Commit Graph

87 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jake Burkholder
0f1a7e05a2 - Added inlines pmap_is_current, pmap_is_alternate and pmap_set_alternate
for testing and setting the current and alternate address spaces.
- Changed PTDpde and APTDpde to arrays to support multiple page directory
  pages.

ponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-02-25 19:40:21 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
5cd612b27e - Removed UMAXPTDI and UMAXPTEOFF.
- Changed VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS to be defined in terms of PTDPTDI.  In order for
  assumptions about the recursive page table map to work it must be the base
  of the recursive map.  Any pte offset that's not NPTEPG will break these
  assumptions.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-02-24 20:29:52 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
ef49a94104 Previous commit missed a 1 that should be NGPTD, and an NPDEPG that should
be NPDEPTD.  Grumble.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-02-23 22:12:08 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
910548dea7 - Added macros NPGPTD, NBPTD, and NPDEPTD, for dealing with the size of the
page directory.
- Use these instead of the magic constants 1 or PAGE_SIZE where appropriate.
  There are still numerous assumptions that the page directory is exactly
  1 page.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-02-23 21:20:00 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
e29632c9e1 - Added macros PDESHIFT and PTESHIFT, use these instead of magic constants
in locore.
- Removed the macros PTESIZE and PDESIZE, use sizeof instead in C.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-02-23 09:45:50 +00:00
Alan Cox
01a06ce250 The root of the splay tree maintained within the pm_pteobj always refers
to the last accessed pte page.  Thus, the pm_ptphint is redundant and can
be removed.
2003-02-22 23:43:08 +00:00
Alan Cox
8365d52166 o Introduce pmap_page_is_mapped(). Its purpose is to obsolete
the PG_MAPPED flag.
2002-08-05 03:40:28 +00:00
Peter Wemm
f1b665c8fe Revive backed out pmap related changes from Feb 2002. The highlights are:
- It actually works this time, honest!
- Fine grained TLB shootdowns for SMP on i386.  IPI's are very expensive,
  so try and optimize things where possible.
- Introduce ranged shootdowns that can be done as a single IPI.
- PG_G support for i386
- Specific-cpu targeted shootdowns.  For example, there is no sense in
  globally purging the TLB cache for where we are stealing a page from
  the local unshared process on the local cpu.  Use pm_active to track
  this.
- Add some instrumentation for the tlb shootdown code.
- Rip out SMP code from <machine/cpufunc.h>
- Try and fix some very bogus PG_G and PG_PS interactions that were bad
  enough to cause vm86 bios calls to break.  vm86 depended on our existing
  bugs and this was the cause of the VESA panics last time.
- Fix the silly one-line error that caused the 'panic: bad pte' last time.
- Fix a couple of other silly one-line errors that should have caused more
  pain than they did.

Some more work is needed:
- pmap_{zero,copy}_page[_idle].  These can be done without IPI's if we
  have a hook in cpu_switch.
- The IPI handlers need some cleanup.  I have a bogus %ds load that can
  be avoided.
- APTD handling is rather bogus and appears to be a large source of
  global TLB IPI shootdowns for no really good reason.

I see speedups of between 1.5% and ~4% on buildworlds in a while 1 loop.
I expect to see a bigger difference when there is significant pageout
activity or the system otherwise has memory shortages.

I have backed out a few optimizations that I had been using over the last
few days in order to be a little more conservative.  I'll revisit these
again over the next few days as the dust settles.

