vmparam.h revision 1.11
1/*	$NetBSD: vmparam.h,v 1.11 2001/04/29 22:44:36 thorpej Exp $	*/
2
3/*
4 * This file was taken from from mvme68k/include/vmparam.h and
5 * should probably be re-synced when needed.
6 * Darrin B Jewell <jewell@mit.edu>  Fri Aug 28 03:22:07 1998
7 * original cvs id: NetBSD: vmparam.h,v 1.9 1998/08/22 10:55:34 scw Exp
8 */
9
10/*
11 * Copyright (c) 1988 University of Utah.
12 * Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1990, 1993
13 *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
14 *
15 * This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
16 * the Systems Programming Group of the University of Utah Computer
17 * Science Department.
18 *
19 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
20 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
21 * are met:
22 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
23 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
24 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
25 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
26 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
27 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
28 *    must display the following acknowledgement:
29 *	This product includes software developed by the University of
30 *	California, Berkeley and its contributors.
31 * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
32 *    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
33 *    without specific prior written permission.
34 *
35 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
36 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
37 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
38 * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
39 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
40 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
41 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
42 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
43 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
44 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
45 * SUCH DAMAGE.
46 *
47 * from: Utah $Hdr: vmparam.h 1.16 91/01/18$
48 *
49 *	@(#)vmparam.h	8.2 (Berkeley) 4/19/94
50 */
51
52#ifndef _NEXT68K_VMPARAM_H_
53#define _NEXT68K_VMPARAM_H_
54
55/*
56 * Machine dependent constants for NEXT68K
57 */
58
59/*
60 * We use 4K pages on the NeXT.  Override the PAGE_* definitions
61 * to be compile-time constants.
62 */
63#define	PAGE_SHIFT	12
64#define	PAGE_SIZE	(1 << PAGE_SHIFT)
65#define	PAGE_MASK	(PAGE_SIZE - 1)
66
67/*
68 * USRTEXT is the start of the user text/data space, while USRSTACK
69 * is the top (end) of the user stack.  LOWPAGES and HIGHPAGES are
70 * the number of pages from the beginning of the P0 region to the
71 * beginning of the text and from the beginning of the P1 region to the
72 * beginning of the stack respectively.
73 *
74 * NOTE: the ONLY reason that HIGHPAGES is 0x100 instead of UPAGES (3)
75 * is for HPUX compatibility.  Why??  Because HPUX's debuggers
76 * have the user's stack hard-wired at FFF00000 for post-mortems,
77 * and we must be compatible...
78 */
79#define	USRTEXT		8192			/* Must equal __LDPGSZ */
80#define	USRSTACK	(-HIGHPAGES*NBPG)	/* Start of user stack */
81#define	BTOPUSRSTACK	(0x100000-HIGHPAGES)	/* btop(USRSTACK) */
82#define	P1PAGES		0x100000
83#define	LOWPAGES	0
84#define	HIGHPAGES	(0x100000/NBPG)
85
86/*
87 * Virtual memory related constants, all in bytes
88 */
89#ifndef MAXTSIZ
90#define	MAXTSIZ		(8*1024*1024)		/* max text size */
91#endif
92#ifndef DFLDSIZ
93#define	DFLDSIZ		(16*1024*1024)		/* initial data size limit */
94#endif
95#ifndef MAXDSIZ
96#define	MAXDSIZ		(64*1024*1024)		/* max data size */
97#endif
98#ifndef	DFLSSIZ
99#define	DFLSSIZ		(512*1024)		/* initial stack size limit */
100#endif
101#ifndef	MAXSSIZ
102#define	MAXSSIZ		MAXDSIZ			/* max stack size */
103#endif
104
105/*
106 * Sizes of the system and user portions of the system page table.
107 */
108/* SYSPTSIZE IS SILLY; IT SHOULD BE COMPUTED AT BOOT TIME */
109#define	SYSPTSIZE	(2 * NPTEPG)	/* 8mb */
110#define	USRPTSIZE 	(1 * NPTEPG)	/* 4mb */
111
112/*
113 * PTEs for mapping user space into the kernel for phyio operations.
114 * One page is enough to handle 4Mb of simultaneous raw IO operations.
115 */
116#ifndef USRIOSIZE
117#define USRIOSIZE	(1 * NPTEPG)	/* 4mb */
118#endif
119
120/*
121 * PTEs for system V style shared memory.
122 * This is basically slop for kmempt which we actually allocate (malloc) from.
123 */
124#ifndef SHMMAXPGS
125#define SHMMAXPGS	1024		/* 4mb */
126#endif
127
128/*
129 * The time for a process to be blocked before being very swappable.
130 * This is a number of seconds which the system takes as being a non-trivial
131 * amount of real time.  You probably shouldn't change this;
132 * it is used in subtle ways (fractions and multiples of it are, that is, like
133 * half of a ``long time'', almost a long time, etc.)
134 * It is related to human patience and other factors which don't really
135 * change over time.
136 */
137#define	MAXSLP 		20
138
139/*
140 * Mach derived constants
141 */
142
143/* user/kernel map constants */
144#define VM_MIN_ADDRESS		((vaddr_t)0)
145#define VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS	((vaddr_t)0xFFF00000)
146#define VM_MAX_ADDRESS		((vaddr_t)0xFFF00000)
147#define VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS	((vaddr_t)0)
148#define VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS	((vaddr_t)0xFFFFF000)
149
150/* virtual sizes (bytes) for various kernel submaps */
151#define VM_PHYS_SIZE		(USRIOSIZE*NBPG)
152
153/* # of kernel PT pages (initial only, can grow dynamically) */
154#define VM_KERNEL_PT_PAGES	((vsize_t)2)		/* XXX: SYSPTSIZE */
155
156/*
157 * Constants which control the way the VM system deals with memory segments.
158 */
159#define	VM_PHYSSEG_MAX		5			/* @@@ should really come from N_SIMM */
160#define	VM_PHYSSEG_STRAT	VM_PSTRAT_RANDOM
161#define	VM_PHYSSEG_NOADD				/* @@@ does the NeXT really need this? */
162#define	VM_NFREELIST		1
163#define	VM_FREELIST_DEFAULT	0
164
165#define	VM_MDPAGE_MEMBERS	/* XXX nothing yet */
166#define	VM_MDPAGE_INIT(pg)	/* XXX nothing yet */
167#define	PMAP_PHYSSEG		/* XXX for now */
168
169/*
170 * pmap-specific data stored in the vm_physmem[] array.
171 */
172struct pmap_physseg {
173	struct pv_entry *pvent;		/* pv table for this seg */
174	char *attrs;			/* page attributes for this seg */
175};
176
177#endif /* _MVME68K_VMPARAM_H_ */
178