Commit Graph

118913 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tor Egge
021869b542 Reduce probability for a deadlock that can occur when a snapshot inode is
updated by a process holding the snapshot lock.  Another process updating a
different inode in the same inodeblock will do copy on write checks and lock in
the opposite direction.

The snapshot code force a copy on write of these blocks manually (cf. start of
expunge_ufs[12]) and these inode blocks are later put on snapblklist.

This partial fix is to 'drain' the relevant ffs_copyonwrite() operation after
installing new snapblklist.  This is not a 100% solution since a failed block
allocation can cause implicit fsync() which might deadlock before the new
snapblklist has been installed.
2005-10-09 20:15:15 +00:00
Tor Egge
d4d530da96 Eliminate a deadlock that can occur when a dirty block belonging to a snapshot
file is flushed by a process not holding snaplk (e.g. bufdaemon).  Another
process might hold snaplk and try to access the block due to ffs_copyonwrite
processing.
2005-10-09 20:07:51 +00:00
Tor Egge
45f91051da Eliminate a deadlock that can occur during the cgaccount() processing due to
the cg map buffer being held when writing indirect blocks.  The process ends up
in ffs_copyonwrite(), attempting to get snaplk while holding the cg map buffer
lock.

Another process might be in ffs_copyonwrite(), trying to allocate a new block
for a copy.  It would hold snaplk while trying to get the cg map buffer lock.

Release the cg map buffer early and use the copy for most of the cgaccount
processing to avoid this deadlock.
2005-10-09 20:00:16 +00:00
Tor Egge
17026ff61a Reduce the probability of low block numbers passed to ffs_snapblkfree() by
skipping the call from ffs_snapremove() if the block number is zero.

Simplify snapshot locking in ffs_copyonwrite() and ffs_snapblkfree() by using
the same locking protocol for low block numbers as for larger block numbers.
This removes a lock leak that could happen if vn_lock() succeeded after
lockmgr() failed in ffs_snapblkfree().

Check if snapshot is gone before retrying a lock in ffs_copyonwrite().
2005-10-09 19:45:01 +00:00
Tor Egge
c73e9e9c7b Reinitialize v_type and v_op fields in case vnode has been reused without
reclamation.  If the vnode previously was a fifo then v_op would point to
ffs_fifoops[12] instead of the expected ffs_vnodeops[12], causing a panic at
the end of ffsext_strategy.
2005-10-09 19:06:34 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
8df5e81c01 Add RELENG_6_0. 2005-10-09 18:01:55 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ada6a4d2b7 Rough implementation of the create and add verbs. The verbs cause
in-memory changes only and as such are only useful for prototyping
and regression testing purposes.
2005-10-09 17:10:35 +00:00
Scott Long
1030a78a12 Make sure that the created fifo gets deleted if the top level make instance
exits due to a signal.
2005-10-09 06:36:51 +00:00
Christian S.J. Peron
cc2a9f52a7 Finish off style(9) fixes which I started two revisions ago. This basically
changes the indentation style from 4 spaces to 8 spaces which we expect to
see in other FreeBSD source files.
2005-10-09 04:45:41 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
a3d7f575c0 - Do not hardcode the bsize to a sectorsize of 2048, even though
the UDF specification specifies a logical sectorsize of 2048.
  Instead, get it from GEOM.
- When reading the UDF Anchor Volume Descriptor, use the logical
  sectorsize of 2048 when calculating the offset to read from, but
  use the actual sectorsize to determine how much to read.

- works with reading a DVD disk and a DVD disk image file via mdconfig
- correctly returns EINVAL if we try to mount_udf an audio CD, instead
  of panicking inside GEOM when INVARIANTS is set
2005-10-09 04:45:33 +00:00
Xin LI
bd1509e0cd Sync whitespace change that is found uniquely in RELENG_6, to reduce diff
against it.
2005-10-09 04:44:51 +00:00
Christian S.J. Peron
42dc20fa6d Woops, in my previous commit, I actually committed some style changes with
a functional change. I know this is a big no no, so this is a forced commit
to note the functional changes from my previous revision:

@@ -196,7 +176,7 @@ wait_for_lock(const char *name, int flag
     int fd;

     if ((fd = open(name, O_CREAT|O_RDONLY|O_EXLOCK|flags, 0666)) == -1) {
-	if (errno == ENOENT || errno == EINTR || errno == EAGAIN)
+	if (errno == EINTR || errno == EAGAIN)
 	    return (-1);
 	err(EX_CANTCREAT, "cannot open %s", name);
     }
2005-10-09 04:40:56 +00:00
Bruce Evans
a0e34da09f Oops, the last-minute optimization in rev.1.8 wasn't a good idea. The
17+17+24 bit pi/2 must only be used when subtraction of the first 2
terms in it from the arg is exact.  This happens iff the the arg in
bits is one of the 2**17[-1] values on each side of (float)(pi/2).

Revert to the algorithm in rev.1.7 and only fix its threshold for using
the 3-term pi/2.  Use the threshold that maximizes the number of values
for which the 3-term pi/2 is used, subject to not changing the algorithm
for comparing with the threshold.  The 3-term pi/2 ends up being used
for about half of its usable range (about 64K values on each side).
2005-10-09 04:29:08 +00:00
Christian S.J. Peron
a5b7fde722 Lock object while we iterate through it's backing objects.
Discussed with:	alc
2005-10-09 02:37:27 +00:00
Bruce Evans
cd604283af Fixed syntax error (a missing brace) in previous commit. 2005-10-08 22:55:36 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
1f98e6ffe0 bridge.4 is now mlinked to if_bridge.4 so do not list it for deletion. 2005-10-08 22:51:47 +00:00
Bruce Evans
a7b8acac04 Fixed range reduction near (but not very near) +-pi/2. A bug caused
a maximum error of 2.905 ulps for cosf(), but the algorithm for cosf()
is good for < 1 ulps and happens to give perfect rounding (< 0.5 ulps)
near +-pi/2 except for the bug.  The extra relative errors for tanf()
were similar (slightly larger).  The bug didn't affect sinf() since
sinf'(+-pi/2) is 0.

For range reduction in ~[-3pi/4, -pi/4] and ~[pi/4, 3pi/4] we must
subtract +-pi/2 and the only complication is that this must be done
in extra precision.  We have handy 17+24-bit and 17+17+24-bit
approximations to pi/2.  If we always used the former then we would
lose up to 24 bits of accuracy due to cancelation of leading bits, but
we need to keep at least 24 bits plus a guard digit or 2, and should
keep as many guard bits as efficiency permits.  So we used the
less-precise pi/2 not very near +-pi/2 and switched to using the
more-precise pi/2 very near +-pi/2.  However, we got the threshold for
the switch wrong by allowing 19 bits to cancel, so we ended up with
only 21 or 22 bits of accuracy in some cases, which is even worse than
naively subtracting pi/2 would have done.

Exhaustive checking shows that allowing only 17 bits to cancel (min.
accuracy ~24 bits) is sufficient to reduce the maximum error for cosf()
near +-pi/2 to 0.726 ulps, but allowing only 6 bits to cancel (min.
accuracy ~35-bits) happens to give perfect rounding for cosf() at
little extra cost so we prefer that.

We actually (in effect) allow 0 bits to cancel and always use the
17+17+24-bit pi/2 (min. accuracy ~41 bits).  This is simpler and
probably always more efficient too.  Classifying args to avoid using
this pi/2 when it is not needed takes several extra integer operations
and a branch, but just using it takes only 1 FP operation.

The patch also fixes misspelling of 17 as 24 in many comments.

For the double-precision version, the magic numbers include 33+53 bits
for the less-precise pi/2 and (53-32-1 = 20) bits being allowed to
cancel, so there are ~33-20 = 13 guard bits.  This is sufficient except
probably for perfect rounding.  The more-precise pi/2 has 33+33+53
bits and we still waste time classifying args to avoid using it.

The bug is apparently from mistranslation of the magic 32 in 53-32-1.
The number of bits allowed to cancel is not critical and we use 32 for
double precision because it allows efficient classification using a
32-bit comparison.  For float precision, we must use an explicit mask,
and there are fewer bits so there is less margin for error in their
allocation.  The 32 got reduced to 4 but should have been reduced
almost in proportion to the reduction of mantissa bits.
2005-10-08 22:43:55 +00:00
Scott Long
8eeb2ca6bf Ue a better msleep identifier. Fix some whitespace. 2005-10-08 22:41:57 +00:00
Scott Long
7a48c6d4ea aac_intr0 rotted long ago, remove it. 2005-10-08 22:36:54 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
3803b26bae As alc pointed out to me, vm_page.c 1.305 was incomplete: uma_startup()
still uses the constant UMA_BOOT_PAGES.  Change it to accept boot_pages
as an additional argument.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-10-08 21:03:54 +00:00
Scott Long
7cb209f5d0 Mega Update to the aac driver to support a whole new family of cards and
the modified interface that they use.  Changes include:

- Register a different interrupt handler for the new interface.  This one is
  INTR_MPSAFE, not INTR_FAST, and directly processes completions and AIFs.
- Add an event registration and callback mechanism for the ioctl and CAM
  modules can know when a resource shortage clears.  This condition was
  previously fatal in CAM due to programming oversights.
- Fix locking to play better with newbus.
- Provide access methods for talking to cards with the NEWCOMM interface.
- Fix up the CAM module to be better suited for dealing with newer firmware
  on the PERC Si/Di series that requires talking to plain SCSI via aac.
- Add a whole slew of new PCI Id's.

Thanks to Adaptec for providing an initial version of this work and for
answering countless questions about it.  There are still some rough edges in
this, but it works well enough to commit and test for now.

Obtained from: Adaptec, Inc.
2005-10-08 15:55:09 +00:00
Seigo Tanimura
314378233c In ngt_input(), do not derefer sc (= (sc_p) tp->t_lsc) before making
sure sc != NULL.
2005-10-08 11:03:29 +00:00
Warner Losh
7f33c2df93 MFP4: More removal of unused stuff. 2005-10-08 06:58:51 +00:00
Warner Losh
f481fa4d29 MFP4: Changes to hopefully make the new power code work better
o Rather than just try to turn off EXCA_INTR_RESET, set the entire register
  to 0.  This is slightly faster, and a better hammer.
o Move attempted clearing of the output enable (EXCA_PWRCTL_OE) back to
  after we turn off the power.  Modify it to write 0 so that we don't get
  Bad Vcc messages on TI bridges (untested, but ru@ sent me a similar patch)
  while at the same time avoiding interrupt storms on Ricoh bridges (tested
  by me on my Sony).

# Many of my observations of 'breakage' for this patch are due to some bug
# in the load/unload of cbb.ko unlreated to this change.  I'll be investigating
# and fixing that bug in the fullness of time.
2005-10-08 06:57:13 +00:00
Warner Losh
f1abc0ea53 MFP4: We no longer use intr_handlers, so remove it. 2005-10-08 06:53:17 +00:00
Warner Losh
ed448ee4de MFP4: Note why we do the dance we do for waiting for the thread to die. 2005-10-08 06:51:47 +00:00
Scott Long
a3699bcaa6 Remove a couple of explicit memset(0) ops that were zeroing past the end of
an allocation.  This fixes the malloc 'use after free' panic on boot that
many were seeing.  It doesn't solve the problem of the allocations being
cached and then written past their bounds later.  That will take more work.

Submitted by: kan
2005-10-08 05:16:45 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
ad45bb822d Now that bridge(4) has been removed, link bridge.4 to if_bridge.4
Reviewed by:	mlaier
2005-10-08 01:20:53 +00:00
Bruce Evans
d31f7e4991 Fixed profiling of main() for amd64 and i386. This started rotting
in 1993 in rev.1.5 of the i386 a.out version (csu/i386/crt0.c).
Profiling uses a magic label "eprol" to delimit the start of the part
of the text section covered by profiling.  This label must be placed
before the call to main() to get main() properly profiled.  It was
placed there in rev.1.1 of crt0.c.  Rev.1.5 imported the initial
implementation of shared libraries in FreeBSD and misplaced the label.
Fortunately, the misplaced label was misspelled and the old label
wasn't removed, so the new label had no effect.  Unfortunately, when
profiling was implemented for the ELF in 1998 in rev.1.2 of
csu/i386-elf/crt1.c, only the incorrectly placed label was copied
(after fixing its name).  The bug was then copied to all other arches.
The label seems to be still misplaced in NetBSD for most arches.  It
is in common.c for most arches so it is even further from being inside
the function that calls main().

I think "eprol" is short for "end of prologue", but it must be placed
before the end of the prologue so that it covers main().  crt0.c has
it before the calls atexit(_mcleanup) and monstartup(...), but it
cannot affect these calls so I moved it after the call to monstartup().
It now also covers the call to _init() but not the newer call to
_init_tls().  Profiling of _init() seems to be harmless, and the call
to _init_tls() seems to be misplaced.

Reviewed by:	jdp (long ago, for a slightly different i386 version)
2005-10-07 22:13:17 +00:00
Damien Bergamini
57bbb41ebd Import iwi-specific tools. Can help debug firmware or connection issues. 2005-10-07 18:27:21 +00:00
Damien Bergamini
71016a2499 Fixes my previous commit (rev 1.20)
MFC after:	1 day
2005-10-07 18:11:32 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
6512768b89 A deja vu of:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/cvs-src/2004-October/033496.html

The same problem applies to if_bridge(4), too.

- Copy-and-paste the if_bridge(4) related block from
  if_ethersubr.c to ng_ether.c
- Add XXXs, so that copy-and-paste would be noticed by
  any future editors of this code.
- Also add XXXs near if_bridge(4) declarations.

Silence from:	thompsa
2005-10-07 14:14:47 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
125fbd3cdc Add parse_uuid() that creates a binary representation of an UUID from
a string representation.
2005-10-07 13:37:10 +00:00
Bruce Evans
762116ae25 Catch up with increasing the resolution suitable for high-res kernel
profiling from microseconds to nanoseconds in 1996.  Picoseconds are
already needed.

Describe the choice of units for the per-call times in detail.
2005-10-07 11:58:46 +00:00
Christian S.J. Peron
45edbdccd7 Do not ignore ENOENT
Pointed out by:	Amir Shalem
2005-10-07 11:49:27 +00:00
Bruce Evans
0b146898f0 Improve printing of self times in the flat profile for functions that
appear to be never called:

(1) If a function is never called according to its call count but it
    must have been called because its child time is nonzero, then print
    it in the flat profile.  Previously, if its call count was zero
    then we only printed it in the flat profile if its self time was
    nonzero.

(2) If a function has a zero call count but has a nonzero self or child
    time, then print its total self time in the self time per call
    column as a percentage of the total (self + child) time.  It is
    not possible to print the times per call in this case because the
    call count is zero.  Previously, this was handled by leaving both
    per-call columns blank.  The self time is printed in another column
    but there was no way to recover the total time.

(1) partially fixes the case of the "never called" function main() and
prepares for (2) to apply to main() and other functions.  Profiling
of main() was lost in the conversion from a.out to ELF, so main()'s
call count has always been zero for many years; then in the common
case where main() is a tiny function, it gets no profiling ticks, so
main() was completely lost in the flat profile.

(2) improves mainly cases like kernel threads.  Most kernel threads
appear to be never called because they are always started before
userland can run to turn on profiling.  As for main(), the fact that
they are called is not very interesting and their callers are
uninteresting, but their relative self time is interesting since they
are long-running.

Almost always printing percentages in the per-call columns would be
more useful than almost always printing 0.0ms.  0.1ms is now a long
time, so only very large functions take that long per call.  The accuracy
per call can approach 1-10 nsec provided programs are run for about
100000 times as long as is necessary to get this accuracy with high
resolution kernel profiling.
2005-10-07 10:59:41 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
8597a1c5b2 We don't need 'imp' here. 2005-10-07 10:30:47 +00:00
Yaroslav Tykhiy
e53e5e56d9 Sync usage screen with manpage.
MFC after:	5 days
2005-10-07 10:18:44 +00:00
Yaroslav Tykhiy
6fcf85bc95 Document the -d flag to mail(1) better, which comes handy when
you want to see, e.g., sendmail arguments mail(1) will use.

-H is not an independent flag, it's a modifier.  Also explicitly
say that -H will cause mail(1) to exit as soon as it prints the headers.

MFC after:	5 days
2005-10-07 10:16:41 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
9c26aa3c12 Polling is now configured with help of ifconfig(8), not sysctl.
Prodded by:     maxim
2005-10-07 09:23:51 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
6e65f82cd1 Polling is now configured with help of ifconfig(8), not sysctl.
Prodded by: 	maxim
2005-10-07 08:55:58 +00:00
Maxim Konovalov
168d656bcc o Mention the fact dcons(4) depends on "options GDB".
Reviewed by:	simokawa, ru (mdoc markup)
MFC after:	1 week
2005-10-07 06:43:04 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
066b4c1658 Switch from K&R-style C prototypes to ISO/ANSI-style C prototypes. 2005-10-07 06:39:08 +00:00
Joel Dahl
727ded3a70 snd_ess needs snd_sbc, so add a note about that. 2005-10-07 06:32:11 +00:00
Tom Rhodes
16d78bb878 Work around an apparent mdoc(7) bug.
Spotted by:	marius
Discussed with:	ru
2005-10-07 02:32:16 +00:00
Tom Rhodes
e57df0d8db Document recently added security.mac.seeotheruids.suser_privileged sysctl. 2005-10-07 02:29:50 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
429cd02cab Bump WARNS up to 3. 2005-10-07 02:22:48 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
aedf10aca9 In prmount(), use an unsigned int variable to eliminate
'comparison between signed and unsigned' compiler warning.
2005-10-07 02:22:04 +00:00
Craig Rodrigues
e24dc56a22 Switch from K&R-style C prototypes to ISO/ANSI-style C prototypes.
Make prototype in extern.h match prototype in mount_ufs.c
2005-10-07 02:18:20 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
a33a86ea1f Display the status of the spanning tree for each port.
member: xl0 flags=7<LEARNING,DISCOVER,STP>
        member: gem0 flags=7<LEARNING,DISCOVER,STP>
to:
        member: xl0 flags=7<LEARNING,DISCOVER,STP>
                port 3 priority 128 path cost 55 forwarding
        member: gem0 flags=7<LEARNING,DISCOVER,STP>
                port 1 priority 128 path cost 55 learning
2005-10-07 00:32:16 +00:00