This allows you to specify the capabilities that the new file descriptor
should have. This allows us to create shared memory objects that only
have the rights we're interested in.
The idea behind restricting the rights is that it makes it a lot easier
for CloudABI to get consistent behaviour across different operating
systems. We only need to make sure that a shared memory implementation
consistently implements the operations that are whitelisted.
Approved by: kib
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/freebsd
On CloudABI, the rights bits returned by cap_rights_get() match up with
the operations that you can actually perform on the file descriptor.
Limiting the rights is good, because it makes it easier to get uniform
behaviour across different operating systems. If process descriptors on
FreeBSD would suddenly gain support for any new file operation, this
wouldn't become exposed to CloudABI processes without first extending
the rights.
Extend fork1() to gain a 'struct filecaps' argument that allows you to
construct process descriptors with custom rights. Use this in
cloudabi_sys_proc_fork() to limit the rights to just fstat() and
pdwait().
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/freebsd
has observable overhead when the buffer pages are not resident or not
mapped. The overhead comes at least from two factors, one is the
additional work needed to detect the situation, prepare and execute
the rollbacks. Another is the consequence of the i/o splitting into
the batches of the held pages, causing filesystems see series of the
smaller i/o requests instead of the single large request.
Note that expected case of the resident i/o buffer does not expose
these issues. Provide a prefaulting for the userspace i/o buffers,
disabled by default. I am careful of not enabling prefaulting by
default for now, since it would be detrimental for the applications
which speculatively pass extra-large buffers of anonymous memory to
not deal with buffer sizing (if such apps exist).
Found and tested by: bde, emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Right now there is a chance that sysctl unregister will cause reader to
block on the sx lock associated with sysctl rmlock, in which case kernels
with debug enabled will panic.
The check added in r285872 can trigger for valid buffers if the buffer space
used happens to be just after unmapped_buf in KVA space.
Discussed with: kib
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Summary:
Pipes in CloudABI are unidirectional. The reason for this is that
CloudABI attempts to provide a uniform runtime environment across
different flavours of UNIX.
Instead of implementing a custom pipe that is unidirectional, we can
simply reuse Capsicum permission bits to support this. This is nice,
because CloudABI already attempts to restrict permission bits to
correspond with the operations that apply to a certain file descriptor.
Replace kern_pipe() and kern_pipe2() by a single kern_pipe() that takes
a pair of filecaps. These filecaps are passed to the newly introduced
falloc_caps() function that creates the descriptors with rights in
place.
Test Plan:
CloudABI pipes seem to be created with proper rights in place:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc/blob/master/src/libc/unistd/pipe_test.c#L44
Reviewers: jilles, mjg
Reviewed By: mjg
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3236
falloc_noinstall() followed by finstall() allows you to create and
install file descriptors with custom capabilities. Add falloc_caps()
that can do both of these actions in one go.
This will be used by CloudABI to create pipes with custom capabilities.
Reviewed by: mjg
'buf' is inconvenient and has lead me to some irritating to discover
bugs over the years. It also makes it more challenging to refactor
the buf allocation system.
- Move swbuf and declare it as an extern in vfs_bio.c. This is still
not perfect but better than it was before.
- Eliminate the unused ffs function that relied on knowledge of the buf
array.
- Move the shutdown code that iterates over the buf array into vfs_bio.c.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
attached to bufs to avoid the overhead of the vm. This purposes is now
better served by vmem. Freeing the kva immediately when a buf is
destroyed leads to lower fragmentation and a much simpler scan algorithm.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Summary:
Back in 2005, maxim@ attempted to fix shutdown() to return ENOTCONN in case the socket was not connected (r150152). This had to be rolled back (r150155), as it broke some of the existing programs that depend on this behavior. I reapplied this change on my system and indeed, syslogd failed to start up. I fixed this back in February (279016) and MFC'ed it to the supported stable branches. Apart from that, things seem to work out all right.
Since at least Linux and Mac OS X do the right thing, I'd like to go ahead and give this another try. To keep old copies of syslogd working, only start returning ENOTCONN for recent binaries.
I took a look at the XNU sources and they seem to test against both SS_ISCONNECTED, SS_ISCONNECTING and SS_ISDISCONNECTING, instead of just SS_ISCONNECTED. That seams reasonable, so let's do the same.
Test Plan:
This issue was uncovered while writing tests for shutdown() in CloudABI:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc/blob/master/src/libc/sys/socket/shutdown_test.c#L26
Reviewers: glebius, rwatson, #manpages, gnn, #network
Reviewed By: gnn, #network
Subscribers: bms, mjg, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3039
Currently LOCK_DEBUG is always defined in sys/lock.h (0 or 1).
This means that debugging code always built. In addition the kernel
modules have always defined LOCK_DEBUG as 1. So, debugging rmlock code
is always used by kernel modules.
MFC after: 1 week
b_kvabase when the buffer is reclaimed. Otherwise, if b_data for the
mapped buffer was adjusted with the page-offset portion of b_offset,
nothing would re-adjust the b_data, which breaks buffer management
code which expects page-aligned b_data (see e.g. bpman_qenter(), which
skips partial pages).
Fix a minor issue with the GB_KVAALLOC requests, which could result in
returning the mapped buffer if the reused buffer is mapped and have
the right amount of KVA reserved.
Improve assertion in the vfs_buf_check_mapped() to catch unmapped
buffers which have their b_data incorrectly adjusted with offset.
Reported and tested by: pho (previous version)
Reviewed by: jeff (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
from x86 to use smp_ipi_mtx spin lock not only for smp_rendezvous_cpus()
but also for the MD cache invalidation, TLB demapping and remote register
reading IPIs due to the following reasons:
- The cross-IPI SMP deadlock x86 otherwise is subject to can't happen on
sparc64. That's because on sparc64, spin locks don't disable interrupts
completely but only raise the processor interrupt level to PIL_TICK. This
means that IPIs still get delivered and direct dispatch IPIs such as the
cache invalidation etc. IPIs in question are still executed.
- In smp_rendezvous_cpus(), smp_ipi_mtx is held not only while sending an
IPI_RENDEZVOUS, but until all CPUs have processed smp_rendezvous_action().
Consequently, smp_ipi_mtx may be locked for an extended amount of time as
queued IPIs (as opposed to the direct ones) such as IPI_RENDEZVOUS are
scheduled via a soft interrupt. Moreover, given that this soft interrupt
is only delivered at PIL_RENDEZVOUS, processing of smp_rendezvous_action()
on a target may be interrupted by f. e. a tick interrupt at PIL_TICK, in
turn leading to the target in question trying to send an IPI by itself
while IPI_RENDEZVOUS isn't fully handled, yet, and, thus, resulting in a
deadlock.
o As mentioned in the commit message of r245850, on least some sun4u platforms
concurrent sending of IPIs by different CPUs is fatal. Therefore, hold the
reintroduced MD ipi_mtx also while delivering cross-traps via MI helpers,
i. e. ipi_{all_but_self,cpu,selected}().
o Akin to x86, let the last CPU to process cpu_mp_bootstrap() set smp_started
instead of the BSP in cpu_mp_unleash(). This ensures that all APs actually
are started, when smp_started is no longer 0.
o In all MD and MI IPI helpers, check for smp_started == 1 rather than for
smp_cpus > 1 or nothing at all. This avoids races during boot causing IPIs
trying to be delivered to APs that in fact aren't up and running, yet.
While at it, move setting of the cpu_ipi_{selected,single}() pointers to
the appropriate delivery functions from mp_init() to cpu_mp_start() where
it's better suited and allows to get rid of the global isjbus variable.
o Given that now concurrent IPI delivery no longer is possible, also nuke
the delays before completely disabling interrupts again in the CPU-specific
cross-trap delivery functions, previously giving other CPUs a window for
sending IPIs on their part. Actually, we now should be able to entirely get
rid of completely disabling interrupts in these functions. Such a change
needs more testing, though.
o In {s,}tick_get_timecount_mp(), make the {s,}tick variable static. While not
necessary for correctness, this avoids page faults when accessing the stack
of a foreign CPU as {s,}tick now is locked into the TLBs as part of static
kernel data. Hence, {s,}tick_get_timecount_mp() always execute as fast as
possible, avoiding jitter.
PR: 201245
MFC after: 3 days
- Use pointer assignment rather than a combination of pointers and
flags to switch buffers between unmapped and mapped. This eliminates
multiple flags and generally simplifies the logic.
- Eliminate b_saveaddr since it is only used with pager bufs which have
their b_data re-initialized on each allocation.
- Gather up some convenience routines in the buffer cache for
manipulating buf space and buf malloc space.
- Add an inline, buf_mapped(), to standardize checks around unmapped
buffers.
In collaboration with: mlaier
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho (many small revisions ago)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
most recently used buffer when we are under paging pressure. This is
a perversion of the buffer and page replacement algorithms and recent
improvements to the page daemon have rendered it unnecessary. In the
event that low-memory deadlocks become an issue it would be possible
to make a daemon or event handler that performs a similar action on
the oldest buffers rather than the newest. Since the buf cache
is analogous to the page cache and some minimum working set is desired
another possibility is to simply shrink the minimum working set which
has less downside now that file pages are not directly mapped.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon
Reviewed by: alc, kib (with some minor objection)
Tested by: pho
done by the functions called on other CPUs, are visible to the caller.
Pair otherwise useless acquire on smp_rv_waiters[3] with a release add
to ensure synchronized with relation, which guarantees visibility.
Reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
it_need was wrong [*]. Restore the releases and add a comment
explaining why it is needed.
Noted by: alc [*]
Reviewed by: bde [*]
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This change refactors the existing create_thread() function to be more
generic. It replaces almost all of its arguments by a callback that can
be used to extract the thread ID and copy it out to the right place, but
also to perform additional initialization steps, such as setting the
trapframe. This also makes the difference between thr_new() and
thr_create() more clear in my opinion.
This function is going to be used by the CloudABI compatibility layer.
It looks like the OpenSolaris compatibility framework already provides a
function called thread_create(). Rename this function to
do_thread_create() and use a macro to deal with the namespacing
conflict. A similar approach is already used for thread_exit().
MFC after: 1 month
in lockstat.ko. This means that lockstat probes now have typed arguments and
will utilize SDT probe hot-patching support when it arrives.
Reviewed by: gnn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2993
Remove useless release semantic for some stores to it_need. For
stores where the release is needed, add a comment explaining why.
Fence after the atomic_cmpset() op on the it_need should be acquire
only, release is not needed (see above). The combination of
atomic_cmpset() + fence_acq() is better expressed there as
atomic_cmpset_acq().
Use atomic_cmpset() for swi' ih_need read and clear.
Discussed with: alc, bde
Reviewed by: bde
Comments wording provided by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
SIGCHLD signal, should keep full 32 bits of the status passed to the
_exit(2).
Split the combined p_xstat of the struct proc into the separate exit
status p_xexit for normal process exit, and signalled termination
information p_xsig. Kernel-visible macro KW_EXITCODE() reconstructs
old p_xstat from p_xexit and p_xsig. p_xexit contains complete status
and copied out into si_status.
Requested by: Joerg Schilling
Reviewed by: jilles (previous version), pho
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
LO_NOPROFILE is set. Some timecounter handlers acquire a spin mutex, and
we don't want to recurse if lockstat probes are enabled.
PR: 201642
Reviewed by: avg
MFC after: 3 days
enabled. The cost of a timecounter read can be quite significant, and the
problem became more apparent after r284297, since that change resulted in
a call to lockstat_nsecs() for each acquisition of an rwlock read lock.
PR: 201642
Reviewed by: avg
Tested by: Jason Unovitch
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3073
It turns out that the CDDL sources already introduce a function called
thread_create(). I'll investigate what we can do to make these functions
coexist.
Reported by: Ivan Klymenko
This change refactors the existing create_thread() function to be more
generic. It replaces almost all of its arguments by a callback that can
be used to extract the thread ID and copy it out to the right place, but
also to perform additional initialization steps, such as setting the
trapframe. This also makes the difference between thr_new() and
thr_create() more clear in my opinion.
This function is going to be used by the CloudABI compatibility layer.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Their primary use was in thread_cow_update to free up old resources.
Freeing had to be done with proc lock held and _cow_ funcs already knew
how to free old structs.
Transitions 0->1 and 1->0 (which decide e.g. on putting the vnode on the free
list) of either counter are still guarded with vnode interlock.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
Tested by: pho
Summary:
In a runtime that is purely based on capability-based security, there is
a strong emphasis on how programs start their execution. We need to make
sure that we execute an new program with an exact set of file
descriptors, ensuring that credentials are not leaked into the process
accidentally.
Providing the right file descriptors is just half the problem. There
also needs to be a framework in place that gives meaning to these file
descriptors. How does a CloudABI mail server know which of the file
descriptors corresponds to the socket that receives incoming emails?
Furthermore, how will this mail server acquire its configuration
parameters, as it cannot open a configuration file from a global path on
disk?
CloudABI solves this problem by replacing traditional string command
line arguments by tree-like data structure consisting of scalars,
sequences and mappings (similar to YAML/JSON). In this structure, file
descriptors are treated as a first-class citizen. When calling exec(),
file descriptors are passed on to the new executable if and only if they
are referenced from this tree structure. See the cloudabi-run(1) man
page for more details and examples (sysutils/cloudabi-utils).
Fortunately, the kernel does not need to care about this tree structure
at all. The C library is responsible for serializing and deserializing,
but also for extracting the list of referenced file descriptors. The
system call only receives a copy of the serialized data and a layout of
what the new file descriptor table should look like:
int proc_exec(int execfd, const void *data, size_t datalen, const int *fds,
size_t fdslen);
This change introduces a set of fd*_remapped() functions:
- fdcopy_remapped() pulls a copy of a file descriptor table, remapping
all of the file descriptors according to the provided mapping table.
- fdinstall_remapped() replaces the file descriptor table of the process
by the copy created by fdcopy_remapped().
- fdescfree_remapped() frees the table in case we aborted before
fdinstall_remapped().
We then add a function exec_copyin_data_fds() that builds on top these
functions. It copies in the data and constructs a new remapped file
descriptor. This is used by cloudabi_sys_proc_exec().
Test Plan:
cloudabi-run(1) is capable of spawning processes successfully, providing
it data and file descriptors. procstat -f seems to confirm all is good.
Regular FreeBSD processes also work properly.
Reviewers: kib, mjg
Reviewed By: mjg
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3079
architectures. Atomic_cmpset_int(9) is a direct replacement, due to
loop. The change fixes arm, arm64, mips an sparc64, which lack
atomic_swap().
Suggested and reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
current value. It is believed that the change is the real fix for the
issue which was covered over by the r252683.
With the current code, if the interrupt handler sets it_need between
read and consequent reset, the update could be lost and
ithread_execute_handlers() would not be called in response to the lost
update.
The r252683 could have hide the issue since at the moment of commit,
atomic_load_acq_int() did locked cmpxchg on the variable, which puts
the cache line into the exclusive owned state and clears store
buffers. Then the immediate store of zero has very high chance of
reusing the exclusive state of the cache line and make the load and
store sequence operate as atomic swap.
For now, add the acq+rel fence immediately after the swap, to not
disturb current (but excessive) ordering. Acquire is needed for the
ih_need reads after the load, while release does not serve a useful
purpose [*].
Reviewed by: alc
Noted by: alc [*]
Discussed with: bde
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
unp_dispose and unp_gc could race to teardown the same mbuf chains, which
can lead to dereferencing freed filedesc pointers.
This patch adds an IGNORE_RIGHTS flag on unpcbs marking the unpcb's RIGHTS
as invalid/freed. The flag is protected by UNP_LIST_LOCK.
To serialize against unp_gc, unp_dispose needs the socket object. Change the
dom_dispose() KPI to take a socket object instead of an mbuf chain directly.
PR: 194264
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3044
Reviewed by: mjg (earlier version)
Approved by: markj (mentor)
Obtained from: mjg
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
If a signal is caught in pipelock, causing it to fail, pipe_direct_write
should not try to pipeunlock.
Reported by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3069
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: markj (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
time between ntp_adjtime() clock offset adjustments. This eliminates spurious
frequency steering after a large clock step (such as a 1970->2015 step on a
system with no battery-backed clock hardware).
This problem was discovered after the import of ntpd 4.2.8, which does things
in a slightly different (but still correct) order than the 4.2.4 we had
previously. In particular, 4.2.4 would step the clock then immediately after
use ntp_adjtime() to set the frequency and offset to zero, which captured the
post-step time-of-day as a side effect. In 4.2.8, ntpd sets frequency and
offset to zero before any initial clock step, capturing the time as 1970-ish,
then when it next calls ntp_adjtime() it's with a non-zero offset measurement.
This non-zero value gets multiplied by the apparent 45-year interval, which
blows up into a completely bogus frequency steer. That gets clamped to
500ppm, but that's still enough to make the clock drift so fast that ntpd has
to keep stepping it every few minutes to compensate.
Previously vputx would detect the condition and clear the flag.
With this change it is invalid to have both v_usecount > 0 and the flag
set. Assert the condition is met in all revlevant places.
Reviewed by: kib
Previously several places were doing it on its own, partially
incorrectly (e.g. without the filedesc locked) or even actively harmful
by populating jdir or assigning rootvnode without vrefing it.
Reviewed by: kib
This is based on work done by jeff@ and jhb@, as well as the numa.diff
patch that has been circulating when someone asks for first-touch NUMA
on -10 or -11.
