point in calling a function just to set a flag.
Keep better track of the syslog FAC/PRI code and try to DTRT if
they mingle.
Log all writes to /dev/console to syslog with <console.info>
priority. The formatting is not preserved, there is no robust,
way of doing it. (Ideas with patches welcome).
To use it, some dll is needed. And currently, the dll is only for NetBSD.
So one more kernel module is needed.
For more infomation,
http://chiharu.haun.org/peace/ .
Reviewed by: bp
striped plexes.
Submitted by: des
Don't lock buffers before calls to sdio, sdio does it by itself.
Submitted by: tegge
parityops: Use correct casts when returning error information.
Requested by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely8.cicely.de>
Cor Bosman <cor@xs4all.net>
Kai Storbeck <kai@xs4all.net>
Joe Greco <jgreco@ns.sol.net>
Add support for Compaq SMART-2 RAID (idad) as storage
device for Vinum subdisks.
Reported by: Aaron Hill <hillaa@hotmail.com>
ahc_pci.c:
Add detach support.
Make use of soft allocated on our behalf by newbus.
For PCI devices, disable the mapping type we aren't
using for extra protection from rogue code.
aic7xxx_93cx6.c:
aic7xxx_93cx6.h:
Sync perforce IDs.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c:
Capture the eventhandle returned by EVENTHANDER_REGISTER
so we can kill the handler off during detach.
Use AHC_* constants instead of hard coded numbers in a
few more places.
Test PPR option state when deciding to "really" negotiate
when the CAM_NEGOTIATE flag is passed in a CCB.
Make use of core "ahc_pause_and_flushwork" routine in our
timeout handler rather than re-inventing this code.
Cleanup all of our resources (really!) in ahc_platform_free().
We should be all set to become a module now.
Implement the core ahc_detach() routine shared by all of
the FreeBSD front-ends.
aic7xxx_freebsd.h:
Softc storage for our event handler.
Null implementation for the ahc_platform_flushwork() OSM
callback. FreeBSD doesn't need this as XPT callbacks are
safe from all contexts and are done directly in ahc_done().
aic7xxx_inline.h:
Implement new lazy interrupt scheme. To avoid an extra
PCI bus read, we first check our completion queues to
see if any work has completed. If work is available, we
assume that this is the source of the interrupt and skip
reading INTSTAT. Any remaining interrupt status will be
cleared by a second call to the interrupt handler should
the interrupt line still be asserted. This drops the
interrupt handler down to a single PCI bus read in the
common case of I/O completion. This is the same overhead
as in the not so distant past, but the extra sanity of
perforning a PCI read after clearing the command complete
interrupt and before running the completion queue to avoid
missing command complete interrupts added a cycle.
aic7xxx.c:
During initialization, be sure to initialize all scratch
ram locations before they are read to avoid parity errors.
In this case, we use a new function, ahc_unbusy_tcl() to
initialize the scratch ram busy target table.
Replace instances of ahc_index_busy_tcl() used to unbusy
a tcl without looking at the old value with ahc_unbusy_tcl().
Modify ahc_sent_msg so that it can find single byte messages.
ahc_sent_msg is now used to determine if a transfer negotiation
attempt resulted in a bus free.
Be more careful in filtering out only the SCSI interrupts
of interest in ahc_handle_scsiint.
Rearrange interrupt clearing code to ensure that at least
one PCI transaction occurrs after hitting CLRSINT1 and
writting to CLRINT. CLRSINT1 writes take a bit to
take effect, and the re-arrangement provides sufficient
delay to ensure the write to CLRINT is effective. The
old code might report a spurious interrupt on some "fast"
chipsets.
export ahc-update_target_msg_request for use by OSM code.
If a target does not respond to our ATN request, clear
it once we move to a non-message phase. This avoids
sending a MSG_NOOP in some later message out phase.
Use max lun and max target constants instead of
hard-coded values.
Use softc storage built into our device_t under FreeBSD.
Fix a bug in ahc_free() that caused us to delete
resources that were not allocated.
Clean up any tstate/lstate info in ahc_free().
Clear the powerdown state in ahc_reset() so that
registers can be accessed.
Add a preliminary function for pausing the chip and
processing any posted work.
Add a preliminary suspend and resume functions.
aic7xxx.h:
Limit the number of supported luns to 64. We don't
support information unit transfers, so this is the
maximum that makes sense for these chips.
Add a new flag AHC_ALL_INTERRUPTS that forces the
processing of all interrupt state in a single invokation
of ahc_intr(). When the flag is not set, we use the
lazy interrupt handling scheme.
