r333273 and partially reverted with r333594.
Older CPUs implement addition of offsets into the page table by a
bitwise OR rather than actual addition, which only works if the table is
aligned at a multiple of its own size (they also require it to be aligned
at a multiple of 256KB). Newer ones do not have that requirement, but it
hardly matters to enforce it anyway.
The original code was failing on newer systems with huge amounts of RAM
(> 512 GB), in which the page table was 4 GB in size. Because the
bootstrap memory allocator took its alignment parameter as an int, this
turned into a 0, removing any alignment constraint at all and making
the MMU fail. The first round of this patch (r333273) fixed this case by
aligning it at 256 KB, which broke older CPUs. Fix this instead by widening
the alignment parameter.
Once a pmc owner is added to the pmc_ss_owners list it is
visible for all to see. We don't want this to happen until
setup is complete.
Reported by: mjg
Approved by: sbruno
- fix load/unload race by allocating the per-domain list structure at boot
- fix long extant vm map LOR by replacing pmc_sx sx_slock with global_epoch
to protect the liveness of elements of the pmc_ss_owners list
Reported by: pho
Approved by: sbruno
The INVARIANTS checks in epoch_wait() were intended to
prevent the block handler from returning with locks held.
What it in fact did was preventing anything except Giant
from being held across it. Check that the number of locks
held has not changed instead.
Approved by: sbruno@
In the reply to an ExchangeID operation, the NFSv4.1 server returns a
"scope" value (eir_server_scope). If this value is the same, it indicates
that two servers share state, which is never the case for FreeBSD servers.
As such, the value needs to be unique and it was without this patch.
However, I just found out that it is not supposed to change when the
server reboots and without this patch, it did change.
This patch fixes eir_server_scope so that it does not change when the
server is rebooted.
The only affect not having this patch has is that Linux clients don't
reclaim opens and locks after a server reboot, which meant they lost
any byte range locks held before the server rebooted.
It only affects NFSv4.1 mounts and the FreeBSD NFSv4.1 client was not
affected by this bug.
MFC after: 1 week
- GC the _nopreempt routines
- to really benefit we'd need a separate routine
- they're not currently in use
- they complicate the API for no benefit at this time
- check that we're actually in a epoch section at exit
- handle epoch_call() early in boot
- Fix copyright declaration language
Approved by: sbruno@
vm_page_queue(), added in r333256, generalizes vm_pageout_page_queued(),
so use it instead. No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15402
For a fairly rare case of a client doing an ExchangeID after a hard reboot,
the old confirmed clientid still exists, but some clients use a new
co_verifier. For this case, the server was not freeing up the sessions on
the old confirmed clientid.
This patch fixes this case. It also adds two LIST_INIT() macros, which are
actually no-ops, since the structure is malloc()d with M_ZERO so the pointer
is already set to NULL.
It should have minimal impact, since the only way I could exercise this
code path was by doing a hard power cycle (pulling the plus) on a machine
running Linux with a NFSv4.1 mount on the server.
Originally spotted during testing of the ESXi 6.5 client.
Tested by: andreas.nagy@frequentis.com
MFC after: 2 months
When an NFSv4.1 session is busy due to a callback being in progress,
nfsrv_freesession() should return NFSERR_BACKCHANBUSY instead of NFS_OK.
The only effect this has is that the DestroySession operation will report
the failure for this case and this probably has little or no effect on a
client. Spotted by inspection and no failures related to this have been
reported.
MFC after: 2 months
- Create getblkx(9) variant of getblk(9) which can return error.
- Add GB_NOSPARSE flag for getblk()/getblkx() which requests that BMAP
was performed before the buffer is created, and EJUSTRETURN returned
in case the requested block does not exist.
- Make ffs_read() use GB_NOSPARSE to avoid instantiating buffer (and
allocating the pages for it), copying from zero_region instead.
The end result is less page allocations and buffer recycling when a
hole is read, which is important for some benchmarks.
Requested and reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14917
It appears that domain information is set correctly independent
of whether or not NUMA is defined. However, there is no memory
backing secondary domains leading to allocation failure.
Reported by: pho@, np@
Approved by: sbruno@
unwind_frame() may be instrumented by FBT, leading to recursion into
dtrace_probe(). Manually inline unwind_frame() as we do with stack
unwinding code for other architectures.
Submitted by: Domagoj Stolfa
Reviewed by: manu
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15359
According to the Intel SDM (Volme 3, 9.11.7) the BIOS signature MSR
should be zeroed before executing cpuid (although in practice it does
not seem to matter).
PR: 192487
Submitted by: Dan Lukes
Reported by: Henrique de Moraes Holschuh
MFC after: 3 days
Don't enable regulator on attach but dealt with them on power_up/power_off
Only set the voltage for the signaling regulator since I don't have boards
that can change the supply voltage.
Enable 1.8v signaling voltage.
Only do a reset of the controller at attach and init it at power_up.
We use to enable some interrupts in reset, only enable the interrupts
we are interested in when doing a request.
While here remove the regulators handling in power_on as it is very wrong
and will be dealt with in another commit.
Tested on: A31, A64
I've been holding back on this because 1.7.0 requires OpenSSL 1.1.0 or
newer for full DANE support. But we can't wait forever, and nothing in
base uses DANE anyway, so here we go.