* Introduce a simple set of VM policy and iterator types.
* tie the policy types into the vm_phys path for now, mirroring how
the initial first-touch allocation work was enabled.
* add syscalls to control changing thread and process defaults.
* add a global NUMA VM domain policy.
* implement a simple cascade policy order - if a thread policy exists, use it;
if a process policy exists, use it; use the default policy.
* processes inherit policies from their parent processes, threads inherit
policies from their parent threads.
* add a simple tool (numactl) to query and modify default thread/process
policities.
* add documentation for the new syscalls, for numa and for numactl.
* re-enable first touch NUMA again by default, as now policies can be
set in a variety of methods.
This is only relevant for very specific workloads.
This doesn't pretend to be a final NUMA solution.
The previous defaults in -HEAD (with MAXMEMDOM set) can be achieved by
'sysctl vm.default_policy=rr'.
This is only relevant if MAXMEMDOM is set to something other than 1.
Ie, if you're using GENERIC or a modified kernel with non-NUMA, then
this is a glorified no-op for you.
Thank you to Norse Corp for giving me access to rather large
(for FreeBSD!) NUMA machines in order to develop and verify this.
Thank you to Dell for providing me with dual socket sandybridge
and westmere v3 hardware to do NUMA development with.
Thank you to Scott Long at Netflix for providing me with access
to the two-socket, four-domain haswell v3 hardware.
Thank you to Peter Holm for running the stress testing suite
against the NUMA branch during various stages of development!
Tested:
* MIPS (regression testing; non-NUMA)
* i386 (regression testing; non-NUMA GENERIC)
* amd64 (regression testing; non-NUMA GENERIC)
* westmere, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* sandy bridge, 2 socket (thankyou dell!)
* ivy bridge, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* westmere-EX, 4 socket / 1TB RAM (thankyou norse!)
* haswell, 2 socket (thankyou norse!)
* haswell v3, 2 socket (thankyou dell)
* haswell v3, 2x18 core (thankyou scott long / netflix!)
* Peter Holm ran a stress test suite on this work and found one
issue, but has not been able to verify it (it doesn't look NUMA
related, and he only saw it once over many testing runs.)
* I've tested bhyve instances running in fixed NUMA domains and cpusets;
all seems to work correctly.
Verified:
* intel-pcm - pcm-numa.x and pcm-memory.x, whilst selecting different
NUMA policies for processes under test.
Review:
This was reviewed through phabricator (https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2559)
as well as privately and via emails to freebsd-arch@. The git history
with specific attributes is available at https://github.com/erikarn/freebsd/
in the NUMA branch (https://github.com/erikarn/freebsd/compare/local/adrian_numa_policy).
This has been reviewed by a number of people (stas, rpaulo, kib, ngie,
wblock) but not achieved a clear consensus. My hope is that with further
exposure and testing more functionality can be implemented and evaluated.
Notes:
* The VM doesn't handle unbalanced domains very well, and if you have an overly
unbalanced memory setup whilst under high memory pressure, VM page allocation
may fail leading to a kernel panic. This was a problem in the past, but it's
much more easily triggered now with these tools.
* This work only controls the path through vm_phys; it doesn't yet strongly/predictably
affect contigmalloc, KVA placement, UMA, etc. So, driver placement of memory
isn't really guaranteed in any way. That's next on my plate.
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.; Dell
objects, i.e. for buffer objects which vnode was reclaimed. Buffer
cache cannot write such buffers. Return the error and discard the
buffer immediately on write attempt.
BO_DIRTY now always set during vnode reclamation, since it is used not
only for the INVARIANTS checks. Do allow placement of the clean
buffers on dead bufobj list, otherwise filesystems cannot use bufcache
at all after the devvp reclaim.
Reported and tested by: trasz
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
- make mode enum start from 0 so that the assertion covers all cases [1]
- rename prefix _CLOEXEC flag with _FLAG
- postpone fhold on the old file descriptor, which eliminates the need to fdrop
in error cases.
- fixup FDDUP_FCNTL check missed in the previous commit
This removes 'fp == oldfde->fde_file' assertion which had little value. kern_dup
only calls fd-related functions which cannot drop the lock or a whole lot of
races would be introduced.
Noted by: kib [1]
to more C11-ish atomic_thread_fence_seq_cst().
Note that on PowerPC, which currently uses lwsync for mb(), the change
actually fixes the missed store/load barrier, intended by r271604 [*].
Reviewed by: alc
Noted by: alc [*]
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
We currently return EINVAL when calling listen() on a UNIX socket that
has not been bound to a pathname. If my interpretation of POSIX is
correct, we should return EDESTADDRREQ: "The socket is not bound to a
local address, and the protocol does not support listening on an unbound
socket."
Return EDESTADDRREQ instead when not bound and not connected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3038
Reviewed by: gnn, network
The logic is reorganised so that there is one exit point prior to the
lookup loop. This is an intermediate step to making audit logging
functions use found vnode instead of translating ni_dirfd on their own.
ni_startdir validation is removed. The only in-tree consumer is nfs
which already makes sure it is a directory.
Reviewed by: kib
All of the CloudABI system calls that operate on file descriptors of an
arbitrary type are prefixed with fd_. This change adds wrappers for
most of these system calls around their FreeBSD equivalents.
The dup2() system call present on CloudABI deviates from POSIX, in the
sense that it can only be used to replace existing file descriptor. It
cannot be used to create new ones. The reason for this is that this is
inherently thread-unsafe. Furthermore, there is no need on CloudABI to
use fixed file descriptor numbers. File descriptors 0, 1 and 2 have no
special meaning.
This change exposes the kern_dup() through <sys/syscallsubr.h> and puts
the FDDUP_* flags in <sys/filedesc.h>. It then adds a new flag,
FDDUP_MUSTREPLACE to force that file descriptors are replaced -- not
allocated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3035
Reviewed by: mjg
namei used to vref fd_cdir, which was immediatley vrele'd on entry to
the loop.
Check for absolute lookup and vref the right vnode the first time.
Reviewed by: kib
fd_rdir vnode was stored in ni_rootdir without refing it in any way,
after which the filedsc lock was being dropped.
The vnode could have been freed by mountcheckdirs or another thread doing
chroot.
VREF the vnode while the lock is held.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
While writing tests for CloudABI, I noticed that close() on process
descriptors returns the process ID of the child process. This is
interesting, as close() is only allowed to return 0 or -1. It turns out
that we clobber td->td_retval[0] in proc_reap(), so that wait*()
properly returns the process ID.
Change proc_reap() to leave td->td_retval[0] alone. Set the return value
in kern_wait6() instead, by keeping track of the PID before we
(potentially) reap the process.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3032
Reviewed by: kib
loop finds the selfd entry and clears its sf_si pointer, which is
handled by selfdfree() in parallel, NULL sf_si makes selfdfree() free
the memory. The result is the race and accesses to the freed memory.
Refcount the selfd ownership. One reference is for the sf_link
linkage, which is unconditionally dereferenced by selfdfree().
Another reference is for sf_threads, both selfdfree() and
doselwakeup() race to deref it, the winner unlinks and than frees the
selfd entry.
Reported by: Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>
Tested by: Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>, pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
CloudABI is a pure capability-based runtime environment for UNIX. It
works similar to Capsicum, except that processes already run in
capabilities mode on startup. All functionality that conflicts with this
model has been omitted, making it a compact binary interface that can be
supported by other operating systems without too much effort.
CloudABI is 'secure by default'; the idea is that it should be safe to
run arbitrary third-party binaries without requiring any explicit
hardware virtualization (Bhyve) or namespace virtualization (Jails). The
rights of an application are purely determined by the set of file
descriptors that you grant it on startup.
The datatypes and constants used by CloudABI's C library (cloudlibc) are
defined in separate files called syscalldefs_mi.h (pointer size
independent) and syscalldefs_md.h (pointer size dependent). We import
these files in sys/contrib/cloudabi and wrap around them in
cloudabi*_syscalldefs.h.
We then add stubs for all of the system calls in sys/compat/cloudabi or
sys/compat/cloudabi64, depending on whether the system call depends on
the pointer size. We only have nine system calls that depend on the
pointer size. If we ever want to support 32-bit binaries, we can simply
add sys/compat/cloudabi32 and implement these nine system calls again.
The next step is to send in code reviews for the individual system call
implementations, but also add a sysentvec, to allow CloudABI executabled
to be started through execve().
More information about CloudABI:
- GitHub: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
- Talk at BSDCan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVdF84x1EdA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2848
Reviewed by: emaste, brooks
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/freebsd
for timehands consumers, by using fences.
Ensure that the timehands->th_generation reset to zero is visible
before the data update is visible [*]. tc_setget() allowed data update
writes to become visible before generation (but not on TSO
architectures).
Remove tc_setgen(), tc_getgen() helpers, use atomics inline [**].
Noted by: alc [*]
Requested by: bde [**]
Reviewed by: alc, bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
The number of available lock list entries for a thread is LOCK_CHILDCOUNT,
and each entry can record up to LOCK_NCHILDREN locks. When iterating over
the locks held by a thread, a bound on the loop index is therefore given
by LOCK_CHILDCOUNT * LOCK_NCHILDREN; WITNESS_COUNT is an unrelated
constant.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2974
Place sched_random nearer to where it's first used: moving the
code nearer to where it is used makes the code easier to read
and we can reduce the initial "#ifdef SMP" island.
Reword a little the comment and clean some whitespaces
while here.
pointer is NULL, as in that case there are no userland pages that
could potentially be wired. It is common for old to be NULL and
oldlenp to be non-NULL in calls to userland_sysctl(), as this is used
to probe for the length of a variable-length sysctl entry before
retrieving a value. Note that it is typical for such calls to be made
with an uninitialized value in *oldlenp, so sysctlmemlock was
essentially being acquired at random (depending on the uninitialized
value in *oldlenp being > PAGE_SIZE or not) for these calls prior to
this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2987
Reviewed by: mjg, kib
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
This obviates the need for a MNTK_SUSPENDABLE flag, since passthrough
filesystems like nullfs and unionfs no longer need to inherit this
information from their lower layer(s). This change also restores the
pre-r273336 behaviour of using the presence of a susp_clean VFS method to
request suspension support.
Reviewed by: kib, mjg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2937
directory sys/contrib/libnv.
The goal of this operation is to NOT install header files which shouldn't
be used outside the nvlist library.
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
asserts are made. Remove them, since we might dereference freed
memory. Leaked locks are asserted by the syscall return code anyway.
Reported and tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
* GENERAL
- Update copyright.
- Make kernel options for RANDOM_YARROW and RANDOM_DUMMY. Set
neither to ON, which means we want Fortuna
- If there is no 'device random' in the kernel, there will be NO
random(4) device in the kernel, and the KERN_ARND sysctl will
return nothing. With RANDOM_DUMMY there will be a random(4) that
always blocks.
- Repair kern.arandom (KERN_ARND sysctl). The old version went
through arc4random(9) and was a bit weird.
- Adjust arc4random stirring a bit - the existing code looks a little
suspect.
- Fix the nasty pre- and post-read overloading by providing explictit
functions to do these tasks.
- Redo read_random(9) so as to duplicate random(4)'s read internals.
This makes it a first-class citizen rather than a hack.
- Move stuff out of locked regions when it does not need to be
there.
- Trim RANDOM_DEBUG printfs. Some are excess to requirement, some
behind boot verbose.
- Use SYSINIT to sequence the startup.
- Fix init/deinit sysctl stuff.
- Make relevant sysctls also tunables.
- Add different harvesting "styles" to allow for different requirements
(direct, queue, fast).
- Add harvesting of FFS atime events. This needs to be checked for
weighing down the FS code.
- Add harvesting of slab allocator events. This needs to be checked for
weighing down the allocator code.
- Fix the random(9) manpage.
- Loadable modules are not present for now. These will be re-engineered
when the dust settles.
- Use macros for locks.
- Fix comments.
* src/share/man/...
- Update the man pages.
* src/etc/...
- The startup/shutdown work is done in D2924.
* src/UPDATING
- Add UPDATING announcement.
* src/sys/dev/random/build.sh
- Add copyright.
- Add libz for unit tests.
* src/sys/dev/random/dummy.c
- Remove; no longer needed. Functionality incorporated into randomdev.*.
* live_entropy_sources.c live_entropy_sources.h
- Remove; content moved.
- move content to randomdev.[ch] and optimise.
* src/sys/dev/random/random_adaptors.c src/sys/dev/random/random_adaptors.h
- Remove; plugability is no longer used. Compile-time algorithm
selection is the way to go.
* src/sys/dev/random/random_harvestq.c src/sys/dev/random/random_harvestq.h
- Add early (re)boot-time randomness caching.
* src/sys/dev/random/randomdev_soft.c src/sys/dev/random/randomdev_soft.h
- Remove; no longer needed.
* src/sys/dev/random/uint128.h
- Provide a fake uint128_t; if a real one ever arrived, we can use
that instead. All that is needed here is N=0, N++, N==0, and some
localised trickery is used to manufacture a 128-bit 0ULLL.
* src/sys/dev/random/unit_test.c src/sys/dev/random/unit_test.h
- Improve unit tests; previously the testing human needed clairvoyance;
now the test will do a basic check of compressibility. Clairvoyant
talent is still a good idea.
- This is still a long way off a proper unit test.
* src/sys/dev/random/fortuna.c src/sys/dev/random/fortuna.h
- Improve messy union to just uint128_t.
- Remove unneeded 'static struct fortuna_start_cache'.
- Tighten up up arithmetic.
- Provide a method to allow eternal junk to be introduced; harden
it against blatant by compress/hashing.
- Assert that locks are held correctly.
- Fix the nasty pre- and post-read overloading by providing explictit
functions to do these tasks.
- Turn into self-sufficient module (no longer requires randomdev_soft.[ch])
* src/sys/dev/random/yarrow.c src/sys/dev/random/yarrow.h
- Improve messy union to just uint128_t.
- Remove unneeded 'staic struct start_cache'.
- Tighten up up arithmetic.
- Provide a method to allow eternal junk to be introduced; harden
it against blatant by compress/hashing.
- Assert that locks are held correctly.
- Fix the nasty pre- and post-read overloading by providing explictit
functions to do these tasks.
- Turn into self-sufficient module (no longer requires randomdev_soft.[ch])
- Fix some magic numbers elsewhere used as FAST and SLOW.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2025
Reviewed by: vsevolod,delphij,rwatson,trasz,jmg
Approved by: so (delphij)
First, on the write error, bufdone() call from ffs_backgroundwrite()
panics because pbrelvp() cleared bp->b_bufobj, while brelse() would
try to re-dirty the copy of the cg buffer. Handle this by setting
B_INVAL for the case of BIO_ERROR.
Second, we must re-dirty the real buffer containing the cylinder group
block data when background write failed. Real cg buffer was already
marked clean in ffs_bufwrite(). After the BV_BKGRDINPROG flag is
cleared on the real cg buffer in ffs_backgroundwrite(), buffer scan
may reuse the buffer at any moment. The result is lost write, and if
the write error was only transient, we get corrupted bitmaps.
We cannot re-dirty the original cg buffer in the
ffs_backgroundwritedone(), since the context is not sleepable,
preventing us from sleeping for origbp' lock. Add BV_BKGDERR flag
(protected by the buffer object lock), which is converted into delayed
write by brelse(), bqrelse() and buffer scan.
In collaboration with: Conrad Meyer <cse.cem@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: mckusick
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation (kib),
EMC/Isilon storage division (Conrad)
MFC after: 2 weeks
CPU set operations in my upcoming NUMA work.
Tested/compiled:
* i386 (run)
* amd64 (run)
* mips (run)
* mips64 (run)
* armv6 (built)
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
avoid the problem of holding a non-sleep lock during a page fault as
reported by witness. It also uses atomics where possible to avoid having
to acquire the exclusive lock. In addition, it consistently uses
memset()/memcpy() instead of bzero()/bcopy().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1971
Submitted by: sson
Reviewed by: jhb
the active vnode list for the given mount point, with the assumption
that vnodes with dirty pages are active. This is enforced by
vinactive() doing vm_object_page_clean() pass over the vnode pages.
The issue is, if vinactive() cannot be called during vput() due to the
vnode being only shared-locked, we might end up with the dirty pages
for the vnode on the free list. Such vnode is invisible to syncer,
and pages are only cleaned on the vnode reactivation. In other words,
the race results in the broken guarantee that user data, written
through the mmap(2), is written to the disk not later than in 30
seconds after the write.
Fix this by keeping the vnode which is freed but still owing
inactivation, on the active list. When syncer loops find such vnode,
it is deactivated and cleaned by the final vput() call.
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
in the requested array, then it is responsible for disposition of previous
page and is responsible for updating the entry in the requested array.
Now consumers of KPI do not need to re-lookup the pages after call to
vm_pager_get_pages().
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
0. For spin events report time spent spinning, not a loop count.
While loop count is much easier and cheaper to obtain it is hard
to reason about the reported numbers, espcially for adaptive locks
where both spinning and sleeping can happen.
So, it's better to compare apples and apples.
1. Teach lockstat about FreeBSD rw locks.
This is done in part by changing the corresponding probes
and in part by changing what probes lockstat should expect.
2. Teach lockstat that rw locks are adaptive and can spin on FreeBSD.
3. Report lock acquisition events for successful rw try-lock operations.
4. Teach lockstat about FreeBSD sx locks.
Reporting of events for those locks completely mirrors
rw locks.
