are inline functions that handle all the routine maintenance operations
except the flush-all and invalidate-all routines which are required only
during early kernel init.
These inline functions should be very much faster than the old mechanism
that involved jumping through the big cpufuncs table, especially for
common operations such as invalidating a single TLB entry. Note that
nothing is calling these yet, this just is just required infrastructure
for upcoming changes to the pmap-v6 code.
mechanism defined for armv7 (and also present on some armv6 chips including
the arm1176 used on rpi). The information is parsed into a global cpuinfo
structure, which will be used by (upcoming) new cache and tlb maintenance
code to handle cpu-specific variations of the maintence sequences.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz
code, passing a 0/1 flag that indicates which type of abort it was. This
sets the stage for unifying the handling of page faults in a single routine.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz
If it seems like this is getting out of hand, I quite agree. I wonder if
it's safe, here in the 21st century, to lose the distinction between C and
ASM symbols?
around so that related things are more grouped together, rewrite comments.
No functional changes, this is all so that the functional changes in the
next commit will stand out.
'extra' entry points which are nested within or provide a synonym name
for another function. It's most likely not safe to be messing with the
IP and LR registers at anything other than the primary entry point to a
function. Anywhere beyond initial function entry, those registers may
be in use as scratch or variable registers.
- Eliminate unused irqframe
- Eliminate unused saframe
- Instead of splitting r4-sp storage between the stack and switchframe,
just put all the registers in switchframe and eliminate the un_32 struct.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz>
If this feels like deja vu... the last time this was fixed in this file
only ARM_MMU_V6 was fixed, this time it's ARM_ARCH_V6 (and this time I
searched for other occurrances of pj4b in here).
It is automatically set when -fPIC is passed to the compiler.
Reviewed by: dim, kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1179
and casuword(9), but do not mix value read and indication of fault.
I know (or remember) enough assembly to handle x86 and powerpc. For
arm, mips and sparc64, implement fueword() and casueword() as wrappers
around fuword() and casuword(), which means that the functions cannot
distinguish between -1 and fault.
On architectures where fueword() and casueword() are native, implement
fuword() and casuword() using fueword() and casuword(), to reduce
assembly code duplication.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks (ia64 needs treating)
registers and use it in the ARMv7 CPU functions.
The sysreg.h file has been checked by hand, however it may contain errors
with the comments on when a register was first introduced. The ARMv7 cpu
functions have been checked by compiling both the previous and this version
and comparing the md5 of the object files.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe at gmail.com>
Submitted by: Michal Meloun <meloun at miracle.cz>
Reviewed by: ian, rpaulo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D795
In the fdt data we've written for ourselves, the interrupt properties
for GIC interrupts have just been a bare interrupt number. In standard
data that conforms to the published bindings, GIC interrupt properties
contain 3-tuples that describe the interrupt as shared vs private, the
interrupt number within the shared/private address space, and configuration
info such as level vs edge triggered.
The new gic_decode_fdt() function parses both types of data, based on the
#interrupt-cells property. Previously, each platform implemented a decode
routine and put a pointer to it into fdt_pic_table. Now they can just
list this function in their table instead if they use arm/gic.c.
header (Elf_Ehdr) to determine if a particular interpretor wants to
accept it or not. Use this mechanism to filter EABI arm on OABI arm
kernels, and vice versa. This method could also be used to implement
OABI on EABI arm kernels, if desired, or to allow a single mips kernel
to run o32, n32 and n64 binaries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D609
By Richard Earnshaw at ARM
>
>GCC has for a number of years provides a set of pre-defined macros for
>use with determining the ISA and features of the target during
>pre-processing. However, the design was always somewhat cumbersome in
>that each new architecture revision created a new define and then
>removed the previous one. This meant that it was necessary to keep
>updating the support code simply to recognise a new architecture being
>added.
>
>The ACLE specification (ARM C Language Extentions)
>(http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.set.swdev/index.html)
>provides a much more suitable interface and GCC has supported this
>since gcc-4.8.
>
>This patch makes use of the ACLE pre-defines to map to the internal
>feature definitions. To support older versions of GCC a compatibility
>header is provided that maps the traditional pre-defines onto the new
>ACLE ones.
Stop using __FreeBSD_ARCH_armv6__ and switch to __ARM_ARCH >= 6 in the
couple of places in tree. clang already implements ACLE. Add a define
that says we implement version 1.1, even though the implementation
isn't quite complete.
The MD allocators were very common, however there were some minor
differencies. These differencies were all consolidated in the MI allocator,
under ifdefs. The defines from machine/vmparam.h turn on features required
for a particular machine. For details look in the comment in sys/sf_buf.h.
As result no MD code left in sys/*/*/vm_machdep.c. Some arches still have
machine/sf_buf.h, which is usually quite small.
Tested by: glebius (i386), tuexen (arm32), kevlo (arm32)
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
don't need any #ifdef stuff to use atomic_load/store_64() elsewhere in
the kernel. For armv4 the atomics are trivial to implement for kernel
code (just disable interrupts), less so for user mode, so this only has
the kernel mode implementations for now.
value shared across multiple cores is with atomic_load_64() and
atomic_store_64(), because the normal 64-bit load/store instructions
are not atomic on 32-bit arm. Luckily the ldrexd/strexd instructions
that are atomic are fairly cheap on armv6. Because it's fairly simple
to do, this implements all the ops for 64-bit, not just load/store.
Reviewed by: andrew, cognet
We have functions nested within functions, and places where we start a
function then never end it, we just jump to the middle of something else.
We tried to express this with nested ENTRY()/END() macros (which result
in .fnstart and .fnend directives), but it turns out there's no way to
express that nesting in ARM EHABI unwind info, and newer tools treat
multiple .fnstart directives without an intervening .fnend as an error.
These changes introduce two new macros, EENTRY() and EEND(). EENTRY()
creates a global label you can call/jump to just like ENTRY(), but it
doesn't emit a .fnstart. EEND() is a no-op that just documents the
conceptual endpoint that matches up with the same-named EENTRY().
This is based on patches submitted by Stepan Dyatkovskiy, but I made some
changes and added the EEND() stuff, so blame any problems on me.
Submitted by: Stepan Dyatkovskiy <stpworld@narod.ru>
handling. For statically linked apps this uses the __exidx_start/end
symbols set up by the linker. For dynamically linked apps it finds the
shared object that contains the given address and returns the location and
size of the exidx section in that shared object.
The dl_unwind_find_exidx() name is used by other BSD projects and Android,
and is mentioned in clang 3.5 comments as "the BSD interface" for finding
exidx data. GCC (in libgcc_s) expects the exact same API and functionality
to be provided by a function named __gnu_Unwind_Find_exidx(), so we provide
that with an alias ("strong reference").
Reviewed by: kib@
MFC after: 1 week
memory ordering model allows writes to different devices to complete out
of order, leading to a situation where the write that clears an interrupt
source at a device can complete after a write that unmasks and EOIs the
interrupt at the interrupt controller, leading to a spurious re-interrupt.
This adds a generic barrier function specific to the needs of interrupt
controllers, and calls that function from the GIC and TI AINTC controllers.
There may still be other soc-specific controllers that need to make the call.
Reviewed by: cognet, Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days