to a deadlock of an association when an IPv6 socket was used to
communcate with IPv4 and an ICMPv4 fragmentation needed message
was received.
While there, simplify the code a bit.
MFC after: 3 days.
MOD_SHUTDOWN is not an end of existence, and there is a life after it.
In particular, code previously called on MOD_SHUTDOWN grabbed lock and
deallocated unit numbering. That caused infinite wait loop if snd_uaudio
tried to destroy its PCM device after that point.
MFC after: 3 days
through by VMware so blacklist their PCI-PCI bridge for MSI/MSI-X here.
Note that besides currently there not being a quirk type that disables
MSI-X only and there's no evidence that MSI doesn't work with the VMware
pass-through, it's really questionable whether MSI generally works in
that setup as VMware only mention three know working devices [1, p. 4].
Also not that this quirk entry currently doesn't affect the devices
emulated by VMware in any way as these don't claim support MSI/MSI-X to
begin with. [2]
While at it, make the PCI quirk table const and static.
- Remove some duplicated empty lines.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
PR: 163812, http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=27899 [2]
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
txsync() and rxsync() callbacks, removing some variables made
useless by this change;
- add generic lock and irq handling routines. These can be useful
in case there are no driver locks that we can reuse;
- add a few macros to reduce differences with the Linux version.
Some older firmware versions have issues that can be worked around by
avoiding certain operations. Add a sysctl dev.aac.#.firmware_build to
make it easy for scripts or userland tools to detect the firmware
version.
* Change the mesh IE size to be IEEE80211_MESH_CONF_SZ rather than the
size of the structure;
* conf_cap is now a uint8_t rather than a uint16_t (uint16_t in D3.0,
uint8_t in the amendment spec);
* Update mesh config capability bits - earlier bits were from draft X,
current is amendment spec;
* Update the following to be an enum rather than #define and added
a VENDOR entry too from the amendment spec;
IEEE80211_MESHCONF_PATH_*
IEEE80211_MESHCONF_METRIC_*
IEEE80211_MESHCONF_CC_*
IEEE80211_MESHCONF_SYNC_*
IEEE80211_MESHCONF_AUTH_*
* Kept IEEE80211_MESHCONF_FORM_* and IEEE80211_MESHCONF_CAP_* as
defines because they are defined in a way that we need to mask in/out
information;
* In IEEE80211_MESHCONF_CAP_* IEEE80211_MESHCONF_CAP_TBTTA is removed
and 0x80 is made reserved as defined in the amendment spec.
Submitted by: monthadar@gmail.com
Reviewed by: rpaulo
When performing a firmware upgrade via atacontrol[1] the subsequent
command may time out producing the error message above. When this
happens the callout could still be active, and the system would then
panic due to a destroyed semaphore.
Instead, ensure that the callout is done first, via callout_drain.
Note that this fix applies to the "old" ata(4) and so isn't applicable
to the default configuration in HEAD. It is still applicable to
stable/8.
[1] http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2012-January/031122.html
Submitted by: Nima Misaghian
Reviewed by: rstone, attilio, mav
Obtained from: SVOS
MFC after: 3 days
There are unfortunately a number of situations where vap->iv_bss is changed
or freed by some code in net80211. Because multiple threads can concurrently
be doing work (and the vap->iv_bss access isn't at all done behind any kind
of lock), it's quite possible that:
* a change will occur in one thread - eg, by a call through
ieee80211_sta_join1();
* a state change occurs in another thread - eg an RX is scheduled
in the ath tasklet and it calls ieee80211_input_mimo_all(), which
does dereference vap->iv_bss;
* these two executing concurrently, causing things to explode.
Another instance is ath_beacon_alloc() which takes an ieee80211_node *.
It's called with the vap->iv_bss node from ath_newstate(). If the node has
changed in the meantime (say it's been freed elsewhere) the reference
that it grabbed _before_ refcounting it may be stale.
I would _prefer_ that these sorts of things were serialised somewhere but
that may be a bit much to ask. Instead, the best we can (currently) hope
is that the underlying bss node is still (somewhat) valid.
There is a related PR (kern/164382) described by the first case above.
That should be fixed by properly serialising the RX path and reset path
so an RX can't occur at the same time as the vap free/shutdown path.
This is inspired by some related fixes in r212127.
PR: kern/165060
for a shared mapping and marking the entry for inheritance.
Other thread might execute vmspace_fork() in between (e.g. by fork(2)),
resulting in the mapping becoming private.
Noted and reviewed by: alc
MFC after: 1 week
be the same chip):
- The I/O port resource may not be available with these. However, given
that we actually only need this resource for some controllers that
require their firmware to be up- and downloaded (which excludes the
SAS1078{,DE}) just handle failure to allocate this resource gracefully
when possible. While at it, generally put non-fatal resource allocation
failures under bootverbose.
- SAS1078{,DE} use a different hard reset protocol.
- Add workarounds for the 36GB physical address limitation of scatter/
gather elements of these controllers.
Tested by: Slawa Olhovchenkov
PR: 149220 (remaining part)
on extended and extensible structs if_msghdrl and ifa_msghdrl. This
will allow us to extend both the msghdrl structs and eventually if_data
in the future without breaking the ABI.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to allow ports to more easily detect the new API.
Reviewed by: glebius, brooks
MFC after: 3 days
both 64bit and 32bit binaries, not for 64bit only.
The set of the flag is not neccessary there, because the only current
user of the cpu_set_user_tls() is create_thread(), which calls
cpu_set_upcall() before and cpu_set_upcall() itself sets PCB_FULL_IRET.
Change the function for consistency and preserve existing KPI for now.
MFC after: 1 week
Code should just use the devtoname() function to obtain the name of a
character device. Also add const keywords to pieces of code that need it
to build properly.
MFC after: 2 weeks
overridden at attach time.
Some 802.11n NICs may only have one physical antenna connected.
The radios will be very upset if you try enabling radios which aren't
connected to antennas.
This allows hints to override the TX and RX chainmask.
These hints are:
hint.ath.X.rx_chainmask
hint.ath.X.tx_chainmask
They can be set at either boot time or in kenv before the module is loaded.
This and the previous HAL commit were sponsored in late 2011 by Hobnob, Inc.