5. Report spin and block events before acquisition event.
This is behavior documented for the upstream, so it makes sense to stick
to it. Note that because of FreeBSD adaptive lock implementations
both the spin and block events may be reported for the same acquisition
while the upstream reports only one of them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2727
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 17 days
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: ClusterHQ
Do not include machine/atomic.h explicitely, the header is already included
by sys/systm.h.
Force inlining of tc_getgen() and tc_setgen(). The functions are used
more than once, which causes compilers with non-aggressive inlining
policies to generate calls.
Suggested by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Use the same scheme implemented to manage credentials.
Code needing to look at process's credentials (as opposed to thred's) is
provided with *_proc variants of relevant functions.
Places which possibly had to take the proc lock anyway still use the proc
pointer to access limits.
Thread credentials are maintained as follows: each thread has a pointer to
creds and a reference on them. The pointer is compared with proc's creds on
userspace<->kernel boundary and updated if needed.
This patch introduces a counter which can be compared instead, so that more
structures can use this scheme without adding more comparisons on the boundary.
MAM is Medium Auxiliary Memory and is most commonly found as flash
chips on tapes.
This includes support for reading attributes and decoding most
known attributes, but does not yet include support for writing
attributes or reporting attributes in XML format.
libsbuf/Makefile:
Add subr_prf.c for the new sbuf_hexdump() function. This
function is essentially the same function.
libsbuf/Symbol.map:
Add a new shared library minor version, and include the
sbuf_hexdump() function.
libsbuf/Version.def:
Add version 1.4 of the libsbuf library.
libutil/hexdump.3:
Document sbuf_hexdump() alongside hexdump(3), since it is
essentially the same function.
camcontrol/Makefile:
Add attrib.c.
camcontrol/attrib.c:
Implementation of READ ATTRIBUTE support for camcontrol(8).
camcontrol/camcontrol.8:
Document the new 'camcontrol attrib' subcommand.
camcontrol/camcontrol.c:
Add the new 'camcontrol attrib' subcommand.
camcontrol/camcontrol.h:
Add a function prototype for scsiattrib().
share/man/man9/sbuf.9:
Document the existence of sbuf_hexdump() and point users to
the hexdump(3) man page for more details.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c:
Add a table of known attributes, text descriptions and
handler functions.
Add a new scsi_attrib_sbuf() function along with a number
of other related functions that help decode attributes.
scsi_attrib_ascii_sbuf() decodes ASCII format attributes.
scsi_attrib_int_sbuf() decodes binary format attributes, and
will pass them off to scsi_attrib_hexdump_sbuf() if they're
bigger than 8 bytes.
scsi_attrib_vendser_sbuf() decodes the vendor and drive
serial number attribute.
scsi_attrib_volcoh_sbuf() decodes the Volume Coherency
Information attribute that LTFS writes out.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
Add a number of attribute-related structure definitions and
other defines.
Add function prototypes for all of the functions added in
scsi_all.c.
sys/kern/subr_prf.c:
Add a new function, sbuf_hexdump(). This is the same as
the existing hexdump(9) function, except that it puts the
result in an sbuf.
This also changes subr_prf.c so that it can be compiled in
userland for includsion in libsbuf.
We should work to change this so that the kernel hexdump
implementation is a wrapper around sbuf_hexdump() with a
statically allocated sbuf with a drain. That will require
a drain function that goes to the kernel printf() buffer
that can take a non-NUL terminated string as input.
That is because an sbuf isn't NUL-terminated until it is
finished, and we don't want to finish it while we're still
using it.
We should also work to consolidate the userland hexdump and
kernel hexdump implemenatations, which are currently
separate. This would also mean making applications that
currently link in libutil link in libsbuf.
sys/sys/sbuf.h:
Add the prototype for sbuf_hexdump(), and add another copy
of the hexdump flag values if they aren't already defined.
Ideally the flags should be defined in one place but the
implemenation makes it difficult to do properly. (See
above.)
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
that:
- th_generation update is visible after the parameters update is
visible;
- the read of parameters is not reordered before initial read of
th_generation.
On UP kernels, compiler barriers are enough. For SMP machines, CPU
barriers must be used too, as was confirmed by submitter by testing on
the Freescale T4240 platform with 24 PowerPC processors.
Submitted by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
MFC after: 1 week
Previously the process terminating with SIGABRT at startup was the
only notification.
PR: 200617
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2731
Lock order checking is done without the witness mutex held, so multiple
threads that are racing to establish a new lock order may read matrix
entries that are in an inconsistent state. Don't print a warning in this
case, but instead just redo the check after taking the witness lock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2713
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
interpreter list to avoid the problem of holding a non-sleep lock during
a page fault as reported by witness. In addition, it consistently uses
memset()/memcpy() instead of bzero()/bcopy() except in the case where
bcopy() is required (i.e. overlapping copy).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2123
Submitted by: sson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
logic is now placed in the mmap hook implementation rather than requiring
it to be placed in sys/vm/vm_mmap.c. This hook allows new file types to
support mmap() as well as potentially allowing mmap() for existing file
types that do not currently support any mapping.
The vm_mmap() function is now split up into two functions. A new
vm_mmap_object() function handles the "back half" of vm_mmap() and accepts
a referenced VM object to map rather than a (handle, handle_type) tuple.
vm_mmap() is now reduced to converting a (handle, handle_type) tuple to a
a VM object and then calling vm_mmap_object() to handle the actual mapping.
The vm_mmap() function remains for use by other parts of the kernel
(e.g. device drivers and exec) but now only supports mapping vnodes,
character devices, and anonymous memory.
The mmap() system call invokes vm_mmap_object() directly with a NULL object
for anonymous mappings. For mappings using a file descriptor, the
descriptors fo_mmap() hook is invoked instead. The fo_mmap() hook is
responsible for performing type-specific checks and adjustments to
arguments as well as possibly modifying mapping parameters such as flags
or the object offset. The fo_mmap() hook routines then call
vm_mmap_object() to handle the actual mapping.
