option for System V semaphores. It appears that there are no overrides
in the code and each file has the following added.
options SYSVSEM # System V semaphores
+#options SEMMNI=10 # number of semaphore identifiers
+#options SEMMNS=60 # number of semaphores in system
+#options SEMUME=10 # max number of undo entries per process
+#options SEMMNU=30 # number of undo structures in system
options SYSVSHM # System V shared memory
If anyone thinks that this is incorrect for any of these files, please
correct it.
Note - the i386 port was not forgotten. It was done separately.
add "%" prefix to register names in assembly code.
change assembly functions to return pointer values in %a0 instead of %d0.
C symbols no longer prepend an underscore, adjust assembly code for this.
32-bit values are now 32-bit aligned instead of 16-bit aligned,
adjust structure packing and padding to override this where necessary.
make EXEC_ELF std, make EXEC_AOUT and COMPAT_AOUT_M68K optional.
use the MI loadfile() instead of several home-grown versions.
each vm_page structure. Add a VM_MDPAGE_INIT() macro to init this
data when pages are initialized by UVM. These macros are mandatory,
but ports may #define them to nothing if they are not needed/used.
This deprecates struct pmap_physseg. As a transitional measure,
allow a port to #define PMAP_PHYSSEG so that it can continue to
use it until its pmap is converted to use VM_MDPAGE_MEMBERS.
Use all this stuff to eliminate a lot of extra work in the Alpha
pmap module (it's smaller and faster now). Changes to other pmap
modules will follow.
- pmap_enter()
- pmap_remove()
- pmap_protect()
- pmap_kenter_pa()
- pmap_kremove()
as described in pmap(9).
These calls are relatively conservative. It may be possible to
optimize these a little more.
call overhead is incurred as we start sprinkling pmap_update() calls
throughout the source tree (no pmaps currently defer operations, but
we are adding the infrastructure to allow them to do so).
tweak esp glue to read xfer_len from dma map
add some debugging checks for dma driver invariants
read DD_LIMIT instead of DD_SAVED_LIMIT on scsi dma shutdowns
keep receive ethernet crc and set M_HASFCS
change bus_dma MD fields to keep xfer_len for entire map
instead of per segment
turn off automatic dma restarts in preparation for changing
scsi driver to handle them.
add dma debugging routines to keep history of dma states
tweak checking for unusual dma limit register
only signal handler array sharable between threads
move other random signal stuff from struct proc to struct sigctx
This addresses kern/10981 by Matthew Orgass.
XXX I wish m68k ports would share trap.c
* move all exec-type specific information from struct emul to execsw[] and
provide single struct emul per emulation
* elf:
- kern/exec_elf32.c:probe_funcs[] is gone, execsw[] how has one entry
per emulation and contains pointer to respective probe function
- interp is allocated via MALLOC() rather than on stack
- elf_args structure is allocated via MALLOC() rather than malloc()
* ecoff: the per-emulation hooks moved from alpha and mips specific code
to OSF1 and Ultrix compat code as appropriate, execsw[] has one entry per
emulation supporting ecoff with appropriate probe function
* the makecmds/probe functions don't set emulation, pointer to emulation is
part of appropriate execsw[] entry
* constify couple of structures
rather than assigning to the whole field, set or clear individual flags,
which implies that the B_BUSY and B_INVAL flags will remain set.
this allows us to make the assertion in brelse() that B_BUSY is set,
which is the purpose of all this.
maps standard boot flags to corresponding RB_* values
use BOOT_FLAG() in port's MD code as appropriate
as discussed on tech-kern, add new boot flags -v, -q for booting
verbosely or quietly, and corresponding AB_VERBOSE/AB_QUIET
boot flags; also add FreeBSD-compatible bootverbose macro and
NetBSD-specific bootquiet macro
for hpcmips, use new bootverbose instead of it's own hpcmips_verbose
Tested on i386, and to limited extend (compile of affected files) also for
mvme68k, hp300, luna68k, sun3.
routine. Works similarly fto pmap_prefer(), but allows callers
to specify a minimum power-of-two alignment of the region.
How we ever got along without this for so long is beyond me.
in the non-MULTIPROCESSOR case (LOCKDEBUG requires it). Scheduler
lock is held upon entry to mi_switch() and cpu_switch(), and
cpu_switch() releases the lock before returning.
Largely from Bill Sommerfeld, with some minor bug fixes and
machine-dependent code hacking from me.
was previously called "subversion" as "build", remove old cruft from newvers.sh
XXX very lighly tested build on NetBSD/hp300 1.4.1, though could not do full
XXX build due to toolchain differences to -current
* put #includes of opt headers and headers to get protos used by
net/netisr_dispatch.h in net/netisr.h (if !defined(_LOCORE)) (rather than
in netisr_dispatch.h itself, and potentially nowhere, respectively).
* require netisr.h to be included before netisr_dispatch.h.
* minor additional cleanup of both netisr.h and netisr_dispatch.h.
* clean up uses to remove now-unnecessary header file inclusions, and
local prototypes of the fns.
* convert netisr dispatch implementations which didn't use
netisr_dispatch.h (pc532) to use it.
<vm/pglist.h> -> <uvm/uvm_pglist.h>
<vm/vm_inherit.h> -> <uvm/uvm_inherit.h>
<vm/vm_kern.h> -> into <uvm/uvm_extern.h>
<vm/vm_object.h> -> nothing
<vm/vm_pager.h> -> into <uvm/uvm_pager.h>
also includes a bunch of <vm/vm_page.h> include removals (due to redudancy
with <vm/vm.h>), and a scattering of other similar headers.
"off_t" and the return value is a "paddr_t" to allow mappings
at offsets past 2^31 bytes. Somewhat inspired by FreeBSD, which
only changed the offset to a "vm_offset_t".
Includes updates for the i386, pc532 and sh3 mmmmap from Jason Thorpe.
and scsipi_device respectively, with size reduction of ncr53c9x_softc.
Specifying NULL instructs the driver to use default adapter and default
device codes. Every target port has ncr53c9x_attach(sc, NULL, NULL) anyway.
doing a cpu_set_kpc(), just pass the entry point and argument all
the way down the fork path starting with fork1(). In order to
avoid special-casing the normal fork in every cpu_fork(), MI code
passes down child_return() and the child process pointer explicitly.
This fixes a race condition on multiprocessor systems; a CPU could
grab the newly created processes (which has been placed on a run queue)
before cpu_set_kpc() would be performed.
- Change ktrace interface to pass in the current process, rather than
p->p_tracep, since the various ktr* function need curproc anyway.
- Add curproc as a parameter to mi_switch() since all callers had it
handy anyway.
- Add a second proc argument for inferior() since callers all had
curproc handy.
Also, miscellaneous cleanups in ktrace:
- ktrace now always uses file-based, rather than vnode-based I/O
(simplifies, increases type safety); eliminate KTRFLAG_FD & KTRFAC_FD.
Do non-blocking I/O, and yield a finite number of times when receiving
EWOULDBLOCK before giving up.
- move code duplicated between sys_fktrace and sys_ktrace into ktrace_common.
- simplify interface to ktrwrite()
state into global and per-CPU scheduler state:
- Global state: sched_qs (run queues), sched_whichqs (bitmap
of non-empty run queues), sched_slpque (sleep queues).
NOTE: These may collectively move into a struct schedstate
at some point in the future.
- Per-CPU state, struct schedstate_percpu: spc_runtime
(time process on this CPU started running), spc_flags
(replaces struct proc's p_schedflags), and
spc_curpriority (usrpri of processes on this CPU).
- Every platform must now supply a struct cpu_info and
a curcpu() macro. Simplify existing cpu_info declarations
where appropriate.
- All references to per-CPU scheduler state now made through
curcpu(). NOTE: this will likely be adjusted in the future
after further changes to struct proc are made.
