doesn't mean supporting IFT_PFSYNC (which I hope will eventually
die). This means decoding packets with IP protocol of 240 caught
on any normal interface like Ethernet.
The code is based on couple of files from OpenBSD, significantly
modified by myself.
Parser differentiates for four levels of verbosity: no -v, -v,
-vv and -vvv.
We don't yet forward this code upstream, because currently it
strongly relies on if_pfsync.h and even on pfvar.h. I hope that
this can be fixed in future.
Reviewed by: gnn, delphij
For -p:
The localtime update should have been excluded in the first place
The make.conf comparison has been OBE for some time now, and there
is no src.conf equivalent to share/examples/make.conf, so remove
the whole thing.
Update copyright
to be a wrapper for the canonical system header file. Unfortunately, we do
not have one (yet) and some times it is causing weird failures when clang
is used for building ports. More complete and correct file will come from
libcxxrt in the future.
Discussed with: dim, kib, theraven
MFC after: 1 week
* jail_setv will leak a parameter name if jailparam_import fails.
* jailparam_all loses the jailparam pointer on realloc error
(a clear freshman mistake).
* If jailparam_init fails, the caller doesn't need to jailparam_free
the buffer. That's not really clear, so set things to NULL allowing
jailparam_free to work without error (though it's still not required).
AR5416 and AR9280, but leave it disabled by default.
TL;DR: don't enable this code at all unless you go through the process
of getting the NIC re-certified. This is purely to be used as a
reference and NOT a certified solution by any stretch of the imagination.
The background:
The AR5112 RF synth right up to the AR5133 RF synth (used on the AR5416,
derivative is used for the AR9130/AR9160) only implement down to 2.5MHz
channel spacing in 5GHz. Ie, the RF synth is programmed in steps of 2.5MHz
(or 5, 10, 20MHz.) So they can't represent the quarter rate channels
in the 4.9GHz PSB (which end in xxx2MHz and xxx7MHz). They support
fractional spacing in 2GHz (1MHz spacing) (or things wouldn't work,
right?)
So instead of doing this, the RF synth programming for the AR5112 and
later code will round to the nearest available frequency.
If all NICs were RF5112 or later, they'll inter-operate fine - they all
program the same. (And for reference, only the latest revision of the
RF5111 NICs do it, but the driver doesn't yet implement the programming.)
However:
* The AR5416 programming didn't at all implement the fractional synth
work around as above;
* The AR9280 programming actually programmed the accurate centre frequency
and thus wouldn't inter-operate with the legacy NICs.
So this patch:
* Implements the 4.9GHz PSB fractional synth workaround, exactly as the
RF5112 and later code does;
* Adds a very dirty workaround from me to calculate the same channel
centre "fudge" to the AR9280 code when operating on fractional frequencies
in 5GHz.
HOWEVER however:
It is disabled by default. Since the HAL didn't implement this feature,
it's highly unlikely that the AR5416 and AR928x has been tested in these
centre frequencies. There's a lot of regulatory compliance testing required
before a NIC can have this enabled - checking for centre frequency,
for drift, for synth spurs, for distortion and spectral mask compliance.
There's likely a lot of other things that need testing so please don't
treat this as an exhaustive, authoritative list. There's a perfectly good
process out there to get a NIC certified by your regulatory domain, please
go and engage someone to do that for you and pay the relevant fees.
If a company wishes to grab this work and certify existing 802.11n NICs
for work in these bands then please be my guest. The AR9280 works fine
on the correct fractional synth channels (49x2 and 49x7Mhz) so you don't
need to get certification for that. But the 500KHz offset hack may have
the above issues (spur, distortion, accuracy, etc) so you will need to
get the NIC recertified.
Please note that it's also CARD dependent. Just because the RF synth
will behave correctly doesn't at all mean that the card design will also
behave correctly. So no, I won't enable this by default if someone
verifies a specific AR5416/AR9280 NIC works. Please don't ask.
Tested:
I used the following NICs to do basic interoperability testing at
half and quarter rates. However, I only did very minimal spectrum
analyser testing (mostly "am I about to blow things up" testing;
not "certification ready" testing):
* AR5212 + AR5112 synth
* AR5413 + AR5413 synth
* AR5416 + AR5113 synth
* AR9280
After further discussion, instead of pretending to use
uid_t and gid_t as upstream Solaris and linux try to, we
are better using u_int, which is in fact what the code
can handle and best approaches the range of values used
by uid and gid.
Discussed with: bde
Reviewed by: bde
net80211 node power save state.
* Add an ATH_NODE_UNLOCK_ASSERT() check
* Add a new node field - an_is_powersave
* Pause/unpause the queue based on the node state
* Attempt to handle net80211 concurrency issues so the queue
doesn't get paused/unpaused more than once at a time from
the net80211 power save code.
Whilst here (and breaking my usual rule), set CLRDMASK when a queue
is unpaused, regardless of whether the queue has some pending traffic.
This means the first frame from that TID (now or later) will hvae
CLRDMASK set.
Also whilst here, bump the swretrymax counters whenever the
filtered frames code expires a frame. Again, breaking my rule, but
this is just a statistics thing rather than a functional change.
This doesn't fix ps-poll (but it doesn't break it too much worse
than it is at the present) or correcting the TID updates.
That's next on the list.
Tested:
* AR9220 AP (Atheros AP96 reference design)
* Macbook Pro and LG Optimus 1 Android phone, both setting
and clearing power save state (but not using PS-POLL.)
