Commit Graph

100 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Attilio Rao
dc6fbf6545 * Completely Remove the option STOP_NMI from the kernel. This option
has proven to have a good effect when entering KDB by using a NMI,
but it completely violates all the good rules about interrupts
disabled while holding a spinlock in other occasions.  This can be the
cause of deadlocks on events where a normal IPI_STOP is expected.
* Adds an new IPI called IPI_STOP_HARD on all the supported architectures.
This IPI is responsible for sending a stop message among CPUs using a
privileged channel when disponible. In other cases it just does match a
normal IPI_STOP.
Right now the IPI_STOP_HARD functionality uses a NMI on ia32 and amd64
architectures, while on the other has a normal IPI_STOP effect. It is
responsibility of maintainers to eventually implement an hard stop
when necessary and possible.
* Use the new IPI facility in order to implement a new userend SMP kernel
function called stop_cpus_hard(). That is specular to stop_cpu() but
it does use the privileged channel for the stopping facility.
* Let KDB use the newly introduced function stop_cpus_hard() and leave
stop_cpus() for all the other cases
* Disable interrupts on CPU0 when starting the process of APs suspension.
* Style cleanup and comments adding

This patch should fix the reboot/shutdown deadlocks many users are
constantly reporting on mailing lists.

Please don't forget to update your config file with the STOP_NMI
option removal

Reviewed by:	jhb
Tested by:	pho, bz, rink
Approved by:	re (kib)
2009-08-13 17:09:45 +00:00
Attilio Rao
120b18d86f FreeBSD right now support 32 CPUs on all the architectures at least.
With the arrival of 128+ cores it is necessary to handle more than that.
One of the first thing to change is the support for cpumask_t that needs
to handle more than 32 bits masking (which happens now).  Some places,
however, still assume that cpumask_t is a 32 bits mask.
Fix that situation by using always correctly cpumask_t when needed.

While here, remove the part under STOP_NMI for the Xen support as it
is broken in any case.

Additively make ipi_nmi_pending as static.

Reviewed by:	jhb, kmacy
Tested by:	Giovanni Trematerra <giovanni dot trematerra at gmail dot com>
2009-05-14 17:43:00 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
82fcb0f192 - Add support for cpuid leaf 0xb. This allows us to determine the
topology of nehalem/corei7 based systems.
 - Remove the cpu_cores/cpu_logical detection from identcpu.
 - Describe the layout of the system in cpu_mp_announce().

Sponsored by:   Nokia
2009-04-29 06:54:40 +00:00
Kip Macy
1f5aa99363 Fix general issues with IPI support 2008-10-24 07:58:38 +00:00
Kip Macy
b1efbd6b47 Fix IPI support 2008-10-23 07:20:43 +00:00
Kip Macy
7814418ad1 don't globally define ipi_bitmap_handler on xen 2008-10-21 08:01:19 +00:00
Kip Macy
a09a884997 Header cleanups and addition of IPI declarations for xen 2008-10-21 06:38:05 +00:00
Marius Strobl
6f04e7b9aa Remove ipi_all() and ipi_self() as the former hasn't been used at
all to date and the latter also is only used in ia64 and powerpc
code which no longer serves a real purpose after bring-up and just
can be removed as well. Note that architectures like sun4u also
provide no means of implementing IPI'ing a CPU itself natively
in the first place.

Suggested by:	jhb
Reviewed by:	arch, grehan, jhb
2008-09-28 18:34:14 +00:00
Kip Macy
036dc2385d add ipi mapping
MFC after:	1 month
2008-09-25 07:09:50 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
81aa71755b - Remove the old smp cpu topology specification with a new, more flexible
tree structure that encodes the level of cache sharing and other
   properties.
 - Provide several convenience functions for creating one and two level
   cpu trees as well as a default flat topology.  The system now always
   has some topology.
 - On i386 and amd64 create a seperate level in the hierarchy for HTT
   and multi-core cpus.  This will allow the scheduler to intelligently
   load balance non-uniform cores.  Presently we don't detect what level
   of the cache hierarchy is shared at each level in the topology.
 - Add a mechanism for testing common topologies that have more information
   than the MD code is able to provide via the kern.smp.topology tunable.
   This should be considered a debugging tool only and not a stable api.

Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-03-02 07:58:42 +00:00
Attilio Rao
c8790f5d09 Fix some entries in the locks static table of witness.
In particular:
- smp_tlb_mtx is no longer used, so it is axed.
- smp rendezvous lock isn't really a leaf spin-mutex. Its bad placement in
  the table, however, has been the source of a false positive LOR reporting
  with the dt_lock.  However, smp rendezvous lock would have had sched_lock
  there for older lock, so it wasn't still a leaf lock.
- allpmaps is only used in ia32 architecture, so it is inserted in the
  appropriate stub.

Addictionally:
- kse_zombie_lock is no longer present, so its definition is axed out.
- zombie_lock doesn't need to have an exported symbol, so just let's it be
  declared as static.

Tested by: kris
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
Approved by: re
2007-09-20 20:38:43 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
fa298d5ea8 Include machine/pcb.hto turn extern struct pcb stoppcbs[]; construct
into the valid C.
2007-05-19 05:01:43 +00:00
John Baldwin
4c5bec1161 Change the x86 interrupt code to use FreeBSD CPU IDs (i.e. PCPU_GET(cpuid))
rather than local APIC IDs to keep track of CPUs which can handle
interrupts.
2007-03-06 17:16:47 +00:00
John Baldwin
4ac60df584 Add a new 'pmap_invalidate_cache()' to flush the CPU caches via the
wbinvd() instruction.  This includes a new IPI so that all CPU caches on
all CPUs are flushed for the SMP case.

MFC after:	1 month
2006-05-01 21:36:47 +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
f0b9813920 - Move the code to deal with handling an IPI_STOP IPI out of
ipi_nmi_handler() and into a new cpustop_handler() function.  Change
  the Xcpustop IPI_STOP handler to call this function instead of
  duplicating all the same logic in assembly.
- EOI the local APIC for the lapic timer interrupt in C rather than
  assembly.
- Bump the lazypmap IPI counter if COUNT_IPIS is defined in C rather than
  assembly.
2005-12-05 22:25:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
0a17b197d3 Garbage collect the code to store diagnostics codes in a CMOS register
during SMP startup.  We haven't had any issues with starting up the APs
on i386 in quite a while now which is all this code is really useful for.
If someone ever does really need it they can always dig it up out of the
attic.
2005-11-22 22:34:14 +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
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
John Baldwin
e8ce55117b Use the local APIC timer to drive the various kernel clocks on SMP machines
rather than forwarding interrupts from the clock devices around using IPIs:
- Add an IDT vector that pushes a clock frame and calls
  lapic_handle_timer().
- Add functions to program the local APIC timer including setting the
  divisor, and setting up the timer to either down a periodic countdown
  or one-shot countdown.
- Add a lapic_setup_clock() function that the BSP calls from
  cpu_init_clocks() to setup the local APIC timer if it is going to be
  used.  The setup uses a one-shot countdown to calibrate the timer.  We
  then program the timer on each CPU to fire at a frequency of hz * 3.
  stathz is defined as freq / 23 (hz * 3 / 23), and profhz is defined as
  freq / 2 (hz * 3 / 2).  This gives the clocks relatively prime divisors
  while keeping a low LCM for the frequency of the clock interrupts.
  Thanks to Peter Jeremy for suggesting this approach.
- Remove the hardclock and statclock forwarding code including the two
  associated IPIs.  The bitmap IPI handler has now effectively degenerated
  to just IPI_AST.
- When the local APIC timer is used we don't turn the RTC on at all, but
  we still enable interrupts on the ISA timer 0 (i8254) for timecounting
  purposes.
2005-02-08 20:25:07 +00:00
Warner Losh
86cb007f9f /* -> /*- for copyright notices, minor format tweaks as necessary 2005-01-06 22:18:23 +00:00
Stephan Uphoff
f30a4a1ced Avoid more than two pending IPI interrupt vectors per local APIC
as this may cause deadlocks.

