application wishes to request high precision time stamps be returned:
Alias Existing
CLOCK_REALTIME_PRECISE CLOCK_REALTIME
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_PRECISE CLOCK_MONOTONIC
CLOCK_UPTIME_PRECISE CLOCK_UPTIME
Add experimental low-precision clockid_t names corresponding to these
clocks, but implemented using cached timestamps in kernel rather than
a full time counter query. This offers a minimum update rate of 1/HZ,
but in practice will often be more frequent due to the frequency of
time stamping in the kernel:
New clockid_t name Approximates existing clockid_t
CLOCK_REALTIME_FAST CLOCK_REALTIME
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_FAST CLOCK_MONOTONIC
CLOCK_UPTIME_FAST CLOCK_UPTIME
Add one additional new clockid_t, CLOCK_SECOND, which returns the
current second without performing a full time counter query or cache
lookup overhead to make sure the cached timestamp is stable. This is
intended to support very low granularity consumers, such as time(3).
The names, visibility, and implementation of the above are subject
to change, and will not be MFC'd any time soon. The goal is to
expose lower quality time measurement to applications willing to
sacrifice accuracy in performance critical paths, such as when taking
time stamps for the purpose of rescheduling select() and poll()
timeouts. Future changes might include retrofitting the time counter
infrastructure to allow the "fast" time query mechanisms to use a
different time counter, rather than a cached time counter (i.e.,
TSC).
NOTE: With different underlying time mechanisms exposed, using
different time query mechanisms in the same application may result in
relative non-monoticity or the appearance of clock stalling for a
single clockid_t, as a cached time stamp queried after a precision
time stamp lookup may be "before" the time returned by the earlier
live time counter query.
This shouldn't happen as far as the self-id buffer is vaild but
some people have this problem.
PR: kern/83999
Submitted by: Markus Wild <fbsd-lists@dudes.ch>
MFC after: 3 days
- In ifc_name2unit(), disallow leading zeroes in a unit.
Exploit: ifconfig lo01 create
- In ifc_name2unit(), properly handle overflows. Otherwise,
either of two local panic()'s can occur, either because
no interface with such a name could be found after it was
successfully created, or because the code will bogusly
assume that it's a wildcard (unit < 0 due to overflow).
Exploit: ifconfig lo<overflowed_integer> create
- Previous revision made the following sequence trigger
a KASSERT() failure in queue(3):
Exploit: ifconfig lo0 destroy; ifconfig lo0 destroy
This is because IFC_IFLIST_REMOVE() is always called
before ifc->ifc_destroy() has been run, not accounting
for the fact that the latter can fail and leave the
interface operating (like is the case for "lo0").
So we ended up calling LIST_REMOVE() twice. We cannot
defer IFC_IFLIST_REMOVE() until after a call to
ifc->ifc_destroy() because the ifnet may have been
removed and its memory has been freed, so recover from
this by re-inserting the ifnet in the cloned interfaces
list if ifc->ifc_destroy() indicates a failure.
the geom creation to a seperate init function and ignore the tasting.
The config is now parsed only in the vinumdrive geom, which hopefully
fixes the problem, that the drive class tasted before the vinum class
had a chance, for good.
Also restore the behaviour that the module can be loaded at boot time
and on a running system.
directly. We need to copyin() the strings in the iovec before
we can strcmp() them. Also, when we want to send the errmsg back
to userspace, we need to copyout()/copystr() the string.
Add a small helper function vfs_getopt_pos() which takes in the
name of an option, and returns the array index of the name in the iovec,
or -1 if not found. This allows us to locate an option in
the iovec without actually manipulating the iovec members. directly via
strcmp().
Noticed by: kris on sparc64
- Add locked variants of start, init, and ifmedia_upd.
- Add a mutex to the softc and remove spl calls.
- Use callout(9) rather than timeout(9).
- Setup interrupt handler last in attach.
- Use M_ZERO rather than bzero.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: wpaul
- Improve panic message if we fail to read the PCI bus number from a bridge
device.
- Don't try to lookup a BIOS IRQ for a link unless the link is routed via
an ISA IRQ since BIOSen currently only route PCI link devices via ISA
IRQs.
Tested by: Mathieu Prevot bsdhack at club-internet dot fr
MFC after: 1 week
but not provide a panic(9) implementation. Thus, enable the sanity
checks under INVARIANTS only if _KERNEL is also defined.
Submitted by: jmallett
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
Instead, re-evaluate _BIF only when we get a notify and use the cached
results. We also still evaluate _BIF once on boot. Also, optimize the
init loop a little by only querying for a particular info if it's not valid.
MFC after: 2 days
during SMP startup. We haven't had any issues with starting up the APs
on i386 in quite a while now which is all this code is really useful for.
If someone ever does really need it they can always dig it up out of the
attic.
INO) for incorrect interrupt map entries on E250 machines. These
incorrect entries caused the INO of the on-board HME to be also
assigned to the second on-board NS16550 and to the on-board printer
port controller. Further down the road caused hme(4) to fail to attach
to the on-board HME in FreeBSD 5 and 6 as INTR_FAST and non-INTR_FAST
handlers can't share the same IRQ there (it's unknown what whould
happen in -CURRENT now that INTR_FAST and non-INTR_FAST handlers can
share an IRQ but I'd expect funny problems with uart(4)).
- Make sure there are exactly 4 PCI ranges instead of just checking
that the bridge has a 'ranges' property in the OFW device tree at all.
Besides the fact that currently the 64bit memory range isn't used by
this driver it we can't really work with less than 4 ranges and don't
have memory for more than 4 bus handles for the ranges in the softc.
- Remove sc_range and sc_nrange from softc; for the bridges supported
by this driver we no longer need to know the ranges besides the bus
handles obtained from them once this driver is attached. That way we
also can free the memory allocated for sc_range during attach again.
- Remove sc_dvmabase from the softc and pass it to psycho_iommu_init()
via an additional argument as we no longer need to know the DVMA base
in this driver once the IOMMU is initialized.
- Remove sc_dmatag from the softc, there isn't much sense in keeping
the nexus dma tag around locally.
PR: 88279 [1]
Info from: OpenSolaris [1]
Tested by: kensmith [1]
MFC after: 1 month
between this driver and other Host-PCI bridge drivers based on this one:
- Make the code fit into 80 columns.
- Make the code adhere style(9) (don't use function calls in initializers,
use uintXX_t instead of u_intXX_t, add missing prototypes, ...).
- Remove unused and superfluous struct declaration, softc member, casts,
includes, etc.
- Use FBSDID.
- Sprinkle const.
- Try to make comments and messages consistent in style throughout the
driver.
- Use convenience macros for the number of interrupts and ranges of the
bridge.
- Use __func__ instead of hardcoded function names in panic strings and
error messages. Some of the hardcoded function names actually were
outdated through moving code around. [1]
- Rename softc members related to the PCI side of the bridge to sc_pci_*
in order to make it clear which side of the bridge they refer to (so
stuff like sc_bushandle vs. sc_bh is less confusing while reading the
code).
PR: 76052 [1]