Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
2e43efd0bb Drop "All rights reserved" from my copyright statements.
Reviewed by:	rgrimes
MFC after:	1 month
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19485
2019-03-06 22:11:45 +00:00
John Baldwin
e13507f6f0 Axe MINIMUM_MSI_INT.
Just allow MSI interrupts to always start at the end of the I/O APIC
pins.  Since existing machines already have more than 255 I/O APIC
pins, IRQ 255 is no longer reliably invalid, so just remove the
minimum starting value for MSI.

Reviewed by:	kib, markj
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17991
2018-11-16 23:39:39 +00:00
John Baldwin
b6b42932db Convert the number of MSI IRQs on x86 from a constant to a tunable.
The number of MSI IRQs still defaults to 512, but it can now be
changed at boot time via the machdep.num_msi_irqs tunable.

Reviewed by:	kib, royger (older version)
Reviewed by:	markj
MFC after:	1 month
Relnotes:	yes
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17977
2018-11-15 18:37:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
fd036deac1 Dynamically allocate IRQ ranges on x86.
Previously, x86 used static ranges of IRQ values for different types
of I/O interrupts.  Interrupt pins on I/O APICs and 8259A PICs used
IRQ values from 0 to 254.  MSI interrupts used a compile-time-defined
range starting at 256, and Xen event channels used a
compile-time-defined range after MSI.  Some recent systems have more
than 255 I/O APIC interrupt pins which resulted in those IRQ values
overflowing into the MSI range triggering an assertion failure.

Replace statically assigned ranges with dynamic ranges.  Do a single
pass computing the sizes of the IRQ ranges (PICs, MSI, Xen) to
determine the total number of IRQs required.  Allocate the interrupt
source and interrupt count arrays dynamically once this pass has
completed.  To minimize runtime complexity these arrays are only sized
once during bootup.  The PIC range is determined by the PICs present
in the system.  The MSI and Xen ranges continue to use a fixed size,
though this does make it possible to turn the MSI range size into a
tunable in the future.

As a result, various places are updated to use dynamic limits instead
of constants.  In addition, the vmstat(8) utility has been taught to
understand that some kernels may treat 'intrcnt' and 'intrnames' as
pointers rather than arrays when extracting interrupt stats from a
crashdump.  This is determined by the presence (vs absence) of a
global 'nintrcnt' symbol.

This change reverts r189404 which worked around a buggy BIOS which
enumerated an I/O APIC twice (using the same memory mapped address for
both entries but using an IRQ base of 256 for one entry and a valid
IRQ base for the second entry).  Making the "base" of MSI IRQ values
dynamic avoids the panic that r189404 worked around, and there may now
be valid I/O APICs with an IRQ base above 256 which this workaround
would incorrectly skip.

If in the future the issue reported in PR 130483 reoccurs, we will
have to add a pass over the I/O APIC entries in the MADT to detect
duplicates using the memory mapped address and use some strategy to
choose the "correct" one.

While here, reserve room in intrcnts for the Hyper-V counters.

PR:		229429, 130483
Reviewed by:	kib, royger, cem
Tested by:	royger (Xen), kib (DMAR)
Approved by:	re (gjb)
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16861
2018-08-28 21:09:19 +00:00
John Baldwin
a800b45c18 Merge amd64 and i386 <machine/intr_machdep.h> headers.
Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16803
2018-08-20 12:31:39 +00:00