* Define a new "MMU type", ARM_MMU_SA1. While the SA-1's MMU is basically
compatible with the generic, the SA-1 cache does not have a write-through
mode, and it is useful to know have an indication of this.
* Add a new PMAP_NEEDS_PTE_SYNC indicator, and try to evaluate it at
compile time. We evaluate it like so:
- If SA-1-style MMU is the only type configured -> 1
- If SA-1-style MMU is not configured -> 0
- Otherwise, defer to a run-time variable.
If PMAP_NEEDS_PTE_SYNC might evaluate to true (SA-1 only or run-time
check), then we also define PMAP_INCLUDE_PTE_SYNC so that e.g. assembly
code can include the necessary run-time support. PMAP_INCLUDE_PTE_SYNC
largely replaces the ARM32_PMAP_NEEDS_PTE_SYNC manual setting Steve
included with the original new pmap.
* In the new pmap, make pmap_pte_init_generic() check to see if the CPU
has a write-back cache. If so, init the PT cache mode to C=1,B=0 to get
write-through mode. Otherwise, init the PT cache mode to C=1,B=1.
* Add a new pmap_pte_init_arm8(). Old pmap, same as generic. New pmap,
sets page table cacheability to 0 (ARM8 has a write-back cache, but
flushing it is quite expensive).
* In the new pmap, make pmap_pte_init_arm9() reset the PT cache mode to
C=1,B=0, since the write-back check in generic gets it wrong for ARM9,
since we use write-through mode all the time on ARM9 right now. (What
this really tells me is that the test for write-through cache is less
than perfect, but we can fix that later.)
* Add a new pmap_pte_init_sa1(). Old pmap, same as generic. New pmap,
does generic initialization, then resets page table cache mode to
C=1,B=1, since C=1,B=0 does not produce write-through on the SA-1.
cd ${KERNSRCDIR}/${KERNARCHDIR}/compile && ${PRINTOBJDIR}
This is far simpler than the previous system, and more robust with
objdirs built via BSDOBJDIR.
The previous method of finding KERNOBJDIR when using BSDOBJDIR by
referencing _SRC_TOP_OBJ_ from another directory was extremely
fragile due to the depth first tree walk by <bsd.subdir.mk>, and
the caching of _SRC_TOP_OBJ_ (with MAKEOVERRIDES) which would be
empty on the *first* pass to create fresh objdirs.
This change requires adding sys/arch/*/compile/Makefile to create
the objdir in that directory, and descending into arch/*/compile
from arch/*/Makefile. Remove the now-unnecessary .keep_me files
whilst here.
Per lengthy discussion with Andrew Brown.
kqueue provides a stateful and efficient event notification framework
currently supported events include socket, file, directory, fifo,
pipe, tty and device changes, and monitoring of processes and signals
kqueue is supported by all writable filesystems in NetBSD tree
(with exception of Coda) and all device drivers supporting poll(2)
based on work done by Jonathan Lemon for FreeBSD
initial NetBSD port done by Luke Mewburn and Jason Thorpe
add rd, pc, #foo - . - 8 -> adr rd, foo
ldr rd, [pc, #foo - . - 8] -> ldr rd, foo
Also, when saving the return address for a function pointer call, use
"mov lr, pc" just before the call unless the return address is somewhere
other than just after the call site.
Finally, a few obvious little micro-optimisations like using LDR directly
rather than ADR followed by LDR, and loading directly into PC rather than
bouncing via R0.
based systems. Untested on shark, but is the right thing to do. I suspect
the original arm32 intr.h had the bug, and when the ports split we just took
the bug.
This merge changes the device switch tables from static array to
dynamically generated by config(8).
- All device switches is defined as a constant structure in device drivers.
- The new grammer ``device-major'' is introduced to ``files''.
device-major <prefix> char <num> [block <num>] [<rules>]
- All device major numbers must be listed up in port dependent majors.<arch>
by using this grammer.
- Added the new naming convention.
The name of the device switch must be <prefix>_[bc]devsw for auto-generation
of device switch tables.
- The backward compatibility of loading block/character device
switch by LKM framework is broken. This is necessary to convert
from block/character device major to device name in runtime and vice versa.
- The restriction to assign device major by LKM is completely removed.
We don't need to reserve LKM entries for dynamic loading of device switch.
- In compile time, device major numbers list is packed into the kernel and
the LKM framework will refer it to assign device major number dynamically.
to do uncached memory access during VM operations (which can be
quite expensive on some CPUs).
We currently write-back PTEs as soon as they're modified; there is
some room for optimization (to write them back in larger chunks).
For PTEs in the APTE space (i.e. PTEs for pmaps that describe another
process's address space), PTEs must also be evicted from the cache
complete (PTEs in PTE space will be evicted durint a context switch).
