Status and Control register at port 0x61.
Be more conservative about "catching up" callouts that were supposed
to fire in the past by skipping an interrupt if it was
scheduled too far in the past.
Restore the PIT ACPI DSDT entries and add an entry for NMISC too.
Approved by: neel (co-mentor)
network interfaces limited to 32 transmit segments, there
are two known issues.
The more serious one is that for an I/O of slightly less than 64K,
the net device driver prepends an ethernet header, resulting in a
TSO segment slightly larger than 64K. Since m_defrag() copies this
into 33 mbuf clusters, the transmit fails with EFBIG.
A tester indicated observing a similar failure using iSCSI.
The second less critical problem is that the network
device driver must copy the mbuf chain via m_defrag()
(m_collapse() is not sufficient), resulting in measurable overhead.
This patch reduces the default size of if_hw_tsomax
slightly, so that the first issue is avoided.
Fixing the second issue will require a way for the
network device driver to inform tcp_output() that it
is limited to 32 transmit segments.
Reported and tested by: csforgeron@gmail.com, markus.gebert@hostpoint.ch
MFC after: 2 weeks
Also, remove #if __BSD_VISIBLE where it is redundant. When __BSD_VISIBLE is
defined to 1, __POSIX_VISIBLE, __XSI_VISIBLE and __ISO_C_VISIBLE are also
defined to the newest supported version.
PR: 188173
Reviewed by: pluknet
boot/mips/beri/loader/metadata.c allow FDT configuration to set
command line options.
This leads to an interesting quesiton of future interactions with loader.
However for configurations without loader this allows bootverbose or boot
single user to be set by compiling a new kernel, which is good enough for
testing and debugging.
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 1 week
NetFPGA-10G Embedded CPU Ethernet Core.
The current version operates on a simple PIO based interface connected
to a NetFPGA-10G port.
To avoid confusion: this driver operates on a CPU running on the FPGA,
e.g. BERI/mips, and is not suited for the PCI host interface.
MFC after: 1 week
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
This code was removed from the opensolaris and darwin's
netsmb implementations, in DfBSD it also has been disabled.
PR: 36566, 87859, 139407, 161579, 175557, 178412, 186652
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
stop timer. since watchdogd rc.d script is marked as 'shutdown'
it will exit (on shutdown) and stop timer. if system happens to
hung after watchdogd exited, manual reset is required. when one
operates in "lights-out" type of environments and without
readily available "remote hands" it could create a problem.
this provides ability to override "stop signal" for watchdogd.
default behavior is preserved, i.e. watchdogd will still be killed
via SIGTERM and timer will be stopped. in order to activate new
feature, one needs to put
watchdogd_sig_stop="KILL"
into /etc/rc.conf and also make sure watchdogd timeout is set
to long enough value allowing system to come back online before
timeout fires.
Obtained from: Netflix
MFC after: 1 week
Due to the way those timers are implemented, we can't handle very short
intervals. In addition to that mentioned patch caused math overflows
for short intervals. To avoid that round those intervals to 1 tick.
PR: kern/187668
MFC after: 1 week
and normal mode; this makes it possible to compile with the former
by default, but use it only when neccessary. That's especially
important for the userland part.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
After r263152 this leaves unused variables if route(8) is compiled
without INET support.
Switch the remaining variable accesses to flags and remove now obsolete
variables.
Reviewed by: glebius
MFC after: 1 week
needed it to be already enabled, because listening in proxy mode
requires it; however, it's conf_apply() that opens pidfiles,
so it resulted in port being enabled before pidfile was opened.
This was not so bad, but it was also disabled when pidfile couldn't
be opened due to ctld already running; this means that starting
second ctld instance screwed up the first.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation