Commit Graph

10935 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joe Marcus Clarke
0618630015 Remove the printf's when the vnode to be exported for procstat is not a VDIR.
If the file system backing a process' cwd is removed, and procstat -f PID
is called, then these messages would have been printed.  The extra verbosity is
not required in this situation.

Requested by:	kib
Approved by:	kib
2009-02-14 21:55:09 +00:00
Joe Marcus Clarke
03fd9c2092 Change two KASSERTS to printfs and simple returns. Stress testing has
revealed that a process' current working directory can be VBAD if the
directory is removed.  This can trigger a panic when procstat -f PID is
run.

Tested by:	pho
Discovered by:	phobot
Reviewed by:	kib
Approved by:	kib
2009-02-14 21:12:24 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
a1797ef6c8 Remove semicolon left in the last commit
Spotted by:	csjp
2009-02-13 18:51:39 +00:00
John Baldwin
ea77ff0a15 Use shared vnode locks when invoking VOP_READDIR().
MFC after:	1 month
2009-02-13 18:18:14 +00:00
Luigi Rizzo
d4619572b4 Clarify and reimplement the bioq API so that bioq_disksort() has
the correct behaviour (sorting by distance from the current head position
in the scan direction) and bioq_insert_head() and bioq_insert_tail()
have a well defined (and useful) behaviour, especially when intermixed
with calls to bioq_disksort().

In particular:
- fix a bug in the existing bioq_disksort() that did not use the
  current head position correctly;
- redefine semantics of bioq_insert_head() and bioq_insert_tail().
  bioq_insert_tail() can now be used as a barrier
  between previous and subsequent calls to bioq_disksort().

The code is heavily documented in the source code so please refer
to that for the details.

Much of this code comes from Fabio Checconi. Also thanks to Kirk
for feedback on the (re)definition of bioq_insert_tail().

NOTE: in the current tree there is only a handful of files which
intermix calls to bioq_disksort() with bioq_insert_head() and
bioq_insert_tail(). The ordering of the queue in these situation
was not specified (nor easy to figure out) before, so I doubt any
of that code could be affected by the specification of the API.

Also note that the current implementation is significantly simpler
than the previous one (also used in ata_sort_queue()).
It would be useful to reimplement ata_sort_queue() using
the same code used in bioq_disksort().

MFC after:	1 week
2009-02-13 11:36:32 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
24ef070126 Check the exit flag at the start of the taskqueue loop rather than the end. It
is possible to tear down the taskqueue before the thread has run and the
taskqueue loop would sleep forever.

Reviewed by:	sam
MFC after:	1 week
2009-02-13 01:16:51 +00:00
Ed Schouten
c0086bf202 Serialize write() calls on TTYs.
Just like the old TTY layer, the current MPSAFE TTY layer does not make
any attempt to serialize calls of write(). Data is copied into the
kernel in 256 (TTY_STACKBUF) byte chunks. If a write() call occurs at
the same time, the data may interleave. This is especially likely when
the TTY starts blocking, because the output queue reaches the high
watermark.

I've implemented this by adding a new flag, TTY_BUSY_OUT, which is used
to mark a TTY as having a thread stuck in write(). Because I don't want
non-blocking processes to be possibly blocked by a sleeping thread, I'm
still allowing it to bypass the protection. According to this message,
the Linux kernel returns EAGAIN in such cases, but I think that's a
little too restrictive:

	http://kerneltrap.org/index.php?q=mailarchive/linux-kernel/2007/5/2/85418/thread

PR:		kern/118287
2009-02-11 16:28:49 +00:00
Robert Watson
54fffe2d67 Modify fdcopy() so that, during fork(2), it won't copy file descriptors
from the parent to the child process if they have an operation vector
of &badfileops.  This narrows a set of races involving system calls that
allocate a new file descriptor, potentially block for some extended
period, and then return the file descriptor, when invoked by a threaded
program that concurrently invokes fork(2).  Similar approches are used
in both Solaris and Linux, and the wideness of this race was introduced
in FreeBSD when we moved to a more optimistic implementation of
accept(2) in order to simplify locking.

