is a dcache invalidate to point of coherency just like dcache_inv_poc(), but
a slightly different version specific to dma operations. Elaborate the
comment about how and why it's different.
Now 24xx and above chips support full 8-byte LUN address space.
Older FC chips may support up to 16K LUNs when firmware allows.
Tested in both initiator and target modes for 23xx, 24xx and 25xx.
Before both 0 and sys_nsig would be successfully returned by parse_signal()
although being invalid signal numbers.
PR: Alexandre Perrin <alex@kaworu.ch>
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3990
This is because the previous version was very obscure about the fact
that despite having Clang "on by default" for architectures such as powerpc, it
does not actually build due to the GCC it uses not having C++11 support.
Using an external compiler that supports C++11 does allow this to work.
This whole block should be rethought more given "on by default" is not
really default without extra work which could actually be surprising for
why Clang is showing up when using a newer GCC.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
'buildconfig' is connected to 'all', but 'installconfig' is only called
manually. There is not much need to conditionalize this file right
now due to how it is hooked up and its impact on various build phases.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
per-map. The per-tag scheme is not safe, and a mutex can't be used to
protect it because the mapping routines can't sleep. Code brought in
from armv6 implementation.
- Rather than allow 'make clean*' to ignore dependencies, make a static
list of targets in STANDALONE_SUBDIR_TARGETS that are known to be safe.
This allows a user to override them if needed and avoids adding this feature
to user-defined targets that are in ${SUBDIR_TARGETS}. [1]
- This now also allows to force SUBDIR_PARALLEL when calling these
targets, since no dependencies are needed.
Reported by: ian [1]
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 3 weeks
X-MFC-With: r289778
The goal is to make these two files cosmetically alike so that the actual
implementation differences are visible. The only changes which aren't
spaces<->tabs and rewrapping and reindenting lines are a couple fields
shuffled around in the tag and map structs so that everything is in the same
order in both versions (which should amount to no functional change).
properly recursed.
The .for loop was defining a ${__dir} variable that was being set at a
different evaluation time than the target itself, so every 'cd ${__dir}'
became the last value that was in ${__dir}. This resulted in 'make obj'
not properly being ran in the tree that would leave .depend files
scattered around when 'make all' was ran in rescue/.
To fix this, define a CRUNCH_SRCDIR_* for every prog if it does not
already have one and then use that variable in every relevant place.
This allows simplifying some logic as well.
Reported by: emaste
X-MFC-With: r289734
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This change allows to decode respective functions in isp(4) in target mode
and pass them through CAM to CTL. Unfortunately neither CAM nor isp(4)
support returning response info for those task management functions now.
On the other side I just have no initiator to test this functionality.
In the past, _res was a global variable. Now, it's multiple function calls.
Several functions in the resolver use _res multiple times and therefore
call the function(s) far more than necessary.
Fix those callers to store the result of _res in a local variable.
Add __noinline to the definition of res_init() to avoid the code bloat
that these changes would have otherwise incurred. Thanks to jilles
for noticing this.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3887
Using unmapped IO is really beneficial when running inside of a VM,
since it avoids IPIs to other vCPUs in order to invalidate the
mappings.
This patch adds unmapped IO support to blkfront. The following tests
results have been obtained when running on a Xen host without HAP:
PVHVM
3165.84 real 6354.17 user 4483.32 sys
PVHVM with unmapped IO
2099.46 real 4624.52 user 2967.38 sys
This is because when running using shadow page tables TLB flushes and
range invalidations are much more expensive, so using unmapped IO
provides a very important performance boost.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-MFC-with: r289834
The implementation of bus_dmamap_load_ma_triv currently calls
_bus_dmamap_load_phys on each page that is part of the passed in buffer.
Since each page is treated as an individual buffer, the resulting behaviour
is different from the behaviour of _bus_dmamap_load_buffer. This breaks
certain drivers, like Xen blkfront.
If an unmapped buffer of size 4096 that starts at offset 13 into the first
page is passed to the current _bus_dmamap_load_ma implementation (so the ma
array contains two pages), the result is that two segments are created, one
with a size of 4083 and the other with size 13 (because two independant
calls to _bus_dmamap_load_phys are performed, one for each physical page).
If the same is done with a mapped buffer and calling _bus_dmamap_load_buffer
the result is that only one segment is created, with a size of 4096.
This patch relegates the usage of bus_dmamap_load_ma_triv in x86 bounce
buffer code to drivers requesting BUS_DMA_KEEP_PG_OFFSET and implements
_bus_dmamap_load_ma so that it's behaviour is the same as the mapped version
(_bus_dmamap_load_buffer). This patch only modifies the x86 bounce buffer
code, other arches are left untouched.
Reviewed by: kib, jah
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D888
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
From the (now removed) comment:
* It is unclear in some cases if the bit is implementation defined.
* The Foundation Model and QEMU disagree on if the IL bit should
* be set when we are in a data fault from the same EL and the ISV
* bit (bit 24) is also set.
Instead of adding even more special cases just remove the assertion.
Approved by: andrew
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
These are not target-specific modules, so the logic to build them should
be common. This also enables them for arm64.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation