Remove page zeroing code from consumers and stop specifying
VM_ALLOC_NOOBJ. In a few places, also convert an allocation loop to
simply use VM_ALLOC_WAITOK.
Similarly, convert vm_page_alloc_domain() callers.
Note that callers are now responsible for assigning the pindex.
Reviewed by: alc, hselasky, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31986
This is needed for LinuxKPI's _ioremap_attr. This reuses the generic
implementation introduced for aarch64, and itself requires implementing
pmap_kenter, which is trivial to do given riscv currently treats all
mapping attributes the same due to the Svpbmt extension not yet being
ratified and in hardware.
Reviewed by: markj, mhorne
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32445
This partially reverts e81e77c5a0, leaving the option both in
GENERICs on amd64/arm64/arm, and in global NOTES file. Apparently
this better matches existing practice, where we do not try to hard
to make LINT and GENERIC complimentary.
Requested and reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Remove the option from NOTES/LINT, and add to NOTES for powerpc and
riscv.
PR: 259036
Requested by: John Hay <john@sanren.ac.za>
Discussed with: ian, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
These platforms don't manage resources for DMA request lines or I/O
ports, this is specific to x86. Remove the references from the comments.
Reviewed by: imp, jhb
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32358
There are two issues with the checks against VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS. First,
the comparison should consider the values as unsigned, otherwise
addresses with the high bit set will fail to branch. Second, the value
of VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS is, by convention, one larger than the maximum
mappable user address and invalid itself. Thus, use the bgeu instruction
for these comparisons.
Add a regression test case for copyin(9).
PR: 257193
Reported by: Robert Morris <rtm@lcs.mit.edu>
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31209
When handling a kernel page fault, check explicitly that stval resides
in either the user or kernel address spaces, and make the page fault
fatal if not. Otherwise, a properly crafted address may appear to
pmap_fault() as a valid and present page in the kernel map, causing the
page fault to be retried continuously. This is mainly due to the fact
that the upper bits of virtual addresses are not validated by most of
the pmap code.
Faults of this nature should only occur due to some kind of bug in the
kernel, but it is best to handle them gracefully when they do.
Handle user page faults in the same way, sending a SIGSEGV immediately
when a malformed address is encountered.
Add an assertion to pmap_l1(), which should help catch other bugs of
this kind that make it this far.
Reviewed by: jrtc27, markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31208
No in-tree drivers are supported for RISC-V (given it supports UEFI we
could enable the EFI framebuffer, but U-Boot has very limited hardware
support and EDK2 remains a work in progress), but drm-kmod exists with
drivers for video cards that can be used with the HiFive Unmatched.
Reviewed by: imp, jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32001
pmap_change_attr is required by drm-kmod so we need the function to
exist. Since the Svpbmt extension is on the horizon we will likely end
up with a real implementation of it, so this stub implementation does
all the necessary page table walking to validate the input, ensuring
that no new errors are returned once it's implemented fully (other than
due to out of memory conditions when demoting L2 entries) and providing
a skeleton for that future implementation.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31996
The implementation of the progress bar is simple, but duplicated for
most minidump implementations. Extract the common bits to kern_dump.c.
Ensure that the bar is reset with each subsequent dump; this was only
done on some platforms previously.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31885
The function is identical in each minidump implementation, so move it to
vm_phys.c. The only slight exception is powerpc where the function was
public, for use in moea64_scan_pmap().
Reviewed by: kib, markj, imp (earlier version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31884
Otherwise sckmode is left uninitialised, not zero. This mode is used for
the on-board flash on the HiFive Unmatched board. Whilst here, catch
unknown modes and return an error rather than silently continuing.
Reviewed by: #riscv, jrtc27
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31562
Move the common kernel function signatures from machine/reg.h to a new
sys/reg.h. This is in preperation for adding PT_GETREGSET to ptrace(2).
Reviewed by: imp, markj
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL (original work)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19830
The current code checks the RWX bits are 0 but does not check the V bit
is non-zero, meaning not-yet-allocated L1 entries that are still zero
are regarded as being allocated. This is likely due to copying the arm64
code that checks ATTR_DESC_MASK is L1_TABLE, which emcompasses both the
type and the validity in a single field, and erroneously translating
that to a check of just PTE_RWX being 0 to indicate non-leaf, forgetting
about the V bit. This then results in the following panic:
panic: Fatal page fault at 0xffffffc0005cf292: 0x00000000000050
cpuid = 1
time = 1628379581
KDB: stack backtrace:
db_trace_self() at db_trace_self
db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x38
kdb_backtrace() at kdb_backtrace+0x2c
vpanic() at vpanic+0x148
panic() at panic+0x2a
page_fault_handler() at page_fault_handler+0x1ba
do_trap_supervisor() at do_trap_supervisor+0x7a
cpu_exception_handler_supervisor() at
cpu_exception_handler_supervisor+0x70
--- exception 13, tval = 0x50
pmap_enter_l2() at pmap_enter_l2+0xb2
pmap_enter_object() at pmap_enter_object+0x15e
vm_map_pmap_enter() at vm_map_pmap_enter+0x228
vm_map_insert() at vm_map_insert+0x4ec
vm_map_find() at vm_map_find+0x474
vm_map_find_min() at vm_map_find_min+0x52
vm_mmap_object() at vm_mmap_object+0x1ba
vn_mmap() at vn_mmap+0xf8
kern_mmap() at kern_mmap+0x4c4
sys_mmap() at sys_mmap+0x38
do_trap_user() at do_trap_user+0x208
cpu_exception_handler_user() at cpu_exception_handler_user+0x72
--- exception 8, tval = 0x1dd
Instead, we should just check the V bit, as on amd64, and assert that
any valid L1 entries are not leaves, since an L1 leaf would render the
entire range allocated and thus we should not have attempted to map that
VA in the first place.
Reported by: David Gilbert <dgilbert@daveg.ca>
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: markj, mhorne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31460
These ones were unambiguous cases where the Foundation was the only
listed copyright holder (in the associated license block).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The SiFive FU740 has both NVMe and USB so we need both to ensure we can
mount root, and HID is a dependency of USB.
Reviewed by: kp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31036
This is present on both the FU540 and FU740, but only needed for the
FU740 in order to assert reset and power enable signals for its PCIe
controller.
Reviewed by: mhorne
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31031
This is needed for FU740 PCIe support. Whilst we don't need the FU540's
resets they are also defined for completeness.
Reviewed by: manu
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31024
This avoids noisy output from early attempts to attach before clk_fixed
has attached to the parent clocks.
Reviewed by: kp, mhorne
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31023
The FU740 has a very similar controller and will reuse most of the
driver. This also drops the dependency on the device-tree include for
the binding indices; the header doesn't namespace its contents (and nor
does the FU740 one) so using both would require seperate translation
units which would be unnecessarily complicated just to avoid defining
local copies of the small number of constants.
Whilst here, add the missing l to gemgxlclk's name and drop the prci_
prefix from tlclk's name as we don't prefix any of the others and it's
entirely unnecessary.
Reviewed by: kp, mhorne
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31021
which is the place to put MD asserts about allocated pages.
On amd64, verify that allocated page does not belong to the kernel
(text, data) or early allocated pages.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31121
This repeats amd64's cfcbf8c6fd (r180498) and i386's cf3508519c
(r202894) but for riscv; pmap_kextract must be lock-free and so it can
race with superpage promotion and demotion, thus the L2 entry must only
be loaded once to avoid using inconsistent state.
PR: 250866
Reviewed by: markj, mhorne
Tested by: David Gilbert <dgilbert@daveg.ca>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31253
We already attempt to enable the SiFive SPI controller, but since spibus
isn't enabled it isn't actually built.
Reviewed by: kp, philip
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31027
The pindex values are assigned from the L3 leaves upwards, meaning there
are NUL2E L3 tables and then NUL1E L2 tables (with a futher NUL0E L1
tables in future when we implement Sv48 support). Therefore anything
below NUL2E is an L3 table's page and anything above or equal to NUL2E
is an L2 table's page (with the threshold of NUL2E + NUL1E marking the
start of the L1 tables' pages in Sv48). Thus all the comparisons and
arithmetic operations must use NUL2E to handle the L3/L2 allocation (and
thus L2/L1 entry) transition point, not NUL1E as all but pmap_alloc_l2
were doing.
To make matters confusing, the NUL1E and NUL2E definitions in the RISC-V
pmap are based on a 4-level page hierarchy but we currently use the
3-level Sv39 format (as that's the only required one, and hardware
support for the 4-level Sv48 is not widespread). This means that, in
effect, the above bug cancels out with the bloated NULxE definitions
such that things "work" (but are still technically wrong, and thus would
break when adding Sv48 support), with one exception. pmap_enter_l2 is
currently the only function to use the correct constant, but since
_pmap_alloc_l3 uses the incorrect constant, it will do complete nonsense
when it needs to allocate a new L2 table (which is rather rare). In this
instance, _pmap_alloc_l3, whilst it would correctly determine the pindex
was for an L2 table, would only subtract NUL1E when computing l1index
and thus go way out of bounds (by 511*512*512 bytes, or 127.75 GiB) of
its own L1 table and, thanks to pmap_distribute_l1, of every other
pmap's L1 table in the whole system. This has likely never been hit as
it would presumably instantly fault and panic.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31087
These use the raw console interface and poll. Unfortunately, the SiFive
UART puts the FIFO empty bit inside the FIFO data register, which means
that the act of checking whether a character is available also dequeues
any character from the FIFO, requiring the user to press each key twice.
However, since we configure the watermark to be 0 and, when the UART has
been grabbed for the console, we have interrupts off, we can abuse the
interrupt pending register to act as a substitute for the FIFO empty
bit.
This perhaps suggests that the console interface should move from having
rxready and getc to having getc_nonblock and getc (or make getc take a
bool), as all the places that call rxready do so to avoid blocking on
getc when there is no character available.
Reviewed by: kp, philip
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31025
This is required for the SiFive FU740's PCIe controller. Copied from
arm64 with the only difference being changing pmap_mapdev_attr to
pmap_mapdev as riscv only has the latter.
Reviewed by: mhorne
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31032
The syscall number is stored in the same register as the syscall return
on amd64 (and possibly other architectures) and so it is impossible to
recover in the signal handler after the call has returned. This small
tweak delivers it in the `si_value` field of the signal, which is
sufficient to catch capability violations and emulate them with a call
to a more-privileged process in the signal handler.
This reapplies 3a522ba1bc with a fix for
the static assertion failure on i386.
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Reviewed by: kib, bcr (manpages)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29185
amd64 and 32-bit ARM already had assertions to this effect. Add them to
other pmaps.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31171
The syscall number is stored in the same register as the syscall return
on amd64 (and possibly other architectures) and so it is impossible to
recover in the signal handler after the call has returned. This small
tweak delivers it in the `si_value` field of the signal, which is
sufficient to catch capability violations and emulate them with a call
to a more-privileged process in the signal handler.
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Reviewed by: kib, bcr (manpages)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29185
Use sysentvec hooks to only call umtx_thread_exit/umtx_exec, which handle
robust mutexes, for native FreeBSD ABI. Similarly, there is no sense
in calling sigfastblock_clear() for non-native ABIs.
Requested by: dchagin
Reviewed by: dchagin, markj (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30987
This adds `sv_elf_core_osabi`, `sv_elf_core_abi_vendor`,
and `sv_elf_core_prepare_notes` fields to `struct sysentvec`,
and modifies imgact_elf.c to make use of them instead
of hardcoding FreeBSD-specific values. It also updates all
of the ABI definitions to preserve current behaviour.
This makes it possible to implement non-native ELF coredump
support without unnecessary code duplication. It will be used
for Linux coredumps.
Reviewed By: kib
Sponsored By: EPSRC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30921
Many of these typedefs are the same across all architectures or can
be set based on an architecture-independent compiler-provided macro
(e.g. __SIZEOF_SIZE_T__). These macros have been available since GCC 4.6
and Clang sometime before 3.0 (godbolt.org does not have any older clang
versions installed).
I originally considered using the compiler-provided `__FOO_TYPE__` directly.
However, in order to do so we have to check that those match the previous
typedef exactly (not just that they have the same size) since any change
would be an ABI break. For example, changing `long` to `long long` results
in different C++ name mangling. Additionally, Clang and GCC disagree on
the underlying type for some of (u)int*_fast_t types, so this change
only moves the definitions that are identical across all architectures
and does not touch those types.
