Update to tzdata2015d:
Release 2015d - 2015-04-24 08:09:46 -0700
Changes affecting future time stamps
Egypt will not observe DST in 2015 and will consider canceling it
permanently. For now, assume no DST indefinitely.
(Thanks to Ahmed Nazmy and Tim Parenti.)
Change affecting past and future time zone abbreviations
The abbreviations for Hawaii-Aleutian standard and daylight times
have been changed from HAST/HADT to HST/HDT, as per US Government
Printing Office style. This affects only America/Adak since 1983,
as America/Honolulu was already using the new style.
Update to tzdata2015d:
Release 2015d - 2015-04-24 08:09:46 -0700
Changes affecting future time stamps
Egypt will not observe DST in 2015 and will consider canceling it
permanently. For now, assume no DST indefinitely.
(Thanks to Ahmed Nazmy and Tim Parenti.)
Change affecting past and future time zone abbreviations
The abbreviations for Hawaii-Aleutian standard and daylight times
have been changed from HAST/HADT to HST/HDT, as per US Government
Printing Office style. This affects only America/Adak since 1983,
as America/Honolulu was already using the new style.
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.iana.org/tz/releases/
bhyveload would allow you to create 33 entries on an array that only has 32 slots
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2569
Reviewed by: araujo
Approved by: neel
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Also fixes the usage statement for the binary to use the correct terms (provider and geom name, rather than dev and prov, which is incorrect in the latter case)
Sync the man page summary with the new usage statement
PR: 199540
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2329
Submitted by: Fabian Keil
Reviewed by: trasz
Approved by: eadler (mentor)
Obtained from: ElectroBSD (original)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
the work to the main thread... This fixes a possible crash if SIGINFO
is delivered at the wrong time...
This still leaves getrusage broken for some reason, but I believe that
is a kernel issue and cannot be fixed here...
interface open continuously instead of closing it after each filesystem
access and reopening it before the next (causing it to re-obtain network
params each time). This vastly speeds up netbooting.
it from the uboot net_init() implementation. The routine uses the standard
U-Boot env vars plus a freebsd-specific variable named "rootpath" (the
corresponding u-boot variable for that would be "bootfile" except that it
refers to ubldr, so a new name was needed to communicate the path to ubldr).
This allows ubldr to load a kernel from nfs without requiring a dhcp or
bootp server to provide the server ip and rootpath parameters.
HDA association descriptors. This fixes a crash during device probe
for some HDA PCI devices.
Reported by: David Wolfskill <david@catwhisker.org>
Reviewed by: mav @
MFC after: 1 week
than bootp and rarp.
The code which splits a serverip:/rootpath string into rootip and a plain
pathname is now a separate net_parse_rootpath() function that can be
called by others. The code that sets the kernel env vars needed for
nfs_diskless is moved into net_open() so that the variables get set no
matter where the params came from.
There was already code in net_open() that allowed for the possibility that
some other entity has set up the network-related global variables. It uses
the rootip variable as the key, assuming that if it is set all the other
required variables are set too. These changes don't alter the existing
behavior, they just make it easier to actually write some new code to get
the params from another source (such as the U-Boot environment).
Clang uses compiler-rt for the code coverage runtime, and ports GCC
provides its own libgcov.
PR: 200203 (exp-run)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
we have both the Amlogic pic and a GIC. This may be the case in some
configurations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2432
Submitted by: John Wehle <john@feith.com>
This is being done to fix breakage with make distribution with read-only
source trees as make distribution doesn't use make obj like building
tests/ does in all cases
Reported by: Wolfgang Zenker <wolfgang@lyxys.ka.sub.org>
Suggested by: jhb
X-MFC with: r282059
MFC after: 1 week
Also return error if TSO is requested without Tx checksum offload.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2564
It just affects capabilities of the created VLAN interface.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2563
If TxQ lock is obtained, deferred packet list shold be serviced even if
the packet addition fails because of overflow.
Without the patch freeze happens if:
- queue is not blocked (i.e. completion does not trigger unblock and service)
- put-list overflow (1024 entries)
- sfxge_tx_packet_add() acquires TxQ lock just as it is released it in
sfxge_tx_qdpl_service() on the second CPU but before pending check
- sfxge_tx_packet_add() swizzles put-list to get-list, fails because of
non-tcp get-list overflow and returns without packet list service
- sfxge_tx_qdpl_service() on the second CPU checks that there are no
pending packets in the put-list and returns
Other possible solution is to guaranee that maximum length of the put-list
is less than maximum length of any get-list.
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2562
Update to tzdata2015c:
Release 2015c - 2015-04-11 08:55:55 -0700
Changes affecting future time stamps
Egypt's spring-forward transition is at 24:00 on April's last Thursday,
not 00:00 on April's last Friday. 2015's transition will therefore be on
Thursday, April 30 at 24:00, not Friday, April 24 at 00:00. Similar fixes
apply to 2026, 2037, 2043, etc. (Thanks to Steffen Thorsen.)
Update to tzdata2015c:
Release 2015c - 2015-04-11 08:55:55 -0700
Changes affecting future time stamps
Egypt's spring-forward transition is at 24:00 on April's last Thursday,
not 00:00 on April's last Friday. 2015's transition will therefore be on
Thursday, April 30 at 24:00, not Friday, April 24 at 00:00. Similar fixes
apply to 2026, 2037, 2043, etc. (Thanks to Steffen Thorsen.)
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.iana.org/tz/releases/
Previously, ubldr would use the virtual addresses in the elf headers by
masking off the high bits and assuming the result was a physical address
where the kernel should be loaded. That would sometimes discard
significant bits of the physical address, but the effects of that were
undone by archsw copy code that would find a large block of memory and
apply an offset to the source/dest copy addresses. The result was that
things were loaded at a different physical address than requested by the
higher code layers, but that worked because other adjustments were applied
later (such as when jumping to the entry point). Very confusing, and
somewhat fragile.
Now the archsw copy routines are just simple copies, and instead
archsw.arch_loadaddr is implemented to choose a load address. The new
routine uses some of the code from the old offset-translation routine to
find the largest block of ram, but it excludes ubldr itself from that
range, and also excludes If ubldr splits the largest block of ram in
two, the kernel is loaded into the bottom of whichever resulting block is
larger.
As part of eliminating ubldr itself from the ram ranges, export the heap
start/end addresses in a pair of new global variables.
This change means that the virtual addresses in the arm kernel elf headers
now have no meaning at all, except for the entry point address. There is
an implicit assumption that the entry point is in the first text page, and
that the address in the the header can be turned into an offset by masking
it with PAGE_MASK. In the future we can link all arm kernels at a virtual
address of 0xC0000000 with no need to use any low-order part of the
address to influence where in ram the kernel gets loaded.
1. Align to a 64-bit address so 64-bit data will be correctly aligned.
2. Add a comment explaining why.
3. Remove an unneeded value from the struct.
This fixes an issue where the struct may not be correctly aligned on the
stack in the syscall function. This may lead to accesing a 64-bit value
at a non 64-bit. This will raise an exception and panic the kernel.
We have been lucky where on arm and armv6 both clang and gcc correctly
align the data, even without us asking to, however, on armeb with clang to
not be the case. This tells the compiler we really do need this to be
aligned.
Reported and tested by: jmg (on armeb with clang)
MFC after: 1 Week [1, 2]
when loader(8) passed physical addresses in loader metadata for arm, but
that is no longer true; all metadata has already been adjusted to vitual
addresses by loader.
I can't track down the exact revision in loader where a change from physical
to virtual metadata addresses happened. The code involved is very twisty
and complicated. I suspect the change was an unintended consequence of the
r247301, r247413, r248118 series of changes I made a couple years ago.
and qone[f]() were marked as __inline, but their forward
declarations were not updated. Fix the forward declarations
to match the actual function declarations.
Requested by: bde
which declares a dependency on siftr(4). This is necessitated by a
reference to struct pkt_node, which is defined in siftr(4): otherwise,
dtrace(1) will return an error during startup if siftr.ko is not loaded.
return an error if one of the depends_on directives in a library is not
satisfied. In this case, libdtrace is supposed to ignore the library and
carry on. However, the remainder of the library may still be buffered by
the lexer, causing libdtrace to erroneously continue processing it on the
next call to yyparse(). Fix this by explicitly flushing the input buffer
each time the compiler state is reset.
MFC after: 3 weeks
comment to this effect and switch the default. My old AT91SAM9G20
now boots, fsck's the SD card and runs w/o an issue for the first
time since a 9.1-ish stable build I did a few years ago.
Problems with unmapped I/O:
o un-page-aligned I/O requests to devices fail (notably fsck
and newfs).
o write-back caching was totally broken. write-through caching
needed to be enabled.
o Even page-aligned I/O requests sometimes failed for reasons
not thoroughly investigated.
Suggested by: ian@
MFC after: 2 days