Off by default, build behaves normally.
WITH_META_MODE we get auto objdir creation, the ability to
start build from anywhere in the tree.
Still need to add real targets under targets/ to build packages.
Differential Revision: D2796
Reviewed by: brooks imp
Work based on Cavium Thunder PCIe driver by Semihalf.
Reviewed by: andrew, jhb
Sponsored by: HEIF5
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2386
drivers, one for fdt, one for acpi. It then uses this to decide if it will
use fdt or acpi.
The GICv2 (interrupt controller) and Generic Timer drivers have been
updated to handle both cases.
As this is early code we still need FDT to find the kernel console, and
some parts are still missing, including PCI support.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2463
Reviewed by: jhb, jkim, emaste
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This will require for AArch64 as we dont have modules yet.
Sponsored by: HEIF5
Sponsored by: ARM Ltd.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1997
up to 2 rx/tx queues for the 82574.
Program the 82574 to enable 5 msix vectors, assign 1 to each rx queue,
1 to each tx queue and 1 to the link handler.
Inspired by DragonFlyBSD, enable some RSS logic for handling tx queue
handling/processing.
Move multiqueue handler functions so that they line up better in a diff
review to if_igb.c
Always enqueue tx work to be done in em_mq_start, if unable to acquire
the TX lock, then this will be processed in the background later by the
taskqueue. Remove mbuf argument from em_start_mq_locked() as the work
is always enqueued. (stolen from igb)
Setup TARC, TXDCTL and RXDCTL registers for better performance and stability
in multiqueue and singlequeue implementations. Handle Intel errata 3 and
generic multiqueue behavior with the initialization of TARC(0) and TARC(1)
Bind interrupt threads to cpus in order. (stolen from igb)
Add 2 new DDB functions, one to display the queue(s) and their settings and
one to reset the adapter. Primarily used for debugging.
In the multiqueue configuration, bump RXD and TXD ring size to max for the
adapter (4096). Setup an RDTR of 64 and an RADV of 128 in multiqueue configuration
to cut down on the number of interrupts. RADV was arbitrarily set to 2x RDTR
and can be adjusted as needed.
Cleanup the display in top a bit to make it clearer where the taskqueue threads
are running and what they should be doing.
Ensure that both queues are processed by em_local_timer() by writing them both
to the IMS register to generate soft interrupts.
Ensure that an soft interrupt is generated when em_msix_link() is run so that
any races between assertion of the link/status interrupt and a rx/tx interrupt
are handled.
Document existing tuneables: hw.em.eee_setting, hw.em.msix, hw.em.smart_pwr_down, hw.em.sbp
Document use of hw.em.num_queues and the new kernel option EM_MULTIQUEUE
Thanks to Intel for their continued support of FreeBSD.
Reviewed by: erj jfv hiren gnn wblock
Obtained from: Intel Corporation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1994
Leaf drivers should not import the PCI bus interface to add IOV handling.
Instead, move the IOV client methods to a separate kobj interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2584
Reviewed by: rstone
Implement vdso - virtual dynamic shared object.
MFi386: r283474
Rework signal code to allow using it by other modules, like linprocfs.
MFi386: r283506
For objcopy, use --input-target and --output-target.
This fixes pc98 build.
Support 7xxx adapters including firmware-assisted TSO and VLAN tagging:
- Solarflare Flareon Ultra 7000 series 10/40G adapters:
- Solarflare SFN7042Q QSFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare SFN7142Q QSFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare Flareon Ultra 7000 series 10G adapters:
- Solarflare SFN7022F SFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare SFN7122F SFP+ Server Adapter
- Solarflare SFN7322F Precision Time Synchronization Server Adapter
- Solarflare Flareon 7000 series 10G adapters:
- Solarflare SFN7002F SFP+ Server Adapter
Support utilities to configure adapters and update firmware.
The work is done by Solarflare developers
(Andy Moreton, Andrew Lee and many others),
Artem V. Andreev <Artem.Andreev at oktetlabs.ru> and me.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Causually read by: gnn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2618
When building with gcc 4.9 and binutils 2.25,
using '--input' and '--output' returns an error
message:
objcopy: option `--input' is ambiguous
Reported by: Jenkins
1. Linux sigset always 64 bit on all platforms. In order to move Linux
sigset code to the linux_common module define it as 64 bit int. Move
Linux sigset manipulation routines to the MI path.
