via 'diskinfo -v'. This avoids the need to track it down via CAM,
and should also work for disks that don't use CAM. And since it's
inherited thru the GEOM hierarchy, in most cases one doesn't need
to walk the GEOM graph either, eg you can use it on a partition
instead of disk itself.
Reviewed by: allanjude, imp
Sponsored by: Klara Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22249
consistency checking slows performance dramatically. This change
reduces the number of assertions checked by completely walking the
vm_map tree only when the write-lock is released, and only then if the
number of modifications to the tree since the last walk exceeds the
number of tree nodes.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
Tested by: pho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22163
The current linux man page and testing done on a fairly recent linux5.n
kernel have identified two changes to the semantics of the linux
copy_file_range system call.
Since the copy_file_range(2) system call is intended to be linux compatible
and is only currently in head/current and not used by any commands,
it seems appropriate to update the system call to be compatible with
the current linux one.
The old linux man page stated that, if the
offset + len exceeded file_size for the input file, EINVAL should be returned.
Now, the semantics is to copy up to at most file_size bytes and return that
number of bytes copied. If the offset is at or beyond file_size, a return
of 0 bytes is done.
This patch modifies copy_file_range(2) to be linux compatible for this
semantic change.
A separate patch will change copy_file_range(2) for the other semantic
change, which allows the infd and outfd to refer to the same file, so
long as the byte ranges do not overlap.
This was once set, but I removed it by the time I committed it because both
configurations use the same POWER_ID. This can be separated back out if the
situation changes.
DMA is currently disabled while I work out why it's broken, but this is
enough for upstream U-Boot + rpi-firmware + our rpi3-psci-monitor to boot
with the right config.
The RPi 4 is still not in a good "supported" state, as we have no
USB/PCI-E/Ethernet drivers, but if air-gapped pies only able to operate over
cereal is your thing, here's your guy.
Submitted by: Robert Crowston (with modifications)
In the EFI implementation in U-Boot no ConOut efi variable is created,
this cause loader to fallback to TERM_EMU implementation which is very
very very slow (and uses the ConOut device in the system table anyway).
The UEFI spec aren't clear as if this variable needs to exists or not.
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
- add support for log2 based dividers
- use proper write mask when writing to divider register
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22283
- add support for fractional dividers
- allow to declare fixed and linked clock
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22282
This kind of clock nodes represent temporary placeholder for clocks
defined later in boot process. Also, these are necessary to break
circular dependencies occasionally occurring in complex clock graphs.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Mergeable rx buffers is a virtio-net feature that allows the hypervisor
to use multiple RX descriptor chains to receive a single receive packet.
Without this feature, a TSO-enabled guest is compelled to publish only
64K (or 32K) long chains, and each of these large buffers is consumed
to receive a single packet, even a very short one. This is a waste of
memory, as a RX queue has room for 256 chains, which means up to 16MB
of buffer memory for each (single-queue) vtnet device.
With the feature on, the guest can publish 2K long chains, and the
hypervisor will merge them as needed.
This change also enables the feature in the netmap backend, which
supports virtio-net offloads. We plan to add support for the
tap backend too.
Note that differently from QEMU/KVM, here we implement one-copy receive,
while QEMU uses two copies.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21007
Object files may specify insufficient alignment on certain sections, for
example due to a bug in NASM[1]. When we detect that case in elfcopy or
strip, emit a warning and increase the alignment to the minimum
required.
The NASM bug was fixed in 2015[2], but we might as well have this fixup
(and warning) in elfcopy in case we encounter such a file for any other
reason.
This might be reworked somewhat upstream - see ELF Tool Chain
ticket 485[3].
[1] https://bugzilla.nasm.us/show_bug.cgi?id=3392307
[2] 1f0cb0f2c1
[3] https://sourceforge.net/p/elftoolchain/tickets/485/
PR: 198611
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2292
RFC 8200 says:
"If the fragment is a whole datagram (that is, both the Fragment
Offset field and the M flag are zero), then it does not need
any further reassembly and should be processed as a fully
reassembled packet (i.e., updating Next Header, adjust Payload
Length, removing the Fragment header, etc.). .."
