net80211/ieee80211_ageq.c was present twice in sys/conf/files so leave the
correctly sorted one. dev/wpi/if_wpi.c was present in sys/conf/files as well
as sys/conf/files.amd64 and sys/conf/files.i386 so prefer the sys/conf/files
entry.
Reviewed by: allanjude, rstone
gone_in(majar, msg); If we're running in FreeBSD major, tell
the user this code may be deleted soon.
If we're running in FreeBSD major - 1,
the the user is deprecated and will
be gone in major.
Otherwise say nothing.
gone_in_dev(dev, major, msg) Just like gone_in, except use device_printf.
New tunable / sysctl debug.oboslete_panic: 0 - don't panic,
1 - panic in major or newer , 2 - panic in major - 1 or newer
default: 0
if NO_OBSOLETE_CODE is defined, then both of these turn into compile
time errors when building for major. Add options NO_OBSOLETE_CODE to
kernel build system.
This lets us tag code that's going away so users know it will be gone,
as well as automatically manage things.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13818
Previously, MAKESYSPATH as well as '-m' directives in MAKEFLAGS would cause
any port rebuilt during the PORTS_MODULES stage to consume system makefiles
from $(SRCROOT)/share/mk instead of those installed under /usr/share/mk.
For kernel modules that need to build against an updated src tree this
makes sense; less so for <bsd.port.mk> or any userspace library or utility
the port may also happen to install.
Before 11.0, this probably didn't matter much in practice. But the addition
of src.libnames.mk under $(SRCROOT)/share/mk in 11.0 breaks any consumer of
bsd.prog.mk and DPADD/LDADD during PORTS_MODULES.
Address the build breakage by removing MAKESYSPATH and any occurrence of
'-m' from MAKEFLAGS in the environment created for the port build.
Instead set SYSDIR so that any kmod built by the port will still consume
conf/kmod.mk from the updated src tree, assuming it uses <bsd.kmod.mk>
Reviewed by: bdrewery
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13053
leaks. We assume each source can be taken / dropped only once and
don't recurse. These are only enabled via DA_TRACK_REFS or
INVARIANTS. There appreas to be a reference leak under extreme load,
and these should help us colaberatively work it out. It also documents
better the reference / holding protocol better.
Reviewed by: ken@, scottl@
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14040
Similarly as other extres pseudo-drivers, implement phy by using kobj model.
This detaches it from provider device, so single device driver can export
multiple different phys. Additionally, this allows phy to be subclassed to
more specialized drivers, like is USB OTG phy, or PCIe phy with hot-plug
capability.
Tested by: manu (previous version, on Allwinner board)
MFC after: 1 month
Both flags do the same thing but -n is more widely supported.
Reviewed By: jhb, emaste
Approved By: jhb (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13936
Make XICS to be OPAL-aware.
Created by: Nathan Whitehorn <nwhitehorn@freebsd.org>
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Some PowerQUICC and QorIQ platforms have a L2 cache managed via the
memory-mapped configuration registers, and appear as a node in the device
tree. This adds basic support to enable the cache.
userspace to control NUMA policy administratively and programmatically.
Implement domainset based iterators in the page layer.
Remove the now legacy numa_* syscalls.
Cleanup some header polution created by having seq.h in proc.h.
Reviewed by: markj, kib
Discussed with: alc
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Netflix, Dell/EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13403
Provide initial support for PCIe host controller as
well as for IOMMU mapping. This commit allows proper
bus enumeration, but does not guarantee DMA operations
are working.
Created by: Nathan Whitehorn <nwhitehorn@freebsd.org>
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
For each we need to walk the MADT to find which we have, then add the
driver as needed. As each may have a child they will each walk the same
table to find these details.
Reviewed by: mmel
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8720
This adds a new acpi_bus interface with a map_intr method. This is similar
to the Open Firmware map_intr method and allows us to create the needed
mapping from ACPI space to INTRNG space.
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8617
OPAL is a dedicated firmware acting as a hypervisor.
Add generic functions to provide all access.
