Don't enable the oscillator when it is found to be stopped at init time,
just let the first setting of valid time start it. But still report a dead
battery if it's stopped at init time.
Don't force the chip into 24hr mode, just cope with whatever mode it is
already in.
Schedule the clock_settime() callbacks to align the RTC clock to top of
second when setting it.
subr_rtc code, switch from CLOCKF_SETTIME_NO_TS to CLOCKF_SETTIME_NO_ADJ
so that we get fed a timestamp, but it's not adjusted to compensate for
inaccuracy in setting time.
Update the use of the B_CACHE flag (since the May 1999 commit
that made it the correct test here).
Reported by: Andreas Longwitz <longwitz@incore.de>
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 1 week
Atomic updates to v_wire_count are a significant source of contention, so
combine multiple updates into one in this easy case. Also remove an old
printf that gets executed if the page is shared-busied, which is a case
that will lead to a panic anyway.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11791
In this case we shouldn't assume that the thread has a valid frame pointer.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11787
The wlanwds code was just creating a clone VAP without specifying the MAC
address to use for said clone VAP. This meant that if an interface
was cloned from an AP interface that wasn't the first created VAP
(which shares the same MAC as the parent physical interface by default)
then the cloned interface would have the wrong MAC and traffic wouldn't work.
Besides chip bugs (ha!) this isn't a requirement.
So, teach wlanwds to:
* look up the link layer address for a given interface (which really should
be a library interface, and will likely quickly become one);
* use this when creating a cloned interface for a DWDS peer;
* (net80211 already has the infrastructure to do this, it just needed to be
used);
* add some extra logging to see what MAC addresses, parent interfaces, etc
are being created.
Whilst here, add a reminder that I should extend this to include monitoring
a specific VAP for DWDS updates rather than just the parent interface.
This is the first step in allowing for multiple DWDS hops, which is a
pre-requisite for adrian's house having wifi in the single upstairs room.
Tested:
* AR9380, DWDS AP + AP mode - with DWDS AP being the second VAP created
with a different MAC address;
* AR9331 (Carambola2), AP + DWDS STA;
* passing traffic
TODO:
* fix 802.11s so this DWDS stuff is no longer required!
This change adds two new tunables, allowing to control serialization for
read and write NFS requests separately. It does not change the default
behavior since there are too many factors to consider, but gives additional
space for further experiments and tuning.
The main motivation for this change is very low write speed in case of ZFS
with sync=always or when NFS clients requests sychronous operation, when
every separate request has to be written/flushed to ZIL, and requests are
processed one at a time. Setting vfs.nfsd.fha.write=0 in that case allows
to increase ZIL throughput by several times by coalescing writes and cache
flushes. There is a worry that doing it may increase data fragmentation
on disks, but I suppose it should not happen for pool with SLOG.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
The intent is to skip expensive opaque sysctls like tcp_pcblist unless
they are explicitly requested. Sysctl nodes like this don't show up in
sysctl -a, but they do generate output that winds up being dropped,
unless the user specifically requested binary/hex output or opaques.
This reduces the runtime of sysctl in many circumstances on a loaded
system. It also reduces the likelihood that simply gathering
diagnostics on a sick machine (stuck lock, etc) via sysctl -a might
push it over the edge into a total lockup.
Reviewed by: jtl
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11461
from enc_hhook().
This should solve the problem when pf is used with if_enc(4) interface,
and outbound packet with existing PCB checked by pf, and this leads to
deadlock due to pf does its own PCB lookup and tries to take rlock when
wlock is already held.
Now we pass PCB pointer if it is known to the pfil hook, this helps to
avoid extra PCB lookup and thus rlock acquiring is not needed.
For inbound packets it is safe to pass NULL, because we do not held any
PCB locks yet.
PR: 220217
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC