Use pci_enable_busmaster instead of setting PCIM_CMD_BUSMASTEREN
directly. There's no need to set PCIM_CMD_MEMEN. The bit is set when a
SYS_RES_MEMORY resource is activated.
Remove redundant pci_* function calls from suspend/resume methods. The
bus driver already saves and restores the PCI configuration.
Write 1 byte instead of 4 when setting the HIFN_TRDY_TIMEOUT register.
It is only 1 byte according to the specification.
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: kib (mentor)
configuration registers directly.
Remove pci_enable_io calls where they are redundant. The PCI bus driver
will set the right bits when the corresponding bus resource is activated.
Remove redundant pci_* function calls from suspend/resume methods. The
bus driver already saves and restores the PCI configuration.
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: kib (mentor)
experimental NFSv4 server. The first was a bogus use of VOP_ISLOCKED()
in a KASSERT() and the second was the need to lock the vnode for the
nfsrv_checkremove() call. Also, delete a "__unused" that was bogus,
since the argument is used.
Reviewed by: zack.kirsch at isilon.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
In this case we call target function only on a single CPU and do not
need any synchronization at the setup stage.
It's a bit non-obvious but setup function of NULL means that
smp_rendezvous_cpus waits for all CPUs to arrive at the rendezvous
point, but without doing any actual setup. While using
smp_no_rendevous_barrier means that each CPU proceeds on its own
schedule without any synchronization whatsoever.
MFC after: 3 weeks
earlier commit. While here, move the thread lock down in rtp_to_pri().
It is not needed for all of the priority value checks and the computation
of newpri.
Reported by: swell.k @ gmail
MFC after: 3 days
This is based on the patch submitted by Yuri Skripachov.
Overview of the changes:
- clarify double-use of some ACPI_BATT_STAT_* definitions
- clean up undefined/extended status bits returned by _BST
- warn about charging+discharging bits being set at the same time
PR: kern/124744
Submitted by: Yuri Skripachov <y.skripachov@gmail.com>
Tested by: Yuri Skripachov <y.skripachov@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
allow the child atkbd device to reuse that IRQ resource instead of
reallocating the same IRQ from the parent bus inside the atkbd driver.
- Don't allocate a shared IRQ for the atkbd driver. For AT keyboard
devices on an ISA bus the IRQ is not shareable. Instead, the bus driver
should mark the IRQ shareable if the bus supports shared IRQs.
- Don't identify child devices until after the atkbdc device itself has
attached.
delete the IRQ resource from the psmcpnp device completely.
- Don't allocate the IRQ resource shared. It is not a shareable interrupt
on ISA. The bus driver can set RF_SHAREABLE if the IRQ is actually
shareable on a non-ISA bus.
- Avoid side-effect assignments in if statements when possible.
- Don't use ! to check for NULL pointers, explicitly check against NULL.
- Explicitly check error return values against 0.
- Don't use INTR_MPSAFE for interrupt handlers with only filters as it is
meaningless.
- Remove unneeded function casts.
- Remove the -shared flag for the trampoline binary, generate an
ELF executable instead of a shared object.
- No need to generate tmphack.S, move the code to sys/mips/mips/inckern.S
- No need generate opt_kernname.h, KERNNAME can be passed with -D
Reviewed by: gonzo, imp
Keep three lines disabled which I am unsure if they had been used at all.
This will allow us to seek testers and possibly bring it all back.
Discussed with: rwatson
MFC after: 7 weeks
a 32-bit one. This can cause weird timeout issues, as the copying reads
garbage from the user.
Code by: Deepak Veliath <deepak dot veliath at isilon dot com>
MFC after: 1 week
in devfs_vmkdir() while adding the entry to de_list of the parent.
- Apply devfs rules to newly created directories and symbolic links.
PR: kern/125034
Submitted by: Mateusz Guzik (original version)
function always returned the nominal frequency instead of current frequency
because we use RDTSC instruction to calculate difference in CPU ticks, which
is supposedly constant for the case. Now we support cpu_get_nominal_mhz()
for the case, instead. Note it should be just enough for most usage cases
because cpu_est_clockrate() is often times abused to find maximum frequency
of the processor.
to PSARC/2010/029. In short, the semantics is simplified - "weird stuff"
no longer happens after chmod, entries don't get duplicated during
inheritance, and trivial ACLs no longer contain three "DENY" entries,
which is also more friendly to MS Windows.
By default, UFS keeps using old semantics. To change it, set sysctl
vfs.acl_nfs4_old_semantics to 0. I'll flip the switch when ZFSv28
hits the tree, to keep these two in sync - ZFS v28 uses PSARC semantics,
and ZFS v15 uses the old one.
- ds1374u : use multi-byte write.
- at24co2n, max6657: remove mutex, iicbus has the necessary locking.
Submitted by: Sreekanth M. S. (kanthms at netlogicmicro com)
1) 32-bit assignment are expected to always be atomic.
2) Release/acquire memory barrier semantics doesn't seem to be needed here.
So a simple assignment can be used.
Remove unused port_set_counter() while here, it also used to mis-use
atomic_set_int().
Reported by: jhb
Pointyhat to: avg
MFC after: 3 weeks
its similar disabling of adaptive mutexes and rwlocks. The existing
comment on why this is the case also applies to sx locks.
MFC after: 3 days
Discussed with: attilio
mark user FPU context initialized, if current context is user context.
It was reversed in r215865, by inadequate change of this code fragment
to a call to fpuuserinited()/npxuserinited().
The issue is only relevant for in-kernel users of FPU.
Reported by: Jan Henrik Sylvester <me janh de>, Mike Tancsa <mike sentex net>
Tested by: Mike Tancsa
MFC after: 3 days
- Major update to xlr_i2c.c: do multi-byte ops correctly, remove unnecessary
code, add mutex to protect bus operations, style(9) fixes.
- Drivers for I2C devices on XLR/XLS engineering boards, ds1374u RTC, max6657
temparature sensor and at24co2n EEPROM.
Submitted by: Sreekanth M. S. (kanthms at netlogicmicro com)
timecounter period from 2^32 ns (~4.3s) to 2^41 ns (~36m39s). Some time
sharing systems can skip clock interrupts for a few seconds when under
load (e.g., if we've recently used more than our fair share of CPU and
someone else wants a burst of CPU) and we were losing time in quanta of
2^32 ns due to timecounter wrapping.
Increasing the timecounter period up to 2^41 ns is definitely overkill,
but we still have microsecond timecounter precision, and anyone using
paravirtualized hardware when they need submicrosecond timing is crazy.