to <sys/gmon.h>. Cleaned them up a little by not attempting to ifdef
for incomplete and out of date support for GUPROF in userland, as in
the sparc64 version.
different context support for 32 vs 64 bit processes. This simply omits
the save/restore of the segment selector registers for non 32 bit
processes. This avoids the rdmsr/rwmsr juggling when restoring %gs
clobbers the kernel msr that holds the gsbase.
However, I suspect it might be better to conditionally do this at
user<->kernel transition where we wouldn't need to do the juggling in the
first place. Or have per-thread extended context save/restore hooks.
to help the AMD cpus (which have a hardware tlb flush filter). I held
off to see what the 64 bit Intel cpus did, but it doesn't seem to help
much there either. Oh well, store it in the Attic.
individual asm versions. The global lock is shared between the BIOS and
OS and thus cannot use our mutexes. It is defined in section 5.2.9.1 of
the ACPI specification.
Reviewed by: marcel, bde, jhb
move its declaration to the machine-dependent header file on those
machines that use it. In principle, only i386 should have it.
Alpha and AMD64 should use their direct virtual-to-physical mapping.
- Remove pmap_kenter_temporary() from ia64. It is unused. Approved
by: marcel@
level of abstraction for any and all CPU mask and CPU bitmap variables
so that platforms have the ability to break free from the hard limit
of 32 CPUs, simply because we don't have more bits in an u_int. Note
that the type is not supposed to solve massive parallelism, where
the number of CPUs can be larger than the width of the widest integral
type. As such, cpumask_t is not supposed to be a compound type. If
such would be necessary in the future, we can deal with the issues
then and there. For now, it can be assumed that the type is integral
and unsigned.
With this commit, all MD definitions start off as u_int. This allows
us to phase-in cpumask_t at our leasure without breaking anything.
Once cpumask_t is used consistently, platforms can switch to wider
(or smaller) types if such would be beneficial (or not; whatever :-)
Compile-tested on: i386
in the non-_KERNEL case. This "fixes" applications that include
this "kernel-only" header and also include <strings.h> (or get
<strings.h> via the default _BSD_VISIBLE pollution in <string.h>.
In C++ there was a fatal error: the declaration specifies C linkage
but the implementation gives C++ linkage. In C there was only a
static/extern mismatch if the headers were included in a certain order
order, and a partially redundant declaration for all include orders;
gcc emits incomplete or wrong diagnostics for these, but only for
compiling with -Wsystem-headers and certain other warning options, so
the problem was usually not seen for C.
Ports breakage reported by: kris
at it, use the ANSI C generic pointer type for the second argument,
thus matching the documentation.
Remove the now extraneous (and now conflicting) function declarations
in various libc sources. Remove now unnecessary casts.
Reviewed by: bde
such that 'ispcvt' can build. Unforunately 'ispcvt' is needed in order for
/etc/rc.d/syscons to run. This fixes the bug where I could not get my
keymap effective at boot.
of doing a loop and taking two 32 bit passes at the runqueue bits. All
the 64 bit platforms should probably do this since there are 64 run queues.
Approved by: re (scottl)
used on amd64, and were actually totally broken. They had the wrong
calling conventions. I believe the i386 versions are going away too.
Approved by: re (scottl)
i386 version. The curthread special case in pcpu.h solves my complaint
about the verbose macro expansion in this case. Note that the i386
version still has some OBE comments, I didn't re-add them back again.
Approved by: re (scottl)
the compiler having to parse and optimize the PCPU_GET(curthread) so often.
__curthread() is an inline optimized version of PCPU_GET(curthread) that
knows that pc_curthread is at offset zero in the pcpu struct. Add a
CTASSERT() to catch any possible changes to this. This accounts for
just over a 1% wall clock speedup for total kernel compile/link time,
and 20% compile time speedup on some specific files depending on which
compile options are used.
Approved by: re (jhb)