The goal of this work is to remove the explicit dependency for ctl(4)
on iscsi(4), so end-users without iscsi(4) support in the kernel can
use ctl(4) for its other functions.
This allows those without iscsi(4) support built into the kernel to use
ctl(4) as a test mechanism. As a sidenote, this was possible around the
10.0-RELEASE period, but made impossible for end-users without iscsi(4)
between 10.0-RELEASE and 11.0-RELEASE.
Automatically load cfiscsi(4) from ctladm(8) and ctld(8) for backwards
compatibility with previously releases. The automatic loading feature is
compiled into the beforementioned tools if MK_ISCSI == yes when building
world.
Add a manpage for cfiscsi(4) and refer to it in ctl(4).
Differential Revision: D10099
MFC after: 2 months
Relnotes: yes
Reviewed by: mav, trasz
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
igor:
- Fix typos.
- Delete trailing whitespace.
manlint:
- Use .Fo/.Fc/.Fa when describing functions.
- Use .Xr.
- Fill in SEE ALSO section.
- Fix .Dt use: the section was specified incorrectly and the name
had a lowercase character.
- Continue new sentences on new lines.
Miscellaneous:
- Remove unnecessary quotes around "SEE ALSO" section headers.
- Sprinkle .Dv use in spots with constants.
Reported by: igor, make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Add missing section number when referring to PCI_IOV_*INIT(9) with .Xr
from the other corresponding manpage.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
- Expand a contraction [1].
- Add a missing section number when referring to uma(9) with .Xr .
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: igor [1], make manlint [2]
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
- Use `Em` with `.It` macro when referring to other libraries, instead of
`Xr`.
- Use `.Em` instead of `.Xr` when referring to libraries.
- Remove commented out lines.
MFC after: 1 month
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
tests(7) should be grouped in the man section 7 group, not the section 8 group.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Describe (briefly) how to compile the filesystem into the kernel and
load as a module.
Reference cd9660(5) in mount(8) and mount_cd9660(8).
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
- Delete trailing whitespace
- Sort SEE ALSO order: mmap(2)'s Xr should come before nmount(2)'s Xr.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Document work done by mmacy/sbruno to merge the two drivers together
and convert em(4) to the iflib framework.
X-MFC with: r311849
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
man(1) has some logic to use two spaces after a full stop, which is
useful for spotting sentence breaks in monospace fonts. However,
this logic is very simple, treating almost all '.' characters as
end-of-sentence markers, unless followed by certain other
characters. For example, '.,' is not end-of-sentence, and neither
is ".) ", but ".)" at the end of a line triggers the sentence-end
detection.
Apply a zero-width space to a few instances of this in share/man,
and also supply a missing full stop for an instance that occurred at
the end of a sentence.
Leave untouched several instances that are at the end of a sentence
or list element.
Reported by: 0mp (ieee80211.9)
Add a clock_nanosleep() syscall, as specified by POSIX.
Make nanosleep() a wrapper around it.
Attach the clock_nanosleep test from NetBSD. Adjust it for the
FreeBSD behavior of updating rmtp only when interrupted by a signal.
I believe this to be POSIX-compliant, since POSIX mentions the rmtp
parameter only in the paragraph about EINTR. This is also what
Linux does. (NetBSD updates rmtp unconditionally.)
Copy the whole nanosleep.2 man page from NetBSD because it is complete
and closely resembles the POSIX description. Edit, polish, and reword it
a bit, being sure to keep any relevant text from the FreeBSD page.
Reviewed by: kib, ngie, jilles
MFC after: 3 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10020
I moved this branch from github to a private server, and pulled from the
wrong one when committing r315280, so I failed to include two recent commits.
Thankfully, they were only cosmetic and were included in the review.
Specifically:
Add documentation, polish comments, and improve style(9).
Tested by: pho (r315280)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9791
Unfortunately they will have different integer value due to Linux value being already assigned in FreeBSD.
The patch is similar to IP_RECVDSTADDR but also provides the destination port value to the application.
