a return instruction. (The latter is discouraged by the Opteron
optimization manual because it disables branch prediction for the return
instruction.)
Reviewed by: bde
critical_enter() and critical_exit() are now solely a mechanism for
deferring kernel preemptions. They no longer have any affect on
interrupts. This means that standalone critical sections are now very
cheap as they are simply unlocked integer increments and decrements for the
common case.
Spin mutexes now use a separate KPI implemented in MD code: spinlock_enter()
and spinlock_exit(). This KPI is responsible for providing whatever MD
guarantees are needed to ensure that a thread holding a spin lock won't
be preempted by any other code that will try to lock the same lock. For
now all archs continue to block interrupts in a "spinlock section" as they
did formerly in all critical sections. Note that I've also taken this
opportunity to push a few things into MD code rather than MI. For example,
critical_fork_exit() no longer exists. Instead, MD code ensures that new
threads have the correct state when they are created. Also, we no longer
try to fixup the idlethreads for APs in MI code. Instead, each arch sets
the initial curthread and adjusts the state of the idle thread it borrows
in order to perform the initial context switch.
This change is largely a big NOP, but the cleaner separation it provides
will allow for more efficient alternative locking schemes in other parts
of the kernel (bare critical sections rather than per-CPU spin mutexes
for per-CPU data for example).
Reviewed by: grehan, cognet, arch@, others
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64, powerpc, arm, possibly more
compiler features tests. This is ok, since machine/ieeefp.h is an internal
interface. But floatingpoint.h is a public interface and some ports use it,
so include sys/cdefs.h in the amd64 and i386 version of floatingpoint.h.
Note: some architectures don't provide recursive inclusion protection in
floatingpoint.h, namely alpha and ia64. Except for this part and now the
include of sys/cdefs.h, all those files are equal (from a compiler POV),
so they could be moved to only one version in src/include/.
Approved by: joerg
There are too many questions in freebsd-amd64@ about how to enable Linux
support that it seems a required piece of functionality. Thus we should
just have it on by default.
objdump --disassemble when disassembling itself in userland. I've added
the cmovCC instruction group and tweaked a bunch of size sensitive array
indexes to either fix my mistakes and/or force it to work by any means
necessary.
I'm committing this because it is usable enough to see what is going on
when single stepping via ddb.
It might still tell lies, but its lies will be far more subtle now. I'm
not sure that this is a good thing or not.
instructions as it was when I dropped it back in May 31, 2003. I'm
committing this as an intermediate stage because back then I thought I
understood what I was doing with this file.
validation error in procfs/linprocfs that can be exploited by local
users to cause a kernel panic. All versions of FreeBSD with the patch
referenced in SA-04:17.procfs have this bug, but versions without that
patch have a more serious bug instead. This problem only affects
systems on which procfs or linprocfs is mounted.
Found by: Coverity Prevent analysis tool
Security: Local DOS
FreeBSD based on aue(4) it was picked by OpenBSD, then from OpenBSD ported
to NetBSD and finally NetBSD version merged with original one goes into
FreeBSD.
Obtained from: http://www.gank.org/freebsd/cdce/
NetBSD
OpenBSD
This is mentioned in the Handbook but it is not as obvious to new
users why bpf is needed compared to the other largely self-explanatory
items in GENERIC.
PR: conf/40855
MFC after: 1 week
where having this disabled was actually hurting us, since so many
BIOSes include legacy USB emulation that takes control of all usb
ports and only the ehci driver knows how to disable it.
to mistakes from day 1, it has always had semantics inconsistent with
SVR4 and its successors. In particular, given argument M:
- On Solaris and FreeBSD/{alpha,sparc64}, it clobbers the old flags
and *sets* the new flag word to M. (NetBSD, too?)
- On FreeBSD/{amd64,i386}, it *clears* the flags that are specified in M
and leaves the remaining flags unchanged (modulo a small bug on amd64.)
- On FreeBSD/ia64, it is not implemented.
There is no way to fix fpsetsticky() to DTRT for both old FreeBSD apps
and apps ported from other operating systems, so the best approach
seems to be to kill the function and fix any apps that break. I
couldn't find any ports that use it, and any such ports would already
be broken on FreeBSD/ia64 and Linux anyway.
By the way, the routine has always been undocumented in FreeBSD,
except for an MLINK to a manpage that doesn't describe it. This
manpage has stated since 5.3-RELEASE that the functions it describes
are deprecated, so that must mean that functions that it is *supposed*
to describe but doesn't are even *more* deprecated. ;-)
Note that fpresetsticky() has been retained on FreeBSD/i386. As far
as I can tell, no other operating systems or ports of FreeBSD
implement it, so there's nothing for it to be inconsistent with.
