Commit Graph

1896 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Conrad Meyer
2744a0b69b Drop CACHE_LINE_SIZE to 64 bytes on x86
The actual cache line size has always been 64 bytes.

The 128 number arose as an optimization for Core 2 era Intel processors.  By
default (configurable in BIOS), these CPUs would prefetch adjacent cache
lines unintelligently.  Newer CPUs prefetch more intelligently.

The latest Core 2 era CPU was introduced in September 2008 (Xeon 7400
series, "Dunnington").  If you are still using one of these CPUs, especially
in a multi-socket configuration, consider locating the "adjacent cache line
prefetch" option in BIOS and disabling it.

Reported by:	mjg
Reviewed by:	np
Discussed with:	jhb
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-08-28 22:28:41 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
3e902b3d76 Make WRFSBASE and WRGSBASE instructions functional.
Right now, we enable the CR4.FSGSBASE bit on CPUs which support the
facility (Ivy and later), to allow usermode to read fs and gs bases
without syscalls. This bit also controls the write access to bases
from userspace, but WRFSBASE and WRGSBASE instructions currently
cannot be used, because return path from both exceptions or interrupts
overrides bases with the values from pcb.

Supporting the instructions is useful because this means that usermode
can implement green-threads completely in userspace without issuing
syscalls to change all of the machine context.

Support is implemented by saving the fs base and user gs base when
PCB_FULL_IRET flag is set. The flag is set on the context switch,
which potentially causes clobber of the bases due to activation of
another context, and when explicit modification of the user context by
a syscall or exception handler is performed. In particular, the patch
moves setting of the flag before syscalls change context.

The changes to doreti_exit and PUSH_FRAME to clear PCB_FULL_IRET on
entry from userspace can be considered a bug fixes on its own.

Reviewed by:	jhb (previous version)
Tested by:	pho (previous version)
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	3 weeks
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12023
2017-08-21 17:38:02 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
dc6a82801d x86: Add dynamic interrupt rebalancing
Add an option to dynamically rebalance interrupts across cores
(hw.intrbalance); off by default.

The goal is to minimize preemption. By placing interrupt sources on distinct
CPUs, ithreads get preferentially scheduled on distinct CPUs.  Overall
preemption is reduced and latency is reduced. In our workflow it reduced
"fighting" between two high-frequency interrupt sources.  Reduced latency
was proven by, e.g., SPEC2008.

Submitted by:	jeff@ (earlier version)
Reviewed by:	kib@
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10435
2017-08-16 18:48:53 +00:00
Ruslan Bukin
2164af29a0 Add support for Intel Software Guard Extensions (Intel SGX).
Intel SGX allows to manage isolated compartments "Enclaves" in user VA
space. Enclaves memory is part of processor reserved memory (PRM) and
always encrypted. This allows to protect user application code and data
from upper privilege levels including OS kernel.

This includes SGX driver and optional linux ioctl compatibility layer.
Intel SGX SDK for FreeBSD is also available.

Note this requires support from hardware (available since late Intel
Skylake CPUs).

Many thanks to Robert Watson for support and Konstantin Belousov
for code review.

Project wiki: https://wiki.freebsd.org/Intel_SGX.

Reviewed by:	kib
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11113
2017-08-16 10:38:06 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
0fd7ea1f21 Add {rd,wr}{fs,gs}base C wrappers for instructions.
Tested by:	pho (as part of the larger patch)
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2017-08-14 11:20:54 +00:00
Warner Losh
9057f54d74 Fail to open efirt device when no EFI on system.
libefivar expects opening /dev/efi to indicate if the we can make efi
runtime calls. With a null routine, it was always succeeding leading
efi_variables_supported() to return the wrong value. Only succeed if
we have an efi_runtime table. Also, while I'm hear, out of an
abundance of caution, add a likely redundant check to make sure
efi_systbl is not NULL before dereferencing it. I know it can't be
NULL if efi_cfgtbl is non-NULL, but the compiler doesn't.
2017-08-08 20:44:16 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
6f240e18b5 x86: Tag some intrinsics with __pure2
Some C wrappers for x86 instructions do not touch global memory and only act
on their arguments; they can be marked __pure2, aka __const__.  Without this
annotation, Clang 3.9.1 is not intelligent enough on its own to grok that
these functions are __const__.

