directly in _rmlock.h and then including it (and its dependencies)
in pcpu.h. This leads to few _*.h headers to be included in pcpu.h
but this is not considered a big deal.
Really pc_rm_queue should be implemented as a dynamic member with
DPCPU interface, but we really want to keep the read acquisition as
fast as possible, so even the further pc_dynamic indirection should be
avoided, and the pollution is dealt like this.
Discussed with: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
support to FreeBSD. A full description of the overall functionality
being added is below. nvmexpress.org defines NVM Express as "an optimized
register interface, command set and feature set fo PCI Express (PCIe)-based
Solid-State Drives (SSDs)."
This commit adds nvme(4) and nvd(4) driver source code and Makefiles
to the tree.
Full NVMe functionality description:
Add nvme(4) and nvd(4) drivers and nvmecontrol(8) for NVM Express (NVMe)
device support.
There will continue to be ongoing work on NVM Express support, but there
is more than enough to allow for evaluation of pre-production NVM Express
devices as well as soliciting feedback. Questions and feedback are welcome.
nvme(4) implements NVMe hardware abstraction and is a provider of NVMe
namespaces. The closest equivalent of an NVMe namespace is a SCSI LUN.
nvd(4) is an NVMe consumer, surfacing NVMe namespaces as GEOM disks.
nvmecontrol(8) is used for NVMe configuration and management.
The following are currently supported:
nvme(4)
- full mandatory NVM command set support
- per-CPU IO queues (enabled by default but configurable)
- per-queue sysctls for statistics and full command/completion queue
dumps for debugging
- registration API for NVMe namespace consumers
- I/O error handling (except for timeoutsee below)
- compilation switches for support back to stable-7
nvd(4)
- BIO_DELETE and BIO_FLUSH (if supported by controller)
- proper BIO_ORDERED handling
nvmecontrol(8)
- devlist: list NVMe controllers and their namespaces
- identify: display controller or namespace identify data in
human-readable or hex format
- perftest: quick and dirty performance test to measure raw
performance of NVMe device without userspace/physio/GEOM
overhead
The following are still work in progress and will be completed over the
next 3-6 months in rough priority order:
- complete man pages
- firmware download and activation
- asynchronous error requests
- command timeout error handling
- controller resets
- nvmecontrol(8) log page retrieval
This has been primarily tested on amd64, with light testing on i386. I
would be happy to provide assistance to anyone interested in porting
this to other architectures, but am not currently planning to do this
work myself. Big-endian and dmamap sync for command/completion queues
are the main areas that would need to be addressed.
The nvme(4) driver currently has references to Chatham, which is an
Intel-developed prototype board which is not fully spec compliant.
These references will all be removed over time.
Sponsored by: Intel
Contributions from: Joe Golio/EMC <joseph dot golio at emc dot com>
- Use callout(9) rather than timeout(9).
- Add a mutex as an I/O lock that protects the adapter and is used
for the I/O path.
- Add an sx lock as a configuration lock that protects the relationship
of configured volumes.
- Freeze the request queue when a DMA load is deferred with EINPROGRESS
and unfreeze the queue when the DMA callback is invoked.
- Explicitly poll the hardware while waiting to submit a command to
allow completed commands to free up slots in the command ring.
- Remove driver-wide 'initted' variable from mlx_*_fw_handshake() routines.
That state should be per-controller instead. Add it as an argument
since the first caller knows when it is the first caller.
- Remove explicit bus_space tag/handle and use bus_*() rather than
bus_space_*().
- Move duplicated PCI device ID probing into a mlx_pci_match() routine.
- Don't check for PCIM_CMD_MEMEN (the PCI bus will enable that when
allocating the resource) and use pci_enable_busmaster() rather than
manipulating the register directly.
Tested by: no one despite multiple requests (hope it works)
an NVidia Tegra 2 CPU.
Tegra 2 needs an external patch to pmap for atomic operations to work. Even
with this the Kernel only gets to the mount root prompt. As such Tegra
support is considered experimental, however adding the kernel config will
help ensure the Tegra code builds.
indexing. When a device has gone it is not removed from device_map
table but just its entry_p field is set to NULL.
So when traversing device_map in disk_OS_get_ATA_disks() and
disk_OS_get_MD_disks() check for entry_p being NULL, otherwise the
bsnmpd crash is possible when a removed map entry is dereferenced.
Before the fix, for disk_OS_get_ATA_disks() the crash could be easily
reproduced running:
atacontrol detach ata1
The crash was not observed in disk_OS_get_MD_disks() because currently
snmp_hostres does no see md(4) disks: to get the device list it uses
devinfo(3), which does not return md devices.
Reported by: Miroslav Lachman 000.fbsd quip.cz
MFC after: 1 week
- Remove cvs(1) references.
- Remove CVS* environment references.
- Add default entries for the default SVNROOT for the Ports
Collection, and Documentation Project.
- While here, update 'SGML-based documentation' to 'XML-based',
since the recent SGML->XML conversion.
- Update an example providing SVNROOT environment usage.
Reminded by: nwhitehorn
MFC After: 1 week
X-MFC-With: r240586, r240587
These are intended for software TX filtering support, where the NIC
decides there has been too many successive failues to a destination
and will filter it.
Although the filtering is done per-destination (via the keycache),
the state and queue is kept per-TID for now. It simplifies the overall
architecture design and locking.
Whilst here, add ATH_TID_UNLOCK_ASSERT().
* Don't treat high percentage failures as "sucessive failures" - high
MCS rates are very picky and will quite happily "fade" from low
to high failure % and back again within a few seconds. If they really
don't work, the aggregate will just plain fail.
* Only sample MCS rates +/- 3 from the current MCS. Sample will back off
quite quickly, so there's no need to sample _all_ MCS rates between
a high MCS rate and MCS0; there may be a lot of them.
* Modify the smoothing rate to be 75% rather than 95% - it's more adaptive
but it comes with a cost of being slightly less stable at times.
A per-node, hysterisis behaviour would be nicer.
such that when commenting/uncommentting lines, horizontal spacing is
maintained...
Also fix some minor comment formatting to line things up, etc...
Reviewed by: gnn, imp
MFC after: 1 week
This reduces code duplication and code size.
/usr/bin/printf is not affected.
Side effect: different error messages when certain builtins are passed
invalid options.