rid of the MTX_DUPOK flag on channel mutexes, which allows witness to
do a better job of lock order checking. Nuke snd_chnmtxcreate() since
it is no longer needed.
Tested by: matk
panic() so that the buffer overflow just beyond this point is always
caught, even when the code is not compiled with INVARIANTS.
Change chn_setblocksize() buffer reallocation code to attempt to avoid
the feed_vchan16() buffer overflow by attempting to always keep the
bufsoft buffer at least as large as the bufhard buffer.
Print a diagnositic message
Danger! %s bufsoft size increasing from %d to %d after CHANNEL_SETBLOCKSIZE()
if our best attempts fail. If feed_vchan16() were to be called by
the interrupt handler while locks are dropped in chn_setblocksize()
to increase the size bufsoft to match the size of bufhard, the panic()
code in feed_vchan16() will be triggered. If the diagnostic message
is printed, it is a warning that a panic is possible if the system
were to see events in an "unlucky" order.
Change the locking code to avoid the need for MTX_RECURSIVE mutexes.
Add the MTX_DUPOK option to the channel mutexes and change the locking
sequence to always lock the parent channel before its children to avoid
the possibility of deadlock.
Actually implement locking assertions for the channel mutexes and fix
the problems found by the resulting assertion violations.
Clean up the locking code in dsp_ioctl().
Allocate the channel buffers using the malloc() M_WAITOK option instead
of M_NOWAIT so that buffer allocation won't fail. Drop locks across
the malloc() calls.
Add/modify KASSERTS() in attempt to detect problems early.
Abuse layering by adding a pointer to the snd_dbuf structure that points
back to the pcm_channel that owns it. This allows sndbuf_resize() to do
proper locking without having to change the its API, which is used by
the hardware drivers.
Don't dereference a NULL pointer when setting hw.snd.maxautovchans
if a hardware driver is not loaded. Noticed by Ryan Sommers
<ryans at gamersimpact.com>.
Tested by: Stefan Ehmann <shoesoft AT gmx.net>
Tested by: matk (Mathew Kanner)
Tested by: Gordon Bergling <gbergling AT 0xfce3.net>
thread being waken up. The thread waken up can run at a priority as
high as after tsleep().
- Replace selwakeup()s with selwakeuppri()s and pass appropriate
priorities.
- Add cv_broadcastpri() which raises the priority of the broadcast
threads. Used by selwakeuppri() if collision occurs.
Not objected in: -arch, -current
Problem:
selwakeup required calling pfind which would cause lock order
reversals with the allproc_lock and the per-process filedesc lock.
Solution:
Instead of recording the pid of the select()'ing process into the
selinfo structure, actually record a pointer to the thread. To
avoid dereferencing a bad address all the selinfo structures that
are in use by a thread are kept in a list hung off the thread
(protected by sellock). When a selwakeup occurs the selinfo is
removed from that threads list, it is also removed on the way out
of select or poll where the thread will traverse its list removing
all the selinfos from its own list.
Problem:
Previously the PROC_LOCK was used to provide the mutual exclusion
needed to ensure proper locking, this couldn't work because there
was a single condvar used for select and poll and condvars can
only be used with a single mutex.
Solution:
Introduce a global mutex 'sellock' which is used to provide mutual
exclusion when recording events to wait on as well as performing
notification when an event occurs.
Interesting note:
schedlock is required to manipulate the per-thread TDF_SELECT
flag, however if given its own field it would not need schedlock,
also because TDF_SELECT is only manipulated under sellock one
doesn't actually use schedlock for syncronization, only to protect
against corruption.
Proc locks are no longer used in select/poll.
Portions contributed by: davidc
AIOGCAP ioctl reports software-emulated formats. It defaults to on. People
who use performance-sensitive audio software and do not want it to pick a
software-emulated audio format instead of one supported by their hardware
should turn it off.
This unbreaks isdnphone(1) on systems with PCM-only sound cards.
Approved by: cg
* be more specific in verbose boot messages
* allow the feeder subsystem to veto pcm* attaching if there is an error
initialising the root feeder
* don't free/malloc a new tmpbuf when resizing a snd_dbuf to the same size as
it currently is
* store the feeder description in the feeder structure instead of mallocing
space for it
extensively as none of my testboxes have speakers or an audio source at
present, but the chains built look correct and reading /dev/audio (ulaw,
translated from signed 16 bit little-endian) gives values within the
expected range for silence.
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
* add new channels to the end of the list so channels used in order of
addition
* de-globalise definition of struct snddev_info and provide accessor
functions where necessary.
* move the $FreeBSD$ tag in each .c file into a macro and allow the
/dev/sndstat handler to display these when set to maximum verbosity to aid
debugging.
* allow each device to register its own sndstat handler to reduce the amount
of groping sndstat must do in foreign structs.
worked before.
mixer, dsp and sndstat are seperate devices - give them their own cdevsws
instead of demuxing requests sent to a single cdevsw.
use the si_drv1/si_drv2 fields in dev_t structures for holding information
specific to an open instance of mixer/dsp.
nuke /dev/{dsp,dspW,audio}[0-9]* links - this functionality is now provided
using cloning.
various locking fixes.
instead of using two malloced arrays for storing channel lists, use an
slist. convert the sndstat device to use sbufs and optionally provide more
detail about channel state.
vchans are software mixed playback channels. they are not enabled by this
commit. they use the feeder infrastructure to emulate normal playback
channels in a manner transparent to applications, whilst providing as many
channels are desired, especially suitable for devices with only one hardware
playback channel. in the future they will provide additional features.
those wishing to test this functionality will need to add vchan.c to
sys/conf/files and use 'sysctl -w hw.snd.pcm0.vchans' to enable it.
blocksize and auto-rate selection are not yet supported.
this introduces a new buffering mechanism which results in dramatic
simplification of the channel manager.
as several structures have changed, we take the opportunity to move their
definitions into the source files where they are used, make them private and
de-typedef them.
the sound drivers are updated to use snd_setup_intr instead of
bus_setup_intr, and to comply with the de-typedefed structures.
the ac97, mixer and channel layers have been updated with finegrained
locking, as have some drivers- not all though. the rest will follow soon.