allocated with the right size from the start. For the thread that has
kernel stack cached, verify that requested stack size is equial to the
actual, and reallocate the stack if sizes differ [1].
This fixes the bug introduced by r173361 that was committed several days
after r173004 and consisted of kthread_add(9) ignoring the non-default
kernel stack size.
Also, r173361 removed the caching of the kernel stacks for a non-first
thread in the process. Introduce separate kernel stack cache that keeps
some limited amount of preallocated kernel stacks to lower the latency
of thread allocation. Add vm_lowmem handler to prune the cache on
low memory condition. This way, system with reasonable amount of the
threads get lower latency of thread creation, while still not exhausting
significant portion of KVA for unused kstacks.
Submitted by: peter [1]
Discussed with: jhb, julian, peter
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
accidentally lost at one point during the PAT development. Without this
fix vm_pager_get_pages() was zeroing each of the pages.
Submitted by: czander @ NVidia
MFC after: 3 days
driver still, it generally works well for most people most of the
time. It is still too green for GENERIC, however.
Submitted by: many (latest being kwm@)
MFC after: 2 days (before RC1 if possible)
and sysuninit handlers.
Previously, sx_vnet, which is a lock designated for protecting
the vnet list, was (ab)used for protecting vnet sysinit / sysuninit
handler lists as well. Holding exclusively the sx_vnet lock while
invoking sysinit and / or sysuninit handlers turned out to be
problematic, since some of the handlers may attempt to wake up
another thread and wait for it to walk over the vnet list, hence
acquire a shared lock on sx_vnet, which in turn leads to a deadlock.
Protecting vnet sysinit / sysuninit lists with a separate lock
mitigates this issue, which was first observed with
flowtable_flush() / flowtable_cleaner() in sys/net/flowtable.c.
Reviewed by: rwatson, jhb
MFC after: 3 days
pages in an object.
- Add a new variant of d_mmap() currently called d_mmap2() which accepts
an additional in/out parameter that is the memory attribute to use for
the requested page.
- A driver either uses d_mmap() or d_mmap2() for all requests but not both.
The current implementation uses a flag in the cdevsw (D_MMAP2) to indicate
that the driver provides a d_mmap2() handler instead of d_mmap(). This
is done to make the change ABI compatible with existing drivers and
MFC'able to 7 and 8.
Submitted by: alc
MFC after: 1 month
information for interface of IFF_POINTOPOINT or IFF_LOOPBACK type.
Since the L2 information (rt_lle) is invalid for these interface
types, accidental caching attempt will trigger panic when the invalid
rt_lle reference is accessed.
When installing a new route, or when updating an existing route, the
user supplied gateway address may be an interface address (this is
particularly true for point-to-point interface related modules such
as ppp, if_tun, if_gif). Currently the routing command handler always
set the RTF_GATEWAY flag if the gateway address is given as part of the
command paramters. Therefore the gateway address must be verified against
interface addresses or else the route would be treated as an indirect
route, thus making that route unusable.
Reviewed by: kmacy, julia, rwatson
Verified by: marcus
MFC after: 3 days
ip_output() if the cached route was not initialized from the
flow-table. The rt_lle entry is invalid unless it has been
initialized through the flow-table.
Reviewed by: kmacy, rwatson
MFC after: immediately
an IPv6 address assigned to it, and if an incoming packet received on
one interface has a packet destination address that belongs to another
interface, the routing table is consulted to determine how to reach this
packet destination. Since the packet destination is an interface address,
the route table will return a host route with the loopback interface as
rt_ifp. The input code must recognize this fact, instead of using the
loopback interface, the input code performs a search to find the right
interface that owns the given IPv6 address.
Reviewed by: bz, gnn, kmacy
MFC after: immediately
causing a panic if it is killed due to a unsolved stack overflow
seen very late during shutdown on sparc64 when the gmirror worker
process exists, which is a regression introduced in 8.0.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
which allows an index to be reserved for an ifnet without making
the ifnet available for management operations. Use this in if_alloc()
while the ifnet lock is released between initial index allocation and
completion of ifnet initialization.
Add ifindex_free() to centralize the implementation of releasing an
ifindex value. Use in if_free() and if_vmove(), as well as when
releasing a held index in if_alloc().
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 days
This reverts part of r196460, so that sockets only return POLLHUP if both
directions are closed/error. Fifos get POLLHUP by closing the unused
direction immediately after creating the sockets.
The tools/regression/poll/*poll.c tests now pass except for two other things:
- if POLLHUP is returned, POLLIN is always returned as well instead of only
when there is data left in the buffer to be read
- fifo old/new reader distinction does not work the way POSIX specs it
Reviewed by: kib, bde
and centralize in a single function ifindex_alloc(). Assert the
IFNET_WLOCK, and add missing IFNET_WLOCK in if_alloc(). This does not
close all known races in this code.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 days
turn ends our usb process. This means the proc pointer becomes invalid and will
panic if a new kthread is added. Count the number of threads and clear the proc
pointer on the last one.
Suggested by: julian
MFC after: 3 days
- The device is based on Marvell 88F6281 system on chip.
- More info about the platform at http://www.plugcomputer.org
- To build the FreeBSD kernel:
make buildkernel TARGET_ARCH=arm KERNCONF=SHEEVAPLUG
- Installation notes at: http://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSDMarvell
Submitted by: Michal Hajduk
Obtained from: Semihalf
list/index locks, to protect link layer address tables. This avoids
lock order issues during interface teardown, but maintains the bug that
sysctl copy routines may be called while a non-sleepable lock is held.
