- Variants/benchmarks can now be selected with wildcards
(--variant/--benchmark), and can be excluded from pruning
(--variant-exclude/--benchmark-exclude).
- The database clearing step can be skipped with --no-delete to
avoid deadlocks with concurrent DB accesses.
- Internals:
* injection_instr / injection_instr_absolute moves from
fspgroup to fsppilot. fsppilot now contains all information we
need for running FI experiments.
TODO: generic campaign needs to be modified, too.
* Force MySQL to use an efficient join order (STRAIGHT_JOIN).
Change-Id: I6241ea2de9da1a1e709fae6374df4fc06ef262a0
- Import timing information from traces that were recorded with timing.
- Allow restricting import to a memory map ("vertical" restriction).
- Proper fault-space right-margin handling.
- Cleanups, data-type usage, etc.
Change-Id: I7a49e8e9e49894c458e884bfc234f36b9ba8b130
TODO: Showing timing or extended trace information should be configurable
with a commandline switch later.
Change-Id: I72ac95ddd1d54dfef87f212ec5afa30b2ed9a6ad
This adds an interface for a backend-specific notion of time, e.g. CPU
cycles since simulator start, and a concrete implementation for the
Bochs backend. This is needed to record CPU idle times (e.g., HLT
instruction), and for target backends capable of more timing-accurate
execution.
This change also modifies the tracing plugin to add the time to all
trace events.
Change-Id: I93ac1d54c07f32b0b8f84f333417741d8e9c8288
The dciao-kernelstructs experiment does a trace imported by the
DCiAOKernelImporter:
bin/import-trace -t trace.pb -i DCiAOKernelImporter --elf-file app.elf
Pruned by the basic method:
bin/prune-trace
and does CiAO fault injection experiments, where the results are
stored in the database.
Change-Id: I485dc2e5097b3ebaf354241f474ee3d317213707
The wrapper builds a temporary bochsrc and sets an FAIL_STATEDIR
environment variable to a temporary directory. FAIL_ELF_PATH is also
set in regard to the command line interface.
Change-Id: I647c6eb3a91ae22847958ca30ede6e09519fba04
The DatabaseCampaign interacts with the MySQL tables that are created
by the import-trace and prune-trace tools. It does offer all
unfinished experiment pilots from the database to the
fail-clients. Those clients send back a (by the experiment) defined
protobuf message as a result. The custom protobuf message does have to
need the form:
import "DatabaseCampaignMessage.proto";
message ExperimentMsg {
required DatabaseCampaignMessage fsppilot = 1;
repeated group Result = 2 {
// custom fields
required int32 bitoffset = 1;
optional int32 result = 2;
}
}
The DatabaseCampaignMessage is the pilot identifier from the
database. For each of the repeated result entries a row in a table is
allocated. The structure of this table is constructed (by protobuf
reflection) from the description of the message. Each field in the
Result group becomes a column in the result table. For the given
example it would be:
CREATE TABLE result_ExperimentMessage(
pilot_id INT,
bitoffset INT NOT NULL,
result INT,
PRIMARY_KEY(pilot_id)
)
Change-Id: I28fb5488e739d4098b823b42426c5760331027f8
This tool creates the fault-space pruning pilot and group
entries. Those are used by the generic campaign to do fault
experiments.
Currently prune-trace only implements conventional def/use pruning
(--prune-method "basic").
Change-Id: I1dfb431e3b1d3cd2ee891a49a3b6ac01210be11f
The import tool does support the following import strategies:
- BasicImporter: generates def-use equivalence classes for read and
write memory accesses
- DCiAOKernelImporter: generates equivalence classes for read access in
the ciao kernel space.
Change-Id: I8960561d3e14dcf5dffa3ff7a59b61a5e8f7e719
The full-tracing plugin was used in the DSN paper. It additionally
traces the data that was accessed/written on a memory access and the
contents of some CPU registers.
Change-Id: I61f5230699009ce523aba341985b98148160556d