payload. This means driver has to split a TX buffer into two
pieces of TX buffers when the TX buffer contains both
ethernet/IP/TCP header and partial TCP payload. The controller
does not require all header should be in a TX buffer but driver
forced it to compute IP/TCP header size/offset which is required
parameter to configure DMA descriptor for TSO.
While here, slightly reorder DMA descriptor setup to enhance
readability and remove unnecessary code for TSO(upper stack never
requests TSO when the frame length is less than or equal to MTU).
Reported by: Yamagi Burmeister <lists <> yamagi dot org>
Tested by: Yamagi Burmeister <lists <> yamagi dot org>
MFC After: 1 week
Alike to BIO_WRITE, report success if at least one subdisk succeeded with
BIO_DELETE. But unlike BIO_WRITE don't fail disk on BIO_DELETE error.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
MFC after: 1 month
If at least one subdisk in the volume supports it, BIO_DELETE requests
will be propagated down. Unfortunatelly, for RAID levels with redundancy
unmapped blocks will be mapped back during first rebuild/resync process.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
MFC after: 1 month
(PowerMac12,1), which have a mac-io MPIC cell that indifies itself
as the root PIC despite the actual root PIC being on the northbridge.
No CPC945 systems have a mac-io PIC that does anything so just don't
attach on CPC945 (U4) systems.
MFC after: 3 days
and move that action from shutdown_pre_sync to shutdown_post_sync stage
to avoid extra flapping.
ZFS tends to not close devices on shutdown, that doesn't allow GEOM RAID
to shutdown gracefully. To handle that, mark volume as clean just when
shutdown time comes and there are no active writes.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Defer sending an independent window update if a delayed ACK is pending
saving a packet. The window update then gets piggy-backed on the next
already scheduled ACK.
Added grammar fixes as well.
MFC after: 2 weeks
overwriting the return mbuf pointer with newly received data after
a loop. Instead append the new mbuf chain to the existing one.
Fix up sb_lastrecord when dequeuing mbuf's so that sbappend_stream()
doesn't get confused.
For the remainder copy case in the mbuf delivery part deduct the
copied length len instead of the whole mbuf length. Additionally
don't depend on 'n' being being available which isn't true in the
case of MSG_PEEK.
Fix the MSG_WAITALL case by comparing against sb_hiwat. Before
it was looping for every receive as sb_lowat normally is zero.
Add comment about issue with (MSG_WAITALL | MSG_PEEK) which isn't
properly handled.
Submitted by: trociny (except for the change in last paragraph)
because the queue itself serves no purpose. When a held page is freed,
inserting the page into the hold queue has the side effect of setting the
page's "queue" field to PQ_HOLD. Later, when the page is unheld, it will
be freed because the "queue" field is PQ_HOLD. In other words, PQ_HOLD is
used as a flag, not a queue. So, this change replaces it with a flag.
To accomodate the new page flag, make the page's "flags" field wider and
"oflags" field narrower.
Reviewed by: kib
sched_unpin() as they are functions static and inline. This way it
can do two dangerous things:
- Reorder instructions around both of them, taking out from the safe
path operations that are supposed to be (ie. per-cpu accesses)
- Cache the value of td_pinned in CPU registers not making visible
in kernel context to the scheduler once it is scanning the runqueue,
as td_pinned is not marked volatile.
In order to avoid both possible bugs explicitly, protect the safe path
with compiler memory barriers. This will prevent reordering and caching
by the compiler about td_pinned operations.
Generally this could lead to suboptimal code traversing the pinnings
but this is not the case as can be easilly verified:
http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/svn-src-projects/2012-October/005797.html
Discussed with: jeff, jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
address passed from the bootloader, rather than using a hard-coded value.
Make FreeBSD announce itself on the LED display similar to other kernels.
Remove uses of the previous LED routines, which were under-used and only used
in drivers for what seem like debugging purposes, despite those drivers being
widely-tested.
Remove several inlines for accessing memory that duplicate other functions
which are now used instead, as they are now entirely unused.
the power save queue.
* introduce some new ATH_NODE lock protected fields, tracking the
net80211 psq and TIM state;
* when doing buffer transitions - ie, when sending and completing
buffers - check the state of the SWQ and update the TIM appropriately.
* when clearing the TIM bit, if the SWQ is not empty then delay clearing
it.
This is racy, but it's no less racy than the current net80211 power
save queue management code. Specifically, with multiple TX threads,
it's quite plausible that parallel state updates will race and the
TIM will be left in an inconsistent state. I'll address that in
a follow-up commit.
after a much reduced timeout.
Typically web servers close their sockets quickly under the assumption
that the TCP connections goes away as well. That is not entirely true
however. If the peer closed the window we're going to wait for a long
time with lots of data in the send buffer.
MFC after: 2 weeks
draft-ietf-tcpm-initcwnd-05. It explains why the increased initial
window improves the overall performance of many web services without
risking congestion collapse.
As long as it remains a draft it is placed under a sysctl marking it
as experimental:
net.inet.tcp.experimental.initcwnd10 = 1
When it becomes an official RFC soon the sysctl will be changed to
the RFC number and moved to net.inet.tcp.
This implementation differs from the RFC draft in that it is a bit
more conservative in the case of packet loss on SYN or SYN|ACK because
we haven't reduced the default RTO to 1 second yet. Also the restart
window isn't yet increased as allowed. Both will be adjusted with
upcoming changes.
Is is enabled by default. In Linux it is enabled since kernel 3.0.
MFC after: 2 weeks
especially in the presence of bi-directional data transfers.
snd_wl1 tracks the right edge, including data in the reassembly
queue, of valid incoming data. This makes it like rcv_nxt plus
reassembly. It never goes backwards to prevent older, possibly
reordered segments from updating the window.
snd_wl2 tracks the left edge of sent data. This makes it a duplicate
of snd_una. However joining them right now is difficult due to
separate update dependencies in different places in the code flow.
snd_wnd tracks the current advertized send window by the peer. In
tcp_output() the effective window is calculated by subtracting the
already in-flight data, snd_nxt less snd_una, from it.
ACK's become the main clock of window updates and will always update
the window when the left edge of what we sent is advanced. The ACK
clock is the primary signaling mechanism in ongoing data transfers.
This works reliably even in the presence of reordering, reassembly
and retransmitted segments. The ACK clock is most important because
it determines how much data we are allowed to inject into the network.
Zero window updates get us out of persistence mode are crucial. Here
a segment that neither moves ACK nor SEQ but enlarges WND is accepted.
When the ACK clock is not active (that is we're not or no longer
sending any data) any segment that moves the extended right SEQ edge,
including out-of-order segments, updates the window. This gives us
updates especially during ping-pong transfers where the peer isn't
done consuming the already acknowledged data from the receive buffer
while responding with data.
The SSH protocol is a prime candidate to benefit from the improved
bi-directional window update logic as it has its own windowing
mechanism on top of TCP and is frequently sending back protocol ACK's.
Tcpdump provided by: darrenr
Tested by: darrenr
MFC after: 2 weeks
the default retransmit timeout, as base to calculate the backoff
time until next try instead of the TCP_REXMTVAL() macro which only
works correctly when we already have measured an actual RTT+RTTVAR.
Before it would cause the first retransmit at RTOBASE, the next
four at the same time (!) about 200ms later, and then another one
again RTOBASE later.
MFC after: 2 weeks
with softupdates went away. Note that this does not fix the problem
entirely; I'm committing it now to make it easier for someone to pick
up the work.
Reviewed by: mckusick
support with ath(4) and VIMAGE.
Right now the VIMAGE code doesn't supply a default vnet context during:
* hotplug attach;
* any device detach.
It special cases kldload/boot time probing (by setting the context to
vnet0) but that doesn't occur when probing devices during a bus rescan -
eg, adding a cardbus card.
These will eventually go away when the VIMAGE support extends to providing
default contexts to hotplug attach/detach.