It seems that the existence of a "depend" target in src/sys/boot is not
to be taken as an indication that it actually does what one would expect,
at least it clearly threw my testing off.
Apologies to: jhb
for processing callbacks. This closes race conditions caused by locking
too many things with a single mutex.
o reclaim crypto requests under certain (impossible) failure conditions
Load 4 sectors more than we used to. This is harmless overhead for
the UFS1_ONLY case, but sufficient for boot2(UFS1+2).
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs
Don't use snprintf where strlcpy() will do the job.
Also, a NUL is '\0' not 0 in our style (C doesn't care), so spell it like.
Remove useless {} and () in the general area of this change.
and therefore we need a way for ioctl handlers to run in that thread
in GEOM. Rather than invent a complicated registration system to
recognize which ioctl handler to use for a given ioctl, we still
schedule all ioctls down the tree as bio transactions but add a
special return code that means "call me directly" and have the
geom_dev layer do that.
Use this for all ioctls that make it as far as a diskdriver to
avoid any backwards compatibility problems.
Requested by: scottl
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs
OpenBSD who got the code (or the idea) from the NetBSD tlp driver.
This gets some cardbus dc cards working (either completely or nearly
so). It also appears to get additional pci cards working, without
breaking working ones.
# Maybe some additional work is needed here. Also, the cardbus attachment
# might need to match on the CIS rather than on the vendor/device so we have
# a finer level of detail as to what the card is. Technically, the
# vendor/device fields are undefined for CardBus (even though most cards are
# using common silicon with pci models).
there are some strange machines that seem to need this.
o delete bogus comment.
o don't use the the bios for read/writing config space. They interact badly
with SMP and being called from ISR. This brings -current in line with
-stable.
# make the latter #ifdef on USE_PCI_BIOS_FOR_READ_WRITE in case we
# need to go back in a hurry.
checks from the MAC tree: allow policies to perform access control
for the ability of a process to send and receive data via a socket.
At some point, we might also pass in additional address information
if an explicit address is requested on send.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
seperate entry points for each occasion:
mac_check_vnode_mmap() Check at initial mapping
mac_check_vnode_mprotect() Check at mapping protection change
mac_check_vnode_mmap_downgrade() Determine if a mapping downgrade
should take place following
subject relabel.
Implement mmap() and mprotect() entry points for labeled vnode
policies. These entry points are currently not hooked up to the
VM system in the base tree. These changes improve the consistency
of the access control interface and offer more flexibility regarding
limiting access to vnode mmaping.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
flags so that we can call malloc with M_NOWAIT if necessary, avoiding
potential sleeps while holding mutexes in the TCP syncache code.
Similar to the existing support for mbuf label allocation: if we can't
allocate all the necessary label store in each policy, we back out
the label allocation and fail the socket creation. Sync from MAC tree.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
devfs VOP symlink creation by introducing a new entry point to determine
the label of the devfs_dirent prior to allocation of a vnode for the
symlink.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
point that instruments the creation of hard links. Policy implementations
to follow.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
to mbuf label initialization, that functionality was never merged to
the main tree. Go ahead and merge that functionality now. Note that
this requires policy modules to accept the case where the label
element may be destroyed even if init has not succeeded on it (in
the event that policy failed the init). This will shortly also
apply to sockets.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
order used in mac_policy.h and elsewhere. Sort order is basically
"by operation category", then "alphabetically by object". Sync to
MAC tree.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
externalization, and cred label life cycle events to entirely above
devfs and vnode events. Sync from MAC tree.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
entry points to better match the entry point ordering in mac_policy.h.
Big diff, no functional change; merge from the MAC tree.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
- If a policy isn't registered when a policy module unloads, silently
succeed.
- Hold the policy list lock across more of the validity tests to avoid
races.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
NB: But it will enable it in all kernels not having options "NO_GEOM"
Put the GEOM related options into the intended order.
Add "options NO_GEOM" to all kernel configs apart from NOTES.
In some order of controlled fashion, the NO_GEOM options will be
removed, architecture by architecture in the coming days.
There are currently three known issues which may force people to
need the NO_GEOM option:
boot0cfg/fdisk:
Tries to update the MBR while it is being used to control
slices. GEOM does not allow this as a direct operation.
SCSI floppy drives:
Appearantly the scsi-da driver return "EBUSY" if no media
is inserted. This is wrong, it should return ENXIO.
PC98:
It is unclear if GEOM correctly recognizes all variants of
PC98 disklabels. (Help Wanted! I have neither docs nor HW)
These issues are all being worked.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
- Change mpo_init_foo(obj, label) and mpo_destroy_foo(obj, label) policy
entry points to mpo_init_foo_label(label) and
mpo_destroy_foo_label(label). This will permit the use of the same
entry points for holding temporary type-specific label during
internalization and externalization, as well as for caching purposes.
- Because of this, break out mpo_{init,destroy}_socket() and
mpo_{init,destroy}_mount() into seperate entry points for socket
main/peer labels and mount main/fs labels.
- Since the prototype for label initialization is the same across almost
all entry points, implement these entry points using common
implementations for Biba, MLS, and Test, reducing the number of
almost identical looking functions.
