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
Casueword(9) on ll/sc architectures must be prepared for userspace
constantly modifying the same cache line as containing the CAS word,
and not loop infinitely. Otherwise, rogue userspace livelocks the
kernel.
To fix the issue, change casueword(9) interface to return new value 1
indicating that either comparision or store failed, instead of relying
on the oldval == *oldvalp comparison. The primitive no longer retries
the operation if it failed spuriously. Modify callers of
casueword(9), all in kern_umtx.c, to handle retries, and react to
stops and requests to terminate between retries.
On x86, despite cmpxchg should not return spurious failures, we can
take advantage of the new interface and just return PSL.ZF.
Reviewed by: andrew (arm64, previous version), markj
Tested by: pho
Reported by: https://xenbits.xen.org/xsa/advisory-295.txt
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20772
Instead of including stdint.h for uintptr_t, include sys/_types.h and use
__types for everything that isn't a native C keyword type.
Remove the #include of cdefs.h. It appears after the include of armreg.h
which has a precondition of cdefs.h being included before it, so everyone
including sysarch.h is already including cdefs.h. (When armv5 support
goes away, there will be no need include armreg.h here either.)
Unfortunately, the unprefixed struct member names "addr" and "len" cannot
be changed, because 3rd-party software is relying on them (libcompiler_rt
is one known consumer).
The hold_count and wire_count fields of struct vm_page are separate
reference counters with similar semantics. The remaining essential
differences are that holds are not counted as a reference with respect
to LRU, and holds have an implicit free-on-last unhold semantic whereas
vm_page_unwire() callers must explicitly determine whether to free the
page once the last reference to the page is released.
This change removes the KPIs which directly manipulate hold_count.
Functions such as vm_fault_quick_hold_pages() now return wired pages
instead. Since r328977 the overhead of maintaining LRU for wired pages
is lower, and in many cases vm_fault_quick_hold_pages() callers would
swap holds for wirings on the returned pages anyway, so with this change
we remove a number of page lock acquisitions.
No functional change is intended. __FreeBSD_version is bumped.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Discussed with: jeff
Discussed with: jhb, np (cxgbe)
Tested by: pho (previous version)
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19247
All MMCBR bridges have to implement all the MMCBR variables. This
implements them for everybody that currently doesn't.
A common routine for this should be written.
This lets PCIe MSI-X device interrupts work on the MACCHIATObin
(Marvell Armada 8k), which allows e.g. the Intel igb NIC to fully work.
Submitted by: Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>
Reviewed by: mw, bcran
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20775
NANDFS has been broken for years. Remove it. The NAND drivers that
remain are for ancient parts that are no longer relevant. They are
polled, have terrible performance and just for ancient arm
hardware. NAND parts have evolved significantly from this early work
and little to none of it would be relevant should someone need to
update to support raw nand. This code has been off by default for
years and has violated the vnode protocol leading to panics since it
was committed.
Numerous posts to arch@ and other locations have found no actual users
for this software.
Relnotes: Yes
No Objection From: arch@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20745
had been done years ago. I did. All this time we've only compiled a LINT
kernel for TARGET_ARCH=arm. Now separate LINT-V5 and LINT-V7 configs are
generated and built.
There are two new files in arm/conf, NOTES.armv5 and NOTES.armv7, containing
some of what used to be in the arm NOTES file. That file now contains only
the bits that are common to v5 and v7.
The makeLINT.mk file now creates the LINT-V5 and LINT-V7 files by concatening
sys/conf/NOTES, arm/conf/NOTES, and arm/conf/NOTES.armv{5,7} in that order.
pwm(9), but also maintains the historical sysctl config interface for
compatiblity with existing apps. The two config systems are not compatible
with each other; if you use both interfaces to change configurations you're
likely to end up with incorrect output or none at all.
upcoming functional changes.
Add an ofw_compat_data table for probing compat strings, and use it to add
PNP data. Remove some stray semicolons at the end of macro definitions,
and add a PWM_LOCK_ASSERT macro to round out the usual suite. Move the
device_t and driver_methods structs to the end of the file. Tweak comments.
is nothing left in the file that related to pwmbus at all. It just contains
prototypes for the functions implemented in dev/pwm.ofw_pwm.c, so name it
accordingly and fix the include protect wrappers to match.
A new pwmbus.h will be coming along in a future commit.
The pwm and pwmbus interfaces were nearly identical, this merges them into a
single pwmbus interface. The pwmbus driver now implements the pwmbus
interface by simply passing all calls through to its parent (the hardware
driver). The channel_count method moves from pwm to pwmbus, and the
get_bus method is deleted (just no longer needed).
The net effect is that the interface for doing pwm stuff is now the same
regardless of whether you're a child of pwmbus, or some random driver
elsewhere in the hierarchy that is bypassing the pwmbus layer and is talking
directly to the hardware driver via cross-hierarchy connections established
using fdt data.
