pcb.h revision 1.8 1 1.8 eeh /* $NetBSD: pcb.h,v 1.8 2002/05/14 02:34:15 eeh Exp $ */
2 1.1 eeh
3 1.1 eeh /*
4 1.8 eeh * Copyright (c) 1996-2002 Eduardo Horvath. All rights reserved.
5 1.1 eeh * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
6 1.1 eeh * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
7 1.1 eeh *
8 1.1 eeh * This software was developed by the Computer Systems Engineering group
9 1.1 eeh * at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory under DARPA contract BG 91-66 and
10 1.1 eeh * contributed to Berkeley.
11 1.1 eeh *
12 1.1 eeh * All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
13 1.1 eeh * must display the following acknowledgement:
14 1.1 eeh * This product includes software developed by the University of
15 1.1 eeh * California, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
16 1.1 eeh *
17 1.1 eeh * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
18 1.1 eeh * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
19 1.1 eeh * are met:
20 1.1 eeh * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
21 1.1 eeh * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
22 1.1 eeh * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
23 1.1 eeh * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
24 1.1 eeh * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
25 1.1 eeh * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
26 1.1 eeh * must display the following acknowledgement:
27 1.1 eeh * This product includes software developed by the University of
28 1.1 eeh * California, Berkeley and its contributors.
29 1.1 eeh * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
30 1.1 eeh * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
31 1.1 eeh * without specific prior written permission.
32 1.1 eeh *
33 1.1 eeh * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
34 1.1 eeh * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
35 1.1 eeh * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
36 1.1 eeh * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
37 1.1 eeh * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
38 1.1 eeh * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
39 1.1 eeh * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
40 1.1 eeh * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
41 1.1 eeh * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
42 1.1 eeh * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
43 1.1 eeh * SUCH DAMAGE.
44 1.1 eeh *
45 1.1 eeh * @(#)pcb.h 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93
46 1.1 eeh */
47 1.1 eeh
48 1.1 eeh #include <machine/reg.h>
49 1.1 eeh
50 1.1 eeh #ifdef notyet
51 1.1 eeh #define PCB_MAXWIN 32 /* architectural limit */
52 1.1 eeh #else
53 1.1 eeh #define PCB_MAXWIN 8 /* worried about u area sizes ... */
54 1.1 eeh #endif
55 1.1 eeh
56 1.1 eeh /*
57 1.1 eeh * SPARC Process Control Block.
58 1.1 eeh *
59 1.1 eeh * pcb_uw is positive if there are any user windows that are
60 1.1 eeh * are currently in the CPU windows rather than on the user
61 1.1 eeh * stack. Whenever we are running in the kernel with traps
62 1.1 eeh * enabled, we decrement pcb_uw for each ``push'' of a CPU
63 1.1 eeh * register window into the stack, and we increment it for
64 1.1 eeh * each ``pull'' from the stack into the CPU. (If traps are
65 1.1 eeh * disabled, or if we are in user mode, pcb_uw is junk.)
66 1.1 eeh *
67 1.1 eeh * To ease computing pcb_uw on traps from user mode, we keep track
68 1.1 eeh * of the log base 2 of the single bit that is set in %wim.
69 1.1 eeh *
70 1.1 eeh * If an overflow occurs while the associated user stack pages
71 1.1 eeh * are invalid (paged out), we have to store the registers
72 1.1 eeh * in a page that is locked in core while the process runs,
73 1.1 eeh * i.e., right here in the pcb. We also need the stack pointer
74 1.1 eeh * for the last such window (but only the last, as the others
75 1.1 eeh * are in each window) and the count of windows saved. We
76 1.1 eeh * cheat by having a whole window structure for that one %sp.
77 1.1 eeh * Thus, to save window pcb_rw[i] to memory, we write it at
78 1.1 eeh * pcb_rw[i + 1].rw_in[6].
79 1.1 eeh *
80 1.1 eeh * pcb_nsaved has three `kinds' of values. If 0, it means no
81 1.1 eeh * registers are in the PCB (though if pcb_uw is positive,
82 1.1 eeh * there may be the next time you look). If positive, it means
83 1.1 eeh * there are no user registers in the CPU, but there are some
84 1.1 eeh * saved in pcb_rw[]. As a special case, traps that needed
85 1.1 eeh * assistance to pull user registers from the stack also store
86 1.1 eeh * the registers in pcb_rw[], and set pcb_nsaved to -1. This
87 1.1 eeh * special state is normally short-term: it can only last until the
88 1.1 eeh * trap returns, and it can never persist across entry to user code.
89 1.1 eeh */
90 1.1 eeh /*
91 1.1 eeh * v9 addendum:
92 1.1 eeh *
93 1.1 eeh * Window handling between v8 and v9 has changed somewhat. There
94 1.1 eeh * is no %wim. Instead, we have a %cwp, %cansave, %canrestore,
95 1.1 eeh * %cleanwin, and %otherwin. By definition:
96 1.1 eeh *
97 1.1 eeh * %cansave + %canrestore + %otherwin = NWINDOWS - 2
98 1.1 eeh *
99 1.1 eeh * In addition, %cleanwin >= %canrestore since restorable windows
100 1.1 eeh * are considered clean. This means that by storing %canrestore
101 1.1 eeh * and %otherwin, we should be able to compute the values of all
102 1.1 eeh * the other registers.
103 1.1 eeh *
104 1.1 eeh * The only other register we need to save is %cwp because it cannot
105 1.1 eeh * be trivially computed from the other registers. The %cwp is
106 1.1 eeh * stored in the %tstate register, but if the machine was in a register
107 1.1 eeh * window spill/fill handler, the value of that %cwp may be off by
108 1.1 eeh * as much as 2 register windows. We will also store %cwp. [We will
109 1.1 eeh * try to steal pcb_uw or pcb_nsaved for this purpose eventually.]
110 1.1 eeh *
111 1.1 eeh * To calculate what registers are in the pcb, start with pcb_cwp
112 1.1 eeh * and proceed to (pcb_cwp - pcb_canrestore) % NWINDOWS. These should
113 1.1 eeh * be saved to their appropriate register windows. The client routine
114 1.1 eeh * (trap handler) is responsible for saving pcb_cwp + 1 [%o1-%o7] in
115 1.1 eeh * the trap frame or on the stack.
116 1.1 eeh *
117 1.1 eeh *
118 1.1 eeh * Even more addendum:
119 1.1 eeh *
120 1.1 eeh * With the new system for keeping track of register windows we don't
121 1.1 eeh * care about anything other than pcb_uw which keeps track of how many
122 1.1 eeh * full windows we have. As soon as a flush traps, we dump all user
123 1.1 eeh * windows to the pcb, handle the fault, then restore all user windows.
124 1.1 eeh *
125 1.1 eeh * XXX we are using pcb_nsaved as the counter. pcb_uw is still a mask.
126 1.1 eeh * change this as soon as the new scheme is debugged.
127 1.1 eeh */
128 1.1 eeh struct pcb {
129 1.7 eeh u_int64_t pcb_sp; /* sp (%o6) when switch() was called */
130 1.7 eeh u_int64_t pcb_pc; /* pc (%o7) when switch() was called */
131 1.1 eeh caddr_t pcb_onfault; /* for copyin/out */
132 1.1 eeh short pcb_pstate; /* %pstate when switch() was called -- may be useful if we support multiple memory models */
133 1.1 eeh char pcb_nsaved; /* number of windows saved in pcb */
134 1.1 eeh
135 1.1 eeh /* The rest is probably not needed except for pcb_rw */
136 1.1 eeh char pcb_cwp; /* %cwp when switch() was called */
137 1.1 eeh char pcb_pil; /* %pil when switch() was called -- prolly not needed */
138 1.1 eeh
139 1.6 mrg const char *lastcall; /* DEBUG -- name of last system call */
140 1.1 eeh /* the following MUST be aligned on a 64-bit boundary */
141 1.1 eeh struct rwindow64 pcb_rw[PCB_MAXWIN]; /* saved windows */
142 1.1 eeh };
143 1.1 eeh
144 1.1 eeh /*
145 1.1 eeh * The pcb is augmented with machine-dependent additional data for
146 1.1 eeh * core dumps. Note that the trapframe here is a copy of the one
147 1.1 eeh * from the top of the kernel stack (included here so that the kernel
148 1.1 eeh * stack itself need not be dumped).
149 1.1 eeh */
150 1.3 eeh struct md_coredump32 {
151 1.3 eeh struct trapframe32 md_tf;
152 1.3 eeh struct fpstate32 md_fpstate;
153 1.3 eeh };
154 1.3 eeh
155 1.1 eeh struct md_coredump {
156 1.8 eeh /* We'll retain the larger structure for backwards compat. */
157 1.8 eeh struct trapframe64_15 md_tf;
158 1.3 eeh struct fpstate64 md_fpstate;
159 1.1 eeh };
160 1.1 eeh
161 1.1 eeh #ifdef _KERNEL
162 1.1 eeh extern struct pcb *cpcb;
163 1.2 eeh #else
164 1.2 eeh /* Let gdb compile. We need fancier macros to make these make sense. */
165 1.2 eeh #define pcb_psr pcb_pstate
166 1.2 eeh #define pcb_wim pcb_cwp
167 1.1 eeh #endif /* _KERNEL */
168