lookup early. This has some performance implications and should not be
enabled by default, but might help greatly in certain setups. After some
more testing this could be turned into a sysctl.
Tested by: avatar
LOR ids: 17, 24, 32, 46, 191 (conceptual)
MFC after: 6 weeks
MPLOCKED. The cleaning in rev.1.25 was supposed to have been undone
by rev.1.26, but 1.26 could never have actually affected asm files
since atomic.h is full of C declarations so including it in asm files
would just give syntax errors. The asm MPLOCKED is even less needed
than when misplaced definitions of it were first removed, and is now
unused in any asm file in the src tree except in anachronismns in
sys/i386/i386/support.s.
manipulation is visible to the subject process. Remove XXX comments
suggesting this.
Convert one XXX on a difference from Darwin into a note: it's not a
bug, it's a feature.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
system calls on the amd64 architecture.
Some minor white space tweaks for consistency with other syscalls.master
files.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
- Replace XXX with Note: in several cases where observations are made about
future functionality rather than problems or bugs.
- Remove an XXX comment about byte order and au_to_ip() -- IP headers must
be submitted in network byte order. Add a comment to this effect.
- Mention that we don't implement select/poll for /dev/audit.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
kernel<->policy ABI version. Add a comment to the definition describing
it and listing known versions. Modify MAC_POLICY_SET() to reference the
current kernel version by name rather than by number.
Staticize mac_late, which is used only in mac_framework.c.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
mac_framework.c Contains basic MAC Framework functions, policy
registration, sysinits, etc.
mac_syscalls.c Contains implementations of various MAC system calls,
including ENOSYS stubs when compiling without options
MAC.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
consumes and implements, as well as the location of the framework and
policy modules.
Refactor MAC Framework versioning a bit so that the current ABI version can
be exported via a read-only sysctl.
Further update comments relating to locking/synchronization.
Update copyright to take into account these and other recent changes.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
node would send every outgoing frame to the "compress" hook.
Packets received on the "compress" hook were expected to be
compressed and PROT_COMPD tag was put on them unconditionally.
After this commit an alternative compression mode can be set.
In this mode the node doesn't put the PROT_COMPD, the compressor
should put it itself. This is important for such kind of
compressors, that can submit uncompressed frames.
Before this commit, if the decompression is enabled, the ng_ppp(4)
node would send and incoming frame to the "decompress" hook
only if it has the PROT_COMPD proto tag on it.
After this commit an alternative decompression mode can be set.
In this mode the node sends all the incoming packets to the
decompression hook. This is important for such kind of compressors
that need uncompressed packets too, to keep their library in sync.
These new features will be used in new version of mpd4, and in new
compressor nodes.
Submitted by: Alexander Motin <mav alkar.net>
mainly involves removing all __CC_SUPPORTS___INLINE__ ifdefs. These
ifdefs are even less needed for amd64 than for i386, but the i386
atomic.h never had them. The ifdefs here were just an optimization
of obsolescent compatibility cruft (__inline) for a null set of
compilers. I think null sets of compilers should only be supported
in cases where this is more than an optimization, doesn't require
extensive ifdefs, and only involves not-so-obsolescent compatibility
cruft (plain inline here).
o mark 11g mode support on finding 11g or pure 11g (OFDM-only)
channels; was requiring pure 11g which caused some contortions
in drivers that manually setup their channel lists
These functions are used a lot for mutexes, so this reduces the text
size of an average kernel by about 0.75%. This wasn't intended to
be a significant optimization, but it somehow increased the maximum
number of packets per second that can be transmitted by my bge hardware
from 320000 to 460000 (this benchmark is CPU-bound and remarkably
sensitive to changes in the text section).
Details: we would prefer to leave the result of the cmpxchg in %al,
but cannot tell gcc that it is there, so we have to convert it to an
integer register. We converted to %al, then to %[re]ax, but the
latter step is usually wasted since gcc usually only wants the condition
code and can recover it from %al just as easily as from %[re]ax. Let
gcc promote %al in the few cases where this is needed.
Nearby style fixes;
- let gcc manage the load of `res', and don't abuse `res' for a copy of `exp'
- don't echo `res's name in comments
- consistently spell the condition code as 'e' after comparison for equality
- don't hard-code %al anywhere except in constraints
- for the version that doesn't use cmpxchg, there is no requirement to use
%al anywhere, so don't hard-code it in the constraints either.
Style non-fix:
- for the versions that use cmpxchg, keep using "a" (was %[re]ax, now %al)
for the main output operand, although this is not required. The input
and output operands that use the "a" constraint are now decoupled, and
this makes things clearer except for the reason that the output register
is hard-coded. It is now just a hack to tell gcc that the input "a" has
been clobbered without increasing the number of operands.
o change handling of regdomain-related mib knobs so they can be set
post-attach: regdomain, countrycode, outdoor, and xchanmode; the
hal will not permit changing the regdomain but we expose it for now
o on regdomain/countrycode change recalculate the channel list and
push it to the net80211 layer (NB: looks to need more tweaking)
o setup rate tables for half/quarter rate channels
o honor half/quarter rate channel configs when changing channels
o honor half/quarter rate channel configs when setting the slot time
o use hack/nonstandard channel numbering scheme for the public safety
band to avoid overlapping 2.4G channels on dual-band cards
o remove setup of ic_sup_rates; the net80211 layer can do this for us
and it simplifies handling of half/quarter rate channels
Tested only in Public Safety Band with cards that have RF5112.
in the Public Safety Band):
o add channel flags to identify half/quarter-rate operation
o add rate sets (need to check spec on 4Mb/s in 1/4 rate)
o add if_media definitions for new rates
o split net80211 channel setup out into ieee80211_chan_init
o fixup ieee80211_mhz2ieee and ieee80211_ieee2mhz to understand half/quarter
rate channels: note we temporarily use a nonstandard/hack numbering that
avoids overlap with 2.4G channels because we don't (yet) have enough
state to identify and/or map overlapping channel sets
o fixup ieee80211_ifmedia_init so it can be called post attach and will
recalculate the channel list and associated state; this enables changing
channel-related state like the regulatory domain after attach (will be
needed for 802.11d support too)
o add ieee80211_get_suprates to return a reference to the supported rate
set for a given channel
o add 3, 4.5, and 27 MB/s tx rates to rate <-> media conversion routines
o const-poison channel arg to ieee80211_chan2mode
bge_intr(). Some of them are used in bge_poll(). Simplify by only
initializing these for polling mode and not toggling them when switching
modes. This also fixes missing synchronization with the coalescing
engine in the toggling.
Add a pointer to the relevant PR for future reference. The whole comment
will be OK to remove as soon as the general solution is applied.
PR: kern/105943
pmap on i386
- check for change in executable status in pmap_enter
- pmap_qenter and pmap_qremove only need to invalidate the range if one
of the pages has been referenced
- remove pmap_kenter/pmap_kremove as they were only used by pmap_qenter
and pmap_qremove
- in pmap_copy don't copy wired bit to destination pmap
- mpte was unused in pmap_enter_object - remove
- pmap_enter_quick_locked is not called on the kernel_pmap, remove check
- move pmap_remove_write specific logic out of tte_clear_phys_bit
- in pmap_protect check for removal of execute bit
- panic in the presence of a wired page in pmap_remove_all
- pmap_zero_range can call hwblkclr if offset is zero and size is PAGE_SIZE
- tte_clear_virt_bit is only used by pmap_change_wiring - thus it can be
greatly simplified
- pmap_invalidate_page need only be called in tte_clear_phys_bit if there
is a match with flags
- lock the pmap in tte_clear_phys_bit so that clearing the page bits is
atomic with invalidating the page
- these changes result in 100s reduction in buildworld from a malloc backed
disk to a malloc backed disk - ~2.5%