2. Move Linux signal number definitions to the MI path. In general, they
are the same on all platforms except for a few signals.
3. Map Linux RT signals to the FreeBSD RT signals and hide signal conversion
tables to avoid conversion errors.
4. Emulate Linux SIGPWR signal via FreeBSD SIGRTMIN signal which is outside
of allowed on Linux signal numbers.
PR: 197216
around kqueue() to implement epoll subset of functionality.
The kqueue user data are 32bit on i386 which is not enough for
epoll user data, so we keep user data in the proc emuldata.
Initial patch developed by rdivacky@ in 2007, then extended
by Yuri Victorovich @ r255672 and finished by me
in collaboration with mjg@ and jillies@.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1092
following primary purposes:
1. Remove the dependency of linsysfs and linprocfs modules from linux.ko,
which will be architecture specific on amd64.
2. Incorporate into linux_common.ko general code for platforms on which
we'll support two Linuxulator modules (for both instruction set - 32 & 64 bit).
3. Move malloc(9) declaration to linux_common.ko, to enable getting memory
usage statistics properly.
Currently linux_common.ko incorporates a code from linux_mib.c and linux_util.c
and linprocfs, linsysfs and linux kernel modules depend on linux_common.ko.
Temporarily remove dtrace garbage from linux_mib.c and linux_util.c
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1072
In collaboration with: Vassilis Laganakos.
Reviewed by: trasz
exposes functions from kernel with proper DWARF CFI information so that
it becomes easier to unwind through them.
Using vdso is a mandatory for a thread cancelation && cleanup
on a modern glibc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1060
we have both the Amlogic pic and a GIC. This may be the case in some
configurations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2432
Submitted by: John Wehle <john@feith.com>
needs to be enabled by adding "kern.racct.enable=1" to /boot/loader.conf.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2407
Reviewed by: emaste@, wblock@
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
GICv3 allows to distribute interrupts to more than 8 cores served by
the previous GIC revisions. GICv3 introduces additional logic in form
of Re-Distributors associated with particular CPUs to determine
the highest priority interrupts and manage PPIs and LPIs
(Locality-specific Peripheral Interrupts). Interrupts routing is
based on CPUs' affinity numbers. CPU interface was changed to be
accessible via CPU System Registers and this is the preferred
(and supported) method in this driver.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste, ian, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Summary:
The Freescale PCIe Root Complex shows up as a Processor class device, PowerPC
subclass, so the generic PCI code ignores it for a bridge. This adds support
for it.
As part of this, update the Freescale PCI hostbridge driver, to allow probing
beyond the root complex, instead of only allowing "proper" PCI-PCI bridges.
Reviewers: #powerpc, marcel, nwhitehorn
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2442
Relnotes: yes
The x86 busdma subsystem allows using multiple implementations.
By default the classic bounce buffer approach is used, however
on systems with IOMMU it could be in runtime switched to more
efficient hardware accelerated implementation.
This commit adds ARM64 port of the x86 busdma framework and bounce
buffer backend. It is ready to use on IO coherent systems. If the
IO coherency cannot be guaranteed, the cache management operations have
to be added to this code in places marked by /* XXX ARM64TODO (...) */
comments. Also IOMMU support might be added by registering another
busdma implementation like it is already done on the x86.
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
In order to map memory from other domains when running on Xen FreeBSD uses
unused physical memory regions. Until now this memory has been allocated
using bus_alloc_resource, but this is not completely safe as we can end up
using unreclaimed MMIO or ACPI regions.
Fix this by introducing a new newbus method that can be used by Xen drivers
to request for unused memory regions. On amd64 we make sure this memory
comes from regions above 4GB in order to prevent clashes with MMIO/ACPI
regions. On i386 there's nothing we can do, so just fall back to the
previous mechanism.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Tested by: Gustau Pérez <gperez@entel.upc.edu>
Summary:
This has been tested on the RB800, but should work on the RB333, RB600, and
RB1100 as well.
It's currently missing ECC support, but read and write are complete.
Reviewers: imp
Reviewed By: imp
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2223
remains. Xen is planning to phase out support for PV upstream since it
is harder to maintain and has more overhead. Modern x86 CPUs include
virtualization extensions that support HVM guests instead of PV guests.
In addition, the PV code was i386 only and not as well maintained recently
as the HVM code.
- Remove the i386-only NATIVE option that was used to disable certain
components for PV kernels. These components are now standard as they
are on amd64.
- Remove !XENHVM bits from PV drivers.
- Remove various shims required for XEN (e.g. PT_UPDATES_FLUSH, LOAD_CR3,
etc.)
- Remove duplicate copy of <xen/features.h>.
- Remove unused, i386-only xenstored.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2362
Reviewed by: royger
Tested by: royger (i386/amd64 HVM domU and amd64 PVH dom0)
Relnotes: yes
The point of this is to be able to add RACCT (with RACCT_DISABLED)
to GENERIC, to avoid having to rebuild the kernel to use rctl(8).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2369
Reviewed by: kib@
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Vmbus multi channel support.
- Vector interrupt support.
- Signal optimization.
- Storvsc driver performance improvement.
- Scatter and gather support for storvsc driver.
- Minor bug fix for KVP driver.
Thanks royger, jhb and delphij from FreeBSD community for the reviews
and comments. Also thanks Hovy Xu from NetApp for the contributions to
the storvsc driver.
PR: 195238
Submitted by: whu
Reviewed by: royger, jhb, delphij
Approved by: royger
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
sys/amd64/amd64/mp_machdep.c, to the new common x86 source
sys/x86/x86/mp_x86.c.
Proposed and reviewed by: jhb
Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2347
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
It is not network-specific code and would
be better as part of libkern instead.
Move zlib.h and zutil.h from net/ to sys/
Update includes to use sys/zlib.h and sys/zutil.h instead of net/
Submitted by: Steve Kiernan stevek@juniper.net
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
GitHub Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/28
Relnotes: yes
sys/i386/i386/machdep.c to new file sys/x86/x86/cpu_machdep.c. Most
of the code is related to the idle handling.
Discussed with: pluknet
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This supports e500v1, e500v2, and e500mc. Tested only on e500v2, but the
performance counters are identical across all, with e500mc having some
additional events.
Relnotes: Yes
The only thing is used from this code is ipip_output() function, that does
IPIP encapsulation. Other parts of XF_IP4 code were removed in r275133.
Also it isn't possible to configure the use of XF_IP4, nor from userland
via setkey(8), nor from the kernel.
Simplify the ipip_output() function and rename it to ipsec_encap().
* move IP_DF handling from ipsec4_process_packet() into ipsec_encap();
* since ipsec_encap() called from ipsec[64]_process_packet(), it
is safe to assume that mbuf is contiguous at least to IP header
for used IP version. Remove all unneeded m_pullup(), m_copydata
and related checks.
* use V_ip_defttl and V_ip6_defhlim for outer headers;
* use V_ip4_ipsec_ecn and V_ip6_ipsec_ecn for outer headers;
* move all diagnostic messages to the ipsec_encap() callers;
* simplify handling of ipsec_encap() results: if it returns non zero
value, print diagnostic message and free mbuf.
* some style(9) fixes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2303
Reviewed by: glebius
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
$M should be the kernel machine src directory, ${MACHINE}. In most cases
${MACHINE} and ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} are the same, but this is not true for
pc98 and arm64.
It appears we previously set M=${MACHINE_CPUARCH} as a workaround to
accommodate pc98, where MACHINE_CPUARCH is pc98 but it uses
sys/i386/i386/genassym.c.
arm64 relies on this being set correctly, so update $M and add explicit
workarounds for pc98.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2307
Reviewed by: andrew, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
discontinued by its initial authors. In FreeBSD the code was already
slightly edited during the pf(4) SMP project. It is about to be edited
more in the projects/ifnet. Moving out of contrib also allows to remove
several hacks to the make glue.
Reviewed by: net@
use PAE format for the page tables, but does not incur other
consequences of the full PAE config. In particular, vm_paddr_t and
bus_addr_t are left 32bit, and max supported memory is still limited
by 4GB.
The option allows to have nx permissions for memory mappings on i386
kernel, while keeping the usual i386 KBI and avoiding the kernel data
sizing problems typical for the PAE config.
Intel documented that the PAE format for page tables is available
starting with the Pentium Pro, but it is possible that the plain
Pentium CPUs have the required support (Appendix H). The goal is to
enable the option and non-exec mappings on i386 for the GENERIC
kernel. Anybody wanting a useful system on 486, have to reconfigure
the modern i386 kernel anyway.
