long doubles (i386, amd64, ia64) and one for machines with 128-bit
long doubles (sparc64). Other platforms use the double version.
I've only done runtime testing on i386.
Thanks to bde@ for helpful discussions and bugfixes.
"BSM conversion requested for unknown event 43140"
It should be noted that we need to audit the fd argument for this system
call.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
MFC after: 1 week
unp_connect(): it is expected to return with the lock held, and two
possible error paths otherwise returned with it unlocked.
The fix committed here is slightly different from the patch in the
PR, but along an alternative line suggested in the PR.
PR: 119778
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: James Juran <james dot juran at baesystems dot com>
was missed. As result, pty_create_slave() may index out of the names[]
bounds, creating wrong slave tty names.
Tested by: kensmith
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
since the the command and data that is being built to be sent to or read
from the HW lives in the softc. Commands are later run via an_setdef etc.
In the ioctl path various references are kept to the data stored in
the softc so it needs to be protected. Almost think of the command
in the softc a global variable since it essentially is. Since locking
wasn't done in this type of context the commands would get corrupted.
Thanks to avatar@ for catching some lock issues and dhw@ for testing.
Things are a lot more stable except for the MPI-350 cards. My an(4)
remote laptop stays on the network now.
The driver should be changed so that it uses private memory that is passed
to the functions that talk to the card. Then only those functions would
really need to grab locks.
Reviewed by: avatar@
drop the lock and then re-acquire it, revalidating TCP connection state
assumptions when we do so. This avoids a potential lock order reversal
(and potential deadlock, although none have been reported) due to the
inpcb lock being held over a page fault.
MFC after: 1 week
PR: 102752
Reviewed by: bz
Reported by: Václav Haisman <v dot haisman at sh dot cvut dot cz>
shortest possible chain of mbufs of m_defrag(9). What we want is
chains of mbufs that can be safely stored to a Tx descriptor which
can have up to STGE_MAXTXSEGS mbufs. The ethernet controller does
not need to align Tx buffers on 32bit boundary. So the use of
m_defrag(9) was waste of time.
write a new test to exercise the hardlink strategies used
by different archive formats (tar, old cpio, new cpio).
This uncovered two problems, both fixed by this commit:
1) Enforce file size when writing files to disk.
2) When restoring hardlink entries, if they have data associated, go
ahead and open the file so we can write the data.
In particular, this fixes bsdtar/bsdcpio extraction of new cpio
formats where the "original" is empty and the subsequent "hardlink"
entry actually carries the data. It also provides correct behavior
for old cpio archives where hardlinked entries have their bodies
stored multiple times in the archive; the last body should always be
the one that ends up in the final file. The new pax format also
permits (but does not require) hardlinks to carry file data; again,
the last contents should always win.
Note that with any of these, a size of zero on a hardlink simply means
that the hardlink carries no data; it does not mean that the file has
zero size. A non-zero size on a hardlink does provide the file size.
Thanks to: John Baldwin, for reminding me about this long-standing bug
and sending me a simple example archive that prompted this test case
specified in Table 7-10 in their destination address field shall not be relayed
by the Bridge. Add a check in bridge_forward() to adhere to this.
PR: kern/119744
crash dumps with kernel modules. The command is basically a wrapper
around add-symbol-file except that it uses the kernel linker data
structures and the ELF section headers of the kld to calculate the
section addresses add-symbol-file needs.
The 'kld' parameter may either be an absolute path or a relative path.
kgdb looks for the kld in several locations checking for variants with
".symbols" or ".debug" suffixes in each location. The first location it
tries is just opening the specified path (this handles absolute paths and
looks for the kld relative to the current directory otherwise). Next
it tries to find the module in the same directory of the kernel image
being used. If that fails it extracts the kern.module_path from the
kernel being debugged and looks in each of those paths.
The upshot is that for the common cases of debugging /boot/kernel/kernel
where the module is in either /boot/kernel or /boot/modules one can merely
do 'add-kld foo.ko'.
MFC after: 1 week
compiled under PMAP_DIAGNOSTIC are now KASSERT()s. (Note: The kernel
option DIAGNOSTIC still disables inlining of certain pmap functions.)
Eliminate dead code from pmap_enter(). This code implemented an assertion.
On i386, an equivalent check is already implemented. However, on amd64,
a small change is required to implement an equivalent check.
Eliminate \n from a nearby panic string.
Use KASSERT() to reimplement pmap_copy()'s two assertions.
assignments and casts don't clip extra precision, if any. The
implementation is to assign to a temporary volatile variable and read
the result back to assign to the original lvalue.
lib/msun currently 2 different hard-coded hacks to avoid the problem
in just a few places and needs it in a few more places. One variant
uses volatile for the original lvalue. This works but is slower than
necessary. Another temporarily casts the lvalue to volatile. This
broke with gcc-4.2.1 or earlier (gcc now stores to the lvalue but
doesn't load from it).
instead of 32+32+15+1) on all arches that have such long doubles (amd64,
ia64 and i386). Large objects should be be accessed in large units,
and the 32+32+15+1[+padding] decomposition asks for almost the opposite
of that, sometimes resulting in very slow accesses depending on how
well the compiler ignores what we ask for and converts to the best
units for the given machine. E.g., on Athlons, there is a 10-20 cycle
penalty for accessing the middle 32-bit word immediately after an
80-bit store.
Whether actually using the alternative view is better is very machine-
dependent. A 32+32+16 view is probably best with old 32-bit systems
and gcc through 4.2.1. The compiler should mostly avoid the view and
generate best accesses, but gcc-4.2.1 is far from doing that. I think
64+16 is best for now. Similarly for doubles -- they should be using
64+0 especially on 64-bit machines, but fdlibm uses 32+32 extensively
for them. Fortunately, in 64-bit mode for doubles, gcc already ignores
the 32+32-bit view and generates best accesses in many cases.
in the range and precision of their type(s) on amd64, but FLT_EVAL_METHOD
said that they were evalated in the "interesting" (buggy) i387 methods.
float_t was broken compatibly with FLT_EVAL_METHOD.
These definitions seem to be broken on powerpc and possibly on arm.
float_t is float on powerpc with gcc [-notraditional] according to
glibc, and FLT_EVAL_METHOD is marked with XXX on arm.