The other option would be to remove it, but I can imagine it may be useful
for the forseeable future as we fiddle with segments in KSE and thr libraries,
that while many maps can exist and be loaded per tag, bus_dmamap_load() and
friends can only be called on one map at a time from the tag. This is
enforced via the mutex arguments in the tag.
Fixing this bug means that s/g lists can be arbitrarily long in length, and
also removes an ugly GNU-ism from the code. No API or ABI change is
incurred. Similar changes for other platforms is forthcoming.
created not only with UMA_ZONE_VM but also with UMA_ZONE_NOFREE. In
the i386 case in particular, the pmap code would hook a special
page allocation routine that allocated from kernel_map and not kmem_map,
and so when/if the pageout daemon drained the zones, it could actually
push out slabs from the PV ENTRY zone but call UMA's default page_free,
which resulted in pages allocated from kernel_map being freed to
kmem_map; bad. kmem_free() ignores the return value of the
vm_map_delete and just returns. I'm not sure what the exact
repercussions could be, but it doesn't look good.
In the PAE case on i386, we also set-up a zone in pmap, so be
conservative for now and make that zone also ZONE_NOFREE and
ZONE_VM. Do this for the pmap zones for the other archs too,
although in some cases it may not be entirely necessarily. We'd
rather be safe than sorry at this point.
Perhaps all UMA_ZONE_VM zones should by default be also
UMA_ZONE_NOFREE?
May fix some of silby's crashes on the PV ENTRY zone.
or free a LDT entry. The function has following prototype:
int i386_set_ldt(int start_sel, union descriptor *descs, int num_sels);
Added Features:
o If start_sel is 0, num_sels is 1 and the descriptor pointed to by descs
is legal, then i386_set_ldt() will allocate a descriptor and return its
selector numbe
o If num_descs is 1, start_sels is valid, and descs is NULL, then
i386_set_ldt() will free that descriptor (making it available to be real-
located again later).
o If num_descs is 0, start_sels is 0 and descs is NULL then, as a special
case, i386_set_ldt() will free all descriptors.
Reviewed by: julian
use "\n\" instead of "\" at the end of each source line, and don't use
semicolons). Fixed some older style bugs on the same lines (mainly
English errors in comments).
with up to date comments. This fixes booting kernels with boot2
(except for loss of the features provided by loader) and is suitable
for MFC. Contrary to the old comments, most loaders don't clear the bss.
biosboot lost clearing of the bss in a code crunch in 1997, and boot2
never did it.
kan didn't notice the problem with gcc-3.3 putting variables that are
initialized to 0 in the bss until after committing gcc-3.3 because he
was already using essentially this patch. Before gcc-3.3, only the
non-critical `bootdev' variable was clobbered by clearing the bss.
MFC after: 3 days
HIDENAME() macro seems to be unimplementable in C. (HIDENAME() used
to use invalid token pasting using ## for the STDC case until gcc
started rejecting that; now it uses unportable token pasting using
juxtaposition in all cases.) This reduces use of HIDENAME() in the
kernel to only i386 and amd64 profiling code so that it doesn't bite
most kernels whenever gcc becomes stricter. Problems with HIDENAME()
in userland are smaller because userland mostly doesn't use strict
flags yet. There are some advantages to hiding the name of mcount,
but newer arches shouldn't do it; only amd64 does.
MFC after: 3 days
On second thoughts hide tmpstk better by staticizing it.
in the `video_state' structure, to larger ones (from u_char to
u_short). Each can now hold values at least as large as the
size of the array it is meant to point into.
This eliminates warnings printed by GCC 3.3.1 and hence makes
pcvt compilable using -Werror.
memory in bus_dmamem_alloc(). This is possible now that
contigmalloc() supports the M_ZERO flag.
- Remove the locking of Giant around calls to contigmalloc() since
contigmalloc() now grabs Giant itself.
contain the filedescriptor number on opens from userland.
The index is used rather than a "struct file *" since it conveys a bit
more information, which may be useful to in particular fdescfs and /dev/fd/*
For now pass -1 all over the place.
written as a template that when inlined is specialized for the caller
through constant value propagation and dead code elimination. Thus,
the specialized code that is generated for pmap_clear_reference() et
al. avoids several conditional branches inside of a loop.
fields in the low 32 bits of the local APIC ICR register. Use this macro
in place of APIC_RESV2_MASK when masking off existing bits from the ICR
when writing to it to send an IPI.
Tested by: scottl
LAZY_SWITCH changes. He pointed out the acpi code sets up an identity
mapping in the current vmspace and that got messed up by the %cr3 being
out of sync with the current page directory. As a workaround, restore
%cr3 across the sleep/resume. A more complete fix would be to undo the
lazy state and clear the pm_active bit from the borrowed pmap, but this
works and people are currently hurting. I'll clean this up.
This is mostly Ian's patch, plus a PAE tweak from me.
work when using a graphics chipset which identifies itself as
`VIA CLE266', used in some VIA EPIA boards. Two values need to be
patched in the VESA mode information structure: the widths of the modes
mentioned above are encoded in a format which was unknown to the VESA
module (and to my copy of the VBE spec.) whereas the window memory
segment values seem to be just incorrect.
I tested this on a VIA EPIA-M9000 and -M10000.
it to the bss section and skips the initialization. This causes all
sorts of havoc because the bogus bss zero code clobbered previously set
variables. All our supported boot loaders already zero the bss, even
kgzip for the elf case. Since we dont generate a.out kernels, the old
a.out bootblocks and the a.out kgzip are not a factor anymore.
reset them only if they were previously in use. Unconditionally
resetting the registers wipes them out frequently, which interferes
with their use for kernel debugging.
While I'm here, be less verbose in the associated comment of a
neighboring function.
Noticed by: bde
order to avoid the overhead of later page faults. In general, it
implements two cases: one for vnode-backed objects and one for
device-backed objects. Only the device-backed case is really
machine-dependent, belonging in the pmap.
This commit moves the vnode-backed case into the (relatively) new
function vm_map_pmap_enter(). On amd64 and i386, this commit only
amounts to code rearrangement. On alpha and ia64, the new machine
independent (MI) implementation of the vnode case is smaller and more
efficient than their pmap-based implementations. (The MI
implementation takes advantage of the fact that objects in -CURRENT
are ordered collections of pages.) On sparc64, pmap_object_init_pt()
hadn't (yet) been implemented.
disabled.
- Change the apm driver to match the acpi driver's behavior by checking to
see if the device is disabled in the identify routine instead of in the
probe routine. This way if the device is disabled it is never created.
Note that a few places (ips(4), Alpha SMP) used "disable" instead of
"disabled" for their hint names, and these hints must be changed to
"disabled". If this is a big problem, resource_disabled() can always be
changed to honor both names.
Add two new arguments to bus_dma_tag_create(): lockfunc and lockfuncarg.
Lockfunc allows a driver to provide a function for managing its locking
semantics while using busdma. At the moment, this is used for the
asynchronous busdma_swi and callback mechanism. Two lockfunc implementations
are provided: busdma_lock_mutex() performs standard mutex operations on the
mutex that is specified from lockfuncarg. dftl_lock() is a panic
implementation and is defaulted to when NULL, NULL are passed to
bus_dma_tag_create(). The only time that NULL, NULL should ever be used is
when the driver ensures that bus_dmamap_load() will not be deferred.
Drivers that do not provide their own locking can pass
busdma_lock_mutex,&Giant args in order to preserve the former behaviour.
sparc64 and powerpc do not provide real busdma_swi functions, so this is
largely a noop on those platforms. The busdma_swi on is64 is not properly
locked yet, so warnings will be emitted on this platform when busdma
callback deferrals happen.
If anyone gets panics or warnings from dflt_lock() being called, please
let me know right away.
Reviewed by: tmm, gibbs
implementation of a largely MI pmap_object_init_pt() for vnode-backed
objects. pmap_enter_quick() is implemented via pmap_enter() on sparc64
and powerpc.
- Correct a mismatch between pmap_object_init_pt()'s prototype and its
various implementations. (I plan to keep pmap_object_init_pt() as
the MD hook for device-backed objects on i386 and amd64.)
- Correct an error in ia64's pmap_enter_quick() and adjust its interface
to match the other versions. Discussed with: marcel
bus_dma async callback scheme. Note that sparc64 does not seem to do
async callbacks. Note that ia64 callbacks might not be MPSAFE at the
moment. Note that powerpc doesn't seem to do async callbacks due to
the implementation being incomplete.
Reviewed by: mostly silence on arch@
Several of the subtypes have an associated vnode which is used for
stuff like the f*() functions.
By giving the vnode a speparate field, a number of checks for the specific
subtype can be replaced simply with a check for f_vnode != NULL, and
we can later free f_data up to subtype specific use.
At this point in time, f_data still points to the vnode, so any code I
might have overlooked will still work.