enabled use an updated timestamp instead of reusing the one used in
the initial TCP SYN-ACK segment.
This patch ensures that an updated timestamp is used when sending the
SYN-ACK from the syncache code. It was already done if the
SYN-ACK was retransmitted from the generic code.
This makes the behaviour consistent and also conformant with
the TCP specification.
Reviewed by: jtl@, Jason Eggleston
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Neflix, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15634
Each clock drivers if now fully subclassed, this have the advantage that
we can control the probe order.
Some clocks can have parents from other drivers, for example clocks in the
sun8i_r driver uses clocks from the main clock driver.
This worked before because the sun8i_r node is after the main ccu node in the
dtb and driver are probed in DTB order. This cannot work with the Display
Engine clocks as it is the first node in the DTB.
Tested on: A83T, H5 A64
Tested on: A20 (kevans)
Only the first device will print
coretemp0: <CPU On-Die Thermal Sensors> numa-domain 0 on cpu0
instead of all hyper threads
Submitted by: kbowling
Reviewed by: imp, sbruno
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15727
- Filter out PRS_NEW procs as rufetch() tries taking the thread lock
which may not yet be initialized.
- Hold PROC_LOCK to ensure stability of iterating the threads.
- p_rux fields are protected by the process statlock as well.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15809
The break() system call was renamed (several times) starting in v3
AT&T UNIX when C was invented and break was a language keyword. The
last vestage of a need for it to be called something else (eg obreak)
was removed in r225617 which consistantly prefixed all syscall
implementations.
Reviewed by: emaste, kib (older version)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15638
regnode::enable_cnt is generally used to refcount regulator nodes. For
GPIOs, the refcount was done on the gpio_entry since more than one regulator
can share a GPIO.
GPIO regulators were not taking part in the node refcount, since they had
their own mechanism. This caused some fallout after manu started disabling
everybody's unused regulators in r331989.
Refcount it.
Glanced over by: manu
If fault started before vmspace_fork() locked the map, and then during
fork, vm_map_copy_entry()->vm_object_split() is executed, it is
possible that the fault instantiate the page into the original object
when the page was already copied into the new object (see
vm_map_split() for the orig/new objects terminology). This can happen
if split found a busy page (e.g. from the fault) and slept dropping
the objects lock, which allows the swap pager to instantiate
read-behind pages for the fault. Then the restart of the scan can see
a page in the scanned range, where it was already copied to the upper
object.
Fix it by instantiating the read-ahead pages before
swap_pager_getpages() method drops the lock to allocate pbuf. The
object scan would see the whole range prefilled with the busy pages
and not proceed the range.
Note that vm_fault rechecks the map generation count after the object
unlock, so that it restarts the handling if raced with split, and
re-lookups the right page from the upper object.
In collaboration with: alc
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
r329104 imported 4.15 DTS which brought CCU to a10/a20. In the process, they
swapped the ordering of 'clocks' for allwinner,sun4i-a10-ahci on both
sun4i-a10 and sun7i-a20 from PLL, Gate to Gate, PLL.
Swap it in the driver.
Note: At this time, this has only been tested on a single board from one of
the supported SoCs. This is enough to boot the board from MMC and have
functional USB- which is still an improvement over where we were at just
before with no functional clocks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15810
This happens in two cases for a20 clocks:
pll_core for 'n' factor:
factor=0, val=1
factor=n, val=n
ahb divisor:
factor=0,val=/2
factor=n,val=/2^n
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15806
PowerISA 3.0 makes several changes to not only the format of the HPT but
also the behavior surrounding it. For instance, TLBIE no longer requires
serialization. Removing this lock cuts buildworld time in half on a
18-core/72-thread POWER9 system, demonstrating that this lock is highly
contended on such a system.
There was odd behavior observed trying to make this change in a
backwards-compatible manner in moea64_native.c, so the best option was to
fully split it, and largely revert the original changes adding POWER9
support to the original file.
Suggested by: nwhitehorn
The timer present in allwinner A64 SoC is unstable, value can jump backward
or forward.
It was found that when bit 11 and upper roll over the low bits can sometimes
being read as all as 1 or all as 0.
Simply ignore the values for those cases.
Probing host aware and host managed SMR drives got broken in revision
330796.
The added cam_periph_lock() calls were in areas in dadone() where
the peripheral lock was already held.
Since then, dadone() has been split into separate functions that are
dedicated to each probe state.
The result is that when probing a host aware drive, I ran into a recursive
lock acquisition in dadone_probeatalogdir(). I would have run into the
same problem in dadone_probeataiddir(), and in dadone_probeatasup() and
dadone_probeatazone() in the error paths had the probe continued.
The solution is to take out all of the extra cam_periph_lock() calls. I
also added cam_periph_assert(periph, MA_OWNED) near the top of each of
the dadone_* calls. These make it clear to anyone coming along in the
the future that the lock is held in the probe done functions.
Also add a locking assert in daprobedone(), to make it clear that it must
be called with the periph lock held.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15764
On very large memory systems 'size' can become 2GB or larger, resulting in a
negative value being formatted. Also, moea64_pteg_count is already a long, so
format it as such.
