Commit Graph

2318 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Warner Losh
982e7bdafc We don't support gcc < 4.2.1, so varargs.h now is just #error
always. Unifdef for versions prior to 4.2.1 and remove now-unused
header files.

Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14323
2018-02-12 14:48:14 +00:00
Nathan Whitehorn
ad6b97e7ca Define PHYS_TO_DMAP() and DMAP_TO_PHYS() as panics on the architectures
(i386 and arm) that never implement them. This allows the removal of
#ifdef PHYS_TO_DMAP on code otherwise protected by a runtime check on
PMAP_HAS_DMAP. It also fixes the build on ARM and i386 after I forgot an
#ifdef in r328168.

Reported by:	Milan Obuch
Pointy hat to:	me
2018-01-19 22:17:13 +00:00
Nathan Whitehorn
9a8196ce19 Remove SFBUF_OPTIONAL_DIRECT_MAP and such hacks, replacing them across the
kernel by PHYS_TO_DMAP() as previously present on amd64, arm64, riscv, and
powerpc64. This introduces a new MI macro (PMAP_HAS_DMAP) that can be
evaluated at runtime to determine if the architecture has a direct map;
if it does not (or does) unconditionally and PMAP_HAS_DMAP is either 0 or
1, the compiler can remove the conditional logic.

As part of this, implement PHYS_TO_DMAP() on sparc64 and mips64, which had
similar things but spelled differently. 32-bit MIPS has a partial direct-map
that maps poorly to this concept and is unchanged.

Reviewed by:		kib
Suggestions from:	marius, alc, kib
Runtime tested on:	amd64, powerpc64, powerpc, mips64
2018-01-19 17:46:31 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
30d4f9e888 Add atomic_load(9) and atomic_store(9) operations.
They provide relaxed-ordered atomic access semantic.  Due to the
FreeBSD memory model, the operations are syntaxical wrappers around
the volatile accesses.  The volatile qualifier is used to ensure that
the access not optimized out and in turn depends on the volatile
semantic as implemented by supported compilers.

The motivation for adding the operation is to help people coming from
other systems or knowing the C11/C++ standards where atomics have
special type and require use of the special access operations.  It is
still the case that FreeBSD requires plain load and stores of aligned
integer types to be atomic.

Suggested by:	jhb
Reviewed by:	alc, jhb
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13534
2017-12-19 09:59:20 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
3f6867ef63 i386: Bump KSTACK_PAGES default to match amd64
Logically, extend r286288 to cover all threads, by default.

The world has largely moved on from i386.  Most FreeBSD users and developers
test on amd64 hardware.  For better or worse, we have written a non-trivial
amount of kernel code that relies on stacks larger than 8 kB, and it "just
works" on amd64, so there has been little incentive to shrink it.

amd64 had its KSTACK_PAGES bumped to 4 back in Peter's initial AMD64 commit,
r114349, in 2003.  Since that time, i386 has limped along on a stack half
the size.  We've even observed the stack overflows years ago, but neglected
to fix the issue; see the 20121223 and 20150728 entries in UPDATING.

If anyone is concerned with this change, I suggest they configure their
AMD64 kernels with KSTACK_PAGES 2 and fix the fallout there first.  Eugene
has identified a list of high stack usage functions in the first PR below.

PR:		219476, 224218
Reported by:	eugen@, Shreesh Holla <hshreesh AT yahoo.com>
Relnotes:	maybe
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-12-11 04:32:37 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
83ef78be95 sys/i386: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I
was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
prone - task.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.
2017-11-27 15:08:52 +00:00
Hans Petter Selasky
322f006ecc Implement atomic_fetchadd_64() for i386. This function is needed by the
atomic64 header file in the LinuxKPI for i386.

Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
2017-11-24 12:10:42 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
383f241dce Remove lint support from system headers and MD x86 headers.
Reviewed by:	dim, jhb
Discussed with:	imp
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13156
2017-11-23 11:40:16 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
51369649b0 sys: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 3-Clause license.

The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.

Special thanks to Wind River for providing access to "The Duke of
Highlander" tool: an older (2014) run over FreeBSD tree was useful as a
starting point.
2017-11-20 19:43:44 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
df57947f08 spdx: initial adoption of licensing ID tags.
The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.

Special thanks to Wind River for providing access to "The Duke of
Highlander" tool: an older (2014) run over FreeBSD tree was useful as a
starting point.

Initially, only tag files that use BSD 4-Clause "Original" license.

RelNotes:	yes
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13133
2017-11-18 14:26:50 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
4e421792ec Remove i386 XBOX support.
It is for console presented at 2001 and featuring Pentium III
processor.  Even if any of them are still alive and run FreeBSD, we do
not have any sign of life from their users.  While removing another
dozens of #ifdefs from the i386 sources reduces the aversion from
looking at the code and improves the platform vitality.

Reviewed by:	cem, pfg, rink (XBOX support author)
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13016
2017-11-16 14:27:02 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
787f835bf0 Reset the fs and gs bases on exec(2).
The values from the old address space do not make sense for the new
program.  In particular, gsbase might be the TLS base for the old
program but the new program has no TLS now.

amd64 already handles this correctly.

Reported and reviewed by:	bde
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2017-10-09 15:39:43 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
053e8ce538 Restore a part of r323722.
Do not return from interrupt using the POP_FRAME;iret instruction
sequence, always jump to doreti.

The user segments selectors saved on the stack might become invalid
because userspace manipulated LDT in a parallel thread.  trap() is
aware of such issue, but it is only prepared to handle it at iret and
segment registers load operations in doreti path.

Also remove POP_FRAME macro because it is no longer used.

Reviewed by:	bde, jhb (as part of r323722)
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2017-09-28 08:46:15 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
d3c968bf84 Revert r323722. A better fix will be committed shortly, as well as
some still useful bits of the reverted revision.

The problem with the committed fix is that there are still issues with
returning from NMI, when NMI interrupted kernel in a moment where the
kernel segments selectors were still not loaded into registers.  If
this happens, the NMI return would loose the userspace selectors
because r323722 does not reload segment registers on return to kernel
mode.

Fixing the problem is complicated.  Since an alternative approach to
handle the original bug exists, it makes sence to stop adding more
complexity.

Discussed with:	bde
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2017-09-28 08:38:24 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
5efe338f3d Fix handling of the segment registers on i386.
Suppose that userspace is executing with the non-standard segment
descriptors.  Then, until exception or interrupt handler executed
SET_KERNEL_SEGS, kernel is still executing with user %ds, %es and %fs.
If an interrupt occurs in this window, the interrupt handler is
executed unsafely, relying on usability of the usermode registers.  If
the interrupt results in the context switch on return, the
contamination of the kernel state spreads to the thread we switched
to.  As result, kernel data accesses might fault or, if only the base
is changed, completely messed up.

More, if the user segment was allocated in LDT, another thread might
mark the descriptor as invalid before doreti code tried to reload
them.  In this case kernel panics.

The issue exists for all exception entry points which use trap gate,
and thus do not automatically disable interrupts on entry, and for
lcall_handler.

Fix is two-fold: first, we need to disable interrupts for all kernel
entries, changing the IDT descriptor types from trap gate to interrupt
gate.  Interrupts are re-enabled not earlier than the kernel segments
are loaded into the segment registers.  Second, we only load the
segment registers from the trap frame when returning to usermode.  For
the later, all interrupt return paths must happen through the doreti
common code.

There is no way to disable interrupts on call gate, which is the
supposed mode of servicing for lcall $7,$0 syscalls.  Change the LDT
descriptor 0 into a code segment type and point it to the userspace
trampoline which redirects the syscall to int $0x80.

All the measures make the segment register handling similar to that of
amd64.  We do not apply amd64 optimizations of not reloading segment
registers on return from the syscall.

Reported by:	Maxime Villard <max@m00nbsd.net>
Tested by:	pho (the non-lcall part)
Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12402
2017-09-18 20:22:42 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
2744a0b69b Drop CACHE_LINE_SIZE to 64 bytes on x86
The actual cache line size has always been 64 bytes.

The 128 number arose as an optimization for Core 2 era Intel processors.  By
default (configurable in BIOS), these CPUs would prefetch adjacent cache
lines unintelligently.  Newer CPUs prefetch more intelligently.

The latest Core 2 era CPU was introduced in September 2008 (Xeon 7400
series, "Dunnington").  If you are still using one of these CPUs, especially
in a multi-socket configuration, consider locating the "adjacent cache line
prefetch" option in BIOS and disabling it.