PR: 75862
Suggested by: bde
sys/bus_dma.h instead of being copied in every single arch. This slightly
reorders a flag that was specific to AXP and thus changes the ABI there.
The interface still relies on bus_space definitions found in <machine/bus.h>
so it cannot be included on its own yet, but that will be fixed at a later
date. Add an MD <machine/bus_dma.h> for ever arch for consistency and to
allow for future MD augmentation of the API. sparc64 makes heavy use of
this right now due to its different bus_dma implemenation.
place.
This moves the dependency on GCC's and other compiler's features into
the central sys/cdefs.h file, while the individual source files can
then refer to #ifdef __COMPILER_FEATURE_FOO where they by now used to
refer to #if __GNUC__ > 3.1415 && __BARC__ <= 42.
By now, GCC and ICC (the Intel compiler) have been actively tested on
IA32 platforms by netchild. Extension to other compilers is supposed
to be possible, of course.
Submitted by: netchild
Reviewed by: various developers on arch@, some time ago
- Add debug.watchdog tunable, so we can specify watchdog CPU from loader
which will help to debug hangs on boot.
- Remove 'U' from debug.watchdog sysctl definition, so if we set it to '-1'
it really shows '-1'.
- Fix comment.
IRQ 0 and not an ExtINT pin. The MADT enumerators ignore the PC-AT flag
and ignore overrides that map IRQ 0 to pin 2 when this quirk is present.
- Add a block comment above the quirks to document each quirk so that we
can use more verbose descriptions quirks.
MFC after: 2 weeks
pointers in argv and envv in userland and use that together with
kern_execve() and exec_free_args() to implement linux_execve() for the
amd64/linux32 ABI without using the stackgap.
- Implement linux_nanosleep() using the recently added kern_nanosleep().
- Use linux_emul_convpath() instead of linux_emul_find() in
exec_linux_imgact_try().
Tested by: cokane
Silence on: amd64
uses the i8237 without trying to emulate the PC architecture move
the register definitions for the i8237 chip into the central include
file for the chip, except for the PC98 case which is magic.
Add new isa_dmatc() function which tells us as cheaply as possible
if the terminal count has been reached for a given channel.
devclass. As pointed out by dfr@, devclasses don't have to share the same
linkage if multiple drivers have the same name. Newbus should match the
devclasses based on name and allocate non-conflicting unit numbers.
millisecond it is calibrating. Suggested by jhb@ and bde@. Don't clobber
the tsc_freq with the new value since it isn't accurate enough for
timecounters and the timecounter system as a whole needs support for
changing rates before we do this. Subtract 0.5% from our measurement
to account for overhead in DELAY. Note that this interface is for
estimating the clockrate and needs to work well at runtime so doing a full
calibration including disabling interrupts for a second is not feasible.
copies arguments into the kernel space and one that operates
completely in the kernel space;
o use kernel-only version of execve(2) to kill another stackgap in
linuxlator/i386.
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD (partially)
MFC after: 2 weeks
cuts to the chase and fills in a provided s/g list. This is meant to optimize
out the cost of the callback since the callback doesn't serve much purpose for
mbufs since mbuf loads will never be deferred. This is just for amd64 and
i386 at the moment, other arches will be coming shortly.
from 4.x kernel config files. User's wishing to upgrade from 4.x to 6
will need to go through 5.x, or grab this script from there. These
scripts will remain in RELENG_5...
on entry and it assumes the responsibility for releasing the page queues
lock if it must sleep.
Remove a bogus comment from pmap_enter_quick().
Using the first change, modify vm_map_pmap_enter() so that the page queues
lock is acquired and released once, rather than each time that a page
is mapped.
In such cases, the busying of the page and the unlocking of the
containing object by vm_map_pmap_enter() and vm_fault_prefault() is
unnecessary overhead. To eliminate this overhead, this change
modifies pmap_enter_quick() so that it expects the object to be locked
on entry and it assumes the responsibility for busying the page and
unlocking the object if it must sleep. Note: alpha, amd64, i386 and
ia64 are the only implementations optimized by this change; arm,
powerpc, and sparc64 still conservatively busy the page and unlock the
object within every pmap_enter_quick() call.
Additionally, this change is the first case where we synchronize
access to the page's PG_BUSY flag and busy field using the containing
object's lock rather than the global page queues lock. (Modifications
to the page's PG_BUSY flag and busy field have asserted both locks for
several weeks, enabling an incremental transition.)
specified register, but a pointer to the in-memory representation of
that value. The reason for this is twofold:
1. Not all registers can be represented by a register_t. In particular
FP registers fall in that category. Passing the new register value
by reference instead of by value makes this point moot.
2. When we receive a G or P packet, both are for writing a register,
the packet will have the register value in target-byte order and
in the memory representation (modulo the fact that bytes are sent
as 2 printable hexadecimal numbers of course). We only need to
decode the packet to have a pointer to the register value.
