will pack multiple touch events in the packet and the current code will only
process the first touch event.
As a result some important events are lost like releasing the finger from the
touchscreen.
Use the maximum maximum packet size as buffer size instead.
Submitted by: Oskar Holmlund <oskar.holmlund@ohdata.se>
PR: 244718
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
The FUSE protocol allows the client (kernel) to cache a file's size, if the
server (userspace daemon) allows it. A well-behaved daemon obviously should
not change a file's size while a client has it cached. But a buggy daemon
might. If the kernel ever detects that that has happened, then it should
invalidate the entire cache for that file. Previously, we would not only
cache stale data, but in the case of a file extension while we had the size
cached, we accidentally extended the cache with zeros.
PR: 244178
Reported by: Ben RUBSON <ben.rubson@gmx.com>
Reviewed by: cem
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24012
These are no longer needed now that it's embedded in cam_ccbq. They are also
unused.
Reviewed by: ken, chuck
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24008
It's used in exactly one place. In that place it's used so we can hold the lock
on the device associated with the path (since we do a xpt_path_lock and unlock
pair around the callback). Instead, inline taking and dropping the reference to
the device so we can ensure we can unlock the mutex after the callback finishes
if the path in the ccb that's queued to be processed by xpt_scanner_thread is
destroyed while being processed. We don't actually need the path itself for
anything other than dereferencing it to get the device to do the lock and
unlock.
This also makes the locking / use model for cam_path a little cleaner by
eliminating a case where we needlessly copy the object.
Reviewed by: chuck, chs, ken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24008
These flags have been unused for some time. Some of them were in the
CAM2 specification, but CAM has moved on a bit from that. Some were
used in the old Pluto VideoSpace (and AirSpace) systems which had the
video playback I/O scheduler in userspace, but have been unused since
then.
Reviewed by: chuck, ken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24008
already allocating from the safe zone and the allocation fails.
This bug was introduced in r357481.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
When clearing sigfastblock, either by sigfastblock(UNSETPTR) call or
implicitly on execve(2), kernel must check for pending signals and
reschedule them if needed.
E.g. on execve, all other threads are terminated, and current thread
fast block pointer is cleaned. If any signal was left pending, it can
now be delivered to the current thread, and we should prepare for
ast() on return to userspace to notice the signals.
Reported and tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
It was used after sigfastblock_setpend() call in in ast() when current
thread fast-blocks signals. Add a flag to sigfastblock_setpend() to
request reschedule, and remove the direct use of the function from
subr_trap.c
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This speeds up Windows guests tremendously.
The patch does:
Add a new tuneable 'hw.vmm.vmx.use_tpr_shadowing' to disable TLP shadowing.
Also add 'hw.vmm.vmx.cap.tpr_shadowing' to be able to query if TPR shadowing is used.
Detach the initialization of TPR shadowing from the initialization of APIC virtualization.
APIC virtualization still needs TPR shadowing, but not vice versa.
Any CPU that supports APIC virtualization should also support TPR shadowing.
When TPR shadowing is used, the APIC page of each vCPU is written to the VMCS_VIRTUAL_APIC field of the VMCS
so that the CPU can write directly to the page without intercept.
On vm exit, vlapic_update_ppr() is called to update the PPR.
Submitted by: Yamagi Burmeister
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22942
Clang from 9.0.0 onwards already has the necessary relocation range
extenders, so this workaround is no longer needed (it produces longer
and slower code). Tested on real hardware, and in cross-compile
environment.
Submitted by: mmel
Basic test case where we create a bridge loop, verify that we really are
looping and then enable spanning tree to resolve the loop.
Reviewed by: philip
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23959
Summary:
This is largely a straight-forward cleave of the 32-bit and 64-bit page
table specifics, along with the mmu_booke_*() functions that are wholely
different between the two implementations.
The ultimate goal of this is to make it easier to reason about and
update a specific implementation without wading through the other
implementation details. This is in support of further changes to the 64-bit
pmap.
Reviewed by: bdragon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23983
Return ENOMEM if one of the buffer cannot be created even with the
minimal size. This should avoid subsequent spurious ENOMEM errors
from write(2) when buffer cannot be allocated on the fly, after we
reported that the pipe was create succesfully.
Reported by: Keno Fischer <keno@juliacomputing.com>
Reviewed by: markj (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23993
Touch Digitizer V04 report descriptor declares 'Contact Count Maximum' usage
as constant. That was not supported by descriptor parser.
PR: 232040
Reported by: Sergei Akhmatdinov <sakhmatd@darkn.space>
MFC after: 1 week
autofs was introduced with FreeBSD 10.1 and is the supported method for
automounting filesystems. As of r296194 the amd man page claimed that it
is deprecated. Remove it from base now; the sysutils/am-utils port is
still available if necessary.
Discussed with: cy
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
When iicbus is attached as child of Designware I2C controller it scans all
ACPI nodes for "I2C Serial Bus Connection Resource Descriptor" described
in section 19.6.57 of ACPI specs.
If such a descriptor is found, I2C child is added to iicbus, it's I2C
address, IRQ resource and ACPI handle are added to ivars. Existing
ACPI bus-hosted child is deleted afterwards.
The driver also installs so called "I2C address space handler" which is
disabled by default as nontested.
Set hw.iicbus.enable_acpi_space_handler loader tunable to 1 to enable it.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22901
Newbus device reference attached to ACPI handle is not cleared when newbus
device is deleted with devctl(8) delete command. Fix that with calling of
AcpiDetachData() from "child_deleted" bus method like acpi_pci driver does.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22902
Without this change, if an AIF interrupt comes at the same time a SYNC
command is finished, the SYNC interrupt will be lost. This happens because
all interrupt bits (bellbits) are cleared, but only one of them is handled.
Debugging shows that, (at least) when !sc->msi_enabled and (sc->flags &
AAC_FLAGS_SYNC_MODE) is true (sync mode), both bits may be set at the same
time.
PR: 237463
Reviewed by: scottl
Sponsored by: Eldorado Research Institute (eldorado.org.br)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23859
The vectx API, computes the hash for verifying a file as it is read.
This avoids the overhead of reading files twice - once to verify, then
again to load.
For doing an install via loader, avoiding the need to rewind
large files is critical.
This API is only used for modules, kernel and mdimage as these are the
biggest files read by the loader.
The reduction in boot time depends on how expensive the I/O is
on any given platform. On a fast VM we see 6% improvement.
For install via loader the first file to be verified is likely to be the
kernel, so some of the prep work (finding manifest etc) done by
verify_file() needs to be factored so it can be reused for
vectx_open().
For missing or unrecognized fingerprint entries, we fail
in vectx_open() unless verifying is disabled.
Otherwise fingerprint check happens in vectx_close() and
since this API is only used for files which must be verified
(VE_MUST) we panic if we get an incorrect hash.
Reviewed by: imp,tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org//D23827
The vectx API, computes the hash for verifying a file as it is read.
This avoids the overhead of reading files twice - once to verify, then
again to load.
For doing an install via loader, avoiding the need to rewind
large files is critical.
This API is only used for modules, kernel and mdimage as these are the
biggest files read by the loader.
The reduction in boot time depends on how expensive the I/O is
on any given platform. On a fast VM we see 6% improvement.
For install via loader the first file to be verified is likely to be the
kernel, so some of the prep work (finding manifest etc) done by
verify_file() needs to be factored so it can be reused for
vectx_open().
For missing or unrecognized fingerprint entries, we fail
in vectx_open() unless verifying is disabled.
Otherwise fingerprint check happens in vectx_close() and
since this API is only used for files which must be verified
(VE_MUST) we panic if we get an incorrect hash.
Reviewed by: imp,tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org//D23827
When I did the use_numa support, I missed the fact that there is
a separate hash function for send tag nic selection. So when
use_numa is enabled, ktls offload does not work properly, as it
does not reliably allocate a send tag on the proper egress nic
since different egress nics are selected for send-tag allocation
and packet transmit. To fix this, this change:
- refectors lacp_select_tx_port_by_hash() and
lacp_select_tx_port() to make lacp_select_tx_port_by_hash()
always called by lacp_select_tx_port()
- pre-shifts flowids to convert them to hashes when calling lacp_select_tx_port_by_hash()
- adds a numa_domain field to if_snd_tag_alloc_params
- plumbs the numa domain into places where we allocate send tags
In testing with NIC TLS setup on a NUMA machine, I see thousands
of output errors before the change when enabling
kern.ipc.tls.ifnet.permitted=1. After the change, I see no
errors, and I see the NIC sysctl counters showing active TLS
offload sessions.
Reviewed by: rrs, hselasky, jhb
Sponsored by: Netflix
This silences an "unused label" warning as well as fixes the attach fail
path that wasn't releasing resources.
Submitted by: Nicholas O'Brien <nickisobrien_gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Axiado
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24004