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-rw-r--r--arch/powerpc/include/asm/mmu-hash64.h128
1 files changed, 66 insertions, 62 deletions
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/include/asm/mmu-hash64.h b/arch/powerpc/include/asm/mmu-hash64.h
index 2fdb47a19ef..b59e06f507e 100644
--- a/arch/powerpc/include/asm/mmu-hash64.h
+++ b/arch/powerpc/include/asm/mmu-hash64.h
@@ -343,17 +343,16 @@ extern void slb_set_size(u16 size);
/*
* VSID allocation (256MB segment)
*
- * We first generate a 38-bit "proto-VSID". For kernel addresses this
- * is equal to the ESID | 1 << 37, for user addresses it is:
- * (context << USER_ESID_BITS) | (esid & ((1U << USER_ESID_BITS) - 1)
+ * We first generate a 37-bit "proto-VSID". Proto-VSIDs are generated
+ * from mmu context id and effective segment id of the address.
*
- * This splits the proto-VSID into the below range
- * 0 - (2^(CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS) - 1) : User proto-VSID range
- * 2^(CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS) - 2^(VSID_BITS) : Kernel proto-VSID range
- *
- * We also have CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS = VSID_BITS - 1
- * That is, we assign half of the space to user processes and half
- * to the kernel.
+ * For user processes max context id is limited to ((1ul << 19) - 5)
+ * for kernel space, we use the top 4 context ids to map address as below
+ * NOTE: each context only support 64TB now.
+ * 0x7fffc - [ 0xc000000000000000 - 0xc0003fffffffffff ]
+ * 0x7fffd - [ 0xd000000000000000 - 0xd0003fffffffffff ]
+ * 0x7fffe - [ 0xe000000000000000 - 0xe0003fffffffffff ]
+ * 0x7ffff - [ 0xf000000000000000 - 0xf0003fffffffffff ]
*
* The proto-VSIDs are then scrambled into real VSIDs with the
* multiplicative hash:
@@ -363,41 +362,49 @@ extern void slb_set_size(u16 size);
* VSID_MULTIPLIER is prime, so in particular it is
* co-prime to VSID_MODULUS, making this a 1:1 scrambling function.
* Because the modulus is 2^n-1 we can compute it efficiently without
- * a divide or extra multiply (see below).
- *
- * This scheme has several advantages over older methods:
- *
- * - We have VSIDs allocated for every kernel address
- * (i.e. everything above 0xC000000000000000), except the very top
- * segment, which simplifies several things.
+ * a divide or extra multiply (see below). The scramble function gives
+ * robust scattering in the hash table (at least based on some initial
+ * results).
*
- * - We allow for USER_ESID_BITS significant bits of ESID and
- * CONTEXT_BITS bits of context for user addresses.
- * i.e. 64T (46 bits) of address space for up to half a million contexts.
+ * We also consider VSID 0 special. We use VSID 0 for slb entries mapping
+ * bad address. This enables us to consolidate bad address handling in
+ * hash_page.
*
- * - The scramble function gives robust scattering in the hash
- * table (at least based on some initial results). The previous
- * method was more susceptible to pathological cases giving excessive
- * hash collisions.
+ * We also need to avoid the last segment of the last context, because that
+ * would give a protovsid of 0x1fffffffff. That will result in a VSID 0
+ * because of the modulo operation in vsid scramble. But the vmemmap
+ * (which is what uses region 0xf) will never be close to 64TB in size
+ * (it's 56 bytes per page of system memory).
*/
+#define CONTEXT_BITS 19
+#define ESID_BITS 18
+#define ESID_BITS_1T 6
+
+/*
+ * 256MB segment
+ * The proto-VSID space has 2^(CONTEX_BITS + ESID_BITS) - 1 segments
+ * available for user + kernel mapping. The top 4 contexts are used for
+ * kernel mapping. Each segment contains 2^28 bytes. Each
+ * context maps 2^46 bytes (64TB) so we can support 2^19-1 contexts
+ * (19 == 37 + 28 - 46).
