allocation was passed up to nexus. Now, we probe sysresource objects and
manage the resources they describe in a local rman pool. This helps
devices which attach/detach varying resources (like the _CST object) and
module loads/unloads. The allocation/release routines now check to see if
the resource is described in a child sysresource object and if so,
allocate from the local rman. Sysresource objects add their resources to
the pool and reserve them upon boot. This means sysresources need to be
probed before other ACPI devices.
Changes include:
* Add ordering to the child device probe. The current order is: system
resource objects, embedded controllers, then everything else.
* Make acpi_MatchHid take a handle instead of a device_t arg.
* Replace acpi_{get,set}_resource with the generic equivalents.
- Define type rlim_t and struct timeval. This makes autoconf
happier. (PR: 62388)
- Add RLIMIT_AS, which is an alias for our RLIMIT_VMEM.
- structs orlimit and loadavg, as well as macros CP*, should
only appear if __BSD_VISIBLE.
- Use underscored versions of int32_t and fixpt_t in case
<sys/types.h> is not included.
- Document areas of non-conformance.
your (network) modules as well as any userland that might make sense of
sizeof(struct ifnet).
This does not change the queueing yet. These changes will follow in a
seperate commit. Same with the driver changes, which need case by case
evaluation.
__FreeBSD_version bump will follow.
Tested-by: (i386)LINT
conform to the rfc2734 and rfc3146 standard for IP over firewire and
should eventually supercede the fwe driver. Right now the broadcast
channel number is hardwired and we don't support MCAP for multicast
channel allocation - more infrastructure is required in the firewire
code itself to fix these problems.
in a TAILQ. Re-arrange some of the ecb elements so that they can stay
stable through alloc/free cycles while the rest get bzero'd.
- Use the tag_id from the ecb rather than fro the ccb. The latter is only
for target mode.
- Honor the ccb flags for tag_action when deciding whether to do a tagged
or untagged transaction.
- Re-arrange autosense completion so that it works correctly in failure
cases.
- Turn on the PI_TAG_ABLE flag so that CAM will send us tagged transactions.
This enables tagged queueing in the driver.
SOCK_LOCK(so):
- Hold socket lock over calls to MAC entry points reading or
manipulating socket labels.
- Assert socket lock in MAC entry point implementations.
- When externalizing the socket label, first make a thread-local
copy while holding the socket lock, then release the socket lock
to externalize to userspace.
order definition for witness. Send lock before receive lock, and
socket locks after accept but before select:
filedesc -> accept -> so_snd -> so_rcv -> sellck
All routing locks after send lock:
so_rcv -> radix node head
All protocol locks before socket locks:
unp -> so_snd
udp -> udpinp -> so_snd
tcp -> tcpinp -> so_snd
before calling sotryfree().
-- Body of earlier bulk commit this belonged with --
Log:
Extend coverage of SOCK_LOCK(so) to include so_count, the socket
reference count:
- Assert SOCK_LOCK(so) macros that directly manipulate so_count:
soref(), sorele().
- Assert SOCK_LOCK(so) in macros/functions that rely on the state of
so_count: sofree(), sotryfree().
- Acquire SOCK_LOCK(so) before calling these functions or macros in
various contexts in the stack, both at the socket and protocol
layers.
- In some cases, perform soisdisconnected() before sotryfree(), as
this could result in frobbing of a non-present socket if
sotryfree() actually frees the socket.
- Note that sofree()/sotryfree() will release the socket lock even if
they don't free the socket.
Submitted by: sam
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Obtained from: BSD/OS
reference count:
- Assert SOCK_LOCK(so) macros that directly manipulate so_count:
soref(), sorele().
- Assert SOCK_LOCK(so) in macros/functions that rely on the state of
so_count: sofree(), sotryfree().
- Acquire SOCK_LOCK(so) before calling these functions or macros in
various contexts in the stack, both at the socket and protocol
layers.
- In some cases, perform soisdisconnected() before sotryfree(), as
this could result in frobbing of a non-present socket if
sotryfree() actually frees the socket.
- Note that sofree()/sotryfree() will release the socket lock even if
they don't free the socket.
Submitted by: sam
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Obtained from: BSD/OS
Otherwise, the setting of the PG_M bit by one processor could be lost if
another processor is simultaneously changing the PG_W bit.
Reviewed by: tegge@
rig a PREPEND macro for ALTQ as the POLL/DEQUEUE semantic is very bad in
terms of locking. We make this a full functional queue to allow "bulk
dequeue" which will further reduce the locking overhead (for non-altq
enabled devices). Drivers will access this via the following macros, which
will show up in <net/if_var.h> once we expose ALTQ to the build:
IFQ_DRV_DEQUEUE(ifq, m) - takes a mbuf off the queue (driver queue first)
IFQ_DRV_PREPEND(ifq, m) - pushes a mbuf back to the driver queue
IFQ_DRV_PURGE(ifq) - drops all packets in both queues
IFQ_DRV_IS_EMPTY(ifq) - checks for pending mbufs in either queue
One has to make sure that the first three are protected by a driver mutex.
At the moment most network drivers still require Giant, so this is not an
issue. Even those that have thier own mutex usually hold it in if_start and
the like, so this requirement is almost always satisfied.
This evolved from a discussion with Andrew Gallatin.
protect fields in the socket buffer. Add accessor macros to use the
mutex (SOCKBUF_*()). Initialize the mutex in soalloc(), and destroy
it in sodealloc(). Add addition, add SOCK_*() access macros which
will protect most remaining fields in the socket; for the time being,
use the receive socket buffer mutex to implement socket level locking
to reduce memory overhead.
Submitted by: sam
Sponosored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Obtained from: BSD/OS
that the command succeeded. Sheesh! This makes CDROMs no longer cause an
instant panic at boot. Thanks to Jake Burkholder for providing a remote
test setup.
Also make device resets work, thanks to another typo.
pass any traffic. Unfortunately this means no full-duplex link with auto-
negotiation on hme(4) using DP83840A PHYs again.
I really thought I had tested this also on a Netra t1 100...
- add locking
- disable ALTQ3_COMPAT by default (do not remove the code to keep the diff
towards KAME small)
- put some more code under ALTQ3 conditional compilation as it should be
- account for if_xname
- some more minor compile fixes
As people started wondering:
The strange path layout "altq/altq" is there to avoid "-Isys/contrib" and
make it "-Isys/contrib/altq" instead, as we will need at least <altq/altq.h>
and <altq/if_altq.h> for kernel compilation.
The "freebsd4_..." in the privious commit is just the best tag name in the
KAME tree I could find to classify this in order to track its history. It
does *not* mean that this will go to 4-STABLE or anything of that kind.
HEAD at this point). This will not exactly live in a vendor branch, but have
the vendor backing to make it easier to exchange diffs.
This will be followed by a diff which takes most of the .c files off the
vendor branch in order to:
- add locking
- disable ALTQ3_COMPAT code (which is outdated and "un-lockable")
There is work in progress to refine the configuration API. Import this "as
is" now to have more exposure time before 5-STABLE.
This is only the import, it will be some more days until you will actually
be able to compile ALTQ support into your kernel so don't hold your breath.
HEADUPs will be posted on current@ and net@ before this is actually enabled.
No-objection: re(scottl), core(rwatson)