That means we should remove the fragment header and make all the adjustments
rather than just skipping over the fragment header. The difference should
be noticeable in that a properly handled atomic fragment triggering an ICMPv6
message at an upper layer (e.g. dest unreach, unreachable port) will not
include the fragment header.
Update the test cases to also test for an unfragmentable part. That is
needed so that the next header is properly updated (not just lengths).
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22155
.jcr still needs a 0-entry added in crtend, even on !HAVE_CTORS archs, as
we're still getting .jcr sections added -- presumably due to the reference
in crtbegin. Without this terminal, the .jcr section (without data) overlaps
with the next section and register_classes in crtbegin will be examining the
wrong item.
PR: 241439
Reviewed by: andrew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22132
We will soon remove the BSD_CRTBEGIN option (and will use the new CRT
files always) as part of the GCC 4.2.1 removal. Right now BSD_CRTBEGIN
works everywhere but sparc64; add a reference to the PR in case anyone
stumbles across this and is looking for more information.
Previously the mkfs_msdos function (from newfs_msdos) emitted warnings
in the case that an image size is specified and the target is not a
file, or no size is specified and the target is not a character device.
The latter warning (not a character device) doesn't make sense when this
code is used in makefs, regardless of whether an image size is specified
or not.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Previously we checked for only BINUTILS_BOOTSTRAP as a broken option
and suggested installing the binutils package. This was originally done
for arm64 where we used the in-tree Clang with external binutils package.
Add a case to the warning to suggest instead the full xtoolchain package
if we have no in-tree compiler either.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21851
The few columns that are not humanized are usually 0. This makes
the output mostly aligned.
Reviewed by: allanjude
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22185
The man page incorrectly described the use of the"len" argument, which
is updated to the number of bytes copied and not reduced by the number
of bytes copied.
This is a content change.
The memory range between VM_MAXUSER_ADDRESS and VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS is
reserved for devices currently, which are always mapped in TLB1, and
therefore do not exist in the kernel page table. Any page fault in this
range is therefore automatically a fatal fault.
Since TLB_MAXNEST is 3, the insert mask should only be 2 bits. Given that 2
bits counts to 4, and that we already have plenty of space wasted in
padding, make the nest level 4 to match the mask.
Freescale SoCs use a set of IRQs at the high end of the OpenPIC IRQ
list, not counted in the NIRQs of the Feature reporting register. Some
SoCs include a MSI inbound window in the PCIe controller configuration
registers as well, but some don't. Currently, this only handles the
SoCs *with* the MSI window.
There are 256 MSIs per MSI bank (32 per MSI IRQ, 8 IRQs per MSI bank).
The P5020 has 3 banks, yielding up to 768 MSIs; older SoCs have only one
bank.
On the RPi4, some of these IRQs are shared. Start moving toward a mode where
we accept that shared IRQs happen and simply ignore interrupts that are
seemingly for no reason.
I would like to be more verbose here, but my 30-minute assessment of the
current world order is that mapping a resource/rid to an actual IRQ number
(as found in FDT) data is not a simple matter. Determining if more than one
handler is attached to an IRQ is closer to feasible, but it's unclear which
way is the cleaner path. Beyond that, we're only really using it to be
slightly more verbose when something's going wrong, so for now just suppress
and drop a complaint-comment.
This was originally submitted (via freebsd-arm@) by Robert Crowston; the
additional verbosity was dropped by kevans@.
Submitted by: Robert Crowston <crowston@protonmail.com>
Add some diagnostic output.
This works around the fact that buildworld calls cleandir in libexec
with the wrong MACHINE_ARCH (i386 on amd64) when the OBJ directory is empty.
Reported by: bdragon, jkim
TVSENSE may not be ready by the time t4_fw_initialize returns and the
firmware returns 0 if the driver asks for the Vdd before the sensor is
ready.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Thanks to bapt, bz, cem, woodsb02, Neel Chauhan and Salvador Martínez
Mármol for helping test the initial 9000-series support.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This is what iwlwifi seems to do, and the previous behaviour triggered
firmware panics during transmit on a 9560.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Though we don't otherwise use firmware's offload capabilities, we need
to set this flag when the MAC header's size isn't a multiple of four.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation