r306065/r306067 introduced ofw_parse_bootargs(), setting environment variables
from Open Firmware's /chosen/bootargs property. On systems booting with
loader(8) (meaning, most systems), the initial static kenv is created with no
extra space, causing kern_setenv() to panic. Since these already have the
environment set directly, there is no need to parse bootargs anyway.
Found by: swills
GNU rcs is still available as a package:
- rcs: Latest GPLv3 GNU rcs version.
- rcs57: Copy of the latest version of GNU rcs (GPLv2) from base.
Relnotes: yes
CTL itself has no limits on on UNMAP and WRITE SAME sizes. But depending
on backends large requests may take too much time. To avoid that new
configuration options allow to hint initiator maximal sizes it should not
exceed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Comparing to the Linux driver there is still one missing feature.
The Linux driver finds and enables "Embedded Controller" item in
the 0x11 group if it's not enabled yet.
I tested the new method, Torfinn Ingolfsen tested the old method
and helped to fix several bugs in the earlier versions of the patch.
Tested by: Torfinn Ingolfsen <torfinn.ingolfsen@getmail.no>
Reviewed by: rpaulo
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8227
Also renamed some tfo labels and added/reworked comments for clarity.
Based on an initial patch from jtl.
PR: 213424
Reviewed by: jtl
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8235
compile when that option is configured. In tcp_destroy(), the error
variable is now only used in code enclosed in an '#ifdef TCP_HHOOK' block.
This broke the build for VNET images.
Enclose the error variable itself in an #ifdef block.
Submitted by: Shawn Webb <shawn.webb at hardenedbsd.org>
Reported by: Shawn Webb <shawn.webb at hardenedbsd.org>
PointyHat to: jtl
- Rename SOC_BCM2837 to SOC_BRCM_BCM2837, put it to opt_soc.h
- do not use files.XXX files, just move required sources to
conf/files.arm64 and make them depend on soc_brcm_bcm2837
Suggested by: andrew
All I/O APIC pins are masked when an I/O APIC is first probed. The
APIC enumerator (MP Table or MADT) then parses its associated tables to
configure individual pins to set custom delivery modes or alternate
routing (e.g. routing IRQ 0 to intpin 2). Pins for regular interrupt
pins are left masked until the first interrupt is assigned. However,
pins with unusual settings (e.g. NMI or SMI) are never assigned an
interrupt and thus never re-programmed. The I/O APIC code used to
reprogram all interrupt pins during registration but this was lost in
r151979.
In theory, this is mostly a no-op as the ACPI APIC table does not
include a way to enumerate NMI or SMI pins for the I/O APIC, so only
systems using an MP Table would be affected.
Reported by: avg
MFC after: 1 month
Using the device pager with /dev/kmem is not stable since KVA mappings
are transient, but the device pager caches the PA associated with a
given offset forever. Interestingly, mips' implementation of
memmap() already refused requests for /dev/kmem.
Note that kvm_read/kvm_write do not use mmap, but use read and write on
/dev/kmem, so this should not affect libkvm users.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 months
etc. can find out where the SMBIOS entry point is located. In pure
UEFI mode the BIOS is not mapped into the standard address space so the
SMBIOS table might not appear between 0xf0000 and 0xfffff. The
UEFI environment can report this the location of the anchor. If it is
reported then expose it as hint.smbios.0.mem. This can then be used
by other tools. However, we should make smbios(4) useful and have it
take this value and provide accesor function so ipmi(4) etc. don't
have to parse and figure things about the SMBIOS table. I have some
simple patches to smbios(4) to expose this address as sysctl and
for ipmi(4) to get the base address. However, the real fix is to
have ipmi(4) ask smbios(4) for what it wants and have smbios(4)
parse it out and return it. This would make smbios(4) useful and reduce
duplicated code. If this address doesn't point to the anchor then
finding SMBIOS info. will fail as if this didn't exist. So there should
be no harm.
With this change and the following hack, dmidecode works on a bunch of
UEFI machines that I tested:
if kenv hint.smbios.0.mem > /dev/null
then
mkdir -p /sys/firmware/efi
mount -t tmpfs -o size=8k tmpfs /sys/firmware/efi
echo "SMBIOS=`kenv hint.smbios.0.mem`" > /sys/firmware/efi/systab
fi
Linux exposes this information via the /sys/firmware/efi/systab file which
dmidecode looks at. We should update dmidecode to do this the FreeBSD
way when we determine what that is!
Reviewed by: jhb
functions to call at the appropriate time to register new forth
words. In the past we've done this with ifdef soup, but now if the
file is included in the build, we'll get the new forth words.
Use this new functionality to move the pci bios stuff out of loader.c
by moving it to biospci.c.
Move the pnp functionality to common/pnp.c.
Move the inb/outb forth words to the i386 sysdep.c file where their
implementation is defined.
Adjust the efi linker scripts and build machinery to cope.
his should be an invisible change to forth scripts and user
experience.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8145
than to store the location of a forth word that is subsequently never
used. It was last used before the 2.03 ficl upgrade in r51786. It was
only used from r43614 (so Feb-Sept 1999) on head and in the 3.x branch
(merged r43715 3.1 -> EOL). Remove it since nobody cared enough to
report the bug in the last 18 years rather than fix it. It's need
seems to have passed in the 2.03 ficl update.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8150
replaced by /boot/loader.rc for 3.1 (r42682). In May 2000, this was
documented as deprecated (r61942) (between FreeBSD 4.0 and
4.1). Remove it since it's not been the preferred method in 17 years
and has been deprecated for 16.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8142
received on a TCP session that has entered the ESTABLISHED state. This
results in a lot of calls to reset the keepalive timer.
This patch changes the behavior so we set the keepalive timer for the
keepalive idle time (TP_KEEPIDLE). When the keepalive timer fires, it will
first check to see if the session has been idle for TP_KEEPIDLE ticks. If
not, it will reschedule the keepalive timer for the time the session will
have been idle for TP_KEEPIDLE ticks.
For a session with regular communication, the keepalive timer should fire
approximately once every TP_KEEPIDLE ticks. For sessions with irregular
communication, the keepalive timer might fire more often. But, the
disruption from a periodic keepalive timer should be less than the regular
cost of resetting the keepalive timer on every packet.
(FWIW, this change saved approximately 1.73% of the busy CPU cycles on a
particular test system with a heavy TCP output load. Of course, the
actual impact is very specific to the particular hardware and workload.)
Reviewed by: gallatin, rrs
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8243
6988 spa_sync() spends half its time in dmu_objset_do_userquota_updates
Using a benchmark which creates 2 million files in one TXG, I observe
that the thread running spa_sync() is on CPU almost the entire time we
are syncing, and therefore can be a performance bottleneck. About 50% of
the time in spa_sync() is in dmu_objset_do_userquota_updates().
The problem is that dmu_objset_do_userquota_updates() calls
zap_increment_int(DMU_USERUSED_OBJECT) once for every file that was
modified (or created). In this benchmark, all the files are owned by the
same user/group, so all 2 million calls to zap_increment_int() are
modifying the same entry in the zap. The same issue exists for the
DMU_GROUPUSED_OBJECT.
We should keep an in-memory map from user to space delta while we are
syncing, and when we finish, iterate over the in-memory map and modify
the ZAP once per entry. This reduces the number of calls to
zap_increment_int() from "number of objects modified" to "number of
owners/groups of modified files".
This reduced the time spent in spa_sync() in the file create benchmark
by ~33%, from 11 seconds to 7 seconds.
Closes#107
Reviewed by: George Wilson <george.wilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Steve Gonczi <steve.gonczi@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Ned Bass <bass6@llnl.gov>
Reviewed by: Jinshan Xiong <jinshan.xiong@intel.com>
Author: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
openzfs/openzfs@5fc46359c5
5120 zfs should allow large block/gzip/raidz boot pool (loader project)
Reviewed by: George Wilson <george.wilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@nexenta.com>
Reviewed by: Andrew Stormont <andyjstormont@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Approved by: Robert Mustacchi <rm@joyent.com>
Author: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
openzfs/openzfs@c8811bd3e2
FreeBSD still does not support booting from gzip-compressed datasets,
so keep one chunk of this commit out.
Using a benchmark which creates 2 million files in one TXG, I observe
that the thread running spa_sync() is on CPU almost the entire time we
are syncing, and therefore can be a performance bottleneck. About 50% of
the time in spa_sync() is in dmu_objset_do_userquota_updates().
The problem is that dmu_objset_do_userquota_updates() calls
zap_increment_int(DMU_USERUSED_OBJECT) once for every file that was
modified (or created). In this benchmark, all the files are owned by the
same user/group, so all 2 million calls to zap_increment_int() are
modifying the same entry in the zap. The same issue exists for the
DMU_GROUPUSED_OBJECT.
We should keep an in-memory map from user to space delta while we are
syncing, and when we finish, iterate over the in-memory map and modify
the ZAP once per entry. This reduces the number of calls to
zap_increment_int() from "number of objects modified" to "number of
owners/groups of modified files".
This reduced the time spent in spa_sync() in the file create benchmark
by ~33%, from 11 seconds to 7 seconds.
Closes#107
Reviewed by: George Wilson <george.wilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Steve Gonczi <steve.gonczi@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Ned Bass <bass6@llnl.gov>
Reviewed by: Jinshan Xiong <jinshan.xiong@intel.com>
Author: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
openzfs/openzfs@5fc46359c5
Reviewed by: George Wilson <george.wilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed by: Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@nexenta.com>
Reviewed by: Andrew Stormont <andyjstormont@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Approved by: Robert Mustacchi <rm@joyent.com>
Author: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
openzfs/openzfs@c8811bd3e2