OpenSolaris and ZFS header files. These changes are sufficient
to allow a C++ program to use the libzfs library.
Note: The majority of these files already included 'extern "C"'
declarations, so the intention of providing C++ compatibility
already existed even if it wasn't provided.
cddl/compat/opensolaris/include/assert.h:
Wrap our compatibility assert implementation in
'extern "C"'. Since this is a compatibility header
I matched the Solaris style of doing this explicitly
rather than rely on FreeBSD's __BEGIN/END_DECLS macro.
sys/cddl/compat/opensolaris/sys/kstat.h:
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/arc.h:
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/dsl_pool.h:
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/ddt.h:
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/spa.h:
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/zio.h:
Rename parameters in function declarations that conflict
with C++ keywords. This was the solution preferred by
members of the Illumos community.
sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/sys/zfs_ioctl.h:
In C, nested structures are visible in the global namespace,
but in C++, they take on the namespace of the structure in
which they are contained. Flatten nested structure
definitions within struct zfs_cmd so these structures are
visible in the global namespace when compiled in both
languages.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
but has only 2 SATA ports instead of 4. The worst part is that SStatus and
SError registers for missing ports are not implemented and return wrong
values (0xffffffff), that caused infinite reset loop.
Just ignore that SError value while I found no better way to identify them.
- Re-add accidentally removed atomic op. for sysctl(9) handler.
- Remove a period(`.') at the end of a debugging message.
- Consistently spell "low" for "TSC-low" timecounter throughout.
Pointed out by: bde
increase robustness (no more calls to panic(9)) and simplify
code.
- Allocate RX/TX data structures as a single buffer rather than
an array of 4KB pages to simplify code.
- Fixed LRO (aka TPA) code. Removed kernel module parameter and
support enabling disabling LRO through ifconfig(8) command line.
LRO is still disabled by default but should be enabled for best
performance on an endpoint device.
- Fixed statistcs code and removed kernel module parameter (stats
should just work).
- Added many software counters to help identify the cause of some
performance issues.
- Streamlined adapter internal init/stop code paths.
- Fiddled with debug code (adding some here, removing some there).
- Continued style(9) adjustments.
invariant. For SMP case (TSC-low), it also has to pass SMP synchronization
test and the CPU vendor/model has to be white-listed explicitly. Currently,
all Intel CPUs and single-socket AMD Family 15h processors are listed here.
Discussed with: hackers
TSC timecounter if TSC frequency is higher than ~4.29 MHz (or 2^32-1 Hz) or
multiple CPUs are present. The "TSC-low" frequency is always lower than a
preset maximum value and derived from TSC frequency (by being halved until
it becomes lower than the maximum). Note the maximum value for SMP case is
significantly lower than UP case because we want to reduce (rare but known)
"temporal anomalies" caused by non-serialized RDTSC instruction. Normally,
it is still higher than "ACPI-fast" timecounter frequency (which was default
timecounter hardware for long time until r222222) to be useful.
interleaving.
Signal dumping to happen only for the first panic which should be the
most important.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Submitted by: Nima Misaghian (nmisaghian AT sandvine DOT com)
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Add retry loops in the i2c read/write functions.
- Combied the ADC channel selection and readout of the value into
one iicbus_transfer to avoid possible races.
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn
whether decapsulated IPsec packets will be passed to pfil again depending
on the setting of the net.ip6.ipsec6.filtertunnel sysctl.
PR: kern/157670
Submitted by: Manuel Kasper (mk neon1.net)
MFC after: 2 weeks
The code has definitely been broken for SCHED_ULE, which is a default
scheduler. It may have been broken for SCHED_4BSD in more subtle ways,
e.g. with manually configured CPU affinities and for interrupt devilery
purposes.
We still provide a way to disable individual CPUs or all hyperthreading
"twin" CPUs before SMP startup. See the UPDATING entry for details.
Interaction between building CPU topology and disabling CPUs still
remains fuzzy: topology is first built using all availble CPUs and then
the disabled CPUs should be "subtracted" from it. That doesn't work
well if the resulting topology becomes non-uniform.
This work is done in cooperation with Attilio Rao who in addition to
reviewing also provided parts of code.
PR: kern/145385
Discussed with: gcooper, ambrisko, mdf, sbruno
Reviewed by: attilio
Tested by: pho, pluknet
X-MFC after: never
RSF_FATAL we need to switch to alternate globals for KSTACK_CHECK just
like tl1_data_excptn(_trap) does. This is more or less cosmetic because
in case RSF_FATAL is called we're already heading south.
- Correct an END().
- Read the window state from the correct register for a CATR().
more than three temporary register in several places CATR() is used so
this code trades instructions in for registers. Actually, this still isn't
sufficient and CATR() has the side-effect of clobbering %y. Luckily, with
the current uses of CATR() this either doesn't matter or we are able to
(save and) restore it.
Now that there's only one use of AND() and TEST() left inline these.
of just setting it to the first registered device, reevaluate it for each
device registered, trying to choose best candidate, unless one was forced.
For now use such preference order: play&rec, play, rec.
As side effect, this should workaround the situation when HDMI audio output
of the video card, usually not connected to anything, becomes default, that
requires manual user intervention to make sound working. If at some point
this won't be enough, we can try to fetch some additional priority flags
from the device driver.
For the AR5211/AR5212, this is apparently a one byte pulse duration
counter value. It is only coded up here for the AR5212 as I don't have
any AR5211-series hardware to test it on.
This information was extracted from the Madwifi DFS branch along with
some local additions.
Please note - all this does is extract out the radar event duration,
it in no way reflects the presence of a radar. Further code is needed
to take a set of radar events and filter them to extract out correct
radar pulse trains (and ignore other events.)
For further information, please see:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/dev/ath_hal%284%29/RadarDetection
This includes references to the relevant patents which describe what
is going on.
Obtained from: Madwifi
Make a behaviour of the libalias based in-kernel NAT a bit closer to
how natd(8) does work. natd(8) drops packets only when libalias returns
PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED and "deny_incoming" option is set, but ipfw_nat
always did drop packets that were not aliased, even if they should
not be aliased and just are going through.
Also add SCTP support: mark response packets to skip firewall processing.
MFC after: 1 month
how natd(8) does work. natd(8) drops packets only when libalias returns
PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED and "deny_incoming" option is set, but ipfw_nat
always did drop packets that were not aliased, even if they should
not be aliased and just are going through.
PR: kern/122109, kern/129093, kern/157379
Submitted by: Alexander V. Chernikov (previous version)
MFC after: 1 month
Many thanks to Tino <tinotom@gmail.com> for drawing my attention to
this, for doing a lot of testing and providing great feedback.
Many thanks to AMD for continuing to release public specifications for
their chipsets.
PR: kern/157568
Tested by: Tino <tinotom@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Otherwise, p_bufr is set to garbage on the stack, and if that garbage
happens to be non-NULL, and the TOLOG or TOCONS flag is set, putbuf()
will get called and attempt to fill the non-existent buffer.
This is really only relevant for tprintf() (and only when the priority is
not -1), but set it in uprintf() and ttyprintf() for completeness.
The next step, to avoid log buffer scrambling, would be to add the
PRINTF_BUFR_SIZE code to tprintf(), but this should prevent panics.
Submitted by: rmacklem
Found by: pho
for it. Do not not expect a developer to call doadump(). Calling
doadump does not necessarily work when it's declared static. Nor
does it necessarily do what was intended in the context of text
dumps. The dump command always creates a core dump.
Move printing of error messages from doadump to the dump command,
now that we don't have to worry about being called from DDB.
points are fixed addresses and (U)EFI CSM specification also mandated that.
Unfortunately, (U)EFI CSM specification does not specifically mention this
is to call service routine via interrupt vector table or to jump directly
to the entry point. As a result, some CSM seems to install two routines
and acts differently, depending on how it was executed, unfortunately.
When INT 15h is used, it calls a function pointer (which is probably a UEFI
service function). When it jumps directly to the entry point, it executes
a simple and traditional INT 15h service routine. Therefore, actually there
are two possible fixes, i. e., this fix or jumping directly to the fixed
entry point. However, we chose this fix because a) keyboard typematic
support via BIOS is becoming extremely rarer and b) we cannot support random
service routine installed by a firmware or a boot loader. This should fix
Lenovo X220 laptop, specifically.
Reviewed by: delphij
MFC after: 3 days
Rather than including lock.h in in_pcbgroup.c in right order, fix it
for all consumers of in_pcb.h by further header file pollution under
#ifdef KERNEL.
Reported by: Pan Tsu (inyaoo gmail.com)
High-speed USB HUB by resetting the transaction translator (TT)
before trying re-enumeration. Also when clear-stall fails multiple times
try a re-enumeration.
Suggested by: Trevor Blackwell
MFC after: 14 days
o cpu_idle_hook is expected to be called with interrupts
disabled and re-enables interrupts on return.
o sync with x86: don't idle when the CPU has runnable tasks
o have callers of ia64_call_pal_static() disable interrupts
and re-enable interrupts.
o add, but compile-out, support for idle mode. This will be
enabled at some later time, after proper testing.
This regression was introduced in r213323.
There are probably no Intel cpus that support amd64 mode, but do not
support cpuid level 4, but it's better to keep i386 and amd64 versions
of this code in sync.
Discovered by: pho
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
the recent changes to track BAR state explicitly. The code would now
attempt to add the same BAR twice in this case. Instead, change this so
that it recognizes this case and only adds it once and do not delete the
BAR outright after parsing the CIS.
Tested by: bschmidt