svn commit: r268624 - head/sys/dev/vt/hw/efifb
Alan Cox
alc at rice.edu
Tue Jul 15 15:44:14 UTC 2014
On 07/15/2014 09:01, John Baldwin wrote:
> On Monday, July 14, 2014 1:53:45 pm Konstantin Belousov wrote:
>> On Mon, Jul 14, 2014 at 05:42:22PM +0000, Nathan Whitehorn wrote:
>>> Author: nwhitehorn
>>> Date: Mon Jul 14 17:42:22 2014
>>> New Revision: 268624
>>> URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/268624
>>>
>>> Log:
>>> On my Lenovo laptop, the firmware maps the EFI framebuffer with MTRRs
> set
>>> to uncacheable. This leads to execrable console performance. Once PMAP
> is
>>> up, remap the framebuffer as write-combining. This reduces boot time on
> my
>>> laptop by 60% when booting with EFI.
>>>
>>> MFC after: 2 weeks
>>>
>>> Modified:
>>> head/sys/dev/vt/hw/efifb/efifb.c
>>>
>>> Modified: head/sys/dev/vt/hw/efifb/efifb.c
>>>
> ==============================================================================
>>> --- head/sys/dev/vt/hw/efifb/efifb.c Mon Jul 14 17:16:09 2014
> (r268623)
>>> +++ head/sys/dev/vt/hw/efifb/efifb.c Mon Jul 14 17:42:22 2014
> (r268624)
>>> @@ -53,6 +53,7 @@ __FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
>>>
>>> static vd_init_t vt_efifb_init;
>>> static vd_probe_t vt_efifb_probe;
>>> +static void vt_efifb_remap(void *efifb_data);
>>>
>>> static struct vt_driver vt_efifb_driver = {
>>> .vd_name = "efifb",
>>> @@ -68,6 +69,8 @@ static struct vt_driver vt_efifb_driver
>>> static struct fb_info local_info;
>>> VT_DRIVER_DECLARE(vt_efifb, vt_efifb_driver);
>>>
>>> +SYSINIT(efifb_remap, SI_SUB_KMEM, SI_ORDER_ANY, vt_efifb_remap,
> &local_info);
>>> +
>>> static int
>>> vt_efifb_probe(struct vt_device *vd)
>>> {
>>> @@ -133,9 +136,9 @@ vt_efifb_init(struct vt_device *vd)
>>> info->fb_size = info->fb_height * info->fb_stride;
>>> info->fb_pbase = efifb->fb_addr;
>>> /*
>>> - * We could use pmap_mapdev here except that the kernel pmap
>>> - * hasn't been created yet and hence any attempt to lock it will
>>> - * fail.
>>> + * Use the direct map as a crutch until pmap is available. Once pmap
>>> + * is online, the framebuffer will be remapped by vt_efifb_remap()
>>> + * using pmap_mapdev_attr().
>>> */
>>> info->fb_vbase = PHYS_TO_DMAP(efifb->fb_addr);
>>>
>>> @@ -163,3 +166,22 @@ vt_efifb_init(struct vt_device *vd)
>>>
>>> return (CN_INTERNAL);
>>> }
>>> +
>>> +static void
>>> +vt_efifb_remap(void *xinfo)
>>> +{
>>> + struct fb_info *info = xinfo;
>>> +
>>> + if (info->fb_pbase == 0)
>>> + return;
>>> +
>>> + /*
>>> + * Remap as write-combining. This massively improves performance and
>>> + * happens very early in kernel initialization, when everything is
>>> + * still single-threaded and interrupts are off, so replacing the
>>> + * mapping address is safe.
>>> + */
>>> + info->fb_vbase = (intptr_t)pmap_mapdev_attr(info->fb_pbase,
>>> + info->fb_size, VM_MEMATTR_WRITE_COMBINING);
>>> +}
>>> +
>> Could you use pmap_change_attr() ? This would save some KVA.
> I think that is a no-op in this case. pmap_mapdev_attr() on amd64 is already
> going to re-use the existing DMAP mapping after doing pmap_change_attr() on
> it.
>
Yes, it automatically uses the direct map:
void *
pmap_mapdev_attr(vm_paddr_t pa, vm_size_t size, int mode)
{
vm_offset_t va, offset;
vm_size_t tmpsize;
/*
* If the specified range of physical addresses fits within the
direct
* map window, use the direct map.
*/
if (pa < dmaplimit && pa + size < dmaplimit) {
va = PHYS_TO_DMAP(pa);
if (!pmap_change_attr(va, size, mode))
return ((void *)va);
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