VR_STICKHW register would result in unexpected results on these
hardwares. wpaul said the following for the issue.
The vr_attach() routine unconditionally does this for all supported
chips:
/*
* Windows may put the chip in suspend mode when it
* shuts down. Be sure to kick it in the head to wake it
* up again.
*/
VR_CLRBIT(sc, VR_STICKHW, (VR_STICKHW_DS0|VR_STICKHW_DS1));
The problem is, the VR_STICKHW register is not valid on all Rhine
devices. The VT86C100A chip, which is present on the D-Link DFE-530TX
boards, doesn't support power management, and its register space is
only 128 bytes wide. The VR_STICKHW register offset falls outside this
range. This may go unnoticed in most scenarios, but if you happen to have
another PCI device in your system which is assigned the register
space immediately after that of the Rhine, the vr(4) driver will
incorrectly stomp it. In my case, the BIOS on my test board decided
to put the register space for my PRO/100 ethernet board right next
to the Rhine, and the Rhine driver ended up clobbering the IMR register
of the PRO/100 device. (Long story short: the board kept locking up on
boot. Took me the better part of the morning suss out why.)
The strictly correct thing to do would be to check the PCI config space
to make sure the device supports the power management capability and only
write to the VR_STICKHW register if it does.
Instead of inspecting chip revision numbers for the availability of
VR_STICKHW register, check the existence of power management capability
of the hardware as wpaul suggested.
Reported by: wpaul
Suggested by: wpaul
OK'ed by: jhb
1. The locking was changed to shared but roundrobin mode still updated a
pointer in the softc with the next tx interface to use. This will panic
under high load. Change this to an atomically incremented sequence number in
order to choose the tx port in round robin.
2. IFQ_HANDOFF will free the mbuf if the queue is full, this will then be freed
again by lagg_start() and panic. Reorganised the error handling and freeing
to fix this.
MFC after: 3 days
SAS-enabled cards. It also makes the driver MPSAFE, eliminating some
problems that resulted from CAM becoming MPSAFE. Many thanks to 3Ware/AMCC
for continuing to support FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Manjunath Ranganathaiah
Approved by: re
voltage of 0. This can result in a divide by zero trap. Add a guard
for this case. The value of lfcap is checked in acpi_battery_bif_valid()
just before this, so it is safe.
Reportd by: sam
Approved by: re
MFC after: 3 days
of directly from acpi0. Before it would attach prior to the sysresource
devices, causing the later allocation of its memory range to fail and
print a warning like "acpi0: reservation of fed00000, 1000 (3) failed".
Use an explicit define for our probe order base value of 10.
Help from: jhb
Tested by: Abdullah Ibn Hamad Al-Marri <almarrie / gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Approved by: re
fixes a bug on UP machines with SMP kernels where the idle thread
constantly switches after trying to steal work from the local cpu.
- Make the idle stealing code more robust against self selection.
- Prefer to steal from the cpu with the highest load that has at least one
transferable thread. Before we selected the cpu with the highest
transferable count which excludes bound threads.
Collaborated with: csjp
Approved by: re
to simply switch rather than lowering priority and switching. This allows
threads of equal priority to run but not lesser priority.
Discussed with: davidxu
Reported by: NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@sa2c.net>
Approved by: re
critical_exit() owepreempt check. ULE will always use owepreempt to
preempt the idle thread. This change does not effect 4BSD since it will
never set owepreempt without PREEMPTION enabled.
- Remove some unused code from choosethread().
Discussed with: jhb
Approved by: re
it must first ensure that the page is no longer mapped. This is
trivially accomplished by calling pmap_remove_all() a little earlier
in vm_page_cache(). While I'm in the neighborbood, make a related
panic message a little more useful.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Reported by: Peter Holm and Konstantin Belousov
Reviewed by: Konstantin Belousov
a consequence of sparc64/sparc64/vm_machdep.c revision 1.76. It occurs
when uma_small_free() frees a page. The solution has two parts: (1) Mark
pages allocated with VM_ALLOC_NOOBJ as PG_UNMANAGED. (2) Defer the lock
assertion in pmap_page_is_mapped() until after PG_UNMANAGED is tested.
