During heavy reads data copying in icl_pdu_get_data() may consume large
percent of CPU time. Moving it out of the lock significantly reduces
lock hold time and respectively lock congestion on read operations.
MFC after: 2 weeks
commit 6d3c4c0922
Add terasic_mtl vt(4) framebuffer driver
terasic_mtl can be built with syscons(4) and vt(4) attachments, selected
at compile time.
commit 33240259b4
Clear terasic_mtl text buffer on attach
commit d188c2d241
Update terasic vt(4) driver for FreeBSD r269783
commit d1cc54eee8
Safety belt to ensure vt(4) fb parameters are correct
commit 76e6d468ef
Improve terasic_mtl_vt fdt parsing
- Use OF_getencprop to avoid need for explicit endian handling
(submitted by ray@freebsd.org)
- Check for expected length and correct pointer type
commit 3e2524b899
Correct device_printf usage
commit 9e53e3c8e0
Switch framebuffer to match host endianness
Xorg and xf86-video-scfb work much better with a native-endian
framebuffer.
commit 0f49259d59
Switch DE4 to vt(4) and enable kbdmux
commit 5bc96ebc89
Add missing \n in device_printf calls
Submitted by: emaste
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
commit d0c7d235c0
Make the Altera JTAG UART device driver slightly more forgiving of
the foibles of a sub-par hrdware interface by increasing the timeout
for spotting JTAG polling from one to two seconds.
commit 19ed45a188
Update comment.
commit 8edfe803f0
Add a comment about a device-driver race condition that could cause the BERI
pipeline to wedge awaiting JTAG in the event that both the low-level console
and the tty layer decide to write to the JTAG FIFO just before JTAG is
disconnected. Resolving this race is a bit tricky as it looks like there
isn't a way to 'give the character back' to the tty layer when we discover
the race. The easy fix is to drop the character, which we don't yet do, but
perhaps should as that is a better outcome than wedging the pipeline.
commit 2ea26cf579
Add a comment about an inherent race with hardware in the Altera JTAG
UART's low-level console code.
Submitted by: rwatson
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Previously, any timeout value for which (timeout * hz) will overflow the
signed integer, will give weird results, since callout(9) routines will
convert negative values of ticks to '1'. For unsigned integer overflow we
will get sufficiently smaller timeout values than expected.
Switch from callout_reset, which requires conversion to int based ticks
to callout_reset_sbt to avoid this.
Also correct isci to correctly resolve ccb timeout.
This was based on the original work done by Eygene Ryabinkin
<rea@freebsd.org> back in 5 Aug 2011 which used a macro to help avoid
the overlow.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1157
Reviewed by: mav, davide
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Multiplay
related cleanups:
- Require each driver to initalize a mutex in the scsi_low_softc that
is shared with the scsi_low code. This mutex is used for CAM SIMs,
timers, and interrupt handlers.
- Replace the osdep function switch with direct calls to the relevant
CAM functions and direct manipulation of timers via callout(9).
- Collapse the CAM-specific scsi_low_osdep_interface substructure
directly into scsi_low_softc.
- Use bus_*() instead of bus_space_*().
- Return BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT from probe routines instead of 0.
- No need to zero softcs.
- Pass 0ul and ~0ul instead of 0 and ~0 to bus_alloc_resource().
- Spell "dettach" as "detach".
- Remove unused 'dvname' variables.
- De-spl().
Tested by: no one
- Don't recurse driver mutex.
- Don't hold driver mutex across fubyte/subyte.
- Replace fubyte/subyte loops with copyin/copyout calls.
- Use relatively sane locking in wl_ioctl().
- Use bus space accessors instead of in*()/out*().
- Use callout(9) instead of timeout(9).
- Stop watchdog timer in detach and don't hold mutex across
bus_teardown_intr().
- Use device_printf() and if_printf().
- De-spl().
Tested by: no one
node. Take this in to account by searching until we find the range for the
root node.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1160
Reviewed by: ian
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Add per-softc mutex.
- Use mutex for CAM SIM lock.
- Use bus_*() instead of inb() and outb().
- Use bus_alloc_resource_any() when reasonable.
Tested by: no one
- Actually use existing per-softc mutex.
- Use mutex in cdev routines and remove D_NEEDGIANT.
- Use callout(9) instead of timeout(9).
- Don't check for impossible conditions (e.g. SCDINIT being clear).