The pwmc driver is now a child of pwmbus, instead of being its sibling
(that's why the get_bus method is no longer needed; pwmc now gets the
device_t of the bus using device_get_parent()).
pollution that was cleaned up recently, and this file got missed in the
cleanup because it's not attached to the build unless you specifically
request this device in a custom kernel config.
driver is compiled into the kernel but pwmbus will be loaded as a module
when needed (and because of that, pwmbus_attach_bus() is going away in
the near future). Instead, just directly do what that function did:
register the fdt xfef handle, and attach the pwmbus.
resources if they got allocated (because detach() gets called from attach()
to handle various failures), and delete the pwmbus child if it got created.
Hide unused code under #ifdef notyet (in one case the only caller is under
that same ifdef), or if it is arm (not arm64) specific code under the
__arm__ ifdef to not yield -Wunused-function warnings during the arm64
kernel compile.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The A3700 has a different GPIO controller and thus, do not use the old (and
shared) code for Marvell.
The pinctrl driver, also part of the controller, is not supported yet (but
the implementation should be straightforward).
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
This allows SDIO (through CAM) to attach to an upstream, e.g.,
..
sdhci_bcm0 pnpinfo name=mmc@7e300000 compat=brcm,bcm2835-mmc
sdiob0
..
Without this, upon trying to load sdio, we would panic with
"bus_add_child is not implemented".
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
In the DMA case, given we disable the data interrupts, we never seem
to get DATA_END. Given we are relying on DMA interrupts we are not
using the SDHCI state machine and hence only call into
sdhci_platform_will_handle() for the first check of data.
We do not call "will handle" for any following round trips of the same
transaction if block size * count > BCM_DMA_BLOCK_SIZE.
Manually check "left" in the DMA interrupt handler to see if we have at
least another full BCM_DMA_BLOCK_SIZE to handle.
Without this change we would DMA that and then even start a DMA with
left == 0 which would lead to a timeout and error.
Now we re-enable data interrupts and return and let the SDHCI generic
interrupt handler and state machine pick the SPACE_AVAIL up and then
find that it should punt to the pio_handler for the remaining bytes
or finish the data transaction.
With this change block mode seems to work beyond 7 * 64byte blocks,
which worked as it was below BCM_DMA_BLOCK_SIZE.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20199
Extending what the initial revision, r273264, r276985, r277346 have
started for the transfer mode and command registers, another pair of
16bit registers written in sequence are block size and block count,
which fall together onto the same 32bit line and hence the same
register(s) would be written twice in sequence for those as well.
Use a similar approach to transfer mode and command and save the writes
to either of the block regiters and then only execute a write once.
We can do this as with transfer mode their values are meaningless until
a command is issued so we can use that write to command as a trigger
to also write out the block registers.
Compared to transfer mode and command the value of block count can
change, so we need to keep state and actually read the block registers
back the first time after a write.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20197
These calls are not the same in general: the former will dequeue the
page if it is enqueued, while the latter will just leave it alone. But,
all existing uses of the former apply to unmanaged pages, which are
never enqueued in the first place. No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20470
cpufunc, in terms of __builtin_ffs and the like, for arm32 v6 and v7
architectures, and use those, rather than the simple libkern
implementations, in building arm32 kernels.
Reviewed by: manu
Approved by: kib, markj (mentors)
Tested by: iz-rpi03_hs-karlsruhe.de, mikael.urankar_gmail.com, ian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20412
Some clocks used the NM type but this clock is for the ones with the
formula "clk = clkin / n / m" and not "clk = clkin * n / m"
Use the new frac clock for them.
Add a clock driver for clock that can either be used in integer mode
with one N factor and one M divider or in fractional mode where the
output frequency is chosen between two predifined output.
This was enumerated with exhaustive search for sys/eventhandler.h includes,
cross-referenced against EVENTHANDLER_* usage with the comm(1) utility. Manual
checking was performed to avoid redundant includes in some drivers where a
common os_bsd.h (for example) included sys/eventhandler.h indirectly, but it is
possible some of these are redundant with driver-specific headers in ways I
didn't notice.
(These CUs did not show up as missing eventhandler.h in tinderbox.)
X-MFC-With: r347984
This allows replacing "sys/eventfilter.h" includes with "sys/_eventfilter.h"
in other header files (e.g., sys/{bus,conf,cpu}.h) and reduces header
pollution substantially.
EVENTHANDLER_DECLARE and EVENTHANDLER_LIST_DECLAREs were moved out of .c
files into appropriate headers (e.g., sys/proc.h, powernv/opal.h).
As a side effect of reduced header pollution, many .c files and headers no
longer contain needed definitions. The remainder of the patch addresses
adding appropriate includes to fix those files.
LOCK_DEBUG and LOCK_FILE_LINE_ARG are moved to sys/_lock.h, as required by
sys/mutex.h since r326106 (but silently protected by header pollution prior
to this change).
No functional change (intended). Of course, any out of tree modules that
relied on header pollution for sys/eventhandler.h, sys/lock.h, or
sys/mutex.h inclusion need to be fixed. __FreeBSD_version has been bumped.
Having IPSEC compiled into the kernel imposes a non-trivial
performance penalty on multi-threaded workloads due to IPSEC
refcounting. In my benchmarks of multi-threaded UDP
transmit (connected sockets), I've seen a roughly 20% performance
penalty when the IPSEC option is included in the kernel (16.8Mpps
vs 13.8Mpps with 32 senders on a 14 core / 28 HTT Xeon
2697v3)). This is largely due to key_addref() incrementing and
decrementing an atomic reference count on the default
policy. This cause all CPUs to stall on the same cacheline, as it
bounces between different CPUs.
Given that relatively few users use ipsec, and that it can be
loaded as a module, it seems reasonable to ask those users to
load the ipsec module so as to avoid imposing this penalty on the
GENERIC kernel. Its my hope that this will make FreeBSD look
better in "out of the box" benchmark comparisons with other
operating systems.
Many thanks to ae for fixing auto-loading of ipsec.ko when
ifconfig tries to configure ipsec, and to cy for volunteering
to ensure the the racoon ports will load the ipsec.ko module
Reviewed by: cem, cy, delphij, gnn, jhb, jpaetzel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20163
tun(4) and tap(4) share the same general management interface and have a lot
in common. Bugs exist in tap(4) that have been fixed in tun(4), and
vice-versa. Let's reduce the maintenance requirements by merging them
together and using flags to differentiate between the three interface types
(tun, tap, vmnet).
This fixes a couple of tap(4)/vmnet(4) issues right out of the gate:
- tap devices may no longer be destroyed while they're open [0]
- VIMAGE issues already addressed in tun by kp
[0] emaste had removed an easy-panic-button in r240938 due to devdrn
blocking. A naive glance over this leads me to believe that this isn't quite
complete -- destroy_devl will only block while executing d_* functions, but
doesn't block the device from being destroyed while a process has it open.
The latter is the intent of the condvar in tun, so this is "fixed" (for
certain definitions of the word -- it wasn't really broken in tap, it just
wasn't quite ideal).
ifconfig(8) also grew the ability to map an interface name to a kld, so
that `ifconfig {tun,tap}0` can continue to autoload the correct module, and
`ifconfig vmnet0 create` will now autoload the correct module. This is a
low overhead addition.
(MFC commentary)
This may get MFC'd if many bugs in tun(4)/tap(4) are discovered after this,
and how critical they are. Changes after this are likely easily MFC'd
without taking this merge, but the merge will be easier.
I have no plans to do this MFC as of now.
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages), tuexen (testing, syzkaller/packetdrill)
Input also from: melifaro
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20044
Use it wherever COMPAT_FREEBSD11 is currently specified, like r309749.
Reviewed by: imp, jhb, markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20120
We don't have the display engine driver commited in FreeBSD yet so it is
useless to expose the clocks yet (and also it have not been tested on H5).
Reported by: Manuel Stühn (freebsdnewbie@freenet.de)
PR: 237571
MFC after: 1 week
Allwinner H3 and H5 share many internal components, that's why they can
use the same drivers.
This patch adds the compatible strings to enable clock drivers
probing on Allwinner NanoPI NEO2 device.
Tested on: NanoPi NEO2 (by submitter), OrangePi PC2 (by manu)
Submitted by: Manuel Stühn (freebsdnewbie@freenet.de)
MFC after: 2 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20069
occasional spurious interrupts are a normal thing on this hardware. Also,
change the name of the cpu-local interrupt controller driver from local_intc
to lintc, because the name gets built into interrupt names, which have to
fit into a 19-byte field for stats reporting (so this allows 5 more bytes
of the actual interrupt name to be displayed).
Due to three conditions the codec driver for Allwinner A10/A20 and H3/H5 did not work properly here:
Wrong bit position for the analog audio reset
Hardware Reset of codec was not de-asserted correctly
Linux DTS file did not contain the address of the analog register the way as the driver was expecting it.
This patch proposes fixes for those three parts.
Submitted by: freebsdnewbie@freenet.de (Manuel Stühn)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19910
The code previously set up interrupt handlers for all the interrupt
resources available, including for timers that are not in use. That could
lead to interrupt storms. For example, if boot firmware enabled the virtual
timer but the kernel is using the physical timer, it could get flooded with
interrupts on the virtual timer which it cannot shut off. By only setting
up an interrupt handler for the hardware that will actually be used, any
interrupts from other timer units will remain masked in the interrupt
controller.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19871
The old clocks are disconneted from the build since r337344.
Remove all those pseudo drivers. The only one remaining is for gmac
(the ethernet controller) so move it to sys/arm/allwinner.
While here remove a83t support from gmacclk as it is unneeded since r326114.
MFC after: 1 month
Since 5.0 DTS the syscon controller have a new compatible as it
exports new subnodes, we currently only use it as a syscon provider
so just add the new compatible.