This is safe because both PG_UNMANAGED and PG_FICTITIOUS are immutable
flags, i.e., they do not change state between the time that a page is
allocated and freed.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
PR: 116794
TCP: [X.X.X.X]:X to [X.X.X.X]:X tcpflags 0x18<PUSH,ACK>; tcp_do_segment: FIN_WAIT_2: Received data after socket was closed, sending RST and removing tcpcb
So that it also includes how many bytes of data were received. It now looks
like this:
TCP: [X.X.X.X]:X to [X.X.X.X]:X tcpflags 0x18<PUSH,ACK>; tcp_do_segment: FIN_WAIT_2: Received X bytes of data after socket was closed, sending RST and removing tcpcb
Approved by: re (gnn)
not being independently freeable. This allows one to embed an mbuf in
the cluster itself. This confers the benefits of the packet zone on
all cluster sizes. Embedded mbufs currently suffer from the same
limitation that packet zone mbufs do in that one cannot disconnect
them and pass them around independently of the cluster. It would
likely be possible to eliminate this limitation in the future by
adding a second reference for the mbuf itself.
Approved by: re(gnn)
problems with the syncache, it produces a lot of console noise and has led
to quite a few false positive bug reports. It can be selectively
re-enabled when debugging specific problems by frobbing the same sysctl.
Discussed with: silby
Approved by: re (gnn)
directory itself (rather than any of its contents) is visible to the
current thread.
MFC after: 1 week
PR: kern/90063
Submitted by: john of 8192.net
Approved by: re (kensmith)
with all functions supported. This is done adding usb device IDs
to the table of recognised devices (because there is no standard
'scanner' class, so no other way to recognise them), and with
a small change to the uscanner attach routine that prevents
reconfiguring the whole USB device while we are dealing only with
one of its USB interfaces.
The latter part has been suggested by Steinar Hamre in
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=107665 , i have
only added a bit of explaination to the code.
I have personally tried this on the Epson DX-5050 and DX-6000
devices (on the US market they have different names, CX-something).
I have good reasons to think that, possibly with the mere addition
of more USB ids to the table in uscanner.c, this should work with
all Epson multifunction devices in that family (from DX-3800 to
DX-7000 - these units are in the 50-120$ price range).
More details on related topics (SANE configuration, OCR, etc.)
at http://info.iet.unipi.it/~luigi/FreeBSD/dx5050.html
Manpage updates coming soon.
Approved by: re, imp
MFC after: 3 days
UDMA modes.
Please notice that Soekris NET5501 bios versions before 1.32f has a bug
that prevents this from working.
Approved by: re (gnn)
MFC: 2 weeks
Before that fix, it was possible for the function to fail if number
of sharers changes between 'x = sx->sx_lock' step and atomic_cmpset_acq_ptr()
call.
This fixes ZFS problem when ZFS returns strange EIO errors under load.
In ZFS there is a code that depends on the fact that sx_try_slock() can
only fail if there is an exclusive owner.
Discussed with: attilio
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: re (kensmith)
after the switch leads to a race where the outgoing thread still owns
the local queue lock while another cpu may switch it in. This race
is only possible on machines where cpu_switch can take significantly
longer on different cpus which in practice means HTT machines with
unfair thread scheduling algorithms.
Found by: kris (of course)
Approved by: re
starvation caused by unbalanced interrupt loads.
- Change the rebalancer to work on stathz ticks but retain randomization.
- Simplify locking in tdq_idled() to use the tdq_lock_pair() rather than
complex sequences of locks to avoid deadlock.
Reported by: kris
Approved by: re
retransmittion by handover event (fast mobility code)
- Fixed problem of mobility code which is caused by remaining
parameters in the deleted primary destination.
- Add a missing lock. When a peer sends an INIT, and while we
are processing it to send an INIT-ACK the socket is closed,
we did not hold a lock to keep the socket from going away.
Add protection for this case.
- Fix so that arwnd is alway uses the minimal rwnd if the user
has set the socket buffer smaller. Found this when the test
org decided to see what happens when you set in a rwnd of 10
bytes (which is not allowed per RFC .. 4k is minimum).
- Fixes so a cookie-echo ootb will NOT cause an abort to
be sent. This was happening in a MPI collision case.
- Examined all panics and unless there was no recovery, moved
any that were not already to INVARANTS.
Approved by: re@freebsd.org (gnn)
support machines having multiple independently numbered PCI domains
and don't support reenumeration without ambiguity amongst the
devices as seen by the OS and represented by PCI location strings.
This includes introducing a function pci_find_dbsf(9) which works
like pci_find_bsf(9) but additionally takes a domain number argument
and limiting pci_find_bsf(9) to only search devices in domain 0 (the
only domain in single-domain systems). Bge(4) and ofw_pcibus(4) are
changed to use pci_find_dbsf(9) instead of pci_find_bsf(9) in order
to no longer report false positives when searching for siblings and
dupe devices in the same domain respectively.
