maps. We always acquire the sx lock exclusively here, but we can't
use a mutex because we want to be able to sleep while holding the
lock. This is completely equivalent to what we were doing with the
lockmgr(9) locks before.
Approved by: alc
- Push down Giant into shmexit(). (Giant is acquired only if the vmspace
contains shm segments.)
- Eliminate the acquisition of Giant from proc_rwmem().
- Reduce the scope of Giant in exit1(), uncovering the destruction of the
address space.
vmspace to the new vmspace in vmspace_exec() is mostly wasted effort. With
one exception, vm_swrss, the copied fields are immediately overwritten.
Instead, initialize these fields to zero in vmspace_alloc(), eliminating a
bcopy() from vmspace_exec() and a bzero() from vmspace_fork().
init and fini handlers. Our vm system removes all userland mappings at
exit prior to calling pmap_release. It just so happens that we might
as well reuse the pmap for the next process since the userland slate
has already been wiped clean.
However. There is a functional benefit to this as well. For platforms
that share userland and kernel context in the same pmap, it means that
the kernel portion of a pmap remains valid after the vmspace has been
freed (process exit) and while it is in uma's cache. This is significant
for i386 SMP systems with kernel context borrowing because it avoids
a LOT of IPIs from the pmap_lazyfix() cleanup in the usual case.
Tested on: amd64, i386, sparc64, alpha
Glanced at by: alc
pmap_protect() and pmap_remove(). In general, they require the lock in
order to modify a page's pv list or flags. In some cases, however,
pmap_protect() can avoid acquiring the lock.
when not propogated on fork (due to minherit(2)). Consistency checks
otherwise fail when the vm_map is freed and it appears to have not been
emptied completely, causing an INVARIANTS panic in vm_map_zdtor().
PR: kern/68017
Submitted by: Mark W. Krentel <krentel@dreamscape.com>
Reviewed by: alc
1. Contrary to the Single Unix Specification our implementation of
munlock(2) when performed on an unwired virtual address range has
returned an error. Correct this. Note, however, that the behavior
of "system" unwiring is unchanged, only "user" unwiring is changed.
If "system" unwiring is performed on an unwired virtual address
range, an error is still returned.
2. Performing an errant "system" unwiring on a virtual address range
that was "user" (i.e., mlock(2)) but not "system" wired would
incorrectly undo the "user" wiring instead of returning an error.
Correct this.
Discussed with: green@
Reviewed by: tegge@
being that PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() returns the wrong vm_page for fictitious
pages but unwiring uses PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE(). The resulting panic
reported an unexpected wired count. Rather than attempting to fix
PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE(), this fix takes advantage of the properties of
fictitious pages. Specifically, fictitious pages will never be
completely unwired. Therefore, we can keep a fictitious page's wired
count forever set to one and thereby avoid the use of
PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() when we know that we're working with a fictitious
page, just not which one.
In collaboration with: green@, tegge@
PR: kern/29915
Previously, mlockall(2) usage would leak MAP_FUTUREWIRE of the process's
vmspace::vm_map and subsequent processes would wire all of their memory.
Coupled with a wired-page leak in vm_fault_unwire(), this would run the
system out of free pages and cause programs to randomly SIGBUS when
faulting in new pages.
(Note that this is not the fix for the latter part; pages are still
leaked when a wired area is unmapped in some cases.)
Reviewed by: alc
PR kern/62930
would actually map the file with read access enabled. According to
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/functions/mmap.html this is
an error. Similarly, an madvise(..., MADV_WILLNEED) would enable read
access on a virtual address range that was PROT_NONE.
The solution implemented herein is (1) to pass a vm_prot_t to
vm_map_pmap_enter() describing the allowed access and (2) to make
vm_map_pmap_enter() responsible for understanding the limitations of
pmap_enter_quick().
Submitted by: "Mark W. Krentel" <krentel@dreamscape.com>
PR: kern/64573
ever since alpha/alpha/pmap.c revision 1.81 introduced the list allpmaps,
there has been no reason for having this function on Alpha. Briefly,
when pmap_growkernel() relied upon the list of all processes to find and
update the various pmaps to reflect a growth in the kernel's valid
address space, pmap_init2() served to avoid a race between pmap
initialization and pmap_growkernel(). Specifically, pmap_pinit2() was
responsible for initializing the kernel portions of the pmap and
pmap_pinit2() was called after the process structure contained a pointer
to the new pmap for use by pmap_growkernel(). Thus, an update to the
kernel's address space might be applied to the new pmap unnecessarily,
but an update would never be lost.
- struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count. The plimit
structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy
on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from
it without needing a further lock.
- The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading
limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from
under you while reading from it.
- Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since
int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock
wouldn't buy us anything.
- All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted
behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return
either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified
resource from a process.
- dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of
other similar syscall helper functions.
- The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit()
(it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit()
and kern_setrlimit() instead.
- The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls,
but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead.
- The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits. It
also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the
ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead. As a result,
ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant.
- The p_rlimit macro no longer exists.
Submitted by: mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups)
Tested on: i386
Compiled on: alpha, amd64
occurs when kmem_malloc() fails to allocate a sufficient number of vm
pages. Specifically, we avoid the lock-order reversal by not grabbing
Giant around pmap_remove() if the map is the kmem_map.
Approved by: re (jhb)
Reported by: Eugene <eugene3@web.de>
- Return EBUSY if the region was wired by mlock(2) and MS_INVALIDATE
is specified to msync(2). This is required by the Open Group Base
Specifications Issue 6.
- vm_map_sync() doesn't return KERN_FAILURE. Thus, msync(2) can't
possibly return EIO.
- The second major loop in vm_map_sync() handles sub maps. Thus,
failing on sub maps in the first major loop isn't necessary.
must return EINVAL if size is zero. Submitted by: tegge
- In order to avoid a race condition in multithreaded applications, the
check and removal operations by munmap(2) must be in the same critical
section. To accomodate this, vm_map_check_protection() is modified to
require its caller to obtain at least a read lock on the map.
if we drop into the pmap or vnode layers.
- Migrate the handling of zero-length msync(2)s into vm_map_sync() so that
multithread applications can't change the map between implementing the
zero-length hack in msync(2) and reacquiring the map lock in
vm_map_sync().
Reviewed by: tegge
that msync(2) is its only caller.
- Migrate the parts of the old vm_map_clean() that examined the internals
of a vm object to a new function vm_object_sync() that is implemented in
vm_object.c. At the same, introduce the necessary vm object locking so
that vm_map_sync() and vm_object_sync() can be called without Giant.
Reviewed by: tegge
the rstack functionality:
1. Fix a KASSERT that tests for the address to be above the upward
growable stack. Typically for rstack, the faulting address can be
identical to the record end of the upward growable entry, and
very likely is on ia64. The KASSERT tested for greater than, not
greater equal, so whenever the register stack had to be grown
the assertion fired.
2. When we grow the upward growable stack entry and adjust the
unlying object, don't forget to adjust the size of the VM map.
Not doing so would trigger an assert in vm_mapzdtor().
Pointy hat: marcel (for not testing with INVARIANTS).
- Specifying VM_MAP_WIRE_HOLESOK should not assume that the start
address is the beginning of the map. Instead, move to the first
entry after the start address.
- The implementation of VM_MAP_WIRE_HOLESOK was incomplete. This
caused the failure of mlockall(2) in some circumstances.
use the ability on ia64 to map the register stack. The orientation of
the stack (i.e. its grow direction) is passed to vm_map_stack() in the
overloaded cow argument. Since the grow direction is represented by
bits, it is possible and allowed to create bi-directional stacks.
This is not an advertised feature, more of a side-effect.
Fix a bug in vm_map_growstack() that's specific to rstacks and which
we could only find by having the ability to create rstacks: when
the mapped stack ends at the faulting address, we have not actually
mapped the faulting address. we need to include or cover the faulting
address.
Note that at this time mmap(2) has not been extended to allow the
creation of rstacks by processes. If such a need arises, this can
be done.
Tested on: alpha, i386, ia64, sparc64
order to use "unmanaged" pages in the kmem object, vm_map_delete() must
unconditionally perform pmap_remove(). Otherwise, sparc64 has problems.
Tested by: jake
growable (stack) entries that not only grow down, but also grow up.
Have vm_map_growstack() take these flags into account when growing
an entry.
This is the first step in adding support for upward growable stacks.
It is a required feature on ia64 to support the register stack (or
rstack as I like to call it -- it also means reverse stack). We do
not currently create rstacks, so the upward growing is not exercised
and the change should be a functional no-op.
Reviewed by: alc
- All those diffs to syscalls.master for each architecture *are*
necessary. This needed clarification; the stub code generation for
mlockall() was disabled, which would prevent applications from
linking to this API (suggested by mux)
- Giant has been quoshed. It is no longer held by the code, as
the required locking has been pushed down within vm_map.c.
- Callers must specify VM_MAP_WIRE_HOLESOK or VM_MAP_WIRE_NOHOLES
to express their intention explicitly.
