Commit Graph

4795 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alexander Leidinger
99e9dcf022 regen after addition of linux_utimes and linux_rt_sigtimedwait 2006-12-31 13:20:31 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
c9447c7551 MFp4 (111746, 108671, 108945, 112352):
- add linux utimes syscall [1]
 - add linux rt_sigtimedwait syscall [2]

Submitted by:	"Scot Hetzel" <swhetzel@gmail.com> [1]
Submitted by:	Bruce Becker <hostmaster@whois.gts.net> [2]
PR:		93199 [2]
2006-12-31 13:16:00 +00:00
Bruce Evans
f28e1c8f99 Fixed some style bugs (mainly assorted errors in comments, and inconsistent
spelling of `result').
2006-12-29 15:29:49 +00:00
Bruce Evans
6c296ffa81 Fixed some style bugs (whitespace only). 2006-12-29 14:28:23 +00:00
Bruce Evans
7e4277e591 Try harder to garbage-collect the "LOCORE" (really asm) version of
MPLOCKED.  The cleaning in rev.1.25 was supposed to have been undone
by rev.1.26, but 1.26 could never have actually affected asm files
since atomic.h is full of C declarations so including it in asm files
would just give syntax errors.  The asm MPLOCKED is even less needed
than when misplaced definitions of it were first removed, and is now
unused in any asm file in the src tree except in anachronismns in
sys/i386/i386/support.s.
2006-12-29 13:36:26 +00:00
Robert Watson
e9e1341c06 Regenerate. 2006-12-29 01:17:09 +00:00
Robert Watson
a46b391df7 Assign or clean up audit identifiers for a number of additional Linux
system calls on the amd64 architecture.

Some minor white space tweaks for consistency with other syscalls.master
files.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2006-12-29 01:17:02 +00:00
Bruce Evans
276c702d8d Removed gratuitous cosmetic differences with the i386 version. This
mainly involves removing all __CC_SUPPORTS___INLINE__ ifdefs.  These
ifdefs are even less needed for amd64 than for i386, but the i386
atomic.h never had them.  The ifdefs here were just an optimization
of obsolescent compatibility cruft (__inline) for a null set of
compilers.  I think null sets of compilers should only be supported
in cases where this is more than an optimization, doesn't require
extensive ifdefs, and only involves not-so-obsolescent compatibility
cruft (plain inline here).
2006-12-28 08:15:14 +00:00
Bruce Evans
26ab2d1d23 Avoid an instruction in atomic_cmpset_{int_long)() in most cases.
These functions are used a lot for mutexes, so this reduces the text
size of an average kernel by about 0.75%.  This wasn't intended to
be a significant optimization, but it somehow increased the maximum
number of packets per second that can be transmitted by my bge hardware
from 320000 to 460000 (this benchmark is CPU-bound and remarkably
sensitive to changes in the text section).

Details: we would prefer to leave the result of the cmpxchg in %al,
but cannot tell gcc that it is there, so we have to convert it to an
integer register.  We converted  to %al, then to %[re]ax, but the
latter step is usually wasted since gcc usually only wants the condition
code and can recover it from %al just as easily as from %[re]ax.  Let
gcc promote %al in the few cases where this is needed.

Nearby style fixes;
- let gcc manage the load of `res', and don't abuse `res' for a copy of `exp'
- don't echo `res's name in comments
- consistently spell the condition code as 'e' after comparison for equality
- don't hard-code %al anywhere except in constraints
- for the version that doesn't use cmpxchg, there is no requirement to use
  %al anywhere, so don't hard-code it in the constraints either.