Created by: Nathan Whitehorn <nw@freebsd.org>
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@freebsd.org>
Iwasaki-san's copyright over. Remove FIXME code that couldn't possibly
work. Call tc_settime() with our estimate of the delta we've been
alseep (the one we print) to adjust the time. Not sure what to do
about callouts, so keep the small #ifdef in place there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13823
Add an implementation of the intrinsics invoked by __builtin_ctz{,ll} and
__builtin_clz{,ll}, and include this compilation unit on platforms that lack
assembly intrinsics for those builtins (MIPS and RISC-V).
Future cleanup work might involve bringing these into a mini libcompiler-rt
for the standalone kernel environment. Or cleaning up the approach upstream
takes for builtins in standalone environments (or just FreeBSD). For now,
at least this builds, and doesn't require modifying the vendor code.
Reported by: jeff, markj, mizhka
Reviewed by: jhb (earlier version), rpokala (comment text earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Disable Zstd experimental support for __BMI__ intrinsics, when built with
-march=foo supporting such intrinsics, to avoid attempting to include
immintrin.h. If a later Zstd marks the support non-experimental, we may want
to revisit this approach.
Submitted by: jkim
Reported by: jkim, "Oliver Hartmann" <ohartmann AT walstatt.org>
a mask and value to compare with the Main ID Register. If these match then a
function is called to handle the installation of the erratum workaround.
No errata are currently handled, however this will change soon in a future
commit.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
By disabling the -Winline warning. Fixes the powerpc and sparc64 build
after r327706.
Note: MIPS and RISCV builds still broken due to absense of __ctzdi2 (aka
__builtin_ctzll) in their libgcc or libcompiler-rt libraries.
Reported by: markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
We currently use a set of subroutines in kern_gzio.c to perform
compression of user and kernel core dumps. In the interest of adding
support for other compression algorithms (zstd) in this role without
complicating the API consumers, add a simple compressor API which can be
used to select an algorithm.
Also change the (non-default) GZIO kernel option to not enable
compressed user cores by default. It's not clear that such a default
would be desirable with support for multiple algorithms implemented,
and it's inconsistent in that it isn't applied to kernel dumps.
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13632
Mock userspace headers and include mocked headers first in compilation
command to inject kernel headers and override e.g., malloc(3) with
malloc(9).
Submitted by: allanjude
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), bapt (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10407
The emac bindings that are landing in Linux 4.15 specify a syscon property
on the emac node that point to /soc/syscon. Use this property if it's
specified, but maintain backwards compatibility with the old method.
The older method is still used for boards that we get .dtb from u-boot, such
as pine64, that did not yet have stable emac bindings.
Tested on: Banana Pi-M3 (a83t)
Tested on: Pine64 (a64)
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13296
Enable the hardclock-based watchdog previously conditional on the
SW_WATCHDOG option whenever hardware watchdogs are not found, and
watchdogd attempts to enable the watchdog. The SW_WATCHDOG option
still causes the sofware watchdog to be enabled even if there is a
hardware watchdog. This does not change the other software-based
watchdog enabled by the --softtimeout option to watchdogd.
Note that the code to reprime the watchdog during kernel core dumps is
no longer conditional on SW_WATCHDOG. I think this was previously a bug.
Reviewed by: imp alfred bjk
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13713
These are intended for debugging purposes and should not be added to
"generic" kernel configurations since they result in a nontrivial amount
of memory being set aside for this purpose, can break if kernel modules are
unloaded, and can potentially leak a dangerous amount of information about
timestamps used as a source of kernel entropy.
The ep(4) driver is the only consumer of the two functions from
elink.c. I removed the standalone module as well, and most likely,
the module metadata is not needed anywhere, but this is for later
cleanup.
Discussed with: imp, jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The i386 FPU (AKA npx) code does not depend on ISA devices at all,
after the support for IRQ13 FPU exceptions was removed. Put the file
into the expected place in the kernel source tree.
Discussed with: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
files that can use the default value.
It used to be required that the low-order bits of KERNVIRTADDR matched
the low-order bits of the physical load address for all arm platforms.
That hasn't been a requirement for armv6 platforms since FreeBSD 10.
There is no longer any relationship between load addr and KERNVIRTADDR
except that both must be aligned to a 2 MiB boundary.
