pmap.h revision 1.19 1 /* $NetBSD: pmap.h,v 1.19 1996/03/14 19:49:14 christos Exp $ */
2
3 /*
4 * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
5 * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
6 *
7 * This software was developed by the Computer Systems Engineering group
8 * at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory under DARPA contract BG 91-66 and
9 * contributed to Berkeley.
10 *
11 * All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
12 * must display the following acknowledgement:
13 * This product includes software developed by the University of
14 * California, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
15 *
16 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
17 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
18 * are met:
19 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
20 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
21 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
22 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
23 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
24 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
25 * must display the following acknowledgement:
26 * This product includes software developed by the University of
27 * California, Berkeley and its contributors.
28 * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
29 * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
30 * without specific prior written permission.
31 *
32 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
33 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
34 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
35 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
36 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
37 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
38 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
39 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
40 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
41 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
42 * SUCH DAMAGE.
43 *
44 * @(#)pmap.h 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93
45 */
46
47 #ifndef _SPARC_PMAP_H_
48 #define _SPARC_PMAP_H_
49
50 #include <machine/pte.h>
51
52 /*
53 * Pmap structure.
54 *
55 * The pmap structure really comes in two variants, one---a single
56 * instance---for kernel virtual memory and the other---up to nproc
57 * instances---for user virtual memory. Unfortunately, we have to mash
58 * both into the same structure. Fortunately, they are almost the same.
59 *
60 * The kernel begins at 0xf8000000 and runs to 0xffffffff (although
61 * some of this is not actually used). Kernel space, including DVMA
62 * space (for now?), is mapped identically into all user contexts.
63 * There is no point in duplicating this mapping in each user process
64 * so they do not appear in the user structures.
65 *
66 * User space begins at 0x00000000 and runs through 0x1fffffff,
67 * then has a `hole', then resumes at 0xe0000000 and runs until it
68 * hits the kernel space at 0xf8000000. This can be mapped
69 * contiguously by ignorning the top two bits and pretending the
70 * space goes from 0 to 37ffffff. Typically the lower range is
71 * used for text+data and the upper for stack, but the code here
72 * makes no such distinction.
73 *
74 * Since each virtual segment covers 256 kbytes, the user space
75 * requires 3584 segments, while the kernel (including DVMA) requires
76 * only 512 segments.
77 *
78 * The segment map entry for virtual segment vseg is offset in
79 * pmap->pm_rsegmap by 0 if pmap is not the kernel pmap, or by
80 * NUSEG if it is. We keep a pointer called pmap->pm_segmap
81 * pre-offset by this value. pmap->pm_segmap thus contains the
82 * values to be loaded into the user portion of the hardware segment
83 * map so as to reach the proper PMEGs within the MMU. The kernel
84 * mappings are `set early' and are always valid in every context
85 * (every change is always propagated immediately).
86 *
87 * The PMEGs within the MMU are loaded `on demand'; when a PMEG is
88 * taken away from context `c', the pmap for context c has its
89 * corresponding pm_segmap[vseg] entry marked invalid (the MMU segment
90 * map entry is also made invalid at the same time). Thus
91 * pm_segmap[vseg] is the `invalid pmeg' number (127 or 511) whenever
92 * the corresponding PTEs are not actually in the MMU. On the other
93 * hand, pm_pte[vseg] is NULL only if no pages in that virtual segment
94 * are in core; otherwise it points to a copy of the 32 or 64 PTEs that
95 * must be loaded in the MMU in order to reach those pages.
96 * pm_npte[vseg] counts the number of valid pages in each vseg.
97 *
98 * XXX performance: faster to count valid bits?
99 *
100 * The kernel pmap cannot malloc() PTEs since malloc() will sometimes
101 * allocate a new virtual segment. Since kernel mappings are never
102 * `stolen' out of the the MMU, we just keep all its PTEs there, and
103 * have no software copies. Its mmu entries are nonetheless kept on lists
104 * so that the code that fiddles with mmu lists has something to fiddle.
105 */
106 #define NKREG ((int)((-(unsigned)KERNBASE) / NBPRG)) /* i.e., 8 */
107 #define NUREG (256 - NKREG) /* i.e., 248 */
108
109 TAILQ_HEAD(mmuhd,mmuentry);
110
111 /* data appearing in both user and kernel pmaps */
112 struct pmap {
113 union ctxinfo *pm_ctx; /* current context, if any */
114 int pm_ctxnum; /* current context's number */
115 #if NCPUS > 1
116 simple_lock_data_t pm_lock; /* spinlock */
117 #endif
118 int pm_refcount; /* just what it says */
119
120 struct mmuhd pm_reglist; /* MMU regions on this pmap */
121 struct mmuhd pm_seglist; /* MMU segments on this pmap */
122 void *pm_regstore;
123 struct regmap *pm_regmap;
124 int pm_gap_start; /* Starting with this vreg there's */
125 int pm_gap_end; /* no valid mapping until here */
126
127 struct pmap_statistics pm_stats; /* pmap statistics */
128 };
129
130 struct regmap {
131 struct segmap *rg_segmap; /* point to NSGPRG PMEGs */
132 smeg_t rg_smeg; /* the MMU region number */
133 u_char rg_nsegmap; /* number of valid PMEGS */
134 };
135
136 struct segmap {
137 int *sg_pte; /* points to NPTESG PTEs */
138 pmeg_t sg_pmeg; /* the MMU segment number */
139 u_char sg_npte; /* number of valid PTEs per seg */
140 };
141
142 typedef struct pmap *pmap_t;
143
144 #ifdef _KERNEL
145
146 #define PMAP_NULL ((pmap_t)0)
147
148 extern struct pmap kernel_pmap_store;
149 extern vm_offset_t vm_first_phys, vm_num_phys;
150
151 /*
152 * Since PTEs also contain type bits, we have to have some way
153 * to tell pmap_enter `this is an IO page' or `this is not to
154 * be cached'. Since physical addresses are always aligned, we
155 * can do this with the low order bits.
156 *
157 * The ordering below is important: PMAP_PGTYPE << PG_TNC must give
158 * exactly the PG_NC and PG_TYPE bits.
159 */
160 #define PMAP_OBIO 1 /* tells pmap_enter to use PG_OBIO */
161 #define PMAP_VME16 2 /* etc */
162 #define PMAP_VME32 3 /* etc */
163 #define PMAP_NC 4 /* tells pmap_enter to set PG_NC */
164 #define PMAP_TNC 7 /* mask to get PG_TYPE & PG_NC */
165 /*#define PMAP_IOC 0x00800000 -* IO cacheable, NOT shifted */
166
167 void pmap_bootstrap __P((int nmmu, int nctx, int nregion));
168 int pmap_count_ptes __P((struct pmap *));
169 void pmap_prefer __P((vm_offset_t, vm_offset_t *));
170 int pmap_pa_exists __P((vm_offset_t));
171 int pmap_dumpsize __P((void));
172 int pmap_dumpmmu __P((int (*)__P((dev_t, daddr_t, caddr_t, size_t)),
173 daddr_t));
174
175 #define pmap_kernel() (&kernel_pmap_store)
176 #define pmap_resident_count(pmap) pmap_count_ptes(pmap)
177 #define managed(pa) ((unsigned)((pa) - vm_first_phys) < vm_num_phys)
178
179 #define PMAP_ACTIVATE(pmap, pcb, iscurproc)
180 #define PMAP_DEACTIVATE(pmap, pcb)
181 #define PMAP_PREFER(fo, ap) pmap_prefer((fo), (ap))
182
183 void pmap_changeprot __P((struct pmap *, vm_offset_t, vm_prot_t, int));
184 void kvm_uncache __P((caddr_t, int));
185 int mmu_pagein __P((struct pmap *, int, int));
186 void pmap_redzone __P((void));
187 struct user;
188 void switchexit __P((vm_map_t, struct user *, int));
189
190 #endif /* _KERNEL */
191
192 #endif /* _SPARC_PMAP_H_ */
193