Along with this change the sole host-PCI bridge driver converted to
actually make use of PCI domain support is uninorth(4), the others
continue to use domain 0 only for now and need to be converted as
appropriate later on.
Note that this means that the format of the location strings as used
by pciconf(8) has been changed and that consumers of <sys/pciio.h>
potentially need to be recompiled.
Suggested by: jhb
Reviewed by: grehan, jhb, marcel
Approved by: re (kensmith), jhb (PCI maintainer hat)
After discussion with Sam, switch back to use firmware(9) instead of
having the firmware in hex format.
Put the binary firmware uuencoded into sys/contrib/dev/npe, and slap a
LICENSE file, as found on the Intel website.
Approved by: re (blanket), mux (mentor)
MFC After: 1 week
Without this change the following situation was possible:
1. Provider is orphaned from within class' access() method on last write
close - orphan provider event is send.
2. GEOM detects last write close on a provider and sends new provider event.
3. g_orphan_register() is called, and calls all orphan methods of attached
consumers.
4. New provider event is executed on orphaned provider, all classes can
taste already orphaned provider, and some may attach consumers to it.
Those consumers will never go away, because the g_orphan_register()
was already called.
We end up with a zombie provider.
With this change, at step 3, we will cancel new provider event.
How to repeat this problem:
# mdconfig -a -t malloc -s 10m
# geli init -i 0 md0
# geli attach md0
# newfs -L test /dev/md0.eli
# mount /dev/ufs/test /mnt/tmp
# geli detach -l md0.eli
# umount /mnt/tmp
# glabel status
Name Status Components
ufs/test N/A N/A
Reviewed by: phk
Approved by: re (kensmith)
value for kern.sched.preempt_thresh appropriately. It can still by
adjusted at runtime. ULE will still use IPI_PREEMPT in certain
migration situations.
- Assert that we're not trying to compile ULE on an unsupported
architecture. To date, I believe only i386 and amd64 have implemented
the third cpu switch argument required.
Approved by: re
cache: vm_object_page_remove() should convert any cached pages that
fall with the specified range to free pages. Otherwise, there could
be a problem if a file is first truncated and then regrown.
Specifically, some old data from prior to the truncation might reappear.
Generalize vm_page_cache_free() to support the conversion of either a
subset or the entirety of an object's cached pages.
Reported by: tegge
Reviewed by: tegge
Approved by: re (kensmith)
to gem_attach() as the former access softc members not yet initialized
at that time and gem_reset() actually is enough to stop the chip. [1]
o Revise the use of gem_bitwait(); add bus_barrier() calls before calling
gem_bitwait() to ensure the respective bit has been written before we
starting polling on it and poll for the right bits to change, f.e. even
though we only reset RX we have to actually wait for both GEM_RESET_RX
and GEM_RESET_TX to clear. Add some additional gem_bitwait() calls in
places we've been missing them according to the GEM documentation.
Along with this some excessive DELAYs, which probably only were added
because of bugs in gem_bitwait() and its use in the first place, as
well as as have of an gem_bitwait() reimplementation in gem_reset_tx()
were removed.
o Add gem_reset_rxdma() and use it to deal with GEM_MAC_RX_OVERFLOW errors
more gracefully as unlike gem_init_locked() it resets the RX DMA engine
only, causing no link loss and the FIFOs not to be cleared. Also use it
deal with GEM_INTR_RX_TAG_ERR errors, with previously were unhandled.
This was based on information obtained from the Linux GEM and OpenSolaris
ERI drivers.
o Turn on workarounds for silicon bugs in the Apple GMAC variants.
This was based on information obtained from the Darwin GMAC and Linux GEM
drivers.
o Turn on "infinite" (i.e. maximum 31 * 64 bytes in length) DMA bursts.
This greatly improves especially RX performance.
o Optimize the RX path, this consists of:
- kicking the receiver as soon as we've a spare descriptor in gem_rint()
again instead of just once after all the ready ones have been handled;
- kicking the receiver the right way, i.e. as outlined in the GEM
documentation in batches of 4 and by pointing it to the descriptor
after the last valid one;
- calling gem_rint() before gem_tint() in gem_intr() as gem_tint() may
take quite a while;
- doubling the size of the RX ring to 256 descriptors.
