Use the same scheme implemented to manage credentials.
Code needing to look at process's credentials (as opposed to thred's) is
provided with *_proc variants of relevant functions.
Places which possibly had to take the proc lock anyway still use the proc
pointer to access limits.
Thread credentials are maintained as follows: each thread has a pointer to
creds and a reference on them. The pointer is compared with proc's creds on
userspace<->kernel boundary and updated if needed.
This patch introduces a counter which can be compared instead, so that more
structures can use this scheme without adding more comparisons on the boundary.
Remove unneeded NULL checks in trap_fatal().
Since td_name is an array member of struct thread, it can never be NULL,
so the check can be removed. In addition, curproc can never be NULL,
so remove the if statement, and splice the two printfs() together.
While here, remove the u_long cast, and use the correct printf format
specifier for curproc->p_pid.
Requested by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
rev. 55. The modern CPUs cache and TLB descriptions looked quite
questionable without the update, e.g. Haswell i7 4770S reported:
Data TLB: 4 KB pages, 4-way set associative, 64 entries
L2 cache: 256 kbytes, 8-way associative, 64 bytes/line
After the update, the report is:
Data TLB: 1 GByte pages, 4-way set associative, 4 entries
Data TLB: 4 KB pages, 4-way set associative, 64 entries
Instruction TLB: 2M/4M pages, fully associative, 8 entries
Instruction TLB: 4KByte pages, 8-way set associative, 64 entries
64-Byte prefetching
Shared 2nd-Level TLB: 4 KByte/2MByte pages, 8-way associative, 1024 entries
L2 cache: 256 kbytes, 8-way associative, 64 bytes/line
Some tags were apparently removed from the table 3-21, Vol. 2A. Keep
them around, but add a comment stating the removal.
Update the format line for cpu_stdext_feature according to the bits
from the SDM rev.55. It appears that Haswells do not store %cs and
%ds values in the FPU save area.
Store content of the %ecx register from the CPUID leaf 0x7
subleaf 0 as cpu_stdext_feature2 and print defined bits from it,
again acording to SDM rev. 55.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Native ABI do not need signal conversion, only emulators may want this. Usually
emulators implements its own sv_sendsig method. For now only ibcs2 emulator does
not have own sv_sendsig implementation and depends on native sendsig() method.
So, remove any extra attempts to convert signal numbers from native sendsig()
methods except from i386 where ibsc2 is living.
1. Linux sigset always 64 bit on all platforms. In order to move Linux
sigset code to the linux_common module define it as 64 bit int. Move
Linux sigset manipulation routines to the MI path.
2. Move Linux signal number definitions to the MI path. In general, they
are the same on all platforms except for a few signals.
3. Map Linux RT signals to the FreeBSD RT signals and hide signal conversion
tables to avoid conversion errors.
4. Emulate Linux SIGPWR signal via FreeBSD SIGRTMIN signal which is outside
of allowed on Linux signal numbers.
PR: 197216
argument is not a null pointer, and the ss_flags member pointed to by ss
contains flags other than SS_DISABLE. However, in fact, Linux also
allows SS_ONSTACK flag which is simply ignored.
For buggy apps (at least mono) ignore other than SS_DISABLE
flags as a Linux do.
While here move MI part of sigaltstack code to the appropriate place.
Reported by: abi at abinet dot ru
around kqueue() to implement epoll subset of functionality.
The kqueue user data are 32bit on i386 which is not enough for
epoll user data, so we keep user data in the proc emuldata.
Initial patch developed by rdivacky@ in 2007, then extended
by Yuri Victorovich @ r255672 and finished by me
in collaboration with mjg@ and jillies@.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1092
to determine the kernel version (this saves one uname call).
Temporarily disable the export of a note.Linux section until I figured
out how to change the kernel version in the note.Linux on the fly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1081
Reviewed by: trasz
The AT_EACCESS and AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW flags are actually implemented
within the glibc wrapper function for faccessat(). If either of these
flags are specified, then the wrapper function employs fstatat() to
determine access permissions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1078
Reviewed by: trasz
following primary purposes:
1. Remove the dependency of linsysfs and linprocfs modules from linux.ko,
which will be architecture specific on amd64.
2. Incorporate into linux_common.ko general code for platforms on which
we'll support two Linuxulator modules (for both instruction set - 32 & 64 bit).
