Continue my parade on introspection tools by fixing:
- failed to check for null after reallocf
- avoid the comma operator
- mark usage as dead
- correct size of len
of 64-bit dev_t's (but not ones involving dev_t's).
st_size was supposed to be clamped in cvtstat() and linux's copy_stat(),
but the clamping code wasn't aware that st_size is signed, and also had
an obfuscated off-by-1 value for the unsigned limit, so its effect was
to produce a bizarre negative size instead of clamping.
Change freebsd32's copy_ostat() to be no worse than cvtstat(). It was
missing clamping and bzero()ing of padding.
Reviewed by: kib (except a final fix of the clamp to the signed maximum)
Some casts from pointers to uint64_t and back in lio_main.c cause base
gcc on i386 to warn "cast from pointer to integer of different size",
and vice versa. Add additional casts to uintptr_t to suppress these.
Reviewed by: sbruno
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15754
When hash table lookups are not serialized with in_pcbfree it will be
possible for callers to find an inpcb that has been marked free. We
need to check for this and return NULL.
- initialize all maybe uninitialized vars with bogus values. This shuts
up the compiler, and causes crashes if it changes later.
- mark noreturn as noreturn
- removed unused macro
- handle x_procstate as runtime rather than pre-processor
- avoid using void functions in condtionals
Tested with clang, gcc 7, gcc 9
without this and running vnets with a TCP stack that uses
some of the features is a recipe for panic (without this commit).
Reported by: Larry Rosenman
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15757
Deferring the actual free of the inpcb until after a grace
period has elapsed will allow us to convert the inpcbinfo
info and hash read locks to epoch.
Reviewed by: gallatin, jtl
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15510
Generating the pnp info have the side effect to include all nodes even
if the status isn't "okay".
That means that loading the module will load but not attach as it checks
the status in the probe function.
On pine64 before :
root@pine64-lts:~ # devmatch -u
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=memory
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=chosen
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=sound_spdif compat=simple-audio-card
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=spdif-out compat=linux,spdif-dit
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=dma-controller@1c02000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-dma
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=mmc@1c10000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-mmc
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=usb@1c19000 compat=allwinner,sun8i-a33-musb
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=spdif@1c21000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-spdif
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2s@1c22000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-i2s
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2s@1c22400 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-i2s
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c28400 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c28800 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c28c00 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=serial@1c29000 compat=snps,dw-apb-uart
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2c@1c2ac00 compat=allwinner,sun6i-a31-i2c
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2c@1c2b000 compat=allwinner,sun6i-a31-i2c
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=i2c@1c2b400 compat=allwinner,sun6i-a31-i2c
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=aliases
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=symbols
All simplebus node are disabled
After :
root@pine64-lts:~ # devmatch -u
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=memory
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=chosen
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=sound_spdif compat=simple-audio-card
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=spdif-out compat=linux,spdif-dit
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=dma-controller@1c02000 compat=allwinner,sun50i-a64-dma
unattached on simplebus pnpinfo name=usb@1c19000 compat=allwinner,sun8i-a33-musb
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=aliases
unattached on ofwbus pnpinfo name=symbols
Reviewed by: imp (with some objection)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15770
There is a type promotion that transform count = -1 into a unsigned int causing
the default TCE SEG SIZE not being returned on a Boston POWER9 machine.
This machine does not have the 'ibm,supported-tce-sizes' entries, thus, count
is set to -1, and the function continue to execute instead of returning.
Reviewed by: jhibbits, wma
Approved by: jhibbits (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15763
This code merge adds a pNFS service to the NFSv4.1 server. Although it is
a large commit it should not affect behaviour for a non-pNFS NFS server.
Some documentation on how this works can be found at:
http://people.freebsd.org/~rmacklem/pnfs-planb-setup.txt
and will hopefully be turned into a proper document soon.
This is a merge of the kernel code. Userland and man page changes will
come soon, once the dust settles on this merge.
It has passed a "make universe", so I hope it will not cause build problems.
It also adds NFSv4.1 server support for the "current stateid".
Here is a brief overview of the pNFS service:
A pNFS service separates the Read/Write oeprations from all the other NFSv4.1
Metadata operations. It is hoped that this separation allows a pNFS service
to be configured that exceeds the limits of a single NFS server for either
storage capacity and/or I/O bandwidth.
It is possible to configure mirroring within the data servers (DSs) so that
the data storage file for an MDS file will be mirrored on two or more of
the DSs.
When this is used, failure of a DS will not stop the pNFS service and a
failed DS can be recovered once repaired while the pNFS service continues
to operate. Although two way mirroring would be the norm, it is possible
to set a mirroring level of up to four or the number of DSs, whichever is
less.
The Metadata server will always be a single point of failure,
just as a single NFS server is.
A Plan B pNFS service consists of a single MetaData Server (MDS) and K
Data Servers (DS), all of which are recent FreeBSD systems.
Clients will mount the MDS as they would a single NFS server.
When files are created, the MDS creates a file tree identical to what a
single NFS server creates, except that all the regular (VREG) files will
be empty. As such, if you look at the exported tree on the MDS directly
on the MDS server (not via an NFS mount), the files will all be of size 0.
Each of these files will also have two extended attributes in the system
attribute name space:
pnfsd.dsfile - This extended attrbute stores the information that
the MDS needs to find the data storage file(s) on DS(s) for this file.
pnfsd.dsattr - This extended attribute stores the Size, AccessTime, ModifyTime
and Change attributes for the file, so that the MDS doesn't need to
acquire the attributes from the DS for every Getattr operation.
For each regular (VREG) file, the MDS creates a data storage file on one
(or more if mirroring is enabled) of the DSs in one of the "dsNN"
subdirectories. The name of this file is the file handle
of the file on the MDS in hexadecimal so that the name is unique.
The DSs use subdirectories named "ds0" to "dsN" so that no one directory
gets too large. The value of "N" is set via the sysctl vfs.nfsd.dsdirsize
on the MDS, with the default being 20.
For production servers that will store a lot of files, this value should
probably be much larger.
It can be increased when the "nfsd" daemon is not running on the MDS,
once the "dsK" directories are created.
For pNFS aware NFSv4.1 clients, the FreeBSD server will return two pieces
of information to the client that allows it to do I/O directly to the DS.
DeviceInfo - This is relatively static information that defines what a DS
is. The critical bits of information returned by the FreeBSD
server is the IP address of the DS and, for the Flexible
File layout, that NFSv4.1 is to be used and that it is
"tightly coupled".
There is a "deviceid" which identifies the DeviceInfo.
Layout - This is per file and can be recalled by the server when it
is no longer valid. For the FreeBSD server, there is support
for two types of layout, call File and Flexible File layout.
Both allow the client to do I/O on the DS via NFSv4.1 I/O
operations. The Flexible File layout is a more recent variant
that allows specification of mirrors, where the client is
expected to do writes to all mirrors to maintain them in a
consistent state. The Flexible File layout also allows the
client to report I/O errors for a DS back to the MDS.
The Flexible File layout supports two variants referred to as
"tightly coupled" vs "loosely coupled". The FreeBSD server always
uses the "tightly coupled" variant where the client uses the
same credentials to do I/O on the DS as it would on the MDS.
For the "loosely coupled" variant, the layout specifies a
synthetic user/group that the client uses to do I/O on the DS.
The FreeBSD server does not do striping and always returns
layouts for the entire file. The critical information in a layout
is Read vs Read/Writea and DeviceID(s) that identify which
DS(s) the data is stored on.
At this time, the MDS generates File Layout layouts to NFSv4.1 clients
that know how to do pNFS for the non-mirrored DS case unless the sysctl
vfs.nfsd.default_flexfile is set non-zero, in which case Flexible File
layouts are generated.
The mirrored DS configuration always generates Flexible File layouts.
For NFS clients that do not support NFSv4.1 pNFS, all I/O operations
are done against the MDS which acts as a proxy for the appropriate DS(s).
When the MDS receives an I/O RPC, it will do the RPC on the DS as a proxy.
If the DS is on the same machine, the MDS/DS will do the RPC on the DS as
a proxy and so on, until the machine runs out of some resource, such as
session slots or mbufs.
As such, DSs must be separate systems from the MDS.
Tested by: james.rose@framestore.com
Relnotes: yes
- fix debugging for family on AMD cpus and add useful debugging for
which file is being selected for update.
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15574
an IPI.
This does not work however yet in QEMU. As a temporary workaround set
software interrupt pending bit manually on a local core to ensure WFI
doesn't halt the hart.
This is required to smpboot in QEMU.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
the system to make use of USB device mode / USB OTG to provide a "virtual
serial port" on release images.
Reviewed by: gjb@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15602
This is in preperation for supporting newer smccc functions that also use
the same call method.
Reviewed by: manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15745
linux_vdso.so provides the vdso for the linuxulator's amd64 target and
is mapped into a Linux binary's address space. Thus it should be a
Linux-style .so, which has the ELF OS/ABI unset.
It turns out that ELF Tool Chain elfcopy/objcopy also has a bug where
the OS/ABI field is unset, regardless of the specified --output-target,
so this change is a no-op with the default in-tree toolchain. This is a
real fix when using external binutils, and the ELF Tool Chain bug will
be fixed in the future.
PR: 228934
Sponsored by: Turing Robotic Industries
Parent needs to be the same frequency as the armclk, not twice the freq.
The real divider is incremented by one so write it with - 1
The rate can be at index 0
Pointy Hat To: myself
This eliminates the difficult to follow mapping of a string list. It
moves numbers from "#define" into (more) debuggable enums. More
generally, it follows the trend of moving more data into a more central
mechanism.
The help output is a little worse: " " is not rendered well, and there
are duplicate entries, but that will be fixed in a followup.
It was needed only for ia64 where it was implemented as a call to
bswapXX, which was always a real function. htobeXX with a constant
argument is calculated at compile-time everywhere else.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
To recap the problem: with a black-on-white xterm, the menu draws terribly.
Ideally, we would try our best for a white-on-black context for the menu
since graphics and whatnot might not be tested for other setups and there's
no reasonable way to sample the terminal at this point for the used color
scheme.
This commit attempts to address that further in two ways:
- Instead of issuing CSI bg/fg resets (CSI 39m and CSI 49m respectively for
"default"), issue CSI bg/fg escape sequences for our expected color scheme
- Reset to *our* default color scheme before we even attempt to load the
local module, so that we personally don't have any earlier text with the
console default color scheme.
Reported by: emaste (again)
option.
The BPF code was creating a compiled filter in the common filter-creation
path. However, BPF only uses compiled filters in the read direction.
When creating a write filter, the common filter-creation code was
creating an unneeded write filter and leaking the memory used for that.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
devd predates service in the system. Modernize usage to use service to
start/stop things in reaction to events rather than calling the rc
file directly.
This was pointed out in my talk at BSDcan as well as indirectly
referrred to as a barrier to entry for OpenRC in that working group.