Commit Graph

1752 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Poul-Henning Kamp
f645b0b51c First part of a little cleanup in the calendar/timezone/RTC handling.
Move relevant variables to <sys/clock.h> and fix #includes as necessary.

Use libkern's much more time- & spamce-efficient BCD routines.
2006-10-02 12:59:59 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
d9cb97ff9d Use __builtin_va_start instead of __builtin_stdarg_start. GCC4 obsoletes
the former and  __builtin_va_start was present in all GCC version 3.1 and
later.
2006-09-21 01:37:02 +00:00
John Baldwin
7e9f73f3ed First pass at allowing memory to be mapped using cache modes other than
WB (write-back) on x86 via control bits in PTEs and PDEs (including making
use of the PAT MSR).  Changes include:
- A new pmap_mapdev_attr() function for amd64 and i386 which takes an
  additional parameter (relative to pmap_mapdev()) specifying the cache
  mode for this mapping.  Note that on amd64 only WB mappings are done with
  the direct map, all other modes result in a private mapping.
- pmap_mapdev() on i386 and amd64 now defaults to using UC (uncached)
  mappings rather than WB.  Previously we relied on the BIOS setting up
  MTRR's to enforce memio regions being treated as UC.  This might make
  hw.cbb_start_memory unnecessary in some cases now for example.
- A new pmap_mapbios()/pmap_unmapbios() API has been added to allow places
  that used pmap_mapdev() to map non-device memory (such as ACPI tables)
  to do so using WB as before.
- A new pmap_change_attr() function for amd64 and i386 that changes the
  caching mode for a range of KVA.

Reviewed by:	alc
2006-08-11 19:22:57 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
0758eaa227 Sync specialreg.h changes between amd64 and i386 with few fixes. 2006-07-13 16:09:40 +00:00
Michael Reifenberger
df2f5de4e5 Initialise (if necessary) the VIA C3/C7 features.
Store the capabilities for further use by random(4), padlock(4), ...

Obtained from:	mostly OpenBSD
MFC after:	1 week
2006-07-12 19:46:08 +00:00
Michael Reifenberger
9b6560e483 fix typo in identcpu.c and add one define to specialreg.h.
MFC after:	1 week
2006-07-12 16:52:56 +00:00
Michael Reifenberger
e5f87cebb3 First step to identify and initialize the newer VIA C7 CPU
as found in a VIA EPIA EN-15000 board.

Obtained from:	large parts from OpenBSD
2006-07-12 14:52:32 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
444576c0c4 Add two new CPUID bits for AMD CPUs, i. e., SVM and extended APIC register. 2006-07-12 06:04:12 +00:00
Thomas Wintergerst
5d0c7501b6 Extend i4b to support CAPI manager based ISDN controllers (CAPI manager is part of
c4b, CAPI for BSD). This is a preparation to add CAPI for BSD to the source tree.

Approved by:	hm (mentor)
MFC after:	2 weeks
2006-07-09 21:16:06 +00:00
David Xu
d037e6d6d0 Style fix, use low-case. 2006-06-19 07:55:29 +00:00
David Xu
85b2d575de Clear bit 22 in MSR IA32_MISC_ENABLE, according to Intel document,
when the bit 22 is set to 1, CPUID with EAX=0 returns a maximum
value in EAX[7..0] of 3, when set to 0(default), CPUID with EAX=0
returns the number corresponding to the maximum standard function
supported. On my machine, BIOS sets the bit to 1 to make it to be
compatible with old OS, this causes dual-core Pentium-D (two
physical cores) to be identified as hyperthreading (two logical
cores) by function mp_topology().
2006-06-19 07:51:47 +00:00
David Xu
afedf1a7f1 Use the method described in IA-32 Intel Architecture Software Developer's
Manual chapter 11.6.6 to get valid mxcsr bits, use the mxcsr mask to clear
invalid bits passed by user code.

