Commit Graph

167 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
c2175767b7 Intel QPI chipsets actually provide two extra "non-core" PCI buses that
provide PCI devices for various hardware such as memory controllers, etc.
These PCI buses are not enumerated via ACPI however.  Add qpi(4) psuedo
bus and Host-PCI bridge drivers to enumerate these buses.  Currently the
driver uses the CPU ID to determine the bridges' presence.

In collaboration with:	Joseph Golio @ Isilon Systems
MFC after:	2 weeks
2010-08-25 19:12:05 +00:00
John Baldwin
dd540b4623 Add a parser for the ACPI SRAT table for amd64 and i386. It sets
PCPU(domain) for each CPU and populates a mem_affinity array suitable
for the NUMA support in the physical memory allocator.

Reviewed by:	alc
2010-07-27 20:40:46 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
5f270659fd Crypto(4) driver for AESNI.
The aeskeys_{amd64,i386}.S content was mostly obtained from OpenBSD,
no objections to the license from core.

Hardware provided by:	Sentex Communications
Tested by:	fabient, pho (previous versions)
MFC after:	1 month
2010-07-23 11:00:46 +00:00
Alexander Motin
43fe7d458a Rename timeevents.c to kern_clocksource.c.
Suggested by:	jhb@
2010-07-14 18:43:27 +00:00
Alexander Motin
28ab822d8a Move timeevents.c to MI code, as it is not x86-specific. I already have
it working on Marvell ARM SoCs, and it would be nice to unify timer code
between more platforms.
2010-07-14 13:31:27 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
588697d478 Move i386-inherited logic of building ACPI headers for acpi_wakeup.c into
better places and remove intermediate makefile and shell scripts.  This
makes parallel kernel build little bit safer for amd64.
2010-07-12 21:08:35 +00:00
Alexander Motin
25eb1b8c15 Some style fixes for r209371.
Submitted by:	jhb@
2010-06-22 16:20:10 +00:00
Alexander Motin
875b8844be Implement new event timers infrastructure. It provides unified APIs for
writing event timer drivers, for choosing best possible drivers by machine
independent code and for operating them to supply kernel with hardclock(),
statclock() and profclock() events in unified fashion on various hardware.

Infrastructure provides support for both per-CPU (independent for every CPU
core) and global timers in periodic and one-shot modes. MI management code
at this moment uses only periodic mode, but one-shot mode use planned for
later, as part of tickless kernel project.

For this moment infrastructure used on i386 and amd64 architectures. Other
archs are welcome to follow, while their current operation should not be
affected.

This patch updates existing drivers (i8254, RTC and LAPIC) for the new
order, and adds event timers support into the HPET driver. These drivers
have different capabilities:
 LAPIC - per-CPU timer, supports periodic and one-shot operation, may
freeze in C3 state, calibrated on first use, so may be not exactly precise.
 HPET - depending on hardware can work as per-CPU or global, supports
periodic and one-shot operation, usually provides several event timers.
 i8254 - global, limited to periodic mode, because same hardware used also
as time counter.
 RTC - global, supports only periodic mode, set of frequencies in Hz
limited by powers of 2.

Depending on hardware capabilities, drivers preferred in following orders,
either LAPIC, HPETs, i8254, RTC or HPETs, LAPIC, i8254, RTC.
User may explicitly specify wanted timers via loader tunables or sysctls:
kern.eventtimer.timer1 and kern.eventtimer.timer2.
If requested driver is unavailable or unoperational, system will try to
replace it. If no more timers available or "NONE" specified for second,
system will operate using only one timer, multiplying it's frequency by few
times and uing respective dividers to honor hz, stathz and profhz values,
set during initial setup.
2010-06-20 21:33:29 +00:00
John Baldwin
b9cd2f771a Move the MD support for PCI message signalled interrupts to the x86 tree
as it is identical for i386 and amd64.
2010-06-08 18:36:03 +00:00
John Baldwin
2465e30f0c Move the machine check support code to the x86 tree since it is identical
on i386 and amd64.

Requested by:	alc
2010-06-08 18:04:07 +00:00
John Baldwin
53a908cb07 Move the I/O APIC code to the x86 tree since it is identical on i386 and
amd64.
2010-06-08 17:51:21 +00:00
Alexander Motin
fa1ed4bd1a Unify local_apic.c for x86 archs, 2010-05-23 17:45:01 +00:00
Fabien Thomas
1fa7f10bac - Support for uncore counting events: one fixed PMC with the uncore
domain clock, 8 programmable PMC.
- Westmere based CPU (Xeon 5600, Corei7 980X) support.
- New man pages with events list for core and uncore.
- Updated Corei7 events with Intel 253669-033US December 2009 doc.
  There is some removed events in the documentation, they have been
  kept in the code but documented in the man page as obsolete.
- Offcore response events can be setup with rsp token.

Sponsored by: NETASQ
2010-04-02 13:23:49 +00:00
Nathan Whitehorn
841c0c7ec7 Provide groundwork for 32-bit binary compatibility on non-x86 platforms,
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
2010-03-11 14:49:06 +00:00
Attilio Rao
2df4a3ea0b Fix a mis-change about the compiling of atrtc.c.
Sponsored by:	Sandvine Incorporated
Reported by:	Giovanni Trematerra
		<giovannit dot trematerra at gmail dot com>
MFC:		3 weeks
X-MFC:		r204309
2010-02-25 15:00:27 +00:00
Attilio Rao
3258030144 Introduce the new kernel sub-tree x86 which should contain all the code
shared and generalized between our current amd64, i386 and pc98.

This is just an initial step that should lead to a more complete effort.
For the moment, a very simple porting of cpufreq modules, BIOS calls and
the whole MD specific ISA bus part is added to the sub-tree but ideally
a lot of code might be added and more shared support should grow.

Sponsored by:	Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by:	emaste, kib, jhb, imp
Discussed on:	arch
MFC:		3 weeks
2010-02-25 14:13:39 +00:00
Rebecca Cran
ac6be749cd Remove the usb2_input_kbd directive that was missed during the renaming of the drivers in the usb2 stack.
Approved by:	rrs (mentor)
2010-02-08 19:48:33 +00:00
Andriy Gapon
5022f21bd9 amdsbwd: new driver for AMD SB600/SB7xx watchdog timer
The hardware is compliant with WDRT specification, so I originally
considered including generic WDRT watchdog support, but decided
against it, because I couldn't find anyone to the code for me.
WDRT seems to be not very popular.
Besides, generic WDRT porbably requires a slightly different driver
approach.

Reviewed by:	des, gavin, rpaulo
MFC after:	3 weeks
2009-11-30 11:44:03 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
3219f535d9 Rewrite x86bios and update its dependent drivers.
- Do not map entire real mode memory (1MB).  Instead, we map IVT/BDA and
ROM area separately.  Most notably, ROM area is mapped as device memory
(uncacheable) as it should be.  User memory is dynamically allocated and
free'ed with contigmalloc(9) and contigfree(9).  Remove now redundant and
potentially dangerous x86bios_alloc.c.  If this emulator ever grows to
support non-PC hardware, we may implement it with rman(9) later.
- Move all host-specific initializations from x86emu_util.c to x86bios.c and
remove now unnecessary x86emu_util.c.  Currently, non-PC hardware is not
supported.  We may use bus_space(9) later when the KPI is fixed.
- Replace all bzero() calls for emulated registers with more obviously named
x86bios_init_regs().  This function also initializes DS and SS properly.
- Add x86bios_get_intr().  This function checks if the interrupt vector is
available for the platform.  It is not necessary for PC-compatible hardware
but it may be needed later. ;-)
- Do not try turning off monitor if DPMS does not support the state.
- Allocate stable memory for VESA OEM strings instead of just holding
pointers to them.  They may or may not be accessible always.  Fix a memory
leak of video mode table while I am here.
- Add (experimental) BIOS POST call for vesa(4).  This function calls VGA
BIOS POST code from the current VGA option ROM.  Some video controllers
cannot save and restore the state properly even if it is claimed to be
supported.  Usually the symptom is blank display after resuming from suspend
state.  If the video mode does not match the previous mode after restoring,
we try BIOS POST and force the known good initial state.  Some magic was
taken from NetBSD (and it was taken from vbetool, I believe.)
- Add a loader tunable for vgapci(4) to give a hint to dpms(4) and vesa(4)
to identify who owns the VESA BIOS.  This is very useful for multi-display
adapter setup.  By default, the POST video controller is automatically
probed and the tunable "hw.pci.default_vgapci_unit" is set to corresponding
vgapci unit number.  You may override it from loader but it is very unlikely
to be necessary.  Unfortunately only AGP/PCI/PCI-E controllers can be
matched because ISA controller does not have necessary device IDs.
- Fix a long standing bug in state save/restore function.  The state buffer
pointer should be ES:BX, not ES:DI according to VBE 3.0.  If it ever worked,
that's because BX was always zero. :-)
- Clean up register initializations more clearer per VBE 3.0.
- Fix a lot of style issues with vesa(4).
2009-10-19 20:58:10 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
bbaa712c0f Scan for option ROMs on i386 and amd64 only. 2009-10-11 20:42:26 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
4507f02e0e lindev(4) [1] is supposed to be a collection of linux-specific pseudo
devices that we also support, just not by default (thus only LINT or
module builds by default).

While currently there is only "/dev/full" [2], we are planning to see more
in the future.  We may decide to change the module/dependency logic in the
future should the list grow too long.

This is not part of linux.ko as also non-linux binaries like kFreeBSD
userland or ports can make use of this as well.

Suggested by:	rwatson [1] (name)
Submitted by:	ed [2]
Discussed with:	markm, ed, rwatson, kib (weeks ago)
Reviewed by:	rwatson, brueffer (prev. version)
PR:		kern/68961
MFC after:	6 weeks
2009-09-26 12:45:28 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
ed89577f29 r197444 unnecessarily changed positions of these files. Re-sort. 2009-09-24 19:42:56 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
19de5df5e5 Move sys/dev/x86bios to sys/compat/x86bios.
It may not be optimal but it is clearly better than the old place.

OK'ed by:	delphij, paradox (ddkprog yahoo com)
2009-09-23 20:49:14 +00:00
Xin LI
2f66eb1e60 Hide x86bios stuff in i386/amd64 specific files as atkbdc would get
these stuff into build.
2009-09-22 07:10:23 +00:00
Xin LI
6abad12dfe Automatically depend on x86emu when vesa or dpms is being built into
kernel.  With this change the user no longer need to remember building
this option.

Submitted by:	swell.k at gmail.com
2009-09-21 07:08:20 +00:00
Xin LI
372c733759 Enable s3pci on amd64 which works on top of VESA, and allow
static building it into kernel on i386 and amd64.

Submitted by:	swell.k at gmail.com
2009-09-21 07:05:48 +00:00
Xin LI
ee5e90dab2 - Teach vesa(4) and dpms(4) about x86emu. [1]
- Add vesa kernel options for amd64.
 - Connect libvgl library and splash kernel modules to amd64 build.
 - Connect manual page dpms(4) to amd64 build.
 - Remove old vesa/dpms files.

Submitted by:	paradox <ddkprog yahoo com> [1], swell k at gmail.com
		(with some minor tweaks)
2009-09-09 09:50:31 +00:00
Ed Schouten
9b934d0930 Move libteken out of the syscons directory.
I initially committed libteken to sys/dev/syscons/teken, but now that
I'm working on a console driver myself, I noticed this was not a good
decision. Move it to sys/teken to make it easier for other drivers to
use a terminal emulator.

Also list teken.c in sys/conf/files, instead of listing it in all the
files.arch files separately.
2009-09-03 09:33:57 +00:00
Rui Paulo
df849145b5 * Driver for ACPI WMI (Windows Management Instrumentation)
* Driver for ACPI HP extra functionations, which required
  ACPI WMI driver.

Submitted by:	Michael <freebsdusb at bindone.de>
Approved by:	re
MFC after:	2 weeks
2009-06-23 13:17:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
9dc0b3d54f Implement simple machine check support for amd64 and i386.
- For CPUs that only support MCE (the machine check exception) but not MCA
  (i.e. Pentium), all this does is print out the value of the machine check
  registers and then panic when a machine check exception occurs.
- For CPUs that support MCA (the machine check architecture), the support is
  a bit more involved.
  - First, there is limited support for decoding the CPU-independent MCA
    error codes in the kernel, and the kernel uses this to output a short
    description of any machine check events that occur.
  - When a machine check exception occurs, all of the MCx banks on the
    current CPU are scanned and any events are reported to the console
    before panic'ing.
  - To catch events for correctable errors, a periodic timer kicks off a
    task which scans the MCx banks on all CPUs.  The frequency of these
    checks is controlled via the "hw.mca.interval" sysctl.
  - Userland can request an immediate scan of the MCx banks by writing
    a non-zero value to "hw.mca.force_scan".
  - If any correctable events are encountered, the appropriate details
    are stored in a 'struct mca_record' (defined in <machine/mca.h>).
    The "hw.mca.count" is a count of such records and each record may
    be queried via the "hw.mca.records" tree by specifying the record
    index (0 .. count - 1) as the next name in the MIB similar to using
    PIDs with the kern.proc.* sysctls.  The idea is to export machine
    check events to userland for more detailed processing.
  - The periodic timer and hw.mca sysctls are only present if the CPU
    supports MCA.

Discussed with:	emaste (briefly)
MFC after:	1 month
2009-05-13 17:53:04 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
2c66cccab7 Save and restore segment registers on amd64 when entering and leaving
the kernel on amd64. Fill and read segment registers for mcontext and
signals. Handle traps caused by restoration of the
invalidated selectors.

Implement user-mode creation and manipulation of the process-specific
LDT descriptors for amd64, see sysarch(2).

Implement support for TSS i/o port access permission bitmap for amd64.

Context-switch LDT and TSS. Do not save and restore segment registers on
the context switch, that is handled by kernel enter/leave trampolines
now. Remove segment restore code from the signal trampolines for
freebsd/amd64, freebsd/ia32 and linux/i386 for the same reason.

Implement amd64-specific compat shims for sysarch.

Linuxolator (temporary ?) switched to use gsbase for thread_area pointer.

TODO:
Currently, gdb is not adapted to show segment registers from struct reg.
Also, no machine-depended ptrace command is added to set segment
registers for debugged process.

In collaboration with:	pho
Discussed with:	peter
Reviewed by:	jhb
Linuxolator tested by:	dchagin
2009-04-01 13:09:26 +00:00
Michael Reifenberger
24cd37102c Add support for Phenom (Family 10h) to cpufreq.
Its a newer version provided by the author than in the PR.

PR:		kern/128575
Submitted by:	Gen Otsuji annona2 [at] gmail.com
2009-03-28 08:54:47 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
b78d0925ed Sigh, not my day. Check-in the update version that didn't have
the linux_compat mistakes.
2009-03-26 20:23:21 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
d2b2128a28 Add stuff to support upcoming BMC/IPMI flashing of newer Dell machine
via the Linux tool.
     -  Add Linux shim to ipmi(4)
     -  Create a partitions file to linprocfs to make Linux fdisk see
        disks.  This file is dynamic so we can see disks come and go.
     -  Convert msdosfs to vfat in mtab since Linux uses that for
        msdosfs.
     -  In the Linux mount path convert vfat passed in to msdosfs
        so Linux mount works on FreeBSD.  Note that tasting works
        so that if da0 is a msdos file system
                /compat/linux/bin/mount /dev/da0 /mnt
        works.
     -  fix a 64it bug for l_off_t.
Grabing sh, mount, fdisk, df from Linux, creating a symlink of mtab to
/compat/linux/etc/mtab and then some careful unpacking of the Linux bmc
update tool and hacking makes it work on newer Dell boxes.  Note, probably
if you can't figure out how to do this, then you probably shouldn't be
doing it :-)
2009-03-26 17:14:22 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
c66d2b38c8 Initial suspend/resume support for amd64.
This code is heavily inspired by Takanori Watanabe's experimental SMP patch
for i386 and large portion was shamelessly cut and pasted from Peter Wemm's
AP boot code.
2009-03-17 00:48:11 +00:00
Rui Paulo
fc1f75e512 Rename the k8temp driver to amdtemp.
MFC after:	2 weeks
2009-03-13 16:08:08 +00:00
Ed Schouten
802cb57e34 Add memmove() to the kernel, making the kernel compile with Clang.
When copying big structures, LLVM generates calls to memmove(), because
it may not be able to figure out whether structures overlap. This caused
linker errors to occur. memmove() is now implemented using bcopy().
Ideally it would be the other way around, but that can be solved in the
future. On ARM we don't do add anything, because it already has
memmove().