It is better to try allocate a big mbuf, than just silently drop a big
packet. A better solution could be reworking of libalias modules to be
able use m_copydata()/m_copyback() instead of requiring the single
contiguous buffer.
PR: 229006
MFC after: 1 week
Give up and remove the almost useless informational message reporting
that device not available exception occured while our state tracking
indicates the current CPU has FPU context loaded for the current
thread.
It seems that this is recurring bug with some VM monitors.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Four functions nfscl_reqstart(), nfscl_fillsattr(), nfsm_stateidtom()
and nfsmnt_mdssession() are now called from within the nfsd.
As such, they needed to be moved from nfscl.ko to nfscommon.ko so that
nfsd.ko would load when nfscl.ko wasn't loaded.
Reported by: herbert@gojira.at
It is possible that ifma_protospec becomes NULL in this function for
some entry, but it is still referenced and thus it will not unlinked
from the list. Then "restart" condition triggers and this entry with
NULL ifma_protospec will lead to page fault.
PR: 228982
This controller have a special mode for RX to help with smbus-like transfer
when the controller will automatically send the slave address, register address
and read the data. Use it when possible.
The same mode for TX is describe is the datasheet but is broken and have been
since ~10 years of presence of this controller in RockChip SoCs.
Attach this driver early at we need it to communicate with the PMIC early in the
boot.
Do not hook it to the kernel build for now.
Add driver for the designware ethernet controller found in some RockChip SoCs.
The driver still rely on a lot of things setup by the bootloader like clocks
and phy mode.
But since netbooting is the only/easiest way to boot rockchip board at the
moment add the driver so other people can test/dev on thoses boards.
This was omitted in r334112 and r334996 which cause the PLL to not correctly
reparent, leaving the armclk to be derived from the APLL instead of the NPLL.
The arm core clock is now correctly set to 600Mhz via the assigned-clock present
in the DTB.
RockChip PLL have two modes controlled by a register, a "slow mode" (the
default one) where the frequency is derived from the 24Mhz oscillator on the
board, and a "normal" one when the pll take it's input from the real PLL output.
Default the mode to normal for all the PLLs.
This is the only node we are interested in so do not waste time to test
creating device that will be either unused or fail as most of the nodes
don't have a compatible string.
Rack with respect to its handling of TCP Fast Open. Several
fixes all related to TFO are included in this commit:
1) Handling of non-TFO retransmissions
2) Building the proper send-map when we are doing TFO
3) Dealing with the ack that comes back that includes the
SYN and data.
It appears that with this commit TFO now works :-)
Thanks Larry for all your help!!
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15758
Mark the PNP table, but still need to handle the CLASS / SUBCLASS /
REVID matching.
Reviewed by: imp, chuck
Submitted by: Lakhan Shiva Kamireddy <lakhanshiva@gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Google, Inc. (GSoC 2018)
With compilers making increasing use of vector instructions the
performance benefit of lazily switching FPU state is no longer a
desirable tradeoff. Linux switched to eager FPU context switch some
time ago, and the idea was floated on the FreeBSD-current mailing list
some years ago[1].
Enable eager FPU context switch by default on amd64, with a tunable/sysctl
available to turn it back off.
[1] https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2015-March/055198.html
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Most kernel memory that is allocated after boot does not need to be
executable. There are a few exceptions. For example, kernel modules
do need executable memory, but they don't use UMA or malloc(9). The
BPF JIT compiler also needs executable memory and did use malloc(9)
until r317072.
(Note that a side effect of r316767 was that the "small allocation"
path in UMA on amd64 already returned non-executable memory. This
meant that some calls to malloc(9) or the UMA zone(9) allocator could
return executable memory, while others could return non-executable
memory. This change makes the behavior consistent.)
This change makes malloc(9) return non-executable memory unless the new
M_EXEC flag is specified. After this change, the UMA zone(9) allocator
will always return non-executable memory, and a KASSERT will catch
attempts to use the M_EXEC flag to allocate executable memory using
uma_zalloc() or its variants.
Allocations that do need executable memory have various choices. They
may use the M_EXEC flag to malloc(9), or they may use a different VM
interfact to obtain executable pages.
Now that malloc(9) again allows executable allocations, this change also
reverts most of r317072.
PR: 228927
Reviewed by: alc, kib, markj, jhb (previous version)
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15691
Allow one to implement a 'car limit' for
bioq_disksort. debug.bioq_batchsize sets the size of car limit. Every
time we queue that many requests, we start over so that we limit the
latency for requests when the software queue depths are large. A value
of '0', the default, means to revert to the old behavior.
Sponsored by: Netflix
to call into the firmware in a similar way to the existing PSCI, and used
PSCI to detect when SMCCC is enabled.
There is a function ID space we can use. Currently we only support 3
functions in the ARM Architecture Calls region, however it is expected we
will expend these in the future.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Due to a copy/paste error in r168688, ARG_TERMID_ADDR has the same
definition as ARG_SADDRUNIX. Fix it.
