Given that 64c/128t CPUs are currently available, and that many
devices (nvme, many NICs) desire to map 1 MSI-X vector per core,
or even 1 per-thread, it is becoming far easier to see MSI-X interrupt
setup fail due to msi vector exhaustion, and devices fail to attach at
boot on large system.
This bump costs 12KB on amd64 (and 6KB on i386), which seems
worth the trade off for a better out of the box experience on
high end hardware.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 21 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
In particular, invalidation of the preloaded modules text to allow
execution from it was broken after D25188/r362031.
Reviewed by: markj
Reported by: delphij, dhw
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 13 days
Right now code first flushes all local TLB entries that needs to be
flushed, then signals IPI to remote cores, and then waits for
acknowledgements while spinning idle. In the VMWare article 'Don’t
shoot down TLB shootdowns!' it was noted that the time spent spinning
is lost, and can be more usefully used doing local TLB invalidation.
We could use the same invalidation handler for local TLB as for
remote, but typically for pmap == curpmap we can use INVLPG for locals
instead of INVPCID on remotes, since we cannot control context
switches on them. Due to that, keep the local code and provide the
callbacks to be called from smp_targeted_tlb_shootdown() after IPIs
are fired but before spin wait starts.
Reviewed by: alc, cem, markj, Anton Rang <rang at acm.org>
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25188
When I did some bus_dma cleanup in r320528, I brought forward some sketchy
WITNESS checks from the prior x86 busdma wrappers, instead of recognizing
them as technical debt and just dropping them. Two of these were removed in
r346351 and r346851, but one remains in bounce_bus_dmamem_alloc(). This check
could be constrained to only apply in the BUS_DMA_NOWAIT case, but it's cleaner
to simply remove it and rely on the checks already present in the sleepable
allocation paths used by this function.
While here, remove another unnecessary witness check in bus_dma_tag_create
(the tag is always allocated with M_NOWAIT), and fix a couple of typos.
Reported by: cem
Reviewed by: kib, cem
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25107
On amd64 we already avoid using memory below 4GB in order to prevent
clashes with MMIO regions, but i386 was allowed to use any hole in
the physical memory map in order to map Xen pages.
Limit this to memory above the 1MB boundary on i386 in order to avoid
clashes with the MMIO holes in that area.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after: 1 week
The flush is needed to prevent cross-process ret2spec, which is not handled
on kernel entry if IBPB is enabled but SMEP is present.
While there, add i386 RSB flush.
Reported by: Anthony Steinhauser <asteinhauser@google.com>
Reviewed by: markj, Anthony Steinhauser
Discussed with: philip
admbugs: 961
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This function is responsible for setting pc_domain in each pcpu
structure. Call it from the main function that starts APs, rather than
a separate SYSINIT. This makes it easier to close the window where
UMA's per-CPU slab allocator may be called while pc_domain is
uninitialized. In particular, the allocator uses pc_domain to allocate
domain-local pages, so allocations before this point end up using domain
0 for everything.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24757
Release kernels have no KDB backends enabled, so they discard an NMI
if it is not due to a hardware failure. This includes NMIs from
IPMI BMCs and hypervisors.
Furthermore, the interaction of panic_on_nmi, kdb_on_nmi, and
debugger_on_panic is confusing.
Respond to all NMIs according to panic_on_nmi and debugger_on_panic.
Remove kdb_on_nmi. Expand the meaning of panic_on_nmi by making
it a bitfield. There are currently two bits: one for NMIs due to
hardware failure, and one for all others. Leave room for more.
If panic_on_nmi and debugger_on_panic are both true, don't actually panic,
but directly enter the debugger, to allow someone to leave the debugger
and [hopefully] resume normal execution.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes: machdep.kdb_on_nmi is gone; machdep.panic_on_nmi changed
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24558
Stop attempting to use FADT legacy hardware flag, it is almost always
a lie.
Instead, unless user explicitly disabled the calibration, calibrate
against 8254 ISA clock. Then, obtain the rough value of the expected
TSC frequency from CPUID leafs 0x15/0x16 or even from the CPU
marketing name string. If calibration results look unbelievably bogus
comparing with CPUID leafs report, use CPUID one.
Intel does not recommend to use CPUID leaf 0x16 for the value of the
system time frequency, indeed the error there might be up to 1% which
e.g. makes ntpd give up. If ISA clock is present, we win, if not, we
get some frequency that allows the machine to boot without enormous
delay.
Next improvement would be to use HPET for re-calibration if we decided
that ISA clock gives bogus results, after HPETs are enumerated. This
is a much bigger change since we probably would need to re-evaluate
some constants depending on TSC frequency.
Reviewed by: emaste, jhb, scottl
Tested by: scottl
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24426
If EOI suppression is supported but reported ioapic version is so old
that it does not has EOI register (weird virtualization setup), fix
Intel trick of eoi-ing by flipping pin type (edge/level) to account
for the disabled pin.
Reported by: Juniper
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23965
It does not serve any purpose now, the io apic id is not seen by
software, and some Intel documents claim that the register is
implemented for FUD reasons. More, renumbering seems to not work on
new Intel machines which actually have mismatched MADT and hw IDs.
On older machines where separate APIC bus existed, unique numbering of
all APICs was required for bus arbitration to work, but it is no
longer true (that machines were SMP from pre-Pentium IV era).
When matching PCIe IOAPIC device against MADT-enumerated IOAPICs,
compare io_apic_id from BAR against io_apic_id read from the
MADT-pointed register page.
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: flo (previous version), pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23965
It seems that the newer Intel chipset did that, and Linux reads 8
bits. The only detail is that all seen datasheets, even under NDA,
claim that io apic id is 4 bits.
Submitted by: jeff
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: flo, pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23965
r357614 added CTLFLAG_NEEDGIANT to make it easier to find nodes that are
still not MPSAFE (or already are but aren’t properly marked).
Use it in preparation for a general review of all nodes.
This is non-functional change that adds annotations to SYSCTL_NODE and
SYSCTL_PROC nodes using one of the soon-to-be-required flags.
Mark all obvious cases as MPSAFE. All entries that haven't been marked
as MPSAFE before are by default marked as NEEDGIANT
Approved by: kib (mentor, blanket)
Commented by: kib, gallatin, melifaro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23718
When turning IBRS mitigation using sysctl, as opposed to loader tunable,
send IPI to tweak MSR on all cores. Right now code only performed MSR write
onr the CPU where sysctl was run.
Properly report hw.ibrs_active for IBRS_ALL. Split hw_ibrs_ibpb_active out
from ibrs_active, to keep the current semantic of guiding kernel entry and
exit handlers.
Reported and tested by: mav
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This is SVM features word, the bit is defined in "PPR for AMD Family
17h Model 31h B0", document 55803 Rev 0.54.
N.B. GuesSpecCtl (no 't') is the spelling from the document.
Submitted by: Dmitry Luhtionov <dmitryluhtionov@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Returned value has type based on the argument, meaning consumers no longer
have to cast in the commmon case.
This commit keeps the kernel compilable without patching the rest.
In dmar_gas_uppermatch, skip searching a subtree if all its gaps-between-alloctions are too small.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23391
If package-level control is present, we default to using it. Per-core
software control may be enabled by setting the machdep.hwpstate_pkg_ctrl
tunable to "0" in loader.conf(5).
Per Intel SDM (Vol 3b Part 2), if HWP indicates EPP (energy-performance
preference) is not supported, the hardware instead uses the ENERGY_PERF_BIAS
MSR. In the epp sysctl handler, fall back to that MSR if HWP does not
support EPP and CPUID indicates the ENERGY_PERF_BIAS MSR is supported.
I don't know why a Skylake CPU with the HWP feature bit present would trap
on MSR reads of the HWP registers, but if this occurs, do not leave the
attach thread bound. This could conceivably cause reported hangs, although
I have no evidence that this is the cause.
Reported by: ae@, Andreas Nilsson <andrnils AT gmail.com>
X-MFC-With: r357002
Add a sysctl knob to allow users to re-enable it, and document the knob and
default in cpufreq.4. (While here, add a few unrelated updates to
cpufreq.4.)
