Modify blst_leaf_alloc to find allocations that cross the boundary between
one leaf node and the next when those two leaves descend from the same
meta node.
Update the hint field for leaves so that it represents a bound on how
large an allocation can begin in that leaf, where it currently represents
a bound on how large an allocation can be found within the boundaries of
the leaf.
The first phase of blst_leaf_alloc currently shrinks sequences of
consecutive 1-bits in mask until each has been shrunken by count-1 bits,
so that any bits remaining show where an allocation can begin, or until
all the bits have disappeared, in which case the allocation fails. This
change amends that so that the high-order bit is copied, as if, when the
last block was free, it was followed by an endless stream of free
blocks. It also amends the early stopping condition, so that the shrinking
of 1-sequences stops early when there are none, or there is only one
unbounded one remaining.
The search for the first set bit is unchanged, and the code path
thereafter is mostly unchanged unless the first set bit is in a position
that makes some of those copied sign bits matter. In that case, we look
for a next leaf, and at what blocks it can provide, to see if a
cross-boundary allocation is possible.
The hint is updated on a successful allocation that clears the last bit,
but it not updated on a failed allocation that leaves the last bit
set. So, as long as the last block is free, the hint value for the leaf is
large. As long as the last block is free, and there's a next leaf, a large
allocation can begin here, perhaps. A stricter rule than this would mean
that allocations and frees in one leaf could require hint updates to the
preceding leaf, and this change seeks to leave the freeing code
unmodified.
Define BLIST_BMAP_MASK, and use it for bit masking in blst_leaf_free and
blist_leaf_fill, as well as in blst_leaf_alloc.
Correct a panic message in blst_leaf_free.
Submitted by: Doug Moore <dougm@rice.edu>
Reviewed by: markj (an earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11819
The usbphy node for allwinner have two kind of resources, one for the
phy_ctrl and one per phy. Instead of blindy allocating resources, alloc
the phy_ctrl and pmu ones separately.
Also add a configuration struct for all different phy that hold the difference
between them (number of phys, unknow needed register write etc ...).
While here remove A83T code as upstream and FreeBSD dts don't have
nodes for USB.
This (plus 323640) re-enable OHCI on Pine64 on the bottom USB port.
The top USB port is routed to the OHCI0/EHCI0 which is by default in OTG mode.
While the phy code can handle the re-route to standard OHCI/EHCI we still need
a driver for musb to probe and configure it in host mode.
EHCI is still buggy on Pine64 (hang the board) so do not enable it for now.
Tested On: Bananapi (A20), BananapiM2 (A31S), OrangePi One (H3) Pine64 (A64)
r323392 introduce gpio_pin_get/gpio_pin_set for a10_gpio driver.
When called via gpio method they must aquire the device lock while
when they are called via gpio_pin_configure the lock is already aquire.
Introduce a10_gpio_pin_{s,g}et_locked and call them in pin_gpio_configure
instead.
Tested On: BananaPi (A20)
Reported by: Richard Puga richard@puga.net
Some makefiles do reachover builds.
In some cases it is convenient to list subdirs of the distribution
in SRCS.
It is not very convenient, or always even desirable to have corresponding
subdirs in .OBJDIR, so OBJS_SRCS_FILTER allows the makefile to choose.
The default value 'R' matches existing practice.
But a makefile can set OBJS_SRCS_FILTER= T (the R gets added by
bsd.init.mk) to avoid the need for subdirs in .OBJDIR
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12218
Reviewed by: bdrewery
This was really too big of a commit even if everything worked, but there
are multiple new issues introduced in the one huge commit, so it's not
worth keeping this until it's fixed.
I'll work on splitting this up into logical chunks and introduce them one
at a time over the next week or two.
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
When -a is specified, the name and value of all system or path
configuration values is reported to standard output.
Reviewed by: kib (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12373
To optimize the case of ping-ponging between two buffers, the DDP code
caches the last two buffers used keeping the pages wired and page pods
stored in the NIC's RAM. If a new aio_read() request uses one of the
same buffers, then the work of holding pages, etc. can be avoided.
However, the starting virtual address of an aio buffer was not saved,
only the page count, length, and initial page offset. Thus, an
aio_read() request could match a different buffer in the address
space. (Earlier during development vm_fault_hold_quick_pages() was
always called and the vm_page_t values were compared, but that was
eventually removed without being adequately replaced.) Fix by storing
the starting virtual address and comparing that (along with other
fields) to determine if a buffer can be reused.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Don't call cam_iosched_trim_done or cam_iosched_submit_trim for nda
since its hardware can handle almost an arbitrary number of TRIMs and
we don't have to be careful to only ever do one.
