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Published byMildred Susanna Pope Modified over 9 years ago
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(1) A Beginner’s Quick Start to SIMICS
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(2) Disclaimer This is a quick start document to help users get set up quickly Does not replace the user guide – you will have to go through the user guide for many parts of this quick start
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(3) Assumptions You have registered at Virtutech, downloaded SIMICS and set up the license Downloaded the user guide from https://www.simics.net/mwf/vh?31 for clarifications or doubts https://www.simics.net/mwf/vh?31 Familiarity in using Linux (e.g. you must know what “mounting” means
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(4) Step 1 Download one of the existing disk images for the x86 ISA (this ISA is what we are targeting) from https://www.simics.net/mwf/vh?31 https://www.simics.net/mwf/vh?31 Pick one that has SimicsFS already installed. – for example: hippie3-r62.craff
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(5) Step 2 Link or copy this file into the appropriate directory: [simics-workspace/targets/x86-440bx/] Your workspace directory structure should be as above if you installed SIMICS version 3.0 (the latest version). Replace "simics-workspace" with the path to your SIMICS workspace directory.
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(6) Step 3 Run SIMICS on the appropriate simics- configuration file For example (from inside simics- workspace/), you will execute –./simics targets/x86-440bx/hippie- common.simics
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(7) Step 4 Follow the instructions in the simics user's guide to –boot the system (takes a long time) –save a check-point (write-configuration command) after you have booted so that you don't have to wait for the system to boot again –try mounting /host and copying files from your Linux host computer to the simulated machine. –quit simics, restart simics with the after-boot checkpoint.
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(8) Step 5 Try setting up a multi-processor machine: –copy hippie-common.simics to hippie-common- 2p.simics in your simics-workspace/targets/x86- 44bx directory –add the following line as the first line in hippie- common-2p.simics: $num_cpus = 2 Start simics as before using hippie-common- 2p.simics. You should now have a 2 processor machine. Boot up and save an after-boot checkpoint.
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(9) Step 6 Brush up a little bit on the "pthreads" library. Write a very simple application with two threads that do completely independent work, and are therefore trivial to execute in parallel on a multi-processor machine. Compile this application on your host machine (Linux, using gcc) and try running this app under both the 1-processor and 2-processor hippie machines. Do you see any difference in run-times? The app should run much faster (2x) on the 2-processor machine.
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