sysproto.h in addition to the existing padding afterwards.
This is needed to support big-endian architectures like sparc64.
Reviewed by: bde
Tested on alpha by: jhb
timeout callwheel and buffer cache, out of the platform specific areas
and into the machine independant area. i386 and alpha adjusted here.
Other cpus can be fixed piecemeal.
Reviewed by: freebsd-smp, jake
callout_stop() would fail in two cases:
1) The timeout was currently executing, and
2) The timeout had already executed.
We only needed to work around the race for 1). We caught some instances
of 2) via the PS_TIMEOUT flag, however, if endtsleep() fired after the
process had been woken up but before it had resumed execution,
PS_TIMEOUT would not be set, but callout_stop() would fail, so we
would block the process until endtsleep() resumed it. Except that
endtsleep() had already run and couldn't resume it. This adds a new flag
PS_TIMOFAIL to indicate the case of 2) when PS_TIMEOUT isn't set.
- Implement this race fix for condition variables as well.
Tested by: sos
has existed for a long time, but I made it worse a few months ago
by by adding calls to VFS_ROOT() and checkdirs() in revision 1.179.
Also, remove the LK_REENABLE flag in the lockmgr() call; this flag
has been ignored by the lockmgr code for 4 years. This was the only
remaining mention of it apart from its definition.
Reviewed by: jhb
information. The default limits only effect machines with > 1GB of ram
and can be overriden with two new kernel conf variables VM_SWZONE_SIZE_MAX
and VM_BCACHE_SIZE_MAX, or with loader variables kern.maxswzone and
kern.maxbcache. This has the effect of leaving more KVM available for
sizing NMBCLUSTERS and 'maxusers' and should avoid tripups where a sysad
adds memory to a machine and then sees the kernel panic on boot due to
running out of KVM.
Also change the default swap-meta auto-sizing calculation to allocate half
of what it was previously allocating. The prior defaults were way too high.
Note that we cannot afford to run out of swap-meta structures so we still
stay somewhat conservative here.
`struct xucred` with the credentials of the connected peer.
Obviously this only works (and makes sense) on SOCK_STREAM
sockets. This works for both the connect(2) and listen(2)
callers.
There is precise documentation of the semantics in unix(4).
Reviewed by: dwmalone (eyeballed)
unnecessary breakage.
While here, use explicit sizes for the string fields so that we dont
have unintentional changes again in the future when key tunables change.
This still is not quite right, but a june userland is happy with
a -current kernel with these tweaks.
label if the dump device overflaps the label (which is a slight
misconfiguration). Dump routines don't use dscheck(), so the normal
write protection of the label doesn't help.
Reduced some nearby overflow bugs. In disk_dumpcheck(), there was
(fatal but fail-safe) overflow on i386's with 4GB of memory, at least
if Maxmem was the top page (can this happen?). The fix assumes that
the sector size divides PAGE_SIZE (dump routines already assume this).
In setdumpdev(), the corresponding overflow occurred with only about
2GB of memory on all machines with 32-bit ints. This allowed setdumpdev()
to succeed when it shouldn't have, but then disk_dumpcheck() failed
safe later. Except in old versions of FreeBSD like RELENG_3 where
there is no disk_dumpcheck().
PR: 28164 (label clobbering part)
MFC after: 1 week
structure is always free()ed yet only sometimes malloc()ed. In particular,
it was simply set to point to l_filename from the a linker_file_t in
link_elf_link_preload_finish(). The l_filename had been malloc()ed inside
the kern_linker.c module and was being free()ed twice: once by
link_elf_unload_file() and again by linker_file_unload(), leading to
a panic.
How to duplicate the problem:
- Pre-load a kernel module from the loader, i.e. if_sis.ko
- Boot system
- Attempt to unload module with kldunload if_sis
- Bewm
The problem here is that the case where the module was loaded with kldload
after system boot would work correctly, so this bug went unnoticed until
I stubbed my toe on it just now. (Also, you can only trip this bug if
you compile a kernel with options DDB, but that's the default now.)
Fix: remember to malloc() a separate copy of the module name for the
l_name member of the gdb linkage structure in three places where the
linkage structure can be initialized.
the process of exiting the kernel. The ast() function now loops as long
as the PS_ASTPENDING or PS_NEEDRESCHED flags are set. It returns with
preemption disabled so that any further AST's that arrive via an
interrupt will be delayed until the low-level MD code returns to user
mode.
- Use u_int's to store the tick counts for profiling purposes so that we
do not need sched_lock just to read p_sticks. This also closes a
problem where the call to addupc_task() could screw up the arithmetic
due to non-atomic reads of p_sticks.
- Axe need_proftick(), aston(), astoff(), astpending(), need_resched(),
clear_resched(), and resched_wanted() in favor of direct bit operations
on p_sflag.
- Fix up locking with sched_lock some. In addupc_intr(), use sched_lock
to ensure pr_addr and pr_ticks are updated atomically with setting
PS_OWEUPC. In ast() we clear pr_ticks atomically with clearing
PS_OWEUPC. We also do not grab the lock just to test a flag.
- Simplify the handling of Giant in ast() slightly.
Reviewed by: bde (mostly)
a time using the ogetdirentries() compatibility syscall. This is a
hack to ensure that rediculous values don't get passed to MALLOC().
Reviewed by: kris
for endtsleep() to be executing when msleep() resumed, for endtsleep()
to spin on sched_lock long enough for the other process to loop on
msleep() and sleep again resulting in endtsleep() waking up the "wrong"
msleep.
Obtained from: BSD/OS
removing the callout entry, return 1. If callout_stop() fails to remove
the callout entry because it is currently executing or has already been
executed, then the function returns 0. The idea was obtained from BSD/OS,
however, BSD/OS changed untimeout(), and I've just changed callout_stop()
to be more conservative.
Obtained from: BSD/OS
- Callers of asleep() and await() have been converted to calling tsleep().
The only caller outside of M_ASLEEP was the ata driver, which called both
asleep() and await() with spl-raised, so there was no need for the
asleep() and await() pair. M_ASLEEP was unused.
Reviewed by: jasone, peter
- Callers of asleep() and await() have been converted to calling tsleep().
The only caller outside of M_ASLEEP was the ata driver, which called both
asleep() and await() with spl-raised, so there was no need for the
asleep() and await() pair. M_ASLEEP was unused.
Reviewed by: jasone, peter
are a really nasty interface that should have been killed long ago
when 'ptrace(PT_[SG]ETREGS' etc came along. The entity that they
operate on (struct user) will not be around much longer since it
is part-per-process and part-per-thread in a post-KSE world.
gdb does not actually use this except for the obscure 'info udot'
command which does a hexdump of as much of the child's 'struct user'
as it can get. It carries its own #defines so it doesn't break
compiles.
filename passed in via the module loader functions in the GDB
"sharedlibrary" support structures. This isn't good, since the pointer
would become stale in almost every case (not the pre-loaded case, of
course).
Change this to malloc()ed copy of the string and finally fix the reason
that gdb -k's "sharedlibrary" command stopped working.
Obtained from: LOMAC/FreeBSD (cf. NAI Labs)
It didn't implement the proper /dev/fd functionality (which would be to
include in the directory listing /dev/fd/n if the process has fd n open)
anyway.
Anything needing access to /dev/fd/n where n > 2 can use the optional
fdescfs module, which implements this properly and does not cause any
trouble with devfs.
Discussed with: phk