Commit Graph

36 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bruce Evans
5ea390eff5 Added drum device.
Submitted by:	partly by "Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@ki.net>
1996-03-27 20:09:26 +00:00
John Dyson
836e5d1360 In order to fix some concurrency problems with the swap pager early
on in the FreeBSD development, I had made a global lock around the
rlist code.  This was bogus, and now the lock is maintained on a
per resource list basis.  This now allows the rlist code to be used for
almost any non-interrupt level application.
1996-03-03 21:11:08 +00:00
Julian Elischer
1dfcbb0ce3 i386/i386/conf.c is no longer needed.. remove it from files.i386
redistribute a few last routines to beter places and shoot the file

I haven't act actually 'deleted' the file yet togive people time
to
have done a config.. I.e. they are likely to have done one in a week or so
so I'll remove it then..
 it's now empty.
makes the question of a USL copyright rather moot.
1995-12-21 20:09:46 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
f708ef1b9e Another mega commit to staticize things. 1995-12-14 09:55:16 +00:00
Julian Elischer
6ba9ebce28 devsw tables are now arrays of POINTERS to struct [cb]devsw
seems to work hre just fine though  I can't check every file
that changed due to limmited h/w, however I've checked enught to be petty
happy withe hte code..

WARNING... struct lkm[mumble] has changed
so it might be an idea to recompile any lkm related programs
1995-12-13 15:13:57 +00:00
Bruce Evans
4439655d52 Replaced nxdump by nodump (if the dump function gets called, then the
device must be configured, so ENXIO is a bogus errno).

Replaced zerosize by nopsize.  zerosize was a temporary alias.
1995-12-10 19:53:42 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
d2f265fab8 Julian forgot to make the *devsw structures static. 1995-12-08 23:23:00 +00:00
Julian Elischer
87f6c6625d Pass 3 of the great devsw changes
most devsw referenced functions are now static, as they are
in the same file as their devsw structure. I've also added DEVFS
support for nearly every device in the system, however
many of the devices have 'incorrect' names under DEVFS
because I couldn't quickly work out the correct naming conventions.
(but devfs won't be coming on line for a month or so anyhow so that doesn't
matter)

If you "OWN" a device which would normally have an entry in /dev
then search for the devfs_add_devsw() entries and munge to make them right..
check out similar devices to see what I might have done in them in you
can't see what's going on..
for a laugh compare conf.c conf.h defore and after... :)
I have not doen DEVFS entries for any DISKSLICE devices yet as that will be
a much more complicated job.. (pass 5 :)

pass 4 will be to make the devsw tables of type (cdevsw * )
rather than (cdevsw)
seems to work here..
complaints to the usual places.. :)
1995-12-08 11:19:42 +00:00
David Greenman
efeaf95a41 Untangled the vm.h include file spaghetti. 1995-12-07 12:48:31 +00:00
Julian Elischer
7198bf4725 If you're going to mechanically replicate something in 50 files
it's best to not have a (compiles cleanly) typo in it! (sigh)
1995-11-29 14:41:20 +00:00
Julian Elischer
53ac6efbd8 OK, that's it..
That's EVERY SINGLE driver that has an entry in conf.c..
my next trick will be to define cdevsw[] and bdevsw[]
as empty arrays and remove all those DAMNED defines as well..

Each of these drivers has a SYSINIT linker set entry
that comes in very early.. and asks teh driver to add it's own
entry to the two devsw[] tables.

some slight reworking of the commits from yesterday (added the SYSINIT
stuff and some usually wrong but token DEVFS entries to all these
devices.

BTW does anyone know where the 'ata' entries in conf.c actually reside?
seems we don't actually have a 'ataopen() etc...

If you want to add a new device in conf.c
please  make sure I know
so I can keep it up to date too..

as before, this is all dependent on #if defined(JREMOD)
(and #ifdef DEVFS in parts)
1995-11-29 10:49:16 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
3af768903d Remove unused vars & funcs, make things static, protoize a little bit. 1995-11-20 12:20:02 +00:00
Bruce Evans
d2d3e8751c Included <sys/sysproto.h> to get central declarations for syscall args
structs and prototypes for syscalls.

Ifdefed duplicated decentralized declarations of args structs.  It's
convenient to have this visible but they are hard to maintain.  Some
are already different from the central declarations.  4.4lite2 puts
them in comments in the function headers but I wanted to avoid the
large changes for that.
1995-11-12 06:43:28 +00:00
Bruce Evans
28f8db1403 Eliminate sloppy common-style declarations. There should be none left for
the LINT configuation.
1995-07-29 11:44:31 +00:00
David Greenman
24a1cce34f NOTE: libkvm, w, ps, 'top', and any other utility which depends on struct
proc or any VM system structure will have to be rebuilt!!!

Much needed overhaul of the VM system. Included in this first round of
changes:

1) Improved pager interfaces: init, alloc, dealloc, getpages, putpages,
   haspage, and sync operations are supported. The haspage interface now
   provides information about clusterability. All pager routines now take
   struct vm_object's instead of "pagers".

2) Improved data structures. In the previous paradigm, there is constant
   confusion caused by pagers being both a data structure ("allocate a
   pager") and a collection of routines. The idea of a pager structure has
   escentially been eliminated. Objects now have types, and this type is
   used to index the appropriate pager. In most cases, items in the pager
   structure were duplicated in the object data structure and thus were
   unnecessary. In the few cases that remained, a un_pager structure union
   was created in the object to contain these items.

3) Because of the cleanup of #1 & #2, a lot of unnecessary layering can now
   be removed. For instance, vm_object_enter(), vm_object_lookup(),
   vm_object_remove(), and the associated object hash list were some of the
   things that were removed.

4) simple_lock's removed. Discussion with several people reveals that the
   SMP locking primitives used in the VM system aren't likely the mechanism
   that we'll be adopting. Even if it were, the locking that was in the code
   was very inadequate and would have to be mostly re-done anyway. The
   locking in a uni-processor kernel was a no-op but went a long way toward
   making the code difficult to read and debug.

5) Places that attempted to kludge-up the fact that we don't have kernel
   thread support have been fixed to reflect the reality that we are really
   dealing with processes, not threads. The VM system didn't have complete
   thread support, so the comments and mis-named routines were just wrong.
   We now use tsleep and wakeup directly in the lock routines, for instance.

6) Where appropriate, the pagers have been improved, especially in the
   pager_alloc routines. Most of the pager_allocs have been rewritten and
   are now faster and easier to maintain.

7) The pagedaemon pageout clustering algorithm has been rewritten and
   now tries harder to output an even number of pages before and after
   the requested page. This is sort of the reverse of the ideal pagein
   algorithm and should provide better overall performance.

8) Unnecessary (incorrect) casts to caddr_t in calls to tsleep & wakeup
   have been removed. Some other unnecessary casts have also been removed.

9) Some almost useless debugging code removed.

10) Terminology of shadow objects vs. backing objects straightened out.
    The fact that the vm_object data structure escentially had this
    backwards really confused things. The use of "shadow" and "backing
    object" throughout the code is now internally consistent and correct
    in the Mach terminology.

11) Several minor bug fixes, including one in the vm daemon that caused
    0 RSS objects to not get purged as intended.

12) A "default pager" has now been created which cleans up the transition
    of objects to the "swap" type. The previous checks throughout the code
    for swp->pg_data != NULL were really ugly. This change also provides
    the rudiments for future backing of "anonymous" memory by something
    other than the swap pager (via the vnode pager, for example), and it
    allows the decision about which of these pagers to use to be made
    dynamically (although will need some additional decision code to do
    this, of course).

13) (dyson) MAP_COPY has been deprecated and the corresponding "copy
    object" code has been removed. MAP_COPY was undocumented and non-
    standard. It was furthermore broken in several ways which caused its
    behavior to degrade to MAP_PRIVATE. Binaries that use MAP_COPY will
    continue to work correctly, but via the slightly different semantics
    of MAP_PRIVATE.

14) (dyson) Sharing maps have been removed. It's marginal usefulness in a
    threads design can be worked around in other ways. Both #12 and #13
    were done to simplify the code and improve readability and maintain-
    ability. (As were most all of these changes)

TODO:

1) Rewrite most of the vnode pager to use VOP_GETPAGES/PUTPAGES. Doing
   this will reduce the vnode pager to a mere fraction of its current size.

2) Rewrite vm_fault and the swap/vnode pagers to use the clustering
   information provided by the new haspage pager interface. This will
   substantially reduce the overhead by eliminating a large number of
   VOP_BMAP() calls. The VOP_BMAP() filesystem interface should be
   improved to provide both a "behind" and "ahead" indication of
   contiguousness.

3) Implement the extended features of pager_haspage in swap_pager_haspage().
   It currently just says 0 pages ahead/behind.

4) Re-implement the swap device (swstrategy) in a more elegant way, perhaps
   via a much more general mechanism that could also be used for disk
   striping of regular filesystems.

5) Do something to improve the architecture of vm_object_collapse(). The
   fact that it makes calls into the swap pager and knows too much about
   how the swap pager operates really bothers me. It also doesn't allow
   for collapsing of non-swap pager objects ("unnamed" objects backed by
   other pagers).
1995-07-13 08:48:48 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
9b2e535452 Remove trailing whitespace. 1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
David Greenman
956e9ca5a0 Removed check for sw_dev == NODEV; this is a normal condition for swap
over NFS and was gratuitously panicing when it happens.

Reviewed by:	John Dyson
Submitted by:	Pierre Beyssac via Poul-Henning Kamp
1995-05-25 03:38:11 +00:00
David Greenman
2976b7f19f NFS diskless operation was broken because swapdev_vp wasn't initialized.
These changes solve the problem in a general way by moving the
initialization out of the individual fs_mountroot's and into swaponvp().

Submitted by:	Poul-Henning Kamp
1995-05-19 03:27:08 +00:00
David Greenman
0e5b52868f Fixed a bug that managed to slip in during Poul's dynamic swap partition
changes. The check for nswap was bogus, but the code was so convoluted
that it was difficult to tell. It's better now. :-)

Reviewed by:	David Greenman (extensively), and John Dyson
Submitted by:	Poul-Henning Kamp, w/tweaks by me.
1995-05-18 05:09:54 +00:00
David Greenman
a401ebbe32 Changed swap partition handling/allocation so that it doesn't
require specific partitions be mentioned in the kernel config
file ("swap on foo" is now obsolete).

From Poul-Henning:

The visible effect is this:

As default, unless
        options "NSWAPDEV=23"
is in your config, you will have four swap-devices.
You can swapon(2) any block device you feel like, it doesn't have
to be in the kernel config.

There is a performance/resource win available by getting the NSWAPDEV right
(but only if you have just one swap-device ??), but using that as default
would be too restrictive.

The invisible effect is that:

Swap-handling disappears from the $arch part of the kernel.
It gets a lot simpler (-145 lines) and cleaner.

Reviewed by:	John Dyson, David Greenman
Submitted by:	Poul-Henning Kamp, with minor changes by me.
1995-05-14 03:00:10 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
8af2296bcb I'm about to jump on the swap-initialization, and having talked
with davidg about it, I hereby kill two undocumented misfeatures:
The code to skip a miniroot in the swapdev is not particular useful, and
if we need it we need it to be done properly, ie size the fs and skip all
of it not some hardcoded size, and subtract what we skip from the length
in the first place.
The SEQSWAP dies too.  It's not the way to do it, it doesn't work, and
nobody have expressed any great desire for it to work.  The way to
implement it correctly would be a second argument to swapon(2) to give
a priority/policy information.  Low priority swapdevs can be made so
by adding them at a far offset (0x80000000 kind of thing), with almost no
modification to the strategy routine (in particular a offset per swapdev).
But until the need is obvious, it will not be done.
1995-05-12 03:54:59 +00:00
Bruce Evans
b5e8ce9f12 Add and move declarations to fix all of the warnings from `gcc -Wimplicit'
(except in netccitt, netiso and netns) and most of the warnings from
`gcc -Wnested-externs'.  Fix all the bugs found.  There were no serious
ones.
1995-03-16 18:17:34 +00:00
David Greenman
480dff540b Fixed some formatting weirdness that I overlooked in the previous commit. 1995-01-10 07:32:52 +00:00
David Greenman
0d94caffca These changes embody the support of the fully coherent merged VM buffer cache,
much higher filesystem I/O performance, and much better paging performance. It
represents the culmination of over 6 months of R&D.

The majority of the merged VM/cache work is by John Dyson.

The following highlights the most significant changes. Additionally, there are
(mostly minor) changes to the various filesystem modules (nfs, msdosfs, etc) to
support the new VM/buffer scheme.

vfs_bio.c:
Significant rewrite of most of vfs_bio to support the merged VM buffer cache
scheme.  The scheme is almost fully compatible with the old filesystem
interface.  Significant improvement in the number of opportunities for write
clustering.

vfs_cluster.c, vfs_subr.c
Upgrade and performance enhancements in vfs layer code to support merged
VM/buffer cache.  Fixup of vfs_cluster to eliminate the bogus pagemove stuff.

vm_object.c:
Yet more improvements in the collapse code.  Elimination of some windows that
can cause list corruption.

vm_pageout.c:
Fixed it, it really works better now.  Somehow in 2.0, some "enhancements"
broke the code.  This code has been reworked from the ground-up.

vm_fault.c, vm_page.c, pmap.c, vm_object.c
Support for small-block filesystems with merged VM/buffer cache scheme.

pmap.c vm_map.c
Dynamic kernel VM size, now we dont have to pre-allocate excessive numbers of
kernel PTs.

vm_glue.c
Much simpler and more effective swapping code.  No more gratuitous swapping.

proc.h
Fixed the problem that the p_lock flag was not being cleared on a fork.

swap_pager.c, vnode_pager.c
Removal of old vfs_bio cruft to support the past pseudo-coherency.  Now the
code doesn't need it anymore.

machdep.c
Changes to better support the parameter values for the merged VM/buffer cache
scheme.

machdep.c, kern_exec.c, vm_glue.c
Implemented a seperate submap for temporary exec string space and another one
to contain process upages. This eliminates all map fragmentation problems
that previously existed.

ffs_inode.c, ufs_inode.c, ufs_readwrite.c
Changes for merged VM/buffer cache.  Add "bypass" support for sneaking in on
busy buffers.

Submitted by:	John Dyson and David Greenman
1995-01-09 16:06:02 +00:00
David Greenman
d49456add7 Preallocate the first swap block to work around a failure with swap starting
at physical block 0. Note that this will show up in pstat -s and swapinfo
as space "in use". In reality, the space is simply never made available.
1994-11-22 08:47:20 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
2fc59d0032 Contrary to my last commit here: NFS-swap is enabled automatically. 1994-10-22 17:53:35 +00:00
David Greenman
36df951444 Fixed a comment from the previous commit. 1994-10-22 02:41:19 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
2a054bc060 ATTENTION!
From now on, >all< swapdevices must be activated with "swapon".

If you havn't got it, add this line to /etc/fstab:
	/dev/wd0b	none	swap	sw	0 0
ne sec

Reason:
We want our GENERIC* kernels to have a large selection of swap-devices, but
on the other hand, we don't want to use a wd0b as swap when we boot of a
floppy.  This way, we will never use a unexpected swapdevice.  Nothing else
has changed.
1994-10-21 03:17:11 +00:00
David Greenman
35c10d2239 Got rid of map.h. It's a leftover from the rmap code, and we use rlists.
Changed swapmap into swaplist.
1994-10-09 07:35:18 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
05f0fdd26a Cosmetics: unused vars, ()'s, #include's &c &c to silence gcc.
Reviewed by:	davidg
1994-10-09 01:52:19 +00:00
David Greenman
c770b47d56 Removed unimplemented subr_rmap.c and unused references to it. 1994-09-25 22:31:11 +00:00
David Greenman
55e8e4749f Fixed problem with no swap on boot device, but there is some on an
alternate device (as specified via kernel config file)...that casues
the machine to panic.
1994-09-11 03:55:39 +00:00
David Greenman
16f62314cd Incorporated post 1.1.5 work from John Dyson. This includes performance
improvements via the new routines pmap_qenter/pmap_qremove and pmap_kenter/
pmap_kremove. These routine allow fast mapping of pages for those
architectures that have "normal" MMUs. Also included is a fix to the
pageout daemon to properly check a queue end condition.

Submitted by:	John Dyson
1994-08-06 09:15:42 +00:00
David Greenman
3c4dd3568f Added $Id$ 1994-08-02 07:55:43 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
26f9a76710 The big 4.4BSD Lite to FreeBSD 2.0.0 (Development) patch.
Reviewed by:	Rodney W. Grimes
Submitted by:	John Dyson and David Greenman
1994-05-25 09:21:21 +00:00
Rodney W. Grimes
df8bae1de4 BSD 4.4 Lite Kernel Sources 1994-05-24 10:09:53 +00:00