Commit Graph

25241 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
KATO Takenori
a3758914a0 Merged from files.i386 revisions 1.359 and 1.360. 2001-04-12 12:26:40 +00:00
Nick Hibma
1470e6aaeb Regen. 2001-04-12 11:08:59 +00:00
Nick Hibma
47a9ad6b89 TDK ids
Submitted by:	Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
2001-04-12 11:04:08 +00:00
Nick Hibma
426128e90b From NetBSD 2001-04-12 10:59:30 +00:00
Robert Watson
4c5eb9c397 o Replace p_cankill() with p_cansignal(), remove wrappage of p_can()
from signal authorization checking.
o p_cansignal() takes three arguments: subject process, object process,
  and signal number, unlike p_cankill(), which only took into account
  the processes and not the signal number, improving the abstraction
  such that CANSIGNAL() from kern_sig.c can now also be eliminated;
  previously CANSIGNAL() special-cased the handling of SIGCONT based
  on process session.  privused is now deprecated.
o The new p_cansignal() further limits the set of signals that may
  be delivered to processes with P_SUGID set, and restructures the
  access control check to allow it to be extended more easily.
o These changes take into account work done by the OpenBSD Project,
  as well as by Robert Watson and Thomas Moestl on the TrustedBSD
  Project.

Obtained from:  TrustedBSD Project
2001-04-12 02:38:08 +00:00
Warner Losh
a9304a4eb5 Fix minor typo in comment. 112x -> 12xx 2001-04-11 22:49:00 +00:00
Archie Cobbs
422c727634 Don't reference a node after we dropped a reference to it
(same as in previous checkin, but in a different function).
2001-04-11 22:04:47 +00:00
Boris Popov
cdcb16abd2 Pull constants from netsmb/smb.h. 2001-04-11 21:35:51 +00:00
Warner Losh
a17e1baffd Add IBM3765 to newcard's pcic pnp device list 2001-04-11 20:22:16 +00:00
Robert Watson
40829dd2dc o Regenerated following introduction of __setugid() system call for
"options REGRESSION".

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2001-04-11 20:21:37 +00:00
Robert Watson
130d0157d1 o Introduce a new system call, __setsugid(), which allows a process to
toggle the P_SUGID bit explicitly, rather than relying on it being
  set implicitly by other protection and credential logic.  This feature
  is introduced to support inter-process authorization regression testing
  by simplifying userland credential management allowing the easy
  isolation and reproduction of authorization events with specific
  security contexts.  This feature is enabled only by "options REGRESSION"
  and is not intended to be used by applications.  While the feature is
  not known to introduce security vulnerabilities, it does allow
  processes to enter previously inaccessible parts of the credential
  state machine, and is therefore disabled by default.  It may not
  constitute a risk, and therefore in the future pending further analysis
  (and appropriate need) may become a published interface.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2001-04-11 20:20:40 +00:00
Warner Losh
e5eac10b13 Add #define for IBM3765.
Fix SWAMPBOX.  It had actiontec's ID.
Reorder pnpids so they are in alphabetical order.
2001-04-11 20:18:29 +00:00
Robert Watson
0b5438c6d1 o Introduce "options REGRESSION", a kernel option which enables
interfaces and functionality intended for use during correctness and
  regression testing.  Features enabled by "options REGRESSION" may
  in and of themselves introduce security or correctness problems if
  used improperly, and so are not intended for use in production
  systems, only in testing environments.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
2001-04-11 19:29:24 +00:00
John Baldwin
7b531e6037 Stick proc0 in the PID hash table. 2001-04-11 18:50:50 +00:00
John Baldwin
2fea957dc5 Rename the IPI API from smp_ipi_* to ipi_* since the smp_ prefix is just
"redundant noise" and to match the IPI constant namespace (IPI_*).

Requested by:	bde
2001-04-11 17:06:02 +00:00
John Baldwin
45fdf62519 Parse the various argument registers in the printtrap() function so that
one doesn't have to go grab a reference manual to decode them by hand every
time the alpha kernel falls over.

