and nobroadcast bits in the mode register and call it both from
pcn_init() and pcn_ioctl(). Sometimes we need to force the state
of the nobroadcast bit after switching out of promisc mode.
them. If we leave garbage in them, the dc_apply_fixup() routine may
try to follow bogus pointers when applying the reset fixup.
Noticed by: Andrew Gallatin
getnewvnode(). Otherwise routines called from VOP_INACTIVE() might
attempt to remove the vnode from a free list the vnode isn't on,
causing corruption.
PR: 18012
out of fashion. This particular case, unlike joy(8) and friends which
are just plain silly, did more than just load a kernel loadable module.
However, /etc/rc and the linux_base port were adjusted a while back to
cope with the absence of this script.
The only outstanding reason to hang on to it would have been for the
linux(8) manual page, which clued folks into the existence of the
Linuxulator. A new linux(4) was introduced a while back. It does
a much better job.
This script just isn't useful any more.
- Look for a hardwired interrupt in the routing table for this
bus/device/pin (we already did this).
- Look for another device with the same link byte which has a hardwired
interrupt.
- Look for a PCI device matching an entry with the same link byte
which has already been assigned an interrupt, and use that.
- Look for a routable interrupt listed in the "PCI only" interrupts
field and use that.
- Pick the first interrupt that's marked as routable and use that.
Xtal reference instead of the CLADI input.
In unframed E1 mode, tie SIGFRZ low so that the mysycc doesn't
get confused.
Don't mask errors with OOF. Don't ignore OOF errors.
Stop the channel before freeing mbufs in disconnect.
I still have no T1 devices to test with, so the T1 code is non-existent.
argument. These flags include INTR_FAST, INTR_MPSAFE, etc.
- Properly handle INTR_EXCL when it is passed in to allow an interrupt
handler to claim exclusive ownership of an interrupt thread.
- Add support for psuedo-fast interrupts on the alpha. For fast interrupts,
we don't allocate an interrupt thread; instead, during dispatching of an
interrupt, we run the handler directly instead of scheduling the thread
to run. Note that the handler is currently run without Giant and must be
MP safe. The only fast handler currently is for the sio driver.
Requested by: dfr
multicast filter on the Pegasus chip. Since IPv6 depends a lot
on multicasting, this caused several failures for people trying to
use IPv6 with Pegasus USB ethernet devices.
Submitted by: Jun Kuriyama <kuriyama@FreeBSD.org>
Return ENOTSUP for any opcode that is not supported by the XPT
device.
Add back a missing local declaration that seems to have been deleted
by my last commit.
Filter incoming transfer negotiation requests to ensure they
never exceed the settings specified by the user.
In restart sequencer attempt to deal with a bug in the aic7895.
If a third party reset occurs at just the right time, the
stack register can lock up. When restarting the sequencer
after handling the SCSI reset, poke SEQADDR1 before resting
the sequencers program counter.
When something strange happens, dump the card's transaction
state via ahc_dump_card_state(). This should aid in debugging.
Handle request sense transactions via the QINFIFO instead of
attaching them to the waiting queue directly. The waiting
queue consumes card SCB resources and, in the pathological case
of every target on the bus beating our selection attemps and
issuing a check condition, could have caused us to run out
of SCBs. I have never seen this happen, and only early
cards with 3 or 4 SCBs had any real chance of ever getting
into this state.
Add additional sequencer interrupt codes to support firmware
diagnostics. The diagnostic code is enabled with the
AHC_DEBUG_SEQUENCER kernel option.
Make it possible to switch into and out of target mode on
the fly. The card comes up by default as an initiator but
will switch into target mode as soon as an enable lun operation
is performed. As always, target mode behavior is gated
by the AHC_TMODE_ENABLE kernel option so most users will
not be affected by this change.
In ahc_update_target_msg_request(), also issue a new
request if the ppr_options have changed.
Never issue a PPR as a target. It is forbidden by the spec.
Correct a bug in ahc_parse_msg() that prevented us from
responding to PPR messages as a target.
Mark SCBs that are on the untagged queue with a flag instead
of checking several fields in the SCB to see if the SCB should
be on the queue. This makes it easier for things like automatic
request sense requests to be queued without touching the
untagged queues even though they are untagged requests.
When dealing with ignore wide residue messages that occur
in the middle of a transfer, reset HADDR, not SHADDR for
non-ultra2 chips. Although SHADDR is where the firmware
fetches the ending transfer address for a save data pointers
request, it is readonly. Setting HADDR has the side effect
of also updating SHADDR.
Cleanup the output of ahc_dump_card_state() by nulling out the
free scb list in the non-paging case. The free list is only
used if we must page SCBs.
Correct the transmission of cdbs > 12 bytes in length. When
swapping HSCBs prior to notifing the sequencer of the new
transaction, the bus address pointer for the cdb must also
be recalculated to reflect its new location. We now defer
the calculation of the cdb address until just before queing
it to the card.
When pulling transfer negotiation settings out of scratch
ram, convert 5MHz/clock doubled settings to 10MHz.
Add a new function ahc_qinfifo_requeue_tail() for use by
error recovery actions and auto-request sense operations.
These operations always occur when the sequencer is paused,
so we can avoid the extra expense incurred in the normal
SCB queue method.
Use the BMOV instruction for all single byte moves on
controllers that support it. The bmov instruction is
twice as fast as an AND with an immediate of 0xFF as
is used on older controllers.
Correct a few bugs in ahc_dump_card_state(). If we have
hardware assisted queue registers, use them to get the
sequencer's idea of the head of the queue. When enumerating
the untagged queue, it helps to use the correct index for
the queue.
aic7xxx.h:
Indicate via a feature flag, which controllers can take
on both the target and the initiator role at the same time.
Add the AHC_SEQUENCER_DEBUG flag.
Add the SCB_CDB32_PTR flag used for dealing with cdbs
with lengths between 13 and 32 bytes.
Add new prototypes.
aic7xxx.reg:
Allow the SCSIBUSL register to be written to. This is
required to fix a selection timeout problem on the 7892/99.
Cleanup the sequencer interrupt codes so that all debugging
codes are grouped at the end of the list.
Correct the definition of the ULTRA_ENB and DISC_DSB locations
in scratch ram. This prevented the driver from properly honoring
these settings when no serial eeprom was available.
Remove an unused sequencer flag.
aic7xxx.seq:
Just before a potential select-out, clear the SCSIBUSL
register. Occasionally, during a selection timeout, the
contents of the register may be presented on the bus,
causing much confusion.
Add sequencer diagnostic code to detect software and or
hardware bugs. The code attempts to verify most list
operations so any corruption is caught before it occurs.
We also track information about why a particular reconnection
request was rejected.
Don't clobber the digital REQ/ACK filter setting in SXFRCTL0
when clearing the channel.
Fix a target mode bug that would cause us to return busy
status instead of queue full in respnse to a tagged transaction.
Cleanup the overrun case. It turns out that by simply
butting the chip in bitbucket mode, it will ack any
bytes until the phase changes. This drasticaly simplifies
things.
Prior to leaving the data phase, make sure that the S/G
preload queue is empty.
Remove code to place a request sense request on the waiting
queue. This is all handled by the kernel now.
Change the semantics of "findSCB". In the past, findSCB
ensured that a freshly paged in SCB appeared on the disconnected
list. The problem with this is that there is no guarantee that
the paged in SCB is for a disconnected transation. We now
defer any list manipulation to the caller who usually discards
the SCB via the free list.
Inline some busy target table operations.
Add a critical section to protect adding an SCB to
the disconnected list.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c:
Handle changes in the transfer negotiation setting API
to filter incoming requests. No filtering is necessary
for "goal" requests from the XPT.
Set the SCB_CDB32_PTR flag when queing a transaction with
a large cdb.
In ahc_timeout, only take action if the active SCB is
the timedout SCB. This deals with the case of two
transactions to the same device with different timeout
values.
Use ahc_qinfifo_requeu_tail() instead of home grown
version.
aic7xxx_inline.h:
Honor SCB_CDB32_PTR when queuing a new request.
aic7xxx_pci.c:
Use the maximum data fifo threshold for all chips.
The XPT uses this to prevent tags from being used on parallel SCSI
interfaces immediately after a bus reset or BDR so that controllers
have an oportunity to renegotiate without tag messages in the way.
Somehow this got disabled... the functionality has been here for
quite some time.
Noticed by: my SCSI bus analyzer
This removes support for booting current kernels with very old bootblocks.
Device driver writers: Please remove initializations for the d_bmaj
field in your cdevsw{}.
terminated and the data_len field is no longer necessary.
Add ASCII2BINARY and BINARY2ASCII capabilities.
The old format is still understood and dealt with, but can't do
the ASCII2BINARY and BINARY2ASCII stuff.
Approved by: archie
current implementation, jail neither virtualizes the Sys V IPC namespace,
nor provides inter-jail protections on IPC objects.
o Support for System V IPC can be enabled by setting jail.sysvipc_allowed=1
using sysctl.
o This is not the "real fix" which involves virtualizing the System V
IPC namespace, but prevents processes within jail from influencing those
outside of jail when not approved by the administrator.
Reported by: Paulo Fragoso <paulo@nlink.com.br>
in the p_candebug() function. Synchronize with sef's CHECKIO()
macro from the old procfs, which seems to be a good source of security
checks.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
PPTP links are no longer dropped by simple (and inappropriate in this
case) "inactivity timeout" procedure, only when requested through the
control connection.
It is now possible to have multiple PPTP servers running behind NAT.
Just redirect the incoming TCP traffic to port 1723, everything else
is done transparently.
Problems were reported and the fix was tested by:
Michael Adler <Michael.Adler@compaq.com>,
David Andersen <dga@lcs.mit.edu>
This is due to a bug that has been in there since Warneer did the
PCCARD stuff, the altioaddr is not offset 8 its offset 14 from
the base address.
Also only probe the master device, no known PCCARD ATA thingies
has a slave AFAIK..
- Add DRIVER_MODULE() declaration to make this driver a
child of cardbus
- Handle different width EEPROMs
The CIS parser still barfs when scanning this card, but it seems to
probe/attach correctly anyway. I can't do a traffic test just yet
since I don't have a proper crossover cable handy.
This allows writing to DVD-RAM, PD and similar drives that probe as CD
devices. Note that these are randomly writeable devices, not
sequential-only devices like CD-R drives, which are supported by cdrecord.
Add a new flag value for dsopen(), DSO_COMPATLABEL. The cd(4) driver now
uses this flag instead of the DSO_NOLABELS flag. The DSO_NOLABELS always
used a "fake" disklabel for the entire disk, provided by the caller.
With the DSO_COMPATLABEL flag, dsopen() will first search the media for a
label, and if it finds a label, it will use that label. Otherwise it will
use the fake disklabel provided by the caller. This provides backwards
compatibility, since we will still have labels for ISO9660 media.
It also provides new functionality, since you can now have a regular BSD
disklabel on read-only media, or on writeable media (e.g. DVD-RAM).
Bruce and I both think that we should eventually (in a few years) get
away from using disklabels for ISO9660 media, and just use the whole disk
device (/dev/cd0). At that point disklabel handling in the cd(4) driver
could follow the "normal" model, as used in the da(4) driver.
Also, clean up the path in a couple of places in cdregister(). (Thanks to
Nick Hibma for catching that bug.)
Reviewed by: bde
Otherwise, aio_read() and aio_write() on sockets are broken if a kevent is
registered. (The code after kevent registration for handling sockets assumes
that the struct file pointer "fp" still refers to the socket, not the kqueue.)
Don't check for a null pointer if malloc called with M_WAITOK.
Submitted by: josh@zipperup.org
Submitted by: Robert Drehmel <robd@gmx.net>
Approved by: bp
<sys/proc.h> to <sys/systm.h>.
Correctly document the #includes needed in the manpage.
Add one now needed #include of <sys/systm.h>.
Remove the consequent 48 unused #includes of <sys/proc.h>.
the offending inline function (BUF_KERNPROC) on it being #included
already.
I'm not sure BUF_KERNPROC() is even the right thing to do or in the
right place or implemented the right way (inline vs normal function).
Remove consequently unneeded #includes of <sys/proc.h>
used in lower layer (scsi_low.c).
The flag of ncv for KME KXLC004 was chaged from 0x1 to 0x100.
The flag of nsp for PIO mode was chaged from 0x1 to 0x100.
command register is too aggressive. Revert to the previous behaviour, but
leave the new behaviour available as an undocumented option. It's not
clear what the Right, Right Thing is to do here, but the more conservative
approach is safer.
a RealTek 8139 cardbus device. Unfortunately it doesn't quite work yet
because the CIS parser barfs on it.
Submitted by msmith, with some small tweaks by me.
return the last value returned by a nested method call. This violates
the ACPI spec, but is implemented by the Microsoft interpreter, and thus
vendors can (and do) get away with it.
Intel's stance is that this is illegal and should not be supported.
As they put it, however, we have to live in the real world. So go ahead
and implement it.
Submitted by: Mitsaru IWASAKI <iwasaki@jp.freebsd.org>
- Set debugger options for kernel build
- Define some missing functions
- Bring in GCC defines
- Disable the 'wbinvd' macro as it conflicts with our inline
- AcpiGetProcessorID (fetch the ACPI processor ID for a given ACPI_HANDLE)
- AcpiSetSystemSleepState (set the Sx sleeping state, proposed by Intel
but not actually implemented)
ACPICA. Most of these are still works in progress. Support exists for:
- Fixed feature and control method power, lid and sleep buttons.
- Detection of ISA PnP devices using ACPI namespace.
- Detection of PCI root busses using ACPI namespace.
- CPU throttling and sleep states (incomplete)
- Thermal monitoring and cooling control (incomplete)
- Interface to platform embedded controllers (mostly complete)
- ACPI timer (incomplete)
- Simple userland control of sleep states.
- Shutdown and poweroff.
seems to be that the nodes are bzero'd beforehand, but the submitter
found that this was not always the case, and in any event defensive
programming here costs epsilon squared.
PR: 22244
Submitted by: Dave Gillam <daveg@chiaro.com>
because it only takes a struct tag which makes it impossible to
use unions, typedefs etc.
Define __offsetof() in <machine/ansi.h>
Define offsetof() in terms of __offsetof() in <stddef.h> and <sys/types.h>
Remove myriad of local offsetof() definitions.
Remove includes of <stddef.h> in kernel code.
NB: Kernelcode should *never* include from /usr/include !
Make <sys/queue.h> include <machine/ansi.h> to avoid polluting the API.
Deprecate <struct.h> with a warning. The warning turns into an error on
01-12-2000 and the file gets removed entirely on 01-01-2001.
Paritials reviews by: various.
Significant brucifications by: bde
to reinstall boot1 after a 'make world'.
Unfortunately this means that people who have already installed a new
boot1 from a 'make world' after 2000/09/18 *must* reinstall it after
their next build using something like:
# disklabel -B /dev/da0c
of IP datagram. This fixes the problem when firewall denied fragmented
packets whose last fragment was less than minimum protocol header size.
Found by: Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
PR: kern/22309
it can function before malloc(9) is up and running.
- Add two new options WITNESS_DDB and WITNESS_SKIPSPIN. If WITNESS_SKIPSPIN
is enabled, then spin mutexes are ignored by the WITNESS code. If
WITNESS_DDB is turned on and DDB is compiled into the kernel, then the
kernel will drop into DDB when either a lock hierarchy violation occurs
or mutexes are held when going to sleep.
- Add some new sysctls:
debug.witness_ddb is a read-write sysctl that corresponds to WITNESS_DDB.
The kernel option merely changes the default value to on at boot.
debug.witness_skipspin is a read-only sysctl that one can use to determine
if the kernel was compiled with WITNESS_SKIPSPIN.
- Wipe out the BSD/OS-specific lock order lists. We get to build our own
lists now as we add mutexes to the kernel.
the PCI latency timer value to 0x80. Davicom's Linux driver does this,
and it drastically reduces the number of TX underruns in my tests. (Note:
this is done only for the Davicom chips. I'm not sure it's a good idea to
do it for all of them.)
Again, still waiting on confirmation before merging to stable.
change_ruid() in kern_prot.c. This fixes an incorrect use
of chgproccnt().
Update both osf1_setuid() and osf1_setgid() to use setsugid() instead
of just frobbing the flag.
(mostly) submitted by: truckman
in the code enforces this. So, do not check for and attempt a
false reassembly if only IP_RF is set.
Also, removed the dead code, since we no longer use dtom() on
return from ip_reass().
DM9100/DM9102 chips. Do not set DC_TX_ONE. The DC_TX_USE_TX_INTR flag
causes dc_encap() to set the 'interrupt on TX completion' bit only
once every 64 packets. This is an attempt to reduce the number
of interrupts generated by the chip. You're supposed to get a 'no more
TX buffers left' interrupt once you hit the last packet whether you
ask for one or not, however it seems the Davicom chip doesn't generate
this interrupt, or at least it doesn't generate it under the same
circumstances. The result is that if you transmit n packets, where
n is less than 64, and then wait 5 seconds, you'll get a watchdog
timeout whether you want one or not. The DC_TX_INTR_ALWAYS causes
dc_encap() to request an interrupt for every frame.
I'm still waiting on confirmation from a couple of users to see if this
fixes their problems with the Davicom DM9102 before I merge this into
-stable, but this fixed the problem for me in my own testing so I'm
willing to make the change to -current right away.
expands beyond the limit we will extend the address space before trying
to zero the BSS. This should give us plenty of headroom for modest
expansion of the loader.
- Change the softintr() macro to do nothing on FreeBSD. Previously,
this macro would set a bit in spending and schedule the softinterrupt
thread to run. However, the bs driver never actually registers a
a software interrupt handler, so all this work achieved nothing. From
the code it is not clear what exactly the softintr() macro is actually
supposed to be doing. It looks like it is supposed to be possibly
running the hardware interrupt handler maybe? This handler is only
present in the #ifdef __NetBSD__ code however. I have no idea how this
driver handles interrupts at all, but at least it compiles now.
- Layout reorganisation to enhance portability. The driver now has
a relatively MI 'core' and a FreeBSD-specific layer over the top.
Since the NetBSD people have already done their own port, this is
largely just to help me with the BSD/OS port.
- Request ID allocation changed to improve performance (I'd been
considering switching to this approach after having failed to come
up with a better way to dynamically allocate request IDs, and seeing
Andy Doran use it in the NetBSD port of the driver convinced me
that I was wasting my time doing it any other way). Now we just
allocate all the requests up front.
- Maximum request count bumped back to 255 after characterisation
of a firmware issue (off-by-one causing it to crash with 256
outstanding commands).
- Control interface implemented. This allows 3ware's '3dm' utility to
talk to the controller. 3dm will be available from 3ware shortly.
- Controller soft-reset feature added; if the controller signals a
firmware or protocol error, the controller will be reset and all
outstanding commands will be retried.
type of software interrupt. Roughly, what used to be a bit in spending
now maps to a swi thread. Each thread can have multiple handlers, just
like a hardware interrupt thread.
- Instead of using a bitmask of pending interrupts, we schedule the specific
software interrupt thread to run, so spending, NSWI, and the shandlers
array are no longer needed. We can now have an arbitrary number of
software interrupt threads. When you register a software interrupt
thread via sinthand_add(), you get back a struct intrhand that you pass
to sched_swi() when you wish to schedule your swi thread to run.
- Convert the name of 'struct intrec' to 'struct intrhand' as it is a bit
more intuitive. Also, prefix all the members of struct intrhand with
'ih_'.
- Make swi_net() a MI function since there is now no point in it being
MD.
Submitted by: cp
- Close a small race condition. The sched_lock mutex protects
p->p_stat as well as the run queues. Another CPU could change p_stat
of the process while we are waiting for the lock, and we would end up
scheduling a process that isn't runnable.
usb_ethersubr.c. This module maintains two queues for packets which
are each protected with one mutex. These are all the changes I can
do for now. Removing the USBD_NO_TSLEEP flag doesn't work yet: when
I tried it, the system would usually freeze up after a NIC had been
operating for a while. The usb_ethersubr module itself ought to
go away; this is the next thing I need to test.
* Fixes to the signal delivery code. Not quite right yet.
I would have preferred to wait until I have signal delivery actually
working but the current kernel in CVS doesn't build.
mail:
The problem seems to originate with NFS's postop_attr
information that is returned with a read or write RPC.
Within a vm_fault context, the code cannot deal with
vnode_pager_setsize() shrinking a vnode.
The workaround in the patch below stops the nfsm_postop_attr()
macro from ever shrinking a vnode. If the new size in the
postop_attr information is smaller, then it just sets the
nfsnode n_attrstamp to 0 to stop the wrong size getting
used in the future. This change only affects postop_attr
attributes; the nfsm_loadattr() macro works as normal.
The change is implemented by adding a new argument to
nfs_loadattrcache() called 'dontshrink'. When this is
non-zero, nfs_loadattrcache() will never reduce the
vnode/nfsnode size; instead it zeros n_attrstamp.
There remain other was processes can get stuck in vmopar.
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
Reviewed by: dillon
Tested by: Vadim Belman <voland@lflat.org>
more include file including <sys/proc.h>, but there still is this wonky
and (causes warnings on i386) reference in globals.h.
CURTHD is now defined in <machine/globals.h> as well. The correct thing
to do is provide a platform function for this.
will compile again. I can't quite see where this was a recursive inclusion.
We probably need to do something to fix the alpha, but let's not break it
in the interim- it's broken enough.
(a NetBSD port for NEC PC-98x1 machines). They are ncv for NCR 53C500,
nsp for Workbit Ninja SCSI-3, and stg for TMC 18C30 and 18C50.
I thank NetBSD/pc98 and bsd-nomads people.
Obtained from: NetBSD/pc98
in add_m6fc(), set interface list for all cases.
in response to a report from Hoerdt Mickael.
kame 1.31 -> 1.32
discard PIM register if the version of the inner packet is incorrect (i.e. IPv6)
(according to clarfication of recent discussion in the IETF pim ML)
Have if_ti stop "hiding" the softc pointer in the buffer region. Rather,
use the available void * passed to the free routine and pass the softc
pointer through there.
To note: in MEXTADD(), TI_JUMBO_FRAMELEN should probably be TI_JLEN. I left it
unchanged, because this way I'm sure to not damage anything in this respect...
Instead of:
foo = malloc(sizeof(foo), M_WAIT);
bzero(foo, sizeof(foo));
You can now (and please do) use:
foo = malloc(sizeof(foo), M_WAIT | M_ZERO);
In the future this will enable us to do idle-time pre-zeroing of
malloc-space.
reducues the maintenance load for the mutex code. The only MD portions
of the mutex code are in machine/mutex.h now, which include the assembly
macros for handling mutexes as well as optionally overriding the mutex
micro-operations. For example, we use optimized micro-ops on the x86
platform #ifndef I386_CPU.
- Change the behavior of the SMP_DEBUG kernel option. In the new code,
mtx_assert() only depends on INVARIANTS, allowing other kernel developers
to have working mutex assertiions without having to include all of the
mutex debugging code. The SMP_DEBUG kernel option has been renamed to
MUTEX_DEBUG and now just controls extra mutex debugging code.
- Abolish the ugly mtx_f hack. Instead, we dynamically allocate
seperate mtx_debug structures on the fly in mtx_init, except for mutexes
that are initiated very early in the boot process. These mutexes
are declared using a special MUTEX_DECLARE() macro, and use a new
flag MTX_COLD when calling mtx_init. This is still somewhat hackish,
but it is less evil than the mtx_f filler struct, and the mtx struct is
now the same size with and without mutex debugging code.
- Add some micro-micro-operation macros for doing the actual atomic
operations on the mutex mtx_lock field to make it easier for other archs
to override/optimize mutex ops if needed. These new tiny ops also clean
up the code in some places by replacing long atomic operation function
calls that spanned 2-3 lines with a short 1-line macro call.
- Don't call mi_switch() from mtx_enter_hard() when we block while trying
to obtain a sleep mutex. Calling mi_switch() would bogusly release
Giant before switching to the next process. Instead, inline most of the
code from mi_switch() in the mtx_enter_hard() function. Note that when
we finally kill Giant we can back this out and go back to calling
mi_switch().
in most of the atomic operations. Now for these operations, you can
use the normal atomic operation, you can use the operation with a read
barrier, or you can use the operation with a write barrier. The function
names follow the same semantics used in the ia64 instruction set. An
atomic operation with a read barrier has the extra suffix 'acq', due to
it having "acquire" semantics. An atomic operation with a write barrier
has the extra suffix 'rel'. These suffixes are inserted between the
name of the operation to perform and the typename. For example, the
atomic_add_int() function now has 3 variants:
- atomic_add_int() - this is the same as the previous function
- atomic_add_acq_int() - this function combines the add operation with a
read memory barrier
- atomic_add_rel_int() - this function combines the add operation with a
write memory barrier
- Add 'ptr' to the list of types that we can perform atomic operations
on. This allows one to do atomic operations on uintptr_t's. This is
useful in the mutex code, for example, because the actual mutex lock is
a pointer.
- Add two new operations for doing loads and stores with memory barriers.
The new load operations use a read barrier before the load, and the
new store operations use a write barrier after the load. For example,
atomic_load_acq_int() will atomically load an integer as well as
enforcing a read barrier.
length of the data properly. This should be moved into a tty_subr
function.
Also, disanle the setting of the CDC_CM_OVER_DATA flag. It breaks some
modems. I don't think that ther actually is a modem that needs this.
Submitted by: Brad Karp <bkarp@ICSI.Berkeley.EDU>
statistics on a per network address basis.
Teach the IPv4 and IPv6 input/output routines to log packets/bytes
against the network address connected to the flow.
Teach netstat to display the per-address stats for IP protocols
when 'netstat -i' is evoked, instead of displaying the per-interface
stats.
o Change name of bus
o Change the panic on resource allocation failure to just a message. We'll
work out why this fails later in the pcic/pccbb code merge.
This commit adds support for Xircom X3201 based cardbus cards.
Support for the TDK 78Q2120 MII is also added.
IBM Etherjet, Intel and Xircom cards uses these chips.
Note that as a result of this commit, some Intel/DEC 21143 based cardbus
cards will also attach, but not get link. That is being looked at.
"administrative" authorization checks. In most cases, the VADMIN test
checks to make sure the credential effective uid is the same as the file
owner.
o Modify vaccess() to set VADMIN as an available right if the uid is
appropriate.
o Modify references to uid-based access control operations such that they
now always invoke VOP_ACCESS() instead of using hard-coded policy checks.
o This allows alternative UFS policies to be implemented by replacing only
ufs_access() (such as mandatory system policies).
o VOP_ACCESS() requires the caller to hold an exclusive vnode lock on the
vnode: I believe that new invocations of VOP_ACCESS() are always called
with the lock held.
o Some direct checks of the uid remain, largely associated with the QUOTA
and SUIDDIR code.
Reviewed by: eivind
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Fixes bugs in devfs when unloading and reloading
Syncs with NetBSD changes
Submitted by: Alexander Langer <alex@big.endian.de>
Submitted by: Thomas Klausner <wiz@netbsd.org>
Submitted by: Daniel O'Connor" <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
priority "0" and without PCATCH, so it was uninterruptable. And
even when it did wake up after entropy arrived, it exited after the
wakeup without actually reading the freshly arrived entropy. I
sent this to Mark before but it seems he is in transit.
Mark: feel free to replace this if it gets in your way.
implementation.
Add bus_generic_rl_{get,set,delete,release,alloc}_resource() functions
which provide generic operations for devices using resource list style
resource management.
This should simplify a number of bus drivers. Further commits to follow.
Files:
dev/cardbus/cardbus.c
dev/cardbus/cardbusreg.h
dev/cardbus/cardbusvar.h
dev/cardbus/cardbus_cis.c
dev/cardbus/cardbus_cis.h
dev/pccbb/pccbb.c
dev/pccbb/pccbbreg.h
dev/pccbb/pccbbvar.h
dev/pccbb/pccbb_if.m
This should support:
- cardbus controllers:
* TI 113X
* TI 12XX
* TI 14XX
* Ricoh 47X
* Ricoh 46X
* ToPIC 95
* ToPIC 97
* ToPIC 100
* Cirrus Logic CLPD683x
- cardbus cards
* 3c575BT
* 3c575CT
* Xircom X3201 (includes IBM, Xircom and, Intel cards)
[ 3com support already in kernel, Xircom will be committed real soon now]
This doesn't work with 16bit pccards under NEWCARD.
Enable in your config by having "device pccbb" and "device cardbus".
(A "device pccard" will attach a pccard bus, but it means you system have
a high chance of panicing when a 16bit card is inserted)
It should be fairly simple to make a driver attach to cardbus under
NEWCARD -- simply add an entry for attaching to cardbus on a new
DRIVER_MODULE and add new device IDs as necessary. You should also make
sure the card can be detached nicely without the interrupt routine doing
something weird, like going into an infinite loop. Usually that should
entail adding an additional check when a pci register or the bus space is
read to check if it equals 0xffffffff.
