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  1/*
  2 * Copyright (c) 2003-2007 Apple Inc. All rights reserved.
  3 *
  4 * @APPLE_OSREFERENCE_LICENSE_HEADER_START@
  5 *
  6 * This file contains Original Code and/or Modifications of Original Code
  7 * as defined in and that are subject to the Apple Public Source License
  8 * Version 2.0 (the 'License'). You may not use this file except in
  9 * compliance with the License. The rights granted to you under the License
 10 * may not be used to create, or enable the creation or redistribution of,
 11 * unlawful or unlicensed copies of an Apple operating system, or to
 12 * circumvent, violate, or enable the circumvention or violation of, any
 13 * terms of an Apple operating system software license agreement.
 14 *
 15 * Please obtain a copy of the License at
 16 * http://www.opensource.apple.com/apsl/ and read it before using this file.
 17 *
 18 * The Original Code and all software distributed under the License are
 19 * distributed on an 'AS IS' basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER
 20 * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND APPLE HEREBY DISCLAIMS ALL SUCH WARRANTIES,
 21 * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
 22 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, QUIET ENJOYMENT OR NON-INFRINGEMENT.
 23 * Please see the License for the specific language governing rights and
 24 * limitations under the License.
 25 *
 26 * @APPLE_OSREFERENCE_LICENSE_HEADER_END@
 27 */
 28
 29/*
 30 * Virtual memory map purgeable object definitions.
 31 * Objects that will be needed in the future (forward cached objects) should be queued LIFO.
 32 * Objects that have been used and are cached for reuse (backward cached) should be queued FIFO.
 33 * Every user of purgeable memory is entitled to using the highest volatile group (7).
 34 * Only if a client wants some of its objects to definitely be purged earlier, it can put those in
 35 * another group. This could be used to make all FIFO objects (in the lower group) go away before
 36 * any LIFO objects (in the higher group) go away.
 37 * Objects that should not get any chance to stay around can be marked as "obsolete". They will
 38 * be emptied before any other objects or pages are reclaimed. Obsolete objects are not emptied
 39 * in any particular order.
 40 * 'purgeable' is recognized as the correct spelling. For historical reasons, definitions
 41 * in this file are spelled 'purgable'.
 42 */
 43
 44#ifndef _MACH_VM_PURGABLE_H_
 45#define _MACH_VM_PURGABLE_H_
 46
 47/*
 48 *	Types defined:
 49 *
 50 *	vm_purgable_t	purgeable object control codes.
 51 */
 52
 53typedef int     vm_purgable_t;
 54
 55/*
 56 *	Enumeration of valid values for vm_purgable_t.
 57 *
 58 *  When making a new VM_PURGABLE_*, update tests vm_parameter_validation_[user|kern]
 59 *  and their expected results; they deliberately call VM functions with invalid
 60 *  values and you may be turning one of those invalid bits valid.
 61 */
 62#define VM_PURGABLE_SET_STATE   ((vm_purgable_t) 0)     /* set state of purgeable object */
 63#define VM_PURGABLE_GET_STATE   ((vm_purgable_t) 1)     /* get state of purgeable object */
 64#define VM_PURGABLE_PURGE_ALL   ((vm_purgable_t) 2)     /* purge all volatile objects now */
 65#define VM_PURGABLE_SET_STATE_FROM_KERNEL ((vm_purgable_t) 3) /* set state from kernel */
 66
 67/*
 68 * Purgeable state:
 69 *
 70 *  31 15 14 13 12 11 10 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
 71 * +-----+--+-----+--+----+-+-+---+---+---+
 72 * |     |NA|DEBUG|  | GRP| |B|ORD|   |STA|
 73 * +-----+--+-----+--+----+-+-+---+---+---+
 74 * " ": unused (i.e. reserved)
 75 * STA: purgeable state
 76 *      see: VM_PURGABLE_NONVOLATILE=0 to VM_PURGABLE_DENY=3
 77 * ORD: order
 78 *      see:VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_*
 79 * B: behavior
 80 *      see: VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_*
 81 * GRP: group
 82 *      see: VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_*
 83 * DEBUG: debug
 84 *      see: VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_*
 85 * NA: no aging
 86 *      see: VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING*
 87 */
 88
 89#define VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING_SHIFT      16
 90#define VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING_MASK       (0x1 << VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING_SHIFT)
 91#define VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING            (0x1 << VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING_SHIFT)
 92
 93#define VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_SHIFT 12
 94#define VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_MASK  (0x3 << VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_SHIFT)
 95#define VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_EMPTY (0x1 << VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_SHIFT)
 96#define VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_FAULT (0x2 << VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_SHIFT)
 97
 98/*
 99 * Volatile memory ordering groups (group zero objects are purged before group 1, etc...
100 * It is implementation dependent as to whether these groups are global or per-address space.
101 * (for the moment, they are global).
102 */
103#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT         8
104#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_MASK          (7 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
105#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_DEFAULT   VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_0
106
107#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_0                     (0 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
108#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_1                     (1 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
109#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_2                     (2 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
110#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_3                     (3 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
111#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_4                     (4 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
112#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_5                     (5 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
113#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_6                     (6 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
114#define VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_7                     (7 << VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_SHIFT)
115
116/*
117 * Purgeable behavior
118 * Within the same group, FIFO objects will be emptied before objects that are added later.
119 * LIFO objects will be emptied after objects that are added later.
120 * - Input only, not returned on state queries.
121 */
122#define VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_SHIFT  6
123#define VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_MASK   (1 << VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_SHIFT)
124#define VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_FIFO   (0 << VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_SHIFT)
125#define VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_LIFO   (1 << VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_SHIFT)
126
127/*
128 * Obsolete object.
129 * Disregard volatile group, and put object into obsolete queue instead, so it is the next object
130 * to be purged.
131 * - Input only, not returned on state queries.
132 */
133#define VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_SHIFT              5
134#define VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_MASK               (1 << VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_SHIFT)
135#define VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_OBSOLETE   (1 << VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_SHIFT)
136#define VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_NORMAL             (0 << VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_SHIFT)
137
138
139/*
140 * Obsolete parameter - do not use
141 */
142#define VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_SHIFT                 4
143#define VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_MASK                  (1 << VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_SHIFT)
144#define VM_VOLATILE_MAKE_FIRST_IN_GROUP (1 << VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_SHIFT)
145#define VM_VOLATILE_MAKE_LAST_IN_GROUP  (0 << VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_SHIFT)
146
147/*
148 * Valid states of a purgeable object.
149 */
150#define VM_PURGABLE_STATE_MIN   0               /* minimum purgeable object state value */
151#define VM_PURGABLE_STATE_MAX   3               /* maximum purgeable object state value */
152#define VM_PURGABLE_STATE_MASK  3               /* mask to separate state from group */
153
154#define VM_PURGABLE_NONVOLATILE 0               /* purgeable object is non-volatile */
155#define VM_PURGABLE_VOLATILE    1               /* purgeable object is volatile */
156#define VM_PURGABLE_EMPTY       2               /* purgeable object is volatile and empty */
157#define VM_PURGABLE_DENY        3               /* (mark) object not purgeable */
158
159#define VM_PURGABLE_ALL_MASKS   (VM_PURGABLE_STATE_MASK | \
160	                         VM_VOLATILE_ORDER_MASK | \
161	                         VM_PURGABLE_ORDERING_MASK | \
162	                         VM_PURGABLE_BEHAVIOR_MASK | \
163	                         VM_VOLATILE_GROUP_MASK | \
164	                         VM_PURGABLE_DEBUG_MASK | \
165	                         VM_PURGABLE_NO_AGING_MASK)
166#endif  /* _MACH_VM_PURGABLE_H_ */