Reviewed by: bz, kmacy
MFC after: 3 days
per platform requirements.
Notes:
- Only used by mge(4) at the moment.
- This is very simplified approach and should be replaced by some long-term
solution for managing the board/platform configuration (among others the
MAC-PHY binding info).
Submitted by: Michal Hajduk
Obtained from: Semihalf
Modules on Marvell SOC can be selectively PM-disabled, and we must not access
disabled devices' registers (attempt to initialize them) unconditionally, as
this leads to the system hang. This patch introduces graceful handling of the
PM state during devices init.
Submitted by: Michal Hajduk
Obtained from: Semihalf
While usually not an issue, this firewalls bugs in the code that may
run us out of memory.
Fix a memory exhaustion in the case where devctl was disabled, but the
link was bouncing. The check to queue was in the wrong place.
Implement a new sysctl hw.bus.devctl_queue to control the depth. Make
compatibility hacks for hw.bus.devctl_disable to ease transition.
Reviewed by: emaste@
Approved by: re@ (kib)
MFC after: asap
BIOS-enumerated devices:
- Assume a device is a match if the memory and I/O ports match even if the
IRQ or DRQ is wrong or missing. Some BIOSes don't include an IRQ for
the atrtc device for example.
- Add a hack to better match floppy controller devices. Many BIOSes do not
include the starting port of the floppy controller listed in the hints
(0x3f0) in the resources for the device. So far, however, all the BIOS
variations encountered do include the 'port + 2' resource (0x3f2), so
adjust the matching for "fdc" devices to look for 'port + 2'.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
and remove from its dependency on LRO, my tests have shown
that its always beneficial, even when doing bridging.
Second, fix up a few problems in the statistics code, the
adapter dependencies had gotten lost so some code that should
only run on 82599 was always running, this resulted in bogus
flow control numbers on 82598.
Handle GNU/Linux according to LSB Core Specification 4.0,
Chapter 11. Object Format, 11.8. ABI note tag.
Also check the first word of desc, not only name, according to
glibc abi-tags specification to distinguish between Linux and
kFreeBSD.
Add explicit handling for Debian GNU/kFreeBSD, which runs
on our kernels as well [2].
In {amd64,i386}/trap.c, when checking osrel of the current process,
also check the ABI to not change the signal behaviour for Linux
binary processes, now that we save an osrel version for all three
from the lists above in struct proc [2].
These changes make it possible to run FreeBSD, Debian GNU/kFreeBSD
and Linux binaries on the same machine again for at least i386 and
amd64, and no longer break kFreeBSD which was detected as GNU(/Linux).
PR: kern/135468
Submitted by: dchagin [1] (initial patch)
Suggested by: kib [2]
Tested by: Petr Salinger (Petr.Salinger seznam.cz) for kFreeBSD
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
1) When calculating the table offset for sliding the sack
array, the two byte values must be "ored" together in order
for us to do the correct sliding of the arrays.
2) We were NOT properly doing CC and other changes to things only
NR-Sacked. The solution here is to make a separate function that
will actually do both CC/updates and free things if its NR sack'd.
This actually shrinks out common code from three places (much better).
MFC after: 3 days
Say, a driver wants to have multiple console devices to pick from, you
would normally write down something like this:
CONSOLE_DRIVER(dev1);
CONSOLE_DRIVER(dev2);
Unfortunately, this means that you have to declare 10 cn routines,
instead of 5. It also isn't possible to initialize cn_arg on beforehand.
I noticed this restriction when I was implementing some of the console
bits for my vt(4) driver in my newcons branch. I have a single set of cn
routines (termcn_*) which are shared by all vt(4) console devices.
In order to solve this, I'm adding a separate consdev_ops structure,
which contains all the function pointers. This structure is referenced
through consdev's cn_ops field.
While there, I'm removing CONS_DRIVER() and cn_checkc, which have been
deprecated for years. They weren't used throughout the source, until the
Xen console driver showed up. CONSOLE_DRIVER() has been changed to do
the right thing. It now declares both the consdev and consdev_ops
structure and ties them together. In other words: this change doesn't
change the KPI for drivers that used the regular way of declaring
console devices.
If drivers want to use multiple console devices, they can do this as
follows:
static const struct consdev_ops mydriver_cnops = {
.cn_probe = mydriver_cnprobe,
...
};
static struct mydriver_softc cons0_softc = {
...
};
CONSOLE_DEVICE(cons0, mydriver_cnops, &cons0_softc);
static struct mydriver_softc cons1_softc = {
...
};
CONSOLE_DEVICE(cons1, mydriver_cnops, &cons1_softc);
Obtained from: //depot/user/ed/newcons/...
leaves behind an orphaned vnet. This change ensures that such vnets get
released.
This change affects only options VIMAGE builds.
Submitted by: jamie
Discussed with: bz
Approved by: re (rwatson), julian (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
has ifaddresses of AF_LINK type which thus have an embedded
if_index "backpointer", we must update that if_index backpointer
to reflect the new if_index that our ifnet just got assigned.
This change affects only options VIMAGE builds.
Submitted by: bz
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (rwatson), julian (mentor)
context inside the RPC code.
Temporarily set td's cred to mount's cred before calling socreate() via
__rpc_nconf2socket().
Submitted by: rmacklem (in part)
Reviewed by: rmacklem, rwatson
Discussed with: dfr, bz
Approved by: re (rwatson), julian (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days