On Mon, Jul 16, 2001 at 10:39:02PM -0400, Greg Johnson wrote: > CPU revision is: 00000422 That's a really old and buggy CPU. Kevin Kissel may correct me but I think it's the first series shipped to customers. Among the fun bugs: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4. R4000PC, R4000SC: An instruction sequence which contains a load which causes a data cache miss and a jump, where the jump instruction is that last instruction in the page and the delay slot of the jump is not currently mapped, causes the exception vector to be overwritten by the jump address. The R4000 will use the jump address as the exception vector. Example: lw <---- data cache miss noop <---- one or two Noops jr <---- last instruction in the page (jump or branch in- struction) --------------<---- page boundary noop Workaround: Jump and branch instructions should never be in the last loca- tion of a page. 11. R4000PC, R4000SC: In the case: lw rA, (rn) noop (or any non-conflicting instruction) lw rn, (rA) (where the address in rA causes a TLB refill) --------------------> end of page page not mapped where rn and RA are general purpose registers r0 through r31 This code sequence causes the second load instruction to slip due to a load use interlock. When the R4000 crosses the page boundary after the lw, it vectors to 0x8000 0000 and later causes an instruction cache miss. After the instruction cache miss is complete the LW causes another TLB refill. This should vector to 0x8000 0000 but instead goes to 0x8000 0180. 14 (Just an update of erratum 4) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- There's more but I don't want to paste the whole errata document in here and above bugs alone without the respective workarounds in kernel and tools are grave bugs. Ralf