Otherwise, the setting of the PG_M bit by one processor could be lost if
another processor is simultaneously changing the PG_W bit.
Reviewed by: tegge@
present and thus that the PnPBIOS probe should be skipped instead of
having ACPI zero out the PnPBIOStable pointer.
- Make the PnPBIOStable pointer static to i386/i386/bios.c now that that is
the only place it is used.
Dividing by 0 in order to check for irq13/exception16 delivery apparently
always causes an irq13 even if we have configured for exception16 (by
setting CR0_NE). This was expected, but the timing of the irq13 was
unexpected. Without CR0_NE, the irq13 is delivered synchronously at
least on my test machine, but with CR0_NE it is delivered a little
later (about 250 nsec) in PIC mode and much later (5000-10000 nsec)
in APIC mode. So especially in APIC mode, the irq13 may arrive after
it is supposed to be shut down. It should then be masked, but the
shutdown is incomplete, so the irq goes to a null handler that just
reports it as stray. The fix is to wait a bit after dividing by 0 to
give a good chance of the irq13 being handled by its proper handler.
Removed the hack that was supposed to recover from the incomplete shutdown
of irq13. The shutdown is now even more incomplete, or perhaps just
incomplete in a different way, but the hack now has no effect because
irq13 is edge triggered and handling of edge triggered interrupts is
now optimized by skipping their masking. The hack only worked due
to it accidentally not losing races.
The incomplete shutdown of irq13 still allows unprivileged users to
generate a stray irq13 (except on systems where irq13 is actually used)
by unmasking an npx exception and causing one. The exception gets
handled properly by the exception 16 handler. A spurious irq13 is
delivered asynchronously but is harmless (as in the probe) because it
is almost perfectly not handled by the null interrupt handler.
Perfectly not handling it involves mainly not resetting the npx busy
latch. This prevents further irq13's despite them not being masked in
the [A]PIC.
size_t and size_t *, respectively. Update callers for the new interface.
This is a better fix for overflows that occurred when dumping segments
larger than 2GB to core files.
APIC interrupt pin based on the settings in the corresponding interrupt
source structure.
- Use ioapic_program_intpin() in place of manual frobbing of the intpin
configuration in ioapic_program_destination() and ioapic_register().
- Use ioapic_program_intpin() to implement suspend/resume support for I/O
APICs.
mbuma is an Mbuf & Cluster allocator built on top of a number of
extensions to the UMA framework, all included herein.
Extensions to UMA worth noting:
- Better layering between slab <-> zone caches; introduce
Keg structure which splits off slab cache away from the
zone structure and allows multiple zones to be stacked
on top of a single Keg (single type of slab cache);
perhaps we should look into defining a subset API on
top of the Keg for special use by malloc(9),
for example.
- UMA_ZONE_REFCNT zones can now be added, and reference
counters automagically allocated for them within the end
of the associated slab structures. uma_find_refcnt()
does a kextract to fetch the slab struct reference from
the underlying page, and lookup the corresponding refcnt.
mbuma things worth noting:
- integrates mbuf & cluster allocations with extended UMA
and provides caches for commonly-allocated items; defines
several zones (two primary, one secondary) and two kegs.
- change up certain code paths that always used to do:
m_get() + m_clget() to instead just use m_getcl() and
try to take advantage of the newly defined secondary
Packet zone.
- netstat(1) and systat(1) quickly hacked up to do basic
stat reporting but additional stats work needs to be
done once some other details within UMA have been taken
care of and it becomes clearer to how stats will work
within the modified framework.
From the user perspective, one implication is that the
NMBCLUSTERS compile-time option is no longer used. The
maximum number of clusters is still capped off according
to maxusers, but it can be made unlimited by setting
the kern.ipc.nmbclusters boot-time tunable to zero.
Work should be done to write an appropriate sysctl
handler allowing dynamic tuning of kern.ipc.nmbclusters
at runtime.
Additional things worth noting/known issues (READ):
- One report of 'ips' (ServeRAID) driver acting really
slow in conjunction with mbuma. Need more data.
Latest report is that ips is equally sucking with
and without mbuma.
- Giant leak in NFS code sometimes occurs, can't
reproduce but currently analyzing; brueffer is
able to reproduce but THIS IS NOT an mbuma-specific
problem and currently occurs even WITHOUT mbuma.
