Return ENOTSUP for any opcode that is not supported by the XPT
device.
Add back a missing local declaration that seems to have been deleted
by my last commit.
Filter incoming transfer negotiation requests to ensure they
never exceed the settings specified by the user.
In restart sequencer attempt to deal with a bug in the aic7895.
If a third party reset occurs at just the right time, the
stack register can lock up. When restarting the sequencer
after handling the SCSI reset, poke SEQADDR1 before resting
the sequencers program counter.
When something strange happens, dump the card's transaction
state via ahc_dump_card_state(). This should aid in debugging.
Handle request sense transactions via the QINFIFO instead of
attaching them to the waiting queue directly. The waiting
queue consumes card SCB resources and, in the pathological case
of every target on the bus beating our selection attemps and
issuing a check condition, could have caused us to run out
of SCBs. I have never seen this happen, and only early
cards with 3 or 4 SCBs had any real chance of ever getting
into this state.
Add additional sequencer interrupt codes to support firmware
diagnostics. The diagnostic code is enabled with the
AHC_DEBUG_SEQUENCER kernel option.
Make it possible to switch into and out of target mode on
the fly. The card comes up by default as an initiator but
will switch into target mode as soon as an enable lun operation
is performed. As always, target mode behavior is gated
by the AHC_TMODE_ENABLE kernel option so most users will
not be affected by this change.
In ahc_update_target_msg_request(), also issue a new
request if the ppr_options have changed.
Never issue a PPR as a target. It is forbidden by the spec.
Correct a bug in ahc_parse_msg() that prevented us from
responding to PPR messages as a target.
Mark SCBs that are on the untagged queue with a flag instead
of checking several fields in the SCB to see if the SCB should
be on the queue. This makes it easier for things like automatic
request sense requests to be queued without touching the
untagged queues even though they are untagged requests.
When dealing with ignore wide residue messages that occur
in the middle of a transfer, reset HADDR, not SHADDR for
non-ultra2 chips. Although SHADDR is where the firmware
fetches the ending transfer address for a save data pointers
request, it is readonly. Setting HADDR has the side effect
of also updating SHADDR.
Cleanup the output of ahc_dump_card_state() by nulling out the
free scb list in the non-paging case. The free list is only
used if we must page SCBs.
Correct the transmission of cdbs > 12 bytes in length. When
swapping HSCBs prior to notifing the sequencer of the new
transaction, the bus address pointer for the cdb must also
be recalculated to reflect its new location. We now defer
the calculation of the cdb address until just before queing
it to the card.
When pulling transfer negotiation settings out of scratch
ram, convert 5MHz/clock doubled settings to 10MHz.
Add a new function ahc_qinfifo_requeue_tail() for use by
error recovery actions and auto-request sense operations.
These operations always occur when the sequencer is paused,
so we can avoid the extra expense incurred in the normal
SCB queue method.
Use the BMOV instruction for all single byte moves on
controllers that support it. The bmov instruction is
twice as fast as an AND with an immediate of 0xFF as
is used on older controllers.
Correct a few bugs in ahc_dump_card_state(). If we have
hardware assisted queue registers, use them to get the
sequencer's idea of the head of the queue. When enumerating
the untagged queue, it helps to use the correct index for
the queue.
aic7xxx.h:
Indicate via a feature flag, which controllers can take
on both the target and the initiator role at the same time.
Add the AHC_SEQUENCER_DEBUG flag.
Add the SCB_CDB32_PTR flag used for dealing with cdbs
with lengths between 13 and 32 bytes.
Add new prototypes.
aic7xxx.reg:
Allow the SCSIBUSL register to be written to. This is
required to fix a selection timeout problem on the 7892/99.
Cleanup the sequencer interrupt codes so that all debugging
codes are grouped at the end of the list.
Correct the definition of the ULTRA_ENB and DISC_DSB locations
in scratch ram. This prevented the driver from properly honoring
these settings when no serial eeprom was available.