This change fixes the bug of extracting the register value of the P
packet as a hexadecimal number instead of as a bit array. The quick
(and dirty) fix to bswap the register value in gdb_cpu_setreg() as
it has been added on i386 and amd64 can therefore be removed and has
in fact been that.
Tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, ia64, sparc64
Allocate the bounce zone at either tag creation or map creation to help
avoid null-pointer derefs later on. Track total pages per zone so that
each zone can get a minimum allocation at tag creation time instead of
being defeated by mis-behaving tags that suck up the max amount.
control the number of lines per page rather than a constant. The variable
can be examined and changed in ddb as '$lines'. Setting the variable to
0 will effectively turn off paging.
- Change db_putchar() to force out pending whitespace before outputting
newlines and carriage returns so that one can rub out content on the
current line via '\r \r' type strings.
- Change the simple pager to rub out the --More-- prompt explicitly when
the routine exits.
- Add some aliases to the simple pager to make it more compatible with
more(1): 'e' and 'j' do a single line. 'd' does half a page, and
'f' does a full page.
MFC after: 1 month
Inspired by: kris
that was greater than 4G. I originally used the same values as i386 in
order to save opening a new PML4 page slot, but in the day of gigabytes
of memory, worrying about a 4K page seems futile. Moving from 8 to 32G
moves the page to a different index, it doesn't increase the number of
pages used.
Restructure pmap_enter() to prevent the loss of a page modified (PG_M) bit
in a race between processors. (This restructuring assumes the newly atomic
pte_load_store() for correct operation.)
Reviewed by: tegge@
PR: i386/61852
the raw values including for child process statistics and only compute the
system and user timevals on demand.
- Fix the various kern_wait() syscall wrappers to only pass in a rusage
pointer if they are going to use the result.
- Add a kern_getrusage() function for the ABI syscalls to use so that they
don't have to play stackgap games to call getrusage().
- Fix the svr4_sys_times() syscall to just call calcru() to calculate the
times it needs rather than calling getrusage() twice with associated
stackgap, etc.
- Add a new rusage_ext structure to store raw time stats such as tick counts
for user, system, and interrupt time as well as a bintime of the total
runtime. A new p_rux field in struct proc replaces the same inline fields
from struct proc (i.e. p_[isu]ticks, p_[isu]u, and p_runtime). A new p_crux
field in struct proc contains the "raw" child time usage statistics.
ruadd() has been changed to handle adding the associated rusage_ext
structures as well as the values in rusage. Effectively, the values in
rusage_ext replace the ru_utime and ru_stime values in struct rusage. These
two fields in struct rusage are no longer used in the kernel.
- calcru() has been split into a static worker function calcru1() that
calculates appropriate timevals for user and system time as well as updating
the rux_[isu]u fields of a passed in rusage_ext structure. calcru() uses a
copy of the process' p_rux structure to compute the timevals after updating
the runtime appropriately if any of the threads in that process are
currently executing. It also now only locks sched_lock internally while
doing the rux_runtime fixup. calcru() now only requires the caller to
hold the proc lock and calcru1() only requires the proc lock internally.
calcru() also no longer allows callers to ask for an interrupt timeval
since none of them actually did.
- calcru() now correctly handles threads executing on other CPUs.
- A new calccru() function computes the child system and user timevals by
calling calcru1() on p_crux. Note that this means that any code that wants
child times must now call this function rather than reading from p_cru
directly. This function also requires the proc lock.
- This finishes the locking for rusage and friends so some of the Giant locks
in exit1() and kern_wait() are now gone.
- The locking in ttyinfo() has been tweaked so that a shared lock of the
proctree lock is used to protect the process group rather than the process
group lock. By holding this lock until the end of the function we now
ensure that the process/thread that we pick to dump info about will no
longer vanish while we are trying to output its info to the console.
Submitted by: bde (mostly)
MFC after: 1 month
that is no longer required. (In fact, it is not clear that it was ever
required in HEAD or RELENG_4, only RELENG_3 required a work-around.) Now,
as before revision 1.251, if the preexisting PTE is invalid, pmap_enter()
does not call pmap_invalidate_page() to update the TLB(s).
Note: Even with this change, the handling of a copy-on-write fault is
inefficient, in such cases pmap_enter() calls pmap_invalidate_page() twice.
Discussed with: bde@
PR: kern/16568
need to mask off the page offset bits. (This operation made some sense
prior to i386/i386/pmap.c revision 1.254 when we passed a physical address
rather than a vm_page pointer to pmap_enter().)
uses predate the change in the pmap_enter() interface that replaced the
page's physical address by the address of its vm_page structure. The
PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() was being used to compute the address of the same vm_page
structure that was being passed in.
pmap_copy(). This entails additional locking in pmap_copy() and the
addition of a "flags" parameter to the page table page allocator for
specifying whether it may sleep when memory is unavailable. (Already,
pmap_copy() checks the availability of memory, aborting if it is scarce.
