concurrency bug. Since all SLB/SR entries were invalidated during an
exception, a decrementer exception could cause the user segment to be
invalidated during a copyin()/copyout() without a thread switch that
would cause it to be restored from the PCB, potentially causing the
operation to continue on invalid memory. This is now handled by explicit
restoration of segment 12 from the PCB on 32-bit systems and a check in
the Data Segment Exception handler on 64-bit.
While here, cause copyin()/copyout() to check whether the requested
user segment is already installed, saving some pipeline flushes, and
fix the synchronization primitives around the mtsr and slbmte
instructions to prevent accessing stale segments.
MFC after: 2 weeks
which are similar to the previous ones, and one for user maps, which
are arrays of pointers into the SLB tree. This changes makes user SLB
updates atomic, closing a window for memory corruption. While here,
rearrange the allocation functions to make context switches faster.
Kernel sources for 64-bit PowerPC, along with build-system changes to keep
32-bit kernels compiling (build system changes for 64-bit kernels are
coming later). Existing 32-bit PowerPC kernel configurations must be
updated after this change to specify their architecture.
UMA segments at their physical addresses instead of into KVA. This emulates
the direct mapping behavior of OEA32 in an ad-hoc way. To make this work
properly required sharing the entire kernel PMAP with Open Firmware, so
ofw_pmap is transformed into a stub on 64-bit CPUs.
Also implement some more tweaks to get more mileage out of our limited
amount of KVA, principally by extending KVA into segment 16 until the
beginning of the first OFW mapping.
Reported by: linimon
for user copyinout down to 12, and keeping segments 13/14 for
kernel VA.
It would be nice to have more available, but segments lower than
this are reserved for either memory or 1:1 mapped device i/o,
and seg 15 is OpenFirmware ROM. Also, the effort to keep OpenFirmware
available for callbacks limits the use of VA-mapped segments.
Fortunately UMA_MD_SMALL_ALLOC takes away a lot of VM pressure.
Obtained from: NetBSD
- culled long-dead #define's
- segment register defs moved to sr.h
- NPMAPS moved to pmap.h
- KERNBASE moved to vmparam.h
- removed include of <machine/cpu.h> and fixed src files that
relied on this.
Modifying segment register code no longer causes gcc rebuilds :-)
boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors)
which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based
on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial
sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot
prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)