Commit Graph

1449 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Marius Strobl
9d9a12b8d1 On sparc64 machines with multiple host-PCI-bridges these bridges
have separate configuration spaces so by definition they implement
different PCI domains. Thus change psycho(4) to use PCI domains
instead of reenumerating all PCI busses so they have globally unique
bus numbers and drop support for reenumerating busses in the OFW PCI
code.
According to CVS history reenumeration was also required in order to
get some E450 to boot but given that no other open source kernel
changes the PCI bus numbers assigned by the firmware I believe the
real problem was that the old code used the bus number as the device
number for the PCI busses and unlike most of the other machines the
firmwares of the problematic ones don't use disjoint PCI bus numbers
across the host-PCI-bridges.

MFC after:	1 month
2008-04-17 12:38:00 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
9b33b154b5 - Add the interrupt vector number to intr_event_create so MI code can
lookup hard interrupt events by number.  Ignore the irq# for soft intrs.
 - Add support to cpuset for binding hardware interrupts.  This has the
   side effect of binding any ithread associated with the hard interrupt.
   As per restrictions imposed by MD code we can only bind interrupts to
   a single cpu presently.  Interrupts can be 'unbound' by binding them
   to all cpus.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-04-11 03:26:41 +00:00
Marius Strobl
a6c165e468 - Add support for IPI_PREEMPT. [1]
- Add my copyright to mp_machdep.c for having implemented support for
  USIII and up and some fixes.

Obtained from:	sun4v (modulo style(9) bugs) [1]
2008-04-09 21:14:01 +00:00
John Baldwin
1ee1b68792 Add a MI intr_event_handle() routine for the non-INTR_FILTER case. This
allows all the INTR_FILTER #ifdef's to be removed from the MD interrupt
code.
- Rename the intr_event 'eoi', 'disable', and 'enable' hooks to
  'post_filter', 'pre_ithread', and 'post_ithread' to be less x86-centric.
  Also, add a comment describe what the MI code expects them to do.
- On amd64, i386, and powerpc this is effectively a NOP.
- On arm, don't bother masking the interrupt unless the ithread is
  scheduled in the non-INTR_FILTER case to match what INTR_FILTER did.
  Also, don't bother unmasking the interrupt in the post_filter case if
  we never masked it.  The INTR_FILTER case had been doing this by having
  arm_unmask_irq for the post_filter (formerly 'eoi') hook.
- On ia64, stray interrupts are now masked for the non-INTR_FILTER case.
  They were already masked in the INTR_FILTER case.
- On sparc64, use the a NULL pre_ithread hook and use intr_enable_eoi() for
  both the 'post_filter' and 'post_ithread' hooks to match what the
  non-INTR_FILTER code did.
- On sun4v, retire the ithread wrapper hack by using an appropriate
  'post_ithread' hook instead (it's what 'post_ithread'/'enable' was
  designed to do even in 5.x).

Glanced at by:	piso
Reviewed by:	marius
Requested by:	marius [1], [5]
Tested on:	amd64, i386, arm, sparc64
2008-04-05 19:58:30 +00:00
Doug Rabson
fa9d9930ca Add kernel module support for nfslockd and krpc. Use the module system
to detect (or load) kernel NLM support in rpc.lockd. Remove the '-k'
option to rpc.lockd and make kernel NLM the default. A user can still
force the use of the old user NLM by building a kernel without NFSLOCKD
and/or removing the nfslockd.ko module.
2008-03-27 11:54:20 +00:00
John Birrell
e483943791 When building a kernel module, define MAXCPU the same as SMP so
that modules work with and without SMP.
2008-03-27 05:03:26 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
e465985885 The "free-lance" timer in the i8254 is only used for the speaker
these days, so de-generalize the acquire_timer/release_timer api
to just deal with speakers.

The new (optional) MD functions are:
	timer_spkr_acquire()
	timer_spkr_release()
and
	timer_spkr_setfreq()

the last of which configures the timer to generate a tone of a given
frequency, in Hz instead of 1/1193182th of seconds.

Drop entirely timer2 on pc98, it is not used anywhere at all.

Move sysbeep() to kern/tty_cons.c and use the timer_spkr*() if
they exist, and do nothing otherwise.

Remove prototypes and empty acquire-/release-timer() and sysbeep()
functions from the non-beeping archs.

This eliminate the need for the speaker driver to know about
i8254frequency at all.  In theory this makes the speaker driver MI,
contingent on the timer_spkr_*() functions existing but the driver
does not know this yet and still attaches to the ISA bus.

Syscons is more tricky, in one function, sc_tone(), it knows the hz
and things are just fine.

In the other function, sc_bell() it seems to get the period from
the KDMKTONE ioctl in terms if 1/1193182th second, so we hardcode
the 1193182 and leave it at that.  It's probably not important.

Change a few other sysbeep() uses which obviously knew that the
argument was in terms of i8254 frequency, and leave alone those
that look like people thought sysbeep() took frequency in hertz.

This eliminates the knowledge of i8254_freq from all but the actual
clock.c code and the prof_machdep.c on amd64 and i386, where I think
it would be smart to ask for help from the timecounters anyway [TBD].
2008-03-26 20:09:21 +00:00
Marius Strobl
5259569262 - Const'ify the bus_stream_asi and bus_type_asi arrays.
- Replace hard-coded functions names missed in bus_machdep.c rev. 1.44
  with __func__.
- Break some long lines.

MFC after:	1 month
2008-03-24 17:57:01 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
ab35440fa1 Oops. Use atomic_add_long() for atomic_fetchadd_long() (not atomic_add_int())
for sparc64 and sun4v.

Noticed by:	marius
2008-03-19 07:27:24 +00:00
John Baldwin
6d2d1c044f Simplify the interrupt code a bit:
- Always include the ie_disable and ie_eoi methods in 'struct intr_event'
  and collapse down to one intr_event_create() routine.  The disable and
  eoi hooks simply aren't used currently in the !INTR_FILTER case.
- Expand 'disab' to 'disable' in a few places.
- Use function casts for arm and i386:intr_eoi_src() instead of wrapper
  routines since to trim one extra indirection.

Compiled on:	{arm,amd64,i386,ia64,ppc,sparc64} x {FILTER, !FILTER}
Tested on:	{amd64,i386} x {FILTER, !FILTER}
2008-03-17 22:42:01 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
6eb4157ffc Implement atomic_fetchadd_long() for all architectures and document it.
Reviewed by:	attilio, jhb, jeff, kris (as a part of the uidinfo_waitfree.patch)
2008-03-16 21:20:50 +00:00
Robert Watson
237fdd787b In keeping with style(9)'s recommendations on macros, use a ';'
after each SYSINIT() macro invocation.  This makes a number of
lightweight C parsers much happier with the FreeBSD kernel
source, including cflow's prcc and lxr.

MFC after:	1 month
Discussed with:	imp, rink
2008-03-16 10:58:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
eaf86d1678 Add preliminary support for binding interrupts to CPUs:
- Add a new intr_event method ie_assign_cpu() that is invoked when the MI
  code wishes to bind an interrupt source to an individual CPU.  The MD
  code may reject the binding with an error.  If an assign_cpu function
  is not provided, then the kernel assumes the platform does not support
  binding interrupts to CPUs and fails all requests to do so.
- Bind ithreads to CPUs on their next execution loop once an interrupt
  event is bound to a CPU.  Only shared ithreads are bound.  We currently
  leave private ithreads for drivers using filters + ithreads in the
  INTR_FILTER case unbound.
- A new intr_event_bind() routine is used to bind an interrupt event to
  a CPU.
- Implement binding on amd64 and i386 by way of the existing pic_assign_cpu
  PIC method.
- For x86, provide a 'intr_bind(IRQ, cpu)' wrapper routine that looks up
  an interrupt source and binds its interrupt event to the specified CPU.
  MI code can currently (ab)use this by doing:

	intr_bind(rman_get_start(irq_res), cpu);

  however, I plan to add a truly MI interface (probably a bus_bind_intr(9))
  where the implementation in the x86 nexus(4) driver would end up calling
  intr_bind() internally.

Requested by:	kmacy, gallatin, jeff
Tested on:	{amd64, i386} x {regular, INTR_FILTER}
2008-03-14 19:41:48 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
6617724c5f Remove kernel support for M:N threading.
While the KSE project was quite successful in bringing threading to
FreeBSD, the M:N approach taken by the kse library was never developed
to its full potential.  Backwards compatibility will be provided via
libmap.conf for dynamically linked binaries and static binaries will
be broken.
2008-03-12 10:12:01 +00:00
Pyun YongHyeon
44858c36f8 Uncomment vr(4), vr(4) should work on all architectures. 2008-03-11 05:09:03 +00:00
Marius Strobl
d8ef604544 - Fix some style bugs.
- Replace hard-coded functions names missed in rev. 1.44 with __func__.

MFC after:	1 week
2008-03-09 17:09:15 +00:00
Marius Strobl
d5295d0b09 - Do as the comment in pmap_bootstrap() suggests and flush all non-locked
TLB entries possibly left over by the firmware and also do so while
  bootstrapping APs.
- Use __FBSDID.

MFC after:	1 month
2008-03-09 15:53:34 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
81aa71755b - Remove the old smp cpu topology specification with a new, more flexible
tree structure that encodes the level of cache sharing and other
   properties.
 - Provide several convenience functions for creating one and two level
   cpu trees as well as a default flat topology.  The system now always
   has some topology.
 - On i386 and amd64 create a seperate level in the hierarchy for HTT
   and multi-core cpus.  This will allow the scheduler to intelligently
   load balance non-uniform cores.  Presently we don't detect what level
   of the cache hierarchy is shared at each level in the topology.
 - Add a mechanism for testing common topologies that have more information
   than the MD code is able to provide via the kern.smp.topology tunable.
   This should be considered a debugging tool only and not a stable api.

Sponsored by:	Nokia
2008-03-02 07:58:42 +00:00
Marius Strobl
559921043b The Sun disk label only uses 16-bit fields for cylinders, heads and
sectors so the geometry of large IDE disks has to be adjusted. This
corresponds to what the OpenSolaris dad(7D) driver does except that
the latter only tweaks sectors and effectively limits the mediasize
to 128GB so the cylinders and heads fields won't ever overflow. Not
limiting the mediasize is a compromise between allowing to use Sun
disk label as far as possible and being able to use the entire disk
with another disk label.
This allows to use the full capacity of large IDE disks if they were
not labeled under (Open)Solaris (in both ways of the meaning).

MFC after:	2 weeks
2008-02-11 21:40:22 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
007b1b7bae Add a wrapper function that bound checks writes to the dump device. 2008-01-28 19:04:07 +00:00
Pyun YongHyeon
23f7072d31 Uncomment sf(4), sf(4) should work on all architectures. 2008-01-21 06:51:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
5965c4b71c Add COMPAT_FREEBSD7 and enable it in configs that have COMPAT_FREEBSD6. 2008-01-07 21:40:11 +00:00
Alan Cox
eb2a051720 Add an access type parameter to pmap_enter(). It will be used to implement
superpage promotion.

Correct a style error in kmem_malloc(): pmap_enter()'s last parameter is
a Boolean.
2008-01-03 07:34:34 +00:00
Alan Cox
b8e7fc24fe Add configuration knobs for the superpage reservation system. Initially,
the reservation will only be enabled on amd64.
2007-12-27 16:45:39 +00:00
Alan Cox
c07f36f742 Update two tracepoints, i.e., CTRx() invocations, to reflect the demise of
page coloring a few months ago.
2007-12-27 03:52:14 +00:00
Robert Watson
3de213cc00 Add a new 'why' argument to kdb_enter(), and a set of constants to use
for that argument.  This will allow DDB to detect the broad category of
reason why the debugger has been entered, which it can use for the
purposes of deciding which DDB script to run.

Assign approximate why values to all current consumers of the
kdb_enter() interface.
2007-12-25 17:52:02 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
0da7aa7a7d Add stubs to unbreak LINT. 2007-12-07 13:45:47 +00:00
Robert Watson
3c90d1ea74 Break out stack(9) from ddb(4):
- Introduce per-architecture stack_machdep.c to hold stack_save(9).
- Introduce per-architecture machine/stack.h to capture any common
  definitions required between db_trace.c and stack_machdep.c.
- Add new kernel option "options STACK"; we will build in stack(9) if it is
  defined, or also if "options DDB" is defined to provide compatibility
  with existing users of stack(9).

Add new stack_save_td(9) function, which allows the capture of a stacktrace
of another thread rather than the current thread, which the existing
stack_save(9) was limited to.  It requires that the thread be neither
swapped out nor running, which is the responsibility of the consumer to
enforce.

Update stack(9) man page.

Build tested:	amd64, arm, i386, ia64, powerpc, sparc64, sun4v
Runtime tested:	amd64 (rwatson), arm (cognet), i386 (rwatson)
2007-12-02 20:40:35 +00:00
Marius Strobl
ddcde502eb Fix a non-fatal off-by-one error in the previous revision. 2007-12-01 19:42:33 +00:00
Marius Strobl
9c13c513ad - Add the PCI side of the HOST-PCI bridge itself to the bus. This
is required by the X.Org PCI domains code and additionally needs
  a workaround for Hummingbird and Sabre bridges as these don't
  allow their config headers to be read at any width, which is an
  unusual behavior.
- In psycho(4) take advantage of DEFINE_CLASS_0 and use more
  appropriate types for some softc members.

MFC after:	3 days
2007-11-30 23:02:42 +00:00
Attilio Rao
573c6b82df Make ADAPTIVE_GIANT as the default in the kernel and remove the option.
Currently, Giant is not too much contented so that it is ok to treact it
like any other mutexes.

Please don't forget to update your own custom config kernel files.

Approved by:	cognet, marcel (maintainers of arches where option is
		not enabled at the moment)
2007-11-28 05:50:45 +00:00
Scott Long
8611774e5e Extend critical section coverage in the low-level interrupt handlers to
include the ithread scheduling step.  Without this, a preemption might
occur in between the interrupt getting masked and the ithread getting
scheduled.  Since the interrupt handler runs in the context of curthread,
the scheudler might see it as having a such a low priority on a busy system
that it doesn't get to run for a _long_ time, leaving the interrupt stranded
in a disabled state.  The only way that the preemption can happen is by
a fast/filter handler triggering a schduling event earlier in the handler,
so this problem can only happen for cases where an interrupt is being
shared by both a fast/filter handler and an ithread handler.  Unfortunately,
it seems to be common for this sharing to happen with network and USB
devices, for example.  This fixes many of the mysterious TCP session
timeouts and NIC watchdogs that were being reported.  Many thanks to Sam
Lefler for getting to the bottom of this problem.

Reviewed by: jhb, jeff, silby
2007-11-21 04:03:51 +00:00
Marius Strobl
e393af8462 Let sunkbd(4) emulate an AT keyboard by default.
This has the following benefits:
- allows to use the AT keyboard maps in share/syscons/keymaps with
  sunkbd(4),
- allows to use kbdmux(4) with sunkbd(4),
- allows Sun RS232 keyboards to be configured and used the same
  way as Sun USB keyboards driven by ukbd(4) (which also does AT
  keyboard emulation) with X.Org, putting an end to the problem
  of native support for the former in X.Org being broken over and
  over again.