This should fix kern/72123.

Discussed with: jhb
Tested by: Nik Azim Azam, Andy Farkas, Flack Man, Aykut KARA
           Izzet BESKARDES, Jens Binnewies, Karl Keusgen
Approved by:    sam (mentor)
2004-12-07 20:15:01 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
59f3a8e626 - Add the mp_topology() function to mp_machdep.c. This function builds up
the smp_topology structure to reflect the layout of HTT enabled machines.
 - Add a prototype for mp_topology() in smp.h
2003-12-11 03:48:31 +00:00
John Baldwin
147ad8d5ad New i386 SMP code:
- The MP code no longer knows anything specific about an MP Table.
  Instead, the local APIC code adds CPUs via the cpu_add() function when
  a local APIC is enumerated by an APIC enumerator.
- Don't divide the argument to mp_bootaddress() by 1024 just so that we
  can turn around and mulitply it by 1024 again.
- We no longer panic if SMP is enabled but we are booted on a UP machine.
- init_secondary(), the asm code between init_secondary() and ap_init()
  in mpboot.s and ap_init() have all been merged together in C into
  init_secondary().
- We now use the cpuid feature bits to determine if we should enable
  PSE, PGE, or VME on each AP.
- Due to the change in the implementation of critical sections, acquire
  the SMP TLB mutex around a slightly larger chunk of code for TLB
  shootdowns.
- Remove some of the debug code from the original SMP implementation
  that is no longer used or no longer applies to the new APIC code.
- Use a temporary hack to disable the ACPI module until the SMP code has
  been further reorganized to allow ACPI to work as a module again.
- Add a DDB command to dump the interesting contents of the IDT.
2003-11-03 22:32:04 +00:00
Peter Wemm
cc66ebe2a9 Commit a partial lazy thread switch mechanism for i386. it isn't as lazy
as it could be and can do with some more cleanup.  Currently its under
options LAZY_SWITCH.  What this does is avoid %cr3 reloads for short
context switches that do not involve another user process.  ie: we can
take an interrupt, switch to a kthread and return to the user without
explicitly flushing the tlb.  However, this isn't as exciting as it could
be, the interrupt overhead is still high and too much blocks on Giant
still.  There are some debug sysctls, for stats and for an on/off switch.

The main problem with doing this has been "what if the process that you're
running on exits while we're borrowing its address space?" - in this case
we use an IPI to give it a kick when we're about to reclaim the pmap.

Its not compiled in unless you add the LAZY_SWITCH option.  I want to fix a
few more things and get some more feedback before turning it on by default.

This is NOT a replacement for Bosko's lazy interrupt stuff.  This was more
meant for the kthread case, while his was for interrupts.  Mine helps a
little for interrupts, but his helps a lot more.

The stats are enabled with options SWTCH_OPTIM_STATS - this has been a
pseudo-option for years, I just added a bunch of stuff to it.

One non-trivial change was to select a new thread before calling
cpu_switch() in the first place.  This allows us to catch the silly
case of doing a cpu_switch() to the current process.  This happens
uncomfortably often.  This simplifies a bit of the asm code in cpu_switch
(no longer have to call choosethread() in the middle).  This has been
implemented on i386 and (thanks to jake) sparc64.  The others will come
soon.  This is actually seperate to the lazy switch stuff.

Glanced at by:  jake, jhb
2003-04-02 23:53:30 +00:00
Paul Saab
87437b0b89 Nuke options HTT infavor of machdep.hlt_logical_cpus tunable/sysctl.
This keeps the logical cpu's halted in the idle loop.  By default
the logical cpu's are halted at startup.  It is also possible to
halt any cpu in the idle loop now using machdep.hlt_cpus.

