Add the AAC_DEBUG option to enable debugging in the aac driver.
Correct a race condition in the interrupt handler where the
controller may queue a fib to a response queue after the driver
has serviced the queue but before the interrupt is cleared.
This could leave a completed fib stranded in the response queue
unless another I/O completed and generated another interrupt.
Reviewed by: msmith
the socket buffer size, the receive is done in sections. After completing
a read, call pru_rcvd on the underlying protocol before blocking again.
This allows the the protocol to take appropriate action, such as
sending a TCP window update to the peer, if the window happened to
close because the socket buffer was filled. If the protocol is not
notified, a TCP transfer may stall until the remote end sends a window
probe.
- enable 10MHz (fast SCSI) operation on boards that support it. (only
aic6360 boards with fast SCSI enabled can do it)
- bounds check sync periods and offsets passed in from the transport layer
- tell the user which resource allocation failed (for the ISA probe) if we
weren't able to allocate an IRQ, DRQ or I/O port.
inq_len member of the ccb_getdev structure, but we've never filled that
value in..
So we now get the length from the inquiry data returned by the drive.
(Since we will fetch as much inquiry data as the drive claims to support.)
Reviewed by: mjacob
Reported by: Andrzej Tobola <san@iem.pw.edu.pl>
supports Xircom netwave series of cards. I have one of these cards
(but am trying to find one or two to test with), but it compiles and
aizu-san says it works.
I don't know if this supports 802.11 or not. I've seen conflicting
information on this.
Submitted by: Hiroyuki Aizu <aizu@jaist.ac.jp>
Obtained from: NetBSD
killing ipv6 and some other things.
This makes GENERIC and NEWCARD the same, with OLDCARD stuff commented
out and the NEWCARD stuff included. For the moment, pcic is commented
out (which has a old). Plus invariants. Plus ddb.
see atacontrol(8) for more.
Also the ATA_ENABLE_ATAPI_DMA, ATA_ENABLE_WC and ATA_ENABLE_TAGS
options are gone, use the tuneables listed in ata.4 instead from
the loader (this makes it possible to switch off DMA before the
driver has to touch the devices on broken hardware).
A route generated from an RTF_CLONING route had the RTF_WASCLONED flag
set but did not have a reference to the parent route, as documented in
the rtentry(9) manpage. This prevented such routes from being deleted
when their parent route is deleted.
Now, for example, if you delete an IP address from a network interface,
all ARP entries that were cloned from this interface route are flushed.
This also has an impact on netstat(1) output. Previously, dynamically
created ARP cache entries (RTF_STATIC flag is unset) were displayed as
part of the routing table display (-r). Now, they are only printed if
the -a option is given.
netinet/in.c, netinet/in_rmx.c:
When address is removed from an interface, also delete all routes that
point to this interface and address. Previously, for example, if you
changed the address on an interface, outgoing IP datagrams might still
use the old address. The only solution was to delete and re-add some
routes. (The problem is easily observed with the route(8) command.)
Note, that if the socket was already bound to the local address before
this address is removed, new datagrams generated from this socket will
still be sent from the old address.
PR: kern/20785, kern/21914
Reviewed by: wollman (the idea)
interface on this chip is compatable with the PIIX4. The catch is that
this interferes with isab0 which wants to attach to the same PCI node.
It seems to work, but we only tested it on systems with no ISA cards.
For UP, we were using $tmp_stk as a stack from the data section. If the
kernel text section grew beyond ~3MB, the data section would be pushed
beyond the temporary 4MB P==V mapping. This would cause the trampoline
up to high memory to fault. The hack workaround I did was to use all of
the page table pages that we already have while preparing the initial
P==V mapping, instead of just the first one.
For SMP, the AP bootstrap process suffered the same sort of problem and
got the same treatment.
MFC candidate - this breaks on 4.x just the same..
Thanks to: Richard Todd <rmtodd@ichotolot.servalan.com>
introduce a new argument, "namespace", rather than relying on a first-
character namespace indicator. This is in line with more recent
thinking on EA interfaces on various mailing lists, including the
posix1e, Linux acl-devel, and trustedbsd-discuss forums. Two namespaces
are defined by default, EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_SYSTEM and
EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_USER, where the primary distinction lies in the
access control model: user EAs are accessible based on the normal
MAC and DAC file/directory protections, and system attributes are
limited to kernel-originated or appropriately privileged userland
requests.
o These API changes occur at several levels: the namespace argument is
introduced in the extattr_{get,set}_file() system call interfaces,
at the vnode operation level in the vop_{get,set}extattr() interfaces,
and in the UFS extended attribute implementation. Changes are also
introduced in the VFS extattrctl() interface (system call, VFS,
and UFS implementation), where the arguments are modified to include
a namespace field, as well as modified to advoid direct access to
userspace variables from below the VFS layer (in the style of recent
changes to mount by adrian@FreeBSD.org). This required some cleanup
and bug fixing regarding VFS locks and the VFS interface, as a vnode
pointer may now be optionally submitted to the VFS_EXTATTRCTL()
call. Updated documentation for the VFS interface will be committed
shortly.
o In the near future, the auto-starting feature will be updated to
search two sub-directories to the ".attribute" directory in appropriate
file systems: "user" and "system" to locate attributes intended for
those namespaces, as the single filename is no longer sufficient
to indicate what namespace the attribute is intended for. Until this
is committed, all attributes auto-started by UFS will be placed in
the EXTATTR_NAMESPACE_SYSTEM namespace.
o The default POSIX.1e attribute names for ACLs and Capabilities have
been updated to no longer include the '$' in their filename. As such,
if you're using these features, you'll need to rename the attribute
backing files to the same names without '$' symbols in front.
o Note that these changes will require changes in userland, which will
be committed shortly. These include modifications to the extended
attribute utilities, as well as to libutil for new namespace
string conversion routines. Once the matching userland changes are
committed, a buildworld is recommended to update all the necessary
include files and verify that the kernel and userland environments
are in sync. Note: If you do not use extended attributes (most people
won't), upgrading is not imperative although since the system call
API has changed, the new userland extended attribute code will no longer
compile with old include files.
o Couple of minor cleanups while I'm there: make more code compilation
conditional on FFS_EXTATTR, which should recover a bit of space on
kernels running without EA's, as well as update copyright dates.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
a 82557 (e.g.: a newer chip) then:
+ enable MWI, if the PCI configuration indicates the system supports it
+ enable usage of extended TxCB, for better performance
+ enable hardware flow control. FC frames will be passed up to the
host only if promiscuous mode is enabled.
IOMEGA deserves a medal for making the most nonstandard ATAPI
devices, if they are ignorant or just not smart enough I don't
know, but somebody should help them out of their misery...
Proberly fail outstanding bio requests on devices that are detached.
This makes it possible to change between disk/cdrom/dvd/whathaveyou
in a notebook, just by suspending it, changing the device in the
bay (or what you model calls it), unsuspend and the ATA driver
will figure out what disappeared and properly fail those, and attach
any new devices found.
programs. There is a case during a fork() which can cause a deadlock.
From Tor -
The workaround that consists of setting a flag in the vm map that
indicates that a fork is in progress and using that mark in the page
fault handling to force a revalidation failure. That change will only
affect (pessimize) page fault handling during fork for threaded
(linuxthreads style) applications and applications using aio_*().
Submited by: tegge
call is correct, but it interferes with the massive hack called
vm_map_growstack(). The call will be returned after our stack handling
code is fixed.
Reported by: tegge
"options FFS_EXTATTR". When extended attribute auto-starting
is enabled, FFS will scan the .attribute directory off of the
root of each file system, as it is mounted. If .attribute
exists, EA support will be started for the file system. If
there are files in the directory, FFS will attempt to start
them as attribute backing files for attributes baring the same
name. All attributes are started before access to the file
system is permitted, so this permits race-free enabling of
attributes. For attributes backing support for security
features, such as ACLs, MAC, Capabilities, this is vital, as
it prevents the file system attributes from getting out of
sync as a result of file system operations between mount-time
and the enabling of the extended attribute. The userland
extattrctl tool will still function exactly as previously.
Files must be placed directly in .attribute, which must be
directly off of the file system root: symbolic links are
not permitted. FFS_EXTATTR will continue to be able
to function without FFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART for sites that do not
want/require auto-starting. If you're using the UFS_ACL code
available from www.TrustedBSD.org, using FFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART
is recommended.
o This support is implemented by adding an invocation of
ufs_extattr_autostart() to ffs_mountfs(). In addition,
several new supporting calls are introduced in
ufs_extattr.c:
ufs_extattr_autostart(): start EAs on the specified mount
ufs_extattr_lookup(): given a directory and filename,
return the vnode for the file.
ufs_extattr_enable_with_open(): invoke ufs_extattr_enable()
after doing the equililent of vn_open()
on the passed file.
ufs_extattr_iterate_directory(): iterate over a directory,
invoking ufs_extattr_lookup() and
ufs_extattr_enable_with_open() on each
entry.
o This feature is not widely tested, and therefore may contain
bugs, caution is advised. Several changes are in the pipeline
for this feature, including breaking out of EA namespaces into
subdirectories of .attribute (this is waiting on the updated
EA API), as well as a per-filesystem flag indicating whether
or not EAs should be auto-started. This is required because
administrators may not want .attribute auto-started on all
file systems, especially if non-administrators have write access
to the root of a file system.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
the target mode code or outer layers.
Increase cd_tagval to be 32 bits since it will have to now carry 16
bits of parallel SCSI ATIO handle as well as a normal tag (if any).
Solaris (which, for reasons unknown to me, chokes on u_int16_t
as a typedef of unsigned short if used in a transitional (mixed K&R
and ANSI) way), we'll go the extra mile and fully ANSIfy things.
offset is set to 0.
Re-arrange the DT limiting code so that we don't end up setting the period
to 0xa if the user really wants async. The previous behavior seemed to
confuse the aic(4) driver.
PR: kern/22733
Reviewed by: gibbs
devices. opening /dev/{dsp,dspW,audio}0 and then opening a different device
from that list and closing it resulted in a panic when any operation is
performed on the first fd.
we prevent this happening by denying the second open unless it uses the same
minor device as the first.
PR: kern/25519
is transmitted as all ones". This got broken after introduction
of delayed checksums as follows. Some guys (including Jonathan)
think that it is allowed to transmit all ones in place of a zero
checksum for TCP the same way as for UDP. (The discussion still
takes place on -net.) Thus, the 0 -> 0xffff checksum fixup was
first moved from udp_output() (see udp_usrreq.c, 1.64 -> 1.65)
to in_cksum_skip() (see sys/i386/i386/in_cksum.c, 1.17 -> 1.18,
INVERT expression). Besides that I disagree that it is valid for
TCP, there was no real problem until in_cksum.c,v 1.20, where the
in_cksum() was made just a special version of in_cksum_skip().
The side effect was that now every incoming IP datagram failed to
pass the checksum test (in_cksum() returned 0xffff when it should
actually return zero). It was fixed next day in revision 1.21,
by removing the INVERT expression. The latter also broke the
0 -> 0xffff fixup for UDP checksums.
Before this change:
: tcpdump: listening on lo0
: 127.0.0.1.33005 > 127.0.0.1.33006: udp 0 (ttl 64, id 1)
: 4500 001c 0001 0000 4011 7cce 7f00 0001
: 7f00 0001 80ed 80ee 0008 0000
After this change:
: tcpdump: listening on lo0
: 127.0.0.1.33005 > 127.0.0.1.33006: udp 0 (ttl 64, id 1)
: 4500 001c 0001 0000 4011 7cce 7f00 0001
: 7f00 0001 80ed 80ee 0008 ffff
each node in order to make it easier to add new entries.
Rewrite the internal directory structure so that it is possible to
have independent subdirectories. Utilize this to add /proc/net/dev.
Reviewed by: DES
Paste always happens to current _text_ cursor position independently of
mouse cursor position in any case and old variant force user to press
mouse paste button _two_ times if mouse cursor is invisible.
to call fork1() directly if we don't want out process queued right away.
This has the serendipitous side effect of saving us a call to pfind().
This makes threaded Linux apps (such as Opera) work again.
come from a dummynet pipe. Without this, the code which increments
the per-ifaddr stats can dereference an uninitialised pointer. This
should make dummynet usable again.
Reported by: "Dmitry A. Yanko" <fm@astral.ntu-kpi.kiev.ua>
Reviewed by: luigi, joe
ahc_eisa.c:
Change aic7770_map_int to take an additional irq parameter.
Although we can get the irq from the eisa dev under FreeBSD,
we can't do this under linux, so the OSM interface must supply
this.
ahc_pci.c:
Move ahc_power_state_change() to the OSM. This allows us to
use a platform supplied function that does the same thing.
-current will move to the FreeBSD native API in the near
future.
aic7770.c:
Sync up with core changes to support Linux EISA.
We now store a 2 bit primary channel number rather
than a bit flag that only allows b to be the primary
channel. Adjust for this change.
aic7xxx.c:
Namespace and staticization cleanup. All exported symbols
use an "ahc_" prefix to avoid collisions with other modules.
Correct a logic bug that prevented us from dropping
ATN during some exceptional conditions during message
processing.
Take advantage of a new flag managed by the sequencer
that indicates if an SCB fetch is in progress. If so,
the currently selected SCB needs to be returned to the
free list to prevent an SCB leak. This leak is a rarity
and would only occur if a bus reset or timeout resulting
in a bus reset occurred in the middle of an SCB fetch.
Don't attempt to perform ULTRA transfers on ultra capable
adapters missing the external precision resistor required
for ultra speeds. I've never encountered an adapter
configured this way, but better safe than sorry.
Handle the case of 5MHz user sync rate set as "0" instead of 0x1c
in scratch ram.
If we lookup a period of 0 in our table (async), clear the scsi offset.
aic7xxx.h:
Adjust for the primary channel being represented as
a 2 bit integer in the flags member of the ahc softc.
Cleanup the flags definitions so that comment blocks are
not cramped.
Update seeprom definitions to correctly reflect the fact
that the primary channel is represented as a 2 bit integer.
Add AHC_ULTRA_DIASABLED softc flag to denote controllers
missing the external precision resistor.
aic7xxx.reg:
Add DFCACHETH to the definition of DFSTATUS for completness sake.
Add SEQ_FLAGS2 which currently only contains the SCB_DMA
(SCB DMA in progress) flag.
aic7xxx.seq:
Correct a problem when one lun has a disconnected untagged
transaction and another lun has disconnected tagged transactions.
Just because an entry is found in the untagged table doesn't
mean that it will match. If the match on the lun fails, cleanup
the SCB (return it to the disconnected list or free it), and snoop
for a tag message. Before this change, we reported an unsolicited
reselection. This bug was introduced about a month ago during an
overly aggressive optimization pass on the reselection code.
When cleaning up an SCB, we can't just blindly free the SCB. In
the paging case, if the SCB came off of the disconnected list, its
state may never have been updated in host memory. So, check the
disconnected bit in SCB_CONTROL and return the SCB to the disconnected
list if appropriate.
Manage the SCB_DMA flag of SEQ_FLAGS2.
More carefully shutdown the S/G dma engine in all cases by using
a subroutine. Supposedly not doing this can cause an arbiter hang
on some ULTRA2 chips.
Formatting cleanup.
On some chips, at least the aic7856, the transition from
MREQPEND to HDONE can take a full 4 clock cycles. Test
HDONE one more time to avoid this race. We only want our
FIFO hung recovery code to execute when the engine is
really hung.
aic7xxx_93cx6.c:
Sync perforce ids.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c:
Adjust for the primary channel being a 2 bit integer
rather than a flag for 'B' channel being the primary.
Namespace cleanup.
Unpause the sequencer in one error recovery path that
neglected to do so. This could have caused us to perform
a bus reset when a recovery message might have otherwise been
successful.
aic7xxx_freebsd.h:
Use AHC_PCI_CONFIG for controlling compilation of PCI
support consistently throughout the driver.
Move ahc_power_state_change() to OSM.
aic7xxx_inline.h
Namespace cleanup.
Adjust our interrupt handler so it will work in the edge
interrupt case. We must process all interrupt sources
when the interrupt fires or risk not ever getting an
interrupt again. This involves marking the fact
that we are relying on an edge interrupt in ahc->flags
and checking for this condition in addition to the
AHC_ALL_INTERRUPTS flag. This fixes hangs on the
284X and any other aic7770 installation where level
interrupts are not available.
aic7xxx_pci.c:
Move the powerstate manipulation code into the OSM. Several
OSes now provide this functionality natively.
Take another shot at using the data stored in scratch ram
if the SCB2 signature is correct and no SEEPROM data is
available. In the past this failed if external SCB ram
was configured because the memory port was locked. We
now release the memory port prior to testing the values
in SCB2 and re-acquire it prior to doing termination control.
Adjust for new 2 bit primary channel setting.
Trust the STPWLEVEL setting on v 3.X BIOSes too.
Configure any 785X ID in the same fashion and assume
that any device with a rev id of 1 or higher has the
PCI 2.1 retry bug.
used for up to "vfs.aio.max_buf_aio" of the requests. If a request
size is MAXPHYS, but the request base isn't page aligned, vmapbuf()
will map the end of the user space buffer into the start of the kva
allocated for the next physical buffer. Don't use a physical buffer
in this case. (This change addresses problem report 25617.)
When an aio_read/write() on a raw device has completed, timeout() is
used to schedule a signal to the process. Thus, the reporting is
delayed up to 10 ms (assuming hz is 100). The process might have
terminated in the meantime, causing a trap 12 when attempting to
deliver the signal. Thus, the timeout must be cancelled when removing
the job.
aio jobs in state JOBST_JOBQGLOBAL should be removed from the
kaio_jobqueue list during process rundown.
During process rundown, some aio jobs might move from one list to a
different list that has already been "emptied", causing the rundown to
be incomplete. Retry the rundown.
A call to BUF_KERNPROC() is needed after obtaining a physical buffer
to disassociate the lock from the running process since it can return
to userland without releasing that lock.
PR: 25617
Submitted by: tegge
Change a prototype.
Add a function version of ng_ref_node() when debugging so
a breakpoint can be set on it.
ng_base.c:
add 'node' as an argument to ng_apply_item so that it is up
to the caller to take over and release the item's reference on
the node. If the release reports back that the node went away
due to the reference going to 0, the caller should cease referencing
the now defunct node. (e.g. the item was a 'kill node' message).
Alter ng_unref_node to report back the residual references as a result.
ng_pptpgre.c:
Don't reference a node after we dropped a reference to it.
(What if it was the last?)
Fixes a node leak reported by Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
which was due to an incorrect earlier attempt to fix the
"accessing node after dropping the last reference" problem.
o Separate the kernel stuff from the Yarrow algorithm. Yarrow is now
well contained in one source file and one header.
o Replace the Blowfish-based crypto routines with Rijndael-based ones.
(Rijndael is the new AES algorithm). The huge improvement in
Rijndael's key-agility over Blowfish means that this is an
extremely dramatic improvement in speed, and makes a heck of
a difference in its (lack of) CPU load.
o Clean up the sysctl's. At BDE's prompting, I have gone back to
static sysctls.
o Bug fixes. The streamlining of the crypto stuff enabled me to
find and fix some bugs. DES also found a bug in the reseed routine
which is fixed.
o Change the way reseeds clear "used" entropy. Previously, only the
source(s) that caused a reseed were cleared. Now all sources in the
relevant pool(s) are cleared.
o Code tidy-up. Mostly to make it (nearly) 80-column compliant.
Use mchain API to work with mbuf chains.
Do not depend on INET and IPX options.
Allocate ncp_rq structure dynamically to prevent possible stack overflows.
Let ncp_request() dispose control structure if request failed.
Move all NCP wrappers to ncp_ncp.c file and all NCP request processing
functions to ncp_rq.c file.
Improve reconnection logic.
Misc style fixes.
then knocked the extra digits off). Blegh. Update the comment and
adjustment method reading the chip clock year register to note that
anything less than 70 means we're past the year 2000.
reference count was transferred to the new object, but both the
new and the old map entries had pointers to the new object.
Correct this by transferring the second reference.
This fixes a panic that can occur when mmap(2) is used with the
MAP_INHERIT flag.
PR: i386/25603
Reviewed by: dillon, alc
on certain types of SOCK_RAW sockets. Also, use the ip.ttl MIB
variable instead of MAXTTL constant as the default time-to-live
value for outgoing IP packets all over the place, as we already
do this for TCP and UDP.
Reviewed by: wollman
if we hold a spin mutex, since we can trivially get into deadlocks if we
start switching out of processes that hold spinlocks. Checking to see if
interrupts were disabled was a sort of cheap way of doing this since most
of the time interrupts were only disabled when holding a spin lock. At
least on the i386. To fix this properly, use a per-process counter
p_spinlocks that counts the number of spin locks currently held, and
instead of checking to see if interrupts are disabled in the witness code,
check to see if we hold any spin locks. Since child processes always
start up with the sched lock magically held in fork_exit(), we initialize
p_spinlocks to 1 for child processes. Note that proc0 doesn't go through
fork_exit(), so it starts with no spin locks held.
Consulting from: cp
into an interruptable sleep and we increment a sleep count, we make sure
that we are the thread that will decrement the count when we wakeup.
Otherwise, what happens is that if we get interrupted (signal) and we
have to wake up, but before we get our mutex, some thread that wants
to wake us up detects that the count is non-zero and so enters wakeup_one(),
but there's nothing on the sleep queue and so we don't get woken up. The
thread will still decrement the sleep count, which is bad because we will
also decrement it again later (as we got interrupted) and are already off
the sleep queue.
an IP header with ip_len in network byte order. For certain
values of ip_len, this could cause icmp_error() to write
beyond the end of an mbuf, causing mbuf free-list corruption.
This problem was observed during generation of ICMP redirects.
We now make quite sure that the copy of the IP header kept
for icmp_error() is stored in a non-shared mbuf header so
that it will not be modified by ip_output().
Also:
- Calculate the correct number of bytes that need to be
retained for icmp_error(), instead of assuming that 64
is enough (it's not).
- In icmp_error(), use m_copydata instead of bcopy() to
copy from the supplied mbuf chain, in case the first 8
bytes of IP payload are not stored directly after the IP
header.
- Sanity-check ip_len in icmp_error(), and panic if it is
less than sizeof(struct ip). Incoming packets with bad
ip_len values are discarded in ip_input(), so this should
only be triggered by bugs in the code, not by bad packets.
This patch results from code and suggestions from Ruslan, Bosko,
Jonathan Lemon and Matt Dillon, with important testing by Mike
Tancsa, who could reproduce this problem at will.
Reported by: Mike Tancsa <mike@sentex.net>
Reviewed by: ru, bmilekic, jlemon, dillon
Since the compiler lays out the stuct so that pointers are naturally
(8-byte) aligned aligned, adding the int ki_layout didn't change the size of
the stuct; it just converted the alignment padding to a usable struct
field.
more robust. They would correctly return ENOMEM for the first time when
the buffer was exhausted, but subsequent calls in this case could cause
writes ouside of the buffer bounds.
Approved by: rwatson
in vr_init(). The VIA Rhine chip happens to be able to automatically
read its station address from the EEPROM automatically when reset,
so you don't need to program the filter if you want to keep using the
factory default address, but if you want to change it with "ifconfig vr0
ether xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx" then we need to manually set it in the init
routine.
sys/contrib/dev/acpica/Subsystem/Hardware/Attic/hwxface.c to the proper
location after AcpiEnterSleepState().
- Wait for the WAK_STS bit
- Evaluate the _WAK method and check result code
structure rather than assuming that the device vnode would reside
in the FFS filesystem (which is obviously a broken assumption with
the device filesystem).
in the hopes that they will actually *read* the comment above
it and *follow* the instructions so as to cause all the rest
of us less a lot less grief.
- Don't try to grab Giant before postsig() in userret() as it is no longer
needed.
- Don't grab Giant before psignal() in ast() but get the proc lock instead.
proctree lock and the process lock are held when updating p_pptr and
p_oppid. When we are just reaading p_pptr we only need the proc lock and
not a proctree lock as well.
Giant. The only exception is the CANSIGNAL() macro. Unlocking the proc
lock around sendsig() in trapsignal() is also questionable. Note that
the functions sigexit(), psignal(), and issignal() must be called with
the proc lock of the process in question held. postsig() and
trapsignal() should not be called with the proc lock held, but they
also do not require Giant anymore either.
- Remove spl's that are now no longer needed as they are fully replaced.
don't end up back at ourselves which would indicate deadlock.
- Add the proc lock to the witness dup_list as we may hold more than one
process lock at a time.
- Don't assert a mutex is owned in _mtx_unlock_sleep() as that is too late.
We do the checks in the macros instead.
mutex operations in kthread_create().
- Lock a kthread's proc before changing its parent via proc_reparent().
- Test P_KTHREAD not P_SYSTEM in kthread_suspend() and kthread_resume().
P_SYSTEM just means that the process shouldn't be swapped and is used
for vinum's daemon for example.
- Lock all the signal state used for suspending and resuming kthreads with
the proc lock.
- Add proc locking to fork1(). Always lock the child procoess (new
process) first when both processes need to be locked at the same
time.
- Remove unneeded spl()'s as the data they protected is now locked.
- Ensure that the proctree is exclusively locked and the new process is
locked when setting up the parent process pointer.
- Lock the check for P_KTHREAD in p_flag in fork_exit().
possible for us to see a process in the early stages of fork before p_fd
has been initialized. Ideally, we wouldn't stick a process on the allproc
list until it was fully created however.
than dinking around in the process lists explicitly.
- Hold both the proctree lock and proc lock of the child process when
reparenting a process via proc_reparent.
- Lock processes while sending them signals.
- Miscellaenous proc locking.
- proc_reparent() now asserts that the child is locked in addition to an
exclusive proctree lock.
- Move the _mtx_assert() prototype up to the top of the file with the rest
of the function prototypes.
- Define all the mtx_foo() macros in terms of mtx_foo_flags().
- Add a KASSERT() to check for invalid options in mtx_lock_flags().
- Move the mtx_assert() to ensure a mutex is owned before releasing it
in front of WITNESS_EXIT() in all the mtx_unlock_* macros.
- Change the MPASS* macros to be on #ifdef INVARIANTS, not just #ifdef
MUTEX_DEBUG since most of them check to see that the mutex functions are
called properly. Define MPASS4() in terms of KASSERT() to do this.
- Define MPASS{,[23]} in terms of MPASS4() to simplify things and avoid
code duplication.
that write access to a member requires both locks and read access only
requires one of the given locks. Convert instances of '(c+)' to
'(c + k)' as a result.
- Change p_pptr from (e) to (c + e).
- Change p_oppid from (c) to (c + e).
- Change p_args from (b?) to (c + k).
- Move the actual work of STOPEVENT, PHOLD, and PRELE to _STOPEVENT,
_PHOLD, and _PRELE. The new macros do not acquire the proc lock and
simply assert that it is held. The non _ prefixed macros acquire the
proc lock and then call the _ prefixed macros.
- Add a PROC_LOCK_NOSWITCH() macro to be used when releasing the proc lock
while already holding a spin lock (usually sched_lock).
- Add a PROC_LOCK_ASSERT() macro to be used to make assertions about the
proc lock. It takes the usual mtx_assert() macro arguments as its
second argument.
INVARIANTS case, define the actual KASSERT() in _SX_ASSERT_[SX]LOCKED
macros that are used in the sx code itself and convert the
SX_ASSERT_[SX]LOCKED macros to simple wrappers that grab the mutex for the
duration of the check.
support implementations of ACLs in file systems. Introduce the
following new functions:
vaccess_acl_posix1e() vaccess() that accepts an ACL
acl_posix1e_mode_to_perm() Convert mode bits to ACL rights
acl_posix1e_mode_to_entry() Build ACL entry from mode/uid/gid
acl_posix1e_perms_to_mode() Generate file mode from ACL
acl_posix1e_check() Syntax verification for ACL
These functions allow a file system to rely on central ACL evaluation
and syntax checking, as well as providing useful utilities to
allow ACL-based file systems to generate mode/owner/etc information
to return via VOP_GETATTR(), and to support file systems that split
their ACL information over their existing inode storage (mode, uid,
gid) and extended ACL into extended attributes (additional users,
groups, ACL mask).
o Add prototypes for exported functions to sys/acl.h, sys/vnode.h
Reviewed by: trustedbsd-discuss, freebsd-arch
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
but potentially significant in -4.x.)
Eliminate a pointless parameter to aio_fphysio().
Remove unnecessary casts from aio_fphysio() and aio_physwakeup().
- Add sx_xholder member to sx struct which is used for INVARIANTS-enabled
assertions. It indicates the thread that presently owns the xlock.
- Add some assertions to the sx lock code that will detect the fatal
API abuse:
xlock --> xlock
xlock --> slock
which now works thanks to sx_xholder.
Notice that the remaining two problematic cases:
slock --> xlock
slock --> slock (a little less problematic, but still recursion)
will need to be handled by witness eventually, as they are more
involved.
Reviewed by: jhb, jake, jasone
supported architectures such as the alpha. This allows us to save
on kernel virtual address space, TLB entries, and (on the ia64) VHPT
entries. pmap_map() now modifies the passed in virtual address on
architectures that do not support direct-mapped segments to point to
the next available virtual address. It also returns the actual
address that the request was mapped to.
- On the IA64 don't use a special zone of PV entries needed for early
calls to pmap_kenter() during pmap_init(). This gets us in trouble
because we end up trying to use the zone allocator before it is
initialized. Instead, with the pmap_map() change, the number of needed
PV entries is small enough that we can get by with a static pool that is
used until pmap_init() is complete.
Submitted by: dfr
Debugging help: peter
Tested by: me
cursor.
The reason is: mouse cursor goes into hide/visible loop while text cursor even
not moved.
PR: 25536
Submitted by: David Xu <davidx@viasoft.com.cn>
palette. As a result, the colors on the video console can look rather
weird. For example, sysinstall on the alpha has a read background. We
can work around this partially by remapping the colors used by syscons for
the ANSI color escape sequences. Note that screen savers and anything that
sets the colors explicitly will still get incorrect colors, but programs
such as sysinstall will now use the correct colors. A more correct fix
would be to actually fix the VGA palette on boot by either swapping all
the red and blue attributes or by hardcoding a standard palette and
overwriting the entire palette.
Requested by: gallatin
Obtained from: NetBSD
This lets us run programs containing newer (eg bwx) instructions
on older (eg EV5 and less) machines. One win is that we can
now run Acrobat4 on EV4s and EV5s.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Glanced at by: mjacob
MFS: bring the consistent `compat_3_brand' support
This should fix the linux-related panics reported
by naddy@mips.inka.de (Christian Weisgerber)
Forgotten by: obrien
it doesn't block packets whose destination address has been translated to
the loopback net by ipnat.
Add warning comments about the ip_checkinterface feature.
aiocb's allocated by zalloc(). In other words, zfree() was never
called. Now, we call zfree(). Why eliminate this micro-
optimization? At some later point, when we multithread the AIO
system, we would need a mutex to synchronize access to aio_freejobs,
making its use nearly indistinguishable in cost from zalloc() and
zfree().
Remove unnecessary fhold() and fdrop() calls from aio_qphysio(),
undo'ing a part of revision 1.86. The reference count on the file
structure is already incremented by _aio_aqueue() before it calls
aio_qphysio(). (Update the comments to document this fact.)
Remove unnecessary casts from _aio_aqueue(), aio_read(), aio_write()
and aio_waitcomplete().
Remove an unnecessary "return;" from aio_process().
Add "static" in various places.
However, if the RTF_DELCLONE and RTF_WASCLONED condition passes, but the ref
count is > 1, we won't decrement the count at all. This could lead to
route entries never being deleted.
Here, we call rtfree() not only if the initial two conditions fail, but
also if the ref count is > 1 (and we therefore don't immediately delete
the route, but let rtfree() handle it).
This is an urgent MFC candidate. Thanks go to Mike Silbersack for the
fix, once again. :-)
Submitted by: Mike Silbersack <silby@silby.com>
addressed to the interface on the other side of the box follow their
historical path.