This de-deduplication will allow us to have a smaller diff downstream in
CheriBSD: we only have to only change the (u)intptr_t definition in
sys/_types.h in CheriBSD instead of having to change machine/_types.h for
all CHERI-enabled architectures (currently RISC-V, AArch64 and MIPS).
Reviewed By: imp, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29895
This is consistent with other platforms, specifically arm and arm64. No
functional change intended.
Reviewed by: jrtc27
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30645
pmap_promote_l2() failed to handle implementations which set the
accessed and dirty flags. In particular, when comparing the attributes
of a run of 512 PTEs, we must handle the possibility that the hardware
will set PTE_D on a clean, writable mapping.
Following the example of amd64 and arm64, change riscv's
pmap_promote_l2() to downgrade clean, writable mappings to read-only, so
that updates are synchronized by the pmap lock.
Fixes: f6893f09d
Reported by: Nathaniel Filardo <nwf20@cl.cam.ac.uk>
Tested by: Nathaniel Filardo <nwf20@cl.cam.ac.uk>
Reviewed by: jrtc27, alc, Nathaniel Filardo
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30644
While here, fix all links to older en_US.ISO8859-1 documentation
in the src/ tree.
PR: 255026
Reported by: Michael Büker <freebsd@michael-bueker.de>
Reviewed by: dbaio
Approved by: blackend (mentor), re (gjb)
MFC after: 10 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30265
During early qemu development, the /soc node was marked as compatible
with "riscv-virtio-soc" instead of "simple-bus".
This was changed in qemu 53f54508dae6 in Sep 2018, and predates the
baseline required qemu version (5.0) for riscv by a wide margin.
The generic simplebus code handles attachment in all cases nowadays.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Reviewed by: jrtc27, mhorne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30011
Previously, a page fault taken during copyin/out and related functions
would run the entire fault handler while permitting direct access to
user addresses. This could also leak across context switches (e.g. if
the page fault handler was preempted by an interrupt or slept for disk
I/O).
To fix, clear SUM in assembly after saving the original version of
SSTATUS in the supervisor mode trapframe.
Reviewed by: mhorne, jrtc27
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29763
Use the new kdb variants. Print more specific error messages.
Reviewed by: jhb, markj
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29156
This basically mirrors what already exists in ddb, but provides a
slightly improved interface. It allows the caller to specify the
watchpoint access type, and returns more specific error codes to
differentiate failure cases.
This will be used to support hardware watchpoints in gdb(4).
Stubs are provided for architectures lacking hardware watchpoint logic
(mips, powerpc, riscv), while other architectures are added individually
in follow-up commits.
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, markj
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29155
This change serves two purposes.
First, we take advantage of the compiler provided endian definitions to
eliminate some long-standing duplication between the different versions
of this header. __BYTE_ORDER__ has been defined since GCC 4.6, so there
is no need to rely on platform defaults or e.g. __MIPSEB__ to determine
endianness. A new common sub-header is added, but there should be no
changes to the visibility of these definitions.
Second, this eliminates the hand-rolled __bswapNN() routines, again in
favor of the compiler builtins. This was done already for x86 in
e6ff6154d2. The benefit here is that we no longer have to maintain our
own implementations on each arch, and can instead rely on the compiler
to emit appropriate instructions or libcalls, as available. This should
result in equivalent or better code generation. Notably 32-bit arm will
start using the `rev` instruction for these routines, which is available
on armv6+.
PR: 236920
Reviewed by: arichardson, imp
Tested by: bdragon (BE powerpc)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29012
e4b8deb222 removed the last in-tree uses of PCPU_INC(). Its
potential benefit is also practically nonexistent. Non-x86
platforms already implement it as PCPU_ADD(..., 1), and according
to [0] there are no recent x86 processors for which the 'inc'
instruction provides a performance benefit over the equivalent
memory-operand form of the 'add' instruction. The only remaining
benefit of 'inc' is smaller instruction size, which in this case
is inconsequential given the limited number of per-CPU data consumers.
[0]: https://www.agner.org/optimize/instruction_tables.pdf
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29308
This appears to be a copy-and-paste error that has simply been
overlooked. The tree contains only two calls to any of the affected
variants, but recent additions to the test suite started exercising the
call to atomic_clear_rel_int() in ng_leave_write(), reliably causing
panics.
Apparently, the issue was inherited from the arm64 atomic header. That
instance was addressed in c90baf6817, but the fix did not make its way
to RISC-V.
Note that the particular test case ng_macfilter_test:main still appears
to fail on this platform, but this change reduces the panic to a
timeout.
PR: 253237
Reported by: Jenkins, arichardson
Reviewed by: kp, arichardson
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29064
This macro returns true if a provided virtual address is contained
in the kernel's clean submap.
In CHERI kernels, the buffer cache and transient I/O map are allocated
as separate regions. Abstracting this check reduces the diff relative
to FreeBSD. It is perhaps slightly more readable as well.
Reviewed by: kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28710
The System Reset extension provides functions to shutdown or reboot the
system via SBI firmware. This newly defined extension supersedes the
functionality of the legacy shutdown extension.
Update the SBI code to use the new System Reset extension when
available, and fall back to the legacy one.
Reviewed By: kp, jhb
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28226
This setting limits the amount of memory that can be allocated to UMA.
On systems with a direct map and ample KVA, however, there is no reason
for VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE to be larger than 1. This appears to have been
inherited from the 32-bit ARM platform definitions.
Also remove VM_KMEM_SIZE_MIN, which is not needed when
VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE is defined to be 1.[*]
Reviewed by: alc, kp, kib
Reported by: alc [*]
Submitted by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored by: Ampere Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28225
This is the superset of the nooptions found in the -DEBUG kernels.
Reviewed by: emaste, manu
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28152
The purpose of this KASSERT is to ensure that we do not run out of space
in the early devmap. However, the devmap grew beyond its initial size of
2MB in r336519, and this assertion did not grow with it.
A devmap mapping of a 1080p framebuffer requires 1920x1080 bytes, or
1.977 MB, so it is just barely able to fit without triggering the
assertion, provided no other devices are mapped before it. With the
addition of `options GDB` in GENERIC by bbfa199cbc, the uart is now
mapped for the purposes of a debug port, before mapping the framebuffer.
The presence of both these conditions pushes the selected virtual
address just below the threshold, triggering the assertion.
To fix this, use the correct size of the devmap, defined by
PMAP_MAPDEV_EARLY_SIZE. Since this code is shared with RISC-V, define
it for that platform as well (although it is a different size).
PR: 25241
Reported by: gbe
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Ensure that we don't end up with a superpage in the vm_page_t's pv list.
This may help with debugging the panic reported in PR 250866, in which
l3 in pmap_remove_write() was found to be NULL. Adding a KASSERT to this
function will help narrow down the cause of this panic the next time it
occurs.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28109
Add 64-bit address support to Cadence CGEM Ethernet driver for use in
other SoCs such as the Zynq UltraScale+ and SiFive HighFive Unleashed.
Reviewed by: philip, 0mp (manpages)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24304
Add an additional set of braces to clarify intention. The '&' operator
has a higher precedence than '|', but the reader may not always remember
this. No functional change.
This sysctl node can generate very verbose output, so don't trigger it
for sysctl -a or sysctl vm.pmap.
Reviewed by: markj, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27504
These implementation IDs are defined in the SBI spec, so we should print
their name if detected.
Submitted by: Danjel Qyteza <danq1222@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: jhb, kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27660
Ability to load-balance traffic over multiple path is a must-have thing for routers.
It may be used by the servers to balance outgoing traffic over multiple default gateways.
The previous implementation, RADIX_MPATH stayed in the shadow for too long.
It was not well maintained, which lead us to a vicious circle - people were using
non-contiguous mask or firewalls to achieve similar goals. As a result, some routing
daemons implementation still don't have multipath support enabled for FreeBSD.
Turning on ROUTE_MPATH by default would fix it. It will allow to reduce networking
feature gap to other operating systems. Linux and OpenBSD enabled similar support
at least 5 years ago.
ROUTE_MPATH does not consume memory unless actually used. It enables around ~1k LOC.
It does not bring any behaviour changes for userland.
Additionally, feature is (temporarily) turned off by the net.route.multipath sysctl
defaulting to 0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27428
Prefer atomics to critical section. This reduces the cost of the
increment operation and removes the possibility of it being interrupted
by counter_u64_zero().
Use CPU_FOREACH() macro to skip absent CPUs.
