Using ISO-10646-UCS-2 will cause a problem when we use our own
iconv functions in the future, or port iconv other than GNU
libiconv.
Each vendors treat "UCS-2" as follows, and endian issue is
vendor specific:
- Solaris 8 iconv
Little Endian with BOM
- HP-UX iconv
Big Endian
- NetBSD/i386 1.6 iconv
Little Endian
- GNU libiconv
Big Endian
- glibc(RedHat AS 2.1 x86) iconv
Little Endian
- IANA
Name: ISO-10646-UCS-2
MIBenum: 1000
Source: the 2-octet Basic Multilingual Plane, aka Unicode
this needs to specify network byte order: the standard
does not specify (it is a 16-bit integer space)
Alias: csUnicode
- MSDN
Little Endian
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/cpref/html/frlrfsystemtextencodingclassgetencodingtopic2.asp
Now using UTF-16BE is harmless, because
- same as UCS-2 with 2 byte range (U+0000 - U+FFFF)
- kernel code of each file systems(cd9660, msdosfs, ntfs) believes
Unicode is a 2 byte character at this time.
- UDF has only 2 byte range of Unicode filenames.
- It's defined at RFC2781.
So I believe it's time to change before starting new RELENG_6. :)
Approved by: re (scottl)
pointer doesn't point to the first instruction of that function, but
rather to a descriptor. The descriptor has the address of the first
instruction, as well as the value of the global pointer. The symbol
table doesn't know anything about descriptors, so if you lookup the
name of a function you get the address of the first instruction. The
cast from the address, which is the result of the symbol lookup, to a
function pointer as is done in db_fncall is therefore invalid.
Abstract this detail behind the DB_CALL macro. By default DB_CALL is
defined as db_fncall_generic, which yields the old behaviour. On ia64
the macro is defined as db_fncall_ia64, in which a descriptor is
constructed to yield a valid function pointer.
While here, introduce DB_MAXARGS. DB_MAXARGS replaces the existing
(local) MAXARGS. The DB_MAXARGS macro can be defined by platforms to
create a convenient maximum. By default this will be the legacy 10.
On ia64 we define this macro to be 8, for 8 is the maximum number of
arguments that can be passed in registers. This avoids having to
implement spilling of arguments on the memory stack.
Approved by: re (dwhite)
packet filter. This would cause a panic on architectures that require strict
alignment such as sparc64 (tier1) and ia64/ppc (tier2).
This adds two new macros that check the alignment, these are compile time
dependent on __NO_STRICT_ALIGNMENT which is set for i386 and amd64 where
alignment isn't need so the cost is avoided.
IP_HDR_ALIGNED_P()
IP6_HDR_ALIGNED_P()
Move bridge_ip_checkbasic()/bridge_ip6_checkbasic() up so that the alignment
is checked for ipfw and dummynet too.
PR: ia64/81284
Obtained from: NetBSD
Approved by: re (dwhite), mlaier (mentor)
as they are already default for I686_CPU for almost 3 years, and
CPU_DISABLE_SSE always disables it. On the other hand, CPU_ENABLE_SSE
does not work for I486_CPU and I586_CPU.
This commit has:
- Removed the option from conf/options.*
- Removed the option and comments from MD NOTES files
- Simplified the CPU_ENABLE_SSE ifdef's so they don't
deal with CPU_ENABLE_SSE from kernel configuration. (*)
For most users, this commit should be largely no-op. If you used to
place CPU_ENABLE_SSE into your kernel configuration for some reason,
it is time to remove it.
(*) The ifdef's of CPU_ENABLE_SSE are not removed at this point, since
we need to change it to !defined(CPU_DISABLE_SSE) && defined(I686_CPU),
not just !defined(CPU_DISABLE_SSE), if we really want to do so.
Discussed on: -arch
Approved by: re (scottl)
by amd64 and i386: For buffered writes we collect data and write it
out a ${DEV_BSIZE}-sized block at a time. The fragsz variable is used
to keep track of how much data we have collected in the buffer so far
and it's reset to zero immediately after writing a block to the dump
device.
When the last, possibly partially filled buffer is flushed, we didn't
reset fragsz to 0 and as such would stop reflecting reality. Since we
currently only need to do buffered writes once, this isn't a problem.
However, when kernel dumps are made by hand (say by callling doadump
from within DDB), the improperly cleared state from the first call to
dumpsys causes the next call to dumpsys to create an invalid code file.
This change resets fragsz after flushing the partially filled buffer so
that it fixes the two problems at once.
