Clang to compile this file: it was using the builtin memcpy and we want
to use the memcpy defined in gptboot.c. (Clang can't compile boot2 yet).
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com>
Reviewed by: jhb
standard kill(). On other systems, SI_LWP is generated by lwp_kill().
This will allow conforming applications to differentiate between
signals generated by standard events and those generated by other
implementation events in a manner compatible with existing practice.
- Bump __FreeBSD_version
support WOL. Some controllers require additional 3-wire auxiliary
remote wakeup connector to draw power. More recent xl(4)
controllers may not need the wakeup connector though.
initialize controller from a known good state. Previously driver
used to issue controller reset while TX/RX DMA are in progress.
I guess resetting controller in active TX/RX DMA cycle is to ensure
stopping I/Os in xl_shutdown(). I remember some buggy controllers
didn't respond with stop command if controller is under high
network load at the time of shutdown so resetting controller was
the only safe way to stop the I/Os. However, from my experiments,
controller always responded with stop command under high network
load so I think it's okay to remove the xl_reset() in
device_shutdown handler.
Resetting controller also will clear configured RX filter which
in turn will make WOL support hard because driver have to reprogram
RX filter in WOL handler as well as setting station address.
Use MACHINE_CPUARCH in preference to MACHINE_ARCH. The former is the
source code location of the machine, the latter the binary output. In
general, we want to use MACHINE_CPUARCH instead of MACHINE_ARCH unless
we're tesitng for a specific target. The isn't even moot for
i386/amd64 where there's momemntum towards a MACHINE_CPUARCH == x86,
although a specific cleanup for that likely would be needed...
the uio_offset adjustment instead to calculate a correct *len.
Without this change, we run off the end of the directory data
we're reading and panic horribly for nfs filesystems.
MFC after: 1 week
register mapping. I'm not sure whether it comes from the fact that
controllers live behind certain PCI brdge(PLX PCI 6152 33BC) and
the bridge has some issues in handling I/O space register mapping.
Unfortunately it's not possible to narrow down to an exact
controller that shows this issue because RealTek used the same PCI
device/revision id again. In theory, it's possible to check parent
PCI bridge device and change rl(4) to use memory space register
mapping if the parent PCI bridge is PLX PCI 6152. But I didn't try
to do that and we wouldn't get much benefit with added complexity.
Blindly switching to use memory space register mapping for rl(4)
may make most old controllers not to work. At least, I don't want
to take potential risk from such change. So use I/O space register
mapping by default but give users chance to override it via a
tunable. The tunable to use memory space register mapping would be
given by adding the following line to /boot/loader.conf file.
dev.rl.%d.prefer_iomap="0"
This change makes P811B quad-port work with this tunable.
Tested by: Nikola Kalpazanov ( n.kalpazanov <> gmail dot com )
MFC after: 1 week
devfs_populate(). This is a prerequisite for the automatic removal of
empty directories which will be committed in the future.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
use '-' in probe names, matching the probe names in Solaris.[1]
Add userland SDT probes definitions to sys/sdt.h.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Discussed with: rwaston [1]
Right now unionfs only allows filesystems to be mounted on top of
another if it supports whiteouts. Even though I have sent a patch to
daichi@ to let unionfs work without it, we'd better also add support for
whiteouts to tmpfs.
This patch implements .vop_whiteout and makes necessary changes to
lookup() and readdir() to take them into account. We must also make sure
that when adding or removing a file, we honour the componentname's
DOWHITEOUT and ISWHITEOUT, to prevent duplicate filenames.
MFC after: 1 month
datagrams with checksum value 0 when TX UDP checksum offloading is
enabled. Generating UDP checksum value 0 is RFC 768 violation.
Even though the probability of generating such UDP datagrams is
low, I don't want to see FreeBSD boxes to inject such datagrams
into network so disable UDP checksum offloading by default. Users
still override this behavior by setting a sysctl variable or loader
tunable, dev.bge.%d.forced_udpcsum.
I have no idea why this issue was not reported so far given that
bge(4) is one of the most commonly used controller on high-end
server class systems. Thanks to andre@ who passed the PR to me.
PR: kern/104826
problems compiling it, but it just gets too big at the moment, even
with -Os. This is not applicable to gptboot, though.
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com>