This brings arm into line with how every other arch does it. For some
reason, only arm lacked a definition of a symbol named kernbase in its
locore.S file(s) for use in its ldscript.arm file. Needlessly different
means harder to maintain.
Using a common symbol name also eases work in progress on a script to help
generate arm and arm64 kernels packaged in various ways (like with a header
blob needed for a bootloader prepended to the kernel file).
Due to clang and LLD's tendency to use a PLT for builtins, and as they
don't have full support for EABI, we sometimes have to deal with a PLT in
.ko files in a clang-built kernel.
As such, augment the in-kernel linker to support jump table processing.
As there is no particular reason to support lazy binding in kernel modules,
only implement Secure-PLT immediate binding.
As part of these changes, add elf_cpu_parse_dynamic() to the MD API of the
in-kernel linker (except on platforms that use raw object files.)
The new function will allow MD code to act on MD tags in _DYNAMIC.
Use this new function in the PowerPC MD code to ensure BSS-PLT modules using
PLT will be rejected during insertion, and to poison the runtime resolver to
ensure we get a clear panic reason if a call is made to the resolver.
Reviewed by: jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22608
off the stack, initialized to default values, and then filled in with
driver-specific values, all without having to worry about the numerous
other fields in the tag. The resulting template is then passed into
busdma and the normal opaque tag object created. See the man page for
details on how to initialize a template.
Templates do not support tag filters. Filters have been broken for many
years, and only existed for an ancient make/model of hardware that had a
quirky DMA engine. Instead of breaking the ABI/API and changing the
arugment signature of bus_dma_tag_create() to remove the filter arguments,
templates allow us to ignore them, and also significantly reduce the
complexity of creating and managing tags.
Reviewed by: imp, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22906
r356043 missed a couple of references in machdep parts... arguably, these
lines could probably be dropped as the softc is likely still zero'd at this
point.
Pointy hat: kevans
As far as I can tell, these are an artifact of times when linker sets
couldn't be empty, otherwise the kernel build would fail due to unresolved
symbols. hselasky fixed this in r268138, and I've audited the kbd portions
to make sure nothing would blow up due to the empty linker set and
successfully compiled+ran a kernel with no keyboard support at all.
Kill them off now since they're no longer required.
MFC after: 1 week
I've opted for just duplicating the two entries needed for this, rather than
writing any other mechanism for maintaining two root compat entries to map
to one config, for simplicity. We'll eventually declare these legacy DTB
unsupported, but let's not do that yet while there's no real burden.
We use armv7/GENERIC for the RPI2 images. The original RPI2 is actually a
32-bit BCM2836, but v1.2 was upgraded to the 64-bit BCM2837. The project
continues to provide the RPI2 image as armv7, as it's the lowest common
denominator of the two. Historically, we've just kind of implicitly
acknowledged this by including some bcm2837 bits on a SOC_BCM2836 kernel
config -- this worked until r354875 added code that actually cared.
Acknowledge formally that BCM2837 is valid in arm32.
This name is inconsistent with the other BCM* SOC on !arm64 for two reasons:
1. It's a pre-existing option on arm64, and
2. the naming convention on arm/ should've arguably changed to include BRCM
#1 seems to be a convincing enough argument to maintain the existing name
for it.
fix an assert violation introduced in r355784. Without this spinlock_exit()
may see owepreempt and switch before reducing the spinlock count. amd64
had been optimized to do a single critical enter/exit regardless of the
number of spinlocks which avoided the problem and this optimization had
not been applied elsewhere.
Reported by: emaste
Suggested by: rlibby
Discussed with: jhb, rlibby
Tested by: manu (arm64)
These invocations were directly calling enkbd_diag(), rather than
indirection back through kbdd_diag/kbdsw. While they're functionally
equivent, invoking kbdd_diag where feasible (i.e. not in a diag
implementation) makes it easier to visually identify locking needs in these
other drivers.
The arm kernel stack unwinder has apparently never been able to unwind when
the path of execution leads through a kernel module. There was code that
tried to handle modules by looking for the unwind data in them, but it did
so by trying to find symbols which have never existed in arm kernel
modules. That caused the unwind code to panic, and because part of panic
handling calls into the unwind code, that just created a recursion loop.