Reviewed by:	drew, -alpha
2001-04-11 16:20:11 +00:00
Boris Popov
bc9243be52 Add forgotten files for NETSMBCRYPTO option (may be DES based encryption
should be enabled by default, not sure).
2001-04-11 09:20:33 +00:00
Warner Losh
80914f7e42 Add O2Micro's OZ6872 Cardbus bridge.
Submitted by: Robert Sexton <robert@kudra.com>
2001-04-11 06:40:35 +00:00
Chris D. Faulhaber
fb1af1f2bf Correct the following defines to match the POSIX.1e spec:
ACL_PERM_EXEC  -> ACL_EXECUTE
  ACL_PERM_READ  -> ACL_READ
  ACL_PERM_WRITE -> ACL_WRITE

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD
2001-04-11 02:19:01 +00:00
Peter Wemm
9d10eb0c0c Create debug.hashstat.[raw]nchash and debug.hashstat.[raw]nfsnode to
enable easy access to the hash chain stats.  The raw prefixed versions
dump an integer array to userland with the chain lengths.  This cheats
and calls it an array of 'struct int' rather than 'int' or sysctl -a
faithfully dumps out the 128K array on an average machine.  The non-raw
versions return 4 integers: count, number of chains used, maximum chain
length, and percentage utilization (fixed point, multiplied by 100).
The raw forms are more useful for analyzing the hash distribution, while
the other form can be read easily by humans and stats loggers.
2001-04-11 00:39:20 +00:00
John Baldwin
5f76d89870 Remove constants defining the bitmasks of the old giant kernel lock. 2001-04-10 22:22:01 +00:00
John Baldwin
8f3b4b873c Remove the old APIC I/O higher level IPI API in favor of the newer MI
API for IPI's that isn't tied to the Intel APIC.  MD code can still use
the apic_ipi() function or dink with the apic directly if needed to send
MD IPI's.
2001-04-10 22:18:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
ca7ef17c08 Remove the BETTER_CLOCK #ifdef's. The code is on by default and is here
to stay for the foreseeable future.

OK'd by:	peter (the idea)
2001-04-10 21:34:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
6a0fa9a023 Add an MI API for sending IPI's. I used the same API present on the alpha
because:
 - it used a better namespace (smp_ipi_* rather than *_ipi),
 - it used better constant names for the IPI's (IPI_* rather than
   X*_OFFSET), and
 - this API also somewhat exists for both alpha and ia64 already.
2001-04-10 21:04:32 +00:00
George C A Reid
e572fcd463 Add another card to the list of Neomagic 256AV's which don't have AC97
codecs. Also, add some additional code to check for future cards without
this feature - attempting to initialise them as AC97 cards will hang the
machine.

PR:		26427
Reviewed by:	cg
2001-04-10 14:28:21 +00:00
Cameron Grant
f72b6281c2 lock the mutex, not the softc pointer. 2001-04-10 13:52:26 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
a61ab64ac4 Directory layout preference improvements from Grigoriy Orlov <gluk@ptci.ru>.
His description of the problem and solution follow. My own tests show
speedups on typical filesystem intensive workloads of 5% to 12% which
is very impressive considering the small amount of code change involved.

------

  One day I noticed that some file operations run much faster on
small file systems then on big ones. I've looked at the ffs
algorithms, thought about them, and redesigned the dirpref algorithm.

  First I want to describe the results of my tests. These results are old
and I have improved the algorithm after these tests were done. Nevertheless
they show how big the perfomance speedup may be. I have done two file/directory
intensive tests on a two OpenBSD systems with old and new dirpref algorithm.
The first test is "tar -xzf ports.tar.gz", the second is "rm -rf ports".
The ports.tar.gz file is the ports collection from the OpenBSD 2.8 release.
It contains 6596 directories and 13868 files. The test systems are:

