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
architecture macros (__mips_n64, __powerpc64__) when 64 bit types (and
corresponding macros) are different from 32 bit. [1]
Correct the type of INT64_MIN, INT64_MAX and UINT64_MAX.
Define (U)INTMAX_C as an alias for (U)INT64_C matching the type definition
for (u)intmax_t. Do this on all architectures for consistency.
Suggested by: bde [1]
Approved by: kib (mentor)
On some architectures UCHAR_MAX and USHRT_MAX had type unsigned int.
However, lacking integer suffixes for types smaller than int, their type
should correspond to that of an object of type unsigned char (or short)
when used in an expression with objects of type int. In that case unsigned
char (short) are promoted to int (i.e. signed) so the type of UCHAR_MAX and
USHRT_MAX should also be int.
Where MIN/MAX constants implicitly have the correct type the suffix has
been removed.
While here, correct some comments.
Reviewed by: bde
Approved by: kib (mentor)
Passing a count of zero on i386 and amd64 for [I386|AMD64]_BUS_SPACE_MEM
causes a crash/hang since the 'loop' instruction decrements the counter
before checking if it's zero.
PR: kern/80980
Discussed with: jhb
contents of the ones that were not empty were stale and unused.
- Now that <machine/mutex.h> no longer exists, there is no need to allow it
to override various helper macros in <sys/mutex.h>.
- Rename various helper macros for low-level operations on mutexes to live
in the _mtx_* or __mtx_* namespaces. While here, change the names to more
closely match the real API functions they are backing.
- Drop support for including <sys/mutex.h> in assembly source files.
Suggested by: bde (1, 2)
In particular, provide pagesize and pagesizes array, the canary value
for SSP use, number of host CPUs and osreldate.
Tested by: marius (sparc64)
MFC after: 1 month
IPI to a specific CPU by its cpuid. Replace calls to ipi_selected() that
constructed a mask for a single CPU with calls to ipi_cpu() instead. This
will matter more in the future when we transition from cpumask_t to
cpuset_t for CPU masks in which case building a CPU mask is more expensive.
Submitted by: peter, sbruno
Reviewed by: rookie
Obtained from: Yahoo! (x86)
MFC after: 1 month
from the inline assembly. This allows the compiler to cache invocations of
curthread since it's value does not change within a thread context.
Submitted by: zec (i386)
MFC after: 1 week
now it uses a very dumb first-touch allocation policy. This will change in
the future.
- Each architecture indicates the maximum number of supported memory domains
via a new VM_NDOMAIN parameter in <machine/vmparam.h>.
- Each cpu now has a PCPU_GET(domain) member to indicate the memory domain
a CPU belongs to. Domain values are dense and numbered from 0.
- When a platform supports multiple domains, the default freelist
(VM_FREELIST_DEFAULT) is split up into N freelists, one for each domain.
The MD code is required to populate an array of mem_affinity structures.
Each entry in the array defines a range of memory (start and end) and a
domain for the range. Multiple entries may be present for a single
domain. The list is terminated by an entry where all fields are zero.
This array of structures is used to split up phys_avail[] regions that
fall in VM_FREELIST_DEFAULT into per-domain freelists.
- Each memory domain has a separate lookup-array of freelists that is
used when fulfulling a physical memory allocation. Right now the
per-domain freelists are listed in a round-robin order for each domain.
In the future a table such as the ACPI SLIT table may be used to order
the per-domain lookup lists based on the penalty for each memory domain
relative to a specific domain. The lookup lists may be examined via a
new vm.phys.lookup_lists sysctl.
- The first-touch policy is implemented by using PCPU_GET(domain) to
pick a lookup list when allocating memory.
Reviewed by: alc
name of 32bit sibling architecture instead of the host one. Do the
same for hw.machine on amd64.
Add a safety belt debug.adaptive_machine_arch sysctl, to turn the
substitution off.
Reviewed by: jhb, nwhitehorn
MFC after: 2 weeks
in particular, do not handle deferred DMA map load operations at all.
Any error, and especially EINPROGRESS, is treated as a hard error and
typically abort the current operation. The fact that the busdma code
queues the load operation for when resources (i.e. bounce buffers in
this particular case) are available makes this especially problematic.
Bounce buffering, unlike what the PR synopsis would suggest, works
fine.
While on the subject, properly implement swi_vm().
PR: 147502
MFC after: 1 week
the arguments array instead of array itself. ia64 syscall arguments are
readily available in the frame, point args to it, do not do unnecessary
bcopy. Still reserve the array in syscall_args for ia32 emulation.
Suggested and reviewed by: marcel
MFC after: 1 month
Extend struct sysvec with three new elements:
sv_fetch_syscall_args - the method to fetch syscall arguments from
usermode into struct syscall_args. The structure is machine-depended
(this might be reconsidered after all architectures are converted).
sv_set_syscall_retval - the method to set a return value for usermode
from the syscall. It is a generalization of
cpu_set_syscall_retval(9) to allow ABIs to override the way to set a
return value.
sv_syscallnames - the table of syscall names.
Use sv_set_syscall_retval in kern_sigsuspend() instead of hardcoding
the call to cpu_set_syscall_retval().
The new functions syscallenter(9) and syscallret(9) are provided that
use sv_*syscall* pointers and contain the common repeated code from
the syscall() implementations for the architecture-specific syscall
trap handlers.
Syscallenter() fetches arguments, calls syscall implementation from
ABI sysent table, and set up return frame. The end of syscall
bookkeeping is done by syscallret().
Take advantage of single place for MI syscall handling code and
implement ptrace_lwpinfo pl_flags PL_FLAG_SCE, PL_FLAG_SCX and
PL_FLAG_EXEC. The SCE and SCX flags notify the debugger that the
thread is stopped at syscall entry or return point respectively. The
EXEC flag augments SCX and notifies debugger that the process address
space was changed by one of exec(2)-family syscalls.
The i386, amd64, sparc64, sun4v, powerpc and ia64 syscall()s are
changed to use syscallenter()/syscallret(). MIPS and arm are not
converted and use the mostly unchanged syscall() implementation.
Reviewed by: jhb, marcel, marius, nwhitehorn, stas
Tested by: marcel (ia64), marius (sparc64), nwhitehorn (powerpc),
stas (mips)
MFC after: 1 month
architecture from page queue lock to a hashed array of page locks
(based on a patch by Jeff Roberson), I've implemented page lock
support in the MI code and have only moved vm_page's hold_count
out from under page queue mutex to page lock. This changes
pmap_extract_and_hold on all pmaps.
Supported by: Bitgravity Inc.
Discussed with: alc, jeffr, and kib
In the end, it does help fixing /dev/io usage from multithreaded
processes.
- On i386 and amd64 the old behaviour is kept but multithreaded
processes must use the new interface in order to work well.
- Support for the other architectures is greatly improved, where
necessary, by the necessity to define very small things now.
Manpage update will happen shortly.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
PR: threads/116181
Reviewed by: emaste, marcel
MFC after: 3 weeks
The sequence number is used as the name of a sysctl node,
under which we add the MCA records using the CPU id as the
leaf name.
Add the hw.mca.inject sysctl to provide a way to inject
MC errors and trigger machine checks.
PR: ia64/113102
with PCI busses. Remove nexus_read_ivar() and nexus_write_ivar()
to give default behaviour. Remove <machine/nexusvar.h> as well,
because there's nothing in it that's being used.
to ia64_enable_intr(). This reduces confusion with intr_disable() and
intr_restore().
Have configure_final() call ia64_finalize_intr() instead of enable_intr()
in preparation of adding support for binding interrupts to all CPUs.
have the BSP use IPIs to trigger clock interrupts on the APs.
This allows us to run on hardware configurations for which the
ITC has non-uniform frequencies across CPUs.
While here, change the clock XIV to type IPI so as to protect
the interrupt delivery against CPU re-balancing once that's
implemented.
This is not for multiple inclusion purposes, because _regset.h already
handles this, but to enable inclusion of the MD header by cross-tools
on non-ia64 installations. The cross-tool can include _regset.h itself
before including MD headers that depend on it.
o Introduce XIV, eXternal Interrupt Vector, to differentiate from
the interrupts vectors that are offsets in the IVT (Interrupt
Vector Table). There's a vector for external interrupts, which
are based on the XIVs.
o Keep track of allocated and reserved XIVs so that we can assign
XIVs without hardcoding anything. When XIVs are allocated, an
interrupt handler and a class is specified for the XIV. Classes
are:
1. architecture-defined: XIV 15 is returned when no external
interrupt are pending,
2. platform-defined: SAL reports which XIV is used to wakeup
an AP (typically 0xFF, but it's 0x12 for the Altix 350).
3. inter-processor interrupts: allocated for SMP support and
non-redirectable.
4. device interrupts (i.e. IRQs): allocated when devices are
discovered and are redirectable.
o Rewrite the central interrupt handler to call the per-XIV
interrupt handler and rename it to ia64_handle_intr(). Move
the per-XIV handler implementation to the file where we have
the XIV allocation/reservation. Clock interrupt handling is
moved to clock.c. IPI handling is moved to mp_machdep.c.
o Drop support for the Intel 8259A because it was broken. When
XIV 0 is received, the CPU should initiate an INTA cycle to
obtain the interrupt vector of the 8259-based interrupt. In
these cases the interrupt controller we should be talking to
WRT to masking on signalling EOI is the 8259 and not the I/O
SAPIC. This requires adriver for the Intel 8259A which isn't
available for ia64. Thus stop pretending to support ExtINTs
and instead panic() so that if we come across hardware that
has an Intel 8259A, so have something real to work with.
o With XIVs for IPIs dynamically allocatedi and also based on
priority, define the IPI_* symbols as variables rather than
constants. The variable holds the XIV allocated for the IPI.
o IPI_STOP_HARD delivers a NMI if possible. Otherwise the XIV
assigned to IPI_STOP is delivered.
for upcoming 64-bit PowerPC and MIPS support. This renames the COMPAT_IA32
option to COMPAT_FREEBSD32, removes some IA32-specific code from MI parts
of the kernel and enhances the freebsd32 compatibility code to support
big-endian platforms.
Reviewed by: kib, jhb
o Assign vectors based on priority, because vectors have
implied priority in hardware.
o Use unordered memory accesses to the I/O sapic and use
the acceptance form of the mf instruction.
o Remove the sapicreg.h and sapicvar.h headers. All definitions
in sapicreg.h are private to sapic.c and all definitions in
sapicvar.h are either private or interface functions. Move the
interface functions to intr.h.
o Hide the definition of struct sapic.
o Eliminate IA64_PHYS_TO_RR6 and change all places where the macro is used
by calling either bus_space_map() or pmap_mapdev().
o Implement bus_space_map() in terms of pmap_mapdev() and implement
bus_space_unmap() in terms of pmap_unmapdev().
o Have ia64_pib hold the uncached virtual address of the processor interrupt
block throughout the kernel's life and access the elements of the PIB
through this structure pointer.
This is a non-functional change with the exception of using ia64_ld1() and
ia64_st8() to write to the PIB. We were still using assignments, for which
the compiler generates semaphore reads -- which cause undefined behaviour
for uncacheable memory. Note also that the memory barriers in ipi_send() are
critical for proper functioning.
With all the mapping of uncached memory done by pmap_mapdev(), we can keep
track of the translations and wire them in the CPU. This then eliminates
the need to reserve a whole region for uncached I/O and it eliminates
translation traps for device I/O accesses.
I/O port access is implemented on Itanium by reading and writing to a
special region in memory. To hide details and avoid misaligned memory
accesses, a process did I/O port reads and writes by making a MD system
call. There's one fatal problem with this approach: unprivileged access
was not being prevented. /dev/io serves that purpose on amd64/i386, so
employ it on ia64 as well. Use an ioctl for doing the actual I/O and
remove the sysarch(2) interface.
Backward compatibility is not being considered. The sysarch(2) approach
was added to support X11, but support for FreeBSD/ia64 was never fully
implemented in X11. Thus, nothing gets broken that didn't need more work
to begin with.
MFC after: 1 week