to this pmap.c. This new r/w lock is used primarily to synchronize access
to the TTE lists. However, it will be used in a somewhat unconventional
way. As finer-grained TTE list locking is added to each of the pmap
functions that acquire this r/w lock, its acquisition will be changed from
write to read, enabling concurrent execution of the pmap functions with
finer-grained locking.
Reviewed by: attilio
Tested by: flo
MFC after: 10 days
in_cksum.h required ip.h to be included for struct ip. To be
able to use some general checksum functions like in_addword()
in a non-IPv4 context, limit the (also exported to user space)
IPv4 specific functions to the times, when the ip.h header is
present and IPVERSION is defined (to 4).
We should consider more general checksum (updating) functions
to also allow easier incremental checksum updates in the L3/4
stack and firewalls, as well as ponder further requirements by
certain NIC drivers needing slightly different pseudo values
in offloading cases. Thinking in terms of a better "library".
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn (as part of the whole)
MFC After: 3 days
discrepancy between modules and kernel, but deal with SMP differences
within the functions themselves.
As an added bonus this also helps in terms of code readability.
Requested by: gibbs
Reviewed by: jhb, marius
MFC after: 1 week
last show-stopper keeping PREEMPTION from being usable on sparc64 should
have been dealt with in r230662.
At least on 2-way systems, PREEMPTION causes a little bit of a degradation
in worldstone performance. However, FreeBSD seems to have started building
up regressions in !PREEMPTION cases so sparc64 better should not be an
oddball in this regard.
MFC after: 1 week
r233961:
Fix interrupt load balancing regression, introduced in revision
222813, that left all un-pinned interrupts assigned to CPU 0.
In intr_shuffle_irqs(), remove CPU_SETOF() call that initialized
the "intr_cpus" cpuset to only contain CPU0.
This initialization is too late and nullifies the results of calls
to the intr_add_cpu() that occur much earlier in the boot process.
r234074 (partial):
The BSP is not added to the mask of valid target CPUs for interrupts.
Fix this by adding the BSP as an interrupt target directly in
r234105:
Fix !SMP build after r234074.
MFC after: 3 days
- Correctly determine the maximum payload size for setting the TX link
frequent NACK latency and replay timer thresholds.
Submitted by: stefanf [1]
MFC after: 3 days
DMA tag with a 4 GB boundary as required by PCI-Express. With r232403 in
place this actually is redundant. However, the host-PCI-Express bridge
driver is the more appropriate place for implementing this restriction.
MFC after: 3 days
As of FreeBSD 8, this driver should not be used. Applications that use
posix_openpt(2) and openpty(3) use the pts(4) that is built into the
kernel unconditionally. If it turns out high profile depend on the
pty(4) module anyway, I'd rather get those fixed. So please report any
issues to me.
The pty(4) module is still available as a kernel module of course, so a
simple `kldload pty' can be used to run old-style pseudo-terminals.
didn't already have them. This is because the ternary expression will
return int, due to the Usual Arithmetic Conversions. Such casts are not
needed for the 32 and 64 bit variants.
While here, add additional parentheses around the x86 variant, to
protect against unintended consequences.
MFC after: 2 weeks
platforms.
This will make every attempt to mount a non-mpsafe filesystem to the
kernel forbidden, unless it is expressely compiled with
VFS_ALLOW_NONMPSAFE option.
This patch is part of the effort of killing non-MPSAFE filesystems
from the tree.
No MFC is expected for this patch.
The tag enforces a single restriction that all DMA transactions must not
cross a 4GB boundary. Note that while this restriction technically only
applies to PCI-express, this change applies it to all PCI devices as it
is simpler to implement that way and errs on the side of caution.
- Add a softc structure for PCI bus devices to hold the bus_dma tag and
a new pci_attach_common() routine that performs actions common to the
attach phase of all PCI bus drivers. Right now this only consists of
a bootverbose printf and the allocate of a bus_dma tag if necessary.
- Adjust all PCI bus drivers to allocate a PCI bus softc and to call
pci_attach_common() from their attach routines.
MFC after: 2 weeks
long for specifying a boundary constraint.
- Change bus_dma tags to use bus_addr_t instead of bus_size_t for boundary
constraints.
These allow boundary constraints to be fully expressed for cases where
sizeof(bus_addr_t) != sizeof(bus_size_t). Specifically, it allows a
driver to properly specify a 4GB boundary in a PAE kernel.
Note that this cannot be safely MFC'd without a lot of compat shims due
to KBI changes, so I do not intend to merge it.
Reviewed by: scottl
so try harder to get the CDMA sync interrupt delivered and also in
a more efficient way:
- wrap the whole process of sending and receiving the CDMA sync
interrupt in a critical section so we don't get preempted,
- send the CDMA sync interrupt to the CPU that is actually waiting
for it to happen so we don't take a detour via another CPU,
- instead of waiting for up to 15 seconds for the interrupt to
trigger try the whole process for up to 15 times using a one
second timeout (the code was also changed to just ignore belated
interrupts of a previous tries should they appear).
According to testing done by Peter Jeremy with the debugging also
added as part of this commit the first two changes apparently are
sufficient to now properly get the CDMA sync interrupts delivered
at the first try though.
VIS-based block copy/zero implementations. While with 4BSD it's
sufficient to just disable the tick interrupts, with ULE+PREEMPTION
it's otherwise also possible that these are preempted via IPIs.
helper since r230632, use these for output and panicing during the
early cycles and move cninit() until after the static per-CPU data
has been set up. This solves a couple of issue regarding the non-
availability of the static per-CPU data:
- panic() not working and only making things worse when called,
- having to supply a special DELAY() implementation to the low-level
console drivers,
- curthread accesses of mutex(9) usage in low-level console drivers
that aren't conditional due to compiler optimizations (basically,
this is the problem described in r227537 but in this case for
keyboards attached via uart(4)). [1]
PR: 164123 [1]
implementing a simple OF_panic() that may be used during the early
cycles when panic() isn't available, yet.
- Mark cpu_{exit,shutdown}() as __dead2 as appropriate.
VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE to 2, awaiting more insight from alc@. As it turns
out, the VM apparently has problems with machines that have large holes
in the physical address space, causing the kmem_suballoc() call in
kmeminit() to fail with a VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE of 1. Using a value of 2
allows these, namely Blade 1500 with 2GB of RAM, to boot.
PR: 164227
CTL is a disk and processor device emulation subsystem originally written
for Copan Systems under Linux starting in 2003. It has been shipping in
Copan (now SGI) products since 2005.
It was ported to FreeBSD in 2008, and thanks to an agreement between SGI
(who acquired Copan's assets in 2010) and Spectra Logic in 2010, CTL is
available under a BSD-style license. The intent behind the agreement was
that Spectra would work to get CTL into the FreeBSD tree.
Some CTL features:
- Disk and processor device emulation.
- Tagged queueing
- SCSI task attribute support (ordered, head of queue, simple tags)
- SCSI implicit command ordering support. (e.g. if a read follows a mode
select, the read will be blocked until the mode select completes.)
- Full task management support (abort, LUN reset, target reset, etc.)
- Support for multiple ports
- Support for multiple simultaneous initiators
- Support for multiple simultaneous backing stores
- Persistent reservation support
- Mode sense/select support
- Error injection support
- High Availability support (1)
- All I/O handled in-kernel, no userland context switch overhead.
(1) HA Support is just an API stub, and needs much more to be fully
functional.
ctl.c: The core of CTL. Command handlers and processing,
character driver, and HA support are here.
ctl.h: Basic function declarations and data structures.
ctl_backend.c,
ctl_backend.h: The basic CTL backend API.
ctl_backend_block.c,
ctl_backend_block.h: The block and file backend. This allows for using
a disk or a file as the backing store for a LUN.
Multiple threads are started to do I/O to the
backing device, primarily because the VFS API
requires that to get any concurrency.
ctl_backend_ramdisk.c: A "fake" ramdisk backend. It only allocates a
small amount of memory to act as a source and sink
for reads and writes from an initiator. Therefore
it cannot be used for any real data, but it can be
used to test for throughput. It can also be used
to test initiators' support for extremely large LUNs.
ctl_cmd_table.c: This is a table with all 256 possible SCSI opcodes,
and command handler functions defined for supported
opcodes.
ctl_debug.h: Debugging support.
ctl_error.c,
ctl_error.h: CTL-specific wrappers around the CAM sense building
functions.
ctl_frontend.c,
ctl_frontend.h: These files define the basic CTL frontend port API.
ctl_frontend_cam_sim.c: This is a CTL frontend port that is also a CAM SIM.
This frontend allows for using CTL without any
target-capable hardware. So any LUNs you create in
CTL are visible in CAM via this port.
ctl_frontend_internal.c,
ctl_frontend_internal.h:
This is a frontend port written for Copan to do
some system-specific tasks that required sending
commands into CTL from inside the kernel. This
isn't entirely relevant to FreeBSD in general,
but can perhaps be repurposed.
ctl_ha.h: This is a stubbed-out High Availability API. Much
more is needed for full HA support. See the
comments in the header and the description of what
is needed in the README.ctl.txt file for more
details.
ctl_io.h: This defines most of the core CTL I/O structures.
union ctl_io is conceptually very similar to CAM's
union ccb.
ctl_ioctl.h: This defines all ioctls available through the CTL
character device, and the data structures needed
for those ioctls.
ctl_mem_pool.c,
ctl_mem_pool.h: Generic memory pool implementation used by the
internal frontend.
ctl_private.h: Private data structres (e.g. CTL softc) and
function prototypes. This also includes the SCSI
vendor and product names used by CTL.
ctl_scsi_all.c,
ctl_scsi_all.h: CTL wrappers around CAM sense printing functions.
ctl_ser_table.c: Command serialization table. This defines what
happens when one type of command is followed by
another type of command.
ctl_util.c,
ctl_util.h: CTL utility functions, primarily designed to be
used from userland. See ctladm for the primary
consumer of these functions. These include CDB
building functions.
scsi_ctl.c: CAM target peripheral driver and CTL frontend port.
This is the path into CTL for commands from
target-capable hardware/SIMs.
README.ctl.txt: CTL code features, roadmap, to-do list.
usr.sbin/Makefile: Add ctladm.
ctladm/Makefile,
ctladm/ctladm.8,
ctladm/ctladm.c,
ctladm/ctladm.h,
ctladm/util.c: ctladm(8) is the CTL management utility.
It fills a role similar to camcontrol(8).
It allow configuring LUNs, issuing commands,
injecting errors and various other control
functions.
usr.bin/Makefile: Add ctlstat.
ctlstat/Makefile
ctlstat/ctlstat.8,
ctlstat/ctlstat.c: ctlstat(8) fills a role similar to iostat(8).
It reports I/O statistics for CTL.
sys/conf/files: Add CTL files.
sys/conf/NOTES: Add device ctl.
sys/cam/scsi_all.h: To conform to more recent specs, the inquiry CDB
length field is now 2 bytes long.
Add several mode page definitions for CTL.
sys/cam/scsi_all.c: Handle the new 2 byte inquiry length.
sys/dev/ciss/ciss.c,
sys/dev/ata/atapi-cam.c,
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_targ_bh.c,
scsi_target/scsi_cmds.c,
mlxcontrol/interface.c: Update for 2 byte inquiry length field.
scsi_da.h: Add versions of the format and rigid disk pages
that are in a more reasonable format for CTL.
amd64/conf/GENERIC,
i386/conf/GENERIC,
ia64/conf/GENERIC,
sparc64/conf/GENERIC: Add device ctl.
i386/conf/PAE: The CTL frontend SIM at least does not compile
cleanly on PAE.
Sponsored by: Copan Systems, SGI and Spectra Logic
MFC after: 1 month
configurations for various architectures in FreeBSD 10.x. This allows
basic Capsicum functionality to be used in the default FreeBSD
configuration on non-embedded architectures; process descriptors are not
yet enabled by default.
MFC after: 3 months
Sponsored by: Google, Inc
no need to additionally add CPU memory barriers to the acquire variants of
atomic(9), these are documented to also include compiler memory barriers.
So add the latter, which were previously included by using membar(), back.
According to the open firmware standard, finddevice call has to return
a phandle with value of -1 in case of error.
This commit is to:
- Fix the FDT implementation of this interface (ofw_fdt_finddevice) to
return (phandle_t)-1 in case of error, instead of 0 as it does now.
- Fix up the callers of OF_finddevice() to compare the return value with
-1 instead of 0 to check for errors.
- Since phandle_t is unsigned, the return value of OF_finddevice should
be checked with '== -1' rather than '<= 0' or '> 0', fix up these cases
as well.
Reported by: nwhitehorn
Reviewed by: raj
Approved by: raj, nwhitehorn
the 16-bit cylinders field of the VTOC8 disk label (at around 502GB). The
geometry chosen for disks above that limit allows to use disks up to 2TB,
which is the limit of the extended VTOC8 format. The geometry used for
disks smaller than the 16-bit cylinders limit stays the same as used by
cam_calc_geometry(9) for extended translation.
