Summary:
Some drivers need special memory requirements. X86 solves this with a
pmap_change_attr() API, which DRM uses for changing the mapping of the GART and
other memory regions. Implement the same function for PowerPC. AIM currently
does not need this, but will in the future for DRM, so a default is added for
that, for business as usual. Book-E has some drivers coming down that do
require non-default memory coherency. In this case, the Datapath Acceleration
Architecture (DPAA) based ethernet controller has 2 regions for the buffer
portals: cache-inhibited, and cache-enabled. By default, device memory is
cache-inhibited. If the cache-enabled memory regions are mapped
cache-inhibited, an alignment exception is thrown on access.
Test Plan:
Tested with a new driver to be added after this (DPAA dTSEC ethernet driver).
No alignment exceptions thrown, driver works as expected with this.
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5471
ucontext_t available. Our code even has XXX comment about this.
Add a bit of compliance by moving struct __ucontext definition into
sys/_ucontext.h and including it into signal.h and sys/ucontext.h.
Several machine/ucontext.h headers were changed to use namespace-safe
types (like uint64_t->__uint64_t) to not depend on sys/types.h.
struct __stack_t from sys/signal.h is made always visible in private
namespace to satisfy sys/_ucontext.h requirements.
Apparently mips _types.h pollutes global namespace with f_register_t
type definition. This commit does not try to fix the issue.
PR: 207079
Reported and tested by: Ting-Wei Lan <lantw44@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Summary:
The revised Book-E spec, adding the specification for the MMUv2 and e6500,
includes a hardware PTE layout for indirect page tables. In order to support
this in the future, migrate the PTE format to match the MMUv2 hardware PTE
format.
Test Plan: Boot tested on a P5020 board. Booted to multiuser mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5224
The PT_{GET,SET}FPREGS requests use 'struct fpreg' and the NT_FPREGSET
core note stores a copy of 'struct fpreg'. As with x86 and the floating
point state there compared to the extended state in XSAVE, struct fpreg
on powerpc now only holds the 'base' FP state, and setting it via
PT_SETFPREGS leaves the extended vector state in a thread unchanged.
Reviewed by: jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5004
VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDERESS is the maximum KVA address. 0xf8000000 is the start of
device mapping space. Since several conditional checks use '<=' against
VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS, bad things could feasibly happen.
Newer Book-E cores (e500mc, e5500, e6500) do not support the WE bit in the MSR,
and instead delegate CPU idling to the SoC.
Perhaps in the future the QORIQ_DPAA option for the mpc85xx platform will become
a subclass, which will eliminate most of the #ifdef's.
Summary:
With some additional changes for AIM, that could also support much
larger physmem sizes. Given that 32-bit AIM is more or less obsolete, though,
it's not worth it at this time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4345
into a new function that other platforms can share.
This creates a new ofw_reg_to_paddr() function (in a new ofw_subr.c file)
that contains most of the existing ppc implementation, mostly unchanged.
The ppc code now calls the new MI code from the MD code, then creates a
ppc-specific bus_space mapping from the results. The new arm implementation
does the same in an arm-specific way.
This also moves the declaration of OF_decode_addr() from ofw_machdep.h to
openfirm.h, except on sparc64 which uses a different function signature.
This will help all FDT platforms to set up early console access using
OF_decode_addr().
e500mc, e5500, and e6500 all use the normal FPU, with the same behavior as AIM
hardware. e6500 also supports Altivec, so, although we don't yet have e6500
hardware to test on, add these IVORs as well. Theoretically, since it boots the
same as a e5500, it should work, single-threaded, single-core, with full altivec
support as of this commit.
With this commit, and some other patches to be committed shortly FreeBSD now
boots on the P5020, single-core, all the way to user space, and should boot just
fine on e500mc.
Relnotes: Yes (e500mc, e5500 support)
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
lwsync instruction, which does not provide Store/Load barrier. Fix
this by using "full" sync barrier for mb().
atomic_store_rel() does not need full barrier, change mb() call there
to the lwsync instruction if not hitting the known CPU erratas
(i.e. on 32bit). Provide powerpc_lwsync() helper to isolate the
lwsync/sync compile time selection, and use it in atomic_store_rel()
and several other places which duplicate the code.
Noted by: alc
Reviewed and tested by: nwhitehorn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
new, simplified, ELF ABI that avoids some of the stranger aspects of the
existing 64-bit PowerPC ABI (function descriptors, in particular). Actually
generating such executables requires a new version of binutils and a newer
compiler (either GCC or clang) than GCC 4.2.1.
As part of this, clean up tlb1_init(), since bootinfo is always NULL here just
eliminate the loop altogether.
Also, fix a bug in mmu_booke_mapdev_attr() where it's possible to map a larger
immediately following a smaller page, causing the mappings to overlap. Instead,
break up the new mapping into smaller chunks. The downside to this is that it
uses more precious TLB1 entries, which, on smaller chips (e500v2) it could cause
problems with TLB1 being out of space (e500v2 only has 16 TLB1 entries).
Obtained from: Semihalf (partial)
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
initial thread stack is not adjusted by the tunable, the stack is
allocated too early to get access to the kernel environment. See
TD0_KSTACK_PAGES for the thread0 stack sizing on i386.
The tunable was tested on x86 only. From the visual inspection, it
seems that it might work on arm and powerpc. The arm
USPACE_SVC_STACK_TOP and powerpc USPACE macros seems to be already
incorrect for the threads with non-default kstack size. I only
changed the macros to use variable instead of constant, since I cannot
test.
On arm64, mips and sparc64, some static data structures are sized by
KSTACK_PAGES, so the tunable is disabled.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 week
vm_offset_t pmap_quick_enter_page(vm_page_t m)
void pmap_quick_remove_page(vm_offset_t kva)
These will create and destroy a temporary, CPU-local KVA mapping of a specified page.
Guarantees:
--Will not sleep and will not fail.
--Safe to call under a non-sleepable lock or from an ithread
Restrictions:
--Not guaranteed to be safe to call from an interrupt filter or under a spin mutex on all platforms
--Current implementation does not guarantee more than one page of mapping space across all platforms. MI code should not make nested calls to pmap_quick_enter_page.
--MI code should not perform locking while holding onto a mapping created by pmap_quick_enter_page
The idea is to use this in busdma, for bounce buffer copies as well as virtually-indexed cache maintenance on mips and arm.
NOTE: the non-i386, non-amd64 implementations of these functions still need review and testing.
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: kib (mentor)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.freebsd.org/D3013
provide a semantic defined by the C11 fences with corresponding
memory_order.
atomic_thread_fence_acq() gives r | r, w, where r and w are read and
write accesses, and | denotes the fence itself.
atomic_thread_fence_rel() is r, w | w.
atomic_thread_fence_acq_rel() is the combination of the acquire and
release in single operation. Note that reads after the acq+rel fence
could be made visible before writes preceeding the fence.
atomic_thread_fence_seq_cst() orders all accesses before/after the
fence, and the fence itself is globally ordered against other
sequentially consistent atomic operations.
Reviewed by: alc
Discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
On Book-E, physical addresses are actually 36-bits, not 32-bits. This is
currently worked around by ignoring the top bits. However, in some cases, the
boot loader configures CCSR to something above the 32-bit mark. This is stage 1
in updating the pmap to handle 36-bit physaddr.
This will print out the Memory Subsystem Status Register on MPC745x (G4+ class),
and the Machine Check Status Register on Book-E class CPUs, to aid in debugging
machine checks. Other relevant registers, for other CPUs, can be added in the
future.
This supports e500v1, e500v2, and e500mc. Tested only on e500v2, but the
performance counters are identical across all, with e500mc having some
additional events.
Relnotes: Yes
and export them to userland.
- Define __HAVE_REG32 on platforms that define a reg32 structure and check
for this in <sys/procfs.h> to control when to export prstatus32, etc.
- Add prstatus32_t and prpsinfo32_t typedefs for the 32-bit structures.
libbfd looks for these types, and having them fixes 'gcore' in gdb of a
32-bit process on a 64-bit platform.
- Use the structure definitions from <sys/procfs.h> in gcore's elf32 core
dump code instead of duplicating the definitions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2142
Reviewed by: kib, nathanw (powerpc bits)
MFC after: 1 week
have the same meaning and occupy the same memory address in the trapframe
courtesy of union. Avoid some pointless #ifdef by spelling them both 'DAR'
in the trapframe.
this change is to improve concurrency:
- Drop global state stored in the shadow overflow page table (and all other
global state)
- Remove all global locks
- Use per-PTE lock bits to allow parallel page insertion
- Reconstruct state when requested for evicted PTEs instead of buffering
it during overflow
This drops total wall time for make buildworld on a 32-thread POWER8 system
by a factor of two and system time by a factor of three, providing performance
20% better than similarly clocked Core i7 Xeons per-core. Performance on
smaller SMP systems, where PMAP lock contention was not as much of an issue,
is nearly unchanged.
