Effectively all i386 kernels now have two pmaps compiled in: one
managing PAE pagetables, and another non-PAE. The implementation is
selected at cold time depending on the CPU features. The vm_paddr_t is
always 64bit now. As result, nx bit can be used on all capable CPUs.
Option PAE only affects the bus_addr_t: it is still 32bit for non-PAE
configs, for drivers compatibility. Kernel layout, esp. max kernel
address, low memory PDEs and max user address (same as trampoline
start) are now same for PAE and for non-PAE regardless of the type of
page tables used.
Non-PAE kernel (when using PAE pagetables) can handle physical memory
up to 24G now, larger memory requires re-tuning the KVA consumers and
instead the code caps the maximum at 24G. Unfortunately, a lot of
drivers do not use busdma(9) properly so by default even 4G barrier is
not easy. There are two tunables added: hw.above4g_allow and
hw.above24g_allow, the first one is kept enabled for now to evaluate
the status on HEAD, second is only for dev use.
i386 now creates three freelists if there is any memory above 4G, to
allow proper bounce pages allocation. Also, VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE changed
from 3 to 1.
The PAE_TABLES kernel config option is retired.
In collaboarion with: pho
Discussed with: emaste
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18894
The need to use libc malloc(3) from some places in libthr always
caused issues. For instance, per-thread key allocation was switched to
use plain mmap(2) to get storage, because some third party mallocs
used keys for implementation of calloc(3).
Even more important, libthr calls calloc(3) during initialization of
pthread mutexes, and jemalloc uses pthread mutexes. Jemalloc provides
some way to both postpone the initialization, and to make
initialization to use specialized allocator, but this is very fragile
and often breaks. See the referenced PR for another example.
Add the small malloc implementation used by rtld, to libthr. Use it in
thr_spec.c and for mutexes initialization. This avoids the issues with
mutual dependencies between malloc and libthr in principle. The
drawback is that some more allocations are not interceptable for
alternate malloc implementations. There should be not too much memory
use from this allocator, and the alternative, direct use of mmap(2) is
obviously worse.
PR: 235211
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18988
This allows to reuse the allocator in other environments that get
malloc(3) and related functions from libc or interposer.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18988
This fixes BIO_ORDERED semantics while also improving performance by:
- sleeping also before BIO_ORDERED bio, as defined, not only after;
- not queueing BIO_ORDERED bio to taskqueue if no other bios running;
- waking up sleeping taskqueue explicitly rather then rely on polling.
On Samsung SSD 970 PRO this shows sync write latency, measured with
`diskinfo -wS`, reduction from ~2ms to ~1.1ms by not sleeping without
reason till next HZ tick.
On the same device ZFS pool with 8 ZVOLs synchronously writing 4KB blocks
shows ~950 IOPS instead of ~750 IOPS before. I suspect ZFS does not need
BIO_ORDERED on BIO_FLUSH at all, but that will be next question.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Because of a typo, the code was mistakenly resetting the
vtnrx_vq pointer rather than vtntx_tq.
Reviewed by: bryanv
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19015
handling for protocols without ports numbers.
Since port numbers were uninitialized for protocols like ICMP/ICMPv6,
ipfw_chk() used some non-zero values to create dynamic states, and due
this it failed to match replies with created states.
Reported by: Oliver Hartmann, Boris Lytochkin
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
X-MFC after: r342908
This will allow multiple consumers of the coverage data to be compiled
into the kernel together. The only requirement is only one can be
registered at a given point in time, however it is expected they will
only register when the coverage data is needed.
A new kernel conflig option COVERAGE is added. This will allow kcov to
become a module that can be loaded as needed, or compiled into the
kernel.
While here clean up the #include style a little.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18955
On sync-kloop stop, send a wake-up signal to the kloop, so that
waiting for the timeout is not needed.
Also, improve logging in netmap_freebsd.c.
MFC after: 3 days
This is a wild guess as to why bectl tests failed once upon a time in CI,
given no apparent way to see a transcript of cleanup routines with Kyua. The
bectl tests construct a new, clean zpool for every test. The failure
indicated was because of a mount that was leftover from a previous test, but
the previous test had succeeded so it's not clear how the mount remained
leftover unless the `zpool get health ${pool}` had somehow failed.
MFC after: 1 week
January 2018 changes -r327723 and -r327821. The softdep_bp_to_mp()
function failed to include VFIFO as one of the valid cases.
Although fifo's do not allocate blocks in the filesystem, they will
allocate blocks if they use extended attributes (such as ACLs). Thus,
softdep_bp_to_mp() needs to return a non-NULL mount pointer when
presented with a fifo vnode so that the soft updates write complete
will properly process the soft updates structures associated with the
extended attribute blocks. It was the failure to process these soft
updates structures, thus leaving them hanging off the buffer, which
lead to the "panic: softdep_deallocate_dependencies: dangling deps"
when trying to clean up the buffer after it was written.
PR: 230962
Reported by: 2t8mr7kx9f@protonmail.com
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netflix
When performing a non-status operation on a single interface, it is
not necessary for ifconfig to build a list of all addresses in the
system, sort them, then iterate through them looking for the entry for
the single interface of interest. Doing so becomes increasingly
expensive as the number of interfaces in the system grows (e.g., in a
system with 1000+ vlan(4) interfaces).
Reviewed by: ae, kp
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: RG Nets
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18919
Re-evaluating the ALTQ kernel configuration can be expensive,
particularly when there are a large number (hundreds or thousands) of
queues, and is wholly unnecessary in response to events on interfaces
that do not support ALTQ as such interfaces cannot be part of an ALTQ
configuration.
Reviewed by: kp
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: RG Nets
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18918
- Use "in" instead of "on" when referring to directory and UFS partition.
- Switch from hw.physmem to hw.realmem and add a description to
distinguish the two.
- Explain why the "df" command is having trouble displaying ZFS sizes
correctly. Add a bit more descriptive text to help why the output of
"zfs list -o space" should be used.
- Switch to vmstat instead of iostat display for systat(1) as it shows
more information on one screen. Describe what is displayed based on the
text of the man page. Change the list of the other values accordingly.
- Sort the flags to "zfs destroy" alphabetically.
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Approved by: rgrimes
MFC after: 8 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18993
The existence of a PV entry for a mapping guarantees that the mapping
exists, so we should not need to test for that.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18866
RFC 3168 defines an ECN-setup SYN-ACK packet as on with the ECE flags
set and the CWR flags not set. The code was only checking if ECE flag
is set. This patch adds the check to verify that the CWR flags is not
set.
Submitted by: Richard Scheffenegger
Reviewed by: tuexen@
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18996
Enforce net80211 rates for control / management / multicast / EAPOL frames
and allow to override rate for unicast frames via ifconfig(8) 'ucastrate'
option; by default it still uses f/w rate adaptation for unicast frames.
MFC after: 1 week
The kernel will reject very large tables to avoid resource exhaustion
attacks. Some users run into this limit with legitimate table
configurations.
The error message in this case was not very clear:
pf.conf:1: cannot define table nets: Invalid argument
pfctl: Syntax error in config file: pf rules not loaded
If a table definition fails we now check the request_maxcount sysctl,
and if we've tried to create more than that point the user at
net.pf.request_maxcount:
pf.conf:1: cannot define table nets: too many elements.
Consider increasing net.pf.request_maxcount.
pfctl: Syntax error in config file: pf rules not loaded
PR: 235076
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18909
find(1) ignores -type w passed to it. With this patch find(1) properly
identifies and prints whiteouts.
PR: 126384, 156703
Submitted by: oleg@mamontov.net
MFC after: 1 week
The comment states that function always return a top of allocated mbuf;
however, the function actually return the overall mbuf chain top pointer.
Since there are already existing users of it (via m_getm(4) macro),
rephrase the comment and leave behavior unchanged.
PR: 134335
MFC after: 12 days
They will stop it automatically ('Interface wlan0 is down,
dhclient exiting'); use /etc/rc.d/dhclient stop command only when
none of them is used.
MFC after: 5 days
This includes the bump for cdevsw d_version. Otherwise, the impact on
the ABI (not KBI) is surprisingly low. The most important affected
interface is devname(3) and ttyname(3) which already correctly handle
long names (and ttyname(3) should not be affected at all).
Still, due to the d_version bump, I argue that the change is not MFC-able.
Requested by: mmacy
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18932
removed as part of r341441.
This call to reloc_non_plt() may crash if ifunc resolvers use the
needed libraries symbols since the pass over the needed libs
relocation is not yet done. The change in r341441 ensures the right
relocation order otherwise.
Submitted by: theraven
MFC after: 1 week
Discussed in: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17529
The strdup() call does not take advantage of the known length of the
source string. Replace by malloc() and memcpy() utilizimng the pre-
calculated string length.
Submitted by: cperciva
Reported by: rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
corresponding bitmap before adding an mbuf has actually succeeded.
Previously, m_gethdr(M_NOWAIT, ...) failing caused a "hole" in the
RX ring but not in its bitmap. One implication of such a hole was
that in a subsequent call to _iflib_fl_refill() with the RX buffer
accounting still indicating another reclaimable buffer, bit_ffc(3)
nevertheless returned -1 in frag_idx which in turn caused havoc
when used as an index. Thus, additionally assert that frag_idx is
0 or greater.
Another possible consequence of a hole in the RX ring was a NULL-
dereference when trying to use the unallocated mbuf, for example
in iflib_rxd_pkt_get().
While at it, make the variable declarations in _iflib_fl_refill()
conform to style(9) and remove redundant checks already performed
by bit_ffc{,_at}(3).
- In iflib_queues_alloc(), don't pass redundant M_ZERO to bit_alloc(3).
Reported and tested by: pho
The buffer allocated in read_chat() could be 1 element too short, if the
chatstr parameter passed in is 1 or 3 charachters long (e.g. "a" or "a b").
The allocation of the pointer array does not account for the terminating
NULL pointer in that case.
Overlapping source and destination strings are undefined in strcpy().
Instead of moving a string to the left by one character just increment the
char pointer before it is assigned to the results array.
MFC after: 2 weeks
* There's no reason to have a while() loop here, because:
- if msleep returns 0, that means we were woken up by the interrupt handler,
and we are going to exit immediately as sc_fw_chunk_done will now be 1
(there is nothing else that sleeps on sc_fw.)
- if msleep doesn't return 0 (i.e. it returned ETIMEDOUT) then we will
exit immediately because of the if-test.
So, just use a single msleep() and then check sc_fw_chunk_done as before.
* The comment said we were sleeping for 5 seconds, but the msleep was only
for 1. Before r314065, this was 1 second and so was the comment,
and in that commit the comment was changed and the function call wasn't.
Possibly fixes failures to initialize uCode on certain devices.
Submitted by: Augustin Cavalier (waddlesplash gmail.com)
Obtained from: Haiku 132990ecdcb072f2ce597b5d497ff3e5b1f09c20
MFC after: 10 days