kernel_vm_end in pmap_bootstrap. Don't delay the initialization until
we need to grow the kernel VM space. This BTW happens twice before
we enter either single- or multi-user mode. Don't adjust kernel_vm_end
while growing based on whether the KPT contains a non-NULL entry. We
trust kernel_vm_end to be correct and we make sure it's still correct
after growing.
Define virtual_avail and virtual_end in terms of VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS
and VM_MAX_KERNEL_ADDRESS (resp). Don't hardcode region knowledge.
o Limit the size of the region ID map to 64KB. This gives a bitmap
that is large enough to keep track of 2^19 numbers. The minimal map
size is 32KB. The reason we limit the map size is that processor
models may have implemented a 24-bit region ID, which would give
a 2MB bitmap while the maximum number of allocations is always
less than PID_MAX*5, which is less than 2^19.
o Allocate all region IDs up-front. The slight downside of reserving
more RIDs then a process needs (3 for ia64 native and 1 for ia32)
is preferable over the call to pmap_ensure_rid() where RIDs are
allocated on demand. On SMP systems this may lead to a race
condition.
o When allocating a region ID, don't use arc4random(). We're not
interested in randomness or uniform distribution across the
spectrum. We only need uniqueness. Random numbers may easily
collide when the number of allocated RIDs is high, creating a
possibly unbounded retry rate.
ia64 only uses relocations with addend, remove the sections specific to
non-addend relocations (.rel.*). Also remove C++ specific sections.
Approved by: re@ (blanket)
Fixes a problem where directory entries could show up twice: once
on the top layer of the union stack, and once on the bottom layer.
Approved by: re (rwatson)
PT_DETACH ptrace(2) requests from functioning as advertised in the
manual page. As described in kern/35175, the PT_DETACH request will,
under certain circumstances, pass an unwanted signal on to the traced
process upan detaching from it. The PT_CONTINUE request will
sometimes fail if you make it pass a signal that has "properties" that
differ from the properties of the signal that origionally caused the
traced process to be stopped. Since PT_KILL is nothing than
PT_CONTINUE with SIGKILL, it is broken too. In the PT_KILL case, this
leads to an unkillable process.
PR: 44011
Submitted by: Mark Kettenis <kettenis@chello.nl>
Approved by: re(jhb)
on if_fxp cards. When flow control is enabled, if the operating system
doesn't acknowledge the packet buffer filling, the card will begin to
generate ethernet quench packets, but appears to get into a feedback
loop of some sort, hosing local switches. This is a temporary workaround
for 5.1: the ability to configure flow control should probably be
exposed by some or another management interface on ethernet link layer
devices.
Approved by: re (bmah)
Reviewed by: mux
instead of taking the (userland) eflags from the trap frame and masking
out PSL_I. There is no need to inherit any flags from the forking process;
the old method however can cause flags set in userland for the forking
process to be bogusly set in kernel mode when the newly forked process
runs for the first time (in particular PSL_T, which is set for userland
when the process is single-stepped; this would cause trace traps in
kernel mode).
Approved by: re (jhb)
- prefix(8) and gifconfig(8) are deprecated
- dtcpc, dtcps were never imported (also removed from KAME CVS)
- pim6dd, pim6sd and racoon are ports
- inet6d does not exist on FreeBSD
PR: docs/51295
Submitted by: Simon L. Nielsen <simon@nitro.dk>
Content reviewed by: itojun
Approved by: des (mentor), re (bmah)
VOP_SETATTR() or VOP_GETATTR(); without these locks (a) VFS_DEBUG_LOCKS
will panic, and (b) it may be possible to corrupt entries in the cached
vnode attributes in the nfsnode, since nfsnode attribute cache data is
also protected by the vnode lock.
Approved by: re (jhb)
Pointed out by: VFS_DEBUG_LOCKS
only while holding appropriate vnode locks. This patch slides the lock
release for ufs_extattr_enable() to continue to hold the active vnode lock
on a backing file until after the flag change; it also acquires a vnode
lock when disabling an attribute and hence clearing a flag on the backing
vnode. This permits VFS_DEBUG_LOCKS to run UFS1 extended attributes
without panicking, as well as preventing a potential race and vnode flag
problem.
Approved by: re (jhb)
Pointed out by: DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS
wrong when running a release tinderbox as root)
Use the setup's COMMENT field in the subject of the failure report, instead
of just "$branch tinderbox".
Tweak the test setups.
netstat(1) not display it for now because its effects are not yet
completely implemented and we're about to cut 5.2-RELEASE.
This is temporary.
Approved by: re (scottl, rwatson)
in the case where the bridge node was closed down but a timeout
still applied to it, the final reference to the node was freeing the private
data structure using the wrong malloc type.
Approved by: re@
of pthread_cond_timedwait() is moved into cond_wait_common().
Pthread_cond_wait() and pthread_cond_timedwait() are now wrappers around
this function. Previously, the former called the latter with the abstime
pointing to 0 time. This violated Posix semantics should an application
have reason to call it with that argument because instead or returning
immediately it would have waited indefinitely for the cv to be signaled.
Approved by: markm/mentor, re/blanket libthr
Reviewed by: jeff
This was the initial intent anyway, and it became clear that it is
really necessary to treat it this way, as many people happen to run
with kernel newer than the installed world.
Submitted by: imp, ru
Approved by: re (scottl)
respect to other threads and signal handlers by moving to
the _thread_critical_enter/exit functions.
o Introduce an static function, testcancel(), that is used by
the other functions in this module. This allows it to make
locking assumptions that the top-level functions can't.
o Rework the code flow a bit to reduce indentation levels.
Approved by: markm/mentor, re/blanket libthr
Reviewed by: jeff
all of the Optio series have the same problems. It might be a better
approach eventually to add wildcard support to USB quirks.
PR: kern/50271, kern/46369
Approved by: re (rwatson)
- Fix compilation without GEM_DEBUG.
- Do not #define GEM_DEBUG by default; it adds overhead (due to bzero()ing
RX space) and is not needed any more, since the driver is quite stable
now.
- Fix watchdog timeouts when failing to load TX packets.
- Do not forcibly limit the number of descriptors used for a packet to
GEM_NTXSEGS, by passing this number to bus_dma_tag_create(). There is
no requirement for a limit any lower than the total number of
available descriptors, and the present limit caused network problems
due to mbuf chains requiring more descriptors.
GEM_NTXSEGS is still used to estimate the interrupt window size, for
which we just need an estimate.
Approved by: re (rwatson)
The submitter of PR 32118 told me that this patch also fixes autoselecting
for znyx 4 port cards (10baseT, 100baseTX did work already).
PR: 32118
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: rwatson (re)
Build LINT on -STABLE now that tinderbox.pl knows how. Also try to build
LINT on powerpc and amd64 (this is a formality as they don't have NOTES
so nothing will be built)
Add two setups for release testing, with plenty of NO* to speed things up.
If the config key was not specified on the command line, try to guess it
from the hostname.
NOCDROM, NODOC and NOPORTS to save time and space, but I may remove
those at a later date so we can use the results to populate a snapshot
server.
Document the --machine option.
Make $arch and $machine default to the correct values for the current
system. This shouldn't make any difference unless you run the
tinderbox on a pc98 machine, since for all other platforms, $arch and
$machine are the same.
Only set kernel-related variables if actually building a kernel or a
release.
Be paranoid and cd to the correct directory in each stage so we're
sure we invoke make(1) in the right place.
To support building LINT on -STABLE, don't try to 'make LINT' unless
NOTES exists, but build LINT if the config file exists even if there
is no NOTES.
The advantage of using register sets is that you don't focus on each
register seperately, but instead instroduce a level of abstraction.
This reduces the chance of errors, and also simplifies the code.
The register sers form the basis of everything register.
The sets in this file are:
struct _special
contains all of the control related registers, such as instruction
pointer and stack pointer. It also contains interrupt specific registers
like the faulting address. The set is roughly split in 3 groups. The
first contains the registers that define a context or thread. This is
the only group that the kernel needs to switch threads. The second group
contains registers needed in addition to the first group needed to switch
userland threads. This group contains the thread pointer and the FP control
register. The third group contains those registers we need for execption
handling and are used on top of the first two groups.
struct _callee_saved, struct _callee_saved_fp
These sets contain the preserved registers, including the NaT after
spilling. The general registers (including branch registers) are
seperated from the FP registers for ptrace(2).
struct _caller_saved, struct _caller_saved_fp
These sets contain the scratch registers based on SDM 2.1, This means that
both ar.csd and ar.ccd are included here, even though they contain ia32
segment register descriptions. We keep seperate NaT bits for scratch and
preserved registers, because they are never saved/restored at the same
time.
struct _high_fp
The upper 96 FP registers that can be enabled/disabled seperately on
the CPU from the lower 32 FP registers. Due to the size of this set,
we treat them specially, even though they are defined as scratch
registers.
CVS ----------------------------------------------------------------------
save and restore "sets" of registers in various places.
The restorectx and swapctx functions are used by cpu_switch()
and deal with the special registers, as well as the preserved
registers.
The *callee_saved* functions are used to save and restore the
preserved registers (integer and floating-point). They are
useful for signal delivery and ptrace support.
The save_high_fp and restore_high_fp functions are used to
"load" and "unload" to and from the CPU as part of lazy context
switching.
The ia32 specific context functions have been kept with the ia32
code.
Approved by: re@ (blanket)
on the epc instruction. The epc instruction, given the permissions
of the page in which the epc is located, allows the privilege level
to be increased with little or no overhead. The previous privilege
level is recorded in the current frame marker and is restored by
a regular (function) return.
Since the epc instruction has to live in a page with non-standard
properties, we hardwire a "gateway" page in the address space. The
address of the gateway page is exported to userland in ar.k7. This
allows us to rewire the page without breaking the ABI.
The syscall stubs in libc are regular function calls that slightly
differ from the normal runtime. The difference is mostly to simplify
the stubs themselves by by moving some of the logic to the kernel.
The libc stubs call into the gateway page (offset 0), from where the
kernel trampolines to the code that sets up a minimal trapframe and
arranges to execute from the kernel stack.
The way back is basicly the same. The kernel returns to the gateway
page, whereby privilege is dropped, and jumps back to the syscall
stub.
Only the special registers are saved in the trapframe. None of the
scratch registers are preserved and since the kernel follows the
same runtime model, none of the preserved registers are saved.
Future enhancements can include the implementation of lightweight
syscalls, where kernel functions are performed without setting up
a trapframe. Good candidates are the *context syscalls for example.
Now that there's a gateway page from which code can be executed in
a non-privileged context, we also have the ideal place to put the
signal trampolines. By moving the signal trampolines from the user
stack to the gateway page, we open up the doors to unexecutable
stacks. The gateway page contains signal trampolines for both the
"legacy" break-based syscall code and the new and improved epc-
based syscall code.
Approved: re@ (blanket)
available by Hewlett-Packard under the MIT license. The unwinder is
small, clean and fast and needed little adaptation for use in the
kernel.
This import has embedded in it the changes needed to make it build
in a kernel environment.
To optimize the common case, the kernel will minimize the number
of registers saved by not saving the preserved registers. In case
access to preserved registers is needed (signal handling, ptrace)
the kernel will unwind to the context of the syscall or exception.
For this we need an unwinder.
Approved by: re (blanket)
server, map it to EAGAIN locally rather than EACCES. The NLM spec
indicates the DENIED corresponds to lock contention, not a permission
failure. This fixes O_EXLOCK/O_SHLOCK with O_NONBLOCK, which would
previously give a permission error, which in turn fixes things
like mailq(8) and lockf(1) over NFS.
Approved by: scottl (re)
Reviewed by: truckman, Andrew P Lentvorski, Jr. <bsder@allcaps.org>
Idea from: truckman
one or more actions in the list. This makes constructs like:
attach 10 {
// echo "Driver $device_name attached"
};
to be accepted by the parser. It will be treated as if the user had
entered:
// attach 10 {
// echo "Driver $device_name attached"
// };
(eg totally ignored).
Approved by: re@ (rwatson)