Reported by:	mjg
Reviewed by:	np
Discussed with:	jhb
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-08-28 22:28:41 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
dc6a82801d x86: Add dynamic interrupt rebalancing
Add an option to dynamically rebalance interrupts across cores
(hw.intrbalance); off by default.

The goal is to minimize preemption. By placing interrupt sources on distinct
CPUs, ithreads get preferentially scheduled on distinct CPUs.  Overall
preemption is reduced and latency is reduced. In our workflow it reduced
"fighting" between two high-frequency interrupt sources.  Reduced latency
was proven by, e.g., SPEC2008.

Submitted by:	jeff@ (earlier version)
Reviewed by:	kib@
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10435
2017-08-16 18:48:53 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
b5669d0aa8 Split identify_cpu() into two functions for amd64 as we do for i386. This
reduces diff between amd64 and i386.  Also, it fixes a regression introduced
in r322076, i.e., identify_hypervisor() failed to identify some hypervisors.
This function assumes cpu_feature2 is already initialized.

Reported by:	dexuan
Tested by:	dexuan
2017-08-09 18:09:09 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
6f240e18b5 x86: Tag some intrinsics with __pure2
Some C wrappers for x86 instructions do not touch global memory and only act
on their arguments; they can be marked __pure2, aka __const__.  Without this
annotation, Clang 3.9.1 is not intelligent enough on its own to grok that
these functions are __const__.

Submitted by:	Anton Rang <anton.rang AT isilon.com>
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-08-03 22:28:30 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
eb36b1d0bc Clean up MD pollution of bus_dma.h:
--Remove special-case handling of sparc64 bus_dmamap* functions.
  Replace with a more generic mechanism that allows MD busdma
  implementations to generate inline mapping functions by
  defining WANT_INLINE_DMAMAP in <machine/bus_dma.h>.  This
  is currently useful for sparc64, x86, and arm64, which all
  implement non-load dmamap operations as simple wrappers
  around map objects which may be bus- or device-specific.

--Remove NULL-checked bus_dmamap macros.  Implement the
  equivalent NULL checks in the inlined x86 implementation.
  For non-x86 platforms, these checks are a minor pessimization
  as those platforms do not currently allow NULL maps.  NULL
  maps were originally allowed on arm64, which appears to have
  been the motivation behind adding arm[64]-specific barriers
  to bus_dma.h, but that support was removed in r299463.

--Simplify the internal interface used by the bus_dmamap_load*
  variants and move it to bus_dma_internal.h

--Fix some drivers that directly include sys/bus_dma.h
  despite the recommendations of bus_dma(9)

Reviewed by:	kib (previous revision), marius
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10729
2017-07-01 05:35:29 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
43f41dd393 Make struct syscall_args visible to userspace compilation environment
from machine/proc.h, consistently on all architectures.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	3 weeks
X-Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11080
2017-06-12 20:53:44 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
83c9dea1ba - Remove 'struct vmmeter' from 'struct pcpu', leaving only global vmmeter
in place.  To do per-cpu stats, convert all fields that previously were
  maintained in the vmmeters that sit in pcpus to counter(9).
- Since some vmmeter stats may be touched at very early stages of boot,
  before we have set up UMA and we can do counter_u64_alloc(), provide an
  early counter mechanism:
  o Leave one spare uint64_t in struct pcpu, named pc_early_dummy_counter.
  o Point counter(9) fields of vmmeter to pcpu[0].pc_early_dummy_counter,
    so that at early stages of boot, before counters are allocated we already
    point to a counter that can be safely written to.
  o For sparc64 that required a whole dummy pcpu[MAXCPU] array.

Further related changes:
- Don't include vmmeter.h into pcpu.h.
- vm.stats.vm.v_swappgsout and vm.stats.vm.v_swappgsin changed to 64-bit,
  to match kernel representation.
- struct vmmeter hidden under _KERNEL, and only vmstat(1) is an exclusion.

This is based on benno@'s 4-year old patch:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2013-July/014471.html

Reviewed by:	kib, gallatin, marius, lidl
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10156
2017-04-17 17:34:47 +00:00
Patrick Kelsey
67d955aab4 Corrected misspelled versions of rendezvous.
The MFC will include a compat definition of smp_no_rendevous_barrier()
that calls smp_no_rendezvous_barrier().

