- Add vendor/device ID for Corega USB-T ethernet adapter to necessary
places so that it will work with the kue driver.
- Add vendor/device ID for CATC Netmate devices for driver to be added
soon.
- Get really crazy about netisr stuff: avoid doing any mbuf allocations
or deallocations at splbio/splusb.
- Fix if_aue driver so that it works with LinkSys USB100TX: you need
to flip the GPIO bits just the right way to put the PHY in the right
mode.
to sleep). Locking 101, part 2: do not look at buffer contents after
you have been asleep. There is no telling what wonderous changes may
have occurred.
This seems to be responsible for a bunch of panics where the process
sleeps and something else finds softupdates "locked" when it shouldn't
be. This commit is unreviewed, but has been a big help here.
Previously my boxes would panic pretty much on the first fsync() that
wrote something to disk.
is very likely to become consensus as recent ietf/ipng mailing list
discussion. Also recent KAME repository and other KAME patched BSDs
also applied it.
s/__ss_family/ss_family/
s/__ss_len/ss_len/
Makeworld is confirmed, and no application should be affected by this change
yet.
it is no longer sufficient to get a lock on a buffer to know
that its write has been completed. We have to first get the
lock on the buffer, then check to see if it is doing a
background write. If it is doing background write, we have
to wait for the background write to finish, then check to see
if that fullfilled our dependency, and if not to start another
write. Luckily the explanation is longer than the fix.
a vnode has not been written (which would clear certain of its
dependencies). The problems arises because fsync with MNT_NOWAIT
no longer pushes all the dirty blocks associated with a vnode. It
skips those that require rollbacks, since they will just get instantly
dirty again. Such skipped blocks are marked so that they will not be
skipped a second time (otherwise circular dependencies would never
clear). So, we fsync twice to ensure that everything will be written
at least once.
layout. It seems that I cleaned it up a bit too much and confused a few
if () {
if () {
} else {
}
}
statements in the obvious manner.
This allows the driver to transmit packets again. *sigh*
Stop the recurring feeling of deja vu
Stop the recurring feeling of deja vu
Stop the recurring feeling of deja vu
and debounce the eject messages. We now mark the socket empty in the
interrupt handler, rather than after we've disabled the socket which
happens "much later".
packets into a single buffer, and set the DC_TX_COALESCE flag for the
Davicom DM9102 chip. I thought I had escaped this problem, but... This
chip appears to silently corrupt or discard transmitted frames when
using scatter/gather DMA (i.e. DMAing each packet fragment in place
with a separate descriptor). The only way to insure reliable transmission
is to coalesce transmitted packets into a single cluster buffer. (There
may also be an alignment constraint here, but mbuf cluster buffers are
naturally aligned on 2K boundaries, which seems to be good enough.)
The DM9102 driver for Linux written by Davicom also uses this workaround.
Unfortunately, the Davicom datasheet has no errata section describing
this or any other apparently known defect.
Problem noted by: allan_chou@davicom.com.tw
drive the transmitter, we have to check the interface's send queue in the
TX end of frame handler (i.e. the usb bulk out callback) and push out new
transmissions if the queue has packets in it and the transmitter is
ready. But the txeof handler is also called from a USB callback running
at splusb() too.
Grrr.
Use IFQ_MAXLEN instead. This seemed like a good idea at the time since
most 3c509s have all of 2k for their TX fifo. My intention was to revisit
ifq_maxlen and auto-scale it or something.
ttcp-t: 16777216 bytes in 21.53 real seconds = 761.07 KB/sec +++
ttcp-t: 2771 I/O calls, msec/call = 7.96, calls/sec = 128.72
ttcp-t: 0.0user 2.9sys 0:21real 13% 20i+280d 222maxrss 0+2pf 717+0csw
ttcp-r: 16777216 bytes in 14.11 real seconds = 1161.48 KB/sec +++
ttcp-r: 2050 I/O calls, msec/call = 7.05, calls/sec = 145.33
ttcp-r: 0.0user 1.4sys 0:14real 10% 87i+1198d 196maxrss 0+1pf 1949+186csw
I've got some tweaks that move the TX speed up to the RX speed but I've
got to groom them from the mess I've made of my source tree.
