of Skyhawk adapters.
Many thanks to Emulex for their continued support of FreeBSD.
Submitted by: "Duvvuru,Venkat Kumar" <VenkatKumar.Duvvuru Emulex.Com>
MFC after: 1 day
controllers. Update the hptiop(4) manual page to reflect this
as well as mentioning that some cards are already end-of-life.
Many thanks to Highpoint for providing this driver update.
MFC after: 1 day
The notable changes of this commit are support for disk resizing
and chases updates to the spec regarding write caching.
Contains projects/virtio commits:
r245713:
virtio_blk: Replace __FUNCTION__ with __func__
r245714:
virtio_blk: Use more consistent mutex name
r245715:
virtio_blk: Print device name too if failed to reinit during dump
r245716:
virtio_blk: Remove an unuseful ASSERT
r245723:
virtio_blk: Record the vendor and device information
r245724:
virtio_blk: Add resize support
r245726:
virtio_blk: More verbose ASSERT messages
r245730:
virtio_blk: Tweak resize announcement message
r246061:
virtio_blk: Do not always read entire config
r246062:
virtio_blk: Use topology to set the stripe size/offset
r246307:
virtio_blk: Correct stripe offset calculation
r246063:
virtio_blk: Add support for write cache enable feature
r246303:
virtio_blk: Expand a comment
r252529:
virtio_blk: Improve write cache handling
r252681:
virtio_blk: Remove unneeded curly braces
MFC after: 1 month
algorithm, which is based on the 2011 v0.1 patch release and described in the
paper "Revisiting TCP Congestion Control using Delay Gradients" by David Hayes
and Grenville Armitage. It is implemented as a kernel module compatible with the
modular congestion control framework.
CDG is a hybrid congestion control algorithm which reacts to both packet loss
and inferred queuing delay. It attempts to operate as a delay-based algorithm
where possible, but utilises heuristics to detect loss-based TCP cross traffic
and will compete effectively as required. CDG is therefore incrementally
deployable and suitable for use on shared networks.
In collaboration with: David Hayes <david.hayes at ieee.org> and
Grenville Armitage <garmitage at swin edu au>
MFC after: 4 days
Sponsored by: Cisco University Research Program and FreeBSD Foundation
- Reconnect with some minor modifications, in particular now selsocket()
internals are adapted to use sbintime units after recent'ish calloutng
switch.
some general word-smithing.
- Don't claim that adaptive mutexes have a timeout (they don't).
- Don't treat pool mutexes as a separate primitive in a few places.
- Describe sleepable read-mostly locks as a separate lock type and add
them to the various tables.
- Don't claim that sx locks are less efficient. That hasn't been true in
a few years now.
- Describe lockmanager locks next to sx locks since they are very similar
in terms of rules, etc., and so that all the lock primitives are
grouped together before the non-lock primitives.
- Similarly, move the section on Giant after the description of all the
non-lock primitives to preserve grouping.
- Condition variables work on several types of locks, not just mutexes.
- Add a bit of language to compare/contrast condition variables with
sleep/wakeup.
- Add a note about why pause(9) is unique.
- Add some language to define bounded vs unbounded sleeps and explain
why they are treated separately (bounded sleeps only need CPU time
to make forward progress).
- Don't state that using mtx_sleep() is a bad idea. It is in fact rather
necessary.
- Rework the interaction table a bit. First, it did not include really
include sleepable rmlocks and it left out lockmgr entirely. To get
things to fit, combine similar lock types into the same column / row,
and explicitly state what "sleep" means. The notes about recursion
and lock order were also a bit banal (lock order is always important,
not just in the few places annotated here), so remove them. In
particular, the lock order note would need to be on just about every
cell. If we want to document recursion I think a better approach
would be a separate table summarizing the recursion rules for each
lock as having too many notes clutters the table.
- Tweak the tables to use less indentation so everything still fits with
the added columns.
- Correct a few cells in the context mode table.
- Use mdoc markup instead of explicit markup in a few places.
Requested by: julian
MFC after: 2 weeks
device names "md" or "md[0-9]*" and a "file" option are specified in
/etc/fstab like this:
md none swap sw,file=/swap.bin 0 0
- Add GBDE/GELI encrypted swap space specification support, which
rc.d/encswap supported. The /etc/fstab lines are like the following:
/dev/ada1p1.bde none swap sw 0 0
/dev/ada1p2.eli none swap sw 0 0
.eli devices accepts aalgo, ealgo, keylen, and sectorsize as options.
swapctl(8) can understand an encrypted device in the command line
like this:
# swapctl -a /dev/ada2p1.bde
- "-L" flag is added to support "late" option to defer swapon until
rc.d/mountlate runs.
- rc.d script change:
rc.d/encswap -> removed
rc.d/addswap -> just display a warning message if $swapfile is defined
rc.d/swap1 -> renamed to rc.d/swap
rc.d/swaplate -> newly added to support "late" option
These changes alleviate a race condition between device creation/removal
and swapon/swapoff.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: wblock (manual page)
provided by Isilon.
- Add an rm_assert() supporting various lock assertions similar to other
locking primitives. Because rmlocks track readers the assertions are
always fully accurate unlike rw_assert() and sx_assert().
- Flesh out the lock class methods for rmlocks to support sleeping via
condvars and rm_sleep() (but only while holding write locks), rmlock
details in 'show lock' in DDB, and the lc_owner method used by
dtrace.
- Add an internal destroyed cookie so that API functions can assert
that an rmlock is not destroyed.
- Make use of rm_assert() to add various assertions to the API (e.g.
to assert locks are held when an unlock routine is called).
- Give RM_SLEEPABLE locks their own lock class and always use the
rmlock's own lock_object with WITNESS.
- Use THREAD_NO_SLEEPING() / THREAD_SLEEPING_OK() to disallow sleeping
while holding a read lock on an rmlock.
Submitted by: andre
Obtained from: EMC/Isilon
This is an extended version of ipv4_addr_IF which supports both IPv4 and
IPv6, and multiple range specifications. To avoid to generate too many
addresses, the maximum number of the generated addresses is currently
limited to 31.
- Add $ifconfig_IF_aliases, which accepts multiple IP aliases in a variable.
- ipv6_prefix_IF now supports !/64 prefix length. In addition to the old
64-bit format (2001:db8:1:1), a full 128-bit format like 2001:db8:1:1::/64
is supported.
- Replace ifconfig command with $IFCONFIG_CMD variable to support
a dry-run mode in the future.
- Remove IP aliases before removing all of IPv4 addresses when doing
"rc.d/netif down".
- Add a DAD wait to network6_getladdr() because it is possible to fail to
configure an EUI64 address when ipv6_prefix_IF is specified.
A summary of the supported ifconfig_* variables is as follows:
# IPv4 configuration.
ifconfig_em0="inet 192.168.0.1"
# IPv6 configuration.
ifconfig_em0_ipv6="inet6 2001:db8::1/64"
# IPv4 address range spec. Now deprecated.
ipv4_addr_em0="10.2.1.1-10"
# IPv6 alias.
ifconfig_em0_alias0="inet6 2001:db8:5::1 prefixlen 70"
# IPv4 alias.
ifconfig_em0_alias1="inet 10.2.2.1/24"
# IPv4 alias with range spec w/o AF keyword (backward compat).
ifconfig_em0_alias2="10.3.1.1-10/32"
# IPv6 alias with range spec.
ifconfig_em0_alias3="inet6 2001:db8:20-2f::1/64"
# ifconfig_IF_aliases is just like ifconfig_IF_aliasN.
ifconfig_em0_aliases="inet 10.3.3.201-204/24 inet6 2001:db8:210-213::1/64 inet 10.1.1.1/24"
# IPv6 alias (backward compat)
ipv6_ifconfig_em0_alias0="inet6 2001:db8:f::1/64"
# IPv6 alias w/o AF keyword (backward compat)
ipv6_ifconfig_em0_alias1="2001:db8:f:1::1/64"
# IPv6 prefix.
ipv6_prefix_em0="2001:db8::/64"
Tested by: Kimmo Paasiala
optionally start the traversal from a previously found element by passing the
element in as "var". Passing a NULL "var" retains the same semantics as the
regular FOREACH macros.
Kudos to phk for suggesting the "FROM" suffix instead of my original proposal.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version), rpaulo
MFC after: 1 week
This is actually a fully functional build except:
* All internal shared libraries are static linked to make sure there
is no interference with ports (and to reduce build time).
* It does not have the python/perl/etc plugin or API support.
* By default, it installs as "svnlite" rather than "svn".
* If WITH_SVN added in make.conf, you get "svn".
* If WITHOUT_SVNLITE is in make.conf, this is completely disabled.
To be absolutely clear, this is not intended for any use other than
checking out freebsd source and committing, like we once did with cvs.
It should be usable for small scale local repositories that don't
need the python/perl plugin architecture.
But we don't want to set it to + for bmake since it breaks make -N
which is used to supress the normal handling of targets marked with .MAKE
(which seems broken in fmake and might be why _+_ was introduced).
Add some comments to explain what's gong on.
Reviewed by: obrien
- remove return statements from void function [1]
- include missing header
- use O_CLOEXEC instead of separate fcntl() calls
PR: docs/179459 [1]
MFC after: 1 week