Thanks to Hans-Joerg Sirtl for providing hardware for testing this change.
MFC after: 3 days
compatible with each other and since r227539 the last issue seen when
using SCHED_ULE is fixed. At least on UP and 2-way machines SCHED_4BSD
still performs better than SCHED_ULE, however, the optimizations done
in r225889 pretty much compensate that so there's at least no net
regression.
Thanks go to Peter Jeremy for extensive testing.
one. Interestingly, these are actually the default for quite some time
(bus_generic_driver_added(9) since r52045 and bus_generic_print_child(9)
since r52045) but even recently added device drivers do this unnecessarily.
Discussed with: jhb, marcel
- While at it, use DEVMETHOD_END.
Discussed with: jhb
- Also while at it, use __FBSDID.
directly from g7, the pcpu pointer. This guarantees correct behavior
when the thread migrates to a different CPU.
Commit message stolen from r205431. Additional testing by Peter Jeremy.
MFC after: 3 days
all the architectures.
The option allows to mount non-MPSAFE filesystem. Without it, the
kernel will refuse to mount a non-MPSAFE filesytem.
This patch is part of the effort of killing non-MPSAFE filesystems
from the tree.
No MFC is expected for this patch.
Tested by: gianni
Reviewed by: kib
The SYSCTL_NODE macro defines a list that stores all child-elements of
that node. If there's no SYSCTL_DECL macro anywhere else, there's no
reason why it shouldn't be static.
replace amd(4) with the former in the amd64, i386 and pc98 GENERIC kernel
configuration files. Besides duplicating functionality, amd(4), which
previously also supported the AMD Am53C974, unlike esp(4) is no longer
maintained and has accumulated enough bit rot over time to always cause
a panic during boot as long as at least one target is attached to it
(see PR 124667).
PR: 124667
Obtained from: NetBSD (based on)
MFC after: 3 days
- Move esp_devclass to ncr53c9x.c in order to allow different bus front-ends
to use it.
- Use KOBJMETHOD_END.
- Remove the gl_clear_latched_intr hook as it's not needed for any of the
chips nor the front-ends supported in FreeBSD and likely never will be.
- Correct the DMA constraints used in the SBus front-end, the LSI64854 isn't
limited to 32-bit DMA.
- The ESP200 also only supports up to 64k transfers.
- Don't let the DMA and SBus front-end supply a maximum transfer size larger
than MAXPHYS as that's the maximum the upper layers use and we otherwise
just waste resources unnecessarily.
- Initialize the ECB callout and don't zero the handle when returning ECBs
to the free list so that ncr53c9x_callout() actually is called with the
driver lock held.
- On detach the driver lock should be held across cam_sim_free() according
to isp(4) and a panic received.
- Check the return value of NCRDMA_SETUP(), i.e. bus_dmamap_load(9), and try
to handle failures gracefully.
- In ncr53c9x_action() replace N calls to xpt_done() in a switch with just
one at the end.
- On XPT_PATH_INQ report "NCR" rather than "Sun" as the vendor as the former
is somewhat more correct as well as the maximum supported transfer size via
maxio in order to take advantage of controllers that that can handle more
than DFLTPHYS.
- Print the number of MESSAGE (EXTENDED) rejected.
- Fix the path encoded in the multiple inclusion protection of ncr53c9xvar.h.
- Correct the DMA constraints used in the LSI64854 core to not exceed the
maximum supported transfer size and include the boundary so we don't need
to check on every setup of a DMA transfer.
- Let the bus DMA map callbacks do nothing in case of an error.
- Correctly handle > 64k transfers for FAS366 in the LSI64854. A new feature
flag NCR_F_LARGEXFER was introduced so we just need to check for this one
and not for individual controllers supporting large transfers in several
places.
- Let the LSI64854 core load transfer buffers using BUS_DMA_NOWAIT as the
NCR53C9x core can't handle EINPROGRESS. Due to lack of bounce buffers
support, sparc64 doesn't actually use EINPROGRESS and likely never will,
as an example for writing additional front-ends for the NCR53C9x core it
makes sense to set BUS_DMA_NOWAIT anyway though.
- Some minor cleanup.
thing when changing the debugging options as part of head becoming a new
stable branch. It may also help people who for one reason or another want
to run head but don't want it slowed down by the debugging support.
Reviewed by: kib