In theory, another CPU could, however, allocate memory between
pmap_copy()'s check and the call to the page table page allocator,
causing the current thread to release its locks and sleep. This change
makes this scenario impossible.)
Reviewed by: tegge@
because it was mostly irrelevant - except for the silly BIOS_PADDRTOVADDR
etc macros. Along the way of working around this, I missed a few things.
* Make syscons properly inherit the bios capslock/shiftlock/etc state like
i386 does. Note that we cannot inherit the bios key repeat rate because
that requires a bios call (which is impossible for us).
* Give syscons the ability to beep on amd64. Oops.
While here, make bios.c compile and add it to files.amd64.
multiprocessors. Specifically, the error is conditioning the call to
pmap_invalidate_page() on whether the pmap is active on the current CPU.
This call must be unconditional. Regardless of whether the pmap is active
on the CPU performing _pmap_unwire_pte_hold(), it could be active on another
CPU. For example, a call to pmap_remove_all() by the page daemon could
result in a call to _pmap_unwire_pte_hold() with the pmap inactive on the
current CPU and active on another CPU. In such circumstances, failing to
call pmap_invalidate_page() results in a stale TLB entry on the other CPU
that still maps the now deallocated page table page. What happens next is
typically a mysterious panic in pmap_enter() by the other CPU, either
"pmap_enter: attempted pmap_enter on 4MB page" or "pmap_enter: pte vanished,
va: 0x%lx". Both occur because the former page table page has been recycled
and allocated to a new purpose. Consequently, it no longer contains zeroes.
See also Peter's i386/i386/pmap.c revision 1.448 and the related e-mail
thread last year.
Many thanks to the engineers at Sandvine for providing clear and concise
information until all of the pieces of the puzzle fell into place and
for testing an earlier patch.
MT5 Candidate
a stack trace from ddb, the output will pause with a '--More--' prompt
every 18 lines. If you hit Enter, it will print another line and prompt
again. If you hit space it will output another page and then prompt.
If you hit 'q' or 'x' it will abort the rest of the stack trace.
- Fix the sparc64 userland stack trace to honor the total count of lines
to print. This is useful if your trace happens to walk back onto
0xdeadc0de and gets stuck in an endless loop.
MFC after: 1 month
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
the page table page's wired count rather than its hold count to contain
the reference count. My rationale for this change is based on several
factors:
1. The machine-independent and pmap layers used the same hold count field
in subtly different ways. The machine-independent layer uses the hold
count to implement a form of ephemeral wiring that is used by pipes,
physio, etc. In other words, subsystems where we wish to temporarily
block a page from being swapped out while it is mapped into the kernel's
address space. Such pages are never removed from the page queues.
Instead, the page daemon recognizes a non-zero hold count to mean "hands
off this page." In contrast, page table pages are never in the page
queues; they are wired from birth to death. The hold count was being
used as a kind of reference count, specifically, the number of valid
page table entries within the page. Not surprisingly, these two
different uses imply different synchronization rules: in the machine-
independent layer access to the hold count requires the page queues
lock; whereas in the pmap layer the pmap lock is required. Thus,
continued use by the pmap layer of vm_page_unhold(), which asserts that
the page queues lock is held, made no sense.
2. _pmap_unwire_pte_hold() was too forgiving in its handling of the wired
count. An unexpected wired count on a page table page was ignored and
the underlying page leaked.
3. In a word, microoptimization. Using the wired count exclusively, rather
than a combination of the wired and hold counts, makes the code slightly
smaller and faster.
Reviewed by: tegge@
and which takes a M_WAITOK/M_NOWAIT flag argument.
Add compatibility isa_dmainit() macro which whines loudly if
isa_dma_init() fails.
Problem uncovered by: tegge
the loss of a page modified (PG_M) bit in a race between processors.
Quoting Tor:
One scenario where the old code could cause a lost PG_M bit is a
multithreaded linux program (or FreeBSD program using the
linuxthreads port) where one thread was starting a subprocess.
The thread doing fork() would call vmspace_fork(), which would then
call vm_map_copy_entry() which would call pmap_protect() on an area
possibly accessed by other threads.
Additionally, make the clearing of PG_M by pmap_protect() unconditional if
write permission is removed. Previously, PG_M could persist on a read-only
unmanaged page. That seems inconsistent and confusing.
In collaboration with: tegge@
MT5 candidate
PR: 61852
value was only enough for 8GB of RAM, the new value can do 16GB. This still
isn't optimal since it doesn't scale. Fixing this for amd64 looks to be
fairly easy, but for i386 will be quite difficult.