Any problems, please let me know.
Reviewed by: imp
Files:
dev/cardbus/cardbus.c
dev/cardbus/cardbusreg.h
dev/cardbus/cardbusvar.h
dev/cardbus/cardbus_cis.c
dev/cardbus/cardbus_cis.h
dev/pccbb/pccbb.c
dev/pccbb/pccbbreg.h
dev/pccbb/pccbbvar.h
dev/pccbb/pccbb_if.m
This should support:
- cardbus controllers:
* TI 113X
* TI 12XX
* TI 14XX
* Ricoh 47X
* Ricoh 46X
* ToPIC 95
* ToPIC 97
* ToPIC 100
* Cirrus Logic CLPD683x
- cardbus cards
* 3c575BT
* 3c575CT
* Xircom X3201 (includes IBM, Xircom and, Intel cards)
[ 3com support already in kernel, Xircom will be committed real soon now]
This doesn't work with 16bit pccards under NEWCARD.
Enable in your config by having "device pccbb" and "device cardbus".
(A "device pccard" will attach a pccard bus, but it means you system have
a high chance of panicing when a 16bit card is inserted)
It should be fairly simple to make a driver attach to cardbus under
NEWCARD -- simply add an entry for attaching to cardbus on a new
DRIVER_MODULE and add new device IDs as necessary. You should also make
sure the card can be detached nicely without the interrupt routine doing
something weird, like going into an infinite loop. Usually that should
entail adding an additional check when a pci register or the bus space is
read to check if it equals 0xffffffff.
Any problems, please let me know.
Reviewed by: imp
o Report function number and config index on probe line
o Activate the resources (I hope) when RF_ACTIVE is set on those resources
I'm allocating on behalf of my children.
o Always enable interrupts on multifunction cards in the multifunction
register.
This was implemented by Shigeru YAMAMOTO-san and Jonathan Chen. I've
cleaned them up somewhat and they seem to work well enough to boot
current (but given current's state it can be hard to tell). Doug
Rabson also reviewed the design and signed off on it.
compile time will build in mutex locks, otherwise the old locking (splcam/splx
with a recursion counter) will be compiled in.
We still depend on config_intr_hook to tell us when it's okay to call
msleep instead of polling. It'd be real nice if we could do this early
enough to not hang up a machine struggling with a bad Fibre Channel loop,
but that's still to come.
write caching is disabled on both SCSI and IDE disks where large
memory dumps could take up to an hour to complete.
Taking an i386 scsi based system with 512MB of ram and timing (in
seconds) how long it took to complete a dump, the following results
were obtained:
Before: After:
WCE TIME WCE TIME
------------------ ------------------
1 141.820972 1 15.600111
0 797.265072 0 65.480465
Obtained from: Yahoo!
Reviewed by: peter
o Remember the resources we allocate for the config entry.
o When we get the resource, do an resource_list_add and do a
resource_list_delete if we fail later in the resource list.
o In the pccard bus, we allocate the resources. When a child asks for
them, just return the resources that we allocated (thanks to Paul
Richards and Mike Smith for the idea).
stacks near the top of their address space. If their TOS is greater
than vm_maxsaddr, vm_map_growstack() will confuse the thread stack
with the process stack and deliver a SEGV if they attempt to grow the
thread stack past their current stacksize rlimit. To avoid this,
adjust vm_maxsaddr upwards to reflect the current stacksize rlimit
rather than the maximum possible stacksize. It would be better to
adjust the mmap'ed region, but some apps (again, IBM's JDK 1.3) do not
check mmap's return value..
This commit (in conjunction with setting MINSIGSTKSZ to 2048 &
rebuilding your kernel and modules) will get IBM's JDK 1.3 working
with FreeBSD at least well enough to run many of the example applets.
Reviewed by: marcel
Tested by: sto@stat.duke.edu, many others on freebsd-java@
and associated user-level signal trampoline glue.
Without this patch, an SA_SIGINFO style handler can be installed by a linux
app, but if the handler accesses its sip argument, it will get a garbage
pointer and likely segfault.
We currently supply a valid pointer, but its contents are mainly
garbage. Filling this in properly is future work.
This is the second of 3 commits that will get IBM's JDK 1.3 working with
FreeBSD ...
rather than all the flags. This prevents setting being read from ROM,
which is a problem. If this breaks anything, it will only break the
3C556B cards minipci cards, which mainly exist at rpi as far as rpi
has been able to tell.
Submitted by: Louis Gerbarg <gerbal@rpi.edu>
loads, prints the copyright, and either hangs or locks solid. The
PC tends to be in the data segment and the RA is in XentMM
Doug really came up with the fix, I'm just the monkey typing. Doug says:
The alpha can only support 64k of globals with $gp pointing at
base+32k so that the code can use 16bit signed offsets from $gp to
access it. .... it is possible to have multiple .got subsections
and the linker handles this with the relocations for 'ldgp' pseudo
instructions. [Without this patch] the code in exception.s has been
linked to use a different gp from locore.s (where pal_kgp is set).
Reviewed by: dfr
#ifdef away the offending code until somebody with more newbus fu than
me can figure out where to put a default function that returns 255
without touching each alpha chipset driver..
kernel backing store.
* Implement syscalls via break instructions.
* Fix backing store copying in cpu_fork() so that the child gets the right
register values.
This thing is actually starting to work now. This set of changes takes me
up to the second execve (the one which runs the first shell). Next stop
single-user mode :-).
before the attach. Things aren't completely working, but this is a good
checkpoint.
Also, initialize the dev member of the function as soon as we add it
to the parent.
o initialize ivars with bzero.
o remove interrupt function pointer. netbsd needs it, but we don't.
o add lots of comments about bogus things that I've been kludging to try
to make the simple cases work.
o add new ivar accessor for cis4 to match cis3. likely neither will be
needed, but it doesn't hurt to have it.
number of ext_buf counters that are possibly allocatable.
Do this because:
(i) It will make it easier to influence EXT_COUNTERS for if_sk,
if_ti (or similar) users where the driver allocates its own
ext_bufs and where it is important for the mbuf system to take
it into account when reserving necessary space for counters.
(ii) Facilitate some percentile calculation for netstat(1)
as inline functions, renaming them to __uint16_swap_uint32,
__uint8_swap_uint32 and __uint8_swap_uint16.
Doing it properly suggested by: msmith
Reviewed by: msmith
now in dirs called sys/*/random/ instead of sys/*/randomdev/*.
Introduce blocking, but only at startup; the random device will
block until the first reseed happens to prevent clients from
using untrustworthy output.
Provide a read_random() call for the rest of the kernel so that
the entropy device does not need to be present. This means that
things like IPX no longer need to have "device random" hardcoded
into thir kernel config. The downside is that read_random() will
provide very poor output until the entropy device is loaded and
reseeded. It is recommended that developers do NOT use the
read_random() call; instead, they should use arc4random() which
internally uses read_random().
Clean up the mutex and locking code a bit; this makes it possible
to unload the module again.
description:
How it works:
--
Basically ifs is a copy of ffs, overriding some vfs/vnops. (Yes, hack.)
I didn't see the need in duplicating all of sys/ufs/ffs to get this
off the ground.