Yelled at by: wpaul
ddb is entered. Don't refer to `in_Debugger' to see if we
are in the debugger. (The variable used to be static in Debugger()
and wasn't updated if ddb is entered via traps and panic anyway.)
- Don't refer to `in_Debugger'.
- Add `db_active' to i386/i386/db_interface.d (as in
alpha/alpha/db_interface.c).
- Remove cnpollc() stub from ddb/db_input.c.
- Add the dbctl function to syscons, pcvt, and sio. (The function for
pcvt and sio is noop at the moment.)
Jointly developed by: bde and me
(The final version was tweaked by me and not reviewed by bde. Thus,
if there is any error in this commit, that is entirely of mine, not
his.)
Some changes were obtained from: NetBSD
The problem occurs when an indirect block and a data block are
being allocated at the same time. For example when the 13th block
of the file is written, the filesystem needs to allocate the first
indirect block and a data block. If the indirect block allocation
succeeds, but the data block allocation fails, the error code
dellocates the indirect block as it has nothing at which to point.
Unfortunately, it does not deallocate the indirect block's associated
dependencies which then fail when they find the block unexpectedly
gone (ptr == 0 instead of its expected value). The fix is to fsync
the file before doing the block rollback, as the fsync will flush
out all of the dependencies. Once the rollback is done the file
must be fsync'ed again so that the soft updates code does not find
unexpected changes. This approach is much slower than writing the
code to back out the extraneous dependencies, but running out of
disk space is not expected to be a common occurence, so just getting
it right is the main criterion.
PR: kern/15063
Submitted by: Assar Westerlund <assar@stacken.kth.se>
have been cleaned up by deallocte_dependencies(). Once that is done, it
is safe to post the request to free the blocks. A similar change is also
needed for the freefile case.
Packets are received inside USB bulk transfer callbacks, which run at
splusb() (actually splbio()). The packet input queues are meant to be
manipulated at splimp(). However the locking apparently breaks down under
certain circumstances and the input queues can get trampled.
There's a similar problem with if_ppp, which is driven by hardware/tty
interrupts from the serial driver, but which must also manipulate the
packet input queues at splimp(). The fix there is to use a netisr, and
that's the fix I used here. (I can hear you groaning back there. Hush up.)
The usb_ethersubr module maintains a single queue of its own. When a
packet is received in the USB callback routine, it's placed on this
queue with usb_ether_input(). This routine also schedules a soft net
interrupt with schednetisr(). The ISR routine then runs later, at
splnet, outside of the USB callback/interrupt context, and passes the
packet to ether_input(), hopefully in a safe manner.
The reason this is implemented as a separate module is that there are
a limited number of NETISRs that we can use, and snarfing one up for
each driver that needs it is wasteful (there will be three once I get
the CATC driver done). It also reduces code duplication to a certain
small extent. Unfortunately, it also needs to be linked in with the
usb.ko module in order for the USB ethernet drivers to share it.
Also removed some uneeded includes from if_aue.c and if_kue.c
Fix suggested by: peter
Not rejected as a hairbrained idea by: n_hibma
Driver is not functional yet, but does compile. Tests with xe cards
indicates that it doesn't panic the machine when they are present, but
fail to probe. Interface help in the pcic/pccard layers are needed to
complete this driver.
o ifdef out pccardchip.h (almost all of it, there are dangling bits
o Add rid/res members to pccard_function
o remove pct/pch from pccard_softc
o map memory properly in scan_cis (almost, see XXX for more work)
o manage ccr.
o remove bogus comment I added about touching the ccr being a layering
violation for pccard. It is properly done at that level.
o More function prototyping
whilst we are playing or recording. since we should irq ~20 times/sec when
active, this should never trigger. in theory. if it never does trigger,
the check will be removed.
to wake up any processes waiting via PIOCWAIT on process exit, and truss
needs to be more aware that a process may actually disappear while it's
waiting.
Reviewed by: Paul Saab <ps@yahoo-inc.com>
1) Fastpath deletions. When a file is being deleted, check to see if it
was so recently created that its inode has not yet been written to
disk. If so, the delete can proceed to immediately free the inode.
2) Background writes: No file or block allocations can be done while the
bitmap is being written to disk. To avoid these stalls, the bitmap is
copied to another buffer which is written thus leaving the original
available for futher allocations.
3) Link count tracking. Constantly track the difference in i_effnlink and
i_nlink so that inodes that have had no change other than i_effnlink
need not be written.
4) Identify buffers with rollback dependencies so that the buffer flushing
daemon can choose to skip over them.
it only on the buf_daemon process). The problem is that when the
syncer process starts running the worklist, it wants to delete
lots of files. It does this by VFS_VGET'ing the vnodes, clearing
the blocks in them and bdwrite'ing the buffer. It can process close
to a thousand files per second which generates a large number of
dirty buffers. So, giving it special priviledge at the buffer trough
leads to trouble as the buf_daemon does occationally need a free
buffer to proceed and if the syncer has used every last one up,
we are toast.
of dirrem structure rather than the collaterally created freeblks
and freefile structures. Limit the rate of buffer dirtying by the
syncer process during periods of intense file removal.
check before the inode is unlocked while grabbing its parent directory.
Once it is unlocked, other operations may slip in that could make
the inode-is-flushed check fail. Allowing other writes to the inode
before returning from fsync does not break the semantics of fsync
since we have flushed everything that was dirty at the time of the
fsync call.
hinted at in the previous config(8) commits. I've spoken about this with
a few people and after the initial suprise wore off they thought it wasn't
a bad idea. The upshot of it is that all the files*, Makefile*, options*
files are all right next to each other in the hope that people making
changes to one set will remember the others.
Note, config(8) looks to sys/conf first, and falls back to sys/$mach/conf
still, so this doesn't stop people working in subdirs for new platforms.
But once it's in the tree it can be moved next to the other files so that
the non-i386 platforms are (hopefully) treated a little better than as if
they were "second class" ports.
This does not change any user editable files. the config program is
still run in the same directory as before, the per-platform files
(GENERIC, LINT etc) are still in the same place.
included in all C files if it makes sense (i.e., for compiling kernels
but not for compiling modules), so including it explicitly just
complicates module makefiles.
COMPAT_LINUX are there. It shouldn't be and isn't used after config
time, except to complicate the svr4 module makefile.
Moved options for emulators to a separate section.
-U_KERNEL became negative when all all the genassym.c's were converted
to be cross-built.
Use "genassym ... > ${.TARGET}", not "genassym -o $@ ...", so that
genassym(1) doesn't need to support -o.
Removed duplicate -D_KERNEL from CFLAGS.
Removed triplicate -D_KERNEL from flags for compiling svr4_locore.s.
-U_KERNEL became negative when all all the genassym.c's were converted
to be cross-built.
Use "genassym ... > ${.TARGET}", not "genassym -o $@ ...", so that
genassym(1) doesn't need to support -o.
Removed duplicate -D_KERNEL from flags for compiling linux_locore.s.
-U_KERNEL became negative when all all the genassym.c's were converted
to be cross-built. Related cleanups: PARAM went away, but was still
used here; KERNEL was renamed to _KERNEL, but was still KERNEL here;
the deprecated macros $@ and $< were still used here.
Use "genassym ... > ${.TARGET}", not "genassym -o $@ ...", so that
genassym(1) doesn't need to support -o.
Removed half-baked hard-coded dependencies of *_genassym.o on headers.
These objects should be added to the list of objects in the depend
rule to get full dependencies. This doesn't happen automatically
because they are not linked into the kernel. Half baked dependencies
don't really help.
-it not seems to be necessary
-to avoid dhcp messages or something like that sent to faith interface
The problem reported by: Jim Bloom <bloom@acm.org>
linux_statfs and linux_fstatfs. Linux binaries testing this expect
the filesystem's magic number and not our vnode's tag.
PR: 15425
Tested by: Vladimir N. Silyaev <vsilyaev@mindspring.com>
- Set MAX_OFFS driver compile option to 63 (was 64 which is wrong).
- Fix a typo in the SYMBIOS NVRAM layout structure and add field and
bit definition for the support of PIM_NOBUSRESET.
- Report to XPT PIM_NOBUSRESET and PIM_SCANHILO if set by user in NVRAM.
- Negotiate SYNC immediately after WIDE response from the target as
suggested by Justin Gibbs.
- Remove some misleading comment about CmdQue handling by CAM.
- Apply correctly the MAX_WIDE and MAX_OFFS driver options.
Include <sys/param.h> before <sys/assym.h> in case any of the magic
in the former is ever needed in the latter.
Removed an unused forward declaration and an unused include.
essentially as in kernel makefiles, so that module sources can include
<stddef.h> and other standard headers. Only add the second path when
the first path can't be found, instead of when DESTDIR is defined.
Adding it used to be just an obfuscation.
Use "${.OBJDIR}" instyead of "." in -I paths. Using "${.OBJDIR}" just
gave more verbose command lines and depend files.
the misleading comments to that effect.
Prune bogus 'at foo?' (smbus, iicbus, ppbus) appendages on things that
they are meaningless for. It was just eye candy and wasn't used by
anything in the tree. The interconnects were defined by the drivers
themselves and auto discovery.
(The new ppbus code may change this if it uses the resource_get_*() calls
to find it's configured children if self discovery isn't possible)
it's always true on these platforms (and is likely to be on others as
well since loader is the one that is configured for whatever the boot
requirements are)
\begin{quote}
Compile genassym.c with ordinary ${CFLAGS}. The (small) needs for
${GEN_CFLAGS} and -U_KERNEL became negative when all all the
genassym.c's were converted to be cross-built.
Makefile.*:
- Cleanups associated with the old genassym.
- Fixed deprecated spelling of ${.IMPSRC} as "$<".
\end{quote}
Submitted by: bde
${GEN_CFLAGS} and -U_KERNEL became negative when all all the
genassym.c's were converted to be cross-built.
Makefile.*:
- Cleanups associated with the old genassym.
- Fixed deprecated spelling of ${.IMPSRC} as "$<".
now you can dynamically create rate-limited queues for different
flows using masks on dst/src IP, port and protocols.
Read the ipfw(8) manpage for details and examples.
Restructure the internals of the traffic shaper to use heaps,
so that it manages efficiently large number of queues.
Fix a bug which was present in the previous versions which could
cause, under certain unfrequent conditions, to send out very large
bursts of traffic.
All in all, this new code is much cleaner than the previous one and
should also perform better.
Work supported by Akamba Corp.
It seems that the IDE system uses 0x3f6 for itself, which conflicts with
fdc's default 0x3f0-3f7 allocation range. Sigh. Work around this.
Use bus_set_resource() rather than allocating specific areas, it makes
the code a little cleaner.
Based on work by: dfr
Note: the .INF file for LinkSys's driver says the vendor ID is 0x66b,
however this does not agree with the vendor ID listed for LinkSys in
the company list from www.usb.org. In fact, 0x66b doesn't seem to appear
in the company list at all. Furthermore, this same vendor ID crops
up in some of the D-Link .INF files. Frankly I don't know what the heck
is going on here, but I need to add 0x66b to usbdevs and call it
something, so here we are.
certain PHY addresses in aue_miibus_readreg(). Not all adapters based
on the Pegasus chip may have their PHYs wired for the same MII bus
addresses: the logic that I used for my ADMtek eval board might not
apply to other adapters, so make sure to only use it if this is really
an ADMtek eval board (check the vendor/device ID).
This will hopefully make the LinkSys USB100TX adapter work correctly.
makes it a little easier to notice that parity checking an 8bit sram
isn't working.
Turn on scb and internal data-path parity checking for all pci chips types.
We were only doing this for ultra2 chips.
After clearing the parity interrupt status, clear the BRKADRINT. This
avoids seeing a bogus BRKADRINT interrupt after external SCB probing
once normal interrupts are enabled.
an URB before sending ZLP) set to the default. Choosing a bad value
can apparently cause a lockup on some machines/controllers.
Reported by: Doug Ambrisko
93cx6.c:
Make the SRAM dump output a little prettier.
aic7xxx.c:
Store all SG entries into our SG array in kernel space.