Discussed on:	arch@
Reviewed by:	rdivacky
2009-02-28 16:21:25 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
719085d9d1 Pull in kbd.c with usb2_input_kbd, just like ukbd. 2009-02-15 20:24:21 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
129dec4245 - Add few VIA bridges to agp_via.c and connect it to amd64 build
as they support Intel Core/Core 2 and VIA Nano processors.
- Align "optional agp" in conf/files.* for consistency while I am here.
2009-01-23 17:48:18 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
9045c73682 Connect padlock(4) to amd64 build for VIA Nano processors. 2009-01-12 19:23:46 +00:00
Ed Schouten
b4b1c5169d Replace syscons terminal renderer by a new renderer that uses libteken.
Some time ago I started working on a library called libteken, which is
terminal emulator. It does not buffer any screen contents, but only
keeps terminal state, such as cursor position, attributes, etc. It
should implement all escape sequences that are implemented by the
cons25 terminal emulator, but also a fair amount of sequences that are
present in VT100 and xterm.

A lot of random notes, which could be of interest to users/developers:

- Even though I'm leaving the terminal type set to `cons25', users can
  do experiments with placing `xterm-color' in /etc/ttys. Because we
  only implement a subset of features of xterm, this may cause
  artifacts. We should consider extending libteken, because in my
  opinion xterm is the way to go. Some missing features:

  - Keypad application mode (DECKPAM)
  - Character sets (SCS)

- libteken is filled with a fair amount of assertions, but unfortunately
  we cannot go into the debugger anymore if we fail them. I've done
  development of this library almost entirely in userspace. In
  sys/dev/syscons/teken there are two applications that can be helpful
  when debugging the code:

  - teken_demo: a terminal emulator that can be started from a regular
    xterm that emulates a terminal using libteken. This application can
    be very useful to debug any rendering issues.

  - teken_stress: a stress testing application that emulates random
    terminal output. libteken has literally survived multiple terabytes
    of random input.

- libteken also includes support for UTF-8, but unfortunately our input
  layer and font renderer don't support this. If users want to
  experiment with UTF-8 support, they can enable `TEKEN_UTF8' in
  teken.h. If you recompile your kernel or the teken_demo application,
  you can hold some nice experiments.

- I've left PC98 the way it is right now. The PC98 platform has a custom
  syscons renderer, which supports some form of localised input. Maybe
  we should port PC98 to libteken by the time syscons supports UTF-8?

- I've removed the `dumb' terminal emulator. It has been broken for
  years. It hasn't survived the `struct proc' -> `struct thread'
  conversion.

- To prevent confusion among people that want to hack on libteken:
  unlike syscons, the state machines that parse the escape sequences are
  machine generated. This means that if you want to add new escape
  sequences, you have to add an entry to the `sequences' file. This will
  cause new entries to be added to `teken_state.h'.

- Any rendering artifacts that didn't occur prior to this commit are by
  accident. They should be reported to me, so I can fix them.

Discussed on:	current@, hackers@
Discussed with:	philip (at 25C3)
2009-01-01 13:26:53 +00:00
Sam Leffler
3364462355 Switch to ath hal source code. Note this removes the ath_hal
module; the ath module now brings in the hal support.  Kernel
config files are almost backwards compatible; supplying

device ath_hal

gives you the same chip support that the binary hal did but you
must also include

options AH_SUPPORT_AR5416

to enable the extended format descriptors used by 11n parts.
It is now possible to control the chip support included in a
build by specifying exactly which chips are to be supported
in the config file; consult ath_hal(4) for information.
2008-12-01 16:53:01 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
0cfab8ddc1 - Add support for PMCs in Intel CPUs of Family 6, model 0xE (Core Solo
and Core Duo), models 0xF (Core2), model 0x17 (Core2Extreme) and
  model 0x1C (Atom).