New option:  DISABLE_PG_G - In case I missed something.
2002-07-12 07:56:11 +00:00
Peter Wemm
fcdc053233 Cosmetic. Remove #if 0 definition of vtophys() - it predates 4MB pages.
Remove avtophys(), it isn't referenced anywhere.
2002-07-08 08:14:28 +00:00
Peter Wemm
db17c6fc07 Tidy up some loose ends.
i386/ia64/alpha - catch up to sparc64/ppc:
- replace pmap_kernel() with refs to kernel_pmap
- change kernel_pmap pointer to (&kernel_pmap_store)
  (this is a speedup since ld can set these at compile/link time)
all platforms (as suggested by jake):
- gc unused pmap_reference
- gc unused pmap_destroy
- gc unused struct pmap.pm_count
(we never used pm_count - we track address space sharing at the vmspace)
2002-04-29 07:43:16 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
b63dc6ad47 Remove __P. 2002-03-20 05:48:58 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d1693e1701 Back out all the pmap related stuff I've touched over the last few days.
There is some unresolved badness that has been eluding me, particularly
affecting uniprocessor kernels.  Turning off PG_G helped (which is a bad
sign) but didn't solve it entirely.  Userland programs still crashed.
2002-02-27 09:51:33 +00:00
Peter Wemm
6bd95d70db Work-in-progress commit syncing up pmap cleanups that I have been working
on for a while:
- fine grained TLB shootdown for SMP on i386
- ranged TLB shootdowns.. eg: specify a range of pages to shoot down with
  a single IPI, since the IPI is very expensive.  Adjust some callers
  that used to trigger this inside tight loops to do a ranged shootdown
  at the end instead.
- PG_G support for SMP on i386 (options ENABLE_PG_G)
- defer PG_G activation till after we decide what we are going to do with
  PSE and the 4MB pages at the start of the kernel.  This should solve
  some rumored strangeness about stale PG_G entries getting stuck
  underneath the 4MB pages.
- add some instrumentation for the fine TLB shootdown
- convert some asm instruction wrappers from functions to inlines.  gcc
  seems to do a fair bit better with this.
- [temporarily!] pessimize the tlb shootdown IPI handlers.  I will fix
  this again shortly.

This has been working fairly well for me for a while, but I have tweaked
it again prior to commit since my last major testing round.  The only
outstanding problem that I know of is PG_G related, which is why there
is an option for it (not on by default for SMP).  I have seen a world
speedups by a few percent (as much as 4 or 5% in one case) but I have
*not* accurately measured this - I am a bit sceptical of these numbers.
2002-02-25 23:49:51 +00:00
Peter Wemm
963131fe0a Tidy up some warnings 2002-02-25 21:42:23 +00:00
Peter Wemm
6a3e90ef2f Some more tidy-up of stray "unsigned" variables instead of p[dt]_entry_t
etc.
2002-02-20 01:05:57 +00:00
Peter Wemm
6729cb8800 Start bringing i386/pmap.c into line with cleanups that were done to
alpha pmap.  In particular -
- pd_entry_t and pt_entry_t are now u_int32_t instead of a pointer.
  This is to enable cleaner PAE and x86-64 support down the track sor
  that we can change the pd_entry_t/pt_entry_t types to 64 bit entities.
- Terminate "unsigned *ptep, pte" with extreme prejudice and use the
  correct pt_entry_t/pd_entry_t types.
- Various other cosmetic changes to match cleanups elsewhere.
- This eliminates a boatload of casts.
- use VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS in place of UPT_MIN_ADDRESS in a couple of places
  where we're testing user address space limits.  Assuming the page tables
  start directly after the end of user space is not a safe assumption.
There is still more to go.
2001-11-17 01:38:32 +00:00
Peter Wemm
f83fbaf22d Introduce a new option, KVA_SPACE, which can be used to reconfigure
the size of the kernel virtual address space relatively painlessly.
Userland will adapt via the exported kernbase symbol.  Increasing
this causes the user part of address space to reduce.
2001-09-21 06:23:03 +00:00
Peter Wemm
083e9ed543 Increase NKPT from 17 to 30. This fixes the 4GB ram boot panic on both
-current and RELENG_4 with GENERIC.

NKPT is the number of initial bootstrap page table pages we create for
the kernel during startup. Once VM is up, we resize it as needed, but
with 4G ram, the size of the vm_page_t structures was pushing it over
the limit.  The fact that trimmed down kernels boot on 4G ram machines
suggests that we were pretty close to the edge.

The "30" is arbitary, but smaller than the 'nkpt' variable on all
machines that I checked.
2000-11-30 01:53:02 +00:00
Tor Egge
d9b05734cc Prepare for a cleanup of pmap module API pollution introduced by the
suggested fix in PR 12378.

Keep track of all existing pmaps independent of existing processes.

This allows for a process to temporarily connect to a different address
space without the risk of missing an update of the original address space if
the kernel grows.

pmap_pinit2() is no longer needed on the i386 platform but is left as a
stub until the alpha pmap code is updated.

PR:		12378
2000-08-16 21:24:44 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
e39756439c Back out the previous change to the queue(3) interface.
It was not discussed and should probably not happen.

