Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David E. O'Brien
1809be3cd4 Use __FBSDID().
Also some minor style cleanups.
2003-08-25 23:30:41 +00:00
Bruce Evans
fa883367ab Removed mounds of unused variables. 2002-02-25 03:45:09 +00:00
John Baldwin
4543c86ece Add support for writing blocks to the loader's disk cache.
PR:		kern/32389
Submitted by:	Jonathan Mini <mini@haikugeek.com>
Sponsored by:	ClickArray, Inc.
2001-12-11 00:10:00 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
6e551fb628 Update to C99, s/__FUNCTION__/__func__/,
also don't use ANSI string concatenation.
2001-12-10 08:09:49 +00:00
John Baldwin
4ae4202e70 Cleanup warnings. Most of these are signed/unsigned warnings, as well as
some added const's.
2000-08-03 09:14:02 +00:00
Daniel C. Sobral
a5686d2f66 bcache_strategy() now receives an unit number, and keep track of what
was the last unit number received. If it changes, it flushes the cache.
Add bcache_flash().

The actual fix is sligthly different from the one in the PR.

PR:		17098
Submitted by:	John Hood <jhood@sitaranetworks.com>
2000-03-15 01:56:12 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c3aac50f28 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
Daniel C. Sobral
b7efae4386 Silence a warning.
PR:		bin/9754
1999-02-04 13:16:21 +00:00
Paul Richards
9abd5d84ac This fixes a bug in the bcache code whereby false cache hits occur
the first time block 0 is read. This fix initialises the block
numbers to -1 which isn't the most correct thing for a daddr_t but
it isn't likely to cause a problem in the boot blocks and it could
do with a more thought out fix later.

The bug is probably benign on the i386 but on the alpha it can
cause initial file opens to fail. This is the cause of the "can't
open /boot/boot.conf" errors.

It appears on the alpha because of a number of combining factors.
On the alpha the LABELSECTOR is 0 so block 0 needs to be read in
from the media. The first time this happens you get a false hit
because the bc_blkno field is zero initially. Also, the timestamp
check against this cache hit succeeds because on the alpha a hacked
getsecs() function can return 0 when it starts counting so that
the zero initial timestamp + BCACHE_TIMEOUT is greater than the
current time until getsecs() has counted passed BCACHE_TIMEOUT.

The overall effect is that the first open() that occurs gets a
false cache hit and returns garbage to the bd_strategy() function
which then fails the open() call. This false hit then stays in the
cache until BCACHE_TIMEOUT getsecs() ticks have passed; all open()
calls during this time fail.

This explains why you can generally access the media by the time
you get to interp() and start issuing commands but the earlier
attempts to run the boot scripts are failing.

It's possible that this is causing the problem switching to the
mfsroot floppy as well but I haven't confirmed that.
1998-11-19 18:12:03 +00:00
Mike Smith
c7db92c026 Add BootForth hooks; if BOOT_FORTH is defined, pass every line read
to the Forth interpreter.  Instantiate all of our inbuilt commands
as Forth words, and handle them being called from there.

Add my copyright to the bcache module (oops).
1998-11-04 00:29:01 +00:00
Mike Smith
ddfd18e255 Ok, the entry aging algorithm sucked; 1s time resolution is not enough for
LRU.  Use a 31-bit counter instead.  If we decide to do heavy I/O through
the bootloader this will have to be revisited.
1998-11-02 23:50:59 +00:00
Mike Smith
af1f6e0673 Implement a simple LRU block cache. By default this is initialised to 16k,
and will bypass transfers for more than 8k.  Blocks are invalidated after
2 seconds, so removable media should not confuse the cache.

The 8k threshold is a compromise; all UFS transfers performed by
libstand are 8k or less, so large file reads thrash the cache.
However many filesystem metadata operations are also performed using
8k blocks, so using a lower threshold gives poor performance.

Those of you with an eye for cache algorithms are welcome to tell me
how badly this one sucks; you can start with the 'bcachestats' command
which will print the contents of the cache and access statistics.
1998-11-02 23:28:11 +00:00