It seems that the register value in some hardware simply reflects the
configured P-state. This results in an inadvertent and unintended outcome
where the P-state can only walk down, and then the driver becomes "stuck" in
the slowest possible P-state.
The Linux driver never consults this register, so that's some evidence that
ignoring the contents are relatively harmless.
PR: 234733
Reported by: sigsys AT gmail.com, Erich Dollanksy <freebsd.ed.lists AT
sumeritec.com>
After r355784 the td_oncpu field is no longer synchronized by the thread
lock, so the stack capture interrupt cannot be delievered precisely.
Fix this using a loop which drops the thread lock and restarts if the
wrong thread was sampled from the stack capture interrupt handler.
Change the implementation to use a regular interrupt instead of an NMI.
Now that we drop the thread lock, there is no advantage to the latter.
Simplify the KPIs. Remove stack_save_td_running() and add a return
value to stack_save_td(). On platforms that do not support stack
capture of running threads, stack_save_td() returns EOPNOTSUPP. If the
target thread is running in user mode, stack_save_td() returns EBUSY.
Reviewed by: kib
Reported by: mjg, pho
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23355
These were all introduced in the initial import of hwpstate_intel(4).
Reported by: Coverity
CIDs: 1413161, 1413164, 1413165, 1413167
X-MFC-With: r357002
at the root of every subtree that changes in an insert or delete, and
only once, and ordered from the bottom of the tree to the top. For
intel_gas.c, the only user of RB_AUGMENT I can find, change the
augmenting routine so that it does not climb from entry to tree root
on every call, and remove a 'tree correcting' function that can be
supplanted by proper tree augmentation.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23189
If we're going to throttle user requested P-states, we should at least produce
a debug log line indicating the surprising behavior.
PR: inspired by 234733
DRIVER_MODULE does not actually define a MODULE_VERSION, which is required
to satisfy a MODULE_DEPENDency. Declare one explicitly in
hwpstate_intel(4).
Reported by: flo
X-MFC-With: r357002
Instead of waiting for pc_curthread which is overwritten by
init_secondary_tail(), wait for non-NULL pc_curpcb, to be set by the
first context switch.
Assert that pc_curpcb is not set too early.
Reported and tested by: rlibby
Reviewed by: markj, rlibby
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23330
Intel Speed Shift is Intel's technology to control frequency in hardware,
with hints from software.
Let's get a working version of this in the tree and we can refine it from
here.
Submitted by: bwidawsk, scottph
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages), myself
Discussed with: jhb, kib (earlier versions)
With feedback from: Greg V, gallatin, freebsdnewbie AT freenet.de
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18028
As a new x86 CPU vendor, Chengdu Haiguang IC Design Co., Ltd (Hygon)
is a joint venture between AMD and Haiguang Information Technology Co.,
Ltd., aims at providing x86 processors for China server market.
The first generation Hygon processor(Dhyana) shares most architecture
with AMD's family 17h, but with different CPU vendor ID("HygonGenuine")
and PCI vendor ID(0x1d94) and family series number 18h(Hygon negotiated
with AMD to confirm that only Hygon use family 18h).
To enable Hygon Dhyana support in FreeBSD, add new definitions
HYGON_VENDOR_ID("HygonGenuine") and X86_VENDOR_HYGON(0x1d94) to identify
Hygon Dhyana CPU.
Initialize the CPU features(topology, local APIC ext, MSI, TSC, hwpstate,
MCA, DEBUG_CTL, etc) for amd64 and i386 mode by sharing the code path of
AMD family 17h.
The changes have been applied on FreeBSD 13.0-CURRENT and tested
successfully on Hygon Dhyana processor.
References:
[1] Linux kernel patches for Hygon Dhyana, merged in 4.20:
https://git.kernel.org/tip/c9661c1e80b609cd038db7c908e061f0535804ef
[2] MSR and CPUID definition:
https://www.amd.com/system/files/TechDocs/54945_PPR_Family_17h_Models_00h-0Fh.pdf
Submitted by: Pu Wen <puwen@hygon.cn>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23163
is no longer used.
pc_curthread is set by cpu_switch after it stopped using the old
thread (or boot) stack. This makes the smp_after_idle_runnable()
function not dependent on the internals of the scheduler operations.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23276
off the stack, initialized to default values, and then filled in with
driver-specific values, all without having to worry about the numerous
other fields in the tag. The resulting template is then passed into
busdma and the normal opaque tag object created. See the man page for
details on how to initialize a template.
Templates do not support tag filters. Filters have been broken for many
years, and only existed for an ancient make/model of hardware that had a
quirky DMA engine. Instead of breaking the ABI/API and changing the
arugment signature of bus_dma_tag_create() to remove the filter arguments,
templates allow us to ignore them, and also significantly reduce the
complexity of creating and managing tags.
Reviewed by: imp, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22906
s/BIT_NAND/BIT_ANDNOT/, and for CPU and DOMAINSET too. The actual
implementation is "and not" (or "but not"), i.e. A but not B.
Fortunately this does appear to be what all existing callers want.
Don't supply a NAND (not (A and B)) operation at this time.
Discussed with: jeff
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22791
migitation is available in microcode and the operator has set
the sysctl to automatic mode.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1408334
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
hardclock IPI is delivered.
In the current code after r355311, critical section is taken only
around hardclockintr() call, and sched_preempt() is called after the
section is exited. If we reschedule after exit, as we typically would
due to conditions that caused IPI, in ULE the runq tdq_ipipending is
not cleared, which blocks generation of further preempt IPIs.
Since all relatively modern (10 years) hardware has per-cpu event
timers, restoring the critical section conditionally does not affect
it.
Reported and tested by: cy
Diagnosed and reviewed by: jeff (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22716
They're in both the old and new places in HEAD for the moment for
discussion and transition. The old locations will be garbage collected
in 4 weeks. MFCs to 12 an 11 will keep the old and new for transition
purposes.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Intel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22590
Just a typo that Coverity identified.
Coverity also identified an unused store in the same functional area (x86 TAA
stuff), but this commit does not address that issue (CID 1408334).
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1408328, 1408332
tightening constraints on busy as a precursor to lockless page lookup and
should largely be a NOP for these cases.
Reviewed by: alc, kib, markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22611
the sched_preempt() switch optimization and causes the sched lock to be dropped
and immediately reacquired.
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, mav, markj (with changes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22623
The header is abused for inclusion into userspace, and on stable
branches neither device_t nor bool types are not defined when used
from userspace.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
X-MFC after: now
Update the NetBSD Kernel Concurrency Sanitizer (KCSAN) runtime to work in
the FreeBSD kernel. It is a useful tool for finding data races between
threads executing on different CPUs.
This can be enabled by enabling KCSAN in the kernel config, or by using the
GENERIC-KCSAN amd64 kernel. It works on amd64 and arm64, however the later
needs a compiler change to allow -fsanitize=thread that KCSAN uses.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22315
context should share page tables.
Practically it means that dma requests from any device on the bus are
translated according to the entries loaded for the bus:0:0 device.
KPI requires that the slot and function of the device be 0:0, and that
no tags for other devices on the bus were used.
The intended use are NTBs which pass TLPs from the downstream to the
host with slot:func of the downstream originator.
Reviewed and tested by: mav
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22434
Use the KPI to tweak MSRs in mitigation code.
Reviewed by: markj, scottl
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22431
This CVE has already been announced in FreeBSD SA-19:26.mcu.
Mitigation for TAA involves either turning off TSX or turning on the
VERW mitigation used for MDS. Some CPUs will also be self-mitigating
for TAA and require no software workaround.
Control knobs are:
machdep.mitigations.taa.enable:
0 - no software mitigation is enabled
1 - attempt to disable TSX
2 - use the VERW mitigation
3 - automatically select the mitigation based on processor
features.
machdep.mitigations.taa.state:
inactive - no mitigation is active/enabled
TSX disable - TSX is disabled in the bare metal CPU as well as
- any virtualized CPUs
VERW - VERW instruction clears CPU buffers
not vulnerable - The CPU has identified itself as not being
vulnerable
Nothing in the base FreeBSD system uses TSX. However, the instructions
are straight-forward to add to custom applications and require no kernel
support, so the mitigation is provided for users with untrusted
applications and tenants.
