This commit does not affect the code generated, as proven by md5'ing
resulting binaries.
Bump WARNS accordingly.
Compiled on: sparc64, ia64, i386
Reviewed by: alfred (but blame me if anything goes wrong :-)
number of entries into bucket_zone_lookup(), which helps make more
clear the logic of consumers of bucket zones.
Annotate the behavior of bucket_init() with a comment indicating
how the various data structures, including the bucket lookup tables,
are initialized.
swapoff: failed to locate %d swap blocks
The race occurred because putpages() can block between the time it
allocates swap space and the time it updates the swap metadata to
associate that space with a vm_object, so swapoff() would complain
about the temporary inconsistency. I hoped to fix this by making
swp_pager_getswapspace() and swp_pager_meta_build() a single atomic
operation, but that proved to be inconvenient. With this change,
swapoff() simply doesn't attempt to be so clever about detecting when
all the pageout activity to the target device should have drained.
because this call is only needed to wake threads that slept when they
discovered a dead object connected to a vnode. To eliminate unnecessary
calls to wakeup() by vnode_pager_dealloc(), introduce a new flag,
OBJ_DISCONNECTWNT.
Reviewed by: tegge@
run as a 32 bit support library for an amd64 kernel. 32 bit consumers of
libthr have zero chance of running on an amd64 kernel since we don't
implement the i386_set_ldt() family of functions. Note that this commit
doesn't make it actually work, it just removes one more obstacle.
can't use the i386_set_ldt() family of routines, because they are not
implemented. Instead, use the recently exposed direct access sysarch
routines for setting what %fs and %gs point to.
Use this for the i386 TLS _set_tp() routine, but only when compiling to
run as a 32 bit support binary for amd64 kernels.
Expose some of the amd64-specific sysarch functions to allow alternative
implementations of the %fs/%gs code for TLS, threads, etc. USER_LDT does
not exist on the amd64 kernel, so we have to implement things other ways.
rates pretty high on the "hack!" scale, but it works for me. Adding
-DWANT_LIB32 to the world build command line, or 'WANT_LIB32=yes' to
/etc/make.conf will include the 32 bit libraries with the build.
I have not made this default behavior. Cross compiling this stuff is an
adventure I have not investigated.
This is still a WIP. We needed this at work so that we could install from
a readonly obj tree - lib32/build.sh wasn't up to that.