These include standalone X550 adapters, X552 10GbE backplane, and
X552/X557-AT 10GBASE-T; with the latter two being integrated into Xeon D SoCs.
As well, this bumps the ixgbe version number to 2.8.3, and includes updates
to shared code for support for the new devices.
Differential Revision: D2414
Reviewed by: gnn, adrian
Approved by: jfv (mentor), gnn (mentor)
- Use hardware counters for ifnet stats in igb(4) when possible. This
ensures these stats include packets that bypass the regular stack via
netmap.
- Don't derefence values off the end of the igb(4) VF stats structure.
Instead, add a dedicated if_get_counter method for igb(4) VF interfaces.
- Report missed packets on igb(4) as input queue drops rather than an
input error.
- Report bug_ring drop counts as output queue drops for igb(4) and ixgbe(4).
- Export the buf_ring drop stats for individual rings via sysctl on
ixgbe(4).
- Fix a typo that in ixl(4) that caused output queue drops to be reported
as input queue drops and input queue drops to be unreported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2402
Reviewed by: jfv, rstone (6)
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
remains. Xen is planning to phase out support for PV upstream since it
is harder to maintain and has more overhead. Modern x86 CPUs include
virtualization extensions that support HVM guests instead of PV guests.
In addition, the PV code was i386 only and not as well maintained recently
as the HVM code.
- Remove the i386-only NATIVE option that was used to disable certain
components for PV kernels. These components are now standard as they
are on amd64.
- Remove !XENHVM bits from PV drivers.
- Remove various shims required for XEN (e.g. PT_UPDATES_FLUSH, LOAD_CR3,
etc.)
- Remove duplicate copy of <xen/features.h>.
- Remove unused, i386-only xenstored.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2362
Reviewed by: royger
Tested by: royger (i386/amd64 HVM domU and amd64 PVH dom0)
Relnotes: yes
Instead of trying to get the keyboard repeat rate set by the BIOS just set a
default one. This allows removing the usage of x86bios from atkbd.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: jkim, delphij
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2399
MFC after: 2 weeks
if its set in the environement of each command seperately.
Move the PATH setting to the NXBMAKE variable so its picked up to find
the one-off gperf build for the native-xtools target.
Pointed Out by: ngie
Much of the code was common to begin with. There is one nit, which is likely
not an issue at all. With the old code, the AIM machdep would __syncicache()
the entire kernel core at setup. However, in the unified setup, that seems to
hang on the MPC7455, perhaps because it's running later than before. Removing
this allows it to boot just fine. Examining the code, the FreeBSD loader
already does syncicache of the full kernel, and each module loaded, so this
doesn't appear to be an actual problem.
Initial code by Nathan Whitehorn.
With certain arc workflows leaving history.immutable as false
results in using the upstream template instead of our usual
commit template. Since the git workflow issues alluded to in my
prior commit message can be worked around, set history.immutable
once again.
enabled host. Build a one-off gperf and put it in the PATH for the rest
of the target so the ONE call to gperf by the gcc build picks it up and
DTRT.
Reviewed by: imp
losing time.
The problem with the earlier implementation was that the uptime value
used by 'vrtc_curtime()' could be different than the uptime value when
'vrtc_time_update()' actually updated 'base_uptime'.
Fix this by calculating and updating the (rtctime, uptime) tuple together.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Those functions are problematic, because there is no way to report
memory allocation problems without complicating the API, so we can
either abort or potentially return invalid results. None of which is
acceptable.
In most cases the caller knows the size of the name, so he can allocate
buffer on the stack and use snprintf(3) to prepare the name.
After some discussion the conclusion is to removed those functions,
which also simplifies the API.
Discussed with: pjd, rstone
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Previously the mask wrapped when one or more of the mask bytes extended
past the right edge of the window. Simplify the logic and use the same
byte offset and bit in both the pattern and mask.
PR: 199648
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2360
The change would appease the static analyzers but it is pretty much a
no-op. I need to trust static analyzers much less, especially for the
kernel.
Requested by: jkim
Currently if you ifconfig down a vtnet interface while it is being used
via netmap, the kernel panics due to trying to treat the cookie values
in the virtio rings as mbufs to be freed. When netmap is enabled, these
cookie values are pointers to something else.
Note that other netmap-aware drivers don't seem to need this as they
store the mbuf pointers in the software rings that mirror the hardware
descriptor rings, and since netmap doesn't touch those, the software
state always has NULL mbuf pointers causing the loops to free mbufs to
not do anything. However, vtnet reuses the same state area for both
netmap and non-netmap mode, so it needs to explicitly avoid looking at
the rings and treating the cookie values as mbufs if netmap is
enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2348
Reviewed by: adrian, bryanv, luigi
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
referenced. I think that there does exist an unlikely edge case for a
memory leak, but only if a driver is incorrectly written and specifies no
valid range of targets to scan. That can be fixed in a follow-up commit.
Obtained from: Netflix, Inc.
a text file with a list of physical memory addresses to exclude, and have it
loaded at boot time via the provided example in loader.conf. The tunable
'vm.blacklist' remains, but using an external file means that there's no
practical limit to the size of the list. This change also improves the
scanning algorithm for processing the list, scanning the list only once
instead of scanning it for every page in the system. Both the sysctl and
the file can be unsorted and contain duplicates so long as each entry is
numeric (decimal or hex) and is separated by a space, comma, or newline
character. The sysctl 'vm.page_blacklist' is now provided to report what
memory locations were successfully excluded.
Reviewed by: imp, emax
Obtained from: Netflix, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days