Overall the RX performance of a GEM in a 1GHz Sun Fire V210 was improved
from ~100Mbit/s to ~850Mbit/s.
o In gem_add_rxbuf() don't assign the newly allocated mbuf to rxs_mbuf
before calling bus_dmamap_load_mbuf_sg(), if bus_dmamap_load_mbuf_sg()
fails we'll free the newly allocated mbuf, unable to recycle the
previous one but a NULL pointer dereference instead.
o In gem_init_locked() honor the return value of gem_meminit().
o Simplify gem_ringsize() and dont' return garbage in the default case.
Based on OpenBSD.
o Don't turn on MAC control, MIF and PCS interrupts unless GEM_DEBUG is
defined as we don't need/use these interrupts for operation.
o In gem_start_locked() sync the DMA maps of the descriptor rings before
every kick of the transmitter and not just once after enqueuing all
packets as the NIC might instantly start transmitting after we kicked
it the first time.
o Keep state of the link state and use it to enable or disable the MAC
in gem_mii_statchg() accordingly as well as to return early from
gem_start_locked() in case the link is down. [3]
o Initialize the maximum frame size to a sane value.
o In gem_mii_statchg() enable carrier extension if appropriate.
o Increment if_ierrors in case of an GEM_MAC_RX_OVERFLOW error and in
gem_eint(). [3]
o Handle IFF_ALLMULTI correctly; don't set it if we've turned promiscuous
group mode on and don't clear the flag if we've disabled promiscuous
group mode (these were mostly NOPs though). [2]
o Let gem_eint() also report GEM_INTR_PERR errors.
o Move setting sc_variant from gem_pci_probe() to gem_pci_attach() as
device probe methods are not supposed to touch the softc.
o Collapse sc_inited and sc_pci into bits for sc_flags.
o Add CTASSERTs ensuring that GEM_NRXDESC and GEM_NTXDESC are set to
legal values.
o Correctly set up for 802.3x flow control, though #ifdef out the code
that actually enables it as this needs more testing and mainly a proper
framework to support it.
o Correct and add some conversions from hard-coded functions names to
__func__ which were borked or forgotten in if_gem.c rev. 1.42.
o Use PCIR_BAR instead of a homegrown macro.
o Replace sc_enaddr[6] with sc_enaddr[ETHER_ADDR_LEN].
o In gem_pci_attach() in case attaching fails release the resources in
the opposite order they were allocated.
o Make gem_reset() static to if_gem.c as it's not needed outside that
module.
o Remove the GEM_GIGABIT flag and the associated code; GEM_GIGABIT was
never set and the associated code was in the wrong place.
o Remove sc_mif_config; it was only used to cache the contents of the
respective register within gem_attach().
o Remove the #ifdef'ed out NetBSD/OpenBSD code for establishing a suspend
hook as it will never be used on FreeBSD.
o Also probe Apple Intrepid 2 GMAC and Apple Shasta GMAC, add support for
Apple K2 GMAC. Based on OpenBSD.
o Add support for Sun GBE/P cards, or in other words actually add support
for cards based on GEM to gem(4). This mainly consists of adding support
for the TBI of these chips. Along with this the PHY selection code was
rewritten to hardcode the PHY number for certain configurations as for
example the PHY of the on-board ERI of Blade 1000 shows up twice causing
no link as the second incarnation is isolated.
These changes were ported from OpenBSD with some additional improvements
and modulo some bugs.
o Add code to if_gem_pci.c allowing to read the MAC-address from the VPD on
systems without Open Firmware.
This is an improved version of my variant of the respective code in
if_hme_pci.c
o Now that gem(4) is MI enable it for all archs.
Pointed out by: yongari [1]
Suggested by: rwatson [2], yongari [3]
Tested on: i386 (GEM), powerpc (GMACs by marcel and yongari),
sparc64 (ERI and GEM)
Reviewed by: yongari
Approved by: re (kensmith)
33MHz for calculating the latency timer values for its children.
Inspired by NetBSD doing the same and Linux as well as OpenSolaris
using a similar approach.
While at it rename a variable and change its type to be more
appropriate fuer values of PCI properties so the variable can be
more easily reused.
- Initialize the cache line size register of PCI devices to a
legal value; the cache line size is limited to 64 bytes by the
Fireplane/Safari, JBus and UPA interconnection busses. Setting
it to an unsupported value caused bad performance at least with
GEM as it causes them to not do cache line bursts and to not
issue cache line commands on the PCI bus.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
MFC after: 1 week