zephyr/kernel/include/mmu.h

304 lines
9.4 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 2020 Intel Corporation.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
*/
#ifndef KERNEL_INCLUDE_MMU_H
#define KERNEL_INCLUDE_MMU_H
#ifdef CONFIG_MMU
#include <stdint.h>
#include <zephyr/sys/slist.h>
#include <zephyr/sys/__assert.h>
#include <zephyr/sys/util.h>
#include <zephyr/sys/mem_manage.h>
#include <zephyr/linker/linker-defs.h>
/*
* At present, page frame management is only done for main system RAM,
* and we generate paging structures based on CONFIG_SRAM_BASE_ADDRESS
* and CONFIG_SRAM_SIZE.
*
* If we have other RAM regions (DCCM, etc) these typically have special
* properties and shouldn't be used generically for demand paging or
* anonymous mappings. We don't currently maintain an ontology of these in the
* core kernel.
*/
#define Z_PHYS_RAM_START ((uintptr_t)CONFIG_SRAM_BASE_ADDRESS)
#define Z_PHYS_RAM_SIZE ((size_t)KB(CONFIG_SRAM_SIZE))
#define Z_PHYS_RAM_END (Z_PHYS_RAM_START + Z_PHYS_RAM_SIZE)
#define Z_NUM_PAGE_FRAMES (Z_PHYS_RAM_SIZE / (size_t)CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE)
/** End virtual address of virtual address space */
#define Z_VIRT_RAM_START ((uint8_t *)CONFIG_KERNEL_VM_BASE)
#define Z_VIRT_RAM_SIZE ((size_t)CONFIG_KERNEL_VM_SIZE)
#define Z_VIRT_RAM_END (Z_VIRT_RAM_START + Z_VIRT_RAM_SIZE)
/* Boot-time virtual location of the kernel image. */
#define Z_KERNEL_VIRT_START ((uint8_t *)(&z_mapped_start))
#define Z_KERNEL_VIRT_END ((uint8_t *)(&z_mapped_end))
#define Z_KERNEL_VIRT_SIZE (Z_KERNEL_VIRT_END - Z_KERNEL_VIRT_START)
#define Z_VM_OFFSET ((CONFIG_KERNEL_VM_BASE + CONFIG_KERNEL_VM_OFFSET) - \
(CONFIG_SRAM_BASE_ADDRESS + CONFIG_SRAM_OFFSET))
/* Only applies to boot RAM mappings within the Zephyr image that have never
* been remapped or paged out. Never use this unless you know exactly what you
* are doing.
*/
#define Z_BOOT_VIRT_TO_PHYS(virt) ((uintptr_t)(((uint8_t *)virt) - Z_VM_OFFSET))
#define Z_BOOT_PHYS_TO_VIRT(phys) ((uint8_t *)(((uintptr_t)phys) + Z_VM_OFFSET))
#ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_MAPS_ALL_RAM
#define Z_FREE_VM_START Z_BOOT_PHYS_TO_VIRT(Z_PHYS_RAM_END)
#else
#define Z_FREE_VM_START Z_KERNEL_VIRT_END
#endif
/*
* Macros and data structures for physical page frame accounting,
* APIs for use by eviction and backing store algorithms. This code
* is otherwise not application-facing.
*/
/*
* z_page_frame flags bits
*/
/** This page contains critical kernel data and will never be swapped */
#define Z_PAGE_FRAME_PINNED BIT(0)
/** This physical page is reserved by hardware; we will never use it */
#define Z_PAGE_FRAME_RESERVED BIT(1)
/**
* This physical page is mapped to some virtual memory address
*
* Currently, we just support one mapping per page frame. If a page frame
* is mapped to multiple virtual pages then it must be pinned.
*/
#define Z_PAGE_FRAME_MAPPED BIT(2)
/**
* This page frame is currently involved in a page-in/out operation
*/
#define Z_PAGE_FRAME_BUSY BIT(3)
/**
* This page frame has a clean copy in the backing store
*/
#define Z_PAGE_FRAME_BACKED BIT(4)
/**
* Data structure for physical page frames
*
* An array of these is instantiated, one element per physical RAM page.
* Hence it's necessary to constrain its size as much as possible.
*/
struct z_page_frame {
union {
/* If mapped, virtual address this page is mapped to */
void *addr;
/* If unmapped and available, free pages list membership. */
sys_snode_t node;
};
/* Z_PAGE_FRAME_* flags */
uint8_t flags;
/* TODO: Backing store and eviction algorithms may both need to
* introduce custom members for accounting purposes. Come up with
* a layer of abstraction for this. They may also want additional
* flags bits which shouldn't clobber each other. At all costs
* the total size of struct z_page_frame must be minimized.
*/
/* On Xtensa we can't pack this struct because of the memory alignment.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_XTENSA
} __aligned(4);
#else
} __packed;
#endif
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_pinned(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (pf->flags & Z_PAGE_FRAME_PINNED) != 0U;
}
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_reserved(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (pf->flags & Z_PAGE_FRAME_RESERVED) != 0U;
}
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_mapped(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (pf->flags & Z_PAGE_FRAME_MAPPED) != 0U;
}
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_busy(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (pf->flags & Z_PAGE_FRAME_BUSY) != 0U;
}
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_backed(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (pf->flags & Z_PAGE_FRAME_BACKED) != 0U;
}
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_evictable(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (!z_page_frame_is_reserved(pf) && z_page_frame_is_mapped(pf) &&
!z_page_frame_is_pinned(pf) && !z_page_frame_is_busy(pf));
}
/* If true, page is not being used for anything, is not reserved, is a member
* of some free pages list, isn't busy, and may be mapped in memory
*/
static inline bool z_page_frame_is_available(struct z_page_frame *page)
{
return page->flags == 0U;
}
static inline void z_assert_phys_aligned(uintptr_t phys)
{
__ASSERT(phys % CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE == 0U,
"physical address 0x%lx is not page-aligned", phys);
(void)phys;
}
extern struct z_page_frame z_page_frames[Z_NUM_PAGE_FRAMES];
static inline uintptr_t z_page_frame_to_phys(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return (uintptr_t)((pf - z_page_frames) * CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE) +
Z_PHYS_RAM_START;
}
/* Presumes there is but one mapping in the virtual address space */
static inline void *z_page_frame_to_virt(struct z_page_frame *pf)
{
return pf->addr;
}
static inline bool z_is_page_frame(uintptr_t phys)
{
z_assert_phys_aligned(phys);
return (phys >= Z_PHYS_RAM_START) && (phys < Z_PHYS_RAM_END);
}
static inline struct z_page_frame *z_phys_to_page_frame(uintptr_t phys)
{
__ASSERT(z_is_page_frame(phys),
"0x%lx not an SRAM physical address", phys);
return &z_page_frames[(phys - Z_PHYS_RAM_START) /
CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE];
}
static inline void z_mem_assert_virtual_region(uint8_t *addr, size_t size)
{
__ASSERT((uintptr_t)addr % CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE == 0U,
"unaligned addr %p", addr);
__ASSERT(size % CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE == 0U,
"unaligned size %zu", size);
__ASSERT(addr + size > addr,
"region %p size %zu zero or wraps around", addr, size);
__ASSERT(addr >= Z_VIRT_RAM_START && addr + size < Z_VIRT_RAM_END,
"invalid virtual address region %p (%zu)", addr, size);
}
/* Debug function, pretty-print page frame information for all frames
* concisely to printk.
*/
void z_page_frames_dump(void);
/* Number of free page frames. This information may go stale immediately */
extern size_t z_free_page_count;
/* Convenience macro for iterating over all page frames */
#define Z_PAGE_FRAME_FOREACH(_phys, _pageframe) \
for (_phys = Z_PHYS_RAM_START, _pageframe = z_page_frames; \
_phys < Z_PHYS_RAM_END; \
_phys += CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE, _pageframe++)
#ifdef CONFIG_DEMAND_PAGING
/* We reserve a virtual page as a scratch area for page-ins/outs at the end
* of the address space
*/
#define Z_VM_RESERVED CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE
#define Z_SCRATCH_PAGE ((void *)((uintptr_t)CONFIG_KERNEL_VM_BASE + \
(uintptr_t)CONFIG_KERNEL_VM_SIZE - \
CONFIG_MMU_PAGE_SIZE))
#else
#define Z_VM_RESERVED 0
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_DEMAND_PAGING
/*
* Core kernel demand paging APIs
*/
/**
* Number of page faults since system startup
*
* Counts only those page faults that were handled successfully by the demand
* paging mechanism and were not errors.
*
* @return Number of successful page faults
*/
unsigned long z_num_pagefaults_get(void);
/**
* Free a page frame physical address by evicting its contents
*
* The indicated page frame, if it contains a data page, will have that
* data page evicted to the backing store. The page frame will then be
* marked as available for mappings or page-ins.
*
* This is useful for freeing up entire memory banks so that they may be
* deactivated to save power.
*
* If CONFIG_DEMAND_PAGING_ALLOW_IRQ is enabled, this function may not be
* called by ISRs as the backing store may be in-use.
*
* @param phys Page frame physical address
* @retval 0 Success
* @retval -ENOMEM Insufficient backing store space
*/
int z_page_frame_evict(uintptr_t phys);
/**
* Handle a page fault for a virtual data page
*
* This is invoked from the architecture page fault handler.
*
* If a valid page fault, the core kernel will obtain a page frame,
* populate it with the data page that was evicted to the backing store,
* update page tables, and return so that the faulting instruction may be
* re-tried.
*
* The architecture must not call this function if the page was mapped and
* not paged out at the time the exception was triggered (i.e. a protection
* violation for a mapped page).
*
* If the faulting context had interrupts disabled when the page fault was
* triggered, the entire page fault handling path must have interrupts
* disabled, including the invocation of this function.
*
* Otherwise, interrupts may be enabled and the page fault handler may be
* preemptible. Races to page-in will be appropriately handled by the kernel.
*
* @param addr Faulting virtual address
* @retval true Page fault successfully handled, or nothing needed to be done.
* The arch layer should retry the faulting instruction.
* @retval false This page fault was from an un-mapped page, should
* be treated as an error, and not re-tried.
*/
bool z_page_fault(void *addr);
#endif /* CONFIG_DEMAND_PAGING */
#endif /* CONFIG_MMU */
#endif /* KERNEL_INCLUDE_MMU_H */