- Use bus_*() instead of bus_space_*().
Tested by: no one
- Add a per-softc mutex.
- Use mutex as CAM sim lock.
- Use taskqueue_thread instead of taskqueue_swi_giant.
- Use callout(9) instead of timeout(9).
- Use bus_*() instead of bus_space_*().
Tested by: no one
- Actually use existing per-softc mutex.
- Use mutex in cdev routines and remove D_NEEDGIANT.
- Use callout(9) instead of timeout(9).
- Don't check for impossible conditions (e.g. MCDINIT being clear).
- Remove critical_enter/exit when sending a PIO command.
- Use bus_*() instead of bus_space_*().
Tested by: no one
The current support for controlling i2c bus speed is an inconsistant mess.
There are 4 symbolic speed values defined, UNKNOWN, SLOW, FAST, FASTEST.
It seems to be universally assumed that SLOW means the standard 100KHz
rate from the original spec. Nothing ever calls iicbus_reset() with a
speed of FAST, although some drivers would treat it as the 400KHz standard
speed. Mostly iicbus_reset() is called with the speed set to UNKNOWN or
FASTEST, and there's really no telling what any individual driver will do
with those.
The speed of an i2c bus is limited by the speed of the slowest device on
the bus. This means that generally the bus speed needs to be configured
based on the board/system and the components within it. Historically for
i2c we've configured with device hints. Newer systems use FDT data and it
documents a clock-frequency property for i2c busses. Hobbyists and
developers are likely to want on the fly changes. These changes provide
all 3 methods, but do not require any existing drivers to change to use
the new facilities.
This adds an iicbus method, iicbus_get_frequency(dev, speed) that gets the
frequency for the requested symbolic speed. If the symbolic speed is SLOW
or if there is no speed configured for the bus, the returned value is
100KHz, always. Otherwise, if bus speed is configured by hints, fdt,
tunable, or sysctl, that speed is returned. It also adds a helper
function, iicbus_init_frequency() that any bus driver subclassed from
iicbus can initialize the frequency from some other source of info.
Initial driver implementations are provided for Freescale and TI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1174
PR: 195009
This is the general support to allow the use of GPIO pins as interrupt
sources for direct gpiobus children.
The use of GPIO pins as generic interrupt sources (for an ethernet driver
for example) will only be possible when arm/intrng is complete. Then, most
of this code will need to be rewritten, but it works for now, is better
than what we have and will allow further developments.
Tested on: ar71xx (RSPRO), am335x (BBB), bcm2835 (Raspberry pi)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D999
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Due to adapter->hw.fc.requested_mode is filled with default value
after ixgbe_initialize_receive_units(), this leads to enabling
DROP_EN in most cases.
Tested by: ae
MFC after: 1 week
Like in r259717, the prority goes from "error" to "debug" to avoid
spamming logs when the connectors are polled.
PR: 194770
Submitted by: Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>
MFC after: 1 week
I did this wrong - I should've included a state flag for each callout
to see if it was supposed to run or not. I didn't do that.
Instead, just use mutexes anyway.
Suggested by: jhb
- Add a per-device mutex to the softc and use it for bus_dma tags,
CAM SIMs, callouts, and interrupt handler.
- Switch from timeout(9) to callout(9).
- Add a separate global mutex to protect the global event buffer ring.
- Return completed index from iir_intr_locked() and remove the global
gdt_wait_* variables.
- Remove global list of gdt softcs and replace its use with
devclass_get_device().
- Use si_drv1 to store softc pointer in the SDEV_PER_HBA case instead
of minor numbers.
- Do math on osreldate instead of dubious char math on osrelease[]
that didn't work on 10.0+.
- Use bus_*() instead of bus_space_*().
- Use device_printf() instead of printf() with a unit number.
Tested by: no one
to the build in either sys/conf/files* or sys/modules/dpt/Makefile. Also,
it was denoted as "doesn't quite work yet" when the file was initially added
(which may account for it never having been hooked up to the build).
have both kern_open() and kern_openat(); change the callers to use
kern_openat().
This removes one (sometimes two) levels of indirection and
consolidates arguments checks.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
leave a port permanently disabled when a copper cable is unplugged and
then plugged right back in.
lacp_linkstate goes looking for the current ifmedia on a link state
change and it could get stale information from cxgbe(4) on a module
unplug followed by replug. The fix is to process module events before
link-state events within the driver, and to always rebuild the ifmedia
list on a module change event (instead of rebuilding it lazily).
