sys_setsockopt. Just a cleanup; no functional changes.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22812
(very sloppy specification) leaves an undefined value in *ret, so it is
wrong to inspect it, the error condition is enough.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 3 days
r355004 removed return statement from this loop with intention to also
call uma_reclaim_wakeup(). But in case of vm.lowmem_period=0 it causes
infinite loop.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
By allowing more items per slab, we can improve memory efficiency for
small allocs. If we were just to increase the bitmap size of the
slabzone, we would then waste slabzone memory. So, split slabzone into
two zones, one especially for 8-byte allocs (512 per slab). The
practical effect should be reduced memory usage for counter(9).
Reviewed by: jeff, markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23149
Remove assumptions about the minimum MINALLOCSIZE, in order to allow
testing of smaller MINALLOCSIZE. A following patch will lower the
MINALLOCSIZE, but not so much that the present patch is required for
correctness at these sites.
Reviewed by: jeff, markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
needs to handle file removal, directory removal, file move, directory move,
etc. The code in handle_workitem_remove() needs to propagate any completed
journal entries to the write that will render the change stable. In the
case of a moved directory this means the new parent. However, for an
overwrite that frees a directory (DIRCHG) we must move the jsegdep to the
removed inode to be released when it is stable in the cg bitmap or the
unlinked inode list. This case was previously unhandled and caused a
panic.
Reported by: mckusick, pho
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: pho
than 128MB, which is the maximum supported by the hardware in RDMA mode.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Use strlcpy to guarantee NUL termination. Due to this, there is
no need for strncmp; simply use strcmp.
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1412242
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23159
Make it less confusing when, for example, stat sets errno to 122 because a
checksum failed in ZFS:
Before: getfacl: /foo/bar: stat() failed: Unknown error: 122
After: getfacl: /foo/bar: stat() failed: Integrity check failed
Submitted by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed by: mckusick, mav
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22973
This helps with event correlation when machines are distributed
across multiple time zones.
Format the time with relaxed ISO 8601 for all the usual reasons.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The netmap passthrough subsystem requires proper support in the
hypervisor. In particular, two PCI device ids (from the Red Hat
PCI vendor id 0x1b36) need to be assigned to the two netmap
virtual devices. We then disable these devices until the ids have
not been assigned, in order to avoid conflicts with other
virtual devices emulated by upstream QEMU.
PR: 241774
MFC after: 3 days
Fix a mistake introduced by r343291, which ported the vmx(4)
driver to iflib.
In case of TSO, the hlen field of the (first) tx descriptor must
be initialized to the cumulative length of Ethernet, IP and TCP
headers. The length of the TCP header was missing.
PR: 236999
Reported by: pkelsey
Reviewed by: avg
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22967
[mips] Use less registers to load address of TargetExternalSymbol
There is no pattern matched `add hi, (MipsLo texternalsym)`. As a
result, loading an address of 32-bit symbol requires two registers
and one more additional instruction:
```
addiu $1, $zero, %lo(foo)
lui $2, %hi(foo)
addu $25, $2, $1
```
This patch adds the missed pattern and enables generation more
effective set of instructions:
```
lui $1, %hi(foo)
addiu $25, $1, %lo(foo)
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66771
llvm-svn: 370196
Merge commit 59bb3609f from llvm git (by Simon Atanasyan):
[mips] Fix 64-bit address loading in case of applying 32-bit mask to
the result
If result of 64-bit address loading combines with 32-bit mask, LLVM
tries to optimize the code and remove "redundant" loading of upper
32-bits of the address. It leads to incorrect code on MIPS64 targets.
MIPS backend creates the following chain of commands to load 64-bit
address in the `MipsTargetLowering::getAddrNonPICSym64` method:
```
(add (shl (add (shl (add %highest(sym), %higher(sym)),
16),
%hi(sym)),
16),
%lo(%sym))
```
If the mask presents, LLVM decides to optimize the chain of commands.
It really does not make sense to load upper 32-bits because the
0x0fffffff mask anyway clears them. After removing redundant commands
we get this chain:
```
(add (shl (%hi(sym), 16), %lo(%sym))
```
There is no patterns matched `(MipsHi (i64 symbol))`. Due a bug in
`SYM_32` predicate definition, backend incorrectly selects a pattern
for a 32-bit symbols and uses the `lui` instruction for loading
`%hi(sym)`.
As a result we get incorrect set of instructions with unnecessary
16-bit left shifting:
```
lui at,0x0
R_MIPS_HI16 foo
dsll at,at,0x10
daddiu at,at,0
R_MIPS_LO16 foo
```
This patch resolves two problems:
- Fix `SYM_32/SYM_64` predicates to prevent selection of patterns
dedicated to 32-bit symbols in case of using N64 ABI.
- Add missed patterns for 64-bit symbols for `%hi/%lo`.
Fix PR42736.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66228
llvm-svn: 370268
These two commits fix a miscompilation of the kernel for mips64, and
should allow clang to be used as the default compiler for mips64.
Requested by: arichards
MFC after: 3 days
Once we know whether the files differ, we don't need to do any further
work.
PR: 242828
Submitted by: fehmi noyan isi <fnoyanisi@yahoo.com> (original version)
Reviewed by: bapt, kevans
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23152
This provides a specific pointer for users of tap(4) to understand why their
interfaces are losing their addresses, and specifically how to workaround
this if they need different behavior.
This manpage received a .Dd bump earlier today in r35688, so no bump occurs
this time.
Submitted by: sigsys@gmail.com (via IRC)
Add a missing riscv.h header file, and fix the check for riscv (must test
MACHINE_CPUARCH, not MACHINE_ARCH, if we want to use 'riscv').
Sponsored by: Axiado
Part of i_flag can persist across a drop to hold count of 0, at which
point the vnode is taken off the lazy list. Then whoever locks and unlocks
the vnode can trip on the assert.
This trips over kyua running a test untarring character devices to ufs.
Reported by: lwhsu
config.h as a guide. In practice contributed software maintains a copy
of config.h within its build directory tree containing its Makefile.
usr.sbin/unbound is the home for its config.h.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22983
This is a follow up to r356481. In locore.S, before virtual memory is
set up, we should avoid using indirect address lookups through the GOT.
Therefore we need to convert uses of the la instruction to lla, which
always generates an auipc/addi pair of instructions. This conversion was
done for the BSP case, but not the AP case, resulting in a fault
somewhere before mpva and a failure to bring APs online.
Reported by: lwhsu
Reviewed by: lwhsu, jrtc27 (accepted in a comment)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23138
Constant requeuing adds significant lock contention in certain
workloads. Lessen the problem by batching it.
Per-cpu areas are locked in order to synchronize against UMA freeing
memory.
vnode's v_mflag is converted to short to prevent the struct from
growing.
Sample result from an incremental make -s -j 104 bzImage on tmpfs:
stock: 122.38s user 1780.45s system 6242% cpu 30.480 total
patched: 144.84s user 985.90s system 4856% cpu 23.282 total
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: pho (in a larger patch, previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22998
The current notion of an active vnode is eliminated.
Vnodes transition between 0<->1 hold counts all the time and the
associated traversal between different lists induces significant
scalability problems in certain workloads.
Introduce a global list containing all allocated vnodes. They get
unlinked only when UMA reclaims memory and are only requeued when
hold count reaches 0.
Sample result from an incremental make -s -j 104 bzImage on tmpfs:
stock: 118.55s user 3649.73s system 7479% cpu 50.382 total
patched: 122.38s user 1780.45s system 6242% cpu 30.480 total
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: pho (in a larger patch, previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22997
Quota code is temporarily regressed to do a full vnode scan.
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: pho (in a larger patch, previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22996
This obviates the need to scan the entire active list looking for vnodes
of interest.
msync is handled by adding all vnodes with write count to the lazy list.
deferred inactive directly adds vnodes as it sets the VI_DEFINACT flag.
Vnodes get dequeued from the list when their hold count reaches 0.
Newly added MNT_VNODE_FOREACH_LAZY* macros support filtering so that
spurious locking is avoided in the common case.
Reviewed by: jeff
Tested by: pho (in a larger patch, previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22995
This will be used later to add vnodes to the lazy list.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version), jeff
Tested by: pho (in a larger patch)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22994
Treat it as a synonym for GRND_NONBLOCK. The reasoning is this:
We have two choices for handling Linux's GRND_INSECURE API flag.
1. We could ignore it completely (like GRND_RANDOM). However, this might
produce the surprising result of GRND_INSECURE requests blocking, when the
Linux API does not block.
2. Alternatively, we could treat GRND_INSECURE requests as requests for
GRND_NONBLOCk. Here, the surprising result for Linux programs is that
invocations with unseeded random(4) will produce EAGAIN, rather than
garbage.
Honoring the flag in the way Linux does seems fraught. If we actually use
the output of a random(4) implementation prior to seeding, we leak some
entropy (in an information theory and also practical sense) from what will
be the initial seed to attackers (or allow attackers to arbitrary DoS
initial seeding, if we don't leak). This seems unacceptable -- it defeats
the purpose of blocking on initial seeding.
Secondary to that concern, before seeding we may have arbitrarily little
entropy collected; producing output from zero or a handful of entropy bits
does not seem particularly useful to userspace.
If userspace can accept garbage, insecure, non-random bytes, they can create
their own insecure garbage with srandom(time(NULL)) or similar. Any program
which would be satisfied with a 3-bit key CTR stream has no need for CSPRNG
bytes. So asking the kernel to produce such an output from the secure
getrandom(2) API seems inane.
For now, we've elected to emulate GRND_INSECURE as an alternative spelling
of GRND_NONBLOCK (2). Consider this API not-quite stable for now. We
guarantee it will never block. But we will attempt to monitor actual port
uptake of this bizarre API and may revise our plans for the unseeded
behavior (prior stable/13 branching).
Approved by: csprng(markm), manpages(bcr)
See also: https://lwn.net/ml/linux-kernel/cover.1577088521.git.luto@kernel.org/
See also: https://lwn.net/ml/linux-kernel/20200107204400.GH3619@mit.edu/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23130
of how it works when not compiled with OpenSSL.
Also, allow users to specify a hexadecimal number by using a prefix of
'0x'. Before this, users could only specify a hexadecimal value if that
value included a hex digit ('a'-'f') in the value.
PR: 243136
Submitted by: Steve Kargl
Reviewed by: gad
MFC after: 3 weeks
When expanding a SYN-cache entry to a socket/inp a two step approach was
taken:
1) The local address was filled in, then the inp was added to the hash
table.
2) The remote address was filled in and the inp was relocated in the
hash table.
Before the epoch changes, a write lock was held when this happens and
the code looking up entries was holding a corresponding read lock.
Since the read lock is gone away after the introduction of the
epochs, the half populated inp was found during lookup.
This resulted in processing TCP segments in the context of the wrong
TCP connection.
This patch changes the above procedure in a way that the inp is fully
populated before inserted into the hash table.
Thanks to Paul <devgs@ukr.net> for reporting the issue on the net@
mailing list and for testing the patch!
Reviewed by: rrs@
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netflix, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22971
Over time one or two hard coded function names did not match the
actual function anymore. Consistently use __func__ for nd6log() calls
and re-wrap/re-format some messages for consitency.
MFC after: 2 weeks