Reviewed by: bde
2006-05-30 23:44:21 +00:00
David Xu
5d84379dd6 Backout changes trying to inherit floating-point environment, although
POSIX (susv3) requires this, but it is unclear what should be inherited,
duplicating whole 387 stack for new thread seems to be unnecessary and
dangerous. Revert to previous code, force a new thread to be started with
clean FP state.
2006-05-29 02:58:37 +00:00
David Xu
38fd748725 When creating a new thread, inherit floating-point environment from
current thread, this is required by POSIX pthread_create document.
2006-05-28 02:03:13 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
aa1807d5d6 Move clock_lock prototype into <machine/clock.h>, where it is more
appropriate.

Discussed with:	jhb
2006-05-19 18:53:50 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
f6ce2a64f7 Send the pcvt(4) driver off to retirement. 2006-05-17 09:33:15 +00:00
Peter Wemm
374757c7cb Test commit after repoman upgrade. Remove one of my many email addresses
from a copyright message.
2006-05-12 22:41:58 +00:00
Peter Wemm
b02a3351e8 Test commit after repoman upgrade. Remove one of my many email addresses
from a coyright message.
2006-05-12 22:38:53 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
5405ab4889 Clean out sysctl machdep.* related defines.
The cmos clock related stuff should really be in MI code.
2006-05-11 17:29:25 +00:00
John Baldwin
2b8a339c7e Add various constants for the PAT MSR and the PAT PTE and PDE flags.
Initialize the PAT MSR during boot to map PAT type 2 to Write-Combining
(WC) instead of Uncached (UC-).

MFC after:	1 month
2006-05-01 22:07:00 +00:00
John Baldwin
4ac60df584 Add a new 'pmap_invalidate_cache()' to flush the CPU caches via the
wbinvd() instruction.  This includes a new IPI so that all CPU caches on
all CPUs are flushed for the SMP case.

MFC after:	1 month
2006-05-01 21:36:47 +00:00
Peter Wemm
041a991fa7 MFamd64: shrink pv entries from 24 bytes to about 12 bytes. (336 pv entries
per page = effectively 12.19 bytes per pv entry after overheads).
Instead of using a shared UMA zone for 24 byte pv entries (two 8-byte tailq
nodes, a 4 byte pointer, and a 4 byte address), we allocate a page at a
time per process.  This provides 336 pv entries per process (actually, per
pmap address space) and eliminates one of the 8-byte tailq entries since
we now can track per-process pv entries implicitly.  The pointer to
the pmap can be eliminated by doing address arithmetic to find the metadata
on the page headers to find a single pointer shared by all 336 entries.
There is an 11-int bitmap for the freelist of those 336 entries.

This is mostly a mechanical conversion from amd64, except:
* i386 has to allocate kvm and map the pages, amd64 has them outside of kvm
* native word size is smaller, so bitmaps etc become 32 bit instead of 64
* no dump_add_page() etc stuff because they are in kvm always.
* various pmap internals tweaks because pmap uses direct map on amd64 but
  on i386 it has to use sched_pin and temporary mappings.

Also, sysctl vm.pmap.pv_entry_max and vm.pmap.shpgperproc are now
dynamic sysctls.  Like on amd64, i386 can now tune the pv entry limits
without a recompile or reboot.

This is important because of the following scenario.   If you have a 1GB
file (262144 pages) mmap()ed into 50 processes, that requires 13 million
pv entries.  At 24 bytes per pv entry, that is 314MB of ram and kvm, while
at 12 bytes it is 157MB.  A 157MB saving is significant.

Test-run by:  scottl (Thanks!)
2006-04-26 21:49:20 +00:00
Peter Wemm
4503a06eef Merge minidumps from amd64 where they were originally developed.
Major differences:
 * since there is no direct map region, there is no custom uma memory
   allocator to modify to include its pages in the dumps.
 * Various data entries are reduced from 64 bit to 32 bit to match the
   native size.

