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@@ -153,42 +153,6 @@ void switch_mm_irqs_off(struct mm_struct *prev, struct mm_struct *next,
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switch_ldt(real_prev, next);
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}
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-/*
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- * The flush IPI assumes that a thread switch happens in this order:
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- * [cpu0: the cpu that switches]
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- * 1) switch_mm() either 1a) or 1b)
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- * 1a) thread switch to a different mm
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- * 1a1) set cpu_tlbstate to TLBSTATE_OK
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- * Now the tlb flush NMI handler flush_tlb_func won't call leave_mm
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- * if cpu0 was in lazy tlb mode.
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- * 1a2) update cpu active_mm
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- * Now cpu0 accepts tlb flushes for the new mm.
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- * 1a3) cpu_set(cpu, new_mm->cpu_vm_mask);
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- * Now the other cpus will send tlb flush ipis.
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- * 1a4) change cr3.
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- * 1a5) cpu_clear(cpu, old_mm->cpu_vm_mask);
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- * Stop ipi delivery for the old mm. This is not synchronized with
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- * the other cpus, but flush_tlb_func ignore flush ipis for the wrong
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- * mm, and in the worst case we perform a superfluous tlb flush.
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- * 1b) thread switch without mm change
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- * cpu active_mm is correct, cpu0 already handles flush ipis.
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- * 1b1) set cpu_tlbstate to TLBSTATE_OK
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- * 1b2) test_and_set the cpu bit in cpu_vm_mask.
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- * Atomically set the bit [other cpus will start sending flush ipis],
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- * and test the bit.
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- * 1b3) if the bit was 0: leave_mm was called, flush the tlb.
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- * 2) switch %%esp, ie current
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- *
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- * The interrupt must handle 2 special cases:
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- * - cr3 is changed before %%esp, ie. it cannot use current->{active_,}mm.
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- * - the cpu performs speculative tlb reads, i.e. even if the cpu only
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- * runs in kernel space, the cpu could load tlb entries for user space
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- * pages.
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- *
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- * The good news is that cpu_tlbstate is local to each cpu, no
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- * write/read ordering problems.
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- */
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-
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static void flush_tlb_func_common(const struct flush_tlb_info *f,
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bool local, enum tlb_flush_reason reason)
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{
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