Sponsored by: Hobnob, Inc.
by capabilities.
Add an ar5416SetCapability() function, which contains logic to override
the chainmask and update the relevant stream.
This is designed to be called after the attach function, which presets
the TX/RX chainmask and stream.
TODO: check the chainmask against the hardware chainmask so non-existing
chains aren't enabled.
If an IPv6 packet has extension headers the kernel needs to deal with it
itself. For the rest it can set various CSUM_XXX flags and the driver
will act on them.
the kernel allocated a buffer but did not zero it as it was about
to be completely filled by a uiomove() from the user's buffer.
However, if the uiomove() failed, the old contents of the buffer
could be exposed especially if the file was being mmap'ed. The
fix was to always zero the buffer when it was allocated.
This change first attempts the uiomove() to the newly allocated
(and dirty) buffer and only zeros it if the uiomove() fails. The
effect is to eliminate the gratuitous zeroing of the buffer in
the usual case where the uiomove() successfully fills it.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks (to 9 only)
Reading register $29 with RDHWR is becoming the de-facto standard to
implement TLS. According to linux-mips wiki, MIPS Technologies has
reserved hardware register $29 for ABI use. Furthermore current GCC
makes the following assumptions:
- RDHWR is natively available or otherwise emulated by the kernel
- Register $29 holds the TLS pointer
Submitted by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
with clang. Also fix a number of warnings uncovered when building with
clang around some implicit enum conversions.
Sponsored by: Intel
Approved by: scottl
A new jail(8) option "devfs_ruleset" defines the ruleset enforcement for
mounting devfs inside jails. A value of -1 disables mounting devfs in
jails, a value of zero means no restrictions. Nested jails can only
have mounting devfs disabled or inherit parent's enforcement as jails are
not allowed to view or manipulate devfs(8) rules.
Utilizes new functions introduced in r231265.
Reviewed by: jamie
MFC after: 1 month
Add support for updating the devfs mount (currently only changing the
ruleset number is supported).
Check mnt_optnew with vfs_filteropt(9).
This new option sets the specified ruleset number as the active ruleset
of the new devfs mount and applies all its rules at mount time. If the
specified ruleset doesn't exist, a new empty ruleset is created.
MFC after: 1 month
1. Fixed timeout specification for the msleep in mps_wait_command().
Added 30 second timeout for mps_wait_command() calls in mps_user.c.
2. Make sure we call mps_detach_user() from the kldunload path.
3. Raid Hotplug behavior change.
The driver now removes a volume when it goes to a failed state,
so we also need to add volume back to the OS when it goes to
opitimal/degraded/online from failed/missing.
Handle raid volume add and remove from the IR_Volume event.
4. Added some more debugging information.
5. Replace xpt_async(AC_LOST_DEVICE, path, NULL) with
mpssas_rescan_target().
This is to work around a panic in CAM that shows up when adding a
drive with a rescan and removing another device from the driver thread
with an AC_LOST_DEVICE async notification.
This problem was encountered in testing with the LSI sas2ircu utility,
which was used to create a RAID volume from physical disks. The driver
has to create the RAID volume target and remove the physical disk
targets, and triggered a panic in the process.
The CAM issue needs to be fully diagnosed and fixed, but this works
around the issue for now.
6. Fix some memory initialization issues in mps_free_command().
7. Resolve the "devq freeze forever" issue. This was caused by the
internal read capacity command issued in the non-head version of the
driver. When the command completed with an error, the driver wasn't
unfreezing thd device queue.
The version in head uses the CAM infrastructure for getting the read
capacity information, and therefore doesn't have the same issue.
8. Bump the version to 13.00.00.00-fbsd. (this is very close to LSI's
internal stable driver 13.00.00.00)
Submitted by: Kashyap Desai <Kashyap.Desai@lsi.com>
MFC after: 3 days
TUNABLE variable (hw.netmap.buf_size) so we can experiment
with values different from 2048 which may give better cache performance.
- rearrange the memory allocation code so it will be easier
to replace it with a different implementation. The current code
relies on a single large contiguous chunk of memory obtained through
contigmalloc.
The new implementation (not committed yet) uses multiple
smaller chunks which are easier to fit in a fragmented address
space.
ext4 but that can be used in ext3 mode.
Also adjust the internal inode to carry the birthtime,
like in UFS, which is starting to get some use when
big inodes are available.
Right now these are just placeholders for features
to come.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Increase probing order for ECDT table to match HID-based probing.
- Decrease probing order for HPET table to match HID-based probing.
- Decrease probing order for CPUs and system resources.
- Fix ACPI_DEV_BASE_ORDER to reflect the reality.
every 30 seconds. This spike in I/O caused the system to pause every
30 seconds which was quite annoying. So, the way that sync worked
was changed so that when a vnode was first dirtied, it was put on
a 30-second cleaning queue (see the syncer_workitem_pending queues
in kern/vfs_subr.c). If the file has not been written or deleted
after 30 seconds, the syncer pushes it out. As the syncer runs once
per second, dirty files are trickled out slowly over the 30-second
period instead of all at once by a call to sync(2).
The one drawback to this is that it does not cover the filesystem
metadata. To handle the metadata, vfs_allocate_syncvnode() is called
to create a "filesystem syncer vnode" at mount time which cycles
around the cleaning queue being sync'ed every 30 seconds. In the
original design, the only things it would sync for UFS were the
filesystem metadata: inode blocks, cylinder group bitmaps, and the
superblock (e.g., by VOP_FSYNC'ing devvp, the device vnode from
which the filesystem is mounted).
Somewhere in its path to integration with FreeBSD the flushing of
the filesystem syncer vnode got changed to sync every vnode associated
with the filesystem. The result of this change is to return to the
old filesystem-wide flush every 30-seconds behavior and makes the
whole 30-second delay per vnode useless.
This change goes back to the originally intended trickle out sync
behavior. Key to ensuring that all the intended semantics are
preserved (e.g., that all inode updates get flushed within a bounded
period of time) is that all inode modifications get pushed to their
corresponding inode blocks so that the metadata flush by the
filesystem syncer vnode gets them to the disk in a timely way.
Thanks to Konstantin Belousov (kib@) for doing the audit and commit
-r231122 which ensures that all of these updates are being made.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
a credential structure would corrupt it. This happened when the
p argument was != NULL. However, I now realize that the copying of
open credentials should only happen for p == NULL, since that indicates
that it is a read-ahead or write-behind. This patch fixes this.
After this commit, r228827 could be reverted, but I think the code is
clearer and safer with the patch, so I am going to leave it in.
Without this patch, it was possible that a NFSv4 VOP_SETATTR() could have
changed the credentials of the caller. This would have happened if
the process doing the VOP_SETATTR() did not have the file open, but
some other process running as a different uid had the file open for writing
at the same time.
MFC after: 5 days
guarantee that all UFS inode metadata changes results in the dirtiness
of the inodeblock. Due to missed inodeblock updates, syncer was
required to fsync each mount point' vnode to guarantee periodic
metadata flush.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
radar parameters for the AR5416 and later NICs.
These parameters have been tested on the following NICs:
* AR5416
* AR9160
* AR9220
* AR9280
And yes, these will return radar pulse parameters and (for AR9160 and later)
radar FFT information as PHY errors.
This is again not enough to do radar detection, it's just here to faciliate
development and validation of radar detection algorithms.
The (pulse, not FFT) decoding code for AR5212, AR5416 and later NICs exist
in the HAL.
This code is disabled for now as generating radar PHY errors can quickly
cause issues in busy environment.s Some further debugging of the RX path
is needed.
Finally, these parameters are likely not useful for the AR5212 era NICs.
The madwifi-dfs branch should have suitable example parameters for the
11a era NICs.
list. If softdep_sync_buf() discovers such dependency, it should do
nothing, which is safe as it is only waiting on the parent buffer to
be written, so it can be removed.
Committed on behalf of: jeff
MFC after: 1 week
mnt_noasync counter to temporary remove MNTK_ASYNC mount option, which
is needed to guarantee a synchronous completion of the initiated i/o
before syscall or VOP return. Global removal of MNTK_ASYNC option is
harmful because not only i/o started from corresponding thread becomes
synchronous, but all i/o is synchronous on the filesystem which is
initiated during sync(2) or syncer activity.
Instead of removing MNTK_ASYNC from mnt_kern_flag, provide a local
thread flag to disable async i/o for current thread only. Use the
opportunity to move DOINGASYNC() macro into sys/vnode.h and
consistently use it through places which tested for MNTK_ASYNC.
Some testing demonstrated 60-70% improvements in run time for the
metadata-intensive operations on async-mounted UFS volumes, but still
with great deviation due to other reasons.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
TCP_KEEPCNT, that allow to control initial timeout, idle time, idle
re-send interval and idle send count on a per-socket basis.
Reviewed by: andre, bz, lstewart
to fix it (without fixing it), after making one of my servers unbootable,
after now making also my laptop unbootable and after running out of patiance
back out r229800 until better solution is found.
set on the new thread. This prevents the thread from inadvertently
inheriting affinity from a random sibling.
Submitted by: attilio
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
kernel modules that include binary-only code.
More fine-grained control is provided via MK_SOURCELESS_HOST (for native code
that runs on host CPU) and MK_SOURCELESS_UCODE (for microcode).
Reviewed by: julian, delphij, freebsd-arch
Approved by: kib (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
of the default one.
Without this change setting kern.cam.ada.default_timeout to 1 instead of 30
allowed me to trigger several false positive command timeouts under heavy
ZFS load on a SiI3132 siis(4) controller with 5 HDDs on a port multiplier.
MFC after: 1 week
netback.c: Add missing VM includes.
xen/xenvar.h,
xen/xenpmap.h: Move some XENHVM macros from <machine/xen/xenpmap.h> to
<machine/xen/xenvar.h> on i386 to match the amd64 headers.
conf/files: Add netback to the build.
Submitted by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
Even having more specific hint.ata.X.mode controls, global ones are
still could be useful from some points, including compatibility.
PR: kern/164651
MFC after: 1 week
The cs driver requires a table with firmware values. An
alternative firmware is available in a similar Open Sound
System driver. This is actually a partial revert of
Revision 77504.
Special thanks to joel@ for patiently testing several
replacement attempts.
The csa driver and the complete sound system are now free
of the GPL.
Tested by: joel
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
disconnected swap device.
This is quick and imperfect solution, as swap device will still be opened
and GEOM will not be able to destroy it. Proper solution would be to
automatically turn off and close disconnected swap device, but with existing
code it will cause panic if there is at least one page on device, even if
it is unimportant page of the user-level process. It needs some work.
Reviewed by: kib@
MFC after: 1 week
channels available
- current code treats bits 4:7 in 'SATAHC interrupt mask' and 'SATAHC
interrupt cause' as flags for SATA channels 2 and 3
- for embedded SATA controllers (SoC) these bits have been marked as reserved
in datasheets so far, but for some new and upcoming chips they are used for
purposes other than SATA
Submitted by: Lukasz Plachno
Reviewed by: mav
Obtained from: Semihalf
MFC after: 2 weeks
to cleanup routes from a single ifa.
o Implement carp_addroute()/carp_delroute() via above functions.
o Call carp_ifa_delroute() in the carp_detach() to avoid
junk routes left in routing table, in case if user
removes an address in a MASTER state. [1]
Reported by: az [1]
it is possible that a single AIO event will be reported to multiple
threads, it is not threading friendly, and the existing API can not
control this behavior.
Allocate a kevent flags field sigev_notify_kevent_flags for AIO event
notification in sigevent, and allow user to pass EV_CLEAR, EV_DISPATCH
or EV_ONESHOT to AIO kernel code, user can control whether the event
should be cleared once it is retrieved by a thread. This change should
be comptaible with existing application, because the field should have
already been zero-filled, and no additional action will be taken by
kernel.
PR: kern/156567
* Override the TX/RX stream count if the EEPROM reports a single RX or
TX stream, rather than assuming the device will always be a 2x2 strea
device.
* For AR9280 devices, don't hard-code 2x2 stream. Instead, allow the
ar5416FillCapabilityInfo() routine to correctly determine things.
The latter should be done for all 11n chips now that
ar5416FillCapabilityInfo() will set the TX/RX stream count based on the
active TX/RX chainmask in the EEPROM.
Thanks to Maciej Milewski for donating some AR9281 NICs to me for
testing.
hardware imposes strict limitations on hard buffer and block sizes.
Previous code set soft buffer to be no smaller then hard buffer. On some
cards with fixed 64K physical buffer that caused up to 800ms play latency.
New code allows to set soft buffer size down to just two blocks of the hard
buffer and to not write more then that size ahead to the hardware buffer.
As result of that change I was able to reduce full practically measured
record-playback loop delay in those conditions down to only about 115ms
with theoretical playback latency of only about 50ms.
New code works fine for both vchans and direct cases. In both cases sound(4)
tries to follow hw.snd.latency_profile and hw.snd.latency values and
application-requested buffer and block sizes as much as limitation of two
hardware blocks allows.
Reviewed by: silence on multimedia@
The isci driver is for the integrated SAS controller in the Intel C600
(Patsburg) chipset. Source files in sys/dev/isci directory are
FreeBSD-specific, and sys/dev/isci/scil subdirectory contains
an OS-agnostic library (SCIL) published by Intel to control the SAS
controller. This library is used primarily as-is in this driver, with
some post-processing to better integrate into the kernel build
environment.
isci.4 and a README in the sys/dev/isci directory contain a few
additional details.
This driver is only built for amd64 and i386 targets.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: scottl
Approved by: scottl
any thread doing an I/O RPC with a transfer size greater than
NFS_UDPMAXDATA will be hung indefinitely, retrying the RPC.
After a discussion on freebsd-fs@, I decided to add a warning
message for this case, as suggested by Jeremy Chadwick.
Suggested by: freebsd at jdc.parodius.com (Jeremy Chadwick)
MFC after: 2 weeks
under the subject "F_RDLCK lock to FreeBSD NFS fails to R/O target file".
This occurred because the server side NLM always checked for VWRITE
access, irrespective of the type of lock request. This patch
replaces VOP_ACCESS(..VWRITE..) with one appropriate to
the lock operation. It allows unlock and lock cancellation
to be done without a check of VOP_ACCESS(), so that files
can't be left locked indefinitely after the file permissions
have been changed.
Discussed with: zack
Submitted by: jwd (earlier version)
Reviewed by: dfr
MFC after: 2 weeks
compliance testing.
In order to allow for radar pattern matching to occur, the DFS CAC/NOL
handling needs to be made configurable. This commit introduces a new
sysctl, "net.wlan.dfs_debug", which controls which DFS debug mode
net80211 is in.
* 0 = default, CSA/NOL handling as per normal.
* 1 = announce a CSA, but don't add the channel to the non-occupy list
(NOL.)
* 2 = disable both CSA and NOL - only print that a radar event occured.
This code is not compiled/enabled by default as it breaks regulatory
handling. A user must enable IEEE80211_DFS_DEBUG in their kernel
configuration file for this option to become available.
Obtained from: Atheros
* For legacy NICs, the combined RSSI should be used.
For earlier AR5416 NICs, use control chain 0 RSSI rather than combined
RSSI.
For AR5416 > version 2.1, use the combined RSSI again.
* Add in a missing AR5212 HAL method (get11nextbusy) which may be called
by radar code.
This serves no functional change for what's currently in FreeBSD.
about new child not only when doing PT_TO_SCX, but also for PT_CONTINUE.
If TDB_FORK flag is set, always issue a stop, the same as is done for
TDB_EXEC.
Reported by: Dmitry Mikulin <dmitrym juniper net>
MFC after: 1 week
that instead of using direct I/O it allows read-ahead similar to
POSIX_FADV_NORMAL, but invokes VOP_ADVISE(POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED) after the
read(2) has completed to purge just-read data. The write(2) path continues
to use direct I/O for POSIX_FADV_NOREUSE for now. Note that NOREUSE works
optimally if an application reads and writes full fs blocks.
that we have the lock now. This cleans up a locking panic ASSERT when
knlist_empty is called without a lock when INVARIANTS etc. are turned.
Reviewed by: kib jhb
MFC after: 1 week
so try harder to get the CDMA sync interrupt delivered and also in
a more efficient way:
- wrap the whole process of sending and receiving the CDMA sync
interrupt in a critical section so we don't get preempted,
- send the CDMA sync interrupt to the CPU that is actually waiting
for it to happen so we don't take a detour via another CPU,
- instead of waiting for up to 15 seconds for the interrupt to
trigger try the whole process for up to 15 times using a one
second timeout (the code was also changed to just ignore belated
interrupts of a previous tries should they appear).
According to testing done by Peter Jeremy with the debugging also
added as part of this commit the first two changes apparently are
sufficient to now properly get the CDMA sync interrupts delivered
at the first try though.
VIS-based block copy/zero implementations. While with 4BSD it's
sufficient to just disable the tick interrupts, with ULE+PREEMPTION
it's otherwise also possible that these are preempted via IPIs.
* Grab the net80211com lock when calling ieee80211_dfs_notify_radar().
* Use the tsf extend function to turn the 64 bit base TSF into a per-
frame 64 bit TSF. This will improve radiotap logging (which will
now have a (more) correct per-frame TSF, rather then the single TSF64
value read at the beginning of ath_rx_proc().
primitives by breaking stop_scheduler into a per-thread variable.
Also, store the new td_stopsched very close to td_*locks members as
they will be accessed mostly in the same codepaths as td_stopsched and
this results in avoiding a further cache-line pollution, possibly.
STOP_SCHEDULER() was pondered to use a new 'thread' argument, in order to
take advantage of already cached curthread, but in the end there should
not really be a performance benefit, while introducing a KPI breakage.
In collabouration with: flo
Reviewed by: avg
MFC after: 3 months (or never)
X-MFC: r228424
helper since r230632, use these for output and panicing during the
early cycles and move cninit() until after the static per-CPU data
has been set up. This solves a couple of issue regarding the non-
availability of the static per-CPU data:
- panic() not working and only making things worse when called,
- having to supply a special DELAY() implementation to the low-level
console drivers,
- curthread accesses of mutex(9) usage in low-level console drivers
that aren't conditional due to compiler optimizations (basically,
this is the problem described in r227537 but in this case for
keyboards attached via uart(4)). [1]
PR: 164123 [1]
implementing a simple OF_panic() that may be used during the early
cycles when panic() isn't available, yet.
