Commit Graph

331 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alan Cox
49c3b92531 I misplaced the assertion that was added to vm_page_startup() in the
previous change.  Correct its placement.
2006-11-08 19:11:54 +00:00
Alan Cox
9ad3296a25 Simplify the construction of the free queues in vm_page_startup(). Add
an assertion to test a hypothesis concerning other redundant computation
in vm_page_startup().
2006-11-08 18:43:47 +00:00
Alan Cox
2a53696fb8 The page queues lock is no longer required by vm_page_busy() or
vm_page_wakeup().  Reduce or eliminate its use accordingly.
2006-10-22 21:18:48 +00:00
Alan Cox
9af80719db Replace PG_BUSY with VPO_BUSY. In other words, changes to the page's
busy flag, i.e., VPO_BUSY, are now synchronized by the per-vm object
lock instead of the global page queues lock.
2006-10-22 04:28:14 +00:00
Ken Smith
a9a5d47c85 Fix two minor style(9) nits in v1.313 which were noticed during an
MFC review.  alc@ will be MFCing V1.313 plus style fix to RELENG_6.
2006-09-29 00:20:56 +00:00
Alan Cox
eb4bbba83a Refactor vm_page_sleep_if_busy() so that the test for a busy page is
inlined and a procedure call is made in the rare case, i.e., when it is
necessary to sleep.  In this case, inlining the test actually makes the
kernel smaller.
2006-08-27 19:50:13 +00:00
Alan Cox
4f9d17d8ab Page flags are reset on (re)allocation. There is no need to clear any
flags except for PG_ZERO in vm_page_free_toq().
2006-08-21 00:34:31 +00:00
Alan Cox
b146f9e5d2 Reimplement the page's NOSYNC flag as an object-synchronized instead of a
page queues-synchronized flag.  Reduce the scope of the page queues lock in
vm_fault() accordingly.

Move vm_fault()'s call to vm_object_set_writeable_dirty() outside of the
scope of the page queues lock.  Reviewed by: tegge
Additionally, eliminate an unnecessary dereference in computing the
argument that is passed to vm_object_set_writeable_dirty().
2006-08-13 00:11:09 +00:00
Alan Cox
25017df472 Ensure that the page's new field for object-synchronized flags is always
initialized to zero.

Call vm_page_sleep_if_busy() instead of duplicating its implementation in
vm_page_grab().
2006-08-11 17:18:58 +00:00
Alan Cox
75db2abb2e Change vm_page_cowfault() so that it doesn't allocate a pre-busied page. 2006-08-10 04:48:29 +00:00
Alan Cox
5786be7cc7 Introduce a field to struct vm_page for storing flags that are
synchronized by the lock on the object containing the page.

Transition PG_WANTED and PG_SWAPINPROG to use the new field,
eliminating the need for holding the page queues lock when setting
or clearing these flags.  Rename PG_WANTED and PG_SWAPINPROG to
VPO_WANTED and VPO_SWAPINPROG, respectively.

Eliminate the assertion that the page queues lock is held in
vm_page_io_finish().

Eliminate the acquisition and release of the page queues lock
around calls to vm_page_io_finish() in kern_sendfile() and
vfs_unbusy_pages().
2006-08-09 17:43:27 +00:00
Alan Cox
e74814b66a Change vm_page_sleep_if_busy() so that it no longer requires the caller to
hold the page queues lock.
2006-08-06 00:15:40 +00:00
Alan Cox
91449ce98c When sleeping on a busy page, use the lock from the containing object
rather than the global page queues lock.
2006-08-03 23:56:11 +00:00
Alan Cox
78985e424a Complete the transition from pmap_page_protect() to pmap_remove_write().
Originally, I had adopted sparc64's name, pmap_clear_write(), for the
function that is now pmap_remove_write().  However, this function is more
like pmap_remove_all() than like pmap_clear_modify() or
pmap_clear_reference(), hence, the name change.

The higher-level rationale behind this change is described in
src/sys/amd64/amd64/pmap.c revision 1.567.  The short version is that I'm
trying to clean up and fix our support for execute access.

Reviewed by: marcel@ (ia64)
2006-08-01 19:06:06 +00:00
Alan Cox
af51d7bf57 Eliminate OBJ_WRITEABLE. It hasn't been used in a long time. 2006-07-21 06:40:29 +00:00
John Baldwin
9bdaa43379 Move the code to handle the vm.blacklist tunable up a layer into
vm_page_startup().  As a result, we now only lookup the tunable once
instead of looking it up once for every physical page of memory in the
system.  This cuts out about a 1 second or so delay in boot on x86
systems.  The delay is much larger and more noticable on sun4v apparently.

Reported by:	kmacy
MFC after:	1 week
2006-06-23 16:44:24 +00:00
Paul Saab
4cbb1c1aaa Fix minidumps to include pages allocated via pmap_map on amd64.
These pages are allocated from the direct map, and were not previous
tracked.  This included the vm_page_array and the early UMA bootstrap
pages.

Reviewed by:	peter
2006-05-31 22:55:23 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c0345a84aa Introduce minidumps. Full physical memory crash dumps are still available
via the debug.minidump sysctl and tunable.

Traditional dumps store all physical memory.  This was once a good thing
when machines had a maximum of 64M of ram and 1GB of kvm.  These days,
machines often have many gigabytes of ram and a smaller amount of kvm.
libkvm+kgdb don't have a way to access physical ram that is not mapped
into kvm at the time of the crash dump, so the extra ram being dumped
is mostly wasted.

Minidumps invert the process.  Instead of dumping physical memory in
in order to guarantee that all of kvm's backing is dumped, minidumps
instead dump only memory that is actively mapped into kvm.

amd64 has a direct map region that things like UMA use.  Obviously we
cannot dump all of the direct map region because that is effectively
an old style all-physical-memory dump.  Instead, introduce a bitmap
and two helper routines (dump_add_page(pa) and dump_drop_page(pa)) that
allow certain critical direct map pages to be included in the dump.
uma_machdep.c's allocator is the intended consumer.

Dumps are a custom format.  At the very beginning of the file is a header,
then a copy of the message buffer, then the bitmap of pages present in
the dump, then the final level of the kvm page table trees (2MB mappings
are expanded into a 4K page mappings), then the sparse physical pages
according to the bitmap.  libkvm can now conveniently access the kvm
page table entries.

Booting my test 8GB machine, forcing it into ddb and forcing a dump
leads to a 48MB minidump.  While this is a best case, I expect minidumps
to be in the 100MB-500MB range.  Obviously, never larger than physical
memory of course.

minidumps are on by default.  It would want be necessary to turn them off
if it was necessary to debug corrupt kernel page table management as that
would mess up minidumps as well.

Both minidumps and regular dumps are supported on the same machine.
2006-04-21 04:24:50 +00:00
Warner Losh
62a59e8f0d Remove leading __ from __(inline|const|signed|volatile). They are
obsolete.  This should reduce diffs to NetBSD as well.
2006-03-08 06:31:46 +00:00
Stephan Uphoff
224409590d When the VM needs to allocated physical memory pages (for non interrupt use)
and it has not plenty of free pages it tries to free pages in the cache queue.
Unfortunately freeing a cached page requires the locking of the object that
owns the page. However in the context of allocating pages we may not be able
to lock the object and thus can only TRY to lock the object. If the locking try
fails the cache page can not be freed and is activated to move it out of the way
so that we may try to free other cache pages.

If all pages in the cache belong to objects that are currently locked the
cache queue can be emptied without freeing a single page. This scenario caused
two problems:

    1)  vm_page_alloc always failed allocation when it tried freeing pages from
        the cache queue and failed to do so. However if there are more than
        cnt.v_interrupt_free_min pages on the free list it should return pages
        when requested with priority VM_ALLOC_SYSTEM. Failure to do so can cause
        resource exhaustion deadlocks.

    2)  Threads than need to allocate pages spend a lot of time cleaning up the
        page queue without really getting anything done while the pagedaemon
         needs to work overtime to refill the cache.

This change fixes the first problem. (1)

Reviewed by:	tegge@
2006-02-15 22:29:53 +00:00
Alan Cox
6c237adcea Change #if defined(DIAGNOSTIC) to KASSERT. 2006-01-31 19:06:51 +00:00
Alan Cox
fc3c1bc471 In vm_page_set_invalid() invalidate all of the page's mappings as soon as
any part of the page's contents is invalidated.

Submitted by: tegge
2006-01-24 07:21:38 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
ef39c05baa MI changes:
- provide an interface (macros) to the page coloring part of the VM system,
   this allows to try different coloring algorithms without the need to
   touch every file [1]
 - make the page queue tuning values readable: sysctl vm.stats.pagequeue
 - autotuning of the page coloring values based upon the cache size instead
   of options in the kernel config (disabling of the page coloring as a
   kernel option is still possible)

MD changes:
 - detection of the cache size: only IA32 and AMD64 (untested) contains
   cache size detection code, every other arch just comes with a dummy
   function (this results in the use of default values like it was the
   case without the autotuning of the page coloring)
 - print some more info on Intel CPU's (like we do on AMD and Transmeta
   CPU's)

Note to AMD owners (IA32 and AMD64): please run "sysctl vm.stats.pagequeue"
and report if the cache* values are zero (= bug in the cache detection code)
or not.

Based upon work by:	Chad David <davidc@acns.ab.ca> [1]
Reviewed by:		alc, arch (in 2004)
Discussed with:		alc, Chad David, arch (in 2004)
2005-12-31 14:39:20 +00:00
Alan Cox
984922d761 Assert that the page that is given to vm_page_free_toq() does not have any
managed mappings.
2005-12-13 19:59:09 +00:00
Alan Cox
7e9d944218 If a physical page is mapped by two or more virtual addresses, transmitted
by the zero-copy sockets method, and written to before the transmission
completes, we need to destroy all of the existing mappings to the page,
not just the one that we fault on.  Otherwise, the mappings will no longer
be to the same page and changes made through one of the mappings will not
be visible through the others.

Observed by: tegge
2005-11-08 06:33:21 +00:00
Alan Cox
674b706ea0 Consider the zero-copy transmission of a page that was wired by mlock(2).
If a copy-on-write fault occurs on the page, the new copy should inherit
a part of the original page's wire count.

Submitted by: tegge
MFC after: 1 week
2005-11-01 04:30:21 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
3803b26bae As alc pointed out to me, vm_page.c 1.305 was incomplete: uma_startup()
still uses the constant UMA_BOOT_PAGES.  Change it to accept boot_pages
as an additional argument.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-10-08 21:03:54 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
cfa22bcc4c Introduce the vm.boot_pages tunable and sysctl, which controls the number
of pages reserved to bootstrap the kernel memory allocator.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-08-12 12:24:19 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
761dbeb66f - In vm_page_insert() hold the backing vnode when the first page
is inserted.
 - In vm_page_remove() drop the backing vnode when the last page
   is removed.
 - Don't check the vnode to see if it must be reclaimed on every
   call to vm_page_free_toq() as we only check it now when it is
   actually required.  This saves us two lock operations per call.

Sponsored by:	Isilon Systems, Inc.
2005-03-15 14:14:09 +00:00
Alan Cox
46fbc58202 Transfer responsibility for freeing the page taken from the cache
queue and (possibly) unlocking the containing object from
vm_page_alloc() to vm_page_select_cache().  Recent optimizations to
vm_map_pmap_enter() (see vm_map.c revisions 1.362 and 1.363) and
pmap_enter_quick() have resulted in panic()s because vm_page_alloc()
mistakenly unlocked objects that had not been locked by
vm_page_select_cache().

Reported by: Peter Holm and Kris Kennaway
2005-01-07 05:02:19 +00:00
Warner Losh
60727d8b86 /* -> /*- for license, minor formatting changes 2005-01-07 02:29:27 +00:00
Alan Cox
0869d38ba6 Assert that page allocations during an interrupt specify
VM_ALLOC_INTERRUPT.

Assert that pages removed from the cache queue are not busy.
2004-12-31 19:50:45 +00:00
Alan Cox
7aa2190c8e Access to the page's busy field is (now) synchronized by the containing
object's lock.  Therefore, the assertion that the page queues lock is held
can be removed from vm_page_io_start().
2004-12-29 04:18:22 +00:00
Alan Cox
40198b3c04 Assert that the vm object is locked on entry to vm_page_sleep_if_busy();
remove some unneeded code.
2004-12-26 21:46:44 +00:00
Alan Cox
d19ef81437 The synchronization provided by vm object locking has eliminated the
need for most calls to vm_page_busy().  Specifically, most calls to
vm_page_busy() occur immediately prior to a call to vm_page_remove().
In such cases, the containing vm object is locked across both calls.
Consequently, the setting of the vm page's PG_BUSY flag is not even
visible to other threads that are following the synchronization
protocol.

This change (1) eliminates the calls to vm_page_busy() that
immediately precede a call to vm_page_remove() or functions, such as
vm_page_free() and vm_page_rename(), that call it and (2) relaxes the
requirement in vm_page_remove() that the vm page's PG_BUSY flag is
set.  Now, the vm page's PG_BUSY flag is set only when the vm object
lock is released while the vm page is still in transition.  Typically,
this is when it is undergoing I/O.
2004-11-03 20:17:31 +00:00
Alan Cox
f4d49654ae Assert that the containing vm object is locked in vm_page_cache() and
vm_page_try_to_cache().
2004-10-28 05:26:21 +00:00
Alan Cox
63bb7041cc Assert that the containing vm object is locked in vm_page_flash(). 2004-10-25 19:52:44 +00:00
Alan Cox
75d0533847 Assert that the containing vm object is locked in vm_page_busy() and
vm_page_wakeup().
2004-10-24 23:53:47 +00:00
Alan Cox
0f9f9bcb53 Introduce VM_ALLOC_NOBUSY, an option to vm_page_alloc() and vm_page_grab()
that indicates that the caller does not want a page with its busy flag set.
In many places, the global page queues lock is acquired and released just
to clear the busy flag on a just allocated page.  Both the allocation of
the page and the clearing of the busy flag occur while the containing vm
object is locked.  So, the busy flag might as well never be set.
2004-10-24 06:15:36 +00:00
Alan Cox
1e96d2a217 Correct two errors in PG_BUSY management by vm_page_cowfault(). Both
errors are in rarely executed paths.
1. Each time the retry_alloc path is taken, the PG_BUSY must be set again.
   Otherwise vm_page_remove() panics.
2. There is no need to set PG_BUSY on the newly allocated page before
   freeing it.  The page already has PG_BUSY set by vm_page_alloc().
   Setting it again could cause an assertion failure.

MFC after: 2 weeks
2004-10-18 08:11:59 +00:00
Alan Cox
36aeb90e34 Assert that the containing object is locked in vm_page_io_start() and
vm_page_io_finish().  The motivation being to transition synchronization of
the vm_page's busy field from the global page queues lock to the per-object
lock.
2004-10-17 22:33:40 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
7ce1979be6 Add new a function isa_dma_init() which returns an errno when it fails
and which takes a M_WAITOK/M_NOWAIT flag argument.

Add compatibility isa_dmainit() macro which whines loudly if
isa_dma_init() fails.

Problem uncovered by:	tegge
2004-09-15 12:09:50 +00:00
Alan Cox
a087914310 Advance the state of pmap locking on alpha, amd64, and i386.
- Enable recursion on the page queues lock.  This allows calls to
   vm_page_alloc(VM_ALLOC_NORMAL) and UMA's obj_alloc() with the page
   queues lock held.  Such calls are made to allocate page table pages
   and pv entries.
 - The previous change enables a partial reversion of vm/vm_page.c
   revision 1.216, i.e., the call to vm_page_alloc() by vm_page_cowfault()
   now specifies VM_ALLOC_NORMAL rather than VM_ALLOC_INTERRUPT.
 - Add partial locking to pmap_copy().  (As a side-effect, pmap_copy()
   should now be faster on i386 SMP because it no longer generates IPIs
   for TLB shootdown on the other processors.)
 - Complete the locking of pmap_enter() and pmap_enter_quick().  (As of now,
   all changes to a user-level pmap on alpha, amd64, and i386 are performed
   with appropriate locking.)
2004-07-29 18:56:31 +00:00
Brian Feldman
d951b75210 Fix a race in vm_page_sleep_if_busy(). Due to vm_object locking
being incomplete, it currently has to know how to drop and pick back
up the vm_object's mutex if it has to sleep and drop the page queue
mutex.  The problem with this is that if the page is busy, while we
are sleeping, the page can be freed and object disappear.  When trying
to lock m->object, we'd get a stale or NULL pointer and crash.

The object is now cached, but this makes the assumption that
the object is referenced in some manner and will not itself
disappear while it is unlocked.  Since this only happens if
the object is locked, I had to remove an assumption earlier in
contigmalloc() that reversed the order of locking the object and
doing vm_page_sleep_if_busy(), not the normal order.
2004-07-21 23:56:09 +00:00
Alan Cox
e832aafc51 - Eliminate the pte object from the pmap. Instead, page table pages are
allocated as "no object" pages.  Similar changes were made to the amd64
   and i386 pmap last year.  The primary reason being that maintaining
   a pte object leads to lock order violations.  A secondary reason being
   that the pte object is redundant, i.e., the page table itself can be
   used to lookup page table pages.  (Historical note: The pte object
   predates our ability to allocate "no object" pages.  Thus, the pte
   object was a necessary evil.)
 - Unconditionally check the vm object lock's status in vm_page_remove().
   Previously, this assertion could not be made on Alpha due to its use
   of a pte object.
2004-07-19 18:12:04 +00:00
Alan Cox
790bdd0f2e Increase the scope of the page queues lock in vm_page_alloc() to cover
a diagnostic check that accesses the cache queue count.
2004-07-10 22:12:49 +00:00
Alan Cox
0a2df4773c Remove spl() calls. Update comments to reflect the removal of spl() calls.
Remove '\n' from panic() format strings.  Remove some blank lines.
2004-06-19 04:19:47 +00:00
Alan Cox
d45f21f31a Do not preset PG_BUSY on VM_ALLOC_NOOBJ pages. Such pages are not
accessible through an object.  Thus, PG_BUSY serves no purpose.
2004-06-17 06:16:58 +00:00
Alan Cox
4be14af9cf To date, unwiring a fictitious page has produced a panic. The reason
being that PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() returns the wrong vm_page for fictitious
pages but unwiring uses PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE().  The resulting panic
reported an unexpected wired count.  Rather than attempting to fix
PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE(), this fix takes advantage of the properties of
fictitious pages.  Specifically, fictitious pages will never be
completely unwired.  Therefore, we can keep a fictitious page's wired
count forever set to one and thereby avoid the use of
PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() when we know that we're working with a fictitious
page, just not which one.

In collaboration with: green@, tegge@
PR: kern/29915
2004-05-22 04:53:51 +00:00
Alan Cox
1bb816d3d1 Restructure vm_page_select_cache() so that adding assertions is easy.
Some of the conditions that caused vm_page_select_cache() to deactivate a
page were wrong.  For example, deactivating an unmanaged or wired page is a
nop.  Thus, if vm_page_select_cache() had ever encountered an unmanaged or
wired page, it would have looped forever.  Now, we assert that the page is
neither unmanaged nor wired.
2004-05-12 04:27:18 +00:00