In particular, do not lock Giant conditionally when calling into the
filesystem module, remove the VFS_LOCK_GIANT() and related
macros. Stop handling buffers belonging to non-mpsafe filesystems.
The VFS_VERSION is bumped to indicate the interface change which does
not result in the interface signatures changes.
Conducted and reviewed by: attilio
Tested by: pho
filters (ipfw and PF) use the same ruleset with the same lock for both
AF_INET and AF_INET6 there is no need in more fine-grade locking.
However, it is possible to request personal lock by specifying
PFIL_FLAG_PRIVATE_LOCK flag in pfil_head structure (see pfil.9 for
more details).
Export PFIL lock via rw_lock(9)/rm_lock(9)-like API permitting pfil consumers
to use this lock instead of own lock. This help reducing locks on main
traffic path.
pfil_assert() is currently not implemented due to absense of rm_assert().
Waiting for some kind of r234648 to be merged in HEAD.
This change is part of bigger patch reducing routing locking.
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Reviewed by: glebius, ae
OK'd by: silence on net@
MFC after: 3 weeks
are using (different) ND-based approach described in RFC 4861. This change
is similar to r241406 which conditionally skips the same check in IPv4.
This change is part of bigger patch eliminating rte locking.
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC.
OK'd by: hrs
MFC after: 2 weeks
Return EPERM if processes were found but they
were unable to be signaled.
Return the first error from p_cansignal if no signal was successful.
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
Return EPERM if processes were found but they
were unable to be signaled.
Return the first error from p_cansignal if no signal was successful.
Reviewed by: jilles
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 week
.. so that consistent compilation algorithms are used for both
architectures as in practice the binaries are expected to be
interchangeable (for time being).
Previously i386 used default setting which were equivalent to
-march=i486 -mtune=generic.
The only difference is using smaller but slower "leave" instructions.
Discussed with: jhb, dim
MFC after: 29 days
output and replace it with a new visible sysctl kern.ipc.acceptqueue
of the same functionality. It specifies the maximum length of the
accept queue on a listen socket.
The old kern.ipc.somaxconn remains available for reading and writing
for compatibility reasons so that existing programs, scripts and
configurations continue to work. There no plans to ever remove the
orginal and now hidden kern.ipc.somaxconn.
The reason for this is that the SPARC v9 architecture allows nested
interrupts of higher priority/level than that of the current interrupt
to occur (and we can't just entirely bypass this model, also, at least
for tick interrupts, this also wouldn't be wise). However, when a
preemption interrupt interrupts another interrupt of lower priority,
f.e. PIL_ITHREAD, and that one in turn is nested by a third interrupt,
f.e. PIL_TICK, with SCHED_ULE the execution of interrupts higher than
PIL_PREEMPT may be migrated to another CPU. In particular, tl1_ret(),
which is responsible for restoring the state of the CPU prior to entry
to the interrupt based on the (also migrated) trap frame, then is run
on a CPU which actually didn't receive the interrupt in question,
causing an inappropriate processor interrupt level to be "restored".
In turn, this causes interrupts of the first level, i.e. PIL_ITHREAD
in the above scenario, to be blocked on the target of the migration
until the correct PIL happens to be restored again on that CPU again.
Making PIL_PREEMPT the lowest real priority, this effectively prevents
this scenario from happening, as preemption interrupts no longer can
interrupt any other interrupt besides stray ones (which is no issue).
Thanks to attilio@ and especially mav@ for helping me to understand
this problem at the 201208DevSummit.
- Give PIL_STOP (which is also used for IPI_STOP_HARD, given that there's
no real equivalent to NMIs on SPARC v9) the highest possible priority
just below the hardwired PIL_TICK, so it has a chance to interrupt
more things.
MFC after: 1 week
... otherwise the current thread might be holding ARC locks and thus run
into a deadlock. This happens, for example, when a thread does memory
allocation in the ARC code and runs into KVA shortage.
Also, it really makes the most sense to wait in pageproc, so that the
results of ARC reclamation are seen before the page cache is acted upon.
In other cases where vm_lowmem is invoked, e.g. on KVA space shortage,
the callers perform multiple attempts (up to 8) and wait for rather
long intervals between them (up to 4 seconds), so ARC reclaim results
should become visible even without explicit waiting on the ARC thread.
Note that this is not a critical issue for typical ZFS usages where KVA
space should already be large enough. On amd64 systems setting KVA size
to twice the physical memory size is known to mitigate KVA fragmentation
issues in practice.
Side note: perhaps vm_lowmem 'how' parameter should be used to
differentiate between causes of the event.
Reported by: Nikolay Denev <ndenev@gmail.com>
MFC after: 19 days
parent adapter's _DOD list, only check the low 16 bits of both _ADR and
_DOD. The language in the ACPI spec seems to indicate that the _ADR values
should exactly match the entries in _DOD. However, I assume that the
masking added to _DOD values was added to work around some known busted
machines (the commit history doesn't indicate either way), and the ACPI
spec does require that the low 16 bits are unique for all video outputs,
so only check the low 16 bits should be fine.
This fixes recognition of video outputs that use the new standardized
device ID scheme in ACPI 3.0 that set bit 31 such as certain Dell laptops.
Tested by: Juergen Lock nox jelal kn-bremen de
MFC after: 3 days
(Model 0x2D /* Per Intel document 253669-044US 08/2012. */)
Add manpage to document all the goodness that is available in this
processor model.
No support for uncore events at this time.
Submitted by: hiren panchasara <hiren.panchasara@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: jimharris@ fabient@
Obtained from: Yahoo! Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks
when running tick_process(), similarly to what the x86 equivalents of
this function do, however employing the less racy sequence also used in
intr_event_handle().
MFC after: 3 days