Style non-fix:
- for the versions that use cmpxchg, keep using "a" (was %[re]ax, now %al)
  for the main output operand, although this is not required.  The input
  and output operands that use the "a" constraint are now decoupled, and
  this makes things clearer except for the reason that the output register
  is hard-coded.  It is now just a hack to tell gcc that the input "a" has
  been clobbered without increasing the number of operands.
2006-12-27 20:26:00 +00:00
David Xu
4b0f4e9d9e Fix a panic when rebooting a SMP machine, when option STOP_NMI is used,
nmi handler is used to stop other processors, nmi hander calls trap(),
however, trap() now accepts a pointer rather than a reference, this was
changed by kmacy@.
2006-12-23 03:30:50 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
77424f4177 MFP4: 109655
- Move linux_nanosleep() from src/sys/amd64/linux32/linux32_machdep.c to
src/sys/compat/linux/linux_time.c.
- Validate timespec ranges before use as Linux kernel does.
- Fix l_timespec structure.
- Clean up style(9) nits.
2006-12-20 20:17:35 +00:00
David Xu
4e32b7b3cc Add a lwpid field into per-cpu structure, the lwpid represents current
running thread's id on each cpu. This allow us to add in-kernel adaptive
spin for user level mutex. While spinning in user space is possible,
without correct thread running state exported from kernel, it hardly
can be implemented efficiently without wasting cpu cycles, however
exporting thread running state unlikely will be implemented soon as
it has to design and stablize interfaces. This implementation is
transparent to user space, it can be disabled dynamically. With this
change, mutex ping-pong program's performance is improved massively on
SMP machine. performance of mysql super-smack select benchmark is increased
about 7% on Intel dual dual-core2 Xeon machine, it indicates on systems
which have bunch of cpus and system-call overhead is low (athlon64, opteron,
and core-2 are known to be fast), the adaptive spin does help performance.

Added sysctls:
    kern.threads.umtx_dflt_spins
        if the sysctl value is non-zero, a zero umutex.m_spincount will
        cause the sysctl value to be used a spin cycle count.
    kern.threads.umtx_max_spins
        the sysctl sets upper limit of spin cycle count.

Tested on: Athlon64 X2 3800+, Dual Xeon 5130
2006-12-20 04:40:39 +00:00
Kip Macy
1726d94f4e Evidently neither GENERIC nor kan's config had isa in it :-0. As
Doug Barton says, "embrace the LINT".
2006-12-17 21:51:44 +00:00
Kip Macy
e5f8d4099d Newer versions of gcc don't support treating structures passed by value
as if they were really passed by reference. Specifically, the dead stores
elimination pass in the GCC 4.1 optimiser breaks the non-compliant behavior
on which FreeBSD relied. This change brings FreeBSD up to date by switching
trap frames to being explicitly passed by reference.

Reviewed by: kan
Tested by: kan
2006-12-17 06:48:40 +00:00
Pyun YongHyeon
1f90cf9895 Add msk(4) to the list of drivers supported by GENERIC kernel. 2006-12-13 03:41:47 +00:00
John Baldwin
8964299ac8 Give Host-PCI bridge drivers their own pcib_alloc_msi() and
pcib_alloc_msix() methods instead of using the method from the generic
PCI-PCI bridge driver as the PCI-PCI methods will be gaining some PCI-PCI
specific logic soon.
2006-12-12 19:27:01 +00:00
John Baldwin
fde45e231a Sort function prototypes. 2006-12-12 19:24:45 +00:00
John Baldwin
c304531851 Add a function to return the MD interrupt source cookie associated with
an interrupt event.  Use this in the x86 code to fixup the intrcnt names
when an interrupt handler is removed.
2006-12-12 19:20:19 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
efa43a53bd Allow machdep.cpu_idle_hlt to be set from the loader. This should allow
to workaround the problem with SMP kernels on Turion64 X2 processors
described in kern/104678 and may be useful in other situations too.

MFC after:	3 days
2006-12-06 18:27:17 +00:00
Julian Elischer
ad1e7d285a Threading cleanup.. part 2 of several.
Make part of John Birrell's KSE patch permanent..
Specifically, remove:
Any reference of the ksegrp structure. This feature was
never fully utilised and made things overly complicated.
All code in the scheduler that tried to make threaded programs
fair to unthreaded programs.  Libpthread processes will already
do this to some extent and libthr processes already disable it.

Also:
Since this makes such a big change to the scheduler(s), take the opportunity
to rename some structures and elements that had to be moved anyhow.
This makes the code a lot more readable.

The ULE scheduler compiles again but I have no idea if it works.

The 4bsd scheduler still reqires a little cleaning and some functions that now do
ALMOST nothing will go away, but I thought I'd do that as a separate commit.

Tested by David Xu, and Dan Eischen using libthr and libpthread.
2006-12-06 06:34:57 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
3cbc967ef7 Use a different bitmask for superpages' base address so that it
doesn't conflict with the PG_PDE_PAT bit.  (We still don't mask
off all the reserved bits but that's okay for now.)

Reviewed by:	alc
2006-12-05 11:31:33 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
786e4fc47d MFP4 (110939):
MFi386: return EOPNOTSUPP for unknown module events.

Submitted by:	rdivacky
2006-12-03 21:06:07 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
43d9d89b3f Sync with i386 (remove the LINUX stuff) now that the module is usable. 2006-12-03 21:02:09 +00:00
Bruce Evans
b73057227b Optimized RTC accesses by avoiding null writes to the index register
and by only delaying when an RTC register is written to.  The delay
after writing to the data register is now not just a workaround.

This reduces the number of ISA accesses in the usual case from 4 to
1.  The usual case is 2 rtcin()'s for each RTC interrupt.  The index
register is almost always RTC_INTR for this.  The 3 extra ISA accesses
were 1 for writing the index and 2 for delays.  Some delays are needed
in theory, but in practice they now just slow down slow accesses some
more since almost eveyone including us does them wrong so modern systems
enforce sufficient delays in hardware.  I used to have the delays ifdefed
out, but with the index register optimization the delays are rarely
executed so the old magic ones can be kept or even implemented non-
magically without significant cost.

Optimizing RTC interrupt handling is more interesting than it used to
be because RTC interrupts are currently needed to fix the more efficient
apic timer interrupts on some systems.  apic_timer_hz is normally 2000
so the RTC interrupt rate needs to be 2048 to keep the apic timer
firing on such systems.  Without these changes, each RTC interrupt
normally took 10 ISA accesses (2 PIC accesses and 2 sets of 4 RTC
accesses).  Each ISA access takes 1-1.5uS so 10 of then at 2048 Hz
takes 2-3% of a CPU.  Now 4 of them take 0.8-1.2% of a CPU.
2006-12-03 03:49:28 +00:00
John Birrell
e0b651251d Turn console printf buffering into a kernel option and only on
by default for sun4v where it is absolutely required.

This change moves the buffer from struct pcpu to the stack to avoid
using the critical section which created a LOR in a couple of cases
due to interaction with the tty code and kqueue. The LOR can't be
fixed with the critical section and the pcpu buffer can't be used
without the critical section.

Putting the buffer on the stack was my initial solution, but it was
pointed out that the stress on the stack might cause problems
depending on the call path. We don't have a way of creating tests
for those possible cases, so it's best to leave this as an option
for the time being. In time we may get enough data to enable this
option more generally.
2006-11-30 04:17:05 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
34028cf7d1 Differentiate between data and instruction fetch in the fatal
page fault trap handler.

Reviewed by:	alc
2006-11-28 20:04:00 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
ca830b9a74 Use a define instead of a "magic" value. 2006-11-23 21:37:04 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
7b0381568e Finish the PG_NX support at the pmap level.
Reviewed by:	alc
2006-11-23 21:36:02 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
f27eb21694 It's been possible to build linprocfs as a module for some time now.
Submitted by:	rdivacky
2006-11-22 10:34:12 +00:00
Alan Cox
da44960498 The global variable avail_end is redundant and only used once. Eliminate
it.  Make avail_start static to the pmap on amd64.  (It no longer exists
on other architectures.)
2006-11-19 20:54:58 +00:00
John Baldwin
81efc3d94c Add support for 8 byte hardware watches in long mode. Kernel hardware
watches support 8 byte watches.  For userland, we disallow 8 byte watches
for 32-bit tasks.
2006-11-17 20:27:01 +00:00
John Baldwin
7693afca4e - Add macro constants for the various fields in %dr7 and use them in place
of various scattered magic values.
- Pretty print the address of hardware watchpoints in 'show watch' rather
  than just displaying hex.
- Expand address field width on amd64 for 64-bit pointers.
2006-11-17 19:20:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
5527d3ed75 Trim some noise from bootverbose:
- Drop the printf in intr_machdep.c when we assign an interrupt souce to
  a CPU.  Each source already has a more detailed printf.
- Don't output a line for each ioapic pin showing its initial state, this
  has outlived its usefulness.
- When an APIC enumerator sets the bus, polarity, or trigger mode of an
  ioapic pin, just return success without printing anything if the new
  value matches the current one.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2006-11-17 16:41:03 +00:00
John Baldwin
5d346a567c A few more style fixes. 2006-11-17 16:37:35 +00:00
John Baldwin
71f4007710 Various whitespace and style fixes. 2006-11-15 19:53:48 +00:00
John Baldwin
15f266289d Fix a typo that broke MSI (MSI-X worked fine) in the later revisions of
the MSI patches.
2006-11-15 18:40:00 +00:00
John Baldwin
4184900911 MD support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts on amd64 and i386:
- Add a new apic_alloc_vectors() method to the local APIC support code
  to allocate N contiguous IDT vectors (aligned on a M >= N boundary).
  This function is used to allocate IDT vectors for a group of MSI
  messages.
- Add MSI and MSI-X PICs.  The PIC code here provides methods to manage
  edge-triggered MSI messages as x86 interrupt sources.  In addition to
  the PIC methods, msi.c also includes methods to allocate and release
  MSI and MSI-X messages.  For x86, we allow for up to 128 different
  MSI IRQs starting at IRQ 256 (IRQs 0-15 are reserved for ISA IRQs,
  16-254 for APIC PCI IRQs, and IRQ 255 is reserved).
- Add pcib_(alloc|release)_msi[x]() methods to the MD x86 PCI bridge
  drivers to bubble the request up to the nexus driver.
- Add pcib_(alloc|release)_msi[x]() methods to the x86 nexus drivers that
  ask the MSI PIC code to allocate resources and IDT vectors.

MFC after:	2 months
2006-11-13 22:23:34 +00:00
John Baldwin
818b0b4bdf Various fixes:
- Remove an extra entry from the array for 0x0f prefixed instruction groups.
  This fixes decoding of instructions where the second opcode >= 0x80.
- Add support for the 64-bit immediate mov instructions.
- When short_addr is enabled, don't parse the modr/m byte for a 16-bit
  address, but as a 32-bit address.
- Support %rip relative addressing.
- Don't print a displacement of 0 if there is a base or index register.