- Mark cpu_{exit,shutdown}() as __dead2 as appropriate.
VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE to 2, awaiting more insight from alc@. As it turns
out, the VM apparently has problems with machines that have large holes
in the physical address space, causing the kmem_suballoc() call in
kmeminit() to fail with a VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE of 1. Using a value of 2
allows these, namely Blade 1500 with 2GB of RAM, to boot.
PR: 164227
cards powering up at once. Work around the easy case (multiple cards
inserted on boot) with a short sleep and a long comment. This
improves reliability on those laptops with power hungry cards.
excluding other allocations including UMA now entails the addition of
a single flag to kmem_alloc or uma zone create
Reviewed by: alc, avg
MFC after: 2 weeks
cleared/dropped leading to qid2tap[n] being NULL as there no longer
is a tap. Now, if there have been lots of frames queued the firmware
processes and returns those after the tap is gone.
Tested by: osa
MFC after: 1 week
NFS clients was reported to freebsd-fs@ under the subject "NFS
corruption in recent HEAD" on Nov. 26, 2011. This problem occurred when
a TCP mounted root fs was changed to using UDP. I believe that this
problem was caused by the change in mnt_stat.f_iosize that occurred
because rsize was decreased to the maximum supported by UDP. This
patch fixes the problem by using v_bufobj.bo_bsize instead of f_iosize,
since the latter is set to f_iosize when the vnode is allocated, but
does not change for a given vnode when f_iosize changes.
Reported by: pjd
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Remove unneeded temporary variable (data) to better match the OSS code.
Remove some unused constants and type definitions.
Tested by: joel
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
referenced within its timeout window. This change clears the LLE_VALID flag when an llentry
is removed from an interface's hash table and adds an extra check to the flowtable code
for the LLE_VALID flag in llentry to avoid retaining and using a stale reference.
Reviewed by: qingli@
MFC after: 2 weeks
This involves significant changes to the mps(4) driver, but is not a
complete rewrite.
Some of the changes in this version of the driver:
- Integrated RAID (IR) support.
- Support for WarpDrive controllers.
- Support for SCSI protection information (EEDP).
- Support for TLR (Transport Level Retries), needed for tape drives.
- Improved error recovery code.
- ioctl interface compatible with LSI utilities.
mps.4: Update the mps(4) driver man page somewhat for the driver
changes. The list of supported hardware still needs to be
updated to reflect the full list of supported cards.
conf/files: Add the new driver files.
mps/mpi/*: Updated version of the MPI header files, with a BSD style
copyright.
mps/*: See above for a description of the new driver features.
modules/mps/Makefile:
Add the new mps(4) driver files.
Submitted by: Kashyap Desai <Kashyap.Desai@lsi.com>
Reviewed by: ken
MFC after: 1 week
data changes.
cam_ccb.h: Add a new advanced information type, CDAI_TYPE_RCAPLONG,
for long read capacity data.
cam_xpt_internal.h:
Add a read capacity data pointer and length to struct cam_ed.
cam_xpt.c: Free the read capacity buffer when a device goes away.
While we're here, make sure we don't leak memory for other
malloced fields in struct cam_ed.
scsi_all.c: Update the scsi_read_capacity_16() to take a uint8_t * and
a length instead of just a pointer to the parameter data
structure. This will hopefully make this function somewhat
immune to future changes in the parameter data.
scsi_all.h: Add some extra bit definitions to struct
scsi_read_capacity_data_long, and bump up the structure
size to the full size specified by SBC-3.
Change the prototype for scsi_read_capacity_16().
scsi_da.c: Register changes in read capacity data with the transport
layer. This allows the transport layer to send out an
async notification to interested parties. Update the
dasetgeom() API.
Use scsi_extract_sense_len() instead of
scsi_extract_sense().
scsi_xpt.c: Add support for the new CDAI_TYPE_RCAPLONG advanced
information type.
Make sure we set the physpath pointer to NULL after freeing
it. This allows blindly freeing it in the struct cam_ed
destructor.
sys/param.h: Bump __FreeBSD_version from 1000005 to 1000006 to make it
easier for third party drivers to determine that the read
capacity data async notification is available.
camcontrol.c,
mptutil/mpt_cam.c:
Update these for the new scsi_read_capacity_16() argument
structure.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
share/man/man4/Makefile,
share/man/man4/xnb.4,
sys/dev/xen/netback/netback.c,
sys/dev/xen/netback/netback_unit_tests.c:
Rewrote the netback driver for xen to attach properly via newbus
and work properly in both HVM and PVM mode (only HVM is tested).
Works with the in-tree FreeBSD netfront driver or the Windows
netfront driver from SuSE. Has not been extensively tested with
a Linux netfront driver. Does not implement LRO, TSO, or
polling. Includes unit tests that may be run through sysctl
after compiling with XNB_DEBUG defined.
sys/dev/xen/blkback/blkback.c,
sys/xen/interface/io/netif.h:
Comment elaboration.
sys/kern/uipc_mbuf.c:
Fix page fault in kernel mode when calling m_print() on a
null mbuf. Since m_print() is only used for debugging, there
are no performance concerns for extra error checking code.
sys/kern/subr_scanf.c:
Add the "hh" and "ll" width specifiers from C99 to scanf().
A few callers were already using "ll" even though scanf()
was handling it as "l".
Submitted by: Alan Somers <alans@spectralogic.com>
Submitted by: John Suykerbuyk <johns@spectralogic.com>
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: ken
- add "+HP" in case of headphones redirection;
- add device type for analog devices, if all pins have the same.
As result now it may look like "Analog 5.1+HP/2.0" or "Front Analog Mic".
I hope it will be more useful than long and confusing.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
casted types: to ssize_t in filesystem code and to
int in buf code, thus supplying a negative argument
leads to kernel panic later. To fix that check user
supplied argument in the beginning of syscall.
Submitted by: Maxim Dounin <mdounin mdounin.ru>, maxim@
- remove experimental code for disabling CRC
- use the correct constant for conversion between interrupt rate
and EITR values (the previous values were off by a factor of 2)
- make dev.ix.N.queueM.interrupt_rate a RW sysctl variable.
