that caused a 3-4 times slow down in performance.
(the primary Sparc64 developers are all using OFW_NEWPCI already, so it is
the best code path for users)
prototypes of cpu_halt(), cpu_reset() and swi_vm() from md_var.h to
cpu.h. This affects db_command.c and kern_shutdown.c.
ia64: move all MD prototypes from cpu.h to md_var.h. This affects
madt.c, interrupt.c and mp_machdep.c. Remove is_physical_memory().
It's not used (vm_machdep.c).
alpha: the MD prototypes have been left in cpu.h with a comment
that they should be there. Moving them is left for later. It was
expected that the impact would be significant enough to be done in
a seperate commit.
powerpc: MD prototypes left in cpu.h. Comment added.
Suggested by: bde
Tested with: make universe (pc98 incomplete)
set in cpu_critical_fork_exit() anymore.
- As far as I can tell, cpu_thread_link() has never been used, not even
when it was originally added, so remove it.
tsb_foreach(), 0 signals to terminate the tsb traversal, so when
tsb_foreach() was used in pmap_protect() (which only happens when
the area to be protected is larger than PMAP_TSB_THRESH = 16MB), only
the first tsb entry in the specified range would be protected.
Reported by: Andrew Belashov <bel@orel.ru>
memory in bus_dmamem_alloc(). This is possible now that
contigmalloc() supports the M_ZERO flag.
- Remove the locking of Giant around calls to contigmalloc() since
contigmalloc() now grabs Giant itself.
code from i386. The code has a slight bogon that interrupts are counted
twice. Once on the ithread dispatch and once on the dispatch for the vector
vmstat -i and systat -vm now contains interrupt counts.
Reviewed by: jake
without Giant held.
A quick outline of the locking strategy:
Since all IOMMUs are synchronized, there is a single lock, iommu_mtx,
which protects the hardware registers (where needed) and the global and
per-IOMMU software states. As soon as the IOMMUs are divorced, each struct
iommu_state will have its own mutex (and the remaining global state
will be moved into the struct).
The dvma rman has its own internal mutex; the TSB slots may only be
accessed by the owner of the corresponding resource, so neither needs
extra protection.
Since there is a second access path to maps via LRU queues, the consumer-
provided locking is not sufficient; therefore, each map which is on a
queue is additionally protected by iommu_mtx (in part, there is one
member which only the map owner may access). Each map on a queue may
be accessed and removed from or repositioned in a queue in any context as
long as the lock is held; only the owner may insert a map.
To reduce lock contention, some bus_dma functions remove the map from
the queue temporarily (on behalf of the map owner) for some operations and
reinsert it when they are done. Shorter operations and operations which are
not done on behalf of the lock owner are completely covered by the lock.
To facilitate the locking, reorganize the streaming buffer handling;
while being there, fix an old oversight which would cause the streaming
buffer to always be flushed, regardless of whether streaming was enabled
in the TSB entry. The streaming buffer is still disabled for now, since
there are a number of drivers which lack critical bus_dmamp_sync() calls.
Additional testing by: jake
order to avoid the overhead of later page faults. In general, it
implements two cases: one for vnode-backed objects and one for
device-backed objects. Only the device-backed case is really
machine-dependent, belonging in the pmap.
This commit moves the vnode-backed case into the (relatively) new
function vm_map_pmap_enter(). On amd64 and i386, this commit only
amounts to code rearrangement. On alpha and ia64, the new machine
independent (MI) implementation of the vnode case is smaller and more
efficient than their pmap-based implementations. (The MI
implementation takes advantage of the fact that objects in -CURRENT
are ordered collections of pages.) On sparc64, pmap_object_init_pt()
hadn't (yet) been implemented.
Add two new arguments to bus_dma_tag_create(): lockfunc and lockfuncarg.
Lockfunc allows a driver to provide a function for managing its locking
semantics while using busdma. At the moment, this is used for the
asynchronous busdma_swi and callback mechanism. Two lockfunc implementations
are provided: busdma_lock_mutex() performs standard mutex operations on the
mutex that is specified from lockfuncarg. dftl_lock() is a panic
implementation and is defaulted to when NULL, NULL are passed to
bus_dma_tag_create(). The only time that NULL, NULL should ever be used is
when the driver ensures that bus_dmamap_load() will not be deferred.
Drivers that do not provide their own locking can pass
busdma_lock_mutex,&Giant args in order to preserve the former behaviour.
sparc64 and powerpc do not provide real busdma_swi functions, so this is
largely a noop on those platforms. The busdma_swi on is64 is not properly
locked yet, so warnings will be emitted on this platform when busdma
callback deferrals happen.
If anyone gets panics or warnings from dflt_lock() being called, please
let me know right away.
Reviewed by: tmm, gibbs
with a comment describing it's advantages and the implication of
changing it. While being there, fix a typo in NOTES.
The option is not enabled in NOTES for now since large portions of code
are conditional on it being disabled, too.
for now. It introduces a OFW PCI bus driver and a generic OFW PCI-PCI
bridge driver. By utilizing these, the PCI handling is much more elegant
now.
The advantages of the new approach are:
- Device enumeration should hopefully be more like on Solaris now,
so unit numbers should match what's printed on the box more
closely.
- Real interrupt routing is implemented now, so cardbus bridges
etc. have at least a chance to work.
- The quirk tables are gone and have been replaced by (hopefully
sufficient) heuristics.
- Much cleaner code.
There was also a report that previously bogus interrupt assignments
are fixed now, which can be attributed to the new heuristics.
A pitfall, and the reason why this is not the default yet, is that
it changes device enumeration, as mentioned above, which can make
it necessary to change the system configuration if more than one
unit of a device type is present (on a system with two hme cars,
for example, it is possible that hme0 becomes hme1 and vice versa
after enabling the option). Systems with multiple disk controllers
may need to be booted into single user (and require manual specification
of the root file system on boot) to adjust the fstab.
Nevertheless, I would like to encourage users to use this option,
so that it can be made the default soon.
In detail, the changes are:
- Introduce an OFW PCI bus driver; it inherits most methods from the
generic PCI bus driver, but uses the firmware for enumeration,
performs additional initialization for devices and firmware-specific
interrupt routing. It also implements an OFW-specific method to allow
child devices to get their firmware nodes.
- Introduce an OFW PCI-PCI bridge driver; again, it inherits most
of the generic PCI-PCI bridge driver; it has it's own method for
interrupt routing, as well as some sparc64-specific methods (one to
get the node again, and one to adjust the bridge bus range, since
we need to reenumerate all PCI buses).
- Convert the apb driver to the new way of handling things.
- Provide a common framework for OFW bridge drivers, used be the two
drivers above.
- Provide a small common framework for interrupt routing (for all
bridge types).
- Convert the psycho driver to the new framework; this gets rid of a
bunch of old kludges in pci_read_config(), and the whole
preinitialization (ofw_pci_init()).
- Convert the ISA MD part and the EBus driver to the new way
interrupts and nodes are handled.
- Introduce types for firmware interrupt properties.
- Rename the old sparcbus_if to ofw_pci_if by repo copy (it is only
required for PCI), and move it to a more correct location (new
support methodsx were also added, and an old one was deprecated).
- Fix a bunch of minor bugs, perform some cleanups.
In some cases, I introduced some minor code duplication to keep the
new code clean, in hopes that the old code will be unifdef'ed soon.
Reviewed in part by: imp
Tested by: jake, Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>,
Sergey Mokryshev <mokr@mokr.net>,
Chris Jackman <cjackNOSPAM@klatsch.org>
Info on u30 firmware provided by: kris
implementation of a largely MI pmap_object_init_pt() for vnode-backed
objects. pmap_enter_quick() is implemented via pmap_enter() on sparc64
and powerpc.
- Correct a mismatch between pmap_object_init_pt()'s prototype and its
various implementations. (I plan to keep pmap_object_init_pt() as
the MD hook for device-backed objects on i386 and amd64.)
- Correct an error in ia64's pmap_enter_quick() and adjust its interface
to match the other versions. Discussed with: marcel
1.) Handle maximum segment sizes which are smaller than the IOMMU page
size by splitting up pages across multiple segments if needed; this case
was previously unimplemented, and would cause panics.
2.) KASSERT that the physical address is in range; remove a KASSERT that
has become pointless.
3.) Add a comment describing what remains to be fixed in the IOMMU code;
I plan to address these issues soon.
Desired by: dwhite (1)
data access errors when trying to read/write to non-existant PCI devices.
fix the psycho bridge to use peek for probing devices. This no longer
fakes it if the OFW node doesn't exist (and the reg == 0).
Reviewed by: jake, tmm
- Don't require all receivers of ipis to wait for all other receivers,
only that the sender wait for all receivers. This should reduce the
amount of time spent with interrupts disabled, which may be a cause
of ipi timeouts.
Discussed with: tmm
- Move prototypes for sparc64-specific helper functions from bus.h to
bus_private.h
- Move the method pointers from struct bus_dma_tag into a separate
structure; this saves some memory, and allows to use a single method
table for each busdma backend, so that the bus drivers need no longer
be changed if the methods tables need to be modified.
- Remove the hierarchical tag method lookup. It was never really useful,
since the layering is fixed, and the current implementations do not
need to call into parent implementations anyway. Each tag inherits
its method table pointer and cookie from the parent (or the root tag)
now, and the method wrapper macros directly use the method table
of the tag.
- Add a method table to the non-IOMMU backend, remove unnecessary
prototypes, remove the extra parent tag argument.
- Rename sparc64_dmamem_alloc_map() and sparc64_dmamem_free_map() to
sparc64_dma_alloc_map() and sparc64_dma_free_map(), move them to a
better place and use them for all map allocations and deallocations.
- Add a method table to the iommu backend, and staticize functions,
remove the extra parent tag argument.
- Change the psycho and sbus drivers to just set cookie and method table
in the root tag.
- Miscellaneous small fixes.
- Add vm page queue locking in certain places that are only needed on
sparc64.
This should make pmap_qenter and pmap_qremove MP-safe.
Discussed with: alc
to the machine-independent parts of the VM. At the same time, this
introduces vm object locking for the non-i386 platforms.
Two details:
1. KSTACK_GUARD has been removed in favor of KSTACK_GUARD_PAGES. The
different machine-dependent implementations used various combinations
of KSTACK_GUARD and KSTACK_GUARD_PAGES. To disable guard page, set
KSTACK_GUARD_PAGES to 0.
2. Remove the (unnecessary) clearing of PG_ZERO in vm_thread_new. In
5.x, (but not 4.x,) PG_ZERO can only be set if VM_ALLOC_ZERO is passed
to vm_page_alloc() or vm_page_grab().