Commit Graph

13382 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andre Oppermann
bb25e5ab00 Give (*ext_free) an int return value allowing for very sophisticated
external mbuf buffer management capabilities in the future.

For now only EXT_FREE_OK is defined with current legacy behavior.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-25 10:57:09 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
df3a21692b Adjust socow_iodone() after r254799.
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-25 09:40:15 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
ce28636bcf After r254779 "error" must always be present in mb_ctor_pack(),
not only when MAC is defined.

Reported by:	gjb / tinderbox
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-24 21:25:53 +00:00
Mark Johnston
29f4e216f2 Rename the kld_unload event handler to kld_unload_try, and add a new
kld_unload event handler which gets invoked after a linker file has been
successfully unloaded. The kld_unload and kld_load event handlers are now
invoked with the shared linker lock held, while kld_unload_try is invoked
with the lock exclusively held.

Convert hwpmc(4) to use these event handlers instead of having
kern_kldload() and kern_kldunload() invoke hwpmc(4) hooks whenever files are
loaded or unloaded. This has no functional effect, but simplifes the linker
code somewhat.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2013-08-24 21:13:38 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
ce6169e715 Remove unused m_free_fast(). The difference to m_free() is only
2 predictable branches nowadays.  However as a pre-condition the
caller had to ensure that the mbuf pkthdr did not have any mtags
attached to it, costing some potential branches again.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-24 21:09:57 +00:00
Mark Johnston
0770f164d3 Set things up so that linker_file_lookup_set() is always called with the
linker lock held. This makes it possible to call it from a kld event handler
with the shared lock held.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2013-08-24 21:08:55 +00:00
Mark Johnston
3a277424e6 Remove the kld lock macros and just use the sx(9) API. Add locking in
linker_init_kernel_modules() and linker_preload() in order to remove most
of the checks for !cold before asserting that the kld lock is held. These
routines are invoked by SYSINIT(9), so there's no harm in them taking the
kld lock.
2013-08-24 21:07:04 +00:00
Mark Johnston
161330357c Remove some code that has been commented out since it was added in 2000. 2013-08-24 21:00:39 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
1b4381afbb Restructure the mbuf pkthdr to make it fit for upcoming capabilities and
features.  The changes in particular are:

o Remove rarely used "header" pointer and replace it with a 64bit protocol/
  layer specific union PH_loc for local use.  Protocols can flexibly overlay
  their own 8 to 64 bit fields to store information while the packet is
  worked on.

o Mechanically convert IP reassembly, IGMP/MLD and ATM to use pkthdr.PH_loc
  instead of pkthdr.header.

o Extend csum_flags to 64bits to allow for additional future offload
  information to be carried (e.g. iSCSI, IPsec offload, and others).

o Move the RSS hash type enumerator from abusing m_flags to its own 8bit
  rsstype field.  Adjust accessor macros.

o Add cosqos field to store Class of Service / Quality of Service information
  with the packet.  It is not yet supported in any drivers but allows us to
  get on par with Cisco/Juniper in routing applications (plus MPLS QoS) with
  a modernized ALTQ.

o Add four 8 bit fields l[2-5]hlen to store the relative header offsets
  from the start of the packet.  This is important for various offload
  capabilities and to relieve the drivers from having to parse the packet
  and protocol headers to find out location of checksums and other
  information.  Header parsing in drivers is a lot of copy-paste and
  unhandled corner cases which we want to avoid.

o Add another flexible 64bit union to map various additional persistent
  packet information, like ether_vtag, tso_segsz and csum fields.
  Depending on the csum_flags settings some fields may have different usage
  making it very flexible and adaptable to future capabilities.

o Restructure the CSUM flags to better signify their outbound (down the
  stack) and inbound (up the stack) use.  The CSUM flags used to be a bit
  chaotic and rather poorly documented leading to incorrect use in many
  places.  Bring clarity into their use through better naming.
  Compatibility mappings are provided to preserve the API.  The drivers
  can be corrected one by one and MFC'd without issue.

o The size of pkthdr stays the same at 48/56bytes (32/64bit architectures).

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-24 19:51:18 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
aaea33e51f Fix a printf format warning on 32-bit mips and powerpc.
Reported by:	bde, gjb
Pointy hat to:	ken
2013-08-24 19:02:36 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
9a73687609 Add an mbuf pointer parameter to (*ext_free) to give the external
free function access to the mbuf the external memory was attached
to.

Mechanically adjust all users to include the mbuf parameter.

