freebsd-dev/sys/ia64
Marcel Moolenaar 3bdfa17c6c When switching the RSE to use the kernel stack as backing store, keep
the RNAT bit index constant. The net effect of this is that there's
no discontinuity WRT NaT collections which greatly simplifies certain
operations. The cost of this is that there can be up to 504 bytes of
unused stack between the true base of the kernel stack and the start
of the RSE backing store. The cost of adjusting the backing store
pointer to keep the RNAT bit index constant, for each kernel entry,
is negligible.

The primary reasons for this change are:
1. Asynchronuous contexts in KSE processes have the disadvantage of
   having to copy the dirty registers from the kernel stack onto the
   user stack. The implementation we had so far copied the registers
   one at a time without calculating NaT collection values. A process
   that used speculation would not work. Now that the RNAT bit index
   is constant, we can block-copy the registers from the kernel stack
   to the user stack without having to worry about NaT collections.
   They will be in the right place on the user stack.
2. The ndirty field in the trapframe is now also usable in userland.
   This was previously not the case because ndirty also includes the
   space occupied by NaT collections. The value could be off by 8,
   depending on the discontinuity. Now that the RNAT bit index is
   contants, we have exactly the same number of NaT collection points
   on the kernel stack as we would have had on the user stack if we
   didn't switch backing stores.
3. Debuggers and other applications that use ptrace(2) can now copy
   the dirty registers from the kernel stack (using ptrace(2)) and
   copy them whereever they want them (onto the user stack of the
   inferior as might be the case for gdb) without having to worry
   about NaT collections in the same way the kernel doesn't have to
   worry about them.

There's a second order effect caused by the randomization of the
base of the backing store, for it depends on the number of dirty
registers the processor happened to have at the time of entry into
the kernel. The second order effect is that the RSE will have a
better cache utilization as compared to having the backing store
always aligned at page boundaries. This has not been measured and
may be in practice only minimally beneficial, if at all measurable.
2003-10-28 19:38:26 +00:00
..
acpica Move the definitions for ACPI MADT table entries not present in the ACPICA 2003-09-10 06:32:27 +00:00
compile Don't need the .keep_me files. Obrien and I committed past each other. 2001-07-01 23:35:44 +00:00
conf Introduce IA64_ID_PAGE_{MASK|SHIFT|SIZE} and LOG2_ID_PAGE_SIZE. The 2003-09-09 05:59:09 +00:00
disasm Remove two unused fields in the operand structure (o_read & o_write). 2003-10-24 02:05:53 +00:00
ia32 Add sysentvec->sv_fixlimits() hook so that we can catch cases on 64 bit 2003-09-25 01:10:26 +00:00
ia64 When switching the RSE to use the kernel stack as backing store, keep 2003-10-28 19:38:26 +00:00
include The previous commit removed both clause 3 and clause 4 from the UCB 2003-10-27 22:54:34 +00:00
isa Mega busdma API commit. 2003-07-01 15:52:06 +00:00
pci Delete legacy pcib code - we can't possibly work without acpi on ia64. 2001-10-06 10:09:57 +00:00