The existing scan code is based on sending an i2c START condition and if
there is no error it assumes there is a device at that i2c address. Some
i2c controllers don't support sending individual start/stop signals on the
bus, they can only perform complete data transfers with start/stop handled
in the silicon.
This adds a fallback mechanism that attempts to read a single byte from each
i2c address. It's less reliable than looking for an an ACK repsonse to a
start, because some devices will NAK an attempt to read that isn't preceeded
by a write of a register address. Writing to devices to probe them is too
dangerous to even consider. The user is told that a less-reliable scan is
being done, so even if the read-scan comes up empty too, it's still a vast
improvement over the old situation where it would just claim there were no
devices on the bus even though the devices were there and working fine.
If the i2c controller responds with a proper ENODEV (device doesn't support
operation) or an almost-proper EOPNOTSUPP, the START/STOP scan is switched
to a read-scan right away. Most controllers respond with ENXIO or EIO if
they don't support START/STOP, so no quick-out is available. For those,
if a scan of all 127 addresses and come up empty, the scan is re-done using
the read method.
Reported by: Maxim Filimonov <che@bein.link>
On AMD, the MCG_CAP feature bit is reserved -- not explicitly zero. Do not
use it to determine CMCI support.
Reviewed by: avg, markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12320
This was originally added as "exit $SUCCESS" but with nothing to set the
SUCCESS variable. Thus it became an exit with no argument, which just
exits with the status of the preceding command.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
There's not much practical difference as far as install media is
concerned but newfs creates UFSv2 by default and it is sensible to use
the contemporary UFS version.
I also intend to change makefs to create UFSv2 by default (to match
newfs) so we'll want make-memstick.sh to be explicit, rather than
relying on the host tool's default.
Reviewed by: andrew, gjb, jhibbits
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12231
This Makefile relies on Makefile.fat providing the correct value for
BOOT1_MAXSIZE and BOOT1_OFFSET. Since BOOT1_OFFSET had no default value
here the build would already fail if Makefile.fat did not provide
correct values.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
illumos/illumos-gate@37e84ab74e37e84ab74ehttps://www.illumos.org/issues/8569
C [C99] has peculiar rules for inline functions that are different from the
C++ rules. Unlike C++ where inline is "fire and forget", in C a programmer
must pay attention to the function's storage class / visibility. The main
problem is with the case where a compiler decides to not inline a call to the
function declared as inline.
Some relevant links:
- http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.faqs/ka15831.html
- http://www.drdobbs.com/the-new-c-inline-functions/184401540
The summary is that either the inline functions should be declared 'static
inline' or one of the compilation units (.c files) must provide a callable
externally visible function definition. In the former case, the compiler would
automatically create a local non-inlined function instance in every compilation
unit where it's needed. In the latter case the single external definition is
used to satisfy any non-inlined calls in all compilation units. As things
stand right now, we can get an undefined reference error under certain
combinations of compilers and compiler options. For example, this is what I
get on FreeBSD when compiling with clang 4.0.0 and -O1:
In function `abd_free': /usr/src/sys/cddl/contrib/opensolaris/uts/common/fs/zfs/abd.c:385:
undefined reference to `abd_is_linear'
Reviewed by: Matt Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Approved by: Robert Mustacchi <rm@joyent.com>
Author: Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>
MFC after: 1 week
illumos/illumos-gate@216d7723a1216d7723a1https://www.illumos.org/issues/8558
On a system with more than 80K ZFS filesystems, we've seen cases where
lwp_create() will start to fail by returning EAGAIN. The problem being,
for each of those 80K ZFS filesystems, a taskq will be created for each
dataset as part of the ZIL for each dataset.
For each of these taskq's, a kernel thread will be created which results
in 24KB being allocated for each thread. With enough of these 24KB
allocations, we eventually exhaust the memory region set aside for these
allocations. Currently, segkpsize is set to a value of 2GB, which means
we can only support about 80K filesystems; 2GB / 24KB = ~80K.
The lwp_create() failure comes into play due to the fact that LWP
creation also allocates 24KB from this same region of memory. Thus, if
we've exhausted this region of memory due to the number of ZIL taskq's,
there won't be any memory avaible to allow the call to lwp_create() to
succeed.
FreeBSD note: I haven't created sysctl-s for the new ZIL clean
parameters. Let's add them if anyone requires to tune them.
Reviewed by: George Wilson <george.wilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Sebastien Roy <sebastien.roy@delphix.com>
Approved by: Robert Mustacchi <rm@joyent.com>
Author: Prakash Surya <prakash.surya@delphix.com>
MFC after: 3 weeks
This patch adds hwtype parameter which keeps information about hardware
revision of Marvell EHCI controller. It allows to replace multiple
calls to ofw_bus_is_compatible with comparing hwtype value during driver
initialization.
Submitted by: Patryk Duda <pdk@semihalf.com>
Suggested by: ian
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Semihalf
In advance of other changes to the fat template generation process, have
generate-fat.sh create all template files at the same time so that they
cannot get out of sync.
Also correct a longstanding but where BOOT1_OFFSET was overwritten on
each invocation. A previous version of this patch stored a per-arch
offset (e.g. BOOT1_arm64_OFFSET) but that was deemed unnecessary.
Instead just hardcode the known offset that applies to all archs (0x2d)
and fail if the offset happens to be different.
Ongiong work (using newfs_msdos in bsdinstall and adding msdosfs support
to makefs) will eventually allow us to do away with this fat template
hack altogether, but in the near term we have a few improvements that
will build on this.
Reviewed by: allanjude, imp, Eric McCorkle
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10931
In the case of running newvers.sh on a git tree w/o git-svn-id notes we
previously piped the entire 'git log' to grep. Add --grep to the log
invocation to avoid processing log entries of no interest.
This saves about 2-3 seconds of newvers.sh run time on my SSD laptop.
Later changes will bring further speedups.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This prevents incorrect subversion revision detection when "git svn" is
not being used to get the sources but git is available. Previously old
subversion revisions included in commit messages were favoured over the
more recent and correct revisions in git notes.
For example cf1f355747 represents r315395 but was treated as r313908
which is referenced in the commit message. Commits following
r315395/cf1f35574722 but before another commit with a git-svn-id
reference in the commit message would be treated as r313908 as well.
Patch from PR updated to accommodate the initial four space indent in
`git log` ouptut.
PR: 221848
Submitted by: Fabian Keil
Obtained from: ElectroBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
Prior to the change they were subject to extreme false sharing.
In particular this change shaves about 3 seconds real time of -j 80 buildkernel.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12281
Sometimes it is necessary to combine several gpio pins into an ad-hoc bus
and manipulate the pins as a group. In such cases manipulating the pins
individualy is not an option, because the value on the "bus" assumes
potentially-invalid intermediate values as each pin is changed in turn. Note
that the "bus" may be something as simple as a bi-color LED where changing
colors requires changing both gpio pins at once, or something as complex as
a bitbanged multiplexed address/data bus connected to a microcontroller.
In addition to the absolute requirement of simultaneously changing the
output values of driven pins, a desirable feature of these new methods is to
provide a higher-performance mechanism for reading and writing multiple
pins, especially from userland where pin-at-a-time access incurs a noticible
syscall time penalty.
These new interfaces are NOT intended to abstract away all the ugly details
of how gpio is implemented on any given platform. In fact, to use these
properly you absolutely must know something about how the gpio hardware is
organized. Typically there are "banks" of gpio pins controlled by registers
which group several pins together. A bank may be as small as 2 pins or as
big as "all the pins on the device, hundreds of them." In the latter case, a
driver might support this interface by allowing access to any 32 adjacent
pins within the overall collection. Or, more likely, any 32 adjacent pins
starting at any multiple of 32. Whatever the hardware restrictions may be,
you would need to understand them to use this interface.
In additional to defining the interfaces, two example implementations are
included here, for imx5/6, and allwinner. These represent the two primary
types of gpio hardware drivers. imx6 has multiple gpio devices, each
implementing a single bank of 32 pins. Allwinner implements a single large
gpio number space from 1-n pins, and the driver internally translates that
linear number space to a bank+pin scheme based on how the pins are grouped
into control registers. The allwinner implementation imposes the restriction
that the first_pin argument to the new functions must always be pin 0 of a
bank.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11810
for analyzing the radix tree structures and reporting on the number, and
sizes, of maximal intervals of free blocks. The report includes the number
of maximal intervals, and also the number of them in each of several size
ranges, from small (size 1, or 3 to 4) to large (28657 to 46367) with size
boundaries defined by Fibonacci numbers. The report is written in the test
tool with the 's' command, or in a running kernel by sysctl.
The analysis of the radix tree frequently computes the position of the lone
bit set in a u_daddr_t, a computation that also appears in leaf allocation.
That computation has been moved into a function of its own, and optimized
for cases where an inlined machine instruction can replace the usual binary
search.
Submitted by: Doug Moore <dougm@rice.edu>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11906
it to a random value between 100 and 1123, rather than 0 as before.
Submitted by: Marie Helene Kvello-Aune <marieheleneka@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5336
Since the efipart rewrite, the chain command was looking for device
handle using interface applicable only for net devices. Disk
partitions and zfs pools need their own approach to find the proper handle.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12287
namecache_ts differs from mere namecache by few fields placed mid struct.
The access to the last element (the name) is thus special-cased.
The standard solution is to put new fields at the very beginning anad
embedd the original struct. The pointer shuffled around points to the
embedded part. If needed, access to new fields can be gained through
__containerof.
MFC after: 1 week
Permit a deflateParams() parameter change as soon as possible.
This change fixes compression errors seen when the embedded Tomcat
web server of a UniFi Controller zlib compresses responses. Given
that Tomcat just uses Java/OpenJDK which in turn employs zlib for
its compression/decompression support, this bug might very well
affect other applications, too.
PR: 222136
This module is specific to a single Marvel board that we currently
only support in 64-bit mode. Remove it from the build otherwise. It
likely should be completely removed, but this unbreaks x86 building.
Noticed by: sbruno@
the driver in a place where it will be built for all targets. x86 doesn't
have all the required build bits for this device.
Move the uart(4) device mvebu to arm64 only.
lock if both old and new pages use the same underlying lock. Convert
existing places to use the helper instead of inlining it. Use the
optimization in vm_object_page_remove().
Suggested and reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week