For some reason firmware sends Port Database Changed notifications in case
of explicit login requests from the driver when target port is unavailabe.
Those notifications don't give driver any new information, but only cause
infinite scan loop.
2TB. The latter can be increased in 512GB chunks by adjusting the lower
address, however more work will be needed to increase the former.
There is still some work needed to only create a DMAP region for the RAM
address space as on ARM architectures all mappings should have the same
memory attributes, and these will be different for device and normal memory.
Reviewed by: kib
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5859
- Pre-buffer audio data to VideoCore so there are no audible glitches when
driver is too late to provide samples
- Start actual playback when there is some prebuffered audio,
it fixes audible noisy click in the beginning of playback
- Use #defines instead of hardcoded values where appropriate
- Fix copy-pasted comment
PR: 208678
Now that we're decap'ing A-MPDU frame, the firmware is only giving us
PHY status information for the whole PPDU, rather than duplicatig it
per frame.
So, we fake it by maintaining the RSSI that we saw in the node struct
and reuse it.
This prevents us from getting some pretty garbage looking default RSSI
values, which shows up as RSSI values of like "3" or "4" when doing
active traffic.
Tested:
* RTL8188EU, STA mode
basis.
2. grcdump can be taken at failure points by invoking bxe_grc_dump() when
trigger_grcdump sysctl flag is set. When grcdump is taken grcdump_done
sysctl flag is set.
3. grcdump_done can be monitored by the user to retrieve the grcdump.
Submitted by:vaishali.kulkarni@qlogic.com
Approved by:davidcs@freebsd.org
MFC after:5 days
In r103767 the kern.ps_strings sysctl was added as the preferred way to
locate the ps_strings struct and is available in any FreeBSD release
supported within the last decade.
Reviewed by: kib
The size of the reply can be different from the size of the command in
case a debug firmware asserts. fw_asrt() needs the entire reply in
order to decode the location of the assert.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
transmissions if possible.
2. For SIOCSIFFLAGS call bxe_init_locked() only if !BXE_STATE_DISABLED
3. remove code not needed in bxe_init_internal_common()
Submitted by:vaishali.kulkarni@qlogic.com;venkata.bhavaraju@qlogic.com
Approved by:davidcs@freebsd.org
MFC after:5 days
In case the firmware falls through to executing startup.sh, populate it
with the name of our boot loader. In normal operation this should not be
necessary but may allow the system to boot if it would otherwise just
remain at a shell prompt.
Reviewed by: andrew, imp, smh
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5878
the NFS server would leave the newly created vnode locked. This could
result in a file system that would not unmount and processes wedged,
waiting for the file to be unlocked.
Since this VOP_SETATTR() never fails for most file systems, this bug
doesn't normally manifest itself. I found it during testing of an
exported GlusterFS file system, which can fail.
This patch adds the vput() and changes the error to the correct NFS one.
MFC after: 2 weeks
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/vdev_geom.c
Don't drop the g_topology_lock before freeing old_physpath. That
opens up a race where one thread can call vdev_geom_attrchanged,
set old_physpath, drop the g_topology_lock, then block trying to
acquire the SCL_STATE lock. Then another thread can come into
vdev_geom_attrchanged, set old_physpath to the same value, and
proceed to free it. When the first thread resumes, it will free
the same location.
It turns out that the SCL_STATE lock isn't needed. It was
originally added by gibbs to protect vd->vdev_physpath while
updating the same. However, the update process subsequently was
switched to an atomic operation (a pointer swap). Now, there is
no need for the SCL_STATE lock, and hence no need to drop the
g_topology_lock.
Reviewed by: delphij
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5413
Previously we had to do it synchronously because we could not drop the lock
due to potential scratch memory use conflicts. Previous commits fixed that
collision, so here it goes -- slower and less reliable external requests
are executed asynchronously without spinning in tight loop and with more
safe timeout handling.
There are some other potential problems related to overflowing racct
counters; I'll revisit those later.
Submitted by: Pieter de Goeje (earlier version)
Reviewed by: emaste@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This fixes a conflict with the M_B macro in powerpc's
<machine/db_machdep.h> exposed by the recent addition of DDB commands
to the cxgbe driver.
Discussed with: np
Reported by: bz
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Usually IOCBs should be put on queue for asynchronous processing and should
not require additional DMA memory. But there are some cases like aborts and
resets that for external reasons has to be synchronous. Give those cases
separate 2*64 byte DMA area to decouple them from other DMA scratch area
users, using it for asynchronous requests.
Some BIOSes disable AMD Topology extension on AMD Family 15h notebook
processors. We re-enable the extension, so that we can properly discover
core and cache topology. Linux seems to do the same.
Reported by: Johannes Dieterich <dieterich.joh@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: jhb, kib
Tested by: Johannes Dieterich <dieterich.joh@gmail.com>
(earlier version)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5883
is required to check the verification tag. However, this
requires the verification tag to be not 0. Enforce this.
For packets with a verification tag of 0, we need to
check it it contains an INIT chunk and use the initiate
tag for the validation. This will be a separate commit,
since it touches also other code.
MFC after: 1 week
Previously uncompressed buffers did not obey that rule.
Type of b_asize is changed to uint64_t for consistency,
given that this is a zeta-byte filesystem.
l2arc_compress_buf is renamed to l2arc_transform_buf to better reflect
its new utility. Now not only we ensure that a compressed buffer has
a size aligned to ashift, but we also allocate a properly sized
temporary buffer if the original buffer is not compressed and it has
an odd size. This ensures that all I/O to the cache device is always
ashift-aligned, in terms of both a request offset and a request size.
If the aligned data is larger than the original data, then we have to use
a temporary buffer when reading it as well.
Also, enhance physical zio alignment checks using vdev_logical_ashift.
On FreeBSD we have this information, so we can make stricter assertions.
Reviewed by: smh, mav
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: ClusterHQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2789
DTrace-related exceptions in userland code are handled elsewhere.
One practical problem was a crash in dtrace_invop_start() when saved
%rsp pointed to a virtual address that was not backed.
i386 code already ignored userland exceptions.
Reviewed by: markj, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5906