This allows/improves implementation of transparent proxies on UDP sockets due to having the whole information on forwarded packets.
Reviewed by: adrian, aw
Approved by: ae (mentor)
Sponsored by: rsync.net
Differential Revision: D9235
This interface has no in-tree consumers and has been more or less
non-functional for several releases.
Remove manpage note that the procfs special file 'mem' is grouped to
kmem. This hasn't been true since r81107.
Remove procfs' README file. It is an out of date duplication of the manpage
(quoth the README: "since the bsd kernel is single-processor...").
Reviewed by: vangyzen, bcr (manpage)
Approved by: des (procfs maintainer), vangyzen (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9802
- Delete empty Li macro uses [1]. This removes some spaces between
the optional command/subcommand arguments.
- Attempt to clarify "show lock" subcommand by being more
terse/direct. This addresses an issue with a contraction [2].
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint [1], igor [2]
Reviewed by: wblock
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9858
Note that makeman's use of 'make showconfig' interacts poorly with
the COMPILER_FEATURES test in share/mk/src.opts.mk, because it tests the
host compiler, not the bootstrap compiler that will actually be used to
build world. This causes it to report that Clang is enabled by default
on MIPS and PowerPC.
For example:
% make TARGET_ARCH=mips64 showconfig | grep CLANG
MK_CLANG = yes
MK_CLANG_BOOTSTRAP = no
MK_CLANG_EXTRAS = no
MK_CLANG_FULL = yes
MK_CLANG_IS_CC = no
I am committing this version anyway to avoid extraneous diffs in
src.conf.5 after every other WITH_/WITHOUT_FOO change.
In addition, we intend to switch to a C++11 compiler for all archs for
12.0 (either by fixing Clang for those archs, or by requiring an
external toolchain), and then src.conf.5 will be correct.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
sbuf_hexdump(9) should be linked to sbuf(9), not hexdump(3). Another
review will be posted to deduplicate the sbuf_hexdump reference in
in hexdump(3) or at the very least make the information less duplicative.
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC with: r313437
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
- Add missing sections for .Xr references.
- Replace .br with .Pp (the former macro is deprecated).
- Use the .Sx (section reference) macro when referring to
LIBRARIES, not the .Xr (cross-reference) macro.
- Add commas after "e.g." and "i.e." [*].
Bump .Dd for the change
Approved by: luigi
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: igor [*], make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: D9859
- Replace the "following lines" with more terse phrases.
- Use .Lk for the mellanox URL.
- Reword the SUPPORT section so it's less wordy.
The DESCRIPTION section suggestions are still outstanding; improving
the section requires additional review to make sure the nuance/message
is correct per the original intent.
Bump .Dd for the change
Submitted by: wblock
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9241
The driver manpage for wpifw(4) is missing, but will be added soon. This
fixes the other 2 .Xr calls lacking sections to match the 3rd,
syntactically correct, reference in the SEE ALSO section.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: make manlint
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Now the section width is set appropriately per the BIO_DELETE
parameter being described.
Reported by: make manlint
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.
Submitted by: Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
to stdout in the non-kernel case and to the console+log
in the kernel case. For the kernel case it hooks the
putbuf() machinery underneath printf(9) so that the buffer
is written completely atomically and without a copy into
another temporary buffer. This is useful for fixing
compound console/log messages that become broken and
interleaved when multiple threads are competing for the
console.
Reviewed by: ken, imp
Sponsored by: Netflix
This function allows the caller to specify the reference clock
and choose between absolute and relative mode. In relative mode,
the remaining time can be returned.
The API is similar to clock_nanosleep(3). Thanks to Ed Schouten
for that suggestion.
While I'm here, reduce the sleep time in the semaphore "child"
test to greatly reduce its runtime. Also add a reasonable timeout.
Reviewed by: ed (userland)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9656
for USB OTG-capable hardware to implement device side of USB
Mass Storage, ie pretend it's a flash drive. It's configured
in the same way as other CTL frontends, using ctladm(8)
or ctld(8). Differently from usfs(4), all the configuration
can be done without rebuilding the kernel.
Testing and review is welcome. Right now I'm still moving,
and I don't have access to my test environment, so I'm somewhat
reluctant to making larger changes to this code; on the other
hand I don't want to let it sit on Phab until my testing setup
is back, because I want to get it into 11.1-RELEASE.
Reviewed by: emaste (cursory), wblock (man page)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8787
compile options. Remove doxygen pointers to now deleted files. Remove
EISA and VME as examples in bus_space.9.
Retained EISA mode code for IO PIC and MPTABLES because that's not
EISA bus, per se, and some people have abused EISA to mean "EISA-like
behavior as opposed to ISA" rather than using it for EISA add-in
cards.
Relnotes: yes
VesaLocalBus or EISA. Internally, EISA and ISA are handled the same,
with VL being handled slightly differently. To avoid too much code
churn, retain the EISA name, despite it being used only for ISA
bus. When it is on the ISA bus, weird gymnastics are required with
EISA-space address accesses as well. Remove known models from the ahc
man page. Remove ahc_eisa module.
page. Remove comment about EISA dual channel card. Remove trivial
references in advlib to avoid false positives with grep. Remove stray
MCA reference not worth a seperate commit.
still relevant (ISA cards can still be in EISA mode, and we're still
ignoring those in the identify routine). Notes about cards in EISA
mode have been left in the manual since they aren't relevant to EISA
support, but instruct how to properly configure an ISA card in a mode
when it is in a ISA bus slot.
support. Fix a comment block that's shared with both vx and ep. Remove
obsolete refernce to statically compiling a kernel with a fixed number
of vx devices. Have not removed EISA from the title of the document
the register definitions were originally derived from (though no doubt
more recent docments were also consulted).
machines, only a few 486 machines that used it, and those haven't had
enough memory to run FreeBSD for quite some time (often limited to
16MB).
Not to be confused with the Machine Check Architecture, which is still
very much alive and used (and untouched by this commit).
No Objection From: arch@
Small summary
-------------
o Almost all IPsec releated code was moved into sys/netipsec.
o New kernel modules added: ipsec.ko and tcpmd5.ko. New kernel
option IPSEC_SUPPORT added. It enables support for loading
and unloading of ipsec.ko and tcpmd5.ko kernel modules.
o IPSEC_NAT_T option was removed. Now NAT-T support is enabled by
default. The UDP_ENCAP_ESPINUDP_NON_IKE encapsulation type
support was removed. Added TCP/UDP checksum handling for
inbound packets that were decapsulated by transport mode SAs.
setkey(8) modified to show run-time NAT-T configuration of SA.
o New network pseudo interface if_ipsec(4) added. For now it is
build as part of ipsec.ko module (or with IPSEC kernel).
It implements IPsec virtual tunnels to create route-based VPNs.
o The network stack now invokes IPsec functions using special
methods. The only one header file <netipsec/ipsec_support.h>
should be included to declare all the needed things to work
with IPsec.
o All IPsec protocols handlers (ESP/AH/IPCOMP protosw) were removed.
Now these protocols are handled directly via IPsec methods.
o TCP_SIGNATURE support was reworked to be more close to RFC.
o PF_KEY SADB was reworked:
- now all security associations stored in the single SPI namespace,
and all SAs MUST have unique SPI.
- several hash tables added to speed up lookups in SADB.
- SADB now uses rmlock to protect access, and concurrent threads
can do SA lookups in the same time.
- many PF_KEY message handlers were reworked to reflect changes
in SADB.
- SADB_UPDATE message was extended to support new PF_KEY headers:
SADB_X_EXT_NEW_ADDRESS_SRC and SADB_X_EXT_NEW_ADDRESS_DST. They
can be used by IKE daemon to change SA addresses.
o ipsecrequest and secpolicy structures were cardinally changed to
avoid locking protection for ipsecrequest. Now we support
only limited number (4) of bundled SAs, but they are supported
for both INET and INET6.
o INPCB security policy cache was introduced. Each PCB now caches
used security policies to avoid SP lookup for each packet.
o For inbound security policies added the mode, when the kernel does
check for full history of applied IPsec transforms.
o References counting rules for security policies and security
associations were changed. The proper SA locking added into xform
code.
o xform code was also changed. Now it is possible to unregister xforms.
tdb_xxx structures were changed and renamed to reflect changes in
SADB/SPDB, and changed rules for locking and refcounting.
