session in multiple threads w/o locking.. There was a single fpu
context shared per session, if multiple threads were using the session,
and both migrated away, they could corrupt each other's fpu context...
This patch adds a per cpu context and a lock to protect it...
It also tries to better address unloading of the aesni module...
The pause will be removed once the OpenCrypto Framework provides a
better method for draining callers into _newsession...
I first discovered the fpu context sharing issue w/ a flood ping over
an IPsec tunnel between two bhyve machines... The patch in D3015
was used to verify that this fix does fix the issue...
Reviewed by: gnn, kib (both earlier versions)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3016
for timehands consumers, by using fences.
Ensure that the timehands->th_generation reset to zero is visible
before the data update is visible [*]. tc_setget() allowed data update
writes to become visible before generation (but not on TSO
architectures).
Remove tc_setgen(), tc_getgen() helpers, use atomics inline [**].
Noted by: alc [*]
Requested by: bde [**]
Reviewed by: alc, bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
seq_write_begin(), instead of the load_rmb/rbm_load functions. The
update does not need to be atomic due to the write lock owned.
Similarly, in seq_write_end(), update of *seqp needs not be atomic.
Only store must be atomic with release.
For seq_read(), the natural operation is the load acquire of the
sequence value, express this directly with atomic_load_acq_int()
instead of using custom partial fence implementation
atomic_load_rmb_int().
In seq_consistent, use atomic_thread_fence_acq() which provides the
desired semantic of ordering reads before fence before the re-reading
of *seqp, instead of custom atomic_rmb_load_int().
Reviewed by: alc, bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
provide a semantic defined by the C11 fences with corresponding
memory_order.
atomic_thread_fence_acq() gives r | r, w, where r and w are read and
write accesses, and | denotes the fence itself.
atomic_thread_fence_rel() is r, w | w.
atomic_thread_fence_acq_rel() is the combination of the acquire and
release in single operation. Note that reads after the acq+rel fence
could be made visible before writes preceeding the fence.
atomic_thread_fence_seq_cst() orders all accesses before/after the
fence, and the fence itself is globally ordered against other
sequentially consistent atomic operations.
Reviewed by: alc
Discussed with: bde
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
However, I've observed the active queue scan stopping when there are
frequent free page shortages and the inactive queue is steadily refilled
by other mechanisms, such as the sequential access heuristic in vm_fault()
or madvise(2). To remedy this problem, record the time of the last active
queue scan, and always scan a number of pages proportional to the time
since the last scan, regardless of whether that last scan was a
timeout-triggered ("pass == 0") or free-page-shortage-triggered ("pass >
0") scan.
Also, on a timeout-triggered scan, allow a full scan of the active queue
when the system is short of inactive pages.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 6 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
On platforms which are fully IO-coherent, the map might be null.
We need to guarantee that all data is observable after the
sync operation is called. Add a memory barrier to ensure that on ARM.
Reviewed by: andrew, kib
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3012
The number of available lock list entries for a thread is LOCK_CHILDCOUNT,
and each entry can record up to LOCK_NCHILDREN locks. When iterating over
the locks held by a thread, a bound on the loop index is therefore given
by LOCK_CHILDCOUNT * LOCK_NCHILDREN; WITNESS_COUNT is an unrelated
constant.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2974
The UEFI loader on the 10.1 release install disk (disc1) modifies an
existing EFI_DEVICE_PATH_PROTOCOL instance in an apparent attempt to
truncate the device path. In doing so it creates an invalid device
path.
Perform the equivalent action without modification of structures
allocated by firmware.
PR: 197641
MFC After: 1 week
Submitted by: Chris Ruffin <chris.ruffin@intel.com>
Place sched_random nearer to where it's first used: moving the
code nearer to where it is used makes the code easier to read
and we can reduce the initial "#ifdef SMP" island.
Reword a little the comment and clean some whitespaces
while here.
The 6205 (Taylor Peak) in the Lenovo X230 works fine in 5GHz 11a and 11n HT20,
but not 11n HT40. The NIC goes RX deaf the moment HT40 is configured.
It's so RX deaf that it doesn't even hear beacons and the firmware sends
"BEACON MISS" events. That's pretty deaf.
I tried configuring up the HT40 flags in monitor mode and it worked - so
I assumed that doing the transition from 20 -> 40MHz channel configuration
when going auth->assoc (ie, after the NIC has been partially configured)
is a problem.
So for now, let's just always set them if they're available.
Tested:
* Intel 5300, STA mode, 5GHz HT/40 AP; 2GHz HT/20 AP
* Intel 6205, STA mode, 5GHz HT/40, HT20, 11a AP; 2GHz HT/20 AP
This was pointed out to me by coworkers trying to use FreeBSD-HEAD
in the office on their Thinkpad T420p laptops.
TODO:
* I don't like how the HT40 flags are configured - the whole interop/
protection config should be re-checked. Notably, I think curhtprotmode
is 0 in a lot of cases, which means "no interoperability" and i think
that's busted.
Sponsored by: Norse Corp, Inc.
Some external tools just do a 'ls /dev/vmm' to figure out the bhyve virtual
machines on the host. These tools break if the devmem device nodes also
appear in /dev/vmm.
Requested by: grehan
flags are not specified... This bug was introduced in r275732...
This only affects IPsec ESP only policies w/ the aesni module loaded,
other subsystems specify one or both of the flags...
Reviewed by: gnn, delphij, eri
Add ARM ITS (Interrupt Translation Services) support required
to bring-up message signalled interrupts on some ARM64 platforms.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
pointer is NULL, as in that case there are no userland pages that
could potentially be wired. It is common for old to be NULL and
oldlenp to be non-NULL in calls to userland_sysctl(), as this is used
to probe for the length of a variable-length sysctl entry before
retrieving a value. Note that it is typical for such calls to be made
with an uninitialized value in *oldlenp, so sysctlmemlock was
essentially being acquired at random (depending on the uninitialized
value in *oldlenp being > PAGE_SIZE or not) for these calls prior to
this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2987
Reviewed by: mjg, kib
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
Summary:
Both booke and AIM interrupt.c files contain nearly identical code. This merges
the two files, to reduce duplication.
Reviewers: #powerpc, marcel
Reviewed By: marcel
Subscribers: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2991
bd_hdrcmplt. As if_loop does not use link-level headers, its behavior
when used by bpfwrite() should be the same regardless of the state of
bd_hdrcmplt. Without this change, libpcap (and other BPF users that
work like it) fail when writing to loopback interfaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2989
Reviewed by: gnn, melifaro
Approved by: jmallett (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
This obviates the need for a MNTK_SUSPENDABLE flag, since passthrough
filesystems like nullfs and unionfs no longer need to inherit this
information from their lower layer(s). This change also restores the
pre-r273336 behaviour of using the presence of a susp_clean VFS method to
request suspension support.
Reviewed by: kib, mjg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2937