Use ATF_TC_CLEANUP(), because that means the cleanup code will get
called even if a test fails. Before it would only be executed if every
test within the body succeeded.
Reported by: Marie Helene Kvello-Aune <marieheleneka@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Explicitly mark these tests as requiring root rights. We need to be able
to open /dev/pf.
Reported by: Marie Helene Kvello-Aune <marieheleneka@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Mainly states of established TCP connections would be affected resulting
in immediate state removal once the number of states is bigger than
adaptive.start. Disabling adaptive timeouts is a workaround to avoid this bug.
Issue found and initial diff by Mathieu Blanc (mathieu.blanc at cea dot fr)
Reported by: Andreas Longwitz <longwitz AT incore.de>
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
There was a large refactoring done in CTL to allow multiple ioctl frontend
ports (and respective devices) to be created, particularly for bhyve.
Unfortunately, respective part of bhyve functionality got lost somehow from
the original virtio-scsi commit. This change allows wanted device path to
be specified in either of two ways:
-s 6,virtio-scsi,/dev/cam/ctl1.1
-s 6,virtio-scsi,dev=/dev/cam/ctl2.3
If neither is specified, the default /dev/cam/ctl device is used.
While there, remove per-queue CTL device opening, which makes no sense at
this point.
Reported by: wg
Reviewed by: araujo
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18504
r336560 was supposed to restore pre-r323954 behaviour when tx_abdicate is
not set (the default case). However, it appears that rather than the drainage
check being made conditional on tx_abdicate being set, it was duplicated
so it occured twice if tx_abdicate was set and once if it was not.
Now when !tx_abdicate, drainage is only checked if the doorbell isn't
pending.
Reported by: lev
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
The error was caused by map_ucode() casting a vm_paddr_t to a void *.
Use a uintptr_t instead to match the caller. Fix some style bugs while
here.
Reported by: bde
Reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
It is a function call only to accomodate *some* ABIs which install a hook.
They only care for 3 types of limits: DATA, STACK, VMEM
Instead of always calling the func, see at compilation time if the requested
limit is something else and just do the read if so.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
to shrink libllvm.a.
This is a workaround for "relocation truncated to fit" errors with BFD
ld 2.17.50 on arm and armv6, when linking executables against it.
The required range extensions are not yet supported by this very old
version of BFD ld. When arm and armv6 userland can be successfully
linked by lld, this workaround can be removed.
initialize the controller.
According to the datasheet, the old code checks if port 2 (P2E, 0x4) was
the only enabled port (except port 0, which was ignored by mask 0xfe),
and issue a write to the PCS register to disable all but port 0, right
before ahci_ctlr_reset.
Some other operating systems would issue a port enable to all ports, but
since the current code only does the special initialization for ICH8M,
it entirely and rely on BIOS to do the right thing (the alternative
would be https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18300?id=50922 , should we see
reports that we really need to do it).
Reviewed by: mav
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18300
Bootstacks are unused after APs executed sched_throw() in
init_secondary_tail() and started executing on proper idle thread
stack. Add sysinit that detects that the idle thread for each CPU was
scheduled at least once, and free corresponding bootstack.
Slight addition of the code (~200 bytes) is compensated by the saving,
because even on typical small modern desktop CPU we leak 128K of
memory otherwise (4 pages x 8 threads).
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18486
There is no reason for it to behave differently from openat(fd, NULL).
Also the handling did not worked because the substituted path was from
the system address space, causing EFAULT.
Submitted by: Jack Halford <jack@gandi.net>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18501
Inline tests for PTE_* bits are easy to read and don't really require a
predicate function, and predicates which operate on a pt_entry_t are
inconvenient when working with L1 and L2 page table entries.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18461
The code was a near exact copy of the code in startup, but it doesn't need
the complexity since the kernel is already relocated. With
VM_MIN_KERNEL_ADDRESS as currently set to KERNBASE, this doesn't cause a
problem, because it's a zero offset. However, when KERNBASE is changed to a
physical load address, it then has a non-zero offset, and ends up with an
invalid stack pointer, causing the AP to hang.
'read' pessimistically read(2)s one byte at a time, which can be quite
silly for large environments in slow emulators.