Thanks to asomers@ for the problem report and detailed analysis to go
with it.
MFC after: 1 week
This will allow to attach UART drivers lying directly on the root node
instead of simple-bus compatible bus only.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Instead of waiting for empty TX FIFO it is more reasonable to
block on full FIFO. As soon as FIFO slot is free the character
can be transmitted.
In case of TX FIFO disabled, TXFF bit indicates that transmit
register is not empty.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
sb_cc member of struct sockbuf to a couple of inline functions:
sbavail() and sbused()
Right now they are equal, but once notion of "not ready socket buffer data",
will be checked in, they are going to be different.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
convert a global timer to a per-controller timer. This works much better
with locking and removes the need for several global lookup tables.
Tested by: ambrisko
state said device should go into.
This was a snafu introduced in the ACPI/PCI awareness separation.
When putting a device into a power state, the bus (and thus firmware,
eg ACPI) should be asked before hand to check whether the device
can indeed go into that power state.
There's a set of nodes in ACPI under each device - the _SxD nodes - which
state which ACPI power state to put the device into when the system is
going into power save state 'x'. So when going into S3, the existence
of an _S3D node would override whatever the system was trying to do.
By default the PCI code wants to put devices into D3 before suspending.
I have a laptop here (Asus Zenbook - check the PR) whose EHCI controller
really wants to be in D2 during suspend, not D3. So if we put it into
D3 and then try to enter S3, everything hangs. The device itself
can go into D3 - it just can't be there when the call to ACPI to enter
S3 occurs. The PCI patch fixes this.
jkim@ noticed that the same is needed for the ACPI child device
enumeration.
Thankyou to Matt Dillon (the programmer, not the actor) for buying me
this particular laptop so I could debug the issues with the Atheros
AR9485 that is in it. It's his fault that I ended up with this
laptop and was sufficiently annoyed by the lack of USB suspend
to go down this rabbit hole.
Tested:
* Thinkpad T400
* Thinkpad X230
* Thinkpad T42
* Thinkpad T60
* Asus Zenbook (see PR)
* Asus EEEPC 701
* Asus EEEPC 1001PX
TODO:
* Figure out what we should do about devices we unload drivers for
that want to be in a specific state when entering S3 / S4 -
the "put devices into D3 if they're not bound to a driver" option
may also mess with things.
PR: kern/194884
Reviewed by: jhb, jkim
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Matt Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com> (hardware)
IGP may declare subclass as either VGA-compatible, or non-VGA. The
difference is that in the later case, IGP does not claim VGA cycles.
Other than that, the device functions normally, and agp_i810 should
attach to it.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
was possible for a regular user to setup the dump device if he had write access
to the given device. In theory it is a security issue as user might get access
to kernel's memory after provoking kernel crash, but in practise it is not
recommended to give regular users direct access to storage devices.
Rework the code so that we do privileges check within the set_dumper() function
to avoid similar problems in the future.
Discussed with: secteam
The prior change to not enable LRO by default has confused several
people. The configurations where LRO is problematic is not the
typical use case for VirtIO, and due to other issues, this often
requires checksum offloading to be disabled anyways.
PR: 185864
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Remove duplicated sources between standard part of the kernel and
module. In particular, it caused duplicated lock initialization and
sysctl registration, both having bad consequences.
- Add missed source files to module.
- Static part of the kernel provides randomdev module, not
random_adaptors. Correct dependencies.
- Use cdev modules declaration macros.
Approved by: secteam (delphij)
Reviewed by: markm
buffer from asm to C, which reduces amount of arguments for inline asm
and simplifies constraints. Use unsigned types consistently.
Submitted by: bde
Approved by: secteam (delphij)
Reviewed by: markm
MFC after: 1 week
After resource allocation and release, resource list entry
stays non-NULL. This causes panic in ofwbus_alloc_resource()
on subsequent resource allocation.
Clean appropriate list entry on release to avoid this.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Reviewed by: ian
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
it, except Ethernet, where it carried ng_ether(4) pointer.
For now carry the pointer in if_l2com directly.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
- Support the KDB alt break sequence to enter the debugger,
panic, reboot, etc. [1]
- Provide emergency write feature description. Note that QEMU
does not implement this feature.
- Make the VTCON_FLAG_* defines sequential once again.
