pmap.h revision 1.44.2.1 1 /* $NetBSD: pmap.h,v 1.44.2.1 2000/06/22 17:00:33 minoura Exp $ */
2
3 /*
4 *
5 * Copyright (c) 1997 Charles D. Cranor and Washington University.
6 * All rights reserved.
7 *
8 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
9 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
10 * are met:
11 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
12 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
13 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
14 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
15 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
16 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
17 * must display the following acknowledgment:
18 * This product includes software developed by Charles D. Cranor and
19 * Washington University.
20 * 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
21 * derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
22 *
23 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
24 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
25 * OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
26 * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
27 * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
28 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
29 * DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
30 * THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
31 * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
32 * THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
33 */
34
35 /*
36 * pmap.h: see pmap.c for the history of this pmap module.
37 */
38
39 #ifndef _I386_PMAP_H_
40 #define _I386_PMAP_H_
41
42 #if defined(_KERNEL) && !defined(_LKM)
43 #include "opt_user_ldt.h"
44 #endif
45
46 #include <machine/cpufunc.h>
47 #include <machine/pte.h>
48 #include <machine/segments.h>
49 #include <uvm/uvm_object.h>
50
51 /*
52 * see pte.h for a description of i386 MMU terminology and hardware
53 * interface.
54 *
55 * a pmap describes a processes' 4GB virtual address space. this
56 * virtual address space can be broken up into 1024 4MB regions which
57 * are described by PDEs in the PDP. the PDEs are defined as follows:
58 *
59 * (ranges are inclusive -> exclusive, just like vm_map_entry start/end)
60 * (the following assumes that KERNBASE is 0xc0000000)
61 *
62 * PDE#s VA range usage
63 * 0->767 0x0 -> 0xbfc00000 user address space, note that the
64 * max user address is 0xbfbfe000
65 * the final two pages in the last 4MB
66 * used to be reserved for the UAREA
67 * but now are no longer used
68 * 768 0xbfc00000-> recursive mapping of PDP (used for
69 * 0xc0000000 linear mapping of PTPs)
70 * 768->1023 0xc0000000-> kernel address space (constant
71 * 0xffc00000 across all pmap's/processes)
72 * 1023 0xffc00000-> "alternate" recursive PDP mapping
73 * <end> (for other pmaps)
74 *
75 *
76 * note: a recursive PDP mapping provides a way to map all the PTEs for
77 * a 4GB address space into a linear chunk of virtual memory. in other
78 * words, the PTE for page 0 is the first int mapped into the 4MB recursive
79 * area. the PTE for page 1 is the second int. the very last int in the
80 * 4MB range is the PTE that maps VA 0xffffe000 (the last page in a 4GB
81 * address).
82 *
83 * all pmap's PD's must have the same values in slots 768->1023 so that
84 * the kernel is always mapped in every process. these values are loaded
85 * into the PD at pmap creation time.
86 *
87 * at any one time only one pmap can be active on a processor. this is
88 * the pmap whose PDP is pointed to by processor register %cr3. this pmap
89 * will have all its PTEs mapped into memory at the recursive mapping
90 * point (slot #767 as show above). when the pmap code wants to find the
91 * PTE for a virtual address, all it has to do is the following:
92 *
93 * address of PTE = (767 * 4MB) + (VA / NBPG) * sizeof(pt_entry_t)
94 * = 0xbfc00000 + (VA / 4096) * 4
95 *
96 * what happens if the pmap layer is asked to perform an operation
97 * on a pmap that is not the one which is currently active? in that
98 * case we take the PA of the PDP of non-active pmap and put it in
99 * slot 1023 of the active pmap. this causes the non-active pmap's
100 * PTEs to get mapped in the final 4MB of the 4GB address space
101 * (e.g. starting at 0xffc00000).
102 *
103 * the following figure shows the effects of the recursive PDP mapping:
104 *
105 * PDP (%cr3)
106 * +----+
107 * | 0| -> PTP#0 that maps VA 0x0 -> 0x400000
108 * | |
109 * | |
110 * | 767| -> points back to PDP (%cr3) mapping VA 0xbfc00000 -> 0xc0000000
111 * | 768| -> first kernel PTP (maps 0xc0000000 -> 0xf0400000)
112 * | |
113 * |1023| -> points to alternate pmap's PDP (maps 0xffc00000 -> end)
114 * +----+
115 *
116 * note that the PDE#767 VA (0xbfc00000) is defined as "PTE_BASE"
117 * note that the PDE#1023 VA (0xffc00000) is defined as "APTE_BASE"
118 *
119 * starting at VA 0xbfc00000 the current active PDP (%cr3) acts as a
120 * PTP:
121 *
122 * PTP#767 == PDP(%cr3) => maps VA 0xbfc00000 -> 0xc0000000
123 * +----+
124 * | 0| -> maps the contents of PTP#0 at VA 0xbfc00000->0xbfc01000
125 * | |
126 * | |
127 * | 767| -> maps contents of PTP#767 (the PDP) at VA 0xbffbf000
128 * | 768| -> maps contents of first kernel PTP
129 * | |
130 * |1023|
131 * +----+
132 *
133 * note that mapping of the PDP at PTP#959's VA (0xeffbf000) is
134 * defined as "PDP_BASE".... within that mapping there are two
135 * defines:
136 * "PDP_PDE" (0xeffbfefc) is the VA of the PDE in the PDP
137 * which points back to itself.
138 * "APDP_PDE" (0xeffbfffc) is the VA of the PDE in the PDP which
139 * establishes the recursive mapping of the alternate pmap.
140 * to set the alternate PDP, one just has to put the correct
141 * PA info in *APDP_PDE.
142 *
143 * note that in the APTE_BASE space, the APDP appears at VA
144 * "APDP_BASE" (0xfffff000).
145 */
146
147 /*
148 * the following defines identify the slots used as described above.
149 */
150
151 #define PDSLOT_PTE ((KERNBASE/NBPD)-1) /* 767: for recursive PDP map */
152 #define PDSLOT_KERN (KERNBASE/NBPD) /* 768: start of kernel space */
153 #define PDSLOT_APTE ((unsigned)1023) /* 1023: alternative recursive slot */
154
155 /*
156 * the following defines give the virtual addresses of various MMU
157 * data structures:
158 * PTE_BASE and APTE_BASE: the base VA of the linear PTE mappings
159 * PTD_BASE and APTD_BASE: the base VA of the recursive mapping of the PTD
160 * PDP_PDE and APDP_PDE: the VA of the PDE that points back to the PDP/APDP
161 */
162
163 #define PTE_BASE ((pt_entry_t *) (PDSLOT_PTE * NBPD) )
164 #define APTE_BASE ((pt_entry_t *) (PDSLOT_APTE * NBPD) )
165 #define PDP_BASE ((pd_entry_t *)(((char *)PTE_BASE) + (PDSLOT_PTE * NBPG)))
166 #define APDP_BASE ((pd_entry_t *)(((char *)APTE_BASE) + (PDSLOT_APTE * NBPG)))
167 #define PDP_PDE (PDP_BASE + PDSLOT_PTE)
168 #define APDP_PDE (PDP_BASE + PDSLOT_APTE)
169
170 /*
171 * XXXCDC: tmp xlate from old names:
172 * PTDPTDI -> PDSLOT_PTE
173 * KPTDI -> PDSLOT_KERN
174 * APTDPTDI -> PDSLOT_APTE
175 */
176
177 /*
178 * the follow define determines how many PTPs should be set up for the
179 * kernel by locore.s at boot time. this should be large enough to
180 * get the VM system running. once the VM system is running, the
181 * pmap module can add more PTPs to the kernel area on demand.
182 */
183
184 #ifndef NKPTP
185 #define NKPTP 4 /* 16MB to start */
186 #endif
187 #define NKPTP_MIN 4 /* smallest value we allow */
188 #define NKPTP_MAX (1024 - (KERNBASE/NBPD) - 1)
189 /* largest value (-1 for APTP space) */
190
191 /*
192 * various address macros
193 *
194 * vtopte: return a pointer to the PTE mapping a VA
195 * kvtopte: same as above (takes a KVA, but doesn't matter with this pmap)
196 * ptetov: given a pointer to a PTE, return the VA that it maps
197 * vtophys: translate a VA to the PA mapped to it
198 *
199 * plus alternative versions of the above
200 */
201
202 #define vtopte(VA) (PTE_BASE + i386_btop(VA))
203 #define kvtopte(VA) vtopte(VA)
204 #define ptetov(PT) (i386_ptob(PT - PTE_BASE))
205 #define vtophys(VA) ((*vtopte(VA) & PG_FRAME) | \
206 ((unsigned)(VA) & ~PG_FRAME))
207 #define avtopte(VA) (APTE_BASE + i386_btop(VA))
208 #define ptetoav(PT) (i386_ptob(PT - APTE_BASE))
209 #define avtophys(VA) ((*avtopte(VA) & PG_FRAME) | \
210 ((unsigned)(VA) & ~PG_FRAME))
211
212 /*
213 * pdei/ptei: generate index into PDP/PTP from a VA
214 */
215 #define pdei(VA) (((VA) & PD_MASK) >> PDSHIFT)
216 #define ptei(VA) (((VA) & PT_MASK) >> PGSHIFT)
217
218 /*
219 * PTP macros:
220 * a PTP's index is the PD index of the PDE that points to it
221 * a PTP's offset is the byte-offset in the PTE space that this PTP is at
222 * a PTP's VA is the first VA mapped by that PTP
223 *
224 * note that NBPG == number of bytes in a PTP (4096 bytes == 1024 entries)
225 * NBPD == number of bytes a PTP can map (4MB)
226 */
227
228 #define ptp_i2o(I) ((I) * NBPG) /* index => offset */
229 #define ptp_o2i(O) ((O) / NBPG) /* offset => index */
230 #define ptp_i2v(I) ((I) * NBPD) /* index => VA */
231 #define ptp_v2i(V) ((V) / NBPD) /* VA => index (same as pdei) */
232
233 /*
234 * PG_AVAIL usage: we make use of the ignored bits of the PTE
235 */
236
237 #define PG_W PG_AVAIL1 /* "wired" mapping */
238 #define PG_PVLIST PG_AVAIL2 /* mapping has entry on pvlist */
239 /* PG_AVAIL3 not used */
240
241 #ifdef _KERNEL
242 /*
243 * pmap data structures: see pmap.c for details of locking.
244 */
245
246 struct pmap;
247 typedef struct pmap *pmap_t;
248
249 /*
250 * we maintain a list of all non-kernel pmaps
251 */
252
253 LIST_HEAD(pmap_head, pmap); /* struct pmap_head: head of a pmap list */
254
255 /*
256 * the pmap structure
257 *
258 * note that the pm_obj contains the simple_lock, the reference count,
259 * page list, and number of PTPs within the pmap.
260 */
261
262 struct pmap {
263 struct uvm_object pm_obj; /* object (lck by object lock) */
264 #define pm_lock pm_obj.vmobjlock
265 LIST_ENTRY(pmap) pm_list; /* list (lck by pm_list lock) */
266 pd_entry_t *pm_pdir; /* VA of PD (lck by object lock) */
267 u_int32_t pm_pdirpa; /* PA of PD (read-only after create) */
268 struct vm_page *pm_ptphint; /* pointer to a PTP in our pmap */
269 struct pmap_statistics pm_stats; /* pmap stats (lck by object lock) */
270
271 int pm_flags; /* see below */
272
273 union descriptor *pm_ldt; /* user-set LDT */
274 int pm_ldt_len; /* number of LDT entries */
275 int pm_ldt_sel; /* LDT selector */
276 };
277
278 /* pm_flags */
279 #define PMF_USER_LDT 0x01 /* pmap has user-set LDT */
280
281 /*
282 * for each managed physical page we maintain a list of <PMAP,VA>'s
283 * which it is mapped at. the list is headed by a pv_head structure.
284 * there is one pv_head per managed phys page (allocated at boot time).
285 * the pv_head structure points to a list of pv_entry structures (each
286 * describes one mapping).
