getting the same behavior using the flags, which can be done inside of
UserConfig. (Also document other syscons flags which were previously
undocumented).
Requested by: bde
negative-logic flags (flags 0x01 and 0x02 for npx0, defaulting to unset = on).
This changes the default from off to on. The options have been in current
for several months with no problems reported.
Added a boot-time negative-logic flag for the old I5886_FAST_BCOPY option
which went away too soon (flag 0x04 for npx0, defaulting to unset = on).
Added a boot-time way to set the memory size (iosiz in config, iosize in
userconfig for npx0).
LINT:
Removed old options. Documented npx0's flags and iosiz.
options.i386:
Removed old options.
identcpu.c:
Don't set the function pointers here. Setting them has to be delayed
until after userconfig has had a chance to disable them and until after
a good npx0 has been detected.
machdep.c:
Use npx0's iosize instead of MAXMEM if it is nonzero.
support.s:
Added vectors and glue code for copyin() and copyout().
Fixed ifdefs for i586_bzero().
Added ifdefs for i586_bcopy().
npx.c:
Set the function pointers here.
Clear hw_float when an npx exists but is too broken to use.
Restored style from a year or three ago in npxattach().
2.2 are more obvious. -Winline is unimportant, but -W gives thousands
of warnings for comparisions. Turning off -W also loses warnings for:
- auto variables clobbered by longjmp. Not much of a problem in the kernel.
- functions returning without a value. I don't like losing this.
- an expression statement or the left side of a comma operand contains no
side effects. Turning this off also stops warnings for the low quality
debugging macros in gsc.c and lpt.c.
Should be in 2.2.
for get_diskinfo(), whose BIOS call sets %es:%edi in some cases, although
most documentation says that it doesn't change %edi in the cases that
happened to matter (for hard disks).
This shall be in 2.1.6 and 2.2.
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@idt.ntnu.no
(except I kept the unnecessary preservation of %edx and %ecx)
are adding new drivers...) to match, as best I can tell, majors.i386.
Improve behaviour when attempting to save changes for devices that should
not be changeable. Now correclty avoids non-device items, PCI devices and
devices with no isa_device structure.
Submitted by: (observations from) joerg, bde
uses one or the other. This required some changes to the ahc_reset()
function, and how early the probes had to allocate their softc.
Turn the AHC_IN/OUT* macros into inline functions and lowercase their names
to indicate this change. Geting AHC_OUTSB to work as a macro doing
conditional memory mapped I/O would have been too gross.
Be smart about the STPWEN control bit in SCFRCTL1. It should only be set
if the low byte of the bus is to be terminated. We figure this out either
by "caching" the value left over from the BIOS setup before we reset the card
or by using the values stored in the seeprom if it is availible.
uses one or the other. This required some changes to the ahc_reset()
function, and how early the probes had to allocate their softc.
Turn the AHC_IN/OUT* macros into inline functions and lowercase their names
to indicate this change. Geting AHC_OUTSB to work as a macro doing
conditional memory mapped I/O would have been too gross.
Stop setting STPWEN in the main driver and let the PCI front end do it
instead. It knows better.
Add the clearing of the QOUTQCNT variable during command complete processing
in the SCB paging case.
Go back to doing unconditional retries for the QUEUE FULL status condition.
This is really a kludge, but the code to handle it properly is on the SCSI
branch and will not make it into 2.2.
uses one or the other. This required some changes to the ahc_reset()
function, and how early the probes had to allocate their softc.
Turn the AHC_IN/OUT* macros into inline functions and lowercase their names
to indicate this change. Geting AHC_OUTSB to work as a macro doing
conditional memory mapped I/O would have been too gross.
1) get_free_or_disc_scb was not being passed its argument correctly
in one case
2) Add protection in the form of the QOUTQCNT variable to prevent
overflowing the QOUTFIFO.
This should make SCB Paging work. Really, I mean it now. 8-)
using a sockaddr_dl.
Fix the other packet-information socket options (SO_TIMESTAMP, IP_RECVDSTADDR)
to work for multicast UDP and raw sockets as well. (They previously only
worked for unicast UDP).
This allows the user to add modify syscons's configuration flags using
UserConfig that will allow older/quirky hardware (most notably older IBM
ThinkPad laptops) to work with the standard boot kernel.
Inspired by: The Nomads
directories to a different parent directory always failed. This bug
was caused by 4.4Lite2 changing the directory format and ext2fs not
keeping up.
Should be in 2.2.
This follows more closely the suggestions in the latest NCR docs, and has
been running on my system for weeks with no problem. It does improve the
quality of diagnostic messages and does allow to better understand the
sequence of events in case of an error.
This should go into 2.2 and 2.1.6.
This fixes several bugs and one missing feature:
- cluster_read() was needlessly used for reading files of size exactly 1
block.
- EFAULT errors for read didn't terminate the loop. This was probably
harmless.