A small race necessarily remains because the fork(2) might occur after
the finit() in accept(2) but before the system call has returned, but
that appears unavoidable using current APIs.  However, this race is
vastly narrower.

The fix can be validated using the newfileops_on_fork regression test.

PR:		kern/130348
Reported by:	Ivan Shcheklein <shcheklein at gmail dot com>
Reviewed by:	jhb, kib
MFC after:	1 week
2009-02-11 15:22:01 +00:00
Warner Losh
c9584ebe61 o Use NULL in pereference to 0 in pointer contexts.
o Use newly minted KOBJMETHOD_END as appropriate
o fix prototype for root_setup_intr.
2009-02-11 04:54:02 +00:00
Alexander Motin
e05e00bcae Check for device_set_devclass() errors and skip driver probe/attach if any.
Attach call without devclass set crashes the system.

On resume AHCI driver sometimes tries to create duplicate adX device.
It is surely his own problem, but IMHO it is not a reason to crash here.
Other reasons are also possible.
2009-02-10 23:22:29 +00:00
Attilio Rao
a1d7ce03ea Scanning all the formats for binary translation of modules loading can
result in errors for a format loading but subsequent correct recognizing
for another format.

File format loading functions should avoid printing any additional
informations but just returning appropriate (and different between each
other) error condition, characterizing different informations.
Additively, the linker should handle appropriately different format
loading errors.

While a general mechanism is desired, fix a simple and common case on
amd64: file type is not recognized for link elf and confuses the linker.
Printout an error if all the registered linker classes can't recognize
and load the module.

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	Sandvine Incorporated
2009-02-10 15:50:19 +00:00
Robert Watson
e2757609ec Remove extra 'comma = 0' in socket state printing code, which otherwise
could lead to an extra comma in output.

Submitted by:   Christoph Mallon <christoph dot mallon at gmx dot de>
2009-02-09 18:19:58 +00:00
Martin Blapp
37e399b26e s/SS_FDREF/SS_NOFDREF/ 2009-02-09 13:29:01 +00:00
Ed Schouten
89d647cb30 Remove a stale comment from the clists code.
We don't support quote bits.
2009-02-09 11:27:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
8941aad19b Tweak the output of VOP_PRINT/vn_printf() some.
- Align the fifo output in fifo_print() with other vn_printf() output.
- Remove the leading space from lockmgr_printinfo() so its output lines up
  in vn_printf().
- lockmgr_printinfo() now ends with a newline, so remove an extra newline
  from vn_printf().
2009-02-06 20:06:48 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
ec48c16f14 Add KASSERTs to make it easier to debug problems like the one fixed
in r188141.

Reviewed by:	kib,attilio
Approved by:	rwatson (mentor)
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2009-02-06 18:16:01 +00:00
John Baldwin
875b66a05b Expand the scope of the sysctllock sx lock to protect the sysctl tree itself.
Back in 1.1 of kern_sysctl.c the sysctl() routine wired the "old" userland
buffer for most sysctls (everything except kern.vnode.*).  I think to prevent
issues with wiring too much memory it used a 'memlock' to serialize all
sysctl(2) invocations, meaning that only one user buffer could be wired at
a time.  In 5.0 the 'memlock' was converted to an sx lock and renamed to
'sysctl lock'.  However, it still only served the purpose of serializing
sysctls to avoid wiring too much memory and didn't actually protect the
sysctl tree as its name suggested.  These changes expand the lock to actually
protect the tree.

Later on in 5.0, sysctl was changed to not wire buffers for requests by
default (sysctl_handle_opaque() will still wire buffers larger than a single
page, however).  As a result, user buffers are no longer wired as often.
However, many sysctl handlers still wire user buffers, so it is still
desirable to serialize userland sysctl requests.  Kernel sysctl requests
are allowed to run in parallel, however.