MFC after:	3 days
2007-11-18 18:11:16 +00:00
Alan Cox
59677d3c0e Prevent the leakage of wired pages in the following circumstances:
First, a file is mmap(2)ed and then mlock(2)ed.  Later, it is truncated.
Under "normal" circumstances, i.e., when the file is not mlock(2)ed, the
pages beyond the EOF are unmapped and freed.  However, when the file is
mlock(2)ed, the pages beyond the EOF are unmapped but not freed because
they have a non-zero wire count.  This can be a mistake.  Specifically,
it is a mistake if the sole reason why the pages are wired is because of
wired, managed mappings.  Previously, unmapping the pages destroys these
wired, managed mappings, but does not reduce the pages' wire count.
Consequently, when the file is unmapped, the pages are not unwired
because the wired mapping has been destroyed.  Moreover, when the vm
object is finally destroyed, the pages are leaked because they are still
wired.  The fix is to reduce the pages' wired count by the number of
wired, managed mappings destroyed.  To do this, I introduce a new pmap
function pmap_page_wired_mappings() that returns the number of managed
mappings to the given physical page that are wired, and I use this
function in vm_object_page_remove().

Reviewed by: tegge
MFC after: 6 weeks
2007-11-17 22:52:29 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
0c3967e7fe o Rename cpu_thread_setup() to cpu_thread_alloc() to better
communicate that it relates to (is called by) thread_alloc()
o  Add cpu_thread_free() which is called from thread_free()
   to counter-act cpu_thread_alloc().

i386:	Have cpu_thread_free() call cpu_thread_clean() to
	preserve behaviour.
ia64:	Have cpu_thread_free() call mtx_destroy() for the
	mutex initialized in cpu_thread_alloc().

PR: ia64/118024
2007-11-14 20:21:54 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
89b57fcf01 Fix for the panic("vm_thread_new: kstack allocation failed") and
silent NULL pointer dereference in the i386 and sparc64 pmap_pinit()
when the kmem_alloc_nofault() failed to allocate address space. Both
functions now return error instead of panicing or dereferencing NULL.

As consequence, vmspace_exec() and vmspace_unshare() returns the errno
int. struct vmspace arg was added to vm_forkproc() to avoid dealing
with failed allocation when most of the fork1() job is already done.

The kernel stack for the thread is now set up in the thread_alloc(),
that itself may return NULL. Also, allocation of the first process
thread is performed in the fork1() to properly deal with stack
allocation failure. proc_linkup() is separated into proc_linkup()
called from fork1(), and proc_linkup0(), that is used to set up the
kernel process (was known as swapper).

In collaboration with:	Peter Holm
Reviewed by:	jhb
2007-11-05 11:36:16 +00:00
Marius Strobl
3718612847 - Make failure to route a ISA interrupt non fatal. Apparently the
Blade 1500/SX1500 boards have inherited the firmware bug of the
  AX1105 mainboards to not include an interrupt map entry for the
  parallel port controller (for the AX1105 the heuristic code for
  E450s probably erroneously kicks in and guesses an interrupt).
- Take advantage of bus_generic_setup_intr(9).
- Fix some whitespace bugs.
2007-10-28 22:08:37 +00:00
Marius Strobl
77ddefb873 - Fix the handling of R_SPARC_OLO10, which is a bit of a special case
in the way we implement handling of relocations.
  As for the kernel part this fixes the loading of lots of modules,
  which failed to load due to unresolvable symbols when built after
  the GCC 4.2.0 import. This wasn't due to a change in GCC itself
  though but one of several changes in configuration done along the
  import. Specfically, HAVE_AS_REGISTER_PSEUDO_OP, which causes GCC
  to denote global registers used for scratch purposes and in turn
  GAS uses R_SPARC_OLO10 relocations for, is now defined.
  While at it replace some more ELF_R_TYPE which should have been
  ELF64_R_TYPE_ID but didn't cause problems so far.
- Sync a sanity check between kernel and rtld(1) and change it to be
  maintenance free regarding the type used for the lookup table.
- Sprinkle const on lookup tables.
- Use __FBSDID.

Reported and tested by:	yongari
MFC after:		5 days
2007-10-16 19:17:48 +00:00
Alan Cox
dc9250f55c Correct a lock assertion failure in sparc64's pmap_page_is_mapped() that is
a consequence of sparc64/sparc64/vm_machdep.c revision 1.76.  It occurs
when uma_small_free() frees a page.  The solution has two parts: (1) Mark
pages allocated with VM_ALLOC_NOOBJ as PG_UNMANAGED.  (2) Defer the lock
assertion in pmap_page_is_mapped() until after PG_UNMANAGED is tested.
This is safe because both PG_UNMANAGED and PG_FICTITIOUS are immutable
flags, i.e., they do not change state between the time that a page is
allocated and freed.

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
PR:		116794
2007-10-07 18:03:03 +00:00
Marius Strobl
55aaf894e8 Make the PCI code aware of PCI domains (aka PCI segments) so we can
support machines having multiple independently numbered PCI domains
and don't support reenumeration without ambiguity amongst the
devices as seen by the OS and represented by PCI location strings.
This includes introducing a function pci_find_dbsf(9) which works
like pci_find_bsf(9) but additionally takes a domain number argument
and limiting pci_find_bsf(9) to only search devices in domain 0 (the
only domain in single-domain systems). Bge(4) and ofw_pcibus(4) are
changed to use pci_find_dbsf(9) instead of pci_find_bsf(9) in order
to no longer report false positives when searching for siblings and
dupe devices in the same domain respectively.
Along with this change the sole host-PCI bridge driver converted to
actually make use of PCI domain support is uninorth(4), the others
continue to use domain 0 only for now and need to be converted as
appropriate later on.
Note that this means that the format of the location strings as used
by pciconf(8) has been changed and that consumers of <sys/pciio.h>
potentially need to be recompiled.

Suggested by:	jhb
Reviewed by:	grehan, jhb, marcel
Approved by:	re (kensmith), jhb (PCI maintainer hat)
2007-09-30 11:05:18 +00:00
Marius Strobl
ae3b789193 - Use the actual clock frequency of the PCI bus instead of assuming
33MHz for calculating the latency timer values for its children.
  Inspired by NetBSD doing the same and Linux as well as OpenSolaris
  using a similar approach.
  While at it rename a variable and change its type to be more
  appropriate fuer values of PCI properties so the variable can be
  more easily reused.
- Initialize the cache line size register of PCI devices to a
  legal value; the cache line size is limited to 64 bytes by the
  Fireplane/Safari, JBus and UPA interconnection busses. Setting
  it to an unsupported value caused bad performance at least with
  GEM as it causes them to not do cache line bursts and to not
  issue cache line commands on the PCI bus.

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
MFC after:	1 week
2007-09-26 20:10:36 +00:00
Christian Brueffer
4fabde5686 Use the correct expanded name for SCTP.
PR:		116496
Submitted by:	koitsu
Reviewed by:	rrs
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-26 20:05:07 +00:00
Alan Cox
7bfda801a8 Change the management of cached pages (PQ_CACHE) in two fundamental
ways:

(1) Cached pages are no longer kept in the object's resident page
splay tree and memq.  Instead, they are kept in a separate per-object
splay tree of cached pages.  However, access to this new per-object
splay tree is synchronized by the _free_ page queues lock, not to be
confused with the heavily contended page queues lock.  Consequently, a
cached page can be reclaimed by vm_page_alloc(9) without acquiring the
object's lock or the page queues lock.