Reviewed by:	gnn, kib
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10313
2017-04-09 02:00:03 +00:00
Mark Johnston
5788c2bde1 Adjust the constraint for "src" in atomic_(f)cmpset_8.
"r" is not sufficient to prevent the use of invalid byte-width registers
with at least gcc.

Reported and reviewed by:	bde
X-MFC-With:	r315718
2017-03-27 16:18:19 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f434f3515b Fix printing of negative offsets (typically from frame pointers) again.
I fixed this in 1997, but the fix was over-engineered and fragile and
was broken in 2003 if not before.  i386 parameters were copied to 8
other arches verbatim, mostly after they stopped working on i386, and
mostly without the large comment saying how the values were chosen on
i386.  powerpc has a non-verbatim copy which just changes the uncritical
parameter and seems to add a sign extension bug to it.

Just treat negative offsets as offsets if they are no more negative than
-db_offset_max (default -64K), and remove all the broken parameters.

-64K is not very negative, but it is enough for frame and stack pointer
offsets since kernel stacks are small.

The over-engineering was mainly to go more negative than -64K for the
negative offset format, without affecting printing for more than a
single address.

Addresses in the top 64K of a (full 32-bit or 64-bit) address space
are now printed less well, but there aren't many interesting ones.
For arches that have many interesting ones very near the top (e.g.,
68k has interrupt vectors there), there would be no good limit for
the negative offset format and -64K is a good as anything.
2017-03-26 18:46:35 +00:00
Mark Johnston
3d6732549d Add support for 8- and 16-bit atomic_(f)cmpset to x86.
Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10068
2017-03-22 17:29:04 +00:00
Bruce Evans
ff17a6773e Don't access the reserved registers %dr4 and %dr5 on i386.
On the original i386, %dr[4-5] were unimplemented but not very clearly
reserved, so debuggers read them to print them.  i386 was still doing
this.

On the original athlon64, %dr[4-5] are documented as reserved but are
aliased to %dr[6-7] unless CR4_DE is set, when accessing them traps.

On 2 of my systems, accessing %dr[4-5] trapped sometimes.  On my Haswell
system, the apparent randomness was because the boot CPU starts with
CR4_DE set while all other CPUs start with CR4_DE clear.  FreeBSD
doesn't support the data breakpoints enabled by CR4_DE and it never
changes this flag, so the flag remains different across CPUs and
the behaviour seemed inconsistent except while booting when the CPU
doesn't change.

The invalid accesses broke:
- read access for printing the registers in ddb "show watches" on CPUs
  with CR4_DE set
- read accesses in fill_dbregs() on CPUs with CR4_DE set.  This didn't
  implement panic(3) since the user case always skipped %dr[4-5].
- write accesses in set_dbregs().  This also didn't affect userland.
  When it didn't trap, the aliasing made it fragile.

Don't print the dummy (zero) values of %dr[4-5] in "show watches" for
i386 or amd64.  Fix style bugs near this printing.

amd64 also has space in the dbregs struct for the reserved %dr[8-15]
and already didn't print the dummy values for these, and never accessed
any of the 10 reserved debug registers.

Remove cpufuncs for making the invalid accesses.  Even amd64 had these.
2017-03-17 13:49:05 +00:00
Warner Losh
fbbd9655e5 Renumber copyright clause 4
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.

Submitted by:	Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request:	https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
2017-02-28 23:42:47 +00:00
Alan Cox
0314966858 Refine the fix from r312954. Specifically, add a new PDE-only flag,
PG_PROMOTED, that indicates whether lingering 4KB page mappings might
need to be flushed on a PDE change that restricts or destroys a 2MB
page mapping.  This flag allows the pmap to avoid range invalidations
that are both unnecessary and costly.

Reviewed by:	kib, markj
MFC after:	6 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9665
2017-02-26 19:54:02 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
57f6622f92 For i386, remove config options CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG, CPU_DISABLE_SSE
and device npx.

This means that FPU is always initialized and handled when available,
and SSE+ register file and exception are handled when available.  This
makes the kernel FPU code much easier to maintain by the cost of
slight bloat for CPUs older than 25 years.

CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG outlived its usefulness, see the removed comment
explaining the original purpose.

