Branch Predictors) mitigation.
DOcument 336996-001 promises that CPUs which implement IBRS but not
STIBP silently ignore setting of the bit instead of trapping.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
We did that in the case of success to prevent the use of stale cached
data, but it makes even less sense to keep the cached data when we fail.
Ideally, we should call vgone() on the vnode in the case of zfs_rezget
failure, but the current lock order prevents us from doing that.
The change also rearranges the order of unlinked check and the size
change check.
While there, add missing SET_ERROR in one of the error paths.
MFC after: 2 weeks
It is coded according to the Intel document 336996-001, reading of the
patches posted on lkml, and some additional consultations with Intel.
For existing processors, you need a microcode update which adds IBRS
CPU features, and to manually enable it by setting the tunable/sysctl
hw.ibrs_disable to 0. Current status can be checked in sysctl
hw.ibrs_active. The mitigation might be inactive if the CPU feature
is not patched in, or if CPU reports that IBRS use is not required, by
IA32_ARCH_CAP_IBRS_ALL bit.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14029
The virtual interrupt method uses V_IRQ, V_INTR_PRIO, and V_INTR_VECTOR
fields of VMCB to inject a virtual interrupt into a guest VM. This
method has many advantages over the direct event injection as it
offloads all decisions of whether and when the interrupt can be
delivered to the guest. But with a purely software emulated vAPIC the
advantage is also a problem. The problem is that the hypervisor does
not have any precise control over when the interrupt is actually
delivered to the guest (or a notification about that). Because of that
the hypervisor cannot update the interrupt vector in IRR and ISR in the
same way as real hardware would. The hypervisor becomes aware that the
interrupt is being serviced only upon the first VMEXIT after the
interrupt is delivered. This creates a window between the actual
interrupt delivery and the update of IRR and ISR. That means that IRR
and ISR might not be correctly set up to the point of the
end-of-interrupt signal.
The described deviation has been observed to cause an interrupt loss in
the following scenario. vCPU0 posts an inter-processor interrupt to
vCPU1. The interrupt is injected as a virtual interrupt by the
hypervisor. The interrupt is delivered to a guest and an interrupt
handler is invoked. The handler performs a requested action and
acknowledges the request by modifying a global variable. So far, there
is no VMEXIT and the hypervisor is unaware of the events. Then, vCPU0
notices the acknowledgment and sends another IPI with the same vector.
The IPI gets collapsed into the previous IPI in the IRR of vCPU1. Only
after that a VMEXIT of vCPU1 occurs. At that time the vector is cleared
in the IRR and is set in the ISR. vCPU1 has vAPIC state as if the
second IPI has never been sent.
The scenario is impossible on the real hardware because IRR and ISR are
updated just before the interrupt handler gets started.
I saw several possibilities of fixing the problem. One is to intercept
the virtual interrupt delivery to update IRR and ISR at the right
moment. The other is to deliver the LAPIC interrupts using the event
injection, same as legacy interrupts. I opted to use the latter
approach for several reasons. It's equivalent to what VMM/Intel does
(in !VMX case). It appears to be what VirtualBox and KVM do. The code
is already there (to support legacy interrupts).
Another possibility was to use a special intermediate state for a vector
after it is injected using a virtual interrupt and before it is known
whether it was accepted or is still pending.
That approach was implemented in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13828
That method is more complex and does not have any clear advantage.
Please see sections 15.20 and 15.21.4 of "AMD64 Architecture
Programmer's Manual Volume 2: System Programming" (publication 24593,
revision 3.29) for comparison between event injection and virtual
interrupt injection.
PR: 215972
Reported by: ajschot@hotmail.com, grehan
Tested by: anish, grehan, Nils Beyer <nbe@renzel.net>
Reviewed by: anish, grehan
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13780
The switch hardware requires this bit to be set in order to kick start the
actual ATU update. This was being masked on some chips by the learning
programming (what to do when a MAC address moves, hash table collision, etc)
which is currently inconsistent between chips.
Tested:
* AR9344 SoC (AR7240 style switch internal)
Move prototypes to proper section now that we don't have modified
versions of strtol and strtoul in libsa. Add prototypes for new
strtoll and strtoull. Use prototypes copied from stdlib.h instead of
the old hand-rolled ones.
(I forgot to move this file form my lua branch in r328613)
since they suffice. Create xlocale_private.h which provides the most
minimal locale implementation we can get away with. Add strtoll and
strtoull from libc.
We may not have enough contiguous memory later, when NTB connection get
established. It is quite likely that NTB windows are symmetric and this
allocation remain, but even if not, we will just reallocate it later.
MFC after: 2 weeks
This avoids a nested page fault when obtaining a stack trace in DDB if
the address from the first frame does not resolve to a known symbol.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
This used to work by accident with ld.bfd even though always_keepalive
was marked as static. LLD honors static more correctly, so export this
variable properly (including moving it into the tcp_* namespace).
Reviewed by: bz, emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14129
If a zfs pool contains a replacing vdev (either created manually by "zpool
replace" or by zfsd(8) via autoreplace by physical path) and then new spares
get added to the pool, zfsd shouldn't use one to replace the drive that is
already being replaced. That's a waste of resources that just slows down
the rebuild.
PR: 225547
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Some ABIs have large gaps in syscall numbers. Allow gaps to be filled
as ranges of UNIMPL, with an entry like:
248-1023 AUE_NULL UNIMPL unimplemented
Reviewed by: jhb, gnn
Sponsored by: Turing Robotic Industries Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14122
checks to recognize own network devices when using mlx5ib. This patch fixes
an issues where mlx5ib fails to recognize mceX network devices for use with
RoCE.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
host to reprobe the bus by switching the USB pull up resistors off and
back on. In other words - when FreeBSD is configured as a USB device,
changing the sysctl will be immediately noticed by the machine it's
connected to.
Reviewed by: hselasky@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Add libxo output support
Merge exp41_intpr and exp_intpr function. The only difference is to print
NFSV4.1 operations in exp41, add a third arguement to control that.
printtitle was set to 1 and don't have a switch, add a -q options to control it.
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: Gandi.net
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14012
NetBSD's libedit has been been cleaned-up considerably so the
non--widecharacter version is no longer an option. Re -sorting the
Makefile should make it easier for some brave soul trying to update it.
No functional change intended.
MFC after: 5 days
The test was marked as an expected failure in r320414 after r319971's import
of a newer jemalloc removed an essential feature (opt.redzone) for
reproducing the behavior it was testing. Since then, no way has been found
or demonstrated to reliably test the behavior, so remove the test.
PR: 220309
net80211/ieee80211_ageq.c was present twice in sys/conf/files so leave the
correctly sorted one. dev/wpi/if_wpi.c was present in sys/conf/files as well
as sys/conf/files.amd64 and sys/conf/files.i386 so prefer the sys/conf/files
entry.
Reviewed by: allanjude, rstone
Restore state 6. Many of the UNH tests end up exercising this
state, where we have a new neighbor cache entry and a new link-layer
entry is being created for it. The link-layer address is currently
unknown so the initial state of the "llentry" should remain initialized
to ND6_LLINFO_NOSTATE so that the ND code will send a solicitation.
Setting this to ND6_LLINFO_STALE implies that the link-level entry
is valid and can be used (but needs to be refreshed via the Neighbor
Unreachability state machine).
https://forums.freebsd.org/threads/64287/
Submitted by: Farrell Woods <Farrell_Woods@Dell.com>
Reviewed by: mjoras, dab, ae
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14059
This may lead to unpredicatable behaviour on different platforms or C
library implementations. Use an intermediate variable.
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD (git a861a526)
Tests were disconnected so that running `make check` in usr.bin/awk did not
have any effect, but CI runs use installed tests. Fully disconnect tests/
from the build for the time being as a short term solutio
Reported by: lwhsu
The test was added prematurely as a goal to reach with the GNU extension
functionality, but the functionality has not yet been introduced. Mark it as
an expected fail until that point.
The root problem is that we were creating a PT_LOAD just for the header.
That was technically valid, but inconvenient: we should not be making
the ELF discontinuous.
The solution is to allow a section with LMAExpr to be added to a PT_LOAD
if that PT_LOAD doesn't already have a LMAExpr.
LLVM PR: 36017
Obtained from: LLVM r323625 by Rafael Espindola
If two sections are in the same PT_LOAD, their relatives offsets,
virtual address and physical addresses are all the same.
[Rafael] initially wanted to have a single global LMAOffset, on the
assumption that every ELF file was in practiced loaded contiguously in
both physical and virtual memory.
Unfortunately that is not the case. The linux kernel has:
LOAD 0x200000 0xffffffff81000000 0x0000000001000000 0xced000 0xced000 R E 0x200000
LOAD 0x1000000 0xffffffff81e00000 0x0000000001e00000 0x15f000 0x15f000 RW 0x200000
LOAD 0x1200000 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000001f5f000 0x01b198 0x01b198 RW 0x200000
LOAD 0x137b000 0xffffffff81f7b000 0x0000000001f7b000 0x116000 0x1ec000 RWE 0x200000
The delta for all but the third PT_LOAD is the same:
0xffffffff80000000. [Rafael] thinks the 3rd one is a hack for implementing
per cpu data, but we can't break that.
Obtained from: LLVM r323456 by Rafael Espindola
This fixes the crash reported at [LLVM] PR36083.
The issue is that we were trying to put all the sections in the same
PT_LOAD and crashing trying to write past the end of the file.
This also adds accounting for used space in LMARegion, without it all
3 PT_LOADs would have the same physical address.
Obtained from: LLVM r323449 by Rafael Espindola