/* * Copyright 1998 Massachusetts Institute of Technology * * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and * its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby * granted, provided that both the above copyright notice and this * permission notice appear in all copies, that both the above * copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all * supporting documentation, and that the name of M.I.T. not be used * in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the * software without specific, written prior permission. M.I.T. makes * no representations about the suitability of this software for any * purpose. It is provided "as is" without express or implied * warranty. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY M.I.T. ``AS IS''. M.I.T. DISCLAIMS * ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, * INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT * SHALL M.I.T. BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT * LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF * USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND * ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, * OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT * OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF * SUCH DAMAGE. * * $FreeBSD$ */ /* * The kernel resource manager. This code is responsible for keeping track * of hardware resources which are apportioned out to various drivers. * It does not actually assign those resources, and it is not expected * that end-device drivers will call into this code directly. Rather, * the code which implements the buses that those devices are attached to, * and the code which manages CPU resources, will call this code, and the * end-device drivers will make upcalls to that code to actually perform * the allocation. * * There are two sorts of resources managed by this code. The first is * the more familiar array (RMAN_ARRAY) type; resources in this class * consist of a sequence of individually-allocatable objects which have * been numbered in some well-defined order. Most of the resources * are of this type, as it is the most familiar. The second type is * called a gauge (RMAN_GAUGE), and models fungible resources (i.e., * resources in which each instance is indistinguishable from every * other instance). The principal anticipated application of gauges * is in the context of power consumption, where a bus may have a specific * power budget which all attached devices share. RMAN_GAUGE is not * implemented yet. * * For array resources, we make one simplifying assumption: two clients * sharing the same resource must use the same range of indices. That * is to say, sharing of overlapping-but-not-identical regions is not * permitted. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include /* XXX debugging */ #include #include #ifdef RMAN_DEBUG #define DPRINTF(params) printf##params #else #define DPRINTF(params) #endif static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_RMAN, "rman", "Resource manager"); struct rman_head rman_head; #ifndef NULL_SIMPLELOCKS static struct simplelock rman_lock; /* mutex to protect rman_head */ #endif static int int_rman_activate_resource(struct rman *rm, struct resource *r, struct resource **whohas); static int int_rman_deactivate_resource(struct resource *r); static int int_rman_release_resource(struct rman *rm, struct resource *r); int rman_init(struct rman *rm) { static int once; if (once == 0) { once = 1; TAILQ_INIT(&rman_head); simple_lock_init(&rman_lock); } if (rm->rm_type == RMAN_UNINIT) panic("rman_init"); if (rm->rm_type == RMAN_GAUGE) panic("implement RMAN_GAUGE"); TAILQ_INIT(&rm->rm_list); rm->rm_slock = malloc(sizeof *rm->rm_slock, M_RMAN, M_NOWAIT); if (rm->rm_slock == 0) return ENOMEM; simple_lock_init(rm->rm_slock); simple_lock(&rman_lock); TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&rman_head, rm, rm_link); simple_unlock(&rman_lock); return 0; } /* * NB: this interface is not robust against programming errors which * add multiple copies of the same region. */ int rman_manage_region(struct rman *rm, u_long start, u_long end) { struct resource *r, *s; r = malloc(sizeof *r, M_RMAN, M_NOWAIT); if (r == 0) return ENOMEM; bzero(r, sizeof *r); r->r_sharehead = 0; r->r_start = start; r->r_end = end; r->r_flags = 0; r->r_dev = 0; r->r_rm = rm; simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); for (s = TAILQ_FIRST(&rm->rm_list); s && s->r_end < r->r_start; s = TAILQ_NEXT(s, r_link)) ; if (s == NULL) { TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&rm->rm_list, r, r_link); } else { TAILQ_INSERT_BEFORE(s, r, r_link); } simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); return 0; } int rman_fini(struct rman *rm) { struct resource *r; simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); TAILQ_FOREACH(r, &rm->rm_list, r_link) { if (r->r_flags & RF_ALLOCATED) { simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); return EBUSY; } } /* * There really should only be one of these if we are in this * state and the code is working properly, but it can't hurt. */ while (!TAILQ_EMPTY(&rm->rm_list)) { r = TAILQ_FIRST(&rm->rm_list); TAILQ_REMOVE(&rm->rm_list, r, r_link); free(r, M_RMAN); } simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); simple_lock(&rman_lock); TAILQ_REMOVE(&rman_head, rm, rm_link); simple_unlock(&rman_lock); free(rm->rm_slock, M_RMAN); return 0; } struct resource * rman_reserve_resource(struct rman *rm, u_long start, u_long end, u_long count, u_int flags, struct device *dev) { u_int want_activate; struct resource *r, *s, *rv; u_long rstart, rend; rv = 0; DPRINTF(("rman_reserve_resource: <%s> request: [%#lx, %#lx], length " "%#lx, flags %u, device %s%d\n", rm->rm_descr, start, end, count, flags, device_get_name(dev), device_get_unit(dev))); want_activate = (flags & RF_ACTIVE); flags &= ~RF_ACTIVE; simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); for (r = TAILQ_FIRST(&rm->rm_list); r && r->r_end < start; r = TAILQ_NEXT(r, r_link)) ; if (r == NULL) { DPRINTF(("could not find a region\n")); goto out; } /* * First try to find an acceptable totally-unshared region. */ for (s = r; s; s = TAILQ_NEXT(s, r_link)) { DPRINTF(("considering [%#lx, %#lx]\n", s->r_start, s->r_end)); if (s->r_start > end) { DPRINTF(("s->r_start (%#lx) > end (%#lx)\n", s->r_start, end)); break; } if (s->r_flags & RF_ALLOCATED) { DPRINTF(("region is allocated\n")); continue; } rstart = max(s->r_start, start); rstart = (rstart + ((1ul << RF_ALIGNMENT(flags))) - 1) & ~((1ul << RF_ALIGNMENT(flags)) - 1); rend = min(s->r_end, max(rstart + count, end)); DPRINTF(("truncated region: [%#lx, %#lx]; size %#lx (requested %#lx)\n", rstart, rend, (rend - rstart + 1), count)); if ((rend - rstart + 1) >= count) { DPRINTF(("candidate region: [%#lx, %#lx], size %#lx\n", rend, rstart, (rend - rstart + 1))); if ((s->r_end - s->r_start + 1) == count) { DPRINTF(("candidate region is entire chunk\n")); rv = s; rv->r_flags |= RF_ALLOCATED | flags; rv->r_dev = dev; goto out; } /* * If s->r_start < rstart and * s->r_end > rstart + count - 1, then * we need to split the region into three pieces * (the middle one will get returned to the user). * Otherwise, we are allocating at either the * beginning or the end of s, so we only need to * split it in two. The first case requires * two new allocations; the second requires but one. */ rv = malloc(sizeof *rv, M_RMAN, M_NOWAIT); if (rv == 0) goto out; bzero(rv, sizeof *rv); rv->r_start = rstart; rv->r_end = rstart + count - 1; rv->r_flags = flags | RF_ALLOCATED; rv->r_dev = dev; rv->r_sharehead = 0; rv->r_rm = rm; if (s->r_start < rv->r_start && s->r_end > rv->r_end) { DPRINTF(("splitting region in three parts: " "[%#lx, %#lx]; [%#lx, %#lx]; [%#lx, %#lx]\n", s->r_start, rv->r_start - 1, rv->r_start, rv->r_end, rv->r_end + 1, s->r_end)); /* * We are allocating in the middle. */ r = malloc(sizeof *r, M_RMAN, M_NOWAIT); if (r == 0) { free(rv, M_RMAN); rv = 0; goto out; } bzero(r, sizeof *r); r->r_start = rv->r_end + 1; r->r_end = s->r_end; r->r_flags = s->r_flags; r->r_dev = 0; r->r_sharehead = 0; r->r_rm = rm; s->r_end = rv->r_start - 1; TAILQ_INSERT_AFTER(&rm->rm_list, s, rv, r_link); TAILQ_INSERT_AFTER(&rm->rm_list, rv, r, r_link); } else if (s->r_start == rv->r_start) { DPRINTF(("allocating from the beginning\n")); /* * We are allocating at the beginning. */ s->r_start = rv->r_end + 1; TAILQ_INSERT_BEFORE(s, rv, r_link); } else { DPRINTF(("allocating at the end\n")); /* * We are allocating at the end. */ s->r_end = rv->r_start - 1; TAILQ_INSERT_AFTER(&rm->rm_list, s, rv, r_link); } goto out; } } /* * Now find an acceptable shared region, if the client's requirements * allow sharing. By our implementation restriction, a candidate * region must match exactly by both size and sharing type in order * to be considered compatible with the client's request. (The * former restriction could probably be lifted without too much * additional work, but this does not seem warranted.) */ DPRINTF(("no unshared regions found\n")); if ((flags & (RF_SHAREABLE | RF_TIMESHARE)) == 0) goto out; for (s = r; s; s = TAILQ_NEXT(s, r_link)) { if (s->r_start > end) break; if ((s->r_flags & flags) != flags) continue; rstart = max(s->r_start, start); rend = min(s->r_end, max(start + count, end)); if (s->r_start >= start && s->r_end <= end && (s->r_end - s->r_start + 1) == count) { rv = malloc(sizeof *rv, M_RMAN, M_NOWAIT); if (rv == 0) goto out; bzero(rv, sizeof *rv); rv->r_start = s->r_start; rv->r_end = s->r_end; rv->r_flags = s->r_flags & (RF_ALLOCATED | RF_SHAREABLE | RF_TIMESHARE); rv->r_dev = dev; rv->r_rm = rm; if (s->r_sharehead == 0) { s->r_sharehead = malloc(sizeof *s->r_sharehead, M_RMAN, M_NOWAIT); if (s->r_sharehead == 0) { free(rv, M_RMAN); rv = 0; goto out; } bzero(s->r_sharehead, sizeof *s->r_sharehead); LIST_INIT(s->r_sharehead); LIST_INSERT_HEAD(s->r_sharehead, s, r_sharelink); s->r_flags |= RF_FIRSTSHARE; } rv->r_sharehead = s->r_sharehead; LIST_INSERT_HEAD(s->r_sharehead, rv, r_sharelink); goto out; } } /* * We couldn't find anything. */ out: /* * If the user specified RF_ACTIVE in the initial flags, * which is reflected in `want_activate', we attempt to atomically * activate the resource. If this fails, we release the resource * and indicate overall failure. (This behavior probably doesn't * make sense for RF_TIMESHARE-type resources.) */ if (rv && want_activate) { struct resource *whohas; if (int_rman_activate_resource(rm, rv, &whohas)) { int_rman_release_resource(rm, rv); rv = 0; } } simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); return (rv); } static int int_rman_activate_resource(struct rman *rm, struct resource *r, struct resource **whohas) { struct resource *s; int ok; /* * If we are not timesharing, then there is nothing much to do. * If we already have the resource, then there is nothing at all to do. * If we are not on a sharing list with anybody else, then there is * little to do. */ if ((r->r_flags & RF_TIMESHARE) == 0 || (r->r_flags & RF_ACTIVE) != 0 || r->r_sharehead == 0) { r->r_flags |= RF_ACTIVE; return 0; } ok = 1; for (s = LIST_FIRST(r->r_sharehead); s && ok; s = LIST_NEXT(s, r_sharelink)) { if ((s->r_flags & RF_ACTIVE) != 0) { ok = 0; *whohas = s; } } if (ok) { r->r_flags |= RF_ACTIVE; return 0; } return EBUSY; } int rman_activate_resource(struct resource *r) { int rv; struct resource *whohas; struct rman *rm; rm = r->r_rm; simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); rv = int_rman_activate_resource(rm, r, &whohas); simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); return rv; } int rman_await_resource(struct resource *r, int pri, int timo) { int rv, s; struct resource *whohas; struct rman *rm; rm = r->r_rm; for (;;) { simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); rv = int_rman_activate_resource(rm, r, &whohas); if (rv != EBUSY) return (rv); /* returns with simplelock */ if (r->r_sharehead == 0) panic("rman_await_resource"); /* * splhigh hopefully will prevent a race between * simple_unlock and tsleep where a process * could conceivably get in and release the resource * before we have a chance to sleep on it. */ s = splhigh(); whohas->r_flags |= RF_WANTED; simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); rv = tsleep(r->r_sharehead, pri, "rmwait", timo); if (rv) { splx(s); return rv; } simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); splx(s); } } static int int_rman_deactivate_resource(struct resource *r) { struct rman *rm; rm = r->r_rm; r->r_flags &= ~RF_ACTIVE; if (r->r_flags & RF_WANTED) { r->r_flags &= ~RF_WANTED; wakeup(r->r_sharehead); } return 0; } int rman_deactivate_resource(struct resource *r) { struct rman *rm; rm = r->r_rm; simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); int_rman_deactivate_resource(r); simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); return 0; } static int int_rman_release_resource(struct rman *rm, struct resource *r) { struct resource *s, *t; if (r->r_flags & RF_ACTIVE) int_rman_deactivate_resource(r); /* * Check for a sharing list first. If there is one, then we don't * have to think as hard. */ if (r->r_sharehead) { /* * If a sharing list exists, then we know there are at * least two sharers. * * If we are in the main circleq, appoint someone else. */ LIST_REMOVE(r, r_sharelink); s = LIST_FIRST(r->r_sharehead); if (r->r_flags & RF_FIRSTSHARE) { s->r_flags |= RF_FIRSTSHARE; TAILQ_INSERT_BEFORE(r, s, r_link); TAILQ_REMOVE(&rm->rm_list, r, r_link); } /* * Make sure that the sharing list goes away completely * if the resource is no longer being shared at all. */ if (LIST_NEXT(s, r_sharelink) == 0) { free(s->r_sharehead, M_RMAN); s->r_sharehead = 0; s->r_flags &= ~RF_FIRSTSHARE; } goto out; } /* * Look at the adjacent resources in the list and see if our * segment can be merged with any of them. */ s = TAILQ_PREV(r, resource_head, r_link); t = TAILQ_NEXT(r, r_link); if (s != NULL && (s->r_flags & RF_ALLOCATED) == 0 && t != NULL && (t->r_flags & RF_ALLOCATED) == 0) { /* * Merge all three segments. */ s->r_end = t->r_end; TAILQ_REMOVE(&rm->rm_list, r, r_link); TAILQ_REMOVE(&rm->rm_list, t, r_link); free(t, M_RMAN); } else if (s != NULL && (s->r_flags & RF_ALLOCATED) == 0) { /* * Merge previous segment with ours. */ s->r_end = r->r_end; TAILQ_REMOVE(&rm->rm_list, r, r_link); } else if (t != NULL && (t->r_flags & RF_ALLOCATED) == 0) { /* * Merge next segment with ours. */ t->r_start = r->r_start; TAILQ_REMOVE(&rm->rm_list, r, r_link); } else { /* * At this point, we know there is nothing we * can potentially merge with, because on each * side, there is either nothing there or what is * there is still allocated. In that case, we don't * want to remove r from the list; we simply want to * change it to an unallocated region and return * without freeing anything. */ r->r_flags &= ~RF_ALLOCATED; return 0; } out: free(r, M_RMAN); return 0; } int rman_release_resource(struct resource *r) { int rv; struct rman *rm = r->r_rm; simple_lock(rm->rm_slock); rv = int_rman_release_resource(rm, r); simple_unlock(rm->rm_slock); return (rv); } uint32_t rman_make_alignment_flags(uint32_t size) { int i; /* * Find the hightest bit set, and add one if more than one bit * set. We're effectively computing the ceil(log2(size)) here. */ for (i = 32; i > 0; i--) if ((1 << i) & size) break; if (~(1 << i) & size) i++; return(RF_ALIGNMENT_LOG2(i)); }