3. Move malloc(9) declaration to linux_common.ko, to enable getting memory
usage statistics properly.
Currently linux_common.ko incorporates a code from linux_mib.c and linux_util.c
and linprocfs, linsysfs and linux kernel modules depend on linux_common.ko.
Temporarily remove dtrace garbage from linux_mib.c and linux_util.c
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1072
In collaboration with: Vassilis Laganakos.
Reviewed by: trasz
Move struct ipc_perm definition to the MD path as it differs for 64 and
32 bit platform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1068
Reviewed by: trasz
exposes functions from kernel with proper DWARF CFI information so that
it becomes easier to unwind through them.
Using vdso is a mandatory for a thread cancelation && cleanup
on a modern glibc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1060
Use it in linux_wait4() system call and move linux_wait4() to the MI path.
While here add a prototype for the static bsd_to_linux_rusage().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2138
Reviewed by: trasz
The reasons:
1. Get rid of the stubs/quirks with process dethreading,
process reparent when the process group leader exits and close
to this problems on wait(), waitpid(), etc.
2. Reuse our kernel code instead of writing excessive thread
managment routines in Linuxulator.
Implementation details:
1. The thread is created via kern_thr_new() in the clone() call with
the CLONE_THREAD parameter. Thus, everything else is a process.
2. The test that the process has a threads is done via P_HADTHREADS
bit p_flag of struct proc.
3. Per thread emulator state data structure is now located in the
struct thread and freed in the thread_dtor() hook.
Mandatory holdig of the p_mtx required when referencing emuldata
from the other threads.
4. PID mangling has changed. Now Linux pid is the native tid
and Linux tgid is the native pid, with the exception of the first
thread in the process where tid and pid are one and the same.
Ugliness:
In case when the Linux thread is the initial thread in the thread
group thread id is equal to the process id. Glibc depends on this
magic (assert in pthread_getattr_np.c). So for system calls that
take thread id as a parameter we should use the special method
to reference struct thread.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1039
threads introduce linux_exit() stub instead of sys_exit() call
(which terminates process).
In the new linuxulator exit() system call terminates the calling
thread (not a whole process).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1027
Reviewed by: trasz
years for head. However, it is continuously misused as the mpsafe argument
for callout_init(9). Deprecate the flag and clean up callout_init() calls
to make them more consistent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2613
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
The replacement started at r283088 was necessarily incomplete without
replacing boolean_t with bool. This also involved cleaning some type
mismatches and ansifying old C function declarations.
Pointed out by: bde
Discussed with: bde, ian, jhb
needs to be enabled by adding "kern.racct.enable=1" to /boot/loader.conf.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2407
Reviewed by: emaste@, wblock@
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
allocated from exec_map. If many threads try to perform execve(2) in
parallel, the exec map is exhausted and some threads sleep
uninterruptible waiting for the map space. Then, the thread which won
the race for the space allocation, cannot single-thread the process,
causing deadlock.
Reported and tested by: pho (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
interacts with interrupts, query ACPI and use MWAIT for entrance into
Cx sleep states. Support C1 "I/O then halt" mode. See Intel'
document 302223-007 "Intelб╝ Processor Vendor-Specific ACPI Interface
Specification" for description.
Move the acpi_cpu_c1() function into x86/cpu_machdep.c and use
it instead of inlining "sti; hlt" sequence in several places.
In the acpi(4) man page, besides documenting the dev.cpu.N.cx_methods
sysctl, correct the names for dev.cpu.N.{cx_usage,cx_lowest,cx_supported}
sysctls.
Both jkim and avg have some other patches implementing the mwait
functionality; this work is unrelated. Linux does not rely on the
ACPI to provide correct tables describing Cx modes. Instead, the
driver has pre-defined knowledge of the CPU models, it was supplied by
Intel.
Tested by: pho (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
remains. Xen is planning to phase out support for PV upstream since it
is harder to maintain and has more overhead. Modern x86 CPUs include
virtualization extensions that support HVM guests instead of PV guests.
In addition, the PV code was i386 only and not as well maintained recently
as the HVM code.
- Remove the i386-only NATIVE option that was used to disable certain
components for PV kernels. These components are now standard as they
are on amd64.
- Remove !XENHVM bits from PV drivers.
- Remove various shims required for XEN (e.g. PT_UPDATES_FLUSH, LOAD_CR3,
etc.)
- Remove duplicate copy of <xen/features.h>.
- Remove unused, i386-only xenstored.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2362
Reviewed by: royger
Tested by: royger (i386/amd64 HVM domU and amd64 PVH dom0)
Relnotes: yes
- Vmbus multi channel support.
- Vector interrupt support.
- Signal optimization.
- Storvsc driver performance improvement.
- Scatter and gather support for storvsc driver.
- Minor bug fix for KVP driver.
Thanks royger, jhb and delphij from FreeBSD community for the reviews
and comments. Also thanks Hovy Xu from NetApp for the contributions to
the storvsc driver.
PR: 195238
Submitted by: whu
Reviewed by: royger, jhb, delphij
Approved by: royger
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
sys/amd64/amd64/mp_machdep.c, to the new common x86 source
sys/x86/x86/mp_x86.c.
Proposed and reviewed by: jhb
Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2347
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
sys/i386/i386/machdep.c to new file sys/x86/x86/cpu_machdep.c. Most
of the code is related to the idle handling.
Discussed with: pluknet
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
shows no difference with the code removed.
On both amd64 and i386, assert that a released pmap is not active.
Proposed and reviewed by: alc
Discussed with: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>, peter
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
use PAE format for the page tables, but does not incur other
consequences of the full PAE config. In particular, vm_paddr_t and
bus_addr_t are left 32bit, and max supported memory is still limited
by 4GB.
The option allows to have nx permissions for memory mappings on i386
kernel, while keeping the usual i386 KBI and avoiding the kernel data
sizing problems typical for the PAE config.
Intel documented that the PAE format for page tables is available
starting with the Pentium Pro, but it is possible that the plain
Pentium CPUs have the required support (Appendix H). The goal is to
enable the option and non-exec mappings on i386 for the GENERIC
kernel. Anybody wanting a useful system on 486, have to reconfigure
the modern i386 kernel anyway.
Discussed with: alc, jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
memory itself. Provide the formula to calculate the number of
required page tables. Correct the size of the struct vm_page for
non-PAE case.
Reviewed by: alc, jhb (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
A couple of internal functions used by malloc(9) and uma truncated
a size_t down to an int. This could cause any number of issues
(e.g. indefinite sleeps, memory corruption) if any kernel
subsystem tried to allocate 2GB or more through malloc. zfs would
attempt such an allocation when run on a system with 2TB or more
of RAM.
Note to self: When this is MFCed, sparc64 needs the same fix.
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2106
Reviewed by: kib
Reported by: Michael Fuckner <michael@fuckner.net>
Tested by: Michael Fuckner <michael@fuckner.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
rather than 20. The MP 1.4 specification states in Appendix B.2:
"A period of 20 microseconds should be sufficient for IPI dispatch to
complete under normal operating conditions".
(Note that this appears to be separate from the 10 millisecond (INIT) and
200 microsecond (STARTUP) waits after the IPIs are dispatched.) The
Intel SDM is silent on this issue as far as I can tell.
At least some hardware requires 60 microseconds as noted in the PR, so
bump this to 100 to be on the safe side.
PR: 197756
Reported by: zaphod@berentweb.com
MFC after: 1 week
translation. In particular, despite IO-APICs only take 8bit apic id,
IR translation structures accept 32bit APIC Id, which allows x2APIC
mode to function properly. Extend msi_cpu of struct msi_intrsrc and
io_cpu of ioapic_intsrc to full int from one byte.
KPI of IR is isolated into the x86/iommu/iommu_intrmap.h, to avoid
bringing all dmar headers into interrupt code. The non-PCI(e) devices
which generate message interrupts on FSB require special handling. The
HPET FSB interrupts are remapped, while DMAR interrupts are not.
For each msi and ioapic interrupt source, the iommu cookie is added,
which is in fact index of the IRE (interrupt remap entry) in the IR
table. Cookie is made at the source allocation time, and then used at
the map time to fill both IRE and device registers. The MSI
address/data registers and IO-APIC redirection registers are
programmed with the special values which are recognized by IR and used
to restore the IRE index, to find proper delivery mode and target.
Map all MSI interrupts in the block when msi_map() is called.
Since an interrupt source setup and dismantle code are done in the
non-sleepable context, flushing interrupt entries cache in the IR
hardware, which is done async and ideally waits for the interrupt,
requires busy-wait for queue to drain. The dmar_qi_wait_for_seq() is
modified to take a boolean argument requesting busy-wait for the
written sequence number instead of waiting for interrupt.
Some interrupts are configured before IR is initialized, e.g. ACPI
SCI. Add intr_reprogram() function to reprogram all already
configured interrupts, and call it immediately before an IR unit is
enabled. There is still a small window after the IO-APIC redirection
entry is reprogrammed with cookie but before the unit is enabled, but
to fix this properly, IR must be started much earlier.
Add workarounds for 5500 and X58 northbridges, some revisions of which
have severe flaws in handling IR. Use the same identification methods
as employed by Linux.
Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1892
Reviewed by: neel
Discussed with: jhb
Tested by: glebius, pho (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
Implement the interace to create SR-IOV Virtual Functions (VFs).
When a driver registers that they support SR-IOV by calling
pci_setup_iov(), the SR-IOV code creates a new node in /dev/iov
for that device. An ioctl can be invoked on that device to
create VFs and have the driver initialize them.
At this point, allocating memory I/O windows (BARs) is not
supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D76
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
x2APIC mode is detected and enabled. Current theory is that switching
the APIC mode while an IPI is in flight might be the issue.
Postpone switching to x2APIC mode until we are guaranteed that all
starting IPIs are already send and aknowledged. Use aps_ready signal
as an indication that the BSP is done with us.
Tested by: adrian
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 months
FPU state to avoid passing a negative length to fpusetregs() / npxsetregs().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1861
Reviewed by: kib, emaste
Remove unneeded disable of LAPIC in the native_lapic_xapic_mode(). We
attempt to send wakeup IPI on the resume path right after BSP wakeup,
so disabling is wrong.
Reported and tested by: glebius, "Ranjan1018 ." <214748mv@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 months
hw.x2apic_enable tunable allows disabling it from the loader prompt.
To closely repeat effects of the uncached memory ops when accessing
registers in the xAPIC mode, the x2APIC writes to MSRs are preceeded
by mfence, except for the EOI notifications. This is probably too
strict, only ICR writes to send IPI require serialization to ensure
that other CPUs see the previous actions when IPI is delivered. This
may be changed later.
In vmm justreturn IPI handler, call doreti_iret instead of doing iretd
inline, to handle corner conditions.
Note that the patch only switches LAPICs into x2APIC mode. It does not
enables FreeBSD to support > 255 CPUs, which requires parsing x2APIC
MADT entries and doing interrupts remapping, but is the required step
on the way.
Reviewed by: neel
Tested by: pho (real hardware), neel (on bhyve)
Discussed with: jhb, grehan
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 months
Intel Multiprocessor Specification v1.4. The Intel SDM claims that
the INIT IPIs here are invalid, but other systems follow the MP
spec instead.
While here, fix the IPI wait routine to accept a timeout in microseconds
instead of a raw spin count, and don't spin forever during AP startup.
Instead, panic if a STARTUP IPI is not delivered after 20 us.
PR: 196542
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1719
MFC after: 2 weeks
KVM clock shares the same data structures between the guest and the host
as Xen so it makes sense to just have a single copy of this code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1429
Reviewed by: royger (eariler version)
MFC after: 1 month
const. On x86, even after the machine context is supposedly read into
the struct ucontext, lazy FPU state save code might only mark the FPU
data as hardware-owned. Later, set_fpcontext() needs to fetch the
state from hardware, modifying the *mcp.
The set_mcontext(9) is called from sigreturn(2) and setcontext(2)
implementations and old create_thread(2) interface, which throw the
*mcp out after the set_mcontext() call.
Reported by: dim
Discussed with: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
for i386, and from the code inspection, nothing in the
arm/mips/sparc64 implementations depends on it.
Discussed with: imp, nwhitehorn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
Implement a subset of the multiboot specification in order to boot Xen
and a FreeBSD Dom0 from the FreeBSD bootloader. This multiboot
implementation is tailored to boot Xen and FreeBSD Dom0, and it will
most surely fail to boot any other multiboot compilant kernel.
In order to detect and boot the Xen microkernel, two new file formats
are added to the bootloader, multiboot and multiboot_obj. Multiboot
support must be tested before regular ELF support, since Xen is a
multiboot kernel that also uses ELF. After a multiboot kernel is
detected, all the other loaded kernels/modules are parsed by the
multiboot_obj format.
The layout of the loaded objects in memory is the following; first the
Xen kernel is loaded as a 32bit ELF into memory (Xen will switch to
long mode by itself), after that the FreeBSD kernel is loaded as a RAW
file (Xen will parse and load it using it's internal ELF loader), and
finally the metadata and the modules are loaded using the native
FreeBSD way. After everything is loaded we jump into Xen's entry point
using a small trampoline. The order of the multiboot modules passed to
Xen is the following, the first module is the RAW FreeBSD kernel, and
the second module is the metadata and the FreeBSD modules.
Since Xen will relocate the memory position of the second
multiboot module (the one that contains the metadata and native
FreeBSD modules), we need to stash the original modulep address inside
of the metadata itself in order to recalculate its position once
booted. This also means the metadata must come before the loaded
modules, so after loading the FreeBSD kernel a portion of memory is
reserved in order to place the metadata before booting.
In order to tell the loader to boot Xen and then the FreeBSD kernel the
following has to be added to the /boot/loader.conf file:
xen_cmdline="dom0_mem=1024M dom0_max_vcpus=2 dom0pvh=1 console=com1,vga"
xen_kernel="/boot/xen"
The first argument contains the command line that will be passed to the Xen
kernel, while the second argument is the path to the Xen kernel itself. This
can also be done manually from the loader command line, by for example
typing the following set of commands:
OK unload
OK load /boot/xen dom0_mem=1024M dom0_max_vcpus=2 dom0pvh=1 console=com1,vga
OK load kernel
OK load zfs
OK load if_tap
OK load ...
OK boot
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D517
For the Forth bits:
Submitted by: Julien Grall <julien.grall AT citrix.com>
Features by CPUID as CPUID.80000008H:EAX[7:0], into variable cpu_maxphyaddr.
Reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
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
may also halt in C2 and not just C3 (it seems that in some cases the BIOS
advertises its C3 state as a C2 state in _CST). Just play it safe and
disable both C2 and C3 states if a user forces the use of the TSC as the
timecounter on such CPUs.
PR: 192316
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1441
No objection from: jkim
MFC after: 1 week
roughly 10 years, and the driver has not enjoyed any significant maintenance
since long before that. Despite well-meaning efforts from a number of
people, myself included, it never made the jump to 64-bit and was relegated
to the back-corners of i386. Now its frailty is hampering forward progress
with Clang. Any renewed engineering efforts are of course welcome and can
happen outside of the tree. No MFC of this is planned.
and r275871 respectively to build with PAE enabled.
- For the PAE kernel configuration file, no longer exclude devices that
are known to be 64-bit DMA clean from amd64.
MFC after: 3 days
It's redundant at the moment since it can be obtained from the trapframe
on the architectures where DTrace is supported, but this won't be the case
with ARM.
(UTC) rather than the archaic (GMT) in comments. Except where the
comments are making fun of people doing this (and pedants who insist
on the new terms).
WITNESS and INVARIANTS checking, which are known to have significant
performance impact on running systems. When benchmarking new features
this kernel should be used instead of the standard GENERIC.
This kernel configuration should never appear outside of the HEAD
of the FreeBSD tree.
- Dump an NT_X86_XSTATE note if XSAVE is in use. This note is designed
to match what Linux does in that 1) it dumps the entire XSAVE area
including the fxsave state, and 2) it stashes a copy of the current
xsave mask in the unused padding between the fxsave state and the
xstate header at the same location used by Linux.
- Teach readelf() to recognize NT_X86_XSTATE notes.
- Change PT_GET/SETXSTATE to take the entire XSAVE state instead of
only the extra portion. This avoids having to always make two
ptrace() calls to get or set the full XSAVE state.
- Add a PT_GET_XSTATE_INFO which returns the length of the current
XSTATE save area (so the size of the buffer needed for PT_GETXSTATE)
and the current XSAVE mask (%xcr0).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1193
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 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
- Add a per-softc mutex as a driver lock.
- Use callout(9) instead of timeout(9).
- Set softc pointer in si_drv1 of cdev instead of looking softc
up via devclass in cdev methods.
Tested by: no one
on i386 PAE. Previously, VM_PHYSSEG_SPARSE could not be used on amd64 and
i386 because vm_page_startup() would not create vm_page structures for the
kernel page table pages allocated during pmap_bootstrap() but those vm_page
structures are needed when the kernel attempts to promote the corresponding
kernel virtual addresses to superpage mappings. To address this problem, a
new public function, vm_phys_add_seg(), is introduced and vm_phys_init() is
updated to reflect the creation of vm_phys_seg structures by calls to
vm_phys_add_seg().
Discussed with: Svatopluk Kraus
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
have both kern_open() and kern_openat(); change the callers to use
kern_openat().
This removes one (sometimes two) levels of indirection and
consolidates arguments checks.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.
No objections from: net@
support for AVX on i386.
- Similar to amd64, move the FPU save area out of the PCB and instead
store saved FPU state in a variable-sized buffer after the PCB on the
stack.
- To support the variable PCB location, alter the locore code to only use
the bottom-most page of proc0stack for init386(). init386() returns
the correct stack pointer to locore which adjusts the stack for thread0
before calling mi_startup().
- Don't bother setting cr3 in thread0's pcb in locore before calling
init386(). It wasn't used (init386() overwrote it at the end) and
it doesn't work with the variable-sized FPU save area.
- Remove the new-bus attachment from npx. This was only ever useful for
external co-processors using IRQ13, but those have not been supported
for several years. npxinit() is now called much earlier during boot
(init386()) similar to amd64.
- Implement PT_{GET,SET}XSTATE and I386_GET_XFPUSTATE.
- npxsave() is now only called from context switch contexts so it can
use XSAVEOPT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1058
Reviewed by: kib
Tested on: FreeBSD/i386 VM under bhyve on Intel i5-2520
- Move the existing code to x86/x86/identcpu.c since it is x86-specific.
- If the CPUID2_HV flag is set, assume a hypervisor is present and query
the 0x40000000 leaf to determine the hypervisor vendor ID. Export the
vendor ID and the highest supported hypervisor CPUID leaf via
hv_vendor[] and hv_high variables, respectively. The hv_vendor[]
array is also exported via the hw.hv_vendor sysctl.
- Merge the VMWare detection code from tsc.c into the new probe in
identcpu.c. Add a VM_GUEST_VMWARE to identify vmware and use that in
the TSC code to identify VMWare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1010
Reviewed by: delphij, jkim, neel
and casuword(9), but do not mix value read and indication of fault.
I know (or remember) enough assembly to handle x86 and powerpc. For
arm, mips and sparc64, implement fueword() and casueword() as wrappers
around fuword() and casuword(), which means that the functions cannot
distinguish between -1 and fault.
On architectures where fueword() and casueword() are native, implement
fuword() and casuword() using fueword() and casuword(), to reduce
assembly code duplication.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks (ia64 needs treating)
This device is only attached to priviledged domains, and allows the
toolstack to interact with Xen. The two functions of the privcmd
interface is to allow the execution of hypercalls from user-space, and
the mapping of foreign domain memory.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
i386/include/xen/hypercall.h:
amd64/include/xen/hypercall.h:
- Introduce a function to make generic hypercalls into Xen.
xen/interface/xen.h:
xen/interface/memory.h:
- Import the new hypercall XENMEM_add_to_physmap_range used by
auto-translated guests to map memory from foreign domains.
dev/xen/privcmd/privcmd.c:
- This device has the following functions:
- Allow user-space applications to make hypercalls into Xen.
- Allow user-space applications to map memory from foreign domains,
this is accomplished using the newly introduced hypercall
(XENMEM_add_to_physmap_range).
xen/privcmd.h:
- Public ioctl interface for the privcmd device.
x86/xen/hvm.c:
- Remove declaration of hypercall_page, now it's declared in
hypercall.h.
conf/files:
- Add the privcmd device to the build process.
in userland rename in-kernel getenv()/setenv() to kern_setenv()/kern_getenv().
This fixes a namespace collision with libc symbols.
Submitted by: kmacy
Tested by: make universe
forced invalidation of the cache range regardless of the presence of
self-snoop feature. Some recent Intel GPUs in some modes are not
coherent, and dirty lines in CPU cache must be flushed before the
pages are transferred to GPU domain.
Reviewed by: alc (previous version)
Tested by: pho (amd64)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This patch adds support for MSI interrupts when running on Xen. Apart
from adding the Xen related code needed in order to register MSI
interrupts this patch also makes the msi_init function a hook in
init_ops, so different MSI implementations can have different
initialization functions.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
xen/interface/physdev.h:
- Add the MAP_PIRQ_TYPE_MULTI_MSI to map multi-vector MSI to the Xen
public interface.
x86/include/init.h:
- Add a hook for setting custom msi_init methods.
amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
i386/i386/machdep.c:
- Set the default msi_init hook to point to the native MSI
initialization method.
x86/xen/pv.c:
- Set the Xen MSI init hook when running as a Xen guest.
x86/x86/local_apic.c:
- Call the msi_init hook instead of directly calling msi_init.
xen/xen_intr.h:
x86/xen/xen_intr.c:
- Introduce support for registering/releasing MSI interrupts with
Xen.
- The MSI interrupts will use the same PIC as the IO APIC interrupts.
xen/xen_msi.h:
x86/xen/xen_msi.c:
- Introduce a Xen MSI implementation.
x86/xen/xen_nexus.c:
- Overwrite the default MSI hooks in the Xen Nexus to use the Xen MSI
implementation.
x86/xen/xen_pci.c:
- Introduce a Xen specific PCI bus that inherits from the ACPI PCI
bus and overwrites the native MSI methods.
- This is needed because when running under Xen the MSI messages used
to configure MSI interrupts on PCI devices are written by Xen
itself.
dev/acpica/acpi_pci.c:
- Lower the quality of the ACPI PCI bus so the newly introduced Xen
PCI bus can take over when needed.
conf/files.i386:
conf/files.amd64:
- Add the newly created files to the build process.
When the FreeBSD kernel is loaded from Xen the symtab and strtab are
not loaded the same way as the native boot loader. This patch adds
three new global variables to ddb that can be used to specify the
exact position and size of those tables, so they can be directly used
as parameters to db_add_symbol_table. A new helper is introduced, so callers
that used to set ksym_start and ksym_end can use this helper to set the new
variables.
It also adds support for loading them from the Xen PVH port, that was
previously missing those tables.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kib
ddb/db_main.c:
- Add three new global variables: ksymtab, kstrtab, ksymtab_size that
can be used to specify the position and size of the symtab and
strtab.
- Use those new variables in db_init in order to call db_add_symbol_table.
- Move the logic in db_init to db_fetch_symtab in order to set ksymtab,
kstrtab, ksymtab_size from ksym_start and ksym_end.
ddb/ddb.h:
- Add prototype for db_fetch_ksymtab.
- Declate the extern variables ksymtab, kstrtab and ksymtab_size.
x86/xen/pv.c:
- Add support for finding the symtab and strtab when booted as a Xen
PVH guest. Since Xen loads the symtab and strtab as NetBSD expects
to find them we have to adapt and use the same method.
amd64/amd64/machdep.c:
arm/arm/machdep.c:
i386/i386/machdep.c:
mips/mips/machdep.c:
pc98/pc98/machdep.c:
powerpc/aim/machdep.c:
powerpc/booke/machdep.c:
sparc64/sparc64/machdep.c:
- Use the newly introduced db_fetch_ksymtab in order to set ksymtab,
kstrtab and ksymtab_size.
for amd64/linux32. Fix the entirely bogus (untested) version from
r161310 for i386/linux using the same shared code in compat/linux.
It is unclear to me if we could support more clock mappings but
the current set allows me to successfully run commercial
32bit linux software under linuxolator on amd64.
Reviewed by: jhb
Differential Revision: D784
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
AP startup and AP resume (it was already used for BSP startup and BSP
resume).
- Split code to do one-time probing of cache properties out of
initializecpu() and into initializecpucache(). This is called once on
the BSP during boot.
- Move enable_sse() into initializecpu().
- Call initializecpu() for AP startup instead of enable_sse() and
manually frobbing MSR_EFER to enable PG_NX.
- Call initializecpu() when an AP resumes. In theory this will now
properly re-enable PG_NX in MSR_EFER when resuming a PAE kernel on
APs.
the local APIC in initializecpu() and re-enables it if the APIC code
decides to use the local APIC after all. Rework this workaround
slightly so that initializecpu() won't re-disable the local APIC if
it is called after the APIC code re-enables the local APIC.