Tested on: POWER8, POWER5+, G5 UP, G5 SMP (64-bit and 32-bit kernels)
Merged from: user/nwhitehorn/ppc64-pmap-rework
Looked over by: jhibbits, andreast
MFC after: 3 months
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
and POWER8. This instruction set unifies the 32 64-bit scalar floating
point registers with the 32 128-bit vector registers into a single bank
of 64 128-bit registers. Kernel support mostly amounts to saving and
restoring the wider version of the floating point registers and making
sure that both scalar FP and vector registers are enabled once a VSX
instruction is executed. get_mcontext() and friends currently cannot
see the high bits, which will require a little more work.
As the system compiler (GCC 4.2) does not support VSX, making use of this
from userland requires either newer GCC or clang.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
instructions to call through pointers instead. In general, these are set
implicitly through relocation processing. One has to be set explicitly in
machdep.c, however, to fit one handler in the tiny (8 instruction) space
available.
Reviewed by: andreast
Differential revision: D1554
Tested on: UP and SMP G5, Cell, POWER5+
This allows executing static clang built with -O0.
The value is configurable by a sysctl, so if one needs to clamp it down, they
still can.
Discussed with: nwhitehorn,emaste
code in sys/kern/kern_dump.c. Most dumpsys() implementations are nearly
identical and simply redefine a number of constants and helper subroutines;
a generic implementation will make it easier to implement features around
kernel core dumps. This change does not alter any minidump code and should
have no functional impact.
PR: 193873
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D904
Submitted by: Conrad Meyer <conrad.meyer@isilon.com>
Reviewed by: jhibbits (earlier version)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Summary:
Revert the initial FBT-with-KDB changes for trap_subr*.S, and instead use the
db_trap filter function to handle dtrace trap filtering. With this, the MMU is
enabled by the support code, simplifying the codepath altogether.
Test Plan: Tested on my G4 PowerBook
Reviewers: #powerpc, nwhitehorn
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1207
MFC after: 3 weeks
It is automatically set when -fPIC is passed to the compiler.
Reviewed by: dim, kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1179
physical address of the page to direct map address, in case
SFBUF_OPTIONAL_DIRECT_MAP returns true. The case of PowerPC AIM
64bit, where the page physical address is identical to the direct map
address, is accidental.
Reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The MD allocators were very common, however there were some minor
differencies. These differencies were all consolidated in the MI allocator,
under ifdefs. The defines from machine/vmparam.h turn on features required
for a particular machine. For details look in the comment in sys/sf_buf.h.
As result no MD code left in sys/*/*/vm_machdep.c. Some arches still have
machine/sf_buf.h, which is usually quite small.
Tested by: glebius (i386), tuexen (arm32), kevlo (arm32)
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
This appears to fix a strange condition with X on 32-bit PowerBooks I observed,
caused by one of these bits getting set in the mcontext, but not set in the
thread, which may be a symptom of another problem, more difficult to diagnose.
Since these bits aren't exported anyway, this change makes it more explicit that
the bits aren't MSR-related in SRR1.
MFC after: 3 weeks
The NetBSD Foundation states "Third parties are encouraged to change the
license on any files which have a 4-clause license contributed to the
NetBSD Foundation to a 2-clause license."
This change removes clauses 3 and 4 from copyright / license blocks that
list The NetBSD Foundation as the only copyright holder.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This also fixes asserts on removal of the module for the mpc74xx.
The PowerPC 970 processors have two different types of events: direct events
and indirect events. Thus far only direct events are supported. I included
some documentation in the driver on how indirect events work, but support is
for the future.
MFC after: 1 month
obsolete. This involves the following pieces:
- Remove it entirely on PowerPC, where it is not used by MD code either
- Remove all references to machine/fdt.h in non-architecture-specific code
(aside from uart_cpu_fdt.c, shared by ARM and MIPS, and so is somewhat
non-arch-specific).
- Fix code relying on header pollution from machine/fdt.h includes
- Legacy fdtbus.c (still used on x86 FDT systems) now passes resource
requests to its parent (nexus). This allows x86 FDT devices to allocate
both memory and IO requests and removes the last notionally MI use of
fdtbus_bs_tag.
- On those architectures that retain a machine/fdt.h, unused bits like
FDT_MAP_IRQ and FDT_INTR_MAX have been removed.
regions which represent the total amount of memory. The size of these regions
is not the physical size of the chip but it is a logical one and it is given
by the OpenFirmware, it is selectable at boot time and varies between 16MB and
256MB in my case. There is an 'automatic' option which would select the size as
64MB in case you have around 16GB of RAM.
To make sure we can allocate RAM with the automatic option bump this value
of PHYS_AVAIL_SZ to 256.
Open Firmware-centric:
- Keep the static list of regions in platform.c instead of ofw_machdep.c
- Move various merging and sorting operations to platform.c as well
- Move apple_hacks code out of ofw_machdep.c and into platform_powermac.c,
where it belongs
- Move CHRP-specific dynamic-reconfiguration memory parsing into
platform_chrp.c instead of pretending it is shared code
It turned out that on pSeries machines the call into OF modified the trap
vectors and this made further behaviour unpredictable.
With this commit I'm now able to boot multi user on a network booted
environment on my IntelliStation 285. This is a POWER5+ machine.
Discussed with: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 1 week
allows FPU emulation on AIM as well as providing support for the mfpvr
and lwsync instructions from userland on e500 cores. lwsync, in particular,
is required for many C++ programs to work correctly.
MFC after: 1 week
the actual FPU is enabled, while PCB_FPREGS indicates that the FPU state
structure in the PCB is valid. This separation reflects the situation on
FPU-less systems in which the FP state is used by the emulator but we don't
actually want to try to turn on the non-existant FPU.
Use this flag to save and restore FP regs properly on both AIM and Book-E.
As a side effect, this sets up hard-FP and Altivec on Book-E CPUs with such
abilities except for a trap handler to call enable_fpu()/enable_altivec().
I found a stack overflow when a coredump was taken onto a ZFS volume with
heavy network activity. 2 DSI traps, plus one DECR trap, along with several
function calls in the stack, overflowed the 4 pages. 8 page stack fixes this.
Discussed with: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 1 week
PCPU fields for curthread, by doing the same to Book-E. This closes
some potential races switching between CPUs. As a side effect, it turns out
the AIM and Book-E swtch.S implementations were the same to within a few
registers, so move that to powerpc/powerpc.
MFC after: 3 months
words, every architecture is now auto-sizing the kmem arena. This revision
changes kmeminit() so that the definition of VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE becomes
mandatory and the definition of VM_KMEM_SIZE becomes optional.
Replace or eliminate all existing definitions of VM_KMEM_SIZE. With
auto-sizing enabled, VM_KMEM_SIZE effectively became an alternate spelling
for VM_KMEM_SIZE_MIN on most architectures. Use VM_KMEM_SIZE_MIN for
clarity.
Change kmeminit() so that the effect of defining VM_KMEM_SIZE is similar to
that of setting the tunable vm.kmem_size. Whereas the macros
VM_KMEM_SIZE_{MAX,MIN,SCALE} have had the same effect as the tunables
vm.kmem_size_{max,min,scale}, the effects of VM_KMEM_SIZE and vm.kmem_size
have been distinct. In particular, whereas VM_KMEM_SIZE was overridden by
VM_KMEM_SIZE_{MAX,MIN,SCALE} and vm.kmem_size_{max,min,scale}, vm.kmem_size
was not. Remedy this inconsistency. Now, VM_KMEM_SIZE can be used to set
the size of the kmem arena at compile-time without that value being
overridden by auto-sizing.
Update the nearby comments to reflect the kmem submap being replaced by the
kmem arena. Stop duplicating the auto-sizing formula in every machine-
dependent vmparam.h and place it in kmeminit() where auto-sizing takes
place.
Reviewed by: kib (an earlier version)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
- Remove explicit requirement that the SOC registers be found except as an
optimization (although the MPC85XX LAW drivers still require they be found
externally, which should change).
- Remove magic CCSRBAR_VA value.
- Allow bus_machdep.c's early-boot code to handle non 1:1 mappings and
systems not in real-mode or global 1:1 maps in early boot.
- Allow pmap_mapdev() on Book-E to reissue previous addresses if the
area is already mapped. Additionally have it check all mappings, not
just the CCSR area.
This allows the console on e500 systems to actually work on systems where
the boot loader was not kind enough to set up a 1:1 mapping before starting
the kernel.
Use it universally. Book-E traps may also need revisiting due to the
introduction of fixed-offset traps and the deprecation of IVORs in POWER
ISA 2.06, but that's very much an issue for another day.
platform modules. Whether to call this function or not is highly machine
dependent: on some systems, it is required, while on others it breaks
everything. Platform modules are in a better position to figure this
out. This is required for POWER hypervisor SCSI to work correctly. There
are no functional changes on Powermac systems.
Approved by: re (kib)