Reviewed by: gnn, wblock
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9352
'-n' to tell the driver to create _up to_ 'n' queues if enough cores are
available. For example, setting hw.cxgbe.nrxq10g="-32" will result in
16 queues if the system has 16 cores, 32 if it has 32.
There is no change in the default number of queues of any type.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Document AF_UNIX control messages in unix(4) only, not split between unix(4)
and recv(2).
Also, warn about LOCAL_CREDS effective uid/gid fields, since the write could
be from a setuid or setgid program (with the explicit SCM_CREDS and
LOCAL_PEERCRED, the credentials are read at such a time that it can be
assumed that the process intends for them to be used in this context).
Reviewed by: wblock
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9298
Provide more useful explanation of features and quirks.
Reviewed by: emaste, vangyzen
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9211
This manpage isn't differentiated from mlx4en except where necessary,
replacing eth/ETH with ib/IB.
Eventually the manpages will be split and the common bits be placed
in a manpage named "mlx4.4".
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: hselasky
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9241
The ea_name string is not nul-terminated. Correct the documentation.
Because the subsequent field is padded to 8 bytes, and the padding is
zeroed, the ea_name string will appear to be nul-terminated whenever the
length isn't exactly one (mod eight).
This was introduced in r167010 (2007).
Additionally, mark the length fields as unsigned. This particularly
matters for the single byte ea_namelength field, which can represent
extended attribute names up to 255 bytes long.
No functional change.
PR: 216127
Reported by: dewayne at heuristicsystems.com.au
Reviewed by: kib@
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9206
Replace archaic "busses" with modern form "buses."
Intentionally excluded:
* Old/random drivers I didn't recognize
* Old hardware in general
* Use of "busses" in code as identifiers
No functional change.
http://grammarist.com/spelling/buses-busses/
PR: 216099
Reported by: bltsrc at mail.ru
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The sysctl controls the period per interface.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9153
drain timeout handling to historical freebsd behavior.
The primary reason for these changes is the need to have tty_drain() call
ttydevsw_busy() at some reasonable sub-second rate, to poll hardware that
doesn't signal an interrupt when the transmit shift register becomes empty
(which includes virtually all USB serial hardware). Such hardware hangs
in a ttyout wait, because it never gets an opportunity to trigger a wakeup
from the sleep in tty_drain() by calling ttydisc_getc() again, after
handing the last of the buffered data to the hardware.
While researching the history of changes to tty_drain() I stumbled across
some email describing the historical BSD behavior of tcdrain() and close()
on serial ports, and the ability of comcontrol(1) to control timeout
behavior. Using that and some advice from Bruce Evans as a guide, I've
put together these changes to implement the hardware polling and restore
the historical timeout behaviors...
- tty_drain() now calls ttydevsw_busy() in a loop at 10 Hz to accomodate
hardware that requires polling for busy state.
- The "new historical" behavior for draining during close(2) is retained:
the drain timeout is "1 second without making any progress". When the
1-second timeout expires, if the count of bytes remaining in the tty
layer buffer is smaller than last time, the timeout is extended for
another second. Unfortunately, the same logic cannot be extended all
the way down to the hardware, because the interface to that layer is a
simple busy/not-busy indication.
- Due to the previous point, an application that needs a guarantee that
all data has been transmitted must use TIOCDRAIN/tcdrain(3) before
calling close(2).
- The historical behavior of honoring the drainwait setting for TIOCDRAIN
(used by tcdrain(3)) is restored.
- The historical kern.drainwait sysctl to control the global default
drainwait time is restored, but is now named kern.tty_drainwait.