The header change, while publicly visible, is guarded by #ifdef KERNEL, and
I can't find any kmod ports that use it. So I'm not bumping
__FreeBSD_version.
PR: 228820
Submitted by: aniketp
Sponsored by: Google, Inc. (GSoC 2018)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15702
the old encodings for the lower 16 and 32 bits and only using the
higher 32 bits for unusually large major and minor numbers. This
change breaks compatibility with the previous encoding (which was only
used in -current).
Fix truncation to (essentially) 16-bit dev_t in newnfs v3.
Any encoding of device numbers gives an ABI, so it can't be changed
without translations for compatibility. Extra bits give the much
larger complication that the translations need to compress into fewer
bits. Fortunately, more than 32 bits are rarely needed, so
compression is rarely needed except for 16-bit linux dev_t where it
was always needed but never done.
The previous encoding moved the major number into the top 32 bits.
Almost no translation code handled this, so the major number was blindly
truncated away in most 32-bit encodings. E.g., for ffs, mknod(8) with
major = 1 and minor = 2 gave dev_t = 0x10000002; ffs cannot represent
this and blindly truncated it to 2. But if this mknod was run on any
released version of FreeBSD, it gives dev_t = 0x102. ffs can represent
this, but in the previous encoding it was not decoded, giving major = 0,
minor = 0x102.
The presence of bugs was most obvious for exporting dev_t's from an
old system to -current, since bugs in newnfs augment them. I fixed
oldnfs to support 32-bit dev_t in 1996 (r16634), but this regressed
to 16-bit dev_t in newnfs, first to the old 16-bit encoding and then
further in -current. E.g., old ad0 with major = 234, minor = 0x10002
had the correct (major, minor) number on the wire, but newnfs truncated
this to (234, 2) and then the previous encoding shifted the major
number into oblivion as seen by ffs or old applications.
I first tried to fix this by translating on every ABI/API boundary, but
there are too many boundaries and too many sloppy translations by blind
truncation. So use the old encoding for the low 32 bits so that sloppy
translations work no worse than before provided the high 32 bits are
not set. Add some error checking for when bits are lost. Keep not
doing any error checking for translations for almost everything in
compat/linux.
compat/freebsd32/freebsd32_misc.c:
Optionally check for losing bits after possibly-truncating assignments as
before.
compat/linux/linux_stats.c:
Depend on the representation being compatible with Linux's (or just with
itself for local use) and spell some of the translations as assignments in
a macro that hides the details.
fs/nfsclient/nfs_clcomsubs.c:
Essentially the same fix as in 1996, except there is now no possible
truncation in makedev() itself. Also fix nearby style bugs.
kern/vfs_syscalls.c:
As for freebsd32. Also update the sysctl description to include file
numbers, and change it to describe device ids as device numbers.
sys/types.h:
Use inline functions (wrapped by macros) since the expressions are now
a bit too complicated for plain macros. Describe the encoding and
some of the reasons for it. 16-bit compatibility didn't leave many
reasonable choices for the 32-bit encoding, and 32-bit compatibility
doesn't leave many reasonable choices for the 64-bit encoding. My
choice is to put the 8 new minor bits in the low 8 bits of the top 32
bits. This minimizes discontiguities.
Reviewed by: kib (except for rewrite of the comment in linux_stats.c)
of needed interface when many gre interfaces are present.
Remove rmlock from gre_softc, use epoch(9) and CK_LIST instead.
Move more AF-related code into AF-related locations. Use hash table to
speedup lookup of needed softc.
This fixes the race when first core sets up the pagetables, while
secondary cores do translating the address of __riscv_boot_ap.
This now allows us to smpboot in QEMU with 8 cores just fine.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
of 64-bit dev_t's (but not ones involving dev_t's).
st_size was supposed to be clamped in cvtstat() and linux's copy_stat(),
but the clamping code wasn't aware that st_size is signed, and also had
an obfuscated off-by-1 value for the unsigned limit, so its effect was
to produce a bizarre negative size instead of clamping.
Change freebsd32's copy_ostat() to be no worse than cvtstat(). It was
missing clamping and bzero()ing of padding.
Reviewed by: kib (except a final fix of the clamp to the signed maximum)
Some casts from pointers to uint64_t and back in lio_main.c cause base
gcc on i386 to warn "cast from pointer to integer of different size",
and vice versa. Add additional casts to uintptr_t to suppress these.
Reviewed by: sbruno
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15754
When hash table lookups are not serialized with in_pcbfree it will be
possible for callers to find an inpcb that has been marked free. We
need to check for this and return NULL.
without this and running vnets with a TCP stack that uses
some of the features is a recipe for panic (without this commit).
Reported by: Larry Rosenman
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15757
Deferring the actual free of the inpcb until after a grace
period has elapsed will allow us to convert the inpcbinfo
info and hash read locks to epoch.
Reviewed by: gallatin, jtl
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15510
Generating the pnp info have the side effect to include all nodes even
if the status isn't "okay".
That means that loading the module will load but not attach as it checks
the status in the probe function.