Tested On: H3
MFC after: 1 month
Since latest DTS update the rtc is supposed to register two clocks :
- osc32k (the 32k oscillator on the board that the RTC uses directly and
that other peripheral can use)
- iosc (the internal oscillator of the RTC when available which frequency
depend on the SoC revision)
Since we need the RTC before the proper clock control unit (because it uses
those clocks) attach it a BUS_PASS_BUS + MIDDLE and attach the clock control
unit at BUS_PASS_BUS + LAST for the SoC that requires it.
Tested On: A20, H3, A64
MFC after: 1 month
Correct a typo in the RPI-B ethernet config - the RPi-B includes a
SMC LAN9512 USB bridge and Ethernet 10/100 NIC/phy. The phy part of
this is supported by smscphy.
Tested On: RPi1 Model B
Approved by: grog, jhb (mentors)
MFC after: 3 days
Since r324184 the root node compatible for the original Raspberry Pi
is "brcm,bcm2835", add it to the compatible list of bcm2835_cpufreq.
Tested On: RPi1 Model B
Note that the default Das U-Boot FDT does not include a cpus clause
so actually adding a bcm2835_cpufreq device requires adding a FDT
overlay defining the cpu.
Approved by: grog, jhb (mentors)
MFC after: 3 days
If a custom block size requested, use it, otherwise revert to the previous logic
of using just a data size if it's less than MMC_BLOCK_SIZE, and MMC_BLOCK_SIZE otherwise.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19783
In r337703 DTS files were updated to Linux 4.18, including Linux commit
4d8b032d3c03f4e9788a18bbb51b10e6c9e8a56b which removed the `phy_id`
property from am335x-bone-common (as the property was deprecated).
Use `phy-handle` via fdt_get_phyaddr, keeping the existing code as a
fallback for old DTBs.
PR: 236624
Submitted by: manu, Gerald Aryeetey <aryeeteygerald_rogers.com>
Reported by: Gerald Aryeetey
Reviewed by: manu
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19814
Using DFLTPHYS/MAXPHYS is not always OK, instead make it possible for the
controller driver to provide maximum data size to MMCCAM, and use it there.
The old stack already does this.
Reviewed by: manu
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15892
Similar to bcm2835_sdhost.c add a TUNABLE and SYSCTL to selectively
turn on debugging printfs if debugging is turned on at compile time.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Reviewed by: gonzo, andrew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19745
When comparing best frequencies use the absolute value.
If we do not do that we end up choosing an always lower value than
the best one if the exact freq cannot be met.
MFC after: 2 weeks
In current code, the delay argument in FDT_PLATFORM_DEF(2) improperly
initialize refs field from kobj_class structure instead of delay_count
field.
This causes not working DELAY() function (due to never initialized
delay_count) in earlier boot stages, until the first timer was attached.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Add the infrastructure to allow MD procctl(2) commands, and use it to
introduce amd64 PTI control and reporting. PTI mode cannot be
modified for existing pmap, the knob controls PTI of the new vmspace
created on exec.
Requested by: jhb
Reviewed by: jhb, markj (previous version)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19514
PTI mode for the process pmap on exec is activated iff P_MD_PTI is set.
On exec, the existing vmspace can be reused only if pti mode of the
pmap matches the P_MD_PTI flag of the process. Add MD
cpu_exec_vmspace_reuse() callback for exec_new_vmspace() which can
vetoed reuse of the existing vmspace.
MFC note: md_flags change struct proc KBI.
Reviewed by: jhb, markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19514
In all of the architectures we have today, we always use PAGE_SIZE.
While in theory one could define different things, none of the
current architectures do, even the ones that have transitioned from
32-bit to 64-bit like i386 and arm. Some ancient mips binaries on
other systems used 8k instead of 4k, but we don't support running
those and likely never will due to their age and obscurity.
Reviewed by: imp (who also contributed the commit message)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19280
Skylake Xeons.
See SDM rev. 68 Vol 3 4.6.2 Protection Keys and the description of the
RDPKRU and WRPKRU instructions.
Reviewed by: markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18893
The charging current can be set using steps
from 0: 200mA to 13: 2800mA (200mA/step).
While there, fix battery charging current related
sensor descriptions.
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19212
battery charging, charge state, voltage, charging current, discharging current,
battery capacity etc. can be obtained via sysctl.
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19145
With this change, randomization can be enabled for all non-fixed
mappings. It means that the base address for the mapping is selected
with a guaranteed amount of entropy (bits). If the mapping was
requested to be superpage aligned, the randomization honours the
superpage attributes.
Although the value of ASLR is diminshing over time as exploit authors
work out simple ASLR bypass techniques, it elimintates the trivial
exploitation of certain vulnerabilities, at least in theory. This
implementation is relatively small and happens at the correct
architectural level. Also, it is not expected to introduce
regressions in existing cases when turned off (default for now), or
cause any significant maintaince burden.
The randomization is done on a best-effort basis - that is, the
allocator falls back to a first fit strategy if fragmentation prevents
entropy injection. It is trivial to implement a strong mode where
failure to guarantee the requested amount of entropy results in
mapping request failure, but I do not consider that to be usable.
I have not fine-tuned the amount of entropy injected right now. It is
only a quantitive change that will not change the implementation. The
current amount is controlled by aslr_pages_rnd.
To not spoil coalescing optimizations, to reduce the page table
fragmentation inherent to ASLR, and to keep the transient superpage
promotion for the malloced memory, locality clustering is implemented
for anonymous private mappings, which are automatically grouped until
fragmentation kicks in. The initial location for the anon group range
is, of course, randomized. This is controlled by vm.cluster_anon,
enabled by default.
The default mode keeps the sbrk area unpopulated by other mappings,
but this can be turned off, which gives much more breathing bits on
architectures with small address space, such as i386. This is tied
with the question of following an application's hint about the mmap(2)
base address. Testing shows that ignoring the hint does not affect the
function of common applications, but I would expect more demanding
code could break. By default sbrk is preserved and mmap hints are
satisfied, which can be changed by using the
kern.elf{32,64}.aslr.honor_sbrk sysctl.
ASLR is enabled on per-ABI basis, and currently it is only allowed on
FreeBSD native i386 and amd64 (including compat 32bit) ABIs. Support
for additional architectures will be added after further testing.
Both per-process and per-image controls are implemented:
- procctl(2) adds PROC_ASLR_CTL/PROC_ASLR_STATUS;
- NT_FREEBSD_FCTL_ASLR_DISABLE feature control note bit makes it possible
to force ASLR off for the given binary. (A tool to edit the feature
control note is in development.)
Global controls are:
- kern.elf{32,64}.aslr.enable - for non-fixed mappings done by mmap(2);
- kern.elf{32,64}.aslr.pie_enable - for PIE image activation mappings;
- kern.elf{32,64}.aslr.honor_sbrk - allow to use sbrk area for mmap(2);
- vm.cluster_anon - enables anon mapping clustering.
PR: 208580 (exp runs)
Exp-runs done by: antoine
Reviewed by: markj (previous version)
Discussed with: emaste
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5603
- for now, alignments bigger that page size is allowed only for buffers
allocated by bus_dmamem_alloc(), cover this fact by KASSERT.
- never bounce buffers allocated by bus_dmamem_alloc(), these always comply
with the required rules (alignment, boundary, address range).
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: jah
PR: 235542
reading some events from the interrupt status registers. These events
are reported to devd via system "PMU" and subsystem "Battery", "AC"
and "USB" such as plugged/unplugged, absent, charged and charging.
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19116
Bump up MAX_HWCNT and MAX_EXCNT to 32 when ACPI is enabled. These are
the sizes of the hwregions and exregions arrays respectively. ACPI
firmware typically has more memory regions and the current value of
16 is not sufficient for some platforms.
This commit fixes a failure seen with AMI firmware on Cavium's Sabre
ThunderX2 reference platform. This platform needs 21 physical memory
regions and 18 excluded regions to boot correctly with the current
firmware release.
Reviewed by: andrew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19073
U-Boot will leave the ephy reset de-asserted and the MAC soft reset will
fail on these boards with internal PHY and no link established. Toggle reset
again before proceeding to attach/init.
MFC after: 1 week
This was intended to fix the soft reset timeout on boot for OrangePi One/R1
with internal PHY, but seems to cause other problems later on due to soft
resetting around some state changes that may or may not make the NIC
non-functional.
Reverting this for now while a better solution is sought out.
Add parentheses to perform assignment before comparison. The prior
condition worked because fdt_parent_addr_cells returns 1 for the DTB
on which fdt_fixup_ranges is called and accidentally par_addr_cells
ends up to be set to the same value.
PR: 210705
Submitted by: David Binderman <dcb314@hotmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
From NetBSD: Since the MAC can get stuck in reset state with no link, ignore
reset timeouts and continue with initializing the device.
Fixes "soft reset timeout" issue at boot with no network cable plugged in.
awg_init may be called multiple times throughout normal interface usage, so
the tx/rx descriptor base address registers must be written after each MAC
reset and are moved as such.
This problem has been observed on FreeBSD, H3/H2+ devices with an internal
PHY (includes OrangePi R1, OrangePi One at least).
Reviewed by: manu, ganbold
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18844
mv_pci driver reads PCI memory window layout from DTB data and if the
data is incomplete falls back to default value. The value is too small
to fit two PCI spaces for mwlwifi devices on WRT3200ACM so the resource
allocation for them fails. Increase the default to 4Mb from 1Mb so
the devices can be properly attached.
MFC after: 1 week
front-end doesn't support SDMA or the latter implements a platform-
specific transfer method instead. While at it, factor out allocation
and freeing of SDMA resources to sdhci_dma_{alloc,free}() in order to
keep the code more readable when adding support for ADMA variants.
o Base the size of the SDMA bounce buffer on MAXPHYS up to the maximum
of 512 KiB instead of using a fixed 4-KiB-buffer. With the default
MAXPHYS of 128 KiB and depending on the controller and medium, this
reduces the number of SDHCI interrupts by a factor of ~16 to ~32 on
sequential reads while an increase of throughput of up to ~84 % was
seen.
Front-ends for broken controllers that only support an SDMA buffer
boundary of a specific size may set SDHCI_QUIRK_BROKEN_SDMA_BOUNDARY
and supply a size via struct sdhci_slot. According to Linux, only
Qualcomm MSM-type SDHCI controllers are affected by this, though.
Requested by: Shreyank Amartya (unconditional bump to 512 KiB)
o Introduce a SDHCI_DEPEND macro for specifying the dependency of the
front-end modules on the sdhci(4) one and bump the module version
of sdhci(4) to 2 via an also newly introduced SDHCI_VERSION in order
to ensure that all components are in sync WRT struct sdhci_slot.
o In sdhci(4):
- Make pointers const were applicable,
- replace a few device_printf(9) calls with slot_printf() for
consistency, and
- sync some local functions with their prototypes WRT static.
This fix booting on A64 boards when disabling the unused regulators at boot.
We did disable all the regulator handled by register 0x13 which of course contain
mandatory regulators for the board to be up.
Reported by: Mark Millard <marklmi@yahoo.com>
X-MFC-With: r340848
icu is a interrupt concentrator in the CP110 block and gicp
is a gic extension to allow interrupts in the CP block to be turned
into GIC SPI interrupts
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
The cp110 clock controller controls the clocks and gate of the CP110
hardware block.
Every clock/gate are implemented except the NAND clock.
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
The first two clocks are for the clusters and their frequencies can be
found reading a register. Then a fixed 1200Mhz clock is present and two
fixed clocks, 'mss' which is 1200 / 6 and 'sdio' which is 1200 / 3.
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
On some architectures, the structures returned by PT_GET*REGS were not
fully populated and could contain uninitialized stack memory. The same
issue existed with the register files in procfs.
Reported by: Thomas Barabosch, Fraunhofer FKIE
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Security: kernel stack memory disclosure
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18421
Add generic implementation for bus_deactivate_resource method. Without
it bus_release_resource fails with "Failed to release active resource"
message
MFC after: 1 week
Fix reporting of SS_ONSTACK in nested signal delivery when sigaltstack()
is used on some architectures.
Add a unit test for this. I tested the test by introducing the bug
on amd64. I did not test it on other architectures.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18347
On arm64 and riscv platforms, sendsig() failed to zero the signal
frame before copying it out to userspace. Zero it.
On arm, I believe all the contents of the frame were initialized,
so there was no disclosure. However, explicitly zero the whole frame
because that fact could inadvertently change in the future,
it's more clear to the reader, and I could be wrong in the first place.
MFC after: 2 days
Security: similar to FreeBSD-EN-18:12.mem and CVE-2018-17155
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Instead of routing the phy when enabling it, do the configuration
and routing in the phynode_usb_set_mode function.
While here, if we don't have a vbus detection method, enable the phy
if requested.
MFC after: 1 month
On arm64 (where INTRNG is enabled), the interrupts have to be mapped
with ACPI_BUS_MAP_INTR() before adding them as resources to devices.
The earlier code did the mapping before calling acpi_set_resource(),
which bypassed code that checked for PCI link interrupts.
To fix this, move the call to map interrupts into acpi_set_resource()
and that requires additional work to lookup interrupt properties.
The changes here are to:
* extend acpi_lookup_irq_handler() to lookup an irq in the ACPI
resources
* create a helper function acpi_map_intr() which uses the updated
acpi_lookup_irq_handler() to look up an irq, and then map it
with ACPI_BUS_MAP_INTR()
* use acpi_map_intr() in acpi_pcib_route_interrupt() to map
pci link interrupts.
With these changes, we can drop the ifdefs in acpi_resource.c, and
we can also drop the call for mapping interrupts in generic_timer.c
Reviewed by: andrew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17790
recent changes in spibus and allow the use of different SPI modes on
the same bus.
Reported by: ian
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
r306041 changed ld invocations for converting binary files to kernel
ELF objects to pass -m, but missed bespoke ld invocations in a pair of
arm file configs (one of which has since been removed).
This is needed to support some external toolchains and lld.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Replace a call to DELAY(1) with a new cpu_lock_delay() KPI. Currently
cpu_lock_delay() is defined to DELAY(1) on all platforms. However,
platforms with a DELAY() implementation that uses spin locks should
implement a custom cpu_lock_delay() doesn't use locks.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Existing base causes conflicts for direct execution of ld-elf.so.1
because default linking base for non-PIE binaries is 0x10000.
Reported and tested by: Mark Millard <marklmi26-fbsd@yahoo.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Add a new 'debugger_on_trap' knob separate from 'debugger_on_panic'
and make the calls to kdb_trap() in MD fatal trap handlers prior to
calling panic() conditional on this new knob instead of
'debugger_on_panic'. Disable the new knob by default. Developers who
wish to recover from a fatal fault by adjusting saved register state
and retrying the faulting instruction can still do so by enabling the
new knob. However, for the more common case this makes the user
experience for panics due to a fatal fault match the user experience
for other panics, e.g. 'c' in DDB will generate a crash dump and
reboot the system rather than being stuck in an infinite loop of fatal
fault messages and DDB prompts.
Reviewed by: kib, avg
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17768
The loader tunable 'debug.verbose_sysinit' may be used to toggle verbosity.
This is added to the debugging section of these kernconfs to be turned off
in stable branches for clarity of intent.
MFC after: never
All platforms except powerpc use the same values and powerpc shares a
majority of them.
Go ahead and declare AT_NOTELF, AT_UID, and AT_EUID in favor of the
unused AT_DCACHEBSIZE, AT_ICACHEBSIZE, and AT_UCACHEBSIZE for powerpc.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17397
In the FDT based probe, check for "arm,armv8-timer" before "arm,armv7-timer".
This gets the description right when the timer node has both entries in
compatible list.
(e.g. RocketChip, lowRISC and derivatives).
RISC-V page table entries support A (accessed) and D (dirty) bits. The
spec makes hardware support for these bits optional. Implementations that
do not manage these bits in hardware raise page faults for accesses to a
valid page without A set and writes to a writable page without D set.
Check for these types of faults when handling a page fault and fixup the
PTE without calling vm_fault if they occur.
Reviewed by: jhb, markj
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17424
We ought to be consistent across our Tier-1 and nearly-Tier-1
architectures, so enable Capsicum for 32-bit armv6/armv7 by default.
PR: 204008
Reviewed by: ian, oshogbo
Approved by: re (gjb)
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17023
These limits are hit on the ThunderX. Also make
arm_physmem_exclude_region() panic rather than fail silently if the
limit on excluded regions is reached.
PR: 231064
Reviewed by: andrew
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17073
To support INTRNG with ACPI we need to set a non-zero cross reference value
for the interrupt controller. The GICv3 driver already had this value set,
however it was missed in the GICv2 driver. Fix this by setting xref to the
correct value.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Same as r333305, with Linux 4.17 dts the compatible for the prcm added
'simplebus', it mean that the simplebus driver will attach to it
at the BUS_PASS_BUS pass.
Change the pass for the prcm driver to be at BUS_PASS_BUS so we will win
the attach.
This introduce a problem as this driver needs the omap_scm one to be already
attached. omap_scm also attach at BUS_PASS_BUS but after the prcm one as it is
after in the dtb and the simplebus driver simpy walk the tree to attach it's
children.
Use the bus_new_pass method to defer the frequencies read at BUS_PASS_TIMER.
This fixes booting on pandaboard
Approved by: re (rgrimes)
Fix the build of the GENERIC-MMCCAM kernel config after the sdhci_xenon
driver was commited.
While here correct sdhci_fdt and tegra_sdhci, even with MMCCAM they do
need to depend on sdhci(4)
Reported by: Reshetnikov Dmitriy <genserg@hotmail.com>
Approved by: re (kib)
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("NetGate")
Exposing max_offset and min_offset defines in public headers is
causing clashes with variable names, for example when building QEMU.
Based on the submission by: royger
Reviewed by: alc, markj (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
Approved by: re (marius)
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16881
Previously we have been lucky where the state was already in r0, however
this is not guaranteed. Use the passed in register as the location to
store the upper half of the arm VFP registers rather than relying on it
being r0.
Approved by: re (kib)
given in random(4).
This includes updating of the relevant man pages, and no-longer-used
harvesting parameters.
Ensure that the pseudo-unit-test still does something useful, now also
with the "other" algorithm instead of Yarrow.
PR: 230870
Reviewed by: cem
Approved by: so(delphij,gtetlow)
Approved by: re(marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16898
error in the function hypercall_memfree(), where the wrong arena was being
passed to kmem_free().
Introduce a per-page flag, VPO_KMEM_EXEC, to mark physical pages that are
mapped in kmem with execute permissions. Use this flag to determine which
arena the kmem virtual addresses are returned to.
Eliminate UMA_SLAB_KRWX. The introduction of VPO_KMEM_EXEC makes it
redundant.
Update the nearby comment for UMA_SLAB_KERNEL.
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Discussed with: jeff
Approved by: re (marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16845
Revert r338177, r338176, r338175, r338174, r338172
After long consultations with re@, core members and mmacy, revert
these changes. Followup changes will be made to mark them as
deprecated and prent a message about where to find the up-to-date
driver. Followup commits will be made to make this clear in the
installer. Followup commits to reduce POLA in ways we're still
exploring.
It's anticipated that after the freeze, this will be removed in
13-current (with the residual of the drm2 code copied to
sys/arm/dev/drm2 for the TEGRA port's use w/o the intel or
radeon drivers).
Due to the impending freeze, there was no formal core vote for
this. I've been talking to different core members all day, as well as
Matt Macey and Glen Barber. Nobody is completely happy, all are
grudgingly going along with this. Work is in progress to mitigate
the negative effects as much as possible.
Requested by: re@ (gjb, rgrimes)
a10_timer is currently use in UP allwinner SoC (A10 and A13).
Those don't have the generic arm timer.
The arm generic timecounter is broken in the A64 SoC, some attempts have
been made to fix the glitch but users still reported some minor ones.
Since the A64 (and all Allwinner SoC) still have this timer controller, rework
the driver so we can use it in any SoC.
Since it doesn't have the 64 bits counter on all SoC, use one of the
generic 32 bits counter as the timecounter source.
PR: 229644
Without this the mmc stack sometimes think that we are in in a retune
operation and some command like switch the bus width to 4 bits failed.
We now switch correctly to 4 bits mode for sd card.
Reported by: jmg, others in pine64 irc channel
The boot-time ifunc resolver assumes that it only needs to apply
IRELATIVE relocations to PLT entries. With an upcoming optimization,
this assumption no longer holds, so add the support required to handle
PC-relative relocations targeting GNU_IFUNC symbols.
- Provide a custom symbol lookup routine that can be used in early boot.
The default lookup routine uses kobj, which is not functional at that
point.
- Apply all existing relocations during boot rather than filtering
IRELATIVE relocations.
- Ensure that we continue to apply ifunc relocations in a second pass
when loading a kernel module.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16749
became unused in FreeBSD 12.x as a side-effect of the NUMA-related
changes.)
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Discussed with: jeff, re@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16825
This is an amalgam of a patch by Doug Ambrisko to
generalize uart_acpi_find_device, imp moving the
ACPI table to uart_dev_ns8250.c and advice by jhb
to work around a bug in the EPYC 3151 BIOS
(the BIOS incorrectly marks the serial ports as
disabled)
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 8 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16432
Recent DTS use the syscon for the emac controller.
We support this but since U-Boot is still using old DTS it was never
needed for us to add this support, but this is a problem when using upstream
recent DTS and will be when U-Boot will catch up.
While here add a new compatible to the aw_syscon driver as Linux changed it ...
- In configurations with a pseudo devices section, move 'device crypto'
into that section.
- Use a consistent comment. Note that other things common in kernel
configs such as GELI also require 'device crypto', not just IPSEC.
Reviewed by: rgrimes, cem, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16775
Missed in r337940.
(It's not like there are any crypto files IPsec doesn't pull in, so it is
unclear what not defining the crypto option was supposed to achieve.)
Reported by: np@
Remove the non-INTRNG code.
Remove left over cut and paste code from the lpc code that was the start for the port.
Set KERNPHYSADDR and KERNVIRTADDR
Tested on Buffalo_WZR2-G300N
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16622
Now softc should be retrieved from struct edvev * pointer
with evdev_get_softc() helper.
wmt(4) is a sample of driver that support both KPI.
Reviewed by: hselasky, gonzo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16614
add support for explicitly requesting that pmap_enter() create a 1 MB page
mapping. (Essentially, this feature allows the machine-independent layer
to create superpage mappings preemptively, and not wait for automatic
promotion to occur.)
Export pmap_ps_enabled() to the machine-independent layer.
Add a flag to pmap_pv_insert_pte1() that specifies whether it should fail
or reclaim a PV entry when one is not available.
Refactor pmap_enter_pte1() into two functions, one by the same name, that
is a general-purpose function for creating pte1 mappings, and another,
pmap_enter_1mpage(), that is used to prefault 1 MB read- and/or execute-
only mappings for execve(2), mmap(2), and shmat(2).
In addition, as an optimization to pmap_enter(..., psind=0), eliminate the
use of pte2_is_managed() from pmap_enter(). Unlike the x86 pmap
implementations, armv6 does not have a managed bit defined within the PTE.
So, pte2_is_managed() is actually a call to PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE(), which is O(n)
in the number of vm_phys_segs[]. All but one call to PHYS_TO_VM_PAGE() in
pmap_enter() can be avoided.
Reviewed by: kib, markj, mmel
Tested by: mmel
MFC after: 6 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16555
Now that aw_sid expose nvmem interface, use that to read the calibration
data.
Add support for H5 SoC.
Fix the bindings, we used to have non-upstreamed bindings. Switch to the
one that have been sent upstream. They are not stable yet, so we switch
from custom, wrong, bindings to correct, proposed bindings
Rework aw_sid so it can work with the nvmem interface.
Each SoC expose a set of fuses (for now rootkey/boardid and, if available,
the thermal calibration data). A fuse can be private or public, reading private
fuse needs to be done via some registers instead of reading directly.
Each fuse is exposed as a sysctl.
For now leave the possibility for a driver to read any fuse without using
the nvmem interface as the awg and emac driver use this to generate a mac
address.
It doesn't work since 2 years when we stopped patching DTS.
The DTS now have the correct bindings but they are a lot different
from our hacked ones we used to have (and more representative of the
reality).
Remove the old clocks for allwinner as now all the SoCs have been converted
to clkng.
The only old clock now is the gmac clock which still lives under the /clocks
dts node.
The nvmem interface helps provider of nvmem data to expose themselves to consumer.
NVMEM is generally present on some embedded board in a form of eeprom or fuses.
The nvmem api are helpers for consumer to read/write the cell data from a provider.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16419