flag. Besides providing the redundand information, need to update both
vnode and object flags causes more acquisition of vnode interlock.
OBJ_MIGHTBEDIRTY is only checked for vnode-backed vm objects.
Remove VI_OBJDIRTY and make sure that OBJ_MIGHTBEDIRTY is set only for
vnode-backed vm objects.
Suggested and reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 3 weeks
* Read the pci capability register to identify AGP 3 support
* Add missing smaller aperture sizes for AGP3 chips.
* Fix the aperture size calculation on AGP2 chips.
All sizes between 32M and 256M reported as 256M.
* Add \n to error string.
This all seems to get the CLE266 EPIA-M board agp working properly, now
back to work on drm.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Quite contrary to VT6130 datasheet which says it supports up to 8K
jumbo frame, VT6130 does not seem to send jumbo frame that is
larger than 4K in length. Trying to send a frame that is larger
than 4K cause TX MAC hang.
Even though it's possible to allow 4K jumbo frame for VT6130, I
think it's meaningless to allow 4K jumbo frame. I'm not sure VT6132
also has the same limitation but I guess it uses the same MAC of
VT6130.
controller will split the jumbo frame into multiple RX buffers.
However it seems the hardware always dma the frame to 8 bytes
boundary for the split frames. Only the first part of the fragment
can have 4 byte alignment and subsequent buffers should be 8 bytes
aligned. Change RX buffer the alignment requirement to 8 bytes from
4 bytes.
Its primary purpose is to start and stop services provided by
the rc.d scripts, however it can also be used to list the scripts
using various criteria.
Basically this commit changes two things, which improves access to TTYs
in exceptional conditions. Basically the problem was that when you ran
jexec(8) to attach to a jail, you couldn't use /dev/tty (well, also the
node of the actual TTY, e.g. /dev/pts/X). This is very inconvenient if
you want to attach to screens quickly, use ssh(1), etc.
The fixes:
- Cache the cdev_priv of the controlling TTY in struct session. Change
devfs_access() to compare against the cdev_priv instead of the vnode.
This allows you to bypass UNIX permissions, even across different
mounts of devfs.
- Extend devfs_prison_check() to unconditionally expose the device node
of the controlling TTY, even if normal prison nesting rules normally
don't allow this. This actually allows you to interact with this
device node.
To be honest, I'm not really happy with this solution. We now have to
store three pointers to a controlling TTY (s_ttyp, s_ttyvp, s_ttydp).
In an ideal world, we should just get rid of the latter two and only use
s_ttyp, but this makes certian pieces of code very impractical (e.g.
devfs, kern_exit.c).
Reported by: Many people
and /.profile. The problem is that install(1) will unlink the old file
before it installs the new one, which means that in the best case we
have to compare the changes for the old file twice.
So, change the logic to first test to see if the link exists, then
install the file. Then if the link was there and we're using -i, just
create the link in /root and be done with it. Otherwise display the
message to the user and give them the option.
Because we are now sorting things before doing the comparison we can
know conclusively that the files in / should be the sources, and the
files in /root will be the targets, so adjust the paths accordingly.
While I'm here, split a too-long error message into two lines and
just return at the end of handling these files instead of setting
the variable that says "do nothing" and then returning at the end
of the function anyway.
Just like a similar change we made to the TTY code about half a year
ago, make these strings look similar.
Suggested by: Jille Timmermans <jille@quis.cx>
it mentioned only VT6122. While I'm here remove the mention of
VT3119 which seems to be VIA's internal model name and VT3119
wouldn't be available to end users.
Reviewed by: brueffer
This tunable allows one to enable (1) or disable (0) gestures like tap
and tap-hold on Synaptics TouchPad when the Extended mode isn't enabled
(ie. "hw.psm.synaptics_support" not set).
By default, the value is -1 in order to keep the current behaviour of
not enabling/disabling gestures explicitly.
PR: kern/139272
Submitted by: David Horn <dhorn2000 AT gmail DOT com>
Reviewed by: David Horn <dhorn2000 AT gmail DOT com>
target one. Since r184058, linux_do_tkill() calls tdsignal() instead of
kill(), without checking for validity of supplied signal number. Prevent
panic when supplied signal is 0 by finishing work after checks.
Found and tested by: scf
MFC after: 3 days
value is obtained by dividing it by 256, not by 2550; also,
one second is 10^9 nanoseconds, not 1800000000 nanoseconds.
- Due to rounding error, setting watchdog to a really small
timeout (<1 sec) was turning the watchdog off. It should
set the watchdog to a small timeout instead.
- Implemented error checking in ipmi_wd_event(), as required
by watchdog(9).
PR: kern/130512
Submitted by: Dmitrij Tejblum
- Additionally, check that the timeout value is within the
supported range, and if it's too large, act as required by
watchdog(9).
MFC after: 3 days
similar to pflog(4).
To use the feature, just put the 'log' options on rules
you are interested in, e.g.
ipfw add 5000 count log ....
and run
tcpdump -ni ipfw0 ...
net.inet.ip.fw.verbose=0 enables logging to ipfw0,
net.inet.ip.fw.verbose=1 sends logging to syslog as before.
More features can be added, similar to pflog(), to store in
the MAC header metadata such as rule numbers and actions.
Manpage to come once features are settled.
perform a function such as ejecting a 3G autoinstaller disk. The eventhandler
system properly tracks threads and is safe to unload, remove the
setting/clearing of a function pointer in the kernel by u3g(4) which included a
tsleep for safety.
threads are executing the eventhandler, sleep in this case to make it safe for
module unload. If the runcount was up then an entry would have been marked
EHE_DEAD_PRIORITY so use this as a trigger to do the wakeup in
eventhandler_prune_list().
Reviewed by: jhb
controllers. TX/RX interrupt mitigation is controlled by
VGE_TXSUPPTHR and VGE_RXSUPPTHR register. These registers suppress
generation of interrupts until the programmed frames counter equals
to the registers. VT61xx also supports interrupt hold off timer
register. If this interrupt hold off timer is active all interrupts
would be disabled until the timer reaches to 0. The timer value is
reloaded whenever VGE_ISR register written. The timer resolution is
about 20us.
Previously vge(4) used single shot timer to reduce Tx completion
interrupts. This required VGE_CRS1 register access in Tx
start/completion handler to rearm new timeout value and it did not
show satisfactory result(more than 50k interrupts under load). Rx
interrupts was not moderated at all such that vge(4) used to
generate too many interrupts which in turn made polling(4) better
approach under high network load.
This change activates all interrupt moderation mechanism and
initial values were tuned to generate interrupt less than 8k per
second. That number of interrupts wouldn't add additional packet
latencies compared to polling(4). These interrupt parameters could
be changed with sysctl.
dev.vge.%d.int_holdoff
dev.vge.%d.rx_coal_pkt
dev.vge.%d.tx_coal_pkt
Interface has be brought down and up again before change take
effect.
With interrupt moderation there is no more need to loop in
interrupt handler. This loop always added one more register access.
While I'm here remove dead code which tried to implement subset of
interrupt moderation.
to list them all in the Makefile for the module,
otherwise it won't load due to missing symbols.
The problem only affected head with ipfw built as a module.
Reported by David Horn