Add a note next to fields in network format.
The n_* types are not enough for compiler checks on endianness, and their
use often requires an otherwise unnecessary #include <netinet/in_systm.h>
The typedef in in_systm.h are still there.
the correct behaviour (sorting by distance from the current head position
in the scan direction) and bioq_insert_head() and bioq_insert_tail()
have a well defined (and useful) behaviour, especially when intermixed
with calls to bioq_disksort().
In particular:
- fix a bug in the existing bioq_disksort() that did not use the
current head position correctly;
- redefine semantics of bioq_insert_head() and bioq_insert_tail().
bioq_insert_tail() can now be used as a barrier
between previous and subsequent calls to bioq_disksort().
The code is heavily documented in the source code so please refer
to that for the details.
Much of this code comes from Fabio Checconi. Also thanks to Kirk
for feedback on the (re)definition of bioq_insert_tail().
NOTE: in the current tree there is only a handful of files which
intermix calls to bioq_disksort() with bioq_insert_head() and
bioq_insert_tail(). The ordering of the queue in these situation
was not specified (nor easy to figure out) before, so I doubt any
of that code could be affected by the specification of the API.
Also note that the current implementation is significantly simpler
than the previous one (also used in ata_sort_queue()).
It would be useful to reimplement ata_sort_queue() using
the same code used in bioq_disksort().
MFC after: 1 week
a serial number, fall through to the next case so that initial negotiation
still happens. Without this, devices were showing up with only 1 available
tag opening, leading to observations of very poor I/O performance.
This should fix problems reported with VMWare Fusion and ESX. Early
generation MPT-SAS controllers with SATA disks might also be affected.
HP CISS controllers are also likely affected, as are many other
pseudo-scsi disk subsystems.
references to iv_bss and the sta table; this is equivalent and causes
direct reclaim of the old bss node when any references in packets inflight
are reclaimed (previously the old node would sit in the bss table until
the inactivity processing reclaimed it)
o remove ieee80211_node_reclaim now that it's only use is gone
Reviewed by: avatar, cbzimmer
parent interface tasks to complete. This had been added to the ioctl path but
it is also need elsewhere like detach so its safe to teardown.
Reported by: Hans Petter Selasky
Submitted by: sam
checked whether this applies to builds in /sys/*/compile/* as well):
- Create empty opt_*.h files were missing
- Hook up svr4 to the build. It compiles fine here, so no reason to
disconnect it in the Makefile. were missing
- Hook up svr4 to the build. It compiles fine here, so no reason to
disconnect it in the Makefile.
kernel. Rather than just kick off the page daemon, we actively retire
more mappings. The inner loop now looks a lot like the inner loop of
pmap_remove_all.
Also, get_pv_entry can't return NULL now, so remove panic if it did.
Reviewed by: alc@
- Always read the character device pointer while the associated devfs vnode
is locked. Also, use dev_ref() to obtain a new reference on the vnode for
the mountpoint. This reference is released on unmount. This mirrors the
earlier fix to FFS.
Reviewed by: kib
cleanup. Before the GEOM consumer would not have been closed.
- Bump the reference on the character device being mounted while the
associated devfs vnode is locked.
Reviewed by: kib
guaranteed to initialize its two last arguments. Therefore, there is a
warning in the subsequent caller ar5416FillVpdTable(), which doesn't
initialize those arguments.
Change getLowerUpperIndex() to assign values to indexL and indexR even
in the case of assertion failure.
Submitted by: Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
Just like the old TTY layer, the current MPSAFE TTY layer does not make
any attempt to serialize calls of write(). Data is copied into the
kernel in 256 (TTY_STACKBUF) byte chunks. If a write() call occurs at
the same time, the data may interleave. This is especially likely when
the TTY starts blocking, because the output queue reaches the high
watermark.
I've implemented this by adding a new flag, TTY_BUSY_OUT, which is used
to mark a TTY as having a thread stuck in write(). Because I don't want
non-blocking processes to be possibly blocked by a sleeping thread, I'm
still allowing it to bypass the protection. According to this message,
the Linux kernel returns EAGAIN in such cases, but I think that's a
little too restrictive:
http://kerneltrap.org/index.php?q=mailarchive/linux-kernel/2007/5/2/85418/thread
PR: kern/118287
from the parent to the child process if they have an operation vector
of &badfileops. This narrows a set of races involving system calls that
allocate a new file descriptor, potentially block for some extended
period, and then return the file descriptor, when invoked by a threaded
program that concurrently invokes fork(2). Similar approches are used
in both Solaris and Linux, and the wideness of this race was introduced
in FreeBSD when we moved to a more optimistic implementation of
accept(2) in order to simplify locking.
A small race necessarily remains because the fork(2) might occur after
the finit() in accept(2) but before the system call has returned, but
that appears unavoidable using current APIs. However, this race is
vastly narrower.
The fix can be validated using the newfileops_on_fork regression test.
PR: kern/130348
Reported by: Ivan Shcheklein <shcheklein at gmail dot com>
Reviewed by: jhb, kib
MFC after: 1 week