that the driver clock is identical to the processor or bus clock.
This is the case for the PowerQUICC processor. When the clock is
high enough, overflows happen in the calculation of the time it
takes to send 1/10 of a character, used in delay loops. Fix the
overflows so as to fix bugs in the delay loops that can cause either
insufficient delays or excessive delays.
system devices (i.e. console, debug port or keyboard), don't stop
after the first match. Find them all and keep track of the last.
The reason for this change is that the low-level console is always
added to the list of system devices first, with other devices added
later. Since new devices are added to the list at the head, we have
the console always at the end. When a debug port is using the same
UART as the console, we would previously mark the "newbus" UART as
a debug port instead of as a console. This would later result in a
panic because no "newbus" device was associated with the console.
By matching all possible system devices we would mark the "newbus"
UART as a console and not as a debug port.
While it is arguably better to be able to mark a "newbus" UART as
both console and debug port, this fix is lightweight and allows
a single UART to be used as the console as well as a debug port
with only the aesthetic bug of not telling the user about it also
being a debug port.
Now that we match all possible system devices, update the rclk of
the system devices with the rclk that was obtained through the
bus attachment. It is generally true that clock information is
more reliable when obtained from the parent bus than by means of
some hardcoded or assumed value used early in the boot. This by
virtue of having more context information.
MFC after: 1 month
by driver backends to mark individual channels as enabled or not.
The default implementation of this method always mark channels as
enabled.
This method is currently not used, but is added with the PowerQUICC
in mind where the 2nd SCC channel can be disabled.
This will increase the memory consumption for more than 1 Mb, but this
is required for operation on multiinterface access concentrators running
mpd.
Requested by: Alexander Motin
- priv(9) KPI added
- ipw/iwi firmware in the base system
Updated release notes:
- OpenSSL updated to 0.9.8e
- GNOME updated to 2.8.0
- acpi_dock(4) and acpi_hpet MFC
- msk(4) MFC
watchdog might hide the succesful arming of an earlier one. Accept that on
failing to arm any watchdog (because of non-supported timeouts) EOPNOTSUPP is
returned instead of the more appropriate EINVAL.
MFC after: 3 days
always 0. Previously we aligned threads on a minimum of 8-byte boundaries.
Note: This changes the uma zone to no longer cache align threads. We
really want the uma zone to do align threads to MAX(16, cache line size)
but there currently isn't a good way to express that to uma.
Submitted by: attilio
When submitting rx buffers and not using WC fifo, always replace the
invalid DMA address with the real one, otherwise allocation failures
could lead to the invalid DMA address being given to the NIC, and
that would cause the receive side to lockup.
with `pw lock', so that it's impossible to log into a locked account
using an alternative authentication mechanism, such as an ssh key.
This change affects only accounts locked with pw(8), i.e., having a
`*LOCKED*' prefix in their password hash field, so people still can
use a different pattern to disable password authentication only.
Mention all account management criteria in the manpage.
Approved by: maintainer (timeout)
PR: bin/71147
MFC after: 1 month
causing a crash.
Suppose that we have two objects, obj and backing_obj, where
backing_obj is obj's backing object. Further, suppose that
backing_obj has a reference count of two. One being the reference
held by obj and the other by a map entry. Now, suppose that the map
entry is deallocated and its reference removed by
vm_object_deallocate(). vm_object_deallocate() recognizes that the
only remaining reference is from a shadow object, obj, and calls
vm_object_collapse() on obj. vm_object_collapse() executes
if (backing_object->ref_count == 1) {
/*
* If there is exactly one reference to the backing
* object, we can collapse it into the parent.
*/
vm_object_backing_scan(object, OBSC_COLLAPSE_WAIT);
vm_object_backing_scan(OBSC_COLLAPSE_WAIT) executes
if (op & OBSC_COLLAPSE_WAIT) {
vm_object_set_flag(backing_object, OBJ_DEAD);
}
Finally, suppose that either vm_object_backing_scan() or
vm_object_collapse() sleeps releasing its locks. At this instant,
another thread executes vm_object_split(). It crashes in
vm_object_reference_locked() on the assertion that the object is not
dead. If, however, assertions are not enabled, it crashes much later,
after the object has been recycled, in vm_object_deallocate() because
the shadow count and shadow list are inconsistent.
Reviewed by: tegge
Reported by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week