Explicitly block packets sent to the loopback network sent from the outside,
which is consistent with the behavior of the forwarding path between
interfaces as implemented in in_canforward().
Always check the arrival interface when matching the packet destination
against the interface broadcast addresses. This bug allowed TCP
connections to be made to the broadcast address of an interface on the
far side of the system because the M_BCAST flag was not set because the
packet was unicast to the interface on the near side. This was broken
when the directed broadcast code was removed from revision 1.32. If
the directed broadcast code was stil present, the destination would not
have been recognized as local until the packet was forwarded to the output
interface and ether_output() looped a copy back to ip_input() with
M_BCAST set and the receive interface set to the output interface.
Optimize the order of the tests.
Reviewed by: jlemon
related code from aio_read() and aio_write(). This field was
intended, but never used, to allow a mythical user-level library to
make an aio_read() or aio_write() behave like an ordinary read() or
write(), i.e., a blocking I/O operation.
user space. It has already been copied in and mp->mnt_stat.f_mntonname has
already been initialised by the caller.
This fixes a panic on the alpha caused by the fact that the variable
'size' wasn't initialised because the call to copyinstr() bailed out with
an EFAULT error.
bolted to a ne-2000 chip. This is necessary for the NetGear FA-410TX
and other cards.
This also requires you add mii to your kernel if you have an ed driver
configured.
This code will result in a couple of timeout messages for ed on the
impacted cards. Additional work will be needed, but this does work
right now, and many people need these cards.
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
`infrastructure' built with INVARIANT_SUPPORT for kern_mutex.c essentially
involves _mtx_assert(), which makes use of constants that were defined
under #ifdef INVARIANTS here.
This is a pretty invasive change, but there are three good
reasons to do this:
1. We'll never have > 16 bits of handle.
2. We can (eventually) enable the RIO (Reduced Interrupt Operation)
bits which return multiple completing 16 bit handles in mailbox
registers.
3. The !)$*)$*~)@$*~)$* Qlogic target mode for parallel SCSI spec
changed such that at_reserved (which was 32 bits) was split into
two pieces- and one of which was a 16 bit handle id that functions
like the at_rxid for Fibre Channel (a tag for the f/w to correlate
CTIOs with a particular command). Since we had to muck with that
and this changed the whole handler architecture, we might as well...
Propagate new at_handle on through int ct_fwhandle. Follow
implications of changing to 16 bit handles.
These above changes at least get Qlogic 1040 cards working in target
mode again. 1080/12160 cards don't work yet.
In isp.c:
Prepare for doing all loop management in outer layers.
with egcs-1.1.1. bus_space_write_multi_2() had an extra operation that
should have been removed.
Remove it.
This fixes the panic when bus_space_write_multi_2() is used.
Obtained from: jake
- Add a KASSERT() to ensure an ithread has a backing kernel thread when we
schedule it.
- Don't attempt to preemptively switch to an ithread if p_stat of curproc
is not SRUN.
newbus in revision 1.19. As a result, lnc was, I believe, broken
for all PCI cards. The softc fields `lnc_btag' and `lnc_bhandle'
were not initialised, `rap', `rdp' and `bdp' were initialised to
the wrong values, and the size of the DMA ring memory was calculated
incorrectly.
Paul Richards has further cleanups in the pipeline, but this at
least is enough to make the driver usable with VMware.
Approved by: paul
is to return EINPROGRESS, EALREADY, (so_error ONCE), EISCONN. Certain
linux applications rely on the so_error (normally 0) being returned in
order to operate properly.
Tested by: Thomas Moestl <tmoestl@gmx.net>
An initial tidyup of the mount() syscall and VFS mount code.
This code replaces the earlier work done by jlemon in an attempt to
make linux_mount() work.
* the guts of the mount work has been moved into vfs_mount().
* move `type', `path' and `flags' from being userland variables into being
kernel variables in vfs_mount(). `data' remains a pointer into
userspace.
* Attempt to verify the `type' and `path' strings passed to vfs_mount()
aren't too long.
* rework mount() and linux_mount() to take the userland parameters
(besides data, as mentioned) and pass kernel variables to vfs_mount().
(linux_mount() already did this, I've just tidied it up a little more.)
* remove the copyin*() stuff for `path'. `data' still requires copyin*()
since its a pointer into userland.
* set `mount->mnt_statf_mntonname' in vfs_mount() rather than in each
filesystem. This variable is generally initialised with `path', and
each filesystem can override it if they want to.
* NOTE: f_mntonname is intiailised with "/" in the case of a root mount.
of memory, rather than from the start.
This fixes problems allocating bouncebuffers on alphas where there is only
1 chunk of memory (unlike PCs where there is generally at least one small
chunk and a large chunk). Having 1 chunk had been fatal, because these
structures take over 13MB on a machine with 1GB of ram. This doesn't leave
much room for other structures and bounce buffers if they're at the front.
Reviewed by: dfr, anderson@cs.duke.edu, silence on -arch
Tested by: Yoriaki FUJIMORI <fujimori@grafin.fujimori.cache.waseda.ac.jp>
for selecting unit). Instead, use the resource hints mechanism.
One unfortunate situation here is that there is no resource_quad_value
function- which is what I needed for WWN boot time replacement. Worse-
you can't store the hint as just plain
hint.isp.0.nodewwn="0x50000000aaaa0001"
because this gets interpreted as an int- incorrectly because it can't
be converted to an int. I can't even get this as a string. To work
around this particular case for nodewwn && portwwn setting, this
rather grotesque form will be used:
hint.isp.0.nodewwn="w50000000aaaa0001"
hint.isp.0.portwwn="w50000000aaaa0002"
At the same time, if we have no hinted WWN, set the default WWN (which, btw,
gets overridden if the card has valid NVRAM, which is usual) to
0x400000007F000009ull (which translates to NAA == IPv4, 127.0.0.9).
Eliminate more printf's and replace them either with device_printf or
isp_prt calls.
ones where we have a CAM path) and replacing them with calls to isp_prt.,
Eliminate isp_unit references- we no longer have an isp_unit- we now
have an isp_dev that device_get_unit can work with.
`rootvnode' pointer, but vfs_syscalls.c's checkdirs() assumed that
it did. This bug reliably caused a panic at reboot time if any
filesystem had been mounted directly over /.
The checkdirs() function is called at mount time to find any process
fd_cdir or fd_rdir pointers referencing the covered mountpoint
vnode. It transfers these to point at the root of the new filesystem.
However, this process was not reversed at unmount time, so processes
with a cwd/root at a mount point would unexpectedly lose their
cwd/root following a mount-unmount cycle at that mountpoint.
This change should fix both of the above issues. Start_init() now
holds an extra vnode reference corresponding to `rootvnode', and
dounmount() releases this reference when the root filesystem is
unmounted just before reboot. Dounmount() now undoes the actions
taken by checkdirs() at mount time; any process cdir/rdir pointers
that reference the root vnode of the unmounted filesystem are
transferred to the now-uncovered vnode.
Reviewed by: bde, phk
a regular basis. Adjust our linux emulation to conform. This will
cause more dirty pages to be left for the pagedaemon to deal with,
but our new low-memory handling code can deal with it. The linux
way appears to be a trend, and we may very well make MAP_NOSYNC the
default for FreeBSD as well (once we have reasonable sequential
write-behind heuristics for random faults).
(will be MFC'd prior to 4.3 freeze)
Suggested by: Andrew Gallatin
make sure that PG_NOSYNC is properly set. Previously we only set it
for a write-fault, but this can occur on a read-fault too.
(will be MFCd prior to 4.3 freeze)
hit on the client side and prevent the server side from retiring writes.
Pipeline operations turned off for all READs (no big loss since reads are
usually synchronous) and for NFS writes, and left on for the default bwrite().
(MFC expected prior to 4.3 freeze)
Testing by: mjacob, dillon
update native priority, it is diffcult to get right and likely
to end up horribly wrong. Use an honestly wrong fixed value
that seems to work; PUSER for user threads, and the interrupt
priority for ithreads. Set it once when the process is created
and forget about it.
Suggested by: bde
Pointy hat: me
if an arriving packet belongs to us, also check that the packet arrived
through the correct interface. Skip this check if the packet was locally
generated.
CVSrepo deletion of the previous attempt will be requested:
--original message--
Add the 'virtual nulmodem driver'
Particularly useful for debuging kernels using vmware.
If your name is Bruce evans and you are a WIZ at tty interfaces,
then you should probably rip this to shreds and offer lots of suggestions and
patches. I've been using this since 4.0-CURRENT and it's never caused
problems but I'm sure I got something wrong. This is similar to the pty/cty
device driver except that both sides are ttys. Even minor numbers
are side A and odd minor numbers are side B.
Work needs to be done regarding what happens to the other side when you
close a node.
to use with vmware, configure vmware to redirect COM2 out to side A of one
of these and boot a kernel with teh gdb remote port set to sio1.
AFTER dropping into the gdb kernel debugger in your test kernel,
fire up gdb with it's remote port pointing at the appropriate side B.
To catch all console output, you can boot the vmware kernel with a serial
console, (COM1) similarly redirected to a nulmodem, and use 'tip' to observe it.
This is practically unaltered since pre 4.0 days except for
changes made along the way needed to make it compile, so any suggestions
or offers of total rewrites will be listenned to :-)
When we recieve a fragmented TCP packet (other than the first) we can't
extract header information (we don't have state to reference). In a rather
unelegant fashion we just move on and assume a non-match.
Recent additions to the TCP header-specific section of the code neglected
to add the logic to the fragment code so in those cases the match was
assumed to be positive and those parts of the rule (which should have
resulted in a non-match/continue) were instead skipped (which means
the processing of the rule continued even though it had already not
matched).
Fault can be spread out over Rich Steenbergen (tcpoptions) and myself
(tcp{seq,ack,win}).
rwatson sent me a patch that got me thinking about this whole situation
(but what I'm committing / this description is mine so don't blame him).
rather than in silly places like "VFS Cluster debugging". People
should really be using COMPAT_LINUX instead of the linux module on
dynamic systems like -current.
process's priority go through the roof when it released a (contested)
mutex. Only set the native priority in mtx_lock if hasn't already
been set.
Reviewed by: jhb
in VMware reports 0x00000000 in the PCI subsystem ID register, but
0x10001000 when you read the mirror registers in I/O space. This causes
pcn_probe() to think it's found a card in 32-bit mode, and performing
a 32-bit I/O access makes on a 16-bit port makes VMware go boom. Special
case the 0x10001000 value until somebody at VMware grows a clue.
Finally discovered by: Andrew Gallatin
For TCP, verify that the sequence number in the ICMP packet falls within
the tcp receive window before performing any actions indicated by the
icmp packet.
Clean up some layering violations (access to tcp internals from in_pcb)