Locating the unwind data in a loaded module requires accessing the Elf
section headers to find the SHT_ARM_EXIDX section. For preloaded modules
those headers are present in a metadata blob. For dynamically loaded
modules, the headers are present only while the loading is in progress; the
memory is freed once the module is ready to use. For that reason, there is
new code in kern/link_elf.c, wrapped in #ifdef __arm__, to extract the
unwind info while the headers are loaded. The values are saved into new
fields in the linker_file structure which are also conditional on __arm__.
In arm/unwind.c there is new code to locally cache the per-module info
needed to find the unwind tables. The local cache is crafted for lockless
read access, because the unwind code often needs to run in context where
sleeping is not allowed. A large comment block describes the local cache
list, so I won't repeat it all here.
Delay the attachment of children, when requested, until after interrutps are
running. This is often needed to allow children to run transactions on i2c or
spi busses. It's a common enough idiom that it will be useful to have its own
wrapper.
Reviewed by: ian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21465
This is a 32-bit structure embedded in each vm_page, consisting mostly
of page queue state. The use of a structure makes it easy to store a
snapshot of a page's queue state in a stack variable and use cmpset
loops to update that state without requiring the page lock.
This change merely adds the structure and updates references to atomic
state fields. No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: alc, jeff, kib
Sponsored by: Netflix, Intel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22650
r354875 pushed VCBUS <-> ARMC translations to runtime determination, but
incorrectly mapped addresses for the BCM2836 -- SOC_BCM2835 and SOC_BCM2836
are actually mutually exclusive, so the BCM2836 config (GENERIC) would have
taken the latter path in the header and used 0x3f000000 as peripheral start.
Easily fixed -- split out the BCM2836 into its own memmap config and use
that instead if SOC_BCM2836 is included. With this, we get back to userland
again.
Reported by: Marek Zarychta <zarychtam@plan-b.pwste.edu.pl>
While here, call device_delete_children() to detach and dealloc all the
existent children and handle the child's detach errors properly.
Reported by: jenkins, hselasky, ian
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
Interrupt based driver, implements SPI mode and clock configuration.
Tested on espressobin and SG-3200.
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
and remove a couple scattered local declarations.
Most of these aren't referenced in C code (there are some references in
asm code), and they also aren't documented anywhere. This helps a bit
with the latter.
This controller is a bit tricky as the STOP condition must be indicated in
the last tranferred byte, some devices will not like the repeated start
behavior of this controller. A proper fix to this issue is in the works.
This driver works in polling mode, can be used early in the boot (required
in some cases).
Tested on espressobin/SG-1100 and the SG-3200.
Obtained from: pfSense
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
o Remove All Rights Reserved from my notices
o imp@FreeBSD.org everywhere
o regularize punctiation, eliminate date ranges
o Make sure that it's clear that I don't claim All Rights reserved by listing
All Rights Reserved on same line as other copyright holders (but not
me). Other such holders are also listed last where it's clear.
- Use ustringp for the location of the argv and environment strings
and allow destp to travel further down the stack for the stackgap
and auxv regions.
- Update the Linux copyout_strings variants to move destp down the
stack as was done for the native ABIs in r263349.
- Stop allocating a space for a stack gap in the Linux ABIs. This
used to hold translated system call arguments, but hasn't been used
since r159992.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested on: md64 (amd64, i386, linux64), i386 (i386, linux)
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22501
tightening constraints on busy as a precursor to lockless page lookup and
should largely be a NOP for these cases.
Reviewed by: alc, kib, markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22611
As part of my journey to make it easy to determine what's relying on tty
bits, remove a couple more. Some of these just outright didn't need it,
while others did rely on <sys/tty.h> pollution for mutex headers.
loaded modules (pass 0/false for the can_lock arg). Searching the unwind
info in modules acquires an exclusive sxlock, and the stack(9) functions can
be called in a context where unbounded sleeps are forbidden (such as from
the witness checkorder code).
Just ignoring the existence of modules in stack_save() is not ideal, so I'm
looking for a better solution, but this commit will make it possible to boot
an ARM kernel with WITNESS enabled again, until I get something better.