This simplifies policy implementation, as well as preparing us for the
merge of the new flexible userland API for managing labels on objects.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
treat it as an invalid partition.
This fixes a bug where ``dumpon <device>'' will configure the dump
device at a random offset on the disk if <device> isn't a valid
partition.
Reviewed by: phk
(1) Use namei() and devfs to discover devices rather than a hard-coded
MAKEDEV implementation. Once rootfs is in place, this will allow
Vinum to be used for the root file system partition.
(2) Pass FREAD to device opens so that GEOM will return sector size
rather than an error on attempts to read label data.
(3) Avoid clobbering return values from close_drive() and masking this
failure, resulting in a later divide by zero due to not having
updated the Vinum-cached sector size.
(4) Ignore failures from DIOCWLABEL as that appears not to be required
in the GEOM environment.
We've done testing in simple Vinum environments, but those with more
complex environments might want to give this a spin in DP2 and make
sure everything is up to speed.
Fixes in collaboration with: iedowse
Reviewed by: grog
before freeing so that WITNESS doesn't dereference mutex data pointers
and page fault. It's now possible to unload vinum.ko with a GENERIC
kernel on 5.0-CURRENT without panic.
Debugged/fixed with the aid of: jake, grog
This allocate the best IRQ to boot-disable devices (have IRQ 0).
Allocated IRQ will be used for PCI interrupt routing when ACPI is
enabled.
Note that verbose messaging enabled for the time being so that
people can easily notice the strange behavior if it happened.
a consistent interface to h/w and s/w crypto algorithms for use by the
kernel and (for h/w at least) by user-mode apps. Access for user-level
code is through a /dev/crypto device that'll eventually be used by openssl
to (potentially) accelerate many applications. Coming soon is an IPsec
that makes use of this service to accelerate ESP, AH, and IPCOMP protocols.
Included here is the "core" crypto support, /dev/crypto driver, various
crypto algorithms that are not already present in the KAME crypto area,
and support routines used by crypto device drivers.
Obtained from: openbsd
This will be removed when new versions of syscalls sigreturn()
and sigaction() are added (mini is working on this but is in
the middle of a move).
This should fix the problem of cvsupd dying.
SCSI disks are too square pegs for the round holes in both of these.
And since atapi-cd has clearly shown that there are better acccess
models for CD media than trying to pretend to be a classical disk,
we stop the masquerade rather than patch up the costume.
But do implement the DIOCGMEDIASIZE and DIOCGSECTORSIZE so it will
be possible to manually attach to GEOM, should some the need arise.
Ideally, this driver should do media-detection and call make_dev()
when a CD is inserted and destroy_dev() when it is removed, this
would allow our future devd(8) to automount etc etc but coding that
takes SCSI-clue beyond anything I posses.
Tested on: sparc64
This reduces the size of GENERIC's text space by 73999 bytes (about 2%).
The bloat is from approximately 3437 strings longer than 31 characters
being padded to a 32-byte boundary.
around limitations in the ia64 kernel stack handling code. Basically
preallocate a bunch of threads (and hence kstacks) while contigmalloc()
still works, and never free them back to the general memory pool. After
the system has been running for a while, contigmalloc() eventually fails
at a critical momemt and panics the system.
is partly based on the Alpha system which duplicates the clock to
each cpu, instead of doing a clock roundrobin like on i386. This means
we get hz * ncpu clocks per second and so we have to seperate clock
sampling from actual 'do the work' clock processing. The BSP runs the
complete processing, the rest just sample state etc.
Using the on-cpu interval timer is not ideal as it will drift. There
is more to be done here, we should use an external clock source.
it. It's also only used in vm/vm_swap.c, but that is also the only source
file that #include's <sys/dmap.h>. sys/dmap.h could probably be embedded
entirely in vm_swap.c since that is the only consumer of it.
totally bogus but will hide the occurances of access of 0xbc(NULL) which
people have run into lately. This is not a proper fix, just a bandaid, until
the cause of this happening is tracked down and fixed.
Reviewed by: rwatson
dereference the struct sigio pointer without any locking. Change
fgetown() to take a reference to the pointer instead of a copy of the
pointer and call SIGIO_LOCK() before copying the pointer and
dereferencing it.
Reviewed by: rwatson
o Unusual order of #ifndef _FOO_H_, followed by license.
o Missing tab in struct sched_param between type and member name.
o Space used, instead of tab, after #define.
o Reversed comment for #endif.
o Irregular comment block.
o Space used, instead of tab, to seperate return value type from
function name.
o Unordered function prototypes.
name instead. (e.g., SLOCK instead of SMTX, TD_ON_LOCK() instead of
TD_ON_MUTEX()) Eventually a turnstile abstraction will be added that
will be shared with mutexes and other types of locks. SLOCK/TDI_LOCK will
be used internally by the turnstile code and will not be specific to
mutexes. Making the change now ensures that turnstiles can be dropped
in at a later date without affecting the ABI of userland applications.
These are still unknown name but these are working as well
as the other ServerWorks chipset.
Description strings should be corrected when the chipsets
are known.
MFC after: 1 week