to match reality: clang does _not_ disable SSE automatically when
-mno-mmx is used, you have to specify -mno-sse explicitly.
Note this was the case even before r232894, which only makes a change in
the 'positive' flag case; e.g. when you specify -msse, MMX gets enabled
too.
MFC after: 1 week
hardclock() tick should be run on every active CPU, or on only one.
On my tests, avoiding extra interrupts because of this on 8-CPU Core i7
system with HZ=10000 saves about 2% of performance. At this moment option
implemented only for global timers, as reprogramming per-CPU timers is
too expensive now to be compensated by this benefit, especially since we
still have to regularly run hardclock() on at least one active CPU to
update system uptime. For global timer it is quite trivial: timer runs
always, but we just skip IPIs to other CPUs when possible.
Option is enabled by default now, keeping previous behavior, as periodic
hardclock() calls are still used at least to implement setitimer(2) with
ITIMER_VIRTUAL and ITIMER_PROF arguments. But since default schedulers don't
depend on it since r232917, we are much more free to experiment with it.
MFC after: 1 month
with HZ rate through the sched_tick() calls from hardclock().
Potentially it can be used to improve precision, but now it is just minus
one more reason to call hardclock() for every HZ tick on every active CPU.
SCHED_4BSD never used sched_tick(), but keep it in place for now, as at
least SCHED_FBFS existing in patches out of the tree depends on it.
MFC after: 1 month
function.
From the submitter:
This patch fixes an issue I encountered using an NFS root with an
ar71xx-based MikroTik RouterBoard 450G on -current where the kernel fails
to contact a DHCP/BOOTP server via if_arge when it otherwise should be able
to. This may be the same issue that Monthadar Al Jaberi reported against
an RSPRO on 6 March, as the signature is the same:
%%%
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
.
.
.
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
arge0: initialization failed: no memory for rx buffers
DHCP/BOOTP timeout for server 255.255.255.255
arge0: initialization failed: no memory for rx buffers
%%%
The primary issue that I found is that the DHCP/BOOTP message that
bootpc_call() is sending never makes it onto the wire, which I believe is
due to the following:
- Last December, a change was made to the ifioctl that bootpc_call() uses
to adjust the netmask around the sosend().
- The new ioctl (SIOCAIFADDR) performs an if_init when invoked, whereas the
old one (SIOCSIFNETMASK) did not.
- if_arge maintains its own sense of link state in sc->arge_link_status.
- On a single-phy interface, sc->arge_link_status is initialized to 0 in
arge_init_locked().
- sc->arge_link_status remains 0 until a phy state change notification
causes arge_link_task to run, notice the link is up, and set it to 1.
- The inits caused by the ifioctls in bootpc_call are reinitializing the
interface, but not the phy, so sc->arge_link_status goes to 0 and remains
there.
- arge_start_locked() always sees sc->arge_link_status == 0 and returns
without queuing anything.
The attached patch changes arge_init_locked() such that in the single-phy
case, instead of initializing sc->arge_link_status to 0, it runs
arge_link_task() to set it according to the current phy state. This change
has allowed my setup to mount an NFS root successfully.
Submitted by: Patrick Kelsey <kelsey@ieee.org>
Reviewed by: juli
I had some interesting hangs until I realised I should try flushing the
DDR FIFO register and lo and behold, hangs stopped occuring.
I've put in a few DDR flushes here and there in case people decide to
reuse some of these functions. It's very very likely they're almost
all superflous.
To test:
* Connect to a network with a _lot_ of broadcast traffic
* Do this:
# while true; do ifconfig arge0 down; ifconfig arge0 up; done
This fixes the mbuf exhaustion that has been reported when the interface
state flaps up/down.
required for the ABI the kernel is being built for.
XXX This is implemented in a kind-of nasty way that involves including source
files, but it's still an improvement.
o) Retire ISA_* options since they're unused and were always wrong.
* enable ALQ and net80211/ath ALQ logging by default, to make it possible
to get debug register traces.
* Update some comments
* Enable HWPMC for testing.
remaining drivers that haven't been converted have various problems or
complexities that will be dealt with later. This list includes:
hptrr, hptmv, hpt27xx - device aggregation across multiple parents
drm - want to talk to the maintainer first
tsec, sec - Openfirmware devices, not sure if changes are warranted
fatm - Done except for unused testing code
usb - want to talk to the maintainer first
ce, cp, ctau, cx - Significant driver changes needed to convey parent info
There are also devices tucked into architecture subtrees that I'll leave
for the respective maintainers to deal with.
add in the netgraph interface to the list of
acceptable interfaces. A todo at the next
IETF code blitz, though is we need to review
why we screen interfaces, there was a reason ;-).
PR: 165210
MFC after: 1 week
- Add support for IPv6 and interface extended tables
- Make number of tables to be loader tunable in range 0..65534.
