memory ordering model allows writes to different devices to complete out
of order, leading to a situation where the write that clears an interrupt
source at a device can complete after a write that unmasks and EOIs the
interrupt at the interrupt controller, leading to a spurious re-interrupt.
This adds a generic barrier function specific to the needs of interrupt
controllers, and calls that function from the GIC and TI AINTC controllers.
There may still be other soc-specific controllers that need to make the call.
Reviewed by: cognet, Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Idle priority is not even time-share, so if system is busy in any way,
those events may never be executed. Since in some cases system waits
for events processed by that thread, that may cause deadlocks.
to be consistent with mutex destruction in ipf_log_soft_destroy(). As a
result mutex destruction in ipf_log_soft_fini() is redundant.
Approved by: glebius (mentor)
Obtained from: darrenr (author)
the kmem object lock is held. Do the pmap_remove() before acquiring the
kmem object lock.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
The CUSE library is a wrapper for the devfs kernel functionality which
is exposed through /dev/cuse . In order to function the CUSE kernel
code must either be enabled in the kernel configuration file or loaded
separately as a module. Currently none of the committed items are
connected to the default builds, except for installing the needed
header files. The CUSE code will be connected to the default world and
kernel builds in a follow-up commit.
The CUSE module was written by Hans Petter Selasky, somewhat inspired
by similar functionality found in FUSE. The CUSE library can be used
for many purposes. Currently CUSE is used when running Linux kernel
drivers in user-space, which need to create a character device node to
communicate with its applications. CUSE has full support for almost
all devfs functionality found in the kernel:
- kevents
- read
- write
- ioctl
- poll
- open
- close
- mmap
- private per file handle data
Requested by several people. Also see "multimedia/cuse4bsd-kmod" in
ports.
the UART FIFO.
The emulation is constrained in a number of ways: 64-bit only, doesn't check
for all exception conditions, limited to i/o ports emulated in userspace.
Some of these constraints will be relaxed in followup commits.
Requested by: grehan
Reviewed by: tychon (partially and a much earlier version)
the proper ICWx initialization sequence. It assumes, probably correctly, that
the boot firmware has done the 8259 initialization.
Since grub-bhyve does not initialize the 8259 this write to the mask register
takes a code path in which 'error' remains uninitialized (ready=0,icw_num=0).
Fix this by initializing 'error' at the start of the function.
shared flag is set on normal-memory mappings made via pmap_kenter() for SMP.
The "shared flag" part of this change isn't obvious from the diff, here's
the deal... by using the array of preformatted page table entry templates
instead of constructing the PTE from scratch, we automatically get the
right attribute bits set for both caching and shared.
MFC after: 1 week
These masks are documented in the Intel Architecture Instruction Set
Extensions Programming Reference (March 2014).
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
"fatal firmware error" happens. Previously it was neccessary to reset
it manually, using "/etc/rc.d/netif restart".
Approved by: adrian@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
"fatal firmware error" happens. Previously it was neccessary to reset
it manually, using "/etc/rc.d/netif restart".
Approved by: adrian@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
direction isochronous transfers.
- Remove setting of fields which does not belong to the respective
TRBs. These fields are currently set as zero and this is more a
cosmetic change.
MFC after: 3 days
Submitted by: Horse Ma <HMa@wyse.com>
Quite often it can be just packet reorder, and killing link in such case
is inconvenient. Add few sysctl's to control that behavior.
PR: kern/182212
Submitted by: Eugene Grosbein <egrosbein@rdtc.ru>
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Make sure TX/RX lists don't leak and are only allocated once.
- Fix off-by one transfer index computation.
- Give firmware loading more time.
MFC after: 3 days
be a race when using a single active queue for all transmit types.
- Last argument of usb_pause_mtx() is ticks and not milliseconds.
- Remove unused watchdog.
- Remove some unused fields from the RSU softc structure.
- Workaround usbd_transfer_start() recursion from inside of completion
callback.
MFC after: 3 days
- Need to set the pre-fetch memory address when reading the host memory.
- We currently assume that no endianness conversion is needed.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Assert that the hold count has not fallen below the use count, a situation
that would only happen when a vref() (or similar) is erroneously paired
with a vdrop(). This situation has not been observed in the wild, but
could be helpful for someone implementing a new filesystem.
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: hrs (mentor)
boundary. This was addressed several years ago by creating a parent
tag hierarchy for the root buses that set the boundary restriction
for appropriate buses and allowed child deviced to inherit it.
Somewhere along the way, this restriction was turned into a case for
marking the tag as a candidate for needing bounce buffers, instead
of just splitting the segment along the boundary line. This flag
also causes all maps associated with this tag to be non-NULL, which
in turn causes bus_dmamap_sync() to take the slow path of function
pointer indirection to discover that there's no bouncing work to
do. The end result is a lot of pages set aside in bounce pools
that will never be used, and a slow path for data buffers in nearly
every DMA-capable PCIe device. For example, our workload at Netflix
was spending nearly 1% of all CPU time going through this slow path.
Fix this problem by being more selective about when to set the
COULD_BOUNCE flag. Only set it when the boundary restriction
exists and the consumer cannot do more than a single DMA segment
at once. This fixes the case of dynamic buffers (mbufs, bio's)
but doesn't address static buffers allocated from bus_dmamem_alloc().
That case will be addressed in the future.
For those interested, this was discovered thanks to Dtrace Flame
Graphs.
Discussed with: jhb, kib
Obtained from: Netflix, Inc.
MFC after: 3 days
Set the accessed and dirty bits in the page table entry. If it fails then
restart the page table walk from the beginning. This might happen if another
vcpu modifies the page tables simultaneously.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
ismt(4) supports the SMBus Message Transport controller found on Intel
C2000 series (Avoton) and S1200 series (Briarwood) Atom SoCs.
Sponsored by: Intel