NDIS_TXPKTS and don't allocate unused extra spaces for sc->ndis_txarray
and sc->ndis_txpool.
PR: kern/127644
Submitted by: Antoine Pelisse <apelisse_at_gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
This reverts a private patch which is causing issues with many Intel chipsets.
I will review that patch and see what we need to do to fix it up later, but
for the time being, we will just get these chips working again.
This update contains a lot of code cleanup and is post gem merge
(no, we don't have gem support). It should prove much easier to read the
code now. A lot of thanks goes to vehemens for that work. I have adapted
the code to use cdevpriv for tracking per open file data. That alleviates
the old ugly hack that we used to try and accomplish the task and helped to
clean up the open / close behavior a good bit. This also replaces the hack
that was put in place a year or so ago to prevent radeons from locking up
with AIGLX enabled. I have had a couple of radeon testers report that it
still works as expected, though I no longer have radeon hardware to test with
myself. Other various fixes from the linux crew and Intel, many of
which are muddled in with the gem merge.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
Obtained from: mesa/drm git master
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Staticize and locally prototype functions uipc_ctloutput(), unp_dispose(),
unp_init(), and unp_externalize(), none of which have been required
outside of uipc_usrreq.c since uipc_proto.c was removed.
- Remove stale prototype for uipc_usrreq(), which has not existed in the
code since 1997
- Forward declare and staticize uipc_usrreqs structure in uipc_usrreq.c and
not un.h.
- Comment on why uipc_connect2() is still non-static -- it is used directly
by fifofs.
- Remove stale comments, tidy up whitespace.
MFC after: 3 days (where applicable)
For the jail case we are already looping over the interface addresses
before falling back to the only IP address of a jail in case of no
match. This is in preparation for the upcoming multi-IPv4/v6/no-IP
jail patch this change was developed with initially.
This also changes the semantics of selecting the IP for processes within
a jail as it now uses the same logic as outside the jail (with additional
checks) but no longer is on a mutually exclusive code path.
Benchmarks had shown no difference at 95.0% confidence for neither the
plain nor the jail case (even with the additional overhead). See:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-net/2008-September/019531.html
Inpsired by a patch from: Yahoo! (partially)
Tested by: latest multi-IP jail patch users (implictly)
Discussed with: rwatson (general things around this)
Reviewed by: mostly silence (feedback from bms)
Help with benchmarking from: kris
MFC after: 2 months
SRCDIR is seeded from `pwd` which not only means src/sys/ but
also src/include/ (and possibly src/usr.sbin/amd/include/ ?).
Trying to build world resulted in
===> include (includes)
cd /usr/src/include; make buildincludes; make installincludes
creating osreldate.h from newvers.sh
cd: can't cd to /usr/src/include/sys
*** Error code 2
as there is apparently no src/include/sys.
There are multiple possible solutions ranging from seeding SRCDIR from
the environment to adding more substitution patterns.
Reported by: sam, bz
Proper solution to be implemented and tested by: peter
This changes from a line discipline to the tty_hooks mechanism. Data will come
in directly via rint_bypass and sent to the peer node in a single mbuf.
As line disciplines are no longer used a new netgraph command called
NGM_TTY_SET_TTY is used to attach the tty. This takes a pointer to to the open
file descriptor of the tty and registers the tty hooks. When the tty disappears
the node will shutdown.
Thanks to: ed
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc
obtained from Linux forcedeth driver.
While I'm here move creating a sysctl node for process_limit to
function nfe_sysctl_node().
Tested by: "Arno J. Klaassen" < arno <at> heho dot snv dot jussieu dot fr >
g33 based chips use a different method of identifying the gtt size.
g45 based chips gtt is located in a different area of stolen memory.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
added in FreeBSD 6.x to break the binary layout of the data structure
during a conversion to C99 sparse structure initialization. Probably
should have been removed before 7.0, but 8.0 will do.
from the vimage project, as per plan established at devsummit 08/08:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/Image/Notes200808DevSummit
Introduce INIT_VNET_*() initializer macros, VNET_FOREACH() iterator
macros, and CURVNET_SET() context setting macros, all currently
resolving to NOPs.
Prepare for virtualization of selected SYSCTL objects by introducing a
family of SYSCTL_V_*() macros, currently resolving to their global
counterparts, i.e. SYSCTL_V_INT() == SYSCTL_INT().
Move selected #defines from sys/sys/vimage.h to newly introduced header
files specific to virtualized subsystems (sys/net/vnet.h,
sys/netinet/vinet.h etc.).
All the changes are verified to have zero functional impact at this
point in time by doing MD5 comparision between pre- and post-change
object files(*).
(*) netipsec/keysock.c did not validate depending on compile time options.
Implemented by: julian, bz, brooks, zec
Reviewed by: julian, bz, brooks, kris, rwatson, ...
Approved by: julian (mentor)
Obtained from: //depot/projects/vimage-commit2/...
X-MFC after: never
Sponsored by: NLnet Foundation, The FreeBSD Foundation
to store the socket address stored in the first mbuf in a packet chain.
This reduces contention on the lock and CPU system time in certain UDP
workloads.
Tested by: ps
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 1 week
It turns out I overlooked some function prototypes that were actually
TTY related, but were stored in <sys/conf.h> to implement the D_TTY
flag. Remove these prototypes now that they don't exist anymore.
- Support for Myricom 10G-PCIE-8B NICs
- multi-slice firmware: fix a bug when the presence of 32-bit or
64-bit DMA addresses for interrupt queues and data is not uniform across
slices.
- Improves automatic selection between ethp_z8e/eth_z8e
Sponsored by: Myricom Inc.
the gvinum header in fields of fixed size and in a big endian byte order
rather than the size and byte order of the actual platform.
Note that the change is backwards compatible with the old gvinum configuration
format, but will save the configuration in the new format when the 'saveconfig'
command is executed.
Submitted by: Rick C. Petty <rick-freebsd -at- kiwi-computer.com>
- Update or remove comments that were left over from the original
soreceive_generic() implementation. Quite a few were misleading in the
context of the new code.
- Since soreceive_dgram() has a simpler structure, replace several gotos
with a while loop making the invariants more clear.
- In the blocking while loop, don't try to handle cases incompatible with
the loop invariant (since m is always NULL, don't check for and handle
non-NULL).
- Don't drop and re-acquire the socket buffer lock unnecessarily after
sbwait() returns, which may help reduce lock contention (etc).
- Assume PR_ATOMIC since we assert it at the top of the function.
MFC after: 3 days
with kernel_map->system_mtx held so these aren't needed. Add an
assertion to make sure this is the case.
Also, fix a minor style(9) nit.
Reviewed by: alc@
- simplify page hold logic
- allow pages for processes other than that of curthread to
have pages held
- normalize the interface to more closely resemble the functions in
sys/vm
MFC after: 1 week
belongs solely to the driver.
We don't lose any statistics with this change, because in a error
case the drop counter on the interface output queue is always incremented.
Reviewed by: thompsa
only mode and restore original value of extended address register
instead of overwriting it with page 1. There are still instance
information passing issue(e.g configured media type: fiber or
copper) from driver to PHY layer but this change make the selected
PHY work with 88E1112 PHY.
Reported by: Krzysztof Jedruczyk < beaker <at> hot dot pl >
Tested by: Krzysztof Jedruczyk < beaker <at> hot dot pl >
This should fix occasional Tx checksum corruption issue.
Reported by: Garrett Cooper < yanefbsd <at> gmail dot com >
Tested by: Garrett Cooper < yanefbsd <at> gmail dot com >
disabled by default because there's problems with it on AT91RM9200,
currently the only host controller in the tree. I've not had time to
track those problems to ground. I'm committing because this is
important for other host controllers that are in the pipeline.
Submitted by: mav@
but an RW mapping exists for the underlying page. This change fixes the bug by using the
page / NULL returned from pmap_extract_and_hold to determine whether or not vm_fault needs
to be called.
The bug was pointed out by alc.
MFC after: 3 days
into the separate function vm_pageout_oom(). Supply a parameter for
vm_pageout_oom() describing a reason for the call.
Call vm_pageout_oom() from the swp_pager_meta_build() when swap zone
is exhausted.
Reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho, jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
if the probe succeeds. This guarantees that the BSD scheme
wins over the MBR scheme when MBR gets to probe first. Build-
or link-time conditions can cause schemes to end up in the
linker set in a different order. Normally BSD is before MBR
in the linker set and as such get to probe first. But typically
when the kernel gets rebuild or relinked, this can change.
sys/param.h and move the MI numbers out of here. Also move the MI
defines. Also remove a couple defines not in use (not sure if it is
age, or OpenBSD origins for thse). Note the current values that are
overrides that appear to be odd in some way.
More cleanup could be done here: NBPG appears to be spelled PAGE_SIZE
these days. There's new ways to spell PGOFSET and PGSHIFT too, I
think. These constants duplicate the MI constants and are sprinkled
into the mips code only. Further investigation is needed.
all to date and the latter also is only used in ia64 and powerpc
code which no longer serves a real purpose after bring-up and just
can be removed as well. Note that architectures like sun4u also
provide no means of implementing IPI'ing a CPU itself natively
in the first place.
Suggested by: jhb
Reviewed by: arch, grehan, jhb
former more explicitly tells the compiler that you want an empty loop.
There are some lint programs that use this hint to avoid generating
warnings.
No functional change...
JBus to PCI 2.2 bridges. In theory, this driver should also handle
`XMITS' Fireplane/Safari to PCI-X bridges but due to lack of access
to such hardware, support for these hasn't be fleshed out, yet.
that a nested partition (typically the BSD disklabel)
is not done tasting while the root file system is being
mounted. While this is rare, it's still possible.
in the transmit path, such as TCPS_TIMEWAIT, fail the credential
extraction immediately rather than acquiring locks and looking up
the inpcb on the global lists in order to reach the conclusion that
the credential extraction has failed.
This is more efficient, but more importantly, it avoids lock
recursion on the inpcbinfo, which is no longer allowed with rwlocks.
This appears to have been responsible for at least two reported
panics.
MFC after: 3 days
Reported by: ganbold
that DTrace uses.
This fixes a bug that would have affected kernels built with MAC and all
kernels built after the mpsafetty integration.
The bug will be apparent in RELENG7 on MAC kernels.
Reported by: kan
and Xlazypmap differ from the frame for Xtimerint. The Xtimerint puts
pointer to the frame between return address and frame body, while rest
of the functions listed above do not. Correct offset calculation to
allow the ddb backtrace to step over such frames.
Noted and reviewed by: tegge
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
setting TDF_INPANIC then it will never be rescheduled again. Wrap
setting the panic condition with the critical section.
Noted and reviewed by: tegge
MFC after: 1 week
The uminor() and umajor() functions have the same use in kernel space as
the minor() and major() functions in userspace. If we ever get rid of
the minor() function in kernel space, we could decide to just expose
minor() and major() to kernel space, making uminor() and umajor()
redundant.
There are two reasons why we want to have uminor() and umajor() in
<sys/types.h>:
- Having them close together prevents them from diverting. Even though
it's unlikely the definitions will change, it's a good habit to have
them at the same place.
- They don't really belong in kern_conf.c. kern_conf.c has been
liberated from dealing with device major and minor number handling.
The device_ids(9) manpage now lists the wrong #include's, because it
should only list <sys/types.h> now. I'm leaving it as it is now, because
I wonder if we should document them anyway. We're probably better off
documenting minor(3) and major(3).
After I removed all the unit2minor()/minor2unit() calls from the kernel
yesterday, I realised calling minor() everywhere is quite confusing.
Character devices now only have the ability to store a unit number, not
a minor number. Remove the confusion by using dev2unit() everywhere.
This commit could also be considered as a bug fix. A lot of drivers call
minor(), while they should actually be calling dev2unit(). In -CURRENT
this isn't a problem, but it turns out we never had any problem reports
related to that issue in the past. I suspect not many people connect
more than 256 pieces of the same hardware.
Reviewed by: kib
I've had some reports in the past that opening an already opened TTY
through, for example, /dev/tty can fail with random error codes. Looking
at ttydev_open(), I can see there is a way `error' is returned without
initialising it. Even though I haven't had any confirmation this fixes
the bug, I'll fix it anyway.
Reported by: Andrzej Tobola <ato iem pw edu pl>
filedescriptor into it. Make sure that td_fpop is NULL when calling
d_mmap from dev_pager_getpages().
Change guards against td_fpop field being non-NULL with private state
for another device, and against sudden clearing the td_fpop. This
could occur when either a driver method calls another driver through
the filedescriptor operation, or a page fault happen while driver is
writing to a memory backed by another driver.
Noted by: rwatson
Tested by: rnoland
MFC after: 3 days
To prevent any further confusion about device minor and unit numbers,
we'd better just refer to device unit numbers. Many people still think
the numbers we show inside devfs have any relation to the numbers passed
to make_dev(9), which is not the case.
Discussed with: kib
When I changed kern_conf.c three months ago I made device unit numbers
equal to (unneeded) device minor numbers. We used to require
bitshifting, because there were eight bits in the middle that were
reserved for a device major number. Not very long after I turned
dev2unit(), minor(), unit2minor() and minor2unit() into macro's.
The unit2minor() and minor2unit() macro's were no-ops.
We'd better not remove these four macro's from the kernel, because there
is a lot of (external) code that may still depend on them. For now it's
harmless to remove all invocations of unit2minor() and minor2unit().
Reviewed by: kib
Thanks goes to ITE who provided docs and feedback and made this possible.
Minor fixups to the Intel ICH code for bugs found while doing this.
(ITE8213 is very semilar to an Intel ICH)
MFC after: 1 week
includes syscall32_{de,}register() routines as well as a module handler
and wrapper macros similar to the support for native syscalls in
<sys/sysent.h>.
MFC after: 1 month
- Instead of using a syscall slot (370) just to get a function prototype
for lkmressys(), add an explicit function prototype to <sys/sysent.h>.