  In these CPUs, the actual numbers, kinds and widths of PMCs present
  need to queried at run time.  Support for specific "architectural"
  events also needs to be queried at run time.

  Model 0xE CPUs support programmable PMCs, subsequent CPUs
  additionally support "fixed-function" counters.

- Use event names that are close to vendor documentation, taking in
  account that:
  - events with identical semantics on two or more CPUs in this family
    can have differing names in vendor documentation,
  - identical vendor event names may map to differing events across
    CPUs,
  - each type of CPU supports a different subset of measurable
    events.

  Fixed-function and programmable counters both use the same vendor
  names for events.  The use of a class name prefix ("iaf-" or
  "iap-" respectively) permits these to be distinguished.

- In libpmc, refactor pmc_name_of_event() into a public interface
  and an internal helper function, for use by log handling code.

- Minor code tweaks: staticize a global, freshen a few comments.

Tested by:	gnn
2008-11-27 09:00:47 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
e829eb6d61 - Separate PMC class dependent code from other kinds of machine
dependencies.  A 'struct pmc_classdep' structure describes operations
  on PMCs; 'struct pmc_mdep' contains one or more 'struct pmc_classdep'
  structures depending on the CPU in question.

  Inside PMC class dependent code, row indices are relative to the
  PMCs supported by the PMC class; MI code in "hwpmc_mod.c" translates
  global row indices before invoking class dependent operations.

- Augment the OP_GETCPUINFO request with the number of PMCs present
  in a PMC class.

- Move code common to Intel CPUs to file "hwpmc_intel.c".

- Move TSC handling to file "hwpmc_tsc.c".
2008-11-09 17:37:54 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
ae528485c4 Add freebsd32 compat shims for ioctl(2)
MDIOCATTACH, MDIOCDETACH, MDIOCQUERY, and MDIOCLIST requests.
2008-09-22 16:09:16 +00:00
Stanislav Sedov
e085f869d5 - Add cpuctl(4) pseudo-device driver to provide access to some low-level
features of CPUs like reading/writing machine-specific registers,
  retrieving cpuid data, and updating microcode.
- Add cpucontrol(8) utility, that provides userland access to
  the features of cpuctl(4).
- Add subsequent manpages.

The cpuctl(4) device operates as follows. The pseudo-device node cpuctlX
is created for each cpu present in the systems. The pseudo-device minor
number corresponds to the cpu number in the system. The cpuctl(4) pseudo-
device allows a number of ioctl to be preformed, namely RDMSR/WRMSR/CPUID
and UPDATE. The first pair alows the caller to read/write machine-specific
registers from the correspondent CPU. cpuid data could be retrieved using
the CPUID call, and microcode updates are applied via UPDATE.

The permissions are inforced based on the pseudo-device file permissions.
RDMSR/CPUID will be allowed when the caller has read access to the device
node, while WRMSR/UPDATE will be granted only when the node is opened
for writing. There're also a number of priv(9) checks.

The cpucontrol(8) utility is intened to provide userland access to
the cpuctl(4) device features. The utility also allows one to apply
cpu microcode updates.

Currently only Intel and AMD cpus are supported and were tested.

Approved by:	kib
Reviewed by:	rpaulo, cokane, Peter Jeremy
MFC after:	1 month
2008-08-08 16:26:53 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
0051271e12 Make genclock standard on all platforms.
Thanks to: grehan & marcel for platform support on ia64 and ppc.
2008-04-21 10:09:55 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
36bff1ebfb Convert amd64 and i386 to share the atrtc device driver. 2008-04-14 08:00:00 +00:00
Rui Paulo
6f15a9e57a Connect k8temp(4) to the build. 2008-04-12 14:20:22 +00:00
Scott Long
593c873471 Remove the rr232x driver. It has been superceded by the hptrr driver. 2008-02-03 07:07:30 +00:00