just return it. Don't try to reinitialize it. This should fix a
number of inconsistencies that some people encountered with "vinum
start".
PR: 30588
PR: 43475
All functionality from the previous system has been preserved, and
users should still customize their system boot with the familiar
methods, rc.conf, rc.conf.local, rc.firewall, sysctl.conf, etc.
Users who have customized versions of scripts that have been removed
should take great care when upgrading, since the compatibility code
that used those old scripts has also been removed.
double free of a mbuf occurs and cause an immediate panic, rather
than allowing free list corruption to occur.
This code is trapped under INVARIANTS, so it should not cause any
change in default performance.
Reviewed by: a bunch of people on -net
MFC after: 1 week
of <machine/pc/bios.h> specific to i386 and added a conditional define
for BIOS_PADDRTOVADDR that depends on ISA_HOLE_START. The latter is
undefined on alpha and ia64. Since the former is defined the same on
both alpha and ia64, assume the ISA_HOLE_START dependent definition
is specific to amd64 and use the identity-mapping in all other cases.
This of course is getting uglier every day...
quite excessive, and caused the available space to be used up too
easily. The new limit should be a better estimation of how much the
caller will need at most.
- Double the IOTSB size 64kB, for a DVMA area size of 64MB.
This should fix DMA problems on e450s and other large machines due
to DVMA space exhaustion, which were introduced in my last IOMMU
code revision in January.
Reported and tested by: fenner
fini routines instead of in fork() and wait(). This has the nice side
benefit that the proc lock of any process on the allproc list is always
valid and sched_lock doesn't have to be used to test against PRS_NEW
anymore.
uptime. Where necessary, convert it back to Unix time by adding boottime
to it. This fixes a potential problem in the accounting code, which would
compute the elapsed time incorrectly if the Unix time was stepped during
the lifetime of the process.
These fields can be left as NULL if ffs_vget() allocates an inode but
fails before the dinode memory has been allocated. There are two cases
when this can occur: when we lose a race and another process has added
the inode to the hash, and when reading the inode off disk fails.
The bug was observed by Kris on one of the package-building machines.
See http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=freebsd-current&m=105172731013411&w=2
In Kris's case, it was the bread() that failed because of a disk error.
The alternative to this patch is to ensure that ffs_vget() does not call
vput() when the inode that hasn't been properly initialised.
project by providing documentation (under NDA) and hardware for
testing. This commit is the first result of the cooperation, and
adds support for several of their new controllers that we didn't
support before (and probably newer would have without this arrangement).
Add support for the Promise SATA150 TX2/TX4 and the Promise TX4000
controllers. This also adds support for various motherboard fitted
Promise SATA/ATA chips.
Note that this code uses memory mapped registers to minimize overhead.
I belive FreeBSD has made another first in the Open Source world
by being able to release support for this :)
to 0 initially. It seems that the ia64 backend isn't as "smart" as the
i386 backend, which realized that those variables were only set or used
when error == 0, and thus were not used uninitialized.
things over floppy size limits, I can exclude it for release builds or
something like that. Most of the changes are to get the load_elf.c file
into a seperate elf32_ or elf64_ namespace so that you can have two
ELF loaders present at once. Note that for 64 bit kernels, it actually
starts up the kernel already in 64 bit mode with paging enabled. This
is really easy because we have a known minimum feature set.
Of note is that for amd64, we have to pass in the bios int 15 0xe821
memory map because once in long mode, you absolutely cannot make VM86
calls. amd64 does not use 'struct bootinfo' at all. It is a pure loader
metadata startup, just like sparc64 and powerpc. Much of the
infrastructure to support this was adapted from sparc64.
that were added to sparc64 and later powerpc, really should have been in
the MI area. But changing that now with insufficient preperation will
just cause too much pain.
Move MD_FETCH() to the MI sys/linker.h file to avoid another two copies
of it.
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
Rewrite minor number decoding. Now we have only three types of
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
Correct formats for some error messages. Don't cast the value to
match the format.
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
Tidy up comments.
Check for null rqgs. This continue to be reported, though I can't
work out why.
Correct formats for some error messages. Don't cast the value to
match the format.
Use microtime, not getmicrotime, for timing debug entries.
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
As a result of the minor number changes, split out the superdevice
handling into a separate function, vinum_super_ioctl. This was most
of the code of vinumioctl.
attachobject: Improve error checking.
init_drive: Rephrase error message text.
Remove dead code (inside #if 0).
Change name of find_drive_by_dev to the more descriptive
find_drive_by_name.
Tidy up comments.
get_emppty_drive: Fix a day one bug with strcpy parameters.
Change name of find_drive_by_dev to the more descriptive
find_drive_by_name.
Rewrite minor number decoding. Now we have only three types of
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
object: subdisks, plexes and volumes. The encoding for plexes and
subdisks no longer reflects the object to which they belong. The
super devices are high-order volume numbers. This gives vastly more
potential volumes (4 million instead of 256).
Remove an unnecessary goto.
vinumopen: Return EINVAL, not ENXIO, on an attempt to open a
referenced plex.
a heavily stripped down FreeBSD/i386 (brutally stripped down actually) to
attempt to get a stable base to start from. There is a lot missing still.
Worth noting:
- The kernel runs at 1GB in order to cheat with the pmap code. pmap uses
a variation of the PAE code in order to avoid having to worry about 4
levels of page tables yet.
- It boots in 64 bit "long mode" with a tiny trampoline embedded in the
i386 loader. This simplifies locore.s greatly.
- There are still quite a few fragments of i386-specific code that have
not been translated yet, and some that I cheated and wrote dumb C
versions of (bcopy etc).
- It has both int 0x80 for syscalls (but using registers for argument
passing, as is native on the amd64 ABI), and the 'syscall' instruction
for syscalls. int 0x80 preserves all registers, 'syscall' does not.
- I have tried to minimize looking at the NetBSD code, except in a couple
of places (eg: to find which register they use to replace the trashed
%rcx register in the syscall instruction). As a result, there is not a
lot of similarity. I did look at NetBSD a few times while debugging to
get some ideas about what I might have done wrong in my first attempt.
were, they are not safe to use outside of the kernel since these values
can change at kernel compile time - ie: we do not want them compiled into
userland binaries.
Rename visible x86_64 references to amd64.
Kill MID_MACHINE, its a.out specific, the only platform that supports it
is i386. All of the other platforms should remove it too.
have to use it since all AMD64 machines are supposed to have acpi etc,
I'm using it during development so I can avoid the acpi code for now.
Yes, this is cheating.
at all (ie reads yield constant values). Display the width as the
difference between max and min so that constant timers have width
zero.
o Get the address of the timer from the XPmTmrBlk field instead of
the V1_PmTmrBlk field. The former is a generic address and can
specify a memory mapped I/O address. Remove <machine/bus_pio.h>
to account for this. The timer is now properly configured on
machines with ACPI v2 tables, whether PIO or MEMIO. Note that
the acpica code converts v1 tables into v2 tables so the address
is always present in XPmTmrBlk.
o Replace the TIMER_READ macro with a call to the read_counter()
function and add a barrier to make sure that we observe proper
ordering of the reads.
Check for suspend before the device polling, rather than after it.
Check to see if the current thread owns the lock in ioctl and return
EBUSY if it does.
This advances the locking to the point that I can eject my fxp card 10
times in a row, but I agree with Jeff Hsu that we need to get the
network layer locking finished before chasing more of the races here
(actually, he doesn't think this set is worth it even). There's a
number of races between FXP_LOCK in detach and all other users of
FXP_LOCK, and this gets back to the 'device with sleepers being
forcibly detached' problem as well...
using 512 byte blocks).
cam_ccb.h: Bump up volume_size and cylinders in ccb_calc_geometry to
64 bits and 32 bits respectively, so we can hold larger
device sizes. cylinders would overflow at about 500GB.
Bump CAM_VERSION for this change. Note that this will
require a recompile of all applications that talk to the
pass(4) driver.
scsi_all.c: Add descriptions for READ/WRITE(16), update READ/WRITE(12)
descriptions, add descriptions for SERVICE ACTION IN/OUT.
Add a new function, scsi_read_capacity_16(), that issues
the read capacity service action. (Necessary for arrays
larger than 2^32 sectors.) Update scsi_read_write() to use
a 64 bit LBA and issue READ(16) or WRITE(16) if necessary.
NOTE the API change. This should be largely transparnet
to most userland applications at compile time, but will
break binary compatibility. The CAM_VERSION bump, above,
also serves the purpose of forcing a recompile for any
applications that talk to CAM.
scsi_all.h: Add 16 byte READ/WRITE structures, structures for 16 byte
READ CAPACITY/SERVICE ACTION IN. Add scsi_u64to8b() and
scsi_8btou64.
scsi_da.c: The da(4) driver probe now has two stages for devices
larger than 2TB. If a standard READ CAPACITY(10) returns
0xffffffff, we issue the 16 byte version of read capacity
to determine the true array capacity. We also do the same
thing in daopen() -- use the 16 byte read capacity if the
device is large enough.
The sysctl/loader code has also been updated to accept
16 bytes as a minimum command size.
For certain combinations of sectorsize, mediasize and random numbers
(used to define the mapping), a multisector read or write would ignore
some subset of the sectors past the first sector in the request because
those sectors would be mapped past the end of the parent device, and
normal "end of media" truncation would zap that part of the request.
Rev 1.19+1.20 of g_bde_work.c added the check which should have alerted
me to this happening. This commit maps the request correctly and
adds KASSERTS to make sure things stay inside the parent device.
This does not change the on-disk layout of GBDE, there is no need to
backup/restore.
it wrote the full length. The only case where this should be able
to happen is if we try to read/write past the end and the request
is truncated. We obviously should never try to do that, so this
code should never activate.
* AcpiOsDerivePciId(): finds a bus number, given the slot/func and the
acpi parse tree.
* AcpiOsPredefinedOverride(): use the sysctl hw.acpi.os_name to
override the value for _OS.
Ideas from: takawata, jhb
Reviewed by: takawata, marcel
Tested on: i386, ia64
be changed, it is very convenient to be able to toggle SDH/Sonet,
idle/unassigned cells and scrambled mode and to see the carrier
state.
Reviewed by: -arch (if_media.h definitions)
do for newstat_copyout().
Lie about disk drives which are character devices
in FreeBSD but block devices under Linux.
PR: 37227
Submitted by: Vladimir B. Grebenschikov <vova@sw.ru>
Reviewed by: phk
MFC after: 2 weeks
o do not use the in* and out* functions. These functions are used by
legacy drivers and thus must have ia32 compatible behaviour. Hence,
they need to have fences. Using these functions for newbus would
then pessimize performance.
o remove the conditional compilation of PIO and/or MEMIO support. It's
a PITA without having any significant benefit. We always support them
both. Since there are no I/O ports on ia64 (they are simulated by the
chipset by translating memory mapped I/O to predefined uncacheable
memory regions) the only difference between PIO and MEMIO is in the
address calculation. There should be enough ILP that can be exploited
here that making these computations compile-time conditional is not
worth it. We now also don't use the read* and write* functions.
o Add the missing *_8 variants. They were missing, although not missed.
It's for completeness.
o Do not add the fences that were present in the low-level support
functions here. We're using uncacheable memory, which means that
accesses are in program order. Change the barrier implementation
to not only do a memory fence, but also an acceptance fence. This
should more reliably synchronize drivers with the hardware. The
memory fence enforces ordering, but does not imply visibility (ie
the access does not necessarily have happened). This is what the
acceptance deals with.
cpufunc.h cleanup:
o Remove the low-level memory mapped I/O support functions. They are
not used. Keep the low-level I/O port access functions for legacy
drivers and add fences to ensure ia32 compatibility.
o Remove the syscons specific functions now that we have moved the
proper definitions where they belong.
o Replace the ia64_port_address() and ia64_memory_address() functions
with macros. There's a bigger change inline functions get inlined
when there aren't function callsi and the calculations are simply
enough to do it with macros.
Replace the one reference to ia64_memory address in mp_machdep.c to
use the macro.
(currently) only consumer (en).
Add a sysctl node hw.atm where the atm drivers will hook on their hardware
sysctl sub-trees.
Make atm_ifattach call if_attach and remove the corresponding call to if_attach
from en. Create atm_ifdetach and use that in en.
While the last change actually changes the interface this is not a problem in
practice because the only other consumer of this API is an older LANAI driver
on the net, that is not ready for current anyway.
Reviewed by: -atm
ia64 by defining them in terms of newbus. Add a static inline for
fillw(), which doesn't have anything to do with I/O.
It's still ugly, but now the ugliness can be removed from ia64
specific headers.