On pine64 before :
root@pine64-lts:~ # devmatch -u
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=memory
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=chosen
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=sound_spdif compat=simple-audio-card
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=spdif-out compat=linux,spdif-dit
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=dma-controller@1c02000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-dma
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=mmc@1c10000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-mmc
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=usb@1c19000 compat=allwinner,sun8i-a33-musb
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=spdif@1c21000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-spdif
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2s@1c22000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-i2s
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2s@1c22400 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-i2s
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c28400 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c28800 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c28c00 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c29000 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2c@1c2ac00 compat=allwinner,sun6i-a31-i2c
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2c@1c2b000 compat=allwinner,sun6i-a31-i2c
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2c@1c2b400 compat=allwinner,sun6i-a31-i2c
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=aliases
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=symbols
All simplebus node are disabled
After :
root@pine64-lts:~ # devmatch -u
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=memory
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=chosen
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=sound_spdif compat=simple-audio-card
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=spdif-out compat=linux,spdif-dit
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=dma-controller@1c02000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-dma
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=usb@1c19000 compat=allwinner,sun8i-a33-musb
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=aliases
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=symbols
Reviewed by: imp (with some objection)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15770
There is a type promotion that transform count = -1 into a unsigned int causing
the default TCE SEG SIZE not being returned on a Boston POWER9 machine.
This machine does not have the 'ibm,supported-tce-sizes' entries, thus, count
is set to -1, and the function continue to execute instead of returning.
Reviewed by: jhibbits, wma
Approved by: jhibbits (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15763
This code merge adds a pNFS service to the NFSv4.1 server. Although it is
a large commit it should not affect behaviour for a non-pNFS NFS server.
Some documentation on how this works can be found at:
http://people.freebsd.org/~rmacklem/pnfs-planb-setup.txt
and will hopefully be turned into a proper document soon.
This is a merge of the kernel code. Userland and man page changes will
come soon, once the dust settles on this merge.
It has passed a "make universe", so I hope it will not cause build problems.
It also adds NFSv4.1 server support for the "current stateid".
Here is a brief overview of the pNFS service:
A pNFS service separates the Read/Write oeprations from all the other NFSv4.1
Metadata operations. It is hoped that this separation allows a pNFS service
to be configured that exceeds the limits of a single NFS server for either
storage capacity and/or I/O bandwidth.
It is possible to configure mirroring within the data servers (DSs) so that
the data storage file for an MDS file will be mirrored on two or more of
the DSs.
When this is used, failure of a DS will not stop the pNFS service and a
failed DS can be recovered once repaired while the pNFS service continues
to operate. Although two way mirroring would be the norm, it is possible
to set a mirroring level of up to four or the number of DSs, whichever is
less.
The Metadata server will always be a single point of failure,
just as a single NFS server is.
A Plan B pNFS service consists of a single MetaData Server (MDS) and K
Data Servers (DS), all of which are recent FreeBSD systems.
Clients will mount the MDS as they would a single NFS server.
When files are created, the MDS creates a file tree identical to what a
single NFS server creates, except that all the regular (VREG) files will
be empty. As such, if you look at the exported tree on the MDS directly
on the MDS server (not via an NFS mount), the files will all be of size 0.
Each of these files will also have two extended attributes in the system
attribute name space:
pnfsd.dsfile - This extended attrbute stores the information that
the MDS needs to find the data storage file(s) on DS(s) for this file.
pnfsd.dsattr - This extended attribute stores the Size, AccessTime, ModifyTime
and Change attributes for the file, so that the MDS doesn't need to
acquire the attributes from the DS for every Getattr operation.
For each regular (VREG) file, the MDS creates a data storage file on one
(or more if mirroring is enabled) of the DSs in one of the "dsNN"
subdirectories. The name of this file is the file handle
of the file on the MDS in hexadecimal so that the name is unique.
The DSs use subdirectories named "ds0" to "dsN" so that no one directory
gets too large. The value of "N" is set via the sysctl vfs.nfsd.dsdirsize
on the MDS, with the default being 20.
For production servers that will store a lot of files, this value should
probably be much larger.
It can be increased when the "nfsd" daemon is not running on the MDS,
once the "dsK" directories are created.
For pNFS aware NFSv4.1 clients, the FreeBSD server will return two pieces
of information to the client that allows it to do I/O directly to the DS.
DeviceInfo - This is relatively static information that defines what a DS
is. The critical bits of information returned by the FreeBSD
server is the IP address of the DS and, for the Flexible
File layout, that NFSv4.1 is to be used and that it is
"tightly coupled".
There is a "deviceid" which identifies the DeviceInfo.
Layout - This is per file and can be recalled by the server when it
is no longer valid. For the FreeBSD server, there is support
for two types of layout, call File and Flexible File layout.
Both allow the client to do I/O on the DS via NFSv4.1 I/O
operations. The Flexible File layout is a more recent variant
that allows specification of mirrors, where the client is
expected to do writes to all mirrors to maintain them in a
consistent state. The Flexible File layout also allows the
client to report I/O errors for a DS back to the MDS.
The Flexible File layout supports two variants referred to as
"tightly coupled" vs "loosely coupled". The FreeBSD server always
uses the "tightly coupled" variant where the client uses the
same credentials to do I/O on the DS as it would on the MDS.