287 */
288
289 struct pv_entry;
290
291 struct pv_head {
292 simple_lock_data_t pvh_lock; /* locks every pv on this list */
293 struct pv_entry *pvh_list; /* head of list (locked by pvh_lock) */
294 };
295
296 struct pv_entry { /* locked by its list's pvh_lock */
297 struct pv_entry *pv_next; /* next entry */
298 struct pmap *pv_pmap; /* the pmap */
299 vaddr_t pv_va; /* the virtual address */
300 struct vm_page *pv_ptp; /* the vm_page of the PTP */
301 };
302
303 /*
304 * pv_entrys are dynamically allocated in chunks from a single page.
305 * we keep track of how many pv_entrys are in use for each page and
306 * we can free pv_entry pages if needed. there is one lock for the
307 * entire allocation system.
308 */
309
310 struct pv_page_info {
311 TAILQ_ENTRY(pv_page) pvpi_list;
312 struct pv_entry *pvpi_pvfree;
313 int pvpi_nfree;
314 };
315
316 /*
317 * number of pv_entry's in a pv_page
318 * (note: won't work on systems where NPBG isn't a constant)
319 */
320
321 #define PVE_PER_PVPAGE ((NBPG - sizeof(struct pv_page_info)) / \
322 sizeof(struct pv_entry))
323
324 /*
325 * a pv_page: where pv_entrys are allocated from
326 */
327
328 struct pv_page {
329 struct pv_page_info pvinfo;
330 struct pv_entry pvents[PVE_PER_PVPAGE];
331 };
332
333 /*
334 * pmap_remove_record: a record of VAs that have been unmapped, used to
335 * flush TLB. if we have more than PMAP_RR_MAX then we stop recording.
336 */
337
338 #define PMAP_RR_MAX 16 /* max of 16 pages (64K) */
339
340 struct pmap_remove_record {
341 int prr_npages;
342 vaddr_t prr_vas[PMAP_RR_MAX];
343 };
344
345 #if 0
346 /*
347 * pmap_transfer_location: used to pass the current location in the
348 * pmap between pmap_transfer and pmap_transfer_ptes [e.g. during
349 * a pmap_copy].
350 */
351
352 struct pmap_transfer_location {
353 vaddr_t addr; /* the address (page-aligned) */
354 pt_entry_t *pte; /* the PTE that maps address */
355 struct vm_page *ptp; /* the PTP that the PTE lives in */
356 };
357 #endif
358
359 /*
360 * global kernel variables
361 */
362
363 /* PTDpaddr: is the physical address of the kernel's PDP */
364 extern u_long PTDpaddr;
365
366 extern struct pmap kernel_pmap_store; /* kernel pmap */
367 extern int nkpde; /* current # of PDEs for kernel */
368 extern int pmap_pg_g; /* do we support PG_G? */
369
370 /*
371 * macros
372 */
373
374 #define pmap_kernel() (&kernel_pmap_store)
375 #define pmap_resident_count(pmap) ((pmap)->pm_stats.resident_count)
376 #define pmap_update() tlbflush()
377
378 #define pmap_clear_modify(pg) pmap_change_attrs(pg, 0, PG_M)
379 #define pmap_clear_reference(pg) pmap_change_attrs(pg, 0, PG_U)
380 #define pmap_copy(DP,SP,D,L,S)
381 #define pmap_is_modified(pg) pmap_test_attrs(pg, PG_M)
382 #define pmap_is_referenced(pg) pmap_test_attrs(pg, PG_U)
383 #define pmap_move(DP,SP,D,L,S)
384 #define pmap_phys_address(ppn) i386_ptob(ppn)
385 #define pmap_valid_entry(E) ((E) & PG_V) /* is PDE or PTE valid? */
386
387
388 /*
389 * prototypes
390 */
391
392 void pmap_activate __P((struct proc *));
393 void pmap_bootstrap __P((vaddr_t));
394 boolean_t pmap_change_attrs __P((struct vm_page *, int, int));
395 void pmap_deactivate __P((struct proc *));
396 static void pmap_page_protect __P((struct vm_page *, vm_prot_t));
397 void pmap_page_remove __P((struct vm_page *));
398 static void pmap_protect __P((struct pmap *, vaddr_t,
399 vaddr_t, vm_prot_t));
400 void pmap_remove __P((struct pmap *, vaddr_t, vaddr_t));
401 boolean_t pmap_test_attrs __P((struct vm_page *, int));
402 void pmap_transfer __P((struct pmap *, struct pmap *, vaddr_t,
403 vsize_t, vaddr_t, boolean_t));
404 static void pmap_update_pg __P((vaddr_t));
405 static void pmap_update_2pg __P((vaddr_t,vaddr_t));
406 void pmap_write_protect __P((struct pmap *, vaddr_t,
407 vaddr_t, vm_prot_t));
408
409 vaddr_t reserve_dumppages __P((vaddr_t)); /* XXX: not a pmap fn */
410
411 #define PMAP_GROWKERNEL /* turn on pmap_growkernel interface */
412
413 /*
414 * Do idle page zero'ing uncached to avoid polluting the cache.
