uvm_amap.h revision 1.28 1 /* $NetBSD: uvm_amap.h,v 1.28 2006/02/11 12:45:07 yamt 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 acknowledgement:
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 #ifndef _UVM_UVM_AMAP_H_
36 #define _UVM_UVM_AMAP_H_
37
38 /*
39 * uvm_amap.h: general amap interface and amap implementation-specific info
40 */
41
42 /*
43 * an amap structure contains pointers to a set of anons that are
44 * mapped together in virtual memory (an anon is a single page of
45 * anonymous virtual memory -- see uvm_anon.h). in uvm we hide the
46 * details of the implementation of amaps behind a general amap
47 * interface. this allows us to change the amap implementation
48 * without having to touch the rest of the code. this file is divided
49 * into two parts: the definition of the uvm amap interface and the
50 * amap implementation-specific definitions.
51 */
52
53 #ifdef _KERNEL
54
55 /*
56 * part 1: amap interface
57 */
58
59 /*
60 * forward definition of vm_amap structure. only amap
61 * implementation-specific code should directly access the fields of
62 * this structure.
63 */
64
65 struct vm_amap;
66
67
68 /*
69 * prototypes for the amap interface
70 */
71
72 void amap_add /* add an anon to an amap */
73 (struct vm_aref *, vaddr_t,
74 struct vm_anon *, boolean_t);
75 struct vm_amap *amap_alloc /* allocate a new amap */
76 (vaddr_t, vaddr_t, int);
77 void amap_copy /* clear amap needs-copy flag */
78 (struct vm_map *, struct vm_map_entry *, int,
79 boolean_t, vaddr_t, vaddr_t);
80 void amap_cow_now /* resolve all COW faults now */
81 (struct vm_map *, struct vm_map_entry *);
82 int amap_extend /* make amap larger */
83 (struct vm_map_entry *, vsize_t, int);
84 int amap_flags /* get amap's flags */
85 (struct vm_amap *);
86 void amap_free /* free amap */
87 (struct vm_amap *);
88 void amap_lock /* lock amap */
89 (struct vm_amap *);
90 struct vm_anon *amap_lookup /* lookup an anon @ offset in amap */
91 (struct vm_aref *, vaddr_t);
92 void amap_lookups /* lookup multiple anons */
93 (struct vm_aref *, vaddr_t,
94 struct vm_anon **, int);
95 void amap_ref /* add a reference to an amap */
96 (struct vm_amap *, vaddr_t, vsize_t, int);
97 int amap_refs /* get number of references of amap */
98 (struct vm_amap *);
99 void amap_share_protect /* protect pages in a shared amap */
100 (struct vm_map_entry *, vm_prot_t);
101 void amap_splitref /* split reference to amap into two */
102 (struct vm_aref *, struct vm_aref *, vaddr_t);
103 void amap_unadd /* remove an anon from an amap */
104 (struct vm_aref *, vaddr_t);
105 void amap_unlock /* unlock amap */
106 (struct vm_amap *);
107 void amap_unref /* drop reference to an amap */
108 (struct vm_amap *, vaddr_t, vsize_t, int);
109 void amap_wipeout /* remove all anons from amap */
110 (struct vm_amap *);
111 boolean_t amap_swap_off
112 (int, int);
113
114 /*
115 * amap flag values
116 */
117
118 #define AMAP_SHARED 0x1 /* amap is shared */
119 #define AMAP_REFALL 0x2 /* amap_ref: reference entire amap */
120 #define AMAP_SWAPOFF 0x4 /* amap_swap_off() is in progress */
121
122 /*
123 * amap_extend flags
124 */
125 #define AMAP_EXTEND_BACKWARDS 0x00 /* add "size" to start of map */
126 #define AMAP_EXTEND_FORWARDS 0x01 /* add "size" to end of map */
127 #define AMAP_EXTEND_NOWAIT 0x02 /* not allowed to sleep */
128
129 #endif /* _KERNEL */
130
131 /**********************************************************************/
132
133 /*
134 * part 2: amap implementation-specific info
135 */
136
137 /*
138 * we currently provide an array-based amap implementation. in this
139 * implementation we provide the option of tracking split references
140 * so that we don't lose track of references during partial unmaps
141 * ... this is enabled with the "UVM_AMAP_PPREF" define.
142 */
143
144 #define UVM_AMAP_PPREF /* track partial references */
145
146 /*
147 * here is the definition of the vm_amap structure for this implementation.
148 */
149
150 struct vm_amap {
151 struct simplelock am_l; /* simple lock [locks all vm_amap fields] */
152 int am_ref; /* reference count */
153 int am_flags; /* flags */
154 int am_maxslot; /* max # of slots allocated */
155 int am_nslot; /* # of slots currently in map ( <= maxslot) */
156 int am_nused; /* # of slots currently in use */
157 int *am_slots; /* contig array of active slots */
158 int *am_bckptr; /* back pointer array to am_slots */
159 struct vm_anon **am_anon; /* array of anonymous pages */
160 #ifdef UVM_AMAP_PPREF
161 int *am_ppref; /* per page reference count (if !NULL) */
162 #endif
163 LIST_ENTRY(vm_amap) am_list;
164 };
165
166 /*
167 * note that am_slots, am_bckptr, and am_anon are arrays. this allows
168 * fast lookup of pages based on their virual address at the expense of
169 * some extra memory. in the future we should be smarter about memory
170 * usage and fall back to a non-array based implementation on systems
171 * that are short of memory (XXXCDC).
172 *
173 * the entries in the array are called slots... for example an amap that
174 * covers four pages of virtual memory is said to have four slots. here
175 * is an example of the array usage for a four slot amap. note that only
176 * slots one and three have anons assigned to them. "D/C" means that we
177 * "don't care" about the value.
178 *
179 * 0 1 2 3
180 * am_anon: NULL, anon0, NULL, anon1 (actual pointers to anons)
181 * am_bckptr: D/C, 1, D/C, 0 (points to am_slots entry)
182 *
183 * am_slots: 3, 1, D/C, D/C (says slots 3 and 1 are in use)
184 *
185 * note that am_bckptr is D/C if the slot in am_anon is set to NULL.
186 * to find the entry in am_slots for an anon, look at am_bckptr[slot],
187 * thus the entry for slot 3 in am_slots[] is at am_slots[am_bckptr[3]].
188 * in general, if am_anon[X] is non-NULL, then the following must be
189 * true: am_slots[am_bckptr[X]] == X
190 *
191 * note that am_slots is always contig-packed.
192 */
193
194 /*
195 * defines for handling of large sparce amaps:
196 *
197 * one of the problems of array-based amaps is that if you allocate a
198 * large sparcely-used area of virtual memory you end up allocating
199 * large arrays that, for the most part, don't get used. this is a
200 * problem for BSD in that the kernel likes to make these types of
201 * allocations to "reserve" memory for possible future use.
202 *
203 * for example, the kernel allocates (reserves) a large chunk of user
204 * VM for possible stack growth. most of the time only a page or two
205 * of this VM is actually used. since the stack is anonymous memory
206 * it makes sense for it to live in an amap, but if we allocated an
207 * amap for the entire stack range we could end up wasting a large
208 * amount of malloc'd KVM.
209 *
210 * for example, on the i386 at boot time we allocate two amaps for the stack
211 * of /sbin/init:
212 * 1. a 7680 slot amap at protection 0 (reserve space for stack)
213 * 2. a 512 slot amap at protection 7 (top of stack)
214 *
215 * most of the array allocated for the amaps for this is never used.
216 * the amap interface provides a way for us to avoid this problem by
217 * allowing amap_copy() to break larger amaps up into smaller sized
218 * chunks (controlled by the "canchunk" option). we use this feature
219 * to reduce our memory usage with the BSD stack management. if we
220 * are asked to create an amap with more than UVM_AMAP_LARGE slots in it,
221 * we attempt to break it up into a UVM_AMAP_CHUNK sized amap if the
222 * "canchunk" flag is set.
223 *
224 * so, in the i386 example, the 7680 slot area is never referenced so
225 * nothing gets allocated (amap_copy is never called because the protection
226 * is zero). the 512 slot area for the top of the stack is referenced.
227 * the chunking code breaks it up into 16 slot chunks (hopefully a single
228 * 16 slot chunk is enough to handle the whole stack).
229 */
230
231 #define UVM_AMAP_LARGE 256 /* # of slots in "large" amap */
232 #define UVM_AMAP_CHUNK 16 /* # of slots to chunk large amaps in */
233
234 #ifdef _KERNEL
235 #include <sys/mallocvar.h>
236 MALLOC_DECLARE(M_UVMAMAP);
237
238 /*
239 * macros
240 */
241
242 /* AMAP_B2SLOT: convert byte offset to slot */
243 #define AMAP_B2SLOT(S,B) { \
244 KASSERT(((B) & (PAGE_SIZE - 1)) == 0); \
245 (S) = (B) >> PAGE_SHIFT; \
246 }
247
248 /*
249 * lock/unlock/refs/flags macros
250 */
251
252 #define amap_flags(AMAP) ((AMAP)->am_flags)
253 #define amap_lock(AMAP) simple_lock(&(AMAP)->am_l)
254 #define amap_lock_try(AMAP) simple_lock_try(&(AMAP)->am_l)
255 #define amap_refs(AMAP) ((AMAP)->am_ref)
256 #define amap_unlock(AMAP) simple_unlock(&(AMAP)->am_l)
257
258 /*
259 * if we enable PPREF, then we have a couple of extra functions that
260 * we need to prototype here...
261 */
262
263 #ifdef UVM_AMAP_PPREF
264
265 #define PPREF_NONE ((int *) -1) /* not using ppref */
266
267 void amap_pp_adjref /* adjust references */
268 (struct vm_amap *, int, vsize_t, int);
269 void amap_pp_establish /* establish ppref */
270 (struct vm_amap *, vaddr_t);
271 void amap_wiperange /* wipe part of an amap */
272 (struct vm_amap *, int, int);
273 #endif /* UVM_AMAP_PPREF */
274
275 #endif /* _KERNEL */
276
277 #endif /* _UVM_UVM_AMAP_H_ */
278