Remove an unused sequencer flag.
aic7xxx.seq:
Just before a potential select-out, clear the SCSIBUSL
register. Occasionally, during a selection timeout, the
contents of the register may be presented on the bus,
causing much confusion.
Add sequencer diagnostic code to detect software and or
hardware bugs. The code attempts to verify most list
operations so any corruption is caught before it occurs.
We also track information about why a particular reconnection
request was rejected.
Don't clobber the digital REQ/ACK filter setting in SXFRCTL0
when clearing the channel.
Fix a target mode bug that would cause us to return busy
status instead of queue full in respnse to a tagged transaction.
Cleanup the overrun case. It turns out that by simply
butting the chip in bitbucket mode, it will ack any
bytes until the phase changes. This drasticaly simplifies
things.
Prior to leaving the data phase, make sure that the S/G
preload queue is empty.
Remove code to place a request sense request on the waiting
queue. This is all handled by the kernel now.
Change the semantics of "findSCB". In the past, findSCB
ensured that a freshly paged in SCB appeared on the disconnected
list. The problem with this is that there is no guarantee that
the paged in SCB is for a disconnected transation. We now
defer any list manipulation to the caller who usually discards
the SCB via the free list.
Inline some busy target table operations.
Add a critical section to protect adding an SCB to
the disconnected list.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c:
Handle changes in the transfer negotiation setting API
to filter incoming requests. No filtering is necessary
for "goal" requests from the XPT.
Set the SCB_CDB32_PTR flag when queing a transaction with
a large cdb.
In ahc_timeout, only take action if the active SCB is
the timedout SCB. This deals with the case of two
transactions to the same device with different timeout
values.
Use ahc_qinfifo_requeu_tail() instead of home grown
version.
aic7xxx_inline.h:
Honor SCB_CDB32_PTR when queuing a new request.
aic7xxx_pci.c:
Use the maximum data fifo threshold for all chips.
The XPT uses this to prevent tags from being used on parallel SCSI
interfaces immediately after a bus reset or BDR so that controllers
have an oportunity to renegotiate without tag messages in the way.
Somehow this got disabled... the functionality has been here for
quite some time.
Noticed by: my SCSI bus analyzer
This removes support for booting current kernels with very old bootblocks.
Device driver writers: Please remove initializations for the d_bmaj
field in your cdevsw{}.
terminated and the data_len field is no longer necessary.
Add ASCII2BINARY and BINARY2ASCII capabilities.
The old format is still understood and dealt with, but can't do
the ASCII2BINARY and BINARY2ASCII stuff.
Approved by: archie
current implementation, jail neither virtualizes the Sys V IPC namespace,
nor provides inter-jail protections on IPC objects.
o Support for System V IPC can be enabled by setting jail.sysvipc_allowed=1
using sysctl.
o This is not the "real fix" which involves virtualizing the System V
IPC namespace, but prevents processes within jail from influencing those
outside of jail when not approved by the administrator.
Reported by: Paulo Fragoso <paulo@nlink.com.br>
in the p_candebug() function. Synchronize with sef's CHECKIO()
macro from the old procfs, which seems to be a good source of security
checks.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
PPTP links are no longer dropped by simple (and inappropriate in this
case) "inactivity timeout" procedure, only when requested through the
control connection.
It is now possible to have multiple PPTP servers running behind NAT.
Just redirect the incoming TCP traffic to port 1723, everything else
is done transparently.
Problems were reported and the fix was tested by:
Michael Adler <Michael.Adler@compaq.com>,
David Andersen <dga@lcs.mit.edu>
This is due to a bug that has been in there since Warneer did the
PCCARD stuff, the altioaddr is not offset 8 its offset 14 from
the base address.
Also only probe the master device, no known PCCARD ATA thingies
has a slave AFAIK..