Requested by:		msmith and others
2000-05-26 02:09:24 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
740a1973a6 Change the way that the queue(3) structures are declared; don't assume that
the type argument to *_HEAD and *_ENTRY is a struct.

Suggested by:	phk
Reviewed by:	phk
Approved by:	mdodd
2000-05-23 20:41:01 +00:00
Peter Wemm
0385347c1a Implement an optimization of the VM<->pmap API. Pass vm_page_t's directly
to various pmap_*() functions instead of looking up the physical address
and passing that.  In many cases, the first thing the pmap code was doing
was going to a lot of trouble to get back the original vm_page_t, or
it's shadow pv_table entry.

Inspired by: John Dyson's 1998 patches.

Also:
Eliminate pv_table as a seperate thing and build it into a machine
dependent part of vm_page_t.  This eliminates having a seperate set of
structions that shadow each other in a 1:1 fashion that we often went to
a lot of trouble to translate from one to the other. (see above)
This happens to save 4 bytes of physical memory for each page in the
system.  (8 bytes on the Alpha).

Eliminate the use of the phys_avail[] array to determine if a page is
managed (ie: it has pv_entries etc).  Store this information in a flag.
Things like device_pager set it because they create vm_page_t's on the
fly that do not have pv_entries.  This makes it easier to "unmanage" a
page of physical memory (this will be taken advantage of in subsequent
commits).

Add a function to add a new page to the freelist.  This could be used
for reclaiming the previously wasted pages left over from preloaded
loader(8) files.

Reviewed by:	dillon
2000-05-21 12:50:18 +00:00
Peter Wemm
664a31e496 Change #ifdef KERNEL to #ifdef _KERNEL in the public headers. "KERNEL"
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot).  This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago.  More commits to come.
1999-12-29 04:46:21 +00:00
Peter Wemm
7ba4a77549 Reclaim UPAGES_HOLE (8k) that was chopped out of process address space.
The UPAGES have not been there since Jan '96, but the hole was preserved
for BSD/OS binary compatability.  This has been fixed other ways (%ebx
now has a pointer to PS_STRINGS), and the stack is nowhere near where
it used to be so this hack isn't required anymore.
1999-12-11 10:54:06 +00:00
Peter Wemm
1a16554b8f Make pmap_mapdev() deal with non-page-aligned requests.
Add a corresponding pmap_unmapdev() to release the KVM back to kernel_map.
1999-09-11 20:31:32 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c3aac50f28 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
Luoqi Chen
541e018708 Do not setup 4M pdir until all APs are up. 1999-06-23 21:47:24 +00:00
Alan Cox
087e80a934 Put in place the infrastructure for improved UP and SMP TLB management.
In particular, replace the unused field pmap::pm_flag by pmap::pm_active,
which is a bit mask representing which processors have the pmap activated.
(Thus, it is a simple Boolean on UPs.)

Also, eliminate an unnecessary memory reference from cpu_switch()
in swtch.s.

Assisted by:	John S. Dyson <dyson@iquest.net>
Tested by:	Luoqi Chen <luoqi@watermarkgroup.com>,
		Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@critter.freebsd.dk>
1999-04-02 17:59:49 +00:00
David Greenman
8681b974c1 Increased kernel virtual address space to 1GB. NOTE: You MUST have fixed
bootblocks in order to boot the kernel after this! Also note that this
change breaks BSDI BSD/OS compatibility.
Also increased default NKPT to 17 so that FreeBSD can boot on machines
with >=2GB of RAM. Booting on machines with exactly 4GB requires other
patches, not included.
1999-03-11 18:28:46 +00:00
David Greenman
37cd370c97 Correct casts in vtophys and avtophys to be vm_offset_t. 1999-03-02 16:20:39 +00:00
Eivind Eklund
38cc2d9316 Move the declaration of PPro_vmtrr from the header file to pmap.c,
replacing the one in the header file with a definition.  This makes it
easier to work with tools that grok ANSI C only.
1998-11-24 20:25:52 +00:00
Stephen McKay
3006f10bdb Remove bogus comment that teleported in from sys/i386/i386/mp_machdep.c. 1998-06-21 14:08:27 +00:00
John Dyson
f0175db1ee Attempt to set write combining mode for graphics devices. 1998-05-11 01:06:08 +00:00
Bruce Evans
96a73b4063 Moved some extern declarations to header files (unused ones to /dev/null). 1997-11-20 19:30:35 +00:00
John Dyson
de5858ab42 Remove the PMAP_PVLIST conditionals in pmap.*, and another unneeded define. 1997-08-05 00:42:01 +00:00
John Dyson
0a0a85b3e0 Add support for 4MB pages. This includes the .text, .data, .data parts
of the kernel, and also most of the dynamic parts of the kernel.  Additionally,
4MB pages will be allocated for display buffers as appropriate (only.)