+ */
+#define MAX_USER_CONTEXT ((ASM_CONST(1) << CONTEXT_BITS) - 5)
+
/*
* This should be computed such that protovosid * vsid_mulitplier
* doesn't overflow 64 bits. It should also be co-prime to vsid_modulus
*/
#define VSID_MULTIPLIER_256M ASM_CONST(12538073) /* 24-bit prime */
-#define VSID_BITS_256M 38
+#define VSID_BITS_256M (CONTEXT_BITS + ESID_BITS)
#define VSID_MODULUS_256M ((1UL<<VSID_BITS_256M)-1)
#define VSID_MULTIPLIER_1T ASM_CONST(12538073) /* 24-bit prime */
-#define VSID_BITS_1T 26
+#define VSID_BITS_1T (CONTEXT_BITS + ESID_BITS_1T)
#define VSID_MODULUS_1T ((1UL<<VSID_BITS_1T)-1)
-#define CONTEXT_BITS 19
-#define USER_ESID_BITS 18
-#define USER_ESID_BITS_1T 6
-#define USER_VSID_RANGE (1UL << (USER_ESID_BITS + SID_SHIFT))
+#define USER_VSID_RANGE (1UL << (ESID_BITS + SID_SHIFT))
/*
* This macro generates asm code to compute the VSID scramble
@@ -421,7 +428,8 @@ extern void slb_set_size(u16 size);
srdi rx,rt,VSID_BITS_##size; \
clrldi rt,rt,(64-VSID_BITS_##size); \
add rt,rt,rx; /* add high and low bits */ \
- /* Now, r3 == VSID (mod 2^36-1), and lies between 0 and \
+ /* NOTE: explanation based on VSID_BITS_##size = 36 \
+ * Now, r3 == VSID (mod 2^36-1), and lies between 0 and \
* 2^36-1+2^28-1. That in particular means that if r3 >= \
* 2^36-1, then r3+1 has the 2^36 bit set. So, if r3+1 has \
* the bit clear, r3 already has the answer we want, if it \
@@ -513,34 +521,6 @@ typedef struct {
})
#endif /* 1 */
-/*
- * This is only valid for addresses >= PAGE_OFFSET
- * The proto-VSID space is divided into two class
- * User: 0 to 2^(CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS) -1
- * kernel: 2^(CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS) to 2^(VSID_BITS) - 1
- *
- * With KERNEL_START at 0xc000000000000000, the proto vsid for
- * the kernel ends up with 0xc00000000 (36 bits). With 64TB
- * support we need to have kernel proto-VSID in the
- * [2^37 to 2^38 - 1] range due to the increased USER_ESID_BITS.
- */
-static inline unsigned long get_kernel_vsid(unsigned long ea, int ssize)
-{
- unsigned long proto_vsid;
- /*
- * We need to make sure proto_vsid for the kernel is
- * >= 2^(CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS[_1T])
- */
- if (ssize == MMU_SEGSIZE_256M) {
- proto_vsid = ea >> SID_SHIFT;
- proto_vsid |= (1UL << (CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS));
- return vsid_scramble(proto_vsid, 256M);
- }
- proto_vsid = ea >> SID_SHIFT_1T;
- proto_vsid |= (1UL << (CONTEXT_BITS + USER_ESID_BITS_1T));
- return vsid_scramble(proto_vsid, 1T);
-}
-
/* Returns the segment size indicator for a user address */
static inline int user_segment_size(unsigned long addr)
{
@@ -550,17 +530,41 @@ static inline int user_segment_size(unsigned long addr)
return MMU_SEGSIZE_256M;
}
-/* This is only valid for user addresses (which are below 2^44) */
static inline unsigned long get_vsid(unsigned long context, unsigned long ea,
int ssize)
{
+ /*
+ * Bad address. We return VSID 0 for that
+ */
+ if ((ea & ~REGION_MASK) >= PGTABLE_RANGE)
+ return 0;
+
if (ssize == MMU_SEGSIZE_256M)
- return vsid_scramble((context << USER_ESID_BITS)
+ return vsid_scramble((context << ESID_BITS)
| (ea >> SID_SHIFT), 256M);
- return vsid_scramble((context << USER_ESID_BITS_1T)
+ return vsid_scramble((context << ESID_BITS_1T)
| (ea >> SID_SHIFT_1T), 1T);
}
+/*
+ * This is only valid for addresses >= PAGE_OFFSET
+ *
+ * For kernel space, we use the top 4 context ids to map address as below
+ * 0x7fffc - [ 0xc000000000000000 - 0xc0003fffffffffff ]
+ * 0x7fffd - [ 0xd000000000000000 - 0xd0003fffffffffff ]
+ * 0x7fffe - [ 0xe000000000000000 - 0xe0003fffffffffff ]
+ * 0x7ffff - [ 0xf000000000000000 - 0xf0003fffffffffff ]
+ */
+static inline unsigned long get_kernel_vsid(unsigned long ea, int ssize)
+{
+ unsigned long context;
+
+ /*
+ * kernel take the top 4 context from the available range
+ */
+ context = (MAX_USER_CONTEXT) + ((ea >> 60) - 0xc) + 1;
+ return get_vsid(context, ea, ssize);
+}
#endif /* __ASSEMBLY__ */
#endif /* _ASM_POWERPC_MMU_HASH64_H_ */