All the Book-E world is no longer e500v{1,2}. e500mc the 64-bit derivatives do
not use the DOZE/NAP bits with MSR[WE], instead using the `wait' instruction to
wait for interrupts, and SoC plane controls (via CCSR) for power management.
MFC after: 1 week
Modify blst_leaf_alloc to find allocations that cross the boundary between
one leaf node and the next when those two leaves descend from the same
meta node.
Update the hint field for leaves so that it represents a bound on how
large an allocation can begin in that leaf, where it currently represents
a bound on how large an allocation can be found within the boundaries of
the leaf.
The first phase of blst_leaf_alloc currently shrinks sequences of
consecutive 1-bits in mask until each has been shrunken by count-1 bits,
so that any bits remaining show where an allocation can begin, or until
all the bits have disappeared, in which case the allocation fails. This
change amends that so that the high-order bit is copied, as if, when the
last block was free, it was followed by an endless stream of free
blocks. It also amends the early stopping condition, so that the shrinking
of 1-sequences stops early when there are none, or there is only one
unbounded one remaining.
The search for the first set bit is unchanged, and the code path
thereafter is mostly unchanged unless the first set bit is in a position
that makes some of those copied sign bits matter. In that case, we look
for a next leaf, and at what blocks it can provide, to see if a
cross-boundary allocation is possible.
The hint is updated on a successful allocation that clears the last bit,
but it not updated on a failed allocation that leaves the last bit
set. So, as long as the last block is free, the hint value for the leaf is
large. As long as the last block is free, and there's a next leaf, a large
allocation can begin here, perhaps. A stricter rule than this would mean
that allocations and frees in one leaf could require hint updates to the
preceding leaf, and this change seeks to leave the freeing code
unmodified.
Define BLIST_BMAP_MASK, and use it for bit masking in blst_leaf_free and
blist_leaf_fill, as well as in blst_leaf_alloc.
Correct a panic message in blst_leaf_free.
Submitted by: Doug Moore <dougm@rice.edu>
Reviewed by: markj (an earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11819
The usbphy node for allwinner have two kind of resources, one for the
phy_ctrl and one per phy. Instead of blindy allocating resources, alloc
the phy_ctrl and pmu ones separately.
Also add a configuration struct for all different phy that hold the difference
between them (number of phys, unknow needed register write etc ...).
While here remove A83T code as upstream and FreeBSD dts don't have
nodes for USB.
This (plus 323640) re-enable OHCI on Pine64 on the bottom USB port.
The top USB port is routed to the OHCI0/EHCI0 which is by default in OTG mode.
While the phy code can handle the re-route to standard OHCI/EHCI we still need
a driver for musb to probe and configure it in host mode.
EHCI is still buggy on Pine64 (hang the board) so do not enable it for now.
Tested On: Bananapi (A20), BananapiM2 (A31S), OrangePi One (H3) Pine64 (A64)
r323392 introduce gpio_pin_get/gpio_pin_set for a10_gpio driver.
When called via gpio method they must aquire the device lock while
when they are called via gpio_pin_configure the lock is already aquire.
Introduce a10_gpio_pin_{s,g}et_locked and call them in pin_gpio_configure
instead.
Tested On: BananaPi (A20)
Reported by: Richard Puga richard@puga.net
This was really too big of a commit even if everything worked, but there
are multiple new issues introduced in the one huge commit, so it's not
worth keeping this until it's fixed.
I'll work on splitting this up into logical chunks and introduce them one
at a time over the next week or two.
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
To optimize the case of ping-ponging between two buffers, the DDP code
caches the last two buffers used keeping the pages wired and page pods
stored in the NIC's RAM. If a new aio_read() request uses one of the
same buffers, then the work of holding pages, etc. can be avoided.
However, the starting virtual address of an aio buffer was not saved,
only the page count, length, and initial page offset. Thus, an
aio_read() request could match a different buffer in the address
space. (Earlier during development vm_fault_hold_quick_pages() was
always called and the vm_page_t values were compared, but that was
eventually removed without being adequately replaced.) Fix by storing
the starting virtual address and comparing that (along with other
fields) to determine if a buffer can be reused.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Don't call cam_iosched_trim_done or cam_iosched_submit_trim for nda
since its hardware can handle almost an arbitrary number of TRIMs and
we don't have to be careful to only ever do one.
Sponsored by: Netflix
It's intended only for those situations where the periph driver
ones to limit the number of trims active to one and only one.
Also update comments on associated functions.
Sponsored by: Netflix
* Demote the level of several debug messages to CAM_DEBUG_TRACE
* Add detection for SDHC cards that can do 1.8V. No voltage switch sequence
is issued yet;
* Don't create a separate LUN for each SDIO function. We need just one to make
pass(4) attach;
* Remove obsolete mmc_sdio* files. SDIO functionality will be moved into the
separate device that will manage a new sdio(4) bus;
* Terminate probing if got no reply to CMD0;
* Make bcm2835 SDHCI host controller driver compile with 'option MMCCAM'.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12109
free queue mutex lock owning session, same as it was done for the
object termination in r323561.
