problem is that a mutex lock, prior to this change, is acquired before
the curproc is set to idleproc, so we mess ourselves up by calling
the mutex lock routine with curproc == NULL.
Moving it up after the aps_ready spin-wait has us hopefully setting it
after idleproc is setup.
Solved by: jake (the allmighty) :-)
the alpha mp_machdep.c.
- Proc locking.
- Catch up to the P_FOO -> PS_FOO proc flags changes.
- Stick ap_init()'s prototype with the other prototypes.
- Remove the Xforwardirq IPI.
- Remove unused simplelocks.
- Don't try to psignal() from forward_statclock(), but set the appropriate
signal pending flag in p_sflag instead.
- Add in KTR_SMP tracepoints for various SMP functions. (Brought over
from the alpha port)
inline functions non-inlined. Hide parts of the mutex implementation that
should not be exposed.
Make sure that WITNESS code is not executed during boot until the mutexes
are fully initialized by SI_SUB_MUTEX (the original motivation for this
commit).
Submitted by: peter
interrupt threads to run with it always >= 1, so that malloc can
detect M_WAITOK from "interrupt" context. This is also necessary
in order to context switch from sched_ithd() directly.
Reviewed By: peter
for SMP; just use the same ones as UP. These weren't used without
holding Giant anyway, and the routines that use them would have to
be protected from pre-emption to avoid migrating cpus.
pre-emptable kernel. For variables of size 4 bytes or less they compile
to a single instruction, which does not allow a process to migrate cpus
in the middle, and get the value for the "wrong" cpu.
appropriate function, rather than doing a horse-and-buggy
acquire. They now take the mutex type as an arg and can be
used with sleep as well as spin mutexes.
non-386 atomic_load_acq(). %eax is an input since its value is used in
the cmpxchg instruction, but we don't care what value it is, so setting
it to a specific value is just wasteful. Thus, it is being used without
being initialized as the warning stated, but it is ok for it to be used
because its value isn't important. Thus, we are only sort of lying when
we say it is an output only operand.
- Add "cc" to the clobber list for atomic_load_acq() since the cmpxchgl
changes ZF.
compiling errors where gcc would run out of registers.
- Add "cc" to the list of clobbers for micro-ops where we perform
instructions that alter %eflags.
- Use xchgl instead of cmpxchgl to release a spin lock. This could allow
for more efficient register allocation as we no longer mandate that %eax
be used.
- Reenable the optimized mutex micro-ops in the non-i386 case.
that modules can call.
- Remove the old gcc <= 2.8 versions of the atomic ops.
- Resort the order of some things in the file so that there is only
one #ifdef for KLD_MODULE, and so that all WANT_FUNCTIONS stuff is
moved to the bottom of the file.
- Remove ATOMIC_ACQ_REL() and just use explicit macros instead.
implement memory fences for the 486+. The 386 still uses versions w/o
memory fences as all operations on the 386 are not program ordered.
The 386 versions are not MP safe.
__FreeBSD_version 500015 can be used to detect their disappearance.
- Move the symbols for SMP_prvspace and lapic from globals.s to
locore.s.
- Remove globals.s with extreme prejudice.
symbols in globals.s.
PCPU_GET(name) returns the value of the per-cpu variable
PCPU_PTR(name) returns a pointer to the per-cpu variable
PCPU_SET(name, val) sets the value of the per-cpu variable
In general these are not yet used, compatibility macros remain.
Unifdef SMP struct globaldata, this makes variables such as cpuid
available for UP as well.
Rebuilding modules is probably a good idea, but I believe old
modules will still work, as most of the old infrastructure
remains.
as multi-processor kernels. The old way made it difficult for kernel
modules to be portable between uni-processor and multi-processor
kernels. It is no longer necessary to jump through hoops.
- always load %fs with the private segment on entry to the kernel
- change the type of the self referntial pointer from struct privatespace
to struct globaldata
- make the globaldata symbol have value 0 in all cases, so the symbols
in globals.s are always offsets, not aliases for fields in globaldata
- define the globaldata space used for uniprocessor kernels in C, rather
than assembler
- change the assmebly language accessors to use %fs, add a macro
PCPU_ADDR(member, reg), which loads the register reg with the address
of the per-cpu variable member
To use it, some dll is needed. And currently, the dll is only for NetBSD.
So one more kernel module is needed.
For more infomation,
http://chiharu.haun.org/peace/ .
Reviewed by: bp
variables from i386 assembly language. The syntax is PCPU(member)
where member is the capitalized name of the per-cpu variable, without
the gd_ prefix. Example: movl %eax,PCPU(CURPROC). The capitalization
is due to using the offsets generated by genassym rather than the symbols
provided by linking with globals.o. asmacros.h is the wrong place for
this but it seemed as good a place as any for now. The old implementation
in asnames.h has not been removed because it is still used to de-mangle
the symbols used by the C variables for the UP case.
the witness code is compiled in. Without this, the witness code doesn't
notice that sched_lock is released by fork_trampoline() and thus gets all
confused about spin lock order later on.
calling the C functions mtx_enter_hard() and mtx_exit_hard() clobbers them.
Note that %eax is also not call safe, but it is already clobbered due to
cmpxchg. However, now we are back to not compiling again, so these macros
are still left disabled for now.
that of MTX_EXIT. Don't assume that the reg parameter to MTX_ENTER
holds curproc, load it explicitly. Put semi-colons at the end of
the macros to be more consistent and so its harder to forget them
when these change.