Difference between revisions of "Running gem5"
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− | The script section of the command line begins with a path to your script file and includes any options that you'd like to pass to that script. Since M5 runs the script in a way similar to python itself (i.e. it's similar to running "python myscript.py [ options ]"), you can pass your script options on the command line to make your script flexible. The script file documentation page ([[ | + | The script section of the command line begins with a path to your script file and includes any options that you'd like to pass to that script. Since M5 runs the script in a way similar to python itself (i.e. it's similar to running "python myscript.py [ options ]"), you can pass your script options on the command line to make your script flexible. The script file documentation page ([[Simulation Scripts Explained]]) has details on how to write scripts for M5, and the [[Simulation Scripts Explained#Options|Options]] section of that page gives a bit of detail on how your scripts can have their own options. |
Revision as of 09:17, 20 August 2006
The m5 command line has two parts: (1) the simulator section which includes the simulator executable and its options, and (2) the script section, which includes the script file and its options. The usage is:
% m5 [m5 options] <script.py> [script options]
The m5 executable is any of the version you may have built (See Compiling M5) such as ALPHA_SE/m5.debug, and the [m5 options] part are all of the options that the simulator itself understands. Running m5 with the "-h" flag prints a help messag that includes all of the supported simulator options. Here's a snippet:
% build/ALPHA_SE/m5.debug -h Usage ===== m5.debug [m5 options] script.py [script options] Copyright (c) 2001-2006 The Regents of The University of Michigan All Rights Reserved options ======= --version show program's version number and exit --help, -h show this help message and exit --authors, -A Show author information --copyright, -C Show full copyright information --readme, -R Show the readme --release-notes, -N Show the release notes --outdir=DIR, -d DIR Set the output directory to DIR [Default: .] --interactive, -i Invoke the interactive interpreter after running the script --pdb Invoke the python debugger before running the script --path=PATH[:PATH], -p PATH[:PATH] Prepend PATH to the system path when invoking the script --quiet, -q Reduce verbosity --verbose, -v Increase verbosity ...
The script section of the command line begins with a path to your script file and includes any options that you'd like to pass to that script. Since M5 runs the script in a way similar to python itself (i.e. it's similar to running "python myscript.py [ options ]"), you can pass your script options on the command line to make your script flexible. The script file documentation page (Simulation Scripts Explained) has details on how to write scripts for M5, and the Options section of that page gives a bit of detail on how your scripts can have their own options.