This is necessary for vmware: it does not use an anonymous mmap for
the memory of the virtual system. In stead it creates a temp file an
unlinks it. For a 50 MB file, this results in a ot of syncing
every 30 seconds.
Reviewed by: Matthew Dillon <dillon@backplane.com>
down, the dc driver and receiver can fall out of sync with one another,
resulting in a condition where the chip continues to receive packets
but the driver never notices. Normally, the receive handler checks each
descriptor starting from the current producer index to see if the chip
has relinquished ownership, indicating that a packet has been received.
The driver hands the packet off to ether_input() and then prepares the
descriptor to receive another frame before moving on to the next
descriptor in the ring. But sometimes, the chip appears to skip a
descriptor. This leaves the driver testing the status word in a descriptor
that never gets updated. The driver still gets "RX done" interrupts but
never advances further into the RX ring, until the ring fills up and the
chip interrupts again to signal an error condition. Sometimes, the
driver will remain in this desynchronized state, resulting in spotty
performance until the interface is reset.
Fortunately, it's fairly simple to detect this condition: if we call
the rxeof routine but the number of received packets doesn't increase,
we suspect that there could be a problem. In this case, we call a new
routine called dc_rx_resync(), which scans ahead in the RX ring to see
if there's a frame waiting for us somewhere beyond that the driver thinks
is the current producer index. If it finds one, it bumps up the index
and calls the rxeof handler again to snarf up the packet and bring the
driver back in sync with the chip. (It may actually do this several times
in the event that there's more than one "hole" in the ring.)
So far the only card supported by if_dc which has exhibited this problem
is a LinkSys LNE100TX v2.0 (82c115 PNIC II), and it only seems to happen
on one particular system, however the fix is general enough and has low
enough overhead that we may as well apply it for all supported chipsets.
I also implemented the same fix for the 3Com xl driver, which is apparently
vulnerable to the same problem.
Problem originally noted and patch tested by: Matt Dillon
login (or not if root)
then exit the shell
truss will get stuct in tsleep
I dont know if this is correct, but it fixes the problem and
according to the commends in pioctl.h, PF_ISUGID is set when we
want to ignore UID changes.
The code is checking for when PF_ISUGID is not set and since it
never is set, we always ignore UID changes.
Submitted by: Paul Saab <ps@yahoo-inc.com>
(from u_int8_t) in ccb_accept_tio structure. This
matches usage elsewhere and also allows me to
overload the tag id with the RX_ID for fibre
channel target mode.
Reviewed by: gibbs@freebsd.org
now, but we're getting interrupts!
o Add pcic_suspend/pcic_resume so we can detach our children on suspention
and fix the state of the pcic on resume.
o Remove some unused parts of softc.
o Centralize resource activation/deactivation for pcic bridge chip in
the stylistic pcic_activate/pcic_deactivate.
o Add bus_print_child method so we can see the pccard attachment.
o Add pcic_identify in an attempt to make it possible to automatically id
the pcic devices. This works great, but we cannot divine the irq to use
from this method, nor the memory hole. For the moment, KLUDGE irq to be
10 and memory hold to be 0xd0000.
o Loose the pnp probe stuff. This may be a big mistake, but it is easy
enough to add back later. I did this so the identify routines can do their
thing unmolested by pnp information. The whole identify thing may be a bad
idea to be ripped out later.
o change return type of pcic_intr to void, make it static and ripple
this through the code.
o Add explicit call to bus_generic_attach at the end of pcic_attach to
get any children probed/attached.
o add some comments about future directions/questionable things being
done at different layers, etc.
then invoke the children. As the value of HISR can be read
only once, pass the HISR to the children via struct
csa_bridgeinfo, stored in the ivars of them.
- Clear the contents of serial FIFO upon stopping the DMA for
playing. This may eliminate buzz on playing. Experimental.
features (except for file types in directory entries, which will be
supported soon).
Centralized the magic number and compatibility checking.
Dropped support for ancient (pre-0.2b) filesystems, as in the Linux
version. Our "support" consisted of printing more details in the error
message before failing at mount time.
Fix potential bug with directory reading.
Explicitly limit file size to 4GB (msdos can't handle larger files).
Slightly reorganize msdosfs_read() to reduce number of 'if's.
main changes are:
- many things are more dynamic; e.g., the inode size is a new parameter
in the superblock instead of a constant.
- extensions are controlled by new flags in the superblock.
- directory entries may have a file type field.
These changes are not used yet, except for a spelling change which affects
ext2_cnv.c
(mainly things that were lost or misformatted in a different way by
moving them to ext2_fs_i.h and back, and ifdefs for user mode that
were excessively edited).
(pci dev_id 0x21).
- Start the SCRIPTS processor without resetting the SCSI BUS
at initialization.
- Remove the "Host adapter CCB chain" (got useless given the
new queuing scheme).
- Display correctly the state of SCSI signals, when SCSI BUS
looks bad.
- Cosmetic changes in messages printed out at initialization.
- Notifications and messages on RESET conditions slightly
reworked.
- TEKRAM 24C16 NVRAM support fixed (also reported ok).
to avoid the namespace problems caused by <ufs/ufs/inode.h> #defining
i_mode, etc.
ext2_fs_i.h had nothing to do with the Linux version. It was a small
part of the Linux version of ext2_fs.h (the part that declares extra
in-core fields for an inode). We don't need it because we use the
ufs in-core inode for the extra fields.