"0" cannot be a correct value since when the function is entered at least
one shared holder must be present and since we want the last one "1" is
the correct value.
Note that lock_profiling for sx locks is far from being perfect.
Expect further fixes for that.
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
patch:
- Do the correct test for ldt allocation
- Drop dt_lock just before to call kmem_free (since it acquires blocking
locks inside)
- Solve a deadlock with smp_rendezvous() where other CPU will wait
undefinitively for dt_lock acquisition.
- Add dt_lock in the WITNESS list of spinlocks
While applying these modifies, change the requirement for user_ldt_free()
making that returning without dt_lock held.
Tested by: marcus, tegge
Reviewed by: tegge
Approved by: jeff (mentor)
produced incorrect behaviour with the KDB_UNATTENDED option) and call
panic in both the KDB and non-KDB cases. This change is consistent
with rwatson's current kdb/ddb work.
actually works. mbp_count() turns out only to be used in debugging code
in if_patm_intr.c, so this bug did not affect much in practice.
Found with: Coverity Prevent(tm)
CID: 1943
existing UMA statistics for pipes, and allows us to get rid of both the
per-pipe dtor and two atomic operations per pipe required to maintain
the counter.
parent vnode and relock it after locking child vnode. The problem was that
we always relock it exclusively, even when it was share-locked.
Discussed with: jeff
scheduler lock is not involved. sched_lock still protects the sched_clock
call. Another patch will remedy this.
Contributed by: Attilio Rao <attilio@FreeBSD.org>
Tested by: kris, jeff
ignore the size of any headers that were passed with the sendfile(2)
system call. Otherwise the file sent will be truncated by the header
size if the nbytes parameter was provided. The bug doesn't show up
when either nbytes is zero, meaning send the whole file, or no header
iovec is provided.
Resolve a potential error aliasing of errors from the VM and sf_buf
parts and the protocol send parts where an error of the latter over-
writes one of the former.
Update comments.
The byte accounting bug wasn't seen in earlier because none of the popular
sendfile(2) consumers, Apache, lighttpd and our ftpd(8) use it in modes
that trigger it. The varnish HTTP proxy makes full use of it and exposed
the problem.
Bug found by: phk
Tested by: phk
function calls are no more generated for vop_lock.
Rename _vop_lock to vop_lock1 to satisfy tools/vnode_if.awk assumption
about vop naming conventions. This restores pre/post-condition calls.
vmcnts. This can be used to abstract away pcpu details but also changes
to use atomics for all counters now. This means sched lock is no longer
responsible for protecting counts in the switch routines.
Contributed by: Attilio Rao <attilio@FreeBSD.org>
speedup and will be more useful after each gains a spinlock in the
impending thread_lock() commit.
- Move initialization and asserts into init/fini routines. fini routines
are only needed in the INVARIANTS case for now.
Submitted by: Attilio Rao <attilio@FreeBSD.org>
Tested by: kris, jeff
defined. This restores the old behavior, and eliminates the
dependency on the kernconf.tmpl when INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE isn't
included in the kernel config. There were many people in the terminal
room that had almost, but not quite, up-to-date config files that this
helps. I don't know if this is the result of skew among the cvsup
servers, or some other more subtle problem. However, this fix should
work for any config of recent vintage (I tested with the latest, and
one before the recent changes, and eye-balled the intermediate
versions).
Reviewed by: the terminal room crew
processes under 64-bit kernels). Previously, each 32-bit process overwrote
its resource limits at exec() time. The problem with this approach is that
the new limits affect all child processes of the 32-bit process, including
if the child process forks and execs a 64-bit process. To fix this, don't
ovewrite the resource limits during exec(). Instead, sv_fixlimits() is
now replaced with a different function sv_fixlimit() which asks the ABI to
sanitize a single resource limit. We then use this when querying and
setting resource limits. Thus, if a 32-bit process sets a limit, then
that new limit will be inherited by future children. However, if the
32-bit process doesn't change a limit, then a future 64-bit child will
see the "full" 64-bit limit rather than the 32-bit limit.
MFC is tentative since it will break the ABI of old linux.ko modules (no
other modules are affected).
MFC after: 1 week
SIGCHLD/kevent(2) notification of process termination and wait(). Now
we no longer drop locks between sending the notification and marking
the process as a zombie. Previously, if another process attempted to do
a wait() with W_NOHANG after receiving a SIGCHLD or kevent and locked
the process while the exiting thread was in cpu_exit(), then wait() would
fail to find the process, which is quite astonishing to the process
calling wait().
MFC after: 3 days
This change will let us to have full configuration of a running kernel
available in sysctl:
sysctl -b kern.conftxt
The same configuration is also contained within the kernel image. It can be
obtained with:
config -x <kernelfile>
Current functionality lets you to quickly recover kernel configuration, by
simply redirecting output from commands presented above and starting kernel
build procedure. "include" statements are also honored, which means options
and devices from included files are also included.
Please note that comments from configuration files are not preserved by
default. In order to preserve them, you can use -C flag for config(8). This
will bring configuration file and included files literally; however,
redirection to a file no longer works directly.
This commit was followed by discussion, that took place on freebsd-current@.
For more details, look here:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2007-March/069994.htmlhttp://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2007-May/071844.html
Development of this patch took place in Perforce, hierarchy:
//depot/user/wkoszek/wkoszek_kconftxt/
Support from: freebsd-current@ (links above)
Reviewed by: imp@
Approved by: imp@
1) adding the thread to the sleepq via sleepq_add() before dropping the
lock, and 2) dropping the sleepq lock around calls to lc_unlock() for
sleepable locks (i.e. locks that use sleepq's in their implementation).