- In rt_check() remove the senderr() macro and the "bad" label. They
used to simplify code, but now aren't.
- Remove extra RT_LOCK_ASSERT() in rt_setgate(). The RT_REMREF macro
does this.
- In rtfree() convert panics to KASSERTs.
- Strict the routing API: rtfree() should be called only in a case
when we are completely sure we've got the last reference on the
rtentry. In all other cases RTFREE_LOCKED() macro should be used.
If the reference isn't the last one spit out a warning printf.
Correct the only(?) case for this in rt_check().
- Fix typos in comments.
- Remove code to use the special wc_fifo. It has been disabled by default
in our other drivers as it actually slows down transmit by a small amount
- Dynamically determine the amount of space required for the rx_done
ring rather than hardcoding it.
- Compute the number of tx descriptors we are willing to transmit per
frame as the minimum of 128 or 1/4 the tx ring size.
- Fix a typo in the tx dma tag setup which could lead to unnecessary
defragging of TSO packets (and potentially even dropping TSO packets
due to EFBIG being returned).
- Add a counter to keep track of how many times we've needed to
defragment a frame. It should always be zero.
- Export new extended f/w counters via sysctl
Sponsored by: Myricom, Inc.
"cache_size * sizeof(struct bucket)". The former is valid in C99 but can
confuse earlier compilers, while the latter is a standard idiom which all
C compilers understand.
Approved by: kientzle
/etc/rc.d/hostid now that we switched the origin of the UUID (variable
smbios.system.uuid as provided by the i386 BIOS code) to already provide
a standard conforming lower-case UUID text representation.
vm_map_pmap_enter() unless the caller is madvise(MADV_WILLNEED). With
the exception of calls to vm_map_pmap_enter() from
madvise(MADV_WILLNEED), vm_fault_prefault() and vm_map_pmap_enter()
are both used to create speculative mappings. Thus, always
reactivating cached pages is a mistake. In principle, cached pages
should only be reactivated by an actual access. Otherwise, the
following misbehavior can occur. On a hard fault for a text page the
clustering algorithm fetches not only the required page but also
several of the adjacent pages. Now, suppose that one or more of the
adjacent pages are never accessed. Ultimately, these unused pages
become cached pages through the efforts of the page daemon. However,
the next activation of the executable reactivates and maps these
unused pages. Consequently, they are never replaced. In effect, they
become pinned in memory.
handling is that fd = open(foo) is -1. This bug is harmless since
close(-1) just returns an error (which the code ignores).
Found by: Coverity Prevent(tm)
CID: 1503 (in userland test run)
same way it was enabled for Linux binares in linuxulator.
This allows binaries built with -pie. Many ports auto-detect -fPIE support
in GCC 4.2 and build binaries FreeBSD was unable to run.
Deal with IPv6 routing headers (see FreeBSD-SA-07:03.ipv6 for background)
Block IPv6 packets with routing headers by default, unless 'allow-opts'
is specified. Block RH0 unconditionally. Deal with ip6_plen 0.
MFC after: 1 week
Discussed with: mlaier
- Update to the latest (1.4.18) f/w. This f/w introduces a new
receive mode which allows us to use FreeBSD's physically discontinuous
MJUM9BYTES clusters.
- Switch the driver from chaining MJUMPAGESIZE clusters to using
MJUM9BYTES clusters to avoid mbuf chaining overheads. Due to this
change, people running obsolete f/w images will be limited to an MTU of
PAGE_SIZE - 16.
- Add (disabled by default) support for Large Receive Offload.
Sponsored by: Myricom, Inc.
field is const, and then employ __DECONST before getting into the kvm
code. This eliminates a gcc 4.2 warning about losing constification.
__DECONST advice from: sam
that the build failure was caused by a computer/sources date/time
mismatch that caused GCC tools to be mistakenly rebuilt again at
an inappropriate time during buildworld, re-linking them against
new libraries instead of host's installed libraries and thus making
them not runnable by the host. Normally they are only built in
the early stage of buildworld (build-tools) that links them against
shared libraries of the host, but if either the system clock or
modification date/time on source files is set incorrectly, make(1)
can be foolished into thinking that tools are stale and will rebuild
them again, now in the "target" environment which is not suitable
for building helper apps that are to be run during buildworld.
OK'ed by: kan
usage to an equivalent csh(1) usage as tr(1) stays in /usr/bin and
/etc/rc.d/hostid has just the root filesystem (and this way mainly the
tools in /bin) available.
I've chosen csh(1) here as the string manipulation tools available in
/bin is extremely limited and the (only) alternative ed(1) usage would
have been a lot more complicated or even might require a temporary file.