MechaCat02 27d3608174 fix(kernel): KRNBUG-D08 — wall-clock v-sync under --parallel
The synthetic v-sync ticker used a per-instruction proxy
(VSYNC_INSTR_PERIOD = 150 k) tuned for ~10 MIPS lockstep
throughput → 60 Hz. Audit M11 observed this drifts under
`--parallel`: with 6 worker threads sharing the kernel mutex,
the dispatcher executes more PPC instructions per tick
callback, so the accumulator never crosses 150 k. Result:
~629 v-syncs/100M lockstep → ~2 v-syncs/100M --parallel.

Hybrid solution preserves lockstep determinism (which the
goldens depend on) while fixing --parallel:

* `tick_vsync_instr(instr_count)` — legacy instruction-count
  ticker, used by lockstep. Bit-stable across runs.

* `tick_vsync_wallclock()` — new Instant-based ticker. Fires
  `floor(elapsed / VSYNC_PERIOD)` v-syncs since the anchor
  and advances the anchor by that many full periods (no
  lazy backlog). Capped at INTERRUPT_QUEUE_CAP per call so a
  forward-jumping clock can't overflow the FIFO.

* `KernelState.parallel_active` flag set at startup from
  `--parallel` / `XENIA_PARALLEL=1`. Read by `coord_pre_round`
  in main.rs to choose between the two tickers.

Verification:

* cargo test --workspace --release: 561 passing (+3 new
  wall-clock tests vs prior 558 baseline).
* lockstep -n 100M --stable-digest: BIT-IDENTICAL to
  pre-Phase-3 baseline. interrupts_delivered preserved at
  ~630 (was ~629 pre-fix).
* --parallel --reservations-table -n 30M: interrupts_delivered
  rose from ~2 to 17. (FIFO INTERRUPT_QUEUE_CAP=4 still caps
  burst delivery; that's a separate bottleneck — addressed
  by raising cap when --parallel queue depth becomes the
  next blocker.)

Trade-off: --parallel runs are non-deterministic at the
v-sync rate by design (per audit M05 PPCBUG-703 already).
Lockstep stays bit-identical, so the `sylpheed_n*m.json`
goldens are untouched.

Audit IDs: KRNBUG-D08 (closed).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-03 17:34:30 +02:00

xenia-rs

Rust reimplementation of the Xbox 360 emulator xenia, focused on reverse-engineering and preservation rather than full-speed play. The initial target is Project Sylpheed — Arc of Deception; getting the title disassembled, traced, and far enough into its init path to understand its engine.

Heavy cross-reference to xenia-canary for CPU context setup, kernel export behavior, and XEX loading semantics.

Status

  • XEX loader — XEX2 header parsing, LZX decompression, AES decryption, PE section parsing.
  • VFS / XISO — XGD2 dual-layer disc images (with the 0x0FD90000 partition offset).
  • PPC interpreter — 200+ opcodes, PowerPC 32/64-bit GPR/FPR, VMX128 decoding.
  • Static analyzer — function discovery (prolog/epilog heuristics), cross-references, labels, save/restore helper detection, assembly text + SQLite database output.
  • Kernel HLE — minimal subset driving Project Sylpheed: ~170 xboxkrnl + xam exports (critical sections, events, TLS, virtual memory, Vd stubs, XAM input/user/content).
  • Debugger — in-memory step/break, SQLite execution + import-call + branch tracing.

Not yet: GPU (xenos/xe-shader), APU audio, HID, kernel scheduler, full threading, exception delivery.

Workspace

crates/
  xenia-types       # shared primitive types, bitflags
  xenia-memory      # guest memory, paged allocator, page table
  xenia-cpu         # PPC decoder, interpreter, context
  xenia-xex         # XEX2 loader, PE parser, LZX, AES
  xenia-vfs         # XISO / disc-image reader
  xenia-kernel      # HLE kernel state, exports, XAM
  xenia-gpu         # (stub) Xenos command processor
  xenia-apu         # (stub) XAudio
  xenia-hid         # (stub) XInput
  xenia-debugger    # in-memory trace, breakpoints, step modes
  xenia-analysis    # function/xref analysis, assembly formatter, SQLite DbWriter
  xenia-app         # `xenia-rs` CLI binary

CLI

Build:

cargo build --release

The binary xenia-rs accepts XEX2 files or ISO / XISO disc images as input (the loader auto-detects discs and extracts default.xex).

info / browse / disasm

Quick header / disc / first-N-instructions inspection. See --help.

extract — unpack PE + metadata

xenia-rs extract <xex-or-iso> [-o <out-dir>] [--db <sqlite-path>]

Writes <name>.pe (decompressed/decrypted PE image) and <name>.xex.json (header metadata). With --db, also emits a SQLite database containing the base tables: metadata, sections, imports.

dis — full disassembly

xenia-rs dis <xex-or-iso> [-o <asm-file>] [--db <sqlite-path>] [--quiet]

Runs function + cross-reference analysis and produces:

  • assembly text to stdout or -o <file> (unless --quiet)
  • optional SQLite DB with the base tables + disasm tables: functions, labels, instructions, xrefs

exec — interpret with tracing

xenia-rs exec <xex-or-iso> [-n <max-instrs>] [--db <sqlite-path>]
             [--trace-instructions] [--trace-imports] [--trace-branches]

Loads the title, initializes CPU state per xenia-canary, intercepts import thunks with HLE kernel calls, and interprets from the entry point. Without -n, runs until halt/fault. With --db, produces a DB that is a superset of dis --db plus opt-in trace tables:

flag table rows
--trace-instructions exec_trace one row per interpreted instruction (PC, r3/r4, LR, SP)
--trace-imports import_calls one row per kernel/XAM call (module, ordinal, args)
--trace-branches branch_trace taken branches classified as call/return/jump/branch

Cumulative DB layering

Each command's DB is a superset of the previous. A single xenia-rs exec <iso> --db full.db --trace-instructions --trace-imports --trace-branches produces the full picture in one pass — base tables, complete static disassembly, and runtime traces correlatable by address/cycle.

Performance knobs

  • XENIA_DB_BATCH_SIZE — rows per streaming commit / trace-buffer flush (default 100_000). Lower values reduce memory use; higher values reduce fsync overhead on slow disks.

The DB writer uses journal_mode=OFF, synchronous=OFF, locking_mode=EXCLUSIVE and commits in batches; no ANALYZE is run at finalize. Indices are created after bulk insertion with progress messages.

Example queries

-- Top 20 kernel functions called during early init
SELECT name, COUNT(*) FROM import_calls GROUP BY name ORDER BY 2 DESC LIMIT 20;

-- All basic-block leaders (targets of taken branches) not already labelled
SELECT DISTINCT bt.target
FROM branch_trace bt LEFT JOIN labels l ON l.address = bt.target
WHERE l.address IS NULL;

-- Correlate a traced call site with its static disassembly
SELECT et.cycle, i.disasm, i.ext_disasm
FROM exec_trace et JOIN instructions i ON i.address = et.address
WHERE et.address = 0x824AB748 ORDER BY et.cycle;

License

BSD-3-Clause, matching upstream xenia.

Description
No description provided
Readme 3.5 MiB
Languages
Rust 98.2%
WGSL 1.8%