Examples of how to use this:
machdep.hlt_cpus=1	halt cpu0
machdep.hlt_cpus=2	halt cpu1
machdep.hlt_cpus=4	halt cpu2
machdep.hlt_cpus=3	halt cpu0,cpu1

Reviewed by:	jhb, peter
2003-03-26 19:49:34 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
238dd3209a Split statclock into statclock and profclock, and made the method for driving
statclock based on profhz when profiling is enabled MD, since most platforms
don't use this anyway.  This removes the need for statclock_process, whose
only purpose was to subdivide profhz, and gets the profiling clock running
outside of sched_lock on platforms that implement suswintr.
Also changed the interface for starting and stopping the profiling clock to
do just that, instead of changing the rate of statclock, since they can now
be separate.

Reviewed by:	jhb, tmm
Tested on:	i386, sparc64
2003-02-03 17:53:15 +00:00
Jim Pirzyk
b2eb172cc3 Add the !define(COMPILING_LINT)
pass the pointy hat...

Requested by: Juli Mallett <jmallett@FreeBSD.org>
2002-10-17 18:17:28 +00:00
Jim Pirzyk
c8c1cf0ca7 put an #error directive when SMP and CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG are set
together.

Requested by: Lars Eggart <larse@isi.edu>
Enlighted how to do it by: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>
2002-10-17 05:51:36 +00:00
Peter Wemm
f1b665c8fe Revive backed out pmap related changes from Feb 2002. The highlights are:
- It actually works this time, honest!
- Fine grained TLB shootdowns for SMP on i386.  IPI's are very expensive,
  so try and optimize things where possible.
- Introduce ranged shootdowns that can be done as a single IPI.
- PG_G support for i386
- Specific-cpu targeted shootdowns.  For example, there is no sense in
  globally purging the TLB cache for where we are stealing a page from
  the local unshared process on the local cpu.  Use pm_active to track
  this.
- Add some instrumentation for the tlb shootdown code.
- Rip out SMP code from <machine/cpufunc.h>
- Try and fix some very bogus PG_G and PG_PS interactions that were bad
  enough to cause vm86 bios calls to break.  vm86 depended on our existing
  bugs and this was the cause of the VESA panics last time.
- Fix the silly one-line error that caused the 'panic: bad pte' last time.
- Fix a couple of other silly one-line errors that should have caused more
  pain than they did.

Some more work is needed:
- pmap_{zero,copy}_page[_idle].  These can be done without IPI's if we
  have a hook in cpu_switch.
- The IPI handlers need some cleanup.  I have a bogus %ds load that can
  be avoided.
- APTD handling is rather bogus and appears to be a large source of
  global TLB IPI shootdowns for no really good reason.

I see speedups of between 1.5% and ~4% on buildworlds in a while 1 loop.
I expect to see a bigger difference when there is significant pageout
activity or the system otherwise has memory shortages.

I have backed out a few optimizations that I had been using over the last
few days in order to be a little more conservative.  I'll revisit these
again over the next few days as the dust settles.

New option:  DISABLE_PG_G - In case I missed something.
2002-07-12 07:56:11 +00:00
Bruce Evans
809dbbc99b Fixed some style bugs in the removal of __P(()). The main ones were
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses.  Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
2002-03-23 15:09:35 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
b63dc6ad47 Remove __P. 2002-03-20 05:48:58 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d1693e1701 Back out all the pmap related stuff I've touched over the last few days.
There is some unresolved badness that has been eluding me, particularly
affecting uniprocessor kernels.  Turning off PG_G helped (which is a bad
sign) but didn't solve it entirely.  Userland programs still crashed.
2002-02-27 09:51:33 +00:00
Peter Wemm
6bd95d70db Work-in-progress commit syncing up pmap cleanups that I have been working
on for a while:
- fine grained TLB shootdown for SMP on i386
- ranged TLB shootdowns.. eg: specify a range of pages to shoot down with
  a single IPI, since the IPI is very expensive.  Adjust some callers
  that used to trigger this inside tight loops to do a ranged shootdown
  at the end instead.
- PG_G support for SMP on i386 (options ENABLE_PG_G)
- defer PG_G activation till after we decide what we are going to do with
  PSE and the 4MB pages at the start of the kernel.  This should solve
  some rumored strangeness about stale PG_G entries getting stuck
  underneath the 4MB pages.
- add some instrumentation for the fine TLB shootdown
- convert some asm instruction wrappers from functions to inlines.  gcc
  seems to do a fair bit better with this.
- [temporarily!] pessimize the tlb shootdown IPI handlers.  I will fix
  this again shortly.

This has been working fairly well for me for a while, but I have tweaked
it again prior to commit since my last major testing round.  The only
outstanding problem that I know of is PG_G related, which is why there
is an option for it (not on by default for SMP).  I have seen a world
speedups by a few percent (as much as 4 or 5% in one case) but I have
*not* accurately measured this - I am a bit sceptical of these numbers.
2002-02-25 23:49:51 +00:00
John Baldwin
1ecf0d56c8 Small cleanups to the SMP code:
- Axe inlvtlb_ok as it was completely redundant with smp_active.
- Remove references to non-existent variable and non-existent file
  in i386/include/smp.h.
- Don't perform initializations local to each CPU while holding the
  ap boot lock on i386 while an AP bootstraps itself.
- Reorganize the AP startup code some to unify the latter half of the
  functions to bring an AP up.  Eventually this might be broken out into
  a MI function in subr_smp.c.
2001-12-17 23:14:35 +00:00
John Baldwin
6caa8a1501 Overhaul of the SMP code. Several portions of the SMP kernel support have
been made machine independent and various other adjustments have been made
to support Alpha SMP.

- It splits the per-process portions of hardclock() and statclock() off
  into hardclock_process() and statclock_process() respectively.  hardclock()
  and statclock() call the *_process() functions for the current process so
  that UP systems will run as before.  For SMP systems, it is simply necessary
  to ensure that all other processors execute the *_process() functions when the
  main clock functions are triggered on one CPU by an interrupt.  For the alpha
  4100, clock interrupts are delievered in a staggered broadcast fashion, so
  we simply call hardclock/statclock on the boot CPU and call the *_process()
  functions on the secondaries.  For x86, we call statclock and hardclock as
  usual and then call forward_hardclock/statclock in the MD code to send an IPI
  to cause the AP's to execute forwared_hardclock/statclock which then call the
  *_process() functions.
- forward_signal() and forward_roundrobin() have been reworked to be MI and to
  involve less hackery.  Now the cpu doing the forward sets any flags, etc. and
  sends a very simple IPI_AST to the other cpu(s).  AST IPIs now just basically
  return so that they can execute ast() and don't bother with setting the
  astpending or needresched flags themselves.  This also removes the loop in
  forward_signal() as sched_lock closes the race condition that the loop worked
  around.
- need_resched(), resched_wanted() and clear_resched() have been changed to take
  a process to act on rather than assuming curproc so that they can be used to
  implement forward_roundrobin() as described above.
- Various other SMP variables have been moved to a MI subr_smp.c and a new
  header sys/smp.h declares MI SMP variables and API's.   The IPI API's from
  machine/ipl.h have moved to machine/smp.h which is included by sys/smp.h.
- The globaldata_register() and globaldata_find() functions as well as the
  SLIST of globaldata structures has become MI and moved into subr_smp.c.
  Also, the globaldata list is only available if SMP support is compiled in.

Reviewed by:	jake, peter
Looked over by:	eivind
2001-04-27 19:28:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
ca7ef17c08 Remove the BETTER_CLOCK #ifdef's. The code is on by default and is here
to stay for the foreseeable future.

OK'd by:	peter (the idea)
2001-04-10 21:34:13 +00:00
Tor Egge
48bed92485 Defer assignment of low level interrupt handlers for PCI interrupts
described in the MP table until something asks for the interrupt number
later on.
2001-01-28 01:07:54 +00:00
Peter Wemm
a263238c86 Move io_apic_{read,write} from apic_ipl.s (where they do not belong) into
mpapic.c.  This gives us the benefit of C type checking.  These functions
are not called in any critical paths and are not used by the interrupt
routines.
2000-12-06 01:04:02 +00:00
Peter Wemm
9a18987b73 GC unused assembler function apic_eoi() 2000-12-06 00:38:04 +00:00
Peter Wemm
5ee171d264 Cleanup some leftover lint from the old interrupt system.
Also, while here, run up to 32 interrupt sources on APIC systems.
Normalize INTREN/INTRDIS so they are the same on both UP and SMP systems
rather than sometimes a macro, and sometimes a function.

Reviewed by:  jhb, jakeb
2000-12-04 21:15:14 +00:00
Paul Saab
92b123a002 Move MAXCPU from machine/smp.h to machine/param.h to fix breakage
with !SMP kernels.  Also, replace NCPUS with MAXCPU since they are
redundant.
2000-09-23 12:18:06 +00:00
Paul Saab
7321545f26 Remove the NCPU, NAPIC, NBUS, NINTR config options. Make NAPIC,
NBUS, NINTR dynamic and set NCPU to a maximum of 16 under SMP.

Reviewed by:	peter
2000-09-22 23:40:10 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
c866ec47e3 Make LINT compile. 2000-09-16 18:55:05 +00:00
John Baldwin
746a935474 Test for both SMP and I386_CPU being set before generating an error. 2000-09-07 16:10:02 +00:00
Jason Evans
0384fff8c5 Major update to the way synchronization is done in the kernel. Highlights
include:

* Mutual exclusion is used instead of spl*().  See mutex(9).  (Note: The
  alpha port is still in transition and currently uses both.)

* Per-CPU idle processes.

* Interrupts are run in their own separate kernel threads and can be
  preempted (i386 only).

Partially contributed by:	BSDi (BSD/OS)
Submissions by (at least):	cp, dfr, dillon, grog, jake, jhb, sheldonh
2000-09-07 01:33:02 +00:00
Mike Smith
8ade16819d Increase the default NAPIC from 1 to 2 as a bandaid until we allocate
these dynamically (ie. typically you shouldn't have to set NAPIC at all)
2000-08-18 20:09:15 +00:00
Tor Egge
e666f57c3e Be more verbose when changing APIC ID on an IO APIC.
Don't allow cpu entries in the MP table to contain APIC IDs out of range.

Don't write outside array boundaries if an IO APIC entry in the MP table
contains an APIC ID out of range.

Assign APIC IDs for all IO APICs according to section 3.6.6 in the
Intel MP spec:

  - If the current APIC ID on an IO APIC doesn't conflict with other
    IO APICs or CPUs, that APIC ID should be used.  The copy of the MP
    table must be updated if the corresponding APIC ID in the MP table
    is different.

  - If the current APIC ID was in conflict with other units, the
    corresponding APIC ID specified in the MP table is checked for conflict.

  - If a conflict is still found then fall back to using a new unique ID.
    The copy of the MP table must be updated.

  - IDs out of range is considered to be in conflict.

During these operations, the IO_TO_ID array cannot be used, since any
conflict would have caused information loss.  The array is then corrected,
since all APIC ID conflicts should have been resolved.

PR:	20312, 18919
2000-08-06 00:04:03 +00:00
Mike Smith
c3c50c4e3a Further fixes for multiple-IO-APIC systems from Tor Egge:
Further experimentation showed that some Dell 2450 machines with the
prevention kludge installed still got T_RESERVED traps.  CPU interrupt
vector 0x7A was observed to be triggered.  This might have been the
bitwise OR of two different vectors sent from each of the IOAPICs at
the same time.

	IOAPIC #0: 0x68 --> irq 8: RTC timer interrupt
	IOAPIC #1: 0x32 --> irq 18: scsi host adapter or network interface
		   ----
		   0x7a --> T_RESERVED

Both IOAPICs had ID 0.

Appendix B.3 in the MP spec indicates that the operating system is
responsible for assigning unique IDs to the IOAPICs.

The enclosed patch programs the IOAPIC IDs according to the IOAPIC
entries in the MP table.

Submitted by:	tegge
2000-05-31 21:37:28 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
db6a426158 The SMP cleanup commit broke UP compiles. Make UP compiles work again. 2000-03-28 18:06:49 +00:00