Only two interfaces are created eth0 and lo and they expose
the following properties:
address, addr_len, flags, ifindex, mty, tx_queue_len and type.
Initial patch developed by Carlos Neira in 2017 and finished by me.
PR: 223722
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13656
a final revision.
Fix style issues and change bool-like variables from int to bool.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20141
looping over the filesystem modules rather than doing a malloc + free
each time through the loop. In addition, nothing changes from loop to
loop, so setup the new devinfo outside the loop as well.
Allow users to specify multiple dump configurations in a prioritized list.
This enables fallback to secondary device(s) if primary dump fails. E.g.,
one might configure a preference for netdump, but fallback to disk dump as a
second choice if netdump is unavailable.
This change does not list-ify netdump configuration, which is tracked
separately from ordinary disk dumps internally; only one netdump
configuration can be made at a time, for now. It also does not implement
IPv6 netdump.
savecore(8) is already capable of scanning and iterating multiple devices
from /etc/fstab or passed on the command line.
This change doesn't update the rc or loader variables 'dumpdev' in any way;
it can still be set to configure a single dump device, and rc.d/savecore
still uses it as a single device. Only dumpon(8) is updated to be able to
configure the more complicated configurations for now.
As part of revving the ABI, unify netdump and disk dump configuration ioctl
/ structure, and leave room for ipv6 netdump as a future possibility.
Backwards-compatibility ioctls are added to smooth ABI transition,
especially for developers who may not keep kernel and userspace perfectly
synced.
Reviewed by: markj, scottl (earlier version)
Relnotes: maybe
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19996
As Linux comment for this function point:
Signal to the system that the PCI device is not in use by the system
anymore. This only involves disabling PCI bus-mastering, if active.
Build tested drm-current-kmod prior to commit.
MFC after: 1 week
Submitted by: slavash@
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Equivalent to r339958 for sys/kern/syscalls.master.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14858
Turning on pr_debug at compile time make it non-optional at runtime.
This often means that the amount of the debugging is unbearable.
Allow developer to turn on pr_debug output only when needed.
Build tested drm-current-kmod prior to commit.
MFC after: 1 week
Submitted by: kib@
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
There's a race between the initialization of devsoftc.mtx (by devinit)
and the creation of the geom worker thread g_run_events, which calls
devctl_queue_data_f. Both of those are initialized at SI_SUB_DRIVERS
and SI_ORDER_FIRST, which means the geom worked thread can be created
before the mutex has been initialized, leading to the panic below:
wpanic: mtx_lock() of spin mutex (null) @ /usr/home/osstest/build.135317.build-amd64-freebsd/freebsd/sys/kern/subr_bus.c:620
cpuid = 3
time = 1
KDB: stack backtrace:
db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x2b/frame 0xfffffe003b968710
vpanic() at vpanic+0x19d/frame 0xfffffe003b968760
panic() at panic+0x43/frame 0xfffffe003b9687c0
__mtx_lock_flags() at __mtx_lock_flags+0x145/frame 0xfffffe003b968810
devctl_queue_data_f() at devctl_queue_data_f+0x6a/frame 0xfffffe003b968840
g_dev_taste() at g_dev_taste+0x463/frame 0xfffffe003b968a00
g_load_class() at g_load_class+0x1bc/frame 0xfffffe003b968a30
g_run_events() at g_run_events+0x197/frame 0xfffffe003b968a70
fork_exit() at fork_exit+0x84/frame 0xfffffe003b968ab0
fork_trampoline() at fork_trampoline+0xe/frame 0xfffffe003b968ab0
--- trap 0, rip = 0, rsp = 0, rbp = 0 ---
KDB: enter: panic
[ thread pid 13 tid 100029 ]
Stopped at kdb_enter+0x3b: movq $0,kdb_why
Fix this by initializing geom at SI_ORDER_SECOND instead of
SI_ORDER_FIRST.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kevans, markj
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20148
The more appropriate place to do the flushing is VOP_OPEN(). This was
uncovered because VOP_SET_TEXT() is now called with the vnode'
vm_object rlocked, which is incompatible with the flush operations.
After the move, there is no need for NFS-specific VOP_SET_TEXT
overload.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 30 days
Since the DMAP is only available on powerpc64, and is *always* available on
Book-E powerpc64, don't penalize either side (32-bit or 64-bit) by always
checking hw_direct_map to perform operations. This saves 5-10% time on
various ports builds, and on buildworld+buildkernel on Book-E hardware.
MFC after: 3 weeks
Use the nitems() macro instead of the expansion, a'la r298352. Also, fix the
location of this check to after initializing availmem_regions_sz, so that the
check isn't always against 0, thus always failing (nitems(phys_avail) is always
more than 0).
kern_execve() locks text vnode exclusive to be able to set and clear
VV_TEXT flag. VV_TEXT is mutually exclusive with the v_writecount > 0
condition.
The change removes VV_TEXT, replacing it with the condition
v_writecount <= -1, and puts v_writecount under the vnode interlock.
Each text reference decrements v_writecount. To clear the text
reference when the segment is unmapped, it is recorded in the
vm_map_entry backed by the text file as MAP_ENTRY_VN_TEXT flag, and
v_writecount is incremented on the map entry removal
The operations like VOP_ADD_WRITECOUNT() and VOP_SET_TEXT() check that
v_writecount does not contradict the desired change. vn_writecheck()
is now racy and its use was eliminated everywhere except access.
Atomic check for writeability and increment of v_writecount is
performed by the VOP. vn_truncate() now increments v_writecount
around VOP_SETATTR() call, lack of which is arguably a bug on its own.
nullfs bypasses v_writecount to the lower vnode always, so nullfs
vnode has its own v_writecount correct, and lower vnode gets all
references, since object->handle is always lower vnode.
On the text vnode' vm object dealloc, the v_writecount value is reset
to zero, and deadfs vop_unset_text short-circuit the operation.
Reclamation of lowervp always reclaims all nullfs vnodes referencing
lowervp first, so no stray references are left.
Reviewed by: markj, trasz
Tested by: mjg, pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19923
NOSPLIT swap objects are not anonymous, they are used by tmpfs regular
files and POSIX shared memory. For such objects, collapse is not
permitted.
Reported by: mjg
Reviewed by: markj, trasz
Tested by: mjg, pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19923
We unlock the vnode around malloc(M_WAITOK), to make it possible for
pagedaemon to flush vnode pages for us. Instead of doing it
unconditionally, first try M_NOWAIT allocation, which typically
succeed. Only on failure, unlock the vnode and retry with M_WAITOK.
Reviewed by: markj, trasz
Tested by: mjg, pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19923
The bug and patch is reported against 11.2, but it is good idea to have
the check in place for all versions.
PR: 236585
Submitted by: john@feith.com
Reported by: john@feith.com
MFC after: 1 day
Right now ath_rate_sample has a fixed rate schedule, rather than the minstrel_ht
style "best, good, most reliable" triplet. So, if higher rates are tried then
it'll not fail back to a lower MCS rate in that transmission schedule.
This means that in low SNR situations it'll not easily drop to MCS0 unless enough
transmissions occur to allow rate control to eventually decide to drop; and if
it's TCP traffic it'll get slowed down because of packet loss.
It's worse for 2-stream and 3-stream rates; it doesn't ever fall back to lower
stream rates, and these higher stream rates required higher SNR to work.
So instead let's (for now?) have each of the 11n transmit rates use MCS0 as
the last attempt. ath_rate_sample will quickly see that rate succeeds more
and will move to it much quicker.
Testing:
* AR9344 (Wasp) - 2G STA mode
These are some fun issues I've found with my upstairs wifi link at such a ridiculous
low signal level (like, < 5dB.)
* Add per-station tx/rx rssi statistics, in potential preparation to use that
in the RX rate control.
* Call the rate control on each received frame to let it potentially use
it as a hint for what rates to potentially use. It's a no-op right now.
* Do ANI calibration during scan as well. The ath_newstate() call was disabling the
ANI timer and only re-enabling it during transitions to _RUN. This has the
unfortunate side-effect that if ANI deafened the NIC because of interference
and it disassociated, it wouldn't be reset and the scan would never hear beacons.
The ANI configuration is stored at least globally on some HALs and per-channel
on others. Because of this a NIC reset wouldn't help; the ANI parameters would
simply be programmed back in.
Now, I have a feeling I also need to do this during AUTH/ASSOC too and maybe,
if I'm feeling clever, I need to reset the ANI parameters on a given channel
during a transition through INIT or if the VAP is destroyed/re-created.
However for now this gets me out of the immediate weeds with connectivity
upstairs (and thus I /can/ commit); I'll keep chipping away at tidying this
stuff up in subsequent commits.
Tested:
* AR9344 (Wasp), 2G STA mode
IPI_STOP is used after panic or when ddb is entered manually. MONITOR/
MWAIT allows CPUs that support the feature to sleep in a low power way
instead of spinning. Something similar is already used at idle.
It is perhaps especially useful in oversubscribed VM environments, and is
safe to use even if the panic/ddb thread is not the BSP. (Except in the
presence of MWAIT errata, which are detected automatically on platforms with
known wakeup problems.)
It can be tuned/sysctled with "machdep.stop_mwait," which defaults to 0
(off). This commit also introduces the tunable
"machdep.mwait_cpustop_broken," which defaults to 0, unless the CPU has
known errata, but may be set to "1" in loader.conf to signal that mwait
wakeup is broken on CPUs FreeBSD does not yet know about.
Unfortunately, Bhyve doesn't yet support MONITOR extensions, so this doesn't
help bhyve hypervisors running FreeBSD guests.
Submitted by: Anton Rang <rang AT acm.org> (earlier version)
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20135
Rather than just accessing it via pointer cast.
No functional change intended.
Discussed with: kib (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20135
The S/G list must be mapped AS-IS without any optimisations.
This also implies that sg_dma_len() must be equal to sg->length.
Many Linux drivers assume this and this fixes some DRM issues.
Put the BUS DMA map pointer into the scatter-gather list to
allow multiple mappings on the same physical memory address.
The FreeBSD version has been bumped to force recompilation of
external kernel modules.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Summary:
A few ports fail to build due to missing pmap-related definitions, which are
specific per-pmap type. This tries to appease those ports, by merging all
pmaps together.
A future change will move the inline page directory out of the Book-E pmap,
to eliminate the last #ifdefs in pmap.h and complete the merge.
Reviewed By: luporl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20119
Remove unnecessary `char*` casting for arguments passed to `cget*(3)`, and
deconst `_PATH_PRINTCAP` before passing it to `cget*` via the `printcapdb`
variable.
This unblocks ^/projects/runtime-coverage-v2 from building cleanly on
universe13a.freebsd.org. I suspect the issue was introduced through some
changes to `bsd.*.mk` inclusion on the branch, which I will continue to
investigate/isolate.
MFC after: 1 week
Tested with: clang 8 (arm64)
directory entries that is caused by uninitialized directory entry
padding written to the disk. It can be viewed by any user with read
access to that directory. Up to 3 bytes of kernel stack are disclosed
per file entry, depending on the the amount of padding the kernel
needs to pad out the entry to a 32 bit boundry. The offset in the
kernel stack that is disclosed is a function of the filename size.
Furthermore, if the user can create files in a directory, this 3
byte window can be expanded 3 bytes at a time to a 254 byte window
with 75% of the data in that window exposed. The additional exposure
is done by removing the entry, creating a new entry with a 4-byte
longer name, extracting 3 more bytes by reading the directory, and
repeating until a 252 byte name is created.
This exploit works in part because the area of the kernel stack
that is being disclosed is in an area that typically doesn't change
that often (perhaps a few times a second on a lightly loaded system),
and these file creates and unlinks themselves don't overwrite the
area of kernel stack being disclosed.
It appears that this bug originated with the creation of the Fast
File System in 4.1b-BSD (Circa 1982, more than 36 years ago!), and
is likely present in every Unix or Unix-like system that uses
UFS/FFS. Amazingly, nobody noticed until now.
This update also adds the -z flag to fsck_ffs to have it scrub
the leaked information in the name padding of existing directories.
It only needs to be run once on each UFS/FFS filesystem after a
patched kernel is installed and running.
Submitted by: David G. Lawrence <dg@dglawrence.com>
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
OVMF's flash variable storage is using add instructions when indexing
the variable store bootrom location.
Submitted by: D Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
Reviewed by: rgrimes
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19975