This fixes a long standing annoyance for external free functions.
Before one had to sacrifice one of the argument pointers for this.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-24 16:57:44 +00:00
Alexander Motin
596d33e923 MFprojects/camlock r254460:
Remove locking from taskqueue_member().  The list of threads is static
during the taskqueue life cycle, so there is no need to protect it,
taking quite congested lock several more times for each ZFS I/O.
2013-08-24 14:41:49 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
894734cbd6 dd a 24 bits wide ext_flags field to m_ext by reducing ext_type
to 8 bits.  ext_type is an enumerator and the number of types we
have is a mere dozen.

A couple of ext_types are renumbered to fit within 8 bits.

EXT_VENDOR[1-4] and EXT_EXP[1-4] types for vendor-internal and
experimental local mapping.

The ext_flags field is currently unused but has a couple of flags
already defined for future use.  Again vendor and experimental
flags are provided for local mapping.

EXT_FLAG_BITS is provided for the printf(9) %b identifier.

Initialize and copy ext_flags in the relevant mbuf functions.

Improve alignment and packing of struct m_ext on 32 and 64 archs
by carefully sorting the fields.
2013-08-24 13:15:42 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
afb295cc9a Avoid code duplication for mbuf initialization and use m_init() instead
in mb_ctor_mbuf() and mb_ctor_pack().
2013-08-24 12:24:58 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
93729c1796 Add support to physio(9) for devices that don't want I/O split and
configure sa(4) to request no I/O splitting by default.

For tape devices, the user needs to be able to clearly understand
what blocksize is actually being used when writing to a tape
device.  The previous behavior of physio(9) was that it would split
up any I/O that was too large for the device, or too large to fit
into MAXPHYS.  This means that if, for instance, the user wrote a
1MB block to a tape device, and MAXPHYS was 128KB, the 1MB write
would be split into 8 128K chunks.  This would be done without
informing the user.

This has suboptimal effects, especially when trying to communicate
status to the user.  In the event of an error writing to a tape
(e.g. physical end of tape) in the middle of a 1MB block that has
been split into 8 pieces, the user could have the first two 128K
pieces written successfully, the third returned with an error, and
the last 5 returned with 0 bytes written.  If the user is using
a standard write(2) system call, all he will see is the ENOSPC
error.  He won't have a clue how much actually got written.  (With
a writev(2) system call, he should be able to determine how much
got written in addition to the error.)

The solution is to prevent physio(9) from splitting the I/O.  The
new cdev flag, SI_NOSPLIT, tells physio that the driver does not
want I/O to be split beforehand.

Although the sa(4) driver now enables SI_NOSPLIT by default,
that can be disabled by two loader tunables for now.  It will not
be configurable starting in FreeBSD 11.0.  kern.cam.sa.allow_io_split
allows the user to configure I/O splitting for all sa(4) driver
instances.  kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split allows the user to
configure I/O splitting for a specific sa(4) instance.

There are also now three sa(4) driver sysctl variables that let the
users see some sa(4) driver values.  kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split
shows whether I/O splitting is turned on.  kern.cam.sa.%d.maxio shows
the maximum I/O size allowed by kernel configuration parameters
(e.g. MAXPHYS, DFLTPHYS) and the capabilities of the controller.
kern.cam.sa.%d.cpi_maxio shows the maximum I/O size supported by
the controller.

Note that a better long term solution would be to implement support
for chaining buffers, so that that MAXPHYS is no longer a limiting
factor for I/O size to tape and disk devices.  At that point, the
controller and the tape drive would become the limiting factors.

sys/conf.h:	Add a new cdev flag, SI_NOSPLIT, that allows a
		driver to tell physio not to split up I/O.

sys/param.h:	Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000049 for the addition
		of the SI_NOSPLIT cdev flag.

kern_physio.c:	If the SI_NOSPLIT flag is set on the cdev, return
		any I/O that is larger than si_iosize_max or
		MAXPHYS, has more than one segment, or would have
		to be split because of misalignment with EFBIG.
		(File too large).

		In the event of an error, print a console message to
		give the user a clue about what happened.

scsi_sa.c:	Set the SI_NOSPLIT cdev flag on the devices created
		for the sa(4) driver by default.

		Add tunables to control whether we allow I/O splitting
		in physio(9).

		Explain in the comments that allowing I/O splitting
		will be deprecated for the sa(4) driver in FreeBSD
		11.0.

		Add sysctl variables to display the maximum I/O
		size we can do (which could be further limited by
		read block limits) and the maximum I/O size that
		the controller can do.

		Limit our maximum I/O size (recorded in the cdev's
		si_iosize_max) by MAXPHYS.  This isn't strictly
		necessary, because physio(9) will limit it to
		MAXPHYS, but it will provide some clarity for the
		application.

		Record the controller's maximum I/O size reported
		in the Path Inquiry CCB.

sa.4:		Document the block size behavior, and explain that
		the option of allowing physio(9) to split the I/O
		will disappear in FreeBSD 11.0.

Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
2013-08-24 04:52:22 +00:00
Xin LI
2454886e05 Allow tmpfs be mounted inside jail. 2013-08-23 22:52:20 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
d23db15020 Fix a whitespace. 2013-08-23 16:54:38 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
f6d76b0ec1 Since the 253927, which removed the soft busy call for the sf page, it
does not make sense to wait for the soft busy state of the page to
drain.  The vm object lock is dropped immediately after, so the result
of the wait is invalidated.

It might make sense to not wait for the hard busy state as well,
esp. for the fully valid page, but this is postponed for now.

Reviewed by:	alc
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-23 14:50:03 +00:00
John Baldwin
e77c507d60 Use tvtohz() to convert a socket buffer timeout to a tick value rather
than using a home-rolled version.  The home-rolled version could result
in shorter-than-requested sleeps.

Reported by:	Vitja Makarov <vitja.makarov@gmail.com>
MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-08-23 13:47:41 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
4f8cf6e59b Both cluster_rbuild() and cluster_wbuild() sometimes set the pages
shared busy without first draining the hard busy state.  Previously it
went unnoticed since VPO_BUSY and m->busy fields were distinct, and
vm_page_io_start() did not verified that the passed page has VPO_BUSY
flag cleared, but such page state is wrong.  New implementation is
more strict and catched this case.

Drain the busy state as needed, before calling vm_page_sbusy().

Tested by:	pho, jkim
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-22 18:26:45 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
5944de8ecd Remove the deprecated VM_ALLOC_RETRY flag for the vm_page_grab(9).
The flag was mandatory since r209792, where vm_page_grab(9) was
changed to only support the alloc retry semantic.

Suggested and reviewed by:	alc
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-22 07:39:53 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
1227f20d26 Revert r254520 and resurrect the M_NOFREE mbuf flag and functionality.
Requested by:	np, grehan
2013-08-21 18:12:04 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
940cb0e2bb Implement read(2)/write(2) and neccessary lseek(2) for posix shmfd.
Add MAC framework entries for posix shm read and write.

Do not allow implicit extension of the underlying memory segment past
the limit set by ftruncate(2) by either of the syscalls.  Read and
write returns short i/o, lseek(2) fails with EINVAL when resulting
offset does not fit into the limit.

Discussed with:	alc
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-21 17:45:00 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
c0a46535c4 Make the seek a method of the struct fileops.
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-21 17:36:01 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
41cf41fdfd Extract the general-purpose code from tmpfs to perform uiomove from
the page queue of some vm object.

Discussed with:	alc
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-21 17:23:24 +00:00
Peter Holm
844e14d34c Added sysctl to turn off calls to vmem_check().
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon storage division
Discussed with:	 jeff
2013-08-20 11:06:56 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
d91722fb27 - Use an arbitrary but reasonably large import size for kva on architectures
that don't support superpages.  This keeps the number of spans and internal
   fragmentation lower.
 - When the user asks for alignment from vmem_xalloc adjust the imported size
   by 2*align to be certain we can satisfy the allocation.  This comes at
   the expense of potential failures when the backend can't supply enough
   memory but could supply the requested size and alignment.

Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2013-08-19 23:02:39 +00:00
Andre Oppermann
aa3cb8fb64 Remove the unused M_NOFREE mbuf flag. It didn't have any in-tree users
for a very long time, if ever.

Should such a functionality ever be needed again the appropriate and
much better way to do it is through a custom EXT_SOMETHING external mbuf
type together with a dedicated *ext_free function.

Discussed with:	trociny, glebius
2013-08-19 11:16:53 +00:00
Jilles Tjoelker
6fbdb9f4f1 Disallow opening a POSIX message queue for execute.
O_EXEC was formerly ignored, so equivalent to O_RDONLY.