Discussed with: alc, jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.
The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.
The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.
This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
handles versions 0.1 and 0.2 of the standard on 32-bit ARM.
With this driver we can shutdown in QEMU. Further work is needed to
turn secondary cores on on boot and to support later revisions of the
specification.
Submitted by: Robin Randhawa <Robin.Randhawa at ARM.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
function names have changed and comments are reformatted or added, but
there is no functional change.
Claim copyright for me and Adrian.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
These are similar to the mips24k performance counters - some are
available on perfcnt0/3, some are available on perfcnt1/4.
However, the events aren't all the same.
* Add the events, named the same as from Linux oprofile.
* Verify they're the same as "MIPS32(R) 74KTM Processor Core Family
Software User's Manual"; Document Number: MD00519; Revision 01.05.
* Rename INSTRUCTIONS to something else, so it doesn't clash with
the alias INSTRUCTIONS. I'll try to tidy this up later; there
are a few other aliases to add and shuffle around.
Tested:
* QCA9558 SoC (AP135 board) - MIPS74Kc core (no FPU.)
* make universe; where it didn't fail for other reasons.
TODO:
* It'd be nice to support the four performance counters
in at least this hardware, rather than just two.
Reviewed by: bsdimp ("looks good; don't break world".)
specially aml8726-m6 and aml8726-m8b SoC based devices.
aml8726-m6 SoC exist in devices such as Visson ATV-102.
Hardkernel ODROID-C1 board has aml8726-m8b SoC.
The following support is included:
Basic machdep code
SMP
Interrupt controller
Clock control driver (aka gate)
Pinctrl
Timer
Real time clock
UART
GPIO
I2C
SD controller
SDXC controller
USB
Watchdog
Random number generator
PLL / Clock frequency measurement
Frame buffer
Submitted by: John Wehle
Approved by: stas (mentor)
Handle the VIRQ_DEBUG signal and print a stack trace of each vCPU on the Xen
console. This is only used for debug purposes and is triggered by the
administrator of the Xen host.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after: 1 week
common (autogenerated) versions. Removes extra vertical space,
and makes it easier to grep for usage throughout the tree.
Conditionally compile only for arm6 [1] (yes sounds odd but is right).
Submitted by: andrew [1]
Reviewed by: gnn, andrew (ian earlier version I think)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2159
Obtained from: Cambridge/L41
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
duplicated code in the two classes, and also allows devices in FDT-based
systems to declare simplebus as their parent and still work correctly
when the FDT data describes the device at the root of the tree rather
than as a child of a simplebus (which is common for interrupt, clock,
and power controllers).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1990
Submitted by: Michal Meloun
are built by default. You can still override that with MODULES_EXTRA
for experimental features like ZFS and dtrace on some
architectures. Also note that kernel config files are not affected by
MK_ options listed, though some targets might be.
any defaults or user specified actions on the command line. This would
be useful for specifying features that are always broken or that
cannot make sense on a specific architecture, like ACPI on pc98 or
EISA on !i386 (!x86 usage of EISA is broken and there's no supported
hardware that could have it in any event). Any items in
__ALWAYS_NO_OPTIONS are forced to "no" regardless of other settings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2011
This is pretty much a complete rewrite based on the existing i386 code. The
patches have been circulating for a couple years and have been looked at by
plenty of people, but I'm not putting anybody on the hook as having reviewed
this in any formal sense except myself.
After this has gotten wider testing from the user community, ARM_NEW_PMAP
will become the default and various dregs of the old pmap code will be
removed.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz>
Many thanks to ian who gently provided me the DS1307 breakout board.
Tested on: Raspberry pi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2022
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Each plaform performs virtual memory split between kernel and user space
and assigns kernel certain amount of memory space. However, is is sometimes
reasonable to change the default values. Such situation may happen on
systems where the demand for kernel buffers is high, many devices occupying
memory etc. This of course comes with the cost of decreasing user space
memory range so shall be used with care. Most embedded systems will not
suffer from this limtation but rather take advantage of this potential
since default behavior is left unchanged.
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: imp
Obtained from: Semihalf
translation. In particular, despite IO-APICs only take 8bit apic id,
IR translation structures accept 32bit APIC Id, which allows x2APIC
mode to function properly. Extend msi_cpu of struct msi_intrsrc and
io_cpu of ioapic_intsrc to full int from one byte.
KPI of IR is isolated into the x86/iommu/iommu_intrmap.h, to avoid
bringing all dmar headers into interrupt code. The non-PCI(e) devices
which generate message interrupts on FSB require special handling. The
HPET FSB interrupts are remapped, while DMAR interrupts are not.
For each msi and ioapic interrupt source, the iommu cookie is added,
which is in fact index of the IRE (interrupt remap entry) in the IR
table. Cookie is made at the source allocation time, and then used at
the map time to fill both IRE and device registers. The MSI
address/data registers and IO-APIC redirection registers are
programmed with the special values which are recognized by IR and used
to restore the IRE index, to find proper delivery mode and target.
Map all MSI interrupts in the block when msi_map() is called.
Since an interrupt source setup and dismantle code are done in the
non-sleepable context, flushing interrupt entries cache in the IR
hardware, which is done async and ideally waits for the interrupt,
requires busy-wait for queue to drain. The dmar_qi_wait_for_seq() is
modified to take a boolean argument requesting busy-wait for the
written sequence number instead of waiting for interrupt.
Some interrupts are configured before IR is initialized, e.g. ACPI
SCI. Add intr_reprogram() function to reprogram all already
configured interrupts, and call it immediately before an IR unit is
enabled. There is still a small window after the IO-APIC redirection
entry is reprogrammed with cookie but before the unit is enabled, but
to fix this properly, IR must be started much earlier.
Add workarounds for 5500 and X58 northbridges, some revisions of which
have severe flaws in handling IR. Use the same identification methods
as employed by Linux.
Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1892
Reviewed by: neel
Discussed with: jhb
Tested by: glebius, pho (previous versions)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
- Split the driver into independent pf and vf loadables. This is
in preparation for SRIOV support which will be following shortly.
This also allows us to keep a seperate revision control over the
two parts, making for easier sustaining.
- Make the TX/RX code a shared/seperated file, in the old code base
the ixv code would miss fixes that went into ixgbe, this model
will eliminate that problem.
- The driver loadables will now match the device names, something that
has been requested for some time.
- Rather than a modules/ixgbe there is now modules/ix and modules/ixv
- It will also be possible to make your static kernel with only one
or the other for streamlined installs, or both.
Enjoy!
Submitted by: jfv and erj
any defaults or user specified actions on the command line. This would
be useful for specifying features that are always broken or that
cannot make sense on a specific architecture, like ACPI on pc98 or
EISA on !i386 (!x86 usage of EISA is broken and there's no supported
hardware that could have it in any event). Any items in
BROKEN_OPTIONS are forced to "no" regardless of other settings.
Clients are expected change BROKEN_OPTIONS with +=. It will not
be unset, so other parts of the build system can have visibility
into the options that are broken on this platform, though this
should be very rare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2009
drivers can use it. This avoids some code duplication. Add missing
default case to all switch statements while at it. Also move the
hashing of the IPv6 flow field to layer 4 because the IPv6 flow field
is constant on a per L4 connection basis and not on a per L3 network.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1987
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 month
in kern_gzio.c. The old gzio interface was somewhat inflexible and has not
worked properly since r272535: currently, the gzio functions are called with
a range lock held on the output vnode, but kern_gzio.c does not pass the
IO_RANGELOCKED flag to vn_rdwr() calls, resulting in deadlock when vn_rdwr()
attempts to reacquire the range lock. Moreover, the new gzio interface can
be used to implement kernel core compression.
This change also modifies the kernel configuration options needed to enable
userland core dump compression support: gzio is now an option rather than a
device, and the COMPRESS_USER_CORES option is removed. Core dump compression
is enabled using the kern.compress_user_cores sysctl/tunable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1832
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Discussed with: kib
executables. The goal here, not yet accomplished, is to let the e500 kernel
run under QEMU by setting KERNBASE to something that fits in low memory and
then having the kernel relocate itself at runtime.
Implement the interace to create SR-IOV Virtual Functions (VFs).
When a driver registers that they support SR-IOV by calling
pci_setup_iov(), the SR-IOV code creates a new node in /dev/iov
for that device. An ioctl can be invoked on that device to
create VFs and have the driver initialize them.
At this point, allocating memory I/O windows (BARs) is not
supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D76
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Sandvine Inc.
I2C real-time clock (RTC).
The DS3231 has an integrated temperature-compensated crystal oscillator
(TXCO) and crystal.
DS3231 has a temperature sensor, an independent 32kHz output (which can be
turned on and off by the driver) and another output that can be used as
interrupt for alarms or as a second square-wave output, which frequency and
operation mode can be set by driver sysctl(8) knobs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1016
Reviewed by: ian, rpaulo
Tested on: Raspberry pi model B
dtrace is able to display a stack trace similar to the one below.
# dtrace -p 603 -n 'tcp:kernel::receive { stack(); }'
0 70 :receive
kernel`ip_input+0x140
kernel`netisr_dispatch_src+0xb8
kernel`ether_demux+0x1c4
kernel`ether_nh_input+0x3a8
kernel`netisr_dispatch_src+0xb8
kernel`ether_input+0x60
kernel`cpsw_intr_rx+0xac
kernel`intr_event_execute_handlers+0x128
kernel`ithread_loop+0xb4
kernel`fork_exit+0x84
kernel`swi_exit
kernel`swi_exit
Tested by: gnn
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
KERNBUILDDIR. Come up with some sensible defaults (though listing them
in kmod.mk may be unwise -- we have no easy way to know what are the
best sensible defaults for everything so we just catch the big stuff).
Append SRCS.${opt} for each option in KERN_OPTS to SRCS to allow easy
conditional compilation. Append any notion of KERN_OPTS_EXTRA to the
list of kernel opts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1530
this option from all modules that enable it theirselves.
In C mode -fms-extensions option enables anonymous structs and unions,
allowing us to use this C11 feature in kernel. Of course, clang supports
it without any extra options.
Reviewed by: dim
used by other places that expect to unwind the stack, e.g. dtrace and
stack(9).
As I have written most of this code I'm changing the license to the
standard FreeBSD license. I have received approval from the other
developers who have changed any of the affected code.
Approved by: ian, imp, rpaulo, eadler (all license change)
Highlights:
- Multiple verbs API updates
- Support for RoCE, RDMA over ethernet
All hardware drivers depending on the common infiniband stack has been
updated aswell.
Discussed with: np @
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 month
has been removed and the driver has been greatly simplified and
optimised for FreeBSD. The driver is currently not built by default.
Requested by: Bruce Simpson <bms@fastmail.net>
This port failed to gain traction and probably only a couple Wii consoles
ran FreeBSD all the way to single user mode with an md(4). IPC
support was never implemented, so it was impossible to use any peripheral
Any further development, if any, will happen at https://github.com/rpaulo/wii.
Discussed with: nathanw (a long time ago), jhibbits
root with BSD.root.mtree, so it often times will not exist. Rather
than force the latter for an installkernel, just create the directory
with a comment about why.
Submitted by: Guy Yur
I discovered this while working on llvm/lld and realized export-dynamic
only supported --. Although upstream will eventually grow to support
both - and --, switch this in our build system, because GNU ld supports
both modes, and because there's some hope lld will become the default linker
for FreeBSD in the future.
Discussed with: emaste, rdivacky
in kernel config files..
put VERBOSE_SYSINIT in it's own option header so the one file,
init_main.c, can use it instead of requiring an entire kernel recompile
to change one file..
The C standard undefines behavior when signed integers overflow. The
compiler toolchain has become more adept at detecting this and taking
advantage of faster undefined behavior. At the current time this has the
unfortunate effect of the clock stopping after 24 days of uptime.
clang makes no distinction between -fwrapv and -fno-strict-overflow. gcc
does treat them differently but -fwrapv is mature in gcc and is the
behavior are actually expecting.
Obtained from: kib
KVM clock shares the same data structures between the guest and the host
as Xen so it makes sense to just have a single copy of this code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1429
Reviewed by: royger (eariler version)
MFC after: 1 month
allocations if only one element should be allocated per page
cache. Make one allocation per element compile time configurable. Fix
a comment while at it.
Suggested by: ian @
MFC after: 1 week
it processes its own ELF relocations and can be loaded and run in place at
any physical/virtual address.
NB: This requires an updated loader to boot!
Relnotes: yes
__attribute__((format(...))), and the -fformat-extensions flag was
removed, introduce a new macro in bsd.sys.mk to choose the right variant
of compile flag for the used compiler, and use it.
