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authorpeter <peter@FreeBSD.org>2003-11-17 08:58:16 +0000
committerpeter <peter@FreeBSD.org>2003-11-17 08:58:16 +0000
commit9dedda25aa3f6dd18f44e322691c1351377f1927 (patch)
treeaabbe8bf492a150ee82a721cb9396dd2a5b08c50 /sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c
parent71a2f6d14698b35350148cb96e1da0939b08ccb2 (diff)
downloadFreeBSD-src-9dedda25aa3f6dd18f44e322691c1351377f1927.zip
FreeBSD-src-9dedda25aa3f6dd18f44e322691c1351377f1927.tar.gz
Initial landing of SMP support for FreeBSD/amd64.
- This is heavily derived from John Baldwin's apic/pci cleanup on i386. - I have completely rewritten or drastically cleaned up some other parts. (in particular, bootstrap) - This is still a WIP. It seems that there are some highly bogus bioses on nVidia nForce3-150 boards. I can't stress how broken these boards are. I have a workaround in mind, but right now the Asus SK8N is broken. The Gigabyte K8NPro (nVidia based) is also mind-numbingly hosed. - Most of my testing has been with SCHED_ULE. SCHED_4BSD works. - the apic and acpi components are 'standard'. - If you have an nVidia nForce3-150 board, you are stuck with 'device atpic' in addition, because they somehow managed to forget to connect the 8254 timer to the apic, even though its in the same silicon! ARGH! This directly violates the ACPI spec.
Diffstat (limited to 'sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c')
-rw-r--r--sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c9
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c b/sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c
index 56d268c..aeb2e35 100644
--- a/sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c
+++ b/sys/amd64/amd64/mem.c
@@ -323,6 +323,15 @@ mem_range_attr_set(struct mem_range_desc *mrd, int *arg)
return (mem_range_softc.mr_op->set(&mem_range_softc, mrd, arg));
}
+#ifdef SMP
+void
+mem_range_AP_init(void)
+{
+ if (mem_range_softc.mr_op && mem_range_softc.mr_op->initAP)
+ (mem_range_softc.mr_op->initAP(&mem_range_softc));
+}
+#endif
+
static int
mem_modevent(module_t mod, int type, void *data)
{
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