Tested on i386 and Alpha. Changes are mostly mechanical, but apologies
in advance if it doesn't compile on a particular platform.
which indicates that the process is actually running on a
processor. Test against SONPROC as appropriate rather than
combinations of SRUN and curproc. Update all context switch code
to properly set SONPROC when the process becomes the current
process on the CPU.
it to determine the boot device: mvme68k, pc532, macppc, ofppc. Those
platforms should be changed to use device_register(). In the mean time,
those ports defined __BROKEN_DK_ESTABLISH.
contains the values __SIMPLELOCK_LOCKED and __SIMPLELOCK_UNLOCKED, which
replace the old SIMPLELOCK_LOCKED and SIMPLELOCK_UNLOCKED. These files
are also required to supply inline functions __cpu_simple_lock(),
__cpu_simple_lock_try(), and __cpu_simple_unlock() if locking is to be
supported on that platform (i.e. if MULTIPROCESSOR is defined in the
_KERNEL case). Change these functions to take an int * (&alp->lock_data)
rather than the struct simplelock * itself.
These changes make it possible for userland to use the locking primitives
by including <machine/lock.h>.
* 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.
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.)
I've fixed the problem that's been keeping me from using anything newer than
1.4.1 now. I tracked down the problem checkin, it's the big reorg of
nextdma.c between 1.19 and 1.20. It didn't introduce a new bug but it
activated a check which wasn't activated before. It's the
is-the-limit-in-the-right-window-check which was ifdeffed before because
some DMA-regs would sometimes have strange values. I think I've fixed the
DMA-reg stuff for now: at the end of nextdma_intr, when the csr is poked
to make DMA do something, I think the check for the ENABLE bit introduces a
race condition. I fixed this by unconditionally setting DMACSR_SETENABLE,
this seems to work and also makes the code more readable. I've also tried
setting DMACSR_SETSUPDATE unconditionally and this also works well, but I
don't know what it implies. Unless you have reasons to not set SUPDATE all
the time, I'd suggest making this change as well, it makes the code cleaner
and faster...
I've tested this patch and it does stop the panics, although I don't think setting
SUPDATE all the tima as he suggests is a good idea. The "SUPDATE" bit implies
a single update (i.e. the end of a dma chain.)
"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}?
now uses the DMACSR_READ bit and no longer keeps _nd_dmadir in softc
unified transfer cleanup code, now in routine next_dma_finish_xfer()
fixed bounds checking on registers after transfer.
removed checking for bus errors since the bit is always set on some nexts
(specifically, on mourning, a 25mhz 68040 mono slab)
fixed a couple of dma bugs involving chaining dma buffers.
DMACSR_READ is now a CSR status bit which can be used to know if current transfer is
from cpu to device.
the old DMACSR_READ bit is renamed DMACSR_SETREAD. This is a control bit that tells
the dma transfer to be from cpu to device.
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. :)
changed most of the spl* to use _splraise to match current usage
this fixes an observed bug where zstty_attach was calling splzs causing
interrupts to be turned on prematurely.
- 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.
return 0 instead of EINVAL. In this case, there will only be one media
type, and the upper-level if_media code will ensure that the user is
setting to that type.
This matches changes Jason made a while back to sys/dev/ic/lance.c
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.
managed pages, into KVA space. Since the pages are managed, we should
use pmap_enter(), not pmap_kenter_pa().
Also, when entering the mappings, enter with an access_type of
VM_PROT_READ | VM_PROT_WRITE. We do this for a couple of reasons:
(1) On systems that have H/W mod/ref attributes, the hardware
may not be able to track mod/ref done by a bus master.
(2) On systems that have to do mod/ref emulation, this prevents
a mod/ref page fault from potentially happening while in an
interrupt context, which can be problematic.
This latter change is fairly important if we ever want to be able to
transfer DMA-safe memory pages to anonymous memory objects; we will need
to know that the pages are modified, or else data could be lost!
Note that while the pages are unowned (i.e. "just DMA-safe memory pages"),
they won't consume any swap resources, as the mappings are wired, and
the pages aren't on the active or inactive queues.
directly, call the function pointer (*if_input)(ifp, m). The input routine
expects the packet header to be at the head of the packet, and will adjust
as necessary. Privatize the layer 2 input and output routines, allowing
*_ifattach() to set them up as appropriate.
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.
These patches include:
Added framebuffer mapping for color framebuffer to support color wscons
which is coming soon.
Renamed wskbdmap_mfii[ch] to wskbdmap_next[ch]
Changed video to be white on black instead of black on white.
Now handles and discards mouse interrupts.
Video and keyboard is now working on mono machines.