years for head. However, it is continuously misused as the mpsafe argument
for callout_init(9). Deprecate the flag and clean up callout_init() calls
to make them more consistent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2613
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
writing approximately never (< 0.00000001% under heavy VM load, and it can
go for months without ever being acquired in normal operation). This
provides a 10% (2-minute) improvement in wall clock time for make -j32
buildworld on a 4-core 32-thread POWER8.
packets and does not schedule interrupts for any packets currently
enqueued. Close two races where enqueued packets may not ever trigger
interrupts. The first of these, at adapter initialization time, was
especially severe since a rush of enqueued packets could actually fill
the receive buffer completely, stalling the interface forever.
MFC after: 2 weeks
this change is to improve concurrency:
- Drop global state stored in the shadow overflow page table (and all other
global state)
- Remove all global locks
- Use per-PTE lock bits to allow parallel page insertion
- Reconstruct state when requested for evicted PTEs instead of buffering
it during overflow
This drops total wall time for make buildworld on a 32-thread POWER8 system
by a factor of two and system time by a factor of three, providing performance
20% better than similarly clocked Core i7 Xeons per-core. Performance on
smaller SMP systems, where PMAP lock contention was not as much of an issue,
is nearly unchanged.
Tested on: POWER8, POWER5+, G5 UP, G5 SMP (64-bit and 32-bit kernels)
Merged from: user/nwhitehorn/ppc64-pmap-rework
Looked over by: jhibbits, andreast
MFC after: 3 months
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
hypervisor. This prevents an infinite loop where processes with evicted
pages would page fault forever when PMAP decided the evicted pages on
which the process was faulting was actually present and did not need to
be restored.
Found while building LLVM with make -j32.
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
that we (a) get the correct large page size to provide to pmap and (b)
we can alert the user if running under incorrectly-configured PowerKVM
on POWER7 and POWER8 systems.
MFC after: 1 week
support in QEMU. Each page of a many page mapping was getting mapped to
the same physical address, which is not the desired behavior.
MFC after: 1 week
the Open Firmware, as provided by petitboot, for example. Note that this is
not quite complete, since RTAS instantiation still depends on callable
firmware.
MFC after: 2 weeks
node's interrupts=<...> property creating resource list entries with a
single common implementation. This change makes ofw_bus_intr_to_rl() the
one true copy of that code and removes the copies of it from other places.
This also adds handling of the interrupts-extended property, which allows
specifying multiple interrupts for a node where each interrupt can have a
separate interrupt-parent. The bindings for this state that the property
cells contain an xref phandle to the interrupt parent followed by whatever
interrupt info that parent normally expects. This leads to having a
variable number of icells per interrupt in the property. For example you
could have <&intc1 1 &intc2 26 9 0 &intc3 9 4>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D803
a sub-node of nexus (ofwbus) rather than direct attach under nexus. This
fixes FDT on x86 and will make coexistence with ACPI on ARM systems easier.
SPARC is unchanged.
Reviewed by: imp, ian
strings and include arbitrary information (IRQ line/domain/sense). When the
ofw_bus_map_intr() API was introduced, it assumed that, as on most systems,
these were either 1 cell, containing an interrupt line, or 2, containing
a line number plus a sense code. It turns out a non-negligible number of
ARM systems use 3 (or even 4!) cells for interrupts, so make this more
general.
Open Firmware-centric:
- Keep the static list of regions in platform.c instead of ofw_machdep.c
- Move various merging and sorting operations to platform.c as well
- Move apple_hacks code out of ofw_machdep.c and into platform_powermac.c,
where it belongs
- Move CHRP-specific dynamic-reconfiguration memory parsing into
platform_chrp.c instead of pretending it is shared code
ibm,dma-window properties. This is especially a concern when
#ibm,dma-address-cells is not specified and we have to use the regular
#address-cells property.
MFC after: 1 week
a variant PCI bus instead of trying to shoehorn it into the PCI host bridge
adapter. Besides matching better the architecture on other platforms, this
also allows systems with multiple partitionable endpoints per PCI host
bridge to work correctly.
the upper 32-bits of the LUN, if possible, into the target_lun field as
passed directly from the REPORT LUNs response. This allows extended LUN
support to work for all LUNs with zeros in the lower 32-bits, which covers
most addressing modes without breaking KBI. Behavior for drivers not
setting PIM_EXTLUNS is unchanged. No user-facing interfaces are modified.
Extended LUNs are stored with swizzled 16-bit word order so that, for
devices implementing LUN addressing (like SCSI-2), the numerical
representation of the LUN is identical with and without PIM_EXTLUNS. Thus
setting PIM_EXTLUNS keeps most behavior, and user-facing LUN IDs, unchanged.
This follows the strategy used in Solaris. A macro (CAM_EXTLUN_BYTE_SWIZZLE)
is provided to transform a lun_id_t into a uint64_t ordered for the wire.
This is the second part of work for full 64-bit extended LUN support and is
designed to a bridge for stable/10 to the final 64-bit LUN code. The
third and final part will involve widening lun_id_t to 64 bits and will
not be MFCed. This third part will break the KBI but will keep the KPI
unchanged so that all drivers that will care about this can be updated now
and not require code changes between HEAD and stable/10.
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
- ofw_bus_map_intr()
Maps an (iparent, IRQ) tuple to a system-global interrupt number in some
platform dependent way. This is meant to be implemented as a replacement
for [FDT_]MAP_IRQ() that is an MI interface that knows about the bus
hierarchy.
- ofw_bus_config_intr()
Configures an interrupt (previously mapped) based on firmware sense flags.
This replaces manual interpretation of the sense field in bus drivers and
will, in a follow-up, allow that interpretation to be redirected to the PIC
drivers where it belongs. This will eventually replace the tables in
/sys/dev/fdt/fdt_ARCH.c
The PowerPC/AIM code has been converted to use these globally, with an
implementation in terms of MAP_IRQ() and powerpc_config_intr(), assuming
OpenPIC, at the bus root in nexus(4). The ofw_bus_config_intr() will shortly
be integrated into pic_if.m and bounced through nexus into the PIC tree.
FDT integration will happen significantly later due to larger testing
requirements. This patch in general also lays the groundwork for the removal
of /sys/dev/fdt/fdt_ARCH.c and machine/fdt.h.
install directly into standard POWER LPARs, as found for example in
QEMU. The core of this device is the SCSI RDMA protocol as also found in
Infiniband. The SRP portions of the driver will be factored out and placed
/sys/cam in the future to allow them to be used for IB storage. Thanks to
Scott Long for a great deal of implementation help.
Reviewed by: scottl
Approved by: re (kib)
platform modules. Whether to call this function or not is highly machine
dependent: on some systems, it is required, while on others it breaks
everything. Platform modules are in a better position to figure this
out. This is required for POWER hypervisor SCSI to work correctly. There
are no functional changes on Powermac systems.
Approved by: re (kib)
operation on systems with multiple serial ports. Also turn on
interrupts for the UART device, which were disabled due to a
now-fixed bug in QEMU.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Requirements) systems from the projects/pseries branch. This in principle
includes all IBM POWER hardware released in the last 15 years with the
exception of POWER3-based systems when run in 64-bit mode. The main
development target, however, has been the PAPR logical partition support
that is the default target in KVM on POWER and QEMU -- mileage may vary
on actual hardware at present. Much of the heavy lifting here was done
by Andreas Tobler.
Approved by: re (kib)