Intel's web site requires some minor tweaks to get it to work:
- The driver seems to have been released with full WMI tracing enabled,
and makes references to some WMI APIs, namely IoWMIRegistrationControl(),
WmiQueryTraceInformation() and WmiTraceMessage(). Only the first
one is ever called (during intialization). These have been implemented
as do-nothing stubs for now. Also added a definition for STATUS_NOT_FOUND
to ntoskrnl_var.h, which is used as a return code for one of the WMI
routines.
- The driver references KeRaiseIrqlToDpcLevel() and KeLowerIrql()
(the latter as a function, which is unusual because normally
KeLowerIrql() is a macro in the Windows DDK that calls KfLowewIrql()).
I'm not sure why these are being called since they're not really
part of WDM. Presumeably they're being used for backwards
compatibility with old versions of Windows. These have been
implemented in subr_hal.c. (Note that they're _stdcall routines
instead of _fastcall.)
- When querying the OID_802_11_BSSID_LIST OID to get a BSSID list,
you don't know ahead of time how many networks the NIC has found
during scanning, so you're allowed to pass 0 as the list length.
This should cause the driver to return an 'insufficient resources'
error and set the length to indicate how many bytes are actually
needed. However for some reason, the Intel driver does not honor
this convention: if you give it a length of 0, it returns some
other error and doesn't tell you how much space is really needed.
To get around this, if using a length of 0 yields anything besides
the expected error case, we arbitrarily assume a length of 64K.
This is similar to the hack that wpa_supplicant uses when doing
a BSSID list query.
Move what can be moved (UMA zones creation, pv_entry_* initialization) from
pmap_init2() to pmap_init().
Create a new function, pmap_postinit(), called from cpu_startup(), to do the
L1 tables allocation.
pmap_init2() is now empty for arm as well.
sio(4) will claim it. This change therefore only affects how ports
are handled when they are not claimed by sio(4), and in principle
will improve hardware support.
MFC after: 2 months
from there. All others get broken up and free'd individually to the mbuf
and cluster zones.
The packet zone is a secondary zone to the mbuf zone. There is currently
a limitation in UMA which prevents decreasing the packet zone stock when
the mbuf and cluster zone are drained and all their members are part of
packets. When this is fixed this change may be reverted.
- Fix a typo in rsmisc.c and a style change for consistency.
This patch will also appear in future ACPI-CA release.
Submitted by: Robert Moore <robert dot moore at intel dot com>
Tested by: ru
descriptor. This should fix the "memory modified after free" panics. This
patch will appear in a future acpi-ca distribution.
Submitted by: Robert Moore <robert.moore / intel.com>
Tested by: Peter Holm
Previously, pvzone's initialization was split between pmap_init() and
pmap_init2(). This split initialization was the underlying cause of
some UMA panics during initialization. Specifically, if the UMA boot
pages was exhausted before the pvzone was fully initialized, then UMA,
through no fault of its own, would use an inappropriate back-end
allocator leading to a panic. (Previously, as a workaround, we have
increased the UMA boot pages.) Fortunately, there is no longer any
reason that pvzone's initialization cannot be completed in
pmap_init().
Eliminate a check for whether pv_entry_high_water has been initialized
or not from get_pv_entry(). Since pvzone's initialization is
completed in pmap_init(), this check is no longer needed.
Use cnt.v_page_count, the actual count of available physical pages,
instead of vm_page_array_size to compute the maximum number of pv
entries.
Introduce the vm.pmap.pv_entries tunable on alpha and ia64.
Eliminate some unnecessary white space.
Discussed with: tegge (item #1)
Tested by: marcel (ia64)
a synchronous reprogramming of hardware MAC filters if the physical
interface are up and running. Previously, MAC filters would be
reconfigured only when the fec interface was brought up.
- Disallow bundle reconfiguration when virtual
interface is running; otherwise, removing a
port from a running configuration will cause
a panic in the start() method on the next packet
on an assumption that a bundle has an even
number of ports (2 or 4).
- Disallow bringing of virtual interface to a
running state when a bundle size is 0; otherwise,
adding and then removing the port will similarly
cause a panic.
- Add missing initialization of fec_ifstat when
adding a new port and fix media status reporting
when virtual interface isn't yet up (check for
fec_status of 1 rather than != 0).
previously, ifp->if_type was set to IFT_ETHER by
ether_ifattach(), now it's done by if_alloc() so
an assignment of if_type to IFT_PROPVIRTUAL after
if_alloc() but before ether_ifattach() broke it.
This makes arp(8) and friends happy about the fec
interfaces, and will allow us to use if_setlladdr()
on the fec interface.