Add data structures to store controller state while
we are suspended.
Use constants instead of hard coded values where appropriate.
Correct some harmless "unsigned/signed" conflicts.
aic7xxx.seq:
Only perform the SCSIBUSL fix on ULTRA2 or newer controllers.
Older controllers seem to be confused by this.
In target mode, ignore PHASEMIS during data phases.
This bit seems to be flakey on U160 controllers acting
in target mode.
aic7xxx_pci.c:
Add support for the 29160C CPCI adapter.
Add definitions for subvendor ID information
available for devices with the "9005" vendor id.
We currently use this information to determine
if a multi-function device doesn't have the second
channel hooked up on a board.
Add rudimentary power mode code so we can put the
controller into the D0 state. In the future this
will be an OSM callback so that in FreeBSD we don't
duplicate functionality provided by the PCI code.
The powerstate code was added after I'd completed
my regression tests on this code.
Only capture "left over BIOS state" if the POWRDN
setting is not set in HCNTRL.
In target mode, don't bother sending incremental
CRC data.
to negotiate from scratch. Make leased lines survive being put into
loopback mode. Bits and pieces and ideas taken from PRs 11238 and 21771.
Make it a module so that it can be kldloaded. Whitespace cleanup. (Can be
ignored with "cvs diff -b".)
PR: 11238 and 21771 (bits and pieces)
This sould make the system power-off correctly where the howto had
more bits set than RB_POWEROFF, e.g. RB_NOSYNC.
Submitted by: Peter Pentchev <roam@orbitel.bg>
1) Be more tolerant of missing snapshot files by only trying to decrement
their reference count if they are registered as active.
2) Fix for snapshots of filesystems with block sizes larger than 8K
(from Ollivier Robert <roberto@eurocontrol.fr>).
3) Fix to avoid losing last block in snapshot file when calculating blocks
that need to be copied (from Don Coleman <coleman@coleman.org>).
which fails to set the modification time on the file. The same
check a few lines later takes the correct action.
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
going to hurt sio(4) performance for the time being. As we get closer to
release and have more of the kernel unlocked we can come back to doing
arcane optimizations to workaround the limitations of the sio hardware.
claimed that their Intel NIC is comatose after a warm boot from Windoze.
This is most likely due to the card getting put in the D3 state. This
should bring it back to life.
PCI code. This saves each driver from having to grovel around looking
for the right registers to twiddle.
I should eventually convert the other PCI drivers to do this; for now,
these three are ones which I know need power state handling.
The fix works by reverting the ordering of free memory so that the
chances of contig_malloc() succeeding increases.
PR: 23291
Submitted by: Andrew Atrens <atrens@nortel.ca>
format version number. (userland programs should not need to be
recompiled when the netgraph kernel internal ABI is changed.
Also fix modules that don;t handle the fact that a caller may not supply
a return message pointer. (benign at the moment because the calling code
checks, but that will change)
require the addition of flag 0x80000 to their config line in
pccard.conf(5). This flag is not optional. These Linksys cards will
not be recognized without it.
Reviewed by: imp, iwasaki
The what argument is the hold type that assertion acts on. LK_SHARED
to assert that the process holds a shared, LK_EXCLUSIVE to assert that
the process holds _either_ a shared lock or an exclusive lock.
this gives us several benefits, including:
* easier extensibility- new optional methods can be added to
ac97/mixer/channel classes without having to fixup every driver.
* forward compatibility for drivers, provided no new mandatory methods are
added.
by ensuring that newly allocated blocks are zerod. The
race can occur even in the case where the write covers
the entire block.
Reported by: Sven Berkvens <sven@berkvens.net>, Marc Olzheim <zlo@zlo.nu>
and had no data available returned 0. Now it returns -1 with errno
set to EWOULDBLOCK (== EAGAIN) as it should. This fix makes the bpf
device usable in threaded programs.
Reviewed by: bde
messages send by routers when they deny our traffic, this causes
a timeout when trying to connect to TCP ports/services on a remote
host, which is blocked by routers or firewalls.
rfc1122 (Requirements for Internet Hosts) section 3.2.2.1 actually
requi re that we treat such a message for a TCP session, that we
treat it like if we had recieved a RST.
quote begin.
A Destination Unreachable message that is received MUST be
reported to the transport layer. The transport layer SHOULD
use the information appropriately; for example, see Sections
4.1.3.3, 4.2.3.9, and 4.2.4 below. A transport protocol
that has its own mechanism for notifying the sender that a
port is unreachable (e.g., TCP, which sends RST segments)
MUST nevertheless accept an ICMP Port Unreachable for the
same purpose.
quote end.
I've written a small extension that implement this, it also create
a sysctl "net.inet.tcp.icmp_admin_prohib_like_rst" to control if
this new behaviour is activated.
When it's activated (set to 1) we'll treat a ICMP administratively
prohibited message (icmp type 3 code 9, 10 and 13) for a TCP
sessions, as if we recived a TCP RST, but only if the TCP session
is in SYN_SENT state.
The reason for only reacting when in SYN_SENT state, is that this
will solve the problem, and at the same time minimize the risk of
this being abused.
I suggest that we enable this new behaviour by default, but it
would be a change of current behaviour, so if people prefer to
leave it disabled by default, at least for now, this would be ok
for me, the attached diff actually have the sysctl set to 0 by
default.
PR: 23086
Submitted by: Jesper Skriver <jesper@skriver.dk>
1. ICMP ECHO and TSTAMP replies are now rate limited.
2. RSTs generated due to packets sent to open and unopen ports
are now limited by seperate counters.
3. Each rate limiting queue now has its own description, as
follows:
Limiting icmp unreach response from 439 to 200 packets per second
Limiting closed port RST response from 283 to 200 packets per second
Limiting open port RST response from 18724 to 200 packets per second
Limiting icmp ping response from 211 to 200 packets per second
Limiting icmp tstamp response from 394 to 200 packets per second
Submitted by: Mike Silbersack <silby@silby.com>
the kernel console. Instead, change logwakeup() to set a flag in the
softc. A callout then wakes up every so often and wakes up any processes
selecting on /dev/log (such as syslogd) if the flag is set. By default
this callout fires 5 times a second, but that can be adjusted by the
sysctl kern.log_wakeups_per_second.
Reviewed by: phk
Add detach routine and turn driver into a module so it can be loaded
and unloaded. Also take a stab at implementing multicast packet
reception so that this NIC will work with IPv6. Promiscuous mode
doesn't seem to work, but I'm not sure why. It works well enough that
I can run dhclient on it and put it on the office network though.
Also ripped out spl stuff and replaced it with mutexes.
This is a driver for the LanMedia/SBE LMC150x E1/T1 family of cards.
The driver currently support unframed E1 (2048kbit/s) and framed
E1 (nx64).
These cards will provision E1/T1 lines for about 1/4 the cost of
a cisco router...
commands have also been slightly updated as follows:
- Use ktr_idx to find the newest entry rather than walking the buffer
comparing timespecs. Timespecs are not always unique after the change
to use getnanotime(9).
- Add a new verbose setting. When the verbose setting is on, then the
timestamp is printed with each message. If KTR_EXTEND is on, then the
filename and line number are output as well. By default this option is
off. It can be turned on with the 'v' modifier passed to the 'tbuf'
and 'tall' commands. For the 'tnext' command, the 'v' modifier toggles
the verbose mode.
- Only display the cpu number for each message on SMP systems.
- Don't display anything for an empty entry that hasn't been used yet.
MS will be treated as having this quirk. In the event that we falsely
identify one that doesn't need it, no harm will be done. Ken
suggested that we make this more generic since there may be more
needed in the future.
Reported by: TERAMOTO Masahiro <teramoto@comm.eng.osaka-u.ac.jp>
PR: kern/23378
Reviewed by: ken
aicasm is run on the build machine and therefore needs to be
compiled and linked against the headers and libraries (resp)
of the build machine. Since normally the default include
directories are search after any specified on the command
line, make sure we don't accidentally pick up machine
dependent headers from the kernel compile directory by
specifying /usr/include first.
This solves the (cross) build problem for ia64.
Approved by: gibbs
functions. If this flag is set, then no KTR log messages are issued.
This is useful for blocking excessive logging, such as with the internal
mutex used by the witness code.
- Use MTX_QUIET on all of the mtx_enter/exit operations on the internal
mutex used by the witness code.
- If we are in a panic, don't do witness checks in witness_enter(),
witness_exit(), and witness_try_enter(), just return.
Generate a version string that looks just like a real Linux one - almost :)
Use sbufs everywhere instead of sprintf(). Note that this is still imperfect,
as the code does not check whether the sbuf overflowed - but it'll still
work better than before, since if the sbuf overflows, the code now simply
copies out 0 bytes instead of causing a trap (or worse, corrupting kernel
structures)
vm86_trap() to return to the calling program directly. vm86_trap()
doesn't return, thus it was never returning to trap() to release
Giant. Thus, release Giant before calling vm86_trap().
struct swblock entries by dividing the number of the entries by 2
until the swap metadata fits.
- Reject swapon(2) upon failure of swap_zone allocation.
This is just a temporary fix. Better solutions include:
(suggested by: dillon)
o reserving swap in SWAP_META_PAGES chunks, and
o swapping the swblock structures themselves.
Reviewed by: alfred, dillon
variables from i386 assembly language. The syntax is PCPU(member)
where member is the capitalized name of the per-cpu variable, without
the gd_ prefix. Example: movl %eax,PCPU(CURPROC). The capitalization
is due to using the offsets generated by genassym rather than the symbols
provided by linking with globals.o. asmacros.h is the wrong place for
this but it seemed as good a place as any for now. The old implementation
in asnames.h has not been removed because it is still used to de-mangle
the symbols used by the C variables for the UP case.
Previously, the syncer process was the only process in the
system that could process the soft updates background work
list. If enough other processes were adding requests to that
list, it would eventually grow without bound. Because some of
the work list requests require vnodes to be locked, it was
not generally safe to let random processes process the work
list while they already held vnodes locked. By adding a flag
to the work list queue processing function to indicate whether
the calling process could safely lock vnodes, it becomes possible
to co-opt other processes into helping out with the work list.
Now when the worklist gets too large, other processes can safely
help out by picking off those work requests that can be handled
without locking a vnode, leaving only the small number of
requests requiring a vnode lock for the syncer process. With
this change, it appears possible to keep even the nastiest
workloads under control.
Submitted by: Paul Saab <ps@yahoo-inc.com>
was not atomic. We now make sure that we free the ext buf if the reference
count is about to reach 0 but also make sure that nobody else has done it
before us.
While I'm here, change refcnt to u_int (from long). This fixes a compiler
warning regarding use of atomic_cmpset_long on i386.
Submitted by: jasone
Reviewed by: jlemon, jake
- Remove redundant header-type-specific support in the cardbus pcibus
clone. The bridges don't need this anymore.
- Use pcib_get_bus instead of the deprecated pci_get_secondarybus.
- Implement read/write ivar support for the pccbb, and teach it how
to report its secondary bus number. Save the subsidiary bus number
as well, although we don't use it yet.
- Break out the /dev/pci driver into a separate file.
- Kill the COMPAT_OLDPCI support.
- Make the EISA bridge attach a bit more like the old code; explicitly
check for the existence of eisa0/isa0 and only attach if they don't
already exist. Only make one bus_generic_attach() pass over the
bridge, once both busses are attached. Note that the stupid Intel
bridge's class is entirely unpredictable.
- Add prototypes and re-layout the core PCI modules in line with
current coding standards (not a major whitespace change, just moving
the module data to the top of the file).
- Remove redundant type-2 bridge support from the core PCI code; the
PCI-CardBus code does this itself internally. Remove the now
entirely redundant header-class-specific support, as well as the
secondary and subordinate bus number fields. These are bridge
attributes now.
- Add support for PCI Extended Capabilities.
- Add support for PCI Power Management. The interface currently
allows a driver to query and set the power state of a device.
- Add helper functions to allow drivers to enable/disable busmastering
and the decoding of I/O and memory ranges.
- Use PCI_SLOTMAX and PCI_FUNCMAX rather than magic numbers in some
places.
- Make the PCI-PCI bridge code a little more paranoid about valid
I/O and memory decodes.
- Add some more PCI register definitions for the command and status
registers. Correct another bogus definition for type-1 bridges.
of explicit calls to lockmgr. Also provides macros for the flags
pased to specify shared, exclusive or release which map to the
lockmgr flags. This is so that the use of lockmgr can be easily
replaced with optimized reader-writer locks.
- Add some locking that I missed the first time.
This clears out my outstanding netgraph changes.
There is a netgraph change of design in the offing and this is to some
extent a superset of soem of the new functionality and some of the old
functionality that may be removed.
This code works as before, but allows some new features that I want to
work with and evaluate. It is the basis for a version of netgraph
with integral locking for SMP use.
This is running on my test machine with no new problems :-)
rather than finding our parent pcib and using its PCI_READ_CONFIG
method.
- Fix the defines for the 32-bit I/O decode registers, and properly
process the 16-bit versions. Now we will correctly check that I/O
resources behind the bridge are going to be decoded.
- Bring the quirk for the Orion PCI:PCI bridge in here (since it
seems to want to set the secondary/supplementary bus numbers).
- Use PCI_SLOTMAX rather than a magic number.
but serves to work around some uncleanliness whereby the ISA bus is not
found on Alpha systems with PCI:EISA bridges due to the lack of EISA code
for the Alpha.
no longer contains kernel specific data structures, but rather
only scalar values and structures that are already part of the
kernel/user interface, specifically rusage and rtprio. It no
longer contains proc, session, pcred, ucred, procsig, vmspace,
pstats, mtx, sigiolst, klist, callout, pasleep, or mdproc. If
any of these changed in size, ps, w, fstat, gcore, systat, and
top would all stop working. The new structure has over 200 bytes
of unassigned space for future values to be added, yet is nearly
100 bytes smaller per entry than the structure that it replaced.
be safely held across an eventhandler function call.
- Fix an instance of the head of an eventhandler list being read without
the lock being held.
- Break down and use a SYSINIT at the new SI_SUB_EVENTHANDLER to initialize
the eventhandler global mutex and the eventhandler list of lists rather
than using a non-MP safe initialization during the first call to
eventhandler_register().
- Add in a KASSERT() to eventhandler_register() to ensure that we don't try
to register an eventhandler before things have been initialized.
the witness code is compiled in. Without this, the witness code doesn't
notice that sched_lock is released by fork_trampoline() and thus gets all
confused about spin lock order later on.
macros, the mutex KTR log entries don't actually have the useful filename
and line numbers in the KTR_EXTEND case, so remove a comment claiming this
and go back to one set of KTR strings.
the ISA bus.
- Don't expect that a PCI:ISA bridge will have a correct class value;
if we're checking PCI IDs, only depend on these.
This should fix the loss of ISA on machines with PCI:EISA bridges like the
AS4100.
CPU version (apecs:ev4::cia:ev5) and the irq hardware depends on the systype
previously, only ev4 AS1000s and ev5 AS1000a's would have worked.
tested by: wilko (in its -stable form)
noticed by: daniel
held and panic if so (conditional on witness).
- Change witness_list to return the number of locks held so this is easier.
- Add kern/syscalls.c to the kernel build if witness is defined so that the
panic message can contain the name of the offending system call.
- Add assertions that Giant and sched_lock are not held when returning from
a system call, which were missing for alpha and ia64.
can lead to further panics.
- Call getnanotime() instead of nanotime() for the timestamp. nanotime()
is more precise, but it also calls into the timer code, which results
in mutex operations on the i386 arch. If KTR_LOCK is turned on, then
ktr_tracepoint() recurses on itself until it exhausts the kernel stack.
Eventually this should change to use get_cyclecount() instead, but that
can't happen if get_cyclecount() is calling nanotime() instead of
getnanotime().
class/subclass, so give up trying to cull the list. Instead, complain
in the bootverbose case, but otherwise just accept that we will have to
carry this list of device IDs around.
cases with file fragments and read-write mmap's can lead to a situation
where a VM page has odd dirty bits, e.g. 0xFC - due to being dirtied by
an mmap and only the fragment (representing a non-page-aligned end of
file) synced via a filesystem buffer. A correct solution that
guarentees consistent m->dirty for the file EOF case is being
worked on. In the mean time we can't be so conservative in the
KASSERT.
waiting for procfs to get fixed:
- Use fill_eproc() to obtain correct VM stats. Attempt to compute VmLib.
- Fill some more fields in proc/<pid>/stat, and add four (unimplemented)
fields after studying a recent Linux kernel.
- Compute CPU frequency only once instead of twice.
- Fix some comments that were OBE.
- Fix indentation except where it makes the code less readable.
- Improve the formatting for devices identified by the database.
- Fix the pcib_route_interrupt method definition, as an old version
snuck in here somehow 8(
- Remove a couple of the vendor/device IDs for PCI:ISA bridges which
correctly identify themselves.
Submitted by: peter
- Move PCI core code to dev/pci.
- Split bridge code out into separate modules.
- Remove the descriptive strings from the bridge drivers. If you
want to know what a device is, use pciconf. Add support for
broadly identifying devices based on class/subclass, and for
parsing a preloaded device identification database so that if
you want to waste the memory, you can identify *anything* we know
about.
- Remove machine-dependant code from the core PCI code. APIC interrupt
mapping is performed by shadowing the intline register in machine-
dependant code.
- Bring interrupt routing support to the Alpha
(although many platforms don't yet support routing or mapping
interrupts entirely correctly). This resulted in spamming
<sys/bus.h> into more places than it really should have gone.
- Put sys/dev on the kernel/modules include path. This avoids
having to change *all* the pci*.h includes.