| Memory management for CRIS/MMU |
| ------------------------------ |
| HISTORY: |
| |
| $Log: README.mm,v $ |
| Revision 1.1 2001/12/17 13:59:27 bjornw |
| Initial revision |
| |
| Revision 1.1 2000/07/10 16:25:21 bjornw |
| Initial revision |
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| Revision 1.4 2000/01/17 02:31:59 bjornw |
| Added discussion of paging and VM. |
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| Revision 1.3 1999/12/03 16:43:23 hp |
| Blurb about that the 3.5G-limitation is not a MMU limitation |
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| Revision 1.2 1999/12/03 16:04:21 hp |
| Picky comment about not mapping the first page |
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| Revision 1.1 1999/12/03 15:41:30 bjornw |
| First version of CRIS/MMU memory layout specification. |
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| ------------------------------ |
| |
| See the ETRAX-NG HSDD for reference. |
| |
| We use the page-size of 8 kbytes, as opposed to the i386 page-size of 4 kbytes. |
| |
| The MMU can, apart from the normal mapping of pages, also do a top-level |
| segmentation of the kernel memory space. We use this feature to avoid having |
| to use page-tables to map the physical memory into the kernel's address |
| space. We also use it to keep the user-mode virtual mapping in the same |
| map during kernel-mode, so that the kernel easily can access the corresponding |
| user-mode process' data. |
| |
| As a comparison, the Linux/i386 2.0 puts the kernel and physical RAM at |
| address 0, overlapping with the user-mode virtual space, so that descriptor |
| registers are needed for each memory access to specify which MMU space to |
| map through. That changed in 2.2, putting the kernel/physical RAM at |
| 0xc0000000, to co-exist with the user-mode mapping. We will do something |
| quite similar, but with the additional complexity of having to map the |
| internal chip I/O registers and the flash memory area (including SRAM |
| and peripherial chip-selets). |
| |
| The kernel-mode segmentation map: |
| |
| ------------------------ ------------------------ |
| FFFFFFFF| | => cached | | |
| | kernel seg_f | flash | | |
| F0000000|______________________| | | |
| EFFFFFFF| | => uncached | | |
| | kernel seg_e | flash | | |
| E0000000|______________________| | DRAM | |
| DFFFFFFF| | paged to any | Un-cached | |
| | kernel seg_d | =======> | | |
| D0000000|______________________| | | |
| CFFFFFFF| | | | |
| | kernel seg_c |==\ | | |
| C0000000|______________________| \ |______________________| |
| BFFFFFFF| | uncached | | |
| | kernel seg_b |=====\=========>| Registers | |
| B0000000|______________________| \c |______________________| |
| AFFFFFFF| | \a | | |
| | | \c | FLASH/SRAM/Peripheral| |
| | | \h |______________________| |
| | | \e | | |
| | | \d | | |
| | kernel seg_0 - seg_a | \==>| DRAM | |
| | | | Cached | |
| | | paged to any | | |
| | | =======> |______________________| |
| | | | | |
| | | | Illegal | |
| | | |______________________| |
| | | | | |
| | | | FLASH/SRAM/Peripheral| |
| 00000000|______________________| |______________________| |
| |
| In user-mode it looks the same except that only the space 0-AFFFFFFF is |
| available. Therefore, in this model, the virtual address space per process |
| is limited to 0xb0000000 bytes (minus 8192 bytes, since the first page, |
| 0..8191, is never mapped, in order to trap NULL references). |
| |
| It also means that the total physical RAM that can be mapped is 256 MB |
| (kseg_c above). More RAM can be mapped by choosing a different segmentation |
| and shrinking the user-mode memory space. |
| |
| The MMU can map all 4 GB in user mode, but doing that would mean that a |
| few extra instructions would be needed for each access to user mode |
| memory. |
| |
| The kernel needs access to both cached and uncached flash. Uncached is |
| necessary because of the special write/erase sequences. Also, the |
| peripherial chip-selects are decoded from that region. |
| |
| The kernel also needs its own virtual memory space. That is kseg_d. It |
| is used by the vmalloc() kernel function to allocate virtual contiguous |
| chunks of memory not possible using the normal kmalloc physical RAM |
| allocator. |
| |
| The setting of the actual MMU control registers to use this layout would |
| be something like this: |
| |
| R_MMU_KSEG = ( ( seg_f, seg ) | // Flash cached |
| ( seg_e, seg ) | // Flash uncached |
| ( seg_d, page ) | // kernel vmalloc area |
| ( seg_c, seg ) | // kernel linear segment |
| ( seg_b, seg ) | // kernel linear segment |
| ( seg_a, page ) | |
| ( seg_9, page ) | |
| ( seg_8, page ) | |
| ( seg_7, page ) | |
| ( seg_6, page ) | |
| ( seg_5, page ) | |
| ( seg_4, page ) | |
| ( seg_3, page ) | |
| ( seg_2, page ) | |
| ( seg_1, page ) | |
| ( seg_0, page ) ); |
| |
| R_MMU_KBASE_HI = ( ( base_f, 0x0 ) | // flash/sram/periph cached |
| ( base_e, 0x8 ) | // flash/sram/periph uncached |
| ( base_d, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_c, 0x4 ) | // physical RAM cached area |
| ( base_b, 0xb ) | // uncached on-chip registers |
| ( base_a, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_9, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_8, 0x0 ) ); // don't care |
| |
| R_MMU_KBASE_LO = ( ( base_7, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_6, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_5, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_4, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_3, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_2, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_1, 0x0 ) | // don't care |
| ( base_0, 0x0 ) ); // don't care |
| |
| NOTE: while setting up the MMU, we run in a non-mapped mode in the DRAM (0x40 |
| segment) and need to setup the seg_4 to a unity mapping, so that we don't get |
| a fault before we have had time to jump into the real kernel segment (0xc0). This |
| is done in head.S temporarily, but fixed by the kernel later in paging_init. |
| |
| |
| Paging - PTE's, PMD's and PGD's |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| [ References: asm/pgtable.h, asm/page.h, asm/mmu.h ] |
| |
| The paging mechanism uses virtual addresses to split a process memory-space into |
| pages, a page being the smallest unit that can be freely remapped in memory. On |
| Linux/CRIS, a page is 8192 bytes (for technical reasons not equal to 4096 as in |
| most other 32-bit architectures). It would be inefficient to let a virtual memory |
| mapping be controlled by a long table of page mappings, so it is broken down into |
| a 2-level structure with a Page Directory containing pointers to Page Tables which |
| each have maps of up to 2048 pages (8192 / sizeof(void *)). Linux can actually |
| handle 3-level structures as well, with a Page Middle Directory in between, but |
| in many cases, this is folded into a two-level structure by excluding the Middle |
| Directory. |
| |
| We'll take a look at how an address is translated while we discuss how it's handled |
| in the Linux kernel. |
| |
| The example address is 0xd004000c; in binary this is: |
| |
| 31 23 15 7 0 |
| 11010000 00000100 00000000 00001100 |
| |
| |______| |__________||____________| |
| PGD PTE page offset |
| |
| Given the top-level Page Directory, the offset in that directory is calculated |
| using the upper 8 bits: |
| |
| static inline pgd_t * pgd_offset(struct mm_struct * mm, unsigned long address) |
| { |
| return mm->pgd + (address >> PGDIR_SHIFT); |
| } |
| |
| PGDIR_SHIFT is the log2 of the amount of memory an entry in the PGD can map; in our |
| case it is 24, corresponding to 16 MB. This means that each entry in the PGD |
| corresponds to 16 MB of virtual memory. |
| |
| The pgd_t from our example will therefore be the 208'th (0xd0) entry in mm->pgd. |
| |
| Since the Middle Directory does not exist, it is a unity mapping: |
| |
| static inline pmd_t * pmd_offset(pgd_t * dir, unsigned long address) |
| { |
| return (pmd_t *) dir; |
| } |
| |
| The Page Table provides the final lookup by using bits 13 to 23 as index: |
| |
| static inline pte_t * pte_offset(pmd_t * dir, unsigned long address) |
| { |
| return (pte_t *) pmd_page(*dir) + ((address >> PAGE_SHIFT) & |
| (PTRS_PER_PTE - 1)); |
| } |
| |
| PAGE_SHIFT is the log2 of the size of a page; 13 in our case. PTRS_PER_PTE is |
| the number of pointers that fit in a Page Table and is used to mask off the |
| PGD-part of the address. |
| |
| The so-far unused bits 0 to 12 are used to index inside a page linearily. |
| |
| The VM system |
| ------------- |
| |
| The kernels own page-directory is the swapper_pg_dir, cleared in paging_init, |
| and contains the kernels virtual mappings (the kernel itself is not paged - it |
| is mapped linearily using kseg_c as described above). Architectures without |
| kernel segments like the i386, need to setup swapper_pg_dir directly in head.S |
| to map the kernel itself. swapper_pg_dir is pointed to by init_mm.pgd as the |
| init-task's PGD. |
| |
| To see what support functions are used to setup a page-table, let's look at the |
| kernel's internal paged memory system, vmalloc/vfree. |
| |
| void * vmalloc(unsigned long size) |
| |
| The vmalloc-system keeps a paged segment in kernel-space at 0xd0000000. What |
| happens first is that a virtual address chunk is allocated to the request using |
| get_vm_area(size). After that, physical RAM pages are allocated and put into |
| the kernel's page-table using alloc_area_pages(addr, size). |
| |
| static int alloc_area_pages(unsigned long address, unsigned long size) |
| |
| First the PGD entry is found using init_mm.pgd. This is passed to |
| alloc_area_pmd (remember the 3->2 folding). It uses pte_alloc_kernel to |
| check if the PGD entry points anywhere - if not, a page table page is |
| allocated and the PGD entry updated. Then the alloc_area_pte function is |
| used just like alloc_area_pmd to check which page table entry is desired, |
| and a physical page is allocated and the table entry updated. All of this |
| is repeated at the top-level until the entire address range specified has |
| been mapped. |
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