Also add something similar to kern.mk, since including bsd.sys.mk from
that file will anger Warner. :-)
Note that bsd.sys.mk does not support the MK_FORMAT_EXTENSIONS knob used
in kern.mk, since that knob is only available in kern.opts.mk, not in
src.opts.mk. We might want to add it later, to more easily support
external compilers for building world (in particular, sys/boot).
bits.
The motivation here is to eventually teach netisr and potentially
other networking subsystems a bit more about how RSS work queues / buckets
are configured so things have a hope of auto-configuring in the future.
* net/rss_config.[ch] takes care of the generic bits for doing
configuration, hash function selection, etc;
* topelitz.[ch] is now in net/ rather than netinet/;
* (and would be in libkern if it didn't directly include RSS_KEYSIZE;
that's a later thing to fix up.)
* netinet/in_rss.[ch] now just contains the IPv4 specific methods;
* and netinet/in6_rss.[ch] now just contains the IPv6 specific methods.
This should have no functional impact on anyone currently using
the RSS support.
Differential Revision: D1383
Reviewed by: gnn, jfv (intel driver bits)
amd64. Until further we need some custom C-flags when building the
Linux compat API.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Reported by: bz@
by dumbbell@ to be able to compile this layer as a dependency module.
Clean up some Makefiles and remove the no longer used OFED define.
Currently only i386 and amd64 targets are supported.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
code in sys/kern/kern_dump.c. Most dumpsys() implementations are nearly
identical and simply redefine a number of constants and helper subroutines;
a generic implementation will make it easier to implement features around
kernel core dumps. This change does not alter any minidump code and should
have no functional impact.
PR: 193873
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D904
Submitted by: Conrad Meyer <conrad.meyer@isilon.com>
Reviewed by: jhibbits (earlier version)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
get the tail part of the path. We can now build kernels the
old-fashioned way on FreeBSD 9.x and 10.x on at least amd64 using
clang 3.3, 3.4 or gcc 4.2.1 (though with the latter you need
WITHOUT_MODULES="aesni vmm cxgbe" due to various issues with
gcc 4.2.1).
of the scan API.
The eventual aim is to have 'ieee80211_scan.c' have the net80211 and
driver facing scan API to start, finish and continue doing scanning
while 'ieee80211_swscan.c' implements the software scanner that
runs the scan task, handles probe request/reply bits, configures
the VAP off-channel, changes channel and does the scanning bits.
For NICs that do no scanning at all, the existing code is needed.
ath(4) and most of the other NICs (dumb USB ones in particular)
do little to no scan offload - it's all done in software.
Some NICs may do single channel at a time scanning; I haven't really
checked them out in detail.
iwn(4), the upcoming 7260 driver stuff, the new Qualcomm Atheros
11ac chipsets and the Atheros mobile/USB full-offload chips all
have complete scan engines in firmware. We don't have to drive
any of it at all - the firmware just needs to be told what to scan,
when to scan, how long to scan. It'll take care of going off
channel, pausing TX/RX appropriately, sending sleep notification
to the AP, sending probe requests and handling probe responses.
It'll do passive/active scan itself. It's almost completely
transparent to the network stack - all we see are scan notifications
when it finishes scanning each channel and beacons/probe responses
when it does its thing. Once it's done we get a final notification
that the scan is complete, with some scan results in the message.
The iwn(4) NICs handle doing active scanning too as an option
and will handle waiting appropriately on 5GHz passive channels
before active scanning.
There's some more refactoring, tidying up and lock assertions to
sprinkle around to tidy this whole thing up before I turn swscan.c
into another set of ic methods to override by the driver or
alternate scan module. So in theory this is all one big no-op
commit. In theory.
Tested:
* iwn(4) 5200, STA mode
* ath(4) 6205, STA mode
* ath(4) - various NICs, AP mode
has support for the .codeXX directives). However, it is desirable, for
a time, to allow kernels to be built with clang 3.4. Historically, it
has been advantageous to allow stable X-1 to build kernels the old
way (so long as the impact of doing so is small), and this restores
that ability.
