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linux-apfs/arch/m68k/sun3/mmu_emu.c
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/*
** Tablewalk MMU emulator
**
** by Toshiyasu Morita
**
** Started 1/16/98 @ 2:22 am
*/
#include <linux/init.h>
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#include <linux/mman.h>
#include <linux/mm.h>
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/ptrace.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <linux/bootmem.h>
#include <linux/bitops.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <asm/setup.h>
#include <asm/traps.h>
#include <asm/uaccess.h>
#include <asm/page.h>
#include <asm/pgtable.h>
#include <asm/sun3mmu.h>
#include <asm/segment.h>
#include <asm/oplib.h>
#include <asm/mmu_context.h>
#include <asm/dvma.h>
#undef DEBUG_MMU_EMU
#define DEBUG_PROM_MAPS
/*
** Defines
*/
#define CONTEXTS_NUM 8
#define SEGMAPS_PER_CONTEXT_NUM 2048
#define PAGES_PER_SEGMENT 16
#define PMEGS_NUM 256
#define PMEG_MASK 0xFF
/*
** Globals
*/
unsigned long m68k_vmalloc_end;
EXPORT_SYMBOL(m68k_vmalloc_end);
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unsigned long pmeg_vaddr[PMEGS_NUM];
unsigned char pmeg_alloc[PMEGS_NUM];
unsigned char pmeg_ctx[PMEGS_NUM];
/* pointers to the mm structs for each task in each
context. 0xffffffff is a marker for kernel context */
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static struct mm_struct *ctx_alloc[CONTEXTS_NUM] = {
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[0] = (struct mm_struct *)0xffffffff
};
/* has this context been mmdrop'd? */
static unsigned char ctx_avail = CONTEXTS_NUM-1;
/* array of pages to be marked off for the rom when we do mem_init later */
/* 256 pages lets the rom take up to 2mb of physical ram.. I really
hope it never wants mote than that. */
unsigned long rom_pages[256];
/* Print a PTE value in symbolic form. For debugging. */
void print_pte (pte_t pte)
{
#if 0
/* Verbose version. */
unsigned long val = pte_val (pte);
printk (" pte=%lx [addr=%lx",
val, (val & SUN3_PAGE_PGNUM_MASK) << PAGE_SHIFT);
if (val & SUN3_PAGE_VALID) printk (" valid");
if (val & SUN3_PAGE_WRITEABLE) printk (" write");
if (val & SUN3_PAGE_SYSTEM) printk (" sys");
if (val & SUN3_PAGE_NOCACHE) printk (" nocache");
if (val & SUN3_PAGE_ACCESSED) printk (" accessed");
if (val & SUN3_PAGE_MODIFIED) printk (" modified");
switch (val & SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_MASK) {
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_MEMORY: printk (" memory"); break;
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_IO: printk (" io"); break;
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_VME16: printk (" vme16"); break;
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_VME32: printk (" vme32"); break;
}
printk ("]\n");
#else
/* Terse version. More likely to fit on a line. */
unsigned long val = pte_val (pte);
char flags[7], *type;
flags[0] = (val & SUN3_PAGE_VALID) ? 'v' : '-';
flags[1] = (val & SUN3_PAGE_WRITEABLE) ? 'w' : '-';
flags[2] = (val & SUN3_PAGE_SYSTEM) ? 's' : '-';
flags[3] = (val & SUN3_PAGE_NOCACHE) ? 'x' : '-';
flags[4] = (val & SUN3_PAGE_ACCESSED) ? 'a' : '-';
flags[5] = (val & SUN3_PAGE_MODIFIED) ? 'm' : '-';
flags[6] = '\0';
switch (val & SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_MASK) {
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_MEMORY: type = "memory"; break;
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_IO: type = "io" ; break;
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_VME16: type = "vme16" ; break;
case SUN3_PAGE_TYPE_VME32: type = "vme32" ; break;
default: type = "unknown?"; break;
}
printk (" pte=%08lx [%07lx %s %s]\n",
val, (val & SUN3_PAGE_PGNUM_MASK) << PAGE_SHIFT, flags, type);
#endif
}
/* Print the PTE value for a given virtual address. For debugging. */
void print_pte_vaddr (unsigned long vaddr)
{
printk (" vaddr=%lx [%02lx]", vaddr, sun3_get_segmap (vaddr));
print_pte (__pte (sun3_get_pte (vaddr)));
}
/*
* Initialise the MMU emulator.