This also removes unused special case checks for 'lkmressys' from
makesyscalls.sh.
- Instead of having magic logic in makesyscalls.sh to only generate a
function prototype the first time 'lkmnosys' is seen, make 'NODEF'
always not generate a function prototype and include an explicit
prototype for 'lkmnosys' in <sys/sysent.h>.
- As a result of the fix in (2), update the LKM syscall entries in
the freebsd32 syscall table to use 'lkmnosys' rather than 'nosys'.
- Use NOPROTO for the __syscall() entry (198) in the native ABI. This
avoids the need for magic logic in makesyscalls.h to only generate
a function prototype the first time 'nosys' is encountered.
called without an inpcb pointer despite holding the tcbinfo global
lock, which lead to a deadlock or panic when ipfw tried to further
acquire it recursively.
Reported by: Stefan Ehmann <shoesoft at gmx dot net>
MFC after: 3 days
variable wait routines. DROP_GIANT() already manages that state in the
Giant interlock case.
- Assert that Giant is held when it is passed as a sleep interlock.
the unlocked route caching in if_stf. Add a mutex that protects
access to cached route. This seemed to fix problems for Pekka Savola.
Nick Sayer had similar problems, and in his case completly disabling
the route cache seemed to help. Add a sysctl net.link.stf.route_cache
that can be used to turn off route caching in if_stf.
PR: 122283
MFC after: 2 weeks
Tested by: Pekka Savola, Nick Sayer.
Kick the device into the right mode if it comes up as a flash-disk.
Set the buffers to a sensible 1024 bytes instead of a far too small
default.
Don't attempt to change speed, baud, parity and such, the device does
not understand it.
have hardware ram buffer. The silicon bug seem to be triggered by
pause frames if receive buffer is not aligned on FIFO word(8 bytes).
To workaround the issue, make sure to align Rx buffers on 8 bytes.
Unfortunately this workaround requires yet another Rx fixup for
strict alignment architecture machines to align IP header.
For newer hardwares that lacks ram buffer may not have this bug so
check number of available ram buffer size to see the existence of
ram buffer.
Reported by: Ian Freislich (ianf <at> clue dot co dot za), das
Tested by: Ian Freislich (ianf <at> clue dot co dot za)
Some subsystems (HPS-USB) like to lock down the TTY through a more
generic approach, namely the regular mtx(9) macro's. Allow the TTY lock
to be obtained through the new macro.
Discussed with: hps, thompsa
unmounts. When we upgrade a vnode lock from shared to exclusive during
a name cache lookup, fail the lookup with EBADF if the vnode is invalidated
while we are waiting for the exclusive lock.
Also, for correctness (though I'm not sure it can occur in practice),
downgrade an exclusively locked vnode if it should be share locked.
Tested by: pho
Yesterday I got two reports of potential crashes, related to TTY
deallocation during device closure. When a thread is in TF_OPENCLOSE,
draining its output upon closure, we should not allow calls to
tty_rel_free() to happen at the same time. This could cause the TTY to
be torn down twice.
PR: kern/127561
Reported by: KOIE Hidetaka <koie suri co jp>
Discussed with: thompsa
unconditionally drop the tcbinfo lock (after all, we assert it lines
before), but call tcp_dropwithreset() under both inpcb and inpcbinfo
locks only if we pass in an tcpcb. Otherwise, if the pointer is NULL,
firewall code may later recurse the global tcbinfo lock trying to look
up an inpcb.
This is an instance where a layering violation leads not only
potentially to code reentrace and recursion, but also to lock
recursion, and was revealed by the conversion to rwlocks because
acquiring a read lock on an rwlock already held with a write lock is
forbidden. When these locks were mutexes, they simply recursed.
Reported by: Stefan Ehmann <shoesoft at gmx dot net>
MFC after: 3 days
to the C99 style. At least, it is easier to read sysent definitions
that way, and search for the actual instances of sigcode etc.
Explicitely initialize sysentvec.sv_maxssiz that was missed in most
sysvecs.
No objection from: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
port by OF the syscons won't take over console. Only attach syscons to "screen"
if /chosen/stdout is not connected, which could be the case when loader(8)
is booted directly from the OF. This fixes Marcel's Xserver.
Reported by: marcel
It turns out our old TTY layer (and other implementations) block when
you read() on a PTY master device of which the slave device node has not
been opened yet. Our new implementation just returned 0. This caused
applications like telnetd to die in a very subtle way (when child
processes would open the TTY later than the first call to select()).
Introduce a new flag called PTS_FINISHED, which indicates whether we
should block or bail out of a read() or write() occurs.
Reported by: Claude Buisson <clbuisson orange fr>