Commit Graph

136951 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jb
7a72ea0e78 fts_pathlen is now a size_t rather than an int so a cast is needed.
I'm not sure why warn() and err() string formatted variables need
to be right-justified.
2008-01-27 01:19:47 +00:00
marius
edbc40c951 Fix a typo in a comment. 2008-01-27 01:11:57 +00:00
marius
6ebda87d5b Add a driver for the National Semiconductor DP83815, DP83843 and
DP83847 PHYs. The main reason for using a specific driver for these
PHYs are reset quirks similar to the nsphy(4) driven DP83840A.

PR:		112654
Obtained from:	NetBSD
MFC after:	2 weeks
Thanks to:	mlaier for testing w/ DP83815
2008-01-27 01:10:41 +00:00
marius
1bf40ea789 Sort values according to style.Makefile(5). 2008-01-27 01:02:29 +00:00
rwatson
44c26c0841 Increase maximum DDB capture buffer size to 5MB.
PR:		119993
MFC after:	2 months
Suggested by:	Scot Hetzel <swhetzel at gmail dot com>
2008-01-26 23:02:14 +00:00
mav
afe3cc011f Improve multilink receive performance by netgraph item reuse. 2008-01-26 22:42:47 +00:00
mav
56891c11ee Improve multilink xmit performance by netgraph item reuse. 2008-01-26 22:41:14 +00:00
mav
4b87cfa8f8 Improve multilink receive performance with fragment headers preallocation. 2008-01-26 22:39:05 +00:00
sam
13fcc58a15 rx mbufs must have a pkthdr; use m_gethdr to populate the rx ring
(and while here correct the mbuf type)

Submitted by:	Sam Banks <w0lfie@clear.net.nz>
MFC after:	1 week
2008-01-26 22:35:57 +00:00
rwatson
db8d5a7a3d Allow DDB_CAPTURE_DEFAULTBUFSIZE and DDB_CAPTURE_MAXBUFSIZE to be
overridden at compile-time using kernel options of the same names.

Rather than doing a compile-time CTASSERT of buffer sizes being
even multiples of block sizes, just adjust them at boottime, as
the failure mode is more user-friendly.

MFC after:	2 months
PR:		119993
Suggested by:	Scot Hetzel <swhetzel at gmail dot com>
2008-01-26 22:32:23 +00:00
brueffer
81169af72a OLDCARD is gone, release imp's lock.
Approved by:	imp
2008-01-26 21:58:52 +00:00
brueffer
32a629a8b5 OLDCARD is long gone, so finally remove the oldcard.4 manpage.
Confirmed by:	imp
2008-01-26 20:23:25 +00:00
yar
ac1e4103b9 Our fts(3) API, as inherited from 4.4BSD, suffers from integer
fields in FTS and FTSENT structs being too narrow.  In addition,
the narrow types creep from there into fts.c.  As a result, fts(3)
consumers, e.g., find(1) or rm(1), can't handle file trees an ordinary
user can create, which can have security implications.

To fix the historic implementation of fts(3), OpenBSD and NetBSD
have already changed <fts.h> in somewhat incompatible ways, so we
are free to do so, too.  This change is a superset of changes from
the other BSDs with a few more improvements.  It doesn't touch
fts(3) functionality; it just extends integer types used by it to
match modern reality and the C standard.

Here are its points:

o For C object sizes, use size_t unless it's 100% certain that
  the object will be really small.  (Note that fts(3) can construct
  pathnames _much_ longer than PATH_MAX for its consumers.)

o Avoid the short types because on modern platforms using them
  results in larger and slower code.  Change shorts to ints as
  follows:

	- For variables than count simple, limited things like states,
	  use plain vanilla `int' as it's the type of choice in C.