dump_add_page() and dump_drop_page() are still present in case one wants to
arrange for arbitary pages to be dumped.  This is of marginal use though
because libkvm+kgdb cannot address physical memory that isn't mapped into
kvm.
2006-04-21 04:28:43 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
bfcdefd8aa Eliminate HAVE_STOPPEDPCBS. On ia64 the PCPU holds a pointer to the
PCB in which the context of stopped CPUs is stored. To access this
PCB from KDB, we introduce a new define, called KDB_STOPPEDPCB. The
definition, when present, lives in <machine/kdb.h> and abstracts
where MD code saves the context. Define KDB_STOPPEDPCB on i386,
amd64, alpha and sparc64 in accordance to previous code.
2006-04-03 22:51:47 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
6f0f8cca25 Use wrapper macros for atomic pointer operations in order to perform the
correct casts.  This should probably be merged to other architectures.
2006-03-28 14:34:48 +00:00
Rink Springer
5fa7c51ff6 Committed the xbox syscons(8)-able console driver.
Reviewed by:    arch@ (no comments)
Approved by:    imp (mentor)
2006-03-03 14:52:57 +00:00
John Baldwin
215e7c161a Rework how we wire up interrupt sources to CPUs:
- Throw out all of the logical APIC ID stuff.  The Intel docs are somewhat
  ambiguous, but it seems that the "flat" cluster model we are currently
  using is only supported on Pentium and P6 family CPUs.  The other
  "hierarchy" cluster model that is supported on all Intel CPUs with
  local APICs is severely underdocumented.  For example, it's not clear
  if the OS needs to glean the topology of the APIC hierarchy from
  somewhere (neither ACPI nor MP Table include it) and setup the logical
  clusters based on the physical hierarchy or not.  Not only that, but on
  certain Intel chipsets, even though there were 4 CPUs in a logical
  cluster, all the interrupts were only sent to one CPU anyway.
- We now bind interrupts to individual CPUs using physical addressing via
  the local APIC IDs.  This code has also moved out of the ioapic PIC
  driver and into the common interrupt source code so that it can be
  shared with MSI interrupt sources since MSI is addressed to APICs the
  same way that I/O APIC pins are.
- Interrupt source classes grow a new method pic_assign_cpu() to bind an
  interrupt source to a specific local APIC ID.
- The SMP code now tells the interrupt code which CPUs are avaiable to
  handle interrupts in a simpler and more intuitive manner.  For one thing,
  it means we could now choose to not route interrupts to HT cores if we
  wanted to (this code is currently in place in fact, but under an #if 0
  for now).
- For now we simply do static round-robin of IRQs to CPUs when the first
  interrupt handler just as before, with the change that IRQs are now
  bound to individual CPUs rather than groups of up to 4 CPUs.
- Because the IRQ to CPU mapping has now been moved up a layer, it would
  be easier to manage this mapping from higher levels.  For example, we
  could allow drivers to specify a CPU affinity map for their interrupts,
  or we could allow a userland tool to bind IRQs to specific CPUs.

The MFC is tentative, but I want to see if this fixes problems some folks
had with UP APIC kernels on 6.0 on SMP machines (an SMP kernel would work
fine, but a UP APIC kernel (such as GENERIC in RELENG_6) would lose
interrupts).

MFC after:	1 week
2006-02-28 22:24:55 +00:00
Sam Leffler
3f676959ae guard function decls with _KERNEL so user code can include this file
MFC after:	1 week
2006-02-22 21:38:33 +00:00
Rink Springer
424d9b482d Cleaned the memory initialization up, moved some defines from the framebuffer
to an include file.

Reviewed by:		imp
Approved by:		imp (mentor)
2006-02-10 18:48:22 +00:00
Roman Kurakin
8edb110aa3 Prepare for sconfig(8) update.
Change also my e-mail.
2006-01-30 13:34:57 +00:00
Warner Losh
d5e61c97a6 By popular demand, move __HAVE_ACPI and __PCI_REROUTE_INTERRUPT into
param.h.  Per request, I've placed these just after the
_NO_NAMESPACE_POLLUTION ifndef.  I've not renamed anything yet, but
may since we don't need the __.

