- 2008年 10月 13日 4 次提交
- 2008年 10月 09日 1 次提交
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由 rtm 提交于
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- 2008年 9月 28日 1 次提交
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由 rtm 提交于
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- 2008年 9月 25日 1 次提交
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由 kolya 提交于
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- 2008年 9月 24日 1 次提交
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由 kolya 提交于
accessible to user from the hidden CPU segment registers.
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- 2008年 9月 11日 2 次提交
- 2008年 9月 09日 1 次提交
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由 kaashoek 提交于
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- 2008年 9月 03日 4 次提交
- 2008年 8月 29日 1 次提交
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由 rtm 提交于
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- 2008年 8月 28日 2 次提交
- 2008年 8月 22日 2 次提交
- 2008年 8月 21日 5 次提交
- 2007年 12月 21日 1 次提交
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由 rsc 提交于
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- 2007年 11月 29日 3 次提交
- 2007年 10月 21日 1 次提交
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由 rtm 提交于
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- 2007年 10月 12日 1 次提交
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由 rsc 提交于
can be called after release without causing deadlock.
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- 2007年 10月 02日 1 次提交
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由 rsc 提交于
Dropped cmpxchg in favor of xchg, to match lecture notes. Use xchg to release lock, for future protection and to keep gcc from acting clever.
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- 2007年 9月 30日 2 次提交
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由 rsc 提交于
rtm wrote: > Why does acquire() call cpuid()? Why does release() call cpuid()? The cpuid in acquire is redundant with the cmpxchg, as you said. I have removed the cpuid from acquire. The cpuid in release is actually doing something important, but not on the hardware. It keeps gcc from reordering the lock->locked assignment above the other two during optimization. (Not that current gcc -O2 would choose to do that, but it is allowed to.) I have replaced the cpuid in release with a "gcc barrier" that keeps gcc from moving things around but has no hardware effect. On a related note, I don't think the cpuid in mpmain is necessary, for the same reason that the cpuid wasn't needed in release. As to the question of whether acquire(); x = protected; release(); might read protected after release(), I still haven't convinced myself whether it can. I'll put the cpuid back into release if we determine that it can. Russ
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由 rsc 提交于
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- 2007年 9月 28日 6 次提交
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由 rsc 提交于
"It just works."
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由 rsc 提交于
Change pushcli / popcli so that they can never turn on interrupts unexpectedly. That is, if interrupts are on, then pushcli(); popcli(); turns them off and back on, but if they are off to begin with, then pushcli(); popcli(); is a no-op. I think our fundamental mistake was having a primitive (release and then popcli nee spllo) that could turn interrupts on at unexpected moments instead of being explicit about when we want to start allowing interrupts. With the new semantics, all the manual fiddling of ncli to force interrupts off in certain sections goes away. In return, we must explicitly mark the places where we want to enable interrupts unconditionally, by calling sti(). There is only one: inside the scheduler loop.
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由 rsc 提交于
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由 rsc 提交于
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由 rsc 提交于
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由 rsc 提交于
I don't actually think this is worthwhile, but I figured I would check it in before reverting it, so that it can be in the revision history. Pros: * curproc doesn't need to turn on/off interrupts * scheduler doesn't have to edit curproc anymore Cons: * it's ugly * all the stack computation is more complicated. * it doesn't actually simplify anything but curproc, and even curproc is harder to follow.
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