	- For a limited number of bit flags use `unsigned' because signed
	  bit-wise operations are implementation-defined, i.e., unportable,
	  in C.

o For things that should be at least 64 bits wide, use long long
  and not int64_t, as the latter is an optional type.  See
  FTSENT.fts_number aka FTS.fts_bignum.  Extending fts_number `to
  satisfy future needs' is pointless because there is fts_pointer,
  which can be used to link to arbitrary data from an FTSENT.
  However, there already are fts(3) consumers that require fts_number,
  or fts_bignum, have at least 64 bits in it, so we must allow for them.

o For the tree depth, use `long'.  This is a trade-off between making
  this field too wide and allowing for 64-bit inode numbers and/or
  chain-mounted filesystems.  On the one hand, `long' is almost
  enough for 32-bit filesystems on a 32-bit platform (our ino_t is
  uint32_t now).  On the other hand, platforms with a 64-bit (or
  wider) `long' will be ready for 64-bit inode numbers, as well as
  for several 32-bit filesystems mounted one under another.  Note
  that fts_level has to be signed because -1 is a magic value for it,
  FTS_ROOTPARENTLEVEL.

o For the `nlinks' local var in fts_build(), use `long'.  The logic
  in fts_build() requires that `nlinks' be signed, but our nlink_t
  currently is uint16_t.  Therefore let's make the signed var wide
  enough to be able to represent 2^16-1 in pure C99, and even 2^32-1
  on a 64-bit platform.  Perhaps the logic should be changed just
  to use nlink_t, but it can be done later w/o breaking fts(3) ABI
  any more because `nlinks' is just a local var.

This commit also inludes supporting stuff for the fts change:

o Preserve the old versions of fts(3) functions through libc symbol
versioning because the old versions appeared in all our former releases.

o Bump __FreeBSD_version just in case.  There is a small chance that
some ill-written 3-rd party apps may fail to build or work correctly
if compiled after this change.

o Update the fts(3) manpage accordingly.  In particular, remove
references to fts_bignum, which was a FreeBSD-specific hack to work
around the too narrow types of FTSENT members.  Now fts_number is
at least 64 bits wide (long long) and fts_bignum is an undocumented
alias for fts_number kept around for compatibility reasons.  According
to Google Code Search, the only big consumers of fts_bignum are in
our own source tree, so they can be fixed easily to use fts_number.

o Mention the change in src/UPDATING.

PR:		bin/104458
Approved by:	re (quite a while ago)
Discussed with:	deischen (the symbol versioning part)
Reviewed by:	-arch (mostly silence); das (generally OK, but we didn't
		agree on some types used; assuming that no objections on
		-arch let me to stick to my opinion)
2008-01-26 17:09:40 +00:00
mtm
bbd4f2a211 Generally, anything that runs rc.d scripts internally should
start using the quiet prefix (i.e. quietstart, quietstop, etc...).
2008-01-26 14:02:19 +00:00
rwatson
2918e1cac2 Rename DB_ constants in db_capture.c to DDB_ so that when they are
exposed as kernel compile options, they have more meaningful names.

PR:		119993
MFC after:	2 months
Suggested by:	Scot Hetzel <swhetzel at gmail dot com>
2008-01-26 13:55:52 +00:00
mtm
619355f258 Generally, anything that runs rc.d scripts internally should
start using the quiet prefix (i.e. quietstart, quietstop, etc...).
2008-01-26 13:50:38 +00:00
mtm
bf5451f3d4 Use 'quietstart' so as not to get spammed with informational diagnostics. 2008-01-26 13:37:48 +00:00
mpp
c964d8b3e5 Explain how the passno field in /etc/fstab works with fsck
and quotacheck in some more detail.
2008-01-26 13:03:35 +00:00
keramida
dfacf4dc3d Document the no-op -r option of BSD xargs(1).
PR:		docs/106416
Submitted by:	Pete Slagle, freebsd-stable at voidcaptain.com
MFC after:	3 days
2008-01-26 12:38:19 +00:00
rwatson
3b2455b135 Remove Giant acquisition around soreceive() and sosend() in fifofs. The
bug that caused us to reintroduce it is believed to be fixed, and Kris
says he no longer sees problems with fifofs in highly parallel builds.
If this works out, we'll MFC it for 7.1.

