implementations or no implementation on all platforms.
Some of these functions might be good ideas, but their semantics were unclear
given the lack of implementation, and an unlucky porter could be fooled into
trying to implement them or, worse, being baffled when something like
platform_trap_enter() failed to be called.
o) Get rid of some unused macros related to features we don't intend to
provide.
o) Get rid of macro definitions for MIPS-I CPUs. We are not likely to
support anything that predartes MIPS-III.
o) Respell MIPS3_* macros as MIPS_*, which is how most of them were being
used already.
o) Eliminate a duplicate and mostly-unused set of exception vector macros.
There's still considerable duplication and lots more obsolete in our headers,
but this reduces one of the larger files to a size where one could reckon
about the correctness of its contents with a mere few hours of contemplation.
There is, of course, a question of whether we need definitions for fields,
registers and configurations that we are unlikely to ever use or implement,
even if they're not obsolete since 1991. FreeBSD is not a processor
reference manual, and things that aren't used may be wrong, or may be
duplicated because nobody could possibly actually know whether they're
already defined.
TLS:
o) The mc_tls field used to store the TLS base when doing context gets and
restores was left a pointer and not converted to a 32-bit integer. This
had the bug of not correctly capturing the TLS value desired by the user,
and the extra nastiness of making the structure the wrong size.
o) The mc_tls field was not being saved by sendsig. As a result, the TLS base
would always be set to NULL when restoring from a signal handler.
Thanks to gonzo for helping track down a bunch of other TLS bugs that came out
of tracking these down.
and offset it only if requested by RDHWR handler. Otherwise things
get overly complicated - we need to track whether address passsed in
request for setting td_md.md_tls is already offseted or not.
using the o32 ABI. This mostly follows nwhitehorn's lead in implementing
COMPAT_FREEBSD32 on powerpc64.
o) Add a new type to the freebsd32 compat layer, time32_t, which is time_t in the
32-bit ABI being used. Since the MIPS port is relatively-new, even the 32-bit
ABIs use a 64-bit time_t.
o) Because time{spec,val}32 has the same size and layout as time{spec,val} on MIPS
with 32-bit compatibility, then, disable some code which assumes otherwise
wrongly when built for MIPS. A more general macro to check in this case would
seem like a good idea eventually. If someone adds support for using n32
userland with n64 kernels on MIPS, then they will have to add a variety of
flags related to each piece of the ABI that can vary. That's probably the
right time to generalize further.
o) Add MIPS to the list of architectures which use PAD64_REQUIRED in the
freebsd32 compat code. Probably this should be generalized at some point.
Reviewed by: gonzo
Reading register $29 with RDHWR is becoming the de-facto standard to
implement TLS. According to linux-mips wiki, MIPS Technologies has
reserved hardware register $29 for ABI use. Furthermore current GCC
makes the following assumptions:
- RDHWR is natively available or otherwise emulated by the kernel
- Register $29 holds the TLS pointer
Submitted by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
implement a deprecated FPU control interface in addition to the
standard one. To make this clearer, further deprecate ieeefp.h
by not declaring the function prototypes except on architectures
that implement them already.
Currently i386 and amd64 implement the ieeefp.h interface for
compatibility, and for fp[gs]etprec(), which doesn't exist on
most other hardware. Powerpc, sparc64, and ia64 partially implement
it and probably shouldn't, and other architectures don't implement it
at all.
If we handle an interrupt just before the 'wait' and the interrupt
schedules some work, we need to skip the 'wait' call. The simple solution
of calling sched_runnable() with interrupts disabled immediately before
wait still leaves a window after the call and before 'wait' in which
the same issue can occur.
The solution implemented is to check the EPC in the interrupt handler, and
if it is in a region before the 'wait' call, to fix up the EPC to skip the
wait call.
Reported/analysed by: adrian
Fix suggested by: kib
Reviewed by: jmallett, imp
- update xlp_machdep.c to read arguments from FDT if FDT support is
compiled in.
