- Fix some comments; remove numerous superfluous or outdated ones.
- Correctly pass on the requesting device when handing requests up
to the parent bus.
- Use the complete device name, including unit number, to build the
IOMMU instance name.
- Inline a function that was only used once, and was trivial.
consistently with the rest of the code, use IFP2AC(ifp) to access
the arpcom structure given the ifp.
In this case also fix a difference in assumptions WRT the rest of
the net/ sources: it is not the 'struct *softc' that starts with a
'struct arpcom', but a 'struct arpcom' that starts with a
'struct ifnet'
- use ifp instead if &ac->ac_if in a couple of nd6* calls;
this removes a useless dependency.
- use IFP2AC(ifp) instead of an extra variable to point to the struct arpcom;
this does not remove the nesting dependency between arpcom and ifnet but
makes it more evident.
caller to vm_page_grab(). Although this gives VM_ALLOC_ZERO a
different meaning for vm_page_grab() than for vm_page_alloc(), I feel
such change is necessary to accomplish other goals. Specifically, I
want to make the PG_ZERO flag immutable between the time it is
allocated by vm_page_alloc() and freed by vm_page_free() or
vm_page_free_zero() to avoid locking overheads. Once we gave up on
the ability to automatically recognize a zeroed page upon entry to
vm_page_free(), the ability to mutate the PG_ZERO flag became useless.
Instead, I would like to say that "Once a page becomes valid, its
PG_ZERO flag must be ignored."
added an arbitrary delay to our readings, causing us to use the ACPI-safe
read method when not necessary. Submitted by: bde
Old:
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 5, width = 2
ACPI timer looks BAD min = 3, max = 19, width = 16
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 5, width = 2
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 5, width = 2
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 5, width = 2
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 5, width = 2
ACPI timer looks BAD min = 3, max = 19, width = 16
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 5, width = 2
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
Timecounter "ACPI-safe" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 1000
New:
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
ACPI timer looks GOOD min = 3, max = 4, width = 1
Timecounter "ACPI-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 1000
Also, reduce unnecesary overhead in ACPI-fast by remove the barrier for
reads. The timer in the ACPI-fast case is known to increase monotonically
so there is no need to serialize access to it.
misplaced forward declarations of structs). This also reduces namespace
pollution (the misplaced declarations were declared in the !_KERNEL case
when they are not used).
would actually map the file with read access enabled. According to
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/functions/mmap.html this is
an error. Similarly, an madvise(..., MADV_WILLNEED) would enable read
access on a virtual address range that was PROT_NONE.
The solution implemented herein is (1) to pass a vm_prot_t to
vm_map_pmap_enter() describing the allowed access and (2) to make
vm_map_pmap_enter() responsible for understanding the limitations of
pmap_enter_quick().
Submitted by: "Mark W. Krentel" <krentel@dreamscape.com>
PR: kern/64573
from tcp_hostcache would have overridden a (now) lower MTU of
an interface or route that changed since first PMTU discovery.
The bug would have caused TCP to redo the PMTU discovery when
not strictly necessary.
Make a comment about already pre-initialized default values
more clear.
Reviewed by: sam
state. Apparently it happens when both devices try to disconnect RFCOMM
multiplexor channel at the same time.
The scenario is as follows:
- local device initiates RFCOMM connection to the remote device. This
creates both RFCOMM multiplexor channel and data channel;
- remote device terminates RFCOMM data channel (inactivity timeout);
- local device acknowledges RFCOMM data channel termination. Because
there is no more active data channels and local device has initiated
connection it terminates RFCOMM multiplexor channel;
- remote device does not acknowledges RFCOMM multiplexor channel
termination. Instead it sends its own request to terminate RFCOMM
multiplexor channel. Even though local device acknowledges RFCOMM
multiplexor channel termination the remote device still keeps
L2CAP connection open.
Because of hanging RFCOMM multiplexor channel subsequent RFCOMM
connections between local and remote devices will fail.
Reported by: Johann Hugo <jhugo@icomtek.csir.co.za>
modules is a very nice way to produce hard-to-find panics. Who would look for
a bug in a Makefile anyway?
Has anyone seen the pointy hat? :-o
Approved by: njl (mentor)
ip_id again. ip_id is already set to the ip_id of the encapsulated packet.
Make a comment about mbuf allocation failures more realistic.
Reviewed by: sobomax
resource pre-allocation. The problem is that the BARs of the EBus bridges
contain the ranges for the resources for the EBus devices beyond the bridge.
So when the EBus code tries to allocate the resource for an EBus device
it's already allocated by the PCI code.
To be removed again as soon as we have a proper solution in the EBus Code.
Reviewed by: tmm
Approved by: marcel (mentor)
source address of a packet exists in the routing table. The
default route is ignored because it would match everything and
render the check pointless.
This option is very useful for routers with a complete view of
the Internet (BGP) in the routing table to reject packets with
spoofed or unrouteable source addresses.
Example:
ipfw add 1000 deny ip from any to any not versrcreach
also known in Cisco-speak as:
ip verify unicast source reachable-via any
Reviewed by: luigi
secondary bus is 0, we program the primary bus, the secondary bus and
the suborindate bus. This isn't ideal, since we start at parent_bus +
1 and store this in a static.
Ideally, we'd walk the tree and assign bus numbers. However, that's
harder to accomplish without some help from the bus layer which we're
not planning on doing that until 6.
This fixes my CardBus problems on my Sony PCG-Z1WA, and might fix the
Dells that have had problems.
sched_ule, in January 2004. Looking at this, "pagezero" is (one of) the
culprit(s). We had no provision for processes with P_NOLOAD set. With
pagezero not running at PRI_ITHD, kseq_load_{add,rem} count pagezero as
another-normal-process, thus the "expected-plus-one" load reported in
the above thread.
Submitted by: Nikos Ntarmos <ntarmos@ceid.upatras.gr>
gadgets (hotkeys, lcd, ...) on Asus laptops. I aim to closely track the
acpi4asus project which implements these features in the Linux kernel.
If this breaks your laptop, please let me know how it does it :-)
Approved by: njl (mentor)
there are a lot of other dependencies that preclude the kernel from
working). Instead, have a more generic note that isa should not be
removed. This should be less confusing for users.
(I hope.)
My original instinct to make ndis_return_packet() asynchronous was correct.
Making ndis_rxeof() submit packets to the stack asynchronously fixes
one recursive spinlock acquisition, but it's also possible for it to
happen via the ndis_txeof() path too. So:
- In if_ndis.c, revert ndis_rxeof() to its old behavior (and don't bother
putting ndis_rxeof_serial() back since we don't need it anymore).
- In kern_ndis.c, make ndis_return_packet() submit the call to the
MiniportReturnPacket() function to the "ndis swi" thread so that
it always happens in another context no matter who calls it.
workaround was for hardware where the clock was not latched, not for
hardware that was too slow. Also, make variable names more specific for ddb
printing.