Transition all boards that support arm cortex CPUs to armv7. This
leaves two armv6 kernels in the tree. RPI-B, which uses the BCM2835
which has a ARM1176 core, and VERSATILEPB, which is a qemu board setup
around the time RPI-B went in. Copy std.armv6 to std.armv7, even
though that duplicates a lot of stuff. More work needs to be done to
sort out the duplication.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12027
Make armv7 as a new MACHINE_ARCH.
Copy all the places we do armv6 and add armv7 as basically an
alias. clang appears to generate code for armv7 by default. armv7 hard
float isn't supported by the the in-tree gcc, so it hasn't been
updated to have a new default.
Support armv7 as a new valid MACHINE_ARCH (and by extension
TARGET_ARCH).
Add armv7 to the universe build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12010
This patch adds support for the Flexible File Layout to the pNFS client.
Although the patch is rather large, it should only affect NFS mounts
using the "pnfs" option against pNFS servers that do not support File
Layout.
There are still a couple of things missing from the Flexible File Layout
client implementation:
- The code does not yet do a LayoutReturn with I/O error stats when
I/O error(s) occur when attempting to do I/O on a DS.
This will be fixed in a future commit, since it is important for the
MDS to know that I/O on a DS is failing.
- The current code does writes and commits to mirror DSs serially.
Making them happen concurrently will be done in a future commit,
after discussion on freebsd-current@ on the best way to do this.
- The code does not handle NFSv4.0 DSs. Since there is no extant pNFS
server that implements NFSv4.0 DSs and NFSv4.1 DSs makes more sense
now, I don't intend to implement this until there is a need for it.
There is support for NFSv4.1 and NFSv3 DSs.
Previous code would always spin once before checking the lock. But a lock
with e.g. 6 readers is not going to become free in the duration of once spin
even if they start draining immediately.
Conservatively perform one for each reader.
Note that the total number of allowed spins is still extremely small and is
subject to change later.
MFC after: 1 week
information in this file is now somewhat dated, or is present mostly
correct in the man pages. Retire this file rather than fix it.
Noticed by: cognet@
Sponsored by: Netflix
Improved logging added in r323879 exposed an error during
attach. We need the irq, not the rid to work correctly. em uses
shared irqs, so it will use the same irq for TX as RX. bnxt does
not use shared irqs, or TX irqs at all, so there's no need to set
the TX irq affinity.
Reviewed by: sbruno
Approved by: sbruno (mentor)
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12496
use LDT segments immediately.
If the i386_set_ldt() call created a first LDT descriptor (and
consequently created the LDT) for our address space, LDTR is currently
loaded only on the CPU executing the syscall. Other CPUs executing
threads sharing the address space, would only load LDTR after context
switch.
Uncomment set_user_ldt_rv() and call it on all CPUs. Remove critical
section inside set_user_ldt(), it is not needed in the context of call
from smp_rendezvous().
Set md_ldt after md_ldt_sd is initialized using the same code sequence
as in user_ldt_free(). Do the whole initialization in a critical
section, to not race with the context switching while we set LDT.
Discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
spin first instant of instantly re-readoing and don't re-read after
spinning is finished - the state is already known.
Note the code is subject to significant changes later.
MFC after: 1 week
cpu_switch.S uses curproc->p_md.md_ldt value as the flag indicating
presence of the process LDT. The flag is checked and then ldt segment
descriptor is copied into the CPU' GDT slot.
Disallow context switches around clearing of the curproc LDT state by
performing the cleanup in critical section. Ensure that the md_ldt
flag is cleared before md_ldt_sd descriptor content is destroyed by
inserting fence between the operations.
We depend on the x86 memory model strong ordering guarantees, in
particular, that cpu_switch.S observes the writes to md_ldt and
md_ldt_sd in the expected order.
Discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
In general, the "kern" facility is reserved for the kernel use only.
If a program specifies that facility, then it is silently converted
to "user" facility.
So, using logger -p kern.xxx was both misleading and non-specific.
Thus, change the facility to local7, so that users can create
more adequate syslogd configurations.
While local0..local7 are documented as being for local use we already
have several examples in the tree where they are used because none of
the named facilities really fits.
Approved by: asomers
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12420
A sysctl can have a custom handler that may access data that is initialized
via SYSINIT(9) or via a module event handler (also invoked via SYSINIT).
Thus, it is not safe to allow access to the module's sysctl-s until
the initialization is performed. Likewise, we should not allow access
to teh sysctl-s after the module is uninitialized.
The latter is easy to achieve by properly ordering linker_file_unregister_sysctls
and linker_file_sysuninit.
The former is not as easy for two reasons:
- the initialization may depend on tunables which get set when sysctl-s are
registered, so we need to set the tunables before running sysinit-s
- the initialization may try to dynamically add more sysctl-s under statically
defined sysctl nodes
So, this change splits the sysctl setup into two phases. In the first phase
the sysctl-s are registered as before but they are disabled and hidden from
consumers. In the second phase, done after sysinit-s, normal access to the
sysctl-s is enabled.
The change should affect only dynamic module loading and unloading after
the system boot-up. Nothing changes for sysctl-s compiled into the kernel
and sysctl-s in preloaded modules.
Discussed with: hselasky, ian, jhb
Reviewed by: julian, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Panzura
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12545
Provide consistent snapshot of the requested descriptors by preventing
other threads from modifying LDT while we fetch the data, lock dt_lock
around the read. Copy the data into intermediate buffer, which is
copied out after the lock is dropped.
Use guaranteed atomic (aligned volatile) reads of the descriptors to
use same-size atomic as CPU update to set A bit in the descriptor type
field.
Improve overflow checking for the descriptors range calculations and
remove unneeded casts.
Reviewed by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Zero, <TYPE>_MIN and <TYPE>_MAX values can result from valid conversions.
They don't necessarily imply any error.
Since we do not have any reliable error signaling from libkern's strto*(),
it's better to always assume success rather than to report an error when
there is none.
Reviewed by: tsoome
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12565
Compilers are allowed to combine plain reads into group operations,
e.g. 64bit element copies of one array into another can be
legitimately optimized back to a memcpy() call, which r323772 tried to
prevent.
Qualify accesses to LDT descriptors with volatile dereference to
ensure that each write indeed occurs. After that, our usual claim of
native-size aligned writes being atomic applies.
This is equivalent to atomic_store(memory_order_relaxed) C11 accesses,
but our machine/atomic.h does not provide corresponding primitive.
Noted and reviewed by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
On i386, the function is used from the context switch code and needs
to be accessible externally. Amd64 MD context switch does not lock an
LDT spinlock and inlines switching in assembly.
Discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This makes the LDT to use only one page with default settings,
avoiding the need to find contigous 2 pages in KVA. It seems that
most users are fine even with 512 segments.
Discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
This patch adds a few definitions for the Flex File Layout.
Until a future commit adds Flex File layout support, these new fields
are not used.
This patch should not affect the "pnfs" option for File Layout.
Remove some dead conditionals and add an assertion around behavior already
present in aesni_process().
Silence a few Coverity false positives.
CIDs: 1381571, 1381557
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Using HAVE_* is a internal tcpdump style standard.
We want to be consistent with the standard to upstream those changes in
the future.
Requested by: glebius@
r323990 fixed the -s flag breakage reported by PR 219173. Mark the
corresponding hexdump tests accordingly, since they should now both succeed.
PR: 222781
Reported by: ngie
Reviewed by: emaste, ngie
Approved by: emaste (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12590
gets drained before invoking the work function. Else the timer
mutex may still be in use which can lead to use-after-free situations,
because the work function might free the work structure before returning.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
on backing file device and inode numbers.
This is useful for gmountver(8) regression tests.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12230