MACHINE_ARCH and MACHINE). Their purpose was to be able to test
in cpp(1), but cpp(1) only understands integer type expressions.
Using such unsupported expressions introduced a number of subtle
bugs, which were discovered by compiling with -Wundef.
_MACHINE == i386 test always succeeds, even on non-i386 (both
sides of expressions become 0). Remove the comment since
_MACHINE and _MACHINE_ARCH are going away.
of the radix lookup tables. Since several rnh_lookup() can run in
parallel on the same table, we can piggyback on the shared locking
provided by ipfw(4).
However, the single entry cache in the ip_fw_table can't be used lockless,
so it is removed. This pessimizes two cases: processing of bursts of similar
packets and matching one packet against the same table several times during
one ipfw_chk() lookup. To optimize the processing of similar packet bursts
administrator should use stateful firewall. To optimize the second problem
a solution will be provided soon.
Details:
o Since we piggyback on the ipfw(4) locking, and the latter is per-chain,
the tables are moved from the global declaration to the
struct ip_fw_chain.
o The struct ip_fw_table is shrunk to one entry and thus vanished.
o All table manipulating functions are extended to accept the struct
ip_fw_chain * argument.
o All table modifing functions use IPFW_WLOCK_ASSERT().
(suggested by alfred@)
o Reuse si_band field in struct __siginfo, add a mqd member which will
be used by mqueue.
o Add code SI_KERNEL to indicate a signal is queued by kernel.
every now and then. It is up to the caller to choose a proper
action upon an error condition. Therefore, use return, not exit,
except for some special cases.
Consistently return 1 to indicate an error.
Submitted by: sem (initially)
Reviewed by: freebsd-rc (silence)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Use the following kernel configuration option to enable:
options BPF_JITTER
If you want to use bpf_filter() instead (e. g., debugging), do:
sysctl net.bpf.jitter.enable=0
to turn it off.
Currently BIOCSETWF and bpf_mtap2() are unsupported, and bpf_mtap() is
partially supported because 1) no need, 2) avoid expensive m_copydata(9).
Obtained from: WinPcap 3.1 (for i386)
time ago appears to be based not on the typical 1.8432MHz clock, or
the other more typical multiple of 8 of this (14.7456MHz), but instead
it appears to be 1/2 the PCI clock rate or 16.50000MHz. I'm not 100%
sure that this is right, but since I did the original entry, I'm going
to go ahead and modify it. With the 14.7456MHz value, I was getting
bits that were ~7.3us instead of ~8.6us like they are supposed to be.
My measuring gear for today is a stupid handheld scope with two
signficant digits. So I don't know if it is 33.000000/2 MHz or some
other value close to 16.5MHz, but 16.5MHz works well enough for me to
use a couple of different devices at 115200 baud, and is a nice even
multiple of a well known clock frequency...
ago. Document the real behavior of bus_dma_tag_create, bus_dmamap_load,
and other functions. Also document their arguments and return values.
MFC After: 3 days
rather than embedding it in the intrframe as if_vec. This reduces diffs
with amd64 somewhat.
- Remove cf_vec from clockframe (it wasn't used anyway) and stop pushing
dummy vector arguments for ipi_bitmap_handler() and lapic_handle_timer()
since clockframe == trapframe now.
- Fix ddb to handle stack traces across interrupt entry points that just
have a trapframe on their stack and not a trapframe + vector.
- Change intr_execute_handlers() to take a trapframe rather than an
intrframe pointer.
- Change lapic_handle_intr() and atpic_handle_intr() to take a vector and
trapframe rather than an intrframe.
- GC struct intrframe now that nothing uses it anymore.
- GC CLOCK_TO_TRAPFRAME() and INTR_TO_TRAPFRAME().
Reviewed by: bde
Requested by: peter
ipi_nmi_handler() and into a new cpustop_handler() function. Change
the Xcpustop IPI_STOP handler to call this function instead of
duplicating all the same logic in assembly.
- EOI the local APIC for the lapic timer interrupt in C rather than
assembly.
- Bump the lazypmap IPI counter if COUNT_IPIS is defined in C rather than
assembly.
commit to atpic.c) there may not be an IRQ 13. Instead, just keep going.
If the INT16 interface doesn't work then we will eventually panic anyway.
FWIW: We could probably just axe the support for IRQ 13 altogether at this
point. The only thing we'd lose support for are 486sx systems with
external 487 FPUs.
