a colliding INIT. This if fine except when we have
data outstanding... we basically reset it to the
previous value it was.. so then we end up assigning
the same TSN to two different data chunks.
This patch:
1) Finds a missing lock for when we change the stream
numbers during COOKIE and INIT-ACK processing.. we
were NOT locking the send_buffer.. which COULD cause
problems (found by inspection looking for <2>)
2) Fixes a case during a colliding INIT where we incorrectly
reset the sending Sequence thus in some cases duplicately
assigning a TSN.
3) Additional enhancments to logging so we can see strm/tsn in
the receiver AND new tracking to watch what the sender
is doing with TSN and STRM seq's.
Approved by: gnn
wait (time waited to acquire) and hold times for *all* kernel locks. If
the architecture has a system synchronized TSC, the profiling code will
use that - thereby minimizing profiling overhead. Large chunks of profiling
code have been moved out of line, the overhead measured on the T1 for when
it is compiled in but not enabled is < 1%.
Approved by: scottl (standing in for mentor rwatson)
Reviewed by: des and jhb
or ia64.
The old message implied to me that ACPI can't be compiled in on platforms
other than amd64 and ia64. The amd64@ mailing list archive has messages
from users with the same confusion.
Approved by: scottl
We were calling select_a_tag() inside sctp_send_initate_ack().
During collision cases we have a stcb and thus a SCTP_LOCK. When
we call select_a_tag it (below it) locks the INFO lock. We now
1) pre-select the nonce-tie-tags in sctputil.c during setup of
a tcb.
2) In the other case where we have to select tags, we unlock after
incr the ref cnt (so assoc won't go away0 and then do the
tag selection followed by a relock and decr the refcnt.
Approved by: gnn
* Actually use the HAVE_<header>_H macros to conditionally include
system headers. They've been defined for a long time, but only
used in a few places. Now they're used pretty consistently
throughout.
* Fill in a lot of missing casts for conversions from void*.
Although Standard C doesn't require this, some people have been
trying to use C++ compilers with this code, and they do require it.
Bit-for-bit, the compiled object files are identical, except for
one assert() whose line number changed, so I'm pretty confident I
didn't break anything. ;-)
- Each stp port is added sequentially so it was possible for our bridgeid to
change every time because the new port has a lower MAC address. Instead
just find the lowest MAC address from all Ethernet adapters in the machine
as the value only needs to be unique, this stops a lot of churn on the
protocol.
- Update the states after enabling or disabling a port.
- Keep tabs if we have been stopped or started by our parent bridge.
- The callout only needs to be drained before destroying the mutex, move it to
bstp_detach.
reset comes in we need to calculate the length and
therefore the number of listed streams (if any) based
on the TLV type. Otherwise if we get a retran we could
in theory panic by sending a notification to a user with
a incorrect list and thus no memory listing the streams.
Found in IOS by devtest :-)
Approved by: gnn
our own watchdog that piggybacks on the em_local_timer() routine.
We suppose that the if_timer/if_watchdog interface should be
obsoleted, since it doesn't fit the modern SMP network stack.
NIC drivers should create their own watchdogs, that check and
clear the timers always holding driver's lock.
In collaboration with: jfv, scottl