In my boring user environment, truss shows that the number of read()
syscalls to source rc.subr and invoke list_vars is reduced by something like
3400 to 60. ministat(1) shows a significant time difference of about -71%
for my environment.
Suggested by: jilles
Discussed with: dteske, jhb, jilles
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18481
Once a signal's siginfo was copied to 'td_si' as part of the signal
exchange in issignal(), it was never cleared. This caused future
thread events that are reported as SIGTRAP events without signal
information to report the stale siginfo in 'td_si'. For example, if a
debugger created a new process and used SIGSTOP to stop it after
PT_ATTACH, future system call entry / exit events would set PL_FLAG_SI
with the SIGSTOP siginfo in pl_siginfo. This broke 'catch syscall' in
current versions of gdb as it assumed PL_FLAG_SI with SIGTRAP
indicates a breakpoint or single step trap.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18487
opcode will be printed. This should solve the problem, when protocol
name is not printed in `ipfw -N show`.
Reported by: Claudio Eichenberger <cei at yourshop.com>
MFC after: 1 week
This change adds a hypervisor trap handler for exception 0x1500 (soft patch),
normalizing all VSX registers and returning.
This avoids a kernel panic due to unknown exception.
Change made with the collaboration of leonardo.bianconi_eldorado.org.br,
that found out that this is a hypervisor exception and not a supervisor one,
and fixed this in the code.
Reviewed by: jhibbits, sbruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17806
The wpa update added some source files with the same name as a file in
another directory (found via .PATH in the previous version). Having a
stale entry in a .depend file means the new file won't be built, so test
for this case and if found remove all of wpa's dependency files.
MFC with: r341759
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
On EF10 HW we can avoid sending packets without checksum offload
or with IP-only checksum offload to dedicated queues. Instead, we
can use option descriptors to change offload policy on any queue
during runtime. Thus, we don't need to create two dedicated queues.
Submitted by: Ivan Malov <Ivan.Malov at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18390
The number of Tx queues on event queue 0 can depend on the NIC family type,
and this property will be leveraged by future patches.
This patch prepares the code for this change.
Submitted by: Ivan Malov <Ivan.Malov at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18389
FreeBSD driver needs a patch to provide a means for packets
which do not need checksum offload but have flow ID set
to avoid hitting only the first Tx queue (which has been used
for packets not needing checksum offload).
This should be possible on Huntington, Medford or Medford2 chips
since these support toggling checksum offload on any given queue
dynamically by means of pushing option descriptors.
The patch for FreeBSD driver will then need a means to figure out
whether the feature can be used, and testing adapter family might
not be a good solution.
This patch adds a feature bit specifically to indicate support
for checksum option descriptors. The new feature bits may have
more users in future, apart from the mentioned FreeBSD patch.
Submitted by: Ivan Malov <Ivan.Malov at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18388
In order to find out why the first event queue and corresponding
interrupt is triggered more frequent, it is useful to know which
events go to each event queue.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18418
and includes the last block represented by the leaf. The reasoning is that,
if the last block is included, then there must be no solution before that
one in the leaf, so the leaf cannot provide an allocation that big again;
indeed, the leaf cannot provide a solution bigger than range1.
Which is all correct, except that if the value of blk passed in did not
represent the first block of the leaf, because the cursor was pointing to
the middle of the leaf, then a possible solution before the cursor may have
been ignored, and bighint cannot be updated.
Consider the sequence allocate 63 (returning address 0), free 0,63 (freeing
that same block, and allocate 1 (returning 63). The result is that one
block is allocated from the first leaf, and the value of bighint is 0, so
that nothing can be allocated from that leaf until the only block allocated
from that leaf is freed. This change detects that skipped-over solution,
and when there is one it makes sure that the value of bighint is not changed
when the last block is allocated.
Submitted by: Doug Moore <dougm@rice.edu>
Tested by: pho
X-MFC with: r340402
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18474
devstat_end_transaction() was called before the i/o was actually ended
(by delivering it to GEOM), so at least the i/o length was messed up.
It was always recorded as 0, so the average transaction size and the
average transfer rate was always displayed as 0.
devstat_end_transaction() was not called at all for the error case, so
there were sometimes multiple starts per end. I didn't observe this in
practice and don't know if it did much damage. I think it extended the
length of the i/o to the next transaction.
Reviewed by: kib