moving #ifdefs to the non-historically-correct place, indentation bugs),
and I've also completely restyle(9)d mbuf.h. There shouldn't be any
KNF issues with it anymore, nor should there be any internal
discrepencies.
(Oh, I also fixed a small bug, but it was benign. The spl was not
released in MCLALLOC if M_NOWAIT and there were no free mclusters.)
Not objected to by: bde
3.3R and then to -current. The pccard support has been left in the
driver, but is presently non-functional because we are using the
isa_compat layer for the moment.
Obtained From: PAO
Sponsored by: Timing Solutions
kernel builds so as not to confuse with perl4 when bootstrapping from old
systems. I don't know if this is still applicable but it shouldn't hurt
to be consistant at least.
Also copy vnode_if.sh to vnode_if.pl. Doing a 'sh vnode_if.sh' when it
was a perl script was kinda silly.
o minor formatting nits
o remove the bus_map/unmap calls. FreeBSD doesn't need them.
o Fix most of the compiler warnings remaining (some still remain, but they
are releated to calling functions that are going to change, so I did
not bother).
do not pollute the interface further.
o Run if_detach at splnet().
o Creatively swipe the relevant parts of the netatm atm_nif_detach
which will delete the relevant references to the interface going
away.
quite dangerous, since the process may hold locks at the point,
and if it is stopped in that tsleep the machine may hang. Because
the sleep is so short, the PCATCH is not required here, so it has
been removed. For the future, the FreeBSD team needs to decide
whether it is still reasonable to stop a process in tsleep, as that
may affect any other code that uses PCATCH while holding kernel locks.
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum <tejblum@arc.hq.cti.ru>
Reviewed by: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
1003.1c-1995.
Undefine _POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS, since we do not implement all of the
necessary interfaces. At least getgrgid_r(), getrnam_r(), getpwuid_r(),
getpwnam_r(), getc_unlocked(), getchar_unlocked(), putc_unlocked(),
and putchar_unlocked() are missing. Due to a likely typo in 1003.1c-1995,
we are not technically allowed to define _POSIX_THREADS without defining
_POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS, but either way we're non-compliant, so I'm
leaving _POSIX_THREADS defined.
PR: bin/8281
the 3c450-TX HomeConnect. Like the 3cSOHO100-TX OfficeConnect, this NIC
uses the same ASIC as the 3c905B/3c905C but is targeted for a particular
market segment (home users). It is somewhat less expensive than the
3c905B/3c905C ($49, according to the 3Com web site), comes with its
own custom driver kit and is bundled with various goofy Windows software
packages designed to demonstrate the niftyness of home networking (networked
game demos, etc...).
Changes are:
- Add PCI ID to list in if_xlreg.h.
- Update xl_devs table in if_xl.c.
- Update xl_choose_xcvr() to consider the HomeConnect the
same as all the other 10baseT/100baseTX cards.
generate the NFSv3 Version id. boottime itself may change, sometimes
once every tick if you are running xntpd, which really throws off
clients. Clients will tend to throw away what they believe to be
stale data too often, and can get into long loops rewriting the same
data over and over again because they believe the server has rebooted
over and over again due to the changing version id.
Approved by: jkh
broken bit work-around enabled.
* Fixed a bug that made MDP not work. (However, MDP is actually not tested
due to lack of hardware using this feature).
* Chip table changed to support the C1010 B0 w/o the U3EN bit work-around
enabled.
* Add the SYM_SETUP_MAX_LUN, SYM_SETUP_LP_PROBE_MAP (used to tell the
driver about chips that are to be claimed with lower priority than old
PCI bus based driver (typically the ncr)), SYM_SETUP_SCSI_DIFF, and
SYM_SETUP_PCI_PARITY options.
Submitted by: Gerard Roudier <groudier@club-internet.fr>
sys/modules Makefile after completing a buildworld.
History:
The bulk of this code was obtained from NetBSD approximately one year
ago (I have taken care to preserve the original NetBSD copyrights and
I thank the authors for their work.) At that time, the OSF/1 code was
what was left over from their initial bootstrapping off of OSF/1 and
did not provide support for executing shared binaries.
I have independently added support for shared libraries, and support
for some of the more obscure system calls. This code has been
available for testing and comment since January of 1999 and running on
production machines here at Duke since April.
Known working applications include:
- Netscape (all versions I've tried)
- Mathematica 3.0.2
- Splus 3.4
- ArcInfo 7.1
- Matlab (version unknown)
- SimOS
- Atom instrumented binaries (built on a real OSF/1 system)
Applications which are known not to work:
- All applications linking to libmach
- Adobe Acrobat (uses libmach)
This has been tested with applications running against shared
libraries from OSF/1 (aka Tru64) 4.0D and 4.0F.
