/loader.rc) to specify a Forth file to read from the pkgfs tarball and
process by Ficl.
This allows for the tarball to do runtime things like load a
platform-specific FDT blob, among other things.
Reviewed by: imp
Approved by: sjg (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8494
After removal of SMB_TRANS some information in the description of
SMB_BWRITE has become stale. E.g., the maximum block size has been
restored to 32.
Also, the descriptions of SMB_BREAD and SMB_BWRITE had some
incorrect information on the SMBus protocol details.
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r308242
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8431
The constant was set to the correct value in r308242.
While there, fix iicsmb_bread() to not use a value of an out parameter
'count'.
MFC after: 3 weeks
X-MFC after: r308242
The hardware does not implement SMBus Process Call command, so remove
ifdef-ed out code from intsmb_pcall. The code used exactly the same
start sequence as for Write Word command.
intsmb_bread code used to access an in value of the count parameter,
but that parameter is supposed to be an out only parameter.
For example, smb(4) does not initialize it before calling smbus_bread.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Developers writing code for accessing /dev/smb may use this base utility
as an example. Now that SMB_READB, SMB_READW, SMB_PCALL behave as
documented, wwe can use them in a more convenient way than before.
MFC after: 4 weeks
X-MFC after: r308527
Previously, those ioctls were defined as 'in' only, so rdata.byte and
rdata.word were never updated in the userland. The read data went only
to rbuf if it was provided. Thus, consumers were forced to always use it.
Now the ioctls are marked as in-out.
Compatibility handlers are provided for old ioctls.
PR: 213481
Reported by: Lewis Donzis <lew@perftech.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: maybe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8430
Used extensively on my network over the past month.
Reviewed by: pfg, brooks
Suggested by: pfg
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.am-utils.org/pub/am-utils/
MFC after: 6 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: D8405
[AArch64] Don't blindly lower f16/f128 FCCMPs.
Instead, extend f16 (like we do when lowering a standalone SETCC),
and let f128 be legalized to the RT calls.
Fixes PR26803.
This fixes a fatal "Cannot select" backend error when building the
net/freerdp port for AArch64.
PR: 214380
MFC after: 3 days
Unfortunately (sigh) some firmware doesn't provide the RX BA starting point,
so we need to cope and set a "close enough" sequence number so we (hopefully!)
don't discard frames as duplicates.
Tested:
* QCA9880v2, athp driver (under development), STA mode
I see the fllowing panic on AMD when exiting pmcstat:
panic: [pmc,1473] pp_pmcval outside of expected range cpu=2 ri=17
pp_pmcval=fffffffffa529f5b pm_reloadcount=10000
It seems that at least on AMD a performance counter keeps counting after
overflowing. When pmcstat exits it sets counters that it used to
PMC_STATE_DELETED and waits until their use count goes to zero.
amd_intr() wouldn't reload a counter in that state and, thus, a counter
would be allowed to overflow. That means that the counter's value would
be allowed to go outside the expected range.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The code assumed that 'timeout' and 'timeout_sec' are in sync
which they weren't if no '-t' option was passed to watchdogd.
Reported by: Olivier Smedts <olivier@gid0.org>,
Alex Deiter <alex.deiter@gmail.com>
Tested by: Olivier Smedts <olivier@gid0.org>,
Alex Deiter <alex.deiter@gmail.com>
MFC after: 5 days
X-MFC with: r308040
To avoid have warning for services that are using oomprotect, oomprotect
will only be applied on services that won't run inside jails.
Reported by: allanjude
MFC after: 2 weeks.
Always define boot.netif.server in kenv in pxeboot
Add "boot.tftproot.server" to kenv when pxeboot uses tftpfs
Change the code order when setting env for TFTP or NFS to be the same as
common/dev_net.c
Reported by: tsoome
pages, specificially, dirty pages that have passed once through the inactive
queue. A new, dedicated thread is responsible for both deciding when to
launder pages and actually laundering them. The new policy uses the
relative sizes of the inactive and laundry queues to determine whether to
launder pages at a given point in time. In general, this leads to more
intelligent swapping behavior, since the laundry thread will avoid pageouts
when the marginal benefit of doing so is low. Previously, without a
dedicated queue for dirty pages, the page daemon didn't have the information
to determine whether pageout provides any benefit to the system. Thus, the
previous policy often resulted in small but steadily increasing amounts of
swap usage when the system is under memory pressure, even when the inactive
queue consisted mostly of clean pages. This change addresses that issue,
and also paves the way for some future virtual memory system improvements by
removing the last source of object-cached clean pages, i.e., PG_CACHE pages.
The new laundry thread sleeps while waiting for a request from the page
daemon thread(s). A request is raised by setting the variable
vm_laundry_request and waking the laundry thread. We request launderings
for two reasons: to try and balance the inactive and laundry queue sizes
("background laundering"), and to quickly make up for a shortage of free
pages and clean inactive pages ("shortfall laundering"). When background
laundering is requested, the laundry thread computes the number of page
daemon wakeups that have taken place since the last laundering. If this
number is large enough relative to the ratio of the laundry and (global)
inactive queue sizes, we will launder vm_background_launder_target pages at
vm_background_launder_rate KB/s. Otherwise, the laundry thread goes back
to sleep without doing any work. When scanning the laundry queue during
background laundering, reactivated pages are counted towards the laundry
thread's target.
In contrast, shortfall laundering is requested when an inactive queue scan
fails to meet its target. In this case, the laundry thread attempts to
launder enough pages to meet v_free_target within 0.5s, which is the
inactive queue scan period.
A laundry request can be latched while another is currently being
serviced. In particular, a shortfall request will immediately preempt a
background laundering.
This change also redefines the meaning of vm_cnt.v_reactivated and removes
the functions vm_page_cache() and vm_page_try_to_cache(). The new meaning
of vm_cnt.v_reactivated now better reflects its name. It represents the
number of inactive or laundry pages that are returned to the active queue
on account of a reference.
In collaboration with: markj
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8302
Some tools spawn c++filt and pass it a single line at a time for
demangling. This is akin to r276689 for addr2line.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
print. Also add a new flag -s that add blocks size to statistics.
PR: 198347, 212726
Submitted by: Ben RUBSON <ben.rubson@gmail.com>
Tested by: pi
MFC After: 2 weeks.
When symbol versioning was added to rtld, the boolean 'in_plt' argument
to find_symdef() was converted to a bitmask of flags. The first flag
added was 'SYMLOOK_IN_PLT' which replaced the 'in_plt' bool. This
happened to still work by accident as SYMLOOK_IN_PLT had the value of 1
which is the same as 'true', so there should be no functional change.
Tested on: amd64
Reviewed by: kan
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
The BUF_TRACKING bio pointer only makes sense for kernel consumers of
CCBs.
PR: 214250
Reported by: trasz@
Reviewed by: imp@, markj@
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8477
Pass current thread credentials instead of NOCRED.
Only allow unmapped buffers for filesystem which proclaimed the support.
For all filesystems which currently use buffer pager (UFS, msdosfs and
cd9660), the changes are effectively nop.
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
The expected deviation should not be more than 1Hz per second. The USB
v2.0 specification also mandates this requirement. Refer to chapter
5.12.4.2 about feedback.
PR: 208791
MFC after: 3 days
This change does modify devsw dv_print() to return the int value,
enabling walkers to interrupt the walk on non zero value from dv_print().
This will allow the pager_print actually to stop displaying data on
user input, and additionally pager is used in various *dev_print callbacks,
where it was missing.
For test, lsdev [-v] command should display data by screenfuls and should
stop when the key 'q' is pressed on pager prompt.
Reviewed by: allanjude
Approved by: allanjude (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5461
Trivially capsicumize some simple programs that just interact with
stdio. This list of programs uses 'pledge("stdio")' in OpenBSD.
No objection from: allanjude, emaste, oshogbo
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8307