pmap_init(). Such a large preallocation is unnecessary and wastes
nearly eight megabytes of kernel virtual address space per gigabyte
of managed physical memory.
- Increase UMA_BOOT_PAGES by two. This enables the removal of
pmap_pv_allocf(). (Note: this function was only used during
initialization, specifically, after pmap_init() but before
pmap_init2(). During pmap_init2(), a new allocator is installed.)
such that 'ispcvt' can build. Unforunately 'ispcvt' is needed in order for
/etc/rc.d/syscons to run. This fixes the bug where I could not get my
keymap effective at boot.
as these ioctl's aren't MD. This also means they are installed in
/usr/include/dev/bktr now. Also provide compatability wrappers for
where these headers lived in 4.x.
Instead, allow the mapping to persist, but add the sf_buf to a free list.
If a later sendfile(2) or zero-copy send resends the same physical page,
perhaps with the same or different contents, then the mapping overhead is
avoided and the sf_buf is simply removed from the free list.
In other words, the i386 sf_buf implementation now behaves as a cache of
virtual-to-physical translations using an LRU replacement policy on
inactive sf_bufs. This is similar in concept to a part of
http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~yruan/debox/ patch, but much simpler in
implementation. Note: none of this is required on alpha, amd64, or ia64.
They now use their direct virtual-to-physical mapping to avoid any
emphemeral mapping overheads in their sf_buf implementations.
lots of old interfaces, and digi now supports all cards that dgb
supported. The author of the driver says that this is no longer
necessary.
Approved by: babkin@
or whose drivers haven't even compiled for years.
The loran hardware was very unique, and only a few copies of it ever
existed. It used the old COMPAT_ISA_DRIVER and when the author was
contacted, he indicated that he had no intention of ever updating this
driver and it was no longer relevant to the FreeBSD world and can be
removed without impact to anybody.
Approved by: phk
Update notes to reflect that cx is no longer a counted device
Update options for new cx option
# commented out ELAN_PPS and ELAN_XTAL since they produced errors
Submitted by: rik@cronyx.ru
Approved by: re@ <scottl>
- Add a really, really, nasty hack to provide stub versions of all of
the 'device apic' functions used by the ACPI MADT APIC enumerator if
'device apic' is not compiled into the kernel. This is gross but is
the best we can do with the current kernel linker implementation.
Approved by: re (scottl / blanket)
SI_SUB_CPU - 1 and probe enumerators, probe CPUs, and setup the local
APIC programming all at SI_SUB_CPU / SI_ORDER_FIRST. This is needed to
help get the ACPI module working again as it moves the APIC enumeration
code after SI_SUB_KLD.
- In the MADT parser, use mp_maxid rather than MAXCPU to terminate a loop
when assigning per-cpu ACPI IDs to avoid a dependency on 'options SMP'.
- Allow the apic device to be disabled via 'hint.apic.0.disabled' from the
loader. Note that since this is done in the local APIC code, it works
for both the ACPI and non-ACPI cases.
Approved by: re (scott / blanket)
1) mp_maxid is a valid FreeBSD CPU ID in the range 0 .. MAXCPU - 1.
2) For all active CPUs in the system, PCPU_GET(cpuid) <= mp_maxid.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Tested on: i386, amd64, alpha
This is the vastly updated cx drvier from Roman Kurakin <rik@cronyx.ru>
who has been patiently waiting for this update for sometime.
The driver is mostly a rewrite from the version we have in the tree.
While some similarities remain, losing the little history that the old
driver has is not a big loss, and the re@ felt it was easier this way (less
error prone).
The userland parts of this update will be committed shortly.
The driver is not connected to the build yet. I want to make sure I
don't break any platform at any time, so I want to test that with
these files in the tree before I continue (on the off chance I'm
forgetting a file).
I changed the DEBUG macro to CX_DEBUG from the code that was submitted
(to not break when we go to building with opt_global.h after the
release), as well adding $FreeBSD$.
Submitted by: Roman Kurakin
Approved by: re@ <scottl>
on. MCOUNT and FAKE_MCOUNT() may clobber all the call-used registers,
and one FAKE_MCOUNT() was placed so that an active %eax was clobbered.
