This change is a bit ugly, but so is the coupling between the i915
driver and syscons. It isn't worth developing a more elegant solution
only to support the legacy syscons console.
The hcreate(3) implementation and related functions we inherited
from NetBSD used to free() the key value, something that is not
supported by the standard implementation.
This would cause a segmentation fault when attempting to run
the examples from the opengroup and linux manpages. NetBSD
has added non-standard calls to provide the previous
behaviour but hdestroy is not very commonly used so at this
time it seems excessive to bring those to FreeBSD.
Bump the __FreeBSD_version as this is an ABI change.
Reference:
http://bugs.dragonflybsd.org/issues/1398
MFC after: 2 weeks
While testing this I found a conformance issue in hdestroy()
that will be fixed in a subsequent commit.
Obtained from: NetBSD (hcreate.c, CVS Rev. 1.7)
Use EBADF instead of EINVAL when working around incorrect O_ACCMODE.
Phabric: D442
Obtained from: Apple Inc. (Libc 997.90.3)
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
columns available anyway. Also left align as we tend to do for flags
fields, although you can't see that currently as the string fully fills
that available columns.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
This has small changes to what Apple uses for compliance
with SUSv3. The changes cause no secondary effects in the
gnulib tests (we pass them).
Obtained from: Apple Inc. (Libc 997.90.3 with changes)
Reviewed by: bde
Phabric: D440
If RSS is enabled, ixgbe(4) will query the RSS API for the types of hashes
which should be used. It'll then only enable hashes that are exposed via
the RSS layer.
This way it won't try to do things like enable UDP hashing if RSS explicitly
states that it isn't supported in lookups.
Tested:
* 82599EB ixgbe(4) NIC
A mix of fragmented and non-fragmented UDP in a single stream will end up
being hashed differently, resulting in out-of-order behaviour in the receive
path.
This was done in the linux e1000 driver in 2011.
Discussed with: jfv
by the stack.
Right now the stack isn't really setup for RSS with 4-tuple UDP hashing
for either IPv4 and IPv6.
The specifics:
* The UDP init path udp_init() and udplite_init() specify the hash as
2-tuple, so the PCBGROUPS code only tries a 2-tuple check;
* The PCBGROUPS and RSS code doesn't know about the UDP hash types
just yet, so they're never treated as valid hashes.
* For correctness, 4-tuple can't be enabled in the general case because
UDP datagrams can be more fragmented than IP datagrams may be.
Strictly speaking, TCP datagrams may also be fragmented and this could
cause issues with PCBGROUPS/RSS until the IP defragment path grows some
code to re-calculate the RSS hash.
I'll follow this commit up with awareness of the UDP 4-tuple for those
who wish to configure it, but for now it'll stay disabled.
No drivers (yet) know to use this function when RSS is enabled.
handling. For statically linked apps this uses the __exidx_start/end
symbols set up by the linker. For dynamically linked apps it finds the
shared object that contains the given address and returns the location and
size of the exidx section in that shared object.
The dl_unwind_find_exidx() name is used by other BSD projects and Android,
and is mentioned in clang 3.5 comments as "the BSD interface" for finding
exidx data. GCC (in libgcc_s) expects the exact same API and functionality
to be provided by a function named __gnu_Unwind_Find_exidx(), so we provide
that with an alias ("strong reference").
Reviewed by: kib@
MFC after: 1 week
A nested exception condition arises when a second exception is triggered while
delivering the first exception. Most nested exceptions can be handled serially
but some are converted into a double fault. If an exception is generated during
delivery of a double fault then the virtual machine shuts down as a result of
a triple fault.
vm_exit_intinfo() is used to record that a VM-exit happened while an event was
being delivered through the IDT. If an exception is triggered while handling
the VM-exit it will be treated like a nested exception.
vm_entry_intinfo() is used by processor-specific code to get the event to be
injected into the guest on the next VM-entry. This function is responsible for
deciding the disposition of nested exceptions.
iterating over the (possibly empty) list of members. Otherwise, we
get a false negative when the target group has no members listed in
/etc/group. This went mostly unnoticed because root is explicitly
listed as a member of wheel, so the bug is never triggered in the most
common use case, which is su(8).
PR: 109416
MFC after: 1 week
configuration lexer and parser during buildworld. Instead of being
included in the source as it is in the upstream distribution, the code is
now always generated (in ${.OBJDIR}) at build time.
PR: 190739
MFC after: 1 week
calling mmap on /dev/mem and add a handler for the possible userland
machine checks that may result. Remove some pointless and wrong copy/paste
that has been in here for a decade as well.
This results in a /dev/mem with identical semantics to the x86 version.
MFC after: 1 week
read workload by splitting the single teardown rrw lock into
RRM_NUM_LOCKS (17) of them.
Read acquisitions are randomly distributed among these locks based
on curthread pointer. Write acquisitions are going to all the
locks, which for the usage of this type of lock should be rare.
Illumos issue:
5008 lock contention (rrw_exit) while running a read only load
MFC after: 2 weeks
Document the exit values and the duration format
Improve wording
Pet mandoc -Tlint
Sort SEE ALSO
Phabric: https://phabric.freebsd.org/D432
Reviewed by: wblock