only used in real mode and keeping them mapped only serves to make NULL
a valid address, which results in silent NULL pointer deferences.
Suggested by: Patrick Kerharo
Obtained from: projects/ppc64
at least on my Xserve, getting the decrementer and timebase on APs to tick
requires setting up a clock chip over I2C, which is not yet done.
While here, correct the 64-bit tlbie function to set the CPU to 64-bit
mode correctly.
Hardware donated by: grehan
the memory or D-cache, depending on the semantics of the platform.
vm_sync_icache() is basically a wrapper around pmap_sync_icache(),
that translates the vm_map_t argumument to pmap_t.
o Introduce pmap_sync_icache() to all PMAP implementation. For powerpc
it replaces the pmap_page_executable() function, added to solve
the I-cache problem in uiomove_fromphys().
o In proc_rwmem() call vm_sync_icache() when writing to a page that
has execute permissions. This assures that when breakpoints are
written, the I-cache will be coherent and the process will actually
hit the breakpoint.
o This also fixes the Book-E PMAP implementation that was missing
necessary locking while trying to deal with the I-cache coherency
in pmap_enter() (read: mmu_booke_enter_locked).
The key property of this change is that the I-cache is made coherent
*after* writes have been done. Doing it in the PMAP layer when adding
or changing a mapping means that the I-cache is made coherent *before*
any writes happen. The difference is key when the I-cache prefetches.
bandaid to prevent exhaustion of the primary and secondary hash groups
in the event of extreme stress on the PMAP layer (e.g. a forkbomb). This
wastes memory, and should be revised to properly handle PTEG spills instead.
Suggested by: grehan
Approved by: re (kensmith)
- Modules and kernel code alike may use DPCPU_DEFINE(),
DPCPU_GET(), DPCPU_SET(), etc. akin to the statically defined
PCPU_*. Requires only one extra instruction more than PCPU_* and is
virtually the same as __thread for builtin and much faster for shared
objects. DPCPU variables can be initialized when defined.
- Modules are supported by relocating the module's per-cpu linker set
over space reserved in the kernel. Modules may fail to load if there
is insufficient space available.
- Track space available for modules with a one-off extent allocator.
Free may block for memory to allocate space for an extent.
Reviewed by: jhb, rwatson, kan, sam, grehan, marius, marcel, stas
aim/machdep.c:
- the RI status register bit needs to be set when doing the mtmsrd 64-bit
instruction test
- psim doesn't implement the dcbz instruction so the run-time cacheline
test fails. Set the cachline size to 32 to avoid infinite loops in
future calls to __syncicache()
aim/platform_chrp.c:
- if after iterating through / and a name property of "cpus" still isn't
found, just search directly for '/cpus'.
- psim doesn't put a "reg" property on it's cpu nodes, so assume 0
since it is uniprocessor-only at this point
powerpc/openpic.c
- the number of CPUs reported is 1 too many on psim's openpic
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 1 week (openpic part)
possible future I-cache coherency operation can succeed. On ARM
for example the L1 cache can be (is) virtually mapped, which
means that any I/O that uses temporary mappings will not see the
I-cache made coherent. On ia64 a similar behaviour has been
observed. By flushing the D-cache, execution of binaries backed
by md(4) and/or NFS work reliably.
For Book-E (powerpc), execution over NFS exhibits SIGILL once in
a while as well, though cpu_flush_dcache() hasn't been implemented
yet.
Doing an explicit D-cache flush as part of the non-DMA based I/O
read operation eliminates the need to do it as part of the
I-cache coherency operation itself and as such avoids pessimizing
the DMA-based I/O read operations for which D-cache are already
flushed/invalidated. It also allows future optimizations whereby
the bcopy() followed by the D-cache flush can be integrated in a
single operation, which could be implemented using on-chips DMA
engines, by-passing the D-cache altogether.
- make mftb() shared, rewrite in C, provide complementary mttb()
- adjust SMP startup per the above, additional comments, minor naming
changes
- eliminate redundant TB defines, other minor cosmetics
Reviewed by: marcel, nwhitehorn
Obtained from: Freescale, Semihalf
new platform module. These are probed in early boot, and have the
responsibility of determining the layout of physical memory, determining
the CPU timebase frequency, and handling the zoo of SMP mechanisms
found on PowerPC.
Reviewed by: marcel, raj
Book-E parts by: raj
When memory is not zero'ed by firmware, uninitialized PCB can have bogus
contents, which appear as a saved onfault condition, Altivec context to
restore etc. and lead to corruption/crashes. This commit fixes such issues.
Submitted by: Michal Mazur arg ! semihalf dot com
Tested by: Andreas Tobler andreast-list ! fgznet dot ch
replace magic numbers with constants to keep this from happening again.
Without this fix, some programs would occasionally get SIGTRAP instead
of SIGILL on an illegal instruction. This affected Altivec detection
in pixman, and possibly other software.
Reported by: Andreas Tobler
MFC after: 1 week
CPUs known to use 128 byte cache lines and defaulting to 32, use the dcbz
instruction to measure it. Also make dcbz behave the way you would
expect on PPC 970.
but do not actually invoke KDB. This includes recoverable machine checks
encountered in kernel mode.
