These cause problems when trying to include the header in a C++ project.
Rename them to 'evt_class', and track the change in mfi and mfiutil.
Submitted by: Mark Johnston
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Reviewed by: jhb@
MFC after: 1 week
crusty, and this still isn't perfect, but its at least a bit
more recent.
Secondly, a few improvements to the driver from Andrew Boyer,
support hint to allow devices to not attach, add VLAN_HWTSO
capability so vlans can use TSO, fix in the interrupt handler
to make sure the stack TX queue is processed. Oh, and also
make sure IPv6 does not cause a re-init in the ioctl routine.
Thanks for your efforts Andrew!
Thanks to Claudio Jeker for noticing the ixgbe_xmit() routine
was not correctly swapping the dma map from the first to the
last descriptor in a multi-descriptor transmission, corrected
this.
VM_PAGER_AGAIN to VM_PAGER_ERROR for the uwritten pages. Return
VM_PAGER_AGAIN for the partially written page. Always forward at least
one page in the loop of vm_object_page_clean().
VM_PAGER_ERROR causes the page reactivation and does not clear the
page dirty state, so the write is not lost.
The change fixes an infinite loop in vm_object_page_clean() when the
filesystem returns permanent errors for some page writes.
Reported and tested by: gavin
Reviewed by: alc, rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
This is in no way a complete DFS/radar detection implementation!
It merely creates an abstracted interface which allows for future
development of the DFS radar detection code.
Note: Net80211 already handles the bulk of the DFS machinery,
all we need to do here is figure out that a radar event has occured
and inform it as such. It then drives the DFS state engine for us.
The "null" DFS radar detection module is included by default;
it doesn't require a device line.
This commit:
* Adds a simple abstracted layer for radar detection state -
sys/dev/ath/ath_dfs/;
* Implements a null DFS module which doesn't do anything;
(ie, implements the exact behaviour at the moment);
* Adds hooks to the ath driver to process received radar events
and gives the DFS module a chance to determine whether
a radar has been detected.
Obtained from: Atheros
Please note - this doesn't in any way constitute a full DFS
implementation, it merely adds the relevant capability bits and
radar detection threshold register access.
The particulars:
* Add new capability bits outlining what the DFS capabilities
are of the various chipsets.
* Add HAL methods to set and get the radar related register values.
* Add AR5212 and AR5416+ DFS radar related register value
routines.
* Add a missing HAL phy error code that's related to radar event
processing.
* Add HAL_PHYERR_PARAM, a data type that encapsulates the radar
register values.
The AR5212 routines are just for completeness. The AR5416 routines
are a super-set of those; I may later on do a drive-by pass to
tidy up duplicate code.
Obtained from: Linux, Atheros
default dispatch method to NETISR_DISPATCH_DIRECT in order to force
direct dispatch. This adds a fairly negligble overhead without
changing default behavior, but in the future will allow deferred or
hybrid dispatch to other worker threads before link layer processing
has taken place.
For example, this could allow redistribution using RSS hashes
without ethernet header cache line hits, if the NIC was unable to
adequately implement load balancing to too small a number of input
queues -- perhaps due to hard queueset counts of 1, 3, or 8, but in
a modern system with 16-128 threads. This can happen on highly
threaded systems, where you want want an ithread per core,
redistributing work to other queues, but also on virtualised systems
where hardware hashing is (or is not) available, but only a single
queue has been directed to one VCPU on a VM.
Note: this adds a previously non-present assertion about the
equivalence of the ifnet from which the packet is received, and the
ifnet stamped in the mbuf header. I believe this assertion to
generally be true, but we'll find out soon -- if it's not, we might
have to add additional overhead in some cases to add an m_tag with
the originating ifnet pointer stored in it.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
dynamic rules. We are doing forwarding in the following cases:
o For the simple ipfw fwd rule, e.g.
fwd 10.0.0.1 ip from any to any out xmit em0
fwd 127.0.0.1,3128 tcp from any to any 80 in recv em1
o For the dynamic fwd rule, e.g.
fwd 192.168.0.1 tcp from any to 10.0.0.3 3333 setup keep-state
When this rule triggers it creates a dynamic rule, but this
dynamic rule should forward packets only in forward direction.
o And the last case that does not work before - simple fwd rule which
triggers when some dynamic rule is already executed.
PR: kern/147720, kern/150798
MFC after: 1 month
The binutils update in r218822 caused the MIPS n64 dynamic binaries to
fail because the ".interp" section is not in the initial sections.
This happens because elf64bmip-defs.sh overrides INITIAL_READONLY_SECTIONS
to add ".MIPS.options" sections instead of the ".reginfo" section used
by n32.
This used to work fine, but after r218822, INITIAL_READONLY_SECTIONS also
contains the .interp section, so the override has to be done differently.
Reported by : aduane at juniper
Obtained from: gonzo (Initial version)
In msgbuf_reinit() and msgbuf_init(), we weren't initializing the mutex.
Depending on the contents of memory, the LO_INITIALIZED flag might be
set on the mutex (either due to a warm reboot, and the message buffer
remaining in place, or due to garbage in memory) and in that case, with
INVARIANTS turned on, we would trigger an assertion that the mutex had
already been initialized.
Fix this by bzeroing the message buffer mutex for the _init() and _reinit()
paths.
Reported by: mdf
The version is used to check if a module is already preset, not setting
it results in:
can't re-use a leaf (ipw)!
module_register: module pci/ipw already exists!
Module pci/ipw failed to register: 17
while trying to load the module due to an entry in loader.conf. With this
commit we get the expected:
module ipw already present!
Reported by: Dru Lavigne, bz
Tested by: bz
MFC after: 1 week
process received frames. Previously it was possible to handle RX
interrupts even if controller is not fully initialized. This
resulted in non-working driver after system is up and running.
Reported by: hselasky
Tested by: hselasky
Pathconf RPC for cases where the reply doesn't include
the answer. This fixes a problem reported by avg@ where
the NFSv3 Pathconf RPC would fail when "ls -l" did an
lpathconf(2) for _PC_ACL_NFS4.
Tested by: avg
MFC after: 2 weeks
While we have had a fix in place (options PRINTF_BUFR_SIZE=128) to fix
scrambled console output, the message buffer and syslog were still getting
log messages one character at a time. While all of the characters still
made it into the log (courtesy of atomic operations), they were often
interleaved when there were multiple threads writing to the buffer at the
same time.
This fixes message buffer accesses to use buffering logic as well, so that
strings that are less than PRINTF_BUFR_SIZE will be put into the message
buffer atomically. So now dmesg output should look the same as console
output.
subr_msgbuf.c: Convert most message buffer calls to use a new spin
lock instead of atomic variables in some places.
Add a new routine, msgbuf_addstr(), that adds a
NUL-terminated string to a message buffer. This
takes a priority argument, which allows us to
eliminate some races (at least in the the string
at a time case) that are present in the
implementation of msglogchar(). (dangling and
lastpri are static variables, and are subject to
races when multiple callers are present.)
msgbuf_addstr() also allows the caller to request
that carriage returns be stripped out of the
string. This matches the behavior of msglogchar(),
but in testing so far it doesn't appear that any
newlines are being stripped out. So the carriage
return removal functionality may be a candidate
for removal later on if further analysis shows
that it isn't necessary.
subr_prf.c: Add a new msglogstr() routine that calls
msgbuf_logstr().
Rename putcons() to putbuf(). This now handles
buffered output to the message log as well as
the console. Also, remove the logic in putcons()
(now putbuf()) that added a carriage return before
a newline. The console path was the only path that
needed it, and cnputc() (called by cnputs())
already adds a carriage return. So this
duplication resulted in kernel-generated console
output lines ending in '\r''\r''\n'.
Refactor putchar() to handle the new buffering
scheme.
Add buffering to log().
Change log_console() to use msglogstr() instead of
msglogchar(). Don't add extra newlines by default
in log_console(). Hide that behavior behind a
tunable/sysctl (kern.log_console_add_linefeed) for
those who would like the old behavior. The old
behavior led to the insertion of extra newlines
for log output for programs that print out a
string, and then a trailing newline on a separate
write. (This is visible with dmesg -a.)
msgbuf.h: Add a prototype for msgbuf_addstr().
Add three new fields to struct msgbuf, msg_needsnl,
msg_lastpri and msg_lock. The first two are needed
for log message functionality previously handled
by msglogchar(). (Which is still active if
buffering isn't enabled.)
Include sys/lock.h and sys/mutex.h for the new
mutex.
Reviewed by: gibbs
rather than at the bottom of the manpage.
- Remove an obsolete comment about SWAIT being a stale state. It was
resurrected for a different purpose in FreeBSD 5 to mark idle ithreads.
- Add a comment documenting that the SLEEP and LOCK states typically
display the name of the event being waited on with lock names being
prefixed with an asterisk and sleep event names not having a prefix.
MFC after: 1 week
be brought up in the order they are enumerated in the device tree (in
particular, that thread 0 on each core be brought up first). The SLIST
through which we loop to start the CPUs has all of its entries added with
SLIST_INSERT_HEAD(), which means it is in reverse order of enumeration
and so AP startup would always fail in such situations (causing a machine
check or RTAS failure). Fix this by changing the SLIST into an STAILQ,
and inserting new CPUs at the end.
Reviewed by: jhb
idle threads). The process is displayed by default (subject to whether or
not system processes are displayed) to preserve existing behavior. The
system idle process can be hidden via the '-z' command line argument or the
'z' key while top is running. When it is hidden, top more closely matches
the behavior of FreeBSD <= 4.x where idle time was not accounted to any
process.
MFC after: 2 weeks
to not only compile bu load as well for testing with IPv6-only kernels.
For the moment we ignore the csum change in pf_ioctl.c given the
pending update to pf45.
Reported by: dru
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 20 days
Add some additional empty string checks for IPv4 and try to configure
a netmask along with the address rather than doing things twice.
Contrary to AUTO-DHCP, IPv6-SLAAC will accept static configuration
as well, which we will use at least for resolv.conf currently and
if we were given a static address configure that as an alias as well.
The pc-sysinstaller changes going along were committed to PC-BSD as r10773.
Reviewed by: kmoore
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 20 days
If compiled in for dual-stack use, test with feature_present(3)
to see if we should register the IPv4/IPv6 address family related
options.
In case there is no "inet" support we would love to go with the
usage() and make the address family mandatory (as it is for anything
but inet in theory). Unfortunately people are used to
ifconfig IF up/down
etc. as well, so use a fallback of "link". Adjust the man page
to reflect these minor details.
Improve error handling printing a warning in addition to the usage
telling that we do not know the given address family in two places.
Reviewed by: hrs, rwatson
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 2 weeks
reporting it properly (none? of known disks now).
Hitachi and WDC AF disks seem could be identified more or less formally.
For Seagate and Samsung enumerate some found models/series.
For other disks it can be forced with kern.cam.ada.X.quirks=1 tunable.
User upgrades his system to fix the problem, but if he has any ZFS snapshots
for the file system which contains problematic binary, any user can mount the
snapshot and execute vulnerable binary.
Prevent this from happening by always mounting snapshots with setuid turned off.
MFC after: 2 weeks
If not specified, network.subr will add it automatically if we have
INET support (1).
In network.subr only call the address family up/down functions
if the respective AF is available.
Switch to new kern.features variables for inet and inet6 as the
inet sysctl tree is also available for IPv6-only kernels leading
to unexpected results.
Suggested by: hrs (1)
Reviewed by: hrs
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
MFC after: 20 days
As noted in Austin Group issue #370 (an interpretation has been issued),
failing posix_spawn() because an fd specified with
posix_spawn_file_actions_addclose() is not open is unnecessarily harsh, and
there are existing implementations that do not fail posix_spawn() for this
reason.
Reviewed by: ed
MFC after: 10 days
queues. Try to have a set of these per port when possible, fall back
to sharing a common pool between all ports otherwise.
- One control queue per port (used to be one per hardware channel).
- t4_eth_rx now handles Ethernet rx only.
- sysctls to display pidx/cidx for some queues.
MFC after: 1 week
filters working. (All other filters - switch without L2 info rewrite,
steer, and drop - were already fully-functional).
Some contrived examples of "switch" filters with L2 rewriting:
# cxgbetool t4nex0 iport 0 dport 80 action switch vlan +9 eport 3
Intercept all packets received on physical port 0 with TCP port 80 as
destination, insert a vlan tag with VID 9, and send them out of port 3.
# cxgbetool t4nex0 sip 192.168.1.1/32 ivlan 5 action switch \
vlan =9 smac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff eport 0
Intercept all packets (received on any port) with source IP address
192.168.1.1 and VLAN id 5, rewrite the VLAN id to 9, rewrite source mac
to aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff, and send it out of port 0.
MFC after: 1 week
hardware supports it.
Since ni->ni_htcap in hostap mode is what the remote end has advertised,
not what has been negotiated/decided, we need to check ourselves what
the current channel width is and what the hardware supports before
enabling short-GI.
It's important that short-GI isn't enabled when it isn't negotiated
and when the hardware doesn't support it (ie, short-gi for 20mhz channels
on any chip < AR9287.)
I've quickly verified this on the AR9285 in 11n mode.