1 unstable release

0.1.0 Aug 14, 2021

#107 in #processor

Download history 3/week @ 2024-02-19 22/week @ 2024-02-26 8/week @ 2024-03-04 14/week @ 2024-03-11 4/week @ 2024-03-25 32/week @ 2024-04-01

52 downloads per month
Used in 3 crates (via ppc750cl)

GPL-3.0-or-later

9KB
176 lines

ppc750cl

Rust tools for working with the PowerPC 750CL family of processors.

Rust crates

rustup components add rustfmt
cargo run --package ppc750cl-genisa
cargo build --release

Python module

python -m venv env
source ./env/bin/activate
pip install maturin
maturin build -m ./disasm-py/Cargo.toml

Install module in dev env

maturin develop -m ./disasm-py/Cargo.toml
python
>>> import ppc750cl
>>> ins = ppc750cl.Ins(addr=0x80006969, code=0x10400420)
>>> str(ins)
'ps_merge00 f2, f0, f0'
>>> ins.fields()
[('frD', 2), ('frA', 0), ('frB', 0)]
>>> ins.frD
2

Instruction Set

For those unfamiliar with PowerPC, here are some basics.

  • PowerPC 7xx is a family of RISC CPUs produced from 1997 to 2012.
    • They operate with 32-bit words and every instruction is 32-bits wide.
  • This project focuses (only) on compatibility with the PowerPC 750CL.
    • This chip is famously packaged as codename "Broadway" for the Nintendo Wii.
    • Its predecessor PowerPC 750CXe is used in the Nintendo GameCube.
    • It adds a "paired-singles" SIMD unit and a bunch of other instructions.

isa.yaml

The file isa.yaml contains a full definition of the PowerPC 750CL instruction set.

It powers the disassembler, assembler, and Rust/Python bindings code analysis tools.

Similarly to LLVM TableGen, the program ppc750cl-genisa generates a Rust file implementing an instruction decoder.

Safety & Correctness

  • This project does not use unsafe Rust code outside of testing utils.
  • The disassembler has been fuzzed over all ~4.29 billion possible instructions (via ppc750cl-fuzz).
  • It is safe to run the disassembler over untrusted byte arrays.
  • However no guarantees on correctness are made (yet). Expect bugs.

Performance

  • Performance isn't great but acceptable.
  • Disassembling & printing: 600k insn/s (2.4 MB/s)
  • Disassembling only: 6M insn/s (24 MB/s)

Dependencies

~1.5MB
~33K SLoC