This makes data-overrun and other error reporting more
useful as we can dump all SG entries. In the past,
we only stored the SG entries that the sequencer might
need to access, which meant we skipped the first element
that is embedded into the SCB.
Add a table of chip strings and replace ugly switch
statements with table lookups.
Add a table with bus phase strings and message reponses
to parity errors in those phases. Use the table to
pretty print bus phase messages as well as collapse
another switch statement.
Fix a bug in target mode that could cause us to unpause
the sequencer early in bus reset processing.
Add the 80MHz/DT mode into our syncrate table. This
rate is not yet used or enabled.
Correct some comments, clean up some code...
aic7xxx.h:
Add U160 controller feature information.
Add some more bit fields for various SEEPROM formats.
aic7xxx.reg:
Add U160 register and register bit definitions.
aic7xxx.seq:
Make phasemis state tracking more straight forward. This
avoids the consumption of SINDEX which is a very useful register.
For the U160 chips, you must use the 'mov' instruction to
update DFCNTRL. Using 'or' to set the PRELOADED bit is
completely ineffective.
At the end of the command phase, wair for our ACK signal
to de-assert before disabling the SCSI dma engine. For
slow devices, this avoids clearing the ACK before the
other end has had a chance to see it and lower REQ.
controllers will run at U2 speeds until I can complete the U160 support
for this driver.
Correct a termination buglet for the 2940UW-Pro.
Be more paranoid in how we probe and enable external ram, fast external
ram timing and external ram parity checking. We should now work on
20ns and 8bit SRAM parts.
Perform initial setup for the DT feature on cards that support it.
Factorize and clean up code. Use tables where it makes sense, etc.
Add some delays in dealing with the board control logic. I've never
seen this code fail, but with the ever increasing speed of processors,
its better to insert deterministic delays just to be safe. This stuff
is only touched during probe and attach, so the extra delay is of no
concern.
ethernet adapters that are supported by the aue and kue drivers.
There are actually a couple more out there from Accton, Asante and
EXP Computer, however I was not able to find any Windows device
drivers for these on their servers, and hence could not harvest
their vendor/device ID info. If somebody has one of these things
and can look in the .inf file that comes with the Windows driver,
I'd appreciate knowing what it says for 'VID' and 'PID.'
Additional adapters include: the D-Link DSB-650 and DSB-650TX, the
SMC 2102USB, 2104USB and 2202USB, the ATen UC10T, and the Netgear EA101.
These are all mentioned in the man pages, relnotes and LINT.
Also correct the date in the kue(4) man page. I wrote this thing
on Jan, 4 2000, not 1999.
layer is trying to access the now unexistant chip functions.
o Added DEVPRINTF which is like DPRINTF only calls device_printf.
o Made it possible to define PCICDEBUG
o Remove ph_parent and use the softc pointer sc instead in pcic_handle.
o Remove all references to dv_xname
o Add some debug messages.
o enable MI attach/detach calling for pccard.
o convert pcic_chip_socket_{en,dis}able to pcic_{dis,en}able_socket
and connect them to the power_{enable,disbale}_socket.
o Remove pccard pointer from pcic_softc.
o GC some unused pccard functions.
o Convert pccard_chip_socket* to POWER_ENABLE_SOCKET
o kill pccard_attach_args.
o power_if.m updates. More to come.
o Rename FDC_PCMCIA to FDC_NODMA to allow systems that don't have dma
for floppies.
o Remove all but two FDC_YE ifdefs. They aren't needed.
o Move defines for YE_DATAPORT to fdreg.h.
Not fixed:
o The pccard probe/attach. However, motivated individuals can more
easily add this now.
This is a merge of changes I've had in my tree for a long time. These
fixes were tested on my VAIO with its normal floppy. Please let me
know if I broke anything.
Prodded by: Peter Wemm <peter@freebsd.org>
This is the hack that compensates for when bios vendors "forget" to
include the fdc control (0x3f7) port in their io port mappings. Instead
of accessing ports outside of a range allocated to a handle, simply
allocate the port directly. It even shows up in the probe..
machine but leave your KLSI adapter plugged into your USB port, it
may stay powered on and retain its firmware in memory. Trying to load
the firmware again in this case will wedge the chip. Try to detect this
in the kue_load_fw() routine and bail if the firmware is already
loaded and running.
Also, in the probe/match routine, force the revision code to the
hardware default and force a rescan of the quirk database. This is
necessary because the adapter will return a different revision code
if the firmware has been loaded. Without the firmware, the revision
code is 0x002. With the firmware, the revision code is 0x202. This
confuses the quirk mechanism, which won't match a quirk to a device
unless the revision code agrees with the quirk table entry.
This makes probe/attach of these devices somewhat more reliable.
Also add a few comments about the device's operation.
In particular:
- Don't leave resources allocated in the probe routine. Allocate them
during probe and release them. Probe's job is to identify devices only.
- Don't abuse the ivars pointer.. (!). Create real ivars and use the
proper access system. (the bus_read_ivar method)
- Don't add the children until attach() has successfully grabbed the
hardware, otherwise there are potential leaks if attach fails.
on alpha.
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
struct sd: Add a field for the pid of the reviver when the subdisk is
reviving.
Replace block device macros with generalized device macros.
alpha.
Explicitly type large scalar parameters to avoid compilation warnings
on alpha.
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Make better checks that the revive block size is valid, silently set
it to the defaults if not.
Replace block device macros with generalized device macros.
alpha.
Modify the manner in which we lock RAID-5 plexes. This appears to
solve some of the elusive panics we have seen with corrupted buffer
headers (specifically the zeroed-out b_iodone field).
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
solve some of the elusive panics we have seen with corrupted buffer
headers (specifically the zeroed-out b_iodone field).
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
'iswhite'. The original change was required because of name
conflicts.
Add key pairs for the keywords 'mv' and 'move' (part of the move
command).
Add comments.
drives. This function just does the low-level configuration changes;
the resultant subdisk is stale if it previously had any contents,
otherwise it is empty (i.e. in need of initializing if it's RAID-5).
We still need to handle getting the contents moved over, but the
current version will suffice to migrate subdisks from a disk which has
failed.
Submitted-by: Marius Bendiksen <marius@marius.scancall.no>
on alpha.
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Remove #include of vm/vm_zone.h.
Submitted-by: Someone, I'm sure, but I seem to have lost the
attribution. Sorry.
Get the check for disk devices correct, and return an appropriate
message if the check fails.
shutdown.
Submitted-by: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>
Correct printf format for pointers to avoid compilation warnings on
alpha.
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Identify daemon as 'vinum', not 'vinumd', in messages. This
corresponds to the name in ps.
on alpha.
Submitted-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Get parameters right for some error messages returned via
throw_rude_remark().
Fix typo in comment.
Remove the 'static' attribute from give_sd_to_drive. This is needed
for the implementation of moveobject() in vinumioctl.c.
into vnode dirtyblkhd we append it to the list instead of prepend it to
the list in order to maintain a 'forward' locality of reference, which
is arguably better then 'reverse'. The original algorithm did things this
way to but at a huge time cost.
Enhance the append interlock for NFS writes to handle intr/soft mounts
better.
Fix the hysteresis for NFS async daemon I/O requests to reduce the
number of unnecessary context switches.
Modify handling of NFS mount options. Any given user option that is
too high now defaults to the kernel maximum for that option rather then
the kernel default for that option.
Reviewed by: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>
Kawasaki LSI KL5KUSB101B chip, including the LinkSys USB10T, the
Entrega NET-USB-E45, the Peracom USB Ethernet Adapter, the 3Com
3c19250 and the ADS Technologies USB-10BT. This device is 10mbs
half-duplex only, so there's miibus or ifmedia support. This device
also requires firmware to be loaded into it, however KLSI allows
redistribution of the firmware images (I specifically asked about
this; they said it was ok).
Special thanks to Annelise Anderson for getting me in touch with
KLSI (eventually) and thanks to KLSI for providing the necessary
programming info.
