booting again.
The code is a copy of the mips/mips/tick.c with minor modifications for
XLR interrupt handling. Disable mips/rmi/clock.c for now, the PIC based
timer code will be added later.
- Adds re-partitioning TLB per core for enabled threads.
- Adds hardware thread id to cpuid mapping
- updates rge driver packet distribution and message ring handling
threads to be started based on hardware thread id.
- remove unused early debugging code to set control registers.
- coding style fixes
Approved by: rrs (mentor)
am now able to run 32 cores ok.. but I still will hang
on buildworld with a NFS problem. I suspect I am missing
a patch for the netlogic rge driver.
JC check and see if I am missing anything except your
core-mask changes
Obtained from: JC
ones implemented using assembly.
o) Use TRAPF_USERMODE() consistently rather than USERMODE(). Eliminate
<machine/psl.h> as a result.
o) Use intr_*() rather than *intr(), consistently.
o) Use register_t instead of u_int in some trap code.
o) Merge some more endian-related macros to machine/asm.h from NetBSD.
o) Add PTR_LI macro, which loads an address with the correct sign-extension for
a pointer.
o) Restore interrupts when bailing out due to an excessive IRQ in
nexus_setup_intr().
o) Remove unused functions from psraccess.S.
o) Enter temporary virtual entries for large memory access into the page tables
rather than simply hoping they stay resident in the TLB and we don't need to
do a refill for them.
o) Abstract out large memory mapping setup/teardown using some macros.
o) Do mips_dcache_wbinv_range() when using temporary virtual addresses just
like we do when we can use the direct map.
- remove unused and commented code (MIPS_BUS_SPACE_PCI, pic_usb_ack)
- use rmi_pci_bus_space for USB too (needs byteswap)
- uncomment xls_ehci.c in files.xlr
- changes to xls_ehci.c - updated with dev/usb/controller/ehci_*.c as
Obtained from: JC - c.jayachandran@gmail.com
- add bus_space_rmi_pci.c for PCI bus space
- files.xlr update for changes in files
- pcibus.c merged into xlr_pci.c (they were small files with inter-dependencies)
- xlr_pci.c - lot of changes here with few fixes, formatting cleanup
Obtained from: C. Jayachandran (JC) - c.jayachandran@gmail.com
- remove pci related code from bus_space_rmi.c, we will have another
file for PCI bus space functions which will do byte-swapping.
- remove local SWAP implementation
- added TODO stub for unimplemented functions
Obtained from: C. Jayachandran - c.jayachandran@gmail.com
- (cleanup) remove rmi specific 'struct mips_intrhand' - this is no
longer needed since 'struct intr_event' have all the required hooks
- add xlr_cpu_establish_hardintr, which has args for pre/post ithread
and filter hooks, so that the PCI code can add the PCI controller
interrupt ack code here
- make 'cpu_establish_hardintr' use the above function.
- (fix) change type of eirr/eimr from register_t to uint64_t. These
have to be 64bit otherwise we cannot handle interrupts from 32.
- (fix) use eimr to mask eirr before checking interrupts, so that we
will not handle masked interrupts.
Obtained from: C. Jayachandran - c.jayachandran@gmail.com
have code that detects this and makes two
transmit descriptors. However its possible
that the algorithm detects when the second
page is not used (when the data aligns perfectly
to the bottom of the page). This caused a 0
len descriptor to be added which locks up the
rge device. Skip such things with a continue.
JC provided this patch... Thanks JC :-)
Obtained from: JC (c.jayachandran@gmail.com)
above 4Gig. If so when we add the base address with
the size we will wrap. So for now we just ignore
such memory and only use what we can. When we
get 64 bit working then we will be much better ;->
Basically the msg ring interrupt was being re-enabled
inside a spinlock as the thread set it self up for rescheduling.
This won't work since inside the re-enable is another
spin lock.. which means on return from the reenable
the interrupts have been reenabled. Thus you would
get a clock int and end up panicing holding a spin
lock to long :-o
Copy sys/dev/rmi to sys/mips/rmi/dev [sic]. For devices that are on
only one SoC, or family of SoC, we place them under sys/<vendor>/dev.
I'll fix the build problems this causes as best I can since rmi kernel
require external toolchains due to lack of support for rmi op-codes in
the ancient binutils we have in the tree.