Also, centralize the addition of ${ASM_CFLAGS.${.IMPSRC}}, place it in
kern.mk rather than kern.pre.mk so that all modules can benefit, and
give the same treatment to CFLAGS in kern.mk as well.
building with gcc 4.2
This has been requested several times over the past few months by several
people (including me), because gcc 4.2 just gets it wrong too often. It's
causing us to litter the code with lots of bogus initializers just to
squelch the warnings. We still have clang and coverity telling us about
uninitialized variables, and they do so more accurately.
mostly paves the way for the new pmap code, and shouldn't result in any
noticible behavior differences.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz
CWARNFALGS.$file centrally so we don't have to have it in all the
places. Remove a few warning flags that are no longer needed.
Also, always use -Wno-unknown-pragma to (hopefully temporarily) work
around #pragma ident in debug.h in the opensolaris code. Remove some
stale warning suppression that's no longer necessary.
roughly 10 years, and the driver has not enjoyed any significant maintenance
since long before that. Despite well-meaning efforts from a number of
people, myself included, it never made the jump to 64-bit and was relegated
to the back-corners of i386. Now its frailty is hampering forward progress
with Clang. Any renewed engineering efforts are of course welcome and can
happen outside of the tree. No MFC of this is planned.
When we started compiling the kernel with -march=armv7 the compiler
started emitting new types of relocation info which are incompatible with
the shared-lib file format used by .ko modules. This workaround prevents
the compiler from emitting the instruction sequences that require the
new relocs. This amounts to using an undocumented internal compiler
flag, so this is just a temporary workaround while we look for a good fix.
PR: 196407
the place where the C dialect is selected. Have a fairly long list
of newly requires warning suppression for clang 3.5.0, also
centralized in kern.mk. Survive the fallout of the removal of
bsd.sys.mk from bsd.kmod.mk.
raft of new warnings that appear to be on by default in clang 3.5.0.
Fix RPI-B build issues with new clang not liking the ability to pass
arbitrary flags to as, since some flags are more arbitrary (and thus
verboten) than others.
These warnings should be actually fixed in the code, but this is a
band-aide to get things (almost) building again.
a) Front load as much work as possible in if_transmit, before any driver
lock or software queue has to get involved.
b) Replace buf_ring with a brand new mp_ring (multiproducer ring). This
is specifically for the tx multiqueue model where one of the if_transmit
producer threads becomes the consumer and other producers carry on as
usual. mp_ring is implemented as standalone code and it should be
possible to use it in any driver with tx multiqueue. It also has:
- the ability to enqueue/dequeue multiple items. This might become
significant if packet batching is ever implemented.
- an abdication mechanism to allow a thread to give up writing tx
descriptors and have another if_transmit thread take over. A thread
that's writing tx descriptors can end up doing so for an unbounded
time period if a) there are other if_transmit threads continuously
feeding the sofware queue, and b) the chip keeps up with whatever the
thread is throwing at it.
- accurate statistics about interesting events even when the stats come
at the expense of additional branches/conditional code.
The NIC txq lock is uncontested on the fast path at this point. I've
left it there for synchronization with the control events (interface
up/down, modload/unload).
c) Add support for "type 1" coalescing work request in the normal NIC tx
path. This work request is optimized for frames with a single item in
the DMA gather list. These are very common when forwarding packets.
Note that netmap tx in cxgbe already uses these "type 1" work requests.
d) Do not request automatic cidx updates every 32 descriptors. Instead,
request updates via bits in individual work requests (still every 32
descriptors approximately). Also, request an automatic final update
when the queue idles after activity. This means NIC tx reclaim is still
performed lazily but it will catch up quickly as soon as the queue
idles. This seems to be the best middle ground and I'll probably do
something similar for netmap tx as well.
e) Implement a faster tx path for WRQs (used by TOE tx and control
queues, _not_ by the normal NIC tx). Allow work requests to be written
directly to the hardware descriptor ring if room is available. I will
convert t4_tom and iw_cxgbe modules to this faster style gradually.
MFC after: 2 months
code alongside the existing implementation and quickly toggle between
the two implementations when testing. Once the new code is past its
teething stage we can remove this option.
initially set up the MMU. Some day they may also be useful as part of
suspend/resume handling, when we get better at power management.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz
mechanism defined for armv7 (and also present on some armv6 chips including
the arm1176 used on rpi). The information is parsed into a global cpuinfo
structure, which will be used by (upcoming) new cache and tlb maintenance
code to handle cpu-specific variations of the maintence sequences.
Submitted by: Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>,
Michal Meloun <meloun@miracle.cz