The p_can(...) construct was a premature (and, it turns out,
awkward) abstraction. The individual calls to p_canxxx() better
reflect differences between the inter-process authorization checks,
such as differing checks based on the type of signal. This has
a side effect of improving code readability.
o Replace direct credential authorization checks in ktrace() with
invocation of p_candebug(), while maintaining the special case
check of KTR_ROOT. This allows ktrace() to "play more nicely"
with new mandatory access control schemes, as well as making its
authorization checks consistent with other "debugging class"
checks.
o Eliminate "privused" construct for p_can*() calls which allowed the
caller to determine if privilege was required for successful
evaluation of the access control check. This primitive is currently
unused, and as such, serves only to complicate the API.
Approved by: ({procfs,linprocfs} changes) des
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
PCI bus object. This should deal both with already-routed interrupts
as well as devices that need an interrupt routed.
Note that it *doesn't* deal with interlocked interrupt dependancies, nor
does it select between interrupt options in a smart way. These are
optimisations that need further work.
is a parallel adjunct to active cooling, not a lesser evil. The _ACx
levels sort from 0 being hottest, not coolest.
Sanity check the returned temperature values, since we are having
trouble reading them on some systems.
Rearrange sysctl nodes a bit; this is probably close to the final layout.
Also removed some spl's and added some VM mutexes, but they are not actually
used yet, so this commit does not really make any operational changes
to the system.
vm_page.c relates to vm_page_t manipulation, including high level deactivation,
activation, etc... vm_pageq.c relates to finding free pages and aquiring
exclusive access to a page queue (exclusivity part not yet implemented).
And the world still builds... :-)
destroyed properly (otherwise bad things would happen after a clone
dev had been created, and the module was kldunloaded). Allocated
children that have not successfully probed are being deleted again
(otherwise fd0 and fd1 have always been allocated, even if only
fd0 was acutally present, and fd1 even survived kldunloading the
module).
Still, kldunloading leaves remnants of the previously existing devices
intact. Why doesn't it destroy all the devices? As a consequence,
since dev->descr now points into no longer allocated memory, the
system panics deep inside printf(9) when running devinfo(1) after
kldunloading the module. Ideas sought...
Also, when kldloading the module on a hints-populated isab0, this bus
somehow has already created an fdc0 entry (a dummy) so the load
attempt fails and will register fdc1 instead. What are those dummy
entries for? Loading the module from the bootloader works, and it
can be unloaded an re-loaded then later.
most of these inlines had been bloated in -current far beyond their
original intent. Normalize prototypes and function declarations to be ANSI
only (half already were). And do some general cleanup.
(kernel size also reduced by 50-100K, but that isn't the prime intent)
For fibre channel, start going for the gusto and using AC_FOUND_DEVICE
and AC_LOST_DEVICE calls to xpt_async when devices appear and disappear
as the loop or fabric changes.
ISPASYNC_FW_CRASH is the async event code where the platform layer
deals with a firmware crash.
some of the RIO (reduced interrupt operation) stuff. Add 64 bit
data list (DSD type 1) and arbitrary data list (DSD type 2)
data structure defines.
Add macros that parameterize usage of the Request/Response in/out
queue pointers. When we finish 2300 support, different registers
will be accessed for the 2300.
part of the PCI block for the 2300- not software convention usage
of the mailbox registers- so we macrosize in/out pointer usage.
Only report that a LIP destroyed commands if it actually destroyed
commands. Get the chan/tgt/lun order correct. Fix a longstanding
stupid bug that caused us to try and issue a command with a tag on
Channel B because we were checking the tagged capability for the
target against Channel A.
A firmware crash is now vectored out to platform specific code
as an async event.
Some minor formatting tweaks.
(this commit is just the first stage). Also add various GIANT_ macros to
formalize the removal of Giant, making it easy to test in a more piecemeal
fashion. These macros will allow us to test fine-grained locks to a degree
before removing Giant, and also after, and to remove Giant in a piecemeal
fashion via sysctl's on those subsystems which the authors believe can
operate without Giant.
- Move the lance_probe function to if_lnc.c.
- Support C-NET(98)S again.
Submitted by: chi@bd.mbn.or.jp (Chiharu Shibata) and nyan
No response from: Paul Richards
best router again. In particular, when the neighbor entry is newly
created, it might affect the selection policy.
Obtained from: KAME
MFC after: 1 week
These take an additional mutex argument, which is dropped before any
processes are made runnable. This can avoid contention on the mutex
if the processes would immediately acquire it, and is done in such a
way that wakeups will not be lost.
Reviewed by: jhb
* add support for mic record channel
* add support for setblocksize
* make mpsafe
* make getptr accurate
* reduce buffer size from 64k to 16k for better synchronisation
We already did this in the SMP case, and it is now maintained in the UP
case as well, and makes the code slightly more readable. Note that
curproc is always executing, thus the p != curproc test does not need to
be performed if the p_oncpu check is made.
We don't actually need to force a context switch of the current process.
The act of firing the event triggers a context switch to softclock() and
then switching back out again which is equivalent to a preemption, thus
no further work is needed on the local CPU.
1. Add SA_IO_TIMEOUT as an option (4 minutes default) to cover reads,
writes, wfm, test unit ready.
2. Add internal SCSIOP_TIMEOUT (e.g., for mode sense) at 1 minute. This
should not require an option, but is cleaner to parameterize.
MFC after: 1 week
removed and a minimal number of changes to make it compile in the new
location.
# I have a fully converted on a disk that may be crashed. If it is
# crashed, I'll redo the work.
Frist, for pci slots, make the setup intr save the requested interrupt
vector and arg and return rather than passing it up to our parent. On
interrupts, we call this vector iff there's a card in the slot. This
should eliminate some of the hangs or "weird" messages that people see
when ejecting cards and also help close the race window somewhat.
Reading the pci bus one more time for this information is judged to be
an acceptible tradeoff since it is very very fast.
Cleanup a little how we detect unsupported cards. Only detect
unsupported cards (eg cardbus cards) on card insertion (or more
pedantically when a card is actually present). This should allow us
to change the message in the future to "cardbus card not supported
with OLDCARD" :-).
Note:
We may also consider this for the ISA bus case, but there the
reads are much more expensive and the location of the CD pin
status lines appears to be less standardized. Also, the ISA
management interrupt isn't shared with the card's interrupt.
The mutliplex the CSC and function interrupts bit also appears
to be non-standard (or at least not imlemented on all
bridges).
because NEWBUS (and I think some versions of Windows sometimes) writes
0xffffffff to these registers to disable them. When they are
"disabled" like this, writing memory ranges to the pcic registers are
ignored and you will get "card (null) (null)" when you insert a call
otherwise.
each of the bridge chips. Before we wrongly assumes that all cardbus
bridge chips were intel compatible step A/B. This mostly worked, but
likely caused problems with certain cirrus logic cardbus bridges.
MFC after: 5 days
- Mask GPCNTL against 0x1c (was 0xfc) for the reading of the NVRAM.
This ensures LEDC bit will not be set on 896 and later chips.
Submitted by Chip Salzenberg <chip@perlsupport.com>.
- Add probe for Tekram 390 U2B/U2W SCSI (53C895) LED handling.
Submitted by Chip Salzenberg <chip@valinux.com>
.cvsignore file for [A-Za-z]* to keep these directories around rather
than waste a file on .keepme. This should also make people's built
trees place nice with CVS.
Idea for .cvsignore: peter (although I suggested the regexp)
Pointed out by: Makoto MATSUSHITA-san <matusita@jp.FreeBSD.org>
Llama's costuming by: Fernamdo Llamas
allow call-specific authorization.
o Modify the authorization model so that p_can() is used to check
scheduling get/set events, using P_CAN_SEE for gets, and P_CAN_SCHED
for sets. This brings the checks in line with get/setpriority().
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Pass the softc, not the device_t to the Notify handler.
Don't invoke the Interpreter from callout context, as it may sleep.
Use AcpiOsQueueForExecution, which is called from taskqueue_swi.
Add an ACPI subsystem mutex, and macros for handling it. Because it's
not possible to differentiate between ACPI CA acquiring mutexes for
internal use and for use by AML, and because AML in the field doesn't
handle mutexes correctly, we can't use the ACPI subsystem's internal
locking. In addition, we have other private data of our own to lock.
Add initial locking to the ACPI driver code and the thermal module.
These locks are currently inoperative.
Pull some errant style back into line.
the sector ID.
Based on numerous comments made by Bruce, rewrite a good part of the
old fdformat() function, and merge it with fdreadid() into a single
unified fdmisccmd() function. Various style and a couple of more
serious bugs fixed there.
While i was at it, i also fixed the long-standing "TODO: don't
allocate buffer on stack." in fdcioctl(), fixed a number of style bugs
there, and finally implemented the FD_DEBUG ioctl command that has
been advertised in <sys/fdcio.h> (formerly <machine/ioctl_fd.h>) for
almost seven years now. ;-)
Submitted by: bde (a lot of fixes for fdformat())
RTF_DYNAMIC route, it got freed twice). I am not sure what was
the actual problem in 1992, but the current behavior is memory
leak if PCB holds a reference to a dynamically created/modified
routing table entry. (rt_refcnt>0 and we don't call rtfree().)
My test bed was:
1. Set net.inet.tcp.msl to a low value (for test purposes), e.g.,
5 seconds, to speed up the transition of TCP connection to a
"closed" state.
2. Add a network route which causes ICMP redirect from the gateway.
3. ping(8) host H that matches this route; this creates RTF_DYNAMIC
RTF_HOST route to H. (I was forced to use ICMP to cause gateway
to generate ICMP host redirect, because gateway in question is a
4.2-STABLE system vulnerable to a problem that was fixed later in
ip_icmp.c,v 1.39.2.6, and TCP packets with DF bit set were
triggering this bug.)
4. telnet(1) to H
5. Block access to H with ipfw(8)
6. Send something in telnet(1) session; this causes EPERM, followed
by an in_losing() call in a few seconds.
7. Delete ipfw(8) rule blocking access to H, and wait for TCP
connection moving to a CLOSED state; PCB is freed.
8. Delete host route to H.
9. Watch with netstat(1) that `rttrash' increased.
10. Repeat steps 3-9, and watch `rttrash' increases.
PR: kern/25421
MFC after: 2 weeks
a KLD. Still doesn't work well except in the PCMCIA case (now if only
pccardd(8) could load and unload drivers dynamically...). Mainly, it
tries to find fdc0 on the PCI bus for whatever obscure reasons, but i
need someone who understands driver(9) to fix this. However, it's at least
already better than before, and i'm tired of maintaining too many private
changes in my tree, given the large patches bde submitted. :)
Idea of a KLD triggered by: Michael Reifenberger <root@nihil.plaut.de>