Reviewed by: emaste, imp, kib, scottph
Sponsored by: Intel
Differential Revision: 22374
Disable the use of executable 2M page mappings in EPT-format page
tables on affected CPUs. For bhyve virtual machines, this effectively
disables all use of superpage mappings on affected CPUs. The
vm.pmap.allow_2m_x_ept sysctl can be set to override the default and
enable mappings on affected CPUs.
Alternate approaches have been suggested, but at present we do not
believe the complexity is warranted for typical bhyve's use cases.
Reviewed by: alc, emaste, markj, scottl
Security: CVE-2018-12207
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21884
Currently NMIs are sent over event channels, but that defeats the
purpose of NMIs since event channels can be masked. Fix this by
issuing NMIs using a hypercall, which injects a NMI (vector #2) to the
desired vCPU.
Note that NMIs could also be triggered using the emulated local APIC,
but using a hypercall is better from a performance point of view
since it doesn't involve instruction decoding when not using x2APIC
mode.
Reported and Tested by: avg
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
x86 stack_save_td_running() can work safely only if IPI_TRACE is a
non-maskable interrupt. But at the moment FreeBSD/Xen does not provide
support for the NMI delivery mode. So, mark the functionality as
unsupported similarly to other platforms without NMI.
Maybe there is a way to provide a Xen-specific working
stack_save_td_running(), but I couldn't figure it out.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
Enabling interrupts on htt cores has benefits to workloads which are primarily
interrupt driven by increasing the logical cores available for interrupt handling.
The tunable is named machdep.hyperthreading_intr_allowed
Reviewed by: kib, jhb
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22233
The rationale is pretty much the same as in r353747.
There is no subsequent dependent store.
The store is to the regular (TSO) memory anyway.
MFC after: 23 days
Rather than a few scattered places in the tree. Organize flag names in a
contiguous region of specialreg.h.
While here, delete deprecated PCOMMIT from leaf 7.
No functional change.
The former spelling probably confused MOVDIR64B with MOVDIRI64.
MOVDIR_64B is the 64-*byte* direct store instruction; MOVDIR_I64 is the
64-*bit* direct store instruction (underscores added here for clarity; they are
not part of the canonical instruction name).
No functional change.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
ABI already guarantees the direction is forward. Note this does not take care
of i386-specific cld's.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21906
Convert all remaining references to that field to "ref_count" and update
comments accordingly. No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Sponsored by: Intel, Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21768
leaf 0x15 is not functional.
This should improve automatic TSC frequency determination on
Skylake/Kabylake/... families, where 0x15 exists but does not provide
all necessary information. SDM contains relatively strong wording
against such uses of 0x16, but Intel does not give us any other way to
obtain the frequency. Linux did the same in the commit
604dc9170f2435d27da5039a3efd757dceadc684.
Based on submission by: Neel Chauhan <neel@neelc.org>
PR: 240475
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21777
doing so adds more flexibility with less redundant code.
Reviewed by: jhb, markj, kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21250
Move the floppy driver to the x86 specific notes file.
Reviewed by: jhb, manu, jhibbits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21208
x86 needs sc, as does sparc64. powerpc doesn't use it by default, but some old
powermac notebooks do not work with vt yet for reasons unknonw. Even so, I've
removed it from powerpc LINT. It's not in daily use there, and the intent is to
100% switch to vt now that it works for that platform to limit support burden.
All the other architectures omit some or all of the screen savers from their
lint config. Move them to the x86 NOTES files and remove the exclusions. This
reduces slightly the number of savers sparc64 compiles, but since they are in
GENERIC, the overage is adequate and if someone reaelly wants to sort them out
in sparc64 they can sweat the details and the testing.
Reviewed by: jhb (earlier version), manu (earlier version), jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21233
Depending on system configuration, version, and architecture,
mds_handler might be dereferenced from doreti before
hw_mds_recalculate_boot() initialized it. Statically assign void
method to cover all cases.
Reported by: "Schuendehuette, Matthias (LDA IT PLM)" <matthias.schuendehuette@siemens.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
that it becomes increasingly expensive to process a steady stream of
correctable errors. Additionally, the memory used by the MCA entries can
grow without bound.
Change the code to maintain two separate lists: a list of entries which
still need to be logged, and a list of entries which have already been
logged. Additionally, allow a user-configurable limit on the number of
entries which will be saved after they are logged. (The limit defaults
to -1 [unlimited], which is the current behavior.)
Reviewed by: imp, jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20482
This is needed for AMD SMCA processors, as SMCA uses different
MSR address for access MCA banks.
Use IA32 specific msr_ops as defualt, and use SMCA-specific msr_ops
when on an SMCA-enabled processor
Submitted by: chandu from amd dot com
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18055
If MDS mitigation is enabled by the tunable but MDS microcode is not
early-loaded, software mitigation is selected. This causes
initializecpu() to try to allocate memory which makes boot process
very unhappy.
Create SYSINIT that runs sufficiently late to succeed.
Reported by: naddy
PR: 237968
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
are able to determine some virtual machines, but the vm_guest variable was
still only being set to VM_GUEST_VM.
Since we do know what some of them specifically are, we can set vm_guest
appropriately.
Also, if we see the CPUID has the HV flag, but we were unable to find a
definitive vendor in the Hypervisor CPUID Information Leaf, fall back to
the older detection methods, as they may be able to determine a specific
HV type.
Add VM_GUEST_PARALLELS value to VM_GUEST for Parallels.
Approved by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20305
This allows replacing "sys/eventfilter.h" includes with "sys/_eventfilter.h"
in other header files (e.g., sys/{bus,conf,cpu}.h) and reduces header
pollution substantially.
EVENTHANDLER_DECLARE and EVENTHANDLER_LIST_DECLAREs were moved out of .c
files into appropriate headers (e.g., sys/proc.h, powernv/opal.h).
As a side effect of reduced header pollution, many .c files and headers no
longer contain needed definitions. The remainder of the patch addresses
adding appropriate includes to fix those files.
LOCK_DEBUG and LOCK_FILE_LINE_ARG are moved to sys/_lock.h, as required by
sys/mutex.h since r326106 (but silently protected by header pollution prior
to this change).
No functional change (intended). Of course, any out of tree modules that
relied on header pollution for sys/eventhandler.h, sys/lock.h, or
sys/mutex.h inclusion need to be fixed. __FreeBSD_version has been bumped.
type, use a table to make it easier to add more in the future, if needed.
Add VirtualBox detection to the table ("VBoxVBoxVBox" is the hypervisor
vendor string to look for.) Also add VM_GUEST_VBOX to the VM_GUEST
enumeration to indicate VirtualBox.
Save the CPUID base for the hypervisor entry that we detected. Driver code
may need to know about it in order to obtain additional CPUID features.
Approved by: bryanv, jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16305
With lockless DI, pmap_remove() requires operational thread lock,
which is initialized at SI_SUB_RUN_QUEUE for thread0. Move it even
later where APs are started, the moment after which other boot memory
like trampoline stacks is already being freed.
Reported by: gtetlow
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 30 days
In all practical situations, the resolver visibility is static.
Requested by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Approved by: so (emaste)
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20281
A static analyzer complained about a couple instances of checking a
variable against NULL after already having dereferenced it.
- dmar_gas_alloc_region: remove the tautological NULL checks
- dmar_release_resources / dmar_fini_fault_log: don't deref unit->regs
unless initialized.
And while here, fix an inverted initialization check in dmar_fini_qi.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20263
Microarchitectural buffers on some Intel processors utilizing
speculative execution may allow a local process to obtain a memory
disclosure. An attacker may be able to read secret data from the
kernel or from a process when executing untrusted code (for example,
in a web browser).
Reference: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00233.html
Security: CVE-2018-12126, CVE-2018-12127, CVE-2018-12130, CVE-2019-11091
Security: FreeBSD-SA-19:07.mds
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: emaste, lwhsu
Approved by: so (gtetlow)
This gets rid of the global cpu_ipi_pending array.
