The difference of one was insignificant because zio_write_issue threads
ended up on the same run queues as other zio threads.
See sys/priority.h and sys/runq.h for more details.
Add a comment describing FreeBSD priority considerations and restore
the illumos variant of the code for comparison.
Obtained from: Panzura
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
show pte from the pmap of the process of the current DDB thread, instead
of necessarily the PCPU pmap.
Submitted by: Ryan Libby <rlibby@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9645
In the Kyua era, it's no longer necessary to set PJDFSTEST_TEST_PATH. Just
use TMPDIR instead.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 3 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9340
The build process generates *assym.h using nm from *genassym.o (which is
in turn created from *genassym.c).
When compiling with link-time optimization (LTO) using -flto, .o files
are LLVM bitcode, not ELF objects. This is not usable by genassym.sh,
so remove -flto from those ${CC} invocations.
Submitted by: George Rimar
Reviewed by: dim
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9659
then return EAGAIN. The current code just returns that if the LAST buf
failed.
Reviewed by: kib@, trasz@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9677
The current code is written on top of GFS, a library with the generic
support for writing filesystems, which was ported from illumos.
Because of significant differences between illumos VFS and FreeBSD
VFS models, both the GFS and zfsctl code were heavily modified to
work on FreeBSD. Nonetheless, they still contain quite a few ugly
hacks and bugs.
This is a reimplementation of the zfsctl code where the VFS-specific
bits are written from scratch and only the code that interacts with
the rest of ZFS is reused.
Some highlights.
We use two types of nodes, static and on-demand. The static nodes
are used for permanent directories like .zfs, .zfs/snapshot, etc. The
on-demand nodes are used for ephemeral directories that act as snapshot
mount points.
Initially only static nodes are created. Their vnodes are instantiated
when they are looked up. The on-demand nodes and vnodes are instantiated
as needed and the nodes are destroyed as soon as the corresponding
vnodes are reclaimed.
We also try very hard to ensure that uncovered snapshot vnodes do not
linger. They are supposed to become inactive as soon as they are
uncovered and we try to recycle them immediately.
When a filesystem is unmounted all snapshots under .zfs are unmounted
first, then all vnodes are flushed and finally the static .zfs nodes
are destroyed.
There are some changes outside of zfsctl code too.
z_ctldir is never used directly (as it is an opaque pointer),
zfsctl_root() has to be used instead. The function returns a locked
vnode now, so it accepts a lock flags parameter. The function can
also fail now, e.g. during force unmounting, whereas previously it
was infallible.
zfsctl_root_lookup() is retired, instead of it VOP_LOOKUP() on the .zfs
vnode (obtained with zfsctl_root) is used.
Some ideas are picked from an independent work by will.
Reviewed by: asomers, smh
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: maybe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7421
would be useless anyway - there is no point in pretending to have block
devices; our "block" devices are in fact character ones, and can only
be accessed as such.
Discussed with: dchagin
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
For some reason isp_handle_platform_notify_fc() allocated INOT just
before calling isp_handle_platform_target_tmf(), which also allocates
INOT. It seems to be a braino introduced in r196008.
MFC after: 2 weeks
1) Add better spinlock debug names when WITNESS_ALL is defined.
2) Make sure that the calling thread gets bound to the current CPU
while a spinlock is locked. Some Linux kernel code depends on that the
CPU ID doesn't change while a spinlock is locked.
3) Add support for using LinuxKPI spinlocks during a panic().
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Tasklets are implemented using a taskqueue and a small statemachine on
top. The additional statemachine is required to ensure all LinuxKPI
tasklets get serialized. FreeBSD taskqueues do not guarantee
serialisation of its tasks, except when there is only one worker
thread configured.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
A set of helper functions have been added to manage the life of the
LinuxKPI task struct. When an external system call or task is invoked,
a check is made to create the task struct by demand. A thread
destructor callback is registered to free the task struct when a
thread exits to avoid memory leaks.
This change lays the ground for emulating the Linux kernel more
closely which is a dependency by the code using the LinuxKPI APIs.
Add new dedicated td_lkpi_task field has been added to struct thread
instead of abusing td_retval[1].
Fix some header file inclusions to make LINT kernel build properly
after this change.
Bump the __FreeBSD_version to force a rebuild of all kernel modules.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
As discussed previously, in order to introduce new OS hardening
defaults, we've added them to bsdinstall in 'off by default' mode.
It has been there for a while, so the next step is to change them
to 'on by defaul' mode, so that in future we could simply enable
them in base OS.
Reviewed by: brd
Approved by: adrian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9641
When LUN is disabled, SIM starts returning queued ATIOs/INOTs. But at the
same time there can be some ATIOs/INOTs still carrying real new requests.
If we free those, SIM may leak some resources, forever expecting for any
response from us. So try to be careful, separating ATIOs/INOTs carrying
requests which still must be processed, from ATIOs/INOTs completed with
errors which can be freed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Previously, the first lines of various generated files from system call
tables were generated in two sections. Some of the initialization was
done in BEGIN, and the rest was done when the first line was encountered.
The main reason for this split before r313564 was that most of the
initialization done in the second section depended on the $FreeBSD$ tag
extracted from the system call table. Now that the $FreeBSD$ tag is no
longer used, consolidate all of the file initialization in the BEGIN
section.
This change was tested by confirming that the content of generated files
did not change.
This also adds support for LINUX_ARCH_SET_GS.
Reviewed by: dchagin
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9372
When a thread is stopped in ptracestop(), the ptrace(2) user may request
a signal be delivered upon resumption of the thread. Heretofore, those signals
were discarded unless ptracestop()'s caller was issignal(). Fix this by
modifying ptracestop() to queue up signals requested by the ptrace user that
will be delivered when possible. Take special care when the signal is SIGKILL
(usually generated from a PT_KILL request); no new stop events should be
triggered after a PT_KILL.
Add a number of tests for the new functionality. Several tests were authored
by jhb.
PR: 212607
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: kib (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
In collaboration with: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9260
* Migrate the rx_params stuff out from ieee80211_freebsd.h where it doesn't belong -
this isn't freebsd specific anymore.
* Don't use a hard-coded number of chains in the ioctl header; now we can shuffle
MAX_CHAINS around so it can be used in the right spot.
* Extend the signal/noisefloor levels in the mimo stats struct to userland to include
the signal and noisefloor levels for each 20MHz slice of a 160MHz channel.
* Bump the number of EVM pilots in preparation for 4x4 and 160MHz channels.
Tested:
* ath(4), STA mode
* iwn(4), STA mode
* local ath10k port, STA mode
TODO:
* 11ax chips will come with 5GHz 8x8 hardware for lots of MU-MIMO - I'll re-bump it
at that point.
Note:
* This breaks the driver and ifconfig ABI; please recompile the kernel,
ifconfig and wpa_supplicant/hostapd.
When using libfetch in an application that drops privileges when fetching
like pkg(8) then user complain because the application does not read anymore
${HOME}/.netrc. Now a caller can prepare a fd to the said file and manually
assign it to the structure.
It is also a first step to allow to capsicumize libfetch applications
Reviewed by: allanjude, des
Approved by: des
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9678
committed in r313972
The code committed in r313962 implicitly relies on python 2.x to generate
testvect.h . There are a handful of issues with this approach:
- python is not an explicit build dependency for FreeBSD
- python 2.x is deprecated and will be removed sometime in the future
(potentially before 11.x's EOL), and the script does not function with
python 3.5 (it uses deprecated idioms and incompatible function calls).
- python(1) (by default) lives in /usr/local/bin (${LOCALBASE}/bin) and
gentestvect.py is a dependency of testvect.h (prior to r313972) which
means that if the mtime of the generator script was newer than the
mtime of the test vector, it could cause a spurious build failure in
build time or at install time.
A better solution using C/C++ should be devised.
Discussed with: allanjude
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC with: r313962, r313972
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Using relative paths imply working directory (in this case .OBJDIR), whereas the
sources live in the .CURDIR-relative path.
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC with: r313962
Pointyhat to: allanjude
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Right now the noexec mount option disallows image activators to try
execve the files on the mount point. Also, after r127187, noexec
also limits max_prot map entries permissions for mappings of files
from such mounts, but not the actual mapping permissions.
As result, the API behaviour is inconsistent. The files from noexec
mount can be mapped with PROT_EXEC, but if mprotect(2) drops execution
permission, it cannot be re-enabled later. Make this consistent
logically and aligned with behaviour of other systems, by disallowing
PROT_EXEC for mmap(2).
Note that this change only ensures aligned results from mmap(2) and
mprotect(2), it does not prevent actual code execution from files
coming from noexec mount. Such files can always be read into
anonymous executable memory and executed from there.
Reported by: shamaz.mazum@gmail.com
PR: 217062
Reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week