Change the bus_dmamap_sync() macro to test the ops argument against pre-
and post- constants. The compiler will optimize out dead code because
of the constants. Since post- operations are not needed on ARM (except
for ISA bounce buffers), this eliminate a large number of function calls
which are noops, each of which cost at least 6 cycles just in the call
and return overhead (not to mention whatever other useless work the
compiler decides to do in the callee).
counters. These counters do not exist on all CPUs, but where they
do exist, can be used for counting events such as dcache misses that
would otherwise be difficult or impossible to instrument by code
inspection or hardware simulation.
pmc(9) is meant to be a general interface. Initially, the Intel XScale
counters are the only ones supported.
A new "arm32_dma_range" structure now describes a DMA window, with
a system address base, bus address base, and length. In addition to
providing info about which memory regions are legal for DMA, the new
structure provides address translation support, as well.
As before, if a tag does not list any ranges, then all addresses are
considered valid, and no DMA address translation is performed.
This allows us to remove a large chunk of code which was duplicated and
tweaked slightly (to do the address translation) from the stock ARM
bus_dma in the XScale IOP and ARM Integrator ports.
Test compiled on all ARM platforms, test booted on Intel IQ80321 and Shark.
into platform-specific initialization code, giving platform-specific
code control over which free list a given chunk of memory gets put
onto.
Changes are essentially mechanical. Test compiled for all ARM
platforms, test booted on Intel IQ80321 and Shark.
Discussed some time ago on port-arm.
be properly used by any misc. cloning device. While here, correct
a comment to indicate that "open" is the only entry point and that
everything else is handled with fileops.
MALLOC_NOINLINE, and VNODE_OP_NOINLINE. The exceptions are when they
include another config files that already defines the options, or if
they are for an embedded board, just define a few extra options, and
do not already define PIPE_SOCKETPAIR.
Significant cleanup, here, including better PTE bit names.
* Add XScale PTE extensions (ECC enable, write-allocate cache mode).
* Mechanical changes everywhere else to update for new pte.h. While
doing this, two bugs (as a result of typos) were fixed in
arm/arm32/bus_dma.c
evbarm/integrator/int_bus_dma.c
* Don't refer to VA 0, instead refer to a new variable: vector_page
* Delete the old zero_page_*() functions, replacing them with a new
one: vector_page_setprot().
* When manipulating vector page mappings in user pmaps, only do so if
the vector page is below KERNEL_BASE (if it's above KERNEL_BASE, the
vector page is mapped by the kernel pmap).
* Add a new function, arm32_vector_init(), which takes the virtual
address of the vector page (which MUST be valid when the function
is called) and a bitmask of vectors the kernel is going to take
over, and performs all vector page initialization, including setting
the V bit in the CPU Control register ("relocate vectors to high
address"), if necessary.
In getDisplayInfo(), don't use malloc(). Instead use static storage
for the two things we'd want to allocate. getDisplayInfo() is called
before VM is bootstrapped in the console init path.
indicating an unhandled "command". ERESTART is -1, which can lead to
confusion. ERESTART has been moved to -3 and EPASSTHROUGH has been
placed at -4. No ioctl code should now return -1 anywhere. The
ioctl() system call is now properly restartable.
Note that this has been compiled on some systems, cats, IQ80310, IPAQ, netwinder and shark (note that shark's build is currently broken due to other reasons), but only actually run on cats.
Shark doesn't make use of the functionality as I believe there has to be a correlation between OFW and the kernel tables so that calls into OFW work.
to the L1 table and a virtual address, and no pointer to the L2 table.
The L2 table will be looked up by pmap_map_entry(), which will panic
if the there is no L2 table for the requested VA.
NOTE: IT IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT THAT THE CORRECT VIRTUAL ADDRESS
BE PROVIDED TO pmap_map_entry()! Notably, the code that mapped
the kernel L2 tables into the kernel PT mapping L2 table were not
passing actual virtual addresses, but rather offsets into the range
mapped by the L2 table. I have fixed up all of these call sites,
and tested the resulting kernel on both an IQ80310 and a Shark.
Other portmasters should examine their pmap_map_entry() calls if
their new kernels fail.
and let pmap_map_chunk() lookup the correct one to use for the
current VA. Eliminate the "l2table" argument to pmap_map_chunk().
Add a second L2 table for mapping kernel text/data/bss on the
IQ80310 (fixes booting kernels with ramdisks).
MACHINE_ARCH since <arm/param.h> already sets it correctly to "arm".
* For platforms which are not yet ELF, defined MACHINE_ARCH to "arm32"
if __ELF__ is not defined by the C preprocessor.
* In <arm/param.h>, clarify the rules about when MACHINE and
MACHINE_ARCH are defined, and to what. Also, for ELF platforms,
int the non-_KERNEL case, force both MACHINE and MACHINE_ARCH to "arm",
rather than allowing platform-specifc code to define either.
* COPTS get -Os
* Comment out all COMPAT_* options
* Comment out System V IPC options
* Comment out KTRACE, IRQSTATS, KMEMSTATS, DIAGNOSTIC
* Comment out unneeded devices (audio, joystick, vnd, sequencer)
...and bump the ramdisk size to 3.5M (ELF binaries are somewhat
larger on-disk due to the way the linker pads out the .data program
section).