- Allow maximal sense size limitation via Control Extension mode page.
- When sense size limited, include descriptors atomically: whole or none.
- Set new SDAT_OVFL bit if some descriptors don't fit the limit.
- Report real written sense length instead of static maximal 252 bytes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The count argument natural type if vm_pindex_t, but due to the loop
organization, it has to be signed type to detect the termination
condition. Replace this logic by using distinguished counter for the
processed pages, and terminate loop when the counter exceeds the
argument.
Completely process one swblock for all relevant indexes instead of
doing relookup in hash when incrementing page index on the loop step.
Do not drop hash mutex around iterations.
Noted and reviewed by: alc
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Return BUS_PROBE_NOWILDCARD in probe method to make sure that spigen
attaches only to the device created in identify method.
Before this change spigen probe method used to return 0 which meant it
competed with other drivers to be attached to the devices created for
child nodes of SPI bus node in FDT.
Reported by: Daniel Braniss
MFC after: 1 week
For most NFSv4.1 servers, a NFS4ERR_BAD_SESSION error is a rare failure
that indicates that the server has lost session/open/lock state.
However, recent testing by cperciva@ against the AmazonEFS server found
several problems with client recovery from this due to it generating this
failure frequently.
Briefly, the problems fixed are:
- If all session slots were in use at the time of the failure, some processes
would continue to loop waiting for a slot on the old session forever.
- If an RPC that doesn't use open/lock state failed with NFS4ERR_BAD_SESSION,
it would fail the RPC/syscall instead of initiating recovery and then
looping to retry the RPC.
- If a successful reply to an RPC for an old session wasn't processed
until after a new session was created for a NFS4ERR_BAD_SESSION error,
it would erroneously update the new session and corrupt it.
- The use of the first element of the session list in the nfs mount
structure (which is always the current metadata session) was slightly
racey. With changes for the above problems it became more racey, so all
uses of this head pointer was wrapped with a NFSLOCKMNT()/NFSUNLOCKMNT().
- Although the kernel malloc() usually allocates more bytes than requested
and, as such, this wouldn't have caused problems, the allocation of a
session structure was 1 byte smaller than it should have been.
(Null termination byte for the string not included in byte count.)
There are probably still problems with a pNFS data server that fails
with NFS4ERR_BAD_SESSION, but I have no server that does this to test
against (the AmazonEFS server doesn't do pNFS), so I can't fix these yet.
Although this patch is fairly large, it should only affect the handling
of NFS4ERR_BAD_SESSION error replies from an NFSv4.1 server.
Thanks go to cperciva@ for the extension testing he did to help isolate/fix
these problems.
Reported by: cperciva
Tested by: cperciva
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8745
operations to the MD PCPU region. Change sysmap initialization to only
allocate KVA pages for CPUs that are actually present. As a minor
optimization, this also prevents false sharing between adjacent sysmap objects
since the pcpu struct is already cacheline-aligned.
While here, move pc_qmap_addr initialization for the BSP into
pmap_bootstrap(), which allows use of pmap_quick* functions during early boot.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8833
It is not compat w/ the old timesync message format, which the message
type stays the same as the old timesync message.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Kernel stack overflows in MIPS call panic() directly from an assembly
handler after storing the interrupted context's registers in a
trapframe. Rather than inferring the location of ra, sp, and pc from
the instruction stream, recognize the pc of a kernel stack overflow
and pull the registers from the trapframe.
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
- Honor PG_NODUMP by not dumping pages with this flag set.
- Pat the watchdog during dumps to avoid a watchdog reset while writing
out a dump.
- Reformat the output during a dump to update every 10% done rather than
every 2MB dumped.
- Include UMA small pages and pages holding PV entries in minidumps.
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
to recreate it from ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX} and ${SRC_BASE} and ${KERNCONF},
the latter being especially problematic when KERNCONF is set to the names
of multiple kernel configs.
I don't yet know which RX descriptor bits map to shortgi, long-gi,
short-preamble, long-preamble, STBC, LDPC, HT40, etc - so I can't
easily add those just yet.
There's apparently no per-frame RX RSSI information exposed so we
also just use the results from the previous calibration task.
This also tidies up how the per-mbuf RSSI is pushed into the frame -
now that it's attached to the mbuf via rx_stats, we don't have to
do any silly hijinx to get it out of the frame processing path.
Tested:
* RTL8712, 1x1 cut 3, STA mode
dump_avail[] is supposed to be a superset of phys_avail[] that
describes all of the memory ranges that should be included in a full
dump. minidumps don't consider pages described by dump_avail[] to be
valid and thus they are excluded via the is_dumpable() function. Most
MIPS platforms (including MALTA) set dump_avail[] to be identical to
phys_avail[]. In particular, phys_avail[] doesn't include the kernel
itself, so pages for the kernel and it's global variables are not
considered dumpable and not included in the dump. Fix this by setting
dump_avail[0] to the first memory address (0) rather than the end of
the kernel.
Several other MIPS platforms have the same bug, though I am only able
to test malta in qemu. The correct fix is to set dump_avail[] to
describe RAM and in particular to not set dump_avail[0] to the end of
the kernel (kernel_kseg0_end).
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
The removal of TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE introduced a small race: when the last
thread on a sleepqueue is awoken, it reclaims the sleepqueue and may begin
executing on a different CPU before sleepq_resume_thread() returns. This
leaves a window during which it may go back to sleep and incorrectly be
awoken again by the caller of sleepq_broadcast().
Reported and tested by: pho
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Current Xen IPI setup functions require that the caller provide a device in
order to obtain the name of the interrupt from it. With early AP startup this
device is no longer available at the point where IPIs are bound, and a KASSERT
would trigger:
panic: NULL pcpu device_t
cpuid = 0
KDB: stack backtrace:
db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x2b/frame 0xffffffff82233a20
vpanic() at vpanic+0x186/frame 0xffffffff82233aa0
kassert_panic() at kassert_panic+0x126/frame 0xffffffff82233b10
xen_setup_cpus() at xen_setup_cpus+0x5b/frame 0xffffffff82233b50
mi_startup() at mi_startup+0x118/frame 0xffffffff82233b70
btext() at btext+0x2c
Fix this by no longer requiring the presence of a device in order to bind IPIs,
and simply use the "cpuX" format where X is the CPU identifier in order to
describe the interrupt.
Reported by: sbruno, cperciva
Tested by: sbruno
X-MFC-With: r310177
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
r310342 fixed non-deterministic nvram_map_gen.awk output and thus a non-
reproducible bhnd(4) build by using a unique sort key.
Go one step further and also remove the srand() call. There's no reason
we want non-deterministic behaviour from this script.
PR: 215422
Reported by: gjb (non-reproducibility of bhnd)
Reported by: lidl (srand as the cause)
Reviewed by: landonf
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8857
VMware tries to enable this bit to avoid multiple threshold notifications
in case of multiple initiators connected to the same LUN. Unfortunately
their code sends MODE SELECT(6) request with parameter length hardcoded
for the page without any thresholds. Since we have four threshold and our
page is bigger, this attempt fails, that is correct in my understanding.
So all we can do about this now is to report proper error code and hope
VMware fix their code one day.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Use proper name for local variables. PDU fields' name was not changed yet.
While I'm here, make # of usable channels tunable. This eases further
testing.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8851
- Place const modifiers where required
- Make sure sdma device is attahched before consumers like SSI
Reviewed by: br
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8874
output.
When ordering SROM layout entries, we now use the unique (var_id,
rev_start, rev_end) tuple as the sort key; this fixes the previously
non-deterministic output when sorting entries with overlapping var_ids.
PR: 215422
Reported by: emaste
Reviewed by: emaste
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8859
FC-Tape provides additional link level error recovery, and is
highly recommended for tape devices. It will only be turned on for
a given target if the target supports it.
Without this setting, we default to whatever FC-Tape setting is in
NVRAM on the card.
This can be overridden by setting the following loader tunable, for
example for isp0:
hint.isp.0.nofctape=1
sys/conf/options:
Add a new kernel config option, ISP_FCTAPE_OFF, that
defaults the FC-Tape configuration to off.
sys/dev/isp/isp_pci.c:
If ISP_FCTAPE_OFF is defined, turn off FC-Tape. Otherwise,
turn it on if the card supports it.
share/man/man4/isp.4:
Add a description of FC-Tape to the isp(4) man page.
Add descriptions of the fctape and nofctape options, as well as the
ISP_FCTAPE_OFF kernel configuration option.
Add the ispfw module and kernel drivers to the suggested
configurations at the top of the man page so that users are less
likely to leave it out. The driver works well with the included
firmware, but may not work at all with whatever firmware the user
has flashed on their card.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
pause() uses a spin loop to simulate a sleep during early boot. However,
we only need this for thread0 to get far enough in the boot process to
enable timers (at which point pause() can sleep). For other kthreads,
sleeping in pause() is ok as the callout will be scheduled and will
eventually fire once thread0 initializes timers.
Tested by: Steven Kargl
Sleuthing by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netflix