caused by temporary EDT allocations performed by controller drivers in
their interrupt routiens.
Reference count bus entries in the EDT in preparation for support for
dynamic controller arrival and departure.
Have children of the EDT hold references to their parents.
Correct routing of the XPT_IMMED_NOTIFY ccb type for use in
target mode applications.
Fix a few cases where the generation count for EDT data members was
not being updated when a modification occurred.
splcam() problem Noticed by: Tor Egge <tegge@FreeBSD.org>
probably always be 16 bits if they exist at all, and fusword() and
susword() are only used in i386 code, so there aren't any portability
functions with them.
numbers as chars or use bogus casts in an attempt to unmisrepresnt
them. In top, don't assume that 0xff is the only negative cpu
number when cpu numbers are (mis)represented.
include of <sys/queue.h> in the !KERNEL case. The prerequisites
for <ufs/ufs/quota.h> were broken in Lite2 by converting some of
the kernel declarations to use queue macros without including
<sys/queue.h>. <sys/queue.h> was included in applications in
/usr/src instead. We polluted this file instead of merging the
changes in the applications.
Include <sys/queue.h> in the KERNEL case, and forward-declare all
structs that are used in prototypes, so that this file is almost
self-sufficient even in the kernel.
Obtained from: mostly from NetBSD
interrupts are enabled, this kills the last "unwanted interrupts"
(and there is no ugly hacks like in the old driver to avoid them).
COmmand interrupt devices are now supported, this applies mostly
to older CDROM's and apparently also the ZIP.
Fixed problems:
Number of total sectors wrong on some older drives.
Fixed by not using the LBA size unless we know its valid.
There has also been more general code clenaups, some reorgs also.
so that non-sloppy applications can call it without using disgusting
casts to avoid warnings. The 4th arg is sort of varargs -- it must
sometimes represent a filename, sometimes a struct pointer, and is
sometimes unused. The arg type is still caddr_t in the kernel.
Obtained from: mostly from NetBSD
a TLB invalidation optimization that won't work given the
limitations of our current SMP support.
This patch should be applied to -stable ASAP.
Thanks to John Capo <jc@irbs.com>,
Steve Kargl <sgk@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>, and
Chuck Robey <chuckr@mat.net>
for testing.
Added "options ATA_STATIC_ID" that wires ATA disks like the old wd driver.
Fixed problems:
Dont use more sectors/intr than the drive supports.
Fix announce of > 8.4G disks.
Dont call ad_interrupt/ad_transfer when no disks config'd.
Use the right page# for CDR write mode params.
Fix breakage when no PCI support in kernel.
Implement DEVFS stuff.
General code clenaup.
Higher numbers led to smaller quanta.
In discussion with BDE, change this parameter to be in uSecs
to make it machine independent,
and limit it to non zero multiples of 'tick' (rounding down).
Also make the variabel globally available so that the present function that
returns its value (used for posix scheduling I believe) can go away.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans <bde@freebsd.org>
the read lock around the subyte operations in mincore. After the lock is
reacquired, use the map's timestamp to determine if we need to restart
the scan.
This produced races resulting in panics and filesystem corruptions
under some circumstances.
Reviewed by: luoqi chen <luoqi@freebsd.org>
Reviewed by: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
Submitted by: Matt Dillon <dillon@freebsd.org>
Change VINUM_SAVECONFIG: it now requires a parameter. 0 means
"configuration updates are finished, please save", and 1 means "please
just save the config". This second meaning is invoked by the new
"saveconfig" command to vinum(8).
Recognize "referenced" drives by the lack of a slash in the device
name, not by a NUL character.
vinum_scandisk: return error indication (ENOENT if we can't find any
vinum drive, otherwise 0).
VINUM_SAVECONFIG: change parameters.
Don't save config while we're reading it from disk.
Change the way we handle the daemon: if we can't communicate with it
for 1 second (which is possible), start a new one. The daemon saves
its pid in daemonpid; on each iteration of the main loop the daemon
checks whether it's still in favour. If not, it silently exits.
Also, when trying to communicate with the daemon, check daemonpid
first. If it's set to 0, don't even try.