The iic_dp_aux_detach callback is therefore useless: it's replaced by
bus_generic_detach. This fixes a "General protection fault" panic during
second (incorrect) deletion of the child.
Tested by: kwm@
Reviewed by: ray@
kld_unload event handler which gets invoked after a linker file has been
successfully unloaded. The kld_unload and kld_load event handlers are now
invoked with the shared linker lock held, while kld_unload_try is invoked
with the lock exclusively held.
Convert hwpmc(4) to use these event handlers instead of having
kern_kldload() and kern_kldunload() invoke hwpmc(4) hooks whenever files are
loaded or unloaded. This has no functional effect, but simplifes the linker
code somewhat.
Reviewed by: jhb
2 predictable branches nowadays. However as a pre-condition the
caller had to ensure that the mbuf pkthdr did not have any mtags
attached to it, costing some potential branches again.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
linker_init_kernel_modules() and linker_preload() in order to remove most
of the checks for !cold before asserting that the kld lock is held. These
routines are invoked by SYSINIT(9), so there's no harm in them taking the
kld lock.
breaks the "2step" feature of the driver, e.g. in order to read 360
KiB media on a 1200 KiB drive.
As the only potential advantage of implied (vs. explicit) seeks is to
minimize the software effort, yet our driver always contained the
logic needed for explicit seeks, simply dropping implied seeks is the
best solution without introducing risks for new bugs. There is no
performance penalty, reading a 1440 KiB medium takes exactly the same
time with both, implied or explicit seeks.
MFC after: 1 week
The mbuf type is an enumerator with only a handful of types in use and
thus reduced from int to 8bits allowing for 255 types to be specified.
Only 5 types have been in use for a long time.
The flags field gets the remaining 24 bits with 12 bits for global
persistent flags and 12 bits for protocol/layer specific overlays.
Some of the global flags/functionality can be moved to the csum_flags
or ext_flags bits in the future.
MT_VENDOR[1-4] and MT_EXP[1-4] types for vendor-internal and
experimental local mapping are added.
The size of m_hdr shrinks from 24/40 to 20/32bytes (32/64bit architectures).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
POSIX does not require ++ and -- in arithmetic. It is probably more useful
to reject them than to treat ++x and --x as x silently.
Note that the behaviour of increment and decrement can be obtained via
(x+=1), ((x+=1)-1), (x-=1) and ((x-=1)+1).
PR: bin/176444
features. The changes in particular are:
o Remove rarely used "header" pointer and replace it with a 64bit protocol/
layer specific union PH_loc for local use. Protocols can flexibly overlay
their own 8 to 64 bit fields to store information while the packet is
worked on.
o Mechanically convert IP reassembly, IGMP/MLD and ATM to use pkthdr.PH_loc
instead of pkthdr.header.
o Extend csum_flags to 64bits to allow for additional future offload
information to be carried (e.g. iSCSI, IPsec offload, and others).
o Move the RSS hash type enumerator from abusing m_flags to its own 8bit
rsstype field. Adjust accessor macros.
o Add cosqos field to store Class of Service / Quality of Service information
with the packet. It is not yet supported in any drivers but allows us to
get on par with Cisco/Juniper in routing applications (plus MPLS QoS) with
a modernized ALTQ.
o Add four 8 bit fields l[2-5]hlen to store the relative header offsets
from the start of the packet. This is important for various offload
capabilities and to relieve the drivers from having to parse the packet
and protocol headers to find out location of checksums and other
information. Header parsing in drivers is a lot of copy-paste and
unhandled corner cases which we want to avoid.
o Add another flexible 64bit union to map various additional persistent
packet information, like ether_vtag, tso_segsz and csum fields.
Depending on the csum_flags settings some fields may have different usage
making it very flexible and adaptable to future capabilities.
o Restructure the CSUM flags to better signify their outbound (down the
stack) and inbound (up the stack) use. The CSUM flags used to be a bit
chaotic and rather poorly documented leading to incorrect use in many
places. Bring clarity into their use through better naming.