Submitted by:	Anton Rang <anton.rang AT isilon.com>
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-08-03 22:28:30 +00:00
Don Lewis
cd155b5603 Lower the amd64 shared page, which contains the signal trampoline,
from the top of user memory to one page lower on machines with the
Ryzen (AMD Family 17h) CPU.  This pushes ps_strings and the stack
down by one page as well.  On Ryzen there is some sort of interaction
between code running at the top of user memory address space and
interrupts that can cause FreeBSD to either hang or silently reset.
This sounds similar to the problem found with DragonFly BSD that
was fixed with this commit:
  https://gitweb.dragonflybsd.org/dragonfly.git/commitdiff/b48dd28447fc8ef62fbc963accd301557fd9ac20
but our signal trampoline location was already lower than the address
that DragonFly moved their signal trampoline to.  It also does not
appear to be related to SMT as described here:
  https://www.phoronix.com/forums/forum/hardware/processors-memory/955368-some-ryzen-linux-users-are-facing-issues-with-heavy-compilation-loads?p=955498#post955498

  "Hi, Matt Dillon here. Yes, I did find what I believe to be a
   hardware issue with Ryzen related to concurrent operations. In a
   nutshell, for any given hyperthread pair, if one hyperthread is
   in a cpu-bound loop of any kind (can be in user mode), and the
   other hyperthread is returning from an interrupt via IRETQ, the
   hyperthread issuing the IRETQ can stall indefinitely until the
   other hyperthread with the cpu-bound loop pauses (aka HLT until
   next interrupt). After this situation occurs, the system appears
   to destabilize. The situation does not occur if the cpu-bound
   loop is on a different core than the core doing the IRETQ. The
   %rip the IRETQ returns to (e.g. userland %rip address) matters a
   *LOT*. The problem occurs more often with high %rip addresses
   such as near the top of the user stack, which is where DragonFly's
   signal trampoline traditionally resides. So a user program taking
   a signal on one thread while another thread is cpu-bound can cause
   this behavior. Changing the location of the signal trampoline
   makes it more difficult to reproduce the problem. I have not
   been because the able to completely mitigate it. When a cpu-thread
   stalls in this manner it appears to stall INSIDE the microcode
   for IRETQ. It doesn't make it to the return pc, and the cpu thread
   cannot take any IPIs or other hardware interrupts while in this
   state."
since the system instability has been observed on FreeBSD with SMT
disabled.  Interrupts to appear to play a factor since running a
signal-intensive process on the first CPU core, which handles most
of the interrupts on my machine, is far more likely to trigger the
problem than running such a process on any other core.

Also lower sv_maxuser to prevent a malicious user from using mmap()
to load and execute code in the top page of user memory that was made
available when the shared page was moved down.

Make the same changes to the 64-bit Linux emulator.

PR:		219399
Reported by:	nbe@renzel.net
Reviewed by:	kib
Reviewed by:	dchagin (previous version)
Tested by:	nbe@renzel.net (earlier version)
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11780
2017-08-02 01:43:35 +00:00
Alan Cox
782e896088 Add support for pmap_enter(..., psind=1) to the amd64 pmap. In other words,
add support for explicitly requesting that pmap_enter() create a 2MB page
mapping.  (Essentially, this feature allows the machine-independent layer to
create superpage mappings preemptively, and not wait for automatic promotion
to occur.)

Export pmap_ps_enabled() to the machine-independent layer.

Add a flag to pmap_pv_insert_pde() that specifies whether it should fail or
reclaim a PV entry when one is not available.

Refactor pmap_enter_pde() into two functions, one by the same name, that is
a general-purpose function for creating PDE PG_PS mappings, and another,
pmap_enter_2mpage(), that is used to prefault 2MB read- and/or execute-only
mappings for execve(2), mmap(2), and shmat(2).

Submitted by:	Yufeng Zhou <yz70@rice.edu> (an earlier version)
Reviewed by:	kib, markj
Tested by:	pho
MFC after:	10 days
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11556
2017-07-23 06:33:58 +00:00
Ryan Libby
5e6f40bdef efi: restrict visibility of EFIABI_ATTR-declared functions
In-tree gcc (4.2) doesn't understand __attribute__((ms_abi))
(EFIABI_ATTR).  Avoid declaring functions with that attribute when the
compiler is detected to be gcc < 4.4.

