low level ioctl routines instead of the magic number -1 so that
callers can distinguish it from ERESTART (which happens to be -1).
-1 meant that the ioctl was not handled at the called level.
ERESTART is normal when a sleeping ioctl is interrupted. ERESTART
got converted to ENOTTY instead of restarting the ioctl. Many
(most?) ioctls can not be restarted safely, but this is apparently
supposed to be handled by drivers converting ERESTART to EINTR.
I first saw this problem for TIOCDRAIN. Justin saw if for disk
ioctls.
Added missing parentheses.
is apparently useful for large shell systems, or systems with long running
idle processes. To enable the feature:
sysctl -w vm.swap_idle_enabled=1
Please note that some of the other vm sysctl variables have been renamed
to be more accurate.
Submitted by: Much of it from Matt Dillon <dillon@best.net>
isn't actually const in vmstat.
Fixed pedantic syntax errors caused by trailing semicolons in macro
definitions.
Fixed style bugs and typos in revisions 1.26-1.33.
the maximum pageout rate:
sysctl -w vm.vm_maxlaunder=n
1 < n < inf.
If paging heavily on large systems, it is likely that a performance
improvement can be achieved by increasing the parameter. On a large
system, the parm is 32, but numbers as large as 128 can make a big
difference. If paging is expensive, you might try decreasing the
number to 1-8.
1) Fix the initialization of malloc structure that changed
due to perf opt.
2) Remove unneeded include.
3) An initialization assert added to malloc.
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
so the filenames can be displayed and selected in full beauty. If RR
is present, the match is now case-sensitive, if RR is missing, the
match is case-insensitive (as it used to be before).
sysctl -w vm.defer_swap_pageouts=1
Causes the system to resist the use of swap space. In low memory
conditions, performance will decrease.
sysctl -w vm.disable_swap_pageouts=1
Causes the system to mostly disable the use of swap space. In
low memory conditions, the system will likely start killing
processes.
the barrery time remaining is reported as a random number. Initialize
edx to 0xffff in this case, and to 0 in all other cases. This change
should be benign on other machines.
Reviewed by: jdp
workaround. Note that this currently eats up two pages extra in the system;
this could be alleviated by aligning idt correctly, and then only dealing with
that (as opposed to the current method of allocated two pages and copying the
IDT table to that, and then setting that to be the IDT table).
option PCIC_NOCLRREGS). This is now the default behavior since it's
apparently required for the CLPD6832, and doesn't negatively affect
any of my test machines.
Requested by: Ted Faber <faber@ISI.EDU>
number of tags (NCR_SCSI_DFLT_TAGS), which is 0 in the FAILSAFE case.
This should fix the incompatibility between kernel and ncrcontrol,
which is the result of FAILSAFE being defined in the kernel config
file, invisible to the build of ncrcontrol. (See kern/5133, which
should be fixed by this change.)
mode. Currently, the only supported controller is the Cirrus Logic
PD6832, but others can be supported with docs on them.
Submitted by: Ted Faber <faber@ISI.EDU>
or aio_write can return the pid of the new thread. This is due to the
way that return values from system calls being passed by side-effect in
the proc structure now. This commit fixes the problem with aio_read and
aio_write.
remove alot of overly verbose debugging statements.
ioproclist {
int aioprocflags; /* AIO proc flags */
TAILQ_ENTRY(aioproclist) list; /* List of processes */
struct proc *aioproc; /* The AIO thread */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aiocblist) jobtorun; /* suggested job to run */
};
/*
* data-structure for lio signal management
*/
struct aio_liojob {
int lioj_flags;
int lioj_buffer_count;
int lioj_buffer_finished_count;
int lioj_queue_count;
int lioj_queue_finished_count;
struct sigevent lioj_signal; /* signal on all I/O done */
TAILQ_ENTRY (aio_liojob) lioj_list;
struct kaioinfo *lioj_ki;
};
#define LIOJ_SIGNAL 0x1 /* signal on all done (lio) */
#define LIOJ_SIGNAL_POSTED 0x2 /* signal has been posted */
/*
* per process aio data structure
*/
struct kaioinfo {
int kaio_flags; /* per process kaio flags */
int kaio_maxactive_count; /* maximum number of AIOs */
int kaio_active_count; /* number of currently used AIOs */
int kaio_qallowed_count; /* maxiumu size of AIO queue */
int kaio_queue_count; /* size of AIO queue */
int kaio_ballowed_count; /* maximum number of buffers */
int kaio_queue_finished_count; /* number of daemon jobs finished */
int kaio_buffer_count; /* number of physio buffers */
int kaio_buffer_finished_count; /* count of I/O done */
struct proc *kaio_p; /* process that uses this kaio block */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aio_liojob) kaio_liojoblist; /* list of lio jobs */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aiocblist) kaio_jobqueue; /* job queue for process */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aiocblist) kaio_jobdone; /* done queue for process */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aiocblist) kaio_bufqueue; /* buffer job queue for process */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aiocblist) kaio_bufdone; /* buffer done queue for process */
};
#define KAIO_RUNDOWN 0x1 /* process is being run down */
#define KAIO_WAKEUP 0x2 /* wakeup process when there is a significant
event */
TAILQ_HEAD (,aioproclist) aio_freeproc, aio_activeproc;
TAILQ_HEAD(,aiocblist) aio_jobs; /* Async job list */
TAILQ_HEAD(,aiocblist) aio_bufjobs; /* Phys I/O job list */
TAILQ_HEAD(,aiocblist) aio_freejobs; /* Pool of free jobs */
static void aio_init_aioinfo(struct proc *p) ;
static void aio_onceonly(void *) ;
static int aio_free_entry(struct aiocblist *aiocbe);
static void aio_process(struct aiocblist *aiocbe);
static int aio_newproc(void) ;
static int aio_aqueue(struct proc *p, struct aiocb *job, int type) ;
static void aio_physwakeup(struct buf *bp);
static int aio_fphysio(struct proc *p, struct aiocblist *aiocbe, int type);
static int aio_qphysio(struct proc *p, struct aiocblist *iocb);
static void aio_daemon(void *uproc);
SYSINIT(aio, SI_SUB_VFS, SI_ORDER_ANY, aio_onceonly, NULL);
static vm_zone_t kaio_zone=0, aiop_zone=0,
aiocb_zone=0, aiol_zone=0, aiolio_zone=0;
/*
* Single AIOD vmspace shared amongst all of them
*/
static struct vmspace *aiovmspace = NULL;
/*
* Startup initialization
*/
void
aio_onceonly(void *na)
{
TAILQ_INIT(&aio_freeproc);
TAILQ_INIT(&aio_activeproc);
TAILQ_INIT(&aio_jobs);
TAILQ_INIT(&aio_bufjobs);
TAILQ_INIT(&aio_freejobs);
kaio_zone = zinit("AIO", sizeof (struct kaioinfo), 0, 0, 1);
aiop_zone = zinit("AIOP", sizeof (struct aioproclist), 0, 0, 1);
aiocb_zone = zinit("AIOCB", sizeof (struct aiocblist), 0, 0, 1);
aiol_zone = zinit("AIOL", AIO_LISTIO_MAX * sizeof (int), 0, 0, 1);
aiolio_zone = zinit("AIOLIO",
AIO_LISTIO_MAX * sizeof (struct aio_liojob), 0, 0, 1);
aiod_timeout = AIOD_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT;
aiod_lifetime = AIOD_LIFETIME_DEFAULT;
jobrefid = 1;
}
/*
* Init the per-process aioinfo structure.
* The aioinfo limits are set per-process for user limit (resource) management.
*/
void
aio_init_aioinfo(struct proc *p)
{
struct kaioinfo *ki;
if (p->p_aioinfo == NULL) {
ki = zalloc(kaio_zone);
p->p_aioinfo = ki
make isa_dmacascade, isa_dmastart, isa_dmadone, and find_isadev MUCH
easier to be found by starting them at the beginging of the line...
remove braces inside of ifdef RESOURCE_CHECK... found by % in vi...
support was missing in the previous version of the AIO code. More
tunables added, and very efficient support for VCHR files has been added.
Kernel threads are not used for VCHR files, all work for such files is
done for the requesting process directly. Some attempt has been made to
charge the requesting process for resource utilization, but more work
is needed. aio_fsync is still missing (but the original fsync system
call can be used for now.) aio_cancel is essentially a noop, but that
is okay per POSIX. More aio_cancel functionality can be added later,
if it is found to be needed.
The functions implemented include:
aio_read, aio_write, lio_listio, aio_error, aio_return,
aio_cancel, aio_suspend.
The code has been implemented to support the POSIX spec 1003.1b
(formerly known as POSIX 1003.4 spec) features of the above. The
async I/O features are truly async, with the VCHR mode of operation
being essentially the same as physio (for appropriate files) for
maximum efficiency. This code also supports the signal capability,
is highly tunable, allowing management of resource usage, and
has been written to allow a per process usage quota.
Both the O'Reilly POSIX.4 book and the actual POSIX 1003.1b document
were the reference specs used. Any filedescriptor can be used with
these new system calls. I know of no exceptions where these
system calls will not work. (TTY's will also probably work.)
Here are the remanding changes required to support the Ensoniq
Soundscape using FreeBSD 3.0-current.
Notes:
1) ad1848_init already has code to detect if DMA_DUPLEX should
be set so it is not necessary (and is in fact a mistake) to
hard code setting it. Not all soundcards (i.e. the current
sscape driver) are capable of using DMA_DUPLEX.
2) The other changes are hopefully self explanatory. Feel free
to let me know if you need additional information.
Submitted by: john@feith.com (John Wehle)
this results in a few functions becoming static, and
the SYSINITs being close to the code they are related to.
setting up the dump device is with dumpsys() and
kicking off the scheduler is with the scheduler.
Mounting root is with the code that does it.
Reviewed by: phk
Sorted the functions into the same order as in ufs_vnops.c so that this
can be compared with the latter without getting 2627 lines of diffs.
Now we get only 1920 lines of diffs.
"high resolution" profiling. The available clocks are:
- the i8254 clock
- on non-SMP i586's and i686's: the TSC
- on systems with I586_PMC_GUPROF configured, and PERFMON configured
and available: all the performance counters.
This is unfinshed (there are problems with locking out the PERFMON
device driver, and with losing calibration after switching the clock),
but better than static configuration or writing to kmem.
Changed ifdefs to avoid generating code for non-working option
combinations.
triple indirect blocks only worked for block sizes of 4K, since
MNINDIR(ump)**3 overflows for larger block sizes (e.g.,
(8192/4)**3 = 2**33 > INT_MAX). This fix is not the obvious one of
changing some types to 64 bits. It rearranges the code to avoid some
unnecessary 64-bit calculations.
Reviewed by: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@McKusick.COM>
a mistake (since softnet interrupts may occur if malloc() waits),
and doing it harmlessly but unnecessarily here interfered with
detection of the mistaken cases.
b_flags, and this patch removes unneeded modifications. Only the needed b_flags
bits are modified now. (Specifically, it is usually wrong to zero b_flags.)
Submitted by: bde@freebsd.org
Fixed overflow of FFLAGS() in fcntl(F_SETFL, ...). This was not
a security hole, but gave wrong results for silly flags values.
E.g., it make fcntl(F_SETFL, -1) equivalent to fcntl(F_SETFL, 0).
POSIX requires ignoring the open mode bits in fcntl() (even if
they would be invalid for open()).
break for the usual sector size. dscheck() adjusts b_bcount to
handle EOF, so we must scale it and not preserve it. i/o beyond
the end of partitions has been broken since rev.1.96.
Not fixed in: od driver
are used in the `#ifdef notyet' case :-). This case is used except in
the `#if !defined (not_yes)' case :-|. This has something to do with
the `#ifdef notyet_block_reallocation_enabled' case in vfs_cluster.c :-(.
Use OID_AUTO instead of a magic number for the debug.syncprt sysctl.
(This sysctl doesn't actually work. FreeBSD nuked it, but parts
of it were mismerged from Lite2. It is not very good, but better
than nothing.)