Instead introduce the [M] prefix to existing keywords. e.g.
MSTD is the MP SAFE version of STD. This is prepatory for a
massive Giant lock pushdown. The old MPSAFE keyword made
syscalls.master too messy.
Begin comments MP-Safe procedures with the comment:
/*
* MPSAFE
*/
This comments means that the procedure may be called without
Giant held (The procedure itself may still need to obtain
Giant temporarily to do its thing).
sv_prepsyscall() is now MP SAFE and assumed to be MP SAFE
sv_transtrap() is now MP SAFE and assumed to be MP SAFE
ktrsyscall() and ktrsysret() are now MP SAFE (Giant Pushdown)
trapsignal() is now MP SAFE (Giant Pushdown)
Places which used to do the if (mtx_owned(&Giant)) mtx_unlock(&Giant)
test in syscall[2]() in */*/trap.c now do not. Instead they
explicitly unlock Giant if they previously obtained it, and then
assert that it is no longer held to catch broken system calls.
Rebuild syscall tables.
Clear residual counts after a successful samount (the user doesn't
care that we got an N-kbyte residual on our test read).
Change a lot of error handling code.
1. If we end up in saerror, check more carefully about the kind of
error. If it is a CAM_SCSI_STATUS_ERROR and it is a read/write
command, we'll be handling this in saerror. If it isn't a read/write
command, check to see whether this is just an EOM/EOP check condition-
if it is, just set residual and return normally. A residual and
then a NO SENSE check condiftion with the ASC of 0 and ASCQ of
between 1 and 4 are normal 'signifying' events, not errors per se,
and we shouldn't give the command to cam_periph_error to do something
relatively unpredictable with.
2. If we get a Bus Reset, had a BDR sent, or get the cam status of
CAM_REQUEUE_REQ, check the retry count on the command. The default
error handler, cam_periph_error, doesn't honor retry count in these
cases. This may change in the future, but for now, make sure we
set EIO and return without calling cam_periph_error if the retry
count for the command with an error is zero.
3. Clean up the pending error case goop and handle cases more
sensibly.
The rules are:
If command was a Write:
If we got a SSD_KEY_VOLUME_OVERFLOW, the resid is
propagated and we set ENOSPC as the error.
Else if we got an EOM condition- just mark EOM pending.
And set a residual of zero. For the longest time I was just
propagating residual from the sense data- but my tape
comparison tests were always failing because all drives I
tested with actually *do* write the data anyway- the EOM
(early warning) condition occurred *prior* to all of the
data going out to media- that is, it was still buffered by
the drive. This case is described in SCSI-2, 10.2.14,
paragraph #d for the meaning of 'information field'. A
better fix for this would be to issue a WFM command of zero
to cause the drive to flush any buffered data, but this
would require a fairly extensive rewrite.
Else if the command was a READ:
If we got a SSD_KEY_BLANK_CHECK-
If we have a One Filemark EOT model- mark EOM as pending,
otherwise set EIO as the erorr.
Else if we found a Filemark-
If we're in Fixed Block mode- mark EOF pending.
If we had an ILI (Incorrect Length Indicator)-
If the residual is less than zero, whine about tape record
being too big for user's buffer, otherwise if we were in
Fixed Block mode, mark EIO as pending.
All 'pending' conditions mean that the command in question completes
without error indication. It had succeeded, but a signifying event
occurred during its execution which will apply to the *next* command
that would be exexcuted. Except for the one EOM case above, we always
propagate residual.
Now, way back in sastart- if we notice any of the PENDING bits set,
we don't run the command we've just pulled off the wait queue. Instead,
we then figure out it's disposition based upon a previous command's
association with a signifying event.
If SA_FLAG_EOM_PENDING is set, we don't set an error. We just complete
the command with residual set to the request count (not data moved,
but no error). We continue on.
If SA_FLAG_EOF_PENDING- if we have this, it's only because we're in
Fixed Block mode- in which case we traverse all waiting buffers (which
we can get in fixed block mode because physio has split things up) and
mark them all as no error, but no data moved and complete them.
If SA_FLAG_EIO_PENDING, just mark the buffer with an EIO error
and complete it.
Then we clear all of the pending state bits- we're done.
MFC after: 4 weeks
- Decrease reseeding interval from every 64 to every 16384 runs
to reduce entropy usage.
- Add time based reseeding. (Every 5 minutes.)
- Throw away the first 256 words of output as suggested in
"Weaknesses in the Key Scheduling Algorithm of RC4."
Reviewed by: Mark Murray
MFC After: jkh says ok
for the device now (we should really just be parsing a passed-in resource
buffer).
Wrap long lines so this is (more) readable.
Support Address16 and Address32 resources, in the CONSUMER case.
Support DRQs so that we can handle ISA devices.
Support ExtendedIrqs (we ignore most of their attributes)
Add a placeholder device for system memory and system resources. This
takes the place of the nexus placeholder, which only attaches to ISA.
the ACPI module if the system apperars to be ACPI compliant.
This is an initial cut; the load should really be done by Forth support
code, and we should check both the BIOS build date and a blacklist.
o Unify <machine/endian.h>'s across all architectures.
o Make bswapXX() functions use a different spelling of u_int16_t and
friends to reduce namespace pollution. The bswapXX() functions
don't actually exist, but we'll probably import these at some
point. Atleast one driver (if_de) depends on bswapXX() for big
endian cases.
o Deprecate byteorder(3) prototypes from <sys/types.h>, these are
now prototyped indirectly in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Deprecate in_addr_t and in_port_t typedefs in <sys/types.h>, these
are now typedef'd in <arpa/inet.h>.
o Change byteorder(3) prototypes to use standards compliant uint32_t
(spelled __uint32_t to reduce namespace pollution).
o Document new preferred headers and standards compliance.
Discussed with: bde
PR: 29946
Reviewed by: bmilekic
new data is acknowledged, reset the dupacks to 0.
The problem was spotted when a connection had its send buffer full
because the congestion window was only 1 MSS and was not being incremented
because dupacks was not reset to 0.
Obtained from: Yahoo!
1. Correctly handle commands initiated by the adapter. These commands
are defered to a kthread responsible for their processing, then are
properly returned to the controller.
2. Add/remove disk devices when notified by the card that a container was
created/deleted/offline.
3. Implement crashdump functionality.
4. Support all ioctls needed for the management CLI to work. The linux
version of this app can be found at the Dell or HP website. A native
version will be forthcoming.
MFC-after: 4.4-RELEASE
Second, the TI 1130 need to have the PCI_INTR set, not cleared.
This gets Soren's machine working with NEWCARD again.
# The whole initialization is a mess and needs to be organized ala OLDCARD.
the cwd is looked up inside the kernel. The native getcwd() in libc
handles this in userland if __getcwd() fails.
Obtained from: NetBSD via OpenBSD
Tested by: Chris Casey <chriss@phys.ksu.edu>, Markus Holmberg <markush@acc.umu.se>
Reviewed by: Darrell Anderson <anderson@cs.duke.edu>
PR: kern/24315
pollution for non-POSIX.1e macros.
o Introduce CAP_UNITE(), CAP_NONZERO().
o Disable aspects of CAP_SETPCAP, which is Linux-specific (in particular,
remove it from CAP_ALL_ON).
o Improve commenting.
Submitted by: tmm
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
KINFO_BSDI_SYSINFO. This supposedly fixes Netscape 3.0.4 (bsdi binary)
on -current. (and is also applicable to RELENG_4)
PR: 25476
Submitted by: Philipp Mergenthaler <un1i@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de>
multiple times, others do. The last strategy, which was to assume
that already routed interrupts were good and just return them doesn't
work for some laptops. So, instead, we have a new strategy: we notice
that we have an interrupt that's already routed. We go ahead and try
to route it, none the less. We will assume that it is correctly
routed, even if the route fails. We still assume that other failures
in the bios32 call are because the interrupt is NOT routed.
Note: some laptops do not support the bios32 interface to PCI BIOS and
we need to call it via the INT 2A interface. That is another windmill
to till at later.
Also correct a minor typo and minor whitespace nits.
Strong MFC candidate.