MFC after:	3 months
Pointed out by:	kris
2008-01-26 12:34:23 +00:00
mpp
9fdc3275be Sync up quotacheck's preen.c with fsck's. This makes quotacheck
process parallel checks in the same way as fsck, since fsck supports
pass numbers other than 0, 1 or 2.  Without this, quotacheck would
ignore file systems with pass numbers > 2.

The -l (maxrun) option is now deprecated and can be tuned with pass
numbers in /etc/fstab if needed.
2008-01-26 12:03:26 +00:00
mtm
128f4ab0d5 Re-implement: do not silently fail when a command is not carried
out because the rc.conf(5) variable was not enabled. Display a
message that the command wasn't run and offer suggestions on
what the user can do.

Implement a quiet prefix, which will disable some diagnostics. The
fast prefix also implies quiet. During boot we use either fast or
quiet. For shutdown we already use 'faststop'. So, this informational
message should only appear during interactive use.

An additional benefit of having a quiet prefix is that we can start
putting some of our diagnostic messages behind this knob and start
"de-cluttering" the console during boot and shutdown.
2008-01-26 11:22:12 +00:00
trhodes
3335722590 Catch up with revision 1.18 of dcons_os.c and add an example of how to use
dcons(4) as a valid gdb port.

PR:             118490
Submitted by:   Alexandre Kovalenko <alex.kovalenko@verizon.net>
2008-01-26 06:50:14 +00:00
kib
82cf20c0b8 In rev. 1.156, the convertion of the minor number to the unit number
resulted in the argument to the make_dev() to be a unit number.

Correct this by supplying a minor number to make_dev(), and using
the unit number for the calculation of the slave tty name.

Reported and tested by:	Peter Holm
Reviewed by:	jhb
Yet another pointy hat to:	kib
MFC after:	1 day
2008-01-26 06:09:23 +00:00
julian
e106c6b62c One of my powerbooks has this chip in it..
Confirmed by looking at netbsd.. they have also added this.
checked by grehen
MFC After: 3 days
2008-01-26 05:11:09 +00:00
emaste
3c84281c0e Allow arbitrary baud rates, not just the standard ones. 2008-01-26 04:30:48 +00:00
kmacy
d6170ff3e2 add opt_global.h dependency 2008-01-26 01:00:56 +00:00
bde
997d2d26fb Fix a harmless type error in 1.9. 2008-01-25 21:09:21 +00:00
jhb
dd3b84ba3a Fix a bug where a thread that hit the race where the sleep timeout fires
while the thread does not hold the thread lock would stop blocking for
subsequent interruptible sleeps and would always immediately fail the
sleep with EWOULDBLOCK instead (even sleeps that didn't have a timeout).

Some background:
- KSE has a facility for allowing one thread to interrupt another thread.
  During this process, the target thread aborts any interruptible sleeps
  much as if the target thread had a pending signal.  Once the target
  thread acknowledges the interrupt, normal sleep handling resumes.  KSE
  manages this via the TDF_INTERRUPTED flag.  Specifically, it sets the
  flag when it sends an interrupt to another thread and clears it when
  the interrupt is acknowledged.  (Note that this is purely a software
  interrupt sort of thing and has no relation to hardware interrupts
  or kernel interrupt threads.)
- The old code for handling the sleep timeout race handled the race
  by setting the TDF_INTERRUPT flag and faking a KSE-style thread
  interrupt to the thread in the process of going to sleep.  It probably
  should have just checked the TDF_TIMEOUT flag in sleepq_catch_signals()
  instead.
- The bug was that the sleepq code would set TDF_INTERRUPT but it was
  never cleared.  The sleepq code couldn't safely clear it in case there
  actually was a real KSE thread interrupt pending for the target thread
  (in fact, the sleepq timeout actually stomped on said pending interrupt).
  Thus, any future interruptible sleeps (*sleep(.. PCATCH ..) or
  cv_*wait_sig()) would see the TDF_INTERRUPT flag set and immediately
  fail with EWOULDBLOCK.  The flag could be cleared if the thread belonged
  to a KSE process and another thread posted an interrupt to the original
  thread.  However, in the more common case of a non-KSE process, the
  thread would pretty much stop sleeping.
- Fix the bug by just setting TDF_TIMEOUT in the sleepq timeout code and
  not messing with TDF_INTERRUPT and td_intrval.  With yesterday's fix to
  fix sleepq_switch() to check TDF_TIMEOUT, this is now sufficient.

MFC after:	3 days
2008-01-25 19:44:46 +00:00
jhb
e2e2970333 Update the timestamp regexps in syncstamp() and monostamp() for > 99999
traces where there isn't any leading whitespace before the record number
in the ktrdump output.
2008-01-25 19:24:12 +00:00
mtm
62d20a5f39 Backout previous commit. It's going to clutter the console
during boot and shutdown. I think I'll hide it behind autoboot or
maybe take brooks@ suggestion and implement a different command
prefix for booting/shutdown purposes, but in any case it needs more
thought and attention.

Noticed by: ceri
Pointyhat to: mtm
2008-01-25 16:44:34 +00:00
mtm
e6e79b3074 Clarify in what formats the grouplist for the '-G' switch may be accepted.
Submitted by: Eygene Ryabinkin <rea-fbsd@codelabs.ru>
2008-01-25 15:54:14 +00:00
mtm
b46fecfe29 If the rc.conf(5) variable for a script is not enabled do not fail
silently. Display a message that the command wasn't run and make
possible suggestions for what to do.

PR:	   conf/118770
MFC after: 1 week
2008-01-25 15:06:26 +00:00
rwatson
1dcfe4a494 Hide ipfw internal data structures behind IPFW_INTERNAL rather than
exposing them to all consumers of ip_fw.h.  These structures are
used in both ipfw(8) and ipfw(4), but not part of the user<->kernel
interface for other applications to use, rather, shared
implementation.

MFC after:	3 days
Reported by:	Paul Vixie <paul at vix dot com>
2008-01-25 14:38:27 +00:00
mtm
17279cebaf Rev. 1.6 made it impossible to use rc.d/kerberos with the krb5 port.
Re-implement the change so that the script once again works with
the krb5 port.

Submitted by: kensmith (slightly modified)
MFC after: 3 days
2008-01-25 05:23:01 +00:00
emaste
fb709bf5c6 Calculate baud rate divisor instead of allowing only a fixed set of
standard rates.

Obtained from OpenBSD
  src/sys/dev/usb/uftdi.c 1.29
  src/sys/dev/usb/uftdireg.h 1.11

OpenBSD revisions noted by: ticso, on hackers
2008-01-25 02:41:44 +00:00
jhb
5d22bdedcf Fix a race in the sleepqueue timeout code that resulted in sleeps not
being properly cancelled by a timeout.  In general there is a race
between a the sleepq timeout handler firing while the thread is still
in the process of going to sleep.  In 6.x with sched_lock, the race was
largely protected by sched_lock.  The only place it was "exposed" and had
to be handled was while checking for any pending signals in
sleepq_catch_signals().

With the thread lock changes, the thread lock is dropped in between
sleepq_add() and sleepq_*wait*() opening up a new window for this race.
Thus, if the timeout fired while the sleeping thread was in between
sleepq_add() and sleepq_*wait*(), the thread would be marked as timed
out, but the thread would not be dequeued and sleepq_switch() would
still block the thread until it was awakened via some other means.  In
the case of pause(9) where there is no other wakeup, the thread would
never be awakened.

Fix this by teaching sleepq_switch() to check if the thread has had its
sleep canceled before blocking by checking the TDF_TIMEOUT flag and
aborting the sleep and dequeueing the thread if it is set.