- Use IP_FW3 opcode for all new extended table cmds
No ABI changes are introduced. Old userland will see valid tables for
IPv4 tables and no entries otherwise. Flush works for any table.
IP_FW3 socket option is used to encapsulate all new opcodes:
/* IP_FW3 header/opcodes */
typedef struct _ip_fw3_opheader {
uint16_t opcode; /* Operation opcode */
uint16_t reserved[3]; /* Align to 64-bit boundary */
} ip_fw3_opheader;
New opcodes added:
IP_FW_TABLE_XADD, IP_FW_TABLE_XDEL, IP_FW_TABLE_XGETSIZE, IP_FW_TABLE_XLIST
ipfw(8) table argument parsing behavior is changed:
'ipfw table 999 add host' now assumes 'host' to be interface name instead of
hostname.
New tunable:
net.inet.ip.fw.tables_max controls number of table supported by ipfw in given
VNET instance. 128 is still the default value.
New syntax:
ipfw add skipto tablearg ip from any to any via table(42) in
ipfw add skipto tablearg ip from any to any via table(4242) out
This is a bit hackish, special interface name '\1' is used to signal interface
table number is passed in p.glob field.
Sponsored by Yandex LLC
Reviewed by: ae
Approved by: ae (mentor)
MFC after: 4 weeks
implementations or no implementation on all platforms.
Some of these functions might be good ideas, but their semantics were unclear
given the lack of implementation, and an unlucky porter could be fooled into
trying to implement them or, worse, being baffled when something like
platform_trap_enter() failed to be called.
machine word. For example, it turns CPU_SET() into expected shift and OR,
removing two extra shifts and additional index on memory access.
Generated code checked for kernel (optimized) and user-level (unoptimized)
cases with GCC and CLANG.
Reviewed by: attilio
MFC after: 2 weeks
updated.
o Number of times NIC ran out of RX buffer descriptors
o Number of inbound packet errors
o Number of inbound packets that were chosen to be discarded
Previously only the discarded packet counter was used to update
if_ierrors. This change fixes wrong if_ierrors counter on
BCM570[0-4] controllers. For BCM5705 and later controllers bge(4)
already correctly counted it.
Reported by: Eugene Grosbein <egrosbein <> rdtc dot ru>
device in device attach. This would help to narrow down issue to a
specific controller and operating mode of the controller.
While I'm here rename BGE_MISCCFG_BOARD_ID with
BGE_MISCCFG_BOARD_ID_MASK.
AMD-8131 PCI-X bridge. The bridge seems to reorder write access to
mailbox registers such that it caused watchdog timeouts by
out-of-order TX completions.
Tested by: Michael L. Squires <mikes <> siralan dot org >
Reviewed by: jhb
- Pass interrupt trapframe for handlers dow the chain
- Add PMC interrupt handler
PMC interrupt is a special case, so we want handle it as soon as possible
with minimum overhead. So we handle it apb filter routine.
bootable image.
The kernel has to fit inside an 896KiB area in a 4MB SPI flash.
So a bunch of stuff can't be included (and more is to come), including
(unfortunately) IPv6.
TODO:
* GPIO modules need to be created
* Shrink the image a bit more by removing some of the CAM layer debugging
strings.
While there, make some style adjustments, like missed () around
return values.
Submitted by: bde
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
The bawrite() schedules the write to happen immediately, and its use
frees the current thread to do more cleanups.
Submitted by: bde
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
Synchronous inode block update is not needed for MNT_LAZY callers (syncer),
and since waitfor values are not zero, code did unneccessary synchronous
update.
Submitted by: bde
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 2 weeks
PCP and CFI fields.
* Ethernet_type for VLAN encapsulation is tunable, default is 0x8100;
* PCP (Priority code point) and CFI (canonical format indicator) is
tunable per VID;
* Tunable encapsulation to support 802.1q
* Encapsulation/Decapsulation code improvements
New messages have been added for this netgraph node to support the
new features.
However, the legacy "vlan" id is still supported and compiled in by
default. It can be disabled in a future release.
TODO:
* Documentation
* Examples
PR: kern/161908
Submitted by: Ivan <rozhuk.im@gmail.com>
- add the macro NETMAP_RING_FIRST_RESERVED() which returns
the index of the first non-released buffer in the ring
(this is useful for code that retains buffers for some time
instead of processing them immediately)
quantum bytewise to the address of a 64-bit variable results in writing
to the "wrong" 32-bit half so adjust the address accordingly. This fix
is implemented in a hackish way for two reasons:
o in order to be able to get it into 8.3 with zero impact on the little-
endian architectures where this bug has no effect and
o to avoid blowing the x86 boot2 out of the water again when compiling
it with clang, which all sane versions of this fix tested do.
This change fixes booting from UFS1 file systems on big-endian machines.
MFC after: 3 days
make use of it where possible.
This primarily brings in support for newer hardware, and FreeBSD is not yet
able to support the abundance of IRQs on new hardware and many features in the
Ethernet driver.
Because of the changes to IRQs in the Simple Executive, we have to maintain our
own list of Octeon IRQs now, which probably can be pared-down and be specific
to the CIU interrupt unit soon, and when other interrupt mechanisms are added
they can maintain their own definitions.
Remove unmasking of interrupts from within the UART device now that the
function used is no longer present in the Simple Executive. The unmasking
seems to have been gratuitous as this is more properly handled by the buses
above the UART device, and seems to work on that basis.
of the Cavium Simple Executive, which violates large function growth rules
in such a way that simply increasing the large function growth parameter is
insufficient.
o) The MAC set must occur before the multicast list is set up as the former
will enable the CAM unconditionally, while promiscuous mode disables it,
so if promiscuous mode is to be set this must occur after the MAC is
programmed.
o) The multicast list must be set up unconditionally as even if flags have
not changed, if the interface has gone through a reinitialization, the
state of the CAM as changed by the MAC initialization could be incorrect.
o) Call octm_init when flags change, even if the interface is already running.
kernel version introduced the sysctl (based upon a linux man-page)
- add comments to sscalls.master regarding some names of sysctls which are
different than the linux-names (based upon the linux unistd.h)
- add some dummy sysctls
- name an unimplemented sysctl
MFC after: 1 month
Lower (ISA) IRQs are working, but allowed mask is not set correctly.
Block both by default to allow HP BL465c G6 blade system to boot.
Reported by: Attila Nagy <bra@fsn.hu>
MFC after: 1 week
Although access to the flags to check/set OACTIVE is racy due to how
the default if_start() function works, this should remove any races
with read/modify/write between threads.
don't setup the avp mcast queue.
This is a bit annoying though - it turns out the mcast queue isn't
initialised for STA mode but it's then touched to see whether anything
is in it. That should be fixed in a subsequent commit.
Noticed by: gperez@entel.upc.edu
PR: kern/165895
Instead of using 25MHz equality threshold, look for the nearest value when
handling dev.cpu.0.freq sysctl and for exact match when it is expected.
ACPI may report extra level with frequency 1MHz above the nominal to
control Intel Turbo Boost operation. It is not a bug, but feature:
dev.cpu.0.freq_levels: 2934/106000 2933/95000 2800/82000 ...
In this case value 2933 means 2.93GHz, but 2934 means 3.2-3.6GHz.
I've found that my Core i7-870 based system has Intel Turbo Boost disabled
by default and without this change it was absolutely invisible and hard
to control.
MFC after: 2 weeks
After 8.0-RELEASE, iwi(4) doesn't send any data frames in infrastructure
mode.
Bacause of the condition `while (frm < efrm)', IEEE80211_VERIFY_LENGTH()
was checking item length beyond the ieee80211_frame region, and returned
from iwi_checkforqos() without setting flags, capinfo and associd.
In infrastructure mode associd is required, so this problem causes
discarding mbuf in ieee80211_start().
PR: kern/165819
Tested/Reviewed/Supported by: bschmidt and adrian
MFC after: 1 week
- Pass number of events to the statclock() and profclock() functions
same as to hardclock() before to not call them many times in a loop.
- Rename them into statclock_cnt() and profclock_cnt().
- Turn statclock() and profclock() into compatibility wrappers,
still needed for arm.
- Rename hardclock_anycpu() into hardclock_cnt() for unification.
MFC after: 1 week
XXX It would be good to use a better way to size intrcnt.
o) Fix literal 4s that are supposed to be sizeof (u_long).
XXX Why the * 2 here? Is this an artifact of a different system that this
code came from? We seem to allocate twice as much space for intrcnt
as we admit to in sintrcnt.
In a very noisy 2.4GHz environment (with HT/40 enabled, making it worse)
I saw the following occur:
* the air was considered "busy" a lot of the time;
* the cabq time is quite short due to staggered beacons being enabled;
* it just wasn't able to keep up TX'ing CABQ frames;
* .. and the cabq would swallow up all the TX ath_buf's.
This patch introduces a twiddle which allows the maximum cabq depth to be
set, forcing further frames to be dropped.
It defaults to the TX buffer count at the moment, so the default behaviour
isn't changed.
I've also started fleshing out a similar setup for the data path, so
it doesn't swallow up all the available TX buffers and preventing management
frames (such as ADDBA) out.
PR: kern/165895
frames with stations in power saving mode.
I'm not (yet) sure how to handle TX'ing aggregates frames to stations
that are in power saving mode, or whether that's even a feasible thing
to do. So in order to (mostly) not forget, leave a couple of comments
in the code.
The code presently assumes that the aggregation TID state for an ath_node
is locked not by the ath_node lock or a node+TID lock, but behind the
hardware queue said TID maps to. This assumption is going to be
incorrect for stations in power saving mode as we'll be TX'ing frames
on the multicast queue.
In any case, I'm afraid its a "later problem". :/
didn't already have them. This is because the ternary expression will
return int, due to the Usual Arithmetic Conversions. Such casts are not
needed for the 32 and 64 bit variants.
While here, add additional parentheses around the x86 variant, to
protect against unintended consequences.
MFC after: 2 weeks
amd64, if 'device isa' is present quiesce the 8259A's during boot and
resume from suspend.
While here, be more selective on amd64 about which kernel configurations
need elcr.c.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Return failure for a suspend attempt if we have no wake address.
- Use intr_disable()/intr_restore() instead of ACPI_DISABLE_IRQS().
- Invoke intr_suspend() earlier and call intr_resume() if suspend
fails.
- Use pause in the loop waiting for CPU to suspend.
- Restore PAT MSR, switchtime, switchticks, and MTRRs on resume.
Reviewed by: jkim (earlier version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Remove extern "C". There are no functions with external linkage here. [1]
- Rename bswapNN_const(x) to bswapNN_gen(x) to indicate that these macros
are generic implementations that can take non-constant arguments. [1]
- Split up __GNUCLIKE_ASM && __GNUCLIKE_BUILTIN_CONSTANT_P and deal with
each separately.
- Replace _LP64 with __amd64__ because asm instructions are machine
dependent, not ABI dependent.
Submitted by: bde [1]
Reviewed by: bde
This function must be called with both the source and destination TXQs
locked or things will get hairy.
I added this as part of some debugging in a PR but it turned out to not
be the cause. I still think it's -correct- so, here it is.
the last buffer in the list.
The current behaviour (due to me, so pointy hat is firmly on my head here)
was incorrect - it was setting the link pointer to the last descriptor
of the _first_ buffer in the TXQ. Instead, it should have set it to the
last descriptor in the _last_ buffer in the TXQ.
This showed up as occasional TX stalls with frames in the TXQ but no
TX progress being made. Further inspection showed the TXQ looked like
it contained multiple "lists" of frames - there'd be a list of correct
frames, then a NULL link pointer, but there'd be a next buffer in the
list.
Since this code is only called upon an interface reset, it's likely
this only began showing up when I started doing stress testing
in environments which annoy the radios enough to cause lockups.
I've not yet any TX stalls with this patch applied.
PR: kern/165866
Expand pci_save_state and pci_restore_state to save more of
the config state for PCI Express and PCI-X devices. Various
writable control registers are present in PCI Express that
can potentially be lost over suspend/resume cycle.
This change is modeled after similar functionality in Linux.
Reviewed by: wlosh,jhb
MFC after: 1 month
When using big inodes there is sufficient space in ext3 to
keep extra resolution and birthtime (creation) timestamps.
The appropriate fields in the on-disk inode have been approved
for a long time but support for this in ext3 has not been
widely distributed.
In preparation for ext4 most linux distributions have enabled
by default such bigger inodes and some people use nanosecond
timestamps in ext3. We now support those when the inode is big
enough and while we do recognize the EXT4F_ROCOMPAT_EXTRA_ISIZE,
we maintain the extra timestamps even when they are not used.
An additional note by Bruce Evans:
We blindly accept unrepresentable tv_nsec in VOP_SETATTR(), but
all file systems have always done that. When POSIX gets around
to specifying the behaviour, it will probably require certain
rounding to the fs's resolution and not rejecting the request.
This unfortunately means that syscalls that set times can't
really tell if they succeeded without reading back the times
using stat() or similar and checking that they were set close
enough.
Reviewed by: bde
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
the cached name used for KTR_SCHED traces when a thread's name changes.
This way KTR_SCHED traces (and thus schedgraph) will notice when a thread's
name changes, most commonly via execve().
MFC after: 2 weeks
revision 1.146
date: 2010/05/12 08:11:11; author: claudio; state: Exp; lines: +2 -3
bzero() the full compressed update struct before setting the values.
This is needed because pf_state_peer_hton() skips some fields in certain
situations which could result in garbage beeing sent to the other peer.
This seems to fix the pfsync storms seen by stephan@ and so dlg owes me
a whiskey.
I didn't see any storms, but this definitely fixes a useless memory
allocation on the receiving side, due to non zero scrub_flags field
in a pfsync_state_peer structure.
It's not clear to a user what they should do after seeing the "geometry
does not match label" kernel message, and it does not appear to present
a problem in practice. Thus, just remove the messages.
Approved by: marcel
all for platforms that only have 32-bit bus addresses. Second, remove
the 'tag_valid' flag from the softc. Instead, if we don't create a
tag in pci_attach_common(), just cache the value of our parent's tag
so that we always have a valid tag to return.
fifo_iseof() condition, allowing the v_fifoinfo to be reset and freed
by fifo_cleanup().
Precalculate EOF at the places were fo_wgen is changed, and cache the
state in a new pipe state flag PIPE_SAMEWGEN.
Reported and tested by: bf
Submitted by: gianni
MFC after: 1 week (a backport)
* Added verify_mesh_*_len functions that verify the length
according to the amendment spec and return number of destination addresses
for allocation of appropriate struct size in memory;
* Modified hwmp_recv_action_meshpath to allocate HWMP ie instead of
storing them on the stack and store all available field according the flags;
* Modify hwmp_add_mesh* to work with all cases of HWMP according to amendment.
* Modify hwmp_send_* to calculate correct len of bytes for the HWMP ie.
* Added new M_80211_MESH_* malloc defines.
* Added macros with magic numbers for HWMP ie sizes according to amendment.
* Added the external address to all HWMP ie structs.
Submitted by: monthadar@gmail.com
platforms.
This will make every attempt to mount a non-mpsafe filesystem to the
kernel forbidden, unless it is expressely compiled with
VFS_ALLOW_NONMPSAFE option.
This patch is part of the effort of killing non-MPSAFE filesystems
from the tree.
No MFC is expected for this patch.
o) Get rid of some unused macros related to features we don't intend to
provide.
o) Get rid of macro definitions for MIPS-I CPUs. We are not likely to
support anything that predartes MIPS-III.
o) Respell MIPS3_* macros as MIPS_*, which is how most of them were being
used already.
o) Eliminate a duplicate and mostly-unused set of exception vector macros.
There's still considerable duplication and lots more obsolete in our headers,
but this reduces one of the larger files to a size where one could reckon
about the correctness of its contents with a mere few hours of contemplation.
There is, of course, a question of whether we need definitions for fields,
registers and configurations that we are unlikely to ever use or implement,
even if they're not obsolete since 1991. FreeBSD is not a processor
reference manual, and things that aren't used may be wrong, or may be
duplicated because nobody could possibly actually know whether they're
already defined.
Winbond Super I/O chips.
With minor efforts it should be possible the extend the driver to support
further chips/revisions available from Winbond. In the simplest case
only new IDs need to be added, while different chipsets might require
their own function to enter extended function mode, etc.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated ULC (in 2011)
Reviewed by: emaste, brueffer
MFC after: 2 weeks
the native sigreturn doesn't use set_mcontext like the COMPAT_FREEBSD32 version
does, this wouldn't actually result in overwriting the TLS base. Probably it
makes sense to restructure the native sigreturn to use set_mcontext for
consistency, and to allow sigreturn to change the TLS base.
TLS:
o) The mc_tls field used to store the TLS base when doing context gets and
restores was left a pointer and not converted to a 32-bit integer. This
had the bug of not correctly capturing the TLS value desired by the user,
and the extra nastiness of making the structure the wrong size.
o) The mc_tls field was not being saved by sendsig. As a result, the TLS base
would always be set to NULL when restoring from a signal handler.
Thanks to gonzo for helping track down a bunch of other TLS bugs that came out
of tracking these down.
and offset it only if requested by RDHWR handler. Otherwise things
get overly complicated - we need to track whether address passsed in
request for setting td_md.md_tls is already offseted or not.
a loader or kernel. Specifically, kname cannot be pointed at cmd[] since
it's value is change to be an empty string after the initial call to
parse, and cmd[]'s value can be changed (thus losing a prior setting for
kname) due to user input at the boot prompt. While here, ensure that that
initial boot config file text is nul-terminated, that ops is initialized
to zero, and that kname is always initialized to a valid string.
Tested by: Domagoj Smolcic rank1seeker of gmail
MFC after: 1 week
amd64/i386/pc98 ptrace.h with stubs.
For amd64 PT_GETXSTATE and PT_SETXSTATE have been redefined to match the
i386 values. The old values are still supported but should no longer be
used.
Reviewed by: kib
This lets specify whereabouts of the parent PHY for a given MAC node
(and get rid of ugly kludges in mge(4) and tsec(4)).
Obtained from: Semihalf
MFC after: 1 week
before vnet_mroute_init(), since vnet_mroute_init() depends on mfchashsize
tunable to be set, and that is done in in ip_mroute_modevent().
Apparently I broke that ordering with r208744 almost 2 years ago...
PR: kern/162201
Submitted by: Stevan Markovic (mcafee.com)
MFC after: 3 days
After getting the current irql, if the kthread gets preempted and
subsequently runs on a different CPU, the saved irql could be wrong.
Also, correct the panic string.
PR: kern/165630
Submitted by: Vladislav Movchan <vladislav.movchan at gmail.com>
does not fit into registers, declare that we do not support this case
using CTASSERT(), and remove endianess-unsafe code to split return value
into td_retval.
While there, change the style of the sysctl debug.iosize_max_clamp
definition.
Requested by: bde
MFC after: 3 weeks
Without this patch we were not able to see the assembly function.
Only the function descriptor was visible.
- Distinguish between user-land and kernel when creating the ENTRY() point of
assembly source.
- Make the ENTRY() macro more readable, replace the .align directive with the
gas platform independant .p2align directive.
- Create an END()macro for later use to provide traceback tables on powerpc64.
These fans are not located under the same node as the the RPM controlled ones,
So I had to adapt the current source to parse and fill the properties correctly.
To control the fans we can set the PWM ratio via sysctl between 20 and 100%.
Tested by: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 3 weeks
* Change in mesh_input to validate that QoS is set and Mesh Control field
is present, also both bytes of the QoS are read;
* Moved defragmentation in mesh_input before we try to forward packet as
inferred from amendment spec, because Mesh Control field only present in first
fragment;
* Changed in ieee80211_encap to set QoS subtype and Mesh Control field present,
only first fragment have Mesh Control field present bit equal to 1;
Submitted by: monthadar@gmail.com
* Moved old categories as specified by D4.0 to be action fields of MESH category
as specified in amendment spec;
* Modified functions to use MESH category and its action fields:
+ ieee80211_send_action_register
+ ieee80211_send_action
+ ieee80211_recv_action_register
+ieee80211_recv_action;
* Modified ieee80211_hwmp_init and hwmp_send_action so they uses correct
action fields as specified in amendment spec;
* Modified ieee80211_parse_action so that it verifies MESH frames.
* Change Mesh Link Metric to use one information element as amendment spec.
Draft 4.0 defined two different information elements for request and response.
Submitted by: monthadar@gmail.com
version was missing an else and would always use the n64 TP_OFFSET. Eliminate
some duplication of logic here.
It may be worth getting rid of some of the ifdefs and introducing gratuitous
SV_ILP32 runtime checks on n64 kernels without COMPAT_FREEBSD32 and on o32
kernels, similarly to how PowerPC works.
that it is better to error out when people attempt to build using the
wrong bsd.*.mk files, than to silently ignore the problem.
This means, that after this commit, if you want to build kernel modules
by hand (or via a port) from a head source tree, you *must* make sure
the files in /usr/share/mk are in sync with that tree. If that isn't
possible, for example when you are running on an older FreeBSD branch,
you can:
- Run "make buildenv" from your head source tree, to have the correct
environment setup. (It's advisable to have run "make buildworld", or
at a minimum "make toolchain" first.)
- Alternatively, set MAKESYSPATH to the share/mk directory under your
head source tree. If your build tools are too old, other problems may
still occur.
- Alternatively, use "make -m" and specify the share/mk directory under
your head source tree. Again, build tools that are too old may still
result in trouble.
MFC after: 2 weeks
not be ideal, but is the ABI we've shipped so far. Fix macros which reflect
the results of _ALIGN on 32-bit MIPS to use the right alignment.
This fixes sendmsg under COMPAT_FREEBSD32 on n64 MIPS kernels.
kernel modules using their old installed /usr/share/mk/bsd.*.mk files,
instead of the updated ones in their source tree. This leads to errors
like:
"sys/conf/kmod.mk", line 111: Malformed conditional (${MK_CLANG_IS_CC} == "no" && ${CC:T:Mclang} != "clang")
Obviously, these errors will go away after a "make installworld", or
alternatively, by using "make buildenv" before attempting to manually
build modules.
However, since it is apparently an expected use case to build using old
.mk files, change the way we test for clang, so it also works when the
MK_CLANG_IS_CC macro doesn't exist.
Note the conditional expressions are becoming rather unreadable now, but
I will attempt to fix that on a followup commit.
MFC after: 2 weeks
- pci_find_extcap() is repurposed to be used for fetching PCI-express
extended capabilities (PCIZ_* constants in <dev/pci/pcireg.h>).
- pci_find_htcap() can be used to locate a specific HyperTransport
capability (PCIM_HTCAP_* constants in <dev/pci/pcireg.h>).
- Cache the starting location of the PCI-express capability for PCI-express
devices in PCI device ivars.
in the new NFS server for NFSv4, where it would report ENOENT
when the file actually existed on the server. This turned out
to be caused by not initializing ni_topdir before calling lookup()
and there was a rare case where the value on the stack location
assigned to ni_topdir happened to be a pointer to a ".." entry,
such that "dp == ndp->ni_topdir" succeeded in lookup().
This patch initializes ni_topdir to fix the problem.
MFC after: 5 days
using the o32 ABI. This mostly follows nwhitehorn's lead in implementing
COMPAT_FREEBSD32 on powerpc64.
o) Add a new type to the freebsd32 compat layer, time32_t, which is time_t in the
32-bit ABI being used. Since the MIPS port is relatively-new, even the 32-bit
ABIs use a 64-bit time_t.
o) Because time{spec,val}32 has the same size and layout as time{spec,val} on MIPS
with 32-bit compatibility, then, disable some code which assumes otherwise
wrongly when built for MIPS. A more general macro to check in this case would
seem like a good idea eventually. If someone adds support for using n32
userland with n64 kernels on MIPS, then they will have to add a variety of
flags related to each piece of the ABI that can vary. That's probably the
right time to generalize further.
o) Add MIPS to the list of architectures which use PAD64_REQUIRED in the
freebsd32 compat code. Probably this should be generalized at some point.