MFC after: 1 week
working IRQ0 with APIC anymore. Previously, it was possible to have
some other ATPIC IRQS "leak" through in a few edge cases. For example, on
my x86 test machine, ACPI re-routes the SCI (IRQ 9) to intpin 13 on the
first I/O APIC. This leaves a hole for IRQ 13 (since the APIC doesn't
provide a source for IRQ 13 in that case) with the result that the ATPIC
IRQ13 source was registered instead. This changes the 8259A drivers to
only register their interrupt sources if none of the 16 ISA IRQs have an
interrupt source already installed.
MFC after: 1 week
- Add a new SET_KERNEL_SREGS macro that sets up %ds and %es to point to
kernel data and %fs to point to per-CPU data and use the new macro
in several kernel entry points including trap and interrupt handlers.
- Convert the IPI_STOP handler Xcpustop to push a standard trap frame
rather than an application frame.
- Make the TRAP() macro private to exception.s since it is only used
there.
- Move the PCPU_*() macros in asmacros.h out of the middle of the
profiling macros.
Reviewed by: bde
Requested by: bde (4, 5)
acquired anywhere in the driver now.
- Axe the spin mutex used for the nve_oslock*() routines. The driver lock
already provides sufficient synchronization.
- Don't mess around with IFF_UP when the link state changes. IFF_UP is
an administrative flag, not a link status indicator.
MFC after: 1 week
lock object (and thus off of each mutex and sx lock):
- Rename the all_locks list to pending_locks and only put locks initialized
before SI_SUB_WITNESS on the list so that the SI_SUB_WITNESS can add them
to witness once it starts up.
- Now that pending_locks is only used during early startup, change it from
a TAILQ to an STAILQ. This removes a pointer from the STAILQ_ENTRY in
struct lock_object.
- Since the pending_locks list is only used during the single-threaded
early boot it no longer needs to be protected by a mutex, so remove
all_mtx.
- Since the lo_list member of struct lock_object is now only used during
early boot before witness is running, collapse lo_list and lo_witness
into a union. This shaves the second pointer off of struct lock_object.
- Axe lock_cur_cnt and lock_max_cnt.
With these changes, struct mtx shrinks from 36 to 28 bytes on 32-bit
platforms and from 72 to 56 bytes on 64-bit platforms. Note that this
commit will completely and utterly destroy the kernel ABI, so no MFC.
Tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, sparc64
immediately from acpi_pci_link_route_interrupt() since we aren't going
to have a valid pci_link device to talk to try to route interrupts. This
fixes a page fault if you disable just pci_link. Note that trying to use
ACPI without pci_link is probably not advised however.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested by: Eugene Grosbein eugen at kuzbass dot ru
since mount_smbfs(8) assumed long name mounting by default unless "-n long"
was explicitly specified.
Rather than supplying a "long" option in mount_smbfs(8), this commit brings
back the original behaviour by associating SMBFS_MOUNT_NO_LONG with the
"nolong" option. This should fix the broken long file names on smbfs people
observed recently.
Reported by: Vladimir Grebenschikov <vova at fbsd dot ru>
Reviewed by: phk
Tested by: Slawa Olhovchenkov <slw at zxy dot spb dot ru>
the keg/zone lists, summarizing cache state, and walking bucket lists in
each zone. I seem to get inconsistent results on SMP, possibly due to
local header problems, but it seems to work quite well on UP. This tool
requires sufficient privilege to read /dev/mem (or a core dump), and is
for debugging purposes rather than administrative monitoring purposes
(use vmstat instead).
the eaddr array (introduced in rev. 1.174) prior to writing to it. As
dc_read_eeprom() is told to write only 3 16-bit words to eaddr but eaddr
in fact is somewhat larger removal of the zeroing defeated the check
whether the MAC address is all zero as there can be some random garbage
in eaddr past the 3 words written to it and the check verifys all bits
in eaddr. Solve this by changing the check to verify only the 3 words
(happenning to be ETHER_ADDR_LEN bytes) written to eaddr.
- While here change the notation of "FCode" in a nearby comment to the
official way.
Ok'ed by: marcel, ru
source it into the shell. If not, handle it in a subshell the same
way that "real" rc.d-style scripts are handled. This will dramatically
ease the "process local scripts in the base rcorder" transition.
Add *.bak to the list of files in */rc.d that we ignore.