Suggest using -a to egrep to properly see executed commands.
This is a minor improvement to the manpage. A better improvement
would be removal or gigantic warnings.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
MFC after: 1 week
The KPI have been reviewed and cleansed of features that were planned
back 20 years ago and never implemented. The pfil(9) internals have
been made opaque to protocols with only returned types and function
declarations exposed. The KPI is made more strict, but at the same time
more extensible, as kernel uses same command structures that userland
ioctl uses.
In nutshell [KA]PI is about declaring filtering points, declaring
filters and linking and unlinking them together.
New [KA]PI makes it possible to reconfigure pfil(9) configuration:
change order of hooks, rehook filter from one filtering point to a
different one, disconnect a hook on output leaving it on input only,
prepend/append a filter to existing list of filters.
Now it possible for a single packet filter to provide multiple rulesets
that may be linked to different points. Think of per-interface ACLs in
Cisco or Juniper. None of existing packet filters yet support that,
however limited usage is already possible, e.g. default ruleset can
be moved to single interface, as soon as interface would pride their
filtering points.
Another future feature is possiblity to create pfil heads, that provide
not an mbuf pointer but just a memory pointer with length. That would
allow filtering at very early stages of a packet lifecycle, e.g. when
packet has just been received by a NIC and no mbuf was yet allocated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18951
Not all child devices of the NVDIMM root device represent DIMM devices
which are present in the system. The spec says (ACPI 6.2, sec 9.20.2):
For each NVDIMM present or intended to be supported by platform,
platform firmware also exposes an NVDIMM device ... under the
NVDIMM root device.
Present NVDIMM devices are found by walking all of the NFIT table's
SPA ranges, then walking the NVDIMM regions mentioned by those SPA
ranges.
A set of NFIT walking helper functions are introduced to avoid the
need to splat the enumeration logic across several disparate
callbacks.
Submitted by: D Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18439
Move the enumeration of NVDIMM SPA ranges from the spa GEOM class
initializer into the NVDIMM root device. This will be necessary for a
later change where NVDIMM namespaces require NVDIMM device enumeration
to be reliably ordered before SPA enumeration.
Submitted by: D Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18734
anything except several assertions. This type is going to be used for
temporary on stack mbufs, that point into data in receive ring of a NIC,
that shall not be freed. Such mbuf can not be stored or reallocated, its
life time is current context.
Parts of the kobj(9) KPI assume a non-sleepable context for the purpose
of internal memory allocations, but currently have no way to signal an
allocation failure to the caller, so they just panic in this case. This
can occur even when kobj_create() is called with M_WAITOK. Fix some
instances of the problem by plumbing wait flags from kobj_create() through
internal subroutines. Change kobj_class_compile() to assume a sleepable
context when called externally, since all existing callers use it in a
sleepable context.
To fix the problem fully the kobj_init() KPI must be changed.
Reported and tested by: pho
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19023
This patch and commit message are based on r340256 created by Jacob Keller:
The iflib stack does not disable TSO automatically when TXCSUM is
disabled, instead assuming that the driver will correctly handle TSOs
even when CSUM_IP is not set.
This results in iflib calling ixgbe_isc_txd_encap with packets which have
CSUM_IP_TSO, but do not have CSUM_IP or CSUM_IP_TCP set. Because of
this, ixgbe_tx_ctx_setup will not setup the IPv4 checksum offloading.
This results in bad TSO packets being sent if a user disables TXCSUM
without disabling TSO.
Fix this by updating the ixgbe_tx_ctx_setup function to check both
CSUM_IP and CSUM_IP_TSO when deciding whether to enable checksums.
Once this is corrected, another issue for TSO packets is revealed. The
driver sets IFLIB_NEED_ZERO_CSUM in order to enable a work around that
causes the ip->sum field to be zero'd. This is necessary for ix
hardware to correctly perform TSOs.
However, if TXCSUM is disabled, then the work around is not enabled, as
CSUM_IP will not be set when the iflib stack checks to see if it should
clear the sum field.
Fix this by adding IFLIB_TSO_INIT_IP to the iflib flags for the ix and
ixv interface files.
Once both of these changes are made, the ix and ixv drivers should
correctly offload TSO packets when TSO offload is enabled, regardless
of whether TXCSUM is enabled or disabled.
Submitted by: Piotr Pietruszewski <piotr.pietruszewski@intel.com>
Reviewed by: IntelNetworking
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18470
From Piotr:
This patch introduces adapter->task_requests register responsible for
recording requests for mod_task, msf_task, mbx_task, fdir_task and
phy_task calls. Instead of enqueueing these tasks with
GROUPTASK_ENQUEUE, handlers will be called directly from
ixgbe_if_update_admin_status() while holding ctx lock.
SIOCGIFXMEDIA ioctl() call reads adapter->media list. The list is
deleted and rewritten in ixgbe_handle_msf() task without holding ctx
lock. This change is needed to maintain data coherency when sharing
adapter info via ioctl() calls.
Patch co-authored by Krzysztof Galazka <krzysztof.galazka@intel.com>.
PR: 221317
Submitted by: Piotr Pietruszewski <piotr.pietruszewski@intel.com>
Reviewed by: sbruno@, IntelNetworking
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18468
lagg_capabilities() will set the capability once interfaces supporting
the feature are added to the lagg. Setting it on a lagg without any
interfaces is pointless as the if_snd_tag_alloc call will always fail
in that case.
Reviewed by: hselasky, gallatin
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19040
The pfil(9) system is about to be converted to epoch(9) synchronization, so
we need [temporarily] go back with ipfw internal locking.
Discussed with: ae
iflib is already a module, but it is unconditionally compiled into the
kernel. There are drivers which do not need iflib(4), and there are
situations where somebody might not want iflib in kernel because of
using the corresponding driver as module.
Reviewed by: marius
Discussed with: erj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19041
Then bucket_alloc() also selects bucket size based on uz_count. However,
since zone lock is dropped, uz_count may reduce. In this case max may
be greater than ub_entries and that would yield into writing beyond end
of the allocation.
Reported by: pho
Output format is compatible with GNU readelf's handling of unknown note
types (modulo a GNU char signedness bug); future changes will add type-
specific decoding.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
image as not compatible with ASLR.
Requested by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5603
The migration to LLVM's lld linker has been in progress for quite some
time - I opened an LLVM tracking bug (23214) in April 2015 to track
issues using lld as FreeBSD's linker, and requested the first exp-run
using lld as /usr/bin/ld in November 2016.
In 12.0 LLD is the system linker on amd64, arm64, and armv7. i386 was
not switched initially as there were additional ports failures not found
on amd64. Those have largely been addressed now, although there are a
small number of issues that are still being worked on. In some of these
cases having lld as the system linker makes it easier for developers and
third parties to investigate failures.
Thanks to antoine@ for handling the exp-runs and to everyone in the
FreeBSD and LLVM communites who have fixed issues with lld to get us to
this point.
PR: 214864
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
For example, from the referenced PR [1]:
$ mkdir /tmp/lib/ /tmp/libexec
$ touch /tmp/lib/foo.so
$ install -lrs /tmp/lib/foo.so /tmp/libexec/
The common path identification bits terminate src at /tmp/lib/ and the
destination at /tmp/libe. The subsequent backtracking is then incorrect, as
it traverses the destination and backtraces exactly one level while eating
the 'libexec' because it was previously (falsely) identified as common with
'lib'.
The obvious fix would be to make sure we've actually terminated just after
directory separators and rewind a character if we haven't. In the above
example, we would end up rewinding to /tmp/ and subsequently doing the right
thing.
Test case added.
PR: 235330 [1]
MFC after: 1 week
length of the struct in memmove() rather than an unintialized variable.
This fixes the first of two kernel page faults when ipfs is invoked.
PR: 235110
Reported by: David.Boyd49@twc.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
These are currently not reproducible because they're built by the
makewhatis on the freebsd-update build host, not the one in the tree.
Regenerate after update, and later we can avoid including it in
freebsd-update data.
PR: 214545, 217389
Reviewed by: delphij
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10482
SIFTR does not allow any kind of filtering, but captures every packet
processed by the TCP stack.
Often, only a specific session or service is of interest, and doing the
filtering in post-processing of the log adds to the overhead of SIFTR.
This adds a new sysctl net.inet.siftr.port_filter. When set to zero, all
packets get captured as previously. If set to any other value, only
packets where either the source or the destination ports match, are
captured in the log file.
Submitted by: Richard Scheffenegger
Reviewed by: Cheng Cui
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18897
In all cases where ZFS sends BIO_FLUSH, it first waits for all related
writes to complete, so its BIO_FLUSH does not care about strict ordering.
Removal of one makes life much easier at least for NVMe driver, which
hardware has no concept of request ordering, relying completely on software.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Other types, such as BIO_FLUSH or BIO_ZONE, or especially new/unknown ones,
may imply some degree of ordering even if strict ordering is not requested
explicitly.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
copyright.
When all member nations of the Buenos Aires Convention adopted the Berne
Convention, the phrase "All rights reserved" became unnecessary to assert
copyright. Remove it from files under my or Panasas's copyright. The files
related to jedec_dimm(4) also bear avg@'s copyright; he has approved this
change.
Approved by: avg
Sponsored by: Panasas
r212160 tightened this from always using MSG_SIMPLE_Q_TAG to always
MSG_ORDERED_Q_TAG. Since it also marked all BIO_FLUSH requests with
BIO_ORDERED, this commit changes nothing immediately, but it returns
BIO_FLUSH callers ability to actually specify ordering they really
need, alike to other request types.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
When using poll(), select() or kevent() on netmap file descriptors,
netmap executes the equivalent of NIOCTXSYNC and NIOCRXSYNC commands,
before collecting the events that are ready. In other words, the
poll/kevent callback has side effects. This is done to avoid the
overhead of two system call per iteration (e.g., poll() + ioctl(NIOC*XSYNC)).
When the kqueue subsystem invokes the kqueue(9) f_event callback
(netmap_knrw), it holds the lock of the struct knlist object associated
to the netmap port (the lock is provided at initialization, by calling
knlist_init_mtx).
However, netmap_knrw() may need to wake up another netmap port (or even
the same one), which means that it may need to call knote().
Since knote() needs the lock of the struct knlist object associated to
the to-be-wake-up netmap port, it is possible to have a lock order reversal
problem (AB/BA deadlock).
This change prevents the deadlock by executing the knote() call in a
per-selinfo taskqueue, where it is possible to hold a mutex.
Reviewed by: aleksandr.fedorov_itglobal.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18956
bus_teardown_intr(9) before pci_release_msi(9).
- Ensure that iflib(4) and associated drivers pass correct RIDs to
bus_release_resource(9) by obtaining the RIDs via rman_get_rid(9)
on the corresponding resources instead of using the RIDs initially
passed to bus_alloc_resource_any(9) as the latter function may
change those RIDs. Solely em(4) for the ioport resource (but not
others) and bnxt(4) were using the correct RIDs by caching the ones
returned by bus_alloc_resource_any(9).
- Change the logic of iflib_msix_init() around to only map the MSI-X
BAR if MSI-X is actually supported, i. e. pci_msix_count(9) returns
> 0. Otherwise the "Unable to map MSIX table " message triggers for
devices that simply don't support MSI-X and the user may think that
something is wrong while in fact everything works as expected.
- Put some (mostly redundant) debug messages emitted by iflib(4)
and em(4) during attachment under bootverbose. The non-verbose
output of em(4) seen during attachment now is close to the one
prior to the conversion to iflib(4).
- Replace various variants of spelling "MSI-X" (several in messages)
with "MSI-X" as used in the PCI specifications.
- Remove some trailing whitespace from messages emitted by iflib(4)
and change them to consistently start with uppercase.
- Remove some obsolete comments about releasing interrupts from
drivers and correct a few others.
Reviewed by: erj, Jacob Keller, shurd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18980
The main differences with the currently implemented method are:
- Requires a local APIC EOI, since it doesn't bypass the local APIC
as the previous method used to do.
- Can be set to use different IDT vectors on each vCPU. Note that
FreeBSD doesn't make use of this feature since the event channel
IDT vector is reserved system wide.
Note that the old method of setting the event channel upcall is
not removed, and will be used as a fallback if this newly introduced
method is not available.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D