by removing parentheses. The main bug is in gcc: on machines with
64-bit longs and 64-bit long longs,
(unsigned long long)rdp->total_sectors / ((1024L * 1024L) / DEV_BSIZE))
has type plain unsigned long instead of the correctly promoted type
unsigned long long, so it can not be printfed using %llu format. Even
1ULL / 1L is mispromoted. Anyway, casting the correct operand
automatically avoids the problem. We do not want to to pessimize the
division; we just want to convert to a common maximal type for printing.
moderately improves msync's and VM object flushing for objects containing
randomly dirtied pages (fsync(), msync(), filesystem update daemon),
and improves cpu use for small-ranged sequential msync()s in the face of
very large mmap()ings from O(N) to O(1) as might be performed by a database.
A sysctl, vm.msync_flush_flag, has been added and defaults to 3 (the two
committed optimizations are turned on by default). 0 will turn off both
optimizations.
This code has already been tested under stable and is one in a series of
memq / vp->v_dirtyblkhd / fsync optimizations to remove O(N^2) restart
conditions that will be coming down the pipe.
MFC after: 3 days
- Move jail checks and some other checks involving constants and stack
variables out from under Giant. This isn't perfectly safe atm because
jail_sysvipc_allowed is read w/o a lock meaning that its value could be
stale. This global variable will soon become a per-jail flag, however,
at which time it will either not need a lock or will use the prison lock.
individual filesystems to determine whether they should operate in
"file system as a single object" mode, or "file system as a set of objects
with individual labels" mode. Note: in the trustedbsd_mac branch,
this is refered to as "MNT_MULTILEVEL", but the two mean the same thing.
MNT_MULTILABEL is more suggestive of a flexible policy system than one
providing purely hierarchal policies. The need for a reserved flag will
go away once nmount() is done.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
and for individual MAC policies. The framework event initializes the
access control subsystem; the policy event allows policies to register
themselves. The gap in between is for all the things we'll think of
later.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
pseudo-devices when an interface goes away. Otherwise, an open /dev/net/foo0
when the interface is removed can cause a crash.
Not objected to by: jlemon
Some buggy firmware workarounds. Fix some endian bugs.
These reduce the diffs from NetBSD, but NetBSD does have more changes since
my last manual merge.
people working on the MAC tree from getting toasted whenever system call
numbers are allocated in the main tree (for example, for KSE :-).
Calls allocated: __mac_{get,set}_proc, __mac_{get,set}_{fd,file}().
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
Includes some minor whitespace changes, and re-ordering to be able to document
properly (e.g, grouping of variables and the SYSCTL macro calls for them, where
the documentation has been added.)
Reviewed by: phk (but all errors are mine)
active-filter in pppd(8).
PR: kern/12281
Submitted by: Tim Moore <moore@bricoworks.com>
Not objected by: peter
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
MFC after: 1 week
be allocated as arrays indexed by the cpu id. Previously the only reliable
way to know the max cpu id was through MAXCPU. mp_ncpus isn't useful here
because cpu ids may be sparsely mapped, although x86 and alpha do not do this.
Also, call cpu_mp_probe much earlier so the max cpu id is known before the VM
starts up. This is intended to help support per cpu queues for the new
allocator, but may be useful elsewhere.
Reviewed by: jake
Approved by: jake
Link if only ATAPI device in kernel config
Remove unused #includes
Rearrange a bit in ata-raid to make diff against -stable smaller
Enable wc as default again, dunne how this happend...
and again in vm_page.c and vm_pageq.c.
o Delete unusused prototypes. (Mainly a result of the earlier renaming
of various functions from vm_page_*() to vm_pageq_*().)
This makes other power-management system (APM for now) to be able to
generate power profile change events (ie. AC-line status changes), and
other kernel components, not only the ACPI components, can be notified
the events.
- move subroutines in acpi_powerprofile.c (removed) to kern/subr_power.c
- call power_profile_set_state() also from APM driver when AC-line
status changes
- add call-back function for Crusoe LongRun controlling on power
profile changes for a example
on the loader to do it. Improve smp startup code to be less racy and to
defer certain things until the right time. This almost boots single user
on my dual ultra 60, it is still very fragile:
SMP: AP CPU #1 Launched!
Enter full pathname of shell or RETURN for /bin/sh:
# ls
Debugger("trapsig")
Stopped at Debugger+0x1c: ta %xcc, 1
db> heh
No such command
db>
with pmaps. When the context numbers wrap around we flush all user mappings
from the tlb. This makes use of the array indexed by cpuid to allow a pmap
to have a different context number on a different cpu. If the context numbers
are then divided evenly among cpus such that none are shared, we can avoid
sending tlb shootdown ipis in an smp system for non-shared pmaps. This also
removes a limit of 8192 processes (pmaps) that could be active at any given
time due to running out of tlb contexts.
Inspired by: the brown book
Crucial bugfix from: tmm
clobbered by the child. This is more complicated than usual because the
window that could get clobbered is pushed in kernel mode, so a lot of
registers would have to be saved in other registers in userland and we
don't have enough. What we do have is space in the pcb to temporarily
store user windows that were spilled in kernel mode, but could not be
immediately stored to the user stack. So we copy in the parent's topmost
window and save it in the pcb, and arrange for it to be copied back out
when the child is done frobbing the stack.
Reviewed by: tmm