PR: 242200
Now that it works for the Raspberry Pi 4, we can discontinue our workarounds
that were put in place to at least get a bootable kernel for other testing.
According to the documentation I have, DREQ pacing should be required here.
The DREQ# hasn't changed since the BCM2835. As soon as we attempt to setup
DREQ, DMA stalls and there's no clear reason why as of yet. Setting this
back to NONE seems to work just as well, though it's yet to be determined if
this is a sustainable model in high-throughput scenarios.
We'll write the value we read back to ack pending interrupts, but we should
at least make it clear to ourselves that we only want to ack pending
transfer interrupts.
r354290 removed arm.arm from universe, but arm.arm kernels were still
found and built during the kernel stage. I'm not aware of a better way
to address this at the moment, but since there aren't many arm.arm
kernels anyhow just add an explicit NO_UNIVERSE to them.
Reported by: rpokala
Later parts assume that this would've been done if interrupts are enabled,
but this is the only case in which that wouldn't have been true. This commit
also reorders operations such that we're done touching slot/slot->intmask
before we call back into the SDHCI framework and exit.
r354823 kicked DATA_END handling out of the DMA interrupt path "to make
things easy", but this was likely a mistake -- if we know we're done after
we've finished pending DMA operations, we should go ahead and acknowledge
it rather than waiting for the controller to finalize it. If it's not ready,
we'll simply re-enable interrupts and wait for it anyways, to be re-entered
in sdhci_data_intr.
Later parts assume that this would've been done if interrupts are enabled,
but this is the only case in which that wouldn't have been true. This commit
also reorders operations such that we're done touching slot/slot->intmask
before we call back into the SDHCI framework and exit.
It's unclear how this didn't get caught in my last iteration, but the fix is
easy- the interface is still compatible, it was just gratuituously renamed
to match my arbitrary definition of consistency... VCBUS, the BCM2835 name,
represents an address on the VideoCore CPU Bus.
In a similar fashion, while it is a physical address, the ARMC portion
represents that these are addresses as seen by the ARM CPU.
To make things even more fun, the BCM2711 peripheral documentation describes
not virtual address space vs. physical address space, but instead the 32-bit
address map vs. the address map in "Low Peripheral" mode. The latter of
these is what the *ARMC* macros translate to/from.
We could maintain the static conversions for the !AArch64 Raspberry Pis, but
I'm not sure it's worth it -- we'll traverse the platform list exactly once
(of which there are only two for armv7), then every conversion there-after
traverses the memory map listing of which there are at-most two entries for
these boards: sdram and peripheral space.
Detecting this at runtime is necessary for the AArch64 SOC, though, because
of the distinct IO windows being otherwise not discernible just from support
compiled into the kernel. We currently select the correct window based on
/compatible in the FDT.
We also use a similar mechanism to describe the DMA restrictions- the RPi 4
can have up to 4GB of RAM while the DMA controller and mailbox mechanism can
technically, kind of, only access the lowest 1GB. See the comment in
bcm2835_vcbus.h for a fun description/clarification of this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22301
This round of refactoring is mostly about streamlining the interrupt handler
to make it easier to verify and reason about operations taking place while
trying to bring FreeBSD up on the RPi4.
This allows easy and care-free scaling of NUM_DMA_SEGS with proper-ish
calculations to make sure we can actually handle the number of segments we'd
like to handle on average so that performance comparisons can be easily made
at different values if/once we can actually handle it. It also makes it
helps the untrained reader understand more quickly the reasoning behind the
choice of maxsize/maxsegs/maxsegsize.
The purpose of this option is to make it easier to track down memory
corruption bugs by reducing the number of malloc(9) types that might
have recently been associated with a given chunk of memory. However, it
increases fragmentation and is disabled in release kernels.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is just further simplification, very little functional change. In the
DMA interrupt handler, we *do* now acknowledge both DATA_AVAIL | SPACE_AVAIL
every time -- these operations are mutually exclusive, so while this is a
functional change, it's effectively a nop. Removing the 'mask' local allows
us to further simplify in a future change.
