When updating across this change (the introduction of ino64), the
"fast and loose" practice of rebooting to multiuser and then doing an
installworld fails with missing symbols. Recommend strongly that users
do this in single user mode. The multiuser case only ever works by
accident because its requirements are stronger than is supported
accross this change. It usually works because critical symbols don't
change their version number in libc, which wasn't the case here.
When reading UPDATING from single user in vi, I noticed a few wrapped,
so fix them to not wrap.
expand -8 UPDATING | awk 'length > 80'
made this easy to find all the offenders.
Add note about needing to start zfs because mount -a doesn't do that.
Add the word 'supported' before 'older branches' for older binaries.
Add note about options in custom config files as well.
Registers visible from 'show reg' don't always match the registers from the
offending trap frame. Knowing the frame address lets one examine the
registers manually.
MFC after: 1 week
In r324227 the comment moved into socketvar.h originally from
sockstate.h r180948. Try to improve English and as a consequence rewrap
the comment.
No functional changes.
Reviewed by: jhb (a wording suggestion)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13865
retries.
When resetting the controller, we abort I/O. Prior to this fix, we
printed a ton of abort messages for I/O that we're going to
retry. This imparts no useful information. Stop printing them unless
our retry count is exhausted. Clarify code for when we don't retry,
and remove useless arg to a routine that's always called with it
as 'true'. All the other debug is still printed (including multiple
reset messages if we have multiple timeouts before the taskqueue
runs the actual reset) so that we know when we reset.
Reviewed by: jimharris@, chuck@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19431
r344504 added an extra ARP_LOG() call in case of an if_output() failure.
It turns out IPv4 can be noisy. In order to not spam the console by default:
(a) add a counter for these events so people can keep better track of how
often it happens, and
(b) add a sysctl to select the default ARP_LOG log level and set it to
INFO avoiding the one (the new) DEBUG level by default.
Claim a spare (1st one after 10 years since the stats were added) in order
to not break netstat from FreeBSD 12->13 updates in the future.
Reviewed by: karels
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19490
The LBA weighting makes sense on rotational media where the outer tracks
have twice the bandwidth of the inner tracks. However, it is detrimental
on nonrotational media such as solid state disks, where the only effect
is to ensure that metaslabs enter the best-fit allocation behavior
sooner, which is detrimental to performance. It also makes no sense on
files where the underlying filesystem can arrange things however it
wants.
Author: Richard Yao <ryao@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <ryao@gentoo.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#3712zfsonlinux/zfs@fb40095f5f
To reduce code divergence this merge replaces equivalent but different
FreeBSD code detecting non-rotating medium vdevs.
MFC after: 1 month
This is not required of a compliant implementation, but it's easy to
check for and helps improve compatibility with other common
implementations. Moreover, it's consistent with our
pthread_mutex_destroy().
PR: 234805
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, ngie
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19496
Before sequential scrub patches ZFS never aggregated I/Os above 128KB.
Sequential scrub bumped that to 1MB, which motivation I understand for
spinning disks, since it should reduce number of head seeks. But for
SSDs it makes much less sense to me, especially on FreeBSD, where due
to MAXPHYS limitation device will likely still see bunch of 128KB I/Os
instead of one large. Having more strict aggregation limit allows to
avoid allocation of large memory buffer and memcpy to/from it, that is
a serious problem when bandwidth reaches few GB/s.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Update the members of the doceng team to include ryusuke@ and me.
Sort and reduce number of line breaks so that our bubble in the
chart is a bit more compact (similar to portmgr next to it).
Reminded by: gjb
Update the bounds checking for zfs_vdev_aggregation_limit so that
it has a floor of zero and a maximum value of the supported block
size for the pool.
Additionally add an early return when zfs_vdev_aggregation_limit
equals zero to disable aggregation. For very fast solid state or
memory devices it may be more expensive to perform the aggregation
than to issue the IO immediately.
Author: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
zfsonlinux/zfs@a58df6f536
MFV/ZoL: Cap maximum aggregate IO size
Commit 8542ef8 allowed optional IOs to be aggregated beyond
the specified aggregation limit. Since the aggregation limit
was also used to enforce the maximum block size, setting
`zfs_vdev_aggregation_limit=16777216` could result in an
attempt to allocate an ABD larger than 16M.
Author: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe Di Natale <dinatale2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#6259Closes#6270zfsonlinux/zfs@2d678f779a
r343295 broke DIOCGETSRCNODES by failing to reset 'nr' after counting the
number of source tracking nodes.
This meant that we never copied the information to userspace, leading to '? ->
?' output from pfctl.
PR: 236368
MFC after: 1 week
mlx4_en_stop_port() calls mlx4_en_put_qp() which can refer the link level
address of the network interface, which in turn will be freed by the
network interface detach function. Make sure the port is stopped
before detaching the network interface.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
It can happen during shutdown that the lock will recurse when the mlx4en(4)
instance is part of a lagg interface. Call ether_ifdetach() unlocked.
