POSIX O_DSYNC means that writes include an implicit fdatasync(2), just
as O_SYNC implies fsync(2).
VOP_WRITE() functions that understand the new IO_DATASYNC flag can act
accordingly, but we'll still pass down IO_SYNC so that file systems that
don't understand it will continue to provide the stronger O_SYNC
behaviour.
Flag also applies to fcntl(2).
Reviewed by: kib, delphij
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25090
Userland aout support has not been required since FreeBSD 2.x.
If someone needs to use FreeBSD 2 shared libraries they will be best
served by using a FreeBSD 2 ldd, perhaps as part of a jail with a full
FreeBSD 2.x install.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27478
This was disconnected from the build in 2001 in commit 66422f5b7a
with a comment that it was long overdue even then.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This change includes:
hpen - Generic / MS Windows compatible HID pen tablet driver.
hgame - Generic game controller and joystick driver.
xb360gp - Xbox360-compatible game controller driver.
Submitted by: Greg V <greg_unrelenting.technology>
Reviewed by: hselasky (as part of D27993)
hidmap is a kernel module that maps HID input usages to evdev events.
Following dependent drivers is included in the commit:
hms - HID mouse driver.
hcons - Consumer page AKA Multimedia keys driver.
hsctrl - System Controls page (Power/Sleep keys) driver.
ps4dshock - Sony DualShock 4 gamepad driver.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27993
which installs /dev/uhid# alias to hidraw character device for
compatibility with some existing uhid(4) users like Firefox.
As side effect it renames traditional uhid(4) driver to hidraw
to make possible using of common unit number allocator.
Requested by: Greg V <greg_unrelenting.technology>
Reviewed by: hselasky (as part of D27992)
This driver provides raw access to HID devices through uhid(4)-compatible
interface and is based on pre-8.x uhid(4) code. Unlike uhid(4) it does
not take devices in to monopoly ownership and allows parallel access
from other drivers.
hidraw supports Linux's hidraw-compatible interface as well.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27992
This allows to mark HID-device interrupt handlers as MP-SAFE.
Atomics-based lockless key event queue with swi_giant taskqueue is used
to pass key-press events into Giant-protected system console.
Reviewed by: hselasky (as part of D27991)
This change implements hid_if.m methods for HID-over-USB protocol [1].
Also, this change adds USBHID_ENABLED kernel option which changes
device_probe() priority and adds/removes PnP records to prefer usbhid
over ums, ukbd, wmt and other USB HID device drivers and vice-versa.
The module is based on uhid(4) driver. It is disabled by default for
now due to conflicts with existing USB HID drivers.
[1] https://www.usb.org/sites/default/files/hid1_11.pdf
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27893
hidquirk(4) is derived from usb_quirk(4) and inherits all its HID-related
functionality. It does not support ioctl(2) interface yet.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27890
This driver provides support for multiple HID driver attachments
to single HID transport backend. This ability existed in Net/OpenBSD
(uhidev and ihidev drivers) but has never been ported to FreeBSD.
Unlike Net/OpenBSD we do not use report number alone to distinct report
source but we follow MS way and use a top level collection (TLC) usage
index that report belongs to as a location key.
The driver performs child device autodiscovery based on HID report
descriptor data, proxying of HID requests from child devices to parent
transport backends and broadcasting of interrupts in backward direction.
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27888
Create an abstract HID interface that provides hardware independent
access to HID capabilities and functions through the device tree.
hid_if.m resembles existing USBHID KPI and consist of next methods:
HID method USBHID variant
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
hid_intr_setup usbd_transfer_setup (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_unsetup usbd_transfer_unsetup (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_start usbd_transfer_start (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_stop usbd_transfer_drain (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_poll usbd_transfer_poll (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_get_rdesc usbd_req_get_report_descriptor
hid_read No direct analog. Not intended for common use.
hid_write uhid(4) write()
hid_get_report usbd_req_get_report
hid_set_report usbd_req_set_report
hid_set_idle usbd_req_set_idle
hid_set_protocol usbd_req_set_protocol
This change is part of D27888
Also hide shim code added in a previous commit under COMPAT_USBHID12.
Note: it is enough to add -DCOMPAT_USBHID12 to CFLAGS to compile old
code with new HID subsystem, but it is not enough to link it at runtime.
HID dependency has to be added explicitly with MODULE_DEPEND macro.
Reviewed by: manu, hselasky (as part of D27887)
This does an import of quirk stubs, debugging macros from USB code and
numerous usage constants used by dependent drivers.
Besides, this change renames some functions to get a better matching
with userland library and NetBSD/OpenBSD HID code. Namely:
- Old hid_report_size() renamed to hid_report_size_max()
- New hid_report_size() calculates size of given report rather than
maximum size of all reports.
- hid_get_data_unsigned() renamed to hid_get_udata()
- hid_put_data_unsigned() renamed to hid_put_udata()
Compat shim functions are provided in usbhid.h to make possible compile
of legacy code unmodified after this change.
Reviewed by: manu, hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27887
It will be used by the upcoming HID-over-i2C implementation. Should be
no-op, except hid.ko module dependency is to be added to affected drivers.
Reviewed by: hselasky, manu
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27867
It is possible that the client list lock is taken by other process for too
long due to e.g. IO timeouts. Allow user to terminate open() in this case.
Reviewed by: markj (as part of D27865)
At the beginning of evdev there was a LOR between hardware driver's and
evdev client list locks as they were taken in different order at
driver's interrupt and evdev open()/close() handlers.
The LOR was fixed with introduction of evdev_register_mtx() function
which allowed to use a hardware driver's lock as evdev client list lock.
While this works good with PS/2 and USB, this does not work with I2C.
Unlike PS/2 and USB, I2C open()/close() handlers do unbound sleeps
while waiting for I2C bus to release and while performing IO.
This change uses epoch(9) for traversing evdev client list in interrupt
handler to avoid the LOR thus making possible to convert evdev client
list lock to sleepable sx.
While here add brief locking protocol description.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27865
hid_locate() currently ignores all HID items which tagged as constant,
i.e. bit 0 of main item data is set to 1. See p.6.2.2.4 of
hid1_11.pdf [1]. Such an items are unconditionally treated as
byte-alignment padding. While that may be right decision for input and
output reports that is wrong for features reports. Feature reports can
contain constant capabilities e.g. 'Contact Count Maximum'.
See: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=232040
Remove check for constant from hid_locate() to make possible parsing of
such a reports.
[1] https://www.usb.org/sites/default/files/documents/hid1_11.pdf
Reviewed by: hselasky
Obtained from: sysutils/iichid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27747
making fsck_ffs(8) run faster, there should be no functional change.
The original fsck_ffs(8) had its own disk I/O management system.
When gjournal(8) was added to FreeBSD 7, code was added to fsck_ffs(8)
to do the necessary gjournal rollback. Rather than use the existing
fsck_ffs(8) disk I/O system, it wrote its own from scratch. Similarly
when journalled soft updates were added in FreeBSD 9, code was added
to fsck_ffs(8) to do the necessary journal rollback. And once again,
rather than using either of the existing fsck_ffs(8) disk I/O
systems, it wrote its own from scratch. Lastly the fsdb(8) utility
uses the fsck_ffs(8) disk I/O management system. In preparation for
making the changes necessary to enable snapshots to be taken when
using journalled soft updates, it was necessary to have a single
disk I/O system used by all the various subsystems in fsck_ffs(8).
This commit merges the functionality required by all the different
subsystems into a single disk I/O system that supports all of their
needs. In so doing it picks up optimizations from each of them
with the results that each of the subsystems does fewer reads and
writes than it did with its own customized I/O system. It also
greatly simplifies making changes to fsck_ffs(8) since everything
goes through a single place. For example the ginode() function
fetches an inode from the disk. When inode check hashes were added,
they previously had to be checked in the code implementing inode
fetch in each of the three different disk I/O systems. Now they
need only be checked in ginode().
Tested by: Peter Holm
Sponsored by: Netflix
The current version of this test will effectively pass as long as one of the
specified paths is in the output, and it could even be a subset of one of
the paths.
Strengthen up the test a little bit:
* Specify beginning/end anchors for each path
* Add egrep -v checks to make sure we don't have any *additional* paths
* Ratchet down paths2 to exactly the two paths we expect to appear
Reviewed by: ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27984
This test attempts to use \t (tab intended) in a grep expression. With the
former /usr/bin/grep (i.e. gnugrep), this was interpreted as a literal 't'.
The expression would work anyways because the tr(1) usage would ultimately
replace all of the spaces with a single newline, and they would match the
paths whether they were correctly fromatted or not.
Current /usr/bin/grep (i.e. bsdgrep) is less-tolerant of ordinary-escapes, a
property of the underlying regex(3) engine, to make it easier to identify
when stuff like this happens. In-fact, this expression broke after the
switch happened.
This revision does the bare basics to fix the usage by using a printf to get
a literal tab character to insert into the expression. It also swaps out the
manual insertion of the line prefix into the grep expression by pulling
that part out of $sep and reusing it for the leading path.
The secondary issue was the tr(1) usage, since tr would only replace the
first character of string1 with the first character of string2. This has
instead been replaced by a sed expression, which similary understands \n to
be a newline on all supported versions of FreeBSD. Each path now gets
prefixed with the appropriate context that should be there (i.e. numeric
sequence followed by a tab).
PR: 252446
Reviewed by: emaste, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27983
This was overlooked in the pfi_kkif/pfi_kif splitup and as a result
userspace could no longer tell which interfaces had the skip flag
applied.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Doing a 'dd' over iscsi will reliably cause stalls. Tx
cleaning _should_ reliably happen as data is sent.
However, currently if the transmit queue fills it will
wait until the iflib timer (hz/2) runs.
This change causes the the tx taskq thread to be run
if there are completed descriptors.
While here:
- make timer interrupt delay a sysctl
- simplify txd_db_check handling
- comment on INTR types
Background on the change:
Initially doorbell updates were minimized by only writing to the register
on every fourth packet. If txq_drain would return without writing to the
doorbell it scheduled a callout on the next tick to do the doorbell write
to ensure that the write otherwise happened "soon". At that time a sysctl
was added for users to avoid the potential added latency by simply writing
to the doorbell register on every packet. This worked perfectly well for
e1000 and ixgbe ... and appeared to work well on ixl. However, as it
turned out there was a race to this approach that would lockup the ixl MAC.
It was possible for a lower producer index to be written after a higher one.
On e1000 and ixgbe this was harmless - on ixl it was fatal. My initial
response was to add a lock around doorbell writes - fixing the problem but
adding an unacceptable amount of lock contention.
The next iteration was to use transmit interrupts to drive delayed doorbell
writes. If there were no packets in the queue all doorbell writes would be
immediate as the queue started to fill up we could delay doorbell writes
further and further. At the start of drain if we've cleaned any packets we
know we've moved the state machine along and we write the doorbell (an
obvious missing optimization was to skip that doorbell write if db_pending
is zero). This change required that tx interrupts be scheduled periodically
as opposed to just when the hardware txq was full. However, that just leads
to our next problem.
Initially dedicated msix vectors were used for both tx and rx. However, it
was often possible to use up all available vectors before we set up all the
queues we wanted. By having rx and tx share a vector for a given queue we
could halve the number of vectors used by a given configuration. The problem
here is that with this change only e1000 passed the necessary value to have
the fast interrupt drive tx when appropriate.
Reported by: mav@
Tested by: mav@
Reviewed by: gallatin@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27683
vn_rdwr() must lock the entire file range for IO_APPEND
just like vn_io_fault() does for O_APPEND.
Reviewed by: kib, imp, mckusick
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28008