The base netmap pointer and offsets involved are provided by the kernel
side of the netmap interface and will have appropriate alignment.
Sponsored by: ADARA Networks
MFC After: 2 weeks
The previous change (based on Solaris) doesn't work properly either
as the casting only has the effect of quieting the compiler.
Move back to the previous solution but adjust the sizeof()
type in xdr_array(). This should mostly work (by accident).
Reported by: bde
When performing a non-blocking read(2), on a TTY while no data is
available, we should return EAGAIN. But if there's a modem disconnect,
we should return 0. Right now we only return 0 when doing a blocking
read, which is wrong.
MFC after: 1 month
Update some of the comments. In particular, use "sleep" in preference to
"block" where appropriate.
Eliminate some unnecessary casts.
Make a few whitespace changes for consistency.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
1) Don't iterate the loop from the environment array beginning each time,
iterate it under the last place we deactivate instead.
2) Call __rebuild_environ() not on each iteration but once, only at the end
of whole loop (of course, only in case if something is changed).
MFC after: 1 week
As part of the previous commit, uses of xdr_int() were replaced
with xdr_u_int(). This has undesired effects as the second
argument doesn't match exactly uid_t or gid_t. It also breaks
assumptions in the size of the provided types.
To work around those issues we revert back to the use of xdr_int()
but provide proper casting so the behaviour doesn't change.
While here fix a style issue in the affected lines.
Reported by: bde
disconnected under the WITH_BSDCONFIG flag (a good idea since this version of
sysrc(8) indeed requires the `sysrc.subr' module installed by bsdconfig(8)).
Multiple reasons sysrc should not simply continue to live in ports. The most
important being that it is tightly coupled with the base.
Approved by: adrian (co-mentor)
When creating a client with clnt_tli_create, it uses strdup to copy
strings for these fields if nconf is passed in. clnt_dg_destroy frees
these strings already. Make sure clnt_vc_destroy frees them in the same
way.
This change matches the reference (OpenSolaris) implementation.
Tested by: David Wolfskill
Obtained from: Bull GNU/Linux NFSv4 Project (libtirpc)
MFC after: 2 weeks
__rpc_getconfip is supposed to return the first netconf
entry supporting tcp or udp, respectively. The code will
currently return the *last* entry, plus it will leak
memory when there is more than one such entry.
This change matches the reference (OpenSolaris)
implementation.
Tested by: David Wolfskill
Obtained from: Bull GNU/linux NFSv4 Project (libtirpc)
MFC after: 1 week
This turns ieee80211_node_pwrsave(), ieee80211_sta_pwrsave() and
ieee80211_recv_pspoll() into methods.
The intent is to let drivers override these and tie into the power save
management pathway.
For ath(4), this is the beginning of forcing a node software queue to
stop and start as needed, as well as supporting "leaking" single frames
from the software queue to the hardware.
Right now, ieee80211_recv_pspoll() will attempt to transmit a single frame
to the hardware (whether it be a data frame on the power-save queue or
a NULL data frame) but the driver may have hardware/software queued frames
queued up. This initial work is an attempt at providing the hooks required
to implement correct behaviour.
Allowing ieee80211_node_pwrsave() to be overridden allows the ath(4)
driver to pause and unpause the entire software queue for a given node.
It doesn't make sense to transmit anything whilst the node is asleep.
Please note that there are other corner cases to correctly handle -
specifically, setting the MORE data bit correctly on frames to a station,
as well as keeping the TIM updated. Those particular issues can be
addressed later.
to craft environment variables with similar names like that:
a=1
a=2
...
unsetenv("a") should remove them all to make later getenv("a") impossible.
Fix it to do so (this is GNU autoconf test #3 failure too).
PR: 172273
MFC after: 1 week
the CAM "enc" peripheral (part of ses(4)). Previously the two modules
used the same name, so only one was included in a linked kernel causing
enc0 to not be created if you added IPSEC to GENERIC. The new module
name follows the pattern of other network interfaces (e.g. "if_loop").
MFC after: 1 week
Both functions need to obtain lock on the found PCB, and they can't do
classic inter-lock with the PCB hash lock, due to lock order reversal.
To keep the PCB stable, these functions put a reference on it and after PCB
lock is acquired drop it. If the reference was the last one, this means
we've raced with in_pcbfree() and the PCB is no longer valid.
This approach works okay only if we are acquiring writer-lock on the PCB.
In case of reader-lock, the following scenario can happen:
- 2 threads locate pcb, and do in_pcbref() on it.
- These 2 threads drop the inp hash lock.
- Another thread comes to delete pcb via in_pcbfree(), it obtains hash lock,
does in_pcbremlists(), drops hash lock, and runs in_pcbrele_wlocked(), which
doesn't free the pcb due to two references on it. Then it unlocks the pcb.
- 2 aforementioned threads acquire reader lock on the pcb and run
in_pcbrele_rlocked(). One gets 1 from in_pcbrele_rlocked() and continues,
second gets 0 and considers pcb freed, returns.
- The thread that got 1 continutes working with detached pcb, which later
leads to panic in the underlying protocol level.
To plumb that problem an additional INPCB flag introduced - INP_FREED. We
check for that flag in the in_pcbrele_rlocked() and if it is set, we pretend
that that was the last reference.
Discussed with: rwatson, jhb
Reported by: Vladimir Medvedkin <medved rambler-co.ru>