- Expose sysctl_lock()/sysctl_unlock() routines to exclusively lock the
  sysctl tree for a few places outside of kern_sysctl.c that manipulate
  the sysctl tree directly including the kernel linker and vfs_register().
- sysctl_register() and sysctl_unregister() require the caller to lock
  the sysctl lock using sysctl_lock() and sysctl_unlock().  The rest of
  the public sysctl API manage the locking internally.
- Add a locked variant of sysctl_remove_oid() for internal use so that
  external uses of the API do not need to be aware of locking requirements.
- The kernel linker no longer needs Giant when manipulating the sysctl
  tree.
- Add a missing break to the loop in vfs_register() so that we stop looking
  at the sysctl MIB once we have changed it.

MFC after:	1 month
2009-02-06 14:51:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
e4d9b9eb18 Drop the kernel linker lock while running SYSUNINIT routines and removing
sysctls during a linker file unload.  We drop the lock when doing similar
operations during a linker file load.  To close races, clear the LINKED
flag before dropping the lock so that the linker file is no longer visible
to userland.

MFC after:	1 week
2009-02-05 23:01:36 +00:00
Attilio Rao
feabc903d9 Add more KTR_VFS logging point in order to have a more effective tracing.
Reviewed by:	brueffer, kib
Tested by:	Gianni Trematerra <giovanni D trematerra A gmail D com>
2009-02-05 15:03:35 +00:00
Ed Schouten
c3328b2ab8 Don't leave the console TTY constantly open.
When we leave the console TTY constantly open, we never reset the
termios attributes. This causes output processing, echoing, etc. not to
be reset to the proper values when going into single user mode after the
system has booted. It also causes nl-to-crnl-conversion not to take
place during shutdown, which causes a `staircase effect'.

This patch adds a new TTY flag, TF_OPENED_CONS, which is set when the
TTY is opened through /dev/console. Because the flags are only used by
the kernel and the pstat(8) utility, I've decided to renumber the TTY
flags. This shouldn't be an issue, because the TTY layer is not yet part
of a stable release.

Reported by:	Mark Atkinson <atkin901 yahoo com>
Tested by:	sepotvin
2009-02-05 14:21:09 +00:00
Jamie Gritton
ca04ba6430 Don't allow creating a socket with a protocol family that the current
jail doesn't support.  This involves a new function prison_check_af,
like prison_check_ip[46] but that checks only the family.

With this change, most of the errors generated by jailed sockets
shouldn't ever occur, at least until jails are changeable.

Approved by:	bz (mentor)
2009-02-05 14:15:18 +00:00
Jamie Gritton
b89e82dd87 Standardize the various prison_foo_ip[46] functions and prison_if to
return zero on success and an error code otherwise.  The possible errors
are EADDRNOTAVAIL if an address being checked for doesn't match the
prison, and EAFNOSUPPORT if the prison doesn't have any addresses in
that address family.  For most callers of these functions, use the
returned error code instead of e.g. a hard-coded EADDRNOTAVAIL or
EINVAL.

Always include a jailed() check in these functions, where a non-jailed
cred always returns success (and makes no changes).  Remove the explicit
jailed() checks that preceded many of the function calls.

Approved by:	bz (mentor)
2009-02-05 14:06:09 +00:00
Edward Tomasz Napierala
27dd8057d3 In some situations, mnt_lockref could go negative due to vfs_unbusy() being
called without calling vfs_busy() first.  This made umount(8) hang waiting
for mnt_lockref to become zero, which would never happen.

Reviewed by:	kib
Approved by:	rwatson (mentor)
Reported by:	pho
Found with:	stress2
Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2009-02-05 08:46:18 +00:00
Robert Watson
fd4f1ebdfe Remove written-to but never read local variable 'offset' from
soreceive_dgram().

Submitted by:	Christoph Mallon <christoph dot mallon at gmx dot de>
MFC after:	1 week
2009-02-04 20:00:17 +00:00
Ed Schouten
f98f752202 Remove slush space from clists.
Right now we only have a very small amount of drivers that use clists,
but we still allocate 50 cblocks as slush space, which allows drivers to
temporarily overcommit their storage. Most of the drivers don't allow
this anyway.

I've performed the following changes:

- We don't allocate any cblocks on startup.

