Commit Graph

169 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David E. O'Brien
b386eb9139 style(9) 2008-09-23 14:25:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
37e9511fcb Expose a new public routine intr_event_execute_handlers() which executes
all the non-filter handlers attached to an interrupt event.  This can be
used by device drivers which multiplex their interrupt onto the interrupt
handlers for child devices.
2008-09-15 22:19:44 +00:00
Kip Macy
6205924afd Submit a band-aid for interrupt set up race.
MFC after:	1 month
2008-08-22 23:24:53 +00:00
Kip Macy
2976b312a1 revert change from local tree 2008-07-18 07:07:57 +00:00
Kip Macy
4af83c8cff import vendor fixes to cxgb 2008-07-18 06:12:31 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
04a58b9d5f Remove an unneeded error variable to make clear that if reaching
the end of the function we never return an error.
2008-06-29 18:26:07 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
8df78c41d6 - Make SCHED_STATS more generic by adding a wrapper to create the
variables and sysctl nodes.
 - In reset walk the children of kern_sched_stats and reset the counters
   via the oid_arg1 pointer.  This allows us to add arbitrary counters to
   the tree and still reset them properly.
 - Define a set of switch types to be passed with flags to mi_switch().
   These types are named SWT_*.  These types correspond to SCHED_STATS
   counters and are automatically handled in this way.
 - Make the new SWT_ types more specific than the older switch stats.
   There are now stats for idle switches, remote idle wakeups, remote
   preemption ithreads idling, etc.
 - Add switch statistics for ULE's pickcpu algorithm.  These stats include
   how much migration there is, how often affinity was successful, how
   often threads were migrated to the local cpu on wakeup, etc.

Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-04-17 04:20:10 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
9b33b154b5 - Add the interrupt vector number to intr_event_create so MI code can
lookup hard interrupt events by number.  Ignore the irq# for soft intrs.
 - Add support to cpuset for binding hardware interrupts.  This has the
   side effect of binding any ithread associated with the hard interrupt.
   As per restrictions imposed by MD code we can only bind interrupts to
   a single cpu presently.  Interrupts can be 'unbound' by binding them
   to all cpus.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-04-11 03:26:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
8aa9e82e67 Move INTR_FILTER from opt_global.h to its own header. 2008-04-05 20:13:15 +00:00
John Baldwin
1ee1b68792 Add a MI intr_event_handle() routine for the non-INTR_FILTER case. This
allows all the INTR_FILTER #ifdef's to be removed from the MD interrupt
code.
- Rename the intr_event 'eoi', 'disable', and 'enable' hooks to
  'post_filter', 'pre_ithread', and 'post_ithread' to be less x86-centric.
  Also, add a comment describe what the MI code expects them to do.
- On amd64, i386, and powerpc this is effectively a NOP.
- On arm, don't bother masking the interrupt unless the ithread is
  scheduled in the non-INTR_FILTER case to match what INTR_FILTER did.
  Also, don't bother unmasking the interrupt in the post_filter case if
  we never masked it.  The INTR_FILTER case had been doing this by having
  arm_unmask_irq for the post_filter (formerly 'eoi') hook.
- On ia64, stray interrupts are now masked for the non-INTR_FILTER case.
  They were already masked in the INTR_FILTER case.
- On sparc64, use the a NULL pre_ithread hook and use intr_enable_eoi() for
  both the 'post_filter' and 'post_ithread' hooks to match what the
  non-INTR_FILTER code did.
- On sun4v, retire the ithread wrapper hack by using an appropriate
  'post_ithread' hook instead (it's what 'post_ithread'/'enable' was
  designed to do even in 5.x).

Glanced at by:	piso
Reviewed by:	marius
Requested by:	marius [1], [5]
Tested on:	amd64, i386, arm, sparc64
2008-04-05 19:58:30 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
e4b1aa6210 - Fix a mis-merge that crept in during the softclock changes.
Spotted by:	jhb
2008-04-04 01:03:23 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
8d809d5061 Implement per-cpu callout threads, wheels, and locks.
- Move callout thread creation from kern_intr.c to kern_timeout.c
 - Call callout_tick() on every processor via hardclock_cpu() rather than
   inspecting callout internal details in kern_clock.c.
 - Remove callout implementation details from callout.h
 - Package up all of the global variables into a per-cpu callout structure.
 - Start one thread per-cpu.  Threads are not strictly bound.  They prefer
   to execute on the native cpu but may migrate temporarily if interrupts
   are starving callout processing.
 - Run all callouts by default in the thread for cpu0 to maintain current
   ordering and concurrency guarantees.  Many consumers may not properly
   handle concurrent execution.
 - The new callout_reset_on() api allows specifying a particular cpu to
   execute the callout on.  This may migrate a callout to a new cpu.
   callout_reset() schedules on the last assigned cpu while
   callout_reset_curcpu() schedules on the current cpu.

Reviewed by:	phk
Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-04-02 11:20:30 +00:00
John Baldwin
6d2d1c044f Simplify the interrupt code a bit:
- Always include the ie_disable and ie_eoi methods in 'struct intr_event'
  and collapse down to one intr_event_create() routine.  The disable and
  eoi hooks simply aren't used currently in the !INTR_FILTER case.
- Expand 'disab' to 'disable' in a few places.
- Use function casts for arm and i386:intr_eoi_src() instead of wrapper
  routines since to trim one extra indirection.

Compiled on:	{arm,amd64,i386,ia64,ppc,sparc64} x {FILTER, !FILTER}
Tested on:	{amd64,i386} x {FILTER, !FILTER}
2008-03-17 22:42:01 +00:00
Robert Watson
237fdd787b In keeping with style(9)'s recommendations on macros, use a ';'
after each SYSINIT() macro invocation.  This makes a number of
lightweight C parsers much happier with the FreeBSD kernel
source, including cflow's prcc and lxr.

MFC after:	1 month
Discussed with:	imp, rink
2008-03-16 10:58:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
eaf86d1678 Add preliminary support for binding interrupts to CPUs:
- Add a new intr_event method ie_assign_cpu() that is invoked when the MI
  code wishes to bind an interrupt source to an individual CPU.  The MD
  code may reject the binding with an error.  If an assign_cpu function
  is not provided, then the kernel assumes the platform does not support
  binding interrupts to CPUs and fails all requests to do so.
- Bind ithreads to CPUs on their next execution loop once an interrupt
  event is bound to a CPU.  Only shared ithreads are bound.  We currently
  leave private ithreads for drivers using filters + ithreads in the
  INTR_FILTER case unbound.
- A new intr_event_bind() routine is used to bind an interrupt event to
  a CPU.
- Implement binding on amd64 and i386 by way of the existing pic_assign_cpu
  PIC method.
- For x86, provide a 'intr_bind(IRQ, cpu)' wrapper routine that looks up
  an interrupt source and binds its interrupt event to the specified CPU.
  MI code can currently (ab)use this by doing:

	intr_bind(rman_get_start(irq_res), cpu);

  however, I plan to add a truly MI interface (probably a bus_bind_intr(9))
  where the implementation in the x86 nexus(4) driver would end up calling
  intr_bind() internally.

Requested by:	kmacy, gallatin, jeff
Tested on:	{amd64, i386} x {regular, INTR_FILTER}
2008-03-14 19:41:48 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
6617724c5f Remove kernel support for M:N threading.
While the KSE project was quite successful in bringing threading to
FreeBSD, the M:N approach taken by the kse library was never developed
to its full potential.  Backwards compatibility will be provided via
libmap.conf for dynamically linked binaries and static binaries will
be broken.
2008-03-12 10:12:01 +00:00
Julian Elischer
539976ffdf fix typo in code normally not compiled in. 2007-10-29 20:45:31 +00:00
Julian Elischer
3c1ffc320f Fix typo in code obviously not being compiled on any of my machines.
found by: rdivacky@
2007-10-28 23:11:57 +00:00
Julian Elischer
9ef95d0105 rename the process to 'idle' and 'intr' as per jhb. 2007-10-27 00:52:26 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ca9a0ddf31 if one changes a function's arguments, one must also change the callers. 2007-10-26 22:03:19 +00:00
Julian Elischer
7ab24ea3b9 Introduce a way to make pure kernal threads.
kthread_add() takes the same parameters as the old kthread_create()
plus a pointer to a process structure, and adds a kernel thread
to that process.

kproc_kthread_add() takes the parameters for kthread_add,
plus a process name and a pointer to a pointer to a process instead of just
a pointer, and if the proc * is NULL, it creates the process to the
specifications required, before adding the thread to it.

All other old kthread_xxx() calls return, but act on (struct thread *)
instead of (struct proc *). One reason to change the name is so that
any old kernel modules that are lying around and expect kthread_create()
to make a process will not just accidentally link.

fix top to show  kernel threads by their thread name in -SH mode
add a tdnam formatting option to ps to show thread names.

make all idle threads actual kthreads and put them into their own idled process.
make all interrupt threads kthreads and put them in an interd process
(mainly for aesthetic and accounting reasons)
rename proc 0 to be 'kernel' and it's swapper thread is now 'swapper'

man page fixes to follow.
2007-10-26 08:00:41 +00:00
Julian Elischer
3745c395ec Rename the kthread_xxx (e.g. kthread_create()) calls
to kproc_xxx as they actually make whole processes.
Thos makes way for us to add REAL kthread_create() and friends
that actually make theads. it turns out that most of these
calls actually end up being moved back to the thread version
when it's added. but we need to make this cosmetic change first.

I'd LOVE to do this rename in 7.0  so that we can eventually MFC the
new kthread_xxx() calls.
2007-10-20 23:23:23 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
982d11f836 Commit 14/14 of sched_lock decomposition.
- Use thread_lock() rather than sched_lock for per-thread scheduling
   sychronization.
 - Use the per-process spinlock rather than the sched_lock for per-process
   scheduling synchronization.

Tested by:      kris, current@
Tested on:      i386, amd64, ULE, 4BSD, libthr, libkse, PREEMPTION, etc.
Discussed with: kris, attilio, kmacy, jhb, julian, bde (small parts each)
2007-06-05 00:00:57 +00:00
Attilio Rao
6759608248 Rework the PCPU_* (MD) interface:
- Rename PCPU_LAZY_INC into PCPU_INC
- Add the PCPU_ADD interface which just does an add on the pcpu member
  given a specific value.

Note that for most architectures PCPU_INC and PCPU_ADD are not safe.
This is a point that needs some discussions/work in the next days.

Reviewed by: alc, bde
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
2007-06-04 21:38:48 +00:00
Paolo Pisati
3401f2c1df In some particular cases (like in pccard and pccbb), the real device
handler is wrapped in a couple of functions - a filter wrapper and an
ithread wrapper. In this case (and just in this case), the filter
wrapper could ask the system to schedule the ithread and mask the
interrupt source if the wrapped handler is composed of just an ithread
handler: modify the "old" interrupt code to make it support
this situation, while the "new" interrupt code is already ok.

Discussed with: jhb
2007-05-31 19:25:35 +00:00
Paolo Pisati
bafe5a3118 Bring in the reminaing bits to make interrupt filtering work:
o push much of the i386 and amd64 MD interrupt handling code
  (intr_machdep.c::intr_execute_handlers()) into MI code
  (kern_intr.c::ithread_loop())
o move filter handling to kern_intr.c::intr_filter_loop()
o factor out the code necessary to mask and ack an interrupt event
  (intr_machdep.c::intr_eoi_src() and intr_machdep.c::intr_disab_eoi_src()),
  and make them part of 'struct intr_event', passing them as arguments to
  kern_intr.c::intr_event_create().
o spawn a private ithread per handler (struct intr_handler::ih_thread)
  with filter and ithread functions.

Approved by: re (implicit?)
2007-05-06 17:02:50 +00:00
Nate Lawson
0ae62c18a0 Bump the interrupt storm detection counter to 1000. My slow fileserver
gets a bogus irq storm detected when periodic daily kicks off at 3 am
and disconnects the disk.  Change the print logic to print once per second
when the storm is occurring instead of only once.  Otherwise, it appeared
that something else was causing the errors each night at 3 am since the
print only occurred the first time.

Reviewed by:	jhb
MFC after:	1 week
2007-04-19 01:24:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
e41bcf3cfc - Don't do the interrupt storm protection stuff for software interrupt
handlers.
- Use pause() when throtting during an interrupt storm.

Reported by:	kris (1)
2007-03-02 17:01:45 +00:00
Paolo Pisati
f2d619c8b1 Do not execute filter only handlers in ithread_execute_handlers():
this fixes the panics when filter only and ithread only handlers where
sharing the same irq .
2007-02-27 17:09:20 +00:00
Paolo Pisati
ef544f6312 o break newbus api: add a new argument of type driver_filter_t to
bus_setup_intr()

o add an int return code to all fast handlers

o retire INTR_FAST/IH_FAST

For more info: http://docs.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=465712+0+current/freebsd-current

Reviewed by: many
Approved by: re@
2007-02-23 12:19:07 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
f0393f063a - Remove setrunqueue and replace it with direct calls to sched_add().
setrunqueue() was mostly empty.  The few asserts and thread state
   setting were moved to the individual schedulers.  sched_add() was
   chosen to displace it for naming consistency reasons.
 - Remove adjustrunqueue, it was 4 lines of code that was ifdef'd to be
   different on all three schedulers where it was only called in one place
   each.
 - Remove the long ifdef'd out remrunqueue code.
 - Remove the now redundant ts_state.  Inspect the thread state directly.
 - Don't set TSF_* flags from kern_switch.c, we were only doing this to
   support a feature in one scheduler.
 - Change sched_choose() to return a thread rather than a td_sched.  Also,
   rely on the schedulers to return the idlethread.  This simplifies the
   logic in choosethread().  Aside from the run queue links kern_switch.c
   mostly does not care about the contents of td_sched.

Discussed with:	julian

 - Move the idle thread loop into the per scheduler area.  ULE wants to
   do something different from the other schedulers.

Suggested by:	jhb

Tested on:	x86/amd64 sched_{4BSD, ULE, CORE}.
2007-01-23 08:46:51 +00:00
John Baldwin
c304531851 Add a function to return the MD interrupt source cookie associated with
an interrupt event.  Use this in the x86 code to fixup the intrcnt names
when an interrupt handler is removed.
2006-12-12 19:20:19 +00:00
John Baldwin
bc17acb2ad Add a comment and fix a whitespace nit. 2006-12-12 19:19:22 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ad1e7d285a Threading cleanup.. part 2 of several.
Make part of John Birrell's KSE patch permanent..
Specifically, remove:
Any reference of the ksegrp structure. This feature was
never fully utilised and made things overly complicated.
All code in the scheduler that tried to make threaded programs
fair to unthreaded programs.  Libpthread processes will already
do this to some extent and libthr processes already disable it.

Also:
Since this makes such a big change to the scheduler(s), take the opportunity
to rename some structures and elements that had to be moved anyhow.
This makes the code a lot more readable.

The ULE scheduler compiles again but I have no idea if it works.

The 4bsd scheduler still reqires a little cleaning and some functions that now do
ALMOST nothing will go away, but I thought I'd do that as a separate commit.

Tested by David Xu, and Dan Eischen using libthr and libpthread.
2006-12-06 06:34:57 +00:00
John Birrell
8460a577a4 Make KSE a kernel option, turned on by default in all GENERIC
kernel configs except sun4v (which doesn't process signals properly
with KSE).

Reviewed by:	davidxu@
2006-10-26 21:42:22 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1ca2c0183f kern_intr.c:
- Count (scheduling of) software interrupts (SWIs) as SWIs, not as
  hardware interrupts.
- Don't count (scheduling of) delayed SWIs as interrupts at all, since
  in the delayed case it is expected that there are many more scheduling
  calls than handling calls.  Perhaps all interrupts should be counted
  only when they are handled, but it is only counts of delayed SWIs that
  shouldn never be combined with the other counts.

subr_trap.c:
- Count (handling of) Asynchronous System Traps (ASTs) as traps, not as
  software interrupts.

Before these changes, the counter for SWIs only counted ASTs, and SWIs
weren't counted separately, but a subcounter for ASTs alone is less
needed than for most other exception sources.

4.4BSD-Lite uses the counters for similar things (actually matching
their names) on its main arches (hp300, ..., !i386) where more of the
exceptions are in hardware.
2006-10-18 04:48:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
19e9205a23 Simplify the pager support in DDB. Allowing different db commands to
install custom pager functions didn't actually happen in practice (they
all just used the simple pager and passed in a local quit pointer).  So,
just hardcode the simple pager as the only pager and make it set a global
db_pager_quit flag that db commands can check when the user hits 'q' (or a
suitable variant) at the pager prompt.  Also, now that it's easy to do so,
enable paging by default for all ddb commands.  Any command that wishes to
honor the quit flag can do so by checking db_pager_quit.  Note that the
pager can also be effectively disabled by setting $lines to 0.

Other fixes:
- 'show idt' on i386 and pc98 now actually checks the quit flag and
  terminates early.
- 'show intr' now actually checks the quit flag and terminates early.
2006-07-12 21:22:44 +00:00
John Baldwin
0f180a7cce Change msleep() and tsleep() to not alter the calling thread's priority
if the specified priority is zero.  This avoids a race where the calling
thread could read a snapshot of it's current priority, then a different
thread could change the first thread's priority, then the original thread
would call sched_prio() inside msleep() undoing the change made by the
second thread.  I used a priority of zero as no thread that calls msleep()
or tsleep() should be specifying a priority of zero anyway.

The various places that passed 'curthread->td_priority' or some variant
as the priority now pass 0.
2006-04-17 18:20:38 +00:00
Scott Long
bb141be10a Take a better stab at making this compile. 2006-04-15 18:54:56 +00:00
Scott Long
83bc5d54c8 Take a stab at making this compile. 2006-04-15 18:04:04 +00:00
John Baldwin
9477358d00 Turn on ithread_destroy() and call it from intr_event_destroy() to tear
down an interrupt event's associated thread (if it has one).
2006-04-13 17:29:04 +00:00
John Baldwin
fe486a370a Add a swi_remove() function to teardown software interrupt handlers. For
now it just calls intr_event_remove_handler(), but at some point it might
also be responsible for tearing down interrupt events created via swi_add.
2005-10-26 15:51:05 +00:00
John Baldwin
e0f66ef861 Reorganize the interrupt handling code a bit to make a few things cleaner
and increase flexibility to allow various different approaches to be tried
in the future.
- Split struct ithd up into two pieces.  struct intr_event holds the list
  of interrupt handlers associated with interrupt sources.
  struct intr_thread contains the data relative to an interrupt thread.
  Currently we still provide a 1:1 relationship of events to threads
  with the exception that events only have an associated thread if there
  is at least one threaded interrupt handler attached to the event.  This
  means that on x86 we no longer have 4 bazillion interrupt threads with
  no handlers.  It also means that interrupt events with only INTR_FAST
  handlers no longer have an associated thread either.
- Renamed struct intrhand to struct intr_handler to follow the struct
  intr_foo naming convention.  This did require renaming the powerpc
  MD struct intr_handler to struct ppc_intr_handler.
- INTR_FAST no longer implies INTR_EXCL on all architectures except for
  powerpc.  This means that multiple INTR_FAST handlers can attach to the
  same interrupt and that INTR_FAST and non-INTR_FAST handlers can attach
  to the same interrupt.  Sharing INTR_FAST handlers may not always be
  desirable, but having sio(4) and uhci(4) fight over an IRQ isn't fun
  either.  Drivers can always still use INTR_EXCL to ask for an interrupt
  exclusively.  The way this sharing works is that when an interrupt
  comes in, all the INTR_FAST handlers are executed first, and if any
  threaded handlers exist, the interrupt thread is scheduled afterwards.
  This type of layout also makes it possible to investigate using interrupt
  filters ala OS X where the filter determines whether or not its companion
  threaded handler should run.
- Aside from the INTR_FAST changes above, the impact on MD interrupt code
  is mostly just 's/ithread/intr_event/'.
- A new MI ddb command 'show intrs' walks the list of interrupt events
  dumping their state.  It also has a '/v' verbose switch which dumps
  info about all of the handlers attached to each event.
- We currently don't destroy an interrupt thread when the last threaded
  handler is removed because it would suck for things like ppbus(8)'s
  braindead behavior.  The code is present, though, it is just under
  #if 0 for now.
- Move the code to actually execute the threaded handlers for an interrrupt
  event into a separate function so that ithread_loop() becomes more
  readable.  Previously this code was all in the middle of ithread_loop()
  and indented halfway across the screen.
- Made struct intr_thread private to kern_intr.c and replaced td_ithd
  with a thread private flag TDP_ITHREAD.
- In statclock, check curthread against idlethread directly rather than
  curthread's proc against idlethread's proc. (Not really related to intr
  changes)

Tested on:	alpha, amd64, i386, sparc64
Tested on:	arm, ia64 (older version of patch by cognet and marcel)
2005-10-25 19:48:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
10f508d9a3 Don't disallow sleeping for handlers on swi's since some swi handlers
(like CAM) do sleep in their handlers.

Requested by:	scottl
2005-09-15 20:08:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
51460da87f - Add a new simple facility for marking the current thread as being in a
state where sleeping on a sleep queue is not allowed.  The facility
  doesn't support recursion but uses a simple private per-thread flag
  (TDP_NOSLEEPING).  The sleepq_add() function will panic if the flag is
  set and INVARIANTS is enabled.
- Use this new facility to replace the g_xup and g_xdown mutexes that were
  (ab)used to achieve similar behavior.
- Disallow sleeping in interrupt threads when invoking interrupt handlers.

MFC after:	1 week
Reviewed by:	phk
2005-09-15 19:05:37 +00:00
John Baldwin
943928c905 Simplify the storming logic and remove a variable as a result.
Approved by:	re (dwhite)
2005-06-20 19:32:23 +00:00
John Baldwin
aa9aa68d2f Use PCPU_LAZY_INC() for cnt.v_{intr,trap,syscalls} rather than atomic
operations in some places and simple non-per CPU math in others.
2005-04-12 23:18:54 +00:00
Warner Losh
9454b2d864 /* -> /*- for copyright notices, minor format tweaks as necessary 2005-01-06 23:35:40 +00:00
John Baldwin
63710c4d35 Stop explicitly touching td_base_pri outside of the scheduler and simply
set a thread's priority via sched_prio() when that is the desired action.
The schedulers will start managing td_base_pri internally shortly.
2004-12-30 20:29:58 +00:00
John Baldwin
d0b4135e00 Don't bother exiting storming mode once a second to see if it has gone
away, instead only exit storming mode when an interrupt stops firing long
enough for the ithread to exit the loop and go back to sleep.

Tested by:	macrus (cruder version)
2004-11-17 14:39:41 +00:00