Submitted by: bde, jhb, scottl, many others.
2006-01-09 06:05:57 +00:00
Warner Losh
501755f4f6 Define __HAVE_ACPI and/or __PCI_REROUTE_INTERRUPT, as appropriate for
each platform.  These will be used in the pci code in preference to
the complicated #ifdefs we have there now.
2006-01-01 20:59:28 +00:00
David Xu
f71ba3d4a7 Remove pcb_switchout, it has not been used for a long time. 2005-12-29 13:23:48 +00:00
David Xu
1bfa910843 Move global variable private_tss into per-cpu area.
Reviewed by: jhb
2005-12-26 00:07:19 +00:00
John Baldwin
b439e431bf Tweak how the MD code calls the fooclock() methods some. Instead of
passing a pointer to an opaque clockframe structure and requiring the
MD code to supply CLKF_FOO() macros to extract needed values out of the
opaque structure, just pass the needed values directly.  In practice this
means passing the pair (usermode, pc) to hardclock() and profclock() and
passing the boolean (usermode) to hardclock_cpu() and hardclock_process().
Other details:
- Axe clockframe and CLKF_FOO() macros on all architectures.  Basically,
  all the archs were taking a trapframe and converting it into a clockframe
  one way or another.  Now they can just extract the PC and usermode values
  directly out of the trapframe and pass it to fooclock().
- Renamed hardclock_process() to hardclock_cpu() as the latter is more
  accurate.
- On Alpha, we now run profclock() at hz (profhz == hz) rather than at
  the slower stathz.
- On Alpha, for the TurboLaser machines that don't have an 8254
  timecounter, call hardclock() directly.  This removes an extra
  conditional check from every clock interrupt on Alpha on the BSP.
  There is probably room for even further pruning here by changing Alpha
  to use the simplified timecounter we use on x86 with the lapic timer
  since we don't get interrupts from the 8254 on Alpha anyway.
- On x86, clkintr() shouldn't ever be called now unless using_lapic_timer
  is false, so add a KASSERT() to that affect and remove a condition
  to slightly optimize the non-lapic case.
- Change prototypeof  arm_handler_execute() so that it's first arg is a
  trapframe pointer rather than a void pointer for clarity.
- Use KCOUNT macro in profclock() to lookup the kernel profiling bucket.

Tested on:	alpha, amd64, arm, i386, ia64, sparc64
Reviewed by:	bde (mostly)
2005-12-22 22:16:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
696effb697 - Cleanup whitespace and extra ()s in vtophys() macros.
- Move vtophys() macros next to vtopte() where vtopte() exists to match
  comments above vtopte().
- Remove references to the alternate address space in the comment above
  vtopte().  amd64 never had the alternate address space, and i386 lost it
  prior to PAE support being added.
- s/entires/entries/ in comments.

Reviewed by:	alc
2005-12-06 21:09:01 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
224d140293 Drop _MACHINE_ARCH and _MACHINE defines (not to be confused with
MACHINE_ARCH and MACHINE).  Their purpose was to be able to test
in cpp(1), but cpp(1) only understands integer type expressions.
Using such unsupported expressions introduced a number of subtle
bugs, which were discovered by compiling with -Wundef.
2005-12-06 13:27:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
2dce95a085 Change the i386 code to pass the interrupt vector as a separate argument
rather than embedding it in the intrframe as if_vec.  This reduces diffs
with amd64 somewhat.
- Remove cf_vec from clockframe (it wasn't used anyway) and stop pushing
  dummy vector arguments for ipi_bitmap_handler() and lapic_handle_timer()
  since clockframe == trapframe now.
- Fix ddb to handle stack traces across interrupt entry points that just
  have a trapframe on their stack and not a trapframe + vector.
- Change intr_execute_handlers() to take a trapframe rather than an
  intrframe pointer.
- Change lapic_handle_intr() and atpic_handle_intr() to take a vector and
  trapframe rather than an intrframe.
- GC struct intrframe now that nothing uses it anymore.
- GC CLOCK_TO_TRAPFRAME() and INTR_TO_TRAPFRAME().

