Cast ctxp to caddr_t to pass data as expected. While void * is a
universal type, char * isn't (and that's what caddr_t is defined as).
One could argue these prototypes should take void * rather than
caddr_t, but changing that is much more invasive.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Make the return type of efi_main uniform. Declare the Exit() function
as not returning. Move efi_main's declaration to the proper header.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Move the efi_main routine out of libefi into sys/boot/efi/loader.
Since boot1 has its own efi_main routine, this effectively prevents
boot1 from linking with libefi. By moving it out, we can share code
better (though though some refactoring with boot1's efi_main and
loader.efi's efi_main is definitely in order).
Sponsored by: Netflix
Simplify i386 trap().
- Use more relevant name 'signo' instead of 'i' for the local variable
which contains a signal number to send for the current exception.
- Eliminate two labels 'userout' and 'out' which point to the very end
of the trap() function. Instead use return directly.
- Re-indent the prot_fault_translation block by reducing if() nesting.
- Some more monor style changes.
Reviewed by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
The machdep.uprintf_signal sysctl replaced it in more convenient way,
not requiring recompilation to use and providing more information on
fault.
Reviewed by: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Illumos and Schillix is adopting some of the locale code and our style(9)
sometimes matches the Solaris cstyle, so the changes are also useful as a
way to reduce diffs.
No functional change.
Discussed with: Joerg Schilling
MFC after: 1 week
where the source register is also the first destination register.
If this is the case, and we raise an exception in the middle of the
instruction, for example the load is across two pages and the second page
isn't mapped, QEMU will have overwritten the address with invalid data.
This is a valid behaviour in most cases, with the exception of when a
destination register is also use in address generation. As such switch
the order of the registers to ensure the address register is second so it
will be written to second, after any exceptions have happened.
This has been acknowledged in upstream QEMU, however as the workaround is
simple also handle it here.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
This fixes infinite recursion in /sbin/init for MIPS N32.
Submitted by: Robert M. Kovacsics <rmk35@cam.ac.uk>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
blocks assigned to the object pages.
- The global swhash_mtx is removed, trie is synchronized by the
corresponding object lock.
- The swp_pager_meta_free_all() function used during object
termination is optimized by only looking at the trie instead of
having to search whole hash for the swap blocks owned by the object.
- On swap_pager_swapoff(), instead of iterating over the swhash,
global object list have to be inspected. There, we have to ensure
that we do see valid trie content if we see that the object type is
swap.
Sizing of the swblk zone is same as for swblock zone, each swblk maps
SWAP_META_PAGES pages.
Proposed by: alc
Reviewed by: alc, markj (previous version)
Tested by: alc, pho (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11435
The AIO job holds a reference on the associated file descriptor, so the
socket's count should already be > 0. This fixes a LOR with the socket
buffer lock after recent socket locking changes in HEAD.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
recieve descriptors for the igb(4) class of devices. This will
allow a better definition for maximum going forward. Some igb(4)
devices support more than the default 4K.
Reported by: Jason (j@nitrology.com)
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
o Automomous Power State Transition
o Host Memory Buffer
o Timestamp
o Keep Alive Timer
o Host Controlled Thermal Management
o Non-Operational Power State Config
Also note that feature codes 0x78-0x7f are reserved for the NVMe
Management Interface.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Though technically correct, GCC complains about usingi a "%zd" format
specifier for a long.
Reported by: cem
MFC after: 3 weeks
X-MFC-With: 322893
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
removal of the "blk" parameter from blst_meta_alloc() had the unintended
effect of generating an out-of-range allocation when the cursor reaches
the end of the tree if the number of managed blocks in the tree equals
the so-called "radix" (which in the blist code is not the standard notion
of what a radix is but rather the maximum number of leaves in a tree of
the current height.) In other words, only certain swap configurations
were affected, which is why earlier testing did not reveal the problem.
Submitted by: Doug Moore <dougm@rice.edu>
Reported by: pho, kib
Tested by: pho
X-MFC with: r322459
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12106
getmntinfo(3) is designed around a relatively static or slow growing set of
current mounts. It tried to detect a race with somewhat concurrent mount
and re-call getfsstat(2) in that case, looping indefinitely. It also
allocated space for a single extra mount as slop.
In the case where the user has a large number of mounts and is adding them
at a rapid pace, it fell over.
This patch makes two functional changes:
1. Allocate even more slop. Double whatever the last getfsstat(2) returned.
2. Abort and return some known results after looping a few times
(arbitrarily, 3). If the list is constantly changing, we can't guarantee
we return a full result to the user at any point anyways.
While here, add very basic functional tests for getmntinfo(3) to the libc
suite.
PR: 221743
Submitted by: Peter Eriksson <peter AT ifm.liu.se> (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
mtree path names and link attributes are encoded, generally using strvis. Newer
versions of mtree will use C-style escapes but previously the accepted form was
octal escapes. makefs' mtree code spots the C-style escapes but fails to deal
with octal escapes correctly.
Remove mtree's escape-decoding code (except for a few instances where it's
needed) and instead pass pathnames and link targets through strunvis prior to
use.
Reviewed by: marcel
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12104
dd(1) casts many of its numeric arguments from uintmax_t to intmax_t and
back again to detect whether or not the original arguments were negative.
This is not correct, and causes problems with boundary cases, for example
when count is SSIZE_MAX-1.
PR: 191263
Submitted by: will@worrbase.com
Reviewed by: pi, asomers
MFC after: 3 weeks
With Flower (CloudABI's network connection daemon) becoming more
complete, there is no longer any need for creating any unconnected
sockets. Socket pairs in combination with file descriptor passing is all
that is necessary, as that is what is used by Flower to pass network
connections from the public internet to listening processes.
Remove all of the kernel bits that were used to implement socket(),
listen(), bindat() and connectat(). In principle, accept() and
SO_ACCEPTCONN may also be removed, but there are still some consumers
left.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
MFC after: 1 month
- map the hard-coded frame buffer address above KERNBASE. Using the
physical address only worked because of larger mapping bugs.
The hard-coded frame buffer address only works on x86. Use messy ifdefs
to try to avoid warnings about unused code for other arches.
- remove the sysctl for reading and writing the table kernel console
attributes. Writing only worked for emergency output since normal
output uses unalterd copies.
- fix the test for the emergency console being usable
- explain why a hard-coded attribute is used very early. Emergency output
works on x86 even before the pcpu pointer is initialized.
vnode lock.
Caller of softdep_count_dependencies() may own a buffer lock, which
might conflict with the lock order.
Reported and tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 10 days
Advertise this by changing the defaults to mostly red. If you don't like
this, change them (almost) back using:
vidcontrol -c charcolors,base=7,height=0
vidcontrol -c mousecolors,base=0[,height=15]
The (graphics mode only) mouse cursor colors were hard-coded to a black
border and lightwhite interior. Black for the border is the worst
possible default, since it is the same as the default black background
and not good for any dark background. Reversing this gives the better
default of X Windows. Coloring everything works better still. Now
the coloring defaults to a lightwhite border and red interior.
Coloring for the character cursor is more complicated and mode
dependent. The new coloring doesn't apply for hardware cursors. For
non-block cursors, it only applies in graphics mode. In text mode,
the cursor color was usually a hard-coded (dull)white for the background
only, unless the foreground was white when it was a hard-coded black
for the background only, unless the foreground was white and the
background was black it was reverse video. In graphics mode, it was
always reverse video for the block cursor. Reverse video is worse,
especially over cutmarking regions, since cutmarking still uses simple
reverse video (nothing better is possible in text mode) and double
reverse video for the cursor gives normal video. Now, graphics mode
uses the same algorithm as the best case for text mode in all cases
for graphics mode. The hard-coded sequence { white, black, } for the
background is now { red, white, blue, } where the first 2 colors can
be configured. The blue color at the end is a sentinel which prevents
reverse video being used in most cases but breaks the compatibility
setting for white on black and black on white characters. This will
be fixed later. The compatibility setting is most needed for mono modes.
The previous commit to syscons.c changed sc_cnterm() to be more careful.
It followed null pointers in some cases. But sc_cnterm() has been
unreachable for 15+ years since changes for multiple consoles turned
off calls to the the cnterm destructor for all console drivers. Before
them, it was only called at boot time. So no driver with an attached
console has ever been unloadable and not even the non-console destructors
have been tested much.
These files are compiled in userland too, so we can't use sys/systm.h
and rely on CTASSERT. Switch to using _Static_assert instead.
MFC After: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
card has to do PCIe transactions to complete the reset process, but
can't do them, per the PCIe spec, unless bus mastering is enabled.
Submitted by: Kinjal Patel
PR: 22166
terminal state for kernel console output.
r56043 in 2000 added many complications to support dynamic selection
of the terminal emulator using modules and the ioctl CONS_SETTERM.
This was never completed. There are still no modules, but it is easy
to restore the scterm and dumb emulators at compile time. Then
boot-time configuration for the preferred one doesn't work right, but
CONS_SETTERM almost works after fixing this bug. CONS_SETTERM only
switches the emulator for the user state, leaving the kernel state(s)
still using the boot-time emulator. The fix is especially important
when switching from sc to scteken, since the scteken state has pointers
in it.
Rename kernel_console_ts to sc_kts.
The previous update to the driver to 3.2.12-k changed the VF's API version
to 1.2, but did not let the VF fall back to 1.1 or 1.0 versions. So, this
patch tries 1.2 first, then the older versions in succession if that fails.
This should allow the VF driver to negotiate 1.1 and work with older PF
drivers, such as the one used in Amazon's EC2 service.
PR: 220872
Submitted by: Jeb Cramer <jeb.j.cramer@intel.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
extreme outliers from dodgy drives. Adjust comments to reflect this,
and make sure that the number of latency buckets match in the two
places where it matters.
o Allow I/O scheduler to gather times on 32-bit systems. We do this by shifting
the sbintime_t over by 8 bits and truncating to 32-bits. This gives us 8.24
time. This is sufficient both in range (256 seconds is about 128x what current
users need) and precision (60ns easily meets the 1ms smallest bucket size
measurements). 64-bit systems are unchanged. Centralize all the time math so
it's easy to tweak tha range / precision tradeoffs in the future.
o While I'm here, the I/O scheduler should be using periph_data rather than
sim_data since it is operating on behalf of the periph.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12119