usb.c 1.40:
revision 1.40
date: 2000/03/14 23:13:12; author: augustss; state: Exp; lines: +4 -1
Make sure the USB event thread discovers all devices first time
it call usb_discover(). It should now be possible to have the
root NFS mounted over a USB Ethernet Adapter.
----------------------------
revision 1.73
date: 2000/05/31 16:14:42; author: augustss; state: Exp; lines: +19 -6
Be more careful when setting the alternate interface so we don't
end up with nothing set at all if it fails.
----------------------------
----------------------------
revision 1.117
date: 2000/05/30 09:26:06; author: augustss; lines: +7 -1
As a safety, check that the controller is not suspended when we get
an interrupt.
----------------------------
ohci.c (1.85), ohcireg.h (1.17):
----------------------------
date: 2000/04/01 09:27:35; author: augustss;
Add a delay before reading the number of ports from the controller to
avoid getting 0 from it.
----------------------------
ohci.c (1.83), ohcireg.h (1.16), ohcivar.h (1.21)
===================================================================
date: 2000/03/29 01:46:26; author: augustss;
A first stab at support for isochronous transfers.
===================================================================
MI, not required to be a fixed size, and used in multiple headers.
This will grow in time, as more things move here from <sys/types.h>
and <machine/ansi.h>.
o Add missing type definitions (uint16_t and uint32_t) to
<arpa/inet.h> and <netinet/in.h>.
o Reduce pollution in <sys/types.h> by using `#if _FOO_T_DECLARED'
widgets to avoid including <sys/stdint.h>.
o Add some missing type definitions to <unistd.h> and note the ones
that still need to be added.
o Make use of <sys/_types.h> primitives in <grp.h> and <sys/types.h>.
Reviewed by: bde
to control the exposure of macros and prototypes depending upon the
POSIX, X/Open, or ISO C version an application has requested.
Submitted by: wollman
Reviewed by: bde, imp
dump the trace buffer feasible.
- Remove KTR_EXTEND. This changes the format of the trace entries when
activated, making writing a userland tool which is not tied to a specific
kernel configuration difficult.
- Use get_cyclecount() for timestamps. nanotime() is much too heavy weight
and requires recursion protection due to ktr traces occuring as a result
of ktr traces. KTR_VERBOSE may still require recursion protection, which
is now conditional on it.
- Allow KTR_CPU to be overridden by MD code. This is so that it is possible
to trace early in startup before pcpu and/or curthread are setup.
- Add a version number for the ktr interface. A userland tool can check this
to detect mismatches.
- Use an array for the parameters to make decoding in userland easier.
- Add file and line recording to the non-extended traces now that the extended
version is no more.
These changes will break gdb macros to decode the extended version of the
trace buffer which are floating around. Users of these macros should either
use the show ktr command in ddb, or use the userland utility which can be run
on a core dump.
Approved by: jhb
Tested on: i386, sparc64
Caveats:
The new savecore program is not complete in the sense that it emulates
enough of the old savecores features to do the job, but implements none
of the options yet.
I would appreciate if a userland hacker could help me out getting savecore
to do what we want it to do from a users point of view, compression,
email-notification, space reservation etc etc. (send me email if
you are interested).
Currently, savecore will scan all devices marked as "swap" or "dump" in
/etc/fstab _or_ any devices specified on the command-line.
All architectures but i386 lack an implementation of dumpsys(), but
looking at the i386 version it should be trivial for anybody familiar
with the platform(s) to provide this function.
Documentation is quite sparse at this time, more to come.
Details:
ATA and SCSI drivers should work as the dump formatting code has been
removed. The IDA, TWE and AAC have not yet been converted.
Dumpon now opens the device and uses ioctl(DIOCGKERNELDUMP) to set
the device as dumpdev. To implement the "off" argument, /dev/null
is used as the device.
Savecore will fail if handed any options since they are not (yet)
implemented. All devices marked "dump" or "swap" in /etc/fstab
will be scanned and dumps found will be saved to diskfiles
named from the MD5 hash of the header record. The header record
is dumped in readable format in the .info file. The kernel
is not saved. Only complete dumps will be saved.
All maintainer rights for this code are disclaimed: feel free to
improve and extend.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
have ripped all the i386 specific formatting code from their
dump routines. Due to the potential for trashing disks, I did
not want to do this "blind".
This design is my best effort and it is quite likely that people more used
to kernel dumps may want to change this subsequently so two levels of
version numbers are provided: one for the common header and one per
architecture.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
the non-GEOM code as well. This simplifies the the kernel-dumping
and disk-management tools as less compatibility cruft will be needed.
Sponsored by: DARPA and NAI Labs.
while holding the proc lock, and by holding the pargs structure when
accessing it from outside of the owner.
Submitted by: Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
(65536 * 32 - 1), but MAKEDEV only supports up to (32 * 32 -1). Device
names use the unit number in base 32 for all "digits".
This required fixing an old bug in MAKEDEV:ttyminor(). Its arg was the
global $unit instead of $1.
Reminded by: Valentin K. Ponomarenko <valka@krog.ukrtel.net>
MFC-after: 1 week
measured accurately for periodic interrupts provided the interrupts
don't need to be serviced very quickly to keep their period almost
constant. sio output interrupts have this property (interrupt service
can be delayed for up to 1 character time without the period changing).
This is non-optional and undocumented so that it can be added and
removed easily. It has no significant effect unless it is enabled by
hacking on a variable using a debugger. Hardclock and statclock interrupts
would work even better for this, at least on i386's, provided their
interrupt handlers are fast (as they are in -current but not in -stable
or in my version of -current).
the osigcontext or ucontext_t rather than useracc() followed by direct user-
space memory accesses. This reduces (o)sigreturn()'s execution time by 5-
50%.
Submitted by: bde
bootinfo block in register r8. In locore.s we save the address
in the global variable 'pa_bootinfo'. In machdep.c we compare
this value against the hardwired address, but don't depend on its
validity yet (ie: we still expect the bootinfo block to be at the
hardwired address). After a small amount of time, we'll flip the
switch and depend on the loader to pass us the address. From that
moment on the loader is free to put it anywhere it likes, provided
the machine itself likes it as well.
Add some verbosity to aid in the transition. We emit a message if
the loader didn't pass the address and we also emit a message if
there's no bootinfo block at the hardwired address.
While in locore.s, reduce the number of redundant serialization
instructions. A srlz.i is a proper superset of a srlz.d and thus
is a valid replacement. Also slightly reorder the movl instructions
to improve bundle density.
register r8. We continue to write the bootinfo block at the same
hardwired address, because the kernel still expects it there.
It is expected that future kernels use register r8 to get to the
bootinfo block and don't depend on the hardwired address anymore.
Bump the loader version once again due to the interface change.
These functions use DEV_STRATEGY() which can easily return a short
count (with no error) for reads near EOF. EOF happens for "disks" too
small to contain a label sector (mainly for empty slices). The functions
didn't understand this at all, and looked for labels in the garbage
in the buffer beyond what DEV_STRATEGY() returned. The recent UMA
changes combined with my local changes and configuration resulted in
the garbage often containing a valid but garbage label left over from
a previous call.
Bugs in EOF handling in -current limited the problem to "disks" with
size precisely LABELSECTOR sectors. LABELSECTOR happens to be a very
unusual "disk" size since it is only 0 for non-i386 arches that don't
usually have disks with DOS MBRs.
provided the latter is nonzero. At this point, the former is a fairly
arbitrary default value (DFTPHYS), so changing it to any reasonable
value specified by the device driver is safe. Using the maximum of
these limits broke ffs clustered i/o for devices whose si_iosize_max
is < DFLTPHYS. Using the minimum would break device drivers' ability
to increase the active limit from DFTLPHYS up to MAXPHYS.
Copied the code for this and the associated (unnecessary?) fixup of
mp_iosize_max to all other filesystems that use clustering (ext2fs and
msdosfs). It was completely missing.
PR: 36309
MFC-after: 1 week
only care if it's network or not at this time. If we're loaded from
the network, we set currdev (=loaddev) so that the kernel is loaded
from the network as well. In all other cases we initialize to disk.
This makes netbooting more convenient and can easily be enhanced to
do more elaborate checking.
Most significantly (from an interfacing point of view) is the
support for the FPSWA pointer passing. Even though that was added
4 months ago, it's probably not a bad idea to bump the version
number to reflect this.
o Query the state field of the protocol mode to determine whether
we need to start and/or initialize the protocol. When we're
loaded across the network, the protocol has already been started
and is already initialized. When no networking has happened yet,
we have to start and initialize the protocol ourselves.
o After initialization, we have to set the receive filters. Not
doing this results in a deaf interface. We set the unicast and
broadcast filters. Multicast may not be supported. This specific
change fixes the problem we had that we could not netboot if
the loader was started from the EFI shell.
o To help future debugging, add a function that dumps the current
mode of the interface. It's conditional on EFINET_DEBUG.
o To help in runtime problems, emit a diagnostic message when we
could not initialize the protocol properly.
an efi_devdesc structure. When we're netbooting, f->f_devdata holds
the address of the network socket variable. Dereferencing this caused
some very unpredictable behaviour, including proper functioning.
So, as a sanity check, we first make sure f->f_dev points to our
own devsw. If not, the open will fail before we use f->f_devdata.
This solves the netboot hangs I invariably got whenever I used the
latest toolchain to compile the EFI loader.
layer to signal transmission of the packet. This resolves the
problem I'm seeing that an immediate call to net->Receive
after calling net->Transmit returns EFI_DEVICE_ERROR. This
condition seems to be sufficiently persistent that BOOTP and
RARP fail.
o While here, unify all functions to have 'nif' defined. Some
have it as arguments. The others now have them as locals. We
now always get the protocol interface by using the 'nif' var.
The current status of netbooting is that even though we now reliably
have BOOTP working (again), opening a file (ie loading a kernel)
across the network causes the loader to hang. I'm working on that now.
exists, otherwise we install it anyway. I interpret this as a very
high desire to install ${PROG}.help. Alas, ${PROG}.help doesn't exist
at the moment and neither does loader.help, so in practice this just
doesn't work, no matter how you interpret it. The compromise is to
install ${PROG}.help IFF it exists. I realize we lost creativity with
this commit, but style should have been preserved, AFAICT :-)
back into the calling MD code. The MD code must ensure no races between
checking the astpening flag and returning to usermode.
Submitted by: peter (ia64 bits)
Tested on: alpha (peter, jeff), i386, ia64 (peter), sparc64
- Make sure the interface is UP and RUNNING in fddi_input().
- Reorder and comment packet tests in fddi_input().
- Call if_attach() in fddi_ifattach().
- Test for a valid return from ifaddr_byindex().
- Use struct fddi_header where appropriate.
- Use bcopy() rather than memcpy().
- Use FDDI_ADDR_LEN macro instead of ETHER_ADDR_LEN macro.
- Add loadable module support.
- Use FDDI_ADDR_LEN rather than a magic number or a sizeof().
- Hide distracting sizeof() behind FDDI_HDR_LEN macro.
- Don't use sizeof(struct llc) in areas where we mean LLC_SNAPFRAMELEN.
allows us to properly parse cards with attribute memory based CIS that
before wouldn't parse correctly, sometimes with a panic. This allows
me to get my 3C562 modem/ethernet card to fail to attach due to
problems in the ep and sio drivers rather than due to problems in the
CIS parsing code :-).
We weren't setting the address to jump to for the function entries.
This caused us to only work when the addional entries were after the
first ones. On the 3C562/3C563 card this was not the case.
We were also mapping Attribute memory when common memory was asked for
in the target of the LONGLINK_{A,C} or LONGLINK_MFC.
My IBM Home And Away Modem/LAN card still fails for reasons unknown.
I have not been able to find very much information about the PC98
extended partition layout so this is gleaned from the source in
our pc98 architecture. Corrections and patched very welcome.
Sponsored by: DARPA and NAI Labs.
in vfs_mount(), in particular revisions 1.215, 1.227 and 1.240.
- flag2 is a low quality variable name, change it to kern_flag.
- strncpy NUL-terminates f_fstypename and f_mntonname since the strings
have length <= <buffer length> - 1, so the explicit NUL-termination is
bogus.
- M_ZERO'ing space for fstype and fspath is stupid since we never use the
space beyond the end of the string.
- Do various style(9) cleanups in both functions.
Submitted by: bde
Reviewed by: phk
put a bunch of crap before the code in .text. Since the firmware
doesn't seem to honour the a.out entry point, we need to include
a little assmbler file which jumps to where we want to be in C.
Submitted by: jake
can be called both with and without the pipe mutex held. (For example,
if called by pipeselwakeup(), it is held. Whereas, if called by kqueue_scan(),
it is not.)
Reviewed by: alfred
There is still some locations where the PROC lock should be held
in order to prevent inconsistent views from outside (like the
proc->p_fd fix for kern/vfs_syscalls.c:checkdirs()) that can be
fixed later.
Submitted by: Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
This completes the ATA RAID support, since all functions to manipulate
the RAID are accessible from FreeBSD, the BIOS on the ATA RAID cards
are only nessesary for booting.
I decided to allow for creation of ATA RAID's on any ATA controller, but
please keep in mind the restrictions on that. Due to the BIOS not
knowing what to do you can only boot from a RAID1 or the first disk
in a SPAN, if its not located on a "real" ATA RAID controller like
the Promise or Highpoint controllers.
Sponsored by: Advanis
with this flag. Remove the dup_list and dup_ok code from subr_witness. Now
we just check for the flag instead of doing string compares.
Also, switch the process lock, process group lock, and uma per cpu locks over
to this interface. The original mechanism did not work well for uma because
per cpu lock names are unique to each zone.
Approved by: jhb
disablement assumptions in kern_fork.c by adding another API call,
cpu_critical_fork_exit(). Cleanup the td_savecrit field by moving it
from MI to MD. Temporarily move cpu_critical*() from <arch>/include/cpufunc.h
to <arch>/<arch>/critical.c (stage-2 will clean this up).
Implement interrupt deferral for i386 that allows interrupts to remain
enabled inside critical sections. This also fixes an IPI interlock bug,
and requires uses of icu_lock to be enclosed in a true interrupt disablement.
This is the stage-1 commit. Stage-2 will occur after stage-1 has stabilized,
and will move cpu_critical*() into its own header file(s) + other things.
This commit may break non-i386 architectures in trivial ways. This should
be temporary.
Reviewed by: core
Approved by: core
- return error -> return (error);
- move a declaration to the top of the function.
- become bug for bug compatible with if (error) lines.
Submitted by: bde
new vfs_getopt()/vfs_copyopt() API. This is intended to be used
later, when there will be filesystems implementing the VFS_NMOUNT
operation. The mount(2) system call will disappear when all
filesystems will be converted to the new API. Documentation will
be committed in a while.
Reviewed by: phk
modules (ie. procfs.ko).
When the kernel loads dynamic filesystem module, it looks for any of the
VOP operations specified by the new filesystem that have not been registered
already by the currently known filesystems. If any of such operations exist,
vfs_add_vnops function calls vfs_opv_recalc function, which rebuilds vop_t
vectors for each filesystem and sets all global pointers like ufs_vnops_p,
devfs_specop_p, etc to the new values and then frees the old pointers. This
behavior is bad because there might be already active vnodes whose v_op fields
will be left pointing to the random garbage, leading to inevitable crash soon.
Submitted by: Alexander Kabaev <ak03@gte.com>
kern_linker.c and rev. 1.237 of vfs_syscalls.c since these are not the
source of the recent panics occuring around kldloading file system
support modules.
Requested by: rwatson
The conclusion is that this method really can tell the perfect from the
less than perfect ACPI counters.
It is in fact probably a bit more discriminative than that, but we
will rather condemn some otherwise perfect counters to the slightly
slower "-safe" version, than certify a counter as perfect which
will let us down later.
Many thanks to all the people who sent email reports!
where a sysctl within 20 seconds of a cache_drain could yield negative "USED"
counts.
Also, grab the uma_mtx while in the sysctl handler. This hadn't caused
problems yet because Giant is held all the time.
Reported by: kkenn
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
- change the IOMMU support code so that it supports overcommittting the
available DVMA memory, while still allocating as lazily as possible.
This is achieved by limiting the preallocation, and deferring the
allocation to map load time when it fails. In the latter case, the
DVMA memory reserved for unloaded maps can be stolen to free up enough
memory for loading a map.
- allow NULL settings in the method tables, and search the parent tags
until an appropriate implementation is found. This allows to remove some
kluges in the old implementation.
the bus-dependent code and to be able to support more systems. The core
of the new code is mostly obtained from NetBSD.
Kluge the interrupt routing methods of the psycho and apb drivers so
that an intline of 0 can be handled for now; real routing is still not
possible (all intline registers are preinitialized instead); this will
require a sparc64-specific adaption of the driver for generic PCI-PCI
bridges with a custom routing method to work right.
by the hardware are still marked as owned. Handle this by installing a
timeout handler to collect this descriptor to avoid having received
packets remain unhandled until the next one arrives.
- remove some useless code from the status change handler that was intended
to enable the the MII drivers for external phys; this is already done
during interface initialization, and the deleted code made some
assumptions about phy addresses that do not seem to hold true on newer
cards. This should get at least one of the two hmes of newer Netra t1
machines working.
- correct the interrupt resource allocation
- bump the number of RX descriptors, lower values cause promblems on some
machines
and upgrade to using 10 byte cdbs.
As far as I tested, this works efficiently for most of the
SBP-II/Firewire devices but most of the umass devices still need
ad-hoc work around because umass-sim doesn't return any SCSI errors.
A sysctl nob is also added for the last resort.
I hope we don't need DA_Q_NO_6_BYTE quirks anymore.
Reviewed by: gibbs
MFC after: 1 week
# This appears to not break X11, but I'm having problems compiling the
# glide part of the server with or without this patch, so I can't tell
# for sure.
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
not removing tabs before "__P((", and not outdenting continuation lines
to preserve non-KNF lining up of code with parentheses. Switch to KNF
formatting and/or rewrap the whole prototype in some cases.
not blocked by raising the pil, a reciever may be interrupted while holding
a spinlock. If the sender does not defer interrupts throughout the entire
operation it may be interrupted and try to acquire a spinlock held by a
reciever, leading to a deadlock due to the synchronization used by the
ipi handlers themselves.
Submitted by: tmm
as a macro w/o messing things up. This is really an abuse and we will back
this out as soon as the abusers have been fixed. Add a comment to this
effect.
With this change, the XFree86-4 port now builds.
code that is still not safe. suser() reads p_ucred so it still needs
Giant for the time being. This should allow kern.giant.proc to be set
to 0 for the time being.
Move the network code from using cr_cansee() to check whether a
socket is visible to a requesting credential to using a new
function, cr_canseesocket(), which accepts a subject credential
and object socket. Implement cr_canseesocket() so that it does a
prison check, a uid check, and add a comment where shortly a MAC
hook will go. This will allow MAC policies to seperately
instrument the visibility of sockets from the visibility of
processes.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
pointer which will then result in the allocated route's reference
count never being decremented. Just flood ping the localhost and
watch refcnt of the 127.0.0.1 route with netstat(1).
Submitted by: jayanth
Back out ip_output.c,v 1.143 and ip_mroute.c,v 1.69 that allowed
ip_output() to be called with a NULL route pointer. The previous
paragraph shows why this was a bad idea in the first place.
MFC after: 0 days
to test req->td for NULL values and then do somewhat more bizarre things
relating to securelevel special-casing and suser checks. Remove the
testing and conditional security checks based on req->td!=NULL, and insert
a KASSERT that td != NULL. Callers to sysctl must always specify the
thread (be it kernel or otherwise) requesting the operation, or a
number of current sysctls will fail due to assumptions that the thread
exists.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Discussed with: bde
NULL, turn warning printf's into panic's, since this call has been
restructured such that a NULL cred would result in a page fault anyway.
There appears to be one case where NULL is explicitly passed in in the
sysctl code, and this is believed to be in error, so will be modified.
Securelevels now always require a credential context so that per-jail
securelevels are properly implemented.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: NAI Labs
Discussed with: bde