File creation is done through a special file - 'newfile' . When newfile
is called, the system allocates and returns an inode. Note that newfile
is done in a cloning fashion:
fd = open("newfile", O_CREAT|O_RDWR, 0644);
fstat(fd, &st);
printf("new file is %d\n", (int)st.st_ino);
Once you have created a file, you can open() and unlink() it by its returned
inode number retrieved from the stat call, ie:
fd = open("5", O_RDWR);
The creation permissions depend entirely if you have write access to the
root directory of the filesystem.
To get the list of currently allocated inodes, VOP_READDIR has been added
which returns a directory listing of those currently allocated.
--
What this entails:
* patching conf/files and conf/options to include IFS as a new compile
option (and since ifs depends upon FFS, include the FFS routines)
* An entry in i386/conf/NOTES indicating IFS exists and where to go for
an explanation
* Unstaticize a couple of routines in src/sys/ufs/ffs/ which the IFS
routines require (ffs_mount() and ffs_reload())
* a new bunch of routines in src/sys/ufs/ifs/ which implement the IFS
routines. IFS replaces some of the vfsops, and a handful of vnops -
most notably are VFS_VGET(), VOP_LOOKUP(), VOP_UNLINK() and VOP_READDIR().
Any other directory operation is marked as invalid.
What this results in:
* an IFS partition's create permissions are controlled by the perm/ownership of
the root mount point, just like a normal directory
* Each inode has perm and ownership too
* IFS does *NOT* mean an FFS partition can be opened per inode. This is a
completely seperate filesystem here
* Softupdates doesn't work with IFS, and really I don't think it needs it.
Besides, fsck's are FAST. (Try it :-)
* Inodes 0 and 1 aren't allocatable because they are special (dump/swap IIRC).
Inode 2 isn't allocatable since UFS/FFS locks all inodes in the system against
this particular inode, and unravelling THAT code isn't trivial. Therefore,
useful inodes start at 3.
Enjoy, and feedback is definitely appreciated!
takes care of all the 10/100 and gigE PCI drivers that I've done.
Next will be the wireless drivers, then the USB ones. I may pick up
some stragglers along the way. I'm sort of playing this by ear: if
anyone spots any places where I've screwed up horribly, please let me
know.
u_int64_t flag field, bounding the number of capabilities at 64,
but substantially cleaning up capability logic (there are currently
43 defined capabilities).
o Heads up to anyone actually using capabilities: the constant
assignments for various capabilities have been redone, so any
persistent binary capability stores (i.e., '$posix1e.cap' EA
backing files) must be recreated. If you have one of these,
you'll know about it, so if you have no idea what this means,
don't worry.
o Update libposix1e to reflect this new definition, fixing the
exposed functions that directly manipulate the flags fields.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
in the face of non-stripe-aligned swap areas. The bug could cause a
panic during boot.
Refuse to configure a swap area that is too large (67 GB or so)
Properly document the power-of-2 requirement for SWB_NPAGES.
The patch is slightly different then the one Tor enclosed in the P.R.,
but accomplishes the same thing.
PR: kern/20273
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
userland from here; just forward declare struct stat. fhstat.2
(== fhopen.2 == fhstatfs.2) has always specified including
<sys/stat.h> before using any of the fh functions although this is
only necessary for dereferencing the "struct stat *" arg of fhstat(),
so applications should not notice this change.
Fixed unsorting of user prototypes in rev.1.78.
1. Don't include <sys/conf.h> in userland. It is not used, and including it
without including its prerequisite <sys/time.h> should have broken the
world.
2. Don't include <sys/mount.h>. It is not used, except in -current it
bogusly includes <sys/stat.h> which bogusly includes <sys/time.h> and
thus accidentally provides the prerequisite in (1).
3. Cleaned up nearby include messes.
Not approved by despite 5 weeks notice: MAINTAINER
with FreeBSD (not including the MINSIGSTKSZ issue, which belongs to
Marcel). Due to time constraints, I'm going to space them out over a
few days.
This fixes two problems with linux_sigaltstack()
o ss == 0 is perfectly valid use, so do not fail in this case.
o Fix flag handling:
- Our SS_DISABLE is 4, linux's is 2, so we need conversion routines.
These conversion routines will be needed by linux_rt_sendsig()
and linux_rt_sigreturn (forthcoming), so they are not static.
- Linux's flag 0 historically meant SS_ONSTACK according to a comment
in their linux/kernel/signal.c file.
Among other things, this fixes a warning from Sun's JDK 1.3:
"Java HotSpot(TM) Client VM warning: cannot uninstall alt signal stack"
Reviewed by: marcel
Tested by: sto@stat.duke.edu, many others on freebsd-java@
and initialized during boot. This avoids bloating sizeof(struct lock).
As a side effect, it is no longer necessary to enforce the assumtion that
lockinit()/lockdestroy() calls are paired, so the LK_VALID flag has been
removed.
Idea taken from: BSD/OS.
and instead reapply the revision 1.49 of mbuf.h, i.e.
Fixed regression of the type of the `header' member of struct pkthdr from
`void *' to caddr_t in rev.1.51. This mainly caused an annoying warning
for compiling ip_input.c.
Requested by: bde
exceptions from both kernel and user mode.
* Fix context switching so that we can switch back to a proc which we
switched away from (we were saving the state in the wrong place).
* Implement lazy switching of the high-fp state. This needs to be looked
at again for SMP to cope with the case of a process migrating from one
processor to another while it has the high-fp state.
* Make setregs() work properly. I still think this should be called
cpu_exec() or something.
* Various other minor fixes.
With this lot, we can execve() /sbin/init and we get all the way up to its
first syscall. At that point, we stop because syscall handling is not done
yet.
during the qinfifo optimization. When swapping HSCBs, we were only copying
the first 32 bytes, the amount used in the common case of a cdb <= 12 bytes.
Larger cdbs are stored in the second 32 bytes of the cdb.
Noticed by: Marc Frajola <marc@terasolutions.com>
safe - we can't afford to take a TLB trap when we are writing a
trapframe. Possibly revisit this later.
* Various fixes to pmap_enter() so that it actually works properly.
This shouldn't affect the alpha or ia64, since they don't have a
variable named astpending. The alpha still has 2 declarations of
this nonexistent variable.
the #includes to the respective source files.
Also un-nest includes in <dev/hfa/fore_include.h>
I have run src/tools/tools/kerninclude to remove 1239 clearly
unneeded #includes reducing the total from 3524 includes to 2285.
Define the NETISR just like all the other NETISRs.
unifdef -Usun -D__FreeBSD__ we will probably never support sun4c
and if we do we can't use the solaris code anyway and I doubt
anybody will be running Fore ATM cards in then in the first place.
past we stored this data in the CCB and attained the CCB via a pointer
in the SCB. In ahc_timeout(), however, the timedout SCB may have already
been completed (inherent race), meaning that the CCB could have been recycled,
and the ahc pointer reset.
Clean up the logic in ahc_search_qinfifo that deals with the busy device
table. For some reason it assumed that the only valid time to search
to see if additional lun entries should be checked was if lun 0 matched.
Now we properly itterate through the necessary luns. The busy device
table is used to detect invalid reselections, so a device would have had
to perform an unexpected reselection for this to cause problems. Further,
all luns are collapsed to a single entry unless we have external ram
with large SCBs (3940AU models) so the chance of this happening was
rather remote.
Clean up the logic for dealing with the untagged queues. We now set a
flag in the SCB that indicates that it is on the untagged queue instead
of inferring this from the type and setup of the CCB pased into us by
CAM.
In ahc_timeout(), don't print the path of the SCB until the controller
is paused and we are sure that it has not completed yet. This, in
conjunction with referencing the ahc pointer in the SCB rather than
the CCB in the SCB avoids panics in the case of a timedout scb completing
just before the timeout handler runs. This turns out to be guaranteed
if interrupt delivery is failing, as we run our interrupt handler to
flush any "just missed events" when a timeout occurs. Mention the
likelyhood of broken interrupts if a timedout SCB is completed by
our call to ahc_intr().
but pccardd apparently maps memory with MDF_16BITS flag.
So memory mapped access is disabled and use IO port instead for now.
This fixes the problem for config index 0x01 in the pccard.conf
with the message: "awi0: failed to complete selftest (timeout)"
o Remove bogus "spurious interrupt" message.
o Ring buffer head and avail were incorrectly calculated.
o Fix fragment count.
o Fix ring entry for single station, default to 16Mbit.
o Don't complain about long frames.
file types to requiring all file types to properly implement fo_stat.
This makes any new file type additions much easier as this code no
longer has to be modified to accomodate it.
o Instead of using curproc in fdesc_allocvp, pass a `struct proc' pointer as
a new fifth parameter.
a resource shortage occurs, freeze our queue and then set the resource
shortage flag while the controller data structure is locked. The old
code did these in the wrong order potentially allowing our interrupt
handler to release the queue and clear the flag before the freeze
ever occurred.
Before calling kernacc(), make sure that we're not calling it
with a K0SEG address.
This gets alphas booting with SMP_DEBUG & INVARIANTS options
approved by: jhb
cheap to setup that it doesn't really matter that we recycle device
vnodes at kleenex speed.
Implement first cut try at killing cloned devices when they are
not needed anymore. For now only the bpf driver is involved in
this experiment. Cloned devices can set the SI_CHEAPCLONE flag
which allows us to destroy_dev() it when the vcount() drops to zero
and the vnode is reclaimed. For now it's a requirement that the
driver doesn't keep persistent state from close to (re)open.
Some whitespace changes.
1) Add FreeBSD: tag.
2) Add parenthesis around macro args.
3) Add parenthesis around macros which are expressions.
4) Add do { ... } while (0) around macros which are compound statements.
5) Sync bitstr_size and bit_alloc with neater versions from NetBSD.
6) Fix bit_ffs and bit_ffc so that they don't search off the end of the
bitstirng.
7) Try to avoid rightshifting signed ints.
I didn't take NetBSD's version directly as the macros are significantly
slower for long bitstrings. Bruce reviewed a previous version of
this patch.
PR: 21204
Submitted by: bob@immure.com
Reviewed by: bde
Previous revision of this file changed the "boot" commands to take
no arguments from the stack. This is only valid in the case where
a kernel has not been loaded. In that case, load_kernel_and_modules
will be called, which takes a list of arguments from the stack.
When a kernel is presently loaded, though, the list of arguments must
be passed to the boot command, which was the behaviour before the last
revision.
Fix things for both cases.
Noticed by: S-Max and others on that chat room
Replace all in-tree uses with <sys/mouse.h> which repo-copied a few
moments ago from src/sys/i386/include/mouse.h by peter.
This is also the appropriate fix for exo-tree sources.
Put warnings in <machine/mouse.h> to discourage use.
November 15th 2000 the warnings will be converted to errors.
January 15th 2001 the <machine/mouse.h> files will be removed.
significantly pessimized syscalls by arranging to do null rescheduling
on return from every syscall. (AST_RESCHED was not defined, and the
mask ~AST_RESCHED gets replaced by the useless mask ~0. This bug has
been fixed before, in rev.1.92.)
aic7xxx.c:
In target mode, reset the TQINPOS on every restart of the sequencer.
In the past we did this only during a bus reset, but there are other
reasons the sequencer might be reset.
In ahc_clear_critical_section(), disable pausing chip interrupts while
we step the sequencer out of a critical section. This avoids the
possibility of getting a pausing interrupt (unexpected bus free,
bus reset, etc.) that would prevent the sequencer from stepping.
Send the correct async notifications in the case of a BDR or bus reset.
In ahc_loadseq(), correct the calculation of our critical sections.
In some cases, the sections would be larger than needed.
aic7xxx.h:
Remove an unused SCB flag.
aic7xxx.seq:
MK_MESSAGE is cleared by the kernel, there is no need to waste
a sequencer instruction clearing it.
aic7xxx_freebsd.c:
Go through the host message loop instead of issuing a single
byte message directly in the ahc_timeout() case where we
are currently on the bus to the device. The effect is the same,
but this way we get a nice printf saying that an expected BDR
was delivered instead of an unexpected bus free.
If we are requeuing an SCB for an error recovery action, be sure
to set the DISCONNECTED flag in the in-core version of the SCB.
This ensures that, in the SCB-paging case, the sequencer will
still recognize the reselection as valid even if the version
of the SCB with this flag set was never previously paged out
to system memory. In the non-paging case, set the MK_MESSAGE
flag in SCB_CONTROL directly.
aic7xxx_pci.c:
Enable the Memeory Write and Invalidate bug workaround for
all aic7880 chips with revs < 1. This bug is rarely triggered
in FreeBSD as most transfers end on cache-aligned boundaries,
but a recheck of my references indicates that these chips
are affected.
handler can safely remove itself from a list while being run.
(Note that it is not safe to remove anything else from the same list,
as this may still cause corruption in the case where the removed
item is next on the list.)
kind we can manage in a set of configurations" and "the number of resources
of a particular kind that can be programmed into an ISA PnP adapter".
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@e-mail.ne.jp>
Submitted by: Hirokazu WATANABE <gwna@geocities.co.jp>
Replace all in-tree uses with necessary subset of <sys/{fb,kb,cons}io.h>.
This is also the appropriate fix for exo-tree sources.
Put warnings in <machine/console.h> to discourage use.
November 15th 2000 the warnings will be converted to errors.
January 15th 2001 the <machine/console.h> files will be removed.
non-LVD controllers. We only need to take special action on the qinfifo
if we have dectected the case of an SCB that has been removed from the
qinfifo but has not been fully DMAed to the controller. A missing
conditional caused this code to be executed every time an SCB was
aborted from the queue
Don't attempt to print the path of an SCB that has been freed.
Clean up the traversal of the pending scb list in
ahc_update_pending_syncrates(). This has no functional change.
Correct ahc_timeout()'s requeing of a timedout SCB to effect a
recovery action. We now use ahc_qinfifo_requeue() and a
new function ahc_qinfifo_count() instead of performing the
requeue inline. The old code did not conform to the new qinfifo
method.
Clear the timedout SCB from the disconnected list. This ensures
that the SCB_NEXT field is free to be used for queuing us to
the qinfifo.
compat probe routines to work).
o Have a null driver_added routines. We need to be careful about probing
until after we know we have a card. For the moment, we do nothing
(which is safe). This fixes a panic when a driver is loaded w/o a
card in the slot.
XXX still need to fix the resource list code. It is totally busted and
XXX causes a panic in the child printing routine after the probe has
XXX succeeded.
it is defined whenm used in ufs_extattr_uepm_destroy(), fixing a panic
due to a NULL pointer dereference.
Submitted by: Wesley Morgan <morganw@chemicals.tacorp.com>
it to lower its memory usage. This was mentioned on the mailing
lists ages ago, and I've lost the name of the person who brought
it up.
Reviewed by: alc
enough into the mbuf data area. Solve this problem once and for all
by pulling up the entire (standard) header for TCP and UDP, and four
bytes of header for ICMP (enough for type, code and cksum fields).
check in the [basic.link] section of the C++ standard wrong. gcc-2.7.2.3
apparently doesn't do the check, so the bug doesn't affect RELENG_3.
PR: 16170, 21427
Submitted by: Max Khon <fjoe@lark.websci.ru> (i386 version)
Discussed with: jdp
a breakpoint in the kernel didn't use the proper argument list. To avoid
having to include the userland link.h header everyhwere that sys/linker.h
is used, make r_debug_state() a static function in link_elf.c as well.
In ahc_search_qinfifo, the SEARCH_REMOVE case must also handle
an SCB that has been removed from the QINFIFO but not yet been
fully dmaed to the card.
Correct locking for ahc_get_scb() calls.
Set SCB syncrate settings in ahc_execute_scb() to avoid a race
condition that could allow a newly queued SCB to be missed
by ahc_update_pending_syncrates().
When notifying the system of transfer negotiation updates, only
set the valid bits for tagged queuing and disconnection if the
path is fully qualified. Sync/Wide settins apply to all luns
of a target, but tagged queuing and disconnection may change
on a per-lun basis.
Add missing ahc_unlock() calls in ahc_timeout() for the target
mode case.
return through doreti to handle ast's. This is necessary for the
clock interrupts to work properly.
- Change the clock interrupts on the x86 to be fast instead of threaded.
This is needed because both hardclock() and statclock() need to run in
the context of the current process, not in a separate thread context.
- Kill the prevproc hack as it is no longer needed.
- We really need Giant when we call psignal(), but we don't want to block
during the clock interrupt. Instead, use two p_flag's in the proc struct
to mark the current process as having a pending SIGVTALRM or a SIGPROF
and let them be delivered during ast() when hardclock() has finished
running.
- Remove CLKF_BASEPRI, which was #ifdef'd out on the x86 anyways. It was
broken on the x86 if it was turned on since cpl is gone. It's only use
was to bogusly run softclock() directly during hardclock() rather than
scheduling an SWI.
- Remove the COM_LOCK simplelock and replace it with a clock_lock spin
mutex. Since the spin mutex already handles disabling/restoring
interrupts appropriately, this also lets us axe all the *_intr() fu.
- Back out the hacks in the APIC_IO x86 cpu_initclocks() code to use
temporary fast interrupts for the APIC trial.
- Add two new process flags P_ALRMPEND and P_PROFPEND to mark the pending
signals in hardclock() that are to be delivered in ast().
Submitted by: jakeb (making statclock safe in a fast interrupt)
Submitted by: cp (concept of delaying signals until ast())
- Make softinterrupts (SWI's) almost completely MI, and divorce them
completely from the x86 hardware interrupt code.
- The ihandlers array is now gone. Instead, there is a MI shandlers array
that just contains SWI handlers.
- Most of the former machine/ipl.h files have moved to a new sys/ipl.h.
- Stub out all the spl*() functions on all architectures.
Submitted by: dfr
of the Am79c973 with "AlertIT Technology," whatever that is. Also mention
support for the PCnet/FAST III cards in the documentation. The
PCnet/FAST III chips have integrated 10/100 PHYs.
adapters. This is necessary in order to make this driver work with
the built-in ethernet on the alpha Miata machines. These systems
have a 21143-PC chip on-board and optional daughtercards with either
a 10/100 MII transceiver or a 10baseT/10base2 transceiver. In both
cases, you need to twiddle the GPIO bits on the controller in order
to turn the transceivers on, and you have to read the media info
from the SROM in order to find out what bits to twiddle.
-- don't depend on garbage in <sys/mount.h>. mbufs aren't actually
used here either. They should have been completely removed from filesystem
interfaces when they were removed from the interfaces to convert between
file handles and vnodes.
of two (one to access the circular input fifo, the other to get the SCB).
This costs us a command slot so the driver can now only queue 254
simultaneous commands.
Have the kernel driver honor critical sections in sequencer code.
When prefetching S/G segments only pull a cacheline's worth but
never less than two elements. This reduces the impact of the
prefetch on the main data transfer when compared to the 128
byte fetches the driver used to do.
Add "bootverbose" logging for transfer negotiations.
Correct a bug in ahc_set_syncrate() that would prevent an update
of the sync parameters if only the ppr_options had changed.
Correct locking for calls to ahc_free_scb(). ahc_free_scb() is no
longer protected internally to simplify ports to other platforms.
Make sure we unfreeze our SIMQ if a resource shortage has occurred
and an SCB is been freed.
ahc_pci.c:
Turn on cacheline streaming for all controllers that support it.
Clarify diagnostic messages about PCI interrupts.
disk drivers along with a load of fixes to context switching, fork
handling and a load of other stuff I can't remember now. This takes us as
far as start_init() before it dies. I guess now I will have to finish off
the VM system and syscall handling :-).
up lock on extattrs.
o Get for free a comment indicating where auto-starting of extended
attributes will eventually occur, as it was in my commit tree also.
No implementation change here, only a comment.
call, which should be the last thing down to a per-mount extattr
management structure, after ufs_extattr_stop() on the file system.
This currently has the effect only of destroying the per-mount lock
on extended attributes, and clearing appropriate flags.
o Remove inappropriate invocation in ufs_extattr_vnode_inactive().
Add lockdestroy() and appropriate invocations, which corresponds to
lockinit() and must be called to clean up after a lockmgr lock is no
longer needed.
this just involves adding the chip ID to the supported list: the PCnet/PRO
is compatible with the PCnet/FAST+ and friends and should "just work"
with this driver.
Also try to handle mbuf allocation failures in the receive handler
more gracefully.
Add support for CMD 648 ATA66 & CMD 649 ATA100 chipsets.
Fix the "resource already allocated" panic with the CMD and other
braindead controllers.
Add options ATA_ENABLE_TAGS, without this option tagged queuing will
not be attempted.
the IP_FW_IF_IPID rule. (We have recently decided to keep the
ip_id field in network byte order inside the kernel, see revision
1.140 of src/sys/netinet/ip_input.c).
I did not like to have the conversion happen in userland, and I
think that the similar conversions for fw_tcp(seq|ack|win) should
be moved out of userland (src/sbin/ipfw/ipfw.c) into the kernel.
platforms.
While here, work around a strange quirk in config(8) that I do not yet
understand. Rearrange which atapi* files have 'optional' vs. 'count'
so that you can have atapifd without atapicd. The only difference should
be that this works instead of having a link error because atapi-all.o got
left out of the kernel.
Basically, the reason most people haven't seen this is
most likely related to the low usage of MCHTYPE.
Pointed out and suggested a fix by: Boris Popov (bp) - thanks!
Taking over the sector following the MBR causes problems on some
machines, and the actual gains are fairly small in terms of how
the space is presently used.
Since we need a number of further features (eg. handling extended
partitions) that can't be readily accommodated in the basic boot0
design anyway, rather choose to implement the additional stuff
separately and concentrate on compatibility rather than features
here.