correctly tell CAM to requeue the command and then freeze it's queue. The
problem was that when resources became available again, it wouldn't tell
CAM to unfreeze it's queue, so no more commands would ever be delivered.
This is simialr to the bug that was fixed in the cciss driver last year.
This is a bug in 4-STABLE also, but is probably masked by the OS being
fast enough to drain the completion queue before it fills up.
Also add some diagnostics avaialble when compiled with MLY_DEBUG.
Thanks very much to LSI Corp for donating equipment to track this down,
and Vaidus Damosevicius for pestering me long enough to get it fixed.
We may actually be increasing Giant contention doing so because the
actual stuff we do is very cheap.
Also I am not convinced there is not a tiny window for a race here.
Sync with userland test framework which now deals better with pcm feeder kobj
emulation.
Reduce max rate from 96kHz to 48kHz as userland tests found a few bad
points about 90kHz and we don't care about operating up there for now.
pam_wheel(8) module was written to work in spite of a broken libpam, and
has grown organically since its inception, which is reflected in both its
functionality and implementation. Rather than clean up pam_wheel(8) and
break backward compatibility, I've chosen to reimplement it under a new,
more generic name.
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
DDB when the interrupt button (aka the "programmer's switch") is pressed.
This isn't unfortunately an NMI, but it's a handy way to get into DDB
quickly if needed.
- Move the command timeout check from a separate repeating timeout to the
kthread since the kthread is already running periodically.
- Move printing the hardware print buffer to the kthread.
- Properly shut down the kernel thread on detach.
- Detach the child array devices on detach.
- Don't issue a controller halt command on detach. Doing so requires a PCI
reset to wake the controller back up. The driver can now be unloaded as
long as CAM support is not enabled.
similar patch has been in 4.x for a while, but is more hacky there.)
For this to work, vinum has to be loaded early (e. g. from
boot/loader), for obvious reasons. If the kernel env variable
(aka. loader variable) "vinum.autostart" is set, vinum then asks the
sysctl kern.disks for all available disks in the system, and scans
them for possible vinum headers.
For statically compiled kernels, this behaviour can be obtained even
without boot/loader by using "options VINUM_AUTOSTART" (though this is
not the recommended way).
Alternatively, the 4.x way to specify "vinum.drives" is also supported.
No further hacks (like the 4.x "vinum.root" variable) are needed,
since in 5.x, mountroot() asks back at the drivers to have them
resolve the name of the root FS into a dev_t (using the dev_clone
eventhandler).
(The MFC reminder below is for a partial MFC for vinum.autostart, the
rest is already there in 4.x.)
Timed out on: grog
MFC after: 2 weeks