- The historical default drainwait timeout of 300 seconds is restored.
- Handling of TIOCGDRAINWAIT and TIOCSDRAINWAIT ioctls is restored
(this also makes the comcontrol(1) drainwait verb work again).
- Manpages are updated to document these behaviors.
Reviewed by: bde (prior version)
These primitives give the caller the read value if the exchange attempt
failed which saves an explicit reload for cmpset loops.
The man page was partially submitted by kib.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version), jhb (previous version)
- Update struct link_settings and associated shared code.
- Add tunables to control FEC and autonegotiation. All ports inherit
these values as their initial settings.
hw.cxgbe.fec
hw.cxgbe.autoneg
- Add per-port sysctls to control FEC and autonegotiation. These can be
modified at any time.
dev.<port>.<n>.fec
dev.<port>.<n>.autoneg
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
- Drop uses of 'will'.
- Replace 'to use' with active voice.
- Tidy language around interrupt types and clarify that INTx doesn't
work on VFs.
- Drop leading articles from sysctl/tunable descriptions.
- Tweak the wording of several sysctl/tunable descriptions.
Submitted by: wblock (1, 2, 4)
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8812
FC-Tape provides additional link level error recovery, and is
highly recommended for tape devices. It will only be turned on for
a given target if the target supports it.
Without this setting, we default to whatever FC-Tape setting is in
NVRAM on the card.
This can be overridden by setting the following loader tunable, for
example for isp0:
hint.isp.0.nofctape=1
sys/conf/options:
Add a new kernel config option, ISP_FCTAPE_OFF, that
defaults the FC-Tape configuration to off.
sys/dev/isp/isp_pci.c:
If ISP_FCTAPE_OFF is defined, turn off FC-Tape. Otherwise,
turn it on if the card supports it.
share/man/man4/isp.4:
Add a description of FC-Tape to the isp(4) man page.
Add descriptions of the fctape and nofctape options, as well as the
ISP_FCTAPE_OFF kernel configuration option.
Add the ispfw module and kernel drivers to the suggested
configurations at the top of the man page so that users are less
likely to leave it out. The driver works well with the included
firmware, but may not work at all with whatever firmware the user
has flashed on their card.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
I'm currently working on writing a metrics exporter for the Prometheus
monitoring system to provide access to sysctl metrics. Prometheus and
sysctl have some structural differences:
- sysctl is a tree of string component names.
- Prometheus uses a flat namespace for its metrics, but allows you to
attach labels with values to them, so that you can do aggregation.
An initial version of my exporter simply translated
hw.acpi.thermal.tz1.temperature
to
sysctl_hw_acpi_thermal_tz1_temperature_celcius
while we should ideally have
sysctl_hw_acpi_thermal_temperature_celcius{thermal_zone="tz1"}
allowing you to graph all thermal zones on a system in one go.
The change presented in this commit adds support for accomplishing this,
by providing the ability to attach labels to nodes. In the example I
gave above, the label "thermal_zone" would be attached to "tz1". As this
is a feature that will only be used very rarely, I decided to not change
the KPI too aggressively.
Discussed on: hackers@
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8775
Changes include modifications in kernel crash dump routines, dumpon(8) and
savecore(8). A new tool called decryptcore(8) was added.
A new DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O control was added to send a kernel crash dump
configuration in the diocskerneldump_arg structure to the kernel.
The old DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O control was renamed to DIOCSKERNELDUMP_FREEBSD11 for
backward ABI compatibility.
dumpon(8) generates an one-time random symmetric key and encrypts it using
an RSA public key in capability mode. Currently only AES-256-CBC is supported
but EKCD was designed to implement support for other algorithms in the future.
The public key is chosen using the -k flag. The dumpon rc(8) script can do this
automatically during startup using the dumppubkey rc.conf(5) variable. Once the
keys are calculated dumpon sends them to the kernel via DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O
control.
When the kernel receives the DIOCSKERNELDUMP I/O control it generates a random
IV and sets up the key schedule for the specified algorithm. Each time the
kernel tries to write a crash dump to the dump device, the IV is replaced by
a SHA-256 hash of the previous value. This is intended to make a possible
differential cryptanalysis harder since it is possible to write multiple crash
dumps without reboot by repeating the following commands:
# sysctl debug.kdb.enter=1
db> call doadump(0)
db> continue
# savecore
A kernel dump key consists of an algorithm identifier, an IV and an encrypted
symmetric key. The kernel dump key size is included in a kernel dump header.
The size is an unsigned 32-bit integer and it is aligned to a block size.
The header structure has 512 bytes to match the block size so it was required to
make a panic string 4 bytes shorter to add a new field to the header structure.
If the kernel dump key size in the header is nonzero it is assumed that the
kernel dump key is placed after the first header on the dump device and the core
dump is encrypted.
Separate functions were implemented to write the kernel dump header and the
kernel dump key as they need to be unencrypted. The dump_write function encrypts
data if the kernel was compiled with the EKCD option. Encrypted kernel textdumps
are not supported due to the way they are constructed which makes it impossible
to use the CBC mode for encryption. It should be also noted that textdumps don't
contain sensitive data by design as a user decides what information should be
dumped.
savecore(8) writes the kernel dump key to a key.# file if its size in the header
is nonzero. # is the number of the current core dump.
decryptcore(8) decrypts the core dump using a private RSA key and the kernel
dump key. This is performed by a child process in capability mode.
If the decryption was not successful the parent process removes a partially
decrypted core dump.
Description on how to encrypt crash dumps was added to the decryptcore(8),
dumpon(8), rc.conf(5) and savecore(8) manual pages.
EKCD was tested on amd64 using bhyve and i386, mipsel and sparc64 using QEMU.
The feature still has to be tested on arm and arm64 as it wasn't possible to run
FreeBSD due to the problems with QEMU emulation and lack of hardware.
Designed by: def, pjd
Reviewed by: cem, oshogbo, pjd
Partial review: delphij, emaste, jhb, kib
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4712
Instead of failing with ENAMETOOLONG, which is swallowed by
pthread_set_name_np() anyway, truncate the given name to MAXCOMLEN+1
bytes. This is more likely what the user wants, and saves the
caller from truncating it before the call (which was the only
recourse).
Polish pthread_set_name_np(3) and add a .Xr to thr_set_name(2)
so the user might find the documentation for this behavior.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
- It should say 'read' in the I2CREAD section.
- last in the struct indicates the last command in a sequence, not the
reverse.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
~/nsmb.conf, as erroneously introduced by r214387, is never used. Fix the man
page to specify that ~/.nsmbrc is used instead.
PR: 210652
Submitted by: ganael.laplanche@corp.ovh.com
Approved by: gjb (doceng@)
We shouldn't install them on the architectures not supported by Hyper-V.
And, hv_ata_pci_disengage.4.gz should be removed from all architectures:
1) It should have only applied to Hyper-V;
2) For Hyper-V platforms (amd64 and i386), the related driver was removed by
r306426 | sephe | 2016-09-29 09:41:52 +0800 (Thu, 29 Sep 2016),
because now we have a better mechanism to disble the ata driver for hard
disks when the VM runs on Hyper-V.
Reviewed by: sephe, andrew, jhb
Approved by: sephe (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8572
on the AES-NI code, and modified as needed for use on ARMv8. When loaded
the driver will check the appropriate field in the id_aa64isar0_el1
register to see if AES is supported, and if so the probe function will
signal the driver should attach.
With this I have seen up to 2000Mb/s from the cryptotest test with a single
thread on a ThunderX Pass 2.0.
Reviewed by: imp
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8297
We need to remove the line since we removed the related manual just now.
Reviewed by: sephe
Approved by: sephe (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft
A few months ago, we removed the driver, which was not necessary any longer.
Reviewed by: sephe
Approved by: sephe (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft
We enhanced the vmbus driver to support PCIe pass-through recently.
Reviewed by: sephe
Approved by: sephe (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft