Currently, 'ifconfig laggX down' does not remove members from this
lagg(4) interface. So, 'service netif stop laggX' followed by
'service netif start laggX' will choke, because "stop" will leave
interfaces attached to the laggX and ifconfig from the "start" will
refuse to add already-existing interfaces.
The real-world case is when I am bundling together my Ethernet and
WiFi interfaces and using multiple profiles for accessing network in
different places: system being booted up with one profile, but later
this profile being exchanged to another one, followed by 'service
netif restart' will not add WiFi interface back to the lagg: the
"stop" action from 'service netif restart' will shut down my main WiFi
interface, so wlan0 that exists in the lagg0 will be destroyed and
purged from lagg0; the "start" action will try to re-add both
interfaces, but since Ethernet one is already in lagg0, ifconfig will
refuse to add the wlan0 from WiFi interface.
Since adding the interface to the lagg(4) when it is already here
should be an idempotent action: we're really not changing anything,
so this fix doesn't change the semantics of interface addition.
Approved by: thompsa
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
not libstdc++.
Unfortunately, it appears that libsupc++ / libstdc++ have a different idea of
the type of size_t to the rest of the world, which may cause problems later
on...
Reported by: des
MFC after: 1 week
headers for TSO but also for generic checksum offloading. Ideally we
would only have one common function shared amongst all drivers, and
perhaps when updating them for IPv6 we should introduce that.
Eventually we should provide the meta information along with mbufs to
avoid (re-)parsing entirely.
To not break IPv6 (checksums and offload) and to be able to MFC the
changes without risking to hurt 3rd party drivers, duplicate the v4
framework, as other OSes have done as well.
Introduce interface capability flags for TX/RX checksum offload with
IPv6, to allow independent toggling (where possible). Add CSUM_*_IPV6
flags for UDP/TCP over IPv6, and reserve further for SCTP, and IPv6
fragmentation. Define CSUM_DELAY_DATA_IPV6 as we do for legacy IP and
add an alias for CSUM_DATA_VALID_IPV6.
This pretty much brings IPv6 handling in line with IPv4.
TSO is still handled in a different way and not via if_hwassist.
Update ifconfig to allow (un)setting of the new capability flags.
Update loopback to announce the new capabilities and if_hwassist flags.
Individual driver updates will have to follow, as will SCTP.
Reported by: gallatin, dim, ..
Reviewed by: gallatin (glanced at?)
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC with: r235961,235959,235958
to this pmap.c. This new r/w lock is used primarily to synchronize access
to the PV lists. However, it will be used in a somewhat unconventional
way. As finer-grained PV list locking is added to each of the pmap
functions that acquire this r/w lock, its acquisition will be changed from
write to read, enabling concurrent execution of the pmap functions with
finer-grained locking.
X-MFC after: r236045
There are currently no in-tree consumers; I'm adding it now for use by
vendor code. This matches the change OpenBSD made while implementing
MPLS in gif(4).
- Fix some math errors in mmc_decode_csd_sd().
- Fix incorrect arguments to mmc_send_app_op_cond() in mmc_go_discovery().
- Add reporting of CSD for debug purposes.
- Add detection (and skipping) of password-locked cards.
- Add setting of block length on card if necessary.
Submitted by: Patrick Kelsey
MFC after: 3 days
1948 zpool list should show more detailed pool information
Display per-vdev information with "zpool list -v".
The added expandsize property has currently no value on FreeBSD.
This changeset allows adding expansion support to individual vdevs
in the future.
References:
https://www.illumos.org/issues/1948
Obtained from: illumos (issue #1948)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Revert r115805. An array type is required to have a range type,
however, the range can be unknown for the upper bound.
Testcase to follow.
Part of rdar://11457152
This should fix ctfconvert producing error messages during kernel
builds, similar to:
ERROR: scsi_all.c: die 24561: failed to retrieve array bounds
These were caused by incorrect debug information for flexible array
members of structs.
MFC after: 3 days
implementation specific vs. the common architecture definition.
Bring PPC4XX defines (PSL, SPR, TLB). Note the new definitions under
BOOKE_PPC4XX are not used in the code yet.
This change set is not supposed to affect existing E500 support, it's just
another reorg step before bringing support for E500mc, E5500 and PPC465.
Obtained from: AppliedMicro, Freescale, Semihalf
Prior to this, setting VersionAddendum will be a no-op: one will
always have BASE_VERSION + " " + VERSION_HPN for VersionAddendum
set in the config and a bare BASE_VERSION + VERSION_HPN when there
is no VersionAddendum is set.
HPN patch requires both parties to have the "hpn" inside their
advertized versions, so we add VERSION_HPN to the VERSION_BASE
if HPN is enabled and omitting it if HPN is disabled.
VersionAddendum now uses the following logics:
* unset (default value): append " " and VERSION_ADDENDUM;
* VersionAddendum is set and isn't empty: append " "
and VersionAddendum;
* VersionAddendum is set and empty: don't append anything.
Approved by: des
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 days
are handled in most CAM peripheral drivers that are not handled by
GEOM's disk class.
The usual character driver open and close semantics are that the
driver gets N open calls, but only one close, when the last caller
closes the device.
CAM peripheral drivers expect that behavior to be honored to the
letter, and the CAM peripheral driver code (specifically
cam_periph_release_locked_busses()) panics if it is done incorrectly.
Since devfs has to drop its locks while it calls a driver's close
routine, and it does not have a way to delay or prevent open calls
while it is calling the close routine, there is a race.
The sequence of events, simplified a bit, is:
- devfs acquires a lock
- devfs checks the reference count, and if it is 1, continues to close.
- devfs releases the lock
- 2nd process open call on the device happens here
- devfs calls the driver's close routine
- devfs acquires a lock
- devfs decrements the reference count
- devfs releases the lock
- 2nd process close call on the device happens here
At the second close, we get a panic in
cam_periph_release_locked_busses(), complaining that peripheral
has been released when the reference count is already 0. This is
because we have gotten two closes in a row, which should not
happen.
The fix is to add the D_TRACKCLOSE flag to the driver's cdevsw, so
that we get a close() call for each open(). That does happen
reliably, so we can make sure that our reference counts are
correct.
Note that the sa(4) and pt(4) drivers only allow one context
through the open routine. So these drivers aren't exposed to the
same race condition.
scsi_ch.c,
scsi_enc.c,
scsi_enc_internal.h,
scsi_pass.c,
scsi_sg.c:
For these drivers, change the open() routine to
increment the reference count for every open, and
just decrement the reference count in the close.
Call cam_periph_release_locked() in some scenarios
to avoid additional lock and unlock calls.
scsi_pt.c: Call cam_periph_release_locked() in some scenarios
to avoid additional lock and unlock calls.
MFC after: 3 days
already plan to support >64k payload here, the IPv6 header payload
length obviously is only 16 bit and the calculations need to be right.
Reported by: dim
Tested by: dim
MFC after: 1 day
X-MFC: with r235958
than required for handling MAXPHYS and report the resulting maximum
I/O size to CAM instead of implicitly limiting it to DFLTPHYS.
- Move the variables of sym_action2() out of nested scope as required
by style(9) and remove extraneous curly braces.
- Replace a magic value for PCIR_COMMAND with the appropriate macro.
- Use DEVMETHOD_END.
- Use NULL instead of 0 for pointers.
Tested with a HBA donated by wilko.
MFC after: 3 days