* Remove the casts to vaddr_t from the round_page() and trunc_page() macros to
make them type-generic, which is necessary i.e. to operate on file offsets
without truncating them.
* In due course, cast pointer arguments to these macros to an appropriate
integral type (paddr_t, vaddr_t).
Originally done by Chuck Silvers, updated by myself.
timeout()/untimeout() API:
- Clients supply callout handle storage, thus eliminating problems of
resource allocation.
- Insertion and removal of callouts is constant time, important as
this facility is used quite a lot in the kernel.
The old timeout()/untimeout() API has been removed from the kernel.
These changes add support for:
o The MI VMEbus framework on both MVME147 and MVME167.
o Enhancements to the existing MD bus_space(9) implementation.
o Most of the bus_dma(9) API.
so that the right entries get added to dev_name2blk[]. Needed for / on RAID.
(Whoops! I missed checking these in when adding the RAID_AUTOCONFIG stuff.)
"To fully support self-modifying code in any situation, it is imperative that
a CPUSHA intrcution is executed before the execution of the first self-modified
instruction. The CPUSHA instruction has the effect of ensuring that there is
no stale data iin memory, the pipeline is flushed, and instruction prefetches
are repeated and taken from external memory."
I verified that this is the only way (I can think of) to make the sigtramp
regression test work on 68040. doing cpushl dc; cinvl ic; over the affected
address range, then nop (to synchronize the pipeline) is not enough; apparently
the nop does not FLUSH the pipeline and prefetch...
Note that the 68060 UM has copied the above cited passage, but in fact this is
not true. This might be connected to the fact that the 68060 does ensure
memory access order under most conditions.
remove GENERIC.v6 file (as it is part of GENERIC now).
"faith" interface is commented out by default as it is not really for
general use.
IPsec items are commented out as well, though we can enable "options IPSEC"
without export-related issue ("options IPSEC" will enable authentication
portion only). We may need to think about it again.
if you have problem compiling with INET6 on archs I do not have access to,
please contact me.
XXX what to do with arch/arm32/SHARK{,.v6}?
that is priority is rasied. Add a new spllowersoftclock() to provide the
atomic drop-to-softclock semantics that the old splsoftclock() provided,
and update calls accordingly.
This fixes a problem with using the "rnd" pseudo-device from within
interrupt context to extract random data (e.g. from within the softnet
interrupt) where doing so would incorrectly unblock interrupts (causing
all sorts of lossage).
XXX 4 platforms do not have priority-raising capability: newsmips, sparc,
XXX sparc64, and VAX. This platforms still have this bug until their
XXX spl*() functions are fixed.
- fix emitrules() like emitfiles() to deal with the prefix (otherwise it
would attempt to find the file in the normal base for the NORMAL_C rule).
- add emitincludes() which adds include directives for each prefix to the
$INCLUDES variable in the makefile.
- add %INCLUDES to each Makefile.arch to deal with the above.
this makes "prefix" actually work in a usable manner, and now i can move
on to fixing compiler warnings (errors) in the ESP code. :)
- remove "need-flag" for mac68k esp driver, as it is not used in anywhere
and conflicts with IPsec ESP header.
This should be the only MD change in IPv6 support, except kernel config file.
Very sorry if you have any compilation problem with it (I believe it is okay).
If your favorite arch is not included in here, please add a
call to ip6intr() from softintr handle.
some internal reference counting on PT pages. We still allocate them
with the page fault routine (a wire-fault, now), but no longer free
PT pages from pmap_pageable().
has PAGEABLE and INTRSAFE flags. PAGEABLE now really means "pageable",
not "allocate vm_map_entry's from non-static pool", so update all map
creations to reflect that. INTRSAFE maps are maps that are used in
interrupt context (e.g. kmem_map, mb_map), and thus use the static
map entry pool (XXX as does kernel_map, for now). This will eventually
change now these maps are locked, as well.
the child inherits the stack pointer from the parent (traditional
behavior). Like the signal stack, the stack area is secified as
a low address and a size; machine-dependent code accounts for stack
direction.
This is required for clone(2).
define a flag UVM_PGA_USERESERVE to allow non-kernel object
allocations to use pages from the reserve.
use the new flag for allocations in pmap modules.
When we put a page on the collection list, we must subtract NPVPPG from the
total free count: one for each pv_entry that's free in that page, and one for
each free pv_entry in other pages that we're going to eat by moving the ones
in the page being collected.
* Map the message buffer with access_type = VM_PROT_READ|VM_PROT_WRITE `just
because'.
* Map the file system buffers with access_type = VM_PROT_READ|VM_PROT_WRITE to
avoid possible problems with pagemove().
* Do not use VM_PROT_EXEC with either of the above.
* Map pages for /dev/mem with access_type = prot. Also, DO NOT use
pmap_kenter() for this, as we DO NOT want to lose modification information.
* Map pages in dumpsys() with VM_PROT_READ.
* Map pages in m68k mappedcopyin()/mappedcopyout() and writeback() with
access_type = prot.
* For now, bus_dma*(), pmap_map(), vmapbuf(), and similar functions still use
access_type = 0. This should probably be revisited.
Make the initializer for BAUDLO depend on PCLK directly; it was incorrect on
some ports where PCLK is not 4.9152MHz.
XXX Is the default value actually used?
minor of libc and the major of libutil). For little-endian architectures
merge the bnswap() assembly versions with nto* and hton* using symbols
aliasing. Use symbol renaming for the bswap function in this case to avoid
namespace pollution.
