This allows me to mark code which they control with #ifdef without
polluting files with #includes of opt_devfs.h and opt_geom.h.
Once these two options are removed, this will allow mechanical removal
of the bits their removal makes obsolete.
Interface (SMAPI) BIOS, which is present on some IBM
Thinkpad models (560, 600, 770 to name a few.)
The SMAPI BIOS provides access to System Information,
System Configuration, and Power Management.
frequency in Hz. The default is still 33.333 MHz. Please notice
that the number is round to a multiple of four internally so it may
not read back exactly the same as written.
Add compile time ELAN_XTAL option to override the 33.333 MHz default.
Add compile time ELAN_PPS option to enable code for high precision
(250 nanoseconds) timestamping of external signals.
included in the kernel. Include imgact_elf.c in conf/files, instead of
both imgact_elf32.c and imgact_elf64.c, which will use the default word
size for an architecture as defined in machine/elf.h. Architectures that
wish to build an additional image activator for an alternate word size can
include either imgact_elf32.c or imgact_elf64.c in files.${ARCH}, which
allows it to be dependent on MD options instead of solely on architecture.
Glanced at by: peter
With a 1 byte transmit fifo, 3 byte receive fifo, and wierd multiplexed I/O
designed for a Z80 cpu, this chip redefines suckage.
Based on the openbsd and netbsd drivers. Only really works as a console,
modem support is not complete since I can't test it.
module dependency system rely on linker behaviour that is machine dependent
and not part of the elf spec, and only work by accident on other platforms.
Approved by: re
This mostly consists of functionality to serialize accesses to
the two ATA channels (which can also be used to "fix" certain
PCI based controllers).
Add support for Acard controllers.
Enable the ATA driver in PC98 GENERIC, and add device hints.
Update man page with latest support.
The PC98 core team has kindly provided me with a PC98
machine that made this all possible, thanks to all that
contributed to that effort, without that this would
probably newer have been possible..
Approved by: re@
Previously these were libc functions but were requested to
be made into system calls for atomicity and to coalesce what
might be two entrances into the kernel (signal mask setting
and floating point trap) into one.
A few style nits and comments from bde are also included.
Tested on alpha by: gallatin
No functional changes, but:
+ the mrouting module now should behave the same as the compiled-in
version (it did not before, some of the rsvp code was not loaded
properly);
+ netinet/ip_mroute.c is now truly optional;
+ removed some redundant/unused code;
+ changed many instances of '0' to NULL and INADDR_ANY as appropriate;
+ removed several static variables to make the code more SMP-friendly;
+ fixed some minor bugs in the mrouting code (mostly, incorrect return
values from functions).
This commit is also a prerequisite to the addition of support for PIM,
which i would like to put in before DP2 (it does not change any of
the existing APIs, anyways).
Note, in the process we found out that some device drivers fail to
properly handle changes in IFF_ALLMULTI, leading to interesting
behaviour when a multicast router is started. This bug is not
corrected by this commit, and will be fixed with a separate commit.
Detailed changes:
--------------------
netinet/ip_mroute.c all the above.
conf/files make ip_mroute.c optional
net/route.c fix mrt_ioctl hook
netinet/ip_input.c fix ip_mforward hook, move rsvp_input() here
together with other rsvp code, and a couple
of indentation fixes.
netinet/ip_output.c fix ip_mforward and ip_mcast_src hooks
netinet/ip_var.h rsvp function hooks
netinet/raw_ip.c hooks for mrouting and rsvp functions, plus
interface cleanup.
netinet/ip_mroute.h remove an unused and optional field from a struct
Most of the code is from Pavlin Radoslavov and the XORP project
Reviewed by: sam
MFC after: 1 week
is a compiler tool and needs to be compiled by the host compiler. I've
tested this in i386->sparc cross-build, 4.7->current upgrade, normal
buildkernel target, and normal /sys/i386/compile/GENERIC configurations.
Submitted by: ru
"refreshing" the label on the vnode before use, just get the label
right from inception. For single-label file systems, set the label
in the generic VFS getnewvnode() code; for multi-label file systems,
leave the labeling up to the file system. With UFS1/2, this means
reading the extended attribute during vfs_vget() as the inode is
pulled off disk, rather than hitting the extended attributes
frequently during operations later, improving performance. This
also corrects sematics for shared vnode locks, which were not
previously present in the system. This chances the cache
coherrency properties WRT out-of-band access to label data, but in
an acceptable form. With UFS1, there is a small race condition
during automatic extended attribute start -- this is not present
with UFS2, and occurs because EAs aren't available at vnode
inception. We'll introduce a work around for this shortly.