- Add DRIVER_MODULE() declaration to make this driver a
child of cardbus
- Handle different width EEPROMs
The CIS parser still barfs when scanning this card, but it seems to
probe/attach correctly anyway. I can't do a traffic test just yet
since I don't have a proper crossover cable handy.
This allows writing to DVD-RAM, PD and similar drives that probe as CD
devices. Note that these are randomly writeable devices, not
sequential-only devices like CD-R drives, which are supported by cdrecord.
Add a new flag value for dsopen(), DSO_COMPATLABEL. The cd(4) driver now
uses this flag instead of the DSO_NOLABELS flag. The DSO_NOLABELS always
used a "fake" disklabel for the entire disk, provided by the caller.
With the DSO_COMPATLABEL flag, dsopen() will first search the media for a
label, and if it finds a label, it will use that label. Otherwise it will
use the fake disklabel provided by the caller. This provides backwards
compatibility, since we will still have labels for ISO9660 media.
It also provides new functionality, since you can now have a regular BSD
disklabel on read-only media, or on writeable media (e.g. DVD-RAM).
Bruce and I both think that we should eventually (in a few years) get
away from using disklabels for ISO9660 media, and just use the whole disk
device (/dev/cd0). At that point disklabel handling in the cd(4) driver
could follow the "normal" model, as used in the da(4) driver.
Also, clean up the path in a couple of places in cdregister(). (Thanks to
Nick Hibma for catching that bug.)
Reviewed by: bde
Otherwise, aio_read() and aio_write() on sockets are broken if a kevent is
registered. (The code after kevent registration for handling sockets assumes
that the struct file pointer "fp" still refers to the socket, not the kqueue.)
Don't check for a null pointer if malloc called with M_WAITOK.
Submitted by: josh@zipperup.org
Submitted by: Robert Drehmel <robd@gmx.net>
Approved by: bp
<sys/proc.h> to <sys/systm.h>.
Correctly document the #includes needed in the manpage.
Add one now needed #include of <sys/systm.h>.
Remove the consequent 48 unused #includes of <sys/proc.h>.
the offending inline function (BUF_KERNPROC) on it being #included
already.
I'm not sure BUF_KERNPROC() is even the right thing to do or in the
right place or implemented the right way (inline vs normal function).
Remove consequently unneeded #includes of <sys/proc.h>
used in lower layer (scsi_low.c).
The flag of ncv for KME KXLC004 was chaged from 0x1 to 0x100.
The flag of nsp for PIO mode was chaged from 0x1 to 0x100.
command register is too aggressive. Revert to the previous behaviour, but
leave the new behaviour available as an undocumented option. It's not
clear what the Right, Right Thing is to do here, but the more conservative
approach is safer.
a RealTek 8139 cardbus device. Unfortunately it doesn't quite work yet
because the CIS parser barfs on it.
Submitted by msmith, with some small tweaks by me.
return the last value returned by a nested method call. This violates
the ACPI spec, but is implemented by the Microsoft interpreter, and thus
vendors can (and do) get away with it.
Intel's stance is that this is illegal and should not be supported.
As they put it, however, we have to live in the real world. So go ahead
and implement it.
Submitted by: Mitsaru IWASAKI <iwasaki@jp.freebsd.org>
- Set debugger options for kernel build
- Define some missing functions
- Bring in GCC defines
- Disable the 'wbinvd' macro as it conflicts with our inline
- AcpiGetProcessorID (fetch the ACPI processor ID for a given ACPI_HANDLE)
- AcpiSetSystemSleepState (set the Sx sleeping state, proposed by Intel
but not actually implemented)
ACPICA. Most of these are still works in progress. Support exists for:
- Fixed feature and control method power, lid and sleep buttons.
- Detection of ISA PnP devices using ACPI namespace.
- Detection of PCI root busses using ACPI namespace.