MFC after:	3 days
Reported by:	dwhite, peter
2008-01-25 02:09:38 +00:00
cperciva
a73485f346 Once the release goes out, RELENG_7_* will need approval from so@.
Approved by:	core (two months ago)
2008-01-24 22:07:03 +00:00
jhb
6d2956878d Move the code for working with kld's out into its own file. 2008-01-24 19:11:13 +00:00
dumbbell
ba3df23cb8 When asked to use kqueue, AIO stores its internal state in the
`kn_sdata' member of the newly registered knote. The problem is that
this member is overwritten by a call to kevent(2) with the EV_ADD flag,
targetted at the same kevent/knote. For instance, a userland application
may set the pointer to NULL, leading to a panic.

A testcase was provided by the submitter.

PR:	kern/118911
Submitted by:	MOROHOSHI Akihiko <moro@remus.dti.ne.jp>
MFC after:	1 day
2008-01-24 17:10:19 +00:00
kib
17d99001fa Do not dereference NULL scp in the case the screen is not opened.
Instead, return ENXIO to the ioctl caller.

Reported and tested by:	Pawel Worach <pawel.worach gmail com>
Discussed with:	markus
MFC after:	3 days
2008-01-24 15:37:48 +00:00
attilio
0db277677c Reflect lockcount() axing and lockmgr() prototype changing. 2008-01-24 14:17:52 +00:00
ru
f517e392f1 - sched_4bsd is no longer a default system scheduler on some
architectures, so call it "traditional" instead.

- sched_ule is no longer buggy or experimental (according to
  rev. 1.7 of sched_ule(4)), so don't call it experimental
  (reported by a user on stable@).

Reviewed by:	rwatson
2008-01-24 13:48:20 +00:00
attilio
004bd547ab Bump __FreeBSD_version in order to signal:
- lockmgr() prototype changing
- lockcount() axing
- LOCKMGR_ASSERT() axing
2008-01-24 12:37:54 +00:00
attilio
7213f4c32b Cleanup lockmgr interface and exported KPI:
- Remove the "thread" argument from the lockmgr() function as it is
  always curthread now
- Axe lockcount() function as it is no longer used
- Axe LOCKMGR_ASSERT() as it is bogus really and no currently used.
  Hopefully this will be soonly replaced by something suitable for it.
- Remove the prototype for dumplockinfo() as the function is no longer
  present

Addictionally:
- Introduce a KASSERT() in lockstatus() in order to let it accept only
  curthread or NULL as they should only be passed
- Do a little bit of style(9) cleanup on lockmgr.h

KPI results heavilly broken by this change, so manpages and
FreeBSD_version will be modified accordingly by further commits.

Tested by: matteo
2008-01-24 12:34:30 +00:00
marck
5671b69e58 There is no PUC_FASTINTR option anymore.
MFC after:	2 weeks
2008-01-24 12:09:59 +00:00
pjd
fbc761a694 - Reduce how much ZFS caches by default. This is another change to mitigate
'kmem_map too small panics'.
- Print two warnings if there is not enough memory and not enough address
  space.
- Improve comment.
2008-01-24 11:24:16 +00:00
pjd
435a09e625 Change type of kmem_used() and kmem_size() functions to uint64_t, so it
doesn't overflow in arc.c in this check:

	if (kmem_used() > (kmem_size() * 4) / 5)
		return (1);

With this bug ZFS almost doesn't cache.

Only 32bit machines are affected that have vm.kmem_size set to values >=1GB.

Reported by:	David Taylor <davidt@yadt.co.uk>
2008-01-24 11:21:54 +00:00
bz
1c376286e0 Replace the last susers calls in netinet6/ with privilege checks.
Introduce a new privilege allowing to set certain IP header options
(hop-by-hop, routing headers).

Leave a few comments to be addressed later.

Reviewed by:	rwatson (older version, before addressing his comments)
2008-01-24 08:25:59 +00:00
bz
ca561e0217 Differentiate between addifaddr and delifaddr for the privilege check.
Reviewed by:	rwatson
MFC after:	2 weeks
2008-01-24 08:14:38 +00:00