This solves a problem independently reported by tegge@ and Isilon.
Specifically, they observed the page daemon consuming a great deal of
CPU time because of pages bouncing back and forth between the cache
queue (PQ_CACHE) and the inactive queue (PQ_INACTIVE).  The source of
this problem turned out to be a deadlock avoidance strategy employed
when selecting a cached page to reclaim in vm_page_select_cache().
However, the root cause was really that reclaiming a cached page
required the acquisition of an object lock while the page queues lock
was already held.  Thus, this change addresses the problem at its
root, by eliminating the need to acquire the object's lock.

Moreover, keeping cached pages in the object's primary splay tree and
memq was, in effect, optimizing for the uncommon case.  Cached pages
are reclaimed far, far more often than they are reactivated.  Instead,
this change makes reclamation cheaper, especially in terms of
synchronization overhead, and reactivation more expensive, because
reactivated pages will have to be reentered into the object's primary
splay tree and memq.

(2) Cached pages are now stored alongside free pages in the physical
memory allocator's buddy queues, increasing the likelihood that large
allocations of contiguous physical memory (i.e., superpages) will
succeed.

Finally, as a result of this change long-standing restrictions on when
and where a cached page can be reclaimed and returned by
vm_page_alloc(9) are eliminated.  Specifically, calls to
vm_page_alloc(9) specifying VM_ALLOC_INTERRUPT can now reclaim and
return a formerly cached page.  Consequently, a call to malloc(9)
specifying M_NOWAIT is less likely to fail.

Discussed with: many over the course of the summer, including jeff@,
   Justin Husted @ Isilon, peter@, tegge@
Tested by: an earlier version by kris@
Approved by: re (kensmith)
2007-09-25 06:25:06 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
b61ce5b0e6 - Move all of the PS_ flags into either p_flag or td_flags.
- p_sflag was mostly protected by PROC_LOCK rather than the PROC_SLOCK or
   previously the sched_lock.  These bugs have existed for some time.
 - Allow swapout to try each thread in a process individually and then
   swapin the whole process if any of these fail.  This allows us to move
   most scheduler related swap flags into td_flags.
 - Keep ki_sflag for backwards compat but change all in source tools to
   use the new and more correct location of P_INMEM.

Reported by:	pho
Reviewed by:	attilio, kib
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-17 05:31:39 +00:00
Alan Cox
6bce07ae73 It has been observed on the mailing lists that the different categories
of pages don't sum to anywhere near the total number of pages on amd64.
This is for the most part because uma_small_alloc() pages have never been
counted as wired pages, like their kmem_malloc() brethren.  They should
be.  This changes fixes that.

It is no longer necessary for the page queues lock to be held to free
pages allocated by uma_small_alloc().  I removed the acquisition and
release of the page queues lock from uma_small_free() on amd64 and ia64
weeks ago.  This patch updates the other architectures that have
uma_small_alloc() and uma_small_free().