While replace cmpset with fcmpset in the delivery code and opportunistically
check if given IPI is already pending.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
IPI_STOP is used after panic or when ddb is entered manually. MONITOR/
MWAIT allows CPUs that support the feature to sleep in a low power way
instead of spinning. Something similar is already used at idle.
It is perhaps especially useful in oversubscribed VM environments, and is
safe to use even if the panic/ddb thread is not the BSP. (Except in the
presence of MWAIT errata, which are detected automatically on platforms with
known wakeup problems.)
It can be tuned/sysctled with "machdep.stop_mwait," which defaults to 0
(off). This commit also introduces the tunable
"machdep.mwait_cpustop_broken," which defaults to 0, unless the CPU has
known errata, but may be set to "1" in loader.conf to signal that mwait
wakeup is broken on CPUs FreeBSD does not yet know about.
Unfortunately, Bhyve doesn't yet support MONITOR extensions, so this doesn't
help bhyve hypervisors running FreeBSD guests.
Submitted by: Anton Rang <rang AT acm.org> (earlier version)
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20135
Rather than just accessing it via pointer cast.
No functional change intended.
Discussed with: kib (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20135
We may need the BSP to reboot, but we don't need any AP CPU that isn't the
panic thread. Any CPU landing in this routine during panic isn't the panic
thread, so we can just detect !BSP && panic and shut down the logical core.
The savings can be demonstrated in a bhyve guest with multiple cores; before
this change, N guest threads would spin at 100% CPU. After this change,
only one or two threads spin (depending on if the panicing CPU was the BSP
or not).
Konstantin points out that this may break any future patches which allow
switching ddb(4) CPUs after panic and examining CPU-local state that cannot
be inspected remotely. In the event that such a mechanism is incorporated,
this behavior could be made configurable by tunable/sysctl.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20019
On some machines, DMAR contexts must be created before all devices
under the scope of the corresponding DMAR unit are enumerated.
Current code has two problems with that:
- scope lookup returns NULL device_t, which causes to skip creating a
context with RMRR, which is fatal for the affected device.
- calculation of the final pci dbsf address fails if any bridge in the
scope is not yet enumerated, because code relies on pcib_get_bus().
Make creation of contexts work either with device_t, or with DMAR PCI
scope paths. Scope provides enough information to infer context
address, and it is directly matched against DMAR tables scopes.
When calculating bus addresses for the scope or device, use direct
pci_cfgregread(PCIR_SECBUS_1) to get the secondary bus number, instead
of pcib_get_bus().
The issue was observed on HP Gen servers, where iLO PCI devices are
located behind south bridge switch. Turning on translation without
satisfying RMRR requests caused iLO to mostly hang, up to the level of
being unusable to control the server.
While there, remove hw.dmar.dmar_match_verbose tunable, and make the
normal logging under bootverbose useful and sufficient to diagnose
DRHD and RMRR parsing and matching.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
Some early PCIe chipsets are explicitly listed in the white-list to
enable use of the MMIO config space accesses, perhaps because ACPI
tables were not reliable source of the base MCFG address at that time.
For that chipsets, MCFG base was read from the known chipset MCFGbase
config register.
During very early stage of boot, when access to the PCI config space
is performed (see e.g. pci_early_quirks.c), we cannot map 255MB of
registers because the method used with pre-boot pmap overflows initial
kernel page tables.
Move fallback to read MCFGbase to the attachment method of the
x86/legacy device, which removes code duplication, and results in the
use of io accesses until MCFG is parsed or legacy attach called.
For amd64, pre-initialize cfgmech with CFGMECH_1, right now we
dynamically assign CFGMECH_1 to it anyway, and remove checks for
CFGMECH_NONE.
There is a mention in the Intel documentation for corresponding
chipsets that OS must use either io port or MMIO access method, but we
already break this rule by reading MCFGbase register, so one more
access seems to be innocent.
Reported by: longwitz@incore.de
PR: 236838
Reviewed by: avg (other version), jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19833
Add the infrastructure to allow MD procctl(2) commands, and use it to
introduce amd64 PTI control and reporting. PTI mode cannot be
modified for existing pmap, the knob controls PTI of the new vmspace
created on exec.
Requested by: jhb
Reviewed by: jhb, markj (previous version)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19514
FreeBSD base system does not provide an ACPI handler for the PC/AT RTC/CMOS
device with PnP ID PNP0B00; on some HP laptops, the absence of this handler
causes suspend/resume and poweroff(8) to hang or fail [1], [2]. On these
laptops EC _REG method queries the RTC date/time registers via ACPI
before suspending/powering off. The handler should be registered before
acpi_ec driver is loaded.
This change adds handler to access CMOS RTC operation region described in
section 9.15 of ACPI-6.2 specification [3]. It is installed only for ACPI
version of atrtc(4) so it should not affect old ACPI-less i386 systems.
It is possible to disable the handler with loader tunable:
debug.acpi.disabled=atrtc
Informational debugging printf can be enabled by setting hw.acpi.verbose=1
in loader.conf
[1] https://wiki.freebsd.org/Laptops/HP_Envy_6Z-1100
[2] https://wiki.freebsd.org/Laptops/HP_Notebook_15-af104ur
[3] https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/ACPI_6_2.pdf
PR: 207419, 213039
Submitted by: Anthony Jenkins <Scoobi_doo@yahoo.com>
Reviewed by: ian
Discussed on: acpi@, 2013-2015, several threads
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19314
Skylake Xeons.
See SDM rev. 68 Vol 3 4.6.2 Protection Keys and the description of the
RDPKRU and WRPKRU instructions.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18893
idle_td is dereferenced without thread-locking it to make its contents is
invariant, and was accessed without telling the compiler that its contents
is invariant. Some compilers optimized accesses to the supposedly invariant
contents by moving the critical checks for changes outside of the loop that
waits for changes. Fix this using atomic ops.
This bug only showed up for the following configuration: a Turion2
system, amd64 kernels, compiled by gcc, and SCHED_4BSD. clang fails
to do the optimization with all CFLAGS that I tried, because it doesn't
fully optimize the '__asm __volatile' for cpu_spinwait() although this
asm has no memory clobber. gcc only does the optimization with most
CFLAGS. I mostly used -Os with all compilers. i386 works because gcc
-m32 -Os only moves 1 or the 2 accesses outside of the loop.
Non-Turion2 systems and SCHED_ULE worked due to different timing (when
all APs start before the BP checks them outside of the loop).
Reviewed by: kib
Make it more comprehensive on i386, by not setting nx bit for any
mapping, not just adding PF_X to all kernel-loaded ELF segments. This
is needed for the compatibility with older i386 programs that assume
that read access implies exec, e.g. old X servers with hand-rolled
module loader.
Reported and tested by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
It was broken before PAE/no-PAE merge, but since now PAE is the
default, resume is apparently becomes for all machines.
The corrected issues:
- the trampoline page is not mapped executable, so machine faults when
paging is on;
- MSR.EFER and %cr4 both should be loaded before paging is enabled,
otherwise paging structures are invalid (cr4.PAE and EFER.NX).
- MSR.EFER and %cr4 should be only loaded if present. I attempt to handle
this by not touching the registers if the value is zero.
There are some more bits still not quite correct, e.g. unconditional
access to %cr4 in resumectx.
Reported and debugging help by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
CPU and buses can manage up to the limit reported by cpu_maxphyaddr,
so set mem_rman to the value returned by cpu_getmaxphyaddr(). For the
PAE mode, it was missed both when rman_res_t was increased to
uintmax_t, and from the PAE merge commit.
When importing smaps or dump_avail chunks into memory rman, do not
blindly ignore resources which ends above the limit, chomp them
instead if start is below the limit. The same change was already done
to i386 add_physmap_entry().
Based on the submission by: bde
MFC after: 2 months
The main differences with the currently implemented method are:
- Requires a local APIC EOI, since it doesn't bypass the local APIC
as the previous method used to do.