Reported and tested by: mjg
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
In theory, all data access errors mean that a member is out of sync
at most. But they were treated as more serious errors to avoid the
situation where a flaky disk gets repeatedly disconnected, re-synchronized,
reconnected and then disconnected again.
ENXIO is a special error that means that the member disk disappeared,
so it should get the same handling as the GEOM orphaning event.
There is a better chance that when the disk is reconnected, it will be
a good member again.
When ENXIO happens on a read we use the exisiting G_MIRROR_BUMP_SYNCID
mechanism which means that the mirror's syncid is increased as soon
as there is a write to the mirror. That's because no data has got out
of sync yet, but the problematic memeber is disconnected, so the future
write will make it stale.
When ENXIO happens on a write we use a new G_MIRROR_BUMP_SYNCID_NOW
mechanism which means that we update the mirror metadata as soon as
possible because the problematic memeber is already behind.
Reviewed by: markj, imp
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9463
The bad_session, sglist_error, and process_error sysctl nodes were
returning the value of the pad_error node instead of the appropriate
error counters.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
When a newborn socket moves from incomplete queue to complete
one, we need to obtain the listening socket lock after the child,
which is a wrong order. The old code did that in potentially
endless loop of mtx_trylock(). The new one does only one attempt
of mtx_trylock(), and in case of failure references listening
socket, unlocks child and locks everything in right order. In
case if listening socket shuts down during that, just bail out.
Reported & tested by: Jason Eggleston <jeggleston llnw.com>
Reported & tested by: Jason Wolfe <jason llnw.com>
kernel. We can register callbacks to perform the required operation on the
saved registers before returning.
This is initially used to work around a bug in old versions of QEMU that
trigger such an exception when reading from an ID register when it should
load z zero value.
I expect this could be used with other exception types, e.g. to emulate
special register access from userland.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
An eventual devd(8) or other component should be able to scan buses and
automatically load drivers that match device ids described in this metadata.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12364
The core note matches the format and layout of NT_ARM_VFP on Linux.
Debuggers use the AT_HWCAP flags to determine how many VFP registers
are actually used and their format.
Reviewed by: mmel (earlier version w/o gcore)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12293
Future changes will use these functions to fetch and store VFP state for
threads other than curthread.
Reviewed by: andrew, stevek, Michal Meloun <meloun-miracle-cz>
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12292
These flags match the meaning and value of flags in Linux, though
Linux has many more flags.
Reviewed by: stevek, Michal Meloun <meloun-miracle-cz> (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12291
A new 'u_long *sv_hwcap' field is added to 'struct sysentvec'. A
process ABI can set this field to point to a value holding a mask of
architecture-specific CPU feature flags. If an ABI does not wish to
supply AT_HWCAP to processes the field can be left as NULL.
The support code for AT_EHDRFLAGS was already present on all systems,
just the #define was not present. This is a step towards unifying the
AT_* constants across platforms.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12290
As long as mnt_ref is not zero there can be a consumer that might try
to access mnt_vnodecovered. For this reason the covered vnode must not
be freed until mnt_ref goes to zero.
So, move the release of the covered vnode to vfs_mount_destroy.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12329
The problem is that fdrop() requires syscall context, as it may
enter sleep in some cases. The reason to use it in the original
non-blocking sendfile implementation, was to avoid use of global
ACCEPT_LOCK() on every I/O completion. Now in head sorele() no
longer requires this lock.
16 bits is only wide enough for kegs with an item size of up to 64KB.
At that size or larger, slab headers are typically offpage because the
item size is a multiple of the page size, but there is no requirement
that this be the case.
We can widen the field without affecting the layout of struct uma_keg
since the removal of uk_slabsize in r315077 left an adjacent hole.
PR: 218911
MFC after: 2 weeks
object' page queue under the single mutex lock.
First, all pages on the queue are prepared for free by calls to
vm_page_free_prep(), and pages which should not be returned to the
physical allocator (e.g. wired or fictitious) are simply removed from
the queue. On the second pass, vm_page_free_phys_pglist() inserts all
pages from the queue without relocking the mutex.
The change improves the object termination, e.g. on the process exit
where large anonymous memory objects otherwise cause relocks the free
queue mutex for each page. More, if several such processes are
exiting or execing in parallel, the mutex was highly contended on
the address space demolition.
Diagnosed and tested by: mjg (previous version)
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
and insertion into the phys allocator free queues vm_page_free_phys().
Also provide a wrapper vm_page_free_phys_pglist() for batched free.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Tested by: mjg (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
other kernel infrastructure changes.
Note that this doesn't affect the base cxgb(4) NIC driver for T3 at all.
MFC after: No MFC.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
On some AMD FCH devices driven by intpm(4) (read: mine), the SMBus I/O port
range is split in two and the low range is only 0x10 wide. intpm(4) does
not access any registers above 0x0f, so there is no need for the wider
range.
