* Fail when the length passed in is 0
* Remove an unneeded increment of the count on success
* Return ENAMETOOLONG when the input pointer is too long
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
mapped address without valid pte installed, when parallel wiring of
the entry happen. The entry must be copy on write. If entry is COW
but was already copied, and parallel wiring set
MAP_ENTRY_IN_TRANSITION, vm_fault() would sleep waiting for the
MAP_ENTRY_IN_TRANSITION flag to clear. After that, the fault handler
is restarted and vm_map_lookup() or vm_map_lookup_locked() trip over
the check. Note that this is race, if the address is accessed after
the wiring is done, the entry does not fault at all.
There is no reason in the current kernel to disallow write access to
the COW wired entry if the entry permissions allow it. Initially this
was done in r24666, since that kernel did not supported proper
copy-on-write for wired text, which was fixed in r199869. The r251901
revision re-introduced the r24666 fix for the current VM.
Note that write access must clear MAP_ENTRY_NEEDS_COPY entry flag by
performing COW. In reverse, when MAP_ENTRY_NEEDS_COPY is set in
vmspace_fork(), the MAP_ENTRY_USER_WIRED flag is cleared. Put the
assert stating the invariant, instead of returning the error.
Reported and debugging help by: peter
Reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Note that to not interfer with finger print it expects a signature on pkg itself
which is named pkg.txz.pubkeysign
To genrate it:
echo -n "$(sha256 -q pkg.txz)" | openssl dgst -sha256 -sign /thekey \
-binary -out ./pkg.txz.pubkeysig
Note the "echo -n" which prevent signing the '\n' one would get otherwise
PR: 202622
MFC after: 1 week
locking and doesn't sleep. Flag the consumer we create as such. In
addition, decrement the in flight index when we have an out of memory
error after having incremented it previously. This would have
prevented swapoff from working if the swap pager ever hit a resource
shortage trying to swap out something (the swap in path always waits
for a bio, so won't have this issue). Simplify the close logic by
abandoning the use of private and initializing the index to 1 and
dropping that reference when we previously set private.
Also, set sw_id only while sw_dev_mtx is held. This should only affect
swapping to a vnode, as opposed to a geom whose close always sets it to
NULL with sw_dev_mtx held.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3547
vendor supplied device trees contain the needed properties for us to select
the correct uart to use as the kernel console.
An example of this would be to add the following to loader.conf.
hw.fdt.console="/smb/uart@f7113000"
The intention of this is slightly different than the existing
hw.uart.console option. The new option will mean the boot serial
configuration will be derived from the device node, while the existing
option expects the user to configure all this themselves.
Further work is planned to allow the uart configuration to be set based on
the stdout-path property devicetree bindings.
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3559
Certain VM guest types (VMware, Xen) do not support MSI, so pci_alloc_msix()
always fails. isci(4) was not properly detecting the allocation failure,
and would try to proceed with MSIx resource initialization rather than
reverting to INTx.
Reported and tested by: Bradley W. Dutton (brad-fbsd-stable@duttonbros.com)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
BIOS always enables PCI busmaster on the isci device, which effectively
worked around this omission. But when passing the isci device through
to a guest VM, the hypervisor will disable busmaster and isci will not
work without calling pci_enable_busmaster().
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
RANDOM_LOADABLE and RANDOM_YARROW's definitions from opt_random.h to
opt_global.h
This unbreaks `make depend` in sys/modules with multiple drivers (tmpfs, etc)
after r286839
X-MFC with: r286839
Reviewed by: imp
Submitted by: lwhsu
Differential Revision: D3486
calling thread is supposed to see accesses issued by the initializer.
This means that the read of the once_control->state variable should
have an acquire semantic. Use atomic_thread_fence_acq() when the
value read is ONCE_DONE, instead of straightforward atomic_load_acq(),
to only put a barrier when needed (*).
On the other hand, the updates of the once_control->state with the
intermediate progress state do not need to synchronize with other
state accesses, remove _acq suffix.
Reviewed by: alc (previous version)
Suggested by: alc (*)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
so that there is only one place where pages are freed and only one place
where pages are moved to the tail of the queue.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is a subtle use-after-free race that results in some very undesirable
hang behaviour.
Reviewed by: pkelsey
Obtained from: Kip Macy, NextBSD (91a9bd1dbb)
The filedesc lock is only needed if ioctls caps are present, which is a
rare situation. This is a step towards reducing the scope of the filedesc
lock.
no option but to use the smbios information to fill in the blanks.
It's a good thing UGA is a protocol of the past and GOP has all the
info we need.
Anyway, the logic has been tweaked a little to get the easier bits
of information up front. This includes the resolution and the frame
buffer address. Then we look at the smbios information and define
expected values as well as the missing bits (frame buffer offset and
stride). If the values obtained match the expect values, we fill in
the blanks and return. Otherwise we use the existing detection logic
to figure it out.
Rename the environment variables from uga_framebuffer abd uga_stride
to hw.efifb.address and hw.efifb.stride. The latter names are more
in line with other variable names.
We currently have hardcoded settings for:
1. Mid-2007 iMac (iMac7,1)
2. Late-2007 MacBook (MacBook3,1)
store should have release semantics and will have due to the dsb above it
so add a comment to explain this. [1]
While here update the code to not reload the current thread, it's already
in a register, we just need to not trash it.
Suggested by: kib [1]
Sponsored by: ABT Systems Ltd