regardless of if they are signed or unsigned since it is easier to work
with sign-extended values. Thus, remove the disabled zapnot to
zero-extend the sign-extended value we read from *p in atomic_cmpset_32()
since the cmpval we are comparing against should already be
sign-extended.
- To ensure that the compiler knows to sign-extend the upper 32 bits of
cmpval rather than leaving garbage in there, cast the appropriately in
the constraints section.
Help from: Richard Henderson <rth@redhat.com>
nearly in its entirety from i386, so it retains the phk/nati copyright.
Savecore likes the results, but I have no way to test it as gdb is
still broken.
value we load from memory. gcc3.1 passes in the u_int32_t old value to
compare against as a _sign_-extended 64-bit value for some reason (bug?).
This is a temporary workaround so kernels work again on alpha.
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)
the symbol index defined by the relocation. The elf_lookup() support
function is to be used by elf_reloc() when symbol lookups need to be
done. The elf_lookup() function operates on the symbol index and
will do a symbol name based lookup when such is required, otherwise
it uses the symbol index directly. This solves the problem seen on
ia64 where the symbol hash table does not contain local symbols and
a symbol name based lookup would fail for those symbols.
Don't pass the symbol name to elf_reloc(), as it isn't used any more.
machine_checks.
This fixes pci config reads for non existing devices on secondary
pci busses.
Thanks to Andrew Gallatin for pointing me to the register
Reviewed by: gallatin
Approved by: gallatin
environment needed at boot time to a dynamic subsystem when VM is
up. The dynamic kernel environment is protected by an sx lock.
This adds some new functions to manipulate the kernel environment :
freeenv(), setenv(), unsetenv() and testenv(). freeenv() has to be
called after every getenv() when you have finished using the string.
testenv() only tests if an environment variable is present, and
doesn't require a freeenv() call. setenv() and unsetenv() are self
explanatory.
The kenv(2) syscall exports these new functionalities to userland,
mainly for kenv(1).
Reviewed by: peter
the tokens are legal ANSI-C. Maybe to enable 'op' to be a macro itself?
Anyway, with the ## concatenation Gcc 3.1's integrated `cpp' treats "=op("
as a single token vs. the three tokens it is.
Gcc 3.1's 'cpp' vs. 2.95.3's. Maybe it is due to other code movement and
it just shows up weirdly in handling the .stab's. Anyway, w/o this change
building a kernel gives:
alpha/alpha/pal.s:75: relocation truncated to fit: REFLONG .text
alpha/alpha/prom_disp.s:67: relocation truncated to fit: REFLONG .text
and pmap_copy_page(). This gets rid of a couple more physical addresses
in upper layers, with the eventual aim of supporting PAE and dealing with
the physical addressing mostly within pmap. (We will need either 64 bit
physical addresses or page indexes, possibly both depending on the
circumstances. Leaving this to pmap itself gives more flexibilitly.)
Reviewed by: jake
Tested on: i386, ia64 and (I believe) sparc64. (my alpha was hosed)
_BYTE_ORDER. These are far more useful than their non-underscored
equivalents as these can be used in restricted namespace environments.
Mark the non-underscored variants as deprecated.
most cases NULL is passed, but in some cases such as network driver locks
(which use the MTX_NETWORK_LOCK macro) and UMA zone locks, a name is used.
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
they aren't in the usual path of execution for syscalls and traps.
The main complication for this is that we have to set flags to control
ast() everywhere that changes the signal mask.
Avoid locking in userret() in most of the remaining cases.
Submitted by: luoqi (first part only, long ago, reorganized by me)
Reminded by: dillon
various machdep.c's to being declared in kern_mutex.c.
- Add a new function mutex_init() used to perform early initialization
needed for mutexes such as setting up thread0's contested lock list
and initializing MI mutexes. Change the various MD startup routines
to call this function instead of duplicating all the code themselves.
Tested on: alpha, i386
and cpu_critical_exit() and moves associated critical prototypes into their
own header file, <arch>/<arch>/critical.h, which is only included by the
three MI source files that need it.
Backout and re-apply improperly comitted syntactical cleanups made to files
that were still under active development. Backout improperly comitted program
structure changes that moved localized declarations to the top of two
procedures. Partially re-apply one of the program structure changes to
move 'mask' into an intermediate block rather then in three separate
sub-blocks to make the code more readable. Re-integrate bug fixes that Jake
made to the sparc64 code.
Note: In general, developers should not gratuitously move declarations out
of sub-blocks. They are where they are for reasons of structure, grouping,
readability, compiler-localizability, and to avoid developer-introduced bugs
similar to several found in recent years in the VFS and VM code.
Reviewed by: jake
general cleanup of the API. The entire API now consists of two functions
similar to the pre-KSE API. The suser() function takes a thread pointer
as its only argument. The td_ucred member of this thread must be valid
so the only valid thread pointers are curthread and a few kernel threads
such as thread0. The suser_cred() function takes a pointer to a struct
ucred as its first argument and an integer flag as its second argument.
The flag is currently only used for the PRISON_ROOT flag.
Discussed on: smp@