Introduction

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What is gem5?

gem5 is a modular discrete event driven computer system simulator platform. That means that:

  1. gem5's components can be rearranged, parameterized, extended or replaced easily to suit your needs.
  2. It simulates the passing of time as a series of discrete events.
  3. Its intended use is to simulate one or more computer systems in various ways.
  4. It's more than just a simulator; it's a simulator platform that lets you use as many of its premade components as you want to build up your own simulation system.

gem5 is written primarily in C++ and python and most components are provided under a BSD style license. It can simulate a complete system with devices and an operating system in full system mode (FS mode), or user space only programs where system services are provided directly by the simulator in syscall emulation mode (SE mode). There are varying levels of support for executing Alpha, ARM, MIPS, Power, SPARC, and 64 bit x86 binaries on CPU models including two simple single CPI models, an out of order model, and an in order pipelined model. A memory system can be flexibly built out of caches and crossbars. Recently the Ruby simulator has been integrated with gem5 to provide even more flexible memory system modeling.

There are many components and features not mentioned here, but from just this partial list it should be obvious that gem5 is a sophisticated and capable simulation platform. Even with all gem5 can do today, active development continues through the support of individuals and some companies, and new features are added and existing features improved on a regular basis.

Capabilities out of the box

gem5 is designed for use in computer architecture research, but if you're trying to research something new and novel it probably won't be able to evaluate your idea out of the box. If it could, that probably means someone has already evaluated a similar idea and published about it.

To get the most out of gem5, you'll most likely need to add new capabilities specific to your project's goals. gem5's modular design should help you make modifications without having to understand every part of the simulator.

As you add the new features you need, please consider contributing your changes back to gem5. That way others can take advantage of your hard work, and gem5 can become an even better simulator.

Quick Start

If you are just getting started with gem5, you can follow the steps below or watch the following video to download, build, and run the code. Refer back to the documentation page for many more details.

A youtube video of the installation process on Ubuntu 12.04 64bit. Video resolution can be set to 1080

Getting a copy

gem5's source code is managed using the Mercurial revision control system. More details on the repository structure and on Mercurial are on the repository page. Assuming you have Mercurial installed on your system, you can get your own copy of the source repository by typing:

hg clone http://repo.gem5.org/gem5

Getting Additional Tools and Files

The additional tools (and other platform dependencies) required to build gem5 are discussed here.

If you want to run the full-system version (including the full-system regression tests), you will also need to download the full-system files (disk images and binaries). Kernels, disk images, and boot loaders for Alpha, ARM, and x86 are available on the Download page. SPARC disk images are available on the with the OpenSPARC Architecture tools.

The path to these files is determined in configs/common/SysPaths.py. There are a couple of default paths hard-coded into this script; you can place the system files at one of those paths, edit SysPaths.py to change those paths, or override the paths in that file by setting your M5_PATH environment variable. If this is not done correctly you will see an error like ImportError: Can't find a path to system files. when you first attempt to run the simulator in full-system mode.

Note that the default path, /dist/m5/system, is designed for environments where you have root (sudo) access (to create /dist) and want the files in a place where they can be shared by multiple users. If both of these are true, you can follow this example to put the system files at the default location:

% sudo mkdir -p /dist/m5/system
% cd /dist/m5/system
% sudo tar vxfj <path>/m5_system_2.0b3.tar.bz2
% sudo mv m5_system_2.0b3/* . ; sudo rmdir m5_system_2.0b3/
% sudo chgrp -R <grp> /dist  # where <grp> is a group that contains all the m5 users

In most cases, it's simplest to put the files wherever is convenient and then set M5_PATH to point to them.