- Inspected at the vmstat, top and vm pager sysctl stats level.
Paging-in activity is occurring correctly, using a test harness.
- The RES size for a process may appear to be greater than its SIZE.
This is believed to be due to mappings of the same shared library
page being wired twice. Further exploration is needed.
- Believed to back out of allocations and locks correctly
(tested with WITNESS, MUTEX_PROFILING, INVARIANTS and DIAGNOSTIC).
PR: kern/43426, standards/54223
Reviewed by: jake, alc
Approved by: jake (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
the "toss the largest process" emergency handling) from vm_map.c to
swap_pager.c.
The quantity calculated depends strongly on the internals of the
swap_pager and by moving it, we no longer need to expose the
internal metrics of the swap_pager to the world.
order to avoid the overhead of later page faults. In general, it
implements two cases: one for vnode-backed objects and one for
device-backed objects. Only the device-backed case is really
machine-dependent, belonging in the pmap.
This commit moves the vnode-backed case into the (relatively) new
function vm_map_pmap_enter(). On amd64 and i386, this commit only
amounts to code rearrangement. On alpha and ia64, the new machine
independent (MI) implementation of the vnode case is smaller and more
efficient than their pmap-based implementations. (The MI
implementation takes advantage of the fact that objects in -CURRENT
are ordered collections of pages.) On sparc64, pmap_object_init_pt()
hadn't (yet) been implemented.
- Add a parameter to vm_pageout_flush() that tells vm_pageout_flush()
whether its caller has locked the vm_object. (This is a temporary
measure to bootstrap vm_object locking.)
process to kill, don't block on a map lock while holding the
process lock. Instead, skip processes whose map locks are held
and find something else to kill.
- Add vm_map_trylock_read() to support the above.
Reviewed by: alc, mike (mentor)
It's unnecessary for two reasons: (1) Giant is at present already held in
such cases and (2) our various implementations of pmap_growkernel() look to
be MP safe. (For example, for sparc64 the proof of (2) is trivial.)
dereferenced when a process exits due to the vmspace ref-count being
bumped. Change shmexit() and shmexit_myhook() to take a vmspace instead
of a process and call it in vmspace_dofree(). This way if it is missed
in exit1()'s early-resource-free it will still be caught when the zombie is
reaped.
Also fix a potential race in shmexit_myhook() by NULLing out
vmspace->vm_shm prior to calling shm_delete_mapping() and free().
MFC after: 7 days
is now synchronized by a mutex, whereas access to user maps is still
synchronized by a lockmgr()-based lock. Why? No single type of lock,
including sx locks, meets the requirements of both types of vm map.
Sometimes we sleep while holding the lock on a user map. Thus, a
a mutex isn't appropriate. On the other hand, both lockmgr()-based
and sx locks release Giant when a thread/process blocks during
contention for a lock. This could lead to a race condition in a legacy
driver (that relies on Giant for synchronization) if it attempts to
kmem_malloc() and fails to immediately obtain the lock. Fortunately,
we never sleep while holding a system map lock.
- Add a mtx_destroy() to vm_object_collapse(). (This allows a bzero()
to migrate from _vm_object_allocate() to vm_object_zinit(), where it
will be performed less often.)
resource starvation we clean-up as much of the vmspace structure as we
can when the last process using it exits. The rest of the structure
is cleaned up when it is reaped. But since exit1() decrements the ref
count it is possible for a double-free to occur if someone else, such as
the process swapout code, references and then dereferences the structure.
Additionally, the final cleanup of the structure should not occur until
the last process referencing it is reaped.
This commit solves the problem by introducing a secondary reference count,
calling 'vm_exitingcnt'. The normal reference count is decremented on exit
and vm_exitingcnt is incremented. vm_exitingcnt is decremented when the
process is reaped. When both vm_exitingcnt and vm_refcnt are 0, the
structure is freed for real.
MFC after: 3 weeks
constants VM_MIN_ADDRESS, VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS, USRSTACK and PS_STRINGS.
This is mainly so that they can be variable even for the native abi, based
on different machine types. Get stack protections from the sysentvec too.
This makes it trivial to map the stack non-executable for certain abis, on
machines that support it.
handler in the kernel at the same time. Also, allow for the
exec_new_vmspace() code to build a different sized vmspace depending on
the executable environment. This is a big help for execing i386 binaries
on ia64. The ELF exec code grows the ability to map partial pages when
there is a page size difference, eg: emulating 4K pages on 8K or 16K
hardware pages.
Flesh out the i386 emulation support for ia64. At this point, the only
binary that I know of that fails is cvsup, because the cvsup runtime
tries to execute code in pages not marked executable.
