The main routine takes 8 args, 3 of which are almost the same for most uses.
This in particular pushes it above the limit of 6 arguments passable through
registers on amd64 making it impossible to tail call.
This is a prerequisite for further cleanups.
Tested by: pho
the jtag port, so that a tty is not created for it.
This is based on information in the PR and from the vendor website. When
the PR was first opened we had no facility for flagging the jtag ports. I
stumbled across the still-open PR with the idea of closing it, and noticed
that this wee update was needed.
PR: 175893
Before executing a command in a ddb script ddb prints an information
line of the form:
db:1:my-script> command
where 1 is the script's depth level, "my-script" is the scipt's name,
and "command" is the current command in the script.
db_script_exec() uses its 'scriptname' parameter to produce that string.
In the case when db_script_exec() is called from db_run_cmd() the
argument points to db_tok_string that is a global variable used for
command parsing. So, its value changes with every command executed.
This commit changes the code to use the script's name stored in
ds_scriptname to print the line.
MFC after: 2 weeks
instead of pause() in the msleep() function to avoid rounding errors when
converting delay values forth and back. Add a guard for a delay value
of zero milliseconds which is undefined.
MFC after: 1 week
Requested by: Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
It would have been on an actual named pass before, but none were really
appropriate in name. Move it to the recently created SUPPORTDEV pass, which
perfectly describes it and keeps it in the right order.
Getting regulator is good, enabling them is better.
When the mmc stack decide to change the voltage for IO, don't
change the main vcc of the sd/mmc, only the io vcc.
AXP803 and AXP813/818 are very similar, only two regulators differs.
AXP803 is the companion chip for A64/R18
AXP813 is the companion chip for A83T
AXP818 is the companion chip for H8 (~A83T)
Add support for all regulators found in both of them.
Since that change the system call stack traces look like this:
...
sys___sysctl() at sys___sysctl+0x5f/frame 0xfffffe0028e13ac0
amd64_syscall() at amd64_syscall+0x79b/frame 0xfffffe0028e13bf0
fast_syscall_common() at fast_syscall_common+0x101/frame 0xfffffe0028e13bf0
So, db_nextframe() stopped recognizing the system call frame.
This commit should fix that.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 4 days
The reason for this new pass is :
The earlier pass names are really specific (interrupt, timer, scheduler etc ..)
and making a driver that other device driver (that attach at DEFAULT pass)
needs probe at earlier pass can be confiusing. We can live with GPIO driver
at INTERRUPT pass because they are often an interrupt controller too but having
a usb phy driver probed at RESOURCES (or SCHEDULER for example) is silly.
The number was choosen to have a lot of margin if we want to introduce other
pass in the futur.
Reviewed by: ian, imp, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14568
imcsmb(4) provides smbus(4) support for the SMBus controller functionality
in the integrated Memory Controllers (iMCs) embedded in Intel Sandybridge-
Xeon, Ivybridge-Xeon, Haswell-Xeon, and Broadwell-Xeon CPUs. Each CPU
implements one or more iMCs, depending on the number of cores; each iMC
implements two SMBus controllers (iMC-SMBs).
*** IMPORTANT NOTE ***
Because motherboard firmware or the BMC might try to use the iMC-SMBs for
monitoring DIMM temperatures and/or managing an NVDIMM, the driver might
need to temporarily disable those functions, or take a hardware interlock,
before using the iMC-SMBs. Details on how to do this may vary from board to
board, and the procedure may be proprietary. It is strongly suggested that
anyone wishing to use this driver contact their motherboard vendor, and
modify the driver as described in the manual page and in the driver itself.
(For what it's worth, the driver as-is has been tested on various SuperMicro
motherboards.)
Reviewed by: avg, jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Panasas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14447
Discussed with: avg, ian, jhb
Tested by: allanjude (previous version), Panasas
POSIX explicitly states that the application must declare union semun.
This makes no sense, but it is what it is. This brings us into line
with Linux, MacOS/Darwin, and NetBSD.
In a ports exp-run a moderate number of ports fail due to a lack of
approprate autotools-like discovery mechanisms or local patches. A
commit to address them will follow shortly.
PR: 224300, 224443 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: emaste, jhb, kib
Exp-run by: antoine
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14492
This deliberately breaks the API in preperation for future syscall
revisions which will remove these nonstandard members.
In an exp-run a single port (devel/qemu-user-static) was found to
use them which it did becuase it emulates system calls. This has
been fixed in the ports tree.
PR: 224443 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: kib, jhb (previous version)
Exp-run by: antoine
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRP
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14490
copyout(9) family.
The addresses are user-controllable, and if the process ABI allows
mapping at zero, then the zero address is meaningful, contradicting
the definition of _Nonnull. In any case, it does not require any
special code to handle NULL udaddr.
It is not clear if __restrict makes sense as well, since kaddr and
udaddr point to different address spaces, so equal numeric values of
the pointers do not imply aliasing and a legitimate. But leave it for
later.
copyinstr(9) does not have its user address argument annotated.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week