Building

gem5 uses the scons build system which is based on python. To build the simulator binary, run scons from the top of the source directory with a target of the form build/<config>/<binary> where <config> is replaced with one of the predefined set of build parameters and <binary> is replaced with one of the possible m5 binary names. The predefined set of parameters determine build-wide configuration settings that affect the behavior, composition, and capabilities of the binary being built. These parameters include the ISA to be supported, the CPU models to be compiled, and the coherence protocol Ruby should use. Several example config files are available in the directory build_opts and it is fairly easy to see what each parameter represents. We'll talk about the build system in more detail later. Valid binary names are gem5.debug, gem5.opt, gem5.fast, and gem5.prof. These binaries all have different properties suggested by their extension. gem5.debug has optimization turned off to make debugging easier in tools like gdb, gem5.opt has optimizations turned on but debug output and asserts left in, gem5.fast removes those debugging tools, and gem5.prof is built to use with gprof. Normally you'll want to use gem5.opt. To build the simulator in syscall emulation mode with ARM support, optimizations turned on, and debugging left in, you would run:

scons build/ARM/gem5.opt

In your source tree, you'd then find a new build/ARM/ directory with the requested gem5.opt in it. For the rest of this chapter we'll assume this is the binary you're using.

See the Build System page for more details on building gem5 binaries.

Running

Now that you've built gem5, it's time to try running it. An gem5 command line is composed of four parts, the binary itself, options for gem5, a configuration script to run, and then finally options for the configuration script. Several example configuration scripts are provided in the “configs/example” directory and are generally pretty powerful. You are encouraged to make your own scripts, but these are a good starting point. The example script we'll use is called se.py and sets up a basic SE mode simulation for us. We'll tell it to run the hello world binary provided in the gem5 source tree.

build/ARM/gem5.opt configs/example/se.py -c tests/test-progs/hello/bin/arm/linux/hello

This builds up a simulated system, tells it to run the binary found at the location specified, and kicks off the simulation. As the binary runs, its output is sent to the console by default and looks like this:

gem5 Simulator System.  http://gem5.org 
gem5 is copyrighted software; use the --copyright option for details.

gem5 compiled Jul 17 2011 19:16:28
gem5 started Jul 17 2011 19:18:16
gem5 executing on zizzer
command line: ./build/ARM/m5.opt configs/example/se.py
Global frequency set at 1000000000000 ticks per second
0: system.remote_gdb.listener: listening for remote gdb #0 on port 7000
**** REAL SIMULATION ****
info: Entering event queue @ 0.  Starting simulation...
Hello world!
hack: be nice to actually delete the event here
Exiting @ tick 3188500 because target called exit()

You can see a lot of output from the simulator itself, but the line “Hello world!” came from the simulated program. Output files generated from the simulation are put in the m5out directory, including statistics in stats.txt.

In this example we didn't provide any options to gem5 itself. If we had, they would have gone on the command line between gem5.opt and se.py. If you'd like to see what command line options are supported, you can pass the --help option to either gem5 or the configuration script. Note that the two groups of options are different, so make sure you keep track of whether they go before or after the configuration script.

See the Running gem5 page for more details on running gem5 simulations.

Asking for help

gem5 has two main mailing lists where you can ask for help or advice. gem5-dev is for developers who are working on the main version of gem5. This is the version that's distributed from the website and most likely what you'll base your own work off of. gem5-users is a larger mailing list and is for people working on their own projects which are not, at least initially, going to be distributed as part of the official version of gem5. Most of the time gem5-users is the right mailing list to use. Most of the people on gem5-dev are also on gem5-users including all the main developers, and in addition many other members of the gem5 community will see your post. That helps you because they might be able to answer your question, and it also helps them because they'll be able to see the answers people send you. To find more information about the mailing lists, to sign up, or to look through archived posts visit Mailing Lists.

Before reporting a problem on the mailing list, please read Reporting Problems

What works

gem5 combines several different ISAs, system modes (SE or FS), CPU models and memory models which all need to work together. Every combination of these may not be fully tested or completely work. The Status Matrix describes the current status of these combinations. Please send an e-mail to the mailing list if a supported combination no longer works, or if you find that a combination works that we're unsure of.