Backtrace:
panic(): _sx_xlock_hard: recursed on non-recursive sx &mdev->state_lock
_sx_xlock_hard()
_sx_xlock()
mlx4_en_ioctl()
if_setlladdr()
lagg_port_destroy()
lagg_port_ifdetach()
if_detach()
mlx4_en_destroy_netdev()
mlx4_en_remove()
mlx4_remove_device()
mlx4_unregister_device()
mlx4_unload_one()
mlx4_shutdown()
linux_pci_shutdown()
bus_generic_shutdown()
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
The check for early exit should be checking the SLB entry itself. As
currently written it was checking the address of the SLB, which is always
non-zero, so would go through the kernel SR restore loop regardless.
Submitted by: mmacy
MFC after: 2 weeks
The second statements on the lines are not guarded by the `if' condition.
This triggers a warning with newer gcc. It's relatively harmless given the
usage, but incorrect. Instead, wrap the statements so they're properly
guarded.
Reported by: powerpc64-gcc xtoolchain
MFC after: 1 week
Chacha20 with a 256 bit key and 128 bit counter size is a good match for an
AES256-ICM replacement.
In userspace, Chacha20 is typically marginally slower than AES-ICM on
machines with AESNI intrinsics, but typically much faster than AES on
machines without special intrinsics. ChaCha20 does well on typical modern
architectures with SIMD instructions, which includes most types of machines
FreeBSD runs on.
In the kernel, we can't (or don't) make use of AESNI intrinsics for
random(4) anyway. So even on amd64, using Chacha provides a modest
performance improvement in random device throughput today.
This change makes the stream cipher used by random(4) configurable at boot
time with the 'kern.random.use_chacha20_cipher' tunable.
Very rough, non-scientific measurements at the /dev/random device, on a
GENERIC-NODEBUG amd64 VM with 'pv', show a factor of 2.2x higher throughput
for Chacha20 over the existing AES-ICM mode.
Reviewed by: delphij, markm
Approved by: secteam (delphij)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19475
When we roam between networks and our link-state goes down, automatically remove
the IPv6-Only flag from the interface. Otherwise we might switch from an
IPv6-only to and IPv4-only network and the flag would stay and we would prevent
IPv4 from working.
While the actual function call to clear the flag is under EXPERIMENTAL,
the eventhandler is not as we might want to re-use it for other
functionality on link-down event (such was re-calculate default routers
for example if there is more than one).
Reviewed by: hrs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19487
I just found that at least on Skylake CPUs cpu_ticks() never returns odd
values, only even, and possibly has even bigger step (176/2?), that makes
its lower bits very bad entropy source, leaving half of taskqueues unused.
Switch to sbinuptime(), closer to upstreams, mitigates the problem by the
rate conversion working as kind of hash function. In case that is somehow
not enough (timer rate is too low or too divisible) mix in curcpu.
MFC after: 1 week
Fix inline assembler constraint validation
The current constraint logic is both too lax and too strict. It fails
for input outside the [INT_MIN..INT_MAX] range, but it also
implicitly accepts 0 as value when it should not. Adjust logic to
handle both correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58649
Pull in r355491 from upstream clang trunk (by Hans Wennborg):
Inline asm constraints: allow ICE-like pointers for the "n"
constraint (PR40890)
Apparently GCC allows this, and there's code relying on it (see bug).
The idea is to allow expression that would have been allowed if they
were cast to int. So I based the code on how such a cast would be
done (the CK_PointerToIntegral case in
IntExprEvaluator::VisitCastExpr()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58821
These should fix assertions and errors when using the inline assembly
"n" constraint in certain ways.
In case of devel/valgrind, a pointer was used as the input for the
constraint, which lead to "Assertion failed: (isInt() && "Invalid
accessor"), function getInt".
In case of math/secp256k1, a very large integer value was used as input
for the constraint, which lead to "error: value '4624529908474429119'
out of range for constraint 'n'".
PR: 236216, 236194
MFC after: 1 month
X-MFC-With: r344779
This matches GNU seq, for example.
For users that are looking for similar functionality, 'jot -b foo N' will
print 'foo' N times. See jot(1).
PR: 236347
Reported by: <y AT maya.st>
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Make the tests run slightly faster by having pft_ping.py end the capture
of packets as soon as it sees the expected packet, rather than
continuing to sniff.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The ports version of cal is an abandonware so in order to minimize the
potential bit rot of our documentation let's not mention it at all.
Interested users are going to find suitable alternatives anyway on their
own.
Reported by: bapt
Approved by: bapt (src)
Approved by: krion (mentor, implicit), mat (mentor, implicit)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19492
dyn_install_state() uses `rule` pointer when it creates state.
For O_LIMIT states this pointer actually is not struct ip_fw,
it is pointer to O_LIMIT_PARENT state, that keeps actual pointer
to ip_fw parent rule. Thus we need to cache rule id and number
before calling dyn_get_parent_state(), so we can use them later
when the `rule` pointer is overrided.
PR: 236292
MFC after: 3 days