- Can be set to use different IDT vectors on each vCPU. Note that
FreeBSD doesn't make use of this feature since the event channel
IDT vector is reserved system wide.
Note that the old method of setting the event channel upcall is
not removed, and will be used as a fallback if this newly introduced
method is not available.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Effectively all i386 kernels now have two pmaps compiled in: one
managing PAE pagetables, and another non-PAE. The implementation is
selected at cold time depending on the CPU features. The vm_paddr_t is
always 64bit now. As result, nx bit can be used on all capable CPUs.
Option PAE only affects the bus_addr_t: it is still 32bit for non-PAE
configs, for drivers compatibility. Kernel layout, esp. max kernel
address, low memory PDEs and max user address (same as trampoline
start) are now same for PAE and for non-PAE regardless of the type of
page tables used.
Non-PAE kernel (when using PAE pagetables) can handle physical memory
up to 24G now, larger memory requires re-tuning the KVA consumers and
instead the code caps the maximum at 24G. Unfortunately, a lot of
drivers do not use busdma(9) properly so by default even 4G barrier is
not easy. There are two tunables added: hw.above4g_allow and
hw.above24g_allow, the first one is kept enabled for now to evaluate
the status on HEAD, second is only for dev use.
i386 now creates three freelists if there is any memory above 4G, to
allow proper bounce pages allocation. Also, VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE changed
from 3 to 1.
The PAE_TABLES kernel config option is retired.
In collaboarion with: pho
Discussed with: emaste
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18894
If i386 has more than 4G of memory, allow the same number of busdma
bounce pages as for amd64. In fact, in this case bouncing sometimes
is much heavier than on amd64.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18854
Right now bus_addr_t and vm_paddr_t are always aliased to the same
underlying integer type on x86, which makes the interchange hard to
detect. Shortly, i386 kernel would use uint64_t for vm_paddr_t to
enable automatic use of PAE paging structures if hardware allows it,
while bus_addr_t would be extended to 64bit only when PAE option is
specified.
Fix all places that were identified as using bus_addr_t while page
address was assumed. This was performed by testing the complete PAE
merging patch on machine with > 4G of RAM enabled.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18854
vmm's CPUID emulation presented Intel topology information to the guest, but
disabled AMD topology information and in some cases passed through garbage.
I.e., CPUID leaves 0x8000_001[de] were passed through to the guest, but
guest CPUs can migrate between host threads, so the information presented
was not consistent. This could easily be observed with 'cpucontrol -i 0xfoo
/dev/cpuctl0'.
Slightly improve this situation by enabling the AMD topology feature flag
and presenting at least the CPUID fields used by FreeBSD itself to probe
topology on more modern AMD64 hardware (Family 15h+). Older stuff is
probably less interesting. I have not been able to empirically confirm it
is sufficient, but it should not regress anything either.
Reviewed by: araujo (previous version)
Relnotes: sure
With new sysctls (to the best of our ability do detect them). Restructured
smp.4 slightly for clarity (keep relevant stuff closer to the top) while
documenting.
Reviewed by: markj, jhibbits (ppc parts)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18322
The goal of this change is to fix a problem with PCI shared interrupts
during suspend and resume.
I have observed a couple of variations of the following scenario.
Devices A and B are on the same PCI bus and share the same interrupt.
Device A's driver is suspended first and the device is powered down.
Device B generates an interrupt. Interrupt handlers of both drivers are
called. Device A's interrupt handler accesses registers of the powered
down device and gets back bogus values (I assume all 0xff). That data is
interpreted as interrupt status bits, etc. So, the interrupt handler
gets confused and may produce some noise or enter an infinite loop, etc.
This change affects only PCI devices. The pci(4) bus driver marks a
child's interrupt handler as suspended after the child's suspend method
is called and before the device is powered down. This is done only for
traditional PCI interrupts, because only they can be shared.
At the moment the change is only for x86.
Notable changes in core subsystems / interfaces:
- BUS_SUSPEND_INTR and BUS_RESUME_INTR methods are added to bus
interface along with convenience functions bus_suspend_intr and
bus_resume_intr;
- rman_set_irq_cookie and rman_get_irq_cookie functions are added to
provide a way to associate an interrupt resource with an interrupt
cookie;
- intr_event_suspend_handler and intr_event_resume_handler functions
are added to the MI interrupt handler interface.
I added two new interrupt handler flags, IH_SUSP and IH_CHANGED, to
implement the new intr_event functions. IH_SUSP marks a suspended
interrupt handler. IH_CHANGED is used to implement a barrier that
ensures that a change to the interrupt handler's state is visible
to future interrupts.
While there, I fixed some whitespace issues in comments and changed a
couple of logically boolean variables to be bool.
MFC after: 1 month (maybe)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15755
The error was caused by map_ucode() casting a vm_paddr_t to a void *.
Use a uintptr_t instead to match the caller. Fix some style bugs while
here.
Reported by: bde
Reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Bootstacks are unused after APs executed sched_throw() in
init_secondary_tail() and started executing on proper idle thread
stack. Add sysinit that detects that the idle thread for each CPU was
scheduled at least once, and free corresponding bootstack.
Slight addition of the code (~200 bytes) is compensated by the saving,
because even on typical small modern desktop CPU we leak 128K of
memory otherwise (4 pages x 8 threads).
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18486
This moves the architecture independent parts of sys/x86/acpica/srat.c
to sys/dev/acpica/acpi_pxm.c, to be used later on arm64. The function
declarations are moved to sys/dev/acpica/acpivar.h
We also need to update sys/conf/files.{i386,amd64} to use the new file.
No functional changes.
Reviewed by: markj, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17941
The SLIT and SRAT ACPI tables needs to be parsed on arm64 as well, on
systems that use UEFI/ACPI firmware and support NUMA. To do this, we
need to move most of the logic of x86/acpica/srat.c to dev/acpica and
provide an API that architectures can use to parse and configure ACPI
NUMA information.
This commit adds the API in srat.c as a first step, without making any
functional changes. We will move the common code to sys/dev/acpica
as the next step.
The functions added are:
* int acpi_pxm_init(int ncpus, vm_paddr_t maxphys) - to allocate and
initialize data structures used
* void acpi_pxm_parse_tables(void) - parse SRAT/SLIT, save the cpu and
memory proximity information
* void acpi_pxm_set_mem_locality(void) - use the saved data to set
memory locality
* void acpi_pxm_set_cpu_locality(void) - use the saved data to set cpu
locality
* void acpi_pxm_free(void) - free data structures allocated by init
On arm64, we do not have an cpu APIC id that can be used as index to
store CPU data, we need to use the Processor Uid. To help with this,
define internal functions cpu_add, cpu_find, cpu_get_info to store
and get CPU proximity information.
Reviewed by: markj, jhb (previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17940
These definitions will be used by a driver to implement Hardware
P-States (autonomous control of HWP, via Intel Speed Shift technology).
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18050
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
SDM rev. 068 was released yesterday and it contains the description of
the MSR 0x10a IA32_ARCH_CAP. This change adds symbolic definitions for
all bits present in the document, and decode them in the CPU
identification lines printed on boot.
But also, the document defines SSB_NO as bit 4, while FreeBSD used but
2 to detect the need to work-around Speculative Store Bypass
issue. Change code to use the bit from SDM.
Similarly, the document describes bit 3 as an indicator that L1TF
issue is not present, in particular, no L1D flush is needed on
VMENTRY. We used RDCL_NO to avoid flushing, and again I changed the
code to follow new spec from SDM.
In fact my Apollo Lake machine with latest ucode shows this:
IA32_ARCH_CAPS=0x19<RDCL_NO,SKIP_L1DFL_VME,SSB_NO>
Reviewed by: bwidawsk
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18006
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
The off-by-one errors in 332735 weren't actual errors and were
preventing the last MSI interrupt source from being used. Instead,
the issue is that when all MSI interrupt sources were allocated, the
loop in msix_alloc() would terminate with 'msi' still set to non-null.
The only check for 'i' overflowing was in the 'msi' == NULL case, so
msix_alloc() would try to reuse the last MSI interrupt source instead
of failing.
Fix by moving the check for all sources being in use to just after the
loop.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17976
We need to know actual value for the standard extended features before
ifuncs are resolved.
Reported and tested by: madpilot
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Avoid using DELAY() since it can try to use spin locks on CPUs without
a P-state invariant TSC. For cpu_lock_delay(), always use the TSC if
it exists (even if it is not P-state invariant) to delay for a
microsecond. If the TSC does not exist, read from I/O port 0x84 to
delay instead.
PR: 228768
Reported by: Roger Hammerstein <cheeky.m@live.com>
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17851
This uses slightly simpler logic than the existing code by using the
full 64-bit counter and thus not having to worry about counter
overflow.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17850
On some Intel devices BIOS does not properly reserve memory (called
"stolen memory") for the GPU. If the stolen memory is claimed by the
OS, functions that depend on stolen memory (like frame buffer
compression) can't be used.
A function called pci_early_quirks that is called before the virtual
memory system is started was added. In Linux, this PCI early quirks
function iterates through all PCI slots to check for any device that
require quirks. While this more generic solution is preferable I only
ported the Intel graphics specific parts because I think my
implementation would be too similar to Linux GPL'd solution after
looking at the Linux code too much.
The code regarding Intel graphics stolen memory was ported from
Linux. In the case of Intel graphics stolen memory this
pci_early_quirks will read the stolen memory base and size from north
bridge registers. The values are stored in global variables that is
later read by linuxkpi_gplv2. Linuxkpi stores these values in a
Linux-specific structure that is read by the drm driver.
Relevant linuxkpi code is here:
https://github.com/FreeBSDDesktop/kms-drm/blob/drm-v4.16/linuxkpi/gplv2/src/linux_compat.c#L37
For now, only amd64 arch is suppor ted since that is the only arch
supported by the new drm drivers. I was told that Intel GPUs are
always located on 0:2:0 so these values are hard coded for now.
Note that the structure and early execution of the detection code is
not required in its current form, but we expect that the code will be
added shortly which fixes the potential BIOS bugs by reserving the
stolen range in phys_avail[]. This must be done as early as possible
to avoid conflicts with the potential usage of the memory in kernel.
Submitted by: Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: bwidawsk, imp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16719
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17775
Remove malloc_domain(9) and most other _domain KPIs added in r327900.
The new functions allow the caller to specify a general NUMA domain
selection policy, rather than specifically requesting an allocation from
a specific domain. The latter policy tends to interact poorly with
M_WAITOK, resulting in situations where a caller is blocked indefinitely
because the specified domain is depleted. Most existing consumers of
the _domain KPIs are converted to instead use a DOMAINSET_PREF() policy,
in which we fall back to other domains to satisfy the allocation
request.
This change also defines a set of DOMAINSET_FIXED() policies, which
only permit allocations from the specified domain.
Discussed with: gallatin, jeff
Reported and tested by: pho (previous version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17418
All platforms except powerpc use the same values and powerpc shares a
majority of them.
Go ahead and declare AT_NOTELF, AT_UID, and AT_EUID in favor of the
unused AT_DCACHEBSIZE, AT_ICACHEBSIZE, and AT_UCACHEBSIZE for powerpc.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17397
This provides a chicken switch for anyone negatively impacted by
enabling NUMA in the amd64 GENERIC kernel configuration. With
NUMA disabled at boot-time, information about the NUMA topology
is not exposed to the rest of the kernel, and all of physical
memory is viewed as coming from a single domain.
This method still has some performance overhead relative to disabling
NUMA support at compile time.
PR: 231460
Reviewed by: alc, gallatin, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17439
Pre-defined policies are useful when integrating the domainset(9)
policy machinery into various kernel memory allocators.
The refactoring will make it easier to add NUMA support for other
architectures.
No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: alc, gallatin, jeff, kib
Tested by: pho (part of a larger patch)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17416
The change is a no-op for architectures which don't ifunc memset,
memcpy nor memmove.
Convert places which need them. Xen bits by royger.
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17487
This caused microcode to be updated only on the BSP if hyperthreading
was disabled, typically resulting in a hang or reset.
Approved by: re (kib)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The AMD Threadripper 2990WX is basically a slightly crippled Epyc.
Rather than having 4 memory controllers, one per NUMA domain, it has
only 2 memory controllers enabled. This means that only 2 of the
4 NUMA domains can be populated with physical memory, and the
others are empty.
Add support to FreeBSD for empty NUMA domains by:
- creating empty memory domains when parsing the SRAT table,
rather than failing to parse the table
- not running the pageout deamon threads in empty domains
- adding defensive code to UMA to avoid allocating from empty domains
- adding defensive code to cpuset to avoid binding to an empty domain
Thanks to Jeff for suggesting this strategy.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Approved by: re (gjb@)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1683
Use these predicates instead of inline references to vm_min_domains.
Also add a global all_domains set, akin to all_cpus.
Reviewed by: alc, jeff, kib
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17278
This simplifies the runtime logic and reduces the number of
runtime-constant branches.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Approved by: re (gjb)
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16736
The atpic_register_sources callback tries to avoid registering interrupt
sources that would collide with an I/O APIC. However, the previous
implementation was failing to register IRQs 8-15 since the slave PIC
saw valid IRQs from the master and assumed an I/O APIC was present. To
fix, go back to registering all 8259A interrupt sources in one loop when
the master's register_sources method is invoked.
PR: 231291
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 month
Register interrupts using the PIC pic_register_sources method instead
of doing it in apic_setup_io. This is now required, since the internal
interrupt structures are not yet setup when calling apic_setup_io.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Instead of panicking. Legacy PVH mode doesn't provide a lapic, and
since native_lapic_intrcnt is called unconditionally this would cause
the assert to trigger. Change the assert into a continue in order to
take into account the possibility of systems without a lapic.
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17015
The recommended way to obtain the vcpu id is using the cpuid
instruction with a specific leaf value. This leaf value must be
obtained at runtime, and it's done when populating the hypercall page.
Legacy PVH however will get the hypercall page populated by the
hypervisor itself before booting, so the cpuid leaf was not actually
set, thus preventing setting the vcpu id value from cpuid.
Fix this by making sure the cpuid leaf has been probed before
attempting to set the vcpu id.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
That's the only mode in FreeBSD that requires the usage of PIRQs, so
there's no need to attach the PIRQ PIC when running in other modes.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
When adding support for the new PVH mode the kenv handling was
switched to use a boot time allocated scratch space, however the
legacy PVH early boot code was not modified to allocate such space.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
The vcpu_id for legacy PVH mode can be set from the output of cpuid,
so there's no need to have a special function to set it.
Also note that xenpv_set_ids should have been executed only for PV
guests, but was executed for all guests types and vcpu_id was later
fixed up for HVM guests.
Reported by: cperciva
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
So that it's done when the vcpu_id has been set. For the BSP the
vcpu_id is set at SUB_INTR, while for the APs it's done in
init_secondary_tail that's called at SUB_SMP order FIRST.
Reported and tested by: cperciva
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17013
When running as a specific type of Xen guest the hypervisor won't
provide any emulated IO-APICs or legacy PICs at all, thus hitting the
following assert in the MSI code:
panic: Assertion num_io_irqs > 0 failed at /usr/src/sys/x86/x86/msi.c:334
cpuid = 0
time = 1
KDB: stack backtrace:
db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x2b/frame 0xffffffff826ffa70
vpanic() at vpanic+0x1a3/frame 0xffffffff826ffad0
panic() at panic+0x43/frame 0xffffffff826ffb30
msi_init() at msi_init+0xed/frame 0xffffffff826ffb40
apic_setup_io() at apic_setup_io+0x72/frame 0xffffffff826ffb50
mi_startup() at mi_startup+0x118/frame 0xffffffff826ffb70
start_kernel() at start_kernel+0x10
Fix this by removing the assert in the MSI code, since it's possible
to get to the MSI initialization without having registered any other
interrupt sources.
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17001
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
error in the function hypercall_memfree(), where the wrong arena was being
passed to kmem_free().
Introduce a per-page flag, VPO_KMEM_EXEC, to mark physical pages that are
mapped in kmem with execute permissions. Use this flag to determine which
arena the kmem virtual addresses are returned to.
Eliminate UMA_SLAB_KRWX. The introduction of VPO_KMEM_EXEC makes it
redundant.
Update the nearby comment for UMA_SLAB_KERNEL.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Discussed with: jeff
Approved by: re (marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16845
Add pmap_activate_boot() for i386, move the invocation on APs from MD
init_secondary() to x86 init_secondary_tail().
Suggested by: alc
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Approved by: re (marius)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16893
In pre-SMPng, the global 'imen' was used to track mask state of the
hardware interrupts and was aligned to the masks used by spl*().
When the atpic code was converted to using the x86 interrupt source
abstraction, the global 'imen' was preserved by having each PIC
instance point to an invididual byte in the global 'imen' to hold its
8-bit interrupt mask. The global 'imen' is no longer used for
anything however, so rather than storing pointers in 'struct atpic',
just store the individual 8-bit mask for each PIC as a char.
While here, convert the ATPIC macro to using C99 initializers.
Reviewed by: kib, imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16827
became unused in FreeBSD 12.x as a side-effect of the NUMA-related
changes.)
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Discussed with: jeff, re@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16825
The MPTable probe code was using PMAP_MAP_LOW as the PA -> VA offset
when searching for the table signature but still using KERNBASE once
it had found the table. As a result, the mpfps table pointed into a
random part of the kernel text instead of the actual MP Table.
Rather than adding more #ifdef's, use BIOS_PADDRTOVADDR from
<machine/pc/bios.h> which already uses PMAP_MAP_LOW on i386 and KERNBASE
on amd64.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16802
The support for lazy pmap invalidations on i386 was removed in r281707.
This removes the constant for the IPI and stops accounting for it when
sizing the interrupt count arrays.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16801
At some point memcpy() may be an ifunc, ifunc resolution cannot be done
until CPU identification has been performed, and CPU identification must
be done after loading any microcode updates.
X-MFC with: r337715
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Updates in the format described in section 9.11 of the Intel SDM can
now be applied as one of the first steps in booting the kernel. Updates
that are loaded this way are automatically re-applied upon exit from
ACPI sleep states, in contrast with the existing cpucontrol(8)-based
method. For the time being only Intel updates are supported.
Microcode update files are passed to the kernel via loader(8). The
file type must be "cpu_microcode" in order for the file to be recognized
as a candidate microcode update. Updates for multiple CPU types may be
concatenated together into a single file, in which case the kernel
will select and apply a matching update. Memory used to store the
update file will be freed back to the system once the update is applied,
so this approach will not consume more memory than required.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 6 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16370
Previously, this check was omitted for the first frame pointer.
Reported by: pho
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16572
The timespecadd(3) family of macros were imported from NetBSD back in
r35029. However, they were initially guarded by #ifdef _KERNEL. In the
meantime, we have grown at least 28 syscalls that use timespecs in some
way, leading many programs both inside and outside of the base system to
redefine those macros. It's better just to make the definitions public.
Our kernel currently defines two-argument versions of timespecadd and
timespecsub. NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeDesktop.org's libbsd, however, define
three-argument versions. Solaris also defines a three-argument version, but
only in its kernel. This revision changes our definition to match the
common three-argument version.
Bump _FreeBSD_version due to the breaking KPI change.
Discussed with: cem, jilles, ian, bde
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14725
the AMD document 55449 'Revision Guide for AMD Family 17h Models
00h-0Fh Processors' rev 1.12.
The errata numbers are mentioned near each action.
It seems that newer BIOSes already include required chicken bits
settings, so the magic MSR updates are only needed when BIOS cannot be
updated. On the other hand, MWAIT avoidance seems to be important.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
In order to setup an initial environment and jump into the generic
hammer_time initialization function. Some of the code is shared with
PVHv1, while other code is PVHv2 specific.
This allows booting FreeBSD as a PVHv2 DomU and Dom0.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Allow the hypercall page to be initialized very early, even before
vtophys is functional. Also make the function global so it can be
called by other files.
This will be needed in order to perform the early bringup on PVHv2
guests.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
HYPERVISOR_start_info is only available to PV and PVHv1 guests, HVM
and PVHv2 guests get this data from HVM parameters that are fetched
using a hypercall.
Instead provide a set of helper functions that should be used to fetch
this data. The helper functions have different implementations
depending on whether FreeBSD is running as PVHv1 or HVM/PVHv2 guest
type.
This helps to cleanup generic Xen code by removing quite a lot of
xen_pv_domain and xen_hvm_domain macro usages.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
boot_parse_arg to parse a single arg
boot_parse_cmdline to parse a command line string
boot_parse_args to parse all the args in a vector
boot_howto_to_env Convert howto bits to env vars
boot_env_to_howto Return howto mask mased on what's set in the environment.
All these routines return an int that's the bitmask of the args
translated to RB_* flags. As a special case, the 'S' flag sets the
comconsole_speed env var. Any arg that looks like a=b will set the env
key 'a' to value 'b'. If =b is omitted, 'a' is set to '1'. This
should help us reduce the number of redundant copies of these routines
in the tree. It should also give a more uniform experience between
platforms.
Also, invent a new flag RB_PROBE that's set when 'P' is parsed. On
x86 + BIOS, this means 'probe for the keyboard, and if it's not there
set both RB_MULTIPLE and RB_SERIAL (which means show the output on
both video and serial consoles, but make serial primary). Others it
may be some similar concept of probing, but it's loader dependent
what, exactly, it means.
These routines are suitable for /boot/loader and/or the kernel,
though they may not be suitable for the tightly hand-rolled-for-space
environments like boot2.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16205
- Change pcpu zone consumers to use a stride size of PAGE_SIZE.
(defined as UMA_PCPU_ALLOC_SIZE to make future identification easier)
- Allocate page from the correct domain for a given cpu.
- Don't initialize pc_domain to non-zero value if NUMA is not defined
There are some misconceptions surrounding this field. It is the
_VM_ NUMA domain and should only ever correspond to valid domain
values as understood by the VM.
The former slab size of sizeof(struct pcpu) was somewhat arbitrary.
The new value is PAGE_SIZE because that's the smallest granularity
which the VM can allocate a slab for a given domain. If you have
fewer than PAGE_SIZE/8 counters on your system there will be some
memory wasted, but this is obviously something where you want the
cache line to be coming from the correct domain.
Reviewed by: jeff
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15933
On arm64 (and possible other architectures) we are unable to use static
DPCPU data in kernel modules. This is because the compiler will generate
PC-relative accesses, however the runtime-linker expects to be able to
relocate these.
In preparation to fix this create two macros depending on if the data is
global or static.
Reviewed by: bz, emaste, markj
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16140
The interface already guarantees that the number of hypercall pages is
always going to be 1, see the comment in interface/arch-x86/cpuid.h
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
devices present.
On at least one machine where it would matter since the ISA timer is
power gated when booted in the UEFI mode, BIOS still reports that the
legacy devices are present. That is, user still have to manually
disable TSC calibration on such machines. Hopefully it will be more
useful in the future.
Discussed with: Ben Widawsky <benjamin.widawsky@intel.com>
Reviewed by: royger
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16004
MFC after: 1 week
and also on apic in common and i386 files (except for xen it is optional
only on xenhvm), but it was not ifdefed except on apic in common and i386
files.
This is all that is left from an attempt to build a (sub-)minimal kernel
without any devices. The isa "option" is still used without ifdefs in many
standard files even on amd64. ISAPNP is not optional on at least i386.
ATPIC is not optional on i386 (it is used mainly for Xspuriousint). But
pci is now supposed to be optional on x86.
Expected NMI-s are those than are either generated by the software (such
as a CPU sending NMI to other CPU) or generated by the hardware after
the software configured it to do so (such as NMI-s on PMC events).
Some unexpected NMI-s can be caused by hardware failures and it is
possible to inquire the hardware about them (somewhat like MCA but much
more primitive) using an EISA mechanism. In some cases the origin of
the NMI can remain truly unknown.
This commit should not change any functionality. It just reorganizes
the code, so that it is easier to extend with new checks for the origin
of the NMI. Also, it frees the code that has nothing to do with ISA
from DEV_ISA.
MFC after: 3 weeks
This change adds a new optional console method cn_resume and a kernel
console interface cnresume. Consoles that may need to re-initialize
their hardware after suspend (e.g., because firmware does not care to do
it) will implement cn_resume. Note that it is called in rather early
environment not unlike early boot, so the same restrictions apply.
Platform specific code, for platforms that support hardware suspend,
should call cnresume early after resume, before any console output is
expected.
This change fixes a problem with a system of mine failing to resume when
a serial console is used. I found that the serial port was in a strange
configuration and an attempt to write to it likely resulted in an
infinite loop.
To avoid adding cn_resume method to every console driver, CONSOLE_DRIVER
macro has been extended to support optional methods.
Reviewed by: imp, mav
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15552
The TSC-s are checked and synchronized only if they were good
originally. That is, invariant, synchronized, etc.
This is necessary on an AMD-based system where after a wakeup from STR I
see that BSP clock differs from AP clocks by a count that roughly
corresponds to one second. The APs are in sync with each other. Not
sure if this is a hardware quirk or a firmware bug.
This is what I see after a resume with this change:
SMP: passed TSC synchronization test after adjustment
acpi_timer0: restoring timecounter, ACPI-fast -> TSC-low
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15551
- Add constants for fields in DR6 and the reserved fields in DR7. Use
these constants instead of magic numbers in most places that use DR6
and DR7.
- Refer to T_TRCTRAP as "debug exception" rather than a "trace trap"
as it is not just for trace exceptions.
- Always read DR6 for debug exceptions and only clear TF in the flags
register for user exceptions where DR6.BS is set.
- Clear DR6 before returning from a debug exception handler as
recommended by the SDM dating all the way back to the 386. This
allows debuggers to determine the cause of each exception. For
kernel traps, clear DR6 in the T_TRCTRAP case and pass DR6 by value
to other parts of the handler (namely, user_dbreg_trap()). For user
traps, wait until after trapsignal to clear DR6 so that userland
debuggers can read DR6 via PT_GETDBREGS while the thread is stopped
in trapsignal().
Reviewed by: kib, rgrimes
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15189
Speculative Store Bypass (SSB) is a speculative execution side channel
vulnerability identified by Jann Horn of Google Project Zero (GPZ) and
Ken Johnson of the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC)
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/project-zero/issues/detail?id=1528.
Updated Intel microcode introduces a MSR bit to disable SSB as a
mitigation for the vulnerability.
Introduce a sysctl hw.spec_store_bypass_disable to provide global
control over the SSBD bit, akin to the existing sysctl that controls
IBRS. The sysctl can be set to one of three values:
0: off
1: on
2: auto
Future work will enable applications to control SSBD on a per-process
basis (when it is not enabled globally).
SSBD bit detection and control was verified with prerelease microcode.
Security: CVE-2018-3639
Tested by: emaste (previous version, without updated microcode)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
Install appropriate pti-aware shootdown IPI handlers, otherwise user
page tables do not get enough invalidations. The non-pti handlers
were used so far.
Reported and tested by: cperciva
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
The intent was to disable IBPB and IBRS around MWAIT, and re-enable on
the sleep end.
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
This change reverts a "while here" part of r333321 that moved clearing
of suspended_cpus to an earlier place.
Apparently, there can be a problem when modifying (shared) memory before
restoring proper cache attributes. So, to be safe, move the clearing to
the old place.
Many thanks to Johannes Lundberg for bisecting the changes to that
particular commit and then bisecting the commit to the particular
change.
Reported by: many
Debugged by: Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r333321
The idea is to calibrate the LAPIC timer just once and only on boot,
given that [at present] the timer constants are global and shared
between all processors.
My primary motivation is to fix a panic that can happen when dynamically
switching to lapic timer. The panic is caused by a recursion on
et_hw_mtx when printing the calibration results to console. See the
review for the details of the panic.
Also, the code should become slightly simpler and easier to read. The
previous code was racy too. Multiple processors could start calibrating
the global constants concurrently, although that seems to have been
benign.
Reviewed by: kib, mav, jhb
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15422
Without a subsequent wbinvd the changes to suspended_cpus (and
resuming_cpus) can be lost at least on AMD systems that use MOESI cache
coherency protocol. That can happen because one of APs ends up as an
Owner of the corresponding cache line(s) and the changes may never reach
the main memory before the AP is reset.
While here, move clearing of suspended_cpus a little bit earlier as the
fact of returning from savectx (with zero return value) means that the
CPU has fully restored it execution context.
Also, rework the comment that describes the need for resuming_cpus.
This change fixed suspend to RAM a previously broken AMD-based system.
Reviewed by: kib
Discussed with: bde
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15295
ifuncs on x86.
Also keep helpers to define 'pseudo-ifuncs' which are emulated by the
indirect jmp.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version, as part of the larger patch)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13838
Resume starts CPU from the init state, which clears any loaded
microcode updates. As result, IBRS MSRs are no longer available,
until the microcode is reloaded.
I have to forcibly clear cpu_stdext_feature3, which assumes that CPUID
leaf 7 reg %ebx does not report anything except Meltdown/Spectre bugs
bits. If future CPUs add new bits there, hw_ibrs_recalculate() and
identify_cpu1()/identify_cpu2() need to be adjusted for that.
Submitted and tested by: Michael Danilov <mike.d.ft402@gmail.com>
PR: 227866
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15236
The APL31 NDA errata is APL30 public errata. Add the reference and
provide the description [2].
Noted by: emaste [2], rpokala [1]
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
If the workaround is activated, always send IPI for wake up, not rely
on the write to the monitor line. This fixes Appolo Lake machines
early hang in sched_bind(), without requiring user to manually select
idle method.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Use designated initializers for the idlt_tlb elements.
Remove strstr() use, add flag field to detect supported MWAIT.
Use nitems() instead of the terminating NULL entry for idle_tlb.
Move several functions into cpu_idle_* namespace.
Based on the discussion with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
disabled.
Intel finally added this information, which allows us to not parse CPU
identification string looking for the nominal frequency. The leaf is
present e.g. on Appolo Lake Atom CPUs. It is only used if the TSC
calibration is disabled by user.
Also, report the TSC frequency in bootverbose mode always, regardless
of the way it was obtained.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
It is applied before it is possible for idle threads to execute on any
CPU, allowing to work around against some bugs.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Otherwise, under bootverbose, the lapic_enable_cmc() banner 'lapicX:
CMCI unmasked' is printed by several CPUs in parallel, causing garbled
output for the LAPIC dumps.
Reported by: royger
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15157
machine check banks must be only monitored by single CPU.
Noted and reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15157
We must ensure that accesses occur, they do not have any other
compiler-visible effects. Bruce found some situations where
optimization could remove an access, and provided a patch to use
volatile qualifier for the state variables. Since volatile behaviour
there is the compiler-specific interpretation of the keyword, use
relaxed atomics instead, which gives exactly the desired semantic.
Noted by and discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This sysctl allows a deeper dive into the sleep abyss comparing to
debug.acpi.suspend_bounce. When the new sysctl is set the system will
execute the suspend sequence up to the call to AcpiEnterSleepState().
That includes saving processor contexts and parking APs. Then, instead
of actually entering the sleep state, the BSP will call resumectx() to
emulate the wakeup. The APs should get restarted by the sequence of
Init and Startup IPIs that BSP sends to them.
MFC after: 8 days
x86 enforces an (arbitray) limit on the number of available MSI and
MSI-X interrupts to simplify code (in particular, interrupt_source[]
is statically sized). This means that an attempt to allocate an MSI
vector needs to fail if it would go beyond the limit, but the checks
for exceeding the limit had an off-by-one error. In the case of MSI-X
which allocates interrupts one at a time this meant that IRQ 768 kept
getting handed out multiple times for msix_alloc() instead of failing
because all MSI IRQs were in use.
Tested by: lidl
MFC after: 1 week