Sponsored by: Netflix
It's intended only for those situations where the periph driver
ones to limit the number of trims active to one and only one.
Also update comments on associated functions.
Sponsored by: Netflix
After r308212 Capsicum permits .. lookups in capability mode, as long as
path component traversal does not escape the directory corresponding to
the provided file descriptor.
We should add a description of the vfs.lookup_cap_dotdot and
vfs.lookup_cap_dotdot_nonlocal sysctls, perhaps as a cross-reference to
capsicum(4). I intend to look at that soon.
Reviewed by: bjk, cem, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12343
- The exit probe was not appropriately filtered to only the known pid so it
was firing on any random process that would exit rather the only the one
we cared about.
- The dtest script executes the tst.raise*.exe in the background from
POSIX sh without jobs control. POSIX mandates that SIGINT be set to
SIG_IGN in this case. The test executable never actually tested that
SIGINT could be caught despite trying to block and delay the signal.
So the SIGINT sent from raise() is never actually received since it
is ignored. This could be fixed by calling 'trap - INT' from dtest
before running the executable but I've opted to just use SIGUSR1
instead in these specific tests rather than adding more logic to
test that SIGINT is not ignored at startup.
These 2 issues meant that the tests would randomly work but only if a process
coincidentally exited during the test.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
* Demote the level of several debug messages to CAM_DEBUG_TRACE
* Add detection for SDHC cards that can do 1.8V. No voltage switch sequence
is issued yet;
* Don't create a separate LUN for each SDIO function. We need just one to make
pass(4) attach;
* Remove obsolete mmc_sdio* files. SDIO functionality will be moved into the
separate device that will manage a new sdio(4) bus;
* Terminate probing if got no reply to CMD0;
* Make bcm2835 SDHCI host controller driver compile with 'option MMCCAM'.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12109
free queue mutex lock owning session, same as it was done for the
object termination in r323561.
Reported and tested by: mjg
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Start the phasing out of TRE by disabling it by default. r317254 introduced
a BSD_GREP_FASTMATCH knob (defaulting to on) for testing of bsdgrep with and
without TRE enabled. More bugs have cropped up since then, and
WITHOUT_BSD_GREP_FASTMATCH has shown in testing to be more stable than its
counterpart.
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12381
In theory, all data access errors mean that a member is out of sync
at most. But they were treated as more serious errors to avoid the
situation where a flaky disk gets repeatedly disconnected, re-synchronized,
reconnected and then disconnected again.
ENXIO is a special error that means that the member disk disappeared,
so it should get the same handling as the GEOM orphaning event.
There is a better chance that when the disk is reconnected, it will be
a good member again.
When ENXIO happens on a read we use the exisiting G_MIRROR_BUMP_SYNCID
mechanism which means that the mirror's syncid is increased as soon
as there is a write to the mirror. That's because no data has got out
of sync yet, but the problematic memeber is disconnected, so the future
write will make it stale.
When ENXIO happens on a write we use a new G_MIRROR_BUMP_SYNCID_NOW
mechanism which means that we update the mirror metadata as soon as
possible because the problematic memeber is already behind.
Reviewed by: markj, imp
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9463
The bad_session, sglist_error, and process_error sysctl nodes were
returning the value of the pad_error node instead of the appropriate
error counters.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
When a newborn socket moves from incomplete queue to complete
one, we need to obtain the listening socket lock after the child,
which is a wrong order. The old code did that in potentially
endless loop of mtx_trylock(). The new one does only one attempt
of mtx_trylock(), and in case of failure references listening
socket, unlocks child and locks everything in right order. In
case if listening socket shuts down during that, just bail out.
Reported & tested by: Jason Eggleston <jeggleston llnw.com>
Reported & tested by: Jason Wolfe <jason llnw.com>
kernel. We can register callbacks to perform the required operation on the
saved registers before returning.
This is initially used to work around a bug in old versions of QEMU that
trigger such an exception when reading from an ID register when it should
load z zero value.
I expect this could be used with other exception types, e.g. to emulate
special register access from userland.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
An eventual devd(8) or other component should be able to scan buses and
automatically load drivers that match device ids described in this metadata.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12364
The core note matches the format and layout of NT_ARM_VFP on Linux.
Debuggers use the AT_HWCAP flags to determine how many VFP registers
are actually used and their format.
Reviewed by: mmel (earlier version w/o gcore)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12293
Future changes will use these functions to fetch and store VFP state for
threads other than curthread.
Reviewed by: andrew, stevek, Michal Meloun <meloun-miracle-cz>
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12292
These flags match the meaning and value of flags in Linux, though
Linux has many more flags.
Reviewed by: stevek, Michal Meloun <meloun-miracle-cz> (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12291