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Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/mistranslation/1339')
| -rw-r--r-- | results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/mistranslation/1339 | 14 |
1 files changed, 14 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/mistranslation/1339 b/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/mistranslation/1339 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0047fea8d --- /dev/null +++ b/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/mistranslation/1339 @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +<think> +Okay, so I'm trying to classify this bug report for QEMU into one of the given categories. Let's see what the problem is. + +The user provided a bug report where running specific RISC-V assembly instructions causes an assertion failure and a segmentation fault. The code in question uses `vsetvli` and `vfncvt.rtz.x.f.w`. When these are executed, QEMU crashes with a segfault due to an assertion failing in the decode_save_opc function. + +Looking at the categories: mistranslation is about incorrect mapping from source to target, which could happen during user-mode assembly lowering. The error seems related to instruction decoding, so it's likely a translation issue. Other possible categories like device or network don't seem relevant here since the problem is with instruction handling rather than hardware devices or networking. + +So, the main issue appears to be in how QEMU translates these RISC-V instructions into the target architecture's IR or machine code. This fits under 'mistranslation' as it involves the assembly lowering process where QEMU might mishandle the vector instructions. +</think> + +The bug is related to incorrect handling of specific RISC-V instructions during translation, pointing to a mistranslation issue. + +**Answer:** +mistranslation \ No newline at end of file |