Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Konstantin Belousov
2c66cccab7 Save and restore segment registers on amd64 when entering and leaving
the kernel on amd64. Fill and read segment registers for mcontext and
signals. Handle traps caused by restoration of the
invalidated selectors.

Implement user-mode creation and manipulation of the process-specific
LDT descriptors for amd64, see sysarch(2).

Implement support for TSS i/o port access permission bitmap for amd64.

Context-switch LDT and TSS. Do not save and restore segment registers on
the context switch, that is handled by kernel enter/leave trampolines
now. Remove segment restore code from the signal trampolines for
freebsd/amd64, freebsd/ia32 and linux/i386 for the same reason.

Implement amd64-specific compat shims for sysarch.

Linuxolator (temporary ?) switched to use gsbase for thread_area pointer.

TODO:
Currently, gdb is not adapted to show segment registers from struct reg.
Also, no machine-depended ptrace command is added to set segment
registers for debugged process.

In collaboration with:	pho
Discussed with:	peter
Reviewed by:	jhb
Linuxolator tested by:	dchagin
2009-04-01 13:09:26 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
e6493bbebf Change some movl's to mov's. Newer GAS no longer accept 'movl' instructions
for moving between a segment register and a 32-bit memory location.

Looked at by:	jhb
2009-01-31 11:37:21 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
9dee707cf0 Segment registers are stored in the uc_mcontext member of the struct
l_ucontext. To restore the registers content, trampoline needs to
dereference uc_mcontext instead of taking some undefined values from
l_ucontext.

Submitted by:	Dmitry Chagin <dchagin@>
MFC after:	1 week
2008-09-07 16:39:21 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
9c5b213e51 MFP4: Linux set_thread_area syscall (aka TLS) support for amd64.
Initial version was submitted by Divacky Roman and mostly rewritten by me.

Tested by:	emulation
2007-03-30 00:06:21 +00:00
Tim J. Robbins
ea0fabbc4f Add preliminary support for running 32-bit Linux binaries on amd64, enabled
with the COMPAT_LINUX32 option. This is largely based on the i386 MD Linux
emulations bits, but also builds on the 32-bit FreeBSD and generic IA-32
binary emulation work.

Some of this is still a little rough around the edges, and will need to be
revisited before 32-bit and 64-bit Linux emulation support can coexist in
the same kernel.
2004-08-16 07:55:06 +00:00