Changing individual values affects the queue immediately,
and propagates to all interfaces at the next reinit.
- add dev.ix.N.queueM.irqs rdonly sysctl, to export the actual
interrupt counts
Netmap-related changes for ixgbe:
- use the "new" format for TX descriptors in netmap mode.
- pass interrupt mitigation delays to the user process doing poll()
on a netmap file descriptor.
On the RX side this means we will not check the ring more than once
per interrupt. This gives the process a chance to sleep and process
packets in larger batches, thus reducing CPU usage.
On the TX side we take this even further: completed transmissions are
reclaimed every half ring even if the NIC interrupts more often.
This saves even more CPU without any additional tx delays.
Generic Netmap-related changes:
- align the netmap_kring to cache lines so that there is no false sharing
(possibly useful for multiqueue NICs and MSIX interrupts, which are
handled by different cores). It's a minor improvement but it does not
cost anything.
Reviewed by: Jack Vogel
Approved by: Jack Vogel
(Patsburg) integrated SAS controller.
sys/dev/isci contains all files specific to FreeBSD.
sys/dev/isci/scil contains OS-agnostic library maintained by Intel and
modified to best integrate into FreeBSD kernel build environment.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: scottl
Unmounts do vfs_msync() before calling VFS_UNMOUNT(), but there is
still a race allowing a process to dirty pages after msync
finished. Remounts rw->ro just left dirty pages in system.
Reviewed by: alc, tegge (long time ago)
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
appropriate timestamps. Restore the assertions which verify that
NCF_TS is set when timestamp is asked for.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
selection in snd_hda(4) driver.
Now driver tracks jack presence detection status for every CODEC pin. For
playback associations, when configured, that information, same as before,
can be used to automatically redirect audio to headphones. Also same as
before, these events are used to track digital display connection status
and fetch ELD. Now in addition to that driver uses that information to
automatically switch recording source of the mixer to the connected input.
When there are devices with no jack detection and with one both connected,
last ones will have the precedence. As result, on most laptops after boot
internal microphone should be automatically selected. But if external one
(for example, headset) connected, it will be selected automatically.
When external mic disconnected, internal one will be selected again.
Automatic recording source selection is enabled by default now to make
recording work out of the box without touching mixer. But it can be
disabled or limited only to attach time using hint.pcm.X.rec.autosrc loader
tunables or dev.pcm.X.rec.autosrc sysctls.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
we will only trust a positive name cache entry for a specified amount of
time before falling back to a LOOKUP RPC, even if the ctime for the file
handle matches the cached copy in the name cache entry. The timeout is
configured via a new 'nametimeo' mount option and defaults to 60 seconds.
It may be set to zero to disable positive name caching entirely.
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
- Enter instead of ENTER
- Remove colons
- Line up option values
- Use dots to provide a line to visually connect the menu
selections with their values
- Replace Enabled/Disabled with off/On
(bigger inital cap for "On" is a visual indicator)
- Remove confusing "Boot" from selections that don't boot.
- With loader_color=1 in /boot/loader.conf, use reverse video to
highlight enabled options
PR: misc/160818
Submitted by: Warren Block <wblock wonkity com>
Reviewed by: Devin Teske <devin dot teske fisglobal com>, current@
MFC after: 1 week
in response to CAM_DEV_NOT_THERE, instead of just the LUN in question.
This will now just eliminate the specified LUN in response to
CAM_DEV_NOT_THERE.
Reported by: Richard Todd <rmtodd@servalan.servalan.com>
MFC after: 3 days
The actual ia6->ia6_lifetime access is hidden in
IFA6_IS_INVALID/IFA6_IS_DEPRECATED macros since a long time ago
(see netinet6/nd6.c, r1.104 of KAME for the reference).
MFC after: 3 days
from TCP to UDP and the rsize/wsize/readdirsize is greater
than NFS_MAXDGRAMDATA, it is possible for a thread doing an
I/O RPC to get stuck repeatedly doing retries. This happens
because the RPC will use a resize/wsize/readdirsize that won't
work for UDP and, as such, it will keep failing indefinitely.
This patch returns an error for this case, to avoid the problem.
A discussion on freebsd-fs@ seemed to indicate that returning
an error was preferable to silently ignoring the "udp"/"mntudp"
option.
This problem was discovered while investigating a problem reported
by pjd@ via email.
MFC after: 2 weeks
(HDMI and HBR bits set) and needed (AC3 format used with 8 channels).
This should allow DTS-HD/TrueHD pass-through with rates above 6.144Mbps.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
consistently, creating some namecache entries without NCF_TS flag.
This causes panic due to failed assertion.
As a temporal relief, remove the assert. Return epoch timestamp for
the entries without timestamp if asked.
While there, consolidate the code which returns timestamps, into a
helper cache_out_ts().
Discussed with: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
widgets. I am not sure if S/PDIF supports 32bit samples, but my Marantz
SR4001 doesn't, producing only single clicks on playback start/stop.
Because HDA controller requires 32bit alignment for all samples above 16bit,
we can't handle this situation in regular way and have to set 32bit format
in sound(4) for anything above 16bit. To workaround the problem, prefer
to setup hardware to use 24/20bit samples when 32bit format requested. Add
dev.pcm.X.play.32bit and dev.pcm.X.rec.32bit sysctls to control what format
really use for 32bit samples.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
hash with names of its hooks. It starts with size of 16, and
grows when number of hooks reaches twice the current size. A
failure to grow (memory is allocated with M_NOWAIT) isn't
fatal, however.
I used standard hash(9) function for the hash. With 25000
hooks named in the mpd (ports/net/mpd5) manner of "b%u", the
distributions is the following: 72.1% entries consist of one
element, 22.1% consist of two, 5.2% consist of three and
0.6% of four.
Speedup in a synthetic test that creates 25000 hooks and then
runs through a long cyclce dereferencing them in a random order
is over 25 times.
mutex(9) to rwlock(9) based locks.
While here remove dropping lock when processing NGM_LISTNODES,
and NGM_LISTTYPES generic commands. We don't need to drop it
since memory allocation is done with M_NOWAIT.
- retrive only one, specified limit for a process, not the whole
array, as it was previously (the sysctl has been added recently and
has not been backported to stable yet, so this change is ok);
- allow to set a resource limit for another process.
Submitted by: Andrey Zonov <andrey at zonov.org>
Discussed with: kib
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
maximal from 64K to 256K.
We usually don't need 750 sound interrupts per second (1.3ms latency)
when playing 192K/24/8 stream. 187 should be better. On usual 48K/16/2
it is just enough for hw.snd.latency=9 at hw.snd.latency_profile=1 with
23 and 6 interrupts per second.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Previous code was relatively dumb. During CODEC probe it was tracing signals
and statically binding amplifier controls to the OSS mixer controls. To set
volume it just set all bound amplifier controls proportionally to mixer
level, not looking on their hierarchy and amplification levels/offsets.
New code is much smarter. It also traces signals during probe, but mostly
to find out possible amplification control rages in dB for each specific
signal. To set volume it retraces each affected signal again and sets
amplifiers controls recursively to reach desired amplification level in dB.
It would be nice to export values in dB to user, but unluckily our OSS mixer
API is too simple for that.
As result of this change:
- cascaded amplifiers will work together to reach maximal precision.
If some input has 0/+40dB preamplifier with 10dB step and -10/+10dB mixer
with 1dB step after it, new code will use both to provide 0/+40dB control
with 1dB step! We could even get -10/+50dB range there, but that is
intentionally blocked for now.
- different channels of multichannel associations on non-uniform CODECs
such as VIA VT1708S will have the same volume, not looking that control
ranges are different. It was not good when fronts were 12dB louder.
- for multiplexed recording, when we can record from only one source at
a time, we can now use recording amplifier controls to set different
volume levels for different inputs if they have no own controls of they
are less precise. If recording source change, amplifiers will be
reconfigured.
To improve out-of-the-box behavior, ignore default volume levels set by
sound(4) and use own, more reasonable: +20dB for mics, -10dB for analog
output volume and 0dB for the rest of controls. sound(4) defaults of 75%
mean absolutely random things for different controls of different CODECs
because of very different control ranges.
Together with further planned automatic recording source selection this
should allow users to get fine playback and recording without touching
mixer first.
Note that existing users should delete /var/db/mixer*-state and reboot
or trigger CODEC reconfiguration to get new default values.
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
This makes it much easier to determine whether an event occurs in the
net80211 taskqueue (which was called "ath0 taskq") or the ath driver
taskqueue (which is also called "ath0 taskq".)
comments to longer, also refining strange ones.
Properly use #ifdef rather than #if defined() where possible. Four
#if defined(PCBGROUP) occurances (netinet and netinet6) were ignored to
avoid conflicts with eventually upcoming changes for RSS.
Reported by: bde (most)
Reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 3 days
provide struct namecache_ts which is the old struct namecache. Only
allocate struct namecache_ts if non-null struct timespec *tsp was
passed to cache_enter_time, otherwise use struct namecache.
Change struct namecache allocation and deallocation macros into static
functions, since logic becomes somewhat twisty. Provide accessor for
the nc_name member of struct namecache to hide difference between
struct namecache and namecache_ts.
The aim of the change is to not waste 20 bytes per small namecache
entry.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-note: after r230394
names and wants to sort them by name, ie. when executes:
# zfs list -t snapshot -o name -s name
Because only name is needed we don't have to read all snapshot properties.
Below you can find how long does it take to list 34509 snapshots from a single
disk pool before and after this change with cold and warm cache:
before:
# time zfs list -t snapshot -o name -s name > /dev/null
cold cache: 525s
warm cache: 218s
after:
# time zfs list -t snapshot -o name -s name > /dev/null
cold cache: 1.7s
warm cache: 1.1s
MFC after: 1 week
fit into existing mcontext_t.
On i386 and amd64 do return the extended FPU states using
getcontextx(3). For other architectures, getcontextx(3) returns the
same information as getcontext(2).
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 month
64bit and 32bit ABIs. As a side-effect, it enables AVX on capable
CPUs.
In particular:
- Query the CPU support for XSAVE, list of the supported extensions
and the required size of FPU save area. The hw.use_xsave tunable is
provided for disabling XSAVE, and hw.xsave_mask may be used to
select the enabled extensions.
- Remove the FPU save area from PCB and dynamically allocate the
(run-time sized) user save area on the top of the kernel stack,
right above the PCB. Reorganize the thread0 PCB initialization to
postpone it after BSP is queried for save area size.
- The dumppcb, stoppcbs and susppcbs now do not carry the FPU state as
well. FPU state is only useful for suspend, where it is saved in
dynamically allocated suspfpusave area.
- Use XSAVE and XRSTOR to save/restore FPU state, if supported and
enabled.
- Define new mcontext_t flag _MC_HASFPXSTATE, indicating that
mcontext_t has a valid pointer to out-of-struct extended FPU
state. Signal handlers are supplied with stack-allocated fpu
state. The sigreturn(2) and setcontext(2) syscall honour the flag,
allowing the signal handlers to inspect and manipilate extended
state in the interrupted context.
- The getcontext(2) never returns extended state, since there is no
place in the fixed-sized mcontext_t to place variable-sized save
area. And, since mcontext_t is embedded into ucontext_t, makes it
impossible to fix in a reasonable way. Instead of extending
getcontext(2) syscall, provide a sysarch(2) facility to query
extended FPU state.
- Add ptrace(2) support for getting and setting extended state; while
there, implement missed PT_I386_{GET,SET}XMMREGS for 32bit binaries.
- Change fpu_kern KPI to not expose struct fpu_kern_ctx layout to
consumers, making it opaque. Internally, struct fpu_kern_ctx now
contains a space for the extended state. Convert in-kernel consumers
of fpu_kern KPI both on i386 and amd64.
First version of the support for AVX was submitted by Tim Bird
<tim.bird am sony com> on behalf of Sony. This version was written
from scratch.
Tested by: pho (previous version), Yamagi Burmeister <lists yamagi org>
MFC after: 1 month
Currently the code is not built by any modules. That will
be fixed later. The Atmel ARM bus interface file part of this
commit is just for sake of example. All registers and bits are
declared like macros and not C-structures like in official
Synopsis header files. This driver mostly origins from the
musb_otg.c driver in FreeBSD except that the chip specific
programming has been replaced by the one for DWC 2.0 USB OTG.