This simplifies the DMA interrupt handler quite a bit. The sdhci framework
will call platform_finish_transfer() if it's received SDHCI_INT_DATA_END, so
we can take care of any final cleanup there and simply not worry about the
possibility of it ending in the DMA interrupt path.
Change the FreeBSD ELF ABIs to use this new hook to copyout ELF auxv
instead of doing it in the sv_fixup hook. In particular, this new
hook allows the stack space to be allocated at the same time the auxv
values are copied out to userland. This allows us to avoid wasting
space for unused auxv entries as well as not having to recalculate
where the auxv vector is by walking back up over the argv and
environment vectors.
Reviewed by: brooks, emaste
Tested on: amd64 (amd64 and i386 binaries), i386, mips, mips64
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22355
The old stack_machdep.c code was written for the APCS ABI (aka "oldabi").
When we switched to ARM EABI (back in freebsd 10) this file never got
updated, and apparently nobody noticed that until now.
The new implementation uses the same stack unwinder code used by the
arm implemenation of the db_trace stuff.
This is an exceptional case; generally found during controller errors.
A panic when we attempt to acess slot->curcmd->data is less ideal than
warning, and other verbiage will be emitted to indicate the exact error.
This was once set, but I removed it by the time I committed it because both
configurations use the same POWER_ID. This can be separated back out if the
situation changes.
DMA is currently disabled while I work out why it's broken, but this is
enough for upstream U-Boot + rpi-firmware + our rpi3-psci-monitor to boot
with the right config.
The RPi 4 is still not in a good "supported" state, as we have no
USB/PCI-E/Ethernet drivers, but if air-gapped pies only able to operate over
cereal is your thing, here's your guy.
Submitted by: Robert Crowston (with modifications)
On the RPi4, some of these IRQs are shared. Start moving toward a mode where
we accept that shared IRQs happen and simply ignore interrupts that are
seemingly for no reason.
I would like to be more verbose here, but my 30-minute assessment of the
current world order is that mapping a resource/rid to an actual IRQ number
(as found in FDT) data is not a simple matter. Determining if more than one
handler is attached to an IRQ is closer to feasible, but it's unclear which
way is the cleaner path. Beyond that, we're only really using it to be
slightly more verbose when something's going wrong, so for now just suppress
and drop a complaint-comment.
This was originally submitted (via freebsd-arm@) by Robert Crowston; the
additional verbosity was dropped by kevans@.
Submitted by: Robert Crowston <crowston@protonmail.com>
This is a standard required property for interrupt controllers, and present
on the bcm_lintc nodes for currently supported RPi models. For the RPi4, we
have both bcm_lintc as well as GIC-400, but only one may be active at a
time.
Don't probe bcm_lintc if it's missing the "interrupt-controller" property --
in RPi 4 DTS, the bcm_lintc node is actually missing this along with other
required interrupt properties. Presumably, if the earlier boot stages will
support switching to the legacy interrupt controller (as is suggested
possible by the documentation), the DTS will need to be updated to indicate
the proper interrupt-parent and hopefully also mark this node as an
interrupt-controller instead.
Don't blindy say that we support both 3.3V and 1.8V.
If we have a regulator for the data lines, check that the voltage is
supported before adding the signaling caps.
If we don't have a regulator, just assume that the data lines are 3.3V
This unbreak eMMC on some allwinner boards.
Reported by: ganbold
MFC after: 1 month
X-MFC-With: r354396
This function will call the regnode_check_voltage method for a given regulator
and check if the desired voltage in reachable by it.
Also adds a default method that check the std_param and which should be enough
for most regulators and add it as the method for axp* rk805 and fixed regulators.
Reviewed by: mmel
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22260
Using cam_sim_alloc_dev() allows to properly set sim_dev field so that
sdiob(4) can attach to the CAM device that represents SDIO card.
The same change for SDHCI driver happened in r348800.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22192
This appears to be a copy-pasto from previous lines that propagated to v6
over the years. Indeed, nothing references kernelstack beyond
USPACE_SVC_STACK_TOP and it would be odd if anything did.
Noticed by: markj
in simple multifunction driver.
- follow interrupt changes in DT. Split old ICU driver to function oriented
parts and add drivers for newly defined parts (system error interrupts).
- Many drivers are children of simple multifunction driver. But after r349596
simple MF driver doesn't longer exports memory resources, and all children
must use syscon interface to access their registers. Adapt affected
drivers to this fact.
MFC after: 3 weeks
After r352110 the page lock no longer protects a page's identity, so
there is no purpose in locking the page in pmap_mincore(). Instead,
if vm.mincore_mapped is set to the non-default value of 0, re-lookup
the page after acquiring its object lock, which holds the page's
identity stable.
The change removes the last callers of vm_page_pa_tryrelock(), so
remove it.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21823
in this driver indicate that the SD_CAPA register is write-once and after
being set one time the values in it cannot be changed. That turns out not
to be the case -- the values written to it survive a reset, but they can
be rewritten/changed at any time.
should be) correct, they lead to the eMMC on a Beaglebone failing to work
in some situations.
The TI sdhci hardware is kind of strange. The first device inherently
supports 1.8v and 3.3v and the abililty to switch between them, and the
other two devices must be set to 1.8v in the sdhci power control register to
operate correctly, but doing so actually makes them run at 3.3v (unless an
external level-shifter is present in the signal path). Even the 1.8v on the
first device may actually be 3.3v (or any other value), depending on what
voltage is fed to the VDDS1-VDDS7 power supply pins on the am335x chip.
Another strange quirk is that the convention for am335x sdhci drivers in
linux and uboot and the am335x boot ROM seems to be to set the voltage in
the sdhci capabilities register to 3.0v even though the actual voltage is
3.3v. Why this is done is a complete mystery to me, but it seems to be
required for correct operation.
If we had complete modern support for the am335x chip we could get the
actual voltages from the FDT data and the regulator framework. But our
am335x code currently doesn't have any regulator framework support.
Reverting to the prior code will get the popular Beaglebone boards working
again.
This is part of the fix for PR 241301, but also requires r353651 for a
complete fix.
PR: 241301
Discussed with: manu
callers hold it.
This simplifies pmap code and removes a dependency on the object lock.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Netflix, Intel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21596
busy acquires while held.
This allows code that would need to acquire and release a very large number
of page busy locks to use the old mechanism where busy is only checked and
not held. This comes at the cost of false positives but never false
negatives which the single consumer, vm_fault_soft_fast(), handles.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Netflix, Intel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21592
This adds support for H6 SoC.
Add a CCU driver for H6 that support all PLLs and most of the clocks
that we are intersted in for now (i2c, mmc, usb, etc ...)
MFC after: 1 month
You aren't supposed to changing the freq of a clock when it is
enable so disable the clock before changing the freq and then
re-enable it.
MFC after: 1 month
According to ian, the only armv6 cpu we support is the 1176, so this
change is effectively a no-op.
The change is just to make the code more self-consistent.
The issue was noticed by a standalone module build for armv6.
Reviewed by: ian
MFC after: 3 weeks
This adds 8 and 16 bit versions of the cmpset and fcmpset functions. Macros
are used to generate all the flavors from the same set of instructions; the
macro expansion handles the couple minor differences between each size
variation (generating ldrexb/ldrexh/ldrex for 8/16/32, etc).
In addition to handling new sizes, the instruction sequences used for cmpset
and fcmpset are rewritten to be a bit shorter/faster, and the new sequence
will not return false when *dst==*old but the store-exclusive fails because
of concurrent writers. Instead, it just loops like ldrex/strex sequences
normally do until it gets a non-conflicted store. The manpage allows LL/SC
architectures to bogusly return false, but there's no reason to actually do
so, at least on arm.
Reviewed by: cognet
PLL_MIPI is the last important PLL that we missed.
Add support for it.
Since it's one of the possible parent for TCON0 also add this clock
now that we can.
While here add some info about what video related clocks should be
enabled at boot and with what frequency.
Centralize calculation of signal and ucode delivered on unhandled page
fault in new function vm_fault_trap(). MD trap_pfault() now almost
always uses the signal numbers and error codes calculated in
consistent MI way.
This introduces the protection fault compatibility sysctls to all
non-x86 architectures which did not have that bug, but apparently they
were already much more wrong in selecting delivered signals on
protection violations.
Change the delivered signal for accesses to mapped area after the
backing object was truncated. According to POSIX description for
mmap(2):
The system shall always zero-fill any partial page at the end of an
object. Further, the system shall never write out any modified
portions of the last page of an object which are beyond its
end. References within the address range starting at pa and
continuing for len bytes to whole pages following the end of an
object shall result in delivery of a SIGBUS signal.
An implementation may generate SIGBUS signals when a reference
would cause an error in the mapped object, such as out-of-space
condition.
Adjust according to the description, keeping the existing
compatibility code for SIGSEGV/SIGBUS on protection failures.
For situations where kernel cannot handle page fault due to resource
limit enforcement, SIGBUS with a new error code BUS_OBJERR is
delivered. Also, provide a new error code SEGV_PKUERR for SIGSEGV on
amd64 due to protection key access violation.
vm_fault_hold() is renamed to vm_fault(). Fixed some nits in
trap_pfault()s like mis-interpreting Mach errors as errnos. Removed
unneeded truncations of the fault addresses reported by hardware.
PR: 211924
Reviewed by: alc
Discussed with: jilles, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21566
Convert all remaining references to that field to "ref_count" and update
comments accordingly. No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Sponsored by: Intel, Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21768
- Remove a dead variable from the amd64 pmap_extract_and_hold().
- Fix grammar in the vm_page_wire man page.
Reported by: alc
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21639
The latest imported FDT data defines a node for an iomuxc-gpr device,
which we don't support (or need, right now) in addition to the usual
iomuxc device. Unfortunately, the dts improperly assigns overlapping
ranges of mmio space to both devices. The -gpr device is also a syscon
and simple_mfd device.
At runtime the simple_mfd driver attaches for the iomuxc-gpr node, then
when the real iomuxc driver comes along later, it fails to attach because
it tries to allocate its register space, and it's already partially in
use by the bogus instance of simple_mfd.
This change works around the problem by simply disabling the node for
the iomuxc-gpr device, since we don't need it for anything.
that makes the upstream FDT data work right, so we don't need to see a
couple dozen instances of it spam the dmesg at boot time unless it's a
verbose boot.
ioctl(2) handling. This allows doing the pps_event() work in the polling
routine, instead of using a taskqueue task to do that work.
Also, add PNPINFO, and switch to using make_dev_s() to create the cdev.
Using a spin mutex and calling pps_event() from the polling function works
around the situation which requires more than 2 sets of timecounter
timehands in a single-core system to get reliable PPS capture. That problem
would happen when a single-core system is idle in cpu_idle() then gets woken
up with an event timer event which was scheduled to handle a hardclock tick.
That processing path would end up calling tc_windup 3 or 4 times between
when the tc polling function was called and when the taskqueue task would
eventually run, and with only two sets of timehands, the th_generation count
would always be too old to allow the captured PPS data to be used.
There are several mechanisms by which a vm_page reference is held,
preventing the page from being freed back to the page allocator. In
particular, holding the page's object lock is sufficient to prevent the
page from being freed; holding the busy lock or a wiring is sufficent as
well. These references are protected by the page lock, which must
therefore be acquired for many per-page operations. This results in
false sharing since the page locks are external to the vm_page
structures themselves and each lock protects multiple structures.
Transition to using an atomically updated per-page reference counter.
The object's reference is counted using a flag bit in the counter. A
second flag bit is used to atomically block new references via
pmap_extract_and_hold() while removing managed mappings of a page.
Thus, the reference count of a page is guaranteed not to increase if the
page is unbusied, unmapped, and the object's write lock is held. As
a consequence of this, the page lock no longer protects a page's
identity; operations which move pages between objects are now
synchronized solely by the objects' locks.
The vm_page_wire() and vm_page_unwire() KPIs are changed. The former
requires that either the object lock or the busy lock is held. The
latter no longer has a return value and may free the page if it releases
the last reference to that page. vm_page_unwire_noq() behaves the same
as before; the caller is responsible for checking its return value and
freeing or enqueuing the page as appropriate. vm_page_wire_mapped() is
introduced for use in pmap_extract_and_hold(). It fails if the page is
concurrently being unmapped, typically triggering a fallback to the
fault handler. vm_page_wire() no longer requires the page lock and
vm_page_unwire() now internally acquires the page lock when releasing
the last wiring of a page (since the page lock still protects a page's
queue state). In particular, synchronization details are no longer
leaked into the caller.
The change excises the page lock from several frequently executed code
paths. In particular, vm_object_terminate() no longer bounces between
page locks as it releases an object's pages, and direct I/O and
sendfile(SF_NOCACHE) completions no longer require the page lock. In
these latter cases we now get linear scalability in the common scenario
where different threads are operating on different files.
__FreeBSD_version is bumped. The DRM ports have been updated to
accomodate the KPI changes.
Reviewed by: jeff (earlier version)
Tested by: gallatin (earlier version), pho
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20486
Instead of using hardcoded bpp of 24, obtain current/configured value
from VideoCore. This solves certain problems with Xorg/Qt apps that
require bpp of 32 to work properly. The mode can be forced by setting
framebuffer_depth value in config.txt
PR: 235363
Submitted by: Steve Peurifoy <ssw01@mathistry.net>
o from FDT;
o from EFI;
o from Linux Boot API (ATAG).
U-Boot may pass RAM info all that 3 ways simultaneously.
We do select between FDT and EFI, but not for ATAG.
So this is not problem fix, but correctness check.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Many extern struct pcpu <something>__pcpu declarations were
copied/pasted in sources. The issue is that the definition is MD, but
it cannot be provided by machine/pcpu.h due to actual struct pcpu
defined in sys/pcpu.h later than the inclusion of machine/pcpu.h.
This forced the copying when other code needed direct access to
__pcpu. There is no way around it, due to machine/pcpu.h supplying
part of struct pcpu fields.
To work around the problem, add a new machine/pcpu_aux.h header, which
should fill any needed MD definitions after struct pcpu definition is
completed. This allows to remove copies of __pcpu spread around the
source. Also on x86 it makes it possible to remove work arounds like
OFFSETOF_CURTHREAD or clang specific warnings supressions.
Reported and tested by: lwhsu, bcran
Reviewed by: imp, markj (previous version)
Discussed with: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21418
Many arm kernel configs bogusly specified WERROR=-Werror. There's no
reason for this because the default is that and there's no reason to
override. These date from a time when we needed to add additional
warning->error suppression. They are obsolete and were cut and paste
propagated from file to file.
Comment out all the WERROR=.... lines in powerpc. They aren't bogus,
but were appropriate for the old defaults for gcc4.2.1. Now that we've
made the policy decision to suppress -Werror by default on these
platforms, it is appropriate to comment these out. People wishing to
fix these errors can still un-comment them out, or say WERROR=-Werror
on the command line.
Fix two instances (cut and paste propagation) of hard-coded -Werror
in x86 code. Replace with ${WERROR} instead. This is a no-op change
except for people who build WERROR=-Wno-error :).
This should fix tinderbox / CI breakage.
ti,dual-volt property say that the eMMC support 1.8V and 3.3V not 3.0V
Use the correct caps for the mmc stack.
Note that the MMCHS_SD_CAPA register can only be written once after bootup
so if one is using a u-boot compiled with eMMC support (this is the default)
this code is a no-op but just in case someone have u-boot compiled without
eMMC support this make eMMC works when the kernel is booted.
MFC after: 1 week
The fdt node for this driver is a simple-mfd and syscon compatible one
meaning that simplemfd will be the driver attached for it. The gpio driver
is attached to the 'gpio' subnode so use syscon_get_handle_default to
obtain the handle of the syscon from the parent device and use this
to read/write to the memory region.
MFC after: 1 week
Since r349596 the syscon driver will map the memory. Since the gpio/pinctrl
controller wants it too set it to SHAREABLE.
This fix the gpio controller for attaching and so consumer can use it.
Now the sdhci_xenon driver can detect presence of an sdcard and attach
the mmc driver.
MFC after: 1 week
doing so adds more flexibility with less redundant code.
Reviewed by: jhb, markj, kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21250
In r350842 I've switched the bus pass to resource so it matches the other
clock drivers but this cannot work as this drivers is meant to match
the dts node '/clocks' and if we don't do it at this pass simplebus is
catching this node and we cannot attach.
This solve booting on Allwinner boards that are still using /clocks (A20 SoC)
MFC after: 3 days
Move the floppy driver to the x86 specific notes file.
Reviewed by: jhb, manu, jhibbits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21208
x86 needs sc, as does sparc64. powerpc doesn't use it by default, but some old
powermac notebooks do not work with vt yet for reasons unknonw. Even so, I've
removed it from powerpc LINT. It's not in daily use there, and the intent is to
100% switch to vt now that it works for that platform to limit support burden.
All the other architectures omit some or all of the screen savers from their
lint config. Move them to the x86 NOTES files and remove the exclusions. This
reduces slightly the number of savers sparc64 compiles, but since they are in
GENERIC, the overage is adequate and if someone reaelly wants to sort them out
in sparc64 they can sweat the details and the testing.
Reviewed by: jhb (earlier version), manu (earlier version), jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21233
status register clears pending interrupts. By moving that code out of the
interrupt handler into a taskqueue task, I effectively created an interrupt
storm by returning from the handler with the interrupt source still active.
We'll have to find a different solution for this driver's need to sleep
in an ithread context.
Long ago this was needed, but now low-level i2c controller drivers cleverly
defer attachment of the bus until interrupts are enabled (if they require
interrupts to function), so that every i2c slave device doesn't have to.
We used the aw_clk_nm clock for clock with only one divider factor
and used a fake multiplier factor. This cannot work properly as we
end up writing the "fake" factor to the register (and so always set
the LSB to 1).
Create a new clock for those.
The reason for not using the clk_div clock is because those clocks are
a bit special. Since they are (almost) all related to video we also need
to set the parent clock (the main PLL) to a frequency that they can support.
As the main PLL have some minimal frequency that they can support we need to
be able to set the main PLL to a multiple of the desired frequency.
Let say you want to have a 71Mhz pixel clock (typical for a 1280x800 display)
and the main PLL cannot go under 192Mhz, you need to set it to 3 times the
desired frequency and set the divider to 3 on the hdmi clock.
So this also introduce the CLK_SET_ROUND_MULTIPLE flag that allow for this kind
of scenario.
- Put all clock and control unit driver in BUS_PASS_RESOURCE except
for the DE2 CCU as it needs the main CCU to be available.
- Use BUS_PASS_CPU for a20_cpu_cfg as it makes more sense.
- For aw_syscon use SCHEDULER pass as we need it early for drivers
that attach in BUS_PASS_SUPPORTDEV
- For the rest we can use BUS_PASS_SUPPORTDEV
The current implementation of gzipped a.out support was based
on a very old version of InfoZIP which ships with an ancient
modified version of zlib, and was removed from the GENERIC
kernel in 1999 when we moved to an ELF world.
PR: 205822
Reviewed by: imp, kib, emaste, Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21099
Since DTS from >= Linux 5.0 the slave address are relative to the parent
node address and aren't the full ones.
Check both so the cpsw driver can find the phy id.
r350229 changed the code to lookup the ti,hwmods property in the parent
as it's now like that in the DTS from >= Linux 5.0, allow the property
to be also in the node itself so we can boot with an older DTB.
Reported by: "Dr. Rolf Jansen" <rj@obsigna.com>
Nothing uses these anymore. They were for super small armv4 boards without
uboot. We removed armv4 support before 13.0, but neglected to garbage collect
this at the same time. Today, both flavors of armv5 kernels (mv and ralink) boot
via uboot which has its own compression scheme for boards that need it.
Note: OLDFILES has not been updated beacuse installkernel will move the whole
directory out of the way before installing the new kernel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21072
syscallret() doesn't use error anymore. Fix a few other places to permit
removing the return value from syscallenter() entirely.
- Remove a duplicated assertion from arm's syscall().
- Use td_errno for amd64_syscall_ret_flush_l1d.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2090