For these devices, the number of supported ports is read from a register
in BAR 0.
PR: kern/134878
Submitted by: David Wood david of wood2 org uk
MFC after: 1 week
boot2 calls back into boot1 to perform disk reads. The ZFS MBR boot blocks
do not have the same space constraints, so remove this hack for ZFS.
While here, remove commented out code to support C/H/S addressing from
zfsldr. The ZFS and GPT bootstraps always just use EDD LBA addressing.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This tool can be used to print statistics, registers, and
other device specific information once the driver is loaded
into the kernel.
Submitted by: Sriram Rapuru from Exar
MFC after: 2 weeks
disk dumping.
With the option SW_WATCHDOG on, these operations are doomed to let
watchdog fire, fi they take too long.
I implemented the stubs this way because I really want wdog_kern_*
KPI to not be dependant by SW_WATCHDOG being on (and really, the option
only enables watchdog activation in hardclock) and also avoid to
call them when not necessary (avoiding not-volountary watchdog
activations).
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Discussed with: emaste, des
MFC after: 2 weeks
- 77115: Implement support for O_DIRECT.
- 98425: Fix a performance issue introduced in 70131 that was causing
reads before writes even when writing full blocks.
- 98658: Rename the BALLOC flags from B_* to BA_* to avoid confusion with
the struct buf B_ flags.
- 100344: Merge the BA_ and IO_ flags so so that they may both be used in
the same flags word. This merger is possible by assigning the IO_ flags
to the low sixteen bits and the BA_ flags the high sixteen bits.
- 105422: Fix a file-rewrite performance case.
- 129545: Implement IO_INVAL in VOP_WRITE() by marking the buffer as
"no cache".
- Readd the DOINGASYNC() macro and use it to control asynchronous writes.
Change i-node updates to honor DOINGASYNC() instead of always being
synchronous.
- Use a PRIV_VFS_RETAINSUGID check instead of checking cr_uid against 0
directly when deciding whether or not to clear suid and sgid bits.
Submitted by: Pedro F. Giffuni giffunip at yahoo
* enable 11n
* add ath_ahb so the AHB<->ath glue is linked in
* disable descriptor order swapping, it isn't needed here
* disable interrupt mitigation, it isn't supported here
The AR9130 is an AR9160/AR5416 family WMAC which is glued directly
to the AR913x SoC peripheral bus (APB) rather than via a PCI/PCIe
bridge.
The specifics:
* A new build option is required to use the AR9130 - AH_SUPPORT_AR9130.
This is needed due to the different location the RTC registers live
with this chip; hopefully this will be undone in the future.
This does currently mean that enabling this option will break non-AR9130
builds, so don't enable it unless you're specifically building an image
for the AR913x SoC.
* Add the new probe, attach, EEPROM and PLL methods specific to Howl.
* Add a work-around to ah_eeprom_v14.c which disables some of the checks
for endian-ness and magic in the EEPROM image if an eepromdata block
is provided. This'll be fixed at a later stage by porting the ath9k
probe code and making sure it doesn't break in other setups (which
my previous attempt at this did.)
* Sprinkle Howl modifications throughput the interrupt path - it doesn't
implement the SYNC interrupt registers, so ignore those.
* Sprinkle Howl chip powerup/down throughout the reset path; the RTC methods
were
* Sprinkle some other Howl workarounds in the reset path.
* Hard-code an alternative setup for the AR_CFG register for Howl, that
sets up things suitable for Big-Endian MIPS (which is the only platform
this chip is glued to.)
This has been tested on the AR913x based TP-Link WR-1043nd mode, in
legacy, HT/20 and HT/40 modes.
Caveats:
* 2ghz has only been tested. I've not seen any 5ghz radios glued to this
chipset so I can't test it.
* AR5416_INTERRUPT_MITIGATION is not supported on the AR9130. At least,
it isn't implemented in ath9k. Please don't enable this.
* This hasn't been tested in MBSS mode or in RX/TX block-aggregation mode.
allocated, not the maximum number of messages the device supports. The
spec only requires the former, and I believe I implemented the latter due
to misunderstanding an e-mail. In particular, this fixes an issue where
having several devices that all support 16 messages can run out of
IDT vectors on x86 even though the driver only uses a single message.
Submitted by: Bret Ketchum bcketchum of gmail
MFC after: 1 week
Expose ip_icmp.c to INET6 as well and only export badport_bandlim()
along with the two sysctls in the non-INET case.
The bandlim types work for all cases I reviewed in IPv6 as well and
the sysctls are available as we export net.inet.* from in_proto.c.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
Move ip_defttl to raw_ip.c where it is actually used. In an IPv6
only world we do not want to compile ip_input.c in for that and
it is a shared default with INET6.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
adding appropriate #ifdefs. For module builds the framework needs
adjustments for at least carp.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
Unfold the IPSEC_COMMON_INPUT_CB() macro in xform_{ah,esp,ipcomp}.c
to not need three different versions depending on INET, INET6 or both.
Mark two places preparing for not yet supported functionality with IPv6.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 4 days
non-interruptible NFS mounts, where a kernel thread will seem
to be stuck sleeping on "rpccon". The msleep() in clnt_vc_create()
that was waiting to a TCP connect to complete would return ERESTART,
since PCATCH was specified. Then the tsleep() in clnt_reconnect_call()
would sleep for 1 second and then try again and again and...
The patch changes the msleep() in clnt_vc_create() so it only sets
the PCATCH flag for interruptible cases.
Tested by: pho
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
NFS client (which I guess is no longer experimental). The fstype "newnfs"
is now "nfs" and the regular/old NFS client is now fstype "oldnfs".
Although mounts via fstype "nfs" will usually work without userland
changes, an updated mount_nfs(8) binary is needed for kernels built with
"options NFSCL" but not "options NFSCLIENT". Updated mount_nfs(8) and
mount(8) binaries are needed to do mounts for fstype "oldnfs".
The GENERIC kernel configs have been changed to use options
NFSCL and NFSD (the new client and server) instead of NFSCLIENT and NFSSERVER.
For kernels being used on diskless NFS root systems, "options NFSCL"
must be in the kernel config.
Discussed on freebsd-fs@.
the watchdog, via the watchdog(9) interface.
For that, the WD_LASTVAL bitwise operation is used. It is mutually
exclusive with any explicit timout passing to the watchdogs.
The last timeout can be returned via the wdog_kern_last_timeout()
KPI.
- Add the possibility to pat the watchdogs installed via the watchdog(9)
interface from the kernel.
In order to do that the new KPI wdog_kern_pat() is offered and it does
accept normalized nanoseconds or WD_LASTVAL.
- Avoid to pass WD_ACTIVE down in the watchdog handlers. All the control
bit processing should over to the upper layer functions and not passed
down to the handlers at all.
These changes are intended to be used in order to fix up the watchdog
tripping in situation when the userland is busted, but protection is still
wanted (examples: shutdown syncing / disk dumping).
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: emaste, des, cognet
MFC after: 2 weeks
bound to an AP before SMP has started, the system will panic when we try
to touch per-CPU state for that AP because that state has not been
initialized yet. Fix this in the same way as ULE: place all threads in
the global run queue before SMP has started.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month