Approved by: re
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
handling clean and functional as 5.x evolves. This allows some of the
nasty bandaids in the 5.x codepaths to be unwound.
Encapsulate 4.x signal handling under COMPAT_FREEBSD4 (there is an
anti-foot-shooting measure in place, 5.x folks need this for a while) and
finish encapsulating the older stuff under COMPAT_43. Since the ancient
stuff is required on alpha (longjmp(3) passes a 'struct osigcontext *'
to the current sigreturn(2), instead of the 'ucontext_t *' that sigreturn
is supposed to take), add a compile time check to prevent foot shooting
there too. Add uniform COMPAT_43 stubs for ia64/sparc64/powerpc.
Tested on: i386, alpha, ia64. Compiled on sparc64 (a few days ago).
Approved by: re
they may be statically linked into the kernel. Note that statically
linked modules, unlike dynamically linked modules, get INVARIANTS,
so if there are INVARIANTS failures, you'll bump into them rather
than not. Add the options to NOTES.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
- Add detach support to the driver so that you can kldunload the module.
Note that currently rc_detach() fails to detach a unit if any of its
child devices are open, thus a kldunload will fail if any of the tty
devices are currently open.
- sys/i386/isa/ic/cd180.h was moved to sys/dev/ic/cd180.h as part of
this change.
Requested by: rwatson
Tested by: rwatson
as sparc64/sparc64/dump_machdep.c a while back).
Other than ia64 (which uses ELF), sparc64 uses a homegrown format for
the dumps (headers are required because the physical address and size of
the tsb must be noted, and because physical memory may be discontiguous);
ELF would not offer any advantages here.
Reviewed by: jake
This is an encryption module designed for to secure denial of access
to the contents of "cold disks" with or without destruction activation.
Major features:
* Based on AES, MD5 and ARC4 algorithms.
* Four cryptographic barriers:
1) Pass-phrase encrypts the master key.
2) Pass-phrase + Lock data locates master key.
3) 128 bit key derived from 2048 bit master key protects sector key.
3) 128 bit random single-use sector keys protect data payload.
* Up to four different changeable pass-phrases.
* Blackening feature for provable destruction of master key material.
* Isotropic disk contents offers no information about sector contents.
* Configurable destination sector range allows steganographic deployment.
This commit adds the kernel part, separate commits will follow for the
userland utility and documentation.
This software was developed for the FreeBSD Project by Poul-Henning Kamp and
NAI Labs, the Security Research Division of Network Associates, Inc. under
DARPA/SPAWAR contract N66001-01-C-8035 ("CBOSS"), as part of the DARPA CHATS
research program.
Many thanks to Robert Watson, CBOSS Principal Investigator for making this
possible.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
without -Werror, we do "make WERROR=", which doesn't need this
variable.
- Use ${.IMPSRC} instead of $< in ${NORMAL_M} for consistency with
the rest of the file.
- Add ${WERROR} for the ${NORMAL_M} case.
Tested on: i386, sparc64
changes for "LSILogic"
(2) enabled non-disk support through CAM interface
(3) HA_INQ (a) enabled tagged queuing (b) disable reset during
driver loading (b) renamed BSDi string to LSI
(4) disabled detecting disk devices during SCSI INQUIRY
(5) changed dcdb single element sglist to send one entire buffer chunk
(6) nsgelem not set in sglist
(7) ap_data_transfer_length not set for dcdb
(8) changed "struct thread" to "d_thread_t" for compatibliity { xxx_open,
xxx_close, xxx_ioctl }
(9) miscellaneous compatiblity fixes
(10) bug fix for 0x0409/0x1000 card
(11) added compiling amr_cam.c in sys/conf/files
(12) added compiling amr_cam.c in sys/modules/amr/Makefile
Reviewed by:ps
MFC after:1 week
1 week
into memory. This brings us in line with the other architectures and
more easily allows us to do machine dependent processing on the ELF
file (such as scanning for unwind information).
needed to be quoted (to get a C string literal), not the value itself.
Fixed the value of SC_CUT_SEPCHARS. Setting this value would have had no
effect even if it were used, since the value was the same as the default.
The above bugs had no effect except to set bad examples, since test
coverage of SC_CUT_SEPCHARS is broken by enabling a negative option.
Removed (unquoted) double quotes for all options. They were all bogus
since they had no effect except to make non-strings look like strings.
Most of the non-strings were expressions. The value of INIT_PATH is
a non-string since it is stringified later (unlike SC_CUT_SEPCHARS).
Fixed parenthesization errors inside bogus quotes (parenthesize values
if they have more than one token in them but don't parenthesize single
tokens).
configuration stuff as well as conditional code in the IPv4 and IPv6
areas. Everything is conditional on FAST_IPSEC which is mutually
exclusive with IPSEC (KAME IPsec implmentation).
As noted previously, don't use FAST_IPSEC with INET6 at the moment.
Reviewed by: KAME, rwatson
Approved by: silence
Supported by: Vernier Networks
This is most beneficial for vmware client os installs.
Reviewed by: jmallet, iedowse, tlambert2@mindspring.com
MFC After: never, -STABLE does not currently use this instruction
with the exception of indirect function calls, are assumed to be
intra load module and thus that GP will be the same. This avoids
saving, setting and restoring GP for each function call and
reduces the kernel with ~320KB. There's obviously a performance
benefit as well.
Note that since we generally don't know if calls will be intra or
inter load module when we're compiling kernel modules, -mconstant-gp
cannot be used for modules.
Fix the "@gprel relocation against dynamic symbol xxx" linker error.
Variables defined in the link unit and small enough to be put in the
short data section will have a gp-relative access sequence (using the
@gprel relocation). It is invalid to have @gprel relocations in shared
libraries, because they are to be resolved by the static linker and
not the dynamic linker. The -fpic option will cause @ltoff relocations
for @gprel relocations, but the side-effects are untested (if any).
Instead, disable/eliminate the short data section to achieve the same.
- Begin moving scheduler specific functionality into sched_4bsd.c
- Replace direct manipulation of scheduler data with hooks provided by the
new api.
- Remove KSE specific state modifications and single runq assumptions from
kern_switch.c
Reviewed by: -arch
allow us to avoid nasty by-hand string parsing stuff in a number of
places in the kernel, reducing the risk of unexpected consequences
for kernel correctness.
among other things, the DEVFS rule subsystem to match nodes against a
path pattern supplied by the user.
fnmatch.c was repo-copied from src/lib/libc/gen/fnmatch.c, and the
only changes to it are those necessary to make it compile in the
kernel. The relevant parts of fnmatch.h were imported into libkern.h.
Approved by: -arch
NB: But it will enable it in all kernels not having options "NO_GEOM"
Put the GEOM related options into the intended order.
Add "options NO_GEOM" to all kernel configs apart from NOTES.
In some order of controlled fashion, the NO_GEOM options will be
removed, architecture by architecture in the coming days.
There are currently three known issues which may force people to
need the NO_GEOM option:
boot0cfg/fdisk:
Tries to update the MBR while it is being used to control
slices. GEOM does not allow this as a direct operation.
SCSI floppy drives:
Appearantly the scsi-da driver return "EBUSY" if no media
is inserted. This is wrong, it should return ENXIO.
PC98:
It is unclear if GEOM correctly recognizes all variants of
PC98 disklabels. (Help Wanted! I have neither docs nor HW)
These issues are all being worked.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
This allocate the best IRQ to boot-disable devices (have IRQ 0).
Allocated IRQ will be used for PCI interrupt routing when ACPI is
enabled.
Note that verbose messaging enabled for the time being so that
people can easily notice the strange behavior if it happened.
This reduces the size of GENERIC's text space by 73999 bytes (about 2%).
The bloat is from approximately 3437 strings longer than 31 characters
being padded to a 32-byte boundary.
doesn't give them enough stack to do much before blowing away the pcb.
This adds MI and MD code to allow the allocation of an alternate kstack
who's size can be speficied when calling kthread_create. Passing the
value 0 prevents the alternate kstack from being created. Note that the
ia64 MD code is missing for now, and PowerPC was only partially written
due to the pmap.c being incomplete there.
Though this patch does not modify anything to make use of the alternate
kstack, acpi and usb are good candidates.
Reviewed by: jake, peter, jhb
gets signals operating based on a TailQ, and is good enough to run X11,
GNOME, and do job control. There are some intricate parts which could be
more refined to match the sigset_t versions, but those require further
evaluation of directions in which our signal system can expand and contract
to fit our needs.
After this has been in the tree for a while, I will make in kernel API
changes, most notably to trapsignal(9) and sendsig(9), to use ksiginfo
more robustly, such that we can actually pass information with our
(queued) signals to the userland. That will also result in using a
struct ksiginfo pointer, rather than a signal number, in a lot of
kern_sig.c, to refer to an individual pending signal queue member, but
right now there is no defined behaviour for such.
CODAFS is unfinished in this regard because the logic is unclear in
some places.
Sponsored by: New Gold Technology
Reviewed by: bde, tjr, jake [an older version, logic similar]
aac driver dependent on the linux emulation module. This was
especially bad for the release engineers who tried to move the
aac driver from the kernel onto the drivers floppy. The linux
compat bits for this driver are now in their own driver, aac_linux.
It can be loaded as a module or compiled into the kernel. For
the latter case, the AAC_COMPAT_LINUX option is needed, along with
the COMPAT_LINUX option.
I've tested this in every configuration I can think of. This is an
MFC candidate for 4.7.
Idea from: rwatson
MFC after: 3 days
ACPI or for when ACPI support is disabled or not present in the kernel.
Basically, the nexus device is now split into two with some parts
(such as adding default ISA, MCA, and EISA busses if they aren't found
as well as support for PCI bus device ivars) being moved to the legacy
driver.
so that it is MI. Allow nfs_mountroot to return an error if the nfs_diskless
struct is not valid, rather than panicing later on. Call nfs_setup_diskless()
from nfs_mountroot if NFS_ROOT is defined, like bootpc_init(). Removed legacy
root mount support for sparc64, and enabled NFS_ROOT by default.
under way to move the remnants of the a.out toolchain to ports. As the
comment in src/Makefile said, this stuff is deprecated and one should not
expect this to remain beyond 4.0-REL. It has already lasted WAY beyond
that.
Notable exceptions:
gcc - I have not touched the a.out generation stuff there.
ldd/ldconfig - still have some code to interface with a.out rtld.
old as/ld/etc - I have not removed these yet, pending their move to ports.
some includes - necessary for ldd/ldconfig for now.
Tested on: i386 (extensively), alpha
support this, we do have MI code that references it and is otherwise
unaware of an override. The alternative is to put knowledge in these
MI files about which platforms have the opt_kstack_pages.h option file.
It is more likely that other platforms will gain the ability to tune the
kstack size.
if compiling with I686_CPU as a target. CPU_DISABLE_SSE will prevent
this from happening and will guarantee the code is not compiled in.
I am still not happy with this, but gcc is now generating code that uses
these instructions if you set CPUTYPE to p3/p4 or athlon-4/mp/xp or higher.
ev6 or pca56 etc this downgrades the cpu specification passed to gas.
As a result, gas will fail when gcc generates media instructions (in
uipc_usrreq.c). This only affects what gas will accept, not what gcc
generates or what our *.s file contain.
i4bq931, i4b, isic, iwic, ifpi, ifpi2, ifpnp, ihfc, and itjc are
no longer count devices. Also remove a few other instances of N<DEVICE>
being used to control compilation of whole files.
Reviewed by: hm
This feature can be disabled via the AHD/AHC_REG_PRETTY_PRINT kernel
option.
The ahc driver now uses the same debug options mechanism as ahd:
AHC_DEBUG - Compile in debugging code
AHC_DEBUG_OPTS - String of debug options as listed in aic7xxx.h
kld's anywhere, and it was always possible to load ELF kld's even in an
a.out kernel. There is no reason for this to exist anymore, and a.out
kld support has been suffering serious bitrot over the years. They have
not been fully functional for quite some time.
the environment for the last command of the pipeline (xargs) instead
of too early in the broken version or using an extra env process for
each command spawned by xargs as in rev.1.12. Fixed a nearby English
error.
can avoid the cost of a large number of atomic operations if we're not
interested in the object count statistics.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
This is an architecture that present a thing message passing interface
to the OS. You can query as to how many ports and what kind are attached
and enable them and so on.
A less grand view is that this is just another way to package SCSI (SPI or
FC) and FC-IP into a one-driver interface set.
This driver support the following hardware:
LSI FC909: Single channel, 1Gbps, Fibre Channel (FC-SCSI only)
LSI FC929: Dual Channel, 1-2Gbps, Fibre Channel (FC-SCSI only)
LSI 53c1020: Single Channel, Ultra4 (320M) (Untested)
LSI 53c1030: Dual Channel, Ultra4 (320M)
Currently it's in fair shape, but expect a lot of changes over the
next few weeks as it stabilizes.
Credits:
The driver is mostly from some folks from Jeff Roberson's company- I've
been slowly migrating it to broader support that I it came to me as.
The hardware used in developing support came from:
FC909: LSI-Logic, Advansys (now Connetix)
FC929: LSI-Logic
53c1030: Antares Microsystems (they make a very fine board!)
MFC after: 3 weeks
The CAM<>ATAPI layer was submitted by "Thomas Quinot <thomas@cuivre.fr.eu.org>"
changes form the version on the net by me (formatting, ability to be used
alone without the ATAPI native device driver, proper speed reporting...)
See /sys/conf/NOTES for usage.
Submitted by: Thomas Quinot <thomas@cuivre.fr.eu.org>
to parse the binary .kld file as a list of symbols. Fix this by
simply deleting the unwanted argument from the ARGV[] array instead
of trying to skip over it.
cards. Since the firmware is hard coded into the kernel, I've made it
a kernel option (WI_SYMBOL_FIRMWARE).
Note: This only downloads into the RAM of these cards. It doesn't
download into FLASH, and is somewhat limited. There needs to be a
better way to deal, but this works for now. My Symbol LA4132 CF card
works now.
Obtained from: NetBSD
kernel access control.
Modify procfs so that (when mounted multilabel) it exports process MAC
labels as the vnode labels of procfs vnodes associated with processes.
Approved by: des
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
controller. Some testing has already been done, but its still greenish.
RAID's has to be setup via the BIOS on the SuperTrak, but all RAID
types are supported by the driver. The SuperTrak rebuilds failed arrays
on the fly and supports spare disks etc etc...
Add "device pst" to your config file to use.
As usual bugsreports, suggestions etc are welcome...
Development sponsored by: Advanis
Hardware donated by: Promise Inc.
MAC support will be merged into the main tree over the next week in
reasonable size chunks; much more to follow.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
pci support. This really needs to be fixed properly some day, but judging
by the fact that the nopci case hasn't compiled for quite a while, there
does not seem to be much urgency.
Reviewed by: sos
This driver actually works slightly better on -stable than on -current
(the system locks on detach on -current), so it should be MFC'd somewhat
sooner.
This driver currently points out a difficulty in the sound device framework.
The PCM unregister routine is allowed to refuse the detach if the device is
in use. In the case of a USB device, however, this unregistration is much more
mandatory in nature, since the device is *actually* gone when this call is
made. The sound subsystem really should not refuse an unregistration and
should take its own steps to reject further I/O. As a result, if you detach
a USB sound device while it is in use, you can expect a panic shortly
thereafter.
This device cannot currently record audio. Some routines are unwritten as
of yet in uaudio.c to support recording.
This device hangs my -current box on detach. I don't know why. This does
not happen on my -stable machine.
Obtained from: Hiroyuki Aizu
MFC after: 2 weeks
handler in the kernel at the same time. Also, allow for the
exec_new_vmspace() code to build a different sized vmspace depending on
the executable environment. This is a big help for execing i386 binaries
on ia64. The ELF exec code grows the ability to map partial pages when
there is a page size difference, eg: emulating 4K pages on 8K or 16K
hardware pages.
Flesh out the i386 emulation support for ia64. At this point, the only
binary that I know of that fails is cvsup, because the cvsup runtime
tries to execute code in pages not marked executable.
Obtained from: dfr (mostly, many tweaks from me).
administrator to define certain properties of new devfs nodes before
they become visible to the userland. Both static (e.g., /dev/speaker)
and dynamic (e.g., /dev/bpf*, some removable devices) nodes are
supported. Each DEVFS mount may have a different ruleset assigned to
it, permitting different policies to be implemented for things like
jails.
Approved by: phk