following behavior:
* Link devices return invalid status (_STA) values. The results are very
unreliable -- sometimes never present. Just ignore the status and pick
the best configuration from _PRS.
* Link devices return invalid current settings (_CRS). Even after setting
the link value, many systems still return a different setting for _CRS.
When setting an IRQ, don't bother to check _CRS to see if we succeeded.
Note that we still check _CRS before routing and this should be addressed
as well.
Since this is a sensitive area, leave the old behavior accessible via
uncommenting the define for ACPI_OLD_PCI_LINK at the top of the file. Once
this has been thoroughly tested, this option and the code it covers will
be removed.
Thanks to Len Brown at Intel for informing us of these issues as he worked
around them in Linux.
location (for the wake code). It should not be needed since we don't
map other pages at the same location and if there was an old mapping, it
would be restored by a fault. The old code had serious problems, namely
that it was restoring the new page it had just removed (not opage) and
it could only guess at the right protection (since there's no
pmap_extract_protect function). Thanks to Alan Cox for explaining much
of this to me.
Also, remove a commented-out initializecpu() call since it is not needed.
Restoring the cpu context is better than attempting to init from scratch.
Reviewed by: alc (earlier version)
have clear idea on boot2 BSS size and leaves portion of it not zeroed out.
btxcsu.s is in much better position for this job.
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD (with minor adjustments)
the submit and outbound daemon, else if sendmail_submit_enable=yes, don't
start the outbound daemon. Only one daemon should be started.
Also, do not rebuild database maps at boot time. The code didn't pay
attention to SENDMAIL_MAP_TYPE and assumed 'hash'. Also, admins may
not want maps automatically rebuilt just because the back end database
has changed. Finally, some maps are built with mode tools than just
makemap (e.g., using cidrexpand on the access text file before sending
it to makemap).
Noticed by: ache
Reviewed by: ache
Since HME doesn't compensate the checksum for UDP datagram which
can yield to 0x0, UDP transmit checksum offload is disabled by
default. The UDP Transmit checksum offload can be reactivated
by setting special link option link0 with ifconfig(8).
Approved by: jake (mentor)
Reviewed by: tmm
Tested by: Herve Boulouis <amon@sockar.homeip.net>
before grabbing BPF locks to see if there are any entries in order to
avoid the cost of locking if there aren't any. Avoids a mutex lock/
unlock for each packet received if there are no BPF listeners.
libc. The externally-visible effect of this is to add __isnanl() to
libm, which means that libm.so.2 can once again link against libc.so.4
when LD_BIND_NOW is set. This was broken by the addition of fdiml(),
which calls __isnanl().
o Remove the code that creates the boot directory on the EFI file
system after it has been mounted, as well as remove the code
that creates the symlink from /boot -> /efi/boot (*). As a result,
/boot will be extracted onto the root file system.
o Add a function efi_mountpoint() that returns the mount point of
the EFI file system or NULL if no EFI partition is created. This
function is used to both check whether there's an EFI file system
and to return what its mount point is.
o When there's no EFI file system, ask the user if this is what he
or she wants. Since we extract /boot onto the root file system,
we do not actually need an EFI file system for the installation to
work. Whether one wants to install without an EFI partition is
of course an entirely different question. We allow it...
o When we're done installing and need to fix up the various bits
and pieces, check if there's an EFI partition and if yes, move
/boot to /efi/boot and create a symlink /boot -> /efi/boot (*).
This is a much more reliable way to get /boot onto the EFI
partition than creating the symlink up front and hope its being
respected. It so happened that we never had the boot directory
end up on the EFI partition. We make the symlink relative.
(*) /efi is a place holder for the actual EFI mount point of course.
consumer and 'bio_pflags' which can be used by provider.
- Remove BIO_FLAG1 and BIO_FLAG2 flags. From now on new fields should be
used for internal flags.
- Update g_bio(9) manual page.
- Update some comments.
- Update GEOM_MIRROR, which was the only one using BIO_FLAGs.
Idea from: phk
Reviewed by: phk
instead of BD_ADDRs
- Convert BD_ADDRs in l2ping(8) output into the human readable names via
bt_gethostbyaddr(3)
- Introduce and document '-n' - numberic output option
Suggested by: Anil Madhavapeddy <anil at recoil dot org>
spin-wait code to use the same spin mutex (smp_tlb_mtx) as the TLB ipi
and spin-wait code snippets so that you can't get into the situation of
one CPU doing a TLB shootdown to another CPU that is doing a lazy pmap
shootdown each of which are waiting on each other. With this change, only
one of the CPUs would do an IPI and spin-wait at a time.
the immediate awakening of proc0 (scheduler kproc, controls swapping
processes in and out). The scheduler process periodically awakens already,
so this will not result in processes not being swapped in, there will just
be more latency in between a thread being made runnable and the scheduler
waking up to swap the affected process back in.
macros and pass the value to the associated _mtx_*() functions to avoid
more curthread dereferences in the function implementations. This provided
a very modest perf improvement in some benchmarks.
Suggested by: rwatson
Tested by: scottl
text/data are covered on APs. This enables the kernel to boot on
a 4 way Intel Itanium-2 platform. This has a secondary effect of
keeping the TRs identical on BP and the APs.
reviewed by: marcel@
a sleep() call waking up in namei(), a later assertion triggers that
Giant is not held. By asserting Giant at the start of namei(), we can
know that if that assertion triggers, Giant is lost during the call to
namei(), and not before.
lock assertions even if IPv6 is compiled into the kernel. Previously,
inclusion of IPv6 and locking assertions would result in a rapid
assertion failure as IPv6 was not properly locking inpcbs.
- In ntoskrnl_var.h, I had defined compat macros for
ntoskrnl_acquire_spinlock() and ntoskrnl_release_spinlock() but
never used them. This is fortunate since they were stale. Fix them
to work properly. (In Windows/x86 KeAcquireSpinLock() is a macro that
calls KefAcquireSpinLock(), which lives in HAL.dll. To imitate this,
ntoskrnl_acquire_spinlock() is just a macro that calls hal_lock(),
which lives in subr_hal.o.)
- Add macros for ntoskrnl_raise_irql() and ntoskrnl_lower_irql() that
call hal_raise_irql() and hal_lower_irql().
- Use these macros in kern_ndis.c, subr_ndis.c and subr_ntoskrnl.c.
- Along the way, I realised subr_ndis.c:ndis_lock() was not calling
hal_lock() correctly (it was using the FASTCALL2() wrapper when
in reality this routine is FASTCALL1()). Using the
ntoskrnl_acquire_spinlock() fixes this. Not sure if this actually
caused any bugs since hal_lock() would have just ignored what
was in %edx, but it was still bogus.
This hides many of the uses of the FASTCALLx() macros which makes the
code a little cleaner. Should not have any effect on generated object
code, other than the one fix in ndis_lock().
vm_page_sleep_if_busy() and the page table page's busy flag as a
synchronization mechanism on page table pages.
Also, relocate the inline pmap_unwire_pte_hold() so that it can be used
to shorten _pmap_unwire_pte_hold() on alpha and amd64. This places
pmap_unwire_pte_hold() next to a comment that more accurately describes
it than _pmap_unwire_pte_hold().
debugging kernels and kernel modules much easier. It will automaticly
locate kernel source, extract kernel module information, and rerun gdb
to load kernel module symbol information (if available by compiling module
w/ debuging symbols).
I have not run these recently, so may need to be updated to work with
gdb6. Feel free to fix as appropriate for -current.