Xtr device, 22 xtr device – AMD SimNow Simulator 4.4.4 User Manual
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AMD Confidential
User Manual
September 12
h
, 2008
106
Chapter 7: Device Configuration
7.22 XTR Device
XTR is a trace record and playback mechanism that is instrumental for applications that 
are not dependent on the specific version of the CPU. An XTR trace contains the 
interaction of the processor with the rest of the system in an XML based log file. The 
XTR trace file can be played back and could be used to simulate behavior of one or more 
devices within a system, which in turn may be used to analyze the CPU's performance or 
to perform conformance analysis between various revs and models of the CPU. XTR may 
also be used in studies where the behavior of some devices needed but the use of an 
actual device or its software model is either difficult of impossible due to various 
constraints. 
 
XTR has two files, a binary file which has the memory dump of the system and an XML 
based text file which contains the log of the events or messages that go in and out a non-
coherent port of the Northbridge, including the DMA signals from devices on the (host‟s) 
secondary bus to the DIMM. XTR playback mechanism essentially replaces all the 
devices including the Northbridge and downwards and feeds the processor with the data 
present in the XTR XML file. The structure of both binary file and XML file is discussed 
below. 
 
XTR can be used both in uni-processor (XTR-UP) and multi-processor (XTR-MP) 
configurations. However, currently only XTR-UP is supported while XTR-MP is under 
development. 
 
There are two modes of XTR, XTR Record and XTR Playback. The simulator supports 
both modes and one mode does not necessitate the other. The simulator could be used to 
record XTR traces only or playback XTR traces generated from other sources as far as 
the XTR specification is followed correctly (see Section 7.22.4, “Limitations”, on page 
113). 
 
An XTR XML file contains Initialization Data, Events and Instructions. XTR 
Initialization data stores the state of CPU just before XTR recording is initiated. This data 
is used to initialize the CPU and memory parameters during Playback (the memory itself 
is initialized from the contents of the binary file). Any register that does not have 
corresponding initialization data in XTR XML file will be initialized with zero. XTR 
events fall into two categories: 
 
Dormant Events, which record an event occurrence but do not trigger an event
during playback.
Active events that are recorded in XTR file and are actively triggered during
playback.
 
IOR, IOW, MEMR, MEMW, RDMSR are examples of dormant events and INTR, APIC, 
DMAW, EOT are examples of Active events. XTR Instructions are commands that are 
injected in the XTR trace to give special instructions during XTR playback. FJMP (Force 
Jump) is an XTR Instruction. 