Reviewed by:	kib, imp (previous version)
Approved by:	markj (mentor)
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11636
2017-07-20 06:47:06 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
eb36b1d0bc Clean up MD pollution of bus_dma.h:
--Remove special-case handling of sparc64 bus_dmamap* functions.
  Replace with a more generic mechanism that allows MD busdma
  implementations to generate inline mapping functions by
  defining WANT_INLINE_DMAMAP in <machine/bus_dma.h>.  This
  is currently useful for sparc64, x86, and arm64, which all
  implement non-load dmamap operations as simple wrappers
  around map objects which may be bus- or device-specific.

--Remove NULL-checked bus_dmamap macros.  Implement the
  equivalent NULL checks in the inlined x86 implementation.
  For non-x86 platforms, these checks are a minor pessimization
  as those platforms do not currently allow NULL maps.  NULL
  maps were originally allowed on arm64, which appears to have
  been the motivation behind adding arm[64]-specific barriers
  to bus_dma.h, but that support was removed in r299463.

--Simplify the internal interface used by the bus_dmamap_load*
  variants and move it to bus_dma_internal.h

--Fix some drivers that directly include sys/bus_dma.h
  despite the recommendations of bus_dma(9)

Reviewed by:	kib (previous revision), marius
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10729
2017-07-01 05:35:29 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
43f41dd393 Make struct syscall_args visible to userspace compilation environment
from machine/proc.h, consistently on all architectures.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	3 weeks
X-Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11080
2017-06-12 20:53:44 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
43af586011 Bump default MAXTSIZ (kern.maxtsiz) from 128MB to 32GB. The old limit
prevents one from running eg clang built with debug; the new one is
arbitrary (equal to MAXDSIZ) and... well, should be quite future-proof.

Same fix might be applicable to other 64 bit architectures; I'll ask
their respective maintainers to make sure it won't break anything.

Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10758
2017-05-17 08:38:41 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
83c9dea1ba - Remove 'struct vmmeter' from 'struct pcpu', leaving only global vmmeter
in place.  To do per-cpu stats, convert all fields that previously were
  maintained in the vmmeters that sit in pcpus to counter(9).
- Since some vmmeter stats may be touched at very early stages of boot,
  before we have set up UMA and we can do counter_u64_alloc(), provide an
  early counter mechanism:
  o Leave one spare uint64_t in struct pcpu, named pc_early_dummy_counter.
  o Point counter(9) fields of vmmeter to pcpu[0].pc_early_dummy_counter,
    so that at early stages of boot, before counters are allocated we already
    point to a counter that can be safely written to.
  o For sparc64 that required a whole dummy pcpu[MAXCPU] array.

Further related changes:
- Don't include vmmeter.h into pcpu.h.
- vm.stats.vm.v_swappgsout and vm.stats.vm.v_swappgsin changed to 64-bit,
  to match kernel representation.
- struct vmmeter hidden under _KERNEL, and only vmstat(1) is an exclusion.

This is based on benno@'s 4-year old patch:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2013-July/014471.html

Reviewed by:	kib, gallatin, marius, lidl
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10156
2017-04-17 17:34:47 +00:00
Patrick Kelsey
67d955aab4 Corrected misspelled versions of rendezvous.
The MFC will include a compat definition of smp_no_rendevous_barrier()
that calls smp_no_rendezvous_barrier().

Reviewed by:	gnn, kib
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10313
2017-04-09 02:00:03 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f434f3515b Fix printing of negative offsets (typically from frame pointers) again.
I fixed this in 1997, but the fix was over-engineered and fragile and
was broken in 2003 if not before.  i386 parameters were copied to 8
other arches verbatim, mostly after they stopped working on i386, and
mostly without the large comment saying how the values were chosen on
i386.  powerpc has a non-verbatim copy which just changes the uncritical
parameter and seems to add a sign extension bug to it.

Just treat negative offsets as offsets if they are no more negative than
-db_offset_max (default -64K), and remove all the broken parameters.

-64K is not very negative, but it is enough for frame and stack pointer
offsets since kernel stacks are small.

The over-engineering was mainly to go more negative than -64K for the
negative offset format, without affecting printing for more than a
single address.

Addresses in the top 64K of a (full 32-bit or 64-bit) address space
are now printed less well, but there aren't many interesting ones.
For arches that have many interesting ones very near the top (e.g.,
68k has interrupt vectors there), there would be no good limit for
the negative offset format and -64K is a good as anything.
2017-03-26 18:46:35 +00:00
Mark Johnston
3d6732549d Add support for 8- and 16-bit atomic_(f)cmpset to x86.
Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10068
2017-03-22 17:29:04 +00:00
Bruce Evans
ff17a6773e Don't access the reserved registers %dr4 and %dr5 on i386.
On the original i386, %dr[4-5] were unimplemented but not very clearly
reserved, so debuggers read them to print them.  i386 was still doing
this.

