Commit Graph

1198 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
Marcel Moolenaar
b1fb1bb19a Sync with i386: Map exceptions to signals in gdb_cpu_signal() so
that kgdb(1) gets a SIGTRAP when it needs to.

Pointed out by: grehan@
2006-04-04 03:00:20 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
470d831703 The PC is register 16, not 18.
Pointed out by: grehan@
2006-04-04 02:44:51 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
bfcdefd8aa Eliminate HAVE_STOPPEDPCBS. On ia64 the PCPU holds a pointer to the
PCB in which the context of stopped CPUs is stored. To access this
PCB from KDB, we introduce a new define, called KDB_STOPPEDPCB. The
definition, when present, lives in <machine/kdb.h> and abstracts
where MD code saves the context. Define KDB_STOPPEDPCB on i386,
amd64, alpha and sparc64 in accordance to previous code.
2006-04-03 22:51:47 +00:00
Peter Wemm
68ac481184 Shrink the amd64 pv entry from 48 bytes to about 24 bytes. On a machine
with large mmap files mapped into many processes, this saves hundreds of
megabytes of ram.
pv entries were individually allocated and had two tailq entries and two
pointers (or addresses).  Each pv entry was linked to a vm_page_t and
a process's address space (pmap).  It had the virtual address and a
pointer to the pmap.
This change replaces the individual allocation with a per-process
allocation system.  A page ("pv chunk") is allocated and this provides
168 pv entries for that process.  We can now eliminate one of the 16 byte
tailq entries because we can simply iterate through the pv chunks to find
all the pv entries for a process.  We can eliminate one of the 8 byte
pointers because the location of the pv entry implies the containing
pv chunk, which has the pointer.  After overheads from the pv chunk
bitmap and tailq linkage, this works out that each pv entry has an
effective size of 24.38 bytes.

Future work still required, and other problems:
* when running low on pv entries or system ram, we may need to defrag
  the chunk pages and free any spares.  The stats (vm.pmap.*) show that
  this doesn't seem to be that much of a problem, but it can be done if
  needed.
* running low on pv entries is now a much bigger problem.  The old
  get_pv_entry() routine just needed to reclaim one other pv entry.
  Now, since they are per-process, we can only use pv entries that are
  assigned to our current process, or by stealing an entire page worth
  from another process.  Under normal circumstances, the pmap_collect()
  code should be able to dislodge some pv entries from the current
  process.  But if needed, it can still reclaim entire pv chunk pages
  from other processes.
* This should port to i386 really easily, except there it would reduce
  pv entries from 24 bytes to about 12 bytes.

(I have integrated Alan's recent changes.)
2006-04-03 21:36:01 +00:00
Peter Wemm
8d0593f54e Merge/sync with i386: various cosmetic tweaks 2006-03-14 00:01:56 +00:00
Peter Wemm
cfa7ffb1d7 MFi386: The SIGFPE macros were moved to signal.h (FPE_INTOVF etc) 2006-03-14 00:01:22 +00:00
Sam Leffler
5225f08dc9 guard function decls with _KERNEL so user code can include this file 2006-03-01 05:59:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
215e7c161a Rework how we wire up interrupt sources to CPUs:
- Throw out all of the logical APIC ID stuff.  The Intel docs are somewhat
  ambiguous, but it seems that the "flat" cluster model we are currently
  using is only supported on Pentium and P6 family CPUs.  The other
  "hierarchy" cluster model that is supported on all Intel CPUs with
  local APICs is severely underdocumented.  For example, it's not clear
  if the OS needs to glean the topology of the APIC hierarchy from
  somewhere (neither ACPI nor MP Table include it) and setup the logical
  clusters based on the physical hierarchy or not.  Not only that, but on
  certain Intel chipsets, even though there were 4 CPUs in a logical
  cluster, all the interrupts were only sent to one CPU anyway.
- We now bind interrupts to individual CPUs using physical addressing via
  the local APIC IDs.  This code has also moved out of the ioapic PIC
  driver and into the common interrupt source code so that it can be
  shared with MSI interrupt sources since MSI is addressed to APICs the
  same way that I/O APIC pins are.
- Interrupt source classes grow a new method pic_assign_cpu() to bind an
  interrupt source to a specific local APIC ID.
- The SMP code now tells the interrupt code which CPUs are avaiable to
  handle interrupts in a simpler and more intuitive manner.  For one thing,
  it means we could now choose to not route interrupts to HT cores if we
  wanted to (this code is currently in place in fact, but under an #if 0
  for now).
- For now we simply do static round-robin of IRQs to CPUs when the first
  interrupt handler just as before, with the change that IRQs are now
  bound to individual CPUs rather than groups of up to 4 CPUs.
- Because the IRQ to CPU mapping has now been moved up a layer, it would
  be easier to manage this mapping from higher levels.  For example, we
  could allow drivers to specify a CPU affinity map for their interrupts,
  or we could allow a userland tool to bind IRQs to specific CPUs.

The MFC is tentative, but I want to see if this fixes problems some folks
had with UP APIC kernels on 6.0 on SMP machines (an SMP kernel would work
fine, but a UP APIC kernel (such as GENERIC in RELENG_6) would lose
interrupts).

MFC after:	1 week
2006-02-28 22:24:55 +00:00
Warner Losh
d5e61c97a6 By popular demand, move __HAVE_ACPI and __PCI_REROUTE_INTERRUPT into
param.h.  Per request, I've placed these just after the
_NO_NAMESPACE_POLLUTION ifndef.  I've not renamed anything yet, but
may since we don't need the __.

Submitted by: bde, jhb, scottl, many others.
2006-01-09 06:05:57 +00:00
Warner Losh
501755f4f6 Define __HAVE_ACPI and/or __PCI_REROUTE_INTERRUPT, as appropriate for
each platform.  These will be used in the pci code in preference to
the complicated #ifdefs we have there now.
2006-01-01 20:59:28 +00:00
John Baldwin
b439e431bf Tweak how the MD code calls the fooclock() methods some. Instead of
passing a pointer to an opaque clockframe structure and requiring the
MD code to supply CLKF_FOO() macros to extract needed values out of the
opaque structure, just pass the needed values directly.  In practice this
means passing the pair (usermode, pc) to hardclock() and profclock() and
passing the boolean (usermode) to hardclock_cpu() and hardclock_process().
Other details:
- Axe clockframe and CLKF_FOO() macros on all architectures.  Basically,
  all the archs were taking a trapframe and converting it into a clockframe
  one way or another.  Now they can just extract the PC and usermode values
  directly out of the trapframe and pass it to fooclock().
- Renamed hardclock_process() to hardclock_cpu() as the latter is more
  accurate.
- On Alpha, we now run profclock() at hz (profhz == hz) rather than at
  the slower stathz.
- On Alpha, for the TurboLaser machines that don't have an 8254
  timecounter, call hardclock() directly.  This removes an extra
  conditional check from every clock interrupt on Alpha on the BSP.
  There is probably room for even further pruning here by changing Alpha
  to use the simplified timecounter we use on x86 with the lapic timer
  since we don't get interrupts from the 8254 on Alpha anyway.
- On x86, clkintr() shouldn't ever be called now unless using_lapic_timer
  is false, so add a KASSERT() to that affect and remove a condition
  to slightly optimize the non-lapic case.
- Change prototypeof  arm_handler_execute() so that it's first arg is a
  trapframe pointer rather than a void pointer for clarity.
- Use KCOUNT macro in profclock() to lookup the kernel profiling bucket.

Tested on:	alpha, amd64, arm, i386, ia64, sparc64
Reviewed by:	bde (mostly)
2005-12-22 22:16:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
333b8de537 MFi386:
- Move PUSH_FRAME and POP_FRAME to asmacros.h and use PUSH_FRAME in
  atpic entry points.
- Move PCPU_* asm macros out of the middle of the asm profiling macros.
- Pass IRQ vector argument as an int rather than void * to reduce diffs
  with i386.
- EOI the lapic in C for the lapic timer handler.
- GC unused Xcpuast function.
- Split IPI_STOP handling code of ipi_nmi_handler() out into a
  cpustop_handler() function and call it from Xcpustop rather than
  duplicating all the logic in assembly.
- Fixup the list of symbols with interrupt frames in ddb traces.
  Xatpic_fastintr* have never existed on amd64, and the lapic timer
  handler and various IPI handlers were missing.
- Use trapframe instead of intrframe for interrupt entry points (on amd64
  the interrupt vector was already a separate argument, so the two frames
  were already identical) and GC intrframe.

