use queue.h macros and KASSERT().
address amap offsets in pages instead of bytes.
make amap_ref() and amap_unref() take an amap, offset and length
instead of a vm_map_entry_t.
improve whitespace and comments.
devices will actually be notified if this is the last close.
this allows raidframe swap devices to be marked clean.
also, move the corresponding vref() into swap_on() for symmetry
and improve some comments.
it and free it as appropriate. Activate p2's new address space once
it references p1's.
- uvm_fork(): Make sure the child's vmspace is NULL before calling
uvmspace_share() (the child doens't have one already in this case).
These changes do not change the behavior for the current use of
uvmspace_share() (vfork(2)), but make it possible for an already
running process (such as a kernel thread) to properly attach to
another process's address space.
to the contents of the hint in the map, and the hint saved in the
map only if the two values match. When an unconditional save is
required, the "check" value passed should be map->hint (and the
compiler will optimize the test away). When deleting a map entry,
the new SAVE_HINT() will only change the hint if the entry being
deleted was the hint value (thus preserving any meaningful hint
that may have been there previously, rather than stomping on it).
- Add a missing hint update when deleting the map entry in
uvm_map_entry_unlink(). This is the fix for kern/11125, from
ITOH Yasufumi <itohy@netbsd.org>.
`struct vmspace' has a new field `vm_minsaddr' which is the user TOS.
PS_STRINGS is deprecated in favor of curproc->p_pstr which is derived
from `vm_minsaddr'.
Bump the kernel version number.
that the page being zero'd was not completed and that page zeroing
should be aborted. This may be used by machine-dependent code doing
slow page access to reduce the latency of running a process that has
become runnable while in the middle of doing a slow page zero.
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.
When it wasn't (which could happen on a 4Mb machine with 32kb pages),
uvm_pagealloc_strat could refuse to allocate user memory, while the pagedaemon
didn't think it was worth freeing any more, resulting in the system seizing up.