Reviewed by: marcel, obrien
BDE-lint by: obrien
Agreed in principal to by: msmith
occur due to np->n_size potentially changing if nfs_getcacheblk()
blocks in nfs_write().
Second, under -current we must supply the proper bufsize when obtaining
buffers that straddle the EOF, but due to the fact that np->n_size can
change out from under us it is possible that we may specify the wrong
buffer size and wind up truncating dirty data written by another
process.
Both problems are solved by implementing nfs_rslock(), which allows us
to lock around sensitive buffer cache operations such as those that
occur when appending to a file.
It is believed that this race is responsible for causing dirtyoff/dirtyend
and (in stable) validoff/validend to exceed the buffer size. Therefore
we have now added a warning printf for the dirtyoff/end case in current.
However, we have introduced a new problem which we need to fix at some
point, and that is that soft or intr NFS mounts may become
uninterruptable from the point of view of process A which is stuck waiting
on rslock while process B is stuck doing the rpc. To unstick process A,
process B would have to be interrupted first.
Reviewed by: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>
tsunami systems and the PCI bus-numbering system of FreeBSD. Eg, the former
allows for 2 PCI bus 2's (one each on hoses 0 and 1) while the latter
needs to give each PCI bus a unique monotonically increasing number.
It has been fairly well tested and correctly maps machines with a ppb on
hose 1 as well as machines with ppbs on both hoses.
DS10s remain untested, as I do not have a pci card with a ppb which will
pass POST in a tsunami.
This is a house of cards.
main component in the southbridge chip to determine which VIA chip
we are dealing with.
Try to enable DMA on generic controllers that say they has the
capability, instead of relying on the BIOS to have set it up.
The variables "m_mclalloc_wid" and "m_mballoc_wid" were not in the
proper place. They should have been in uipc_mbuf.c and have been global,
not in mbuf.h and local per each file that uses mbuf.h.
Sorta bug fix:
In mbuf.h, the definitions of various things for KERNEL and not
KERNEL cases were very screwy. This fixes all of that which I could
find.
- Add a flag DC_TX_INTR_ALWAYS which causes the transmit code to
request a TX done interrupt for every packet. The PNIC seems to need
this to insure that the sent TX buffers get reaped in a timely fashion.
- Try to unreset the SIA as soon as possible after resetting the whole
chip.
- Change dcphy to support either 10/100 or 10Mbps only NICs. The
built-in 21143 ethernet in Compaq Presario machines is 10Mbps only
and it doesn't work right if we try to advertise 100Mbps modes during
autoneg. When restricted to only 10mbps modes, it works fine.
Note that for now, I detect this condition by checking the PCI
subsystem ID on this NIC (which has a Compaq vendor/device ID).
Yes, I know that's what the SROM is supposed to be for. I'm deliberately
ignoring the SROM wherever possible. Sue me.
The latter two fixes allow if_dc to work correctly with the built-in
ethernet on certain Compaq Presario boxes. There are liable to be quite
a few people using these as their home systems who might want to try
FreeBSD; may as well be nice to them.
Now if anybody out there has an Alpha miata with 10Mbps ethernet and
can show me the output from pciconf -l on their system, I'd be grateful.
cannot unilaterally pass data to a client it can reduce the physical
disk transaction overhead by reading larger blocks. This results in
better pipelining of requests/responses over the network and an almost
100% increase in cpu efficiency on the server. On a 100BaseTX network
NFS read performance increases from 8.5 MBytes/sec to 10 MB/sec (maxed
out), and cpu efficiency increases from 72% idle to 80% idle on the server.
Reviewed by: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>
frame types. Currently it supports only IPX protocol and doesn't
affect existing functionality when not loaded.
Reviewed by: Ollivier Robert <roberto@keltia.freenix.fr>
Add a missing DELAY(1) in ata_wait.
Change the info from ad_version, so the ATA version from the disk can
be used to quantify the DAM modes valid for this drive, ie be more
selective with turning DMA on on older disks that should not support it..
Fix the probe for BIOS enabled DMA in the generic case, master/slave
was reversed in the test.
Check the return for ata_command in all cases, and print warnings if
it fails.
Call ata_dmainit with all dmamodes off when falling back to PIO mode,
that should take care of both the Promise & HPT366 controllers not
being able to handle the fallback...
Cleanup the printf's in the drivers, use the prober device name (if
possible) instead of ataN-master/slave.
1. Data written beyond end of pipe buffer, causing kernel memory corruption.
- Check that space is still valid after obtaining the pipe lock.
- Defer the calculation of transfer size until the pipe
lock has been obtained.
- Update the pipe buffer pointers while holding the pipe lock.
2. Writes of size <= PIPE_BUF not always atomic.
- Allow an internal write to span two contiguous segments,
so writes of size <= PIPE_BUF can be kept atomic
when wrapping around from the end to the start of the
pipe buffer.
PR: 15235
Reviewed by: Matt Dillon <dillon@FreeBSD.org>
are configured, and/or associated with a parent device. If you
receive a frame for a VLAN that's not in the list, you walk off
the end of the list. Boom.
Submitted by: C. Stephen Gunn <csg@waterspout.com>
PR: 15291
vlan interfaces it manages. This prevents the interface from
actually sending or receiving data.
Submitted by: C. Stephen Gunn <csg@waterspout.com>
PR: 15290
to print out protocol specific pcb info.
A patch submitted by guido@gvr.org, and asmodai@wxs.nl also reported
the problem.
Thanks and sorry for your troubles.
Submitted by: guido@gvr.org
Reviewed by: shin
needed for ages, but keeps getting cut/pasted into new Makefiles.
(Once apon a time it was used to activate mount arguments in
<sys/mount.h>, but that was killed with extreme prejudice long ago)
we use. The .c half is statically compiled into the kernel. It's kinda
silly to generate a .h file on the fly that has inlines to call the
.c stuff when the .c code is fixed.
Also, zap the special treatment for VFS_KLD modules. This treatment
applies to lots of things, not just VFS's.
the kernel while the vnode_if.h header is a bunch of inlines to call the
code that is in the kernel. Generating the .h file on the fly is kinda
bogus because it has to match the one compiled into the kernel.
IMHO we should have kern/vnode_if.c and sys/vnode_if.h committed in the
tree but that's another battle.
used to edit the old-style isa_devtab config tables to insert a mapping
for a pci device into the isa tables so that the wdc driver could probe
it later. This has been #if 0'd since April.
differences between the VFS interface between FreeBSD and NetBSD make
it easier to pick up the Linux one than to continue development with the
NetBSD port.
This patch fixes a bug which caused duplicate filenames to be seen by
callers to svr4_sys_getdents64(), leading to malformed directory listings
from Solaris client programs.
Obtained from: The Linuxulator, with a pointer from marcel
NFS packets, mainly initializing structure pointers to NULL which
are conditionally freed prior to return.
PR: kern/15249
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
blocks of zeros could wind up in a file written to over NFS by a client.
The problem only occurs a few times per several gigabytes of data. This
problem turned out to be bug #3 below.
bug #1:
B_CLUSTEROK must be cleared when an NFS buffer is reverted from
stage 2 (ready for commit rpc) to stage 1 (ready for write).
Reversions can occur when a dirty NFS buffer is redirtied with new
data.
Otherwise the VFS/BIO system may end up thinking that a stage 1
NFS buffer is clusterable. Stage 1 NFS buffers are not clusterable.
bug #2:
B_CLUSTEROK was inappropriately set for a 'short' NFS buffer (short
buffers only occur near the EOF of the file). Change to only set
when the buffer is a full biosize (usually 8K). This bug has no
effect but should be fixed in -current anyway. It need not be
backported.
bug #3:
B_NEEDCOMMIT was inappropriately set in nfs_flush() (which is
typically only called by the update daemon). nfs_flush()
does a multi-pass loop but due to the lack of vnode locking it
is possible for new buffers to be added to the dirtyblkhd list
while a flush operation is going on. This may result in nfs_flush()
setting B_NEEDCOMMIT on a buffer which has *NOT* yet gone through its
stage 1 write, causing only the commit rpc to be made and thus
causing the contents of the buffer to be thrown away (never sent to
the server).
The patch also contains some cleanup, which only applies to the commit
into -current.
Reviewed by: dg, julian
Originally Reported by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@emsphone.com>
means that running out of mbuf space isn't a panic anymore, and code
which runs out of network memory will sleep to wait for it.
Submitted by: Bosko Milekic <bmilekic@dsuper.net>
Reviewed by: green, wollman
madvise().
This feature prevents the update daemon from gratuitously flushing
dirty pages associated with a mapped file-backed region of memory. The
system pager will still page the memory as necessary and the VM system
will still be fully coherent with the filesystem. Modifications made
by other means to the same area of memory, for example by write(), are
unaffected. The feature works on a page-granularity basis.
MAP_NOSYNC allows one to use mmap() to share memory between processes
without incuring any significant filesystem overhead, putting it in
the same performance category as SysV Shared memory and anonymous memory.
Reviewed by: julian, alc, dg
add support for non-pnp cards to sbc
move card identification to sbc
channel-swapping code is in sb now instead of dsp
vibra16x support is still broken, but will be fixed soon
note: sbc is now compulsory for sb cards
for pnp cards use:
device sbc0
for non-pnp cards eg:
device sbc0 at isa? port 0x240 irq 5 drq 3 flags 0x15
(hints as oldpcm)
both in addition to:
device pcm0
Reviewed by: tanimura,dfr
Said he liked it: peter
second LUN to show up.
mjacob's change (which is correct) in rev 1.21 of cam_periph.c to elminiate
infinite retries of the SCSI busy status bit seems to have broken probing
of Pioneer changers that aren't already quirked.
The right way to fix this is probably to change things around so we can
guarantee 100% sequential probing of LUN-based changers even if they aren't
quirked. This should fix things for now, though.
* lockstatus() and VOP_ISLOCKED() gets a new process argument and a new
return value: LK_EXCLOTHER, when the lock is held exclusively by another
process.
* The ASSERT_VOP_(UN)LOCKED family is extended to use what this gives them
* Extend the vnode_if.src format to allow more exact specification than
locked/unlocked.
This commit should not do any semantic changes unless you are using
DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS.
Discussed with: grog, mch, peter, phk
Reviewed by: peter
The UPAGES have not been there since Jan '96, but the hole was preserved
for BSD/OS binary compatability. This has been fixed other ways (%ebx
now has a pointer to PS_STRINGS), and the stack is nowhere near where
it used to be so this hack isn't required anymore.
maps onto the upages. We used to use this extensively, particularly
for ps and gdb. Both of these have been "fixed". ps gets the p_stats
via eproc along with all the other stats, and gdb uses the regs, fpregs
etc files.
Once apon a time the UPAGES were mapped here, but that changed back
in January '96. This essentially kills my revisions 1.16 and 1.17.
The 2-page "hole" above the stack can be reclaimed now.
by the Linux emulator (and other emulators) for syscall argument
translation. The x86 port currently seems to allow unrestricted kernel
accesses to user memory.
Reviewed by: alc, gallatin
and fixing some major bugs.
- Add support for the v5 firmware interface, used by the DAC1164P
(tested) and AcceleRAID 352 (untested but should work). We now cover
all of the Mylex family's protocols except for v2 (used by EISA and
Alpha-compatible cards).
- Fix an accounting bug which resulted in endless 'poll still busy'
messages. In situations of high controller load the count of poll
commands could be incremented without actually successfully launching
a command. This totally removes the accounting for status poll
commnads; it was its own worst enemy.
- Add some simple reentry prevention locks to processing of the waiting
and completed command queues to prevent races which could result in
I/O being done or completed twice (both are fatal). This highlights
a need for simple locking primitives in both the UP and SMP kernels.
- Streamline the handling of command completion to reduce the amount of
redundant work being done. Remove the code which tests for commands
that have gone missing in action; nobody has ever seen one of these
and it wouldn't have worked properly anyhow.
- Handle disconnection of drives from the controller in the detach,
not shutdown method. This avoids problems flushing the cache in
a panic when a drive is mounted.
- Don't call bus_generic_detach when disconnecting drives; it doesn't
actually do anything useful.
- Increment the log message index regardless of whether we actually
retrieved one or not. If we run into a message that we can't fetch,
we don't want to spin endlessly complaining about the fact.
- Don't assume that interrupts will work when we're flushing the
controller. We may think they are enabled, but in eg. a panic
situation the controller may not be able to deliver an interrupt.
attaching to the device via chip*, use the newbus nomatch method to report
the device. This leaves them unattached so that a driver can be easily
loaded to grab them later.
o be more careful about clearing addresses (this isn't a kludge)
o For AF_INET interfaces, call SIOCDIFFADDR to remove last(?) bit
of cruft.
Special cases for AF_INET shouldn't be here, but I didn't see a good
generic way of doing this. If I missed something, please let me know.
This gross hack makes pccard ejection stable for ethernet cards.
Submitted by: Atushi Onoe-san
These drivers were cloned from the ed and ep drivers back in 1994
when PCMCIA cards were a very new thing and we had no other support
for such devices. They treated the PCIC (the chip which controls the
PCCARD slot) as part of their device and generally hacked their way
to success. They have significantly bit-rotted relative to their
ancestor drivers (ed & ep) and they were a dead-end on the evolution
path to proper PCCARD support in FreeBSD.
They have been terminally broken since August 18 where mdodd forgot
them and nobody seems to have missed them enough to fix them since.
I found no outstanding PRs against these drivers.
o fix return type of sio_pccard_detach
o don't free softc in deatch, since that is done by newbus
o disconnect interrupt we used to have. Add cookie to com so that we can
tear down the interrupt on unload
o Set gone earlier, but likely doesn't matter
This makes sio pccards work again. Cards that are active when ejects may
not work (but they might, softc goes away quickly).
These changes are unreviewed by bde. I'll make any style changes he wants.
o Expose ed_stop and call it early to shutdown the hardware.
o When releasing the interrupt, pass the cookie for the irq, not
a pointer to the cookie (this is the base problem).
o Release other resources used, just like the ep driver
the activate method to the setup_intr, and turn it off to
teardown_intr.
This makes the ed driver not enter its interrupt routine during the
probe. Apparently, an interrupt happens when you disable the
interrupts. There are other problems with ed still.
ralta. These keys combine shift/ctrl/alt function and the AltLock
function. When these keys pressed together with another key, they act
just like the ordinary shift/ctrl/alt keys. When these keys are
pressed and released alone, Alt lock state is toggled.
PR: kern/12475
keymap and pressed, the system panic will be forced.
This feature must be specifically enabled by a new sysctl variable:
machdep.enable_panic_key. Its default value is 0. The panic key
won't do anything unless this variable is set to non-zero.
To use the panic key, add a keyword 'panic' to a key in your
keymap file. The following example assigns the panic function
to SysReq (Alt-PrintScreen) key (keycode 84).
083 del '.' '.' '.' '.' '.' boot boot N
084 panic nop nop nop panic nop nop nop O
085 nop nop nop nop nop nop nop nop O
PR: kern/13721
possible for ro->ro_rt to be non-NULL even though the RTF_UP flag
is cleared. (Example: a routing daemon or the "route" command
deletes a cloned route in active use by a TCP connection.) In that
case, the code was clobbering a reference to the routing table
entry without decrementing the entry's reference count.
The splnet() call probably isn't needed, but I haven't been able
to prove that yet. It isn't significant from a performance standpoint
since it is executed very rarely.
Reviewed by: wollman and others in the freebsd-current mailing list
background ]
Rename sys/pci/pci_ioctl.h to sys/sys/pciio.h to make it easier for
userland programs to use this interface. Reformat the file, and add a
BSD-style copyright to it.
Add a new man page for pci(4). The PCIOCGETCONF, PCIOCREAD, and PCIOCWRITE
ioctls are documented, but the PCIOCATTACHED ioctl is not documented
because it is not implemented.
Change includes of <pci/pci_ioctl.h> to <sys/pciio.h> or remove them
altogether. In many cases, pci_ioctl.h was unused.
Reviewed by: steve
There seems to be some problem with the new rgb_vbi_prog() RISC
code not working for NTSC users.
This means that European teletext users will need to start
Alevt (or open /dev/vbi0) BEFORE starting FXTV (or opening /dev/bktr0)
if they want to capture VBI data for Teletext/Videotext or WaveTop
Reported by: Chris Csanady <cc@137.org>, Kenneth D. Merry <ken@kdm.org>,
Randy Bush <randy@psg.com>
opt_global.h and opt_svr4.h, instead of from the command line. This
brings them in-line with most of the rest of the kernel.
svr4_ioctl.c has also failed to compile with debugging for a while
now; fixed by adding systm.h and socketvar.
Some svr4 source files are automatically generated from syscalls.master;
these have been committed as consequential changes, otherwise everyone
will have to "make svr4_sysent.c".
Changes:
sys/svr4/svr4.h include opt_global.h and opt_svr4.h
sys/svr4/svr4_ioctl.c include svr4.h, sys/systm.h and sys/socketvar.h
sys/svr4/svr4_ipc.c include svr4.h
sys/svr4/svr4_resource.c include svr4.h
sys/svr4/svr4_socket.c include svr4.h
sys/svr4/svr4_ttold.c include svr4.h
sys/svr4/syscalls.master include svr4.h
sys/svr4/svr4_syscallnames.c dependent on syscalls.master
sys/svr4/svr4_sysent.c dependent on syscalls.master
sys/svr4/svr4_syscall.h dependent on syscalls.master
sys/svr4/svr4_proto.h dependent on syscalls.master
sys/modules/svr4/Makefile create opt_global.h and opt_svr4.h