For the "loosely coupled" variant, the layout specifies a
synthetic user/group that the client uses to do I/O on the DS.
The FreeBSD server does not do striping and always returns
layouts for the entire file. The critical information in a layout
is Read vs Read/Writea and DeviceID(s) that identify which
DS(s) the data is stored on.
At this time, the MDS generates File Layout layouts to NFSv4.1 clients
that know how to do pNFS for the non-mirrored DS case unless the sysctl
vfs.nfsd.default_flexfile is set non-zero, in which case Flexible File
layouts are generated.
The mirrored DS configuration always generates Flexible File layouts.
For NFS clients that do not support NFSv4.1 pNFS, all I/O operations
are done against the MDS which acts as a proxy for the appropriate DS(s).
When the MDS receives an I/O RPC, it will do the RPC on the DS as a proxy.
If the DS is on the same machine, the MDS/DS will do the RPC on the DS as
a proxy and so on, until the machine runs out of some resource, such as
session slots or mbufs.
As such, DSs must be separate systems from the MDS.
Tested by: james.rose@framestore.com
Relnotes: yes
an IPI.
This does not work however yet in QEMU. As a temporary workaround set
software interrupt pending bit manually on a local core to ensure WFI
doesn't halt the hart.
This is required to smpboot in QEMU.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
This is in preperation for supporting newer smccc functions that also use
the same call method.
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15745
linux_vdso.so provides the vdso for the linuxulator's amd64 target and
is mapped into a Linux binary's address space. Thus it should be a
Linux-style .so, which has the ELF OS/ABI unset.
It turns out that ELF Tool Chain elfcopy/objcopy also has a bug where
the OS/ABI field is unset, regardless of the specified --output-target,
so this change is a no-op with the default in-tree toolchain. This is a
real fix when using external binutils, and the ELF Tool Chain bug will
be fixed in the future.
PR: 228934
Sponsored by: Turing Robotic Industries
Parent needs to be the same frequency as the armclk, not twice the freq.
The real divider is incremented by one so write it with - 1
The rate can be at index 0
Pointy Hat To: myself
It was needed only for ia64 where it was implemented as a call to
bswapXX, which was always a real function. htobeXX with a constant
argument is calculated at compile-time everywhere else.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
option.
The BPF code was creating a compiled filter in the common filter-creation
path. However, BPF only uses compiled filters in the read direction.
When creating a write filter, the common filter-creation code was
creating an unneeded write filter and leaking the memory used for that.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
lan78xx_eeprom_read just checked for EEPROM presence then called
lan78xx_eeprom_read_raw if present, and had only one caller. Introduce
lan78xx_eeprom_present to check for EEPROM presence, and use it in the
one place it is needed.
This is used by r334964, which was accidentally committed out-of-order
from my work tree.
Reported by: markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
There were a couple of cases in newnfs_request() that it assumed that it
was an NFSv4.1 mount with a session. This should always be the case when
a Sequence operation is in the reply or the server replies NFSERR_BADSESSION.
However, if a server was broken and sent an erroneous reply, these safety
belt checks should avoid trouble.
The one check required a small tweak to nfsmnt_mdssession() so that it
returns NULL when there is no session instead of the offset of the field
in the structure (0x8 for i386).
This patch should have no effect on normal operation of the client.
Found by inspection during pNFS server development.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differences between LAN7800 and LAN7850 from the driver's perspective:
* The LAN7800 muxes EEPROM signals with LEDs, so LED mode needs to be
disabled when reading/writing EEPROM. The EEPROM is not muxed on the
LAN7850.
* The Linux driver enables automatic duplex and speed detection when
there is no EEPROM, for the LAN7800 only. With this FreeBSD driver
LAN7850-based adapters without a configuration EEPROM fail to link
(with or without the automatic duplex and speed detection code), so
I have just followed the example of the Linux driver for now.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: Microchip (hardware)
- non NULL controlp is not an error, returning EINVAL
would cause X forwarding to fail
- MSG_PEEK and MSG_WAITALL are fairly exceptional, but we still
want to handle them - punt to soreceive_generic
time dependency.
At present, RACK requires the TCPHPTS option to run. However, because
modules can be moved from machine to machine, this dependency is really
best assessed at load time rather than at build time.
Reviewed by: rrs
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15756
Casting from rman_res_t to a pointer results in "cast to pointer from
integer of different size" warnings with base gcc on i386, so print
these without casting. The kva field of struct bxe_bar is of type
vm_offset_t, which can be 32 or 64 bit, so cast it to uintmax_t before
printing.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15733
Because base gcc does not support the required intrinsics, do not
attempt to compile the aesni module with it.
Noticed by: Dan Allen <danallen46@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Base gcc fails to compile sys/dev/drm2/i915/intel_display.c for i386,
with the following -Werror warnings:
cc1: warnings being treated as errors
/usr/src/sys/dev/drm2/i915/intel_display.c:8884: warning:
initialization from incompatible pointer type
This is due to https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=36432, which
incorrectly interprets the [] as a flexible array member.
Because base gcc does not have a -W flag to suppress this particular
warning, it requires a rather ugly cast. To not influence any other
compiler, put it in a #if/#endif block.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15744
Add a few intermediate casts to uintptr_t to suppress "cast to pointer
from integer of different size" warnings from gcc. Also remove a few
incorrect casts.
Reviewed by: ram
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15747
The Flexible File layout case wasn't handled by LayoutRecall callbacks
because it just checked for File layout and returned NFSERR_NOMATCHLAYOUT
otherwise. This patch adds the Flexible File layout handling.
Found during testing of the pNFS server.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This file has only generated a warning for the last 18 months. Its
existence at this point only serves to confuse software looking for
POSIX.1e capabilities and produce actionless warnings.
breakpoint instruction, however this would lose information that may be
useful for debugging.
These are now handled in a similar way to other exceptions, however it
won't exit out of the exception handler until it is known if we can
handle these exceptions in a useful way.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
and also on apic in common and i386 files (except for xen it is optional
only on xenhvm), but it was not ifdefed except on apic in common and i386
files.
This is all that is left from an attempt to build a (sub-)minimal kernel
without any devices. The isa "option" is still used without ifdefs in many
standard files even on amd64. ISAPNP is not optional on at least i386.
ATPIC is not optional on i386 (it is used mainly for Xspuriousint). But
pci is now supposed to be optional on x86.
A call to npxsave() in the exception trampolines was not relocated.
This call to a garbage address usually paniced when made, but it is only
made when the thread has used an FPU recently, and this is not the usual
case.
PR: 228755
Reviewed by: kib
These ioctls are not documented and only stubbed in a few drivers: mse(4),
psm(4) and syscon's sysmouse(4). The only exception is MOUSE_GETVARS
implemented in psm(4)
Given the fact that they were introduced 20 years ago and implementation
has never been completed, remove any related code.
PR: 228718 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15726
These macros were added because they were used by the pNFS server last
year. However, they are no longer used by the pNFS server code and
might as well be deleted.
This is a partial reversion of r326735.
NFSDEV_MIRRORSTR was defined for the pNFS server, but has not been used,
so this patch deletes it. It also cleans up the comment and hopefully
makes it more readable.
when parsing the phy type, however this is included in the length returned
by OF_getprop. To fix this stop ignoring the terminator.
PR: 228828
Reported by: sbruno
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
If a locally generated packet is routed (with route-to/reply-to/dup-to) out of
a different interface it's passed through the firewall again. This meant we
lost the inp pointer and if we required the pointer (e.g. for user ID matching)
we'd deadlock trying to acquire an inp lock we've already got.
Pass the inp pointer along with pf_route()/pf_route6().
PR: 228782
MFC after: 1 week
Since we are setting IFF_UP flag on SIOCSIFADDR, it is possible, that
after this link state information still not initialized properly.
This leads to problems with routing, since now interface has
IFCAP_LINKSTATE capability and a route is considered as working only
when interface's link state is in LINK_STATE_UP (see RT_LINK_IS_UP()
macro).
Reported by: Marek Zarychta
MFC after: 3 days
This caused issues with PASTE. Just remove the reschedule since the DELAY()
should be enough for use cases such as pkt-gen which were failing before the
change.
Reported by: Michio Honda
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Per-cpu zone allocations are very rarely done compared to regular zones.
The intent is to avoid pessimizing the latter case with per-cpu specific
code.
In particular contrary to the claim in r334824, M_ZERO is sometimes being
used for such zones. But the zeroing method is completely different and
braching on it in the fast path for regular zones is a waste of time.
callbacks to perform additional cleanup actions at the time a socket is
closed.
Michio Honda presented a use for this at BSDCan 2018.
(See https://www.bsdcan.org/2018/schedule/events/965.en.html .)
Submitted by: Michio Honda <micchie at sfc.wide.ad.jp> (previous version)
Reviewed by: lstewart (previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15706
With the introduction of pmap_switch(), the DSB instruction on the
address map switch is not necessary executed, which is fixed by
changing the unlock store to release. Also remove comment which
documented pre-pmap_switch() code.
Reviewed by: andrew
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
If we fail noise floor calibration then we may end up with a deaf NIC
which we can't recover without a full chip reset.
Earlier chips seem to get less stuck in this condition versus AR9280/later
and AR9300/later, but whilst here just fix up the AR5212 era chips to also
return NF calibration failures.
This HAL routine would only return failure if the channel was not configured.
This is a no-op until the driver side code for doing resets and the HAL
code for being told about the reset type (and then handling it!) is
implemented.
Tested:
* AR9280, STA mode
* AR2425, STA mode
* AR9380, STA mode
d4a72f2386
During scans (scrubs or resilvers), it sorts the blocks in each transaction
group by block offset; the result can be a significant improvement. (On my
test system just now, which I put some effort to introduce fragmentation into
the pool since I set it up yesterday, a scrub went from 1h2m to 33.5m with the
changes.) I've seen similar rations on production systems.