Reject O_EXEC with [EINVAL] like the invalid mode 3.
2013-08-18 13:27:04 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
0dac22d8ea Implement 32bit versions of the cap_ioctls_limit(2) and cap_ioctls_get(2)
system calls as unsigned longs have different size on i386 and amd64.

Reported by:	jilles
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-18 10:30:41 +00:00
Bryan Venteicher
e5bbc81be8 Do not use potentially stale thread in kthread_add()
When an existing process is provided, the thread selected to use
to initialize the new thread could have exited and be reaped.
Acquire the proc lock earlier to ensure the thread remains valid.

Reviewed by:	jhb, julian (previous version)
MFC after:	3 days
2013-08-17 17:02:43 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
4593c0ad6b In r114945 the line 'nmp = TAILQ_NEXT(mp, mnt_list);' was duplicated.
Instead of just removing the duplicate, convert the loop to TAILQ_FOREACH().
2013-08-17 14:13:45 +00:00
Xin LI
42d875a536 Fix build. 2013-08-17 00:25:11 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
b1dd38f408 Restore the previous sendfile(2) behaviour on the block devices.
Provide valid .fo_sendfile method for several missed struct fileops.

Reviewed by:	glebius
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-08-16 14:22:20 +00:00
Mark Johnston
196f2f42eb Use strdup(9) instead of reimplementing it. 2013-08-16 03:41:41 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
ce625ec719 Change the way that unmapped I/O capability is advertised.
The previous method was to set the D_UNMAPPED_IO flag in the cdevsw
for the driver.  The problem with this is that in many cases (e.g.
sa(4)) there may be some instances of the driver that can handle
unmapped I/O and some that can't.  The isp(4) driver can handle
unmapped I/O, but the esp(4) driver currently cannot.  The cdevsw
is shared among all driver instances.

So instead of setting a flag on the cdevsw, set a flag on the cdev.
This allows drivers to indicate support for unmapped I/O on a
per-instance basis.

sys/conf.h:	Remove the D_UNMAPPED_IO cdevsw flag and replace it
		with an SI_UNMAPPED cdev flag.

kern_physio.c:	Look at the cdev SI_UNMAPPED flag to determine
		whether or not a particular driver can handle
		unmapped I/O.

geom_dev.c:	Set the SI_UNMAPPED flag for all GEOM cdevs.
		Since GEOM will create a temporary mapping when
		needed, setting SI_UNMAPPED unconditionally will
		work.

		Remove the D_UNMAPPED_IO flag.

nvme_ns.c:	Set the SI_UNMAPPED flag on cdevs created here
		if NVME_UNMAPPED_BIO_SUPPORT is enabled.

vfs_aio.c:	In aio_qphysio(), check the SI_UNMAPPED flag on a
		cdev instead of the D_UNMAPPED_IO flag on the cdevsw.

sys/param.h:	Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000045 for the switch from
		setting the D_UNMAPPED_IO flag in the cdevsw to setting
		SI_UNMAPPED in the cdev.

Reviewed by:	kib, jimharris
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
2013-08-15 22:52:39 +00:00
Colin Percival
2bb93f2d18 Change the queue of locks in kern_rangelock.c from holding lock requests in
the order that they arrive, to holding
(a) granted write lock requests, followed by
(b) granted read lock requests, followed by
(c) ungranted requests, in order of arrival.

This changes the stopping condition for iterating through granted locks to
see if a new request can be granted: When considering a read lock request,
we can stop iterating as soon as we see a read lock request, since anything
after that point is either a granted read lock request or a request which
has not yet been granted.  (For write lock requests, we must still compare
against all granted lock requests.)

For workloads with R parallel reads and W parallel writes, this improves
the time spent from O((R+W)^2) to O(W*(R+W)); i.e., heavy parallel-read
workloads become significantly more scalable.

No statistically significant change in buildworld time has been measured,
but synthetic tests of parallel 'dd > /dev/null' and 'openssl enc >/dev/null'
with the input file cached yield dramatic (up to 10x) improvement with high
(up to 128 processes) levels of parallelism.

Reviewed by:	kib
2013-08-15 20:19:17 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
ca04d21d5f Make sendfile() a method in the struct fileops. Currently only
vnode backed file descriptors have this method implemented.

Reviewed by:	kib
Sponsored by:	Nginx, Inc.
Sponsored by:	Netflix
2013-08-15 07:54:31 +00:00
Mark Johnston
7b77e1fe0f Specify SDT probe argument types in the probe definition itself rather than
using SDT_PROBE_ARGTYPE(). This will make it easy to extend the SDT(9) API
to allow probes with dynamically-translated types.