*/
void __init mmu_emu_init(unsigned long bootmem_end)
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{
unsigned long seg, num;
int i,j;
memset(rom_pages, 0, sizeof(rom_pages));
memset(pmeg_vaddr, 0, sizeof(pmeg_vaddr));
memset(pmeg_alloc, 0, sizeof(pmeg_alloc));
memset(pmeg_ctx, 0, sizeof(pmeg_ctx));
/* pmeg align the end of bootmem, adding another pmeg,
* later bootmem allocations will likely need it */
bootmem_end = (bootmem_end + (2 * SUN3_PMEG_SIZE)) & ~SUN3_PMEG_MASK;
/* mark all of the pmegs used thus far as reserved */
for (i=0; i < __pa(bootmem_end) / SUN3_PMEG_SIZE ; ++i)
pmeg_alloc[i] = 2;
/* I'm thinking that most of the top pmeg's are going to be
used for something, and we probably shouldn't risk it */
for(num = 0xf0; num <= 0xff; num++)
pmeg_alloc[num] = 2;
/* liberate all existing mappings in the rest of kernel space */
for(seg = bootmem_end; seg < 0x0f800000; seg += SUN3_PMEG_SIZE) {
i = sun3_get_segmap(seg);
if(!pmeg_alloc[i]) {
#ifdef DEBUG_MMU_EMU
printk("freed: ");
print_pte_vaddr (seg);
#endif
sun3_put_segmap(seg, SUN3_INVALID_PMEG);
}
}
j = 0;
for (num=0, seg=0x0F800000; seg<0x10000000; seg+=16*PAGE_SIZE) {
if (sun3_get_segmap (seg) != SUN3_INVALID_PMEG) {
#ifdef DEBUG_PROM_MAPS
for(i = 0; i < 16; i++) {
printk ("mapped:");
print_pte_vaddr (seg + (i*PAGE_SIZE));
break;
}
#endif
// the lowest mapping here is the end of our
// vmalloc region
if (!m68k_vmalloc_end)
m68k_vmalloc_end = seg;
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// mark the segmap alloc'd, and reserve any
// of the first 0xbff pages the hardware is
// already using... does any sun3 support > 24mb?
pmeg_alloc[sun3_get_segmap(seg)] = 2;
}
}
dvma_init();
/* blank everything below the kernel, and we've got the base
mapping to start all the contexts off with... */
for(seg = 0; seg < PAGE_OFFSET; seg += SUN3_PMEG_SIZE)
sun3_put_segmap(seg, SUN3_INVALID_PMEG);
set_fs(MAKE_MM_SEG(3));
for(seg = 0; seg < 0x10000000; seg += SUN3_PMEG_SIZE) {
i = sun3_get_segmap(seg);
for(j = 1; j < CONTEXTS_NUM; j++)
(*(romvec->pv_setctxt))(j, (void *)seg, i);
}
set_fs(KERNEL_DS);
}
/* erase the mappings for a dead context. Uses the pg_dir for hints
as the pmeg tables proved somewhat unreliable, and unmapping all of
TASK_SIZE was much slower and no more stable. */
/* todo: find a better way to keep track of the pmegs used by a
context for when they're cleared */
void clear_context(unsigned long context)
{
unsigned char oldctx;
unsigned long i;
if(context) {
if(!ctx_alloc[context])
panic("clear_context: context not allocated\n");
ctx_alloc[context]->context = SUN3_INVALID_CONTEXT;
ctx_alloc[context] = (struct mm_struct *)0;
ctx_avail++;
}
oldctx = sun3_get_context();
sun3_put_context(context);
for(i = 0; i < SUN3_INVALID_PMEG; i++) {
if((pmeg_ctx[i] == context) && (pmeg_alloc[i] == 1)) {
sun3_put_segmap(pmeg_vaddr[i], SUN3_INVALID_PMEG);
pmeg_ctx[i] = 0;
pmeg_alloc[i] = 0;
pmeg_vaddr[i] = 0;
}
}
sun3_put_context(oldctx);
}
/* gets an empty context. if full, kills the next context listed to
die first */
/* This context invalidation scheme is, well, totally arbitrary, I'm
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sure it could be much more intelligent... but it gets the job done
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for now without much overhead in making it's decision. */
/* todo: come up with optimized scheme for flushing contexts */
unsigned long get_free_context(struct mm_struct *mm)
{
unsigned long new = 1;
static unsigned char next_to_die = 1;
if(!ctx_avail) {
/* kill someone to get our context */
new = next_to_die;
clear_context(new);
next_to_die = (next_to_die + 1) & 0x7;
if(!next_to_die)
next_to_die++;
} else {
while(new < CONTEXTS_NUM) {
if(ctx_alloc[new])
new++;
else
break;
}
// check to make sure one was really free...
if(new == CONTEXTS_NUM)
panic("get_free_context: failed to find free context");
}
ctx_alloc[new] = mm;
ctx_avail--;
return new;
}
/*
* Dynamically select a `spare' PMEG and use it to map virtual `vaddr' in
* `context'. Maintain internal PMEG management structures. This doesn't
* actually map the physical address, but does clear the old mappings.
*/
//todo: better allocation scheme? but is extra complexity worthwhile?
//todo: only clear old entries if necessary? how to tell?
inline void mmu_emu_map_pmeg (int context, int vaddr)
{
static unsigned char curr_pmeg = 128;
int i;
/* Round address to PMEG boundary. */
vaddr &= ~SUN3_PMEG_MASK;
/* Find a spare one. */
while (pmeg_alloc[curr_pmeg] == 2)
++curr_pmeg;
#ifdef DEBUG_MMU_EMU
printk("mmu_emu_map_pmeg: pmeg %x to context %d vaddr %x\n",
curr_pmeg, context, vaddr);
#endif
/* Invalidate old mapping for the pmeg, if any */
if (pmeg_alloc[curr_pmeg] == 1) {
sun3_put_context(pmeg_ctx[curr_pmeg]);
sun3_put_segmap (pmeg_vaddr[curr_pmeg], SUN3_INVALID_PMEG);
sun3_put_context(context);
}
/* Update PMEG management structures. */
// don't take pmeg's away from the kernel...
if(vaddr >= PAGE_OFFSET) {
/* map kernel pmegs into all contexts */
unsigned char i;
for(i = 0; i < CONTEXTS_NUM; i++) {
sun3_put_context(i);
sun3_put_segmap (vaddr, curr_pmeg);
}
sun3_put_context(context);
pmeg_alloc[curr_pmeg] = 2;
pmeg_ctx[curr_pmeg] = 0;
}
else {
pmeg_alloc[curr_pmeg] = 1;
pmeg_ctx[curr_pmeg] = context;
sun3_put_segmap (vaddr, curr_pmeg);
}
pmeg_vaddr[curr_pmeg] = vaddr;
/* Set hardware mapping and clear the old PTE entries. */
for (i=0; i<SUN3_PMEG_SIZE; i+=SUN3_PTE_SIZE)
sun3_put_pte (vaddr + i, SUN3_PAGE_SYSTEM);
/* Consider a different one next time. */
++curr_pmeg;
}
/*
* Handle a pagefault at virtual address `vaddr'; check if there should be a
* page there (specifically, whether the software pagetables indicate that
* there is). This is necessary due to the limited size of the second-level
* Sun3 hardware pagetables (256 groups of 16 pages). If there should be a
* mapping present, we select a `spare' PMEG and use it to create a mapping.
* `read_flag' is nonzero for a read fault; zero for a write. Returns nonzero
* if we successfully handled the fault.
*/
//todo: should we bump minor pagefault counter? if so, here or in caller?
//todo: possibly inline this into bus_error030 in <asm/buserror.h> ?
// kernel_fault is set when a kernel page couldn't be demand mapped,
// and forces another try using the kernel page table. basically a
// hack so that vmalloc would work correctly.
int mmu_emu_handle_fault (unsigned long vaddr, int read_flag, int kernel_fault)
{
unsigned long segment, offset;
unsigned char context;
pte_t *pte;
pgd_t * crp;
if(current->mm == NULL) {
crp = swapper_pg_dir;
context = 0;
} else {
context = current->mm->context;
if(kernel_fault)
crp = swapper_pg_dir;
else
crp = current->mm->pgd;
}
#ifdef DEBUG_MMU_EMU
printk ("mmu_emu_handle_fault: vaddr=%lx type=%s crp=%p\n",
vaddr, read_flag ? "read" : "write", crp);
#endif
segment = (vaddr >> SUN3_PMEG_SIZE_BITS) & 0x7FF;
offset = (vaddr >> SUN3_PTE_SIZE_BITS) & 0xF;
#ifdef DEBUG_MMU_EMU
printk ("mmu_emu_handle_fault: segment=%lx offset=%lx\n", segment, offset);
#endif
pte = (pte_t *) pgd_val (*(crp + segment));
//todo: next line should check for valid pmd properly.
if (!pte) {
// printk ("mmu_emu_handle_fault: invalid pmd\n");
return 0;
}
pte = (pte_t *) __va ((unsigned long)(pte + offset));
/* Make sure this is a valid page */
if (!(pte_val (*pte) & SUN3_PAGE_VALID))
return 0;
/* Make sure there's a pmeg allocated for the page */
if (sun3_get_segmap (vaddr&~SUN3_PMEG_MASK) == SUN3_INVALID_PMEG)
mmu_emu_map_pmeg (context, vaddr);
/* Write the pte value to hardware MMU */
sun3_put_pte (vaddr&PAGE_MASK, pte_val (*pte));
/* Update software copy of the pte value */
// I'm not sure this is necessary. If this is required, we ought to simply
// copy this out when we reuse the PMEG or at some other convenient time.
// Doing it here is fairly meaningless, anyway, as we only know about the
// first access to a given page. --m
if (!read_flag) {
if (pte_val (*pte) & SUN3_PAGE_WRITEABLE)
pte_val (*pte) |= (SUN3_PAGE_ACCESSED
| SUN3_PAGE_MODIFIED);
else
return 0; /* Write-protect error. */
} else
pte_val (*pte) |= SUN3_PAGE_ACCESSED;
#ifdef DEBUG_MMU_EMU
printk ("seg:%d crp:%p ->", get_fs().seg, crp);
print_pte_vaddr (vaddr);
printk ("\n");
#endif
return 1;
}