Reviewed by:	bde
Requested by:	peter
2005-12-05 22:39:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
f0b9813920 - Move the code to deal with handling an IPI_STOP IPI out of
ipi_nmi_handler() and into a new cpustop_handler() function.  Change
  the Xcpustop IPI_STOP handler to call this function instead of
  duplicating all the same logic in assembly.
- EOI the local APIC for the lapic timer interrupt in C rather than
  assembly.
- Bump the lazypmap IPI counter if COUNT_IPIS is defined in C rather than
  assembly.
2005-12-05 22:25:41 +00:00
John Baldwin
48c8cbcb82 - Move PUSH_FRAME and POP_FRAME into machine/asmacros.h.
- Add a new SET_KERNEL_SREGS macro that sets up %ds and %es to point to
  kernel data and %fs to point to per-CPU data and use the new macro
  in several kernel entry points including trap and interrupt handlers.
- Convert the IPI_STOP handler Xcpustop to push a standard trap frame
  rather than an application frame.
- Make the TRAP() macro private to exception.s since it is only used
  there.
- Move the PCPU_*() macros in asmacros.h out of the middle of the
  profiling macros.

Reviewed by:	bde
Requested by:	bde (4, 5)
2005-12-05 21:44:47 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
342ed5d948 Fix -Wundef warnings found when compiling i386 LINT, GENERIC and
custom kernels.
2005-12-05 11:58:35 +00:00
John Baldwin
1dab802e37 Garbage collect machine/smptests.h now that it is empty and no longer used. 2005-11-22 22:55:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
c21ba8d166 Make COUNT_IPIS and COUNT_XINVLTLB_HITS real kernel options and take
them out of machine/smptests.h.
2005-11-22 22:54:42 +00:00
John Baldwin
e36e973da9 Garbage collect unused {VERBOSE_,}CPUSTOP_ON_DDBBREAK macros. 2005-11-22 22:37:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
0a17b197d3 Garbage collect the code to store diagnostics codes in a CMOS register
during SMP startup.  We haven't had any issues with starting up the APs
on i386 in quite a while now which is all this code is really useful for.
If someone ever does really need it they can always dig it up out of the
attic.
2005-11-22 22:34:14 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
6d8200ff0c Add /dev/speaker support to amd64.
The following repo-copies were made (by Mark Murray):

sys/i386/isa/spkr.c -> sys/dev/speaker/spkr.c
sys/i386/include/speaker.h -> sys/dev/speaker/speaker.h
share/man/man4/man4.i386/spkr.4 -> share/man/man4/spkr.4
2005-11-11 09:57:32 +00:00
Warner Losh
51ef421d92 Add support for XBOX to the FreeBSD port. The xbox architecture is
nearly identical to wintel/ia32, with a couple of tweaks.  Since it is
so similar to ia32, it is optionally added to a i386 kernel.  This
port is preliminary, but seems to work well.  Further improvements
will improve the interaction with syscons(4), port Linux nforce driver
and future versions of the xbox.

This supports the 64MB and 128MB boxes.  You'll need the most recent
CVS version of Cromwell (the Linux BIOS for the XBOX) to boot.

Rink will be maintaining this port, and is interested in feedback.
He's setup a website http://xbox-bsd.nl to report the latest
developments.

Any silly mistakes are my fault.

Submitted by: Rink P.W. Springer rink at stack dot nl and
	Ed Schouten ed at fxq dot nl
2005-11-09 03:55:40 +00:00
John Baldwin
c7362ff7fb Change the x86 code to allocate IDT vectors on-demand when an interrupt
source is first enabled similar to how intr_event's now allocate ithreads
on-demand.  Previously, we would map IDT vectors 1:1 to IRQs.  Since we
only have 191 available IDT vectors for I/O interrupts, this limited us
to only supporting IRQs 0-190 corresponding to the first 190 I/O APIC
intpins.  On many machines, however, each PCI-X bus has its own APIC even
though it only has 1 or 2 devices, thus, we were reserving between 24 and
32 IRQs just for 1 or 2 devices and thus 24 or 32 IDT vectors.  With this
change, a machine with 100 IRQs but only 5 in use will only use up 5 IDT
vectors.  Also, this change provides an API (apic_alloc_vector() and
apic_free_vector()) that will allow a future MSI interrupt source driver to
request IDT vectors for use by MSI interrupts on x86 machines.

