These are similar to the mips24k performance counters - some are
available on perfcnt0/3, some are available on perfcnt1/4.
However, the events aren't all the same.
* Add the events, named the same as from Linux oprofile.
* Verify they're the same as "MIPS32(R) 74KTM Processor Core Family
Software User's Manual"; Document Number: MD00519; Revision 01.05.
* Rename INSTRUCTIONS to something else, so it doesn't clash with
the alias INSTRUCTIONS. I'll try to tidy this up later; there
are a few other aliases to add and shuffle around.
Tested:
* QCA9558 SoC (AP135 board) - MIPS74Kc core (no FPU.)
* make universe; where it didn't fail for other reasons.
TODO:
* It'd be nice to support the four performance counters
in at least this hardware, rather than just two.
Reviewed by: bsdimp ("looks good; don't break world".)
When following symlinks, fts returned FTS_SLNONE when fstatat(flag=0)
failed, but a subsequent fstatat(flag=AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) succeeded. This
incorrectly triggered if a filename existed to be read from the directory,
was deleted before the fstatat(flag=0) and created again after the
fstatat(flag=0).
Fix this by only returning FTS_SLNONE if the result from
fstatat(flag=AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW) is actually a symlink. If it is not a
symlink, treat it as if fstatat(flag=0) succeeded.
PR: 196724
Reported and tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
stage, just like for the regular world stage.
Reviewed by: rodrigc, imp, bapt, emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2187
Both .weak and .alias assembler directives only work when assembling
the file which defines the symbol.
Reported and tested by: andrew
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
%rdi, %rsi, etc are inadvertently bypassed along with the check to
see if the instruction needs to be repeated per the 'rep' prefix.
Add "MOVS" instruction support for the 'MMIO to MMIO' case.
Reviewed by: neel
Per Austin group issue #884, sh should not import IFS from the environment
but always set it to $' \t\n'. For wordexp(), however, it is documented and
useful for it to use IFS from the environment.
Since sh currently imports IFS from the environment, this change has no
functional effect.
MFC after: 1 week
Note that to cancel blocked kevent(2) call, changelist must be empty,
since we cannot cancel a call which already made changes to the
process state. And in reverse, call which only makes changes to the
kqueue state, without waiting for an event, is not cancellable. This
makes a natural usage model to migrate kqueue loop to support
cancellation, where existing single kevent(2) call must be split into
two: first uncancellable update of kqueue, then cancellable wait for
events.
Note that this is ABI-incompatible change, but it is believed that
there is no cancel-safe code that relies on kevent(2) not being a
cancellation point. Option to preserve the ABI would be to keep
kevent(2) as is, but add new call with flags to specify cancellation
behaviour, which only value seems to add complications.
Suggested and reviewed by: jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
only adds support for kernel-toolchain, however it is expected further
changes to add kernel and userland support will be committed as they are
reviewed.
As our copy of binutils is too old the devel/aarch64-binutils port needs
to be installed to pull in a linker.
To build either TARGET needs to be set to arm64, or TARGET_ARCH set to
aarch64. The latter is set so uname -p will return aarch64 as existing
third party software expects this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2005
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This fixes C++ libraries not implicitly linking in libc++. This is
generally not an issue because the final linking with the compiled binary
will involve CXX via PROG_CXX or other means. It is however
inconsistent with libraries implicitly linking in libc and problematic
for trying to build libraries with '-z defs' to ensure all direct
dependencies are linked in.
libatf-c++ is currently the only consumer of this new feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2039
Reviewed by: imp
Discussed with: bapt
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Refactor float to integer conversion to share the same code.
80bit Intel/PPC long double is excluded due to lacking support
for the abstraction. Consistently provide saturation logic.
Extend to long double on 128bit IEEE extended platforms.
Initial patch with test cases from GuanHong Liu.
Reviewed by Steve Canon.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D2804
Pull in r232107 from upstream compiler-rt trunk (by Ed Maste):
Use signed int implementation for __fixint
Requested by: emaste
redzone below the stack pointer for scratch space and requires
interrupt and signal frames to avoid overwriting it. However, EFI uses
the Windows ABI which does not support this. As a result, interrupt
handlers in EFI push their interrupt frames directly on top of the
stack pointer. If the compiler used the red zone in a function in the
EFI loader, then a device interrupt that occurred while that function
was running could trash its local variables. In practice this happens
fairly reliable when using gzipfs as an interrupt during decompression
can trash the local variables in the inflate_table() function
resulting in corrupted output or hangs.
Fix this by disabling the redzone for amd64 EFI binaries. This
requires building not only the loader but any libraries used by the
loader without redzone support.
Thanks to Jilles for pointing me at the redzone once I found the stack
corruption.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2054
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc.
should raise a divide-by-zero floating point exception for x = +-0
and an invalid floating point exception for x < 0 including x = -Inf.
Update the code to raise the exception and update the documentation
with hopefully better description of the behavior.
Reviewed by: bde (code only)
The MEM_UOPS_RETIRED actually work the same way as the Sandy
Bridge counters, but the counters were documented in a different
way and that seemed to cause the Ivy Bridge counters to be
implemented incorrectly. Use the same counter definitions as
Sandy Bridge. While I'm here, rename the counters to match
what's documented in the datasheet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1590
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
On Sandy Bridge and later, to count branch-related events you
have to or together a mask indicating the type of branch
instruction to count (e.g. direct jump, branch, etc) and a bits
indicating whether to count taken and not-taken branches. The
current counter definitions where defining this bits individually,
so the counters never worked and always just counted 0.
Fix the counter definitions to instead contain the proper
combination of masks. Also update the man pages to reflect the
new counters.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1587
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
confusion, the _setjmp.S in libstand was never being used and was instead
being shadowed by the libc version. Since the libc version now uses FPRs,
it caused loader to crash.
This should also save and restore non-volatile Altivec registers, but that
needs to wait on solving two problems:
1. Adding the nonvolatile vector registers means we need 5 more than _JBLEN
entries in jmp_buf on 32-bit targets (64-bit is OK).
2. Need to figure out how to determine if saving/restoring vector regs
is supported on the current CPU from userland.
MFC after: 1 month
When a gpiobus child is added, use its name to identify the mapped pin
names.
Make the respective changes to libgpio.
Add a new '-n' flag to gpioctl(8) to set the pin name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2002
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Requested by: many