Approved by: Alexander Motin
Obtained from: ZFS On Linux
Relnotes: Yes (improved scrub performance, with tunables)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15562
Turns out there is code which ends up passing M_ZERO to counters.
Since counters zero unconditionally on their own, just ignore drop the
flag in that place.
pmc_process_interrupt takes 5 arguments when only 3 are needed.
cpu is always available in curcpu and inuserspace can always be
derived from the passed trapframe.
While facially a reasonable cleanup this change was motivated
by the need to workaround a compiler bug.
core2_intr(cpu, tf) ->
pmc_process_interrupt(cpu, ring, pmc, tf, inuserspace) ->
pmc_add_sample(cpu, ring, pm, tf, inuserspace)
In the process of optimizing the tail call the tf pointer was getting
clobbered:
(kgdb) up
at /storage/mmacy/devel/freebsd/sys/dev/hwpmc/hwpmc_mod.c:4709
4709 pmc_save_kernel_callchain(ps->ps_pc,
(kgdb) up
1205 error = pmc_process_interrupt(cpu, PMC_HR, pm, tf,
resulting in a crash in pmc_save_kernel_callchain.
Nothing in the tree uses it and pcpu zones have a fundamentally different use
case than the regular zones - they are not supposed to be allocated and freed
all the time.
This reduces pollution in the allocation fast path.
memset fills the target buffer from a byte-sized value passed in as the
second argument.
The fully-sized (8 bytes) register containing it is named %rsi. Lower 4 bytes
can be referred to as %esi and finally the lowest byte is %sil.
Vast majority of all the callers just zero the target buffer and set it up by
doing xor %esi,%esi which has a side-effect of zeroing the upper parts of
the register as well. Some others do a word-sized move to %esi which has the
same result.
However, there are callers which only fill %sil. This does *not* clear up
the rest of the register.
The value of %rsi is multiplied by $0x0101010101010101 to create a 8-byte sized
pattern for 8-byte stores.
Prior to the patch, the func just blindly took %rsi assuming the unwanted bytes
are zeroed out. Since this is not the case for the callers which only play with
%sil (the rest of the register can have absolutely anything), the resulting
pattern can be garbage.
This has potential for funny bugs. One side effect (which was not amusing)
after enabling it instead of bzero was that the kernel was hanging on boot
as a xen domU.
Reported by: Trond Endrestøl <Trond.Endrestol fagskolen.gjovik.no>
Pointy hat: me
trashing freed memory and checking that allocated memory is properly
trashed, and also of keeping a bitset of freed items. Trashing/checking
creates a lot of CPU cache poisoning, while keeping debugging bitsets
consistent creates a lot of contention on UMA zone lock(s). The performance
difference between INVARIANTS kernel and normal one is mostly attributed
to UMA debugging, rather than to all KASSERT checks in the kernel.
Add loader tunable vm.debug.divisor that allows either to turn off UMA
debugging completely, or turn it on only for a fraction of allocations,
while still running all KASSERTs in kernel. That allows to run INVARIANTS
kernels in production environments without reducing load by orders of
magnitude, but still doing useful extra checks.
Default value is 1, meaning debug every allocation. Value of 0 would
disable UMA debugging completely. Values above 1 enable debugging only
for every N-th item. It isn't possible to strictly follow the number,
but still amount of debugging is reduced roughly by (N-1)/N percent.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15199
Changed excise_initrd_region to support both 32- and 64-bit
values for linux,initrd-start and linux,initrd-end.
This fixes the boot problem on some machines after rS334485.
Submitted by: Luis Pires <lffpires@ruabrasil.org>
Reviewed by: jhibbits, leitao
Approved by: jhibbits (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15667
myriad ways that the various compliers treat this. The
only safe prefetch appears to be for AMD. The other
compilers either are not volatile or are not const :(
Reported by: Michael Tuexen
When we're at our vnode limit, getnewvnode will call into the vnode LRU
cache to free up vnodes. If the vnode we try to recycle is a ZFS vnode we
end up, eventually, in zfs_rmnode. If the ZFS vnode we're recycling
represents something with extended attributes, zfs_rmnode will call
zfs_zget which will attempt to allocate another vnode. If the next vnode we
try to recycle is also a ZFS vnode representing something with extended
attributes we can recurse further. This ends up being unbounded and can end
up overflowing the stack.
In order to avoid this, restructure zfs_rmnode to simply add the extended
attribute directory's object ID to the unlinked set, thus not requiring the
allocation of a vnode. We then schedule a task that calls zfs_unlinked_drain
which will do the work of properly marking the vnodes for unlinking.
zfs_unlinked_drain is also called on mount so these will be cleaned up
there.
Reviewed by: avg, mav
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15342
Rack includes the following features:
- A different SACK processing scheme (the old sack structures are not used).
- RACK (Recent acknowledgment) where counting dup-acks is no longer done
instead time is used to knwo when to retransmit. (see the I-D)
- TLP (Tail Loss Probe) where we will probe for tail-losses to attempt
to try not to take a retransmit time-out. (see the I-D)
- Burst mitigation using TCPHTPS
- PRR (partial rate reduction) see the RFC.
