1994-10-26 10:22:45 +03:00
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$NetBSD: TODO.hp300,v 1.2 1994/10/26 07:22:59 cgd Exp $
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1994-05-23 09:49:17 +04:00
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1. Create and use an interrupt stack.
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Well actually, use the master SP for kernel stacks instead of
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the interrupt SP. Right now we use the interrupt stack for
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everything. Allows for more accurate accounting of systime.
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In theory, could also allow for smaller kernel stacks but we
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only use one page anyway.
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2. Copy/clear primitives could be tuned.
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What is best is highly CPU and cache dependent. One thing to look
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at are the copyin/copyout primitives. Rather than looping using
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MOVS instructions, you could map an entire page at a time and use
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bcopy, MOVE16, or whatever. This would lose big on the VAC models
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however.
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3. Sendsig/sigreturn are pretty bogus.
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Currently we can call a signal handler even if an excpetion
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occurs in the middle of an instruction. This causes the handler
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to return right back to the middle of the offending instruction
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which will most likely lead to another exception/signal.
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Technically, I feel this is the correct behavior but it requires
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saving a lot of state on the user's stack, state that we don't
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really want the user messing with. Other 68k implementations
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(e.g. Sun) will delay signals or abort execution of the current
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instruction to reduce saved state. Even if we stick with the
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current philosophy, the code could be cleaned up.
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4. Ditto for AST and software interrupt emulation.
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Both are possibly over-elaborate and inefficiently implemented.
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We could possibly handle them by using an appropriately planted
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PS trace bit.
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5. Make use of transparent translation registers on 030/040 MMU.
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With a little rearranging of the KVA space we could use one to
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map the entire external IO space [ 600000 - 20000000 ). Since
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the translation must be 1-1, this would limit the kernel to 6mb
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(some would say that is hardly a limit) or divide it into two
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pieces. Another promising use would be to map physical memory
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within the kernel. This allows a much simpler and more efficient
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implementation of /dev/mem, pmap_zero_page, pmap_copy_page and
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possible even kernel-user cross address space copies. However,
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it does eat up a significant piece of kernel address space.
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6. Create a 32-bit timer.
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Timers 2 and 3 on the MC6840 clock chip can be concatonated together to
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get a 32-bit countdown timer. There are at least three uses for this:
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1. Monitoring the interval timer ("clock") to detect lost "ticks".
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(Idea from Scott Marovich)
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2. Implement the DELAY macro properly instead of approximating with
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the current "while (--count);" loop. Because of caches, the current
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method is potentially way off.
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3. Export as a user-mappable timer for high-precision (4us) timing.
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Note that by doing this we can no longer use timer 3 as a separate
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statistics/profiling timer. Should be able to compile-time (runtime?)
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select between the two.
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7. Conditional MMU code sould be restructured.
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Right now it reflects the evolutionary path of the code: 320/350 MMU
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was supported and PMMU support was glued on. The latter can be ifdef'ed
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out when not needed, but not all of the former (e.g. ``mmutype'' tests).
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Also, PMMU is made to look like the HP MMU somewhat ham-stringing it.
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Since HP MMU models are dead, the excess baggage should be there (though
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it could be argued that they benefit more from the minor performance
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impact). MMU code should probably not be ifdef'ed on model type, but
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rather on more relevant tags (e.g. MMU_HP, MMU_MOTO).
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8. Redo cache handling.
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There are way too many routines which are specific to particular
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cache types. We should be able to come up with a more coherent
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scheme (though HP 68k boxes have just about every caching scheme
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imaginable: internal/external, physical/virtual, writeback/writethrough)
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See, for example, Wheeler and Bershad in ASPLOS 92.
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9. Sort the free page list.
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The DMA hardware on the 300 cannot do scatter/gather IO. For example,
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if an 8k system buffer consists of two non-contiguous physical pages
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it will require two DMA transfers (and hence two interrupts) to do the
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operation. It would take only one transfer if they were physically
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contiguous. By keeping the free list ordered we could potentially
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allocate contiguous pages and reduce the number of interrupts. We can
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consider doing this since pages in the free list are not reclaimed and
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thus we don't have to worry about distorting any LRU behavior.
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----
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Mike Hibler
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University of Utah CSS group
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mike@cs.utah.edu
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