Tested on:	amd64, i386
2005-11-02 20:11:47 +00:00
John Baldwin
e0f66ef861 Reorganize the interrupt handling code a bit to make a few things cleaner
and increase flexibility to allow various different approaches to be tried
in the future.
- Split struct ithd up into two pieces.  struct intr_event holds the list
  of interrupt handlers associated with interrupt sources.
  struct intr_thread contains the data relative to an interrupt thread.
  Currently we still provide a 1:1 relationship of events to threads
  with the exception that events only have an associated thread if there
  is at least one threaded interrupt handler attached to the event.  This
  means that on x86 we no longer have 4 bazillion interrupt threads with
  no handlers.  It also means that interrupt events with only INTR_FAST
  handlers no longer have an associated thread either.
- Renamed struct intrhand to struct intr_handler to follow the struct
  intr_foo naming convention.  This did require renaming the powerpc
  MD struct intr_handler to struct ppc_intr_handler.
- INTR_FAST no longer implies INTR_EXCL on all architectures except for
  powerpc.  This means that multiple INTR_FAST handlers can attach to the
  same interrupt and that INTR_FAST and non-INTR_FAST handlers can attach
  to the same interrupt.  Sharing INTR_FAST handlers may not always be
  desirable, but having sio(4) and uhci(4) fight over an IRQ isn't fun
  either.  Drivers can always still use INTR_EXCL to ask for an interrupt
  exclusively.  The way this sharing works is that when an interrupt
  comes in, all the INTR_FAST handlers are executed first, and if any
  threaded handlers exist, the interrupt thread is scheduled afterwards.
  This type of layout also makes it possible to investigate using interrupt
  filters ala OS X where the filter determines whether or not its companion
  threaded handler should run.
- Aside from the INTR_FAST changes above, the impact on MD interrupt code
  is mostly just 's/ithread/intr_event/'.
- A new MI ddb command 'show intrs' walks the list of interrupt events
  dumping their state.  It also has a '/v' verbose switch which dumps
  info about all of the handlers attached to each event.
- We currently don't destroy an interrupt thread when the last threaded
  handler is removed because it would suck for things like ppbus(8)'s
  braindead behavior.  The code is present, though, it is just under
  #if 0 for now.
- Move the code to actually execute the threaded handlers for an interrrupt
  event into a separate function so that ithread_loop() becomes more
  readable.  Previously this code was all in the middle of ithread_loop()
  and indented halfway across the screen.
- Made struct intr_thread private to kern_intr.c and replaced td_ithd
  with a thread private flag TDP_ITHREAD.
- In statclock, check curthread against idlethread directly rather than
  curthread's proc against idlethread's proc. (Not really related to intr
  changes)

Tested on:	alpha, amd64, i386, sparc64
Tested on:	arm, ia64 (older version of patch by cognet and marcel)
2005-10-25 19:48:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
58553b9925 Rename the KDB_STOP_NMI kernel option to STOP_NMI and make it apply to all
IPI_STOP IPIs.
- Change the i386 and amd64 MD IPI code to send an NMI if STOP_NMI is
  enabled if an attempt is made to send an IPI_STOP IPI.  If the kernel
  option is enabled, there is also a sysctl to change the behavior at
  runtime (debug.stop_cpus_with_nmi which defaults to enabled).  This
  includes removing stop_cpus_nmi() and making ipi_nmi_selected() a
  private function for i386 and amd64.
- Fix ipi_all(), ipi_all_but_self(), and ipi_self() on i386 and amd64 to
  properly handle bitmapped IPIs as well as IPI_STOP IPIs when STOP_NMI is
  enabled.
- Fix ipi_nmi_handler() to execute the restart function on the first CPU
  that is restarted making use of atomic_readandclear() rather than
  assuming that the BSP is always included in the set of restarted CPUs.
  Also, the NMI handler didn't clear the function pointer meaning that
  subsequent stop and restarts could execute the function again.
- Define a new macro HAVE_STOPPEDPCBS on i386 and amd64 to control the use
  of stoppedpcbs[] and always enable it for i386 and amd64 instead of
  being dependent on KDB_STOP_NMI.  It works fine in both the NMI and
  non-NMI cases.
2005-10-24 21:04:19 +00:00