vmparam.h revision 1.1 1 /* $NetBSD: vmparam.h,v 1.1 1998/06/09 07:53:05 dbj Exp $ */
2
3 /*
4 * Copyright (c) 1988 University of Utah.
5 * Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1990, 1993
6 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
7 *
8 * This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
9 * the Systems Programming Group of the University of Utah Computer
10 * Science Department.
11 *
12 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
13 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
14 * are met:
15 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
16 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
17 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
18 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
19 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
20 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
21 * must display the following acknowledgement:
22 * This product includes software developed by the University of
23 * California, Berkeley and its contributors.
24 * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
25 * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
26 * without specific prior written permission.
27 *
28 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
29 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
30 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
31 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
32 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
33 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
34 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
35 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
36 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
37 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
38 * SUCH DAMAGE.
39 *
40 * from: Utah $Hdr: vmparam.h 1.16 91/01/18$
41 *
42 * @(#)vmparam.h 8.2 (Berkeley) 4/19/94
43 */
44
45 #ifndef _NEXT68K_VMPARAM_H_
46 #define _NEXT68K_VMPARAM_H_
47
48
49 /*
50 * Machine dependent constants for NEXT68K
51 */
52 /*
53 * USRTEXT is the start of the user text/data space, while USRSTACK
54 * is the top (end) of the user stack. LOWPAGES and HIGHPAGES are
55 * the number of pages from the beginning of the P0 region to the
56 * beginning of the text and from the beginning of the P1 region to the
57 * beginning of the stack respectively.
58 *
59 * NOTE: the ONLY reason that HIGHPAGES is 0x100 instead of UPAGES (3)
60 * is for HPUX compatibility. Why?? Because HPUX's debuggers
61 * have the user's stack hard-wired at FFF00000 for post-mortems,
62 * and we must be compatible...
63 */
64 #define USRTEXT 8192 /* Must equal __LDPGSZ */
65 #define USRSTACK (-HIGHPAGES*NBPG) /* Start of user stack */
66 #define BTOPUSRSTACK (0x100000-HIGHPAGES) /* btop(USRSTACK) */
67 #define P1PAGES 0x100000
68 #define LOWPAGES 0
69 #define HIGHPAGES (0x100000/NBPG)
70
71 /*
72 * Virtual memory related constants, all in bytes
73 */
74 #ifndef MAXTSIZ
75 #define MAXTSIZ (8*1024*1024) /* max text size */
76 #endif
77 #ifndef DFLDSIZ
78 #define DFLDSIZ (16*1024*1024) /* initial data size limit */
79 #endif
80 #ifndef MAXDSIZ
81 #define MAXDSIZ (64*1024*1024) /* max data size */
82 #endif
83 #ifndef DFLSSIZ
84 #define DFLSSIZ (512*1024) /* initial stack size limit */
85 #endif
86 #ifndef MAXSSIZ
87 #define MAXSSIZ MAXDSIZ /* max stack size */
88 #endif
89
90 /*
91 * Sizes of the system and user portions of the system page table.
92 */
93 /* SYSPTSIZE IS SILLY; IT SHOULD BE COMPUTED AT BOOT TIME */
94 #define SYSPTSIZE (2 * NPTEPG) /* 8mb */
95 #define USRPTSIZE (1 * NPTEPG) /* 4mb */
96
97 /*
98 * PTEs for mapping user space into the kernel for phyio operations.
99 * One page is enough to handle 4Mb of simultaneous raw IO operations.
100 */
101 #ifndef USRIOSIZE
102 #define USRIOSIZE (1 * NPTEPG) /* 4mb */
103 #endif
104
105 /*
106 * PTEs for system V style shared memory.
107 * This is basically slop for kmempt which we actually allocate (malloc) from.
108 */
109 #ifndef SHMMAXPGS
110 #define SHMMAXPGS 1024 /* 4mb */
111 #endif
112
113 /*
114 * Boundary at which to place first MAPMEM segment if not explicitly
115 * specified. Should be a power of two. This allows some slop for
116 * the data segment to grow underneath the first mapped segment.
117 */
118 #define MMSEG 0x200000
119
120 /*
121 * The size of the clock loop.
122 */
123 #define LOOPPAGES (maxfree - firstfree)
124
125 /*
126 * The time for a process to be blocked before being very swappable.
127 * This is a number of seconds which the system takes as being a non-trivial
128 * amount of real time. You probably shouldn't change this;
129 * it is used in subtle ways (fractions and multiples of it are, that is, like
130 * half of a ``long time'', almost a long time, etc.)
131 * It is related to human patience and other factors which don't really
132 * change over time.
133 */
134 #define MAXSLP 20
135
136 /*
137 * A swapped in process is given a small amount of core without being bothered
138 * by the page replacement algorithm. Basically this says that if you are
139 * swapped in you deserve some resources. We protect the last SAFERSS
140 * pages against paging and will just swap you out rather than paging you.
141 * Note that each process has at least UPAGES+CLSIZE pages which are not
142 * paged anyways (this is currently 8+2=10 pages or 5k bytes), so this
143 * number just means a swapped in process is given around 25k bytes.
144 * Just for fun: current memory prices are 4600$ a megabyte on VAX (4/22/81),
145 * so we loan each swapped in process memory worth 100$, or just admit
146 * that we don't consider it worthwhile and swap it out to disk which costs
147 * $30/mb or about $0.75.
148 * Update: memory prices have changed recently (9/96). At the current
149 * value of $6 per megabyte, we lend each swapped in process memory worth
150 * $0.15, or just admit that we don't consider it worthwhile and swap it out
151 * to disk which costs $0.20/MB, or just under half a cent.
152 */
153 #define SAFERSS 4 /* nominal ``small'' resident set size
154 protected against replacement */
155
156 /*
157 * DISKRPM is used to estimate the number of paging i/o operations
158 * which one can expect from a single disk controller.
159 */
160 #define DISKRPM 60
161
162 /*
163 * Klustering constants. Klustering is the gathering
164 * of pages together for pagein/pageout, while clustering
165 * is the treatment of hardware page size as though it were
166 * larger than it really is.
167 *
168 * KLMAX gives maximum cluster size in CLSIZE page (cluster-page)
169 * units. Note that ctod(KLMAX*CLSIZE) must be <= DMMIN in dmap.h.
170 * ctob(KLMAX) should also be less than MAXPHYS (in vm_swp.c)
171 * unless you like "big push" panics.
172 */
173
174 #define KLMAX (4/CLSIZE)
175 #define KLSEQL (2/CLSIZE) /* in klust if vadvise(VA_SEQL) */
176 #define KLIN (4/CLSIZE) /* default data/stack in klust */
177 #define KLTXT (4/CLSIZE) /* default text in klust */
178 #define KLOUT (4/CLSIZE)
179
180 /*
181 * KLSDIST is the advance or retard of the fifo reclaim for sequential
182 * processes data space.
183 */
184 #define KLSDIST 3 /* klusters advance/retard for seq. fifo */
185
186 /*
187 * Paging thresholds (see vm_sched.c).
188 * Strategy of 1/19/85:
189 * lotsfree is 512k bytes, but at most 1/4 of memory
190 * desfree is 200k bytes, but at most 1/8 of memory
191 */
192 #define LOTSFREE (512 * 1024)
193 #define LOTSFREEFRACT 4
194 #define DESFREE (200 * 1024)
195 #define DESFREEFRACT 8
196
197 /*
198 * There are two clock hands, initially separated by HANDSPREAD bytes
199 * (but at most all of user memory). The amount of time to reclaim
200 * a page once the pageout process examines it increases with this
201 * distance and decreases as the scan rate rises.
202 */
203 #define HANDSPREAD (2 * 1024 * 1024)
204
205 /*
206 * The number of times per second to recompute the desired paging rate
207 * and poke the pagedaemon.
208 */
209 #define RATETOSCHEDPAGING 4
210
211 /*
212 * Believed threshold (in megabytes) for which interleaved
213 * swapping area is desirable.
214 */
215 #define LOTSOFMEM 2
216
217 /*
218 * Mach derived constants
219 */
220
221 /* user/kernel map constants */
222 #define VM_MIN_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0)
223 #define VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0xFFF00000)
224 #define VM_MAX_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0xFFF00000)
225 #define VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)KERNBASE)
226 #define VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS ((vm_offset_t)0xFFFFF000)
227
228 /* virtual sizes (bytes) for various kernel submaps */
229 #define VM_MBUF_SIZE (NMBCLUSTERS*MCLBYTES)
230 #define VM_KMEM_SIZE (NKMEMCLUSTERS*CLBYTES)
231 #define VM_PHYS_SIZE (USRIOSIZE*CLBYTES)
232
233 /* # of kernel PT pages (initial only, can grow dynamically) */
234 #define VM_KERNEL_PT_PAGES ((vm_size_t)2) /* XXX: SYSPTSIZE */
235
236 /* pcb base */
237 #define pcbb(p) ((u_int)(p)->p_addr)
238
239 #define MACHINE_NONCONTIG /* VM <=> pmap interface modifier */
240
241 #endif /* _NEXT68K_VMPARAM_H_ */
242