page queues for the backing objects. The queues are huge and clutter
the display, when mostly the map entries and its backing storage is
interesting.
The page queues can be seen with ddb 'show object' command.
Reviewed by: alc
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
the GPIO pin is connected to a push button (or other devices).
Instead keep the boot loader settings.
Calling ar71xx_gpio_pin_configure() with DEFAULT_CAPS was probably a
mistake and was causing all the pins to be set as outputs.
at that time, but AFAIK it is only used on routerboards.
Enabling GPIO_FUNC_SPI_CS[1|2]_EN will claim the use of gpio pins 0 and 1
respectivelly for use as SPI CS pins.
When really needed, this can still be enabled on kernel hints using the
function_set and function_clear knobs.
This driver supports the low and high precision models (9 and 11 bits) and
it will auto-detect the both variants.
The driver expose the temperature registers (actual temperature, shutdown
and hysteresys temperature) and also the configuration register.
It was tested on FDT systems: RPi, BBB and on non-FDT systems: AR71xx, with
both, hardware i2c controllers (when available) and gpioiic(4).
This provides a simple and cheap way for verifying the i2c bus on embedded
systems.
- For non-periodic traffic we only need to wait two SOFs before
disabling the channel.
- Make sure we release the TX FIFO tracking level after the host
channel is disabled.
- Make sure the host channel state gets reset/disabled initially.
- Two minor code style changes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Under enough load, the swi's can actually be preempted and migrated
to other currently free cores. When doing RSS experiments, this lead
to the per-CPU TCP timers not lining up any more with the RX CPU said
flows were ending up on, leading to increased lock contention.
Since there was a little pushback on flipping them on by default,
I've left the default at "don't pin."
The other less obvious problem here is that the default swi
is also the same as the destination swi for CPU #0. So if one
pins the swi on CPU #0, there's no default floating swi.
A nice future project would be to create a separate swi for
the "default" floating swi, as well as per-CPU swis that are
(optionally) pinned.
Tested:
* parallel TCP tests (2 x 1g unfortunately for now);
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2650
Note:
This is based on some initial investigation into RSS/TCP stack lock
contention on FreeBSD-HEAD whilst at Netflix in January 2014.
- Rework how we allocate and free USB host channels, so that we only
allocate a channel if there is a real packet going out on the USB
cable.
- Use BULK type for control data and status, due to instabilities in
the HW it appears.
- Split FIFO TX levels into one for the periodic FIFO and one for the
non-periodic FIFO.
- Use correct HFNUM mask when scheduling host transactions. The HFNUM
register does not count the full 16-bit range.
- Correct START/COMPLETION slot for TT transactions. For INTERRUPT and
ISOCHRONOUS type transactions the hardware always respects the ODDFRM
bit, which means we need to allocate multiple host channels when
processing such endpoints, to not miss any so-called complete split
opportunities.
- When doing ISOCHRONOUS OUT transfers through a TT send all data
payload in a single ALL-burst. This deacreases the likelyhood for
isochronous data underruns.
- Fixed unbalanced unlock in case of "dwc_otg_init_fifo()" failure.
- Increase interrupt priority.
MFC after: 2 weeks
have implemented the PIM_NOSCAN rescan functionality will have it
enabled.
This is a no-op for head.
Reviewed by: slm
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
MFC after: 3 days
TLR is necessary for reliable communication with SAS tape drives.
This was broken by change 246713 in the mps(4) driver. It changed the
cm_data field for SCSI I/O requests to point to the CCB instead of the data
buffer. So, instead, look at the CCB's data pointer to determine whether
or not we're talking to a tape drive.
Also, take the residual into account to make sure that we don't go off the
end of the request.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
Remove some other ifdefs that came in with a copy/paste that mean basically
"if this processor supports multicore stuff", because if you're starting up
an AP core... it does.
Since radix has been ignoring sa_family in passed sockaddrs,
no one ever has bothered filling valid sa_family in netmasks.
Additionally, radix adjusts sa_len field in every netmask not to
compare zero bytes at all.
This leads us to rt_mask with sa_family of AF_UNSPEC (-1) and
arbitrary sa_len field (0 for default route, for example).
However, rtsock have been passing that rt_mask intact for ages,
requiring all rtsock consumers to make ther own local hacks.
We even have unfixed on in base:
do `route -n monitor` in one window and issue `route -n get addr`
for some directly-connected address. You will probably see the following:
got message of size 304 on Thu May 8 15:06:06 2014
RTM_GET: Report Metrics: len 304, pid: 30493, seq 1, errno 0, flags:<UP,DONE,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK,IFP,IFA>
10.0.0.0 link#1 (255) ffff ffff ff em0:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.92
_________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
after the change:
got message of size 312 on Thu May 8 15:44:07 2014
RTM_GET: Report Metrics: len 312, pid: 2895, seq 1, errno 0, flags:<UP,DONE,PINNED>
locks: inits:
sockaddrs: <DST,GATEWAY,NETMASK,IFP,IFA>
10.0.0.0 link#1 255.255.255.0 em0:8.0.27.c5.29.d4 10.0.0.92
_________________^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
cards. LSI has been maintaining this driver outside of the FreeBSD
tree. It overlaps support of ThunderBolt and Invader cards that mfi(4)
supports. By default mfi(4) will attach to cards. If the tunable:
hw.mfi.mrsas_enable=1
is set then mfi(4) will not probe and attach to these newer cards and
allow mrsas(4) to attach. So by default this driver will not effect
a FreeBSD system unless mfi(4) is removed from the kernel or the
tunable is enabled.
mrsas(4) attaches disks to the CAM layer so it depends on CAM and devices
show up as /dev/daX. mfiutil(8) does not work with mrsas. The FreeBSD
version of MegaCli and StorCli from LSI do work with mrsas. It appears
that StorCli only works with mrsas. MegaCli appears to work with mfi(4)
and mrsas(4).
It would be good to add mfiutil(4) support to mrsas, emulations modes,
kernel logging, device aliases to ease the transition between mfi(4)
and mrsas(4).
Style issues should be resolved by LSI when they get committers approved.
The plan is get this driver in FreeBSD 9.3 to improve HW support.
Thanks to LSI for developing, testing and working with FreeBSD to
make this driver co-exist in FreeBSD. This improves the overall
support of MegaRAID SAS.
Submitted by: Kashyap Desai <Kashyap.Desai@lsi.com>
Reviewed by: scottl
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: LSI
allowed range or when one or more pages are not mapped. This according to
The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7.
Discussed with: attilio, Bruce Evans
Reviewed by: alc, Garrett Cooper
Reported by: ATF
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division
mprsas_SSU_to_SATA_devices().
This fixes an assertion on shutdown with INVARIANTS enabled with SATA
drives present on an IR firmware controller.
Reviewed by: Steve McConnell <stephen.mcconnell@avagotech.com>.
MFC after: 3 days
a journal block even when there are no journal entries to be written.
Until the root cause is found, handle this case by ensuring that a
valid journal segment is always written.
Second, the data buffer used for writing journal entries was never
being scrubbed of old data. Fix this.
Submitted by: Takehara Mikihito
Obtained from: Netflix, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
4730 metaslab group taskq should be destroyed in metaslab_group_destroy()
Reviewed by: Alex Reece <alex.reece@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Sebastien Roy <sebastien.roy@delphix.com>
Original author: George Wilson
MFC after: 3 days