Discussed with: avg
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
generate_fat.sh does the following:
- create an 800kb zero-filled file
- create an md device backed by this file
- format the device fat12
- mount the filesystem
- create the EFI ESP directory structure
- create the EFI boot file (BOOTx64 for amd64, BOOTaa64 for aarch64, etc)
- Adds a marker to the beginning of the file, and pad it to 384kb
- 384kb was chosen as it is less than half of 800kb, thus allowing
users to keep a backup of their older boot file in the small partition
- Unmount the filesystem
- Scan the image and find the offset where the marker was inserted
- The process requires root, to make image generation easier, images for
each architecture are pregenerated, compressed with xz, and checked
into svn.
The Makefile that generates boot1.efifat does the following:
- Ensure the compiled boot1.efi file is no larger than the generated image
- Decompress the template created by generate-fat.sh
- dd the contents of boot1.efi into boot1.efifat starting at the offset
where the marker is found. This allows any file less than the maximum
size to be written into the fat filesystem without having to mount it,
so no root privileges are required.
Later work by imp and myself makes bsdinstall create a 200mb fat16 instead
of using this process, but it is retained to make image generation easier.
Submitted by: Eric McCorkle (original version)
Reviewed by: emaste, tsoome, Eric McCorkle
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9680
available, in i2c controller drivers that require interrupts for transfers.
This is the result of auditing all 22 existing drivers that attach iicbus.
These drivers were the only ones remaining that require interrupts and were
not using config_intrhook to defer attachment. That has led, over the
years, to various i2c slave device drivers needing to use config_intrhook
themselves rather than performing bus transactions in their probe() and
attach() methods, just in case they were attached too early.
in UNIX sockets.
o Check that socket is still connected in uipc_ready(). If not
we are responsible to free mbufs.
o In uipc_send() if socket appears to be disconnected, but we
are sending data with pending I/Os, don't free mbufs.
Reported by: Kevin Bowling <kbowling llnw.com>
Tested by: Kevin Bowling <kbowling llnw.com>
PR: 222259
Reported by: Mark Martinec <Mark.Martinec ijs.si>
MFC after: 3 days
in favor of just rendering the manpage instead of relying on pre-formatted
catpages. Note, this does not impede the ability to use existing catpages,
it just removes the utility to generate them.
Reviewed by: imp, allanjude
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12317
Kegs for internal zones always keep the slab header in the slab itself.
Therefore, when determining the allocation size, we need to take the
slab header size into account.
Reported and tested by: ae, rakuco
Reviewed by: avg
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12342
The new IDs are taken from the hardware to which I have access
and from open datasheets.
Also, the hardware probing is moved to the device probe method.
Reviewed by: rpokala
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11730
CAM_DEBUG_TRACE results in way too much debug output than needed now.
When debugging, it's always possible to turn on trace level using camcontrol.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12110
by Matt Macy as well as other changes which he has accepted via pull
request to his github repo at https://github.com/mattmacy/networking/
This should bring -CURRENT and the github repo into close enough sync to
allow small feature branches rather than a large chain of interdependant
patches being developed out of tree. The reset of the synchronization
should be able to be completed on github by splitting the remaining
changes that are not yet ready into short feature branches for later
review as smaller commits.
Here is a summary of changes included in this patch:
1) More checks when INVARIANTS are enabled for eariler problem
detection
2) Group Task Queue cleanups
- Fix use of duplicate shortdesc for gtaskqueue malloc type.
Some interfaces such as memguard(9) use the short description to
identify malloc types, so duplicates should be avoided.
3) Allow gtaskqueues to use ithreads in addition to taskqueues
- In some cases, this can improve performance
4) Better logging when taskqgroup_attach*() fails to set interrupt
affinity.
5) Do not start gtaskqueues until they're needed
6) Have mp_ring enqueue function enter the ABDICATED rather than BUSY
state. This moves the TX to the gtaskq and allows processing to
continue faster as well as make TX batching more likely.
7) Add an ift_txd_errata function to struct if_txrx. This allows
drivers to inspect/modify mbufs before transmission.
8) Add a new IFLIB_NEED_ZERO_CSUM for drivers to indicate they need
checksums zeroed for checksum offload to work. This avoids modifying
packet data in the TX path when possible.
9) Use ithreads for iflib I/O instead of taskqueues
10) Clean up ioctl and support async ioctl functions
11) Prefetch two cachlines from each mbuf instead of one up to 128B. We
often need to parse packet header info beyond 64B.
12) Fix potential memory corruption due to fence post error in
bit_nclear() usage.
13) Improved hang detection and handling
14) If the packet is smaller than MTU, disable the TSO flags.
This avoids extra packet parsing when not needed.
15) Move TCP header parsing inside the IS_TSO?() test.
This avoids extra packet parsing when not needed.
16) Pass chains of mbufs that are not consumed by lro to if_input()
rather call if_input() for each mbuf.
17) Re-arrange packet header loads to get as much work as possible done
before a cache stall.
18) Lock the context when calling IFDI_ATTACH_PRE()/IFDI_ATTACH_POST()/
IFDI_DETACH();
19) Attempt to distribute RX/TX tasks across cores more sensibly,
especially when RX and TX share an interrupt. RX will attempt to
take the first threads on a core, and TX will attempt to take
successive threads.
