We should not be leaking these interfaces to the outside world given
that it's much easier for third-party components to use the devel/atf
package from ports.
As a side-effect, we can also drop the ATF pkgconfig and aclocal files
from the base system. Nothing in the base system needs these, and it
was quite ugly to have to get them installed only so that a few ports
could build. The offending ports have been fixed to depend on
devel/atf explicitly.
Reviewed by: bapt
API function 'vie_calculate_gla()'.
While the current implementation is simplistic it forms the basis of doing
segmentation checks if the guest is in 32-bit protected mode.
of the guest linear address space. These APIs in turn use a new ioctl
'VM_GLA2GPA' to convert the guest linear address to guest physical.
Use the new copyin/copyout APIs when emulating ins/outs instruction in
bhyve(8).
taskqueue worker thread(s) to.
For now it isn't a taskqueue/taskthread error to fail to pin
to the given cpuid.
Thanks to rpaulo@, kib@ and jhb@ for feedback.
Tested:
* igb(4), with local RSS patches to pin taskqueues.
TODO:
* ask the doc team for help in documenting the new API call.
* add a taskqueue_start_threads_cpuset() method which takes
a cpuset_t - but this may require a bunch of surgery to
bring cpuset_t into scope.
'struct vm_guest_paging'.
Check for canonical addressing in vmm_gla2gpa() and inject a protection
fault into the guest if a violation is detected.
If the page table walk is restarted in vmm_gla2gpa() then reset 'ptpphys' to
point to the root of the page tables.
indicate the faulting linear address.
If the guest PML4 entry has the PG_PS bit set then inject a page fault into
the guest with the PGEX_RSV bit set in the error_code.
Get rid of redundant checks for the PG_RW violations when walking the page
tables.
memory ordering model allows writes to different devices to complete out
of order, leading to a situation where the write that clears an interrupt
source at a device can complete after a write that unmasks and EOIs the
interrupt at the interrupt controller, leading to a spurious re-interrupt.
This adds a generic barrier function specific to the needs of interrupt
controllers, and calls that function from the GIC and TI AINTC controllers.
There may still be other soc-specific controllers that need to make the call.
Reviewed by: cognet, Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Idle priority is not even time-share, so if system is busy in any way,
those events may never be executed. Since in some cases system waits
for events processed by that thread, that may cause deadlocks.
mode. This allows the binder to be functional in the child after the
fork (assuming no lazy loading of a filter is needed), but other rtld
services which require write lock on rtld_bind_lock cause deadlock, if
called by child.
Change the _rtld_atfork() to lock the bind lock in write mode, making
the rtld fully functional after the fork.
Pre-resolve the symbols which are called by the libthr' fork()
interposer, since dynamic resolution causes deadlock due to the
rtld_bind_lock already owned in the write mode.
Reported and tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
to be consistent with mutex destruction in ipf_log_soft_destroy(). As a
result mutex destruction in ipf_log_soft_fini() is redundant.
Approved by: glebius (mentor)
Obtained from: darrenr (author)
the kmem object lock is held. Do the pmap_remove() before acquiring the
kmem object lock.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Makefiles are evaluated without building things. In a normal build,
the prerequisites would be built, and CC would be an actual thing. In
an INDEX build, though, they don't exists. Redirect stderr to get rid
of annoying messages, and assume that the compiler version is 0 if the
actual compiler can't tell us. Do this in preference to guessing based
on numbers because gcc410 might be 4.10, or 4.1.0 and without
carefully crafted special knowledge we differentiate between them
easily (also ming-gcc has no clues at all). Elsewhere, don't trust
the compiler version if it is 0.
The CUSE library is a wrapper for the devfs kernel functionality which
is exposed through /dev/cuse . In order to function the CUSE kernel
code must either be enabled in the kernel configuration file or loaded
separately as a module. Currently none of the committed items are
connected to the default builds, except for installing the needed
header files. The CUSE code will be connected to the default world and
kernel builds in a follow-up commit.
The CUSE module was written by Hans Petter Selasky, somewhat inspired
by similar functionality found in FUSE. The CUSE library can be used
for many purposes. Currently CUSE is used when running Linux kernel
drivers in user-space, which need to create a character device node to
communicate with its applications. CUSE has full support for almost
all devfs functionality found in the kernel:
- kevents
- read
- write
- ioctl
- poll
- open
- close
- mmap
- private per file handle data
Requested by several people. Also see "multimedia/cuse4bsd-kmod" in
ports.
add a -j option so we can tune the amount of parallel make,
the default we used (-j 8) is large and was giving problems
with SUBDIR_PARALLEL due to some missing dependencies.
the UART FIFO.
The emulation is constrained in a number of ways: 64-bit only, doesn't check
for all exception conditions, limited to i/o ports emulated in userspace.
Some of these constraints will be relaxed in followup commits.
Requested by: grehan
Reviewed by: tychon (partially and a much earlier version)
the proper ICWx initialization sequence. It assumes, probably correctly, that
the boot firmware has done the 8259 initialization.
Since grub-bhyve does not initialize the 8259 this write to the mask register
takes a code path in which 'error' remains uninitialized (ready=0,icw_num=0).
Fix this by initializing 'error' at the start of the function.
problem with broken in-tree builds (which are used far more
pervasively than I'd known outside the tree). However, weird results
may now happen if at any point in the tree above you there happens to
be a directory that has subdirectory of share/mk, as unpredictable
results will follow. This was considered the lessor of the two evils,
at least for now. In the future this will be removed again when the
underlying issues are resolved.
shared flag is set on normal-memory mappings made via pmap_kenter() for SMP.
The "shared flag" part of this change isn't obvious from the diff, here's
the deal... by using the array of preformatted page table entry templates
instead of constructing the PTE from scratch, we automatically get the
right attribute bits set for both caching and shared.
MFC after: 1 week
an embedded newline appearing within the options string surrounded by
double-quotes. Rework the logic that goes into setting dataset options on
the root pool dataset while we're here -- added two new variables (which
can be altered via scripting) ZFSBOOT_POOL_CREATE_OPTIONS and also
ZFSBOOT_BOOT_POOL_CREATE_OPTIONS for setting pool/dataset attributes at
the time of pool creation. The former is for setting options on the root
pool (zroot) and the latter is for setting options on the optional separate
boot pool (bootpool) implicitly enabled when using either GELI or MBR. The
default value for the root pool variable (ZFSBOOT_POOL_CREATE_OPTIONS) is
"-O compress=lz4 -O atime=off" and the default value for separate boot pool
variable (ZFSBOOT_BOOT_POOL_CREATE_OPTIONS) is NULL (no additional options
for the separate boot pool dataset).
Reviewed by: allanjude
MFC after: 7 days
X-MFC-with: r266107-266109