In this installment, we learn that it is bad to access registers that
are only defined for mfc cards in the interrupt handler when we do not
in fact have a mfc card. For MFC cards, we'll only call the ISR if
the this card interrupted bit is set. For non mfc cards (which are
basically 90% of pccards in use), we always call the ISR and avoid
touching the suspect registers. We always pacify the bit in the MFC
case on the off chance that will help in the itnerrupt handler not
being registed.
out that there is no easy way to discern the difference between a text
segment and a data segment through the read-only OR execute attribute
in the elf segment header, so revert the algorithm to what it was before.
Neither can we account for multiple data load segments in the vmspace
structure (at least not without more work), due to assumptions obreak()
makes in regards to the data start and data size fields.
Retain RLIMIT_VMEM checking by using a local variable to track the
total bytes of data being loaded.
Reviewed by: peter
X-MFC after: ASAP
when the first PCI bus attaches.
- Create /dev/pci during MOD_LOAD as well.
- Destroy /dev/pci during MOD_UNLOAD (not that you can kldunload pci, but
might as well get the code right)
so that it works on the Alpha. This defines the segment that the entry
point exists in as 'text' and any others (usually one) as data.
Submitted by: tmm
Tested on: i386, alpha
it can do it w/o needing to hold the filelist_lock sx lock.
- fdalloc() doesn't need Giant to call free() anymore. It also doesn't
need to drop and reacquire the filedesc lock around free() now as a
result.
- Try to make the code that copies fd tables when extending the fd table in
fdalloc() a bit more readable by performing assignments in separate
statements. This is still a bit ugly though.
- Use max() instead of an if statement so to figure out the starting point
in the search-for-a-free-fd loop in fdalloc() so it reads better next to
the min() in the previous line.
- Don't grow nfiles in steps up to the size needed if we dup2() to some
really large number. Go ahead and double 'nfiles' in a loop prior
to doing the malloc().
- malloc() doesn't need Giant now.
- Use malloc() and free() instead of MALLOC() and FREE() in fdalloc().
- Check to see if the size we are going to grow to is too big, not if the
current size of the fd table is too big in the loop in fdalloc(). This
means if we are out of space or if dup2() requests too high of a fd,
then we will return an error before we go off and try to allocate some
huge table and copy the existing table into it.
- Move all of the logic for dup'ing a file descriptor into do_dup() instead
of putting some of it in do_dup() and duplicating other parts in four
different places. This makes dup(), dup2(), and fcntl(F_DUPFD) basically
wrappers of do_dup now. fcntl() still has an extra check since it uses
a different error return value in one case then the other functions.
- Add a KASSERT() for an assertion that may not always be true where the
fdcheckstd() function assumes that falloc() returns the fd requested and
not some other fd. I think that the assertion is always true because we
are always single-threaded when we get to this point, but if one was
using rfork() and another process sharing the fd table were playing with
the fd table, there might could be a problem.
- To handle the problem of a file descriptor we are dup()'ing being closed
out from under us in dup() in general, do_dup() now obtains a reference
on the file in question before calling fdalloc(). If after the call to
fdalloc() the file for the fd we are dup'ing is a different file, then
we drop our reference on the original file and return EBADF. This
race was only handled in the dup2() case before and would just retry
the operation. The error return allows the user to know they are being
stupid since they have a locking bug in their app instead of dup'ing
some other descriptor and returning it to them.
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64
sleep mutexes and vice versa. WITNESS normally should catch this but
not everyone uses WITNESS so this is a fallback to catch nasty but easy
to do bugs.
instead of on startup. This fixes binary compatibility of dynamically
linked binaries from before the signal code move.
Suggested by: wollman (a long time ago)
PCATCH means 'if we get a signal, interrupt me!" and tsleep returns
either EINTR or ERESTART depending on the circumstances. ERESTART is
"special" because it causes the system call to fail, but right as it
returns back to userland it tells the trap handler to move %eip back a
bit so that userland will immediately re-run the syscall.
This is a syscall restart. It only works for things like read() etc where
nothing has changed yet. Note that *userland* is tricked into restarting
the syscall by the kernel. The kernel doesn't actually do the restart. It
is deadly for things like select, poll, nanosleep etc where it might cause
the elapsed time to be reset and start again from scratch. So those
syscalls do this to prevent userland rerunning the syscall:
if (error == ERESTART) error = EINTR;
Fake "signals" like SIGTSTP from ^Z etc do not normally invoke userland
signal handlers. But, in -current, the PCATCH *is* being triggered and
tsleep is returning ERESTART, and the syscall is aborted even though no
userland signal handler was run.
That is the fault here. We're triggering the PCATCH in cases that we
shouldn't. ie: it is being triggered on *any* signal processing, rather
than the case where the signal is posted to userland.
--- Peter
The work of psignal() is a patchwork of special case required by the process
debugging and job-control facilities...
--- Kirk McKusick
"The design and impelementation of the 4.4BSD Operating system"
Page 105
in STABLE source, when psignal is posting a STOP signal to sleeping
process and the signal action of the process is SIG_DFL, system will
directly change the process state from SSLEEP to SSTOP, and when
SIGCONT is posted to the stopped process, if it finds that the process
is still on sleep queue, the process state will be restored to SSLEEP,
and won't wakeup the process.
this commit mimics the behaviour in STABLE source tree.
Reviewed by: Jon Mini, Tim Robbins, Peter Wemm
Approved by: julian@freebsd.org (mentor)
PUC devices live on pccard or pci so INTR_FAST is never really an option.
Don't try to register the interrupt as fast and don't allow the children
to do so either.
- add bus capabilities into the driver, so that it is possible for a radio
driver to attach to it to use shared resources of fm801 chip. The radio
driver itself will be committed later.
MFC after: 1 week
than 32 bits. It was trying to figure out things like the day of week
of when time_t is roughly 2^62 etc. Make a better guess for the starting
point for the binary search that works on both 32 and 64 bit types. I have
been using this for a while now.