The fo_mmap() hook is optional. If it is not set, then fo_mmap() will
fail with ENODEV. A fo_mmap() hook is implemented for regular files,
character devices, and shared memory objects (created via shm_open()).
While here, consistently use the VM_PROT_* constants for the vm_prot_t
type for the 'prot' variable passed to vm_mmap() and vm_mmap_object()
as well as the vm_mmap_vnode() and vm_mmap_cdev() helper routines.
Previously some places were using the mmap()-specific PROT_* constants
instead. While this happens to work because PROT_xx == VM_PROT_xx,
using VM_PROT_* is more correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2658
Reviewed by: alc (glanced over), kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio
When providing memory map information to userland, populate the vnode pointer
for tmpfs files. Set the memory mapping to appear as a vnode type, to match
FreeBSD 9 behavior.
This fixes the use of tmpfs files with the dtrace pid provider,
procstat -v, procfs, linprocfs, pmc (pmcstat), and ptrace (PT_VM_ENTRY).
Submitted by: Eric Badger <eric@badgerio.us> (initial revision)
Obtained from: Dell Inc.
PR: 198431
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: kib (mentor)
Without this, if a process was being traced by truss(1), which
uses different p_stops bits than gdb(1), the latter would
misbehave because of the unexpected bits.
Reported by: jceel
Submitted by: sef
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
tdsigwakeup() increases the priority of the low-priority threads, to
give them a chance to be terminated timely. Also, kernel allows user
to signal kernel processes. The combined effect is that signalling
idle process bump a priority of the selected delivery thread, which
starts eating CPU.
Check for the delivery thread be an idle thread and do not raise its
priority then.
The signal delivery to the kernel threads must be opt-in feature.
Kernel thread should explicitely declare the ability to handle signals
directed to it. E.g., nfsd threads check for signal as an indication
of exit request.
Most threads do not handle signals at all, and queuing the signal to
them causes odd side-effects. Most innocent consequence is the memory
leak due to queued ksiginfo, which is never deleted from the sigqueue.
Code to prevent even queuing signals to the kernel threads is trivial,
but it requires careful examination of each call to kproc/kthread
creation to decide should the signalling be allowed. The commit is a
stop-gap measure which fixes the immediate case for now.
PR: 200493
Reported and tested by: trasz
Discussed with: trasz, emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
buildkernel run.
Some of them were write-only under some kernel options, e.g. variables
keeping values only used by CTR() macros. It costs nothing to the
code readability and correctness to eliminate the warnings in those
cases too by removing the local cached values used only for
single-access.
Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2665
Reviewed by: rodrigc
Looked at by: bjk
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Nothing stops a parallel unmount to suceed before the given call to
dounmount() checks and locks the covered vnode. Prevent dounmount()
from acting on the freed (although type-stable) memory by changing the
interface to require the mount point to be referenced. dounmount()
consumes the reference on return, regardless of the sucessfull or
erronous result.
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
vn_start_secondary_write(9) functions. The flag indicates that the
caller already owns a reference on the mount point, and the functions
can consume it. The reference is released by vn_finished_write(9) and
vn_finished_secondary_write(9) in due course.
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
limits in the code which is deep in the call stack, and owns several
critical system resources, like vnode locks. Attempt to wait while
the per-mount softupdate thread cleans up the backlog may deadlock,
because the thread might need to lock the same vnode which is owned by
the waiting thread.
Instead of synchronously waiting for the worker, perform the worker'
tickle and pause until the backlog is cleaned, at the safe point
during return from kernel to usermode. A new ast request to call
softdep_ast_cleanup() is created, the SU code now only checks the size
of queue and schedules ast.
There is no ast delivery for the kernel threads, so they are exempted
from the mechanism, except NFS daemon threads. NFS server loop
explicitely checks for the request, and informs the schedule_cleanup()
that it is capable of handling the requests by the process P2_AST_SU
flag. This is needed because nfsd may be the sole cause of the SU
workqueue overflow. But, to not cause nsfd to spawn additional
threads just because we slow down existing workers, only tickle su
threads, without waiting for the backlog cleanup.
Reviewed by: jhb, mckusick
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
traced by another process such as a debugger). The parent process does
need to check for matching orphan pids to avoid returning ECHILD if an
orphan has exited, but it should not return the exited status for the
child until after the debugger has detached from the orphan process
either explicitly or implicitly via wait().
Add two tests for for this case: one where the debugger is the direct
child (thus the parent has a non-empty children list) and one where
the debugger is not a direct child (so the only "child" of the parent
is the orphan).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2644
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
In r256613, taskqueue_enqueue_locked() have been modified to release the
task queue lock before returning. In r276665, taskqueue_drain_all() will
call taskqueue_enqueue_locked() to insert the barrier task into the queue,
but did not reacquire the lock after it but later code expects the lock
still being held (e.g. TQ_SLEEP()).
The barrier task is special and if we release then reacquire the lock,
there would be a small race window where a high priority task could sneak
into the queue. Looking more closely, the race seems to be tolerable but
is undesirable from semantics standpoint.
To solve this, in taskqueue_drain_tq_queue(), instead of directly calling
taskqueue_enqueue_locked(), insert the barrier task directly without
releasing the lock.
1. Add a kern_kqueue() counterpart for kqueue() with flags parameter.
2. Be a bit secure. To avoid a double fp lookup add a kern_kevent_fp()
counterpart for kern_kevent() with file pointer parameter instead
of file descriptor an pass the buck to it.
Suggested by: mjg [2]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1091
Reviewed by: trasz
threads split sys_sched_getparam(), sys_sched_setparam(),
sys_sched_getscheduler(), sys_sched_setscheduler() to their kern_*
counterparts and add targettd parameter to allow specify the target
thread directly by callee.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1034
Reviewed by: trasz