- When the multiple port feature is not negotiated, query the
rows and columns of the one console during the device attach
when the size feature is negotiated.
- Report failure to the device if hot plugging a port fails.
- Acknowledge the console port event with an open event. This
is required by the spec, but QEMU doesn't seem to care.
Submitted by: Juniper [1]
MFC after: 1 month
-Improved VF stability, thanks to changes from Ryan Stone,
and Juniper.
- RSS fixes in the ixlv driver
- link detection in the ixlv driver
- New sysctl's added in ixl and ixlv
- reset timeout increased for ixlv
- stability fixes in detach
- correct media reporting
- Coverity warnings fixed
- Many small bug fixes
- VF Makefile modified - nvm shared code needed
- remove unused sleep channels in ixlv_sc struct
Submitted by: Eric Joyner (committed by jfv)
MFC after: 1 week
Therefore, to set histry size to 2000 lines, add the following line to
your kernel configuration file:
options SC_HISTORY_SIZE=2000
The default history remains at 500 lines.
MFC after: 1 week
some accumulated entropy twice and use that as the new key. Due to a
typo, we were using the output of the first hash round instead of the
second. Correct this, but eliminate temp[] since we can reuse hash[].
Also add comments explaining what is going on and why.
Noticed by: Sami Farin <sami.farin@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: markm@
Approved by: so (des)
on my part about north bridge/GPU pci ids and use of aperture.
Leave the agp_intel.c out of static compilation on amd64, it makes the
things consistent with agp.ko.
Pointed out by: tijl
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 13 days
... and their associated tunables. This gives a way to know the list of
available connectors, no matter the driver.
The problem is that xrandr(1) can list connectors but it uses a
different naming.
MFC after: 1 week
875. This intersects with the agp_i810.c, which supports all Intels
from i810 to Core i5/7. Both agp_intel.c and agp_i810.c are compiled
into kernel when device agp is specified in config, and agp_i810
attach seems to be selected by chance due to linking order.
Strip support for 810 and later from agp_intel.c. Since 440-class
chipsets do not support any long-mode capable CPUs, remove agp_intel.c
from amd64 kernel file list. Note that agp_intel.c is not compiled
into agp.ko on amd64 already.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
By default, vt(4) gets the "preferred mode" from DRM, when using a DRM
video driver as its backend. The preferred mode is usually the native
screen resolution.
Now, if this mode isn't appropriate, a user can use loader tunables to
select a mode. The tunables are read in the following order:
1. kern.vt.fb.modes.$connector_name
2. kern.vt.fb.default_mode
For example, to set a 1024x768 mode, no matter the connector:
kern.vt.fb.default_mode="1024x768"
To set a 800x600 mode only on the laptop builtin screen:
kern.vt.fb.modes.LVDS-1="800x600"
MFC after: 1 week
random_adaptors_lock is held.
- Use sx_sleep instead of tsleep in read and write path to allow
another thread that registers a new random adapter when waiting.
Assert that random_adaptor is not NULL after reacquiring the lock.
- Capture EINTR/ERESTART from sx_sleep to allow the blocking cycle be
stopped when user requests so, while there also make short
read/write's return 0.
- Move M_WAITOK allocations out of lock scope.
In collobration with: kib, markm, ian, jilles
Reviewed by: kib, markm
Approved by: so
The problem was that only the kbdmux keyboard index was saved in
vd->vd_keyboard. This index is -1 when kbdmux isn't used. In this
case, the keyboard was correctly allocated, but the returned index was
discarded.
PR: 194718
MFC after: 1 week
updating the GTT and flushing the AGP TLB by storing the GTT in
write-combining memory.
On x86 flushing the AGP TLB is done by an I/O operation or a store to a
MMIO register in uncacheable memory. Both cases imply that WC buffers are
flushed so no memory barriers are needed.
On powerpc there is no WC memory type. It maps to uncacheable memory and
two stores to uncacheable memory, such as to the GTT and then to an MMIO
register, are strongly ordered, so no memory barriers are needed either.
MFC after: 1 month
A new terminal_set_cursor() is added: it wraps the existing
teken_set_cursor() function.
In vtbuf_grow(), the cursor position is adjusted at the end of the
function. In vt_change_font(), we call terminal_set_cursor() just after
terminal_set_winsize_blank(), while the terminal is mute.
This fixes a bug where, after loading a kernel video driver which
increases the terminal window size, the cursor remains at its old
position, in other words, in the middle of the display content.
PR: 194421
MFC after: 1 week
hold the gpiobus lock between the gpio calls.
gpiobus_acquire_lock() now accepts a third parameter which tells gpiobus
what to do when the bus is already busy.
When GPIOBUS_WAIT wait is used, the calling thread will be put to sleep
until the bus became free.
With GPIOBUS_DONTWAIT the calling thread will receive EWOULDBLOCK right
away and then it can act upon.
This fixes the gpioiic(4) locking issues that arises when doing multiple
concurrent access on the bus.
This code has had an extensive rewrite and a good series of reviews, both by the author and other parties. This means a lot of code has been simplified. Pluggable structures for high-rate entropy generators are available, and it is most definitely not the case that /dev/random can be driven by only a hardware souce any more. This has been designed out of the device. Hardware sources are stirred into the CSPRNG (Yarrow, Fortuna) like any other entropy source. Pluggable modules may be written by third parties for additional sources.
The harvesting structures and consequently the locking have been simplified. Entropy harvesting is done in a more general way (the documentation for this will follow). There is some GREAT entropy to be had in the UMA allocator, but it is disabled for now as messing with that is likely to annoy many people.
The venerable (but effective) Yarrow algorithm, which is no longer supported by its authors now has an alternative, Fortuna. For now, Yarrow is retained as the default algorithm, but this may be changed using a kernel option. It is intended to make Fortuna the default algorithm for 11.0. Interested parties are encouraged to read ISBN 978-0-470-47424-2 "Cryptography Engineering" By Ferguson, Schneier and Kohno for Fortuna's gory details. Heck, read it anyway.
Many thanks to Arthur Mesh who did early grunt work, and who got caught in the crossfire rather more than he deserved to.
My thanks also to folks who helped me thresh this out on whiteboards and in the odd "Hallway track", or otherwise.
My Nomex pants are on. Let the feedback commence!
Reviewed by: trasz,des(partial),imp(partial?),rwatson(partial?)
Approved by: so(des)
in the radeonkms driver.
Note: In PCI mode virtual addresses on the graphics card that map to system
RAM are translated to physical addresses by the graphics card itself. In
AGP mode address translation is done by the AGP chipset so fictitious
addresses appear on the system bus. For the CPU cache management to work
correctly when the CPU accesses this memory it needs to use the same
fictitious addresses (and let the chipset translate them) instead of using
the physical addresses directly.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
initial MPA exchange must be tracked this way so that t4_tom's state for
the tid is all clean at the time the tid transitions to RDMA mode. Once
it does, t4_tom is out of the way and iw_cxgbe uses the qp endpoints
directly.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
directly accessed. Although this will work on some platforms, it can
throw an exception if the pointer is invalid and then panic the kernel.
Add a missing SYSCTL_IN() of "SCTP_BASE_STATS" structure.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
- Free rt in c4iw_connect only if it is allocated.
- Call soclose instead of so_shutdown if there is an abort from the peer.
- Close socket and return failure if TOE is not enabled.
Submitted by: Hariprasad at Chelsio dot com
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
transfers to be default. It simplifies porting code which assumes
such settings.
Discussed with: avg, llos, nwhitehorn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
It had two bugs: one where mmap was still allowed and another where
D_TRACKCLOSE doesn't handle all cases.
Thanks to jhb and kib for pointing them out.
MFC after: 1 week
In some cases, TSC is broken and special applications might benefit
from memory mapping HPET and reading the registers to count time.
Most often the main HPET counter is 32-bit only[1], so this only gives
the application a 300 second window based on the default HPET
interval.
Other applications, such as Intel's DPDK, expect /dev/hpet to be
present and use it to count time as well.
Although we have an almost userland version of gettimeofday() which
uses rdtsc in userland, it's not always possible to use it, depending
on how broken the multi-socket hardware is.
Install the acpi_hpet.h so that applications can use the HPET register
definitions.
[1] I haven't found a system where HPET's main counter uses more than
32 bit. There seems to be a discrepancy in the Intel documentation
(claiming it's a 64-bit counter) and the actual implementation (a
32-bit counter in a 64-bit memory area).
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
search (i.e. without returning any result) and you would end up with a
random MAC address.
Change the search algorithm to a recursive one to ensure that all the nodes
on DTS will be verified.
