Now when one does 'make kernel ; make kernel' the second invocation
only does: `kernel.ko' is up to date.
rather than reproduce all the .fw files and relink the kernel.
Bring in a driver for the LSI Logic MPT2 6Gb SAS controllers.
This driver supports basic I/O, and works with SAS and SATA drives and
expanders.
Basic error recovery works (i.e. timeouts and aborts) as well.
Integrated RAID isn't supported yet, and there are some known bugs.
So this isn't ready for production use, but is certainly ready for
testing and additional development. For the moment, new commits to this
driver should go into the FreeBSD Perforce repository first
(//depot/projects/mps/...) and then get merged into -current once
they've been vetted.
This has only been added to the amd64 GENERIC, since that is the only
architecture I have tested this driver with.
Submitted by: scottl
Discussed with: imp, gibbs, will
Sponsored by: Yahoo, Spectra Logic Corporation
the existing code was very platform specific, and broken for SMP systems
trying to reboot from KDB.
- Add a new PLATFORM_RESET() method to the platform KOBJ interface, and
migrate existing reset functions into platform modules.
- Modify the OF_reboot() routine to submit the request by hand to avoid
the IPIs involved in the regular openfirmware() routine. This fixes
reboot from KDB on SMP machines.
- Move non-KDB reset and poweroff functions on the Powermac platform
into the relevant power control drivers (cuda, pmu, smu), instead of
using them through the Open Firmware backdoor.
- Rename platform_chrp to platform_powermac since it has become
increasingly Powermac specific. When we gain support for IBM systems,
we will grow a new platform_chrp.
provide PCI devices for various hardware such as memory controllers, etc.
These PCI buses are not enumerated via ACPI however. Add qpi(4) psuedo
bus and Host-PCI bridge drivers to enumerate these buses. Currently the
driver uses the CPU ID to determine the bridges' presence.
In collaboration with: Joseph Golio @ Isilon Systems
MFC after: 2 weeks
Makefiles or *.mk files, use ${CC:T:Mfoo} instead, so only the basename
of the compiler command (excluding any arguments) is considered.
This allows you to use, for example, CC="/nondefault/path/clang -xxx",
and still have the various tests in bsd.*.mk identify your compiler as
clang correctly.
ICC if cases were also changed.
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com>
As des noted, the section on SCTP would benefit from
a rewrite by a native speaker (which I am not).
Any volunteers?
Approved by: des (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
zones for each malloc bucket size. The purpose is to isolate
different malloc types into hash classes, so that any buffer overruns
or use-after-free will usually only affect memory from malloc types in
that hash class. This is purely a debugging tool; by varying the hash
function and tracking which hash class was corrupted, the intersection
of the hash classes from each instance will point to a single malloc
type that is being misused. At this point inspection or memguard(9)
can be used to catch the offending code.
Add MALLOC_DEBUG_MAXZONES=8 to -current GENERIC configuration files.
The suggestion to have this on by default came from Kostik Belousov on
-arch.
This code is based on work by Ron Steinke at Isilon Systems.
Reviewed by: -arch (mostly silence)
Reviewed by: zml
Approved by: zml (mentor)
module that can be used by both the regular and experimental nfs
clients. This fixes the problem reported by jh@ where /dev/nfslock
would be registered twice when both nfs clients were used.
I also defined the size of the lm_fh field to be the correct value,
as it should be the maximum size of an NFSv3 file handle.
Reviewed by: jh
MFC after: 2 weeks
The aeskeys_{amd64,i386}.S content was mostly obtained from OpenBSD,
no objections to the license from core.
Hardware provided by: Sentex Communications
Tested by: fabient, pho (previous versions)
MFC after: 1 month
library:
o) Increase inline unit / large function growth limits for MIPS to accommodate
the needs of the Simple Executive, which uses a shocking amount of inlining.
o) Remove TARGET_OCTEON and use CPU_CNMIPS to do things required by cnMIPS and
the Octeon SoC.
o) Add OCTEON_VENDOR_LANNER to use Lanner's allocation of vendor-specific
board numbers, specifically to support the MR320.
o) Add OCTEON_BOARD_CAPK_0100ND to hard-wire configuration for the CAPK-0100nd,
which improperly uses an evaluation board's board number and breaks board
detection at runtime. This board is sold by Portwell as the CAM-0100.
o) Add support for the RTC available on some Octeon boards.
o) Add support for the Octeon PCI bus. Note that rman_[sg]et_virtual for IO
ports can not work unless building for n64.
o) Clean up the CompactFlash driver to use Simple Executive macros and
structures where possible (it would be advisable to use the Simple Executive
API to set the PIO mode, too, but that is not done presently.) Also use
structures from FreeBSD's ATA layer rather than structures copied from
Linux.
o) Print available Octeon SoC features on boot.
o) Add support for the Octeon timecounter.
o) Use the Simple Executive's routines rather than local copies for doing reads
and writes to 64-bit addresses and use its macros for various device
addresses rather than using local copies.
o) Rename octeon_board_real to octeon_is_simulation to reduce differences with
Cavium-provided code originally written for Linux. Also make it use the
same simplified test that the Simple Executive and Linux both use rather
than our complex one.
o) Add support for the Octeon CIU, which is the main interrupt unit, as a bus
to use normal interrupt allocation and setup routines.
o) Use the Simple Executive's bootmem facility to allocate physical memory for
the kernel, rather than assuming we know which addresses we can steal.