On the original athlon64, %dr[4-5] are documented as reserved but are
aliased to %dr[6-7] unless CR4_DE is set, when accessing them traps.

On 2 of my systems, accessing %dr[4-5] trapped sometimes.  On my Haswell
system, the apparent randomness was because the boot CPU starts with
CR4_DE set while all other CPUs start with CR4_DE clear.  FreeBSD
doesn't support the data breakpoints enabled by CR4_DE and it never
changes this flag, so the flag remains different across CPUs and
the behaviour seemed inconsistent except while booting when the CPU
doesn't change.

The invalid accesses broke:
- read access for printing the registers in ddb "show watches" on CPUs
  with CR4_DE set
- read accesses in fill_dbregs() on CPUs with CR4_DE set.  This didn't
  implement panic(3) since the user case always skipped %dr[4-5].
- write accesses in set_dbregs().  This also didn't affect userland.
  When it didn't trap, the aliasing made it fragile.

Don't print the dummy (zero) values of %dr[4-5] in "show watches" for
i386 or amd64.  Fix style bugs near this printing.

amd64 also has space in the dbregs struct for the reserved %dr[8-15]
and already didn't print the dummy values for these, and never accessed
any of the 10 reserved debug registers.

Remove cpufuncs for making the invalid accesses.  Even amd64 had these.
2017-03-17 13:49:05 +00:00
Warner Losh
fbbd9655e5 Renumber copyright clause 4
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.

Submitted by:	Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request:	https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
2017-02-28 23:42:47 +00:00
Alan Cox
0314966858 Refine the fix from r312954. Specifically, add a new PDE-only flag,
PG_PROMOTED, that indicates whether lingering 4KB page mappings might
need to be flushed on a PDE change that restricts or destroys a 2MB
page mapping.  This flag allows the pmap to avoid range invalidations
that are both unnecessary and costly.

Reviewed by:	kib, markj
MFC after:	6 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9665
2017-02-26 19:54:02 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
e2a8d17887 Bring back r313037, with fixes for mips:
Implement get_pcpu() for amd64/sparc64/mips/powerpc, and use it to
replace pcpu_find(curcpu) in MI code.

Reviewed by:	andreast, kan, lidl
Tested by:	lidl(mips, sparc64), andreast(powerpc)
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9587
2017-02-19 02:03:09 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
ad62ba6e96 Revert r313037
The switch to get_pcpu() in MI code seems to cause hangs on MIPS.
Back out until we can get a better idea of what's happening there.

Reported by:	kan, lidl
2017-02-04 06:24:49 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
65ed483615 Implement get_pcpu() for the remaining architectures and use it to
replace pcpu_find(curcpu) in MI code.
2017-02-01 03:32:49 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
5611aaa195 Use SFENCE for ordering CLFLUSHOPT.
SDM states that CLFLUSHOPT instructions can be ordered with other
writes by SFENCE, heavier MFENCE is not required.

Reviewed by:	alc
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2017-01-20 19:08:44 +00:00
Mateusz Guzik
f7c6177038 amd64: add atomic_fcmpset
Reviewed by:	kib, jhb
2017-01-03 21:00:24 +00:00
John Baldwin
0a4c51f423 Move declarations of invpcid_works and pmap_pcid_enabled to pmap.h.
Previously these were only declared under #ifdef SMP in <machine/smp.h>.
However, these variables are defind in pmap.c unconditionally, and efirt.c
references them unconditionally.  This fixes non-SMP kernel builds.

Discussed with:	kib
MFC after:	1 week
2016-10-31 18:37:05 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
83c001d3c2 Re-apply r306516 (by cem):
Reduce the cost of TLB invalidation on x86 by using per-CPU completion flags

Reduce contention during TLB invalidation operations by using a per-CPU
completion flag, rather than a single atomically-updated variable.

On a Westmere system (2 sockets x 4 cores x 1 threads), dtrace measurements
show that smp_tlb_shootdown is about 50% faster with this patch; observations
with VTune show that the percentage of time spent in invlrng_single_page on an
interrupt (actually doing invalidation, rather than synchronization) increases
from 31% with the old mechanism to 71% with the new one.  (Running a basic file
server workload.)