Once built into your kernel, you can select this stack by either
socket option with the name of the stack is "rack" or by setting
the global sysctl so the default is rack.
Note that any connection that does not support SACK will be kicked
back to the "default" base FreeBSD stack (currently known as "default").
To build this into your kernel you will need to enable in your
kernel:
makeoptions WITH_EXTRA_TCP_STACKS=1
options TCPHPTS
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15525
pagetables.
physmap[] can be inconsistent with the physical memory limit due to
buggy bios, or to the hw.physmem tunable. Since bootstrap pagetables
are initialized by accesses through the DMAP, we must ensure that DMAP
really cover the selected pages. This is only relevant when machine
has less than 4G RAM and buggy BIOS, which is the combination on Acer
Chromebook 720.
The call to mp_bootaddress() is moved later to have Maxmem initialized.
An alternative could be to always cover 4G for DMAP, but this change
seems to be simpler.
Reported and tested by: grembo
Reviewed by: royger
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15675
Fix the behavior of ofw_fdt_getprop() and ofw_fdt_getprop() functions to match
the documentation as the non-fdt code.
Submitted by: Luis Pires <lffpires@ruabrasil.org>
Reviewed by: manu, jhibbits
Approved by: jhibbits (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15680
Expected NMI-s are those than are either generated by the software (such
as a CPU sending NMI to other CPU) or generated by the hardware after
the software configured it to do so (such as NMI-s on PMC events).
Some unexpected NMI-s can be caused by hardware failures and it is
possible to inquire the hardware about them (somewhat like MCA but much
more primitive) using an EISA mechanism. In some cases the origin of
the NMI can remain truly unknown.
This commit should not change any functionality. It just reorganizes
the code, so that it is easier to extend with new checks for the origin
of the NMI. Also, it frees the code that has nothing to do with ISA
from DEV_ISA.
MFC after: 3 weeks
On PowerNV systems, the rootfs is passed through kexec, which loads the rootfs
into memory and set two fdt entries to describe where the file is located in
the memory;
I need to pass this memory region to the md device as a mfs_root, but, current
md driver does not support two things:
* Just getting a pointer from an external (bootloader) memory. If I need to
workaround it, I would need to declare a static array and memcopy from this
external memory to this static variable.
* The size of the image. The usage of mfs_root_end, which is not a pointer,
seems to be not possible for this prestaged scenario.
This patch simply adds a new way to load mfs_root from memory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15625
Approved by: kib, jhibbits (mentor)
ixl(4) (when it switches over to using iflib) devices need the TCP header
length in order to do TCP checksum offload.
Reviewed by: gallatin@, shurd@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15558
controller that tries to handle early invocations of the controller,
in other words, invocations before the expected end of the interval.
However, there were some calculation errors in this early invocation
case. Notably, if an early invocation occurred while the error was
negative, the derivative term was off by a large amount. One visible
effect of this error was that processes were being killed by the
virtual memory system's OOM killer when in fact there was plentiful
free memory.
Correct a couple minor errors in the sysctl descriptions, and apply
some style fixes.
Reviewed by: jeff, markj
- add '-j' options to filter to enable converting native pmc
log format to json lines format to enable the use of scripts
and external tooling
% pmc filter -j pmc.log pmc.jsonl
- Record the tsc value in sampling interrupts as opposed to
recording nanotime when the sample is copied to a global log
in hardclock - potentially many milliseconds later.
- At initialize record the tsc_freq and the time of day to give
us an offset for translating the tsc values in callchain records
Silently dicard SCTP chunks which have been requested to be
authenticated but are received unauthenticated no matter if support
for SCTP authentication has been negotiated. This improves compliance
with RFC 4895.
When the application uses the SCTP_AUTH_CHUNK socket option to
request a chunk to be received in an authenticated way, enable
the SCTP authentication extension for the end-point. This improves
compliance with RFC 6458.
Discussed with: Peter Lei
MFC after: 3 days
While at it rename hlist_add_after() into hlist_add_behind().
Submitted by: Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
This patch adds a new socket option, SO_REUSEPORT_LB, which allow multiple
programs or threads to bind to the same port and incoming connections will be
load balanced using a hash function.
Most of the code was copied from a similar patch for DragonflyBSD.
However, in DragonflyBSD, load balancing is a global on/off setting and can not
be set per socket. This patch allows for simultaneous use of both the current
SO_REUSEPORT and the new SO_REUSEPORT_LB options on the same system.
Required changes to structures:
Globally change so_options from 16 to 32 bit value to allow for more options.
Add hashtable in pcbinfo to hold all SO_REUSEPORT_LB sockets.
Limitations:
As DragonflyBSD, a load balance group is limited to 256 pcbs (256 programs or
threads sharing the same socket).
This is a substantially different contribution as compared to its original
incarnation at svn r332894 and reverted at svn r332967. Thanks to rwatson@
for the substantive feedback that is included in this commit.
Submitted by: Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
Obtained from: DragonflyBSD
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11003
the LinuxKPI. Add a comment saying in which Linux version this change was made.
Submitted by: Johannes Lundberg <johalun0@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks