freebsd-skq/sys/i386/isa/npx.c

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1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
/*-
* Copyright (c) 1990 William Jolitz.
* Copyright (c) 1991 The Regents of the University of California.
* All rights reserved.
*
* 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.
*
ALL: Removed patch kit headers and rcsid strings, add $Id$. isa.c: Removed old #ifdef notyet isa_configure code, since it will never be used, and I have done 90% of what it attempted to. Add conflict checking code that searchs back through the devtab's looking for any device that has already been found that may conflict with what we are about to probe. Checks are mode for I/O address, memory address, IRQ, and DRQ. This should stop the screwing up of any device that has alread been found by other device probes. Print out messages when we are not going to probe a device due to a conflict so the user knows WHY something was not found. For example: aha0 not probed due to irq conflict with ahb0 at 11 Now print out a message when a device is not found so the user knows that it was probed for, but could not be found. For example: ed1 not found at 0x320 For devices that have I/O address < 0x100 say that they are on the motherboard, not on isa! The 0x100 magic number is per ISA spec. It may seem funny that pc0 and sc0 report as being on the motherboard, but this is due to the fact that the I/O address used is that of the keyboard controller which IS on the motherboard. We really need to split the keyboard probe from the display probe. It is completly legal to build a pc with out one or the other, or even with out both! npx.c: Return -1 from the probe routine if we are using the Emulator so that the i/o addresses are not printed, this is the same trick used for 486's. Do not print the ``Errors reported via Exception 16'', and ``Errors reported via IRQ 13'' messages any more, since these just lead to more user confusion that anything. It still prints the message ``Error reporting broken, using 387 emulator'' so that the person is aware that there mother board is ill.
1993-10-13 15:59:30 +00:00
* from: @(#)npx.c 7.2 (Berkeley) 5/12/91
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
*/
2003-06-02 16:32:55 +00:00
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include "opt_cpu.h"
#include "opt_debug_npx.h"
#include "opt_isa.h"
#include "opt_npx.h"
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
New APIC support code: - The apic interrupt entry points have been rewritten so that each entry point can serve 32 different vectors. When the entry is executed, it uses one of the 32-bit ISR registers to determine which vector in its assigned range was triggered. Thus, the apic code can support 159 different interrupt vectors with only 5 entry points. - We now always to disable the local APIC to work around an errata in certain PPros and then re-enable it again if we decide to use the APICs to route interrupts. - We no longer map IO APICs or local APICs using special page table entries. Instead, we just use pmap_mapdev(). We also no longer export the virtual address of the local APIC as a global symbol to the rest of the system, but only in local_apic.c. To aid this, the APIC ID of each CPU is exported as a per-CPU variable. - Interrupt sources are provided for each intpin on each IO APIC. Currently, each source is given a unique interrupt vector meaning that PCI interrupts are not shared on most machines with an I/O APIC. That mapping for interrupt sources to interrupt vectors is up to the APIC enumerator driver however. - We no longer probe to see if we need to use mixed mode to route IRQ 0, instead we always use mixed mode to route IRQ 0 for now. This can be disabled via the 'NO_MIXED_MODE' kernel option. - The npx(4) driver now always probes to see if a built-in FPU is present since this test can now be performed with the new APIC code. However, an SMP kernel will panic if there is more than one CPU and a built-in FPU is not found. - PCI interrupts are now properly routed when using APICs to route interrupts, so remove the hack to psuedo-route interrupts when the intpin register was read. - The apic.h header was moved to apicreg.h and a new apicvar.h header that declares the APIs used by the new APIC code was added.
2003-11-03 21:53:38 +00:00
#include <sys/smp.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <machine/bus.h>
#include <sys/rman.h>
#ifdef NPX_DEBUG
#include <sys/syslog.h>
#endif
#include <sys/signalvar.h>
#include <machine/asmacros.h>
#include <machine/cputypes.h>
#include <machine/frame.h>
#include <machine/md_var.h>
#include <machine/pcb.h>
#include <machine/psl.h>
#include <machine/clock.h>
#include <machine/resource.h>
#include <machine/specialreg.h>
#include <machine/segments.h>
#include <machine/ucontext.h>
#ifdef PC98
#include <pc98/pc98/pc98.h>
#else
#include <i386/isa/isa.h>
#endif
New APIC support code: - The apic interrupt entry points have been rewritten so that each entry point can serve 32 different vectors. When the entry is executed, it uses one of the 32-bit ISR registers to determine which vector in its assigned range was triggered. Thus, the apic code can support 159 different interrupt vectors with only 5 entry points. - We now always to disable the local APIC to work around an errata in certain PPros and then re-enable it again if we decide to use the APICs to route interrupts. - We no longer map IO APICs or local APICs using special page table entries. Instead, we just use pmap_mapdev(). We also no longer export the virtual address of the local APIC as a global symbol to the rest of the system, but only in local_apic.c. To aid this, the APIC ID of each CPU is exported as a per-CPU variable. - Interrupt sources are provided for each intpin on each IO APIC. Currently, each source is given a unique interrupt vector meaning that PCI interrupts are not shared on most machines with an I/O APIC. That mapping for interrupt sources to interrupt vectors is up to the APIC enumerator driver however. - We no longer probe to see if we need to use mixed mode to route IRQ 0, instead we always use mixed mode to route IRQ 0 for now. This can be disabled via the 'NO_MIXED_MODE' kernel option. - The npx(4) driver now always probes to see if a built-in FPU is present since this test can now be performed with the new APIC code. However, an SMP kernel will panic if there is more than one CPU and a built-in FPU is not found. - PCI interrupts are now properly routed when using APICs to route interrupts, so remove the hack to psuedo-route interrupts when the intpin register was read. - The apic.h header was moved to apicreg.h and a new apicvar.h header that declares the APIs used by the new APIC code was added.
2003-11-03 21:53:38 +00:00
#include <machine/intr_machdep.h>
#ifdef DEV_ISA
#include <isa/isavar.h>
#endif
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#if !defined(CPU_ENABLE_SSE) && defined(I686_CPU)
#define CPU_ENABLE_SSE
#endif
#if defined(CPU_DISABLE_SSE)
#undef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
#endif
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
/*
* 387 and 287 Numeric Coprocessor Extension (NPX) Driver.
*/
/* Configuration flags. */
#define NPX_DISABLE_I586_OPTIMIZED_BCOPY (1 << 0)
#define NPX_DISABLE_I586_OPTIMIZED_BZERO (1 << 1)
#define NPX_DISABLE_I586_OPTIMIZED_COPYIO (1 << 2)
#if defined(__GNUCLIKE_ASM) && !defined(lint)
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
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#define fldcw(addr) __asm("fldcw %0" : : "m" (*(addr)))
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#define fnclex() __asm("fnclex")
#define fninit() __asm("fninit")
#define fnsave(addr) __asm __volatile("fnsave %0" : "=m" (*(addr)))
#define fnstcw(addr) __asm __volatile("fnstcw %0" : "=m" (*(addr)))
#define fnstsw(addr) __asm __volatile("fnstsw %0" : "=m" (*(addr)))
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
#define fp_divide_by_0() __asm("fldz; fld1; fdiv %st,%st(1); fnop")
#define frstor(addr) __asm("frstor %0" : : "m" (*(addr)))
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
#define fxrstor(addr) __asm("fxrstor %0" : : "m" (*(addr)))
#define fxsave(addr) __asm __volatile("fxsave %0" : "=m" (*(addr)))
#endif
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#define start_emulating() __asm("smsw %%ax; orb %0,%%al; lmsw %%ax" \
: : "n" (CR0_TS) : "ax")
#define stop_emulating() __asm("clts")
#else /* !(__GNUCLIKE_ASM && !lint) */
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
void fldcw(caddr_t addr);
void fnclex(void);
void fninit(void);
void fnsave(caddr_t addr);
void fnstcw(caddr_t addr);
void fnstsw(caddr_t addr);
void fp_divide_by_0(void);
void frstor(caddr_t addr);
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
void fxsave(caddr_t addr);
void fxrstor(caddr_t addr);
#endif
void start_emulating(void);
void stop_emulating(void);
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#endif /* __GNUCLIKE_ASM && !lint */
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#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
#define GET_FPU_CW(thread) \
(cpu_fxsr ? \
(thread)->td_pcb->pcb_save.sv_xmm.sv_env.en_cw : \
(thread)->td_pcb->pcb_save.sv_87.sv_env.en_cw)
#define GET_FPU_SW(thread) \
(cpu_fxsr ? \
(thread)->td_pcb->pcb_save.sv_xmm.sv_env.en_sw : \
(thread)->td_pcb->pcb_save.sv_87.sv_env.en_sw)
#else /* CPU_ENABLE_SSE */
#define GET_FPU_CW(thread) \
(thread->td_pcb->pcb_save.sv_87.sv_env.en_cw)
#define GET_FPU_SW(thread) \
(thread->td_pcb->pcb_save.sv_87.sv_env.en_sw)
#endif /* CPU_ENABLE_SSE */
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typedef u_char bool_t;
static void fpusave(union savefpu *);
static void fpurstor(union savefpu *);
static int npx_attach(device_t dev);
static void npx_identify(driver_t *driver, device_t parent);
static void npx_intr(void *);
static int npx_probe(device_t dev);
#ifdef I586_CPU_XXX
static long timezero(const char *funcname,
void (*func)(void *buf, size_t len));
#endif /* I586_CPU */
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
int hw_float; /* XXX currently just alias for npx_exists */
SYSCTL_INT(_hw,HW_FLOATINGPT, floatingpoint,
CTLFLAG_RD, &hw_float, 0,
"Floatingpoint instructions executed in hardware");
static volatile u_int npx_intrs_while_probing;
static volatile u_int npx_traps_while_probing;
static union savefpu npx_cleanstate;
static bool_t npx_cleanstate_ready;
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static bool_t npx_ex16;
static bool_t npx_exists;
static bool_t npx_irq13;
alias_for_inthand_t probetrap;
__asm(" \n\
.text \n\
.p2align 2,0x90 \n\
.type " __XSTRING(CNAME(probetrap)) ",@function \n\
" __XSTRING(CNAME(probetrap)) ": \n\
ss \n\
incl " __XSTRING(CNAME(npx_traps_while_probing)) " \n\
fnclex \n\
iret \n\
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");
/*
* Identify routine. Create a connection point on our parent for probing.
*/
static void
npx_identify(driver, parent)
driver_t *driver;
device_t parent;
{
device_t child;
child = BUS_ADD_CHILD(parent, 0, "npx", 0);
if (child == NULL)
panic("npx_identify");
}
/*
* Do minimal handling of npx interrupts to convert them to traps.
*/
static void
npx_intr(dummy)
void *dummy;
{
struct thread *td;
npx_intrs_while_probing++;
/*
* The BUSY# latch must be cleared in all cases so that the next
* unmasked npx exception causes an interrupt.
*/
#ifdef PC98
outb(0xf8, 0);
#else
outb(0xf0, 0);
#endif
/*
* fpcurthread is normally non-null here. In that case, schedule an
* AST to finish the exception handling in the correct context
* (this interrupt may occur after the thread has entered the
* kernel via a syscall or an interrupt). Otherwise, the npx
* state of the thread that caused this interrupt must have been
2001-09-14 04:40:44 +00:00
* pushed to the thread's pcb, and clearing of the busy latch
* above has finished the (essentially null) handling of this
* interrupt. Control will eventually return to the instruction
* that caused it and it will repeat. We will eventually (usually
* soon) win the race to handle the interrupt properly.
*/
td = PCPU_GET(fpcurthread);
if (td != NULL) {
td->td_pcb->pcb_flags |= PCB_NPXTRAP;
mtx_lock_spin(&sched_lock);
td->td_flags |= TDF_ASTPENDING;
mtx_unlock_spin(&sched_lock);
}
}
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/*
* Probe routine. Initialize cr0 to give correct behaviour for [f]wait
* whether the device exists or not (XXX should be elsewhere). Set flags
* to tell npxattach() what to do. Modify device struct if npx doesn't
* need to use interrupts. Return 0 if device exists.
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*/
static int
npx_probe(dev)
device_t dev;
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{
struct gate_descriptor save_idt_npxtrap;
struct resource *ioport_res, *irq_res;
void *irq_cookie;
int ioport_rid, irq_num, irq_rid;
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
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u_short control;
u_short status;
save_idt_npxtrap = idt[IDT_MF];
setidt(IDT_MF, probetrap, SDT_SYS386TGT, SEL_KPL,
GSEL(GCODE_SEL, SEL_KPL));
ioport_rid = 0;
ioport_res = bus_alloc_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IOPORT, &ioport_rid,
IO_NPX, IO_NPX, IO_NPXSIZE, RF_ACTIVE);
if (ioport_res == NULL)
panic("npx: can't get ports");
#ifdef PC98
if (resource_int_value("npx", 0, "irq", &irq_num) != 0)
irq_num = 8;
#else
if (resource_int_value("npx", 0, "irq", &irq_num) != 0)
irq_num = 13;
#endif
irq_rid = 0;
irq_res = bus_alloc_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, &irq_rid, irq_num,
irq_num, 1, RF_ACTIVE);
if (irq_res == NULL)
panic("npx: can't get IRQ");
if (bus_setup_intr(dev, irq_res, INTR_TYPE_MISC | INTR_FAST, npx_intr,
NULL, &irq_cookie) != 0)
panic("npx: can't create intr");
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
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/*
* Partially reset the coprocessor, if any. Some BIOS's don't reset
* it after a warm boot.
*/
#ifdef PC98
outb(0xf8,0);
#else
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outb(0xf1, 0); /* full reset on some systems, NOP on others */
outb(0xf0, 0); /* clear BUSY# latch */
#endif
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/*
* Prepare to trap all ESC (i.e., NPX) instructions and all WAIT
* instructions. We must set the CR0_MP bit and use the CR0_TS
* bit to control the trap, because setting the CR0_EM bit does
* not cause WAIT instructions to trap. It's important to trap
* WAIT instructions - otherwise the "wait" variants of no-wait
* control instructions would degenerate to the "no-wait" variants
* after FP context switches but work correctly otherwise. It's
* particularly important to trap WAITs when there is no NPX -
* otherwise the "wait" variants would always degenerate.
*
* Try setting CR0_NE to get correct error reporting on 486DX's.
* Setting it should fail or do nothing on lesser processors.
*/
load_cr0(rcr0() | CR0_MP | CR0_NE);
/*
* But don't trap while we're probing.
*/
stop_emulating();
/*
* Finish resetting the coprocessor, if any. If there is an error
* pending, then we may get a bogus IRQ13, but npx_intr() will handle
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
* it OK. Bogus halts have never been observed, but we enabled
* IRQ13 and cleared the BUSY# latch early to handle them anyway.
*/
fninit();
device_set_desc(dev, "math processor");
/*
* Don't use fwait here because it might hang.
* Don't use fnop here because it usually hangs if there is no FPU.
*/
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
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DELAY(1000); /* wait for any IRQ13 */
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#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
if (npx_intrs_while_probing != 0)
printf("fninit caused %u bogus npx interrupt(s)\n",
npx_intrs_while_probing);
if (npx_traps_while_probing != 0)
printf("fninit caused %u bogus npx trap(s)\n",
npx_traps_while_probing);
#endif
/*
* Check for a status of mostly zero.
*/
status = 0x5a5a;
fnstsw(&status);
if ((status & 0xb8ff) == 0) {
/*
* Good, now check for a proper control word.
*/
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
control = 0x5a5a;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
fnstcw(&control);
if ((control & 0x1f3f) == 0x033f) {
hw_float = npx_exists = 1;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
/*
* We have an npx, now divide by 0 to see if exception
* 16 works.
*/
control &= ~(1 << 2); /* enable divide by 0 trap */
fldcw(&control);
#ifdef FPU_ERROR_BROKEN
/*
* FPU error signal doesn't work on some CPU
* accelerator board.
*/
npx_ex16 = 1;
return (0);
#endif
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
npx_traps_while_probing = npx_intrs_while_probing = 0;
fp_divide_by_0();
Fixed misclassification of npx interrupts caused by npx_probe(). Dividing by 0 in order to check for irq13/exception16 delivery apparently always causes an irq13 even if we have configured for exception16 (by setting CR0_NE). This was expected, but the timing of the irq13 was unexpected. Without CR0_NE, the irq13 is delivered synchronously at least on my test machine, but with CR0_NE it is delivered a little later (about 250 nsec) in PIC mode and much later (5000-10000 nsec) in APIC mode. So especially in APIC mode, the irq13 may arrive after it is supposed to be shut down. It should then be masked, but the shutdown is incomplete, so the irq goes to a null handler that just reports it as stray. The fix is to wait a bit after dividing by 0 to give a good chance of the irq13 being handled by its proper handler. Removed the hack that was supposed to recover from the incomplete shutdown of irq13. The shutdown is now even more incomplete, or perhaps just incomplete in a different way, but the hack now has no effect because irq13 is edge triggered and handling of edge triggered interrupts is now optimized by skipping their masking. The hack only worked due to it accidentally not losing races. The incomplete shutdown of irq13 still allows unprivileged users to generate a stray irq13 (except on systems where irq13 is actually used) by unmasking an npx exception and causing one. The exception gets handled properly by the exception 16 handler. A spurious irq13 is delivered asynchronously but is harmless (as in the probe) because it is almost perfectly not handled by the null interrupt handler. Perfectly not handling it involves mainly not resetting the npx busy latch. This prevents further irq13's despite them not being masked in the [A]PIC.
2004-06-06 15:17:44 +00:00
DELAY(1000); /* wait for any IRQ13 */
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
if (npx_traps_while_probing != 0) {
/*
* Good, exception 16 works.
*/
npx_ex16 = 1;
goto no_irq13;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
if (npx_intrs_while_probing != 0) {
/*
* Bad, we are stuck with IRQ13.
*/
npx_irq13 = 1;
idt[IDT_MF] = save_idt_npxtrap;
New APIC support code: - The apic interrupt entry points have been rewritten so that each entry point can serve 32 different vectors. When the entry is executed, it uses one of the 32-bit ISR registers to determine which vector in its assigned range was triggered. Thus, the apic code can support 159 different interrupt vectors with only 5 entry points. - We now always to disable the local APIC to work around an errata in certain PPros and then re-enable it again if we decide to use the APICs to route interrupts. - We no longer map IO APICs or local APICs using special page table entries. Instead, we just use pmap_mapdev(). We also no longer export the virtual address of the local APIC as a global symbol to the rest of the system, but only in local_apic.c. To aid this, the APIC ID of each CPU is exported as a per-CPU variable. - Interrupt sources are provided for each intpin on each IO APIC. Currently, each source is given a unique interrupt vector meaning that PCI interrupts are not shared on most machines with an I/O APIC. That mapping for interrupt sources to interrupt vectors is up to the APIC enumerator driver however. - We no longer probe to see if we need to use mixed mode to route IRQ 0, instead we always use mixed mode to route IRQ 0 for now. This can be disabled via the 'NO_MIXED_MODE' kernel option. - The npx(4) driver now always probes to see if a built-in FPU is present since this test can now be performed with the new APIC code. However, an SMP kernel will panic if there is more than one CPU and a built-in FPU is not found. - PCI interrupts are now properly routed when using APICs to route interrupts, so remove the hack to psuedo-route interrupts when the intpin register was read. - The apic.h header was moved to apicreg.h and a new apicvar.h header that declares the APIs used by the new APIC code was added.
2003-11-03 21:53:38 +00:00
#ifdef SMP
if (mp_ncpus > 1)
panic("npx0 cannot use IRQ 13 on an SMP system");
#endif
return (0);
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
/*
* Worse, even IRQ13 is broken. Use emulator.
*/
}
}
/*
* Probe failed, but we want to get to npxattach to initialize the
* emulator and say that it has been installed. XXX handle devices
* that aren't really devices better.
*/
New APIC support code: - The apic interrupt entry points have been rewritten so that each entry point can serve 32 different vectors. When the entry is executed, it uses one of the 32-bit ISR registers to determine which vector in its assigned range was triggered. Thus, the apic code can support 159 different interrupt vectors with only 5 entry points. - We now always to disable the local APIC to work around an errata in certain PPros and then re-enable it again if we decide to use the APICs to route interrupts. - We no longer map IO APICs or local APICs using special page table entries. Instead, we just use pmap_mapdev(). We also no longer export the virtual address of the local APIC as a global symbol to the rest of the system, but only in local_apic.c. To aid this, the APIC ID of each CPU is exported as a per-CPU variable. - Interrupt sources are provided for each intpin on each IO APIC. Currently, each source is given a unique interrupt vector meaning that PCI interrupts are not shared on most machines with an I/O APIC. That mapping for interrupt sources to interrupt vectors is up to the APIC enumerator driver however. - We no longer probe to see if we need to use mixed mode to route IRQ 0, instead we always use mixed mode to route IRQ 0 for now. This can be disabled via the 'NO_MIXED_MODE' kernel option. - The npx(4) driver now always probes to see if a built-in FPU is present since this test can now be performed with the new APIC code. However, an SMP kernel will panic if there is more than one CPU and a built-in FPU is not found. - PCI interrupts are now properly routed when using APICs to route interrupts, so remove the hack to psuedo-route interrupts when the intpin register was read. - The apic.h header was moved to apicreg.h and a new apicvar.h header that declares the APIs used by the new APIC code was added.
2003-11-03 21:53:38 +00:00
#ifdef SMP
if (mp_ncpus > 1)
panic("npx0 cannot be emulated on an SMP system");
#endif
/* FALLTHROUGH */
no_irq13:
idt[IDT_MF] = save_idt_npxtrap;
bus_teardown_intr(dev, irq_res, irq_cookie);
bus_release_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, irq_rid, irq_res);
bus_release_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IOPORT, ioport_rid, ioport_res);
return (0);
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
/*
* Attach routine - announce which it is, and wire into system
*/
static int
npx_attach(dev)
device_t dev;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
{
int flags;
register_t s;
flags = device_get_flags(dev);
if (npx_irq13)
device_printf(dev, "IRQ 13 interface\n");
else if (npx_ex16)
device_printf(dev, "INT 16 interface\n");
else
device_printf(dev, "WARNING: no FPU!\n");
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
npxinit(__INITIAL_NPXCW__);
if (npx_cleanstate_ready == 0) {
s = intr_disable();
stop_emulating();
fpusave(&npx_cleanstate);
start_emulating();
npx_cleanstate_ready = 1;
intr_restore(s);
}
#ifdef I586_CPU_XXX
if (cpu_class == CPUCLASS_586 && npx_ex16 && npx_exists &&
timezero("i586_bzero()", i586_bzero) <
timezero("bzero()", bzero) * 4 / 5) {
if (!(flags & NPX_DISABLE_I586_OPTIMIZED_BCOPY))
bcopy_vector = i586_bcopy;
if (!(flags & NPX_DISABLE_I586_OPTIMIZED_BZERO))
bzero_vector = i586_bzero;
if (!(flags & NPX_DISABLE_I586_OPTIMIZED_COPYIO)) {
copyin_vector = i586_copyin;
copyout_vector = i586_copyout;
}
}
#endif
return (0); /* XXX unused */
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
/*
* Initialize floating point unit.
*/
void
npxinit(control)
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
u_short control;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
{
static union savefpu dummy;
register_t savecrit;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
if (!npx_exists)
return;
/*
* fninit has the same h/w bugs as fnsave. Use the detoxified
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
* fnsave to throw away any junk in the fpu. npxsave() initializes
* the fpu and sets fpcurthread = NULL as important side effects.
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
*/
savecrit = intr_disable();
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
npxsave(&dummy);
stop_emulating();
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
/* XXX npxsave() doesn't actually initialize the fpu in the SSE case. */
if (cpu_fxsr)
fninit();
#endif
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
fldcw(&control);
start_emulating();
intr_restore(savecrit);
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
/*
* Free coprocessor (if we have it).
*/
void
npxexit(td)
struct thread *td;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
{
register_t savecrit;
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
savecrit = intr_disable();
if (curthread == PCPU_GET(fpcurthread))
npxsave(&PCPU_GET(curpcb)->pcb_save);
intr_restore(savecrit);
#ifdef NPX_DEBUG
if (npx_exists) {
u_int masked_exceptions;
masked_exceptions = GET_FPU_CW(td) & GET_FPU_SW(td) & 0x7f;
/*
* Log exceptions that would have trapped with the old
* control word (overflow, divide by 0, and invalid operand).
*/
if (masked_exceptions & 0x0d)
log(LOG_ERR,
2001-09-18 21:05:04 +00:00
"pid %d (%s) exited with masked floating point exceptions 0x%02x\n",
td->td_proc->p_pid, td->td_proc->p_comm,
masked_exceptions);
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
#endif
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
}
int
npxformat()
{
if (!npx_exists)
return (_MC_FPFMT_NODEV);
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
if (cpu_fxsr)
return (_MC_FPFMT_XMM);
#endif
return (_MC_FPFMT_387);
}
/*
* The following mechanism is used to ensure that the FPE_... value
* that is passed as a trapcode to the signal handler of the user
* process does not have more than one bit set.
*
* Multiple bits may be set if the user process modifies the control
* word while a status word bit is already set. While this is a sign
* of bad coding, we have no choise than to narrow them down to one
* bit, since we must not send a trapcode that is not exactly one of
* the FPE_ macros.
*
* The mechanism has a static table with 127 entries. Each combination
* of the 7 FPU status word exception bits directly translates to a
* position in this table, where a single FPE_... value is stored.
* This FPE_... value stored there is considered the "most important"
* of the exception bits and will be sent as the signal code. The
* precedence of the bits is based upon Intel Document "Numerical
* Applications", Chapter "Special Computational Situations".
*
* The macro to choose one of these values does these steps: 1) Throw
* away status word bits that cannot be masked. 2) Throw away the bits
* currently masked in the control word, assuming the user isn't
* interested in them anymore. 3) Reinsert status word bit 7 (stack
* fault) if it is set, which cannot be masked but must be presered.
* 4) Use the remaining bits to point into the trapcode table.
*
* The 6 maskable bits in order of their preference, as stated in the
* above referenced Intel manual:
* 1 Invalid operation (FP_X_INV)
* 1a Stack underflow
* 1b Stack overflow
* 1c Operand of unsupported format
* 1d SNaN operand.
* 2 QNaN operand (not an exception, irrelavant here)
* 3 Any other invalid-operation not mentioned above or zero divide
* (FP_X_INV, FP_X_DZ)
* 4 Denormal operand (FP_X_DNML)
* 5 Numeric over/underflow (FP_X_OFL, FP_X_UFL)
* 6 Inexact result (FP_X_IMP)
*/
static char fpetable[128] = {
0,
FPE_FLTINV, /* 1 - INV */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 2 - DNML */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 3 - INV | DNML */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 4 - DZ */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 5 - INV | DZ */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 6 - DNML | DZ */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 7 - INV | DNML | DZ */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 8 - OFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 9 - INV | OFL */
FPE_FLTUND, /* A - DNML | OFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* B - INV | DNML | OFL */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* C - DZ | OFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* D - INV | DZ | OFL */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* E - DNML | DZ | OFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 10 - UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 11 - INV | UFL */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 12 - DNML | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 13 - INV | DNML | UFL */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 14 - DZ | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 15 - INV | DZ | UFL */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 16 - DNML | DZ | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 17 - INV | DNML | DZ | UFL */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 18 - OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 19 - INV | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 1A - DNML | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 1B - INV | DNML | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 1C - DZ | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 1D - INV | DZ | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 1E - DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 1F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL */
FPE_FLTRES, /* 20 - IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 21 - INV | IMP */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 22 - DNML | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 23 - INV | DNML | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 24 - DZ | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 25 - INV | DZ | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 26 - DNML | DZ | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 27 - INV | DNML | DZ | IMP */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 28 - OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 29 - INV | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 2A - DNML | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 2B - INV | DNML | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 2C - DZ | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 2D - INV | DZ | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 2E - DNML | DZ | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 2F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 30 - UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 31 - INV | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 32 - DNML | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 33 - INV | DNML | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 34 - DZ | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 35 - INV | DZ | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 36 - DNML | DZ | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 37 - INV | DNML | DZ | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 38 - OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 39 - INV | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 3A - DNML | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 3B - INV | DNML | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 3C - DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 3D - INV | DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 3E - DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTINV, /* 3F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 40 - STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 41 - INV | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 42 - DNML | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 43 - INV | DNML | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 44 - DZ | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 45 - INV | DZ | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 46 - DNML | DZ | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 47 - INV | DNML | DZ | STK */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 48 - OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 49 - INV | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 4A - DNML | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 4B - INV | DNML | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 4C - DZ | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 4D - INV | DZ | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 4E - DNML | DZ | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 4F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 50 - UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 51 - INV | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 52 - DNML | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 53 - INV | DNML | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 54 - DZ | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 55 - INV | DZ | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 56 - DNML | DZ | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 57 - INV | DNML | DZ | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 58 - OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 59 - INV | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 5A - DNML | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 5B - INV | DNML | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 5C - DZ | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 5D - INV | DZ | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 5E - DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 5F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL | STK */
FPE_FLTRES, /* 60 - IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 61 - INV | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 62 - DNML | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 63 - INV | DNML | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 64 - DZ | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 65 - INV | DZ | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 66 - DNML | DZ | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 67 - INV | DNML | DZ | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 68 - OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 69 - INV | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 6A - DNML | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 6B - INV | DNML | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 6C - DZ | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 6D - INV | DZ | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 6E - DNML | DZ | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 6F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 70 - UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 71 - INV | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 72 - DNML | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 73 - INV | DNML | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 74 - DZ | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 75 - INV | DZ | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 76 - DNML | DZ | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 77 - INV | DNML | DZ | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTOVF, /* 78 - OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 79 - INV | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTUND, /* 7A - DNML | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 7B - INV | DNML | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 7C - DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 7D - INV | DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTDIV, /* 7E - DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
FPE_FLTSUB, /* 7F - INV | DNML | DZ | OFL | UFL | IMP | STK */
};
1993-06-12 14:58:17 +00:00
/*
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
* Preserve the FP status word, clear FP exceptions, then generate a SIGFPE.
*
* Clearing exceptions is necessary mainly to avoid IRQ13 bugs. We now
* depend on longjmp() restoring a usable state. Restoring the state
* or examining it might fail if we didn't clear exceptions.
*
* The error code chosen will be one of the FPE_... macros. It will be
* sent as the second argument to old BSD-style signal handlers and as
* "siginfo_t->si_code" (second argument) to SA_SIGINFO signal handlers.
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
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*
* XXX the FP state is not preserved across signal handlers. So signal
* handlers cannot afford to do FP unless they preserve the state or
* longjmp() out. Both preserving the state and longjmp()ing may be
* destroyed by IRQ13 bugs. Clearing FP exceptions is not an acceptable
* solution for signals other than SIGFPE.
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*/
int
npxtrap()
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{
register_t savecrit;
u_short control, status;
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if (!npx_exists) {
printf("npxtrap: fpcurthread = %p, curthread = %p, npx_exists = %d\n",
PCPU_GET(fpcurthread), curthread, npx_exists);
panic("npxtrap from nowhere");
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}
savecrit = intr_disable();
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/*
* Interrupt handling (for another interrupt) may have pushed the
* state to memory. Fetch the relevant parts of the state from
* wherever they are.
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*/
if (PCPU_GET(fpcurthread) != curthread) {
control = GET_FPU_CW(curthread);
status = GET_FPU_SW(curthread);
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} else {
fnstcw(&control);
fnstsw(&status);
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}
if (PCPU_GET(fpcurthread) == curthread)
fnclex();
intr_restore(savecrit);
return (fpetable[status & ((~control & 0x3f) | 0x40)]);
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}
/*
* Implement device not available (DNA) exception
*
* It would be better to switch FP context here (if curthread != fpcurthread)
Use sufficient parentheses in macros. Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw(). Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs. Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now. Fix some spelling and formatting errors. Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int). Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13. Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device. Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no emulator in the kernel. Use %p for pointers in error messages. Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state. SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave the FPU in the wrong state (as before). Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation. Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception. Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when npxsave() was called.
1995-01-03 04:00:06 +00:00
* and not necessarily for every context switch, but it is too hard to
* access foreign pcb's.
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*/
static int err_count = 0;
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int
npxdna()
{
struct pcb *pcb;
register_t s;
u_short control;
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if (!npx_exists)
return (0);
if (PCPU_GET(fpcurthread) == curthread) {
printf("npxdna: fpcurthread == curthread %d times\n",
++err_count);
stop_emulating();
return (1);
}
if (PCPU_GET(fpcurthread) != NULL) {
printf("npxdna: fpcurthread = %p (%d), curthread = %p (%d)\n",
PCPU_GET(fpcurthread),
PCPU_GET(fpcurthread)->td_proc->p_pid,
curthread, curthread->td_proc->p_pid);
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panic("npxdna");
}
s = intr_disable();
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stop_emulating();
/*
* Record new context early in case frstor causes an IRQ13.
*/
PCPU_SET(fpcurthread, curthread);
pcb = PCPU_GET(curpcb);
if ((pcb->pcb_flags & PCB_NPXINITDONE) == 0) {
/*
* This is the first time this thread has used the FPU or
* the PCB doesn't contain a clean FPU state. Explicitly
* initialize the FPU and load the default control word.
*/
fninit();
control = __INITIAL_NPXCW__;
fldcw(&control);
pcb->pcb_flags |= PCB_NPXINITDONE;
} else {
/*
* The following frstor may cause an IRQ13 when the state
* being restored has a pending error. The error will
* appear to have been triggered by the current (npx) user
* instruction even when that instruction is a no-wait
* instruction that should not trigger an error (e.g.,
* fnclex). On at least one 486 system all of the no-wait
* instructions are broken the same as frstor, so our
* treatment does not amplify the breakage. On at least
* one 386/Cyrix 387 system, fnclex works correctly while
* frstor and fnsave are broken, so our treatment breaks
* fnclex if it is the first FPU instruction after a context
* switch.
*/
fpurstor(&pcb->pcb_save);
}
intr_restore(s);
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return (1);
}
/*
* Wrapper for fnsave instruction, partly to handle hardware bugs. When npx
* exceptions are reported via IRQ13, spurious IRQ13's may be triggered by
* no-wait npx instructions. See the Intel application note AP-578 for
* details. This doesn't cause any additional complications here. IRQ13's
* are inherently asynchronous unless the CPU is frozen to deliver them --
* one that started in userland may be delivered many instructions later,
* after the process has entered the kernel. It may even be delivered after
* the fnsave here completes. A spurious IRQ13 for the fnsave is handled in
* the same way as a very-late-arriving non-spurious IRQ13 from user mode:
* it is normally ignored at first because we set fpcurthread to NULL; it is
* normally retriggered in npxdna() after return to user mode.
*
* npxsave() must be called with interrupts disabled, so that it clears
* fpcurthread atomically with saving the state. We require callers to do the
* disabling, since most callers need to disable interrupts anyway to call
* npxsave() atomically with checking fpcurthread.
*
* A previous version of npxsave() went to great lengths to excecute fnsave
* with interrupts enabled in case executing it froze the CPU. This case
* can't happen, at least for Intel CPU/NPX's. Spurious IRQ13's don't imply
* spurious freezes.
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*/
void
npxsave(addr)
union savefpu *addr;
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{
stop_emulating();
fpusave(addr);
start_emulating();
PCPU_SET(fpcurthread, NULL);
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}
/*
* This should be called with interrupts disabled and only when the owning
* FPU thread is non-null.
*/
void
npxdrop()
{
struct thread *td;
/*
* Discard pending exceptions in the !cpu_fxsr case so that unmasked
* ones don't cause a panic on the next frstor.
*/
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
if (!cpu_fxsr)
#endif
fnclex();
td = PCPU_GET(fpcurthread);
PCPU_SET(fpcurthread, NULL);
td->td_pcb->pcb_flags &= ~PCB_NPXINITDONE;
start_emulating();
}
/*
* Get the state of the FPU without dropping ownership (if possible).
* It returns the FPU ownership status.
*/
int
npxgetregs(td, addr)
struct thread *td;
union savefpu *addr;
{
register_t s;
if (!npx_exists)
return (_MC_FPOWNED_NONE);
if ((td->td_pcb->pcb_flags & PCB_NPXINITDONE) == 0) {
if (npx_cleanstate_ready)
bcopy(&npx_cleanstate, addr, sizeof(npx_cleanstate));
else
bzero(addr, sizeof(*addr));
return (_MC_FPOWNED_NONE);
}
s = intr_disable();
if (td == PCPU_GET(fpcurthread)) {
fpusave(addr);
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
if (!cpu_fxsr)
#endif
/*
* fnsave initializes the FPU and destroys whatever
* context it contains. Make sure the FPU owner
* starts with a clean state next time.
*/
npxdrop();
intr_restore(s);
return (_MC_FPOWNED_FPU);
} else {
intr_restore(s);
bcopy(&td->td_pcb->pcb_save, addr, sizeof(*addr));
return (_MC_FPOWNED_PCB);
}
}
/*
* Set the state of the FPU.
*/
void
npxsetregs(td, addr)
struct thread *td;
union savefpu *addr;
{
register_t s;
if (!npx_exists)
return;
s = intr_disable();
if (td == PCPU_GET(fpcurthread)) {
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
if (!cpu_fxsr)
#endif
fnclex(); /* As in npxdrop(). */
fpurstor(addr);
intr_restore(s);
} else {
intr_restore(s);
bcopy(addr, &td->td_pcb->pcb_save, sizeof(*addr));
}
curthread->td_pcb->pcb_flags |= PCB_NPXINITDONE;
}
static void
fpusave(addr)
union savefpu *addr;
{
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
if (cpu_fxsr)
fxsave(addr);
else
#endif
fnsave(addr);
}
static void
fpurstor(addr)
union savefpu *addr;
{
#ifdef CPU_ENABLE_SSE
if (cpu_fxsr)
fxrstor(addr);
else
#endif
frstor(addr);
}
#ifdef I586_CPU_XXX
static long
timezero(funcname, func)
const char *funcname;
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void (*func)(void *buf, size_t len);
{
void *buf;
#define BUFSIZE 1048576
long usec;
struct timeval finish, start;
buf = malloc(BUFSIZE, M_TEMP, M_NOWAIT);
if (buf == NULL)
return (BUFSIZE);
microtime(&start);
(*func)(buf, BUFSIZE);
microtime(&finish);
usec = 1000000 * (finish.tv_sec - start.tv_sec) +
finish.tv_usec - start.tv_usec;
if (usec <= 0)
usec = 1;
if (bootverbose)
printf("%s bandwidth = %u kBps\n", funcname,
(u_int32_t)(((BUFSIZE >> 10) * 1000000) / usec));
free(buf, M_TEMP);
return (usec);
}
#endif /* I586_CPU */
static device_method_t npx_methods[] = {
/* Device interface */
DEVMETHOD(device_identify, npx_identify),
DEVMETHOD(device_probe, npx_probe),
DEVMETHOD(device_attach, npx_attach),
DEVMETHOD(device_detach, bus_generic_detach),
DEVMETHOD(device_shutdown, bus_generic_shutdown),
DEVMETHOD(device_suspend, bus_generic_suspend),
DEVMETHOD(device_resume, bus_generic_resume),
{ 0, 0 }
};
static driver_t npx_driver = {
"npx",
npx_methods,
1, /* no softc */
};
static devclass_t npx_devclass;
/*
* We prefer to attach to the root nexus so that the usual case (exception 16)
* doesn't describe the processor as being `on isa'.
*/
DRIVER_MODULE(npx, nexus, npx_driver, npx_devclass, 0, 0);
#ifdef DEV_ISA
/*
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* This sucks up the legacy ISA support assignments from PNPBIOS/ACPI.
*/
static struct isa_pnp_id npxisa_ids[] = {
{ 0x040cd041, "Legacy ISA coprocessor support" }, /* PNP0C04 */
{ 0 }
};
static int
npxisa_probe(device_t dev)
{
int result;
if ((result = ISA_PNP_PROBE(device_get_parent(dev), dev, npxisa_ids)) <= 0) {
device_quiet(dev);
}
return(result);
}
static int
npxisa_attach(device_t dev)
{
return (0);
}
static device_method_t npxisa_methods[] = {
/* Device interface */
DEVMETHOD(device_probe, npxisa_probe),
DEVMETHOD(device_attach, npxisa_attach),
DEVMETHOD(device_detach, bus_generic_detach),
DEVMETHOD(device_shutdown, bus_generic_shutdown),
DEVMETHOD(device_suspend, bus_generic_suspend),
DEVMETHOD(device_resume, bus_generic_resume),
{ 0, 0 }
};
static driver_t npxisa_driver = {
"npxisa",
npxisa_methods,
1, /* no softc */
};
static devclass_t npxisa_devclass;
DRIVER_MODULE(npxisa, isa, npxisa_driver, npxisa_devclass, 0, 0);
#ifndef PC98
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DRIVER_MODULE(npxisa, acpi, npxisa_driver, npxisa_devclass, 0, 0);
#endif
#endif /* DEV_ISA */