- IO_VMIO handling was missing near line 275. I don't know what this does.
- B_CLUSTEROK was only set if (doclusterwrite) nead line 293. This was
harmless, if only because another bug prevents doclusterwrite from being
0.
- MNT_NOATIME wasn't implemented.
This should be in 2.2, of course.
Reviewed by: davidg
if I586_CPU is defined. Note there is a runtime check so the code
won't be run for non-Pentium CPUs anyway.
2.2 candidate, this code has been tested for almost half year in -current.
handlers if interrupts are nested more than a few (3) deep. This
only reduces the maximum nesting level by 1 with the standard
drivers unless there is a related bug somewhere, but can't hurt
much (the worst case is returning to hoggish interrupt handler like
wdintr(), but such interrupt handlers hurt anyway).
Fixed a previously harmless race incrementing the interrupt nesting
level.
This should be in 2.1.6 and 2.2.
medium with another size is being inserted. Right now, this case was
broken and led to a situation where a medium could only be replaced
with another one of the same size.
Closes PR #kern/1830: Can't mount optical disk...
Submitted by: akiyama@kme.mei.co.jp (Shunsuke Akiyama)
hardware interrupt counts add up to the total. Previously, software
interrupts generated by splz() were counted in the total. These
software interrupts seem to be very rare - there have apparently been
0 of them on freefall among the last 352448857 interrupts.
will be renamed.
Fixed comments about unsupported network protocols.
ncr0 is a controller, not a device. This make no difference.
Added undocumented options DEVFS_ROOT, I586_CTR_GUPROF and I586_PMC_GUPROF.
Sorted undocumented options.
. also detect the Phlips CDD2000; it's software-compatible with the HP part
Submitted by: cau@cc.gatech.edu (Carlos Ugarte)
. correct the blocksize handling for CD-DA tracks, and fix multitrack
handling
Submitted by: nsayer@quack.kfu.com (Nick Sayer)
2.2 candidates!
existing mechanism uses a global queue for some buffers and the
vp->b_dirtyblkhd queue for others. This turns sequential writes into
randomly ordered writes to the server, affecting both read and write
performance. The existing mechanism also copes badly with hung
servers, tending to block accesses to other servers when all the iods
are waiting for a hung server.
The new mechanism uses a queue for each mount point. All asynchronous
i/o goes through this queue which preserves the ordering of requests.
A simple mechanism ensures that the iods are shared out fairly between
active mount points. This removes the sysctl variable vfs.nfs.dwrite
since the new queueing mechanism removes the old delayed write code
completely.
This should go into the 2.2 branch.
7810 being either the last of the first device to be probed, so use a counting
scheme instead to determine when one card ends and another begins. There may
be a better way to do this by decoding the PCI tag, which I will investigate
later.
2.2 Candidate.
it automatically. The AHC_FORCE_PIO option wasn't having any effect because
the PCI probe code didn't include this file.
Fix some problems with the new sync and wide negotiation code. First off,
go back to async transfers by using a message reject again. The SCSI II and
III spec indicate that if a target's response to an initiater does not suit
(i.e. its too low), then performing a message reject is the appropriate
response. If, on the other hand, the initiator begins the negotiation and
we want to go async, we will send back an SDTR message with a 0 period and
offset.
Also fix a really bad negotiation problem caused by a missing "break". This
would usually hit people that had "smart" wide devices that immediately
attempt sync negotiation after a successful wide negotiation.
2.2 Candidate.
or list items which may look like devices but which don't have an
isa_device structure attached to them.
This _shouldn't_ be possible, but it appears to have been
observed-by: Joerg
problem of allocating contiguous buffer memory in general, but
make it much more likely to work at boot-up time. The best
chance for an LKM-type load of a sound driver is immediately
after the mount of the root filesystem.
This appears to work for a 64K allocation on an 8MB system.
3COM 3C590 Etherlink III PCI,
3COM 3C595 Fast Etherlink PCI,
3COM 3C592 Etherlink III EISA,
3COM 3C590 Fast Etherlink EISA,
3COM 3C900 Etherlink XL PCI and
3COM 3C905 Fast Etherlink XL PCI.
This driver is based on OpenBSD's driver. I modified it to run under FreeBSd
and made it actually work usefully.
Afterwards, nao@tom-yam.or.jp (HAMADA Naoki) added EISA support as well as
early support for 3C900 Etherlink XL PCI and 3C905 Fast Etherlink XL PCI.
He also split up the driver in a bus independant and bus dependant parts.
Especially the 3c59X support should be pretty stable now.
Submitted by: partly nao@tom-yam.or.jp (HAMADA Naoki)
Obtained from:partly OpenBSD
1. When a directory is renamed to an existing (empty) directory,
it is possible for the target vnode to become the source vnode
underneath you (because another process may complete the same
rename). It was assumed that this can't happen, and the bogus
errno EINVAL was returned. This was fairly harmless.
Fix: return ENOENT instead, as if the source directory was renamed
a little earlier.
2. The same metamorphosis is possible for non-directories. It was
assumed that this can't happen, and the code for handling "just
removing a link name" happened to be used. This would have worked
except for fatal bugs in the link name removal - the link name was
assumed to still be there, and a null pointer was followed.
Fix: check the result of relookup(). This fixes PR 1930.
Notes:
(a) POSIX seems to say that removing link names shall have no effect.
BSD (4.4Lite2 at least) does something reasonable instead.
(b) The relookup() may find a file unrelated to the original.
Removing this isn't correct. Consider 3 existing files A, B and
C, and concurrent renames: AB = rename(A, B), another AB, and
CA = rename("c", "a"). If rename() is atomic, then only the
following results are possible:
AB, AB (fails), CA: A = original C, B = original A, C = gone
AB, CA, AB: A = gone, B = original C, C = gone
CA, AB, AB (fails): A = gone, B = original C, C = gone
but ufs_rename() can give:
A,AB,CA,B (sorta): A = gone, B = original A, C = gone
This usually doesn't matter, since getting into a race is usually
an error.
---
These fixes should be in 2.1.6 and 2.2.
mappings with mlock. This problem only occurred because of the
quick unmap code not respecting the wired-ness of pages in the
process. In the future, we need to eliminate the dependency
intrinsic to the design of the code that wired pages actually
be mapped. It is kind-of bogus not to have wired pages mapped,
but it is also a weakness for the code to fall flat because
of a missing page.
This show fix a problem that Tor Egge has been having, and also
should be included into 2.2-RELEASE.
appearance of this bug was the malfunctioning -M option in GNU tar (it
worked only by explicitly specifying -L).
Reviewed by: bde, and partially corrected accoring to his comments
Candidate for 2.2, IMHO even for 2.1.6.
changes to the keyboard code in pcvt, this update_led() very often
caused pcvt to hang early at boot time.
(Eventually, a better solution should be found, but the simple
omission serves well as a workaround for something that is actually a
show-stopper class problem.)
Candidate for 2.2.
(1) deleted #if 0
pc98/pc98/mse.c
(2) hold per-unit I/O ports in ed_softc
pc98/pc98/if_ed.c
pc98/pc98/if_ed98.h
(3) merge more files by segregating changes into headers.
new file (moved from pc98/pc98):
i386/isa/aic_98.h
deleted:
well, it's already in the commit message so I won't repeat the
long list here ;)
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
"high" and "secure"), we can't use a single variable to track the most
recently used port in all three ranges.. :-] This caused the next
transient port to be allocated from the start of the range more often than
it should.
If DEVFS is configured, create devfs devices for previously invisible
partitions on the slices.
Fixed an old aliasing bug which caused E=17 errors from DEVFS for
DIOCSDINFO when there were no real slices.
(1) Add #ifdef PC98:
sys/pc98/boot/biosboot/boot2.S
(2) Fix bug that made it impossible to boot from sd's other than unit 0:
sys/pc98/boot/biosboot/sys.c
(3) Delete redundant $Id$:
sys/pc98/pc98/clock.c (reject$B$5$l$k$+$b$7$l$J$$(B)
(4) unt -> u_int:
sys/pc98/pc98/if_ed.c
(5) Add support for rebooting by the hot-key sequence:
sys/pc98/pc98/kbdtables.h
(6) Display now looks like PC/AT version:
sys/pc98/pc98/npx.c
(7) Change comment to match that of PC/AT version:
sys/pc98/pc98/pc98.c
(8) Add function prototypes:
sys/pc98/pc98/pc98_machdep.c
(9) Include PC98 headers:
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/adlib_card.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/audio.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/dev_table.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/dmabuf.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/midi_synth.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/midibuf.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/opl3.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/oatmgr.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb16_dsp.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb16_midi.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb_card.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb_dsp.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb_midi.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb_mixer.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sequencer.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sound_config.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sound_switch.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/soundcard.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sys_timer.c
(10) Merge in PC98 changes:
sys/i386/isa/sound/os.h
(11) Deleted as result of 9. and 10. above:
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/ad1848_mixer.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/aedsp16.c
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/coproc.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/finetune.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/gus_hw.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/gus_linearvol.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/hex2hex.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/mad16.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/midi_ctrl.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/midi_synth.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/opl3.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/os.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/pas.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/sb_mixer.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/soundvers.h
sys/pc98/pc98/sound/tuning.h
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
Check that a received packet isn't longer than MCLBYTES. This will
sometimes happen if a cable is plugged into or removed from a live
system.
Try to cater better for early receive interrupts.
used mvi instead of mov. Luckily this code is most likely never executed
since it is only there for sanity should a target goes into the data phase
twice during a single selection or reselection.
This involves expanding the support of the SEEPROM routines to deal with
the larger SEEPROMs on these cards and providing a mechanism to share
SCB arrays between multiple controllers.
Most of the 398X support came from Dan Eischer.
ahc_data -> ahc_softc
Clean up some more type bogons I missed from the last pass.
This involves expanding the support of the SEEPROM routines to deal with
the larger SEEPROMs on these cards and providing a mechanism to share
SCB arrays between multiple controllers.
Most of the 398X support came from Dan Eischer.
ahc_data -> ahc_softc
Clean up some more type bogons I missed from the last pass.
Be more clear when handing the NO_MATCH condition. NO_MATCH can also
happen when the sequencer encounters an SCB we've asked to be aborted.
AHC_FORCE_PIO - This forces the driver to use PIO even on systems that
say they have memory mapped the controller's registers. This
seems to fix Ken Lam's problems. I've also placed this option
in the GENERIC kernel file so that we are guaranteed to install
even on these flakey machines.
AHC_SHARE_SCBS - This option attempts to share the external SCB SRAM on
the 398X controllers allowing a totoll of 255 non-paged SCBs.
This doesn't work quite yet, so this option is mostly here to
help 398X owners to experiment and give me feedback until this
works properly.
it breaks in the DEVFS_ROOT case. replicate a bit too much of bdevvp()
in here to circumvent the problem. The real problem is the magic that
lives in bdevsw[1].
TIMER_FREQ.
Fixed missing splx() in scrn_timer(). The bug was harmless because of the
undocumented behaviour that the ipl is automatically restored for timeout
functions (see softclock()). Perhaps we should depend on this behaviour.
Fixed the ddb fix in rev.1.176. The in_debugger flag was no use because
it only works when the debugger is entered via the keyboard hotkey. The
debugger may be entered for breakpoints and traps, and the console putc
routine has no way of knowing when it was, so the console putc routine
must (almost?) always remove the cursor image.
Not fixed: console switching in ddb doesn't work (ISTR it working), and
console 0 shouldn't be switched to for the debugger hotkey unless console
0 is /dev/console.
Fixed side effects from calling add_keyboard_randomness() in the console
getc routine by not calling it. add_keyboard_randomness() currently
always reenables interrupts on 386's and 486's. This is very bad if the
console getc routine is called from the debugger and the debugger was
entered with interrupts disabled.
Fixed preservation of initial screen and now-bogus comment about it. It
was broken by setting the initial scr_buf to `buffer' instead of Crtat.
`buffer' was full of nulls and the first scroll cleared everything above
the things written through syscons.
Submitted by: bruce (bde@freebsd.org)
I decided to do this for every hardclock() call instead of lazily
in microtime(). The lazy method is simpler but has more overhead
if microtime() is called a lot.
CPU_THISTICKLEN() is now a no-op and should probably go away.
Previously it did nothing directly but had the side effect of
setting i586_last_tick for CPU_CLOCKUPDATE() and i586_avg_tick for
debugging. CPU_CLOCKUPDATE() now uses a better method and
i586_avg_tick is too much trouble to maintain.
Reduced nesting of #includes in the usual case.
Increased nesting of #includes when CLOCK_HAIR is defined. This
is a kludge to get typedefs for inline functions only when the
inline functions are used. Normally only kern_clock.c defines
this. kern_clock.c can't include the i386 headers directly.
Removed unused LOCORE support.
break when I remove LOCORE support from clock.h.
I586_CTR_MULTIPLIER_SHIFT = 32 from clock.h is actually still used, but
32 is so magic that it doesn't get used explicitly.
- Add support for memory mapped I/O.
- Use DMA to get SCBs down to the adapters.
- Remove old paging code.
- Be much smarter about how we allocate SCB space. The old, simple method
wasted almost half a page per SCB. Ooops.
- Make command complete interrupt processing more efficient.
- Break the monolithic ahc_intr into sub-routines. The sub-routines handle
rare, special case events so the function call is not a penalty and the
removal of the code from the main routine most likely improves performance
instruction prefech will work better and less code is pushed into the cache.
- Never, ever allow tagged queueing if a device has disconnection disabled.
- Clean up and simplify timeout code. Many of the changes are to handle the
new DMA scheme.
SCB paging is now handled almost entirely by the sequencer and also uses
DMA. This should make SCB paging at least an order of magnitude more
efficient and vastly simplifies the implementation.
Add a few space optimizations so this code still fits on aic7770 chips.
Update comments.
Submitted by: whistle communications
move the socket from /dev to /var/run by default
TRANSITIONALLY make syslog add a symlink..
I PROMISE I'll remove that as soon as I have the makefiles etc fixed as well.
1) Rename FNM_ICASE to FNM_CASEFOLD
2) Add FNM_LEADING_DIR
Add proper (unsigned char) casts to tolower().
Use 'char' function argument for proper sign extension
bit (0x0008) in the sc driver configuration line. This way it's easy to
boink a generic kernel.
Also, document and place in an opt_ file the #define's for overriding which
serial port is the system console.
Approved by: sos
(1) Bug fix (pass boot drive):
pc98/boot/biosboot/boot2.S
(2) Delete code for unsupported high-resolution modes and move old
Epson notebook code to epsonio.h:
pc98/boot/biosboot/io.c
pc98/i386/vm_machdep.c
pc98/pc98/fd.c
pc98/pc98/pc98.c
pc98/pc98/pc98.h
pc98/pc98/epsonio.h (new)
(3) Change aic driver so that PCMCIA cards (I/O port same as PC/AT)
and PC-9801-100 cards can be selected with a flag in kernel config
file:
pc98/pc98/aic6360.c
pc98/pc98/aic_98.h (new)
(4) Fix wcd entry (it was broken). Delete mcd, it doesn't work on
98. Change aic entry according to above:
pc98/conf/GENERIC98
(5) Move pc98_machdep.c to top of files in pc98/pc98:
pc98/conf/files.pc98
(6) Delete empty lines:
pc98/i386/locore.s
(7) Fix (it didn't work if I586 was specified):
pc98/pc98/clock.c
(8) Staticize:
pc98/pc98/pc98_machdep.c
(9) Enable workaround for Cyrix bug for 5x86 also:
pc98/i386/machdep.c
pc98/i386/trap.c
All the above deletes this file too:
pc98/i386/pmap.c
(phew!)
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
Garrett Wollman sent me this code a few weeks ago for review, and I made
some significant changes, which he in turn accepted ...
In order to make use of these changes, a device entry has to added to /dev.
Submitted by: wollman
following warning:
warning: ANSI C forbids braced-groups within expressions
Adding __extension__ before the statement-expression seems to work right.
Submitted by: bde (a *long* time ago)
contents are discarded, including the cached seek cookies.
Unfortunately, if the directory was larger than NFS_DIRBLKSIZ, then
this confused nfs_readdirrpc(), making it appear as if the directory
was truncated.
Reviewed by: Karl Denninger <karl@Mcs.Net>
there is keyboard input.
The mousepointer is shown again immediately if moved.
Also a function pointer used to install a userwritten extra
ioctl handler (sc_user_ioctl). This way its is possible to
install user defined videomodes etc etc. No further changes
should be in the kernel.
- use a more accurate and more efficient method of compensating for
overheads. The old method counted too much time against leaf
functions.
- normally use the Pentium timestamp counter if available.
On Pentiums, the times are now accurate to within a couple of cpu
clock cycles per function call in the (unlikely) event that there
are no cache misses in or caused by the profiling code.
- optionally use an arbitrary Pentium event counter if available.
- optionally regress to using the i8254 counter.
- scaled the i8254 counter by a factor of 128. Now the i8254 counters
overflow slightly faster than the TSC counters for a 150MHz Pentium :-)
(after about 16 seconds). This is to avoid fractional overheads.
files.i386:
permon.c temporarily has to be classified as a profiling-routine
because a couple of functions in it may be called from profiling code.
options.i386:
- I586_CTR_GUPROF is currently unused (oops).
- I586_PMC_GUPROF should be something like 0x70000 to enable (but not
use unless prof_machdep.c is changed) support for Pentium event
counters. 7 is a control mode and the counter number 0 is somewhere
in the 0000 bits (see perfmon.h for the encoding).
profile.h:
- added declarations.
- cleaned up separation of user mode declarations.
prof_machdep.c:
Mostly clock-select changes. The default clock can be changed by
editing kmem. There should be a sysctl for this.
subr_prof.c:
- added copyright.
- calibrate overheads for the new method.
- documented new method.
- fixed races and and machine dependencies in start/stop code.
mcount.c:
Use the new overhead compensation method.
gmon.h:
- changed GPROF4 counter type from unsigned to int. Oops, this should
be machine-dependent and/or int32_t.
- reorganized overhead counters.
Submitted by: Pentium event counter changes mostly by wollman
add free vnodes back to the freelist. They must do their own vnode
management. Anyway, this change is *only* activated with their filesystem
and doesn't affect anyone else. Whoops, forgot the submitted-by lines
in my previous commits too.. :-(
Submitted-By: Tony Ardolino <tony@netcon.com>
The heuristic for managment of memory backing the buffer cache was
nice, but didn't work due to some architectural problems. Simplify
and improve the algorithm.
- use CROSSJUMP() and CROSSJUMP_LABEL() for conditional jumps from idle()
into cpu_switch() and vice versa.
- moved badsw code to after cpu_switch().
Cosmetic changes:
- moved sw0 string to be immediately after its caller (badsw).
- removed unused #include.
the one place that depended on it. wakeup() is now prototyped in
<sys/systm.h> so that it is normally visible.
Added nested include of <sys/queue.h> in <vm/vm_object.h>. The queue
macros are a more fundamental prerequisite for <vm/vm_object.h> than
the wakeup prototype and previously happened to be included by
namespace pollution from <sys/proc.h> or elsewhere.
controllers, it is an error to issue a command before the keyboard
has had time to reply to the previous command. Setting the LEDs
involves issueing 2 commands, so it never worked on these keyboards.
Fixed resetting of keyboard. It is possible for unprocessed
scancodes to be present when the reset routine is called. This
usually occurs after switching from one console driver to another
in userconfig. pcvt and syscons attempt to flush any stale scancodes,
but sometimes fail to do so because keyboard and/or keyboard
controller takes a long time to send the scancodes after reset
(scancodes are apparently not flushed by reset!). syscons handles
this later by not checking for errors at strategic places, but pcvt
was confused.
Use an impossible initial and failure mode setting for the LEDs
so that the LEDs always get set if they are possibly out of sync.
Added missing spltty() in update_led().
shipped with freebsd can be changed without modifying the Makefiles directly.
Creates: BOOT_FORCE_COMCONSOLE
BOOT_PROBE_KEYBOARD
BOOT_PROBE_KEYBOARD_LOCK
BOOT_COMCONSOLE (port value for console)
ufs_read() and ufs_write().
Found by: looking at warnings for comparing the result of lblktosize()
(which is usually daddr_t = long) with file sizes (which are u_quad_t
for ufs). File sizes should probably be off_t's to avoid warnings
when the are compared with file offsets, so the fixed lblktosize()
casts to off_t instead of u_quad_t.
Added definition of smalllblksize(). It is the same as the old
lblksize() and is more efficient for small block numbers on 32-bit
machines.
Use smalllblktosize() instead of its expansion in blksize() and
dblksize(). This keeps the line length short and makes it more
obvious that the shift can't overflow.
capable of being used for things other than swap space allocation,
and splvm would have been appropriate for only swap space allocation
and other VM things. My commit broke that (and was actually a mistake.)
previous snap. Specifically, kern_exit and kern_exec now makes a
call into the pmap module to do a very fast removal of pages from the
address space. Additionally, the pmap module now updates the PG_MAPPED
and PG_WRITABLE flags. This is an optional optimization, but helpful
on the X86.
- fixed a sloppy common-style declaration.
- removed an unused macro.
- moved once-used macros to the one file where they are used.
- removed unused forward struct declarations.
- removed __pure.
- declared inline functions as inline in their prototype as well
as in theire definition (gcc unfortunately allows the prototype
to be inconsistent).
- staticized.
<net/if_arp.h> and fixed the things that depended on it. The nested
include just allowed unportable programs to compile and made my
simple #include checking program report that networking code doesn't
need to include <sys/socket.h>.
Still no support for Ultra-SCSI and other new features, but the code
should now correctly initialize the clock pre-scaler (based on freqency
measurement results, if necessary).
Fix support of 16 targets for WIDE SCSI.
Disable bus reset in case no progress is made for too long ("ncr dead"
message), which did not work too well with scanners and other slow devices.
(yes I had tested the hell out of this).
I've also temporarily disabled the code so that it behaves as it previously
did (tail drop's the syns) pending discussion with fenner about some socket
state flags that I don't fully understand.
Submitted by: fenner
if a single process is performing a large number of requests (in this
case writing a large file). The writing process could monopolise the
recieve lock and prevent any other processes from recieving their
replies.
It also adds a new sysctl variable 'vfs.nfs.dwrite' which controls the
behaviour which originally pointed out the problem. When a process
writes to a file over NFS, it usually arranges for another process
(the 'iod') to perform the request. If no iods are available, then it
turns the write into a 'delayed write' which is later picked up by the
next iod to do a write request for that file. This can cause that
particular iod to do a disproportionate number of requests from a
single process which can harm performance on some NFS servers. The
alternative is to perform the write synchronously in the context of
the original writing process if no iod is avaiable for asynchronous
writing.
The 'delayed write' behaviour is selected when vfs.nfs.dwrite=1 and
the non-delayed behaviour is selected when vfs.nfs.dwrite=0. The
default is vfs.nfs.dwrite=1; if many people tell me that performance
is better if vfs.nfs.dwrite=0 then I will change the default.
Submitted by: Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
features are used without testing for i586 features that they depend
on. Configuring option PERFMON without configuring a suitable cpu
still doesn't fail right.
(1) Merged i386/i386/sb.h, deleted pc98/pc98/sb.h.
(2) pc98/conf/GENERIC8 looks more like i386/conf/GENERIC now.
(3) Fixed display bug in pc98/boot/biosboot/io.c.
(4) Prepare to merge memory allocation routines:
pc98/i386/locore.s
pc98/i386/machdep.c
pc98/pc98/pc98_machdep.c
pc98/pc98/pc98_machdep.h
(5) Support new board "C-NET(98)":
pc98/pc98/if_ed98.h
pc98/pc98/if_ed.c
(6) Make sure FPU is recognized for non-Intel CPUs:
pc98/pc98/npx.c
(7) Do not expect bss to be zero-allocated:
pc98/pc98/pc98.c
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
Also disabled -Wunused. It caused too many warnings even for me.
The sign mismatch warnings should be fixed first. They are more
important and harder to disable (they are controlled by -W, which
controls too many things).
I586_OPTIMIZED_BCOPY is configured.
Similarly for bzero/I586_OPTIMIZED_BZERO.
Fake 586's had better have a hardware FPU with non-broken exception
handling (we mask exceptions, but broken exception handling may trap
on the instructions that do the masking). I guess this means that
the routines won't work on most 386's or FPUless 486's even when they
have a h/w FPU.
These are based on using the FPU to do 64-bit stores. They also
use i586-optimized instruction ordering, i586-optimized cache
management and a couple of other tricks. They should work on any
i*86 with a h/w FPU, but are slower on at least i386's and i486's.
They come close to saturating the memory bus on i586's. bzero()
can maintain a 3-3-3-3 burst cycle to 66 MHz non-EDO main memory
on a P133 (but is too slow to keep up with a 2-2-2-2 burst cycle
for EDO - someone with EDO should fix this). bcopy() is several
cycles short of keeping up with a 3-3-3-3 cycle for writing. For
a P133 writing to 66 MHz main memory, it just manages an N-3-3-3,
3-3-3-3 pair of burst cycles, where N is typically 6.
The new routines are not used by default. They are always configured
and can be enabled at runtime using a debugger or an lkm to change
their function pointer, or at compile time using new options (see
another log message).
Removed old, dead i586_bzero() and i686_bzero(). Read-before-write is
usually bad for i586's. It doubles the memory traffic unless the data
is already cached, and data is (or should be) very rarely cached for
large bzero()s (the system should prefer uncached pages for cleaning),
and the amount of data handled by small bzero()s is relatively small
in the kernel.
Improved comments about overlapping copies.
Removed unused #include.
callers of it to take advantage of this. This reduces new connection
request overhead in the face of a large number of PCBs in the system.
Thanks to David Filo <filo@yahoo.com> for suggesting this and providing
a sample implementation (which wasn't used, but showed that it could be
done).
Reviewed by: wollman
I have only tested the ABP5140 card and only with a single CDROM drive
but it seems to work fine. This driver relies on features found only in
the SCSI branch so will not work in -current until those changes
are brought in. It also doesn't have any error handling code *yet*.
The goal is to use this driver as the development platform for the new
generic SCSI layer error recovery/handling code.
PCI and EISA front ends will show up as soon as I get my hands on
the cards. There are also a few issues in the driver that I need
to clear up with AdvanSys before I can suggest sticking one of
these cards in your server. 8-)
Thanks to AdvanSys for releasing this code under a suitable copyright.
Obtained from: Ported from the Linux driver writen by
bobf@advansys.com (Bob Frey).
64K. The change has essentially neutral effect on those machines with
little or no cache, and has a positive effect on "normal" machines
with 256K or more cache.
[long long] results when I last worked on them, but they are normally
used together with to daddr_t's and off_t's which are signed, so the
unsigned results did little except cause warnings.
The main change is from unsigned long unsigned int. It just needs to
be a 32-bit type and unsigned int is most natural. Using a non-long
type has the "advantage" of hiding bugs in the "machine-independent"
code where it prints foo_t's using %d or %x. These bugs are currently
hidden bug not compiling with -Wformat.
I tried changing vm_ooffset_t from long long to unsigned long long, but
that was wrong because vm_ooffset_t needs to be long to match off_t,
although file offsets are never negative.
Reviewed by: dyson
Staticized it in userconfig. The one in pcvt is unused.
Removed bogus unused arg to getchar(). This should not have compiled
in the USERCONFIG_BOOT case, but the getchar() was also non-prototyped
and defined in K&R style.
Staticized the badly named global variable `next'. Even static variables
should have a unique module-specific prefix so that they can be referenced
easily in debuggers, etc.
Major: When blocking occurs in allocbuf() for VMIO files,
excess wire counts could accumulate.
Major: Pages are incorrectly accumulated into the physical
buffer for clustered reads. This happens when bogus
page is needed.
Minor: When reclaiming buffers, the async flag on the buffer
needs to be zero, or the reclaim is not optimal.
Minor: The age flag should be cleared, if a buffer is wanted.
First, change sysinstall and the Makefile rules to not build the kernel
nlist directly into sysinstall now. Instead, spit it out as an ascii
file in /stand and parse it from sysinstall later. This solves the chicken-n-
egg problem of building sysinstall into the fsimage before BOOTMFS is built
and can have its symbols extracted. Now we generate the symbol file in
release.8.
Second, add Poul-Henning's USERCONFIG_BOOT changes. These have two
effects:
1. Userconfig is always entered, rather than only after a -c
(don't scream yet, it's not as bad as it sounds).
2. Userconfig reads a message string which can optionally be
written just past the boot blocks. This string "preloads"
the userconfig input buffer and is parsed as user input.
If the first command is not "USERCONFIG", userconfig will
treat this as an implied "quit" (which is why you don't need
to scream - you never even know you went through userconfig
and back out again if you don't specifically ask for it),
otherwise it will read and execute the following commands
until a "quit" is seen or the end is reached, in which case
the normal userconfig command prompt will then be presented.
How to create your own startup sequences, using any boot.flp image
from the next snap forward (not yet, but soon):
% dd of=/dev/rfd0 seek=1 bs=512 count=1 conv=sync <<WAKKA_WAKKA_DOO
USERCONFIG
irq ed0 10
iomem ed0 0xcc000
disable ed1
quit
WAKKA_WAKKA_DOO
Third, add an intro screen to UserConfig so that users aren't just thrown
into this strange screen if userconfig is auto-launched. The default
boot.flp startup sequence is now, in fact, this:
USERCONFIG
intro
visual
(Since visual never returns, we don't need a following "quit").
Submitted-By: phk & jkh
1/ session leader
2/ Have a console device vnode (/dev/console)
3/ have NULL pointer for a consoel tty struct.
fix the only case where the tty struct is referenced without a prior
check for existance.
certain error conditions, it is possible for pages to be left allocated
in the object beyond it's end. It is generally bad practice to allocate
pages beyond the end of an object.
support LD_HINTS_VERSION_2 that has the ldconfig pathname stored in the
ld.so.hints file (ie: a new library can be installed and used without
needing to run ldconfig -m first)
Reviewed by: nate, jdp
Obtained from: NetBSD (mostly)
divisor latch registers if the registers wouldn't change.
Use the default console cfcr setting while setting the divisor
latch registers for console i/o. Input may be messed up by
transiently changing the cfcr.
Use a usual cfcr setting while setting the divisor latch registers
in the probe. This shouldn't matter, but this is not the place to
test the UART's handling of 5 bit words.
Removed a stale devfs comment.
was always disabled because "pci.h" wasn't included. Now the configured
pci devices are listed and you can edit bogus flags for them.
Fixed bitrot in the disabled code. A used #include was removed and const
poisoning wasn't fixed.
Removed unused #include.
not resuming the NIC as required for transmit. Thanks to Alan Cox
<alc@cs.rice.edu> for noticing this.
Added another performance optimization to compensate. :-)
Changed crscdt to 1...strange, but this seems to be needed for some reason
despite what the manual says.
dependent operation, and not really a correct name. invltlb and invlpg
are more descriptive, and in the case of invlpg, a real opcode.
Additionally, fix the tlb management code for 386 machines.
- kern.maxproc and kern.maxprocperuid were read-only (and thus essentially
useless. Apparently no one uses them).
- all the user sysctls were read-write (and thus it was possible for them
to be inconsistent with the authoritative fixed values in the library).
Removed unused #include.
for headers in the compile directory work unsurprisingly. Without
-I-, the search for "foo.h" begins in the directory of the file
that includes it, and the compile directory is only searched because
`-I.' is in ${INCLUDES}.
Removed -I$S/sys from ${INCLUDES}. It was once necessary to find
things like "param.h" in $S/sys. Now <sys/param.h> is found in $S.
lcall 7,0 (ie: ldt slot 0) and lcall 0x87,0 (ldt slot 16, it's shifted
three bits to the left). I was fiddling with this so long ago, I don't
recall the specifics.
with this quite a while ago when somebody reported a BSD/OS 2.1 binary
that wouldn't run. I'm pretty sure they tried it and I'm pretty sure
they mentioned to me that the patch worked.
comparisons in the inb() and outb() macros. I decided that int args
are OK here. Any type that can hold a u_int16_t without overflow
is correct, and 32-bit types are optimal.
Introduced a few tens of warnings (100 in LINT) for use of pessimized
(short) types for the port arg. Only a few drivers are affected by
this. u_short pessimizations aren't detected.
Added `__extension__' before the statement-expression in inb() so
that it can be compiled without warnings by gcc -pedantic.
ring that caused wrong things to happen sometimes.
Doubled the number of transmit descriptors to 128 so that the internal
FIFO in the NIC can be fully filled when dealing with small packets.
Several minor performance improvements.
- don't include <sys/ioctl.h> in any header. Include <sys/ioccom.h>
instead. This was already done in 4.4Lite for the most important
ioctl headers. Header spam currently increases kernel build
times by 10-20%. There are more than 30000 #includes (not counting
duplicates) for compiling LINT.
- include <sys/types.h> if and only it is necessary to make the header
almost self-sufficient (some ioctl headers still need structs from
elsewhere).
- uniformized idempotency ifdefs. Copied the style in the 4.4Lite
ioctl headers.