Remove NAKing limit and pause IN and OUT transactions for 125us in
case of NAK response for BULK and CONTROL endpoints. This gets the
receive latency down and improves USB network throughput at the cost
of some CPU usage.
MFC after: 1 month
ordering semantic of x86 CPUs makes only the compiler barrier
neccessary to give the acquire behaviour.
Existing implementation ensured sequentially consistent semantic for
load_acq, making much stronger guarantee than required by standard's
definition of the load acquire. Consumers which depend on the barrier
are believed to be identified and already fixed to use proper
operations.
Noted by: alc (long time ago)
Reviewed by: alc, bde
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
sosend(). The only release on the xp_snt_cnt is done after sosend(),
with an intent to synchronize with load_acq in svc_vc_ack().
Reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
The file_create() system call can be used to create files of a given
type. Right now it can only be used to create directories and FIFOs. As
CloudABI does not expose filesystem permissions, this system call lacks
a mode argument. Simply use 0777 or 0666 depending on the file type.
Summary:
CloudABI provides access to two different stat structures:
- fdstat, containing file descriptor level status: oflags, file
descriptor type and Capsicum rights, used by cap_rights_get(),
fcntl(F_GETFL), getsockopt(SO_TYPE).
- filestat, containing your regular file status: timestamps, inode
number, used by fstat().
Unlike FreeBSD's stat::st_mode, CloudABI file descriptor types don't
have overloaded meanings (e.g., returning S_ISCHR() for kqueues). Add a
utility function to extract the type of a file descriptor accurately.
CloudABI does not work with O_ACCMODEs. File descriptors have two sets
of Capsicum-style rights: rights that apply to the file descriptor
itself ('base') and rights that apply to any new file descriptors
yielded through openat() ('inheriting'). Though not perfect, we can
pretty safely decompose Capsicum rights to such a pair. This is done in
convert_capabilities().
Test Plan: Tests for these system calls are fairly extensive in cloudlibc.
Reviewers: jonathan, mjg, #manpages
Reviewed By: mjg
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3171
making clear transits between different states, and avoids bug with
handling repeated $'s.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3221
xhci_start_controller() to xhci_init(). These values don't change at run-
time so there's no point of acquiring them on every USB_HW_POWER_RESUME
instead of only once during initialization. In r276717, reading the first
couple of registers in question already had been moved as a prerequisite
for the changes in that revision.
- Identify ASMedia ASM1042A controllers.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
MFC after: 3 days
Summary:
Back in 2005, maxim@ attempted to fix shutdown() to return ENOTCONN in case the socket was not connected (r150152). This had to be rolled back (r150155), as it broke some of the existing programs that depend on this behavior. I reapplied this change on my system and indeed, syslogd failed to start up. I fixed this back in February (279016) and MFC'ed it to the supported stable branches. Apart from that, things seem to work out all right.
Since at least Linux and Mac OS X do the right thing, I'd like to go ahead and give this another try. To keep old copies of syslogd working, only start returning ENOTCONN for recent binaries.
I took a look at the XNU sources and they seem to test against both SS_ISCONNECTED, SS_ISCONNECTING and SS_ISDISCONNECTING, instead of just SS_ISCONNECTED. That seams reasonable, so let's do the same.
Test Plan:
This issue was uncovered while writing tests for shutdown() in CloudABI:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc/blob/master/src/libc/sys/socket/shutdown_test.c#L26
Reviewers: glebius, rwatson, #manpages, gnn, #network
Reviewed By: gnn, #network
Subscribers: bms, mjg, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3039
variant of Microsoft RNDIS, i. e. their unofficial version of CDC ACM,
has been disabled in r261544 for resolving a conflict with umodem(4).
Eventually, in r275790 that problem was dealt with in the right way.
However, r275790 failed to put probing of RNDIS devices in question
back.
- Initialize the device prior to querying it, as required by the RNDIS
specification. Otherwise already determining the MAC address may fail
rightfully.
- On detach, halt the device again.
- Use UCDC_SEND_ENCAPSULATED_{COMMAND,RESPONSE}. While these macros are
resolving to the same values as UR_{CLEAR_FEATURE,GET_STATUS}, the
former set is way more appropriate in this context.
- Report unknown - rather: unimplemented - events unconditionally and
not just in debug mode. This ensures that we'll get some hint of what
is going wrong instead of the driver silently failing.
- Deal with the Microsoft ActiveSync requirement of using an input buffer
the size of the expected reply or larger - except for variably sized
replies - when querying a device.
- Fix some pointless NULL checks, style bugs etc.
This changes allow urndis(4) to communicate with a Microsoft-certified
USB RNDIS test token.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: genua mbh
Summary:
CloudABI provides two different types of futex objects: read-write locks
and condition variables. There is no need to provide separate support
for once objects and thread joining, as these are efficiently simulated
by blocking on a read-write lock. Mutexes simply use read-write locks.
Condition variables always have a lock object associated to them. They
always know to which lock a thread needs to be migrated if woken up.
This allows us to implement requeueing. A broadcast on a condition
variable will never cause multiple threads to be woken up at once. They
will be woken up iteratively.
This implementation still has lots of room for improvement. Locking is
coarse and right now we use linked lists to store all of the locks and
condition variables, instead of using a hash table. The primary goal of
this implementation was to behave correctly. Performance will be
improved as we go.
Test Plan:
This futex implementation has been in use for the last couple of months
and seems to work pretty well. All of the cloudlibc and libc++ unit
tests seem to pass.
Reviewers: dchagin, kib, vangyzen
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3148
Futex object scopes have been renamed from using their own constants to
simply reusing the existing CLOUDABI_MAP_{PRIVATE,SHARED} flags, as they
are more accurate in this context.
identification (e.g. isa:0x3f0 or pci0:2:1:0). In libbus,
the device is turned into a path name. For bus_space_map(),
the resource is now specified in a second argument.
Before:
bus.map('/dev/proto/pci0:2:1:0/pcicfg')
busdma.tag_create('/dev/proto/pci0:2:1:0/busdma', ...)
Now:
bus.map('pci0:2:1:0', 'pcicfg')
busdma.tag_create('pci0:2:1:0', ...)
Rationale: ident(1) is useful out of RCS, lot of scripts are using ident(1) and
failing when base is built WITHOUT_RCS.
This version is:
- fully compatible with RCS 5.7 ident.
- fully compatible with RCS 5.9 ident.
- passes all ident test from GNU RCS 5.9 test suite
This version has support for: svn extension for the Keyword id (double colon and
# before last $)
Différences with GNU RCS ident:
- no long options as found in GNU RCS 5.9 (but not commented there).
- '-V' reports nothing but has been added for compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3200
Reviewed by: pfg
Currently LOCK_DEBUG is always defined in sys/lock.h (0 or 1).
This means that debugging code always built. In addition the kernel
modules have always defined LOCK_DEBUG as 1. So, debugging rmlock code
is always used by kernel modules.
MFC after: 1 week
determining whether a node changed.
Other filesystems, e.g., UFS, only check on seconds, when determining
whether something changed.
This also corrects the birthtime case, where we checked tv_nsec
twice, instead of tv_sec and tv_nsec (PR).
PR: 201284
Submitted by: David Binderman
Patch suggested by: kib
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Committed from: Essen FreeBSD Hackathon
This is required by our FORTIFY_SOURCE implementation as it
does more inlining. As a rule of thumb, FORTIFY_SOURCE doubles
the number of inlines except that in grep inlining
blows up for some reason.
Assume that a vnode is mapped shared and mlocked(), and then the vnode
is truncated, or truncated and then again extended past the mapping
point EOF. Truncation removes the pages past the truncation point,
and if pages are later created at this range, they are not properly
mapped into the mlocked region, and their wiring count is wrong.
The revert leaves the invalidated but wired pages on the object queue,
which means that the pages are found by vm_object_unwire() when the
mapped range is munlock()ed, and reused by the buffer cache when the
vnode is extended again.
The changes in r173708 were required since then vm_map_unwire() looked
at the page tables to find the page to unwire. This is no longer
needed with the vm_object_unwire() introduction, which follows the
objects shadow chain.
Also eliminate OBJPR_NOTWIRED flag for vm_object_page_remove(), which
is now redundand, we do not remove wired pages.
Reported by: trasz, Dmitry Sivachenko <trtrmitya@gmail.com>
Suggested and reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
to no longer claim they are experimental.
Reviewed by: rwatson@, wblock@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2985
b_kvabase when the buffer is reclaimed. Otherwise, if b_data for the
mapped buffer was adjusted with the page-offset portion of b_offset,
nothing would re-adjust the b_data, which breaks buffer management
code which expects page-aligned b_data (see e.g. bpman_qenter(), which
skips partial pages).
Fix a minor issue with the GB_KVAALLOC requests, which could result in
returning the mapped buffer if the reused buffer is mapped and have
the right amount of KVA reserved.
Improve assertion in the vfs_buf_check_mapped() to catch unmapped
buffers which have their b_data incorrectly adjusted with offset.
Reported and tested by: pho (previous version)
Reviewed by: jeff (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
but it's hard to find and easy to miss.
Reviewed by: wblock@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3183