Compatibility mappings are provided to preserve the API. The drivers
can be corrected one by one and MFC'd without issue.
o The size of pkthdr stays the same at 48/56bytes (32/64bit architectures).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
free function access to the mbuf the external memory was attached
to.
Mechanically adjust all users to include the mbuf parameter.
This fixes a long standing annoyance for external free functions.
Before one had to sacrifice one of the argument pointers for this.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Author: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Date: Mon Jun 4 18:39:20 2012 +0200
drm/i915: adjusted_mode->clock in the dp mode_fixup
... instead of changing mode->clock, which we should leave as-is.
After the previous patch we only touch that if it's a panel, and then
adjusted mode->clock equals adjusted_mode->clock. Outside of
intel_dp.c we only use ajusted_mode->clock in the mode_set functions.
Within intel_dp.c we only use it to calculate the dp dithering
and link bw parameters, so that's the only thing we need to fix
up.
As a temporary ugliness (until the cleanup in the next patch) we
pass the adjusted_mode into dp_dither for both parameters (because
that one still looks at mode->clock).
Note that we do overwrite adjusted_mode->clock with the selected dp
link clock, but that only happens after we've calculated everything we
need based on the dotclock of the adjusted output configuration.
Outside of intel_dp.c only intel_display.c uses adjusted_mode->clock,
and that stays the same after this patch (still equals the selected dp
link clock). intel_display.c also needs the actual dotclock (as
target_clock), but that has been fixed up in the previous patch.
v2: Adjust the debug message to also use adjusted_mode->clock.
Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Reviewed-by: Jesse Barnes <jbarnes@virtuousgeek.org>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
NoBuiltin was introduced after clang/llvm 3.3 and thus does not exist in
FreeBSD. Thus special handling for the attribute is not needed in lldb.
This reverts lldb r186990 (git eebd175)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Author: Daniel Malea <daniel.malea@intel.com>
Date: Thu Aug 1 21:18:16 2013 +0000
Fixed the Intel-syntax X86 disassembler to respect the (existing)
option for hexadecimal immediates, to match AT&T syntax. This also
brings a new option for C-vs-MASM-style hex.
Patch by Richard Mitton
Reviewed: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1243
Remove locking from taskqueue_member(). The list of threads is static
during the taskqueue life cycle, so there is no need to protect it,
taking quite congested lock several more times for each ZFS I/O.
thing done by the dummynet handler is taskqueue_enqueue() call, it doesn't
need extra switch to the clock SWI context.
On idle system this change in half reduces number of active CPU cycles and
wakes up only one CPU from sleep instead of two.
I was going to make this change much earlier as part of calloutng project,
but waited for better solution with skipping idle ticks to be implemented.
Unfortunately with 10.0 release coming it is better get at least this.
to 8 bits. ext_type is an enumerator and the number of types we
have is a mere dozen.
A couple of ext_types are renumbered to fit within 8 bits.
EXT_VENDOR[1-4] and EXT_EXP[1-4] types for vendor-internal and
experimental local mapping.
The ext_flags field is currently unused but has a couple of flags
already defined for future use. Again vendor and experimental
flags are provided for local mapping.
EXT_FLAG_BITS is provided for the printf(9) %b identifier.
Initialize and copy ext_flags in the relevant mbuf functions.
Improve alignment and packing of struct m_ext on 32 and 64 archs
by carefully sorting the fields.
* Do per vnet instance cleanup (previously it was only for vnet0 on
module unload, and led to libalias leaks and possible panics due to
stale pointer dereferences).
* Instead of protecting ipfw hooks registering/deregistering by only
vnet0 lock (which does not prevent pointers access from another
vnets), introduce per vnet ipfw_nat_loaded variable. The variable is
set after hooks are registered and unset before they are deregistered.
* Devirtualize ifaddr_event_tag as we run only one event handler for
all vnets.
* It is supposed that ifaddr_change event handler is called in the
interface vnet context, so add an assertion.
Reviewed by: zec
MFC after: 2 weeks
The linked list of pfil hooks is changed to "chain" and this term
is applied consistently. The head_list remains with "list" term.
Add KASSERT to vnet_pfil_uninit().
Update and extend comments.
Reviewed by: eri (previous version)
If a job is specified to 'wait', wait for it to complete. Formerly, in
interactive mode, the job was deleted if it stopped.
If no jobs are specified in interactive mode, 'wait' still waits for all jobs
to complete or stop.
In non-interactive mode, WUNTRACED is not passed to wait3() so stopped jobs
are not detected.
PR: bin/181435
configure sa(4) to request no I/O splitting by default.
For tape devices, the user needs to be able to clearly understand
what blocksize is actually being used when writing to a tape
device. The previous behavior of physio(9) was that it would split
up any I/O that was too large for the device, or too large to fit
into MAXPHYS. This means that if, for instance, the user wrote a
1MB block to a tape device, and MAXPHYS was 128KB, the 1MB write
would be split into 8 128K chunks. This would be done without
informing the user.
This has suboptimal effects, especially when trying to communicate
status to the user. In the event of an error writing to a tape
(e.g. physical end of tape) in the middle of a 1MB block that has
been split into 8 pieces, the user could have the first two 128K
pieces written successfully, the third returned with an error, and
the last 5 returned with 0 bytes written. If the user is using
a standard write(2) system call, all he will see is the ENOSPC
error. He won't have a clue how much actually got written. (With
a writev(2) system call, he should be able to determine how much
got written in addition to the error.)
The solution is to prevent physio(9) from splitting the I/O. The
new cdev flag, SI_NOSPLIT, tells physio that the driver does not
want I/O to be split beforehand.
Although the sa(4) driver now enables SI_NOSPLIT by default,
that can be disabled by two loader tunables for now. It will not
be configurable starting in FreeBSD 11.0. kern.cam.sa.allow_io_split
allows the user to configure I/O splitting for all sa(4) driver
instances. kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split allows the user to
configure I/O splitting for a specific sa(4) instance.
There are also now three sa(4) driver sysctl variables that let the
users see some sa(4) driver values. kern.cam.sa.%d.allow_io_split
shows whether I/O splitting is turned on. kern.cam.sa.%d.maxio shows
the maximum I/O size allowed by kernel configuration parameters
(e.g. MAXPHYS, DFLTPHYS) and the capabilities of the controller.
kern.cam.sa.%d.cpi_maxio shows the maximum I/O size supported by
the controller.
Note that a better long term solution would be to implement support
for chaining buffers, so that that MAXPHYS is no longer a limiting
factor for I/O size to tape and disk devices. At that point, the
controller and the tape drive would become the limiting factors.
sys/conf.h: Add a new cdev flag, SI_NOSPLIT, that allows a
driver to tell physio not to split up I/O.
sys/param.h: Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000049 for the addition
of the SI_NOSPLIT cdev flag.
kern_physio.c: If the SI_NOSPLIT flag is set on the cdev, return
any I/O that is larger than si_iosize_max or
MAXPHYS, has more than one segment, or would have
to be split because of misalignment with EFBIG.
(File too large).
In the event of an error, print a console message to
give the user a clue about what happened.
scsi_sa.c: Set the SI_NOSPLIT cdev flag on the devices created
for the sa(4) driver by default.
Add tunables to control whether we allow I/O splitting
in physio(9).
Explain in the comments that allowing I/O splitting
will be deprecated for the sa(4) driver in FreeBSD
11.0.
Add sysctl variables to display the maximum I/O
size we can do (which could be further limited by
read block limits) and the maximum I/O size that
the controller can do.
Limit our maximum I/O size (recorded in the cdev's
si_iosize_max) by MAXPHYS. This isn't strictly
necessary, because physio(9) will limit it to
MAXPHYS, but it will provide some clarity for the
application.
Record the controller's maximum I/O size reported
in the Path Inquiry CCB.
sa.4: Document the block size behavior, and explain that
the option of allowing physio(9) to split the I/O
will disappear in FreeBSD 11.0.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Don't treat the parameter as a number (pool GUID) when there is
error converting it from string, instead, treat it as the pool
name.
Illumos ZFS issues:
1765 assert triggered in libzfs_import.c trying to import pool
name beginning with a number