- CPU throttling and sleep states (incomplete)
- Thermal monitoring and cooling control (incomplete)
- Interface to platform embedded controllers (mostly complete)
- ACPI timer (incomplete)
- Simple userland control of sleep states.
- Shutdown and poweroff.
seems to be that the nodes are bzero'd beforehand, but the submitter
found that this was not always the case, and in any event defensive
programming here costs epsilon squared.
PR: 22244
Submitted by: Dave Gillam <daveg@chiaro.com>
because it only takes a struct tag which makes it impossible to
use unions, typedefs etc.
Define __offsetof() in <machine/ansi.h>
Define offsetof() in terms of __offsetof() in <stddef.h> and <sys/types.h>
Remove myriad of local offsetof() definitions.
Remove includes of <stddef.h> in kernel code.
NB: Kernelcode should *never* include from /usr/include !
Make <sys/queue.h> include <machine/ansi.h> to avoid polluting the API.
Deprecate <struct.h> with a warning. The warning turns into an error on
01-12-2000 and the file gets removed entirely on 01-01-2001.
Paritials reviews by: various.
Significant brucifications by: bde
to reinstall boot1 after a 'make world'.
Unfortunately this means that people who have already installed a new
boot1 from a 'make world' after 2000/09/18 *must* reinstall it after
their next build using something like:
# disklabel -B /dev/da0c
of IP datagram. This fixes the problem when firewall denied fragmented
packets whose last fragment was less than minimum protocol header size.
Found by: Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
PR: kern/22309
it can function before malloc(9) is up and running.
- Add two new options WITNESS_DDB and WITNESS_SKIPSPIN. If WITNESS_SKIPSPIN
is enabled, then spin mutexes are ignored by the WITNESS code. If
WITNESS_DDB is turned on and DDB is compiled into the kernel, then the
kernel will drop into DDB when either a lock hierarchy violation occurs
or mutexes are held when going to sleep.
- Add some new sysctls:
debug.witness_ddb is a read-write sysctl that corresponds to WITNESS_DDB.
The kernel option merely changes the default value to on at boot.
debug.witness_skipspin is a read-only sysctl that one can use to determine
if the kernel was compiled with WITNESS_SKIPSPIN.
- Wipe out the BSD/OS-specific lock order lists. We get to build our own
lists now as we add mutexes to the kernel.
the PCI latency timer value to 0x80. Davicom's Linux driver does this,
and it drastically reduces the number of TX underruns in my tests. (Note:
this is done only for the Davicom chips. I'm not sure it's a good idea to
do it for all of them.)
Again, still waiting on confirmation before merging to stable.
change_ruid() in kern_prot.c. This fixes an incorrect use
of chgproccnt().
Update both osf1_setuid() and osf1_setgid() to use setsugid() instead
of just frobbing the flag.
(mostly) submitted by: truckman
in the code enforces this. So, do not check for and attempt a
false reassembly if only IP_RF is set.
Also, removed the dead code, since we no longer use dtom() on
return from ip_reass().
DM9100/DM9102 chips. Do not set DC_TX_ONE. The DC_TX_USE_TX_INTR flag
causes dc_encap() to set the 'interrupt on TX completion' bit only
once every 64 packets. This is an attempt to reduce the number
of interrupts generated by the chip. You're supposed to get a 'no more
TX buffers left' interrupt once you hit the last packet whether you
ask for one or not, however it seems the Davicom chip doesn't generate
this interrupt, or at least it doesn't generate it under the same
circumstances. The result is that if you transmit n packets, where
n is less than 64, and then wait 5 seconds, you'll get a watchdog
timeout whether you want one or not. The DC_TX_INTR_ALWAYS causes
dc_encap() to request an interrupt for every frame.
I'm still waiting on confirmation from a couple of users to see if this
fixes their problems with the Davicom DM9102 before I merge this into
-stable, but this fixed the problem for me in my own testing so I'm
willing to make the change to -current right away.
expands beyond the limit we will extend the address space before trying
to zero the BSS. This should give us plenty of headroom for modest
expansion of the loader.
- Change the softintr() macro to do nothing on FreeBSD. Previously,
this macro would set a bit in spending and schedule the softinterrupt
thread to run. However, the bs driver never actually registers a
a software interrupt handler, so all this work achieved nothing. From
the code it is not clear what exactly the softintr() macro is actually
supposed to be doing. It looks like it is supposed to be possibly
running the hardware interrupt handler maybe? This handler is only
present in the #ifdef __NetBSD__ code however. I have no idea how this
driver handles interrupts at all, but at least it compiles now.
- Layout reorganisation to enhance portability. The driver now has
a relatively MI 'core' and a FreeBSD-specific layer over the top.
Since the NetBSD people have already done their own port, this is
largely just to help me with the BSD/OS port.
- Request ID allocation changed to improve performance (I'd been
considering switching to this approach after having failed to come
up with a better way to dynamically allocate request IDs, and seeing
Andy Doran use it in the NetBSD port of the driver convinced me
that I was wasting my time doing it any other way). Now we just
allocate all the requests up front.
- Maximum request count bumped back to 255 after characterisation
of a firmware issue (off-by-one causing it to crash with 256
outstanding commands).
- Control interface implemented. This allows 3ware's '3dm' utility to
talk to the controller. 3dm will be available from 3ware shortly.
- Controller soft-reset feature added; if the controller signals a
firmware or protocol error, the controller will be reset and all
outstanding commands will be retried.
type of software interrupt. Roughly, what used to be a bit in spending
now maps to a swi thread. Each thread can have multiple handlers, just
like a hardware interrupt thread.
- Instead of using a bitmask of pending interrupts, we schedule the specific
software interrupt thread to run, so spending, NSWI, and the shandlers
array are no longer needed. We can now have an arbitrary number of
software interrupt threads. When you register a software interrupt
thread via sinthand_add(), you get back a struct intrhand that you pass
to sched_swi() when you wish to schedule your swi thread to run.
- Convert the name of 'struct intrec' to 'struct intrhand' as it is a bit
more intuitive. Also, prefix all the members of struct intrhand with
'ih_'.
- Make swi_net() a MI function since there is now no point in it being
MD.
Submitted by: cp
- Close a small race condition. The sched_lock mutex protects
p->p_stat as well as the run queues. Another CPU could change p_stat
of the process while we are waiting for the lock, and we would end up
scheduling a process that isn't runnable.
usb_ethersubr.c. This module maintains two queues for packets which
are each protected with one mutex. These are all the changes I can
do for now. Removing the USBD_NO_TSLEEP flag doesn't work yet: when
I tried it, the system would usually freeze up after a NIC had been
operating for a while. The usb_ethersubr module itself ought to
go away; this is the next thing I need to test.
* Fixes to the signal delivery code. Not quite right yet.
I would have preferred to wait until I have signal delivery actually
working but the current kernel in CVS doesn't build.
mail:
The problem seems to originate with NFS's postop_attr
information that is returned with a read or write RPC.
Within a vm_fault context, the code cannot deal with
vnode_pager_setsize() shrinking a vnode.
The workaround in the patch below stops the nfsm_postop_attr()
macro from ever shrinking a vnode. If the new size in the
postop_attr information is smaller, then it just sets the
nfsnode n_attrstamp to 0 to stop the wrong size getting
used in the future. This change only affects postop_attr
attributes; the nfsm_loadattr() macro works as normal.
The change is implemented by adding a new argument to
nfs_loadattrcache() called 'dontshrink'. When this is
non-zero, nfs_loadattrcache() will never reduce the
vnode/nfsnode size; instead it zeros n_attrstamp.
There remain other was processes can get stuck in vmopar.
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
Reviewed by: dillon
Tested by: Vadim Belman <voland@lflat.org>