Submitted by:	Anton Rang <rang at acm.org>
Reviewed by:	cem (earlier version)
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8041
2016-10-04 17:01:24 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
31f575777c Revert r306516 for now, it is incomplete on i386
Noted by:	kib
2016-09-30 18:58:50 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
2965d505f6 Reduce the cost of TLB invalidation on x86 by using per-CPU completion flags
Reduce contention during TLB invalidation operations by using a per-CPU
completion flag, rather than a single atomically-updated variable.

On a Westmere system (2 sockets x 4 cores x 1 threads), dtrace measurements
show that smp_tlb_shootdown is about 50% faster with this patch; observations
with VTune show that the percentage of time spent in invlrng_single_page on an
interrupt (actually doing invalidation, rather than synchronization) increases
from 31% with the old mechanism to 71% with the new one.  (Running a basic file
server workload.)

Submitted by:	Anton Rang <rang at acm.org>
Reviewed by:	cem (earlier version), kib
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8041
2016-09-30 18:12:16 +00:00
Warner Losh
2faa9f8c8e Change the efi_get_table interface to a void ** so we can return the
pointer by dereferencing the pointer.

Reviewed by: kib@
MFC After: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc
2016-09-22 19:04:51 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
bc3ad3a179 Add kernel interfaces to call EFI Runtime Services.
Runtime services require special execution environment for the call.
Besides that, OS must inform firmware about runtime virtual memory map
which will be active during the calls, with the SetVirtualAddressMap()
runtime call, done while the 1:1 mapping is still used.  There are two
complication: the SetVirtualAddressMap() effectively must be done from
loader, which needs to know kernel address map in advance.  More,
despite not explicitely mentioned in the specification, both 1:1 and
the map passed to SetVirtualAddressMap() must be active during the
SetVirtualAddressMap() call.  Second, there are buggy BIOSes which
require both mappings active during runtime calls as well, most likely
because they fail to identify all relocations to perform.

On amd64, we can get rid of both problems by providing 1:1 mapping for
the duration of runtime calls, by temprorary remapping user addresses.
As result, we avoid the need for loader to know about future kernel
address map, and avoid bugs in BIOSes.  Typically BIOS only maps
something in low 4G.  If not runtime bugs, we would take advantage of
the DMAP, as previous versions of this patch did.

Similar but more complicated trick can be used even for i386 and 32bit
runtime, if and when the EFI boot on i386 is supported.  We would need
a trampoline page, since potentially whole 4G of VA would be switched
on calls, instead of only userspace portion on amd64.

Context switches are disabled for the duration of the call, FPU access
is granted, and interrupts are not disabled.  The later is possible
because kernel is mapped during calls.

To test, the sysctl mib debug.efi_time is provided, setting it to 1
makes one call to EFI get_time() runtime service, on success the efitm
structure is printed to the control terminal.  Load efirt.ko, or add
EFIRT option to the kernel config, to enable code.

Discussed with:	emaste, imp
Tested by:	emaste (mac, qemu)
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2016-09-21 11:31:58 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
559a7b209a Add a way for the architecture to specify the calling ABI for methods
in the EFI Runtime Services Table.  On amd64, the calling conventions
are MS.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2016-09-21 10:35:44 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
c1538a1365 Add amd64 functions to load/store GDT register, store IDT and TR registers.
Note that lgdt() name is already used for function which, besides
loading GDT, also reloads segment descriptors cache, thus new function
is named bare_lgdt().

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2016-09-21 10:10:36 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
195a6bb9e6 Export the pmap_cache_bits() and pmap_pinit_pml4() functions from the
amd64 pmap.

The new pmap_pinit_pml4() function initializes the level 4 page table
with entries for the kernel mappings.  Both functions are needed for
upcoming EFI Runtime Services support.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2016-09-21 10:05:51 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
65afaac0c3 Move pmap_p*e_index() inline functions from pmap.c to pmap.h.
They are already used in minidump code.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2016-09-20 09:38:07 +00:00
Bruce Evans
9680db5e94 Decode some REX prefixes in inst_call(). This makes the 'next' and
'until' commands work in more cases.
2016-09-15 18:30:53 +00:00
Bruce Evans
bd20334ca0 Abort single stepping in ddb if the trap is not for single-stepping.
This is not very easy to do, since ddb didn't know when traps are
for single-stepping.  It more or less assumed that traps are either
breakpoints or single-step, but even for x86 this became inadequate
with the release of the i386 in ~1986, and FreeBSD passes it other
trap types for NMIs and panics.