Highlights:
- Add driver files to /sys/dev/usb
- update usbdevs and regenerate attendate files
- update usb_quirks.c
- Update HARDWARE.TXT and RELNOTES.TXT for i386 and alpha
- Update LINT, GENERIC and others for i386, alpha and pc98
- Add man page
- Add module
- Update sysinstall and userconfig.c
was calling nfs_flush() and then clearing the NMODIFIED bit. This is
not legal since there might still be dirty buffers after the nfs_flush
(for example, pending commits). The clearing of this bit in turn prevented
a necessary vinvalbuf() from occuring leaving left over dirty buffers
even after truncating the file in a new operation. The fix is to
simply not clear NMODIFIED.
Also added a sysctl vfs.nfs.nfsv3_commit_on_close which, if set to 1,
will cause close() to do a stage 1 write AND a stage 2 commit
synchronously. By default only the stage 1 write is done synchronously.
Reviewed by: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>
the low level interrupt handler number should be used. Change
setup_apic_irq_mapping() to allocate low level interrupt handler X (Xintr${X})
for any ISA interrupt X mentioned in the MP table.
Remove an assumption in the driver for the system clock (clock.c) that
interrupts mentioned in the MP table as delivered to IOAPIC #0 intpin Y
is handled by low level interrupt handler Y (Xintr${Y}) but don't assume
that low level interrupt handler 0 (Xintr0) is used.
Don't allocate two low level interrupt handlers for the system clock.
Reviewed by: NOKUBI Hirotaka <hnokubi@yyy.or.jp>
hardpps() produced offset component. This is tested and behaved
stable with frequency offsets from -338.05 to +499.91 PPM.
Interestingly the machine I tested this on would fail if the clock
were slower than 14.3132 MHz whereas it was perfectly happy to run
at 16.384 MHz, in other words [-340PPM ... +14.4%]
Make pps_shift tweakable with sysctl.
driver seems relatively functional, but could use some souping up,
particularly in the performance area. This has both NetBSD and FreeBSD
attachment code and a fair amount of effort has been put into making
it easy to port to different *BSD platforms.
The basic design is a one tfd per mbuf transmit (with no transmit
related interrupts- tfds are gc'd as needed). The receive ring
uses a 2K buffer per rfd with a +2 byte adjust for the ethernet
header (so the payload is aligned). There's support that *almost*
works for doing large packets- the rfd chaining code works, but there's
some problem with getting good checksums at the IP reassembly level
(ditto for doing short tfd's too).
The chip has support for TCP checksums insertion for transmit and
TCP checksum calculation on receive (for both you have to do some
appropriate backoff && twiddling), but this isn't in place.
This is nearly entirely reverse engineered from the released Intel
driver, so there's a lot of "We have to do this but do not know why"
stuff. There is somebody who has the chip specs who works in FreeBSD
but they're being a bit standoffish about even sharing hints which
is somewhat annoying. It's also apparent that all I had to work with
were the first rev boards.
This driver has been lightly tested on intel && alpha, but only
point-to-point. There may be some issues with switches- use of
boot time environment variables that override EEPROM settings
(e.g., 'set wx_ilos=1' which inverts the sense of optical signal
loss) may help with this.
I had this out for review for three weeks, and nobody said anything
negative or positive, ergo, this checkin has no 'reviewed by' field
which I would have preferred.
has it blacklisted. Silly us for not planning ahead. Tsk. Anyway-
a 10 year window patch is probably sufficient to still detect
nonsense in the clock but allow us to roll past the year 2000.
code gratefully borrowed from Patrick Stirling who did a lot of the
grunt work on this years ago. There are also some beginnings of
swizzle macros in case we go to a big endian machine. This is just
a first pass at this and is likely to change a bit over the next
Add in a very large amount of target mode support code- this is just
a first pass at this. It's a difficult thing because some of the code
can be in platform independent areas (see isp_target.?) but a lot has
to be in platform dependent areas because of not only the tight coupling
of received commands/events and the specific OS subsystem but because
the platform independent code has (deliberately) no event/wait mechanisms.
of where we could have seen the loop up at least once so it
makes sense. Change some stuff in ispscsicmd so we don't get
stuck there if the loop has never come up yet. Add in some
target mode support code.