MFC after:	3 days
2006-11-13 21:14:54 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
d77f5882e7 Fix NKPT comments to match reality. Note that the current value
of NKPT is no longer enough to run amd64 with 16G of RAM, as it
doesn't have space for mapping a kernel (16M kernel would require
additionally 8 page tables).
2006-11-13 20:33:54 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
26af9ac7d0 Fix a comment. 2006-11-13 06:26:57 +00:00
Alan Cox
44b8bd66f9 Make pmap_enter() responsible for setting PG_WRITEABLE instead
of its caller.  (As a beneficial side-effect, a high-contention
acquisition of the page queues lock in vm_fault() is eliminated.)
2006-11-12 21:48:34 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
9f70620442 Regen.
Forgotten by:	trhodes
2006-11-11 21:49:08 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
7eae4829bf Spelling. 2006-11-07 21:57:18 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
81490cbe6f Line up memory amount reporting that got broken when s/real/usable/. 2006-11-07 21:55:39 +00:00
John Baldwin
6ddd7e6a5a Add a new 'union l_sigval' to use in place of 'union sigval' in the
linux siginfo structure.  l_sigval uses a l_uintptr_t for sival_ptr so
that sival_ptr is the right size for linux32 on amd64.  Since no code
currently uses 'lsi_ptr' this is just a cosmetic nit rather than a bug
fix.
2006-11-07 18:53:49 +00:00
John Baldwin
3900a3be21 Remove duplicate IDTVEC macro definition, it's already defined in
<machine/intr_machdep.h>.
2006-11-07 18:46:33 +00:00
Robert Watson
acd3428b7d Sweep kernel replacing suser(9) calls with priv(9) calls, assigning
specific privilege names to a broad range of privileges.  These may
require some future tweaking.

Sponsored by:           nCircle Network Security, Inc.
Obtained from:          TrustedBSD Project
Discussed on:           arch@
Reviewed (at least in part) by: mlaier, jmg, pjd, bde, ceri,
                        Alex Lyashkov <umka at sevcity dot net>,
                        Skip Ford <skip dot ford at verizon dot net>,
                        Antoine Brodin <antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net>
2006-11-06 13:42:10 +00:00
John Birrell
8391a99bf7 Remove the KDTRACE option again because of the complaints about having
it as a default.

For the record, the KDTRACE option caused _no_ additional source files
to be compiled in; certainly no CDDL source files. All it did was to
allow existing BSD licensed kernel files to include one or more CDDL
header files.

By removing this from DEFAULTS, the onus is on a kernel builder to add
the option to the kernel config, possibly by including GENERIC and
customising from there. It means that DTrace won't be a feature
available in FreeBSD by default, which is the way I intended it to be.

Without this option, you can't load the dtrace module (which contains
the dtrace device and the DTrace framework). This is equivalent to
requiring an option in a kernel config before you can load the linux
emulation module, for example.

I think it is a mistake to have DTrace ported to FreeBSD, but not
to have it available to everyone, all the time. The only exception
to this is the companies which distribute systems with FreeBSD embedded.
Those companies will customise their systems anyway. The KDTRACE
option was intended for them, and only them.
2006-11-04 23:50:12 +00:00
John Birrell
1f80cd9398 Build in kernel support for loading DTrace modules by default. This
adds the hooks that DTrace modules register with, and adds a few functions
which have the dtrace_ prefix to allow the DTrace FBT (function boundary
trace) provider to avoid tracing because they are called from the DTtrace
probe context.

Unlike other forms of tracing and debug, DTrace support in the kernel
incurs negligible run-time cost.

I think the only reason why anyone wouldn't want to have kernel support
enabled for DTrace would be due to the license (CDDL) under which DTrace
is released.
2006-11-04 04:58:10 +00:00
John Birrell
3d068827c2 Add a cnputs() function to write a string to the console with
a lock to prevent interspersed strings written from different CPUs
at the same time.

To avoid putting a buffer on the stack or having to malloc one,
space is incorporated in the per-cpu structure. The buffer
size if 128 bytes; chosen because it's the next power of 2 size
up from 80 characters.

String writes to the console are buffered up the end of the line
or until the buffer fills. Then the buffer is flushed to all
console devices.

Existing low level console output via cnputc() is unaffected by
this change. ithread calls to log() are also unaffected to avoid
blocking those threads.

A minor change to the behaviour in a panic situation is that
console output will still be buffered, but won't be written to
a tty as before. This should prevent interspersed panic output
as a number of CPUs panic before we end up single threaded
running ddb.

Reviewed by:	scottl, jhb
MFC after:	2 weeks
2006-11-01 04:54:51 +00:00