- define rmi_uart_bus_space, and use it as fdtbus_bs_tag
- update conf files for FDT support
- add default dts file xlp-basic.dts
Wrong in that it must be guarded (it's configurable)
and bogus in that there's absolutely no rationale for
it not default to a page size like all other archs.
This patch is going to help in cases like mips flavours where you
want a more granular support on MAXCPU.
No MFC is previewed for this patch.
Tested by: pluknet
Approved by: re (kib)
This patch adds support for the Netlogic XLP mips64 processors in
the common MIPS code. The changes are :
- Add CPU_NLM processor type
- Add cases for CPU_NLM, mostly were CPU_RMI is used.
- Update cache flush changes for CPU_NLM
- Add kernel build configuration files for xLP.
In collaboration with: Prabhath Raman <prabhathpr at netlogicmicro com>
Approved by: bz(re), jmallett, imp(mips)
architectures (i386, for example) the virtual memory space may be
constrained enough that 2MB is a large chunk. Use 64K for arches
other than amd64 and ia64, with special handling for sparc64 due to
differing hardware.
Also commit the comment changes to kmem_init_zero_region() that I
missed due to not saving the file. (Darn the unfamiliar development
environment).
Arch maintainers, please feel free to adjust ZERO_REGION_SIZE as you
see fit.
Requested by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
MFC with: r221853
a number of cores, this allows for a sparse set of CPUs. Implement support
for sparse core masks on Octeon.
XXX jeff@ suggests that all_cpus should include cores that are offline or
running other applications/OSes, so the platform API should be further
extended to allow us to set all_cpus to include all cores that are
physically-present as opposed to only those that are running FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Bhanu Prakash (with modifications)
Reviewed by: jchandra
Glanced at by: kib, jeff, jhb
o) Have mips_wblush just do syncw, not sync on Cavium Octeon.
o) Add support for reading and writing some Octeon-specific registers.
NB: Some of these are not entirely Octeon-specific.
Submitted by: Bhanu Prakash
- Provide trivial implementation of sf_buf_alloc(), sf_buf_free(),
sf_buf_kva() and sf_buf_page() using direct map for n64.
- uio_machdep.c - use macros so that the direct map will be used in
case of n64.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version)
Obtained from: jmallett (user/jmallett/octeon)
Compile sys/dev/mem/memutil.c for all supported platforms and remove now
unnecessary dev_mem_md_init(). Consistently define mem_range_softc from
mem.c for all platforms. Add missing #include guards for machine/memdev.h
and sys/memrange.h. Clean up some nearby style(9) nits.
MFC after: 1 month
In n32 and n64, add support for physical address above 4GB by having
64 bit page table entries and physical addresses. Major changes are:
- param.h: update PTE sizes, masks and shift values to support 64 bit PTEs.
- param.h: remove DELAY(), mips_btop(same as atop), mips_ptob (same as
ptoa), and reformat.
- param.h: remove casting to unsigned long in trunc_page and round_page
since this will be used on physical addresses.
- _types.h: have 64 bit __vm_paddr_t for n32.
- pte.h: update TLB LO0/1 access macros to support 64 bit PTE
- pte.h: assembly macros for PTE operations.
- proc.h: md_upte is now 64 bit for n32 and n64.
- exception.S and swtch.S: use the new PTE macros for PTE operations.
- cpufunc.h: TLB_LO0/1 registers are 64bit for n32 and n64.
- xlr_machdep.c: Add memory segments above 4GB to phys_avail[] as they are
supported now.
Reviewed by: jmallett (earlier version)
1. Use vm_paddr_t for physical addresses.
There are a few places in the MIPS platform code where vm_offset_t is
used for physical addresses, change these to use vm_paddr_t:
- phys_avail[], physmem_desc[] arrays
- pmap_mapdev(), page_is_managed(), is_cacheable_mem() pmap_map() args
- local variables of various pmap functions
2. Change init_pte_prot() return from int to pt_entry_t, as this can be
64 bit when using 64 bit TLB entries.
3. Update printing of pt_entry_t and of vm_paddr_t to use 'j' format with
uintmax_t. This will be useful later if we plan to use 64bit phsical addr
on 32 bit n32 compilation.
Reviewed by: imp