- Added some new debug helper routines to systcl.
- Fixed many of the style(9) violations that have crept into the code
due to my use of a "smart" editor.
MFC after: 2 weeks
killed by OOM. When killed process waits for a page allocation, try to
satisfy the request as fast as possible.
This removes the often encountered deadlock, where OOM continously
selects the same victim process, that sleeps uninterruptibly waiting
for a page. The killed process may still sleep if page cannot be
obtained immediately, but testing has shown that system has much
higher chance to survive in OOM situation with the patch.
In collaboration with: pho
Reviewed by: alc
MFC after: 4 weeks
checks on the length of the client's open/lock owner name. Also,
add free()'s for one case where they were missing and would
have caused a leak if NFSERR_BADXDR had been replied. Probably
never happens, but the leak is now plugged, just in case.
MFC after: 2 weeks
coda.h:
- CodaFid typdef -> struct CodaFid throughout.
- Use unsigned int instead of unsigned long for venus_dirent and other
cosmetic fixes.
- Introduce cuid_t and cgid_t and use instead of uid_t and gid_t in RPCs.
- Synchronize comments and macros.
- Use u_int32_t instead of unsigned long for coda_out_hdr.
With these changes, a 64-bit Coda kernel module now works with
coda6_client, whereas previous userspace and kernel versions of RPCs
differed sufficiently to prevent using the file system. This has been
verified only with casual testing, but /coda is now usable for at least
basic operations on amd64.
MFC after: 1 week
in the readdir functions for non-positive byte count arguments.
For the negative case, set it to the maximum allowable, since it
was actually a large positive value (unsigned) on the wire.
Also, fix up the readdir function comment a bit.
Suggested by: dillon AT apollo.backplane.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
* Fix handling of mapping arrays when draining mbufs or processing
FORWARD-TSN chunks.
* Cleanup code (no duplicate code anymore for SACKs and NR-SACKs).
Part of this code was developed together with rrs.
MFC after: 2 weeks.
In other words, deny multiple read-only mounts of the same device.
Shared read-only mounts should theoretically be possible, but,
unfortunately, can not be implemented correctly using current
buffer cache code/interface and results in an eventual system crash.
Also, using nullfs seems to be a more efficient way to achieve the same
goal.
This gets us back to where we were before GEOM and where other BSDs are.
Submitted by: pjd (idea for checking for shared mounting)
Discussed with: phk, pjd
Silence from: fs@, geom@
MFC after: 2 weeks
As currently st_blksize is always PAGE_SIZE, it is playing safe to not
use any smaller value. For some cases this might not be optimal, but
at least nothing should get broken.
Generally I don't expect this commit to change much for the following
reasons (in case of VREG, VDIR):
- application I/O and physical I/O are sufficiently decoupled by
filesystem code, buffer cache code, cluster and read-ahead logic
- not all applications use st_blksize as a hint, some use f_iosize, some
use fixed block sizes
I expect writes to the middle of files on ZFS to benefit the most from
this change.
Silence from: fs@
MFC after: 2 weeks
The assignment is already done in g_vfs_open.
Redundant assignment is harmless, but can become a problem if g_vfs_open
logic is changed.
MFC after: 1 week
set to sane values as they no longer default to 0, otherwise some OFW
implementation might copy in or out arguments not based on what the actual
function takes but what ever stack garbage nargs and nreturns supply.
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn
Bytes per cluster are calcuated as bytes per sector times sectors per
cluster. Too high value can overflow an internal variable with type
that can hold only values in valid range. Trying to use a wider type
results in an attempt to read more than MAXBSIZE at once, a panic.
Unfortunately, it is FreeBSD newfs_msdos that produces filesystems
with invalid parameters for certain types of media.
Reported by: Fabian Keil <freebsd-listen@fabiankeil.de>,
Paul B. Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Discussed with: bde, kib
MFC after: 1 week
X-ToDo: fix newfs_msdos
In r205860 I missed the fact that there is code that strongly assumes
that devvp bo_bsize is equal to underlying provider's sectorsize.
In those places it is hard to obtain the sectorsize in an alternative
way if devvp bo_bsize is set to something else.
So, I am reverting bo_bsize assigment in g_vfs_open.
Instead, in getblk I use DEV_BSIZE block size for b_offset calculation
if vp is a disk vp as reported by vn_isdisk. This should coinside with
vp being a devvp.
Reported by: Mykola Dzham <i@levsha.me>
Tested by: Mykola Dzham <i@levsha.me>
Pointyhat to: avg
MFC after: 2 weeks
X-ToDo: convert bread(devvp) in all fs to use bo_bsize-d blocks
unlocks and unreferences for argument vnodes, as expected by
kern_renameat(9), and returns EOPNOTSUPP. This fixes locks and
reference leaks when rename is attempted on fs that does not
implement rename.
PR: kern/107439
Based on submission by: Mikolaj Golub <to.my.trociny gmail com>
Tested by: Mikolaj Golub
MFC after: 1 week
domain clock, 8 programmable PMC.
- Westmere based CPU (Xeon 5600, Corei7 980X) support.
- New man pages with events list for core and uncore.
- Updated Corei7 events with Intel 253669-033US December 2009 doc.
There is some removed events in the documentation, they have been
kept in the code but documented in the man page as obsolete.
- Offcore response events can be setup with rsp token.
Sponsored by: NETASQ
are some problems with static executables), make.conf (would also
affect ports which do not use GNU make and do not override the
compile targets) or in the kernel config (via "makeoptions
WITH_CTF=yes").
Additional (related) changes:
- propagate WITH_CTF to module builds
- do not add -g to the linker flags, it's a noop there anyway
(at least according to the man page of ld)
- do not add -g to CFLAGS unconditionally
we need to have a look if it is really needed (IMO not) or if there
is a way to add it only when WITH_CTF is used
Note: ctfconvert / ctfmerge lines will not appear in the build output,
to protect the innocent (those which do not build with WITH_CTF would
see the shell-test and may think WITH_CTF is used).
Reviewed by: imp, jhb, scottl (earlier version)
Discussed on: arch@
path buffer for one case where it was missing when doing mkdir.
This could have conceivably resulted in a leak of a buffer, but
a leak was never observed during testing, so I suspect it would
have occurred rarely, if ever, in practice.
MFC after: 2 weeks
NFS server for the CREATE cn_nameiop where SAVESTART isn't set.
I was not aware that this needed to be done by the caller until
recently.
Tested by: lampa AT fit.vutbr.cz (link case)
Submitted by: lampa AT fit.vutbr.cz (link case)
MFC after: 2 weeks
directly to ioctl(2). Because of how ioctl command is build using _IO*()
macros we have only 13 bits to encode structure size. So the structure
can be up to 8kB-1.
Currently we define IOCPARM_MAX as PAGE_SIZE.
This is IMHO wrong for three main reasons:
1. It is confusing on archs with page size larger than 8kB (not really
sure if we support such archs (sparc64?)), as even if PAGE_SIZE is
bigger than 8kB, we won't be able to encode anything larger in ioctl
command.
2. It is a waste. Why the structure can be only 4kB on most archs if we
have 13 bits dedicated for that, not 12?
3. It shouldn't depend on architecture and page size. My ioctl command
can work on one arch, but can't on the other?
Increase IOCPARM_MAX to 8kB and make it independed of PAGE_SIZE and
architecture it is compiled for. This allows to use all the bits on all the
archs for size. Note that this doesn't mean we will copy more on every ioctl(2)
call. No. We still copyin(9)/copyout(9) only exact number of bytes encoded in
ioctl command.
Practical use for this change is ZFS. zfs_cmd_t structure used for ZFS
ioctls is larger than 4kB.
Silence on: arch@
MFC after: 1 month
volumes were incorrectly calculated.
I've tested this with one of my es1370 cards and I can confirm that it
works.
PR: 98167
Submitted by: Joseph Terner <jtsn@gmx.de>
Approved by: kib
- Use the new alq_destroy() to properly handle a failure case in alq_open().
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Reviewed by: dwmalone, jeff, rpaulo, rwatson (as part of a larger patch)
Approved by: kmacy (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
change the argument type to igb_rxeof() to the
correct type. Note, any users of POLLING must
be sure and set the number of queues to 1 for
things to work correctly.