freebsd-nq/sys/mips/include/vmparam.h
Warner Losh 45d426a34e FreeBSD/mips port. The FreeBSD/mips port targets mips32, mips64,
mips32r2 and mips64r2 (and close relatives) processors.  There
presently is support for ADMtek ADM5120, A mips 4Kc in a malta board,
the RB533 routerboard (based on IDT RC32434) and some preliminary
support for sibtye/broadcom designs.  Other hardware support will be
forthcomcing.

This port boots multiuser under gxemul emulating the malta board and
also bootstraps on the hardware whose support is forthcoming...

Oleksandr Tymoshenko, Wojciech Koszek, Warner Losh, Olivier Houchard,
Randall Stewert and others that have contributed to the mips2 and/or
mips2-jnpr perforce branches.  Juniper contirbuted a generic mips port
late in the life cycle of the misp2 branch.  Warner Losh merged the
mips2 and Juniper code bases, and others list above have worked for
the past several months to get to multiuser.

In addition, the mips2 work owe a debt to the trail blazing efforts of
the original mips branch in perforce done by Juli Mallett.
2008-04-13 07:27:37 +00:00

202 lines
6.2 KiB
C

/* $OpenBSD: vmparam.h,v 1.2 1998/09/15 10:50:12 pefo Exp $ */
/* $NetBSD: vmparam.h,v 1.5 1994/10/26 21:10:10 cgd Exp $ */
/*
* Copyright (c) 1988 University of Utah.
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* the Systems Programming Group of the University of Utah Computer
* Science Department and Ralph Campbell.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* from: Utah Hdr: vmparam.h 1.16 91/01/18
* @(#)vmparam.h 8.2 (Berkeley) 4/22/94
* JNPR: vmparam.h,v 1.3.2.1 2007/09/10 06:01:28 girish
* $FreeBSD$
*/
#ifndef _MACHINE_VMPARAM_H_
#define _MACHINE_VMPARAM_H_
/*
* Machine dependent constants mips processors.
*/
/*
* USRTEXT is the start of the user text/data space, while USRSTACK
* is the top (end) of the user stack.
*/
#define USRTEXT (1*PAGE_SIZE)
/*
* USRSTACK needs to start a little below 0x8000000 because the R8000
* and some QED CPUs perform some virtual address checks before the
* offset is calculated.
*/
#define USRSTACK 0x7ffff000 /* Start of user stack */
/*
* Virtual memory related constants, all in bytes
*/
#ifndef MAXTSIZ
#define MAXTSIZ (128UL*1024*1024) /* max text size */
#endif
#ifndef DFLDSIZ
#define DFLDSIZ (128UL*1024*1024) /* initial data size limit */
#endif
#ifndef MAXDSIZ
#define MAXDSIZ (1*1024UL*1024*1024) /* max data size */
#endif
#ifndef DFLSSIZ
#define DFLSSIZ (8UL*1024*1024) /* initial stack size limit */
#endif
#ifndef MAXSSIZ
#define MAXSSIZ (64UL*1024*1024) /* max stack size */
#endif
#ifndef SGROWSIZ
#define SGROWSIZ (128UL*1024) /* amount to grow stack */
#endif
/*
* The time for a process to be blocked before being very swappable.
* This is a number of seconds which the system takes as being a non-trivial
* amount of real time. You probably shouldn't change this;
* it is used in subtle ways (fractions and multiples of it are, that is, like
* half of a ``long time'', almost a long time, etc.)
* It is related to human patience and other factors which don't really
* change over time.
*/
#define MAXSLP 20
/*
* Mach derived constants
*/
/* user/kernel map constants */
#define VM_MIN_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0x00000000)
#define VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0x80000000)
#define VM_MAX_MMAP_ADDR VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS
#define VM_MAX_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0x80000000)
#ifndef VM_KERNEL_ALLOC_OFFSET
#define VM_KERNEL_ALLOC_OFFSET ((vm_offset_t)0x00000000)
#endif
#define VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0xC0000000)
#define VM_KERNEL_WIRED_ADDR_END (VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS + VM_KERNEL_ALLOC_OFFSET)
#define VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0xFFFFC000)
/*
* Disable superpage reservations. (not sure if this is right
* I copied it from ARM)
*/
#ifndef VM_NRESERVLEVEL
#define VM_NRESERVLEVEL 0
#endif
/* virtual sizes (bytes) for various kernel submaps */
#ifndef VM_KMEM_SIZE
#define VM_KMEM_SIZE (12 * 1024 * 1024)
#endif
/*
* How many physical pages per KVA page allocated.
* min(max(VM_KMEM_SIZE, Physical memory/VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE), VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX)
* is the total KVA space allocated for kmem_map.
*/
#ifndef VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE
#define VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE (3)
#endif
/*
* Ceiling on amount of kmem_map kva space.
*/
#ifndef VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX
#define VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX (200 * 1024 * 1024)
#endif
/* initial pagein size of beginning of executable file */
#ifndef VM_INITIAL_PAGEIN
#define VM_INITIAL_PAGEIN 16
#endif
/*
* max number of non-contig chunks of physical RAM you can have
*/
#define VM_PHYSSEG_MAX 32
/*
* The physical address space is densely populated.
*/
#define VM_PHYSSEG_DENSE
/*
* Create three free page pools: VM_FREEPOOL_DEFAULT is the default pool
* from which physical pages are allocated and VM_FREEPOOL_DIRECT is
* the pool from which physical pages for small UMA objects are
* allocated.
*/
#define VM_NFREEPOOL 3
#define VM_FREEPOOL_CACHE 2
#define VM_FREEPOOL_DEFAULT 0
#define VM_FREEPOOL_DIRECT 1
/*
* we support 1 free list:
*
* - DEFAULT for all systems
*/
#define VM_NFREELIST 1
#define VM_FREELIST_DEFAULT 0
/*
* The largest allocation size is 1MB.
*/
#define VM_NFREEORDER 9
/*
* XXXMIPS: This values need to be changed!!!
*/
#if 0
#define VM_MIN_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0x0000000000010000)
#define VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)MIPS_KSEG0_START-1)
#define VM_MAX_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0x0000000100000000)
#define VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)MIPS_KSEG3_START)
#define VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)MIPS_KSEG3_END)
#define KERNBASE (VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS)
/* virtual sizes (bytes) for various kernel submaps */
#define VM_KMEM_SIZE (16*1024*1024) /* XXX ??? */
#endif
#define NBSEG 0x400000 /* bytes/segment */
#define SEGOFSET (NBSEG-1) /* byte offset into segment */
#define SEGSHIFT 22 /* LOG2(NBSEG) */
#endif /* !_MACHINE_VMPARAM_H_ */