Some parts related to system suspend and resume have been left
like empty functions for the future. USB suspend and resume is
fully supported.
For example, this particular topology didn't work correctly from all
nodes:
[A] - [B] - [C] - [D]
Submitted by: Monthadar Al Jaberi <monthadar@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: bschmidt, adrian
This allows for multiple MAC addresses to be printed on the same
debugging line. ether_sprintf() uses a static char buffer and
thus isn't very useful here.
Submitted by: Monthadar Al Jaberi <monthadar@gmail.com>
of root HUB. Although it is initialized with port index of the
device's parent hub, which is worng. So track the USB tree up to
root HUB and initialize this filed ptroprly
Rename port_index to root_port_index in order to reflect its
real semantics.
versions derived from /usr/ports/audio/oss.
The particular headers used were taken from the
attic/drv/oss_allegro directory and are mostly identical
to the previous files.
The Maestro3 driver is now free from the GPL.
NOTE: due to lack of testers this driver is being
considered for deprecation and removal.
PR: kern/153920
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
profiling and kernel profiling. To enable kernel profiling one has to build
kgmon(8). I will enable the build once I managed to build and test powerpc
(32-bit) kernels with profiling support.
- add a powerpc64 PROF_PROLOGUE for _mcount.
- add macros to avoid adding the PROF_PROLOGUE in certain assembly entries.
- apply these macros where needed.
- add size information to the MCOUNT function.
MFC after: 3 weeks, together with r230291
entries on one client when a directory was renamed on another client. The
root cause for the stale entry being trusted is that each per-vnode nfsnode
structure has a single 'n_ctime' timestamp used to validate positive name
cache entries. However, if there are multiple entries for a single vnode,
they all share a single timestamp. To fix this, extend the name cache
to allow filesystems to optionally store a timestamp value in each name
cache entry. The NFS clients now fetch the timestamp associated with
each name cache entry and use that to validate cache hits instead of the
timestamps previously stored in the nfsnode. Another part of the fix is
that the NFS clients now use timestamps from the post-op attributes of
RPCs when adding name cache entries rather than pulling the timestamps out
of the file's attribute cache. The latter is subject to races with other
lookups updating the attribute cache concurrently. Some more details:
- Add a variant of nfsm_postop_attr() to the old NFS client that can return
a vattr structure with a copy of the post-op attributes.
- Handle lookups of "." as a special case in the NFS clients since the name
cache does not store name cache entries for ".", so we cannot get a
useful timestamp. It didn't really make much sense to recheck the
attributes on the the directory to validate the namecache hit for "."
anyway.
- ABI compat shims for the name cache routines are present in this commit
so that it is safe to MFC.
MFC after: 2 weeks
subject "Data corruption over NFS in -current". During investigation
of this, I came across an ugly bogusity in the new NFS client where
it replaced the cr_uid with the one used for the mount. This was
done so that "system operations" like the NFSv4 Renew would be
performed as the user that did the mount. However, if any other
thread shares the credential with the one doing this operation,
it could do an RPC (or just about anything else) as the wrong cr_uid.
This patch fixes the above, by using the mount credentials instead of
the one provided as an argument for this case. It appears
to have fixed Martin's problem.
This patch is needed for NFSv4 mounts and NFSv3 mounts against
some non-FreeBSD servers that do not put post operation attributes
in the NFSv3 Statfs RPC reply.
Tested by: Martin Cracauer (cracauer at cons.org)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
pci_get_vpd_readonly_method(). Previously the loop was always running
to completion and falling through to failing with ENXIO.
PR: kern/164313
Submitted by: Chuck Tuffli chuck tuffli net
MFC after: 1 week
ctl_error.c,
ctl_error.h: Take out the ctl_sense_format enumeration, and use
scsi_sense_data_type instead.
Remove ctl_get_sense_format() and switch ctl_build_ua()
over to using scsi_sense_data_type.
ctl_backend_ramdisk.c,
ctl_backend_block.c:
Use C99 structure initializers instead of GNU initializers.
ctl.c: Switch over to using the SCSI sense format enumeration
instead of the CTL-specific enumeration.
Submitted by: dim (partially)
MFC after: 1 month
frightening "unknown" word. In most cases we don't need to know chips
to properly handle them, but having IDs in logs may simplify debugging.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
1. correct the initialization of RDT when there is an ixgbe_init()
while a netmap client is active. This code was previously
in ixgbe_initialize_receive_units() but RDT is overwritten
shortly afterwards in ixgbe_init_locked()
2. add code (not active yet) to disable CRCSTRIP while in netmap mode.
From all evidence i could gather, it seems that when the 82599 has to
write a data block that is not a full cache line, it first reads
the line (64 bytes) and then writes back the updated version.
This hurts reception of min-sized frames, which are only 60 bytes
if the CRC is stripped: i could never get above 11Mpps
(received from one queue) with CRCSTRIP enabled, whyle 64+4-byte
packets reach 14.2 Mpps (the theoretical maximum).
Leaving the CRC in gets us 14.88Mpps for 60+4 byte frames,
(and penalizes 64+4). The min-size case is important not just because
it looks good in benchmarks, but also because this is the size
of pure acks.
Note we cannot leave CRCSTRIP on by default because it is
incompatible with some other features (LRO etc.)
of HDA bus. Handle that from two directions:
- Add support for "striping" (using several SDO lines), if supported.
- Account HDA bus utilization and return error on new stream allocation
attempt if remaining bandwidth is unsifficient.
Most of HDA controllers have one SDO line with 46Mbps output bandwidth.
NVIDIA GF210 has 2 lines - 92Mbps. NVIDIA GF520 has 4 lines - 184Mbps!
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
using LOADER_TFTP_SUPPORT excludes this code. Fixes compilation of pxeldr
with -DLOADER_TFTP_SUPPORT
Applicable to stable/9 and stable/8 now.
This appears to not be needed on stable/7 as r212126 has not been MFC'd.
Obtained from: Yahoo! Inc.
MFC after: 2 weeks