This change makes the default KERNVIRTADDR value 0xc0000000, and removes the
options from all the platforms that can use the default value. The default
is now defined in vmparam.h, and that file is now included in a few new
places that reference KERNVIRTADDR, since it may not come in via the
forced-include of opt_global.h on the compile command line.
is used as the bootloader on a number of PPC64 platforms. This involves the
following pieces:
- Making the first instruction a valid kernel entry point, since kexec
ignores the ELF entry value. This requires a separate section and linker
magic to prevent the linker from filling the beginning of the section
with stubs.
- Adding an entry point at 0x60 past the first instruction for systems
lacking firmware CPU shutdown support (notably PS3).
- Linker script changes to support the above.
MFC after: 1 month
draft of a never-finalized standard (CHRP) and is irrelevant in practice
on FreeBSD since we load the kernel with loader(8) on Open Firmware
platforms anyway. Moreover, loader(8), which is directly loaded by Open
Firmware, has never had an equivalent note.
MFC after: 2 weeks
kernel VA mapping in the temporary page tables set up by locore-v6.S.
The number used to be hard-coded to 64MB, which is still the default if
the kernel option is not specified. However, 64MB is insufficient for
using a large mdroot filesystem. The hard-coded number can't be safely
increased because too large a number may run into memory-mapped IO space
on some SoCs that must not be mapped as ordinary memory.
to ipfw in https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/326233,
a dependency on the SCTP stack was added to ipfw by accident.
This was noted by Kevel Bowling in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13594
where also a solution was suggested. This patch is based on Kevin's
suggestion, but implements the required SCTP checksum computation
without any dependency on other SCTP sources.
While there, do some cleanups and improve comments.
Thanks to Kevin Kevin Browling for reporting the issue and suggesting
a fix.
This should help reduce confusion between syscon/syscons a little bit.
syscon is a resource generally modeled by FDT platforms, and not to be
confused with syscons.
Allow more flexibility by kobj'ifying syscon and splitting out fdt specific
bits in preparation of a move to the extres framework.
The generic fdt driver has been moved to syscon_generic.c and the fdt
requirement has been removed from the syscon interface, as is common to the
extres framework.
Reviewed by: strejda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13521
MD_READONLY flag for the md device automatically instantiated during
kernel init for an mdroot filesystem.
Note that there is specifically and by design no tunable or sysctl
control over this feature. Without this option, you already have control
over whether the mdroot fs is writeable using vfs.root.mountfrom.options
from loader(8), the root_rw_mount rcvar, and by using "mount -u[rw] /"
or equivelent on the fly. This option is being added to provide a way
to make the mdroot fs truly immutable before userland code begins running.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13411
Initial update to the ixgbe PF and VF drivers to support the iflib interface.
The PF driver version is bumped to 4.0.0, and the VF driver version is bumped to 2.0.0.
Special thanks to sbruno@ for the support in helping make this conversion happen.
Submitted by: Jeb Cramer <cramerj@intel.com>, Krzysztof Galazka (Chris) <krzysztof.galazka@intel.com>, Piotr Pietruszewski <piotr.pietruszewski@intel.com>
Reviewed by: sbruno@, shurd@, #IntelNetworking
Tested by: Jeffrey Pieper <jeffrey.e.pieper@intel.com>, Sergey Kozlov <kozlov.sergey.404@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks, Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11727
applied relocation offset in link_elf.c works as intended. We may want to
revisit how that works in future, for example by having elf_reloc_self()
actually store the numbers it is using rather than computing them later,
but this fixes symbol lookup after r326203.
Reported by: andreast@
Pointy hat to: me
Upstream dts for allwinner will require a syscon driver, since the emac node
coming in 4.15 will be using xref to /soc/syscon for configuring the emac
clock. Add a generic syscon driver to attach to /soc/syscon for use by
if_awg, providing basic read/write functionality to consumers.
syscon driver will also be used by arm64 at least for A64+H5 emac/if_awg.
Written by: mmel
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13295
This option was used in the early days to allow performance measurements
extrapolating the use of SCTP checksum offloading. Since this feature
is now available, get rid of this option.
This also un-breaks the LINT kernel. Thanks to markj@ for making me
aware of the problem.