bsd.lib.mk and thus broke the build since AFLAGS were not taken
into considered anymore, as bsd.lib.mk currently has wrong .s.o
rule that uses cc(1) instead of as(1).
Revision 1.14 reverted to using as(1), and revision 1.15 brought
AFLAGS back to the business, but revision 1.14 also broke "make
clean".
To fix this, but not break anything that was fixed in revisions
1.13-1.15, we revert mostly to revision 1.13 except for switching
back to using bsd.prog.mk. This gives us back the default .s.o
rule from sys.mk that uses as(1), and fixes "make clean" by
restoring the full contents of OBJS.
Also fixed LDFLAGS.
o add missing zeroize op when deleting an SA
o don't re-initialize an xform for an SA that already has one
Submitted by: Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@verniernetworks.com>
MFC after: 1 day
implementation of a largely MI pmap_object_init_pt() for vnode-backed
objects. pmap_enter_quick() is implemented via pmap_enter() on sparc64
and powerpc.
- Correct a mismatch between pmap_object_init_pt()'s prototype and its
various implementations. (I plan to keep pmap_object_init_pt() as
the MD hook for device-backed objects on i386 and amd64.)
- Correct an error in ia64's pmap_enter_quick() and adjust its interface
to match the other versions. Discussed with: marcel
bit in the EEPROM mode register on. Also, the address must be written
in two 32-bit register accesses instead of 6 8-bit accesses.
Tested with my 8139B cardbus NIC.
PR: kern/35900
Submitted by: Mark Kettenis <kettenis@chello.nl>
the user requests a read-only mount. This is necessary because we
don't do the VOP_OPEN again if they upgrade a read-only mount to
read-write.
Fixes lockup when creating files on msdosfs mounts that have been
mounted read-only then upgraded to read-write. The exact cause of
the lockup is not known, but it is likely to be the kernel getting
stuck in an infinite loop trying to write dirty buffers to a device
without write permission.
Reported/tested by andreas, discussed with phk.
mapped I/O mode, we pause for .1 seconds after issuing the reset command
before trying to poll the 'command busy' bit in the status register.
With my 3c575C cardbus NIC, my Sony Picturebook locks up when it tries
to read the status register immediately after the reset. This appears
to be a problem only with certain NICs on certain hardware, but the
added delay should not hurt cards that already work.
This bug seems to have been brought to light by the fact that the xl
driver now defaults to memory mapped I/O mode instead of programmed
I/O mode like it used to. With PIO mode, the delay isn't needed and
everything works (which is why this NIC worked with 5.0-RELEASE but
not 5.1). I suspect that what's happening is that when the chip is
reset, it takes a little while for the memory-mapped decoding logic
to recover. Trying to access the chip's registers during this period
causes an error condition of some kind that wedges the system.
1.) Handle maximum segment sizes which are smaller than the IOMMU page
size by splitting up pages across multiple segments if needed; this case
was previously unimplemented, and would cause panics.
2.) KASSERT that the physical address is in range; remove a KASSERT that
has become pointless.
3.) Add a comment describing what remains to be fixed in the IOMMU code;
I plan to address these issues soon.
Desired by: dwhite (1)
happens to work on 32-bit platforms as sizeof(long)=sizeof(int), but
wrecks all kinds of havoc (garbage reads, corrupting writes and
misaligned loads/stores) on 64-bit architectures.
The fix for now is to use fuword32() and suword32() and change the
type of the applicable int fields to int32. This is to make it
explicit that we depend on these fields being 32-bit. We may want
to revisit this later.
Reviewed by: deischen
the VMIN and VTIME members of the c_cc array. These members are not
special control characters. By not excluding these members we
changed the noncanonical mode input processing when both members
were 0 on entry (=LINUX_POSIX_VDISABLE) as we would remap them to 255
(=_POSIX_VDISABLE). See termios(4) case A for how that screws up
your terminal I/O.
PR: 23173
Originator: Bjarne Blichfeldt <bbl@dk.damgaard.com>
Patch by: Boris Nikolaus <bn@dali.tellique.de> (original submission)
Philipp Mergenthaler <philipp.mergenthaler@stud.uni-karlsruhe.de>
Reminders by: Joseph Holland King <gte743n@cad.gatech.edu>
MFC after: 5 days
- Initialize fc->status to process bus reset correctly after resume.
- Initialize AT ring buffer pointer.
- Requeue stdma to stfree for active IR buffer.
- Stop DMA before suspend for safe.
- Set powerstate after resume.
function behaves correctly in principle, but is not expected to be
100% complete. In any case, with this commit we have KSE ported
enough to start runtime testing with threaded applications and fix
whatever bugs or omissions we encounter. Yay!
or unblock a thread in kernel, and allow UTS to specify whether syscall
should be restarted.
o Add ability for UTS to monitor signal comes in and removed from process,
the flag PS_SIGEVENT is used to indicate the events.
o Add a KMF_WAITSIGEVENT for KSE mailbox flag, UTS call kse_release with
this flag set to wait for above signal event.
o For SA based thread, kernel masks all signal in its signal mask, let
UTS to use kse_thr_interrupt interrupt a thread, and install a signal
frame in userland for the thread.
o Add a tm_syncsig in thread mailbox, when a hardware trap occurs,
it is used to deliver synchronous signal to userland, and upcall
is schedule, so UTS can process the synchronous signal for the thread.
Reviewed by: julian (mentor)
POSIX says siginfo pointer parameter can be NULL and if the
function success, it should return signal number but not zero.
The waitset it past should be negatived before it can be
used as thread signal mask.
color in vm_page_alloc(). (This also has small performance benefits.)
- Eliminate vm_page_select_free(); vm_page_alloc() might as well
call vm_pageq_find() directly.
nice distribution without significantly impacting interactive response.
As a side effect it should also allow batch processes to run for a
slightly longer period which will positively impact their performance.
This is based on the ubsa driver by Alexander Kabaev along with documentation
gleaned from the Linux mct_u232 driver. I've had this driver sitting in my
tree for almost 6 months, and several others have found it useful.
have completed across the bus but not to the host before
processing of an exception condition (busfree, bus reset,
etc.). When flushing the controller of completed commands,
we also look for packetized commands that have completed
with good status and are stored in the "good status fifo".
The hardware will post to the good status fifo even if
data for that command is still active in a FIFO. In
one particular failure case, a command outstanding on the
bus reconnected, transferred data into a FIFO, and provided
good status while the host driver was processing an expected
busfree event (PPR message negotiation). This resulted in
an entry in the good status fifo that we completed, but
since the sequencer was paused, the data in the data FIFO
for this command had never been transferred to the host.
Once the busfree processing was complete, the sequencer
was unpaused, and the data completed its transfer to the
host. In some instances, the client for the data was notified
of the completion and attempted to view the data before
it arrived. This case only occurred during FreeBSD's
multi-target probe of the SCSI bus while some devices are
negotiating to go packetized and some devices are already
running in packetized.
The fix is to run and FIFOs active with a context in the
good status fifo to completion before completing the command
to the SCSI layer. This requies duplicating the FIFO rundown
operations in the host driver that would usually be handled
by the firmware, but there is no other alternative.
Don't blindly shutdown the SCB dma engine when restarting
the sequencer. We may be killing an operation that is
not supposed to be cancelled. The cases where we need to
shutdown these dma engines are already handled elsewhere in
the driver.
Fix a few more ahd_in?() -> ahd_in?_scbram() instances.
Add softc flag to indicate that we have seen at
least one selection since the last bus reset or
SE/LVD bus change.
aic79xx.c:
Fix a few style nits.
In ahd_update_pending_scbs(), only touch card registers
once we have found an SCB that needs to be updated.
This removes lots of clutter from PCI traces taken of
error recovery performed by the driver.
Short circuit the first selection iocell workaround handler
if we've run once since the last bus reset or iocell change.
This also removes clutter from PCI traces.
Note if completions are pending in the qoutfifo when we dump
card state.
Add a comment in ahd_clear_critical_sections() about
our need to leave ENBUSFREE set in SIMODE1 while single
stepping.
Re-arrange some delay loops so that we always perform
a read after any register write and before the delay.
This should make the delay loop more accurate.
When completing message processing for a packetized
commention, return the controller to a state where
invalid non-packetized phases will still cause protocol
violations. These are the same operations as those
performed in the clear_target_state routine in the
firmware.
Now that we have a chip with working ABORTPENDING
support (the 7901B), comment out the automatic use
of this feature until we can adequately test it.
The previous checkin updated the bug mask for the
7901B so this code was exercised.
When resetting the bus, perform an ahd_flush_device_writes()
call so that our reset assertion delay is acurately
timed from when the reset bit is written to the controller.
Remove an old comment that no longer applies.
Fix a jump in our unexpected non-packetized phase
handler to use an explicit lable. The old code
had a hardcoded jump offset that was off by one
instruction.
Add a 7901A specific feature definition.
aic79xx_pci.c:
Split out the general aic790X setup into it's own
setup handler that works on single and dual controllers.
Adjust all other PCI setup handlers to initialize the
chips basic features and type before calling the generic
handler.
Turn off a few Rev B workarounds that are not required
on the 7901B.
to store an int in the bio->bio_driver1 (a void *). It is big enough,
but you have to match the int sizes first before doing the cast.
Glanced at by: scottl
mark crypto requests with ``callback immediately'' to avoid doing a context
switch to return crypto results. This completes the work to eliminate
context switches for using software crypto via the crypto subsystem (with
symmetric crypto ops).
software crypto device:
o record crypto device capabilities in each session id
o add a capability that indicates if the crypto driver operates synchronously
o tag the software crypto driver as operating synchronously
This commit also introduces crypto session id macros that cleanup their
construction and querying.
an MSDOSFS file system either failed, silently corrupted the file, or
sometimes corrupted the neighboring file.
PR: 53695
Submitted by: Ariff Abdullah <skywizard@MyBSD.org.my> (original version)
MFC: 3 days
channel has been disabled by BIOS. This prevents a bus timeout
machine check on B&W G3 PowerMacs, which have a primary-only CMD646
on the motherboard.
Approved by: sos
Obtained from: NetBSD
bus_dma async callback scheme. Note that sparc64 does not seem to do
async callbacks. Note that ia64 callbacks might not be MPSAFE at the
moment. Note that powerpc doesn't seem to do async callbacks due to
the implementation being incomplete.
Reviewed by: mostly silence on arch@
succeeds. There is a difference between how OLDCARD and NEWCARD deal
with their resources, and this code exposes that difference. I'm not
sure which behavior is correct, and will need to look into that in
more detail. However, it appears that we go ahead and allocate the
right thing in both cases that I have access to (CF cards, CDROM, and
external ata enclosures), so go ahead and ignore the failure to get
the resource for the other rid. There's already another check to make
sure that the actual allocation works correctly, and that should be
sufficient to catch cases that don't work.
Submitted by: wpaul and iedowse
o add back rx monitor support
o make WI_RID_SCAN_RES DTRT
o fix a bug handling zero-length RID requests (used by dstumbler to set
a zero-length SSID)
o make RID_SCAN_REQ DTRT
o add back WI_RID_OWN_SSID
o fix wi_scan_ap to take a channel mask and txrate (for prism cards)
These changes fix dstumbler -o (monitor mode). A minor change to dstumbler
is needed to get normal AP scanning mode to work right; this is preferred to
modifying the driver.
PR: kern/53187
Reviewed by: Bruce M Simpson <bms@spc.org>
flag'ed INTR_MPSAFE. In ep_if_start(), use the IF_DEQUEUE macro to
grab the next mbuf to send, and use IF_PREPEND if the card is busy
and we actually can't handle it right now.
The old code was first getting the mbuf by taking it from the queue
without using the macros, thus without locking, and without removing
it from the queue either. It was later assuming that IF_DEQUEUE would
give him this same mbuf.
Tested by: mich
when the user specifies a maximum fragment size < 2.
This is the behavior that Linux provides and fixes the problem I've
observed in Tribes2 where sounds effects are delayed by 1/2 a second.
This commit has two pieces. One half is the watchdog kernel code which lives
primarily in hardclock() in sys/kern/kern_clock.c. The other half is a userland
daemon which, when run, will keep the watchdog from firing while the userland
is intact and functioning.
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
being requested is outside of the range of the direct map region. eg:
for pci windows. While here, increase the minimum size of the direct
map region to be 4GB instead of 1GB.
so can leave stale data in the buffer and confuse the driver.
- enable the ability to set the 'disable' hint for the driver to keep it
from attaching. i.e. 'hw.ips.0.disable=1' will prevent the driver from
attaching.
- Only detach if attach suceeded.
Submitted by: mjacob
Before, we would add/subtract the leap second when the system had been
up for an even multiple of days, rather than at the end of the day, as
a leap second is defined (at least wrt ntp). We do this by
calculating the notion of UTC earlier in the loop, and passing that to
get it adjusted. Any adjustments that ntp_update_second makes to this
time are then transferred to boot time. We can't pass it either the
boot time or the uptime because their sum is what determines when a
leap second is needed. This code adds an extra assignment and two
extra compare in the typical case, which is as cheap as I could made
it.
I have confirmed with this code the kernel time does the correct thing
for both positive and negative leap seconds. Since the ntp interface
doesn't allow for +2 or -2, those cases can't be tested (and the folks
in the know here say there will never be a +2s or -2s leap event, but
rather two +1s or -1s leap events).
There will very likely be no leap seconds for a while, given how the
earth is speeding up and slowing down, so there will be plenty of time
for this fix to propigate. UT1-UTC is currently at "about -0.4s" and
decrementing by .1s every 8 months or so. 6 * 8 is 48 months, or 4
years.
-stable has different code, but a similar bug that was introduced
about the time of the last leap second, which is why nobody has
noticed until now.
MFC After: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: phk
"Furthermore, leap seconds must die." -- Cato the Elder
incremented at the start of the leap second, not after the leap second
has been inserted. This is because at the start of the leap second,
we set the time back one second. This setting back one second is the
moment that the offset changes. The old code set it back after the
leap second, but that's one second too late. The negative leap second
case is handled correctly.
Reviewed by: phk
of pcpu locks. This makes uma_zone somewhat smaller (by (LOCKNAME_LEN *
sizeof(char) + sizeof(struct mtx) * maxcpu) bytes, to be exact).
No Objections from jeff.
short read operations at the end of a file to not have the "eof"
flag set as they should. The problem is that the requested read
count was compared against the rounded-up reply data length instead
of the actual reply data length. This bug appears to have been
introduced in revision 1.78 (June 1999). It causes first-time reads
of certain file sizes (e.g 4094 bytes) to fail with EIO on a RedHat
9.0 NFSv3 client.
MFC after: 1 week
build it on the i386 and alpha architectures, where this has been
set up (there is also a sparc64-bitops.h in sys/gnu/ext2fs, but it
appears to be broken and it is not linked up).
This should unbreak the sparc64 LINT build.
in the netisr case. This would result in a lock reversal. This
fixes the net.isr.enable=1 case. Better performance might be
obtained by chaining all packets received, dropping the lock, and
then calling if_input() on each one.
Reported by: hmp
of the contents of the CCSCBCTL register into our
local varaible. The other bits are used in later tests.
This avoids a potential deadlock in ahd_run_qoutfifo()
if we happen to catch the DMA engine in just the right
state.
built by LINT. Also override a number of knobs for enabling and
disabling various modules in the ALL_MODULES case to further increase
LINT's module coverage.
Submitted by: ru
o code reorg (relative to old netbsd-derived code) for future growth
o drivers now specify available channels and rates and 802.11 layer handles
almost all ifmedia actions
o multi-mode support for 11a/b/g devices
o 11g protocol additions (incomplete)
o new element id additions (for other than 11g)
o node/station table redone for proper locking and to eliminate driver
incestuousness
o split device flags and capabilities to reduce confusion and provide room
for expansion
o incomplete power management infrastructure (need to revisit)
o incomplete hooks for software retry
o more...
read permision only required for listing, read/write required for
read/write to registers
fix a possible memory leak
clean up error handling a bit
Reviewed by: silence
the MAC policy modules to improve robustness against C string
bugs and vulnerabilities. Following these revisions, all
string construction of labels for export to userspace (or
elsewhere) is performed using the sbuf API, which prevents
the consumer from having to perform laborious and intricate
pointer and buffer checks. This substantially simplifies
the externalization logic, both at the MAC Framework level,
and in individual policies; this becomes especially useful
when policies export more complex label data, such as with
compartments in Biba and MLS.
Bundled in here are some other minor fixes associated with
externalization: including avoiding malloc while holding the
process mutex in mac_lomac, and hence avoid a failure mode
when printing labels during a downgrade operation due to
the removal of the M_NOWAIT case.
This has been running in the MAC development tree for about
three weeks without problems.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
attributes from objects over vop_setextattr() with a NULL uio; if
the file system doesn't support the vop_rmextattr() method, fall
back to the vop_setextattr() method.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
interface, rather than relying on a NULL uio for the deletion
operation.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
specify what credential to use when authorizing vn_open() and later
write operations, rather than curthread->td_ucred.
When writing KTR traces to an ALQ, specify the credential of the thread
generating the sysctl request.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
releasing the lock only if we are about to sleep (e.g., vm_pager_get_pages()
or vm_pager_has_pages()). If we sleep, we have marked the vm object with
the paging-in-progress flag.
"ipid" options. This feature has been requested by several users.
On passing, fix some minor bugs in the parser. This change is fully
backward compatible so if you have an old /sbin/ipfw and a new
kernel you are not in trouble (but you need to update /sbin/ipfw
if you want to use the new features).
Document the changes in the manpage.
Now you can write things like
ipfw add skipto 1000 iplen 0-500
which some people were asking to give preferential treatment to
short packets.
The 'MFC after' is just set as a reminder, because I still need
to merge the Alpha/Sparc64 fixes for ipfw2 (which unfortunately
change the size of certain kernel structures; not that it matters
a lot since ipfw2 is entirely optional and not the default...)
PR: bin/48015
MFC after: 1 week
policy definition structure; this permits policies to reduce their
number of gratuitous includes for required for entry points they
don't implement. This also facilitates building the MAC Framework
on Darwin.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Several of the subtypes have an associated vnode which is used for
stuff like the f*() functions.
By giving the vnode a speparate field, a number of checks for the specific
subtype can be replaced simply with a check for f_vnode != NULL, and
we can later free f_data up to subtype specific use.
At this point in time, f_data still points to the vnode, so any code I
might have overlooked will still work.
console, even if there is a TIOCCONS console tty. We were already
doing this after a panic, but it's also useful when entering DDB
for some other reason too.
TIOCCONS console (e.g. xconsole) via a timeout routine instead of
calling into the tty code directly from printf(). This fixes a
number of cases where calling printf() at the wrong time (such as
with locks held) would cause a panic if xconsole is running.
The TIOCCONS message buffer is 8k in size by default, but this can
be changed with the kern.consmsgbuf_size sysctl. By default, messages
are checked for 5 times per second. The timer runs and the buffer
memory remains allocated only at times when a TIOCCONS console is
active.
Discussed on: freebsd-arch
Reorder how the pci probing in handled. before adding devices, check to
see if the slot is a multi-function device to see if we should probe all
the functions.
Original idea by: imp
with a new implementation that has a mostly reentrant "addchar"
routine, supports multiple message buffers in the kernel, and hides
the implementation details from callers.
The new code uses a kind of sequence number to represend the current
read and write positions in the buffer. This approach (suggested
mainly by bde) permits the read and write pointers to be maintained
separately, which reduces the number of atomic operations that are
required. The "mostly reentrant" above refers to the way that while
it is now always safe to have any number of concurrent writers,
readers could see the message buffer after a writer has advanced
the pointers but before it has witten the new character.
Discussed on: freebsd-arch
data access errors when trying to read/write to non-existant PCI devices.
fix the psycho bridge to use peek for probing devices. This no longer
fakes it if the OFW node doesn't exist (and the reg == 0).
Reviewed by: jake, tmm
when serving up more than about 32 active files. For details see
section 6.3 (pg 111) of Daniel Ellard and Margo Seltzer, ``NFS
Tricks and Benchmarking Traps'' in the Proceedings of the Usenix
2003 Freenix Track, June 9-14, 2003 pg 101-114.
Obtained from: Daniel Ellard <ellard@eecs.harvard.edu>
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.