the soft updates changes: only report the link count to be i_effnlink
in ufs_getattr() for file systems that maintain i_effnlink.
Tested by: Mike Dracopoulos <mdraco@math.uoa.gr>
In order to achieve this, root filesystem mount is moved from
SI_ORDER_FIRST to SI_ORDER_SECOND in the SI_SUB_MOUNT_ROOT sysinit
group. Now, modules which wish to usurp the default root mount
can use SI_ORDER_FIRST.
A compiled-in or preloaded MFS filesystem will become the root
filesystem unless the vfs.root.mountfrom environment variable refers
to a valid bootable device. This will normally only be the case when
the kernel and MFS image have been loaded from a disk which has a
valid /etc/fstab file. In this case, the variable should be manually
overridden in the loader, or the kernel booted with -a. In either
case "mfs:" should be supplied as the new value.
Also fix a typo in one DFLTROOT case that would not have compiled.
can deal with from 1GB to 2GB. I have no way to test with >1GB because I
don't have high enough density memory to get any one box over 1GB. However, I
have tested it on xp1000 & ds10 with < 1GB of memory & have verified that it
does no harm.
filesystem is discovered. Preference is given to using the kernel
environment variable vfs.root.mountfrom, which is set by the loader
according to the contents of /etc/fstab. Changes in the MD code
provide fallback mechanisms for systems not using the loader.
A more robust fallback path is also provided, with the last recourse
being to prompt on the console for a root device.
These changes drastically simplify the machine-dependant parts of
the root configuration process. In addition, support for CDROM root
devices has been removed; it was a nasty hack and didn't work.
Mike says the whole idea of a current device was a bad idea in first place,
and will be doing away with currdev.
Anyway, people are not supposed to even notice this. :-)
be ignored by default by the df(1) program. This is used mostly to
avoid stat()-ing entries that do not represent "real" disk mount
points (such as those made by an automounter such as amd.) It is
also useful not to have to stat() these entries because it takes
longer to report them that for other file systems, being that these
mount points are served by a user-level file server and resulting in
several context switches. Worse, if the automounter is down
unexpectedly, a causal df(1) will hang in an interruptible way.
PR: kern/9764
Submitted by: Erez Zadok <ezk@cs.columbia.edu>
only two conflicts, cdev #98 and cdev #99. These should be fixed.
MAKEDEV should probably be merged as well.
Static majors are (hopefully) going away one day soon.
This file is informational and not machine parsed by anything any more.
to config(8) for static device tables that have not existed for quite
some time. They have been aliases for 'device' for a while, and "tape"
went away entirely as it wasn't used anywhere (except in an example
in LINT.. "fixed").
camcontrol was setup to use the old scheme of going through the xpt(4)
device, which never worked properly (and has been disabled for a while).
camcontrol now sends BDRs through the pass(4) device, and XPT_RESET_DEV
CCBs are put on the device queue in the transport layer, as they should be.
Submitted by: luoqi
Reviewed by: ken
If the ipl is lowered here, a machine can rapidly run out of stack
space when it is under heavy interrupt load. Without this fix,
my test machine would fall over within a few seconds when forwarding
14,000 packets/sec. With the patch, it has been up for over 24 hours
and has built the world at the same time.
submitted by: dfr@freebsd.org
the countdown register.
this should not be necessary but there are broken laptops that
do not restore the countdown register on resume.
when it happnes, it messes up the hardclock interval and system clock,
which leads to the infamous "calcru: negative time" problem.
Submitted by: kjc, iwasaki
Reviewed by: Steve O'Hara-Smith <steveo@eircom.net> and committers.
Obtained from: PAO3
eliminate an extra (useless) level of indirection in half of the page
queue accesses and (2) to use a single name for each queue throughout,
instead of, e.g., "vm_page_queue_active" in some places and
"vm_page_queues[PQ_ACTIVE]" in others.
Reviewed by: dillon
"rw" argument, rather than hijacking B_{READ|WRITE}.
Fix two bugs (physio & cam) resulting by the confusion caused by this.
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
Reviewed by: alc, ken (partly)
This is one piece of the grand unified PPP daemon concept, whereby using
netgraph nodes enables PPP data to be handled completely in kernel land,
while leaving negotiation/control to be handled by a single user land
daemon, no matter what the link type(s).
This is a safety checkin only; it compiles, but is utterly untested.
Concept reviewed by: julian, brian
Merge the contents (less some trivial bordering the silly comments)
of <vm/vm_prot.h> and <vm/vm_inherit.h> into <vm/vm.h>. This puts
the #defines for the vm_inherit_t and vm_prot_t types next to their
typedefs.
This paves the road for the commit to follow shortly: change
useracc() to use VM_PROT_{READ|WRITE} rather than B_{READ|WRITE}
as argument.
go to REQ_SENT (and we probably should also log this since it should
only happen in a cross-linked connection).
Submitted by: Mark Tinguely <tinguely@plains.NoDak.edu>
test this support since I don't have the dongle for the card in
question and the dongle I have for my 3C589D doesn't seem to work on
it. I don't know if this is due to the damage I did to the 562 card
in transit from freebsdcon, or a mis-matched dongle...
Update AverMedia GPIO values
Submitted by: AverMedia
Add support for WinTV Theater Dolby Surround Sound DPL3518A chip
Submitted by: Frank Nobis <fn@radio-do.de>
Make PLL mode the default for Bt878s. You no longer need options BKTR_USE_PLL
pccard attachments must activate the resources they want to access.
ep didn't do this, so of course thee eeprom came back as busy. ed and
sio already did this. It was only due to a bug in the logic that the
probe succeeded. These problems have been fixed.
Note to self; when converting a driver to newbus, the foodriver bits
must be removed from sys/i386/isa/isa_compat.h
Reminded gently by: Mitsuru IWASAKI <iwasaki@jp.FreeBSD.org>
- Rip out all the static softc stuff and do softc allocation the right way.
- Rewrite most of the ISA code so that it provides a DEVICE_IDENTIFY
method to enumerate all non-PnP ISA devices.
This has the following consequences:
- No 'ep' devices may be hardwired.
- All hardwired devices will probably be detected twice.
By hardwired I mean:
device ep0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 10
- 'ep' devices are ordered by bus, slot, and then MAC address.
- Make 3c509B cards work in PnP mode. Yes, they really work.
- Convert over to using ifmedia for media selection. No more of this
lame 'linkX' stuff.
- Consolidate a lot of duplicated code.
- Make a stab at not breaking MII based PCCARD devices.
I doubt that the PCCARD stuff works any more than it did before my
changes but theres hope. My PCCARD hardware should arrive in a
week or so.
- Retreive the media settings from the card EEPROM rather than guessing.
I've got a 3c509-TPO that thinks its got an AUI port and if others
can report similar problems I'll write a bit of clever code that will
fix this but right now it works correctly on all but 1 card.
- Clean up a few things and make some cosmetic changes.
- Add myself as the MAINTAINER since nobody else wants to. I'm
in the best position to do this as I've got an example of most
of the cards:
EISA 3c579 bnc/aui
MCA 3c529 tp/aui
ISA 3c509 tpo
ISA-PnP 3c509B combo
If someone wants to send me a any cards I don't have I'd appriciate
it. Also welcome are 3c59x boards since I'll be folding if_vx and
if_ep at some point.
Shift to using the same queueing strategy that the amr driver uses.
Some simple tests indicate that we use about 2% of the CPU at around
500tps with the controller completely saturated with I/O.
the time spent at splbio(). We now avoid it unless we are actually
manipulating the command queues themselves. This doesn't improve
performance noticeably, but should improve concurrency somewhat.
(yet) compile and link. Renamed pcic back to pcic from pcicx, but
conditionalize its inclusion on pccard being included also. card is
the old and pccard is the new, which is a handy way to have both in
the tree at the same time.
Obtained from: newconfig project
More to follow...
incomplete and likely has problem. The code was originally pcmcia,
but I renamed it to pccard and made it compile on FreeBSD -current. I
converted SIMPLEQ to STAILQ as well as a few sc->dev.xname ->
device_printf changes. This is a green port of fairly mature code.
I derived this work from the FreeBSD newconfig project
(http://www.jp.freebsd.org/newconfig). Any problems with it are
likely introduced by me.
Obtained from: newconfig project
if_fe.c uses PCCARD_MODULE() and is part of GENERIC. I've #ifdef'ed out
the #include of "card.h" to hopefully disable pccard support in this
driver until it can be converted. I'm not positive this will fix make
release, but it can't possibly make it any worse than it is now.
I hope this stuff settles down soon.
yet, but that should be resolved shortly. Non memory mapped ed
devices should work, but I cannot test this since my only ed card is
memory mapped.
Submitted by: Matt Dodd <mdodd@freebsd.org>
I'm committing this from a laptop running this driver. Have only one
devclass for all ep devices (at least for pccard and eisa) so unit
numbering is sane. Might not work with both isa and non-isa devices
on the same system until ep is updated (Matt has some patches in the
pipeline which should resolve this, he wanted me to commit this so he
can resolve any conflicts against cvs rather than my patches).
Reviewed by: Matt Dodd <mdodd@freebsd.org>
by Peter Wemm, but I've not merged all the changes he sent to me yet.
This has not been reviewed by bde, so I'm committing to resolve any
issues he has with this when he returns from FreeBSD CON 99.
I've had four reports of this working for them. I've been able to
communicate to both my built in modem and a pccard modem with these
patches.
o Gut the compatibility interface, you now must attach with newbus.
o Unit numbers from pccardd are now ignored. This may change the units
assigned to a card. It now uses the first available unit.
o kill old skeleton code that is now obsolete.
o Use newbus attachment code.
o cleanup interfile dependencies some.
o kill list of devices per slot. we use the device tree for what we need.
o Remove now obsolete code.
o The ep driver (and maybe ed) may need some config file tweaks to
allow it to attach. See config files that were committed for examples
on how to do this.
Drivers to be commited shortly.
This is an interrum fix until the new pccard. ed, ep and sio will be
supported by me with this release, although others are welcome to try
to support other devices before new pccard is working.
I plan on doing minimal further work on this code base. Be careful
when upgrading, since this code is known to work on my laptop and
those of a couple others as well, but your milage may vary.
BUGS TO BE FIXED:
o system memory isn't allocated yet, it will be soon.
o No devices actually have a pccard newbus attach in the tree.
BUGS THAT MIGHT BE FIXED:
o card removal, including suspend, usually hangs the system.
Many thanks to Peter Wemm and Doug Rabson for helping me to fill in
the missing bits of New Bus understanding at FreeBSD Con '99.
slightly older version of this code was tested by BDE and I.
Also fixes a lockup situation when kva gets too fragmented.
Remove the maxvmiobufspace variable and sysctl, they are no longer
used. Also cleanup (remove) #if 0 sections from prior commits.
This code is more of a hack, but presumably the whole buffer cache
implementation is going to be rewritten in the next year so it's no
big deal.
revision 1.21
date: 1999/10/15 17:29:20; author: imp; state: Exp; lines: +3 -3
Reorganize the attachement point for pcic (it was unattached and
floating before). Attach pccard devices to pcic, one per slot
(although this may change to one per pcic). pcic is now attached to
isa (to act as a bridge) and pccard is attached to pcic, cbb and
pc98ic (the last two are card bus bridge and the pc98ic version of
pcic, neither of which are in the tree yet). Move pccard compat code
into pccard/pccard_compat.c.
THIS REQUIRES A CONFIG FILE CHANGE. You must change your pcic/card
entries to be:
# PCCARD (PCMCIA) support
controller pcic0 at isa?
controller pcic1 at isa?
controller card0
The old system was upside down and this corrects that problem. It
will make it easier to add support for YENTA pccard/card bus bridges.
Much more cleanup needs to happen before newbus devices can have
pccard attachments. My previous commit's comments were premature.
Forgotten by: imp
- Fix a bug in rl_rxeof() handler: in the case where the packet wraps
from the end of the receive buffer back to the beginning, we need to
insure that at least sizeof(ether_header) bytes make it into the first
mbuf. If we don't, then doing eh = mtod(m, struct ether_header *)
loses. To avoid this, we use m_pullup() to suck at least MHLEN -
RL_ETHER_ALIGN bytes into the first mbuf, which should also help
small packets fit into a single mbuf.
Pointed out by: Philip A. Prindeville <philipp@zembu.com>
- Make the transmit threshold autotuning: start off with a small value
and jack it up when TX underruns are detected.
- Also improve TX error recovery: kick the chip in the head with a
reset/init sequence to make sure it recovers afer a transmit error.
glibc2 defines struct dirent differently than the Linux kernel does.
The getdents function therefore needs to read a heuristically defined
number of kernel dirents to satisfy the request. In case where too
many kernel dirents have been read, the function lseeks on the
directory so that a next call will start with the right dirent. The
offset used in lseeking is the offset-field in the last dirent passed
to the application. This can only mean that the offset-field holds
the offset of the next dirent and not the offset of the dirent itself.
Been in production for 3 years now. Gives Instant Frame relay to if_sr
and if_ar drivers, and PPPOE support soon. See:
ftp://ftp.whistle.com/pub/archie/netgraph/index.html
for on-line manual pages.
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson (dfr@freebsd.org)
Obtained from: Whistle CVS tree
to remove 'b'lock devices. The agreement is, essentially, that
block devices will be collapsed into character devices as a first
step (though I don't particularly agree), and raw device names 'rxxx'
will become simply 'xxx' in devfs in the second step (i.e. no 'rxxx'
names will exist). The renaming will not effect the original /dev
and the expectation is that devfs will eventually (but not immediately)
become the standard way to access devices in the system.
If it is determined that a reimplementation of block device access
characteristics is beneficial, a number of alternatives will
be possible that do not involve resurrecting the 'b'lock device class.
For example, an ioctl() that might be made on an open character device
descriptor or a generic buffered overlay device.
This commit removes the blockdev disablement sysctl which does not
apply to the solution that was reached.
and unusable by the pccard system since pccard doesn't attach to the
nexus any more. This was stopping my 3c589D from working as pccard unit
0 is used directly for resource allocation and this fails when unit 0
isn't actually attached to anything.
it has the same value on all platforms. Previously it was just under
3 seconds on x86 (typically hz<=128) and just under 1/3 of a second on
alpha (typically hz>=1024). This covers up a race between ad_interrupt()
and ad_timeout() which is being looked into.
reviewd by: sos
This means that access to block devices nodes will act the
same as char device nodes for disk-like devices.
If you encounter problems after this, where programs accessing
disks directly fail to operate, please use the following command
to revert to previous behaviour:
sysctl -w vfs.bdev_buffered=1
And verify that this was indeed the cause of your trouble.
See the mail-archives of the arch@FreeBSD.org list for background.
bootup. Somehow my backout of an abortaive attempt at shared
memory autoconfiguration included this line:
sc->mem_shared = 1;
Which is fairly important as it turns out.
Since I performed my pre-commit testing on a different box with a generic
NE2000 I didn't catch this. Pointy hat.
Put splbio protection around the main launch loop. We've seen cases where
the bottom half was cutting off the branch on which we're sitting.
Experienced-by: Michael Reifenberger <root@nihil.plaut.de>
have you is prototyped). Removed code versions in md struct- not used
any more. Allocate transfer dma maps and xflist stuff in mbxdmasetup based
upon isp->isp_maxcmds. Allow for multiple calls to mbxdmasetup (for
isp_reset cases).
file later. Do some pencil-sharpening types of minor changes. Change
how active commands are remembered (using new inline functions to get
handles, etc..). Now do a GET FIRMWARE STATUS after firing up the f/w as
outgoing mailbox 2 will tell you the f/w's notion of the max commands
that can be supported. Attempt to retrieve loop topology. Add in the
appropriate SWIZZLE/UNSWIZZLE macros calls (this is a no-op on Little
Endian machines but is needed for sparc (on other platforms)). Move
the temp port database we use to find out where things have moved to
after a LIP to the softc and off the kernel stack. Follow Qlogic's
hint and don't bother setting a tag for commands that don't have
this enabled (presumably the f/w will do it's own selection then).
Use an INT_PENDING macro to check for an interrupt. The call to
ISP_DMAFREE now just takes the handle- not the 'handle-1' which was
a layering violation. Use CFGPRINTF in a couple of places to make
things less chatty if not booting verbose, or CAMDEBUG compiles, etc..
where it defaults to one. Change simq width allocation to the max number
of commands supported by the HBA after f/w fires up- not the constant
MAXISPREQUEST value. Do some stylistic changes.