This patch causes machines with Grackle host-PCI bridges to be able to
correctly enumerate them again.
MFC after: 3 days
being switched out may hold a reservation. The stwcx. will
clear the reservation. This is architecturally recommended.
The scenario this addresses is as follows:
1. Thread 1 performs a lwarx and as such holds a reservation.
2. Thread 1 gets switched out (before doing the matching
stwcx.) and thread 2 is switched in.
3. Thread 2 performs a stwcx. to the same reservation granule.
This will succeed because the processor has the reservation
even though thread 2 didn't do the lwarx.
Note that on some processors the address given the stwcx. is
not checked. On these processors the mere condition of having
a reservation would cause the stwcx. to succeed, irrespective
of whether the addresses are the same. The dummy stwcx. is
especially important for those processors.
provided, for example, on the PowerPC 970 (G5), as well as on related CPUs
like the POWER3 and POWER4.
This also adds support for various built-in hardware found on Apple G5
hardware (e.g. the IBM CPC925 northbridge).
Reviewed by: grehan
the unmanaged flag set in the PVO attributes. Without doing this,
pmap_remove() could try to remove fictitious pages (like those created
by mmap of physical memory) from the wrong UMA zone, causing a panic.
Reported by: Justin Hibbits
MFC after: 1 week
of OFW access semantics, in order to allow future support for real-mode
OF access and flattened device frees. OF client interface modules are
implemented using KOBJ, in a similar way to the PPC PMAP modules.
Because we need Open Firmware to be available before mutexes can be used on
sparc64, changes are also included to allow KOBJ to be used very early in
the boot process by only using the mutex once we know it has been initialized.
Reviewed by: marius, grehan
simplifies certain device attachments (Kauai ATA, for instance), and makes
possible others on new hardware.
On G5 systems, there are several otherwise standard PCI devices
(Serverworks SATA) that will not allow their interrupt properties to be
written, so this information must be supplied directly from Open Firmware.
Obtained from: sparc64
make it memory-coherency enforced (PTE_M). This is required for SMP
to work.
o Serialize tlbie operations and implement the tlbie operation in a
function called tlbie(). Hardware can end up in a live-lock if
between the tlbsync and subsequent sync on one processor another
processor executes a tlbie or tlbsync.
o Eliminate the following defines:
TLBIE, TLBSYNC, SYNC and EIEIO
Use either inline assembly statements or inline functions defined
in <machine/cpufunc.h>
caches if not yet enabed. This is required for coherency and
atomic operations to work, not to mention performance. We use the
L2 and L3 cache settings of the BSP to configure the APs caches.
Can't be bad.
Program NAP and not DOZE. DOZE is present only on earlier CPUs
and the bit is reserved on the MPC7441 & MPC7451. NAP will do
bus snooping to keep caches coherent.
Program the PIR with the cpuid. This may not be necessary...
We're only returning a 32-bit counter.
o In decr_intr(), manually perform LICM, so that we don't test
a loop invariant condition inside a loop.
o Include <machine/smp.h>
common PowerPC code when all we want to achieve is to enable
external interrupts. We can set PSL_RI at any time before we
allow interrupts and/or exceptions, so move it to the AIM
specific initialization and do it when we also set PSL_ME
(machine check enable).
from idle over the next tick.
- Add a new MD routine, cpu_wake_idle() to wakeup idle threads who are
suspended in cpu specific states. This function can fail and cause the
scheduler to fall back to another mechanism (ipi).
- Implement support for mwait in cpu_idle() on i386/amd64 machines that
support it. mwait is a higher performance way to synchronize cpus
as compared to hlt & ipis.
- Allow selecting the idle routine by name via sysctl machdep.idle. This
replaces machdep.cpu_idle_hlt. Only idle routines supported by the
current machine are permitted.
Sponsored by: Nokia
for better structure.
Much of this is related to <sys/clock.h>, which should really have
been called <sys/calendar.h>, but unless and until we need the name,
the repocopy can wait.
In general the kernel does not know about minutes, hours, days,
timezones, daylight savings time, leap-years and such. All that
is theoretically a matter for userland only.
Parts of kernel code does however care: badly designed filesystems
store timestamps in local time and RTC chips almost universally
track time in a YY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS format, and sometimes in local
timezone instead of UTC. For this we have <sys/clock.h>
<sys/time.h> on the other hand, deals with time_t, timeval, timespec
and so on. These know only seconds and fractions thereof.
Move inittodr() and resettodr() prototypes to <sys/time.h>.
Retain the names as it is one of the few surviving PDP/VAX references.
Move startrtclock() to <machine/clock.h> on relevant platforms, it
is a MD call between machdep.c/clock.c. Remove references to it
elsewhere.
Remove a lot of unnecessary <sys/clock.h> includes.
Move the machdep.disable_rtc_set sysctl to subr_rtc.c where it belongs.
XXX: should be kern.disable_rtc_set really, it's not MD.