NB: This may reduce the amount of RAM the kernel reports you as having if
you are leaving large temporary allocations made by U-Boot allocated
when starting FreeBSD.
o) Add a port of the Cavium-provided Ethernet driver for Linux. This changes
Ethernet interface naming from rgmxN to octeN. The new driver has vast
improvements over the old one, both in performance and functionality, but
does still have some features which have not been ported entirely and there
may be unimplemented code that can be hit in everyday use. I will make
every effort to correct those as they are reported.
o) Support loading the kernel on non-contiguous cores.
o) Add very conservative support for harvesting randomness from the Octeon
random number device.
o) Turn SMP on by default.
o) Clean up the style of the Octeon kernel configurations a little and make
them compile with -march=octeon.
o) Add support for the Lanner MR320 and the CAPK-0100nd to the Simple
Executive.
o) Modify the Simple Executive to build on FreeBSD and to build without
executive-config.h or cvmx-config.h. In the future we may want to
revert part of these changes and supply executive-config.h and
cvmx-config.h and access to the options contained in those files via
kernel configuration files.
o) Modify the Simple Executive USB routines to support getting and setting
of the USB PID.
MACHINE_CPUARCH isn't defined. I believe that this will cover all
options.
I didn't define it in kern.mk because $M is set to MACHINE_CPUARCH and
then is expanded for the genassym.o rule in kern.post.mk and kern.mk
is included after this, so the expansion isn't quite right. I think
this is a bug in make, but don't have the time to track it to ground
(and even if I did, fixing it would require a MFC of the change to the
very old systems we're targetting with this fix).
Kernel sources for 64-bit PowerPC, along with build-system changes to keep
32-bit kernels compiling (build system changes for 64-bit kernels are
coming later). Existing 32-bit PowerPC kernel configurations must be
updated after this change to specify their architecture.
(exec_setregs, etc.) in order to simplify the addition of 64-bit support,
and possible future extension of the Book-E code to handle hard floating
point and Altivec.
MFC after: 1 month
The following systems are affected:
- MPC8555CDS
- MPC8572DS
This overhaul covers the following major changes:
- All integrated peripherals drivers for Freescale MPC85XX SoC, which are
currently in the FreeBSD source tree are reworked and adjusted so they
derive config data out of the device tree blob (instead of hard coded /
tabelarized values).
- This includes: LBC, PCI / PCI-Express, I2C, DS1553, OpenPIC, TSEC, SEC,
QUICC, UART, CFI.
- Thanks to the common FDT infrastrucutre (fdtbus, simplebus) we retire
ocpbus(4) driver, which was based on hard-coded config data.
Note that world for these platforms has to be built WITH_FDT.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
the core changes but left out the shared code, lol.
Well, and a couple fixes to the core... hopefully
this will all be complete now.
Happy happy joy joy :)
It has more features than acpi_aiboost(4) and it will eventually replace
acpi_aiboost(4).
Submitted by: Constantine A. Murenin <cnst at FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: freebsd-acpi, imp
MFC after: 1 month
writing event timer drivers, for choosing best possible drivers by machine
independent code and for operating them to supply kernel with hardclock(),
statclock() and profclock() events in unified fashion on various hardware.
Infrastructure provides support for both per-CPU (independent for every CPU
core) and global timers in periodic and one-shot modes. MI management code
at this moment uses only periodic mode, but one-shot mode use planned for
later, as part of tickless kernel project.
For this moment infrastructure used on i386 and amd64 architectures. Other
archs are welcome to follow, while their current operation should not be
affected.
This patch updates existing drivers (i8254, RTC and LAPIC) for the new
order, and adds event timers support into the HPET driver. These drivers
have different capabilities:
LAPIC - per-CPU timer, supports periodic and one-shot operation, may
freeze in C3 state, calibrated on first use, so may be not exactly precise.
HPET - depending on hardware can work as per-CPU or global, supports
periodic and one-shot operation, usually provides several event timers.
i8254 - global, limited to periodic mode, because same hardware used also
as time counter.
RTC - global, supports only periodic mode, set of frequencies in Hz
limited by powers of 2.
Depending on hardware capabilities, drivers preferred in following orders,
either LAPIC, HPETs, i8254, RTC or HPETs, LAPIC, i8254, RTC.
User may explicitly specify wanted timers via loader tunables or sysctls:
kern.eventtimer.timer1 and kern.eventtimer.timer2.
If requested driver is unavailable or unoperational, system will try to
replace it. If no more timers available or "NONE" specified for second,
system will operate using only one timer, multiplying it's frequency by few
times and uing respective dividers to honor hz, stathz and profhz values,
set during initial setup.
This information can be very valuable for CPU sleep-time (and respectively
idle power consumption) optimization.
Add counters for timer-related IPIs.
Reviewed by: jhb@ (previous version)
The following systems are involved:
- DB-88F5182
- DB-88F5281
- DB-88F6281
- DB-78100
- SheevaPlug
This overhaul covers the following major changes:
- All integrated peripherals drivers for Marvell ARM SoC, which are
currently in the FreeBSD source tree are reworked and adjusted so they
derive config data out of the device tree blob (instead of hard coded /
tabelarized values).
- Since the common FDT infrastrucutre (fdtbus, simplebus) is used we say
good by to obio / mbus drivers and numerous hard-coded config data.
Note that world needs to be built WITH_FDT for the affected platforms.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation.
passing through. Modifications are restricted to a subset of C language
operations on unsigned integers of 8, 16, 32 or 64 bit size.
These are: set to new value (=), addition (+=), subtraction (-=),
multiplication (*=), division (/=), negation (= -), bitwise AND (&=),
bitwise OR (|=), bitwise eXclusive OR (^=), shift left (<<=),
shift right (>>=). Several operations are all applied to a packet
sequentially in order they were specified by user.
Submitted by: Maxim Ignatenko <gelraen.ua at gmail.com>
Vadim Goncharov <vadimnuclight at tpu.ru>
Discussed with: net@
Approved by: mav (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
The driver is stub. It just creates device entry and feeds
reassembled packets from hardware into it.
If in future we would port wsmouse(4) from NetBSD, or make
sysmouse(4) to support absolute motion events, then the driver
can be extended to act as system mouse. Meanwhile, it just
presents a /dev/uep0, that can be utilized by X driver, that
I am going to commit to ports tree soon.
The name for the driver is chosen to be the same as in NetBSD,
however, due to different USB stacks this driver isn't a port.
Extend struct sysvec with three new elements:
sv_fetch_syscall_args - the method to fetch syscall arguments from
usermode into struct syscall_args. The structure is machine-depended
(this might be reconsidered after all architectures are converted).
sv_set_syscall_retval - the method to set a return value for usermode
from the syscall. It is a generalization of
cpu_set_syscall_retval(9) to allow ABIs to override the way to set a
return value.
sv_syscallnames - the table of syscall names.
Use sv_set_syscall_retval in kern_sigsuspend() instead of hardcoding
the call to cpu_set_syscall_retval().
The new functions syscallenter(9) and syscallret(9) are provided that
use sv_*syscall* pointers and contain the common repeated code from
the syscall() implementations for the architecture-specific syscall
trap handlers.
Syscallenter() fetches arguments, calls syscall implementation from
ABI sysent table, and set up return frame. The end of syscall
bookkeeping is done by syscallret().
Take advantage of single place for MI syscall handling code and
implement ptrace_lwpinfo pl_flags PL_FLAG_SCE, PL_FLAG_SCX and
PL_FLAG_EXEC. The SCE and SCX flags notify the debugger that the
thread is stopped at syscall entry or return point respectively. The
EXEC flag augments SCX and notifies debugger that the process address
space was changed by one of exec(2)-family syscalls.
The i386, amd64, sparc64, sun4v, powerpc and ia64 syscall()s are
changed to use syscallenter()/syscallret(). MIPS and arm are not
converted and use the mostly unchanged syscall() implementation.
Reviewed by: jhb, marcel, marius, nwhitehorn, stas
Tested by: marcel (ia64), marius (sparc64), nwhitehorn (powerpc),
stas (mips)
MFC after: 1 month
hook it up to ada(4) also. While at it, rename *ad_firmware_geom_adjust()
to *ata_disk_firmware_geom_adjust() etc now that these are no longer
limited to ad(4).
Reviewed by: mav
MFC after: 3 days
Powermac G5 systems. MSI and several other things are not presently
supported.
The U3/U4 internal device support portions of this change were contributed
by Andreas Tobler.
MFC after: 1 week
HAL/Fujitsu) CPUs. For the most part this consists of fleshing out the
MMU and cache handling, it doesn't add pmap optimizations possible with
these CPU, yet, though.
With these changes FreeBSD runs stable on Fujitsu Siemens PRIMEPOWER 250
and likely also other models based on SPARC64 V like 450, 650 and 850.
Thanks go to Michael Moll for providing access to a PRIMEPOWER 250.
driver for CAM ATA subsystem. This driver supports same hardware as
atamarvell, ataadaptec and atamvsata drivers from ata(4), but provides
many additional features, such as NCQ, PMP, etc.
that generates a fatal bus trap. Normally, the chips are setup to do
128 byte DMA bursts, but when on this CPU, they can only safely due
4-byte DMA bursts due to this bug. Details of the exact nature of the
bug are sketchy, but some can be found at
https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?pid=70060 on pages 4, 5 and 6.
There's a small performance penalty associated with this workaround,
so it is only enabled when needed on the Atheros AR71xx platforms.
Unfortunately, this condition is impossible to detect at runtime
without MIPS specific ifdefs. Rather than cast an overly-broad net
like Linux/OpenWRT dues (which enables this workaround all the time on
MIPS32 platforms), we put this option in the kernel for just the
affected machines. Sam didn't like this aspect of the patch when he
reviewed it, and I'd love to hear sane proposals on how to fix it :)
Reviewed by: sam@
with all other corresponding CTF places by changing the corresponding
code which is generated by config(8). Or in short, move the '@' from
the variable definition to the use of the variable. [1]
While I'm here break up a long line. [2]
Discussed with: imp [1,2], bde [2]
This driver was written by Alexander Pohoyda and greatly enhanced
by Nikolay Denev. I don't have these hardwares but this driver was
tested by Nikolay Denev and xclin.
Because SiS didn't release data sheet for this controller, programming
information came from Linux driver and OpenSolaris. Unlike other open
source driver for SiS190/191, sge(4) takes full advantage of TX/RX
checksum offloading and does not require additional copy operation in
RX handler.
The controller seems to have advanced offloading features like VLAN
hardware tag insertion/stripping, TCP segmentation offload(TSO) as
well as jumbo frame support but these features are not available
yet. Special thanks to xclin <xclin<> cs dot nctu dot edu dot tw>
who sent fix for receiving VLAN oversized frames.
StarCat systems which provides time-of-day services for both as well as
console service for Serengeti, i.e. Sun Fire V1280. While the latter is
described with a device type of serial in the OFW device tree, it isn't
actually an UART. Nevertheless the console service is handled by uart(4)
as this allowed to re-use quite a bit of MD and MI code. Actually, this
idea is stolen from Linux which interfaces the sun4v hypervisor console
with the Linux counterpart of uart(4).
This framework allows drivers to abstract the rate control algorithm and
just feed the framework with the usable parameters. The rate control
framework will now deal with passing the parameters to the selected
algorithm. Right now we have AMRR (the default) and RSSADAPT but there's
no way to select one with ifconfig, yet.
The objective is to have more rate control algorithms in the net80211
stack so all drivers[0] can use it. Ideally, we'll have the well-known
sample rate control algorithm in the net80211 at some point so all
drivers can use it (not just ath).
[0] all drivers that do rate control in software, that is.
Reviewed by: bschmidt, thompsa, weyongo
MFC after: 1 months
domain clock, 8 programmable PMC.
- Westmere based CPU (Xeon 5600, Corei7 980X) support.
- New man pages with events list for core and uncore.
- Updated Corei7 events with Intel 253669-033US December 2009 doc.
There is some removed events in the documentation, they have been
kept in the code but documented in the man page as obsolete.
- Offcore response events can be setup with rsp token.
Sponsored by: NETASQ
are some problems with static executables), make.conf (would also
affect ports which do not use GNU make and do not override the
compile targets) or in the kernel config (via "makeoptions
WITH_CTF=yes").
Additional (related) changes:
- propagate WITH_CTF to module builds
- do not add -g to the linker flags, it's a noop there anyway
(at least according to the man page of ld)
- do not add -g to CFLAGS unconditionally
we need to have a look if it is really needed (IMO not) or if there
is a way to add it only when WITH_CTF is used
Note: ctfconvert / ctfmerge lines will not appear in the build output,
to protect the innocent (those which do not build with WITH_CTF would
see the shell-test and may think WITH_CTF is used).
Reviewed by: imp, jhb, scottl (earlier version)
Discussed on: arch@
em revision 7.0.0:
- Using driver devclass, seperate legacy (pre-pcie) code
into a seperate source file. This will at least help
protect against regression issues. It compiles along
with em, and is transparent to end use, devices in each
appear to be 'emX'. When using em in a modular form this
also allows the legacy stuff to be defined out.
- Add tx and rx rings as in igb, in the 82574 this becomes
actual multiqueue for the first time (2 queues) while in
other PCIE adapters its just make code cleaner.
- Add RX mbuf handling logic that matches igb, this will
eliminate packet drops due to temporary mbuf shortage.
igb revision 1.9.3:
- Following the ixgbe code, use a new approach in what
was called 'get_buf', the routine now has been made
independent of rxeof, it now does the update to the
engine TDT register, this design allows temporary
mbuf resources to become non-critical, not requiring
a packet to be discarded, instead it just returns and
does not increment the tail pointer.
- With the above change it was also unnecessary to keep
'spare' maps around, since we do not have the discard
issue.
- Performance tweaks and improvements to the code also.
MFC in a week
for upcoming 64-bit PowerPC and MIPS support. This renames the COMPAT_IA32
option to COMPAT_FREEBSD32, removes some IA32-specific code from MI parts
of the kernel and enhances the freebsd32 compatibility code to support
big-endian platforms.
Reviewed by: kib, jhb
and tested over the past two months in the ipfw3-head branch. This
also happens to be the same code available in the Linux and Windows
ports of ipfw and dummynet.
The major enhancement is a completely restructured version of
dummynet, with support for different packet scheduling algorithms
(loadable at runtime), faster queue/pipe lookup, and a much cleaner
internal architecture and kernel/userland ABI which simplifies
future extensions.
In addition to the existing schedulers (FIFO and WF2Q+), we include
a Deficit Round Robin (DRR or RR for brevity) scheduler, and a new,
very fast version of WF2Q+ called QFQ.
Some test code is also present (in sys/netinet/ipfw/test) that
lets you build and test schedulers in userland.
Also, we have added a compatibility layer that understands requests
from the RELENG_7 and RELENG_8 versions of the /sbin/ipfw binaries,
and replies correctly (at least, it does its best; sometimes you
just cannot tell who sent the request and how to answer).
The compatibility layer should make it possible to MFC this code in a
relatively short time.
Some minor glitches (e.g. handling of ipfw set enable/disable,
and a workaround for a bug in RELENG_7's /sbin/ipfw) will be
fixed with separate commits.
CREDITS:
This work has been partly supported by the ONELAB2 project, and
mostly developed by Riccardo Panicucci and myself.
The code for the qfq scheduler is mostly from Fabio Checconi,
and Marta Carbone and Francesco Magno have helped with testing,
debugging and some bug fixes.
Enhanced process coredump routines.
This brings in the following features:
1) Limit number of cores per process via the %I coredump formatter.
Example:
if corefilename is set to %N.%I.core AND num_cores = 3, then
if a process "rpd" cores, then the corefile will be named
"rpd.0.core", however if it cores again, then the kernel will
generate "rpd.1.core" until we hit the limit of "num_cores".
this is useful to get several corefiles, but also prevent filling
the machine with corefiles.
2) Encode machine hostname in core dump name via %H.
3) Compress coredumps, useful for embedded platforms with limited space.
A sysctl kern.compress_user_cores is made available if turned on.
To enable compressed coredumps, the following config options need to be set:
options COMPRESS_USER_CORES
device zlib # brings in the zlib requirements.
device gzio # brings in the kernel vnode gzip output module.
4) Eventhandlers are fired to indicate coredumps in progress.
5) The imgact sv_coredump routine has grown a flag to pass in more
state, currently this is used only for passing a flag down to compress
the coredump or not.
Note that the gzio facility can be used for generic output of gzip'd
streams via vnodes.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Reviewed by: kan
shared and generalized between our current amd64, i386 and pc98.
This is just an initial step that should lead to a more complete effort.