1. Celeron-450, 128Mb, two IDE drives, the system at wd0, file system for
   test is at wd1. Size of test file system is 8 Gb, number of cg=991,
   size of cg is 8m, block size = 8k, fragment size = 1k OpenBSD-current
   from Dec 2000 with BUFCACHEPERCENT=35

2. PIII-600, 128Mb, two IBM DTLA-307045 IDE drives at i815e, the system
   at wd0, file system for test is at wd1. Size of test file system is 40 Gb,
   number of cg=5324, size of cg is 8m, block size = 8k, fragment size = 1k
   OpenBSD-current from Dec 2000 with BUFCACHEPERCENT=50

You can get more info about the test systems and methods at:
http://www.ptci.ru/gluk/dirpref/old/dirpref.html

                              Test Results

             tar -xzf ports.tar.gz               rm -rf ports
  mode  old dirpref new dirpref speedup old dirprefnew dirpref speedup
                             First system
 normal     667         472      1.41       477        331       1.44
 async      285         144      1.98       130         14       9.29
 sync       768         616      1.25       477        334       1.43
 softdep    413         252      1.64       241         38       6.34
                             Second system
 normal     329         81       4.06       263.5       93.5     2.81
 async      302         25.7    11.75       112          2.26   49.56
 sync       281         57.0     4.93       263         90.5     2.9
 softdep    341         40.6     8.4        284          4.76   59.66

"old dirpref" and "new dirpref" columns give a test time in seconds.
speedup - speed increasement in times, ie. old dirpref / new dirpref.

------

Algorithm description

The old dirpref algorithm is described in comments:

/*
 * Find a cylinder to place a directory.
 *
 * The policy implemented by this algorithm is to select from
 * among those cylinder groups with above the average number of
 * free inodes, the one with the smallest number of directories.
 */

A new directory is allocated in a different cylinder groups than its
parent directory resulting in a directory tree that is spreaded across
all the cylinder groups. This spreading out results in a non-optimal
access to the directories and files. When we have a small filesystem
it is not a problem but when the filesystem is big then perfomance
degradation becomes very apparent.

What I mean by a big file system ?

  1. A big filesystem is a filesystem which occupy 20-30 or more percent
     of total drive space, i.e. first and last cylinder are physically
     located relatively far from each other.
  2. It has a relatively large number of cylinder groups, for example
     more cylinder groups than 50% of the buffers in the buffer cache.

The first results in long access times, while the second results in
many buffers being used by metadata operations. Such operations use
cylinder group blocks and on-disk inode blocks. The cylinder group
block (fs->fs_cblkno) contains struct cg, inode and block bit maps.
It is 2k in size for the default filesystem parameters. If new and
parent directories are located in different cylinder groups then the
system performs more input/output operations and uses more buffers.
On filesystems with many cylinder groups, lots of cache buffers are
used for metadata operations.

My solution for this problem is very simple. I allocate many directories
in one cylinder group. I also do some things, so that the new allocation
method does not cause excessive fragmentation and all directory inodes
will not be located at a location far from its file's inodes and data.
The algorithm is:
/*
 * Find a cylinder group to place a directory.
 *
 * The policy implemented by this algorithm is to allocate a
 * directory inode in the same cylinder group as its parent
 * directory, but also to reserve space for its files inodes
 * and data. Restrict the number of directories which may be
 * allocated one after another in the same cylinder group
 * without intervening allocation of files.
 *
 * If we allocate a first level directory then force allocation
 * in another cylinder group.
 */

  My early versions of dirpref give me a good results for a wide range of
file operations and different filesystem capacities except one case:
those applications that create their entire directory structure first
and only later fill this structure with files.

  My solution for such and similar cases is to limit a number of
directories which may be created one after another in the same cylinder
group without intervening file creations. For this purpose, I allocate
an array of counters at mount time. This array is linked to the superblock
fs->fs_contigdirs[cg]. Each time a directory is created the counter
increases and each time a file is created the counter decreases. A 60Gb
filesystem with 8mb/cg requires 10kb of memory for the counters array.

