interlock in getnewvnode() to avoid possible sleeps while holding
the mutex. Note that the warning from Witness is a slight false
positive since we know there will be no contention on the interlock
since we haven't made the vnode available for use yet, but the theory
is not a bad one.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
prototyped functions to get a sigset_t, and further to check for any
queued signals, rather than an empty signal set, to go with the move
to signal queues rather than signal sets.
gets signals operating based on a TailQ, and is good enough to run X11,
GNOME, and do job control. There are some intricate parts which could be
more refined to match the sigset_t versions, but those require further
evaluation of directions in which our signal system can expand and contract
to fit our needs.
After this has been in the tree for a while, I will make in kernel API
changes, most notably to trapsignal(9) and sendsig(9), to use ksiginfo
more robustly, such that we can actually pass information with our
(queued) signals to the userland. That will also result in using a
struct ksiginfo pointer, rather than a signal number, in a lot of
kern_sig.c, to refer to an individual pending signal queue member, but
right now there is no defined behaviour for such.
CODAFS is unfinished in this regard because the logic is unclear in
some places.
Sponsored by: New Gold Technology
Reviewed by: bde, tjr, jake [an older version, logic similar]
timestamped TCP packets where FreeBSD will send DATA+FIN and
A W2K box will ack just the DATA portion. If this occurs
after FreeBSD has done a (NewReno) fast-retransmit and is
recovering it (dupacks > threshold) it triggers a case in
tcp_newreno_partial_ack() (tcp_newreno() in stable) where
tcp_output() is called with the expectation that the retransmit
timer will be reloaded. But tcp_output() falls through and
returns without doing anything, causing the persist timer to be
loaded instead. This causes the connection to hang until W2K gives up.
This occurs because in the case where only the FIN must be acked, the
'len' calculation in tcp_output() will be 0, a lot of checks will be
skipped, and the FIN check will also be skipped because it is designed
to handle FIN retransmits, not forced transmits from tcp_newreno().
The solution is to simply set TF_ACKNOW before calling tcp_output()
to absolute guarentee that it will run the send code and reset the
retransmit timer. TF_ACKNOW is already used for this purpose in other
cases.
For some unknown reason this patch also seems to greatly reduce
the number of duplicate acks received when Guido runs his tests over
a lossy network. It is quite possible that there are other
tcp_newreno{_partial_ack()} cases which were not generating the expected
output which this patch also fixes.
X-MFC after: Will be MFC'd after the freeze is over
of 1 so that it is not probed until after acpi0 is probed and attached.
- In legacy_probe(), return ENXIO if acpi0 is around and alive.
- nexus_attach() is now much simpler and just lets its child drivers do
all the work.
and attach routines have succeeded so that if they fail we can still use
the PnP BIOS to find ISA on-board devices. The fact that we do this here
is gross but fixing it properly involves a lot more work.
code path to fix a bug in the non USB_USE_SOFTINTR path that caused
the usb bus to hang and generally misbehave when devices were unplugged.
In the process though it also reduced the throughput of usb devices because
of a less than optimal implementation under FreeBSD.
This commit fixes the non USB_USE_SOFTINTR code in uhci and ohci
so that it works again, and switches back to using this code path.
The uhci code has been tested, but the ohci code hasn't. It's
essentially the same anyway and so I don't envisage any difficulties.
Code for uhci submitted by: Maksim Yevmenkin <myevmenk@exodus.net>
testing any modifications to them, they shouldn't even bother with
disklabels in the first place and they are just plain obsolete old
hardware which should be axed entirely before 5.0-R IMO.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
from stopping another thread from completing a syscall, and this allows it to
release its resources etc. Probably more related commits to follow (at least
one I know of)
Initial concept by: julian, dillon
Submitted by: davidxu
device_t the same throughout kernel.
This is a very fine point of C which fortunatly does not make any
difference in normal circumstances but which due to the pervasiveness
of device_t in the kernel can make a lint barf a lot.
sparc v9 ABI. The Elf_Rela records for local symbols appear to already
have the symbol's value added in to the addend field, even though the ABI
specifies we need to lookup the symbol and add its value too. This breaks
text relocations in klds because the symbol's value is added twice, and
the resulting address points off into nowhere land, so for now just use
the addend.
Tested by: rwatson
The advanced stage of computer assisted hardware design and
verification is aptly illustrated by the fact that this is necessary
because only the first ports in a single-chip, dual-port async
PC-Card product lacks this register.
that this will make people use this for their future copy&paste operations.
Rework the detection of raw-disk offsets in disklabels. This actually
unearthed a number of bugs in the (now) previous version.
Also accept labels which don't have a magic RAW_PART, provided they don't
confuse us too much.
Change the order of our sanity-checks on labels found on disks to be more
robust.
Check against MAXPARTITIONS in our sanity-check and reject disklabels
we cannot cope with.
Create new g_bsd_modify() function to implment disklabel modifying
ioctls.
Implement DIOCSDINFO and DIOCWDINFO with the provision that the latter
still not writes your change back to disk. I didn't have the nerves
for that yet.
In the start routine, use g_call_me() for complex ioctls to prevent
sleeping.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
with support for trying, doing and forcing.
This will eventually replace g_slice_addslice() which gets changed from
grabbing topology to requing it in this commit as well.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
work.
This prevents people from sleeping in the UP/DOWN I/O path by mistake
or design (doing so almost invariably result in deadlocks since it
stalls all I/O processing in the given direction.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
a disklabel modification tries to change an open device, and no
counter-examples exists.
Be less facist about when we can do Setattr, the openmodes of devices
are so loosely managed that the "exclusive" count is almost useless.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Add a __unused.
Make the 2byte decoder functions return 16 bits for the benefits
of picky lints.
No need to grab giant around a tsleep() when we have a timeout.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
to be performed in the event-thread.
To do this, we need to lock the eventlist with g_eventlock (nee g_doorlock),
since g_call_me() being called from the UP/DOWN paths will not be able to
aquire g_topology_lock.
This also means that for now these events are not referenced on any
particular consumer/provider/geom.
For UP/DOWN path use, this will not become a problem since the access()
function will make sure we drain any bio's before we dismantle.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.