Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jake
da0dba2052 Remove unneeded include. 2002-05-08 04:21:58 +00:00
jake
80ce8587d9 Add support for an alternate signal trampoline; add a sysarch call to register
an alternate trampoling with the kernel.
2002-04-29 18:08:26 +00:00
dillon
dc5aafeb94 Compromise for critical*()/cpu_critical*() recommit. Cleanup the interrupt
disablement assumptions in kern_fork.c by adding another API call,
cpu_critical_fork_exit().  Cleanup the td_savecrit field by moving it
from MI to MD.  Temporarily move cpu_critical*() from <arch>/include/cpufunc.h
to <arch>/<arch>/critical.c (stage-2 will clean this up).

Implement interrupt deferral for i386 that allows interrupts to remain
enabled inside critical sections.  This also fixes an IPI interlock bug,
and requires uses of icu_lock to be enclosed in a true interrupt disablement.

This is the stage-1 commit.  Stage-2 will occur after stage-1 has stabilized,
and will move cpu_critical*() into its own header file(s) + other things.
This commit may break non-i386 architectures in trivial ways.  This should
be temporary.

Reviewed by:	core
Approved by:	core
2002-03-27 05:39:23 +00:00
jake
0c96d7eeb6 Implement user trap delivery as specified by the sparc abi. This provides
an efficient way for the kernel to bounce certain mundane traps back to
userland for handling there.  A user trap handler returns directly to the
trapping user code, rather than going through the kernel again.  Only a
handful of instructions are actually executed in kernel mode.
Implement sysarch(SPARC_UTRAP_INSTALL).
Add code to handle sharing of the user trap table across forks and unsharing
at exec.

This can be used to implement efficient tracking of floating point register
usage in userland, fe by a thread library, and to handle alignment fault
fixups and instruction emulation in userland, for which the code may need
to be different for 32bit and 64bit binaries.
2002-01-01 20:56:28 +00:00
jhb
21b6b26912 Overhaul the per-CPU support a bit:
- The MI portions of struct globaldata have been consolidated into a MI
  struct pcpu.  The MD per-CPU data are specified via a macro defined in
  machine/pcpu.h.  A macro was chosen over a struct mdpcpu so that the
  interface would be cleaner (PCPU_GET(my_md_field) vs.
  PCPU_GET(md.md_my_md_field)).
- All references to globaldata are changed to pcpu instead.  In a UP kernel,
  this data was stored as global variables which is where the original name
  came from.  In an SMP world this data is per-CPU and ideally private to each
  CPU outside of the context of debuggers.  This also included combining
  machine/globaldata.h and machine/globals.h into machine/pcpu.h.
- The pointer to the thread using the FPU on i386 was renamed from
  npxthread to fpcurthread to be identical with other architectures.
- Make the show pcpu ddb command MI with a MD callout to display MD
  fields.
- The globaldata_register() function was renamed to pcpu_init() and now
  init's MI fields of a struct pcpu in addition to registering it with
  the internal array and list.
- A pcpu_destroy() function was added to remove a struct pcpu from the
  internal array and list.

Tested on:	alpha, i386
Reviewed by:	peter, jake
2001-12-11 23:33:44 +00:00
julian
5596676e6c KSE Milestone 2
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.

Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)

Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org

X-MFC after:    ha ha ha ha
2001-09-12 08:38:13 +00:00
obrien
0e8186d4dc style(9) the structure definitions. 2001-09-05 05:18:35 +00:00
jake
908b8f329b Use the correct copyrights. Note where most of this came from.
Requested by:	obrien
2001-09-03 22:27:23 +00:00
obrien
f202ead276 The author isn't a [UC] Regents. Correct the copyright language. 2001-08-09 02:09:34 +00:00
jake
fb7edc502f Flesh out the sparc64 port considerably. This contains:
- mostly complete kernel pmap support, and tested but currently turned
  off userland pmap support
- low level assembly language trap, context switching and support code
- fully implemented atomic.h and supporting cpufunc.h
- some support for kernel debugging with ddb
- various header tweaks and filling out of machine dependent structures
2001-07-31 06:05:05 +00:00
jake
489876bc4d Add skeleton machine dependent headers and c files for a port of freebsd
to a new architecture.  This is the base of the sparc64 port, but contains
limited machine dependent code, and can be used a base for ports.  Included
are:
- standard machine dependent headers, tweaked for a 64 bit, big endian
  architecture, including empty versions of all the machine dependent
  structures
- a machine independent atomic.h, which can be used until a port has
  support for interrupts and the operations really need to be atomic
- stub versions of all the machine dependent functions, which panic
  when called and print out the name of the function that needs to
  be implemented.  functions which are normally in assembly files are
  not included, but this should reduce the number of different undefined
  references on the first few compiles from hundreds to 5 or 6
Given minimal startup code and console support it should be trivial to
make this compile and run the first few sysinits on almost any architecture.

Requested by:   alfred, imp, jhb
2001-07-31 05:45:16 +00:00