The 4MB support for SMP isn't complete, but doesn't interfere with operation
either.
1997-07-17 04:34:03 +00:00
Peter Wemm
b3196e4b9f Preliminary support for per-cpu data pages.
This eliminates a lot of #ifdef SMP type code.  Things like _curproc reside
in a data page that is unique on each cpu, eliminating the expensive macros
like:    #define curproc (SMPcurproc[cpunumber()])

There are some unresolved bootstrap and address space sharing issues at
present, but Steve is waiting on this for other work.  There is still some
strictly temporary code present that isn't exactly pretty.

This is part of a larger change that has run into some bumps, this part is
standalone so it should be safe.  The temporary code goes away when the
full idle cpu support is finished.

Reviewed by: fsmp, dyson
1997-06-22 16:04:22 +00:00
Peter Wemm
477a642cee Man the liferafts! Here comes the long awaited SMP -> -current merge!
There are various options documented in i386/conf/LINT, there is more to
come over the next few days.

The kernel should run pretty much "as before" without the options to
activate SMP mode.

There are a handful of known "loose ends" that need to be fixed, but
have been put off since the SMP kernel is in a moderately good condition
at the moment.

This commit is the result of the tinkering and testing over the last 14
months by many people.  A special thanks to Steve Passe for implementing
the APIC code!
1997-04-26 11:46:25 +00:00
Peter Wemm
a0c3795f19 Use UPAGES_HOLE instead of UPAGES in case it's changed some time.
Rename the PT* index KSTK* #defines to UMAX*, since we don't have a kernel
stack there any more..

These are used to calculate VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS and USRSTACK, and really
do not want to be changed with UPAGES since BSD/OS 2.x binary compatability
depends on it.
1997-04-07 09:30:22 +00:00
Peter Wemm
6875d25465 Back out part 1 of the MCFH that changed $Id$ to $FreeBSD$. We are not
ready for it yet.
1997-02-22 09:48:43 +00:00
Jordan K. Hubbard
1130b656e5 Make the long-awaited change from $Id$ to $FreeBSD$
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.

Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore.  This update would have been
insane otherwise.
1997-01-14 07:20:47 +00:00
John Dyson
8de30f117f Pmap_resident_count was mistakenly removed from pmap.h, thereby
disabling the RSS listing in ps and ^T.  This commit re-inserts
the macro defn.
1996-10-13 03:14:57 +00:00
John Dyson
9d3fbbb5f4 Performance optimizations. One of which was meant to go in before the
previous snap.  Specifically, kern_exit and kern_exec now makes a
call into the pmap module to do a very fast removal of pages from the
address space.  Additionally, the pmap module now updates the PG_MAPPED
and PG_WRITABLE flags.  This is an optional optimization, but helpful
on the X86.
1996-10-12 21:35:25 +00:00
Bruce Evans
da2186afa3 Cleaned up:
- fixed a sloppy common-style declaration.
- removed an unused macro.
- moved once-used macros to the one file where they are used.
- removed unused forward struct declarations.
- removed __pure.
- declared inline functions as inline in their prototype as well
  as in theire definition (gcc unfortunately allows the prototype
  to be inconsistent).
- staticized.
1996-10-12 20:36:15 +00:00
John Dyson
b8e251a56d Improve the scalability of certain pmap operations. 1996-09-08 16:57:53 +00:00
John Dyson
67bf686897 Backed out the recent changes/enhancements to the VM code. The
problem with the 'shell scripts' was found, but there was a 'strange'
problem found with a 486 laptop that we could not find.  This commit
backs the code back to 25-jul, and will be re-entered after the snapshot
in smaller (more easily tested) chunks.
1996-07-30 03:08:57 +00:00
John Dyson
4f4d35edf0 This commit is meant to solve a couple of VM system problems or
performance issues.