- Set/reset IFF_DRV_RUNNING/IFF_DRV_OACTIVE in init()
and stop() methods rather than in ioctl(), like the
rest of the drivers do. This fixes a bug when an
"ifconfig fec0 ipv4_address" would not have made
the interface running, didn't launch the ticker
function to track media status of bundled ports,
etc.
used in the base system. This has been much discussed in the past
(typically people giving me a hard time for it). Since all that was
added to config was nocpu, and since we don't use it, we don't need to
bump the version.
current context in the IPI_STOP handler so that we can get accurate stack
traces of threads on other CPUs on these two archs like we do now on i386
and amd64.
Tested on: alpha, sparc64
buffers *and* there are no buffers queued up for writing. The bug
was that NMODIFIED was being cleared even while there were buffers
scheduled to be written out, which leads to all sorts of interesting
bugs - one where the file could shrink (because of a post-op getattr
load, say) causing data in buffer(s) queued for write to be tossed,
resulting in data corruption.
Submitted by: Mohan Srinivasan
both proc pointer and thread pointer, if thread pointer is NULL,
tdsignal automatically finds a thread, otherwise it sends signal
to given thread.
Add utility function psignal_event to send a realtime sigevent
to a process according to the delivery requirement specified in
struct sigevent.
source is first enabled similar to how intr_event's now allocate ithreads
on-demand. Previously, we would map IDT vectors 1:1 to IRQs. Since we
only have 191 available IDT vectors for I/O interrupts, this limited us
to only supporting IRQs 0-190 corresponding to the first 190 I/O APIC
intpins. On many machines, however, each PCI-X bus has its own APIC even
though it only has 1 or 2 devices, thus, we were reserving between 24 and
32 IRQs just for 1 or 2 devices and thus 24 or 32 IDT vectors. With this
change, a machine with 100 IRQs but only 5 in use will only use up 5 IDT
vectors. Also, this change provides an API (apic_alloc_vector() and
apic_free_vector()) that will allow a future MSI interrupt source driver to
request IDT vectors for use by MSI interrupts on x86 machines.
Tested on: amd64, i386
for code to start out on one CPU when thunking into Windows
mode in ctxsw_utow(), and then be pre-empted and migrated to another
CPU before thunking back to UNIX mode in ctxsw_wtou(). This is
bad, because then we can end up looking at the wrong 'thread environment
block' when trying to come back to UNIX mode. To avoid this, we now
pin ourselves to the current CPU when thunking into Windows code.
Few other cleanups, since I'm here:
- Get rid of the ndis_isr(), ndis_enable_interrupt() and
ndis_disable_interrupt() wrappers from kern_ndis.c and just invoke
the miniport's methods directly in the interrupt handling routines
in subr_ndis.c. We may as well lose the function call overhead,
since we don't need to export these things outside of ndis.ko
now anyway.
- Remove call to ndis_enable_interrupt() from ndis_init() in if_ndis.c.
We don't need to do it there anyway (the miniport init routine handles
it, if needed).
- Fix the logic in NdisWriteErrorLogEntry() a little.
- Change some NDIS_STATUS_xxx codes in subr_ntoskrnl.c into STATUS_xxx
codes.
- Handle kthread_create() failure correctly in PsCreateSystemThread().
based jumbo 9k and jumbo 16k cluster support.
All mbuf's with external storage attached are mandatory reference
counted. For clusters and jumbo clusters UMA provides the refcnt
storage directly. It does not have to be separatly allocated. Any
other type of external storage gets its own refcnt allocated from
an UMA mbuf refcnt zone instead of normal kernel malloc.
The refcount API MEXT_ADD_REF() and MEXT_REM_REF() is no longer
publically accessible. The proper m_* functions have to be used.
mb_ctor_clust() and mb_dtor_clust() both handle normal 2K as well
as 9k and 16k clusters.
Clusters and jumbo clusters may be obtained without attaching it
immideatly to an mbuf. This is for high performance cluster
allocation in network drivers where mbufs are attached after the
cluster has been filled.
Tested by: rwatson
Sponsored by: TCP/IP Optimizations Fundraise 2005
destruction:
- Backout 1.62, since it doesn't fix all possible
problems.
- Upon node creation, put an additional reference on node.
- Add a mutex and refcounter to struct ngsock. Netgraph node,
control socket and data socket all count as references.
- Introduce ng_socket_free_priv() which removes one reference
from ngsock, and frees it when all references has gone.
- No direct pointers between pcbs and node, all pointing
is done via struct ngsock and protected with mutex.
- Introduce ng_topo_mtx, a mutex to protect topology changes.
- In ng_destroy_node() protect with ng_topo_mtx the process
of checking and pointing at ng_deadnode. [1]
- In ng_con_part2() check that our peer is not a ng_deadnode,
and protect the check with ng_topo_mtx.
- Add KASSERTs to ng_acquire_read/write, to make more
understandible synopsis in case if called on ng_deadnode.
Reported by: Roselyn Lee [1]