A lot of utility code was just being imported willy-nilly from one
package to another. This moves the common code into util to make things
more sensible. The code moved were
* The AsyncQueue and AsyncDecoupledCrossing from junctions.
* All of the code in rocket's util.scala
* The BlackBox asynchronous reset registers from uncore.tilelink2
* The implicit definitions from uncore.util
A chip's power-up sequence, or awake-from-sleep sequence, may wish to
set the reset PC based upon dynamic properties, e.g., the settings of
external pins. Support this by passing the reset vector to the Coreplex.
ExampleTop simply hard-wires the reset vector, as was the case before.
Additionally, allow MTVEC to *not* be reset. In most cases, including
riscv-tests, pk, and bbl, overriding MTVEC is one of the first things
that the boot sequence does. So the reset value is superfluous.
Rocket's QoR has improved enough that the FMAs are on the critical
path. This change seems to keep the integer pipeline's logic
paths balanced with the FPU.
The old value 62 seems to have been a typo introduced over 2 years ago
in commit 63bd0b9d2a. The intent was to
fit the dhrystone working set (rofl) which the new value of 40 does.
They fit in the same part of the address space as DRAM would be, and
are coherent (because they are not cacheable).
They are currently limited to single cores without DRAM. We intend
to lift both restrictions, probably when we add support for
heterogeneous tiles.
This usually shouldn't be used in Tiles that are meant to be P&R'd once
and multiply instantiated, as their RTL would no longer be homogeneous.
However, it is useful for conditionalizing RTL generation for
heterogeneous tiles.
The previous approach used ex_reg_valid to determine whether to
source data from the FPU or RoCC. Thus, when the RoCC was not
present, it was still creating muxes. Using ex_cp_valid instead
gets rid of them.