Submitted by:	peter (3)
2005-12-08 18:33:30 +00:00
John Baldwin
696effb697 - Cleanup whitespace and extra ()s in vtophys() macros.
- Move vtophys() macros next to vtopte() where vtopte() exists to match
  comments above vtopte().
- Remove references to the alternate address space in the comment above
  vtopte().  amd64 never had the alternate address space, and i386 lost it
  prior to PAE support being added.
- s/entires/entries/ in comments.

Reviewed by:	alc
2005-12-06 21:09:01 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
224d140293 Drop _MACHINE_ARCH and _MACHINE defines (not to be confused with
MACHINE_ARCH and MACHINE).  Their purpose was to be able to test
in cpp(1), but cpp(1) only understands integer type expressions.
Using such unsupported expressions introduced a number of subtle
bugs, which were discovered by compiling with -Wundef.
2005-12-06 13:27:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
c7362ff7fb Change the x86 code to allocate IDT vectors on-demand when an interrupt
source is first enabled similar to how intr_event's now allocate ithreads
on-demand.  Previously, we would map IDT vectors 1:1 to IRQs.  Since we
only have 191 available IDT vectors for I/O interrupts, this limited us
to only supporting IRQs 0-190 corresponding to the first 190 I/O APIC
intpins.  On many machines, however, each PCI-X bus has its own APIC even
though it only has 1 or 2 devices, thus, we were reserving between 24 and
32 IRQs just for 1 or 2 devices and thus 24 or 32 IDT vectors.  With this
change, a machine with 100 IRQs but only 5 in use will only use up 5 IDT
vectors.  Also, this change provides an API (apic_alloc_vector() and
apic_free_vector()) that will allow a future MSI interrupt source driver to
request IDT vectors for use by MSI interrupts on x86 machines.

Tested on:	amd64, i386
2005-11-02 20:11:47 +00:00
John Baldwin
e0f66ef861 Reorganize the interrupt handling code a bit to make a few things cleaner
and increase flexibility to allow various different approaches to be tried
in the future.
- Split struct ithd up into two pieces.  struct intr_event holds the list
  of interrupt handlers associated with interrupt sources.
  struct intr_thread contains the data relative to an interrupt thread.
  Currently we still provide a 1:1 relationship of events to threads
  with the exception that events only have an associated thread if there
  is at least one threaded interrupt handler attached to the event.  This
  means that on x86 we no longer have 4 bazillion interrupt threads with
  no handlers.  It also means that interrupt events with only INTR_FAST
  handlers no longer have an associated thread either.
- Renamed struct intrhand to struct intr_handler to follow the struct
  intr_foo naming convention.  This did require renaming the powerpc
  MD struct intr_handler to struct ppc_intr_handler.
- INTR_FAST no longer implies INTR_EXCL on all architectures except for
  powerpc.  This means that multiple INTR_FAST handlers can attach to the
  same interrupt and that INTR_FAST and non-INTR_FAST handlers can attach
  to the same interrupt.  Sharing INTR_FAST handlers may not always be
  desirable, but having sio(4) and uhci(4) fight over an IRQ isn't fun
  either.  Drivers can always still use INTR_EXCL to ask for an interrupt
  exclusively.  The way this sharing works is that when an interrupt
  comes in, all the INTR_FAST handlers are executed first, and if any
  threaded handlers exist, the interrupt thread is scheduled afterwards.
  This type of layout also makes it possible to investigate using interrupt
  filters ala OS X where the filter determines whether or not its companion
  threaded handler should run.
- Aside from the INTR_FAST changes above, the impact on MD interrupt code
  is mostly just 's/ithread/intr_event/'.
- A new MI ddb command 'show intrs' walks the list of interrupt events
  dumping their state.  It also has a '/v' verbose switch which dumps
  info about all of the handlers attached to each event.
- We currently don't destroy an interrupt thread when the last threaded
  handler is removed because it would suck for things like ppbus(8)'s
  braindead behavior.  The code is present, though, it is just under
  #if 0 for now.
- Move the code to actually execute the threaded handlers for an interrrupt
  event into a separate function so that ithread_loop() becomes more
  readable.  Previously this code was all in the middle of ithread_loop()
  and indented halfway across the screen.
- Made struct intr_thread private to kern_intr.c and replaced td_ithd
  with a thread private flag TDP_ITHREAD.
- In statclock, check curthread against idlethread directly rather than
  curthread's proc against idlethread's proc. (Not really related to intr
  changes)