The fix is to move this FAKE_MCOUNT() earlier where it should have
been anyway.
Fixed 3 layers of bitrot in the comment about why this FAKE_MCOUNT()
was where it was by removing the comment. (mcount() should be called
as early as possible after entering a new level, but an implementation
detail got in the way until 3 layers of changes ago.)
Kernel profiling still gives wrong results because the new interrupt
code rearranged object files too much. mcount() depends on trap,
syscall and interrupt handlers being between certain magic labels with
interrupt handlers last, and on nothing else being there. Splitting
up exception.o moved the magic labels to effectively random places
relative to what they are supposed to delimit. This mainly broke the
call graph; the flat profile is still usable.
code. Both the driver and the new code were wrong. Driver interrupt
handlers are supposed to take "void *vsc" arg, but some including all
COMPAT_ISA drivers and the pci part of the cy driver want an "int unit"
arg. They got this using bogus casts of function pointers which should
have kept working despite their bogusness. However, the new interrupt
code doesn't honor requests to pass an arg of ((void *)0), so things
are very broken if the arg is actually a representation of unit 0.
The fix is to use a normal "void *vsc" arg for the pci case and a
wrapper for the COMPAT_ISA case (of the cy driver). This cleans up
new-busification of the pci case but takes the COMPAT_ISA case a little
further from new-bus. The corresponding bug for the COMPAT_ISA case
has already been fixed similarly using a wrapper in compat_isa.c and
we need another wrapper just to undo that.
Fixed some directly related style bugs (mainly by removing compatibility
cruft).
cy.c:
Fixed an indirectly related old bug in cyattach_common(). A wrong status
was returned in the unlikely event that malloc() failed.
Approved by: re (scottl)
Make it possible to configure GPIO pins as led(4) devices, PPS inputs
and PPS-echo outputs with a sysctl. Led(4) and PPS-echo can be configured
for active-high or active-low.
Be more complete in initialization of timecounter hardware.
Approved by: re@
very early (SI_SUB_TUNABLES - 1) and is responsible for setting mp_maxid.
cpu_mp_probe() is now called at SI_SUB_CPU and determines if SMP is
actually present and sets mp_ncpus and all_cpus. Splitting these up
allows an architecture to probe CPUs later than SI_SUB_TUNABLES by just
setting mp_maxid to MAXCPU in cpu_mp_setmaxid(). This could allow the
CPU probing code to live in a module, for example, since modules
sysinit's in modules cannot be invoked prior to SI_SUB_KLD. This is
needed to re-enable the ACPI module on i386.
- For the alpha SMP probing code, use LOCATE_PCS() instead of duplicating
its contents in a few places. Also, add a smp_cpu_enabled() function
to avoid duplicating some code. There is room for further code
reduction later since much of this code is also present in cpu_mp_start().
- All archs besides i386 still set mp_maxid to the same values they set it
to before this change. i386 now sets mp_maxid to MAXCPU.
Tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, ia64, sparc64
Approved by: re (scottl)
source count pointers at them so that intr_execute_handlers() won't
choke when it tries to handle an unregisterd ATPIC interrupt source.
- Install the low-level ATPIC interrupt handlers when we first program the
ATPIC in atpic_startup() rather than at SI_SUB_INTR. This is only
necessary to work around buggy code that enables interrupts too early
in the boot process (namely, the vm86 code).
Approved by: re (rwatson)
more than one sf_buf for one vm_page. To accomplish this, we add
a global hash table mapping vm_pages to sf_bufs and a reference
count to each sf_buf. (This is similar to the patches for RELENG_4
at http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~yruan/debox/.)
For the uninitiated, an sf_buf is nothing more than a kernel virtual
address that is used for temporary virtual-to-physical mappings by
sendfile(2) and zero-copy sockets. As such, there is no reason for
one vm_page to have several sf_bufs mapping it. In fact, using more
than one sf_buf for a single vm_page increases the likelihood that
sendfile(2) blocks, hurting throughput.
(See http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~yruan/debox/.)
is the warning that points to the bug in `(char *)malloc(...)' where
malloc() is implicitly declared as returning int. We do similar things
here, but they work because u_int is the same as uintptr_t on i386's.)