  The maxcontigdirs is a maximum number of directories which may be created
without an intervening file creation. I found in my tests that the best
performance occurs when I restrict the number of directories in one cylinder
group such that all its files may be located in the same cylinder group.
There may be some deterioration in performance if all the file inodes
are in the same cylinder group as its containing directory, but their
data partially resides in a different cylinder group. The maxcontigdirs
value is calculated to try to prevent this condition. Since there is
no way to know how many files and directories will be allocated later
I added two optimization parameters in superblock/tunefs. They are:

        int32_t  fs_avgfilesize;   /* expected average file size */
        int32_t  fs_avgfpdir;      /* expected # of files per directory */

These parameters have reasonable defaults but may be tweeked for special
uses of a filesystem. They are only necessary in rare cases like better
tuning a filesystem being used to store a squid cache.

I have been using this algorithm for about 3 months. I have done
a lot of testing on filesystems with different capacities, average
filesize, average number of files per directory, and so on. I think
this algorithm has no negative impact on filesystem perfomance. It
works better than the default one in all cases. The new dirpref
will greatly improve untarring/removing/coping of big directories,
decrease load on cvs servers and much more. The new dirpref doesn't
speedup a compilation process, but also doesn't slow it down.

Obtained from:	Grigoriy Orlov <gluk@ptci.ru>
2001-04-10 08:38:59 +00:00
Boris Popov
681a5bbef2 Import kernel part of SMB/CIFS requester.
Add smbfs(CIFS) filesystem.

Userland part will be in the ports tree for a while.

Obtained from:	smbfs-1.3.7-dev package.
2001-04-10 07:59:06 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
43d97995d8 Add more diagnostic output for failure.
s/1518/ETHER_MAX_LEN

Some style changes, add some braces, mostly residual from having
a lot of debug hooks added while working on this driver.

Bring in a plethora of changes from NetBSD:

	revision 1.58
	date: 2001/03/08 11:07:08;  author: ichiro;  state: Exp;  lines: +17 -1
	it wait until busy flag disappears.
	it was able to prevent some cards with late initializing faling in wi_reset().

	revision 1.41
	date: 2000/10/13 19:15:08;  author: jonathan;  state: Exp;  lines: +4 -2
	Fix wi_intr() to avoid touching card registers during insert/remove  events,
	when sharing an interrupt with other devices:
	check sc->sc_enabled,  and drop the interrupt if its' off.

	revision 1.30
	date: 2000/08/18 04:11:48;  author: jhawk;  state: Exp;  lines: +4 -4
	Copy wi_{dst,src}_addr from struct wi_frame into faked-up ether_header
	instead of addr1 and addr2. THis means that tcpdump -e will show the
	correct MAC address for communications with access points instead of showing
	the BSSID.

	In the future there should be 802.11 support for bpf/libpcap/tcpdump,
	but that is aways down the road.
2001-04-10 05:29:26 +00:00
Boris Popov
16162e5789 Avoid endless recursion on panic.
Reviewed by:	jhb
2001-04-10 00:56:19 +00:00
John Baldwin
d53d22496f Maintain a reference count on the witness struct. When the reference
count drops to 0 in witness_destroy, set the w_name and w_file pointers
to point to the string "(dead)" and the w_line field to 0.  This way,
if a mutex of a given name is used only in a module, then as long as
all mutexes in the module are destroyed when the module is unloaded,
witness will not maintain stale references to the mutex's name in the
module's data section causing a panic later on when the w_name or w_file
field's are examined.
2001-04-09 22:34:05 +00:00
Matt Jacob
bab64fffde Several things:
1. Pick up MII/PHY support for Livengood copper part (10/100/1000) from
Parag Patel. It was a fairly complete but not quite platform independent
job.

2. Finish silly offset differences that LIVENGOOD vs. WISEMAN registers
have (so the !)$*!)$*!$ fiber LIVENGOOD now works too).