Reviewed by: peter
VT6122 gigabit ethernet chip and integrated 10/100/1000 copper PHY.
The vge driver has been added to GENERIC for i386, pc98 and amd64,
but not to sparc or ia64 since I don't have the ability to test
it there. The vge(4) driver supports VLANs, checksum offload and
jumbo frames.
Also added the lge(4) and nge(4) drivers to GENERIC for i386 and
pc98 since I was in the neighborhood. There's no reason to leave them
out anymore.
and was propagated to nearly every platform. The boundary of the child needs
to consider the boundary of the parent and pick the minimum of the two, not
the maximum. However, if either is 0 then pick the appropriate one.
This bug was exposed by a recent change to ATA, which should now be fixed by
this change. The alignment and maxsegsz tag attributes likely also need
a similar review in the near future.
This is a MT5 candidate.
Reviewed by: marcel
Submitted by: sos (in part)
It can be switched back once 5.3 is tested and released. Also turn on
PREEMPTION as many of the stability problems with it have been fixed.
MT5: 3 days.
but with slightly cleaned up interfaces.
The KSE structure has become the same as the "per thread scheduler
private data" structure. In order to not make the diffs too great
one is #defined as the other at this time.
The KSE (or td_sched) structure is now allocated per thread and has no
allocation code of its own.
Concurrency for a KSEGRP is now kept track of via a simple pair of counters
rather than using KSE structures as tokens.
Since the KSE structure is different in each scheduler, kern_switch.c
is now included at the end of each scheduler. Nothing outside the
scheduler knows the contents of the KSE (aka td_sched) structure.
The fields in the ksegrp structure that are to do with the scheduler's
queueing mechanisms are now moved to the kg_sched structure.
(per ksegrp scheduler private data structure). In other words how the
scheduler queues and keeps track of threads is no-one's business except
the scheduler's. This should allow people to write experimental
schedulers with completely different internal structuring.
A scheduler call sched_set_concurrency(kg, N) has been added that
notifies teh scheduler that no more than N threads from that ksegrp
should be allowed to be on concurrently scheduled. This is also
used to enforce 'fainess' at this time so that a ksegrp with
10000 threads can not swamp a the run queue and force out a process
with 1 thread, since the current code will not set the concurrency above
NCPU, and both schedulers will not allow more than that many
onto the system run queue at a time. Each scheduler should eventualy develop
their own methods to do this now that they are effectively separated.
Rejig libthr's kernel interface to follow the same code paths as
linkse for scope system threads. This has slightly hurt libthr's performance
but I will work to recover as much of it as I can.
Thread exit code has been cleaned up greatly.
exit and exec code now transitions a process back to
'standard non-threaded mode' before taking the next step.
Reviewed by: scottl, peter
MFC after: 1 week
FULL_PREEMPTION is defined. Add a runtime warning to ULE if PREEMPTION is
enabled (code inspired by the PREEMPTION warning in kern_switch.c). This
is a possible MT5 candidate.
The removed argument could trivially be derived from the remaining one.
That in turn should be the same as curthread, but it is possible that curthread could be expensive to derive on some syste,s so leave it as an argument.
Having both proc and thread as an argumen tjust gives an opportunity for
them to get out sync.
MFC after: 3 days
in diagnostics. It has outlived its usefulness and has started
causing panics for people who turn on DIAGNOSTIC, in what is otherwise
good code.
MFC after: 2 days
these two reasons:
1. On ia64 a function pointer does not hold the address of the first
instruction of a functions implementation. It holds the address
of a function descriptor. Hence the user(), btrap(), eintr() and
bintr() prototypes are wrong for getting the actual code address.
2. The logic forces interrupt, trap and exception entry points to
be layed-out contiguously. This can not be achieved on ia64 and is
generally just bad programming.
The MCOUNT_FROMPC_USER macro is used to set the frompc argument to
some kernel address which represents any frompc that falls outside
the kernel text range. The macro can expand to ~0U to bail out in
that case.
The MCOUNT_FROMPC_INTR macro is used to set the frompc argument to
some kernel address to represent a call to a trap or interrupt
handler. This to avoid that the trap or interrupt handler appear to
be called from everywhere in the call graph. The macro can expand
to ~0U to prevent adjusting frompc. Note that the argument is selfpc,
not frompc.
This commit defines the macros on all architectures equivalently to
the original code in sys/libkern/mcount.c. People can take it from
here...
Compile-tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, ia64 and sparc64
Boot-tested on: i386
valid pmap to the pmap functions that require one. Remove the checks for
NULL. (These checks have their origins in the Mach pmap.c that was
integrated into BSD. None of the new code written specifically for
FreeBSD included them.)
compile option. All FreeBSD packet filters now use the PFIL_HOOKS API and
thus it becomes a standard part of the network stack.
If no hooks are connected the entire packet filter hooks section and related
activities are jumped over. This removes any performance impact if no hooks
are active.
Both OpenBSD and DragonFlyBSD have integrated PFIL_HOOKS permanently as well.
We were obtaining different spin mutexes (which disable interrupts after
aquisition) and spin waiting for delivery. For example, KSE processes
do LDT operations which use smp_rendezvous, while other parts of the
system are doing things like tlb shootdowns with a different mutex.
This patch uses the common smp_rendezvous mutex for all MD home-grown
IPIs that spinwait for delivery. Having the single mutex means that
the spinloop to aquire it will enable interrupts periodically, thus
avoiding the cross-ipi deadlock.
Obtained from: dwhite, alc
Reviewed by: jhb
with the COMPAT_LINUX32 option. This is largely based on the i386 MD Linux
emulations bits, but also builds on the 32-bit FreeBSD and generic IA-32
binary emulation work.
Some of this is still a little rough around the edges, and will need to be
revisited before 32-bit and 64-bit Linux emulation support can coexist in
the same kernel.
logical CPUs on a system to be used as a dedicated watchdog to cause a
drop to the debugger and/or generate an NMI to the boot processor if
the kernel ceases to respond. A sysctl enables the watchdog running
out of the processor's idle thread; a callout is launched to reset a
timer in the watchdog. If the callout fails to reset the timer for ten
seconds, the watchdog will fire. The sysctl allows you to select which
CPU will run the watchdog.
A sample "debug.leak_schedlock" is included, which causes a sysctl to
spin holding sched_lock in order to trigger the watchdog. On my Xeons,
the watchdog is able to detect this failure mode and break into the
debugger, which cannot otherwise be done without an NMI button.
This option does not currently work with sched_ule due to ule's push
notion of scheduling, similar to machdep.hlt_logical_cpus failing to
work with that scheduler.
On face value, this might seem somewhat inefficient, but there are a
lot of dual-processor Xeons with HTT around, so using one as a watchdog
for testing is not as inefficient as one might fear.
to allow dumping per-thread machine specific notes. On ia64 we use this
function to flush the dirty registers onto the backingstore before we
write out the PRSTATUS notes.
Tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, ia64 & sparc64
Not tested on: arm, powerpc
are resevered, they can be written with anything, but they always read
as zero, we should simulate it in set_regs() as we are reading/writting
real hardware %rflags register.
becauses some syscalls using set_mcontext can sneakily change
parameters and later when those syscalls references parameters,
they will wrongly use register values in mcontext_t.
Approved by: peter
vm_page_sleep_if_busy() and the page table page's busy flag as a
synchronization mechanism on page table pages.
Also, relocate the inline pmap_unwire_pte_hold() so that it can be used
to shorten _pmap_unwire_pte_hold() on alpha and amd64. This places
pmap_unwire_pte_hold() next to a comment that more accurately describes
it than _pmap_unwire_pte_hold().
being defined, define and use a new MD macro, cpu_spinwait(). It only
expands to something on i386 and amd64, so the compiled code should be
identical.
Name of the macro found by: jhb
Reviewed by: jhb
their own directory and module, leaving the MD parts in the MD
area (the MD parts _are_ part of the modules). /dev/mem and /dev/io
are now loadable modules, thus taking us one step further towards
a kernel created entirely out of modules. Of course, there is nothing
preventing the kernel from having these statically compiled.
- Enable recursion on the page queues lock. This allows calls to
vm_page_alloc(VM_ALLOC_NORMAL) and UMA's obj_alloc() with the page
queues lock held. Such calls are made to allocate page table pages
and pv entries.
- The previous change enables a partial reversion of vm/vm_page.c
revision 1.216, i.e., the call to vm_page_alloc() by vm_page_cowfault()
now specifies VM_ALLOC_NORMAL rather than VM_ALLOC_INTERRUPT.
- Add partial locking to pmap_copy(). (As a side-effect, pmap_copy()
should now be faster on i386 SMP because it no longer generates IPIs
for TLB shootdown on the other processors.)
- Complete the locking of pmap_enter() and pmap_enter_quick(). (As of now,
all changes to a user-level pmap on alpha, amd64, and i386 are performed
with appropriate locking.)
dereference curthread. It is called only from critical_{enter,exit}(),
which already dereferences curthread. This doesn't seem to affect SMP
performance in my benchmarks, but improves MySQL transaction throughput
by about 1% on UP on my Xeon.
Head nodding: jhb, bmilekic
the thread ID and call db_trace_thread().
Since arm has all the logic in db_stack_trace_cmd(), rename the
new DB_COMMAND function to db_stack_trace to avoid conflicts on
arm.
While here, have db_stack_trace parse its own arguments so that
we can use a more natural radix for IDs. If the ID is not a thread
ID, or more precisely when no thread exists with the ID, try if
there's a process with that ID and return the first thread in it.
This makes it easier to print stack traces from the ps output.
requested by: rwatson@
tested on: amd64, i386, ia64
a fast interrupt handler doing an swi_sched(). This fixed the lockups I
saw on my laptop when using xmms in KDE and on rwatson's MySQL benchmarks
on SMP. This will eventually be removed and/or modified when I figure out
what the root cause is and fix that.
NO_ADAPTIVE_MUTEXES. This option has been enabled by default on amd64 for
quite some time, and has been extensively tested on i386 and sparc64. It
shows measurable performance gains in many circumstances, and few negative
effects. It would be nice in t he future if adaptive mutexes actually went
to sleep after a certain amount of spinning, but that will require quite a
bit more testing.
pmap_protect() and pmap_remove(). In general, they require the lock in
order to modify a page's pv list or flags. In some cases, however,
pmap_protect() can avoid acquiring the lock.
reduces the size of the pv_entry structure a small but significant amount.
This is implemented a little differently because it isn't so cheap to get
the physical address of the page tabke page on amd64.. instead of it
being directly accessible from the top level page directory, it is now
two additional tree levels down. However.. In almost all cases, we
recently had the physical address if the page table page a short while
before we needed it, but it slipped through our fingers. This patch
saves it for when we do need it. Also, for the one case where we do not
have the ptp paddr, we are always running in curproc context and so we
can do a vtopte-like trick. I've implemented vtopde() for this purpose.
There is still a CYA entry in pmap_unuse_pt() that needs to be removed. I
think it can be removed now but I forgot to test with it gone.
pmap_remove_pages(). (The implementation of pmap_remove_pages() is
optional. If pmap_remove_pages() is unimplemented, the acquisition and
release of the page queues lock is unnecessary.)
Remove spl calls from the alpha, arm, and ia64 pmap_remove_pages().
This also fixes the (runtime) breakage introduced in the previous
commit that was the result of a botched merge. This hasn't even
been compile-tested...
Most of the changes are a direct result of adding thread awareness.
Typically, DDB_REGS is gone. All registers are taken from the
trapframe and backtraces use the PCB based contexts. DDB_REGS was
defined to be a trapframe on all platforms anyway.
Thread awareness introduces the following new commands:
thread X switch to thread X (where X is the TID),
show threads list all threads.
The backtrace code has been made more flexible so that one can
create backtraces for any thread by giving the thread ID as an
argument to trace.
With this change, ia64 has support for breakpoints.
o Make debugging support conditional upon KDB instead of DDB.
o Remove implementation of Debugger().
o Don't make setjump() and longjump() conditional upon DDB.
o s/ddb_on_nmi/kdb_on_nmi/g
o Call kdb_reenter() when kdb_active is non-zero. Call kdb_trap()
otherwise.
a PCB from a trapframe for purposes of unwinding the stack. The PCB
is used as the thread context and all but the thread that entered the
debugger has a valid PCB.
This function can also be used to create a context for the threads
running on the CPUs that have been stopped when the debugger got
entered. This however is not done at the time of this commit.
in which multiple (presumably different) debugger backends can be
configured and which provides basic services to those backends.
Besides providing services to backends, it also serves as the single
point of contact for any and all code that wants to make use of the
debugger functions, such as entering the debugger or handling of the
alternate break sequence. For this purpose, the frontend has been
made non-optional.
All debugger requests are forwarded or handed over to the current
backend, if applicable. Selection of the current backend is done by
the debug.kdb.current sysctl. A list of configured backends can be
obtained with the debug.kdb.available sysctl. One can enter the
debugger by writing to the debug.kdb.enter sysctl.
backend improves over the old GDB support in the following ways:
o Unified implementation with minimal MD code.
o A simple interface for devices to register themselves as debug
ports, ala consoles.
o Compression by using run-length encoding.
o Implements GDB threading support.
bootp -> BOOTP
bootp.nfsroot -> BOOTP_NFSROOT
bootp.nfsv3 -> BOOTP_NFSV3
bootp.compat -> BOOTP_COMPAT
bootp.wired_to -> BOOTP_WIRED_TO
- i.e. back out the previous commit. It's already possible to
pxeboot(8) with a GENERIC kernel.
Pointed out by: dwmalone
BOOTP -> bootp
BOOTP_NFSROOT -> bootp.nfsroot
BOOTP_NFSV3 -> bootp.nfsv3
BOOTP_COMPAT -> bootp.compat
BOOTP_WIRED_TO -> bootp.wired_to
This lets you PXE boot with a GENERIC kernel by putting this sort of thing
in loader.conf:
bootp="YES"
bootp.nfsroot="YES"
bootp.nfsv3="YES"
bootp.wired_to="bge1"
or even setting the variables manually from the OK prompt.
than as one-off hacks in various other parts of the kernel:
- Add a function maybe_preempt() that is called from sched_add() to
determine if a thread about to be added to a run queue should be
preempted to directly. If it is not safe to preempt or if the new
thread does not have a high enough priority, then the function returns
false and sched_add() adds the thread to the run queue. If the thread
should be preempted to but the current thread is in a nested critical
section, then the flag TDF_OWEPREEMPT is set and the thread is added
to the run queue. Otherwise, mi_switch() is called immediately and the
thread is never added to the run queue since it is switch to directly.
When exiting an outermost critical section, if TDF_OWEPREEMPT is set,
then clear it and call mi_switch() to perform the deferred preemption.
- Remove explicit preemption from ithread_schedule() as calling
setrunqueue() now does all the correct work. This also removes the
do_switch argument from ithread_schedule().
- Do not use the manual preemption code in mtx_unlock if the architecture
supports native preemption.
- Don't call mi_switch() in a loop during shutdown to give ithreads a
chance to run if the architecture supports native preemption since
the ithreads will just preempt DELAY().
- Don't call mi_switch() from the page zeroing idle thread for
architectures that support native preemption as it is unnecessary.
- Native preemption is enabled on the same archs that supported ithread
preemption, namely alpha, i386, and amd64.
This change should largely be a NOP for the default case as committed
except that we will do fewer context switches in a few cases and will
avoid the run queues completely when preempting.
Approved by: scottl (with his re@ hat)
wasn't actually clean, it was saving the xmm registers as left over by the
bios. fninit() doesn't clear those.
In fpudna(), instead of doing a fninit() and forgetting to load the initial
mxcsr, do a full fxrstor(&fpu_cleanstate). Otherwise we hand over whatever
random values are left in the xmm registers by the last user.
I'm not certain of whether this is excessive paranoia or not, but there was
an outright bug in neglecting to set the mxcsr value that caused awk to
SIGFPE in some case. Especially for Tim Robbins. :-)
i386 probably should do something about the mxcsr setings too.
Found by: tjr
devclass will be present even if the driver was disabled by a hint. Using
device_get_softc() provides the right info even if it's overkill.
Explained by: jhb
Otherwise, the setting of the PG_M bit by one processor could be lost if
another processor is simultaneously changing the PG_W bit.
Reviewed by: tegge@
present and thus that the PnPBIOS probe should be skipped instead of
having ACPI zero out the PnPBIOStable pointer.
- Make the PnPBIOStable pointer static to i386/i386/bios.c now that that is
the only place it is used.
pmap_extract() already does it.
In pmap_enter(), opa has already been masked so don't do it again.
Wrap a long line (recent transgression).
Use trunc_page() in pmap_mapdev() instead of anding with PG_FRAME, since
that is what we really meant.
Submitted by: alc (first item)
- export the rest of the cpu features (and amd's features).
- turn on EFER_NXE, depending on the NX amd feature bit
- reorg the identcpu stuff a bit in order to stop treating the
amd features as second class features (since it is now a primary feature
bit set) and make it easier to export.
lives in the top 12 'available' bits. atop() in the PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE()
macro only masks off the lower bits (by accident) and the upper bits
in the 64 bit ptes turn into "interesting" index values.
pmap_remove() would be called with a huge range and we'd stride across
it in only 2MB chunks. This would manifest as massive cpu time and a
largely unresponsive system during hard swap. Instead, check the higher
page directories which means we can run pmap_remove() in just a few
hundred loop iterations instead of millions since we can process
address space in chunks of 512GB and 1GB as well as 2MB.
Eternal thanks to: tmm
of this micro-optimization occurs when we call pmap_enter() to wire an
already mapped page. Because of the micro-optimization, we fail to
mark the PTE as wired. Later, on teardown of the address space,
pmap_remove_pages() destroys the PTE before vm_fault_unwire() has
unwired the page. (pmap_remove_pages() is not supposed to destroy
wired PTEs. They are destroyed by a later call to pmap_remove().)
Thus, the page becomes lost.
Note: The page is not lost if the application called munlock(2), only
if it relies on teardown of the address space to unwire its pages.
For the historically inclined, this bug was introduced by a
megacommit, revision 1.182, roughly six years ago.
Leak observed by: green@ and dillon independently
Patch submitted by: dillon at backplane dot com
Reviewed by: tegge@
MFC after: 1 week
gmon and struct gmonhdr was originally just to represent the kernel
(profiling) clock frequency and it remains poorly suited to representing
the frequencies of fast counters like the TSC. It broke a year or two
ago. This quick fix keeps it working for another year or month or two
until TSC frequencies can exceed 2^32, by dividing the frequency by 2.
Dividing the frequency by 4 would work for a little longer but would
lose a little too much precision.