If port passed negative IID value, the function will try to allocate IID
from the pool of unused, based on passed wwpn or name arguments. It does
all its best to make IID unique and persistent across reconnects.
This makes persistent reservation properly work for iSCSI. Previously,
in case of reconnects, reservation could be unexpectedly lost, or even
migrate between intiators.
- add missing rcvif in mbuf
- add missing ipacket stat
- remove uncessary mbuf copy on output path
- fix deadlock of the TX engine in case of error
Obtained from: NETASQ
MFC after: 2 weeks
This includes:
o All directories named *ia64*
o All files named *ia64*
o All ia64-specific code guarded by __ia64__
o All ia64-specific makefile logic
o Mention of ia64 in comments and documentation
This excludes:
o Everything under contrib/
o Everything under crypto/
o sys/xen/interface
o sys/sys/elf_common.h
Discussed at: BSDcan
teardown, and new port creation during `service ctld restart`.
Close it by returning iSCSI port internal state, that allows to identify
dying ports, which should not be counted as existing, from really alive.
several reasons for this change:
pmap_change_wiring() has never (in my memory) been used to set the wired
attribute on a virtual page. We have always used pmap_enter() to do that.
Moreover, it is not really safe to use pmap_change_wiring() to set the wired
attribute on a virtual page. The description of pmap_change_wiring() says
that it assumes the existence of a mapping in the pmap. However, non-wired
mappings may be reclaimed by the pmap at any time. (See pmap_collect().)
Many implementations of pmap_change_wiring() will crash if the mapping does
not exist.
pmap_unwire() accepts a range of virtual addresses, whereas
pmap_change_wiring() acts upon a single virtual page. Since we are
typically unwiring a range of virtual addresses, pmap_unwire() will be more
efficient. Moreover, pmap_unwire() allows us to unwire superpage mappings.
Previously, we were forced to demote the superpage mapping, because
pmap_change_wiring() only allowed us to express the unwiring of a single
base page mapping at a time. This added to the overhead of unwiring for
large ranges of addresses, including the implicit unwiring that occurs at
process termination.
Implementations for arm and powerpc will follow.
Discussed with: jeff, marcel
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Previously ISID was changed every time, that made impossible correct
persistent reservation, because reconnected session was identified as
completely new one.
Reviewed by: trasz
MFC after: 1 week
prior to starting "/sbin/init" which will run all the "/etc/rc.d/xxx"
scripts. Else there can be a race configuring the interfaces via
"/etc/rc.conf".
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
correct stack alignment, however when we have a leaf function that uses
thread local storage it calls __aeabi_read_tp to get the thread pointer.
Neither GCC or clang see this as a function call so will align the stack
to a 4-byte boundary. This may be a problem as _rtld_bind expects to be
on an 8-byte boundary.
The solution is to store a copy of the stack pointer and force the
alignment before calling _rtld_bind.
This fixes a problem with armeb where applications would crash in odd ways.
It should also remove the need for a local patch to clang to force the
stack alignment to an 8-byte boundary, even for leaf functions. Further
testing will be needed before reverting this local change to clang as we
may rely on it in other places.
Reviewed by: jmg@
Instead make ports provide wanted port and target IDs, and LUNs provide
wanted LUN IDs. After that core Device ID VPD code only had to link all
of them together and add relative port and port group numbers.
LUN ID for iSCSI LUNs no longer created by CTL, but by ctld, and passed
to CTL as "scsiname" LUN option. This makes LUNs to report the same set
of IDs, independently from the port through which it is accessed, as
required by SCSI specifications.
Having single port for all iSCSI connections makes problematic implementing
some more advanced SCSI functionality in CTL, that require proper ports
enumeration and identification.
This change extends CTL iSCSI API, making ctld daemon to control list of
iSCSI ports in CTL. When new target is defined in config fine, ctld will
create respective port in CTL. When target is removed -- port will be
also removed after all active commands through that port properly aborted.
This change require ctld to be rebuilt to match the kernel.
As a minor side effect, this allows to have iSCSI targets without LUNs.
While that may look odd and not very useful, that is not incorrect.
6679140 asymmetric alloc/dealloc activity can induce dynamic variable drops
6679193 dtrace_dynvar walker produces flood of dtrace_dynhash_sink
This finishes a set of merges from the older OpenSolaris releases.
Still the FreeBSD port has many differences that are difficult to
account for but that seems normal given that the kernels are different.
MFC after: 1 week