of the `machdep.acpi_root' sysctl. This is required on ia64
because the root pointer hardly ever, if at all, lives in the
first MB of memory and also because scanning the first MB of
memory can cause machine checks.
This provides a save and reliable way for ACPI tools to work
with the tables if ACPI support is present in the kernel. On
ia64 ACPI is non-optional.
GENERIC. Each device can be re-enabled at startup time by unsetting the
disabled hint in the loader.
Requested by: mdodd
Approved by: re
Prodded by: rwatson
The correct range is [1...7] with Sunday=1, but we have been writing
[0...6] with Sunday=0.
The Soekris computers flagged the zero, zapped the date, so if you
rebooted your soekris on a sunday, it would come up with a wrong
date.
Bruce has a more extensive rework of this code, but we will stick with
the minimalist fix for now.
Spotted by: Soren Kristensen <soren@soekris.com>
Thanks to: Michael Sierchio <kudzu@tenebras.com>.
Confirmed by: bde
Approved by: re
to accomodate the new SSE/XMM floating point save/restore
instructions.
This commit is mostly from bde and includes some style nits.
Approved by: re (jhb)
pmap_remove_pte(). Use vm_page_sleep_if_busy() in
_pmap_unwire_pte_hold() so that the page queues lock is released
when sleeping.
Approved by: re (blanket)
to the sparc64 implementation. (Note: With modest effort on the alpha and
ia64 this function could migrate to the MI part of the kernel.)
Approved by: re (blanket)
i386 cpu_thread_exit(). This resulted in a panic with WITNESS
since we need to hold Giant to call kmem_free(), and we weren't
helding it anymore in cpu_thread_exit(). We now do this from a
new MD function, cpu_thread_dtor(), called by thread_dtor().
Approved by: re@
Suggested by: jhb
macro for use when parsing MADT tables, thus we always tried to set the
interrupt model to APIC. This proved to be harmful on UP machines with
IO APIC's (or for UP kernels on SMP machines) since the wrong interrupt
routing information would be returned.
Pointy hat to: jhb
Approved by: re (rwatson)
Previously these were libc functions but were requested to
be made into system calls for atomicity and to coalesce what
might be two entrances into the kernel (signal mask setting
and floating point trap) into one.
A few style nits and comments from bde are also included.
Tested on alpha by: gallatin
to reflect its new location, and add page queue and flag locking.
Notes: (1) alpha, i386, and ia64 had identical implementations
of pmap_collect() in terms of machine-independent interfaces;
(2) sparc64 doesn't require it; (3) powerpc had it as a TODO.
has broken int 12H.
If hw.hasbrokenint12="1" in loader environment, kernel never use BIOS
INT 12 call to determine base memory size.
Otherwise, kernel use INT 12 in old behaviour.
This should fix kernel panic problem caused by 1.544 changes.
MFC after: 1 day
sysctls to MI code; this reduces code duplication and makes all of them
available on sparc64, and the latter two on powerpc.
The semantics by the i386 and pc98 hw.availpages is slightly changed:
previously, holes between ranges of available pages would be included,
while they are excluded now. The new behaviour should be more correct
and brings i386 in line with the other architectures.
Move physmem to vm/vm_init.c, where this variable is used in MI code.
take advantage of the fact that the vm object's list of pages is
now ordered to reduce the overhead of finding the desired set of
pages to be mapped. (See revision 1.215 of vm/vm_page.c.)
remove global variable in_vm86call, set vm86 calling flag in PCB flags.
2.Fix vm86 BIOS calling preempted problem by changing vm86_lock mutex type
from MTX_DEF to MTX_SPIN. vm86pcb is not remembered in thread struct,
when the thread calling vm86 BIOS is preempted by interrupt thread,
and later switching back to the thread would cause incorrect context be
loaded into CPU registers, this leads to kernel crash.
not look like the prerequisites to fill it in properly will be in the tree
for the upcoming release, but it's mostly done, so there is no need for these
to stay around to remind us.
o It turns out that we always need to try to route the interrupts for
the case where the $PIR tells us there can be only one. Some machines
require this, while others fail when we try to do this (bogusly, imho).
Since we have no apriori way of knowing which is which, we always try to
do the routing and hope for the best if things fail.
o Add some additional comments that state the obvious, but amplify it in
non-obvious ways (judging from the questions I've gotten).
This should un-break older laptops that still have to use PCIBIOS to route
interrupts.
Tested by: sam