On x86, teach ddb when a trap is for single stepping using the %dr6
register.  Unknown traps are now treated almost the same as breakpoints
instead of as the same as single-steps.  Previously, the classification
of breakpoints was almost correct and everything else was unknown so
had to be treated as a single-step.  Now the classification of single-
steps is precise, the classification of breakpoints is almost correct
(as before) and everything else is unknown and treated like a
breakpoint.

This fixes:
- breakpoints not set by ddb, including the main one in kdb_enter(),
  were treated as single-steps and not stopped on when stepping
  (except for the usual, simple case of a step with residual count 1).
  As special cases, kdb_enter() didn't stop for fatal traps or panics
- similarly for "hardware breakpoints".

Use a new MD macro IS_SSTEP_TRAP(type, code) to code to classify
single-steps.  This is excessively complicated for bug-for-bug and
backwards compatibilty.  Design errors apparently started in Mach
in ~1990 or perhaps in the FreeBSD interface in ~1993.  Common trap
types like single steps should have a unique MI code (like the TRAP*
codes for user SIGTRAP) so that debuggers don't need macros like
IS_SSTEP_TRAP() to decode them.  But 'type' is actually an ambiguous
MD trap number, and code was always 0 (now it is (int)%dr6 on x86).
So it was impossible to determine the trap type from the args.
Global variables had to be used.

There is already a classification macro db_pc_is_single_step(), but
this just gets in the way.  It is only used to recover from bugs in
IS_BREAKPOINT_TRAP().  On some arches, IS_BREAKPOINT_TRAP() just
duplicates the ambiguity in 'type' and misclassifies single-steps as
breakpoints.  It defaults to 'false', which is the opposite of what is
needed for bug-for-bug compatibility.

When this is cleaned up, MI classification bits should be passed in
'code'.  This could be done now for positive-logic bits, since 'code'
was always 0, but some negative logic is needed for compatibility so
a simple MI classificition is not usable yet.

After reading %dr6, clear the single-step bit in it so that the type
of the next debugger trap can be decoded.  This is a little
ddb-specific.  ddb doesn't understand the need to clear this bit and
doing it before calling kdb is easiest.  gdb would need to reverse
this to support hardware breakpoints, but it just doesn't support
them now since gdbstub doesn't support %dr*.

Fix a bug involving %dr6: when emulating a single-step trap for vm86,
set the bit for it in %dr6.  Userland debuggers need this.  ddb now
needs this for vm86 bios calls.  The bit gets copied to 'code' then
cleared again.

Fix related style bugs:
- when clearing bits for hardware breakpoints in %dr6, spell the mask
  as ~0xf on both amd64 and i386 to get the correct number of bits
  using sign extension and not need a comment about using the wrong
  mask on amd64 (amd64 traps for invalid results but clearing the
  reserved top bits didn't trap since they are 0).
- rewrite my old wrong comments about using %dr6 for ddb watchpoints.
2016-09-15 17:24:23 +00:00
John Baldwin
38605d7312 Remove 'cpu' and 'cpu_class' on amd64.
The 'cpu' and 'cpu_class' variables were always set to the same value
on amd64 and are legacy holdovers from i386.  Remove them entirely on
amd64.

Reviewed by:	imp, kib (older version)
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7888
2016-09-15 17:05:54 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
cf1c47763f Add FPU_KERN_NOCTX flag to the fpu_kern_enter() function on amd64.
The flag specifies that the block which uses FPU must be executed in
critical section, i.e. take no context switches, and does not need an
FPU save area during the execution.

It is intended to be applied around fast and short code pathes where
save area allocation is impossible or undesirable, due to context or
due to the relative cost of calculation vs. allocation.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2016-09-11 09:14:07 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1a5735873e On amd64, declare sse2_pagezero() and start using it again, but only
for zeroing pages in idle where nontemporal writes are clearly best.
This is almost a no-op since zeroing in idle works does nothing good
and is off by default.  Fix END() statement forgotten in previous
commit.

Align the loop in sse2_pagezero().  Since it writes to main memory,
the loop doesn't have to be very carefully written to keep up.
Unrolling it was considered useless or harmful and was not done on
i386, but that was too careless.

