diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/assembly/1030807')
| -rw-r--r-- | results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/assembly/1030807 | 15 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/assembly/1030807 b/results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/assembly/1030807 deleted file mode 100644 index 61e145e35..000000000 --- a/results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/assembly/1030807 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,15 +0,0 @@ -<think> -Alright, let's try to classify this bug report properly. The user mentioned that in QEMU, the host bridge is accepting 1-, 2-, and 4-byte I/O accesses, which breaks Plan9 guests expecting Mode1 behavior where only 4-byte accesses are allowed. - -The issue revolves around how the PCI host bridge handles different byte sizes for I/O transactions. According to the spec, when in Mode1, any non-DWORD (i.e., less than 4 bytes) access should be ignored. However, QEMU isn't doing that right now—it's processing all these accesses. - -Looking at the code references provided, it seems the problem is within how QEMU's host bridge is implemented. Specifically, in hw/piic_pci.c and ioport.c, the current setup allows for 1-, 2-, and 4-byte reads/writes, which isn't compliant with Mode1 requirements. - -The user also pointed out that this affects Plan9 guests because their kernel expects that only 4-byte writes to the config space are processed, while others are ignored. QEMU's behavior causes the kernel to fallback to Mode2, leading to no visible PCI devices in the guest. - -So, the core issue is with how I/O accesses are handled by the host bridge in terms of byte size compliance. This seems related to assembly lowering or translation, as it's about correctly interpreting and handling different I/O access sizes at the hardware level within QEMU. - -Given that, the most fitting category from the options provided would be "assembly". It involves incorrect semantic mapping (mistranslation) but since the issue is more about how I/O operations are handled at a lower level, which ties into assembly-level instructions and their translation in QEMU's implementation. -</think> - -assembly \ No newline at end of file |