- I've removed the DDB command, because it has nothing useful to print
  now. You can obtain the amount of allocated blocks by running `vmstat
  -m | grep clist'.

- I've removed cfreecount, which is now unused.

- The old code first tries to allocate using M_NOWAIT, followed by
  M_WAITOK. This doesn't make any sense, so just remove this logic. It
  seems the drivers allow us to sleep anyway.

We can even remove ccmax from clist_alloc_cblocks and c_cbmax from
struct clist, but this breaks binary compatibility.

This reduces the amount of allocated cblocks on my system from 54 to 4.
2009-02-04 17:10:01 +00:00
Ed Schouten
41ba7e9b13 Slightly improve the design of the TTY buffer.
The TTY buffers used the standard <sys/queue.h> lists. Unfortunately
they have a big shortcoming. If you want to have a double linked list,
but no tail pointer, it's still not possible to obtain the previous
element in the list. Inside the buffers we don't need them. This is why
I switched to custom linked list macros. The macros will also keep track
of the amount of items in the list. Because it doesn't use a sentinel,
we can just initialize the queues with zero.

In its simplest form (the output queue), we will only keep two
references to blocks in the queue, namely the head of the list and the
last block in use. All free blocks are stored behind the last block in
use.

I noticed there was a very subtle bug in the previous code: in a very
uncommon corner case, it would uma_zfree() a block in the queue before
calling memcpy() to extract the data from the block.
2009-02-03 19:58:28 +00:00
Warner Losh
2c204a1631 Use NULL in preference to 0 in pointer contexts. 2009-02-03 07:54:42 +00:00
Warner Losh
13b4c4c3a3 Make bioq_disksort have a ANSI-C definition rather than a K&R definition. 2009-02-03 07:53:51 +00:00
Warner Losh
8ed4d9c970 rman_debug should be static, so make it static. 2009-02-03 07:53:08 +00:00
Warner Losh
bada728732 Use ANSI function definition for profil. 2009-02-03 07:52:36 +00:00
Warner Losh
04d17b6283 Prefer ANSI function definitions to K&R ones. 2009-02-03 07:52:07 +00:00
Warner Losh
d710cae75a Use NULL in preference to 0 for pointers. 2009-02-03 07:51:41 +00:00
Warner Losh
4592c621f3 Use NULL in preference to 0 for pointers. 2009-02-03 07:51:11 +00:00
Warner Losh
8260e3a4c0 o Use unsigned for bit fields.
o Use NULL for pointers in preference to 0.
2009-02-03 07:50:41 +00:00
Warner Losh
9483543dfc int foo(void) is the proper ANSI function definition when there's no
parameters.  Use it for resettodr().
2009-02-03 07:50:01 +00:00
Warner Losh
bdf331d450 Declare bus_data_devices to be static: it isn't used elsewhere.
Use NULL in a couple of places rather than 0 in the context of
pointers to be consistent with the rest of the file.
2009-02-03 00:10:21 +00:00
Stephane E. Potvin
60b7f468da Fix select on platforms where sizeof(long) != sizeof(int). This used
to work by accident before the cleanup done in revision 187693.

Approved by:	kan (mentor)
2009-02-02 03:34:40 +00:00
Robert Watson
ad765b0945 If a process is a zombie and we couldn't identify another useful state,
print out the state as "zombine" in preference to "unknown" when ^T is
pressed.

MFC after:	3 days
Sponsored by:	Google, Inc.
2009-01-29 09:32:56 +00:00
Ed Schouten
f3b86a5fd7 Mark most often used sysctl's as MPSAFE.
After running a `make buildkernel', I noticed most of the Giant locks in
sysctl are only caused by a very small amount of sysctl's:

- sysctl.name2oid. This one is locked by SYSCTL_LOCK, just like
  sysctl.oidfmt.

- kern.ident, kern.osrelease, kern.version, etc. These are just constant
  strings.

- kern.arandom, used by the stack protector. It is already protected by
  arc4_mtx.

I also saw the following sysctl's show up. Not as often as the ones
above, but still quite often:

- security.jail.jailed. Also mark security.jail.list as MPSAFE. They
  don't need locking or already use allprison_lock.

- kern.devname, used by devname(3), ttyname(3), etc.

This seems to reduce Giant locking inside sysctl by ~75% in my primitive
test setup.
2009-01-28 19:58:05 +00:00
John Baldwin
9078981ab1 Convert the global mutex protecting the directory lookup name cache from a
mutex to a reader/writer lock.  Lookup operations first grab a read lock and
perform the lookup.  If the operation results in a need to modify the cache,
then it tries to do an upgrade.  If that fails, it drops the read lock,
obtains a write lock, and redoes the lookup.
2009-01-28 19:05:18 +00:00
Ed Schouten
8e700fb80c Use the proper flag to let kern.ttys be executed without Giant.
Pointed out by:	jhb
2009-01-26 16:43:18 +00:00
John Baldwin
4e30a2db51 Whitespace tweak. 2009-01-26 15:32:39 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
9cdacff1d3 - bit has to be fd_mask to work properly on 64bit platforms. Constants
must also be cast even though the result ultimately is promoted
   to 64bit.
 - Correct a loop index upper bound in selscan().
2009-01-25 18:38:42 +00:00
Robert Watson
95c807cf5e When a statically linked binary is executed (or at least, one without
an interpreter definition in its program header), set the auxiliary
ELF argument AT_BASE to 0 rather than to the address that we would
have mapped the interpreter at if there had been one.

The ELF ABI specifications appear to be ambiguous as to the desired
behavior in this situation, as they define AT_BASE as the base address
of the interpreter, but do not mention what to do if there is none.
On Solaris, AT_BASE will be set to the base address of the static
binary if there is no interpreter, and on Linux, AT_BASE is set to 0.
We go with the Linux semantics as they are of more immediate utility
and allow the early runtime environment to know that the kernel has
not mapped an interpreter, but because AT_PHDR points at the ELF
header for the running binary, it is still possible to retrieve all
required mapping information when the process starts should it be
required.  Either approach would be preferable to our current behavior
of passing a pointer to an unmapped region of user memory as AT_BASE.

MFC after:	3 weeks
2009-01-25 12:07:43 +00:00
Bjoern A. Zeeb
1cecba0fcd For consistency with prison_{local,remote,check}_ipN rename
prison_getipN to prison_get_ipN.

Submitted by:	jamie (as part of a larger patch)
MFC after:	1 week
2009-01-25 10:11:58 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
748b9df687 - Correct a typo in a comment.
Noticed by:	danger
2009-01-25 09:17:16 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
e20a199fd5 - Make the keg abstraction more complete. Permit a zone to have multiple
backend kegs so it may source compatible memory from multiple backends.
   This is useful for cases such as NUMA or different layouts for the same
   memory type.
 - Provide a new api for adding new backend kegs to secondary zones.
 - Provide a new flag for adjusting the layout of zones to stagger
   allocations better across cache lines.

Sponsored by:	Nokia
2009-01-25 09:11:24 +00:00
Ed Schouten
30bf032c76 Remove unneeded use of device unit numbers from pty(4).
A much more simple approach to generate the slave device name, is to
obtain the device name of the master and replace 'p' by 't'.
2009-01-25 08:27:11 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
0d2cf8374a - Use __XSTRING where I want the define to be expanded. This resulted in
sizeof("MAXCPU") being used to calculate a string length rather than
   something more reasonable such as sizeof("32").  This shouldn't have
   caused any ill effect until we run on machines with 1000000 or more
   cpus.
2009-01-25 07:35:10 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
11b763df19 Fix errors introduced when I rewrote select.
- Restructure selscan() and selrescan() to avoid producing extra selfps
   when we have a fd in multiple sets.  As described below multiple selfps
   may still exist for other reasons.
 - Make selrescan() tolerate multiple selfds for a given descriptor
   set since sockets use two selinfos per fd.  If an event on each selinfo
   fires selrescan() will see the descriptor twice.  This could result in
   select() returning 2x the number of fds actually existing in fd sets.

Reported by:	mgleason@ncftp.com
2009-01-25 07:24:34 +00:00