- Issues in network locking: there is at least one
code path in the rip code where one or more locks
are acquired and we end up in m_prepend() with
M_WAITOK, which causes WITNESS to whine from within
UMA. Current temporary solution: force all UMA
allocations to be M_NOWAIT from within UMA for now
to avoid deadlocks unless WITNESS is defined and we
can determine with certainty that we're not holding
any locks when we're M_WAITOK.
- I've seen at least one weird socketbuffer empty-but-
mbuf-still-attached panic. I don't believe this
to be related to mbuma but please keep your eyes
open, turn on debugging, and capture crash dumps.
This change removes more code than it adds.
A paper is available detailing the change and considering
various performance issues, it was presented at BSDCan2004:
http://www.unixdaemons.com/~bmilekic/netbuf_bmilekic.pdf
Please read the paper for Future Work and implementation
details, as well as credits.
Testing and Debugging:
rwatson,
brueffer,
Ketrien I. Saihr-Kesenchedra,
...
Reviewed by: Lots of people (for different parts)
of this micro-optimization occurs when we call pmap_enter() to wire an
already mapped page. Because of the micro-optimization, we fail to
mark the PTE as wired. Later, on teardown of the address space,
pmap_remove_pages() destroys the PTE before vm_fault_unwire() has
unwired the page. (pmap_remove_pages() is not supposed to destroy
wired PTEs. They are destroyed by a later call to pmap_remove().)
Thus, the page becomes lost.
Note: The page is not lost if the application called munlock(2), only
if it relies on teardown of the address space to unwire its pages.
For the historically inclined, this bug was introduced by a
megacommit, revision 1.182, roughly six years ago.
Leak observed by: green@ and dillon independently
Patch submitted by: dillon at backplane dot com
Reviewed by: tegge@
MFC after: 1 week
been developed for use with FreeBSD, version 4.8 and later.
Submitted by: Hema Joyce
Reviewed by: Prafulla Deuskar
Approved by: Prafulla Deuskar
MFC after: 1 week
gmon and struct gmonhdr was originally just to represent the kernel
(profiling) clock frequency and it remains poorly suited to representing
the frequencies of fast counters like the TSC. It broke a year or two
ago. This quick fix keeps it working for another year or month or two
until TSC frequencies can exceed 2^32, by dividing the frequency by 2.
Dividing the frequency by 4 would work for a little longer but would
lose a little too much precision.
Fixed profiling of trap, syscall and interrupt handlers and some
ordinary functions, essentially by backing out half of rev.1.106 of
i386/exception.s. The handlers must be between certain labels for
the purposes of profiling, and this was broken by scattering them in
separately compiled .s files, especially for ordinary functions that
ended up between the labels. Merge the files by #including them as
before, except with different pathnames and better comments and
organization. Changes to the scattered files are minimal -- just
move the labels to the file that does the #includes.
This also partly fixes profiling of IPIs -- all IPI handlers are now
correctly classified as interrupt handlers, but many are still missing
mcount calls.
vm86bios.s is included as before, but it is now between the labels for
interrupt handlers again, which seems to be wrong since half of it is
for a non-interrupt handler.
polarity rather than assuming that level triggered IRQs use active low and
edge triggered IRQs use active high. Both the MultiProcessor 1.4
and ACPI 2.0 Specifications state in their examples that level triggered
EISA IRQs are active low, but in practice they seem to be active high.
Reported by: Nik Azim Azam nskyline_r35 at yahoo dot com
high resolution kernel profiling (options GUPROF. "U" in GUPROF stands
for microseconds resolution, but the resolution is now smaller than 1
nanosecond on multi-GHz machines and the accuracy is heading towards
1 nanosecond too). Arches that support GUPROF must now provide certain
macros for the calibration. GUPROF is now only supported for i386's,
so the absence of the new macros for other arches doesn't break anything
that wasn't already broken. amd64's have uncommitted support for
GUPROF, and sparc64's have support that seems to be complete except
here (there was an #error for non-i386 cases; now there are undefined
macros).
Changed the asms a little:
- declare them as __volatile. They must not be moved, and exporting a
label across asms is technically incorrect, so try harder to stop gcc
moving them.
- don't put the non-clobbered register "bx" in the clobber list. The
clobber lists are still more conservative than necessary.
- drop the non-support for gcc-1. It just gave a better error message,
and this is not useful since compiling with gcc-1 would cause thousands
of worse error messages.
- drop the support for aout.
to <sys/gmon.h>. Cleaned them up a little by not attempting to ifdef
for incomplete and out of date support for GUPROF in userland, as in
the sparc64 version.