Suggested by and discussed with:	bde
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	3 weeks
2017-02-03 12:51:40 +00:00
Mateusz Guzik
ed869ff019 i386: fixup fcmpset
An incorrect output specifier was used which worked with clang by accident,
but breaks with the in-tree gcc version.

While here plug a whitespace nit.

Reported by:	bde
2017-02-02 01:33:08 +00:00
Mateusz Guzik
e7a98aef79 i386: add atomic_fcmpset
Tested by:	pho
2017-01-30 02:24:54 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
d986450859 Implement get_pcpu() for i386 and use it to replace pcpu_find(curcpu)
in the i386 pmap.

The curcpu macro loads the per-cpu data pointer as its first step,
so the remaining steps of pcpu_find(curcpu) are circular.

get_pcpu() is already implemented for arm, arm64, and risc-v.
My plan is to implement it for the remaining architectures and use
it to replace several instances of pcpu_find(curcpu) in MI code.

Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	1 week
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9370
2017-01-29 16:54:55 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
5611aaa195 Use SFENCE for ordering CLFLUSHOPT.
SDM states that CLFLUSHOPT instructions can be ordered with other
writes by SFENCE, heavier MFENCE is not required.

Reviewed by:	alc
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2017-01-20 19:08:44 +00:00
Jason A. Harmening
43aabbefd8 Move the objects used to create temporary mappings for i386 pmap zero and copy
operations to the MD PCPU region.  Change sysmap initialization to only
allocate KVA pages for CPUs that are actually present.  As a minor
optimization, this also prevents false sharing between adjacent sysmap objects
since the pcpu struct is already cacheline-aligned.

While here, move pc_qmap_addr initialization for the BSP into
pmap_bootstrap(), which allows use of pmap_quick* functions during early boot.

Reviewed by:	kib
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8833
2016-12-23 15:14:56 +00:00
Bryan Drewery
28323add09 Fix improper use of "its".
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2016-11-08 23:59:41 +00:00
Warner Losh
b2a7ac4802 Fix building on i386 and arm. But 'public domain' headers on the files
with no creative content. Include "lost" changes from git:
o Use /dev/efi instead of /dev/efidev
o Remove redundant NULL checks.

Submitted by: kib@, dim@, zbb@, emaste@
2016-10-13 06:56:23 +00:00
Warner Losh
f79d484dff Create /dev/efidev to provide an ioctl interface to
userland.  It supports userland interfaces to UEFI Runtime Services. This is
indended to the the MI portion of EFI RuntimeServices support.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8128
Reviewed by: kib@, wblock@, Ganael Laplanche
2016-10-11 22:24:30 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
83c001d3c2 Re-apply r306516 (by cem):
Reduce the cost of TLB invalidation on x86 by using per-CPU completion flags

Reduce contention during TLB invalidation operations by using a per-CPU
completion flag, rather than a single atomically-updated variable.

On a Westmere system (2 sockets x 4 cores x 1 threads), dtrace measurements
show that smp_tlb_shootdown is about 50% faster with this patch; observations
with VTune show that the percentage of time spent in invlrng_single_page on an
interrupt (actually doing invalidation, rather than synchronization) increases
from 31% with the old mechanism to 71% with the new one.  (Running a basic file
server workload.)

Submitted by:	Anton Rang <rang at acm.org>
Reviewed by:	cem (earlier version)
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8041
2016-10-04 17:01:24 +00:00
Bruce Evans
808cf02c24 Determine the operand/address size of %cs in a new function
db_segsize().

Use db_segsize() to set the default operand/address size for
disassembling.  Allow overriding this with the "alternate" display
format /I.  The API of db_disasm() should be debooleanized to pass a
more general request (amd64 needs overrides to sizes of 16, 32, and
64, but this commit doesn't implement anything for amd64 since much
larger changes are needed to restore the amd64 disassmbler's support
for non-default sizes).

Fix db_print_loc_and_inst() to ask for the normal format and not the
alternate in normal operation.

This is most useful for vm86 mode, but also works for 16-bit protected
mode.

Use db_segsize() to avoid trying to print a garbage stack trace if %cs
is 16 bits.  Print something like the stack trace termination message
for a trap boundary instead.

Document that the alternate format is now useful on i386.
2016-09-25 16:30:29 +00:00
Bruce Evans
1d3c0fa7b2 Remove all kernel uses of pcb_psl, but keep in in the struct to
preserve the ABI and API for applications.  It was removed in the port
to amd64, but was remained as garbage giving a micro-pessimization and
spurious single-step traps on i386.

pcb_psl was intended to be used just to do a context switch of PSL_I,
but this context switch was null in most or all versions, and
mis-switching of PSL_T was done instead.

Some history:
- in 386BSD-0.0, cpu_switch() ran at splhigh() and splhigh() did too
  much interrupt disabling, so interrupts were hard-disabled across
  cpu_switch() and too many other places
- in 386BSD-0.0-patchkit through FreeBSD-4 and FreeBSD-5 before
  SMPng, splhigh() did soft interrupt masking, and cpu_switch() was
  excessively cautious and did a cli at the start and a sti at the
  end to hard-disable interrupts across the switch
- SMPng replaced the spl's and cli's by spinlocks (just sched_lock?),
  so interrupts were hard-disabled across cpu_switch() and too many
  other places again
- initial attempts to fix this intended to restore some soft
  interrupt disabling, but to support variations in this cpu_switch()
  used pushfl/popfl into pcb_psl to avoid hard-coding the assumption
  that the initial and final states have PSL_I enabled.  But the
  version with soft interrupt disabling wasn't used for long, or was
  never committed, (except I always used my different version of it
  for UP) so the pushfl/popl and pcb_psl to hold them have been doing
  less than nothing for about 14 years.
2016-09-17 14:00:52 +00:00
Bruce Evans
bd20334ca0 Abort single stepping in ddb if the trap is not for single-stepping.
This is not very easy to do, since ddb didn't know when traps are
for single-stepping.  It more or less assumed that traps are either
breakpoints or single-step, but even for x86 this became inadequate
with the release of the i386 in ~1986, and FreeBSD passes it other
trap types for NMIs and panics.

On x86, teach ddb when a trap is for single stepping using the %dr6
register.  Unknown traps are now treated almost the same as breakpoints
instead of as the same as single-steps.  Previously, the classification
of breakpoints was almost correct and everything else was unknown so
had to be treated as a single-step.  Now the classification of single-
steps is precise, the classification of breakpoints is almost correct
(as before) and everything else is unknown and treated like a
breakpoint.

This fixes:
- breakpoints not set by ddb, including the main one in kdb_enter(),
  were treated as single-steps and not stopped on when stepping
  (except for the usual, simple case of a step with residual count 1).
  As special cases, kdb_enter() didn't stop for fatal traps or panics
- similarly for "hardware breakpoints".

Use a new MD macro IS_SSTEP_TRAP(type, code) to code to classify
single-steps.  This is excessively complicated for bug-for-bug and
backwards compatibilty.  Design errors apparently started in Mach
in ~1990 or perhaps in the FreeBSD interface in ~1993.  Common trap
types like single steps should have a unique MI code (like the TRAP*
codes for user SIGTRAP) so that debuggers don't need macros like
IS_SSTEP_TRAP() to decode them.  But 'type' is actually an ambiguous
MD trap number, and code was always 0 (now it is (int)%dr6 on x86).
So it was impossible to determine the trap type from the args.
Global variables had to be used.

There is already a classification macro db_pc_is_single_step(), but
this just gets in the way.  It is only used to recover from bugs in
IS_BREAKPOINT_TRAP().  On some arches, IS_BREAKPOINT_TRAP() just
duplicates the ambiguity in 'type' and misclassifies single-steps as
breakpoints.  It defaults to 'false', which is the opposite of what is
needed for bug-for-bug compatibility.

When this is cleaned up, MI classification bits should be passed in
'code'.  This could be done now for positive-logic bits, since 'code'
was always 0, but some negative logic is needed for compatibility so
a simple MI classificition is not usable yet.

After reading %dr6, clear the single-step bit in it so that the type
of the next debugger trap can be decoded.  This is a little
ddb-specific.  ddb doesn't understand the need to clear this bit and
doing it before calling kdb is easiest.  gdb would need to reverse
this to support hardware breakpoints, but it just doesn't support
them now since gdbstub doesn't support %dr*.

Fix a bug involving %dr6: when emulating a single-step trap for vm86,
set the bit for it in %dr6.  Userland debuggers need this.  ddb now
needs this for vm86 bios calls.  The bit gets copied to 'code' then
cleared again.

Fix related style bugs:
- when clearing bits for hardware breakpoints in %dr6, spell the mask
  as ~0xf on both amd64 and i386 to get the correct number of bits
  using sign extension and not need a comment about using the wrong
  mask on amd64 (amd64 traps for invalid results but clearing the
  reserved top bits didn't trap since they are 0).
- rewrite my old wrong comments about using %dr6 for ddb watchpoints.
2016-09-15 17:24:23 +00:00
John Baldwin
38605d7312 Remove 'cpu' and 'cpu_class' on amd64.
The 'cpu' and 'cpu_class' variables were always set to the same value
on amd64 and are legacy holdovers from i386.  Remove them entirely on
amd64.

Reviewed by:	imp, kib (older version)
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7888
2016-09-15 17:05:54 +00:00
Mark Johnston
dbbaf04f1e Remove support for idle page zeroing.
Idle page zeroing has been disabled by default on all architectures since
r170816 and has some bugs that make it seemingly unusable. Specifically,
the idle-priority pagezero thread exacerbates contention for the free page
lock, and yields the CPU without releasing it in non-preemptive kernels. The
pagezero thread also does not behave correctly when superpage reservations
are enabled: its target is a function of v_free_count, which includes
reserved-but-free pages, but it is only able to zero pages belonging to the
physical memory allocator.

Reviewed by:	alc, imp, kib
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7714
2016-09-03 20:38:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
a47632d45b Fix build for !SMP kernels after the Xen MSIX workaround.
Move msix_disable_migration under #ifdef SMP since it doesn't make sense
for !SMP kernels.

PR:		212014
Reported by:	Glyn Grinstead <glyn@grinstead.org>
MFC after:	3 days
2016-08-22 21:23:17 +00:00
Bruce Evans
5bd90da0ef Remove duplicate definition of get_pcb_td(). gcc works for detecting
this error.
2016-08-15 10:46:33 +00:00
Bruce Evans
258b53d151 Fix the variables $esp, $ds, $es, $fs, $gs and $ss in vm86 mode.
Fix PC_REGS() so that printing of instructions works in some useful
cases.  ddb only understands a single flat address space, but this
macro allows mapping $cs:$eip into vm86's flat address space well
enough for the MI parts of ddb.  This doesn't work for the MD parts
that do stack traces, and there are no similar macros for data addresses.

PC_REGS() has to use the trapframe pointer instead of the pcb for this.
For other CPUs, the trapframe pointer is not available except by tracing
back to it.  But tracing back through vm86 trapframes is broken even
starting with one.
2016-08-14 16:51:25 +00:00
Alexander Motin
fb112f72a8 Add more UEFI/e820 memory types from latest specifications.
This is only cosmetics.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2016-07-24 09:15:11 +00:00
Roger Pau Monné
302244700f xen: automatically disable MSI-X interrupt migration
If the hypervisor version is smaller than 4.6.0. Xen commits 74fd00 and
70a3cb are required on the hypervisor side for this to be fixed, and those
are only included in 4.6.0, so stay on the safe side and disable MSI-X
interrupt migration on anything older than 4.6.0.

It should not cause major performance degradation unless a lot of MSI-X
interrupts are allocated.

Sponsored by:		Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after:		3 days
Reviewed by:		jhb
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7148
2016-07-12 08:43:09 +00:00
Nathan Whitehorn
96c85efb4b Replace a number of conflations of mp_ncpus and mp_maxid with either
mp_maxid or CPU_FOREACH() as appropriate. This fixes a number of places in
the kernel that assumed CPU IDs are dense in [0, mp_ncpus) and would try,
for example, to run tasks on CPUs that did not exist or to allocate too
few buffers on systems with sparse CPU IDs in which there are holes in the
range and mp_maxid > mp_ncpus. Such circumstances generally occur on
systems with SMT, but on which SMT is disabled. This patch restores system
operation at least on POWER8 systems configured in this way.

There are a number of other places in the kernel with potential problems
in these situations, but where sparse CPU IDs are not currently known
to occur, mostly in the ARM machine-dependent code. These will be fixed
in a follow-up commit after the stable/11 branch.

PR:		kern/210106
Reviewed by:	jhb
Approved by:	re (glebius)
2016-07-06 14:09:49 +00:00