Obtained from: dfr (mostly, many tweaks from me).
Use lmin(long, long), not min(u_int, u_int). This is a problem here on
ia64 which has *way* more than 2^32 pages of KVA. 281474976710655 pages
to be precice.
_vm_map_lock_read(), and _vm_map_trylock(). Submitted by: tegge
o Remove GIANT_REQUIRED from kmem_alloc_wait() and kmem_free_wakeup().
(This clears the way for exec_map accesses to move outside of Giant.
The exec_map is not a system map.)
o Remove some premature MPSAFE comments.
Reviewed by: tegge
and kmem_free_wakeup(). Previously, kmem_free_wakeup() always
called wakeup(). In general, no one was sleeping.
o Export vm_map_unlock_and_wait() and vm_map_wakeup() from vm_map.c
for use in vm_kern.c.
of the KVA space's size in addition to the amount of physical memory
and reduce it by a factor of two.
Under the old formula, our reservation amounted to one kernel map entry
per virtual page in the KVA space on a 4GB i386.
types are not required, as the overhead is unnecessary:
o In the i386 pmap_protect(), `sindex' and `eindex' represent page
indices within the 32-bit virtual address space.
o In swp_pager_meta_build() and swp_pager_meta_ctl(), use a temporary
variable to store the low few bits of a vm_pindex_t that gets used
as an array index.
o vm_uiomove() uses `osize' and `idx' for page offsets within a
map entry.
o In vm_object_split(), `idx' is a page offset within a map entry.
release of Giant around the direct manipulation of the vm_object and
the optional call to pmap_object_init_pt().
o In vm_map_findspace(), remove GIANT_REQUIRED. Instead, acquire and
release Giant around the occasional call to pmap_growkernel().
o In vm_map_find(), remove GIANT_REQUIRED.
release of Giant.
o Reduce the scope of GIANT_REQUIRED in vm_map_insert().
These changes will enable us to remove the acquisition and release
of Giant from obreak().
allocated slabs and bucket caches for free items. It will not go ask the vm
for pages. This differs from M_NOWAIT in that it not only doesn't block, it
doesn't even ask.
- Add a new zcreate option ZONE_VM, that sets the BUCKETCACHE zflag. This
tells uma that it should only allocate buckets out of the bucket cache, and
not from the VM. It does this by using the M_NOVM option to zalloc when
getting a new bucket. This is so that the VM doesn't recursively enter
itself while trying to allocate buckets for vm_map_entry zones. If there
are already allocated buckets when we get here we'll still use them but
otherwise we'll skip it.
- Use the ZONE_VM flag on vm map entries and pv entries on x86.
vm_map_user_pageable().
o Remove vm_map_pageable() and vm_map_user_pageable().
o Remove vm_map_clear_recursive() and vm_map_set_recursive(). (They were
only used by vm_map_pageable() and vm_map_user_pageable().)
Reviewed by: tegge
Submitted by: tegge
o Eliminate the "!mapentzone" check from vm_map_entry_create() and
vm_map_entry_dispose(). Reviewed by: tegge
o Fix white-space usage in vm_map_entry_create().
or user vm_maps. This implementation has two key benefits when compared
to vm_map_{user_,}pageable(): (1) it avoids a race condition through
the use of "in-transition" vm_map entries and (2) it eliminates lock
recursion on the vm_map.
Note: there is still an error case that requires clean up.
Reviewed by: tegge
o Add a stub for vm_map_wire().
Note: the description of the previous commit had an error. The in-
transition flag actually blocks the deallocation of a vm_map_entry by
vm_map_delete() and vm_map_simplify_entry().
or user vm_maps. In accordance with the standards for munlock(2),
and in contrast to vm_map_user_pageable(), this implementation does not
allow holes in the specified region. This implementation uses the
"in transition" flag described below.
o Introduce a new flag, "in transition," to the vm_map_entry.
Eventually, vm_map_delete() and vm_map_simplify_entry() will respect
this flag by deallocating in-transition vm_map_entrys, allowing
the vm_map lock to be safely released in vm_map_unwire() and (the
forthcoming) vm_map_wire().
o Modify vm_map_simplify_entry() to respect the in-transition flag.
In collaboration with: tegge
vm_map_create(), and vm_map_submap().
o Make further use of a local variable in vm_map_entry_splay()
that caches a reference to one of a vm_map_entry's children.
(This reduces code size somewhat.)
o Revert a part of revision 1.66, deinlining vmspace_pmap().
