This is part 2 of r347078, pulling the page directory out of the Book-E
pmap. This breaks KBI for anything that uses struct pmap (such as vm_map)
so any modules that access this must be rebuilt.
instead of the hard-coded value of 4. This is a precursor to increasing
the number of interfaces speficied in "on {interface, ..., interface}".
Note that though this feature is coded in ipf_y.y, it is partially
supported in the ipfilter kld, meaning it does not work yet (and is yet
to be documented in ipf.5 too).
MFC after: 2 weeks
broken ipfilter rule matches (upstream bug #554). The upstream patch
was incomplete, it resolved all but one rule compare issue. The issue
fixed here is when "{to, reply-to, dup-to} interface" are used in
conjuncion with "on interface". The match was only made if the on keyword
was specified in the same order in each case referencing the same rule.
This commit fixes this.
The reason for this is that interface name strings and comment keyword
comments are stored in a a variable length field starting at fr_names
in the frentry struct. These strings are placed into this variable length
in the order they are encountered by ipf_y.y and indexed through index
pointers in fr_ifnames, fr_comment or one of the frdest struct fd_name
fields. (Three frdest structs are within frentry.) Order matters and
this patch takes this into account.
While in here it was discovered that though ipfilter is designed to
support multiple interface specifiations per rule (up to four), this
undocumented (the man page makes no mention of it) feature does not work.
A todo is to fix the multiple interfaces feature at a later date. To
understand the design decision as to why only four were intended, it is
suspected that the decision was made because Sun workstations and PCs
rarely if ever exceeded four NICs at the time, this is not true in 2019.
PR: 238796
Reported by: WHR <msl0000023508@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
status register clears pending interrupts. By moving that code out of the
interrupt handler into a taskqueue task, I effectively created an interrupt
storm by returning from the handler with the interrupt source still active.
We'll have to find a different solution for this driver's need to sleep
in an ithread context.
The `sp' pointer doesn't need to be modified in the caller of
dnsdecode().
This fixes -Wcast-qual error (`must have all intermediate pointers
const qualified to be safe') when compiled with WARNS=6.
Submitted by: Ján Sučan <sucanjan@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Google, inc. (Google Summer of Code 2019)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21215
This fixes -Wmissing-variable-declarations error when compiled with
WARNS=6.
Submitted by: Ján Sučan <sucanjan@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Google, inc. (Google Summer of Code 2019)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21214
It can be done just after the sockets have been created.
Submitted by: Ján Sučan <sucanjan@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Google, inc. (Google Summer of Code 2019)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21213
Long ago this was needed, but now low-level i2c controller drivers cleverly
defer attachment of the bus until interrupts are enabled (if they require
interrupts to function), so that every i2c slave device doesn't have to.
We used the aw_clk_nm clock for clock with only one divider factor
and used a fake multiplier factor. This cannot work properly as we
end up writing the "fake" factor to the register (and so always set
the LSB to 1).
Create a new clock for those.
The reason for not using the clk_div clock is because those clocks are
a bit special. Since they are (almost) all related to video we also need
to set the parent clock (the main PLL) to a frequency that they can support.
As the main PLL have some minimal frequency that they can support we need to
be able to set the main PLL to a multiple of the desired frequency.
Let say you want to have a 71Mhz pixel clock (typical for a 1280x800 display)
and the main PLL cannot go under 192Mhz, you need to set it to 3 times the
desired frequency and set the divider to 3 on the hdmi clock.
So this also introduce the CLK_SET_ROUND_MULTIPLE flag that allow for this kind
of scenario.
- Put all clock and control unit driver in BUS_PASS_RESOURCE except
for the DE2 CCU as it needs the main CCU to be available.
- Use BUS_PASS_CPU for a20_cpu_cfg as it makes more sense.
- For aw_syscon use SCHEDULER pass as we need it early for drivers
that attach in BUS_PASS_SUPPORTDEV
- For the rest we can use BUS_PASS_SUPPORTDEV
This change makes required modifications in runtests to also only require the
aesni module on Intel (i386/amd64) platforms, as it is an Intel specific
module.
MFC after: 1 month
MFC to: ^/stable/12 (support not present on ^/stable/11)
Submitted by: Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21018
This is a gcc 8.0+ warning which needed to be silenced on for the riscv
build. amd64-xtoolchain-gcc still uses gcc 6.4.0 and does not understand
this flag.
Reviewed by: asomers
Feedback from: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21195
As per r177853, we need to avoid using errno inside user mutex code, since
signal handlers can interfere with it and mess up libthr internal state.
So, implement _umtx_op_err() instead, which makes a raw syscall and
returns the error value directly instead of using errno.
Approved by: jhibbits (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20946
ensure that the subsequent mbuf contains the remainder of the bytes
the caller sought. If this is not the case, fall through to the code
which gathers the bytes in a new mbuf.
This fixes a bug where m_pulldown() could fail to gather all the desired
bytes into consecutive memory.
PR: 238787
Reported by: A reddit user
Discussed with: emaste
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 3 days
Our in-tree gcc doesn't have a no-tree-vectorize optimization knob, so we get a
warning that it's unused. This causes the build to fail on all our gcc platforms.
Add a quick version check as a stop-gap measure to get CI building again.
An earlier version of the patch had code that set "error" between
line#s 2797-2799. When that code was moved, the second check for "error != 0"
could never be true and the check became harmless cruft.
This patch removes the cruft, mainly to make Coverity happy.
Reported by: asomers, cem
Since the VOP_IOCTL(FIOSEEKDATA/FIOSEEKHOLE) calls are done with the
vnode unlocked, it is possible for another thread to do:
- truncate(), lseek(), write()
between the two calls and create a hole where FIOSEEKDATA returned the
start of data.
For this case, VOP_IOCTL(FIOSEEKHOLE) will return the same offset for
the hole location. This could result in an infinite loop in the copy
code, since copylen is set to 0 and the copy doesn't advance.
Usually, this race is avoided because of the use of rangelocks, but the
NFS server does not do range locking and could do a sequence like the
above to create the hole.
This patch checks for this case and makes the hole search fail, to avoid
the infinite loop.
At this time, it is an open question as to whether or not the NFS server
should do range locking to avoid this race.
We should support removing vdev from boot pool. Update loader zfs reader
to support com.delphix:removing.
Reviewed by: allanjude
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18901
Create a rough and ready NOTES file from GENERIC, remove the duplication from
sys/conf/NOTES and add relevant no* directives to make this compile.
Reviewed by: jhb, manu (earlier versions that differed only in comments)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21184
The COMPAT_43 option isn't quite like the other compat options, and arm64 makes
attempts to support it in 64-bit mode. In 32-bit compat mode, however, two
syscall implementations that COMPAT_FREEBSD32 assumes will be there are
missing. Provide implementations for these: ofreebsd32_sigreturn (which we'll
never encounter, so implement it as nosys as is done in kern_sig.c) and
ofreebsd32_getpagesize, where we'll always return 4096 since that's the only
PAGE_SIZE we support, similar to how the ia32 implementation does things.
Reviewed by: manu@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21192
The chain command can be used to chain load another binary.
If veriexec is enabled we should verify it first.
Note that on EFI systems the verification was already done
through firmware, assuming that Secure Boot was enabled there.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 1 week
Obtained from: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20952
During early stages of kern_exec(), including strings copyout,
p_textvp for init is NULL. This prevented stack grow from working for
init execution.
Without stack gap enabled, initial stack segment size is enough for
strings passed by kernel to init. With the gap enabled, the used
address might fall out of the initial segment, which kills init.
Exclude initproc from the check for contexts which should not cause
stack grow in the target map.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week