Declare bswap* in machine/bswap.h, not machine/endian.h. For little-endian
machines, common code for inline macros go in machine/byte_swap.h
Sync libkern with libc.
Adjust #include in kernel sources for machine/bswap.h.
- returned EOPNOTSUPP rather than -1.
- no check for negative offset.
many of these fix potential security problems in these drivers.
XXX XXX XXX
the d_mmap cdev routine should be changed to have a prototype like:
paddr_t (*d_mmap) __P((dev_t, off_t, int));
by someone!
- cpu_set_kpc() now takes void *arg third argument, passed to the
entry point.
- cpu_fork() allows parent to be non-curproc iff parent is proc0.
When forking non-curproc, assume its state has already been saved.
- Adjust various pieces of machine-dependent code to account of all of this.
-sys/lib/libkern builds as library per default (as it was documented all
the time)
-ports able to LKM set "KERN_AS=obj" explicitely in their Makefiles
(for now; should depend on actual "option LKM" or -better- functions
included for LKM use should be pulled in by a stub)
-always link libcompat before libkern - libkern stuff can be referred to
by libcompat, but not the other way
struct scsipi_adapter; they were not used.
Add a scsipi_ioctl entry point to struct scsipi_adapter. This will be
used to issue ioctl commands to the host adapters.
Inspired by PR #6090, from Matt Jacob.
which require special handling, e.g. sigreturn on m68k.
This differs from the old sigreturn trap in that we require the syscall
number to be in register d0, just like the regular syscall entry point.
This will allow sigreturn to be versioned in the future without the need
to allocate another trap vector.
u-area in machine-dependent code. Instead, call exit2() to schedule
the reaper to free them for us, once it is safe to do so (i.e. we are
no longer running on the dead proc's vmspace and stack).
. cache control functions <m68k/cacheops.h>
. sigreturn code <m68k/m68k/sigreturn.s>
Also a few of other things found while scouting around for vm_offset_t
changes.
as with user-land programs, include files are installed by each directory
in the tree that has includes to install. (This allows more flexibility
as to what gets installed, makes 'partial installs' easier, and gives us
more options as to which machines' includes get installed at any given
time.) The old SYS_INCLUDES={symlinks,copies} behaviours are _both_
still supported, though at least one bug in the 'symlinks' case is
fixed by this change. Include files can't be build before installation,
so directories that have includes as targets (e.g. dev/pci) have to move
those targets into a different Makefile.
Use of the latter caused the 1st and 2nd stage boot loaders to occupy
over 64k of memory. This caused them to fail on a 4Mb mvme147 since
they are loaded at 0x3f0000.
Reported by Kristen A. McIntyre and Maxime Kurkdjian.
a HAVE_GCC28 check-variable that can now be used to add other gcc-2.8
flags in cases where they may be useful, or to remove gcc 2.7.2 "bug
workaround" flags.)
- Maintain two copies of the number and size of physical memory segments.
One copy, mem_clusters[], contains _all_ of physical RAM, for crash dumps.
The other copy, phys_seg_list[], starts out with all of physical RAM (and
is used to initialize mem_clusters[]), but is adjusted to be the memory
actually managed by the VM system.
- Fix computation of physmem; when support for MACHINE_NEW_NONCONTIG was
added, physmem was accidentally changed to not take into account the memory
located before the kernel, or the memory taken up by the kernel itself.
- Make initialization of the message buffer a little less magic-looking.
- Maintain two copies of the number and size of physical memory segments.
One copy, mem_clusters[], contains _all_ of physical RAM, for crash dumps.
The other copy, phys_seg_list[], starts out with all of physical RAM (and
is used to initialize mem_clusters[]), but is adjusted to be the memory
actually managed by the VM system.
- Fix crash dumps with regard to multiple memory segments.
as this breaks C++ code that happens to indirectly include this header.
Both Matthias Scheler and I noticed this, independently.
This problem notably does not affect the atari and sun3/sun3x ports,
which have already implemented a similar solution.
was converted to use Mach VM for Net2/4.4BSD. The user segment table
pointer was originally stored in the PCB. When Mach VM came along,
however, it was also stored in the pmap, and loaded into the PCB in
pmap_activate(). pmap_activate() would then note that the PCB's USTP
was now in sync with the pmap's USTP, and the low-level context switch
code would use the value from the PCB.
However, pmap_activate() would also load the hardware MMU context if
the pmap was the current pmap (or, in the case where pmaps can be shared,
such as in NetBSD, if the proc was the current proc). The low-level
context switch code would then reload the hardware _again_ using the
USTP from the PCB.
However, the optimization of not calling pmap_activate() if "stchanged"
was false ended up causing some processes to use stale USTP values from
the PCB when the low-level context switch code reloaded the hardware!
This was noticed by using a real vfork(2) (which worked for some time
before failing, surprisingly!)
Since I'm hard pressed to find any real optimization here (since the
hardware was always reloaded once, sometimes twice!), the code now always
calls pmap_activate(), which uses the correct USTP value (the one in the
pmap). The PCB's USTP is now ignored, and should eventually be g/c'd.
Another optimization can actually be performed, and I have added a comment
describing what it is, but have not yet implemented it.
Also note that most of the loadustp() functions where actually incomplete.
This has been corrected. These functions should probably be split up into
MMU-specific operations, and called indirectly, rather than doing constant
run-time decision making based on values that will never change during the
course of a boot's lifetime.