Replace hand-rolled address calculation with zpcpu_get().
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27536
Allows recovery or diagnosis of a fatal page fault before panicking the
system.
Reviewed by: jhb, kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27534
- Push the kstack_contains check down into unwind_frame() so that it
is honored by DDB and DTrace.
- Check that the trapframe for an exception frame is contained in the
traced thread's kernel stack for DDB traces.
Reviewed by: markj
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27357
This is useful for stack unwinders which need to avoid out-of-bounds
reads of a kernel stack which can trigger kernel faults.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27356
This allows GDB to print more useful backtraces when setting a breakpoint
on an assembly function.
Reviewed By: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27177
Ensure we initialize the static environment when not booting via
loader(8), and provide a static buffer if this is the case. This fixes
two issues.
First, performing the initialization ensures that kenv variables set in
the kernel's config file are honored. Previously, any new or overridden
values were ignored.
Second, providing the static buffer allows variables to be set in the
device tree's bootargs property of the chosen node. This can be set by
u-boot or by QEMU's '-append' flag. Attempting to this prior to this
change resulted in an early panic, since the static environment had no
buffer backing it.
Submitted by: syrinx (earlier version)
Reviewed by: kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25034
In pmap_bootstrap(), we fill kernel_pmap->pm_active since it is
invariably active on all harts. However, this marks it as active even
for harts that don't exist in the system, which can cause issue when the
mask is passed to the SBI firmware via sbi_remote_sfence_vma().
Specifically, the SBI spec allows SBI_ERR_INVALID_PARAM to be returned
when an invalid hart is set in the mask.
The latest version of OpenSBI does not have this issue, but v0.6 does,
and this is triggering a recently added KASSERT in CI. Switch to only
setting bits in pm_active for harts that enter the system.
Reported by: Jenkins
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27080
VM_ALLOC_WAITOK and vm_page_unwire_noq(), have eliminated the need for
many of the #includes.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27052
- remove setting of register value which is not used until the next value is
set
- Use the L2_SHIFT constant when setting up L2 superpages
Submitted by: Antonin Houska <ah AT melesmeles DOT cz>
Version 0.2 of the SBI specification [1] marked the existing SBI
functions as "legacy" in order to move to a newer calling convention. It
also introduced a set of replacement extensions for some of the legacy
functionality. In particular, the TIME, IPI, and RFENCE extensions
implement and extend the semantics of their legacy counterparts, while
conforming to the newer version of the spec.
Update our SBI code to use the new replacement extensions when
available, and fall back to the legacy ones. These will eventually be
dropped, when support for version 0.2 is ubiquitous.
[1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-sbi-doc/blob/master/riscv-sbi.adoc
Submitted by: Danjel Q. <danq1222@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26953
S-mode software has write access to the SIP.SSIP bit, so instead of
making a second round-trip through the SBI we can clear it ourselves.
The SBI spec has deprecated this function for this exactly this reason.
Submitted by: Danjel Q. <danq1222@gmail.com
Reviewed by: kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26952
The existing names were inherited from arm64, but we should prefer
RISC-V terminology. Change the prefix to SCAUSE, and further change the
names to better match the RISC-V spec and be more consistent with one
another. Also, remove two codes that are not defined for S-mode (machine
and hypervisor ecall).
While here, apply style(9) to some condition checks.
Reviewed by: kp
Discussed with: jrtc27
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26918
As was done for L3 PTEs in r362853, mask out the reserved bits when
extracting the physical address from an L2 PTE. Future versions of the
spec or custom implementations may make use of these reserved bits, in
which case the resulting physical address could be incorrect.
Submitted by: Nathaniel Filardo <nwf20@cl.cam.ac.uk>
Reviewed by: kp, mhorne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26607
Hiding this feature behind RB_VERBOSE is gratuitous. The tunable is enough
to limit its use to only those who explicitly request it.
Suggested by: kevans
Move dump_avail[] extern declaration and inlines into a new header
vm/vm_dumpset.h. This fixes default gcc build for mips.
Reviewed by: alc, scottph
Tested by: kevans (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26741
Push the root seed version to userspace through the VDSO page, if
the RANDOM_FENESTRASX algorithm is enabled. Otherwise, there is no
functional change. The mechanism can be disabled with
debug.fxrng_vdso_enable=0.
arc4random(3) obtains a pointer to the root seed version published by
the kernel in the shared page at allocation time. Like arc4random(9),
it maintains its own per-process copy of the seed version corresponding
to the root seed version at the time it last rekeyed. On read requests,
the process seed version is compared with the version published in the
shared page; if they do not match, arc4random(3) reseeds from the
kernel before providing generated output.
This change does not implement the FenestrasX concept of PCPU userspace
generators seeded from a per-process base generator. That change is
left for future discussion/work.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
Approved by: csprng (me -- only touching FXRNG here)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22839
Create the RISC-V NOTES and LINT files. As of r366559, LINT configs are
no longer generated but checked in to the tree.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26502
The boot metadata (also referred to as modinfo, or preload metadata)
provides information about the size and location of the kernel,
pre-loaded modules, and other metadata (e.g. the EFI framebuffer) to be
consumed during by the kernel during early boot. It is encoded as a
series of type-length-value entries and is usually constructed by
loader(8) and passed to the kernel. It is also faked on some
architectures when booted by other means.
Although much of the module information is available via kldstat(8),
there is no easy way to debug the metadata in its entirety. Add some
routines to parse this data and allow it to be printed to the console
during early boot or output via a sysctl.
Since the output can be lengthly, printing to the console is gated
behind the debug.dump_modinfo_at_boot kenv variable as well as the
BOOTVERBOSE flag. The sysctl to print the metadata is named
debug.dump_modinfo.
Reviewed by: tsoome
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26687
It is unlikely, but possible, that an unrecognized or unsupported
relocation type is encountered while trying to load a kernel module. If
this occurs we should offer the symbol index as a hint to the user.
While here, fix some small style issues.
Reviewed by: markj, kib (amd64 part, in D26701)
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Since r366355 and r366284 we panic on access faults rather than treating
them like page faults so this condition is never true.
Reviewed by: jhb (mentor), markj, mhorne
Approved by: jhb (mentor), markj, mhorne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26686
We should never take instruction page faults when in the kernel, but by
using the standard page fault code we should get a more-informative
message about faulting on a NOFAULT page rather than branching to the
default case here and printing an "Unknown kernel exception ..."
message.
Reviewed by: jhb (mentor), markj
Approved by: jhb (mentor), markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26685
These names were inherited from the arm64 port and should be changed to
the RISC-V terminology.
Reviewed by: jhb (mentor), kp, markj
Approved by: jhb (mentor), kp, markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26671
Access faults in user mode are treated like TLB misses, which leads to an
endless loop of faults. It's less serious than the same fault in kernel mode,
because we can just terminate the process, but that's not ideal.
Treat user mode access faults as a bus error.
Suggested by: jrtc27
Reviewed by: br, jhb
Sponsored by: Axiado
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26621
Load/store/fetch access exceptions always indicate a violation of a PMP
rule. We can't treat those as page faults, because updating the page
table and trying again will only result in exactly the same access
exception recurring. This leaves us in an endless exception loop.
We cannot recover from these exceptions, so panic instead.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Axiado
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26544
Every other architecture defines this and this is required for
interrupts to work when using QEMU's PCI VirtIO devices (which all
report an interrupt line of 0) for two reasons.
Firstly, interrupt line 0 is wrong; they use one of 0x20-0x23 with the
lines being cycled across devices like normal. Moreover, RISC-V uses
INTRNG, whose IRQs are virtual as indices into its irq_map, so even if
we have the right interrupt line we still need to try and route the
interrupt in order to ultimately call into intr_map_irq and get back a
unique index into the map for the given line, otherwise we will use
whatever happens to be in irq_map[line] (which for QEMU where the line
is initialised to 0 results in using the first allocated interrupt,
namely the RTC on IRQ 11 at time of commit).
Note that pci_assign_interrupt will still do the wrong thing for INTRNG
when using a tunable, as it will bypass INTRNG entirely and use the
tunable's value as the index into irq_map, when it should instead
(indirectly) call intr_map_irq to allocate a new entry for the given
IRQ and treat the tunable as stating the physical line in use, which is
what one would expect. This, however, is a problem shared by all INTRNG
architectures, and not exclusive to RISC-V.
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26564