Approved by: re (kensmith)
2007-09-15 18:47:02 +00:00
Marius Strobl
7439368f60 o Revamp the sparc64 interrupt code in order to be able to interface
with the INTR_FILTER-enabled MI code. Basically this consists of
  registering an interrupt controller (of which there can be multiple
  and optionally different ones either per host-to-foo bridge or shared
  amongst host-to-foo bridges in any one machine) along with an interrupt
  vector as specific argument for all the interrupt vectors used by a
  given host-to-foo bridge (roughly similar to registering interrupt
  sources on amd64 and i386), providing functions to enable, clear and
  disable the interrupts of the children beneath the bridge.
  This also includes:
  - No longer entering a critical section in tl0_intr() and tl1_intr()
    for executing interrupt handlers but rather let the handlers enter
    it themselves so in the case of intr_event_handle() we don't enter
    a nested critical section.
  - Adding infrastructure for binding delivery of interrupt vectors to
    specific CPUs which later on can be interfaced with the code from
    amd64/i386 for binding interrupts to specific CPUs.
  - Getting rid of the wrapper hack introduced along the lines of the
    API changes for INTR_FILTER which as a side-effect caused interrupts
    associated with ithread handlers only to get the elevated priority
    of those associated with filters ("fast handlers") (this removes the
    hack also in the non-INTR_FILTER case).
  - Disabling (by not clearing) an interrupt in the interrupt controller
    until all associated handlers have been executed, which is crucial
    for the typical locking strategy of NIC drivers in order to work
    correctly in case of shared interrupts. This was a more or less
    theoretical problem on sparc64 though, as shared interrupts are
    rather uncommon there except for the on-board SCCs and UARTs.
  Note that due to the behavior of at least of some of the interrupt
  controllers used on sparc64 an enable+EOI instead of a disable+EOI
  approach (as implied by the INTR_FILTER MI code and implemented on
  other architectures) is used as the latter can cause lost interrupts
  or in the worst case interrupt starvation.
o Correct a typo in sbus_alloc_resource() which caused (pass-through)
  allocations to only work down to the grandchildren of the bus, which
  wasn't a real problem so far as we don't support any devices which are
  great-grandchildren or greater of a U2S bridge, yet.
o In fhc(4) use bus_{read,write}_4() instead of bus_space_{read,write}_4()
  in order to get rid of sc_bh and sc_bt in the fhc_softc. Also get rid
  of some other unneeded members in fhc_softc.

Reviewed by:	marcel (earlier version)
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-06 19:16:30 +00:00
Marius Strobl
5435966282 Style(9) fix - use #define<tab> consistently.
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-06 14:56:09 +00:00
Marius Strobl
6bbb5a106c - Divorce the IOTSBs, which so far where handled via a global list
instead of per IOMMU, so we no longer need to program all of them
  identically in systems having multiple IOMMUs. This continues the
  rototilling of the nexus(4) done about 5 months ago, which amongst
  others changed nexus(4) and the drivers for host-to-foo bridges
  to provide bus_get_dma_tag methods, allowing to handle DMA tags in
  a hierarchical way and to link them with devices.
  This still doesn't move the silicon bug workarounds for Sabre (and
  in the uncommitted schizo(4) for Tomatillo) bridges into special
  bus_dma_tag_create() and bus_dmamap_sync() methods though, as w/o
  fully newbus'ified bus_dma_tag_create() and bus_dma_tag_destroy()
  this still requires too much hackery, i.e. per-child parent DMA
  tags in the parent driver.
- Let the host-to-foo drivers supply the maximum physical address
  of the IOMMU accompanying the bridges. Previously iommu(4) hard-
  coded an upper limit of 16GB, which actually only applies to the
  IOMMUs of the Hummingbird and Sabre bridges. The Psycho variants
  as well as the U2S in fact can can translate to up to 2TB, i.e.
  translate to 41-bit physical addresses. According to the recently
  available Tomatillo documentation these bridges even translate to
  43-bit physical addresses and hints at the Schizo bridges doing
  43 bits as well.
  This fixes the issue the FreeBSD 6.0 todo list item "Max RAM on
  sparc64" was refering to and pretty much obsoletes the lack of
  support for bounce buffers on sparc64.

Thanks to Nathan Whitehorn for pointing me at the Tomatillo manual.

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-08-05 11:56:44 +00:00
David Malone
6d8617d42a If clock_ct_to_ts fails to convert time time from the real time clock,
print a one line error message. Add some comments on not being able to
trust the day of week field (I'll act on these comments in a follow up
commit).

Approved by:	re
MFC after:	3 weeks
2007-07-23 09:42:32 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
6ea38de8aa - Remove the global definition of sched_lock in mutex.h to break
new code and third party modules which try to depend on it.
 - Initialize sched_lock in sched_4bsd.c.
 - Declare sched_lock in sparc64 pmap.c and assert that we're compiling
   with SCHED_4BSD to prevent accidental crashes from running ULE.  This
   is the sole remaining file outside of the scheduler that uses the
   global sched_lock.

Approved by:	re
2007-07-18 20:46:06 +00:00