For the moment, a very simple porting of cpufreq modules, BIOS calls and
the whole MD specific ISA bus part is added to the sub-tree but ideally
a lot of code might be added and more shared support should grow.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: emaste, kib, jhb, imp
Discussed on: arch
MFC: 3 weeks
Although this file has historically been used as a dumping ground for
random functions, nowadays it only contains functions related to copying
bits {from,to} userspace and hash table utility functions.
Behold, subr_uio.c and subr_hash.c.
scalable shared memory node, which is used in large UltraSPARC III based
machines to group snooping-coherency domains together, like schizo(4) to
be treated like nexus(4) children.
this in the Sibyte PCI hostbridge driver instead.
The nexus driver sees resource allocation requests for memory and irq
resources only. These are legitimate resources on all MIPS platforms.
Suggested by: imp
The platform that supports SMP currently is a SWARM with a dual-core Sibyte
processor. The kernel config file to use is SWARM_SMP.
Reviewed by: imp, rrs
available today.
This card is a low power 802.11bgn that only does 11n rates up to MCS 7
(that's 65 Mbps in 20Mhz mode and 135 in 40Mhz mode).
802.11n is not yet supported, but will be in the future.
The driver still has a problem regarding to the setting of txpower on
the card, so don't expect good performance yet. After fixing this
problem, an MFC is possible.
Special thanks to iXsystems and S Smirnov <tonve at yandex.ru> for help
with the purchase of a netbook with this card.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
- ATPIC, on pc98 is never defined somewhere, differently from i386.
Turn its compilation to be conditional as i386 does. [1]
[0] Reported by: nyan
[1] Submitted by: nyan
Note that due to e.g. write throttling ('wdrain'), it can stall all the disk
I/O instead of just the device it's configured for. Using it for removable
media is therefore not a good idea.
Reviewed by: pjd (earlier version)
LAPIC may lead to aliasing for softclock and profclock because frequencies
are sized in order to fit mainly hardclock.
atrtc used to take care of the softclock and profclock and it does still
do, if the LAPIC can't handle the clocks properly.
Revert the change when the LAPIC started taking charge of all three of
them and let atrtc handle softclock and profclock if not explicitly
requested. Such request can be made setting != 0 the new tunable
machdep.lapic_allclocks or if the new device ATPIC is not present
within the i386 kernel config (atrtc is linked to atpic presence).
Diagnosed by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: jhb, emaste
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
MFC: 3 weeks
of Code 2009:
- BSDL block and inode allocation policies for ext2fs. This involves the use
FFS1 style block and inode allocation for ext2fs. Preallocation was removed
since it was GPL'd.
- Make ext2fs MPSAFE by introducing locks to per-mount datastructures.
- Fixes for kern/122047 PR.
- Various small bugfixes.
- Move out of gnu/ directory.
Sponsored by: Google Inc.
Submitted by: Aditya Sarawgi <sarawgi.aditya AT SPAMFREE gmail DOT com>
from standard 3G wireless units by supplying a raw IP/IPv6 endpoint rather than
using PPP over serial. uhsoctl(1) is used to initiate and close the WAN
connection.
Obtained from: Fredrik Lindberg <fli@shapeshifter.se>
I/O port access is implemented on Itanium by reading and writing to a
special region in memory. To hide details and avoid misaligned memory
accesses, a process did I/O port reads and writes by making a MD system
call. There's one fatal problem with this approach: unprivileged access
was not being prevented. /dev/io serves that purpose on amd64/i386, so
employ it on ia64 as well. Use an ioctl for doing the actual I/O and
remove the sysarch(2) interface.
Backward compatibility is not being considered. The sysarch(2) approach
was added to support X11, but support for FreeBSD/ia64 was never fully
implemented in X11. Thus, nothing gets broken that didn't need more work
to begin with.
MFC after: 1 week
r200593 | imp | 2009-12-15 16:22:19 -0700 (Tue, 15 Dec 2009) | 4 lines
Remove the now-obsolete comments about compile-with. There are no
compile-with lines in this file at all. So we don't need two warnings
about them.
r198669 | rrs | 2009-10-30 02:53:11 -0600 (Fri, 30 Oct 2009) | 5 lines
With this commit our friend RMI will now compile. I have
not tested it and the chances of it running yet are about
ZERO.. but it will now compile. The hard part now begins,
making it run ;-)
r198311 | neel | 2009-10-20 18:56:13 -0600 (Tue, 20 Oct 2009) | 8 lines
Update options.mips to support config options required to build the SWARM
kernel.
The SWARM kernel does not build yet but at least it gets past the kernel
config stage.
r198154 | rrs | 2009-10-15 15:03:32 -0600 (Thu, 15 Oct 2009) | 10 lines
Does 4 things:
1) Adds future RMI directories
2) Places intr_machdep.c in specfic files.arch pointing to the generic
intr_machdep.c. This allows us to have an architecture dependant
intr_machdep.c (which we will need for RMI) in the machine specific
directory
3) removes intr_machdep.c from files.mips
4) Adds some TARGET_XLR_XLS ifdef's for the machine specific intra_machdep.h. We
may need to look at finding a better place to put this. But first I want to
get this thing compiling.
r196315 | imp | 2009-08-17 06:37:06 -0600 (Mon, 17 Aug 2009) | 5 lines
Like qdivrem, remove the other quad_t support stuff from 64-bit
kernels.
r195331 | imp | 2009-07-03 20:49:17 -0600 (Fri, 03 Jul 2009) | 4 lines
Merge in new cfe environment passing of kenv for swarm/sibyte boards.
Submitted by: Neelkanth Natu
r195732 | gonzo | 2009-07-16 20:28:27 -0600 (Thu, 16 Jul 2009) | 2 lines
- Add DES and Blowfish implementstions to build. Required by crypto(4)
r195437 | imp | 2009-07-07 23:57:58 -0600 (Tue, 07 Jul 2009) | 2 lines
The kernel isn't quite ready for this to be optional...
r195401 | imp | 2009-07-06 02:16:25 -0600 (Mon, 06 Jul 2009) | 4 lines
Only build qdivrem on 32-bit ISA...
r195331 | imp | 2009-07-03 20:49:17 -0600 (Fri, 03 Jul 2009) | 4 lines
Merge in new cfe environment passing of kenv for swarm/sibyte boards.
Submitted by: Neelkanth Natu
r195165 | gonzo | 2009-06-29 11:36:47 -0600 (Mon, 29 Jun 2009) | 2 lines
- add sys_machdep.c to build
r192864 | gonzo | 2009-05-26 16:40:12 -0600 (Tue, 26 May 2009) | 4 lines
- Replace CPU_NOFPU and SOFTFLOAT options with CPU_FPU. By default
we assume that there is no FPU, because majority of SoC does
not have it.
r191085 | gonzo | 2009-04-14 20:41:35 -0600 (Tue, 14 Apr 2009) | 2 lines
- mainbus.c seems not to be used, disconnect it from build
r191084 | gonzo | 2009-04-14 20:28:26 -0600 (Tue, 14 Apr 2009) | 6 lines
Use FreeBSD/arm approach for handling bus space access: space tag is a pointer
to bus_space structure that defines access methods and hence every bus can
define own accessors. Default space is mips_bus_space_generic. It's a simple
interface to physical memory, values are read with regard to host system
byte order.
r187418 | gonzo | 2009-01-18 19:37:10 -0700 (Sun, 18 Jan 2009) | 4 lines
- Add trampoline stuff for bootloaders that do not support ELF
- Replace arm'ish KERNPHYSADDR/KERNVIRTADDR with
KERNLOADADDR/TRAMPLOADADDR and clean configs
r187415 | gonzo | 2009-01-18 16:49:02 -0700 (Sun, 18 Jan 2009) | 3 lines
- Move Silicon Backplanes code out to system-wide level (dev/siba) as
it's going to be used not only for siba5 devices.
r187418 | gonzo | 2009-01-18 19:37:10 -0700 (Sun, 18 Jan 2009) | 4 lines
- Add trampoline stuff for bootloaders that do not support ELF
- Replace arm'ish KERNPHYSADDR/KERNVIRTADDR with
KERNLOADADDR/TRAMPLOADADDR and clean configs
from projects/mips to head by hand:
r197015 | imp | 2009-09-08 21:59:46 -0600 (Tue, 08 Sep 2009) | 2 lines
Prefer PTR_LA over a naked la to work with 64-bits..
r197012 | imp | 2009-09-08 21:46:04 -0600 (Tue, 08 Sep 2009) | 3 lines
Use proper set of flags to build the tramp. this gets 64-bit almost
building and lets me debug the 'almost' :)
r197004 | imp | 2009-09-08 18:47:12 -0600 (Tue, 08 Sep 2009) | 2 lines
Use ${LDSCRIPT_NAME} in preference to ldscript.$M.
r195669 | gonzo | 2009-07-13 17:03:44 -0600 (Mon, 13 Jul 2009) | 3 lines
- Remove -mno-dsp from CFLAGS. MIPS DSP ASE is off by default
now (as it should be)
r195533 | imp | 2009-07-10 01:21:26 -0600 (Fri, 10 Jul 2009) | 4 lines
Add in the emulation selection when linking... We're still not 100%
of the way there, but we're better with it. hack.so build now, but
we die when we try to link it in.
r191079 | gonzo | 2009-04-14 16:53:22 -0600 (Tue, 14 Apr 2009) | 2 lines
- Revert changes accidentally killed by merge operation
r187418 | gonzo | 2009-01-18 19:37:10 -0700 (Sun, 18 Jan 2009) | 4 lines
- Add trampoline stuff for bootloaders that do not support ELF
- Replace arm'ish KERNPHYSADDR/KERNVIRTADDR with
KERNLOADADDR/TRAMPLOADADDR and clean configs
r201902 | imp | 2010-01-09 10:16:19 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jan 2010) | 2 lines
Fix comment, which was missed in an earlier commit...
r195669 | gonzo | 2009-07-13 17:03:44 -0600 (Mon, 13 Jul 2009) | 3 lines
- Remove -mno-dsp from CFLAGS. MIPS DSP ASE is off by default
now (as it should be)
While the name is pretentious, a good explanation of its targets is
reported in this 17 months old presentation e-mail:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2008-August/008452.html
In order to implement it, the sq_type in sleepqueues is mandatory and not
only compiled along with INVARIANTS option. Additively, a new sleepqueue
function, sleepq_type() is added, returning the type of the sleepqueue
linked to a wchan.
Three new sysctls are added in order to configure the thread:
debug.deadlkres.slptime_threshold
debug.deadlkres.blktime_threshold
debug.deadlkres.sleepfreq
rappresenting the thresholds for sleep and block time that will lead to
a deadlock matching (when exceeded), while the sleepfreq rappresents the
number of seconds between 2 consecutive thread runnings.
In order to enable the deadlock resolver thread recompile your kernel
with the option DEADLKRES.
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: pho, Giovanni Trematerra
Sponsored by: Nokia Incorporated, Sandvine Incorporated
MFC after: 2 weeks
sys/conf/makeLINT.mk, which includes LINT and sets options VIMAGE
so that we will have VIMAGE LINT builds[1]. For now only do it for
those two architectures to avoid massive universe times for archs,
where people will less likely use VIMAGE or not at all.
Requested by: jhb [1]
Discussed on/with: arch, jhb, rwatson
MFC after: 1 month
previously know by StarSemi STR9104.
Tested by the submitter on an Emprex NSD-100 board.
Submitted by: Yohanes Nugroho <yohanes at gmail.com>
Reviewed by: freebsd-arm, stas
Obtained from: //depot/projects/str91xx/...
o Optimize for memory mapped I/O by making all I/O port acceses function
calls and marking the test for the IA64_BUS_SPACE_IO tag with
__predict_false(). Implement the I/O port access functions in a new
file, called bus_machdep.c.
o Change the bus_space_handle_t for memory mapped I/O to the virtual
address rather than the physical address. This eliminates the PA->VA
translation for every I/O access. The handle for I/O port access is
still the port number.
o Move inb(), outb(), inw(), outw(), inl(), outl(), and their string
variants from cpufunc.h and define them in bus.h. On ia64 these are
not CPU functions at all. In bus.h they are merely aliases for the
new I/O port access functions defined in bus_machdep.h.
o Handle the ACPI resource bug in nexus_set_resource(). There we can
do it once so that we don't have to worry about it whenever we need
to write to an I/O port that is really a memory mapped address.
The upshot of this change is that the KBI is better defined and that I/O
port access always involves a function call, allowing us to change the
actual implementation without breaking the KBI. For memory mapped I/O the
virtual address is abstracted, so that we can change the VA->PA mapping
in the kernel without causing an KBI breakage. The exception at this time
is for bus_space_map() and bus_space_unmap().
MFC after: 1 week.
* new firmware
* untested support for 1000 and 6000 series
* bgscan support
* remove unnecessary RXON changes
* allow setting of country/regdomain by enforcing channel flags read
from the EEPROM
* suspend/resume fixes
* RF kill switch fixes
* LED adjustments
* several bus_dma*() related fixes
* addressed some LORs
* many other bug fixes
Submitted by: Bernhard Schmidt <bschmidt at techwires.net>
Obtained from: Brandon Gooch <jamesbrandongooch at gmail dot com> (LED
related changes), Benjamin Kaduk <kaduk at mit dot edu>
(LOR fixes), OpenBSD
the Sun Fire V215/V245 and Sun Ultra 25/45 machines. This driver also
already includes all the code to support the `Oberon' Uranus to PCIe
bridges found in the Fujitsu-Siemens based Mx000 machines but due to
lack of access to such a system for testing, probing of these bridges
is currently disabled.
Unfortunately, the event queue mechanism of these bridges for MSIs/
MSI-Xs matches our current MD and MI interrupt frameworks like square
pegs fit into round holes so for now we are generous and use one event
queue per MSI, which limits us to 35 MSIs/MSI-Xs per Host-PCIe-bridge
(we use one event queue for the PCIe error messages). This seems
tolerable as long as most devices just use one MSI/MSI-X anyway.
Adding knowledge about MSIs/MSI-Xs to the MD interrupt code should
allow us to decouple the 1:1 mapping at the cost of no longer being
able to bind MSIs/MSI-Xs to specific CPUs as we currently have no
reliable way to quiesce a device during the transition of its MSIs/
MSI-Xs to another event queue. This would still require the problem
of interrupt storms generated by devices which have no one-shot
behavior or can't/don't mask interrupts while the filter/handler is
executed (like the older PCIe NICs supported by bge(4)) to be solved
though.
Committed from: 26C3
and the sockopt routines (the upper half of the kernel).
Whoever is the author of the 'table' code (Ruslan/glebius/oleg ?)
please change the attribution in ip_fw_table.c. I have copied
the copyright line from ip_fw2.c but it carries my name and I have
neither written nor designed the feature so I don't deserve
the credit.
MFC after: 1 month
At this time we pull out from ip_fw2.c the logging functions, and
support for dynamic rules, and move kernel-only stuff into
netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_private.h
No ABI change involved in this commit, unless I made some mistake.
ip_fw.h has changed, though not in the userland-visible part.
Files touched by this commit:
conf/files
now references the two new source files
netinet/ip_fw.h
remove kernel-only definitions gone into netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_private.h.
netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_private.h
new file with kernel-specific ipfw definitions
netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_log.c
ipfw_log and related functions
netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_dynamic.c
code related to dynamic rules
netinet/ipfw/ip_fw2.c
removed the pieces that goes in the new files
netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_nat.c
minor rearrangement to remove LOOKUP_NAT from the
main headers. This require a new function pointer.
A bunch of other kernel files that included netinet/ip_fw.h now
require netinet/ipfw/ip_fw_private.h as well.
Not 100% sure i caught all of them.
MFC after: 1 month
Introduce ATA_CAM kernel option, turning ata(4) controller drivers into
cam(4) interface modules. When enabled, this options deprecates all ata(4)
peripheral drivers (ad, acd, ...) and interfaces and allows cam(4) drivers
(ada, cd, ...) and interfaces to be natively used instead.
As side effect of this, ata(4) mode setting code was completely rewritten
to make controller API more strict and permit above change. While doing
this, SATA revision was separated from PATA mode. It allows DMA-incapable
SATA devices to operate and makes hw.ata.atapi_dma tunable work again.
Also allow ata(4) controller drivers (except some specific or broken ones)
to handle larger data transfers. Previous constraint of 64K was artificial
and is not really required by PCI ATA BM specification or hardware.
Submitted by: nwitehorn (powerpc part)
config(8) doesn't parse parantheses and instead treated them as being
part of the device driver name (e.g. '(u3g' vs 'u3g'). While here, fix the
style of these long lines to match the wrapping used for other long lines
in this file.
Submitted by: Brett Glass
MFC after: 1 week
The hardware is compliant with WDRT specification, so I originally
considered including generic WDRT watchdog support, but decided
against it, because I couldn't find anyone to the code for me.
WDRT seems to be not very popular.
Besides, generic WDRT porbably requires a slightly different driver
approach.
Reviewed by: des, gavin, rpaulo
MFC after: 3 weeks
long as I remember, and completely superseded by better maintained umass(4).
It's main idea was to optionally avoid CAM dependency for such devices, but
with move ATA to CAM, it is not actual any more.
No objections: hselasky@, thompsa@, arch@
Right now syscons(4) uses a cons25-style terminal emulator. The
disadvantages of that are:
- Little compatibility with embedded devices with serial interfaces.
- Bad bandwidth efficiency, mainly because of the lack of scrolling
regions.
- A very hard transition path to support for modern character sets like
UTF-8.
Our terminal emulation library, libteken, has been supporting
xterm-style terminal emulation for months, so flip the switch and make
everyone use an xterm-style console driver.
I still have to enable this on i386. Right now pc98 and i386 share the
same /etc/ttys file. I'm not going to switch pc98, because it uses its
own Kanji-capable cons25 emulator.
IMPORTANT: What to do if things go wrong (i.e. graphical artifacts):
- Run the application inside script(1), try to reduce the problem and
send me the log file.
- In the mean time, you can run `vidcontrol -T cons25' and `export
TERM=cons25' so you can run applications the same way you did before.
You can also build your kernel with `options TEKEN_CONS25' to make all
virtual terminals use the cons25 emulator by default.
Discussed on: current@
into libkern in order to made it usable by other modules than alias_proxy.
Obtained from: Sandvine Incorporated
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
MFC: 1 week
o Move all code into a single file for easier maintenance.
o Use a single global lock to avoid having to handle either
multiple locks or race conditions.
o Make sure to disable the high FP registers after saving
or dropping them.
o use msleep() to wait for the other CPU to save the high
FP registers.
This change fixes the high FP inconsistency panics.
A single global lock typically serializes too much, which may
be noticable when a lot of threads use the high FP registers,
but in that case it's probably better to switch the high FP
context synchronuously. Put differently: cpu_switch() should
switch the high FP registers if the incoming and outgoing
threads both use the high FP registers.
splitting in bce(4) instead of (ab)using ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS that was not
propagated into if_bce.c anyway. It is disabled by default.
Approved by: davidch
MFC after: 3 days
- Do not map entire real mode memory (1MB). Instead, we map IVT/BDA and
ROM area separately. Most notably, ROM area is mapped as device memory
(uncacheable) as it should be. User memory is dynamically allocated and
free'ed with contigmalloc(9) and contigfree(9). Remove now redundant and
potentially dangerous x86bios_alloc.c. If this emulator ever grows to
support non-PC hardware, we may implement it with rman(9) later.
- Move all host-specific initializations from x86emu_util.c to x86bios.c and
remove now unnecessary x86emu_util.c. Currently, non-PC hardware is not
supported. We may use bus_space(9) later when the KPI is fixed.
- Replace all bzero() calls for emulated registers with more obviously named
x86bios_init_regs(). This function also initializes DS and SS properly.
- Add x86bios_get_intr(). This function checks if the interrupt vector is
available for the platform. It is not necessary for PC-compatible hardware
but it may be needed later. ;-)
- Do not try turning off monitor if DPMS does not support the state.
- Allocate stable memory for VESA OEM strings instead of just holding
pointers to them. They may or may not be accessible always. Fix a memory
leak of video mode table while I am here.
- Add (experimental) BIOS POST call for vesa(4). This function calls VGA
BIOS POST code from the current VGA option ROM. Some video controllers
cannot save and restore the state properly even if it is claimed to be
supported. Usually the symptom is blank display after resuming from suspend
state. If the video mode does not match the previous mode after restoring,
we try BIOS POST and force the known good initial state. Some magic was
taken from NetBSD (and it was taken from vbetool, I believe.)
- Add a loader tunable for vgapci(4) to give a hint to dpms(4) and vesa(4)
to identify who owns the VESA BIOS. This is very useful for multi-display
adapter setup. By default, the POST video controller is automatically
probed and the tunable "hw.pci.default_vgapci_unit" is set to corresponding
vgapci unit number. You may override it from loader but it is very unlikely
to be necessary. Unfortunately only AGP/PCI/PCI-E controllers can be
matched because ISA controller does not have necessary device IDs.
- Fix a long standing bug in state save/restore function. The state buffer
pointer should be ES:BX, not ES:DI according to VBE 3.0. If it ever worked,
that's because BX was always zero. :-)
- Clean up register initializations more clearer per VBE 3.0.
- Fix a lot of style issues with vesa(4).
1) Adds future RMI directories
2) Places intr_machdep.c in specfic files.arch pointing to the generic
intr_machdep.c. This allows us to have an architecture dependant intr_machdep.c
(which we will need for RMI) in the machine specific directory
3) removes intr_machdep.c from files.mips
4) Adds some TARGET_XLR_XLS ifdef's for the machine specific intra_machdep.h. We
may need to look at finding a better place to put this. But first I want to
get this thing compiling.
- support for the new Gen-2, BT, and LP-CR cards.
- T3 firmware 7.7.0
- shared "common code" updates.
Approved by: gnn (mentor)
Obtained from: Chelsio
MFC after: 1 month