	1) The pmap module has had too many inlines, and so the
	   object file is simply bigger than it needs to be.
	   Some common code is also merged into subroutines.
	2) Removal of some *evil* PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE macro calls.
	   Unfortunately, a few have needed to be added also.
	   The removal caused the need for more vm_page_lookups.
	   I added lookup hints to minimize the need for the
	   page table lookup operations.
	3) Removal of some bogus performance improvements, that
	   mostly made the code more complex (tracking individual
	   page table page updates unnecessarily).  Those improvements
	   actually hurt 386 processors perf (not that people who
	   worry about perf use 386 processors anymore :-)).
	4) Changed pv queue manipulations/structures to be TAILQ's.
	5) The pv queue code has had some performance problems since
	   day one.  Some significant scalability issues are resolved
	   by threading the pv entries from the pmap AND the physical
	   address instead of just the physical address.  This makes
	   certain pmap operations run much faster.  This does
	   not affect most micro-benchmarks, but should help loaded system
	   performance *significantly*.  DG helped and came up with most
	   of the solution for this one.
	6) Most if not all pmap bit operations follow the pattern:
		pmap_test_bit();
		pmap_clear_bit();
	   That made for twice the necessary pv list traversal.   The
	   pmap interface now supports only pmap_tc_bit type operations:
	   pmap_[test/clear]_modified, pmap_[test/clear]_referenced.
	   Additionally, the modified routine now takes a vm_page_t arg
	   instead of a phys address.  This eliminates a PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE
	   operation.
	7) Several rewrites of routines that contain redundant code to
	   use common routines, so that there is a greater likelihood of
	   keeping the cache footprint smaller.
1996-07-27 03:24:10 +00:00
Bruce Evans
87bc5d1973 Removed unnecessary forward declarations of incomplete structs. 1996-06-08 11:21:19 +00:00
John Dyson
b18bfc3da7 This set of commits to the VM system does the following, and contain
contributions or ideas from Stephen McKay <syssgm@devetir.qld.gov.au>,
Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>, David Greenman <davidg@freebsd.org> and me:

	More usage of the TAILQ macros.  Additional minor fix to queue.h.
	Performance enhancements to the pageout daemon.
		Addition of a wait in the case that the pageout daemon
		has to run immediately.
		Slightly modify the pageout algorithm.
	Significant revamp of the pmap/fork code:
		1) PTE's and UPAGES's are NO LONGER in the process's map.
		2) PTE's and UPAGES's reside in their own objects.
		3) TOTAL elimination of recursive page table pagefaults.
		4) The page directory now resides in the PTE object.
		5) Implemented pmap_copy, thereby speeding up fork time.
		6) Changed the pv entries so that the head is a pointer
		   and not an entire entry.
		7) Significant cleanup of pmap_protect, and pmap_remove.
		8) Removed significant amounts of machine dependent
		   fork code from vm_glue.  Pushed much of that code into
		   the machine dependent pmap module.
		9) Support more completely the reuse of already zeroed
		   pages (Page table pages and page directories) as being
		   already zeroed.
	Performance and code cleanups in vm_map:
		1) Improved and simplified allocation of map entries.
		2) Improved vm_map_copy code.
		3) Corrected some minor problems in the simplify code.
	Implemented splvm (combo of splbio and splimp.)  The VM code now
		seldom uses splhigh.
	Improved the speed of and simplified kmem_malloc.
	Minor mod to vm_fault to avoid using pre-zeroed pages in the case
		of objects with backing objects along with the already
		existant condition of having a vnode.  (If there is a backing
		object, there will likely be a COW...  With a COW, it isn't
		necessary to start with a pre-zeroed page.)
	Minor reorg of source to perhaps improve locality of ref.
1996-05-18 03:38:05 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
5084d10dd0 Move atdevbase out of locore.s and into machdep.c
Macroize locore.s' page table setup even more, now it's almost readable.
Rename PG_U to PG_A (so that I can...)
Rename PG_u to PG_U.  "PG_u" was just too ugly...
Remove some unused vars in pmap.c
Remove PG_KR and PG_KW
Remove SSIZE
Remove SINCR
Remove BTOPKERNBASE

This concludes my spring cleaning, modulus any bug fixes for messes I
have made on the way.

(Funny to be back here in pmap.c, that's where my first significant
contribution to 386BSD was... :-)
1996-05-02 22:25:18 +00:00