Commit Graph

94 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
kaktus
ad355b0a9d Mark more nodes as CTLFLAG_MPSAFE or CTLFLAG_NEEDGIANT (17 of many)
r357614 added CTLFLAG_NEEDGIANT to make it easier to find nodes that are
still not MPSAFE (or already are but aren’t properly marked).
Use it in preparation for a general review of all nodes.

This is non-functional change that adds annotations to SYSCTL_NODE and
SYSCTL_PROC nodes using one of the soon-to-be-required flags.

Mark all obvious cases as MPSAFE.  All entries that haven't been marked
as MPSAFE before are by default marked as NEEDGIANT

Approved by:	kib (mentor, blanket)
Commented by:	kib, gallatin, melifaro
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23718
2020-02-26 14:26:36 +00:00
wulf
3bc1fc0821 Fix amd64/i386 LINT build after r344982
Submitted by:	jkim
Reported by:	rpokala
MFC with:	r344982
2019-03-11 19:46:15 +00:00
wulf
9721774b12 atrtc(4): install ACPI RTC/CMOS operation region handler
FreeBSD base system does not provide an ACPI handler for the PC/AT RTC/CMOS
device with PnP ID PNP0B00; on some HP laptops, the absence of this handler
causes suspend/resume and poweroff(8) to hang or fail [1], [2]. On these
laptops EC _REG method queries the RTC date/time registers via ACPI
before suspending/powering off. The handler should be registered before
acpi_ec driver is loaded.

This change adds handler to access CMOS RTC operation region described in
section 9.15 of ACPI-6.2 specification [3]. It is installed only for ACPI
version of atrtc(4) so it should not affect old ACPI-less i386 systems.

It is possible to disable the handler with loader tunable:
debug.acpi.disabled=atrtc

Informational debugging printf can be enabled by setting hw.acpi.verbose=1
in loader.conf

[1] https://wiki.freebsd.org/Laptops/HP_Envy_6Z-1100
[2] https://wiki.freebsd.org/Laptops/HP_Notebook_15-af104ur
[3] https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/ACPI_6_2.pdf

PR:		207419, 213039
Submitted by:	Anthony Jenkins <Scoobi_doo@yahoo.com>
Reviewed by:	ian
Discussed on:	acpi@, 2013-2015, several threads
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19314
2019-03-10 20:19:43 +00:00
jhb
ae6222b0c3 Drop "All rights reserved" from my copyright statements.
Reviewed by:	rgrimes
MFC after:	1 month
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19485
2019-03-06 22:11:45 +00:00
jhb
f9cb852e70 Fix a regression in r338360 when booting an x86 machine without APIC.
The atpic_register_sources callback tries to avoid registering interrupt
sources that would collide with an I/O APIC.  However, the previous
implementation was failing to register IRQs 8-15 since the slave PIC
saw valid IRQs from the master and assumed an I/O APIC was present.  To
fix, go back to registering all 8259A interrupt sources in one loop when
the master's register_sources method is invoked.

PR:		231291
Approved by:	re (kib)
MFC after:	1 month
2018-09-17 17:18:54 +00:00
jhb
87fe475224 Dynamically allocate IRQ ranges on x86.
Previously, x86 used static ranges of IRQ values for different types
of I/O interrupts.  Interrupt pins on I/O APICs and 8259A PICs used
IRQ values from 0 to 254.  MSI interrupts used a compile-time-defined
range starting at 256, and Xen event channels used a
compile-time-defined range after MSI.  Some recent systems have more
than 255 I/O APIC interrupt pins which resulted in those IRQ values
overflowing into the MSI range triggering an assertion failure.

Replace statically assigned ranges with dynamic ranges.  Do a single
pass computing the sizes of the IRQ ranges (PICs, MSI, Xen) to
determine the total number of IRQs required.  Allocate the interrupt
source and interrupt count arrays dynamically once this pass has
completed.  To minimize runtime complexity these arrays are only sized
once during bootup.  The PIC range is determined by the PICs present
in the system.  The MSI and Xen ranges continue to use a fixed size,
though this does make it possible to turn the MSI range size into a
tunable in the future.

As a result, various places are updated to use dynamic limits instead
of constants.  In addition, the vmstat(8) utility has been taught to
understand that some kernels may treat 'intrcnt' and 'intrnames' as
pointers rather than arrays when extracting interrupt stats from a
crashdump.  This is determined by the presence (vs absence) of a
global 'nintrcnt' symbol.

This change reverts r189404 which worked around a buggy BIOS which
enumerated an I/O APIC twice (using the same memory mapped address for
both entries but using an IRQ base of 256 for one entry and a valid
IRQ base for the second entry).  Making the "base" of MSI IRQ values
dynamic avoids the panic that r189404 worked around, and there may now
be valid I/O APICs with an IRQ base above 256 which this workaround
would incorrectly skip.

If in the future the issue reported in PR 130483 reoccurs, we will
have to add a pass over the I/O APIC entries in the MADT to detect
duplicates using the memory mapped address and use some strategy to
choose the "correct" one.

While here, reserve room in intrcnts for the Hyper-V counters.

PR:		229429, 130483
Reviewed by:	kib, royger, cem
Tested by:	royger (Xen), kib (DMAR)
Approved by:	re (gjb)
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16861
2018-08-28 21:09:19 +00:00
jhb
66719320e1 Remove 'imen' global variable from atpic(4).
In pre-SMPng, the global 'imen' was used to track mask state of the
hardware interrupts and was aligned to the masks used by spl*().
When the atpic code was converted to using the x86 interrupt source
abstraction, the global 'imen' was preserved by having each PIC
instance point to an invididual byte in the global 'imen' to hold its
8-bit interrupt mask.  The global 'imen' is no longer used for
anything however, so rather than storing pointers in 'struct atpic',
just store the individual 8-bit mask for each PIC as a char.

While here, convert the ATPIC macro to using C99 initializers.

Reviewed by:	kib, imp
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16827
2018-08-21 17:13:51 +00:00
kib
8f7ca8028a Provide a helper function acpi_get_fadt_bootflags() to fetch the FADT
x86 boot flags.

Reviewed by:	royger
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16004
MFC after:	1 week
2018-06-25 11:01:12 +00:00
emaste
f545864525 ANSIfy sys/x86 2018-03-17 01:40:09 +00:00
royger
edf2293a55 at_rtc: check in ACPI FADT boot flags if the RTC is present
Or else disable the device. Note that the detection can be bypassed by
setting the hw.atrtc.enable option in the loader configuration file.
More information can be found on atrtc(4).

Sponsored by:		Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by:		ian
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14399
2018-03-13 09:42:33 +00:00
ian
49fbeddce5 Give the atrtc_time_lock a unique name.
Reported by:	hps@
2018-03-12 15:26:11 +00:00
ian
de8e5f9bb1 Revert r330780, it was improperly tested and results in taking a spin
mutex before acquiring sleep mutexes.

Reported by:	kib@
2018-03-11 20:13:15 +00:00
ian
b00d088ba5 Remove MTX_NOPROFILE from atrtc_lock, it was inappropriately copy/pasted
from the i8254 driver when I created separate mutexes for each.  The i8254
driver could be the active timecounter, leading to recursion during mutex
profiling, but the atrtc driver cannot be a timecounter, so it isn't needed.
2018-03-11 19:56:07 +00:00
ian
00abf0e72d Eliminate atrtc_time_lock, and use atrtc_lock for efirtc locking. 2018-03-11 19:22:58 +00:00
ian
583404330f Everywhere that multiple registers are accessed in sequence, lock/unlock
just once around the whole group of accesses.
2018-03-11 18:54:45 +00:00
ian
95221efb08 Use separate mutexes for atrtc and i8254 locking. Change all the strange
un-function-like RTC_LOCK/UNLOCK macro usage into normal function calls.
Since there is no longer any need to handle register access from a debugger
context, those function calls can just be regular mutex lock/unlock calls.

