running thread.
It is currently implemented only on amd64 and i386; on these
architectures, it is implemented by raising an NMI on the CPU on which
the target thread is currently running. Unlike stack_save_td(), it may
fail, for example if the thread is running in user mode.
This change also modifies the kern.proc.kstack sysctl to use this function,
so that stacks of running threads are shown in the output of "procstat -kk".
This is handy for debugging threads that are stuck in a busy loop.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, jhb, kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3256
since on amd64 the first argument to a function is generally not on the
stack.
Revert an old DTrace bug fix to some code that assumed that
sizeof(struct amd64_frame) == 16.
Reviewed by: jhb, kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3255
5930 fasttrap_pid_enable() panics when prfind() fails in forking process
Reviewed by: Adam Leventhal <ahl@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Gordon Ross <gordon.ross@nexenta.com>
Approved by: Richard Lowe <richlowe@richlowe.net>
Author: Bryan Cantrill <bryan@joyent.com>
illumos/illumos-gate@9df7e4e12e
The only operation which is prevented by the hold is the kernel stack
swapout for the faulted thread, which should be fine to allow.
Remove useless checks for NULL curproc or curproc->p_vmspace from the
trap_pfault() wrappers on x86 and powerpc.
Reviewed by: alc (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
CTL HA functionality was originally implemented by Copan many years ago,
but large part of the sources was never published. This change includes
clean room implementation of the missing code and fixes for many bugs.
This code supports dual-node HA with ALUA in four modes:
- Active/Unavailable without interlink between nodes;
- Active/Standby with second node handling only basic LUN discovery and
reservation, synchronizing with the first node through the interlink;
- Active/Active with both nodes processing commands and accessing the
backing storage, synchronizing with the first node through the interlink;
- Active/Active with second node working as proxy, transfering all
commands to the first node for execution through the interlink.
Unlike original Copan's implementation, depending on specific hardware,
this code uses simple custom TCP-based protocol for interlink. It has
no authentication, so it should never be enabled on public interfaces.
The code may still need some polishing, but generally it is functional.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Auto-tuning threshold discussions aside, it turns out that if you want
to lower this on say, rather memory-packed machines, you either set maxusers
or kern.maxfiles, or you set it in sysctl. The former is a non-exact
way to tune this; the latter doesn't actually affect anything in the
startup scripts.
This first occured because I wondered why the hell screen would take upwards
of 10 seconds to spawn a new screen. I then found python doing the same
thing during fork/exec of child processes - it calls close() on each FD
up to the current openfiles limit. On a 1TB machine this is like, 26 million
FDs per process. Ugh.
So:
* This allows it to be set early in /boot/loader.conf;
* It can be used to work around the ridiculous situation of
screen, python, etc doing a close() on potentially millions of FDs
even though you only have four open.
Tested:
* 4GB, 32GB, 64GB, 128GB, 384GB, 1TB systems with autotune, ensuring
screen and python forking doesn't result in some pretty hilariously
bad behaviour.
TODO:
* Note that the default login.conf sets openfiles-cur to unlimited,
effectively obeying kern.maxfilesperproc. Perhaps we should fix
this.
* .. and even if we do, we need to also ensure that daemons get
a soft limit of something reasonable and capped - they can request
more FDs themselves.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
named node, open(2) cannot create directories. But do allow the flag
combination to succeed if the directory already exists.
Declare the open("name", O_DIRECTORY | O_CREAT | O_EXCL) always
invalid for the same reason, since open(2) cannot create directory.
Note that there is an argument that O_DIRECTORY | O_CREAT should be
invalid always, regardless of the target directory existence or
O_EXCL. The current fix is conservative and allows the call to
succeed in the situation where it succeeded before the patch.
Reported by: Tom Ridge <freebsd@tom-ridge.com>
Reviewed by: rwatson
PR: 202892
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
* Fail when the length passed in is 0
* Remove an unneeded increment of the count on success
* Return ENAMETOOLONG when the input pointer is too long
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
mapped address without valid pte installed, when parallel wiring of
the entry happen. The entry must be copy on write. If entry is COW
but was already copied, and parallel wiring set
MAP_ENTRY_IN_TRANSITION, vm_fault() would sleep waiting for the
MAP_ENTRY_IN_TRANSITION flag to clear. After that, the fault handler
is restarted and vm_map_lookup() or vm_map_lookup_locked() trip over
the check. Note that this is race, if the address is accessed after
the wiring is done, the entry does not fault at all.
There is no reason in the current kernel to disallow write access to
the COW wired entry if the entry permissions allow it. Initially this
was done in r24666, since that kernel did not supported proper
copy-on-write for wired text, which was fixed in r199869. The r251901
revision re-introduced the r24666 fix for the current VM.
Note that write access must clear MAP_ENTRY_NEEDS_COPY entry flag by
performing COW. In reverse, when MAP_ENTRY_NEEDS_COPY is set in
vmspace_fork(), the MAP_ENTRY_USER_WIRED flag is cleared. Put the
assert stating the invariant, instead of returning the error.
Reported and debugging help by: peter
Reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
locking and doesn't sleep. Flag the consumer we create as such. In
addition, decrement the in flight index when we have an out of memory
error after having incremented it previously. This would have
prevented swapoff from working if the swap pager ever hit a resource
shortage trying to swap out something (the swap in path always waits
for a bio, so won't have this issue). Simplify the close logic by
abandoning the use of private and initializing the index to 1 and
dropping that reference when we previously set private.
Also, set sw_id only while sw_dev_mtx is held. This should only affect
swapping to a vnode, as opposed to a geom whose close always sets it to
NULL with sw_dev_mtx held.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3547
vendor supplied device trees contain the needed properties for us to select
the correct uart to use as the kernel console.
An example of this would be to add the following to loader.conf.
hw.fdt.console="/smb/uart@f7113000"
The intention of this is slightly different than the existing
hw.uart.console option. The new option will mean the boot serial
configuration will be derived from the device node, while the existing
option expects the user to configure all this themselves.
Further work is planned to allow the uart configuration to be set based on
the stdout-path property devicetree bindings.
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3559
Certain VM guest types (VMware, Xen) do not support MSI, so pci_alloc_msix()
always fails. isci(4) was not properly detecting the allocation failure,
and would try to proceed with MSIx resource initialization rather than
reverting to INTx.
Reported and tested by: Bradley W. Dutton (brad-fbsd-stable@duttonbros.com)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
BIOS always enables PCI busmaster on the isci device, which effectively
worked around this omission. But when passing the isci device through
to a guest VM, the hypervisor will disable busmaster and isci will not
work without calling pci_enable_busmaster().
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
RANDOM_LOADABLE and RANDOM_YARROW's definitions from opt_random.h to
opt_global.h
This unbreaks `make depend` in sys/modules with multiple drivers (tmpfs, etc)
after r286839
X-MFC with: r286839
Reviewed by: imp
Submitted by: lwhsu
Differential Revision: D3486
so that there is only one place where pages are freed and only one place
where pages are moved to the tail of the queue.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is a subtle use-after-free race that results in some very undesirable
hang behaviour.
Reviewed by: pkelsey
Obtained from: Kip Macy, NextBSD (91a9bd1dbb)
The filedesc lock is only needed if ioctls caps are present, which is a
rare situation. This is a step towards reducing the scope of the filedesc
lock.
no option but to use the smbios information to fill in the blanks.
It's a good thing UGA is a protocol of the past and GOP has all the
info we need.
Anyway, the logic has been tweaked a little to get the easier bits
of information up front. This includes the resolution and the frame
buffer address. Then we look at the smbios information and define
expected values as well as the missing bits (frame buffer offset and
stride). If the values obtained match the expect values, we fill in
the blanks and return. Otherwise we use the existing detection logic
to figure it out.
Rename the environment variables from uga_framebuffer abd uga_stride
to hw.efifb.address and hw.efifb.stride. The latter names are more
in line with other variable names.
We currently have hardcoded settings for:
1. Mid-2007 iMac (iMac7,1)
2. Late-2007 MacBook (MacBook3,1)
store should have release semantics and will have due to the dsb above it
so add a comment to explain this. [1]
While here update the code to not reload the current thread, it's already
in a register, we just need to not trash it.
Suggested by: kib [1]
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
because the RSS hash may need to be recalculated.
Submitted by: Tiwei Bie <btw@mail.ustc.edu.cn>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3564
This is preparation for possibility to open/close media several times
per LUN life cycle. While there, rename variables to reduce confusion.
As additional bonus this allows to open read-only media, such as ZFS
snapshots.
the size of the name cache hash table (mapping file names to vnodes)
and the vnode hash table (mapping mount point and inode number to vnode).
An appropriate locking strategy is the key to changing hash table sizes
while they are in active use.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2265
MFC after: 2 weeks
striking a delicate balance between exhaustive searching and
banking on assumptions. The environment variables can be used
as a fall-back anyway. With this change, all known and tested
Macs with only UGA should have a working console out of the
box... for now...
pages will have left the inactive queue before the page daemon performs
its next scan. Also, ignore references to pages from terminated objects.
This allows the clean pages to be freed a little sooner.
Move some comments to their proper place, i.e., next to the code that
they describe, and update other nearby comments.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
hardware to perform address translation for us. These are useful to help
track down what caused us to enter the debugger.
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
o Unlike xor, in Jenkins hash every bit of input affects virtually
every bit of output, thus salting the hash actually works. With
xor salting only provides a false sense of security, since if
hash(x) collides with hash(y), then of course, hash(x) ^ salt
would also collide with hash(y) ^ salt. [1]
o Jenkins provides much better distribution than xor, very close to
ideal.
TCP connection setup/teardown benchmark has shown a 10% increase
with default hash size, and with bigger hashes that still provide
possibility for collisions. With enormous hash size, when dataset is
by an order of magnitude smaller than hash size, the benchmark has
shown 4% decrease in performance decrease, which is expected and
acceptable.
Noticed by: Jeffrey Knockel <jeffk cs.unm.edu> [1]
Benchmarks by: jch
Reviewed by: jch, pkelsey, delphij
Security: strengthens protection against hash collision DoS
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Some places in our network stack already have const
arguments (like if_output() routines and LLE functions).
Code using ifa_ifwith (and similar functins) along with
LLE/_output functions is currently bound to use tricks
like __DECONST(). Provide a cleaner way by making sockaddr
lookup key really constant.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3464
in the frame buffer when we flip pixels. Allow the detection
to be bypassed by setting the uga_framebuffer and uga_stride
variables. The kernel console works fine even when we can't
detect pixel changes in the frame buffer, which indicates
that the problem could be with reading from the frame buffer
and not writing to it.
nlge(4) is supposed to deprecate rge(4) for Broadcom XLR when it was
introduced 5 years ago.
rge doesn't build on -CURRENT due to MII changes. All the XLR kernel confs
use nlge. Let's get rid of the old driver for FreeBSD 11. We can use
10-STABLE or SVN to go back and look at the old driver if needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3339
Submitted by: kevin.bowling@kev009.com
Gleaned from a public header file. 5402 and 5404 look like they may be
used on embedded devices. 5478 and 5488 are switch PHYs. 5754 change is just
to note a product alias.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3338
Submitted by: kevin.bowling@kev009.com
Coredump notes depend on being able to invoke dump routines twice; once
in a dry-run mode to get the size of the note, and another to actually
emit the note to the corefile.
When a note helper emits a different length section the second time
around than the length it requested the first time, the kernel produces
a corrupt coredump.
NT_PROCSTAT_FILES output length, when packing kinfo structs, is tied to
the length of filenames corresponding to vnodes in the process' fd table
via vn_fullpath. As vnodes may move around during dump, this is racy.
So:
- Detect badly behaved notes in putnote() and pad underfilled notes.
- Add a fail point, debug.fail_point.fill_kinfo_vnode__random_path to
exercise the NT_PROCSTAT_FILES corruption. It simply picks random
lengths to expand or truncate paths to in fo_fill_kinfo_vnode().
- Add a sysctl, kern.coredump_pack_fileinfo, to allow users to
disable kinfo packing for PROCSTAT_FILES notes. This should avoid
both FILES note corruption and truncation, even if filenames change,
at the cost of about 1 kiB in padding bloat per open fd. Document
the new sysctl in core.5.
- Fix note_procstat_files to self-limit in the 2nd pass. Since
sometimes this will result in a short write, pad up to our advertised
size. This addresses note corruption, at the risk of sometimes
truncating the last several fd info entries.
- Fix NT_PROCSTAT_FILES consumers libutil and libprocstat to grok the
zero padding.
With suggestions from: bjk, jhb, kib, wblock
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3548
operations that map a single page that has an associated vm_page_t.
This does not permit mapping larger regions (such as a PCI memory
BAR) and it does not permit mapping addresses beyond the top of RAM
(such as a 64-bit BAR located above the top of RAM).
Instead of using a single OBJT_DEVICE object and passing the physaddr via
the offset as a hack, create a new sglist and OBJT_SG object for each
mmap request. The requested memory attribute is applied to the object
thus affecting all pages mapped by the request.
Reviewed by: hselasky, np
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3386
delete a logic volume on status change which is NOT what we want here.
The original code is correct in that when the volume changes status
the driver will only delete the volume if the status is one of the
fatal errors. A drive failure in a mirrored volume is NOT a situtation
where the volume should dissapear.
Reported on freebsd-scsi@:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-scsi/2015-September/006800.html
MFC after: 3 days
PCI BARs does not necessarily correspond to the upper-left
most pixel. Scan the frame buffer for which byte changed
when changing the pixel at (0,0).
Use the same technique to determine the stride. Except for
changing the pixel at (0,0), we change the pixel at (0,1).
PR: 202730
Tested by: hartzell (at) alerce.com
so they were disabled during DTS transition. Though there are
no standard devices/drivers on them people might use iic(4) userland
interface to access these buses.
Originally it was added in order to prevent trashing of objects with
INVARIANTS enabled. The same effect is now provided with mere UMA_ZONE_NOFREE.
This reverts r286921.
Discussed with: kib
Objects obtained from such zones are supposed to retain type stability,
which was violated by aforementioned trashing.
This is a follow-up to r284861.
Discussed with: kib
broke in two ways. One, the pacing variable was accessed in multiple
threads in an unsafe way. Two, since large numbers of I/O could come
down from the buf layer at one time, large numbers of allocation
failures could happen all at once, resulting in a huge pace value that
would limit I/Os to 10 IOPS for minutes (or even hours) at a
time. While a real solution to these problems requires substantial
work (to go to a no-allocation after the first model, or to have some
way to wait for more memory with some kind of reserve for pager and
swapper requests), it is relatively easy to make this simplistic
pacing less pathological.
Move to using a volatile variable with loads and stores. While this is
a little racy, losing the race is safe: either you get memory and
proceed, or you don't and queue. Second, sleep for 1ms (or one tick, whichever
is larger) instead of 100ms. This removes the artificial 10 IOPS limit
while still easing up on new I/Os during memory shortages. Remove
tying the amount of time we do this to the number of failed requests
and do it only as long as we keep failing requests.
Finally, to avoid needless recursion when memory is tight (start ->
g_io_deliver() -> g_io_request() -> start -> ... until we use 1/2 the
stack), don't do direct dispatch while pacing. This should be a rare
event (not steady state) so the performance hit here is worth the
extra safety of not starving g_down() with directly dispatched I/O.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3546
Resetting some generations of the I/OAT hardware (just BDXDE for now)
resets the corresponding MSI-X registers. So, teardown and
re-initialize interrupts after resetting the hardware.
Reviewed by: jimharris
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3549