20) Allow iflib_softirq_alloc_generic() to request affinity to the same
cpus an interrupt has affinity with. This allows TX queues to
ensure they are serviced by the socket the device is on.
21) Add new iflib sysctls to net.iflib:
- timer_int - interval at which to run per-queue timers in ticks
- force_busdma
22) Add new per-device iflib sysctls to dev.X.Y.iflib
- rx_budget allows tuning the batch size on the RX path
- watchdog_events Count of watchdog events seen since load
23) Fix error where netmap_rxq_init() could get called before
IFDI_INIT()
24) e1000: Fixed version of r323008: post-cold sleep instead of DELAY
when waiting for firmware
- After interrupts are enabled, convert all waits to sleeps
- Eliminates e1000 software/firmware synchronization busy waits after
startup
25) e1000: Remove special case for budget=1 in em_txrx.c
- Premature optimization which may actually be incorrect with
multi-segment packets
26) e1000: Split out TX interrupt rather than share an interrupt for
RX and TX.
- Allows better performance by keeping RX and TX paths separate
27) e1000: Separate igb from em code where suitable
Much easier to understand separate functions and "if (is_igb)" than
previous tests like "if (reg_icr & (E1000_ICR_RXSEQ | E1000_ICR_LSC))"
#blamebruno
Reviewed by: sbruno
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12235
Normally after receiving a packet, a vlan(4) interface sends the packet
back through its parent interface's rx routine so that it can be
processed as an untagged frame. It does this by using the parent's
ifp->if_input. This is incompatible with netmap(4), which replaces the
vlan(4) interface's if_input with a netmap(4) hook. Fix this by using
the vlan(4) interface's ifp instead of the parent's directly.
Reported by: Harry Schmalzbauer <freebsd@omnilan.de>
Reviewed by: rstone
Approved by: rstone (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12191
The cam_iosched_ticker() can't be scheduled more than once per tick.
Some limiters depend on quanta matching the number of calls per second
to enforce the proper limits. Limit the quanta to no faster than 1 per
clock tick. This fixes some features when running in VMs where the
default HZ is 100.
PR: 221953
Obtained from: ElectroBSD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12337
Submitted by: Fabian Keil
It's awkward to have spaces in CAM device serial numbers. That leads to
such things as device nodes named "/dev/diskid/MYSERIAL%20%20%201". Better
to replace the spaces with "0"s. This change only affects the default
serial numbers for users who don't provide their own.
Reviewed by: ken, mav
MFC after: Never
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12263
Newer binutils supports extensions to the MIPS ABI for non-PIC code
that is used when compiling O32 binaries with clang 5 (but not used
for N64 oddly enough). These extensions require support for
R_MIPS_COPY relocations as well as a second PLT GOT using
R_MIPS_JUMP_SLOT relocations.
For R_MIPS_COPY, use the same approach as on other architectures where
fixups are deferred to the MD do_copy_relocations.
The additional PLT GOT for jump slots is located in a .got.plt section
which is identified by a DT_MIPS_PLTGOT dynamic entry. This GOT also
requires fixups for the first two GOT entries just as the normal GOT.
However, the entry point for this second GOT uses a different calling
convention. Rather than passing an offset into the GOT, it passes an
offset into the .rel.plt section. This requires a second entry point
(_rtld_pltbind_start) which calls the normal _rtld_bind() rather than
_mips_rtld_bind(). This also means providing a real version of
reloc_jmpslot() which is used by _rtld_bind().
In addition, add real implementions of reloc_plt() and
reloc_jmpslots() which walk .rel.plt handling R_MIPS_JUMP_SLOT
relocations.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12326
The zfsonlinux feature large_dnode is not yet supported by the loader.
Reviewed by: avg, allanjude
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12288
"probe" method of those drivers to mean we're on e TI SoC. Introduce a new
function, ti_soc_is_supported(), and use it to be sure we're really a TI
system.
PR: 222250
The uncovered vnode is possible because there is no guarantee that
its hold count would go to zero (and it would be inactivated and reclaimed)
immediately after a covering filesystem is unmounted.
So, such a vnode should be expected and it is possible to re-use it
without any trouble.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
The only consumer of zfs_get_vfs, zfs_unmount_snap, does not need
the filesystem to be busy, it just need a reference that it can pass
to dounmount.
Also, previously the code was racy as it unbusied the filesystem
before taking a reference on it.
Now the code should be simpler and safer.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
stop, read, and write methods. Some controllers don't implement these
individual operations and have only a transfer method. In that case, we
should return an indication that the device is present but doesn't support
the method, as opposed to the kobj default error ENXIO which makes it
look like the whole device is missing. Userland tools such as i2c(8) can
use the differing return values to switch between the two different i2c
IO mechanisms.
On AMD, the MCG_CAP feature bit is reserved -- not explicitly zero. Do not
use it to determine CMCI support.