The previous algorithm could not keep up if the DTS has too many sub-nodes.
While here, fix the punctuation on comments.
To restore the default font using vidcontrol(1), use the "-f" flag
without an argument:
vidcontrol -f < /dev/ttyv0
PR: 193910
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D971
Submitted by: Marcin Cieslak <saper@saper.info>
Reviewed by: ray@, emaste@
Approved by: ray@
MFC after: 1 week
Support for the multiport feature is mostly implemented, but currently
disabled due to some potential races in the hot plug code paths.
Requested by: marcel
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Current FreeBSD netback names the interface with xnb<device unit>, but
this is not suitable for usage with the Xen toolstack, which expects
something similar to <prefix><domid><handle>. In order to solve this,
change the netback naming convention to use xnb<domid>.<handle>.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
dev/xen/netback/netback.c:
- Change netback to use the nomenclature stated above.
This device is only attached to priviledged domains, and allows the
toolstack to interact with Xen. The two functions of the privcmd
interface is to allow the execution of hypercalls from user-space, and
the mapping of foreign domain memory.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
i386/include/xen/hypercall.h:
amd64/include/xen/hypercall.h:
- Introduce a function to make generic hypercalls into Xen.
xen/interface/xen.h:
xen/interface/memory.h:
- Import the new hypercall XENMEM_add_to_physmap_range used by
auto-translated guests to map memory from foreign domains.
dev/xen/privcmd/privcmd.c:
- This device has the following functions:
- Allow user-space applications to make hypercalls into Xen.
- Allow user-space applications to map memory from foreign domains,
this is accomplished using the newly introduced hypercall
(XENMEM_add_to_physmap_range).
xen/privcmd.h:
- Public ioctl interface for the privcmd device.
x86/xen/hvm.c:
- Remove declaration of hypercall_page, now it's declared in
hypercall.h.
conf/files:
- Add the privcmd device to the build process.
The user-space event channel device is used by applications to receive
and send event channel interrupts. This device is based on the Linux
evtchn device.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
xen/evtchn/evtchn_dev.c:
- Remove the old event channel device, which was already disabled in
the build system.
dev/xen/evtchn/evtchn_dev.c:
- Import a new event channel device based on the one present in
Linux.
- This device allows the following operations:
- Bind VIRQ event channels (ioctl).
- Bind regular event channels (ioctl).
- Create and bind new event channels (ioctl).
- Unbind event channels (ioctl).
- Send notifications to event channels (ioctl).
- Reset the device shared memory ring (ioctl).
- Unmask event channels (write).
- Receive event channel upcalls (read).
- The new code is MP safe, and can be used concurrently.
conf/files:
- Add the new device to the build system.
the r241987 commit message, instead of having users locally overriding
the value using tunables in /boot/loader.conf .
Found by: Adam Parco
Discussed with: Nick Hibma
the Microsoft Azure service does not recognize the second
attached disk on the system.
Submitted by: kyliel@Microsoft
Patched by: weh@Microsoft
PR: 194376
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-10.1: yes, ASAP
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Wrong integer type was specified.
- Wrong or missing "access" specifier. The "access" specifier
sometimes included the SYSCTL type, which it should not, except for
procedural SYSCTL nodes.
- Logical OR where binary OR was expected.
- Properly assert the "access" argument passed to all SYSCTL macros,
using the CTASSERT macro. This applies to both static- and dynamically
created SYSCTLs.
- Properly assert the the data type for both static and dynamic
SYSCTLs. In the case of static SYSCTLs we only assert that the data
pointed to by the SYSCTL data pointer has the correct size, hence
there is no easy way to assert types in the C language outside a
C-function.
- Rewrote some code which doesn't pass a constant "access" specifier
when creating dynamic SYSCTL nodes, which is now a requirement.
- Updated "EXAMPLES" section in SYSCTL manual page.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Before, the font was loaded and the window size recalculated, giving an
unusable terminal, even if the actual font didn't change.
Reported by: beeessdee@ruggedinbox.com
MFC after: 3 days
Increasingly, FDT data has the "simple-bus" compatible string on nodes
that have children, but we wouldn't consider them to be busses. If the
node lacks a ranges property then we will fail to attach successfully,
so fail to probe as well.
consistent with pmc_destroy_owner_descriptor(). Also be sure to destroy
PMCs if a process exits or execs without explicitly releasing them.
Reviewed by: bz, gnn
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D958