added/deleted, the delete the multicast addresses previously programmed
in HW and reprogram the new set of multicast addresses.
Submitted by:Vaishali.Kulkarni@cavium.com
MFC after:5 days
disabled.
Intel finally added this information, which allows us to not parse CPU
identification string looking for the nominal frequency. The leaf is
present e.g. on Appolo Lake Atom CPUs. It is only used if the TSC
calibration is disabled by user.
Also, report the TSC frequency in bootverbose mode always, regardless
of the way it was obtained.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
- The --exclude{,-dir} and --include{,-dir} directives now match GNU
behavior of being processed in order and latest matching directive wins
- --label was previously not really documented, and -L and -l did not
indicate that --label applied to them
- The flags listed as being extensions to POSIX spec were not updated with
the removal of compression-related flags
MFC after: 1 week
Compression was removed so #2 goes away and everything else needs renumbered
to match, and the usage string was also updated due to removed options.
X-MFC-With: r332995
We use transformation rather than accessors as virtually ever driver
implements SIOCGIFMEDIA and all would have to be touched.
Keep the code readable by always performing copies and (possiably no-op)
transforms.
Reviewed by: jhb, kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14996
device-side (and only device-side) "virtual USB serial adapters" - the
ones you can get with an OTG-capable board - as consoles. It boils down
to adding the device name to kern.console sysctl, although doing that
requires jumping through some hoops. It doesn't change the actual
operation of those virtual devices. The point is to make it possible
for init(8) to recognize them as console devices and to launch getty(8)
for them, when configured as "onifconsole" in ttys(5). The point of
that, in turn, is to add such entries to the default ttys(5), so that
init(8) will launch gettys for device-side "virtual serial adapters",
but not for actual USB serial dongles.
Reviewed by: hselasky@
No objections: imp@
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Compression support is now handled by an external script, remove it from the
bsdgrep(1) utility.
This removes the support for -Z -J -X and -M
Note: that it matches the changes in newer GNU grep
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: kevans
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15197
hardware will ensure the stack pointer is aligned to a 16-byte
boundary before saving the fault state on the stack.
In the PTI case, handle this potential alignment adjustment by copying
both frames independently while unwinding the stack in between.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15183
Import the wrapper script from zstdgrep (written by wiz@netbsd.org)
Modify it to support more than just zstd (adding support for gzip,
lzma, xz and bzip2)
Write a simple manpage dedicated for it.
Only use that new wrapper both for gnu grep and bsd grep
Next step will be removing code related to compression format from bsdgrep
Reviewed by: kevans
Approved by: kevans
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15193
Contrary to what the message says, this is not only executed in an EFI
context- it provides functions for use in an EFI environment. I don't think
there's much reason to broadcast this fact when we haven't in the past, so
just remove it.
Reported by: emaste (a while ago), cperciva
Discussing with others, this needs to be at least 20 to boot on some POWER9
nodes. Linux made a similar change for the same reason, so increase to 32
to give us some extra breathing room as well. The input and output arrays
are sized at 256, so much greater than the increase in the property array
size.
Currently both the page lock and a page queue lock must be held in
order to enqueue, dequeue or requeue a page in a given page queue.
The queue locks are a scalability bottleneck in many workloads. This
change reduces page queue lock contention by batching queue operations.
To detangle the page and page queue locks, per-CPU batch queues are
used to reference pages with pending queue operations. The requested
operation is encoded in the page's aflags field with the page lock
held, after which the page is enqueued for a deferred batch operation.
Page queue scans are similarly optimized to minimize the amount of
work performed with a page queue lock held.
Reviewed by: kib, jeff (previous versions)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14893
It is applied before it is possible for idle threads to execute on any
CPU, allowing to work around against some bugs.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Otherwise, under bootverbose, the lapic_enable_cmc() banner 'lapicX:
CMCI unmasked' is printed by several CPUs in parallel, causing garbled
output for the LAPIC dumps.
Reported by: royger
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15157
machine check banks must be only monitored by single CPU.
Noted and reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15157
This allows the creation of zones which don't do any caching in front of
the keg. If the zone is a cache zone, this means that UMA will not
attempt any memory allocations when allocating an item from the backend.
This is intended for use after a panic by netdump, but likely has other
applications.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15184
We intend to remove support before FreeBSD 12 is branched. These are
available only as 32-bit PCI devices. The driver has an ambiguous
license and I have not been successful in contacting the driver's author
in order to address this.
The planned deprecation has been announced on -current and -stable; if
we receive feedback that the driver is still useful and we are able to
resolve the license issue this deprecation notice can be reverted.
Reviewed by: bapt, brooks, imp, rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15182
The target is not necessarily a FreeBSD binary - for example, it may be
a Linux binary running under the linuxulator. Basic ptrace (live)
debugging already worked in this case, except for the assertion.
Sponsored by: Turing Robotic Industries Inc.
It is acceptable for syscallabi to map SV_ABI to SYSDECODE_ABI on all
architectures; libsysdecode will return not-found sentinel values if
it does not have a syscall name or errno mapping for a given
architecture.
Also, use __LP64__ for the SV_ILP32 -> SYSDECODE_ABI_LINUX32 mapping,
for any future 32- on 64-bit linuxulator implementation.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Turing Robotic Industries Inc.
To totally silence and ignore secondary kassert violations after a primary
panic, set debug.kassert.do_log=0 and debug.kassert.suppress_in_panic=1.
Additional assertion warnings shouldn't block core dump and may alert the
developer to another erroneous condition. Secondary stack traces may be
printed, identically to the unsuppressed case where panic() is reentered --
controlled via debug.trace_all_panics.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This has been an (incorrect) copy-paste duplicate of debug.kassert.warn_only
since it was originally committed in r243980.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
To diagnose and fix secondary panics, it is useful to have a stack trace.
When panic tracing is enabled, optionally trace secondary panics as well.
The option is configured with the tunable/sysctl debug.trace_all_panics.
(The original concern that inspired only tracing the primary panic was
likely that the secondary trace may scroll the original panic message or trace
off the screen. This is less of a concern for serial consoles with logging.
Not everything has a serial console, though, so the behavior is optional.)
Discussed with: jhb
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
assertions to not suppressing post-panic assertions.
There are some post-panic assertions that are valuable and we shouldn't
default to disabling them. However, when a user trips over them, the
user can still adjust the tunable/sysctl to suppress them temporarily to
get conduct troubleshooting (e.g. get a core dump).
Reported by: cem, markj
r313683 introduced new lockmgr APIs that missed the panic-time neutering
present in the rest of our locks. Correct that by adding the usual check.
Additionally, move the __lockmgr_args neutering above the assertions at the
top of the function. Drop the interlock unlock because we shouldn't have
an unneutered interlock either. No point trying to unlock it.
PR: 227749
Reported by: jtl
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Note that GDB at least implements single stepping for MIPS using software
breakpoints explicitly rather than using PT_STEP, so this has only been
tested via tests in ptrace_test which now pass rather than fail.
- Fix several places to use uintptr_t instead of int for virtual addresses.
- Check for errors from ptrace_read_int() when setting a breakpoint for a
step.
- Properly check for errors from ptrace_write_int() as it returns non-zero,
not negative values on failure.
- Change the error returns for ptrace_read_int() and ptrace_write_int() from
ENOMEM to EFAULT.
- Clear a single step breakpoint when it traps rather than waiting for it
to be cleared from ptrace(). This matches the behavior of the arm port
and in general seems a bit more reliable than waiting for ptrace() to
clear it via FIX_SSTEP.
- Drop the PROC_LOCK around ptrace_write_int() in ptrace_clear_single_step()
since it can sleep.
- Reorder the breakpoint handler in trap() to only read the instruction if
the address matches the current thread's breakpoint address.
- Replace various #if 0'd debugging printfs with KTR_PTRACE traces.
Tested on: mips64
This is necessary to make sure that functions that can have stack
protection are not used to update the stack guard. If not, the stack
guard check would fail when it shouldn't.
guard_setup() calls elf_aux_info(), which, in turn, calls memcpy() to
update stack_chk_guard. If either elf_aux_info() or memcpy() have
stack protection enabled, __stack_chk_guard will be modified before
returning from them, causing the stack protection check to fail.
This change uses a temporary buffer to delay changing
__stack_chk_guard until elf_aux_info() returns.
Submitted by: Luis Pires
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15173
We must ensure that accesses occur, they do not have any other
compiler-visible effects. Bruce found some situations where
optimization could remove an access, and provided a patch to use
volatile qualifier for the state variables. Since volatile behaviour
there is the compiler-specific interpretation of the keyword, use
relaxed atomics instead, which gives exactly the desired semantic.
Noted by and discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Use proper method to access userspace. For now, only the slow copyout
path is implemented.
Reported and tested by: tijl (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This sysctl allows a deeper dive into the sleep abyss comparing to
debug.acpi.suspend_bounce. When the new sysctl is set the system will
execute the suspend sequence up to the call to AcpiEnterSleepState().
That includes saving processor contexts and parking APs. Then, instead
of actually entering the sleep state, the BSP will call resumectx() to
emulate the wakeup. The APs should get restarted by the sequence of
Init and Startup IPIs that BSP sends to them.
MFC after: 8 days
The MIPS ptrace_single_step() unlocks the PROC_LOCK while reading and
writing instructions from userland. One failure case was not reacquiring
the lock before returning.