and-signal instruction.
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64 0x04 SPU was stopped by a halt instruction.
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66 0x08 SPU is waiting for a channel.
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68 0x10 SPU is in single-step mode.
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70 0x20 SPU has tried to execute an invalid instruction.
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72 0x40 SPU has tried to access an invalid channel.
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74 0x3fff0000
75 The bits masked with this value contain the code returned from a
76 stop-and-signal instruction. These bits are only valid if the
77 0x02 bit is set.
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79 If spu_run() has not returned an error, one or more bits among the
80 lower eight ones are always set.
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83 EBADF fd is not a valid file descriptor.
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85 EFAULT npc is not a valid pointer, or event is non-NULL and an invalid
86 pointer.
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88 EINTR A signal occurred while spu_run() was in progress; see sig‐
89 nal(7). The npc value has been updated to the new program
90 counter value if necessary.
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92 EINVAL fd is not a valid file descriptor returned from spu_create(2).
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94 ENOMEM There was not enough memory available to handle a page fault
95 resulting from a Memory Flow Controller (MFC) direct memory
96 access.
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98 ENOSYS The functionality is not provided by the current system, because
99 either the hardware does not provide SPUs or the spufs module is
100 not loaded.
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103 The spu_run() system call was added to Linux in kernel 2.6.16.
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106 This call is Linux-specific and only implemented by the PowerPC archi‐
107 tecture. Programs using this system call are not portable.
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110 Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call; call it using
111 syscall(2). Note however, that spu_run() is meant to be used from
112 libraries that implement a more abstract interface to SPUs, not to be
113 used from regular applications. See http://www.bsc.es/projects/deep‐
114 computing/linuxoncell/ for the recommended libraries.
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117 The following is an example of running a simple, one-instruction SPU
118 program with the spu_run() system call.
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120 #include <stdlib.h>
121 #include <stdint.h>
122 #include <unistd.h>
123 #include <stdio.h>
124 #include <sys/types.h>
125 #include <fcntl.h>
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127 #define handle_error(msg) \
128 do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } while (0)
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130 int main(void)
131 {
132 int context, fd, spu_status;
133 uint32_t instruction, npc;
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135 context = spu_create("/spu/example-context", 0, 0755);
136 if (context == -1)
137 handle_error("spu_create");
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139 /* write a 'stop 0x1234' instruction to the SPU's
140 * local store memory
141 */
142 instruction = 0x00001234;
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144 fd = open("/spu/example-context/mem", O_RDWR);
145 if (fd == -1)
146 handle_error("open");
147 write(fd, &instruction, sizeof(instruction));
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149 /* set npc to the starting instruction address of the
150 * SPU program. Since we wrote the instruction at the
151 * start of the mem file, the entry point will be 0x0
152 */
153 npc = 0;
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155 spu_status = spu_run(context, &npc, NULL);
156 if (spu_status == -1)
157 handle_error("open");
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159 /* we should see a status code of 0x1234002:
160 * 0x00000002 (spu was stopped due to stop-and-signal)
161 * | 0x12340000 (the stop-and-signal code)
162 */
163 printf("SPU Status: 0x%08x\n", spu_status);
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165 exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
166 }
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169 close(2), spu_create(2), capabilities(7), spufs(7)
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172 This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A
173 description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
174 be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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178Linux 2007-11-25 SPU_RUN(2)