Timing for i386: the loop was not unrolled at all, and moved only 4
bytes/iteration.  So on a 2GHz CPU, it needed to run at 2 cycles/
iteration to keep up with a memory speed of just 4GB/sec.  But when
it crossed a 16-byte boundary, on old CPUs it ran at 3 cycles/
iteration so it gave a maximum speed of 2.67GB/sec and couldn't even
keep up with PC3200 memory.  Fix the alignment so that it keep up with
4GB/sec memory, and unroll once to get nearer to 8GB/sec.  Further
unrolling might be useless or harmful since it would prevent the loop
fitting in 16-bytes.  My test system with an old CPU and old DDR1 only
needed 5+ GB/sec.  My test system with a new CPU and DDR3 doesn't need
any changes to keep up ~16GB/sec.

Timing for amd64: with 8-byte accesses and newer faster CPUs it is
easy to reach 16GB/sec but not so easy to go much faster.  The
alignment doesn't matter much if the CPU is not very old.  The loop
was already unrolled 4 times, but needs 32 bytes and uses a fancy
method that doesn't work for 2-way unrolling in 16 bytes.  Just
align it to 32-bytes.
2016-08-29 13:07:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
a47632d45b Fix build for !SMP kernels after the Xen MSIX workaround.
Move msix_disable_migration under #ifdef SMP since it doesn't make sense
for !SMP kernels.

PR:		212014
Reported by:	Glyn Grinstead <glyn@grinstead.org>
MFC after:	3 days
2016-08-22 21:23:17 +00:00
Alexander Motin
fb112f72a8 Add more UEFI/e820 memory types from latest specifications.
This is only cosmetics.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2016-07-24 09:15:11 +00:00
Roger Pau Monné
302244700f xen: automatically disable MSI-X interrupt migration
If the hypervisor version is smaller than 4.6.0. Xen commits 74fd00 and
70a3cb are required on the hypervisor side for this to be fixed, and those
are only included in 4.6.0, so stay on the safe side and disable MSI-X
interrupt migration on anything older than 4.6.0.

It should not cause major performance degradation unless a lot of MSI-X
interrupts are allocated.

Sponsored by:		Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after:		3 days
Reviewed by:		jhb
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7148
2016-07-12 08:43:09 +00:00
Nathan Whitehorn
96c85efb4b Replace a number of conflations of mp_ncpus and mp_maxid with either
mp_maxid or CPU_FOREACH() as appropriate. This fixes a number of places in
the kernel that assumed CPU IDs are dense in [0, mp_ncpus) and would try,
for example, to run tasks on CPUs that did not exist or to allocate too
few buffers on systems with sparse CPU IDs in which there are holes in the
range and mp_maxid > mp_ncpus. Such circumstances generally occur on
systems with SMT, but on which SMT is disabled. This patch restores system
operation at least on POWER8 systems configured in this way.

There are a number of other places in the kernel with potential problems
in these situations, but where sparse CPU IDs are not currently known
to occur, mostly in the ARM machine-dependent code. These will be fixed
in a follow-up commit after the stable/11 branch.

PR:		kern/210106
Reviewed by:	jhb
Approved by:	re (glebius)
2016-07-06 14:09:49 +00:00
Sepherosa Ziehau
dfdc9a05c6 atomic: Add testandclear on i386/amd64
Reviewed by:	kib
Sponsored by:	Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6381
2016-05-16 07:19:33 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
56e61f57b0 Eliminate pvh_global_lock from the amd64 pmap.
The only current purpose of the pvh lock was explained there
On Wed, Jan 09, 2013 at 11:46:13PM -0600, Alan Cox wrote:
> Let me lay out one example for you in detail.  Suppose that we have
> three processors and two of these processors are actively using the same
> pmap.  Now, one of the two processors sharing the pmap performs a
> pmap_remove().  Suppose that one of the removed mappings is to a
> physical page P.  Moreover, suppose that the other processor sharing
> that pmap has this mapping cached with write access in its TLB.  Here's
> where the trouble might begin.  As you might expect, the processor
> performing the pmap_remove() will acquire the fine-grained lock on the
> PV list for page P before destroying the mapping to page P.  Moreover,
> this processor will ensure that the vm_page's dirty field is updated
> before releasing that PV list lock.  However, the TLB shootdown for this
> mapping may not be initiated until after the PV list lock is released.
> The processor performing the pmap_remove() is not problematic, because
> the code being executed by that processor won't presume that the mapping
> is destroyed until the TLB shootdown has completed and pmap_remove() has
> returned.  However, the other processor sharing the pmap could be
> problematic.  Specifically, suppose that the third processor is
> executing the page daemon and concurrently trying to reclaim page P.
> This processor performs a pmap_remove_all() on page P in preparation for
> reclaiming the page.  At this instant, the PV list for page P may
> already be empty but our second processor still has a stale TLB entry
> mapping page P.  So, changes might still occur to the page after the
> page daemon believes that all mappings have been destroyed.  (If the PV
> entry had still existed, then the pmap lock would have ensured that the
> TLB shootdown completed before the pmap_remove_all() finished.)  Note,
> however, the page daemon will know that the page is dirty.  It can't
> possibly mistake a dirty page for a clean one.  However, without the
> current pvh global locking, I don't think anything is stopping the page
> daemon from starting the laundering process before the TLB shootdown has
> completed.
>
> I believe that a similar example could be constructed with a clean page
> P' and a stale read-only TLB entry.  In this case, the page P' could be
> "cached" in the cache/free queues and recycled before the stale TLB
> entry is flushed.

