Add fields to hold the SGE control register and free list buffer sizes to
the sge_params structure. Populate these new fields in
t4_init_sge_params() for PF devices and change t4_read_chip_settings() to
pull these values out of the params structure instead of reading
registers directly. This will permit t4_read_chip_settings() to be reused
for VF devices which cannot read SGE registers directly.
While here, move the call to t4_init_sge_params() to
get_params__post_init(). The VF driver will populate the SGE parameters
structure via a different method before calling t4_read_chip_settings().
Reviewed by: np
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7476
Like scr_lock, the grab count needs to be per-physical-device to work.
This bug corrupted the grab count on both vtys if the ungrabbed vty is
different from the console, and failed to restore the keyboard state
on the ungrabbed vty, but not restoring it usually left the keyboard
mode part of the keyboard state uncorrupted at 1 (K_XLATE), while
after this fix the keyboard mode part is usually corrupted to 0 (K_RAW).
While here, rename the grab count from grabbed to grab_level.
This bug corrupted the grab count on both vtys if the ungrabbed vty is
different from the console, and failed to restore the keyboard state
on the ungrabbed vty, but not restoring the latter usually left the
keyboard mode part of it uncorrupted at 1 (K_XLATE), while after this
fix the keyboard mode part is usually corrupted to 0 (K_RAW).
While here, rename the grab count from 'grabbed' to grab_level.
- never call up to the tty layer to restart output for keyboard input in
console mode. This was already disallowed in kdb mode. Other cases
are rarely reached.
- disable the reboot, halt and powerdown keys in console mode. The suspend,
standby and panic keys are still allowed, and aren't even conditonal
on excessive configuration options. Some of these actions are still
available in ddb mode as ddb commands which are equally unsafe. Some
are useful at input prompts and should be restored when the locking is
fixed.
- disallow bells in kdb mode (should be in console mode, but the flag for
that is not available). Visual bell gives very alarming behaviour by
trying to use callouts which don't work in kdb mode. Audio bell uses
timeouts and hardware resources with mutexes that can deadlock in
reasonable use of ddb.
Screen switches in kdb mode are not very safe, but they are important
functionality and there is a lot of code to make them sort of work.
24 hours is too long. Periodic scripts are executed serially, so when
combined with the sleep in 410.pkg-audit periodic could actually take more
than 24 hours and block the next invocation.
Reviewed by: cy
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7481
restores avoidance of doing dangerous things like calling wakeup() and
callouts while in ddb.
Initialization of 'debugger' was broken by removing the cndbctl() console
method that was used mainly in this driver to initialize 'debugger' and
switch to the console screen on entry to ddb. The screen switch was
restored using the cngrab() method, but cngrab() is more general so it
should not initialize 'debugger' and never did. 'debugger' was just
an over-engineered alias for kdb_active anyway. It existed because
kdb_active (when it was named ddb_active) was considered as a private
kdb variable, and there are ordering problems initializing the variables
atomically with the state that they represent, but an extra variable and
method to set it increased these problems.
The bug caused LORs, but WITNESS is normally misconfigured with
WITNESS_SKIPSIN so it doesn't check the spinlocks used by wakeup() and
callouts.
virtual-device, but needs to be per-physical-device so that it protects
shared data. Usually, scp->sc->write_in_progress got corrupted first
and further corruption was limited when this variable was left at nonzero
with no write in progress.
Attempt to fix missing lock destruction in r162285. Put it with the
lock destruction for r172250 after moving the latter. Both might be
unreachable.
To demonstrate the bug, find a buggy syscall or sysctl that calls
printf(9) and run this often. Run hd /dev/zero >/dev/ttyvN for any
N != 0. The console spam goes to ttyv0 and the non-console spam goes
to ttyvN, so the lock provided no protection (but it helped for
N == 0).
Without this, rules using address ranges (e.g. "10.1.1.1 - 10.1.1.5") did not
match addresses correctly on little-endian systems.
PR: 211796
Obtained from: OpenBSD (sthen)
MFC after: 3 days
Later gcc and clang have deprecated =v (which maps to a specific temp
register) and instead we should just use =r to have the assembler
(hopefully!) save/restore things appropriately after choosing
a register.
Tested:
* AR9344 SoC, with userreg support
* AR9331 SoC, with no userreg support
Sponsored by: Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL (MIPS TLS user register work)
Fix PC_REGS() so that printing of instructions works in some useful
cases. ddb only understands a single flat address space, but this
macro allows mapping $cs:$eip into vm86's flat address space well
enough for the MI parts of ddb. This doesn't work for the MD parts
that do stack traces, and there are no similar macros for data addresses.
PC_REGS() has to use the trapframe pointer instead of the pcb for this.
For other CPUs, the trapframe pointer is not available except by tracing
back to it. But tracing back through vm86 trapframes is broken even
starting with one.
It was remarkably hard to trace all current threads. "show pcpu" only
showed the pid, and there was nothing (?) better than searching ps output
to find the tids on CPUs. This change simplifies the search, but you
still have to trace the tid for each CPU manually.
the fixed-width numeric field 'wchan', as in ps(1). They were sort
of centered, although the template shows 'state' as right-justified.
The `wmesg' field very rarely has a prefix of '*' (for lock names)
that is still to the left of the header, and the width of this field
is reduced from 8 to 7 (more than 6 is an error).
The 'wmesg' and 'wchan' fields are still misnamed and poorly handled.
They are named sort of backwards relative to ps(1):
- wmesg in ddb = mwchan in ps
- wmesg in ddb = wchan in ps (if it is a wait channel name, not a lock name)
- wchan in ddb = nwchan in ps
ddb ps wastes lots of space for the unimportant 'wchan' field (20
columns altogether on 64-bit arches). ps(1) documents using a
compressed format, but the compression only omits leading nybbles of
0 so it has neveqr worked on arches that put the kernel in the top half
of the address space. It just avoids wasting space for an 0x prefix.
single stepping of multiple instructions (e.g., s/p,<count> and n/p).
db_print_loc_and_inst() already prints a newline on all arches although
it probably shouldn't.
Especially on SMP systems, single stepping tends to deadlock or panic
too quickly to be useful for anything except finding bugs in itself,
but with printing "itself" includes console drivers so it is useful
for generating stress tests for console drivers.
Sync libarchive with vendor including three security fixes
Vendor issues fixed:
Issue #744: Very long pathnames evade symlink checks
Issue #748: libarchive can compress, but cannot decompress zip some files
PR #750: ustar: fix out of bounds read on empty string ("") filename
PR #755: fix use of acl_get_flagset_np() on FreeBSD
MFC after: 3 days
mpc85xx_map_dcsr() returns a vm_offset_t, not an error code.
mpc85xx_fix_errata() will gracefully exit if mpc85xx_map_dcsr() returns 0, as
that indicates an error (NULL pointer).
__syncicache() only syncs the icache on the current CPU, it doesn't touch the
cache on any other core. Replace the call with cpu_flush_dcache() instead.
Since bp_kernload is not touched again by the boot CPU in this code path, dcbf
is no less efficient than the dcbst from __syncicache() by invalidating the
cache line.
Vendor issues fixed:
Issue #744: Very long pathnames evade symlink checks
Issue #748: libarchive can compress, but cannot decompress zip some files
PR #750: ustar: fix out of bounds read on empty string ("") filename
PR #755: fix use of acl_get_flagset_np() on FreeBSD
add the new "-d" flag from D1626.
The man page will be updated in a subsequent commit.
Submitted by: will (earlier version)
Reviewed by: ken
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1626
Summary:
There is often a need at the debugger to print arbitrary special
purpose registers (SPRs) on PowerPC. Using a rewritable asm stub, print any SPR
provided on the command line.
Note, as there is no checking in this, attempting to print a nonexistent SPR
may cause a Program exception (illegal instruction, or boundedly undefined).
Note also that this relies on the kernel text pages being writable. If in the
future this is made not the case, this will need to be reworked.
Test Plan:
Printing the Processor Version Register (PVR, SPR 287):
db> show spr 11f
SPR 287(11f): 80240012
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7403
incorrect from the error cases in exec_map_first_page(). They are
unnecessary because we automatically unbusy the page in vm_page_free()
when we remove it from the object. The calls are incorrect because they
happen after the page is freed, so we might actually unbusy the page
after it has been reallocated to a different object. (This error was
introduced in r292373.)
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Summary:
u-boot, following the ePAPR specification, puts secondary cores into a
spinloop at boot, rather than leaving them shut off. It then relies on the host
OS to write the correct values to a special spin table, located in coherent
memory (on newer implementations), or noncoherent memory (older
implementations).
This supports both implementations of ePAPR, as well as continuing to support
non-ePAPR booting, by first attempting to use the spintable, and falling back to
expecting non-started CPUs.
Test Plan:
Booted on a P5020 board. Tested before and after the changes.
Before the changes, prints the error "SMP: CPU 1 already out of hold-off state!"
and panics shortly thereafter. After the changes, same boot method lets it
complete boot.
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Alex Perez/Inertial Computing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7494