Approved by: re (scottl)
after PAWS checks. The symptom of this is an inconsistency in the cached
sack state, caused by the fact that the sack scoreboard was not being
updated for an ACK handled in the header prediction path.
Found by: Andrey Chernov.
Submitted by: Noritoshi Demizu, Raja Mukerji.
Approved by: re
does not clear tlen and frees the mbuf (leaving th pointing at
freed memory), if the data segment is a complete duplicate.
This change works around that bug. A fix for the tcp_reass() bug
will appear later (that bug is benign for now, as neither th nor
tlen is referenced in tcp_input() after the call to tcp_reass()).
Found by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek.
Submitted by: Raja Mukerji, Noritoshi Demizu.
Approved by: re
- Introducing the possibility of using locks different than mutexes
for the knlist locking. In order to do this, we add three arguments to
knlist_init() to specify the functions to use to lock, unlock and
check if the lock is owned. If these arguments are NULL, we assume
mtx_lock, mtx_unlock and mtx_owned, respectively.
- Using the vnode lock for the knlist locking, when doing kqueue operations
on a vnode. This way, we don't have to lock the vnode while holding a
mutex, in filt_vfsread.
Reviewed by: jmg
Approved by: re (scottl), scottl (mentor override)
Pointyhat to: ssouhlal
Will be happy: everyone
of USB2 "duplicate" psuedo busses, it is not at all uncommon for machines
to have more than 4 USB busses nowadays.
PR: bin/81533
Submitted by: Darren Pilgrim dmp at bitfreak dot org
Approved by: re (scottl)
MFC after: 1 week
timer since irq0 isn't being driven at hz in that case and we don't need to
try to handle edge cases with rollover, etc. that require irq0 to be firing
for the timecounter to actually work.
Submitted by: phk
Tested by: schweikh
Approved by: re (scottl)
and stop trying to play cute games so that sccs[] shares space with
version[].
Reported by: Jilles Tjoelker jilles at stack dot nl
Discussed with: bde, "R. Imura" imura at ryu16 dot org
Idea from: NetBSD (via bde)
Approved by: re (scottl)
MFC after: 1 week
We removed the corresponding code long time ago and the historically
interested can find this paper in the cvs repo, there is no point
in installing it any more.
Approved by: re@
a cosmetic change. m_uiotombuf() produces a packet header mbuf, while
original implementation did not. When kernel is compiled with MAC
support, headerless mbuf will cause panic.
Reported by: Alexander Nikiforenko <asn rambler-co.ru>
Approved by: re (scottl)
MFC After: 2 weeks
module-specific malloc types. These should help us to pinpoint the
possible memory leakage in the future.
- Implementing xpt_alloc_ccb_nowait() and replacing all malloc/free based
CCB memory management with xpt_alloc_ccb[_nowait]/xpt_free_ccb. Hopefully
this would be helpful if someday we move the CCB allocator to use UMA
instead of malloc().
Encouraged by: jeffr, rwatson
Reviewed by: gibbs, scottl
Approved by: re (scottl)
starts with an ifatm which in turns has an ifnet. Remove also a couple
of unneccessary casts that could hide such things in the future.
Approved by: re
so residue of division for all hosts on net is the same, and thus only
one VHID answers. Change source IP in host byte order.
Reviewed by: mlaier
Approved by: re (scottl)
o Grab the MAC address out of the CIS if the card has the special
3Com 0x88 tuple. Most 3Com cards don't have this tuple, but we
prefer it to the eeprom since it only appears to be present when
the eeprom doesn't have the info. So far, I've only observed this
on my 3C362 and 3C362B cards, but the NetBSD driver implies that
the 3C362C also has this tuple, and that some 3C574 cards do too (none
of mine do). ep_pccard_mac was written after looking at the NetBSD
code.
o Store the enet addr in the softc for this device, so we can use the
overridden MAC to set the station address.
o Create a routine to set the station address and use it where we need it.
o setup the cmd shitfs and such before we call ep_alloc(), and remove
setting up the cmd shift value there. It initializes to 0, and those
attachments that need to frob it do so before calling ep_alloc.
o Remove some obsolete comments
o No longer a need to export ep_get_macaddr, so make it static
o ep_alloc already grabs the EEPROM id, so we don't need to grab it again
in ep_pccard_attach.
o eliminate unit, it isn't needed, fix some printfs to be device_printf
instead.
# All my pccards except the 3C1 work now. Didn't test ISA or cbus cards
# that I have: 3C509B-TP or 3C569B-J-TPO
Tested on: 3C589B, 3C589C, 3C589D, 3C589D-TP, 3C562, 3C562B/3C563B,
3C562D/3C563D, 3CCFE574BT, 3CXEM556, 3CCSH572BT, 3C574-TX,
3CCE589EC, 3CXE589EC, 3CCFEM556, 3C1
Approved by: re (scottl)
how to convert these to gprof(1) flat profiles. Augment description
for the '-g' option.
Remove superfluous quotes around a macro argument, bump document date [1].
Reminded by: ru [1]
Approved by: re (blanket hwpmc)
scan the CIS for interesting tuples. 95% of what can be obtained from
the CIS is harvested by the pccard layer and presented to the user in
standard function calls. However, there are special needs at times
where the standard stuff doesn't suffice. This is for those special
cases.
CARD_SCAN_CIS(device_get_parent(dev), function, argp)
scans the CIS of the card, passing each tuple to function with
the tuple and argp as its arguments. Returning 0 continues the scan,
while returning 1 terminates the scan. The value of the last
invocation of function is returned from this function.
int (*pccard_scan_t)(struct pccard_tuple *tuple, void *argp)
function called for each tuple. Elements of the CIS tuple can be
read with pccard_tuple_read_{1,2,3,4,n}(). You are reading
the actual tuple memory each time, in case your card has
registers in the CIS.
# I suppose these things should be documented in pccard(4) or something like
# that.
# I plan on unifying cardbus CIS support in a similar way.
Approved by: re (scottl)
- pmcstat(8) gprof output mode fixes:
lib/libpmc/pmclog.{c,h}, sys/sys/pmclog.h:
+ Add a 'is_usermode' field to the PMCLOG_PCSAMPLE event
+ Add an 'entryaddr' field to the PMCLOG_PROCEXEC event,
so that pmcstat(8) can determine where the runtime loader
/libexec/ld-elf.so.1 is getting loaded.
sys/kern/kern_exec.c:
+ Use a local struct to group the entry address of the image being
exec()'ed and the process credential changed flag to the exec
handling hook inside hwpmc(4).
usr.sbin/pmcstat/*:
+ Support "-k kernelpath", "-D sampledir".
+ Implement the ELF bits of 'gmon.out' profile generation in a new
file "pmcstat_log.c". Move all log related functions to this
file.
+ Move local definitions and prototypes to "pmcstat.h"
- Other bug fixes:
+ lib/libpmc/pmclog.c: correctly handle EOF in pmclog_read().
+ sys/dev/hwpmc_mod.c: unconditionally log a PROCEXIT event to all
attached PMCs when a process exits.
+ sys/sys/pmc.h: correct a function prototype.
+ Improve usage checks in pmcstat(8).
Approved by: re (blanket hwpmc)
- Remove following files since their contents are merged into
relnotes/common/new.sgml years ago.
relnotes/common/artheader.sgml
relnotes/common/intro.sgml
relnotes/common/upgrading.sgml
Approved by: re (hrs)
This is good enough to be able to run a RELENG_4 gdb binary against
a RELENG_4 application, along with various other tools (eg: 4.x gcore).
We use this at work.
ia32_reg.[ch]: handle the 32 bit register file format, used by ptrace,
procfs and core dumps.
procfs_*regs.c: vary the format of proc/XXX/*regs depending on the client
and target application.
procfs_map.c: Don't print a 64 bit value to 32 bit consumers, or their
sscanf fails. They expect an unsigned long.
imgact_elf.c: produce a valid 32 bit coredump for 32 bit apps.
sys_process.c: handle 32 bit consumers debugging 32 bit targets. Note
that 64 bit consumers can still debug 32 bit targets.
IA64 has got stubs for ia32_reg.c.
Known limitations: a 5.x/6.x gdb uses get/setcontext(), which isn't
implemented in the 32/64 wrapper yet. We also make a tiny patch to
gdb pacify it over conflicting formats of ld-elf.so.1.
Approved by: re
that newer Intel cpu hardware implements them too. This includes things
like the NX (pte no-execute) flag for execute protection. We'll need to
reference this for implementing no-exec in pmap.c at some point.
Some feature flags are duplicated in both the Intel-orignated bits and
the AMD bits. Suppress the the duplicates correctly - the old code
assumed they were a 1:1 mapping which is not correct. We can't just mask
off the bits present in cpu_feature.
Converge with amd64 where this originated from.
Intel cpu's that implement any AMD features will report them in dmesg now.
Approved by: re