TLBs for addresses with updated PTEs are always flushed before pmap
lock is unlocked.  On the other hand, amd64 pmap code does not always
flushes TLBs before PV list locks are unlocked, if previously PTEs
were cleared and PV entries removed.

To handle the situations where a thread might notice empty PV list but
third thread still having access to the page due to TLB invalidation
not finished yet, introduce delayed invalidation.  Comparing with the
pvh_global_lock, DI does not block entered thread when
pmap_remove_all() or pmap_remove_write() (callers of
pmap_delayed_invl_wait()) are executed in parallel.  But _invl_wait()
callers are blocked until all previously noted DI blocks are leaved,
thus ensuring that neccessary TLB invalidations were performed before
returning from pmap_remove_all() or pmap_remove_write().

See comments for detailed description of the mechanism, and also for
the explanations why several pmap methods, most important
pmap_enter(), do not need DI protection.

Reviewed by:	alc, jhb (turnstile KPI usage)
Tested by:	pho (previous version)
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5747
2016-05-14 23:35:11 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
aa3ec63e02 Add locking annotations to amd64 struct md_page members.
Reviewed by:	alc
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2016-05-10 09:58:51 +00:00
John Baldwin
8d791e5af1 Add a new bus method to fetch device-specific CPU sets.
bus_get_cpus() returns a specified set of CPUs for a device.  It accepts
an enum for the second parameter that indicates the type of cpuset to
request.  Currently two valus are supported:

 - LOCAL_CPUS (on x86 this returns all the CPUs in the package closest to
   the device when DEVICE_NUMA is enabled)
 - INTR_CPUS (like LOCAL_CPUS but only returns 1 SMT thread for each core)

For systems that do not support NUMA (or if it is not enabled in the kernel
config), LOCAL_CPUS fails with EINVAL.  INTR_CPUS is mapped to 'all_cpus'
by default.  The idea is that INTR_CPUS should always return a valid set.

Device drivers which want to use per-CPU interrupts should start using
INTR_CPUS instead of simply assigning interrupts to all available CPUs.
In the future we may wish to add tunables to control the policy of
INTR_CPUS (e.g. should it be local-only or global, should it ignore
SMT threads or not).

The x86 nexus driver exposes the internal set of interrupt CPUs from the
the x86 interrupt code via INTR_CPUS.

The ACPI bus driver and PCI bridge drivers use _PXM to return a suitable
LOCAL_CPUS set when _PXM exists and DEVICE_NUMA is enabled.  They also and
the global INTR_CPUS set from the nexus driver with the per-domain set from
_PXM to generate a local INTR_CPUS set for child devices.

Compared to the r298933, this version uses 'struct _cpuset' in
<sys/bus.h> instead of 'cpuset_t' to avoid requiring <sys/param.h>
(<sys/_cpuset.h> still requires <sys/param.h> for MAXCPU even though
<sys/_bitset.h> does not after recent changes).
2016-05-09 20:50:21 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
edafb5a327 sys/amd64: Small spelling fixes.
No functional change.
2016-05-03 22:13:04 +00:00
John Baldwin
8a08b7d36b Revert bus_get_cpus() for now.
I really thought I had run this through the tinderbox before committing,
but many places need <sys/types.h> -> <sys/param.h> for <sys/bus.h> now.
2016-05-03 01:17:40 +00:00