415 */
416 void pmap_zero_page_uncached __P((paddr_t));
417 #define PMAP_PAGEIDLEZERO(pa) pmap_zero_page_uncached((pa))
418
419 /*
420 * inline functions
421 */
422
423 /*
424 * pmap_update_pg: flush one page from the TLB (or flush the whole thing
425 * if hardware doesn't support one-page flushing)
426 */
427
428 __inline static void
429 pmap_update_pg(va)
430 vaddr_t va;
431 {
432 #if defined(I386_CPU)
433 if (cpu_class == CPUCLASS_386)
434 pmap_update();
435 else
436 #endif
437 invlpg((u_int) va);
438 }
439
440 /*
441 * pmap_update_2pg: flush two pages from the TLB
442 */
443
444 __inline static void
445 pmap_update_2pg(va, vb)
446 vaddr_t va, vb;
447 {
448 #if defined(I386_CPU)
449 if (cpu_class == CPUCLASS_386)
450 pmap_update();
451 else
452 #endif
453 {
454 invlpg((u_int) va);
455 invlpg((u_int) vb);
456 }
457 }
458
459 /*
460 * pmap_page_protect: change the protection of all recorded mappings
461 * of a managed page
462 *
463 * => this function is a frontend for pmap_page_remove/pmap_change_attrs
464 * => we only have to worry about making the page more protected.
465 * unprotecting a page is done on-demand at fault time.
466 */
467
468 __inline static void
469 pmap_page_protect(pg, prot)
470 struct vm_page *pg;
471 vm_prot_t prot;
472 {
473 if ((prot & VM_PROT_WRITE) == 0) {
474 if (prot & (VM_PROT_READ|VM_PROT_EXECUTE)) {
475 (void) pmap_change_attrs(pg, PG_RO, PG_RW);
476 } else {
477 pmap_page_remove(pg);
478 }
479 }
480 }
481
482 /*
483 * pmap_protect: change the protection of pages in a pmap
484 *
485 * => this function is a frontend for pmap_remove/pmap_write_protect
486 * => we only have to worry about making the page more protected.
487 * unprotecting a page is done on-demand at fault time.
488 */
489
490 __inline static void
491 pmap_protect(pmap, sva, eva, prot)
492 struct pmap *pmap;
493 vaddr_t sva, eva;
494 vm_prot_t prot;
495 {
496 if ((prot & VM_PROT_WRITE) == 0) {
497 if (prot & (VM_PROT_READ|VM_PROT_EXECUTE)) {
498 pmap_write_protect(pmap, sva, eva, prot);
499 } else {
500 pmap_remove(pmap, sva, eva);
501 }
502 }
503 }
504
505 vaddr_t pmap_map __P((vaddr_t, paddr_t, paddr_t, vm_prot_t));
506
507 #if defined(USER_LDT)
508 void pmap_ldt_cleanup __P((struct proc *));
509 #define PMAP_FORK
510 #endif /* USER_LDT */
511
512 #endif /* _KERNEL */
513 #endif /* _I386_PMAP_H_ */
514