This is a long-standing bug, but until recent changes it was difficult
to trigger, and even then its impact was non-catastrophic, with the
exception of revision 1.157.
Optimize chunk_alloc_mmap() to avoid the need for unmapping pages in the
common case. Thanks go to Kris Kennaway for a patch that inspired this
change.
Do not maintain a record of previously mmap'ed chunk address ranges.
The original intent was to avoid the extra system call overhead in
chunk_alloc_mmap(), which is no longer a concern. This also allows some
simplifications for the tree of unused DSS chunks.
Introduce huge_mtx and dss_chunks_mtx to replace chunks_mtx. There was
no compelling reason to use the same mutex for these disjoint purposes.
Avoid memset() for huge allocations when possible.
Maintain two trees instead of one for tracking unused DSS address
ranges. This allows scalable allocation of multi-chunk huge objects in
the DSS. Previously, multi-chunk huge allocation requests failed if the
DSS could not be extended.
that I've been working on but put off committing until after the
RELENG_7 branch, including:
* New manpages: cpio.5 mtree.5
* New archive_entry_strmode()
* New archive_entry_link_resolver()
* New read support: mtree format
* Internal API change: read format auction only runs once
* Running the auction only once allowed simplifying a lot of bid logic.
* Cpio robustness: search for next header after a sync error
* Support device nodes on ISO9660 images
* Eliminate a lot of unnecessary copies for uncompressed archives
* Corrected handling of new GNU --sparse --posix formats
* Correctly handle a zero-byte write to a compressed archive
* Fixed memory leaks
Many of these improvements were motivated by the upcoming bsdcpio
front-end.
There have also been extensive improvements to the libarchive_test
test harness, which I'll commit separately.
global list of all files.
- Mark kvm_getfiles() as broken since the live version exports struct xfile
with no filelist at the head and does so incorrectly and the deadfiles
version exports struct file with a filelist at the head. It is not known
if either version works or complies to the manpage.
- Introduce a finit() which is used to initailize the fields of struct file
in such a way that the ops vector is only valid after the data, type,
and flags are valid.
- Protect f_flag and f_count with atomic operations.
- Remove the global list of all files and associated accounting.
- Rewrite the unp garbage collection such that it no longer requires
the global list of all files and instead uses a list of all unp sockets.
- Mark sockets in the accept queue so we don't incorrectly gc them.
Tested by: kris, pho
possible to end up in the interrupt handler again while processing the
previous RX interrupt in ifp->if_input() because the MD interrupt code
disables the delivery of the respective interrupt until all associated
handlers were called (in the INTR_FILTER case the MI code supposedly
does the same). Toggling the NIC interrupt enable bit in these handlers
still is necessary though as some chips (f.e. the VMware emulated one)
require this to be done in order to keep issuing interrupts.
MFC after: 1 month
implemented with macros. This patch improves code readability. Reasoning
behind vidd_* is a sort of "video discipline".
List of macros is supposed to be complete--all methods of video_switch
ought to have their respective macros from now on.
Functionally, this code should be no-op. My intention is to leave current
behaviour of touched code as is.
No objections: rwatson
Silence on: freebsd-current@
Approved by: cognet
implemented with macros. This patch improves code readability. Reasoning
behind kbdd_* is a "keyboard discipline".
List of macros is supposed to be complete--all methods of keyboard_switch
should have their respective macros from now on.
Functionally, this code should be no-op. My intention is to leave current
behaviour of code as is.
Glanced at by: rwatson
Reviewed by: emax, marcel
Approved by: cognet
machine-independent support for superpages. (The earlier part was
the rewrite of the physical memory allocator.) The remainder of the
code required for superpages support is machine-dependent and will
be added to the various pmap implementations at a later date.
Initially, I am only supporting one large page size per architecture.
Moreover, I am only enabling the reservation system on amd64. (In
an emergency, it can be disabled by setting VM_NRESERVLEVELS to 0
in amd64/include/vmparam.h or your kernel configuration file.)
argument. It allows ppp, mpd or any other node consumer to request
connection to specified access concentrator.
Proposed by: Alexander A. Burylov <burylov@mail.ru>
"month names" -> "months names"
typo
"Long months names (alternative)" or "in alternative form" ->
"(without case ending)"
"Long months names" -> "Long months names (as in a date)"
to not confuse developers on what purpose those sections are
Without it, code has two problems:
- behaviour of the old and new [l]stat are different with regard of
the /compat/linux
- directly accessing the userspace data from the kernel asks for
the panics.
Reported and tested by: Peter Holm
Reviewed by: rdivacky
MFC after: 3 days
the inode, do the rollback in case the allocation failed (due to
insufficient free space or quota limits). But, the code does leaves the
buffers corresponding to the inoirect blocks on the vnode bufobj list.
This causes several assertion failures (for instance, "ffs_truncate3"
in ffs_truncate()) to fail, and could result in the indirect block
aliasing problem, like writing the context of such blocks to random
disk location.
Remove the buffers from the bufobj properly.
Reported and tested by: Peter Holm
Reviewed by: tegge
MFC after: 3 weeks
sys/types.h polution that FreeBSD has in one of its include files.
Since this is a bootstrap tool, include more than is strictly
necessary for FreeBSD.
we would leak a saved screen for every other package we tried to install
that listed perl as one of its dependencies. When installing things
like gnome and kde that wound up being a LOT of leaked memory.
Insta-MFC request coming so this can be tested as part of 6.3-RC2...
Testing help from: kris
paragraph clarifying that portsnap does not behave the same way as
cvs and cvsup where local modifications are concerned.
Submitted by: peter
Feet shot: peter, kris, obrien, + many others
order to support re-use of multi-chunk unused regions within the DSS for
huge allocations. This generalization is important to correct function
when mmap-based allocation is disabled.
Avoid zeroing re-used memory in the DSS unless it really needs to be
zeroed.
too small for today's standards. While loading packages sysinstall
blows past this by a LOT but I think (hope...) that's caused by other
bugs. I'll look more into why sysinstall's memory use has gotten so
out of control as it loads packages but independent of that there really
is no reason to leave the limits on datasize and stacksize in place. And
they can cause problems for some of the things "modern packages" might
be doing via pkg_add which gets run by sysinstall and would inherit the
limits.
Another insta-MFC probably coming, this is holding up 6.3-RC2. Sysinstall's
memory use is so out of control it blows past the current limit before it
finishes loading either of the meta-packages kde or gnome...
so that the results end up in the DDB output stream rather than the
console output stream.
This should likely also be done for the vprint() function it calls.
MFC after: 3 months
This option just adds complexity and the new implementation no longer
will support it, so axing it now that it is unused is probabilly the
better idea.
FreeBSD version is bumped in order to reflect the KPI breakage introduced
by this patch.
In the ports tree, kris found that only old OSKit code uses it, but as
it is thought to work only on 2.x kernels serie, version bumping will
solve any problem.
memory is acquired from the system via sbrk(2) and/or mmap(2). By default,
use sbrk(2) only, in order to support traditional use of resource limits.
Additionally, when both options are enabled, prefer the data segment to
anonymous mappings, in order to coexist better with large file mappings
in applications on 32-bit platforms. This change has the potential to
increase memory fragmentation due to the linear nature of the data
segment, but from a performance perspective this is mitigated by the use
of madvise(2). [1]
Add the ability to interpret integer prefixes in MALLOC_OPTIONS
processing. For example, MALLOC_OPTIONS=lllllllll can now be specified as
MALLOC_OPTIONS=9l.
Reported by: [1] rwatson
Design review: [1] alc, peter, rwatson
with the interlock), owner of the lock should be only curthread or at
least, for its limited usage, NULL which identifies LK_KERNPROC.
The thread "extra argument" for the lockmgr interface is going to be
removed in the near future, but for the moment, just let kernel run for
some days with this check on in order to find potential deadlocking
places around the kernel and fix them.
p_candebug() will return EAGAIN which, if the other process never
leaves execve(), will result in the sysctl spinning and never returning
to userspace. Processes should always eventually leave execve(), but
spinning in kernel while we wait is bad for countless reasons, and
particularly harmful if execve() itself is deadlocked.
Possibly we should return another error, or return a marker indicating
the thread is in execve() so it can be reported that way in userspace.
Reported by: kris
rather than the memcmp() which is used for regular dumps: the
textdump string is one character shorter, so we need to stop
comparing at the end of the string.
Use independent version checking logic for architecture-specific
version number vs. textdump version number, as the version sequences
may (someday) differ.
Run into by: rrs
equivalent with this and so operate the switch.
That call is the only one remaining LK_EXCLUPGRADE consumer and removing
it will prepare the ground for LK_EXCLUPGRADE axing and further
lockmgr improvements.
Discussed with: jeff, ups