There is no functional change.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-08-15 04:08:55 +00:00
Mark Johnston
12ede07ab8 Use kld_{load,unload} instead of mod_{load,unload} for the linker file load
and unload event handlers added in r254266.

Reported by:	jhb
X-MFC with:	r254266
2013-08-14 00:42:21 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
99de9af2a6 - Disable quantum caches on the kmem_arena. This can make fragmentation
worse on small KVA systems.  I had intended to only enable it for
   debugging.

Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2013-08-13 22:41:24 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
8441d1e842 - Add a statically allocated memguard arena since it is needed very early
on.
 - Pass the appropriate flags to vmem_xalloc() when allocating space for
   the arena from kmem_arena.

Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
2013-08-13 22:40:43 +00:00
John Baldwin
e05bf4cf95 Some small cleanups to the fixes in r180340:
- Set NOTE_TRACKERR before running filt_proc().  If the knote did not
  have NOTE_FORK set in fflags when registered, then the TRACKERR event
  could miss being posted.
- Don't pass the pid in to filt_proc() for NOTE_FORK events.  The special
  handling for pids is done knote_fork() directly and no longer in
  filt_proc().

MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-08-13 18:45:58 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
90c35c1939 - Minor style(9) fix.
- Bring a comment up to date.
2013-08-13 13:40:31 +00:00
Mark Johnston
8776669b53 FreeBSD's DTrace implementation has a few problems with respect to handling
probes declared in a kernel module when that module is unloaded. In
particular,

* Unloading a module with active SDT probes will cause a panic. [1]
* A module's (FBT/SDT) probes aren't destroyed when the module is unloaded;
  trying to use them after the fact will generally cause a panic.

This change fixes both problems by porting the DTrace module load/unload
handlers from illumos and registering them with the corresponding
EVENTHANDLER(9) handlers. This allows the DTrace framework to destroy all
probes defined in a module when that module is unloaded, and to prevent a
module unload from proceeding if some of its probes are active. The latter
problem has already been fixed for FBT probes by checking lf->nenabled in
kern_kldunload(), but moving the check into the DTrace framework generalizes
it to all kernel providers and also fixes a race in the current
implementation (since a probe may be activated between the check and the
call to linker_file_unload()).

Additionally, the SDT implementation has been reworked to define SDT
providers/probes/argtypes in linker sets rather than using SYSINIT/SYSUNINIT
to create and destroy SDT probes when a module is loaded or unloaded. This
simplifies things quite a bit since it means that pretty much all of the SDT
code can live in sdt.ko, and since it becomes easier to integrate SDT with
the DTrace framework. Furthermore, this allows FreeBSD to be quite flexible
in that SDT providers spanning multiple modules can be created on the fly
when a module is loaded; at the moment it looks like illumos' SDT
implementation requires all SDT probes to be statically defined in a single
kernel table.

PR:		166927, 166926, 166928
Reported by:	davide [1]
Reviewed by:	avg, trociny (earlier version)
MFC after:	1 month
2013-08-13 03:10:39 +00:00
Mark Johnston
9c6139e411 Remove some unused fields from struct linker_file. They were added in
r172862 for use by the DTrace SDT framework but don't seem to have ever
been used.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-08-13 03:09:00 +00:00
Mark Johnston
c9b645b50b Add event handlers for module load and unload events. The load handlers are
called after the module has been loaded, and the unload handlers are called
before the module is unloaded. Moreover, the module unload handlers may
return an error to prevent the unload from proceeding.

Reviewed by:	avg
MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-08-13 03:07:49 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
2f7c18600c The r254167 moved initialization of the sleepqueues before the witness
is operational.  init_sleepqueues() initializes 256 mutexes, which,
due to witness still being cold, started to overflow the pending_locks
array.

As stated in the reported panic message, increase WITNESS_PENDLIST
from 768 to 1024, which provides space for additional 256 locks.

Reported by:	many
Tested by:	rakuco, bdrewery
2013-08-10 21:42:14 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
662423aeaf Don't call sleepinit() from proc0_init(), make it a SYSINIT instead.
vmem needs the sleepq locks to be initialized when free'ing kva, so we want it
called as early as possible.
2013-08-09 23:13:52 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
e137643ef3 Instead of just trying to do it for arm, make sure vm_kmem_size is properly
aligned in kmeminit(), where it'll work for any arch.

Suggested by:	alc
2013-08-09 22:30:54 +00:00