count to prevent sockets from being garbage collected during
socket-specific system calls. This is the same approach used in
most VFS-specific system calls, as well as generic file descriptor
system calls such as read() and write().
To do this, add a utility function getsock(), which is logically
identical to getvnode() used for the same purpose in VFS. Unlike
fgetsock(), it returns with the file reference count elevated, but
no bump of the socket reference count. Replace matching calls to
fputsock() with fdrop().
This change is made to all socket system calls other than
sendfile() and accept(), but the approach should be applicable to
those system calls also.
This shaves about four mutex operations off of each of these
system calls, including send() and recv() variants, adding about
1% to pps on minimal UDP packets for UP using netblast, and 4% on
SMP.
Reviewed by: pjd
instead of the disk size of the file sent. Since the log file
is intended to provide data for anonymous ftp traffic accounting,
the disk size of the file isn't really informative in this case.
PR: bin/72687
Submitted by: Oleg Koreshkov
MFC after: 1 week
Extend it with a strategy method.
Add bufstrategy() which do the usual VOP_SPECSTRATEGY/VOP_STRATEGY
song and dance.
Rename ibwrite to bufwrite().
Move the two NFS buf_ops to more sensible places, add bufstrategy
to them.
Add inlines for bwrite() and bstrategy() which calls through
buf->b_bufobj->b_ops->b_{write,strategy}().
Replace almost all VOP_STRATEGY()/VOP_SPECSTRATEGY() calls with bstrategy().
trigger a socket creation race some some kind). Checking for non-NULL socket
and credential is not a bad idea anyway. Unfortunatly too late for the
release.
Reported & tested by: Gilbert Cao
MFC after: 2 weeks
vm_page_sleep_if_busy(). (The motivation being to transition
synchronization of the vm_page's PG_BUSY flag from the global page queues
lock to the per-object lock.)
two loops in agp_generic_bind_memory(). As an intended side-effect, all
of the calls to vm_page_wakeup() are now performed with the containing
vm object lock held.
that indicates that the caller does not want a page with its busy flag set.
In many places, the global page queues lock is acquired and released just
to clear the busy flag on a just allocated page. Both the allocation of
the page and the clearing of the busy flag occur while the containing vm
object is locked. So, the busy flag might as well never be set.