Commit Graph

71 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Konstantin Belousov
3165194c6b Increase max number of physical segments on amd64 to 63.
Eventually, the vmd_segs of the struct vm_domain should become bitset
instead of long, to allow arbitrary compile-time selected maximum.

Reviewed by:	alc
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2014-08-20 08:07:08 +00:00
Alan Cox
c70af4875e As of r257209, all architectures have defined VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE. In other
words, every architecture is now auto-sizing the kmem arena.  This revision
changes kmeminit() so that the definition of VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE becomes
mandatory and the definition of VM_KMEM_SIZE becomes optional.

Replace or eliminate all existing definitions of VM_KMEM_SIZE.  With
auto-sizing enabled, VM_KMEM_SIZE effectively became an alternate spelling
for VM_KMEM_SIZE_MIN on most architectures.  Use VM_KMEM_SIZE_MIN for
clarity.

Change kmeminit() so that the effect of defining VM_KMEM_SIZE is similar to
that of setting the tunable vm.kmem_size.  Whereas the macros
VM_KMEM_SIZE_{MAX,MIN,SCALE} have had the same effect as the tunables
vm.kmem_size_{max,min,scale}, the effects of VM_KMEM_SIZE and vm.kmem_size
have been distinct.  In particular, whereas VM_KMEM_SIZE was overridden by
VM_KMEM_SIZE_{MAX,MIN,SCALE} and vm.kmem_size_{max,min,scale}, vm.kmem_size
was not.  Remedy this inconsistency.  Now, VM_KMEM_SIZE can be used to set
the size of the kmem arena at compile-time without that value being
overridden by auto-sizing.

Update the nearby comments to reflect the kmem submap being replaced by the
kmem arena.  Stop duplicating the auto-sizing formula in every machine-
dependent vmparam.h and place it in kmeminit() where auto-sizing takes
place.

Reviewed by:	kib (an earlier version)
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2013-11-08 16:25:00 +00:00
Neel Natu
0ef2ab3ab8 Bump up the maximum addressable memory on amd64 systems from 1TB to 4TB.
Bump up the KVA size proportionally from 512GB to 2TB.

The number of page table pages used by the direct map is now calculated at
run time based on 'Maxmem'. This means the small memory systems will not
see any additional tax in terms of page table pages for the direct map.

However all amd64 systems, regardless of the memory size, will use 3 more
pages to accomodate the bump in the KVA size.

More details available here:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-hackers/2013-June/043015.html
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2013-July/043143.html

Tested with the following configurations:
- Sandybridge server with 64GB of memory.
- bhyve VM with 64MB of memory.
- bhyve VM with a 8GB of memory with the memory segment above 4GB cuddling
  right up against the 4TB maximum memory limit.

Discussed on:	hackers@, current@
Submitted by:	Chris Torek (torek@torek.net)
2013-08-17 19:49:08 +00:00
Attilio Rao
941646f5ec Rename VM_NDOMAIN into MAXMEMDOM and move it into machine/param.h in
order to match the MAXCPU concept.  The change should also be useful
for consolidation and consistency.

Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon storage division
Obtained from:	jeff
Reviewed by:	alc
2013-05-07 22:46:24 +00:00
Robert Millan
74269bb439 Increase DFLDSIZ from 128 MiB to 32 GiB. On amd64 there's plenty of virtual
memory available, so there is no need to be so conservative about it.

Reviewed by:	arch
2012-04-27 22:27:21 +00:00
Matthew D Fleming
cfb00e5aa7 Move the ZERO_REGION_SIZE to a machine-dependent file, as on many
architectures (i386, for example) the virtual memory space may be
constrained enough that 2MB is a large chunk.  Use 64K for arches
other than amd64 and ia64, with special handling for sparc64 due to
differing hardware.

Also commit the comment changes to kmem_init_zero_region() that I
missed due to not saving the file.  (Darn the unfamiliar development
environment).

Arch maintainers, please feel free to adjust ZERO_REGION_SIZE as you
see fit.

Requested by:	alc
MFC after:	1 week
MFC with:	r221853
2011-05-13 19:35:01 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
50a57dfbec Move repeated MAXSLP definition from machine/vmparam.h to sys/vmmeter.h.
Update the outdated comments describing MAXSLP and the process
selection algorithm for swap out.

Comments wording and reviewed by:	alc
2011-01-09 12:50:44 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
6297a3d843 Create shared (readonly) page. Each ABI may specify the use of page by
setting SV_SHP flag and providing pointer to the vm object and mapping
address. Provide simple allocator to carve space in the page, tailored
to put the code with alignment restrictions.

Enable shared page use for amd64, both native and 32bit FreeBSD
binaries.  Page is private mapped at the top of the user address
space, moving a start of the stack one page down. Move signal
trampoline code from the top of the stack to the shared page.

Reviewed by:	 alc
2011-01-08 16:13:44 +00:00
Alan Cox
686b00d691 Make the size of the direct map easily configurable. Changing NDMPML4E
now suffices.

Increase the size of the direct map to 1TB.

An earler version of this patch was tested by sbruno@.
2010-11-26 19:36:26 +00:00
Andriy Gapon
0b750af1b1 amd64: reduce VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE to 1 allowing kernel to use more memory
KVA space is abundant on amd64, so there is no reason to limit kernel
map size to a fraction of available physical memory.  In fact, it could
be larger than physical memory.

This should help with memory auto-tuning for ZFS and shouldn't affect
other workloads.
This should reduce number of circumstances for "kmem_map too small"
panics, but probably won't eliminate them entirely due to potential kmem
fragmentation.

In fact, you might want/need to limit maximum ARC size after this commit
if you need to resrve more memory for applications.

This change was discussed on arch@ and nobody said "don't do it".

MFC after:	6 weeks
2010-09-17 07:36:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
a3870a1826 Very rough first cut at NUMA support for the physical page allocator. For
now it uses a very dumb first-touch allocation policy.  This will change in
the future.
- Each architecture indicates the maximum number of supported memory domains
  via a new VM_NDOMAIN parameter in <machine/vmparam.h>.
- Each cpu now has a PCPU_GET(domain) member to indicate the memory domain
  a CPU belongs to.  Domain values are dense and numbered from 0.
- When a platform supports multiple domains, the default freelist
  (VM_FREELIST_DEFAULT) is split up into N freelists, one for each domain.
  The MD code is required to populate an array of mem_affinity structures.
  Each entry in the array defines a range of memory (start and end) and a
  domain for the range.  Multiple entries may be present for a single
  domain.  The list is terminated by an entry where all fields are zero.
  This array of structures is used to split up phys_avail[] regions that
  fall in VM_FREELIST_DEFAULT into per-domain freelists.
- Each memory domain has a separate lookup-array of freelists that is
  used when fulfulling a physical memory allocation.  Right now the
  per-domain freelists are listed in a round-robin order for each domain.
  In the future a table such as the ACPI SLIT table may be used to order
  the per-domain lookup lists based on the penalty for each memory domain
  relative to a specific domain.  The lookup lists may be examined via a
  new vm.phys.lookup_lists sysctl.
- The first-touch policy is implemented by using PCPU_GET(domain) to
  pick a lookup list when allocating memory.

Reviewed by:	alc
2010-07-27 20:33:50 +00:00
Kip Macy
2965a45315 On Alan's advice, rather than do a wholesale conversion on a single
architecture from page queue lock to a hashed array of page locks
(based on a patch by Jeff Roberson), I've implemented page lock
support in the MI code and have only moved vm_page's hold_count
out from under page queue mutex to page lock. This changes
pmap_extract_and_hold on all pmaps.

Supported by: Bitgravity Inc.

Discussed with: alc, jeffr, and kib
2010-04-30 00:46:43 +00:00
Kip Macy
b522d2c99b correct range in comment
pointed out by alc
2009-05-16 22:08:00 +00:00
Kip Macy
e127902229 update vm map comment
pointed out by Larry Rosenman
2009-05-16 22:00:13 +00:00
Kip Macy
b6d82b1ae9 Increase default kernel map to 512GB
I briefly discussed this with alc. It could lead to problems for greater than 64GB.
However, that seems unlikely in practice.
2009-05-16 20:57:08 +00:00
Alan Cox
8136b7265f Eliminate pmap_growkernel()'s dependence on create_pagetables() preallocating
page directory pages from VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS through the end of the
kernel's bss.  Specifically, the dependence was in pmap_growkernel()'s one-
time initialization of kernel_vm_end, not in its main body.  (I could not,
however, resist the urge to optimize the main body.)

Reduce the number of preallocated page directory pages to just those needed
to support NKPT page table pages.  (In fact, this allows me to revert a
couple of my earlier changes to create_pagetables().)
2008-07-08 22:59:17 +00:00
Alan Cox
13e0058451 Increase the kernel map's size to 7GB, making room for a kmem map of size
greater than 4GB.  (Auto-sizing will set the ceiling on the kmem map size
to 4.2GB.)
2008-07-05 20:44:55 +00:00
Alan Cox
db0a9105b1 Increase the ceiling on the kmem map's size to 3.6GB. Also, define the
ceiling as a fraction of the kernel map's size rather than an absolute
quantity.  Thus, scaling of the kmem map's size will be automatic with
changes to the kernel map's size.
2008-07-03 04:53:14 +00:00
Alan Cox
17e2138882 Document the layout of the address space, borrowing heavily from
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-amd64/2005-July/005578.html
2008-06-30 03:14:39 +00:00
Alan Cox
ce3cb38836 Strictly speaking, the definition of VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS is wrong. However,
in practice, the error (currently) makes no difference because the computation
performed by KVADDR() hides the error.  This revision fixes the error.

Also, eliminate a (now) unused definition.
2008-06-29 19:13:27 +00:00
Alan Cox
bd4328d3a6 Ensure that KERNBASE is no less than the virtual address -2GB. 2008-06-23 15:22:53 +00:00
Alan Cox
b8e7fc24fe Add configuration knobs for the superpage reservation system. Initially,
the reservation will only be enabled on amd64.
2007-12-27 16:45:39 +00:00
Alan Cox
7bfda801a8 Change the management of cached pages (PQ_CACHE) in two fundamental
ways:

(1) Cached pages are no longer kept in the object's resident page
splay tree and memq.  Instead, they are kept in a separate per-object
splay tree of cached pages.  However, access to this new per-object
splay tree is synchronized by the _free_ page queues lock, not to be
confused with the heavily contended page queues lock.  Consequently, a
cached page can be reclaimed by vm_page_alloc(9) without acquiring the
object's lock or the page queues lock.

This solves a problem independently reported by tegge@ and Isilon.
Specifically, they observed the page daemon consuming a great deal of
CPU time because of pages bouncing back and forth between the cache
queue (PQ_CACHE) and the inactive queue (PQ_INACTIVE).  The source of
this problem turned out to be a deadlock avoidance strategy employed
when selecting a cached page to reclaim in vm_page_select_cache().
However, the root cause was really that reclaiming a cached page
required the acquisition of an object lock while the page queues lock
was already held.  Thus, this change addresses the problem at its
root, by eliminating the need to acquire the object's lock.

Moreover, keeping cached pages in the object's primary splay tree and
memq was, in effect, optimizing for the uncommon case.  Cached pages
are reclaimed far, far more often than they are reactivated.  Instead,
this change makes reclamation cheaper, especially in terms of
synchronization overhead, and reactivation more expensive, because
reactivated pages will have to be reentered into the object's primary
splay tree and memq.

(2) Cached pages are now stored alongside free pages in the physical
memory allocator's buddy queues, increasing the likelihood that large
allocations of contiguous physical memory (i.e., superpages) will
succeed.

Finally, as a result of this change long-standing restrictions on when
and where a cached page can be reclaimed and returned by
vm_page_alloc(9) are eliminated.  Specifically, calls to
vm_page_alloc(9) specifying VM_ALLOC_INTERRUPT can now reclaim and
return a formerly cached page.  Consequently, a call to malloc(9)
specifying M_NOWAIT is less likely to fail.

Discussed with: many over the course of the summer, including jeff@,
   Justin Husted @ Isilon, peter@, tegge@
Tested by: an earlier version by kris@
Approved by: re (kensmith)
2007-09-25 06:25:06 +00:00
Alan Cox
5b4a3e940f Add the machine-specific definitions for configuring the new physical
memory allocator.

Set the size of phys_avail[] and dump_avail[] using one of these
definitions.

Approved by:	re
2007-06-03 23:18:29 +00:00
Alan Cox
04a18977c8 Define every architecture as either VM_PHYSSEG_DENSE or
VM_PHYSSEG_SPARSE depending on whether the physical address space is
densely or sparsely populated with memory.  The effect of this
definition is to determine which of two implementations of
vm_page_array and PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() is used.  The legacy
implementation is obtained by defining VM_PHYSSEG_DENSE, and a new
implementation that trades off time for space is obtained by defining
VM_PHYSSEG_SPARSE.  For now, all architectures except for ia64 and
sparc64 define VM_PHYSSEG_DENSE.  Defining VM_PHYSSEG_SPARSE on ia64
allows the entirety of my Itanium 2's memory to be used.  Previously,
only the first 1 GB could be used.  Defining VM_PHYSSEG_SPARSE on
sparc64 allows USIIIi-based systems to boot without crashing.

This change is a combination of Nathan Whitehorn's patch and my own
work in perforce.

Discussed with: kmacy, marius, Nathan Whitehorn
PR:		112194
2007-05-05 19:50:28 +00:00
Stephane E. Potvin
0e5179e441 Add support for specifying a minimal size for vm.kmem_size in the loader via
vm.kmem_size_min. Useful when using ZFS to make sure that vm.kmem size will
be at least 256mb (for example) without forcing a particular value via vm.kmem_size.

Approved by: njl (mentor)
Reviewed by: alc
2007-04-21 01:14:48 +00:00
Peter Wemm
3904b13fab Raise MAXDSIZ from 8G to 32G. The old limit was just an arbitary choice
that was greater than 4G.  I originally used the same values as i386 in
order to save opening a new PML4 page slot, but in the day of gigabytes
of memory, worrying about a 4K page seems futile.  Moving from 8 to 32G
moves the page to a different index, it doesn't increase the number of
pages used.
2004-10-27 17:21:15 +00:00
Alan Cox
4d4a286cba Increase VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX from 200MB to 400MB.
Discussed with:	peter
2003-12-07 04:51:04 +00:00
Peter Wemm
fcfe57d640 Update the graffiti. 2003-11-08 04:39:22 +00:00
Peter Wemm
cc3112f108 Re-raise the default datasize and stacksize now that the 32 bit exec
support can clip it to sensible values.
2003-09-25 01:11:17 +00:00
Peter Wemm
725bc17312 Oops. back out last commit. The data and stack limits are used by the
32 bit binary stuff.  32 bit binaries do not like it much when the kernel
tries hard to put things above the 8GB mark.

I have a work-in-progress to fix this properly, but I didn't want to burn
anybody with this yet.
2003-09-23 03:20:34 +00:00
Peter Wemm
24789c549a Increase the default data size limit from 512MB to 8GB. Increase default
stack limit from 64MB to 512MB.
2003-09-22 23:21:39 +00:00
Peter Wemm
bf8ca114e2 Fix the VADDR() macros to use either KVADDR() or UVADDR(), depending
on the implied sign extension.  The single unified VADDR() macro was
not able to avoid sign extending the VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS/USRSTACK values.
Be explicit about UVADDR() (positive address space) and KVADDR()
(kernel negative address space) to make mistakes show up more
spectacularly.

Increase user VM space from 1/2TB (512GB) to 128TB.
2003-07-09 23:04:23 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d9cd1af4aa Typo fix. oops.
Submitted by:  jmallett
Approved by:   re (blanket amd64/*)
2003-05-23 06:36:46 +00:00
Peter Wemm
3c9a3c9ca3 Major pmap rework to take advantage of the larger address space on amd64
systems.  Of note:
- Implement a direct mapped region using 2MB pages.  This eliminates the
  need for temporary mappings when getting ptes.  This supports up to
  512GB of physical memory for now.  This should be enough for a while.
- Implement a 4-tier page table system.  Most of the infrastructure is
  there for 128TB of userland virtual address space, but only 512GB is
  presently enabled due to a mystery bug somewhere.  The design of this
  was heavily inspired by the alpha pmap.c.
- The kernel is moved into the negative address space(!).
- The kernel has 2GB of KVM available.
- Provide a uma memory allocator to use the direct map region to take
  advantage of the 2MB TLBs.
- Fixed some assumptions in the bus_space macros about the ability
  to fit virtual addresses in an 'int'.

Notable missing things:
- pmap_growkernel() should be able to grow to 512GB of KVM by expanding
  downwards below kernbase.  The kernel must be at the top 2GB of the
  negative address space because of gcc code generation strategies.
- need to fix the >512GB user vm code.

Approved by:	re (blanket)
2003-05-23 05:04:54 +00:00
Peter Wemm
afa8862328 Commit MD parts of a loosely functional AMD64 port. This is based on
a heavily stripped down FreeBSD/i386 (brutally stripped down actually) to
attempt to get a stable base to start from.  There is a lot missing still.
Worth noting:
- The kernel runs at 1GB in order to cheat with the pmap code.  pmap uses
  a variation of the PAE code in order to avoid having to worry about 4
  levels of page tables yet.
- It boots in 64 bit "long mode" with a tiny trampoline embedded in the
  i386 loader.  This simplifies locore.s greatly.
- There are still quite a few fragments of i386-specific code that have
  not been translated yet, and some that I cheated and wrote dumb C
  versions of (bcopy etc).
- It has both int 0x80 for syscalls (but using registers for argument
  passing, as is native on the amd64 ABI), and the 'syscall' instruction
  for syscalls.  int 0x80 preserves all registers, 'syscall' does not.
- I have tried to minimize looking at the NetBSD code, except in a couple
  of places (eg: to find which register they use to replace the trashed
  %rcx register in the syscall instruction).  As a result, there is not a
  lot of similarity.  I did look at NetBSD a few times while debugging to
  get some ideas about what I might have done wrong in my first attempt.
2003-05-01 01:05:25 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
46ea68dd10 Better fix for previous previous which still allows the 4megs of kva at
the top of the address space to be reclaimed.  The problem is that with
the APTD gone the mapable kernel address space runs right to the end of
the 32 bit address space.  As a max this is 0x100000000, which can't be
represented in 32 bits, so we have to use ptd entry n-1 and pte offset
n-1, instead of ptd entry n and pte offset 0.  There's still 1 page we
can't use, but we gain just under 4 megs of kva (8 megs with PAE).

Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-04-07 14:27:19 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
5cd612b27e - Removed UMAXPTDI and UMAXPTEOFF.
- Changed VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS to be defined in terms of PTDPTDI.  In order for
  assumptions about the recursive page table map to work it must be the base
  of the recursive map.  Any pte offset that's not NPTEPG will break these
  assumptions.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2003-02-24 20:29:52 +00:00
Peter Wemm
255108f385 Make sysv-style shared memory tuneable params fully runtime adjustable
via sysctl.  It's done pretty simply but it should be quite adequate.
Also move SHMMAXPGS from $machine/include/vmparam.h as the comments that
went with it were wrong... we don't allocate KVM space for the pages so
that comment is bogus..  The only practical limit is how much physical
ram you want to lock up as this stuff isn't paged out or swap backed.
2000-03-30 07:17:05 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c3aac50f28 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
David Greenman
6704748cf6 Increased max kmem to 200MB. This should fix some out-of-kmem panics on
large systems.
1999-07-24 22:26:42 +00:00
David Greenman
f4fabec6b0 Increased MAXTSIZ to 128MB...there are binaries that get quite large.
Increased DFLDSIZ to 128MB, as it is a better default.
Reviewed by:	jkh
1998-06-12 09:10:22 +00:00
John Dyson
d9bed5bee1 Try to dynamically size the VM_KMEM_SIZE (but is still able to be overridden
in a way identically as before.)  I had problems with the system properly
handling the number of vnodes when there is alot of system memory, and the
default VM_KMEM_SIZE.  Two new options "VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE" and
"VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX" have been added to support better auto-sizing for systems
with greater than 128MB.

Add some accouting for vm_zone memory allocations, and provide properly
for vm_zone allocations out of the kmem_map.  Also move the vm_zone
allocation stats to the VM OID tree from the KERN OID tree.
1998-02-23 07:42:43 +00:00
John Dyson
95461b450d 1) Start using a cleaner and more consistant page allocator instead
of the various ad-hoc schemes.
2)	When bringing in UPAGES, the pmap code needs to do another vm_page_lookup.
3)	When appropriate, set the PG_A or PG_M bits a-priori to both avoid some
	processor errata, and to minimize redundant processor updating of page
	tables.
4)	Modify pmap_protect so that it can only remove permissions (as it
	originally supported.)  The additional capability is not needed.
5)	Streamline read-only to read-write page mappings.
6)	For pmap_copy_page, don't enable write mapping for source page.
7)	Correct and clean-up pmap_incore.
8)	Cluster initial kern_exec pagin.
9)	Removal of some minor lint from kern_malloc.
10)	Correct some ioopt code.
11)	Remove some dead code from the MI swapout routine.
12)	Correct vm_object_deallocate (to remove backing_object ref.)
13)	Fix dead object handling, that had problems under heavy memory load.
14)	Add minor vm_page_lookup improvements.
15)	Some pages are not in objects, and make sure that the vm_page.c can
	properly support such pages.
16)	Add some more page deficit handling.
17)	Some minor code readability improvements.
1998-02-05 03:32:49 +00:00
Jordan K. Hubbard
7416845fdd Bump MAXDSIZ to 512MB so that soft limits have a chance to actually
regulate this.
Reviewed by:	dyson
1997-10-27 00:38:46 +00:00
Tor Egge
7bcc0f3d66 Allow the kernel configuration file to override the amount of memory
available to the kernel (VM_KMEM_SIZE). The default (32 MB) is too low
when having 512 MB or more physical memory in a server environment. This is
relevant on systems where "panic: kmem_malloc: kmem_map too small" is a
problem.
1997-06-25 20:18:58 +00:00
Peter Wemm
a0c3795f19 Use UPAGES_HOLE instead of UPAGES in case it's changed some time.
Rename the PT* index KSTK* #defines to UMAX*, since we don't have a kernel
stack there any more..

These are used to calculate VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS and USRSTACK, and really
do not want to be changed with UPAGES since BSD/OS 2.x binary compatability
depends on it.
1997-04-07 09:30:22 +00:00
Peter Wemm
6875d25465 Back out part 1 of the MCFH that changed $Id$ to $FreeBSD$. We are not
ready for it yet.
1997-02-22 09:48:43 +00:00
Jordan K. Hubbard
1130b656e5 Make the long-awaited change from $Id$ to $FreeBSD$
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.

Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore.  This update would have been
insane otherwise.
1997-01-14 07:20:47 +00:00
John Dyson
d0aea04fe0 Let the VM system know that on certain arch's that VM_PROT_READ
also implies VM_PROT_EXEC.  We support it that way for now,
since the break system call by default gives VM_PROT_ALL.  Now
we have a better chance of coalesing map entries when mixing
mmap/break type operations.  This was contributing to excessive
numbers of map entries on the modula-3 runtime system.  The
problem is still not "solved", but the situation makes more
sense.

Eventually, when we work on architectures where VM_PROT_READ
is orthogonal to VM_PROT_EXEC, we will have to visit this
issue carefully (esp. regarding security issues.)
1996-12-30 05:31:21 +00:00