Reviewed by: avg, markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12320
This Makefile relies on Makefile.fat providing the correct value for
BOOT1_MAXSIZE and BOOT1_OFFSET. Since BOOT1_OFFSET had no default value
here the build would already fail if Makefile.fat did not provide
correct values.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
illumos/illumos-gate@37e84ab74e37e84ab74ehttps://www.illumos.org/issues/8569
C [C99] has peculiar rules for inline functions that are different from the
C++ rules. Unlike C++ where inline is "fire and forget", in C a programmer
must pay attention to the function's storage class / visibility. The main
problem is with the case where a compiler decides to not inline a call to the
function declared as inline.
Some relevant links:
- http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.faqs/ka15831.html
- http://www.drdobbs.com/the-new-c-inline-functions/184401540
The summary is that either the inline functions should be declared 'static
inline' or one of the compilation units (.c files) must provide a callable
externally visible function definition. In the former case, the compiler would
automatically create a local non-inlined function instance in every compilation
unit where it's needed. In the latter case the single external definition is
used to satisfy any non-inlined calls in all compilation units. As things
stand right now, we can get an undefined reference error under certain
combinations of compilers and compiler options. For example, this is what I
get on FreeBSD when compiling with clang 4.0.0 and -O1:
In function `abd_free': /usr/src/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/abd.c:385:
undefined reference to `abd_is_linear'
Reviewed by: Matt Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Approved by: Robert Mustacchi <rm@joyent.com>
Author: Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>
MFC after: 1 week
illumos/illumos-gate@216d7723a1216d7723a1https://www.illumos.org/issues/8558
On a system with more than 80K ZFS filesystems, we've seen cases where
lwp_create() will start to fail by returning EAGAIN. The problem being,
for each of those 80K ZFS filesystems, a taskq will be created for each
dataset as part of the ZIL for each dataset.
For each of these taskq's, a kernel thread will be created which results
in 24KB being allocated for each thread. With enough of these 24KB
allocations, we eventually exhaust the memory region set aside for these
allocations. Currently, segkpsize is set to a value of 2GB, which means
we can only support about 80K filesystems; 2GB / 24KB = ~80K.
The lwp_create() failure comes into play due to the fact that LWP
creation also allocates 24KB from this same region of memory. Thus, if
we've exhausted this region of memory due to the number of ZIL taskq's,
there won't be any memory avaible to allow the call to lwp_create() to
succeed.
FreeBSD note: I haven't created sysctl-s for the new ZIL clean
parameters. Let's add them if anyone requires to tune them.
Reviewed by: George Wilson <george.wilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Sebastien Roy <sebastien.roy@delphix.com>
Approved by: Robert Mustacchi <rm@joyent.com>
Author: Prakash Surya <prakash.surya@delphix.com>
MFC after: 3 weeks
This patch adds hwtype parameter which keeps information about hardware
revision of Marvell EHCI controller. It allows to replace multiple
calls to ofw_bus_is_compatible with comparing hwtype value during driver
initialization.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Suggested by: ian
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
In advance of other changes to the fat template generation process, have
generate-fat.sh create all template files at the same time so that they
cannot get out of sync.
Also correct a longstanding but where BOOT1_OFFSET was overwritten on
each invocation. A previous version of this patch stored a per-arch
offset (e.g. BOOT1_arm64_OFFSET) but that was deemed unnecessary.
Instead just hardcode the known offset that applies to all archs (0x2d)
and fail if the offset happens to be different.
Ongiong work (using newfs_msdos in bsdinstall and adding msdosfs support
to makefs) will eventually allow us to do away with this fat template
hack altogether, but in the near term we have a few improvements that
will build on this.
Reviewed by: allanjude, imp, Eric McCorkle
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10931
In the case of running newvers.sh on a git tree w/o git-svn-id notes we
previously piped the entire 'git log' to grep. Add --grep to the log
invocation to avoid processing log entries of no interest.
This saves about 2-3 seconds of newvers.sh run time on my SSD laptop.
Later changes will bring further speedups.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This prevents incorrect subversion revision detection when "git svn" is
not being used to get the sources but git is available. Previously old
subversion revisions included in commit messages were favoured over the
more recent and correct revisions in git notes.
For example cf1f35574722 represents r315395 but was treated as r313908
which is referenced in the commit message. Commits following
r315395/cf1f35574722 but before another commit with a git-svn-id
reference in the commit message would be treated as r313908 as well.
Patch from PR updated to accommodate the initial four space indent in
`git log` ouptut.
PR: 221848
Submitted by: Fabian Keil
Obtained from: ElectroBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
Prior to the change they were subject to extreme false sharing.
In particular this change shaves about 3 seconds real time of -j 80 buildkernel.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12281
Sometimes it is necessary to combine several gpio pins into an ad-hoc bus
and manipulate the pins as a group. In such cases manipulating the pins
individualy is not an option, because the value on the "bus" assumes
potentially-invalid intermediate values as each pin is changed in turn. Note
that the "bus" may be something as simple as a bi-color LED where changing
colors requires changing both gpio pins at once, or something as complex as
a bitbanged multiplexed address/data bus connected to a microcontroller.
In addition to the absolute requirement of simultaneously changing the
output values of driven pins, a desirable feature of these new methods is to
provide a higher-performance mechanism for reading and writing multiple
pins, especially from userland where pin-at-a-time access incurs a noticible
syscall time penalty.
These new interfaces are NOT intended to abstract away all the ugly details
of how gpio is implemented on any given platform. In fact, to use these
properly you absolutely must know something about how the gpio hardware is
organized. Typically there are "banks" of gpio pins controlled by registers
which group several pins together. A bank may be as small as 2 pins or as
big as "all the pins on the device, hundreds of them." In the latter case, a
driver might support this interface by allowing access to any 32 adjacent
pins within the overall collection. Or, more likely, any 32 adjacent pins
starting at any multiple of 32. Whatever the hardware restrictions may be,
you would need to understand them to use this interface.
In additional to defining the interfaces, two example implementations are
included here, for imx5/6, and allwinner. These represent the two primary
types of gpio hardware drivers. imx6 has multiple gpio devices, each
implementing a single bank of 32 pins. Allwinner implements a single large
gpio number space from 1-n pins, and the driver internally translates that
linear number space to a bank+pin scheme based on how the pins are grouped
into control registers. The allwinner implementation imposes the restriction
that the first_pin argument to the new functions must always be pin 0 of a
bank.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11810
for analyzing the radix tree structures and reporting on the number, and
sizes, of maximal intervals of free blocks. The report includes the number
of maximal intervals, and also the number of them in each of several size
ranges, from small (size 1, or 3 to 4) to large (28657 to 46367) with size
boundaries defined by Fibonacci numbers. The report is written in the test
tool with the 's' command, or in a running kernel by sysctl.
The analysis of the radix tree frequently computes the position of the lone
bit set in a u_daddr_t, a computation that also appears in leaf allocation.
That computation has been moved into a function of its own, and optimized
for cases where an inlined machine instruction can replace the usual binary
search.
Submitted by: Doug Moore <dougm@rice.edu>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11906
it to a random value between 100 and 1123, rather than 0 as before.
Submitted by: Marie Helene Kvello-Aune <marieheleneka@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5336
Since the efipart rewrite, the chain command was looking for device
handle using interface applicable only for net devices. Disk
partitions and zfs pools need their own approach to find the proper handle.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12287
namecache_ts differs from mere namecache by few fields placed mid struct.
The access to the last element (the name) is thus special-cased.
The standard solution is to put new fields at the very beginning anad
embedd the original struct. The pointer shuffled around points to the
embedded part. If needed, access to new fields can be gained through
__containerof.
MFC after: 1 week
This module is specific to a single Marvel board that we currently
only support in 64-bit mode. Remove it from the build otherwise. It
likely should be completely removed, but this unbreaks x86 building.
Noticed by: sbruno@
the driver in a place where it will be built for all targets. x86 doesn't
have all the required build bits for this device.
Move the uart(4) device mvebu to arm64 only.
lock if both old and new pages use the same underlying lock. Convert
existing places to use the helper instead of inlining it. Use the
optimization in vm_object_page_remove().
Suggested and reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
have a scope ID. Change size of the searched scope ID to the full
16-bits. There can typically be more than 255 interfaces.
Suggested by: ae @
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
This patch enables using NETA driver on Marvell Armada 3700 SoC
by introducing new compatible string, modifying clock source
obtaining and also excluding unnecessary parts.
The driver is added as a build option for arm64 platforms as well.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12258
Now the virtual address of received buffer is taken from a software ring.
Thanks to this, we can use the NETA driver on 64 bits architecture and
avoid 32-bit buf_cookie descriptor field limitation.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12257
This patch adds support for UART in Armada 3700 family.
It exposes both low-level UART interface, as well as
standard driver methods.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12250
Enabled driver can be used on boards equipped with Marvell Armada 3700 SoC.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12256
This patch reuses ehci_mv driver by adding a support for the new
compatible string and adding ehci_mv.c to list of available options
for arm64 platforms.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12255
illumos/illumos-gate@1702cce7511702cce751
FreeBSD note: rather than merging the zpool.8 update I copied the zpool
scrub section from the illumos zpool.1m to FreeBSD zpool.8 almost
verbatim. Now that the illumos page uses the mdoc format, it was an
easier option. Perhaps the change is not in perfect compliance with the
FreeBSD style, but I think that it is acceptible.
https://www.illumos.org/issues/8414
This issue tracks the port of scrub pause from ZoL: https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/pull/6167
Currently, there is no way to pause a scrub. Pausing may be useful when
the pool is busy with other I/O to preserve bandwidth.
Description
This patch adds the ability to pause and resume scrubbing. This is achieved
by maintaining a persistent on-disk scrub state. While the state is 'paused'
we do not scrub any more blocks. We do however perform regular scan
housekeeping such as freeing async destroyed and deadlist blocks while paused.
Motivation and Context
Scrub pausing can be an I/O intensive operation and people have been asking
for the ability to pause a scrub for a while. This allows one to preserve scrub
progress while freeing up bandwidth for other I/O.
Reviewed by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed by: Brad Lewis <brad.lewis@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Matt Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Approved by: Dan McDonald <danmcd@joyent.com>
Author: Alek Pinchuk <apinchuk@datto.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Enabled driver can be used on boards equipped with Marvell Armada
3700/7k/8k SoCs.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12253
This driver will be used by Marvell Armada 3700 and 7k/8k SoC families.
The same, generic xhci device also appears in Armada 380, so we are reusing
driver.
This patch also adds xhci_mv.c entry to the arm64 files list.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12252
Workaround problem that ifa_ifwithaddr() also matches the scope ID of
the IPv6 address when searching for a maching IPv6 address. For now
simply try all valid scope IDs until a match is found.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
use of the linux_poll_wakeup() function from unsafe contexts, which
can lead to use-after-free issues.
Instead of calling linux_poll_wakeup() directly use the wake_up()
family of functions in the LinuxKPI to do this.
Bump the FreeBSD version to force recompilation of external kernel modules.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
- start_wrq_wr must not drain the wr_list if there are incomplete_wrs
pending. This can happen when a t4_wrq_tx runs between two
start_wrq_wr.
- commit_wrq_wr must examine the cookie's pidx and ndesc with the
queue's lock held. Otherwise there is a bad race when incomplete WRs
are being completed and commit_wrq_wr for the WR that is ahead in the
queue updates the next incomplete WR's cookie's pidx/ndesc but the
commit_wrq_wr for the second one is using stale values that it read
without the lock.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
P5040/P5021 have the same number of LAWs as P5020. There may be a better way of
getting the count from the FDT (fsl,num-laws property on soc/corenet-law or
soc/ecm-law), but that's not supported everywhere, so we still need this check
for those other cases.
These processors may not be supported yet, but add them for completion.
POWER9 is planned for support. e300 may work (based on 603e core).
P5040/P5021 are similar to P5020, so should work as well. One addition is
needed for P5040, to support the number of LAWs, and will be a separate commit.
In integrity mode, a larger logical sector (e.g., 4096 bytes) spans several
physical sectors (e.g., 512 bytes) on the backing device. Due to hash
overhead, a 4096 byte logical sector takes 8.5625 512-byte physical sectors.
This means that only 288 bytes (256 data + 32 hash) of the last 512 byte
sector are used.
The memory allocation used to store the encrypted data to be written to the
physical sectors comes from malloc(9) and does not use M_ZERO.
Previously, nothing initialized the final physical sector backing each
logical sector, aside from the hash + encrypted data portion. So 224 bytes
of kernel heap memory was leaked to every block :-(.
This patch addresses the issue by initializing the trailing portion of the
physical sector in every logical sector to zeros before use. A much simpler
but higher overhead fix would be to tag the entire allocation M_ZERO.
PR: 222077
Reported by: Maxim Khitrov <max AT mxcrypt.com>
Reviewed by: emaste
Security: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12272
In particular this eliminates function calls and related register save/restore
when only few writes would suffice.
Example speed up can be seen in a fstat microbenchmark on AMD Ryzen cpus, where
the throughput went up by ~4.5%.
Thanks to cem@ for benchmarking and reviewing the patch.
MFC after: 1 week
Scan all buses for CSR bus, not stopping on the first failed
match. Scan all slots for function 0 on the found bus, for instance on
IvyBridge the slot 0 is not decoded at all. Since the scan is quite
unsafe, and access to the buses is mostly useful for developers,
enable the csr buses scan with the tunable.
Current qpi.c makes too many assumptions about the uncore
configuration buses location and about slots occupied. Also it
restricts itself only to Nehalem CPUs. It is needed on all Core-based
Xeons. On the 2600 v2 (IvyBridge) machine I have access to, the CSR
buses have numbers 31 (BSP socket) and 63 (second socket), and there
is no functions pci0.31.0.0 or pci0.63.0.0. According to the CPU
datasheet, all devices on the uncore bus occupy slots >= 8.
Practically, the attach to config buses is required for the intel-pcm
pcm-memory.x tool to work, for instance.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12268
remapping.
VT-d specification requires use of PCI rid as source id for IOAPICs
enumerated by PCI bus. The values from the DMAR ACPI table should be
only used when IOAPIC is not on PCI.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Hardware provided by: Intel
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12205
the interrupt messages from given IOAPIC, if the IOAPIC can be
enumerated on PCI bus.
If IOAPIC has PCI binding, match the PCI device against MADT
enumerated IOAPIC. Match is done first by registers window physical
address, then by IOAPIC ID as read from the APIC ID register.
PCI bsf address of the matched PCI device is the rid.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Hardware provided by: Intel
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12205
This provides port stats (updated once per second) in
dev.bnxt.X.port_stats for PFs. VFs do not have access to the port stats.
Submitted by: Bhargava Chenna Marreddy <bhargava.marreddy@broadcom.com>
Reviewed by: shurd, sbruno
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Broadcom Limited
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11914
Do not use malloc(M_NOWAIT), wait is possible there, and the malloc
failures where not checked. Do not forget to free malloced memory.
Reported and tested by: pho
Approved by: sbruno
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
We currently initialize the vm_page array in three passes: one to zero
the array, one to initialize the "order" field of each page (necessary
when inserting them into the vm_phys buddy allocator one-by-one), and
one to initialize the remaining non-zero fields and individually insert
each page into the allocator.
Merge the three passes into one following a suggestion from alc:
initialize vm_page fields in a single pass, and use vm_phys_free_contig()
to efficiently insert physical memory segments into the buddy allocator.
This reduces the initialization time to a third or a quarter of what it
was before on most systems that I tested.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12248
17h supports MCA thresholding in the same way as 16h and earlier.
Supposedly a ScalableMca feature bit in CPUID 8000_0007:EBX must be set, but
that was not true for earlier models, so be careful about relying on it.
While here, document a missing bit in LS MCA MISC0.
Reviewed by: truckman
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12237
It doesn't seem necessary to busy the CPU while waiting to transition
into a different p-state.
PR: 221621 (related, but does not completely address)
Reviewed by: truckman
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12260
values. As not all assemblers understand the new ID_AA64MMFR2_EL1 register
add a macro to access it. This seems to be safe for older CPUs to read this
new register, with them returning zero.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
We need to extend the -Wno-format hack to yet another Makefile to cope
with %S meaning (CHAR16 *) not (wchar_t *) in the context of the EFI
boot loaders.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Rename boot1's wcslen to ucs2len, which we can't use in userland
because wchar in userland is unsigned, not short. Move it into
efichar.c. Also spell '* 2' as '* sizeof(efi_char)' and add 1 for the
trailing NUL to transition the FreeBSD boot env vars to being NUL
terminated on the same line...
Sponsored by: Netflix
When bcopy is treated as memcpy/memmove, Clang produces warnings that the
size argument doesn't match the type of the source. This is true, it
doesn't match; we're aliasing the source.
Explicitly cast the source pointer to the expected type to remove the
warning.
No functional change.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
and convert any messages of types SCM_BINTIME, SCM_TIMESTAMP,
SCM_REALTIME and SCM_MONOTONIC from 64-bit to its 32-bit
representation. Otherwise we either run out of user-supplied
buffer to copy those out resulting in the MSG_CTRUNC or simply
return values that the userland 32-bit code is not going
to parse correctly. This fixes at least two regression tests
failing to function properly in 32-bit compat mode:
tools/regression/sockets/udp_pingpong
tools/regression/sockets/unix_cmsg
PR: kern/222039
MFC after: 30 days
While __read_mostly groups variables together, their placement is not
specified. In particular 2 frequently used variables can end up in
different lines.
This annotation is only expected to be used for variables read all the time,
e.g. on each syscall entry.
MFC after: 1 week
While these locks are guarnteed to not share their respective cache lines,
their current placement leaves unnecessary holes in lines which preceeded them.
For instance the annotation of vm_page_queue_free_mtx allows 2 neighbour
cachelines (previously separate by the lock) to be collapsed into 1.
The annotation is only effective on architectures which have it implemented in
their linker script (currently only amd64). Thus locks are not converted to
their not-padaligned variants as to not affect the rest.
MFC after: 1 week
hsi_struct_def.h file contains all firmware (HWRM) data struct's, updated
that with the latest one which was released on 30'th Aug.
After this upgrade, HWRM version will be 1.8.1.5 (earlier it was 1.4.0).
Submitted by: Bhargava Chenna Marreddy <bhargava.marreddy@broadcom.com>
Reviewed by: shurd, sbruno
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Broadcom Limited
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12203
1) Based on the suggestion from firmware team, derive
scctx->isc_ntxqsets_max & scctx->isc_nrxqsets_max based on FUNC_QCFG
(instead of FUNC_QCAPS).
2) Bump-up driver version to "1.0.0.2".
Submitted by: Bhargava Chenna Marreddy <bhargava.marreddy@broadcom.com>
Reviewed by: shurd, sbruno
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Broadcom Limited
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12128
In swp_pager_meta_build(), if the requested operation results in
freeing the last swap pointer in the swblk, free the trie node. Other
swap pager code does not expect to find completely empty swblk.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
swapblk for our index while we dropped the object lock.
Noted by: jeff
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
report extended media types.
lacp_aggregator_bandwidth() uses the media to determine the speed of the
interface and returns 0 for IFM_OTHER without the bits in the extended
range.
Reported by: kbowling@
Reviewed by: eugen_grosbein.net, mjoras@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12188
transmit queues aswell as non-ratelimited ones.
Add the required structure bits in order to support a backpressure
indication with ratelimited connections aswell as non-ratelimited
ones. The backpressure indicator is a value between zero and 65535
inclusivly, indicating if the destination transmit queue is empty or
full respectivly. Applications can use this value as a decision point
for when to stop transmitting data to avoid endless ENOBUFS error
codes upon transmitting an mbuf. This indicator is also useful to
reduce the latency for ratelimited queues.
Reviewed by: gallatin, kib, gnn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11518
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Turn on the required options in the ERL config file, and ensure
that the fbt module is listed as a dependency for mips in
the modules/dtrace/dtraceall/dtraceall.c file.
PR: 220346
Reviewed by: gnn, markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12227
Similar to r323195, but for amdsmn(4) driver (which borrowed some design).
Ignore hostbs that do not match our PCI device id criteria.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon