I'm trying to learn the RISC-V ISA. Is there a way to simulate RISC-V assembly code just like in MARS for the MIPS ISA?
It sounds like you're looking for an instruction-level RISC-V simulator with an integrated front end that allows you to interactively edit machine code as well as view and manipulate the CPU state. I don't know of any tool for RISC-V that is as tightly integrated as MARS, but you can achieve a close approximation by combining some existing RISC-V tools, namely:
- An ISA simulator (Spike or QEMU)
- A RISC-V toolchain with assembler and compiler (RISC-V GNU toolchain)
- A debugger (gdb, included in the above toolchain)
- A debugger front end (gdb tui mode, DDD, gdbgui, or others)
I have had luck using QEMU + gdb or gdbgui as follows:
$ qemu-system-riscv32 -S -s -kernel /path/to/myprog.elf -nographic
Then in another console:
$ riscv64-unknown-elf-gdb /path/to/myprog.elf
(gdb) target remote localhost:1234
or
$ gdbgui -r -n -g /path/to/riscv64-unknown-elf-gdb /path/to/myprog.elf
NOTE: I notice that the gdb built under the riscv toolchain does not include support for tui mode by default.
NOTE2: QEMU is actually more than an ISA simulator -- it simulates various specific RISC-V target boards and their attendant peripherals.
Ripes : A graphical 5-stage RISC-V pipeline simulator & assembly editor
rv8 : RISC-V simulator for x86-64
risc-v-simulator : RISC-V assembler/simulator with GUI
RiscVAssemblerSuite : RISC V Assembler, Disassembler, and Simulation Environment
TinyEMU : TinyEMU is a system emulator for the RISC-V and x86 architectures
While using Spike and the RISC-V GNU toolchain certainly works and it is far from ideal for learning the ISA.
I actually spent a summer porting MARS for RISC-V because there wasn't a good option for beginners to use. RARS should be exactly what you are looking for.
A few things were removed from MARS for various reasons, but I do keep an eye on the repo so if there is an improvement missing, just make an issue.
If you want a more high-level tool with a graphical interface, you can have a look at a small tool my university is using for teaching riscv. It comes with an inbuild assembler and simulator, which displays the content of all registers, memory and the state of a minimal riscv-pipeline for each cycle.
Unfortunatly the project is pretty old and the github-repo is not really up-to-date, but its still a convienient way to start with riscv.
Here is a great RISC-V simulator that was introduced in our computer organization class BRISC-V Simulator
I use QEMU for emulation and spike, this is a good chain to test almost everything situation. QEMU also can run Debian.
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