Reviewed by: gonzo
and not asynchronously. This fixes problems related to USB system
suspend and resume. It is assumed that we are always allowed to sleep
from the device_suspend() method.
MFC after: 1 week
Submitted by: jkim
significantly. Upon investigation this was caused by name cache
misses for lookups of "..". For name cache entries for non-".."
directories, the cache entry serves double duty. It maps both the
named directory plus ".." for the parent of the directory. As such,
two ctime values (one for each of the directory and its parent) need
to be saved in the name cache entry.
This patch adds an entry for ctime of the parent directory to the
name cache. It also adds an additional uma zone for large entries
with this time value, in order to minimize memory wastage.
As well, it fixes a couple of cases where the mtime of the parent
directory was being saved instead of ctime for positive name cache
entries. With this patch, Lookup RPC counts return to values similar
to pre-r230394 kernels.
Reported by: bde
Discussed with: kib
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
cards that should be handled by the mfi(4) driver.
The root of the problem is that the mpt(4) driver was masking off the
bottom bit of the PCI device ID when deciding which cards to attach to.
It appears that a number of the mpt(4) Fibre Channel cards had a LAN
variant whose PCI device ID was just one bit off from the FC card's device
ID. The FC cards were even and the LAN cards were odd.
The problem was that this pattern wasn't carried over on the SAS and
parallel SCSI mpt(4) cards. Luckily the SAS and parallel SCSI PCI device
IDs were either even numbers, or they would get masked to a supported
adjacent PCI device ID, and everything worked well.
Now LSI is using some of the odd-numbered PCI device IDs between the 3Gb
SAS device IDs for their new MegaRAID cards. This is causing the mpt(4)
driver to attach to the RAID cards instead of the mfi(4) driver.
The solution is to stop masking off the bottom bit of the device ID, and
explicitly list the PCI device IDs of all supported cards.
This change should be a no-op for mpt(4) hardware. The only intended
functional change is that for the 929X, the is_fc variable gets set. It
wasn't being set previously, but needs to be because the 929X is a Fibre
Channel card.
Reported by: Kashyap Desai <Kashyap.Desai@lsi.com>
MFC After: 3 days
handle address, where we're using handles as raw addresses.
This fixes devices with subregions on Octeon PCI specifically, and likely also on
MIPS more generally, where there isn't another bus_space in use that was doing the
math already.
The tag enforces a single restriction that all DMA transactions must not
cross a 4GB boundary. Note that while this restriction technically only
applies to PCI-express, this change applies it to all PCI devices as it
is simpler to implement that way and errs on the side of caution.
- Add a softc structure for PCI bus devices to hold the bus_dma tag and
a new pci_attach_common() routine that performs actions common to the
attach phase of all PCI bus drivers. Right now this only consists of
a bootverbose printf and the allocate of a bus_dma tag if necessary.
- Adjust all PCI bus drivers to allocate a PCI bus softc and to call
pci_attach_common() from their attach routines.
MFC after: 2 weeks
associated with the previous vnode (if any) associated with the target of
a rename(). Otherwise, a lookup of the target pathname concurrent with a
rename() could re-add a name cache entry after the namei(RENAME) lookup
in kern_renameat() had purged the target pathname.
MFC after: 2 weeks
interface supported by mvs(4) are 88SX, while AHCI-like chips are 88SE.
PR: kern/165271
Submitted by: Jia-Shiun Li <jiashiun@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
The scan code unlocks the comlock and calls into the driver. It then
assumes the state hasn't changed from underneath it.
Although I haven't seen this particular condition trigger, I'd like to
be informed if I or anyone else sees it.
What I'm thinking may occur:
* A cancellation comes in during the scan_end call;
* the cancel flag is set;
* but it's never checked, so scandone isn't updated;
* .. and the interface stays in the STA power save mode.
It's a subtle race, if it even exists.
PR: kern/163318
clients.
These are helful when making certain drivers work on both Linux
and FreeBSD without changing the code flow too much.
Reviewed by: kib, wlosh
MFC after: 1 month
pci_cfg_save() and pci_cfg_restore() for device drivers to use when
saving and restoring state (e.g. to handle device-specific resets).
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
long for specifying a boundary constraint.
- Change bus_dma tags to use bus_addr_t instead of bus_size_t for boundary
constraints.
These allow boundary constraints to be fully expressed for cases where
sizeof(bus_addr_t) != sizeof(bus_size_t). Specifically, it allows a
driver to properly specify a 4GB boundary in a PAE kernel.
Note that this cannot be safely MFC'd without a lot of compat shims due
to KBI changes, so I do not intend to merge it.
Reviewed by: scottl
snapshots on UFS filesystems running with journaled soft updates.
This is the first of several bugs that need to be fixed before
removing the restriction added in -r230250 to prevent the use
of snapshots on filesystems running with journaled soft updates.
The deadlock occurs when holding the snapshot lock (snaplk)
and then trying to flush an inode via ffs_update(). We become
blocked by another process trying to flush a different inode
contained in the same inode block that we need. It holds the
inode block for which we are waiting locked. When it tries to
write the inode block, it gets blocked waiting for the our
snaplk when it calls ffs_copyonwrite() to see if the inode
block needs to be copied in our snapshot.
The most obvious place that this deadlock arises is in the
ffs_copyonwrite() routine when it updates critical metadata
in a snapshot and tries to write it out before proceeding.
The fix here is to write the data and indirect block pointer
for the snapshot, but to skip the call to ffs_update() to
write the snapshot inode. To ensure that we will never have
to update a pointer in the inode itself, the ffs_snapshot()
routine that creates the snapshot has to ensure that all the
direct blocks are allocated as part of the creation of the
snapshot.
A less obvious place that this deadlock occurs is when we hold
the snaplk because we are deleting a snapshot. In the course of
doing the deletion, we need to allocate various soft update
dependency structures and allocate some journal space. If we
hit a resource limit while doing this we decrease the resources
in use by flushing out an existing dirty file to get it to give
up the soft dependency resources that it holds. The flush can
cause an ffs_update() to be done on the inode for the file that
we have selected to flush resulting in the same deadlock as
described above when the inode that we have chosen to flush
resides in the same inode block as the snapshot inode that we hold.
The fix is to defer cleaning up any time that the inode on which
we are operating is a snapshot.
Help and review by: Jeff Roberson
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC (to 9 only) after: 2 weeks
installs clang as /usr/bin/cc, /usr/bin/c++ and /usr/bin/cpp.
Note this does *not* disable building and installing gcc, which will
still be available as /usr/bin/gcc, /usr/bin/g++ and /usr/bin/gcpp. If
you want to disable gcc completely, you must use WITHOUT_GCC.
MFC after: 2 weeks
operations for setting and accessing vnode's v_socket field.
The operations are necessary to implement proper unix socket handling
on layered file systems like nullfs(5).
This change fixes the long standing issue with nullfs(5) being in that
unix sockets did not work between lower and upper layers: if we bound
to a socket on the lower layer we could connect only to the lower
path; if we bound to the upper layer we could connect only to the
upper path. The new behavior is one can connect to both the lower and
the upper paths regardless what layer path one binds to.
PR: kern/51583, kern/159663
Suggested by: kib
Reviewed by: arch
MFC after: 2 weeks
sys/xen/interface/io/blkif.h:
o Insert space in "Red Hat".
o Fix typo "discard-aligment" -> "discard-alignment"
o Fix typo "unamp" -> "unmap"
o Fix typo "formated" -> "formatted"
o Clarify the text for "params".
o Clarify the text for "sector-size".
o Clarify the text for "max-requests" in the backend section.
instead of accepting half-constructed vnode. Previous code cannot decide
what to do with such vnode anyway, and although processing it for hash
removal, paniced later when getting rid of nullfs reference on lowervp.
While there, remove initializations from the declaration block.
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
function null_destroy_proto() from null_insmntque_dtr(). Also
apply null_destroy_proto() in null_nodeget() when we raced and a vnode
is found in the hash, so the currently allocated protonode shall be
destroyed.
Lock the vnode interlock around reassigning the v_vnlock.
In fact, this path will not be exercised after several later commits,
since null_nodeget() cannot take shared-locked lowervp at all due to
insmntque() requirements.
Reported by: rea
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
- Reserver respective number of addresses for managment port
- octm uses base address directly
- other drivers get MACs on "first come first served" basis
Reviewed by: juli
external pagers in Mach. FreeBSD doesn't implement external pagers.
Moreover, it don't pageout the kernel object. So, the reasons for
having code don't hold.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 6 weeks
following clang warning:
sys/kern/sys_pipe.c:1556:10: error: promoted type 'int' of K&R function parameter is not compatible with the parameter type 'mode_t'
(aka 'unsigned short') declared in a previous prototype [-Werror]
mode_t mode;
^
sys/kern/sys_pipe.c:155:19: note: previous declaration is here
static fo_chmod_t pipe_chmod;
^
Enforce a boundary of no more than 4GB - transfers crossing a 4GB
boundary can lead to data corruption due to PCIe limitations. This
change is a less-intrusive workaround that can be quickly merged back
to older branches; a cleaner implementation will arrive in HEAD later
but may require KPI changes.
This change is based on a suggestion by jhb@.
Reviewed by: scottl, jhb
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
MFC after: 3 days