(This function is MPSAFE.)
deinlining vm_map_entry_behavior() and vm_map_entry_set_behavior()
actually increases the kernel's size.
o Make vm_map_entry_set_behavior() static and add a comment describing
its purpose.
o Remove an unnecessary initialization statement from vm_map_entry_splay().
into the vm_object layer:
o Acquire and release Giant in vm_object_shadow() and
vm_object_page_remove().
o Remove the GIANT_REQUIRED assertion preceding vm_map_delete()'s call
to vm_object_page_remove().
o Remove the acquisition and release of Giant around vm_map_lookup()'s
call to vm_object_shadow().
and vm_map_delete(). Assert GIANT_REQUIRED in vm_map_delete()
only if operating on the kernel_object or the kmem_object.
o Remove GIANT_REQUIRED from vm_map_remove().
o Remove the acquisition and release of Giant from munmap().
the last accessed datum is moved to the root of the splay tree.
Therefore, on lookups in which the hint resulted in O(1) access,
the splay tree still achieves O(1) access. In contrast, on lookups
in which the hint failed miserably, the splay tree achieves amortized
logarithmic complexity, resulting in dramatic improvements on vm_maps
with a large number of entries. For example, the execution time
for replaying an access log from www.cs.rice.edu against the thttpd
web server was reduced by 23.5% due to the large number of files
simultaneously mmap()ed by this server. (The machine in question has
enough memory to cache most of this workload.)
Nothing comes for free: At present, I see a 0.2% slowdown on "buildworld"
due to the overhead of maintaining the splay tree. I believe that
some or all of this can be eliminated through optimizations
to the code.
Developed in collaboration with: Juan E Navarro <jnavarro@cs.rice.edu>
Reviewed by: jeff
release Giant around vm_map_madvise()'s call to pmap_object_init_pt().
o Replace GIANT_REQUIRED in vm_object_madvise() with the acquisition
and release of Giant.
o Remove the acquisition and release of Giant from madvise().
vm_object_deallocate(), replacing the assertion GIANT_REQUIRED.
o Remove GIANT_REQUIRED from vm_map_protect() and vm_map_simplify_entry().
o Acquire and release Giant around vm_map_protect()'s call to pmap_protect().
Altogether, these changes eliminate the need for mprotect() to acquire
and release Giant.
mutex class. Currently this is only used for kmapentzone because kmapents
are are potentially allocated when freeing memory. This is not dangerous
though because no other allocations will be done while holding the
kmapentzone lock.
in the same style as sys/proc.h.
o Undo the de-inlining of several trivial, MPSAFE methods on the vm_map.
(Contrary to the commit message for vm_map.h revision 1.66 and vm_map.c
revision 1.206, de-inlining these methods increased the kernel's size.)
statclock can access it in the tail end of statclock_process() at an
unfortunate time. This bit me several times on an SMP alpha (UP2000)
and the problem went away with this change. I'm not sure why it doesn't
break x86 as well. Maybe it's because the clocks are much faster
on alpha (HZ=1024 by default).
and pmap_copy_page(). This gets rid of a couple more physical addresses
in upper layers, with the eventual aim of supporting PAE and dealing with
the physical addressing mostly within pmap. (We will need either 64 bit
physical addresses or page indexes, possibly both depending on the
circumstances. Leaving this to pmap itself gives more flexibilitly.)
Reviewed by: jake
Tested on: i386, ia64 and (I believe) sparc64. (my alpha was hosed)
best path forward now is likely to change the lockmgr locks to simple
sleep mutexes, then see if any extra contention it generates is greater
than removed overhead of managing local locking state information,
cost of extra calls into lockmgr, etc.
Additionally, making the vm_map lock a mutex and respecting it properly
will put us much closer to not needing Giant magic in vm.
While doing this, move it earlier in the sysinit boot process so that the
VM system can use it.
After that, the system is now able to use sx locks instead of lockmgr
locks in the VM system. To accomplish this, some of the more
questionable uses of the locks (such as testing whether they are
owned or not, as well as allowing shared+exclusive recursion) are
removed, and simpler logic throughout is used so locks should also be
easier to understand.
This has been tested on my laptop for months, and has not shown any
problems on SMP systems, either, so appears quite safe. One more
user of lockmgr down, many more to go :)
style(9)
- Minor space adjustment in cases where we have "( ", " )", if(), return(),
while(), for(), etc.
- Add /* SYMBOL */ after a few #endifs.
Reviewed by: alc
shared.
Also introduce vm_endcopy instead of using pointer tricks when
initializing new vmspaces.
The race occured because of how the reference was utilized:
test vmspace reference,
possibly block,
decrement reference
When sharing a vmspace between multiple processes it was possible
for two processes exiting at the same time to test the reference
count, possibly block and neither one free because they wouldn't
see the other's update.
Submitted by: green
(allocating pv entries w/ zalloci) when called in a loop due to
an madvise(). It is possible to completely exhaust the free page list and
cause a system panic when an expected allocation fails.
- vm map entries are not valid after the map has been unlocked.
- An exclusive lock on the map is needed before calling
vm_map_simplify_entry().
Fix cleanup after page wiring failure to unwire all pages that had been
successfully wired before the failure was detected.
Reviewed by: dillon
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
most of these inlines had been bloated in -current far beyond their
original intent. Normalize prototypes and function declarations to be ANSI
only (half already were). And do some general cleanup.
(kernel size also reduced by 50-100K, but that isn't the prime intent)
(this commit is just the first stage). Also add various GIANT_ macros to
formalize the removal of Giant, making it easy to test in a more piecemeal
fashion. These macros will allow us to test fine-grained locks to a degree
before removing Giant, and also after, and to remove Giant in a piecemeal
fashion via sysctl's on those subsystems which the authors believe can
operate without Giant.
introduce a modified allocation mechanism for mbufs and mbuf clusters; one
which can scale under SMP and which offers the possibility of resource
reclamation to be implemented in the future. Notable advantages:
o Reduce contention for SMP by offering per-CPU pools and locks.
o Better use of data cache due to per-CPU pools.
o Much less code cache pollution due to excessively large allocation macros.
o Framework for `grouping' objects from same page together so as to be able
to possibly free wired-down pages back to the system if they are no longer
needed by the network stacks.
Additional things changed with this addition:
- Moved some mbuf specific declarations and initializations from
sys/conf/param.c into mbuf-specific code where they belong.
- m_getclr() has been renamed to m_get_clrd() because the old name is really
confusing. m_getclr() HAS been preserved though and is defined to the new
name. No tree sweep has been done "to change the interface," as the old
name will continue to be supported and is not depracated. The change was
merely done because m_getclr() sounds too much like "m_get a cluster."
- TEMPORARILY disabled mbtypes statistics displaying in netstat(1) and
systat(1) (see TODO below).
- Fixed systat(1) to display number of "free mbufs" based on new per-CPU
stat structures.
- Fixed netstat(1) to display new per-CPU stats based on sysctl-exported
per-CPU stat structures. All infos are fetched via sysctl.
TODO (in order of priority):
- Re-enable mbtypes statistics in both netstat(1) and systat(1) after
introducing an SMP friendly way to collect the mbtypes stats under the
already introduced per-CPU locks (i.e. hopefully don't use atomic() - it
seems too costly for a mere stat update, especially when other locks are
already present).
- Optionally have systat(1) display not only "total free mbufs" but also
"total free mbufs per CPU pool."
- Fix minor length-fetching issues in netstat(1) related to recently
re-enabled option to read mbuf stats from a core file.
- Move reference counters at least for mbuf clusters into an unused portion
of the cluster itself, to save space and need to allocate a counter.
- Look into introducing resource freeing possibly from a kproc.
Reviewed by (in parts): jlemon, jake, silby, terry
Tested by: jlemon (Intel & Alpha), mjacob (Intel & Alpha)
Preliminary performance measurements: jlemon (and me, obviously)
URL: http://people.freebsd.org/~bmilekic/mb_alloc/
processes a little earlier to avoid a deadlock. Second, when calculating
the 'largest process' do not just count RSS. Instead count the RSS + SWAP
used by the process. Without this the code tended to kill small
inconsequential processes like, oh, sshd, rather then one of the many
'eatmem 200MB' I run on a whim :-). This fix has been extensively tested on
-stable and somewhat tested on -current and will be MFCd in a few days.
Shamed into fixing this by: ps
- Add a few KTR tracepoints to track the addition and removal of
vm_map_entry's and the creation adn free'ing of vmspace's.
- Adjust a few portions of code so that we update the process' vmspace
pointer to its new vmspace before freeing the old vmspace.
vm_mtx does not recurse and is required for most low level
vm operations.
faults can not be taken without holding Giant.
Memory subsystems can now call the base page allocators safely.
Almost all atomic ops were removed as they are covered under the
vm mutex.
Alpha and ia64 now need to catch up to i386's trap handlers.
FFS and NFS have been tested, other filesystems will need minor
changes (grabbing the vm lock when twiddling page properties).
Reviewed (partially) by: jake, jhb
other "system" header files.
Also help the deprecation of lockmgr.h by making it a sub-include of
sys/lock.h and removing sys/lockmgr.h form kernel .c files.
Sort sys/*.h includes where possible in affected files.
OK'ed by: bde (with reservations)
programs. There is a case during a fork() which can cause a deadlock.
From Tor -
The workaround that consists of setting a flag in the vm map that
indicates that a fork is in progress and using that mark in the page
fault handling to force a revalidation failure. That change will only
affect (pessimize) page fault handling during fork for threaded
(linuxthreads style) applications and applications using aio_*().
Submited by: tegge
call is correct, but it interferes with the massive hack called
vm_map_growstack(). The call will be returned after our stack handling
code is fixed.
Reported by: tegge
reference count was transferred to the new object, but both the
new and the old map entries had pointers to the new object.
Correct this by transferring the second reference.
This fixes a panic that can occur when mmap(2) is used with the
MAP_INHERIT flag.
PR: i386/25603
Reviewed by: dillon, alc
by myself. It solves a serious vm_map corruption problem that can occur
with the buffer cache when block sizes > 64K are used. This code has been
heavily tested in -stable but only tested somewhat on -current. An MFC
will occur in a few days. My additions include the vm_map_simplify_entry()
and minor buffer cache boundry case fix.
Make the buffer cache use a system map for buffer cache KVM rather then a
normal map.
Ensure that VM objects are not allocated for system maps. There were cases
where a buffer map could wind up with a backing VM object -- normally
harmless, but this could also result in the buffer cache blocking in places
where it assumes no blocking will occur, possibly resulting in corrupted
maps.
Fix a minor boundry case in the buffer cache size limit is reached that
could result in non-optimal code.
Add vm_map_simplify_entry() calls to prevent 'creeping proliferation'
of vm_map_entry's in the buffer cache's vm_map. Previously only a simple
linear optimization was made. (The buffer vm_map typically has only a
handful of vm_map_entry's. This stabilizes it at that level permanently).
PR: 20609
Submitted by: (Tor Egge) tegge
struct swblock entries by dividing the number of the entries by 2
until the swap metadata fits.
- Reject swapon(2) upon failure of swap_zone allocation.
This is just a temporary fix. Better solutions include:
(suggested by: dillon)
o reserving swap in SWAP_META_PAGES chunks, and
o swapping the swblock structures themselves.
Reviewed by: alfred, dillon
Add lockdestroy() and appropriate invocations, which corresponds to
lockinit() and must be called to clean up after a lockmgr lock is no
longer needed.
This
This feature allows you to specify if mmap'd data is included in
an application's corefile.
Change the type of eflags in struct vm_map_entry from u_char to
vm_eflags_t (an unsigned int).
Reviewed by: dillon,jdp,alfred
Approved by: jkh
run out of KVM through a mmap()/fork() bomb that allocates hundreds
of thousands of vm_map_entry structures.
Add panic to make null-pointer dereference crash a little more verbose.
Add a new sysctl, vm.max_proc_mmap, which specifies the maximum number
of mmap()'d spaces (discrete vm_map_entry's in the process). The value
defaults to around 9000 for a 128MB machine. The test is scaled for the
number of processes sharing a vmspace (aka linux threads). Setting
the value to 0 disables the feature.
PR: kern/16573
Approved by: jkh
invalidation code cannot wait for paging to complete while holding a
vnode lock, so we don't wait. Instead we simply allow the lower level
code to simply block on any busy pages it encounters. I think Yahoo
may be the only entity in the entire world that actually uses this
msync feature :-).
Bug reported by: Paul Saab <paul@mu.org>
madvise().
This feature prevents the update daemon from gratuitously flushing
dirty pages associated with a mapped file-backed region of memory. The
system pager will still page the memory as necessary and the VM system
will still be fully coherent with the filesystem. Modifications made
by other means to the same area of memory, for example by write(), are
unaffected. The feature works on a page-granularity basis.
MAP_NOSYNC allows one to use mmap() to share memory between processes
without incuring any significant filesystem overhead, putting it in
the same performance category as SysV Shared memory and anonymous memory.
Reviewed by: julian, alc, dg
from vm_map_pageable(). At the point they called, vm_map_pageable()
holds a read (or shared) lock on the map. The purpose
of vm_map_{clear,set}_recursive() is to disable/enable repeated
write (or exclusive) lock requests by the same process.
vm_map always failed because vm_map_lookup() looked at
"vm_map_entry->wired_count" instead of "(vm_map_entry->eflags &
MAP_ENTRY_USER_WIRED)". The effect was that many page
wiring operations by sysctl were (silently) failing.
Merge the contents (less some trivial bordering the silly comments)
of <vm/vm_prot.h> and <vm/vm_inherit.h> into <vm/vm.h>. This puts
the #defines for the vm_inherit_t and vm_prot_t types next to their
typedefs.
This paves the road for the commit to follow shortly: change
useracc() to use VM_PROT_{READ|WRITE} rather than B_{READ|WRITE}
as argument.
A complete rewrite by dillon and myself to separate
the implementation of behaviors that effect the vm_map_entry
from those that effect the vm_object.
A result of this change is that madvise(..., MADV_FREE);
is much cheaper.
Now that behaviors are stored in the vm_map_entry rather than
the vm_object, it's no longer necessary to instantiate a vm_object
just to hold the behavior.
Reviewed by: dillon
When creating new processes (or performing exec), the new page
directory is initialized too early. The kernel might grow before
p_vmspace is initialized for the new process. Since pmap_growkernel
doesn't yet know about the new page directory, it isn't updated, and
subsequent use causes a failure.
The fix is (1) to clear p_vmspace early, to stop pmap_growkernel
from stomping on memory, and (2) to defer part of the initialization
of new page directories until p_vmspace is initialized.
PR: kern/12378
Submitted by: tegge
Reviewed by: dfr
vm_map.c:
Don't set OBJ_ONEMAPPING on arbitrary vm objects. Only default
and swap type vm objects should have it set. vm_object_deallocate
already handles these cases.
vm_object.c:
If OBJ_ONEMAPPING isn't already clear in vm_object_shadow,
we are in trouble. Instead of clearing it, make it
an assertion that it is already clear.
creating a new entry. vm_map_stack and vm_map_growstack can panic when
a new entry isn't created. Fixed vm_map_stack and vm_map_growstack.
Also, when extending the stack, always set the protection to VM_PROT_ALL.
Remove a useless argument from vm_map_madvise's interface (vm_map.c,
vm_map.h, and vm_mmap.c).
Remove a redundant test in vm_uiomove (vm_map.c).
Make two changes to vm_object_coalesce:
1. Determine whether the new range of pages actually overlaps
the existing object's range of pages before calling vm_object_page_remove.
(Prior to this change almost 90% of the calls to vm_object_page_remove
were to remove pages that were beyond the end of the object.)
2. Free any swap space allocated to removed pages.
It never makes sense to specify MAP_COPY_NEEDED without also specifying
MAP_COPY_ON_WRITE, and vice versa. Thus, MAP_COPY_ON_WRITE suffices.
Reviewed by: David Greenman <dg@root.com>
1. Don't bother checking object->ref_count == 1 in order to set
OBJ_ONEMAPPING. It's a waste of time. If object->ref_count == 1,
vm_map_entry_delete will "run-down" the object and its pages.
2. If object->ref_count == 1, ignore OBJ_ONEMAPPING. Wait for
vm_map_entry_delete to "run-down" the object and its pages.
Otherwise, we're calling two different procedures to delete
the object's pages.
Note: "vmstat -s" will once again show a non-zero value
for "pages freed by exiting processes".
Remove more (redundant) map timestamp increments from properly
synchronized routines. (Changed: vm_map_entry_link, vm_map_entry_unlink,
and vm_map_pageable.)
Micro-optimize vm_map_entry_link and vm_map_entry_unlink, eliminating
unnecessary dereferences. At the same time, converted them from macros
to inline functions.
In general, vm_map_simplify_entry should be performed INSIDE
the loop that traverses the map, not outside. (Changed:
vm_map_inherit, vm_map_pageable.)
vm_fault_unwire doesn't acquire the map lock (or block holding
it). Thus, vm_map_set/clear_recursive shouldn't be called.
(Changed: vm_map_user_pageable, vm_map_pageable.)
lock) until it actually needs to modify the vm_map.
Note: it is legal to modify vm_map::hint without holding a write lock.
Submitted by: "Richard Seaman, Jr." <dick@tar.com> with minor changes
by myself.
Fix bug where an object's OBJ_WRITEABLE/OBJ_MIGHTBEDIRTY flags do
not get set under certain circumstances ( page rename case ).
Reviewed by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>, John Dyson
is the preparation step for moving pmap storage out of vmspace proper.
Reviewed by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>
Matthew Dillion <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
OBJ_ONEMAPPING in the case where an object is extended by an
additional vm_map_entry must be allocated.
In vm_object_madvise(), remove calll to vm_page_cache() in MADV_FREE
case in order to avoid a page fault on page reuse. However, we still
mark the page as clean and destroy any swap backing store.
Submitted by: Alan Cox <alc@cs.rice.edu>