3. Ansify the source.

So- we now suppor tthe PRO1000F and PRO1000T adapters.
2001-04-09 21:54:15 +00:00
Matt Jacob
40be668926 Add in MII support for LICENGOOD copper part (10/100/1000). Add in some
more flags for verbose as well as debug printing.
2001-04-09 21:48:50 +00:00
Matt Jacob
91e6ce1b32 Pick up changes from Parag Patel and Kachun Lee, and self:
1. The offsets for some registers change in LIVENGOOD. Gratuitously.

2. Define LIVENGOOD and LIVENGOOD_CU part numbers. Add some more
specific LIVENGOOD defaults.

3. Add definitions for PHY support for the copper LIVENGOOD part
(10/100/1000).
2001-04-09 21:47:11 +00:00
John Baldwin
7d8e84e364 - One can now specify the decimal pid of a process to trace as a parameter.
Since pid's are not in the kernel address space, this doesn't conflict
  with the funcionality of specifying an arbitrary frame pointer to the
  trace command.
- If the first function of a backtrace maps to fork_trampoline, then this
  is a newly fork'd process that has not been executed yet, so just print
  out the first frame and then return for that case.
- Lower the default count from 65535 to 1024.  ddb doesn't trace into
  userland, and if the stack gets hosed and starts looping it's less
  annoying.
2001-04-09 21:43:45 +00:00
Matt Jacob
175fe04ac6 We now depend on miibus_if.h. 2001-04-09 21:34:52 +00:00
Cameron Grant
941431caa8 comment out a boot-time debug message 2001-04-09 21:33:47 +00:00
Matt Jacob
2a4339f78f Add Marvell PHY support for 10/100/1000 LIVENGOOD_CU Intel NIC.
Parag Patel did all of the grunt work, so he gets the credit.
Register definitions and actions inferred from a Linux driver,
so Intel also gets some 'credit'.
2001-04-09 21:29:44 +00:00
Nick Hibma
e796578c40 Rege. 2001-04-09 18:45:32 +00:00
Nick Hibma
053a2f773b Again an ID that has been reused. Update description. 2001-04-09 18:45:02 +00:00
Nick Hibma
6e4a2c5638 Add the Abocom URE 450 ethernet adapter.
Submitted by:   dima@bog.msu.su
2001-04-09 18:44:11 +00:00
Nick Hibma
d6bbfa7387 Regen. 2001-04-09 18:26:18 +00:00
Nick Hibma
5224ce264a Update the description for the EPSON PID 0x010a. It seems to be reused in
the 8700 series.
2001-04-09 18:22:20 +00:00
Nick Hibma
0ec85a1de5 Regen. 2001-04-09 18:19:41 +00:00
Nick Hibma
b0477600ef Add the Omni 56K Plus modem
Submitted by:	kazarov@izmiran.rssi.ru
2001-04-09 18:19:20 +00:00
Cameron Grant
3bf5344663 enable the rate conversion feeder.
the main benefit this gives for now is that via686 audio devices on
motherboards with ac97 codecs that do not support vra will be able to use
sample rates other than 48khz.
2001-04-09 12:04:44 +00:00
Nick Hibma
7032578aac Remove a stale file. 2001-04-09 10:28:33 +00:00
Boris Popov
6f2d8adb12 Add function prototypes and base module for kernel side iconv library.
Add simple "xlat" converter which performs 8to8 table based conversion.
Unicode converter will be added in the near future.

Reviewed by:			silence on arch@
Files placement reviewed by:	bde
Obtained from:			smbfs
2001-04-09 09:39:29 +00:00
Warner Losh
f8ef5bfb0d Two minor fixes:
o Change the number of init tries from 5 to a #define.
	o Allow up to 5s rather than 2s for commands to complete.  This
	  is still much less than 51 minutes, but makes my intel card init
	  with more reliability than before.
2001-04-09 06:33:36 +00:00
Matt Jacob
660fd20479 Correctly initialize free_ccbq so that if we fail to attach (as is
possible for some systems where the device is there, but the BIOS
hasn't allocated memory resources for it), we don't panic.

Submitted by:	 Gerard Roudier
2001-04-09 05:41:41 +00:00