Tested on:	alpha, amd64, i386, sparc64
Tested on:	arm, ia64 (older version of patch by cognet and marcel)
2005-10-25 19:48:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
58553b9925 Rename the KDB_STOP_NMI kernel option to STOP_NMI and make it apply to all
IPI_STOP IPIs.
- Change the i386 and amd64 MD IPI code to send an NMI if STOP_NMI is
  enabled if an attempt is made to send an IPI_STOP IPI.  If the kernel
  option is enabled, there is also a sysctl to change the behavior at
  runtime (debug.stop_cpus_with_nmi which defaults to enabled).  This
  includes removing stop_cpus_nmi() and making ipi_nmi_selected() a
  private function for i386 and amd64.
- Fix ipi_all(), ipi_all_but_self(), and ipi_self() on i386 and amd64 to
  properly handle bitmapped IPIs as well as IPI_STOP IPIs when STOP_NMI is
  enabled.
- Fix ipi_nmi_handler() to execute the restart function on the first CPU
  that is restarted making use of atomic_readandclear() rather than
  assuming that the BSP is always included in the set of restarted CPUs.
  Also, the NMI handler didn't clear the function pointer meaning that
  subsequent stop and restarts could execute the function again.
- Define a new macro HAVE_STOPPEDPCBS on i386 and amd64 to control the use
  of stoppedpcbs[] and always enable it for i386 and amd64 instead of
  being dependent on KDB_STOP_NMI.  It works fine in both the NMI and
  non-NMI cases.
2005-10-24 21:04:19 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
25736eb670 Correct few MSR addresses.
PR:		amd64/85852
Submitted by:	Nate Eldredge <nge at cs dot hmc dot edu>
2005-10-15 00:44:56 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
9c3acb0bc1 - Print number of physical/logical cores and more CPUID info.
- Add newer CPUID definitions for future use.

Many thanks to Mike Tancsa <mike at sentex dot net> for providing test
cases for Intel Pentium D and AMD Athlon 64 X2.

Approved by:	anholt (mentor)
2005-10-14 22:52:01 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d176c062c9 I believe the stack underflows during early development that caused me to
add spare padding at the beginning of the pcb are long gone.  Remove the
padding fields.
2005-09-27 21:11:35 +00:00
Peter Wemm
1acc225f91 Kill pcb_rflags. It served no purpose.
Reported by:  bde
2005-09-27 21:10:10 +00:00
John Baldwin
3c2bc2bf26 Add a new atomic_fetchadd() primitive that atomically adds a value to a
variable and returns the previous value of the variable.

Tested on:	i386, alpha, sparc64, arm (cognet)
Reviewed by:	arch@
Submitted by:	cognet (arm)
MFC after:	1 week
2005-09-27 17:39:11 +00:00
Warner Losh
62061bf002 MFi386: pci attribute allocation fixes. 2005-09-18 01:42:43 +00:00
John Baldwin
80d52f16da Stop using the '+' constraint modifier with inline assembly. The '+'
constraint is actually only allowed for register operands.  Instead, use
separate input and output memory constraints.

Education from:	alc
Reviewed by:	alc
Tested on:	i386, alpha
MFC after:	1 week
2005-09-15 19:31:22 +00:00
Stefan Farfeleder
a1f85d7f83 Move MINSIGSTKSZ from <machine/signal.h> to <machine/_limits.h> and rename
it to __MINSIGSTKSZ.  Define MINSIGSTKSZ in <sys/signal.h>.

This is done in order to use MINSIGSTKSZ for the macro PTHREAD_STACK_MIN
in <pthread.h> (soon <limits.h>) without having to include the whole
<sys/signal.h> header.

Discussed with:		bde
2005-08-20 16:44:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
5d2f4de5da Add aliases for atomic operations on 64-bit integers just like other
64-bit platforms.

MFC after:	1 week
2005-08-18 14:36:47 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
b8b77732ff Fix $FreeBSD$. 2005-07-22 04:03:25 +00:00
Peter Wemm
9e76f9ad3f Like on i386, bypass lock prefix for atomic ops on !SMP kernels. 2005-07-21 22:35:02 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
636d90fc5c Make the facility for recognizing BIOS-signatures more general
and return a printable representation.

This fixes recognition of the PC Engines WRAP and improves the
recognition of the Soekris boards (Bios version can now be
seen in the dmesg output for instance).

Also, add watchdog support for PCM-582x platforms.

Submitted by:	Adrian Steinmann <ast@marabu.ch>
Slightly changed by:	phk
PR:	81360
2005-07-21 09:48:37 +00:00
John Baldwin
122eceef61 Convert the atomic_ptr() operations over to operating on uintptr_t
variables rather than void * variables.  This makes it easier and simpler
to get asm constraints and volatile keywords correct.

MFC after:	3 days
Tested on:	i386, alpha, sparc64
Compiled on:	ia64, powerpc, amd64
Kernel toolchain busted on:	arm
2005-07-15 18:17:59 +00:00
John Baldwin
48281036d7 Some cleanups and tweaks to some of the atomic.h files in preparation for
further changes and fixes in the future:
- Use aliases via macros rather than duplicated inlines wherever possible.
- Move all the aliases to the bottom of these files and the inline
  functions to the top.
- Add various comments.
- On alpha, drop atomic_{load_acq,store_rel}_{8,char,16,short}().
- On i386 and amd64, don't duplicate the extern declarations for functions
  in the two non-inline cases (KLD_MODULE and compiler doesn't do inlines),
  instead, consolidate those two cases.
- Some whitespace fixes.

Approved by:	re (scottl)
2005-07-09 12:38:53 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
2fcb030ad5 Check the alignment of the IP header before passing the packet up to the
packet filter. This would cause a panic on architectures that require strict
alignment such as sparc64 (tier1) and ia64/ppc (tier2).

This adds two new macros that check the alignment, these are compile time
dependent on __NO_STRICT_ALIGNMENT which is set for i386 and amd64 where
alignment isn't need so the cost is avoided.

 IP_HDR_ALIGNED_P()
 IP6_HDR_ALIGNED_P()

Move bridge_ip_checkbasic()/bridge_ip6_checkbasic() up so that the alignment
is checked for ipfw and dummynet too.

PR:		ia64/81284
Obtained from:	NetBSD
Approved by:	re (dwhite), mlaier (mentor)
2005-07-02 23:13:31 +00:00
Peter Wemm
235a54de9d Switch AMD64 and i386 platforms to using ELF as their kernel crash
dump format.  The key reason to do this is so that we can dump sparse
address space.  For example, we need to be able to skip the PCI hole
just below the 4GB boundary.  Trying to destructively dump MMIO device
registers is Really Bad(TM).  The frequent result of trying to do a
crash dump on a machine with 4GB or more ram was ugly (lockup or reboot).

This code has been taken directly from the IA64 dump_machdep.c code,
with just a few (mostly minor) mods.

Introduce a dump_avail[] array in the machdep.c code so that we have a
source of truth for what memory is present in a machine that needs to be
dumped.  We can't use phys_avail[] because all sorts of things slice
memory out of it that we really need to dump.  eg: the vm page array
and the dmesg buffer.  dump_avail[] is pretty much an unmolested version
of phys_avail[].  It does have Maxmem correction.

Bump the i386 and amd64 dump format to version 2, but nothing actually
uses this.  amd64 was actually using the i386 dump version number.

libkvm support to follow.

Approved by:	re
2005-06-29 22:28:46 +00:00
John Baldwin
014693eb89 Increase MAXCPU to 16 in SMP kernels so that APIC IDs from 0 to 15 are
allowed for CPUs.

Tested by:	amd64 at cybernetwork dot org
Approved by:	re (scottl)
MFC after:	1 week
2005-06-29 15:13:25 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
f263522a45 MFP4:
- Implement sampling modes and logging support in hwpmc(4).

- Separate MI and MD parts of hwpmc(4) and allow sharing of
  PMC implementations across different architectures.
  Add support for P4 (EMT64) style PMCs to the amd64 code.

- New pmcstat(8) options: -E (exit time counts) -W (counts
  every context switch), -R (print log file).

- pmc(3) API changes, improve our ability to keep ABI compatibility
  in the future.  Add more 'alias' names for commonly used events.

- bug fixes & documentation.
2005-06-09 19:45:09 +00:00
Stephan Uphoff
6097174e4d Add IPI support for preempting a thread on another CPU.
MFC after:	3 weeks
2005-06-09 18:23:54 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
d4fcf3cba5 Remove bus_{mem,p}io.h and related code for a micro-optimization on i386
and amd64.  The optimization is a trivial on recent machines.

Reviewed by:	-arch (imp, marcel, dfr)
2005-05-29 04:42:30 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
f7965374d4 Change the spkr_set_pitch() function to a macro to fix low level profiling. 2005-05-28 13:40:27 +00:00
Peter Wemm
1eb6f02e7a MFi386: remove comment 2005-05-22 16:31:32 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
24072ca35b - Move timerreg.h to <arch>/include and split i8253 specific defines into
i8253reg.h, and add some defines to control a speaker.
- Move PPI related defines from i386/isa/spkr.c into ppireg.h and use them.
- Move IO_{PPI,TIMER} defines into ppireg.h and timerreg.h respectively.
- Use isa/isareg.h rather than <arch>/isa/isa.h.

Tested on: i386, pc98
2005-05-14 09:10:02 +00:00
Jacques Vidrine
f6108b6158 Add a knob for disabling/enabling HTT, "machdep.hyperthreading_allowed".
Default off due to information disclosure on multi-user systems.

Submitted by:	cperciva
Reviewed by:	jhb
2005-05-13 00:10:56 +00:00
Doug White
fdc9713bf7 Implement an alternate method to stop CPUs when entering DDB. Normally we use
a regular IPI vector, but this vector is blocked when interrupts are disabled.
With "options KDB_STOP_NMI" and debug.kdb.stop_cpus_with_nmi set, KDB will
send an NMI to each CPU instead. The code also has a context-stuffing
feature which helps ddb extract the state of processes running on the
stopped CPUs.

KDB_STOP_NMI is only useful with SMP and complains if SMP is not defined.
This feature only applies to i386 and amd64 at the moment, but could be
used on other architectures with the appropriate MD bits.

Submitted by:	ups
2005-04-30 20:01:00 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
76b6d954f0 o Reverse the inclusion chain from MD->MI to MI->MD by removing the
inclusion of <sys/pmc.h> and depending on being included from
   that header file.
o  Include any MD specific header files that otherwise need to be
   included from MI files.

Ok'd: jkoshy@
2005-04-20 20:22:33 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
ebccf1e3a6 Bring a working snapshot of hwpmc(4), its associated libraries, userland utilities
and documentation into -CURRENT.

Bump FreeBSD_version.

Reviewed by:	alc, jhb (kernel changes)
2005-04-19 04:01:25 +00:00
Warner Losh
06db52b609 Break out the definition of bus_space_{tag,handle}_t and a few other types
into _bus.h to help with name space polution from including all of bus.h.
In a few days, I'll commit changes to the MI code to take advantage of thse
sepration (after I've made sure that these changes don't break anything in
the main tree, I've tested in my trees, but you never know...).

Suggested by: bde (in 2002 or 2003 I think)
Reviewed in principle by: jhb
2005-04-18 21:45:34 +00:00
Peter Wemm
ba5f6b61da MFi386: use the lapic timer for UP systems that are using the apic so that
IRQ0 and mixed mode isn't a problem anymore.  This removes mixed mode
support because nothing is left that uses it.
2005-04-15 18:44:53 +00:00
Peter Wemm
0501844603 MFi386: use c99 types 2005-04-15 18:41:32 +00:00
Peter Wemm
7234adbe8e Show that I can actually count. 2005-04-15 18:39:31 +00:00
Peter Wemm
2fc8e0f037 MFi386: track bus.h changes (unsplit bus_${machine}.h) 2005-04-15 18:38:59 +00:00