Requested by:  bde
2018-03-11 18:20:49 +00:00
ian
5e5730983b Convert atrtc the new style rtc debugging output. Remove the db show
command handler which provided much the same information.  Removing the
possibility of accessing the hardware regs from the debugger context
paves the way for simplifying the locking code in the driver.
2018-03-11 16:57:14 +00:00
imp
1912ffb2e5 Add ISA PNP tables to ISA drivers. Fix a few incidental comments.
ACPI ISA PBP tables not tagged, there's bigger issues with them.
2018-01-29 00:22:30 +00:00
kib
c35d24e497 PTI for amd64.
The implementation of the Kernel Page Table Isolation (KPTI) for
amd64, first version. It provides a workaround for the 'meltdown'
vulnerability.  PTI is turned off by default for now, enable with the
loader tunable vm.pmap.pti=1.

The pmap page table is split into kernel-mode table and user-mode
table. Kernel-mode table is identical to the non-PTI table, while
usermode table is obtained from kernel table by leaving userspace
mappings intact, but only leaving the following parts of the kernel
mapped:

    kernel text (but not modules text)
    PCPU
    GDT/IDT/user LDT/task structures
    IST stacks for NMI and doublefault handlers.

Kernel switches to user page table before returning to usermode, and
restores full kernel page table on the entry. Initial kernel-mode
stack for PTI trampoline is allocated in PCPU, it is only 16
qwords.  Kernel entry trampoline switches page tables. then the
hardware trap frame is copied to the normal kstack, and execution
continues.

IST stacks are kept mapped and no trampoline is needed for
NMI/doublefault, but of course page table switch is performed.

On return to usermode, the trampoline is used again, iret frame is
copied to the trampoline stack, page tables are switched and iretq is
executed.  The case of iretq faulting due to the invalid usermode
context is tricky, since the frame for fault is appended to the
trampoline frame.  Besides copying the fault frame and original
(corrupted) frame to kstack, the fault frame must be patched to make
it look as if the fault occured on the kstack, see the comment in
doret_iret detection code in trap().

Currently kernel pages which are mapped during trampoline operation
are identical for all pmaps.  They are registered using
pmap_pti_add_kva().  Besides initial registrations done during boot,
LDT and non-common TSS segments are registered if user requested their
use.  In principle, they can be installed into kernel page table per
pmap with some work.  Similarly, PCPU can be hidden from userspace
mapping using trampoline PCPU page, but again I do not see much
benefits besides complexity.

PDPE pages for the kernel half of the user page tables are
pre-allocated during boot because we need to know pml4 entries which
are copied to the top-level paging structure page, in advance on a new
pmap creation.  I enforce this to avoid iterating over the all
existing pmaps if a new PDPE page is needed for PTI kernel mappings.
The iteration is a known problematic operation on i386.

The need to flush hidden kernel translations on the switch to user
mode make global tables (PG_G) meaningless and even harming, so PG_G
use is disabled for PTI case.  Our existing use of PCID is
incompatible with PTI and is automatically disabled if PTI is
enabled.  PCID can be forced on only for developer's benefit.

MCE is known to be broken, it requires IST stack to operate completely
correctly even for non-PTI case, and absolutely needs dedicated IST
stack because MCE delivery while trampoline did not switched from PTI
stack is fatal.  The fix is pending.

Reviewed by:	markj (partially)
Tested by:	pho (previous version)
Discussed with:	jeff, jhb
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2018-01-17 11:44:21 +00:00
ian
f0c14bee67 Remove redundant critical_enter/exit() calls. The block of code delimited
by these calls is now protected by a spin mutex (obscured within the
RTC_LOCK/RTC_UNLOCK macros).

Reported by:	bde@
2018-01-16 23:18:52 +00:00
ian
2fcaa5e746 Move some code around and rename a couple variables; no functional changes.
The static atrtc_set() function was called only from clock_settime(), so
just move its contents entirely into clock_settime() and delete atrtc_set().

Rename the struct bcd_clocktime variables from 'ct' to 'bct'.  I had
originally wanted to emphasize how identical the clocktime and bcd_clocktime
structs were, but things evolved to the point where the structs are not at
all identical anymore, so now emphasizing the difference seems better.
2018-01-16 23:14:12 +00:00
ian
6ac58f6094 Add static inline rtcin_locked() and rtcout_locked() functions for doing a
related series of operations without doing a lock/unlock for each byte.
Use them when reading and writing the entire set of time registers.

The original rtcin() and writertc() functions which do lock/unlock on each
byte still exist, because they are public and called by outside code.
2018-01-16 03:02:41 +00:00
ian
3f5e0fe8f4 Convert the x86 RTC driver to use new validated BCD<->timespec conversions.
New common routines were added to kern/subr_clock.c for converting between
calendrical time expressed in BCD and struct timespec. The new functions
return EINVAL on error, as expected when the clock hardware does not provide
valid time.

PR:		224813
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13731 (no reviewers)
2018-01-15 16:40:43 +00:00
imp
e65dafd72c Further investigation shows this shouldn't have been added at all.
Remove it.
2017-12-24 17:59:48 +00:00
imp
b002fd76bf Comment this out until I have time to get to the bottom of why it's
failing for some people.
2017-12-24 16:36:50 +00:00
imp
9afedc5ef7 Warn when nonPNP ISA devices are attached in GENERIC that they are
being removed from GENERIC in 12. Always print PNP info for ISA when
it exists: it doesn't depend on ISAPNP. Add PNP ID to orm and vga to
prevent us from warning about them since those devices aren't being
removed from GENERIC. PNP devices will be removed from GENERIC too,
but they will be automatically loaded, so need no warning. We don't
warn for non-GENERIC kernels because people running them are presumed
to know what they are doing.

MFC After: 2 weeks
2017-12-23 22:57:14 +00:00
pfg
f1206865bb SPDX: Fix some cases wrongly attributed to MIT.
In the cases of BSD-style license variants without clauses, use 0BSD for
the time being in lack of a better description.
2017-11-30 15:10:11 +00:00
pfg
921a5b4874 sys/x86: 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 15:11:47 +00:00
pfg
4736ccfd9c 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
ian
7ba2756fac Stop calling atrtc_set() from the xen timer clock_settime() method. That
removes the only reference to atrtc_set() from outside of atrtc.c, so make
it static.

The xen timer driver registers as a realtime clock with 1us resolution.  In
the past that resulted in only the xen timer's clock_settime() getting
called, so it would call atrtc_set() to set the hardware clock as well.  As
of r32090, the clock_settime() method of all registered realtime clocks gets
called, so the xen driver no longer needs to chain-call the lower-resolution
driver.

Thanks to royger@ for talking me through the xen stuff, and for testing.
2017-08-11 19:02:11 +00:00
ian
242599409b Protect access to the AT realtime clock with its own mutex.
The mutex protecting access to the registered realtime clock should not be
overloaded to protect access to the atrtc hardware, which might not even be
the registered rtc. More importantly, the resettodr mutex needs to be
eliminated to remove locking/sleeping restrictions on clock drivers, and
that can't happen if MD code for amd64 depends on it. This change moves the
protection into what's really being protected: access to the atrtc date and
time registers.

This change also adds protection when the clock is accessed from
xentimer_settime(), which bypasses the resettodr locking.

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11483
2017-07-12 02:42:57 +00:00
vangyzen
06b3d5f73d Validate values read from the RTC before trying BCD decoding
Submitted by:	cem
Reported by:	Michael Gmelin <freebsd@grem.de>
Tested by:	Oleksandr Tymoshenko <gonzo@bluezbox.com>
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC
2017-03-09 02:19:30 +00:00
imp
7e6cabd06e 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
imp
5e19920be6 Remove Micro Channel Architecture support. Of the commonly available
machines, only a few 486 machines that used it, and those haven't had
enough memory to run FreeBSD for quite some time (often limited to
16MB).

Not to be confused with the Machine Check Architecture, which is still
very much alive and used (and untouched by this commit).

No Objection From: arch@
2017-02-15 23:04:25 +00:00
nyan
259480b6de Remove pc98 support completely.
I thank all developers and contributors for pc98.

Relnotes:	yes
2017-01-28 02:22:15 +00:00
jhb
bcc5b0c55d Add an EARLY_AP_STARTUP option to start APs earlier during boot.
Currently, Application Processors (non-boot CPUs) are started by
MD code at SI_SUB_CPU, but they are kept waiting in a "pen" until
SI_SUB_SMP at which point they are released to run kernel threads.
SI_SUB_SMP is one of the last SYSINIT levels, so APs don't enter
the scheduler and start running threads until fairly late in the
boot.

This change moves SI_SUB_SMP up to just before software interrupt
threads are created allowing the APs to start executing kernel
threads much sooner (before any devices are probed).  This allows
several initialization routines that need to perform initialization
on all CPUs to now perform that initialization in one step rather
than having to defer the AP initialization to a second SYSINIT run
at SI_SUB_SMP.  It also permits all CPUs to be available for
handling interrupts before any devices are probed.

This last feature fixes a problem on with interrupt vector exhaustion.
Specifically, in the old model all device interrupts were routed
onto the boot CPU during boot.  Later after the APs were released at
SI_SUB_SMP, interrupts were redistributed across all CPUs.

However, several drivers for multiqueue hardware allocate N interrupts
per CPU in the system.  In a system with many CPUs, just a few drivers
doing this could exhaust the available pool of interrupt vectors on
the boot CPU as each driver was allocating N * mp_ncpu vectors on the
boot CPU.  Now, drivers will allocate interrupts on their desired CPUs
during boot meaning that only N interrupts are allocated from the boot
CPU instead of N * mp_ncpu.

Some other bits of code can also be simplified as smp_started is
now true much earlier and will now always be true for these bits of
code.  This removes the need to treat the single-CPU boot environment
as a special case.

As a transition aid, the new behavior is available under a new kernel
option (EARLY_AP_STARTUP).  This will allow the option to be turned off
if need be during initial testing.  I plan to enable this on x86 by
default in a followup commit in the next few days and to have all
platforms moved over before 11.0.  Once the transition is complete,
the option will be removed along with the !EARLY_AP_STARTUP code.

These changes have only been tested on x86.  Other platform maintainers
are encouraged to port their architectures over as well.  The main
things to check for are any uses of smp_started in MD code that can be
simplified and SI_SUB_SMP SYSINITs in MD code that can be removed in
the EARLY_AP_STARTUP case (e.g. the interrupt shuffling).

PR:		kern/199321
Reviewed by:	markj, gnn, kib
Sponsored by:	Netflix
2016-05-14 18:22:52 +00:00
bz
10195fa2e4 Allow orm(4) to be disabled from probing/attaching by a hints entry:
hint.orm.0.disabled=1

Suggested by:	jhb
Reviewed by:	jhb
MFC after:	2 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6307
2016-05-10 22:28:06 +00:00
royger
390486acbc atrtc: export function to set RTC
This is going to be used by the Xen clock on Dom0 in order to set the RTC of
the host. The current logic in atrtc_settime is moved to atrtc_set and the
unused device_t parameter is removed from the atrtc_set function call so it
can be safely used by other callers.

Sponsored by:		Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by:		kib, jhb
Differential revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6067
2016-05-02 16:14:55 +00:00
pfg
be4082c832 X86: use our nitems() macro when it is avaliable through param.h.
No functional change, only trivial cases are done in this sweep,

Discussed in:	freebsd-current
2016-04-19 23:41:46 +00:00
jkim
b36627870b Silence PVS-Studio warning (V595). It can never be NULL here. 2016-02-23 23:57:24 +00:00
jhibbits
f8385663ee Introduce a RMAN_IS_DEFAULT_RANGE() macro, and use it.
This simplifies checking for default resource range for bus_alloc_resource(),
and improves readability.

This is part of, and related to, the migration of rman_res_t from u_long to
uintmax_t.

Discussed with:	jhb
Suggested by:	marcel
2016-02-20 01:32:58 +00:00
jhibbits
31bb8ee5bd Convert rman to use rman_res_t instead of u_long
Summary:
Migrate to using the semi-opaque type rman_res_t to specify rman resources.  For
now, this is still compatible with u_long.

This is step one in migrating rman to use uintmax_t for resources instead of
u_long.

Going forward, this could feasibly be used to specify architecture-specific
definitions of resource ranges, rather than baking a specific integer type into
the API.

This change has been broken out to facilitate MFC'ing drivers back to 10 without
breaking ABI.

Reviewed By: jhb
Sponsored by:	Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5075
2016-01-27 02:23:54 +00:00
brueffer
406a68d5cf Set the initial system time to a sane (as in: not end of 21st century) value when
booting on a PC with CMOS clock set to a year before 2000.

This uses 1980 (instead of 1970 as in the initial patch) as pivot year as
suggested by imp in the PR followup.

PR:		195703
Submitted by:	cs@soi.spb.ru
Reviewed by:	imp
MFC after:	1 weeks
2015-06-29 17:02:09 +00:00
imp
5dd3f4fde2 Include mca_machdep.h. 2015-01-18 03:43:47 +00:00
imp
503404cbf7 Need to include opt_mca.h to test for DEV_MCA. 2015-01-17 02:17:59 +00:00
marcel
48e5a4e056 Virtual machines can easily have more than 16 option ROMs and
when that happens, we happily access our resource array out of
bounds. Make sure we stay within the MAX_ROMS limit.
While here, bump MAX_ROMS from 16 to 32 to minimize the chance
of leaving option ROMs unaccounted for.

Obtained from:	Juniper Networks, Inc.
2014-10-22 01:37:32 +00:00
royger
c934f5fd28 atpic: make sure atpic_init is called after IO APIC initialization
After r269510 the IO APIC and ATPIC initialization is done at the same
order, which means atpic_init can be called before the IO APIC has
been initalized. In that case the ATPIC will take over the interrupt
sources, preventing the IO APIC from registering them.

Reported by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
Tested by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>,
           Trond Endrestøl <Trond.Endrestol@fagskolen.gjovik.no>
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
2014-08-07 17:00:50 +00:00
royger
152e3229be isa: allow ISA bus to attach to xenpv bus
This is needed because syscons depends on ISA.

Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Approved by: gibbs

x86/isa/isa.c:
 - Allow the ISA bus to attach to xenpv.
2014-06-16 08:49:16 +00:00
imp
9f008568e7 Remove vestiges of knowing the ISA bus, which we gave up on around 20
years ago. Remove redunant copy of isaregs.h.
2014-03-19 21:03:04 +00:00
royger
467e743960 xen: implement an early timer for Xen PVH
When running as a PVH guest, there's no emulated i8254, so we need to
use the Xen PV timer as the early source for DELAY. This change allows
for different implementations of the early DELAY function and
implements a Xen variant for it.

Approved by: gibbs
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D

dev/xen/timer/timer.c:
dev/xen/timer/timer.h:
 - Implement Xen early delay functions using the PV timer and declare
   them.

x86/include/init.h:
 - Add hooks for early clock source initialization and early delay
   functions.

i386/i386/machdep.c:
pc98/pc98/machdep.c:
amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
 - Set early delay hooks to use the i8254 on bare metal.
 - Use clock_init (that will in turn make use of init_ops) to
   initialize the early clock source.

amd64/include/clock.h:
i386/include/clock.h:
 - Declare i8254_delay and clock_init.

i386/xen/clock.c:
 - Rename DELAY to i8254_delay.

x86/isa/clock.c:
 - Introduce clock_init that will take care of initializing the early
   clock by making use of the init_ops hooks.
 - Move non ISA related delay functions to the newly introduced delay
   file.

x86/x86/delay.c:
 - Add moved delay related functions.
 - Implement generic DELAY function that will use the init_ops hooks.

x86/xen/pv.c:
 - Set PVH hooks for the early delay related functions in init_ops.

conf/files.amd64:
conf/files.i386:
conf/files.pc98:
 - Add delay.c to the kernel build.
2014-03-11 10:20:42 +00:00