free function controlable, instead of passing the KVA of the buffer
storage as the first argument.
Fix all conventional users of the API to pass the KVA of the buffer
as the first argument, to make this a no-op commit.
Likely break the only non-convetional user of the API, after informing
the relevant committer.
Update the mbuf(9) manual page, which was already out of sync on
this point.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 800016 as there is no way to tell how
many arguments a CPP macro needs any other way.
This paves the way for giving sendfile(9) a way to wait for the
passed storage to have been accessed before returning.
This does not affect the memory layout or size of mbufs.
Parental oversight by: sam and rwatson.
No MFC is anticipated.
use. If it is in use, use the watched request, otherwise use the
lockuser's own request. Only allocate a lockuser request if both
requests are null.
PR: 119920
Tested by (6.x): Landon Fuller <landonf -at- bikemonkey -dot- org>
prerequisite for using this interface. However, the 'statinfo' struct
actually references CPUSTATES from <sys/resource.h>, so in fact it
requires <sys/resource.h> to compile. Use a nested include of
<sys/resource.h> to make the code match the docs.
Reported by: Pietro Cerutti gahr | gahr.ch
aligned (or at least not cross a page boundary). However, it turns out
that on at least one machine one table header does cross a page boundary.
This caused problems with the MADT early probe as it uses the crash dump
map to load ACPI tables by loading the RSDT/XSDT into pages 1 ... N and
loading the header of each ACPI table header into page 0 looking for the
MADT. However, if a table header crossed a page boundary, then page 1
would get trashed resulting in a panic. Fix this by reserving the first
2 pages for ACPI table headers (headers are less than a page in size,
so 2 pages will be sufficient) and use pages 2 .. N for the RSDT and XSDT.
Note: amd64 should probably be simplified to just use pmap_mapbios()
for all these tables which will use the direct map and not need the
crash dump hack.
MFC after: 5 days
Tested on: i386
Reported by: Pete French petefrench of ticketswitch.com
read socket buffers in shutdown() and close():
- Call socantrcvmore() before sblock() to dislodge any threads that
might be sleeping (potentially indefinitely) while holding sblock(),
such as a thread blocked in recv().
- Flag the sblock() call as non-interruptible so that a signal
delivered to the thread calling sorflush() doesn't cause sblock() to
fail. The sblock() is required to ensure that all other socket
consumer threads have, in fact, left, and do not enter, the socket
buffer until we're done flushin it.
To implement the latter, change the 'flags' argument to sblock() to
accept two flags, SBL_WAIT and SBL_NOINTR, rather than one M_WAITOK
flag. When SBL_NOINTR is set, it forces a non-interruptible sx
acquisition, regardless of the setting of the disposition of SB_NOINTR
on the socket buffer; without this change it would be possible for
another thread to clear SB_NOINTR between when the socket buffer mutex
is released and sblock() is invoked.
Reviewed by: bz, kmacy
Reported by: Jos Backus <jos at catnook dot com>
global header if nothing else has been written before the closing of
the archive. This will change the behaviour when creating archives
without members, i.e., instead of generating a 0-size archive file, an
archive with just the global header (8 bytes in total) will be created
and it is indeed a valid archive by the definition of libarchive, thus
subsequent operation on this archive will be accepted. This especially
solves the failure caused by following sequence: (several ports do)
% ar cru libfoo.a # without specifying obj files
% ranlib libfoo.a
Reviewed by: kientzle, jkoshy
Approved by: kientzle
Approved by: jkoshy (mentor)
Reported by: erwin
MFC after: 1 month
obey or ignore the size field on a hardlink entry. In particular,
if we're reading a non-POSIX archive, we should always ignore
the size field.
This should fix both the audio/xmcd port and the math/unixstat port.
Thanks to: Pav Lucistnik for pointing these two ports out to me.
MFC after: 7 days
The only downside is that it renames pmap_vac_me_harder() to pmap_fix_cache().
From Mark's email on -arm :
pmap_get_vac_flags(), pmap_vac_me_harder(), pmap_vac_me_kpmap(), and
pmap_vac_me_user() has been rewritten as pmap_fix_cache() to be more
efficient in the kernel map case. I also removed the reference to
the md.kro_mappings, md.krw_mappings, md.uro_mappings, and md.urw_mappings
counts.
In pmap_clearbit(), we can also skip over tests and writeback/invalidations
in the PVF_MOD and PVF_REF cases if those bits are not set in the pv_flag.
PVF_WRITE will turn caching back on and remove the PV_MOD bit.
In pmap_nuke_pv(), the vm_page_flag_clear(pg, PG_WRITEABLE) has been moved
to the pmap_fix_cache().
We can be more agressive in attempting to turn caching back on by calling
pmap_fix_cache() at times that may be appropriate to turn cache on
(a kernel mapping has been removed, a write has been removed or a read
has been removed and we know the mapping does not have multiple write
mappings to a page).
In pmap_remove_pages() the cpu_idcache_wbinv_all() is moved to happen
before the page tables are NULLed because the caches are virtually
indexed and virtually tagged.
In pmap_remove_all(), the pmap_remove_write(m) is added before the
page tables are NULLed because the caches are virtually indexed and
virtually tagged. This also removes the need for the caches fixing routine
(whichever is being used pmap_vac_me_harder() or pmap_fix_cache()) to be
called on any of these mappings.
In pmap_remove(), I simplified the cache cleaning process and removed
extra TLB removals. Basically if more than PMAP_REMOVE_CLEAN_LIST_SIZE
are removed, then just flush the entire cache.
This implemntation made for growing down stack organization like i386/amd64
platforms have, but prefers different machine dependent version if it is present.
due to the way watch(8) looks for available snoop devices.
PR: bin/118286
Submitted by: Mykola Zubach <zuborg@advancedhosters.com>
Reviewed by: rwatson, csjp, imp (all a long time ago)
Approved by: imp (mentor) (long time ago)
MFC after: 1 week
- Process (a) is blocked in read on a socket waiting on data.
- Process (b) is blocked in shutdown() on a socket waiting on (a).
- Process (c) delivers a signal to (b) interrupting its wait.
When the signal is delivered, the kernel panics as sblock() fails in
sorflush(). Even if it didn't panic, shutdown() would block potentially
indefinitely waiting for recv() to succeeded. Fixes to follow.
Reported by: Jos Backus <jos at catnook dot com>
kgdb(8) now treats kld's as shared libraries relative to the kernel
"binary". Thus, you can use 'info sharedlibrary' to list the kld's
along with 'sharedlibrary' and 'nosharedlibrary' to manage symbol
loading and unloading. Note that there isn't an easy way to force GDB
to use a specific path for a shared library. However, you can use
'nosharedlibrary' to unload all the klds and then use 'sharedlibrary'
to load specific klds where it gets the kld correct and use
'add-kld' for the kld's where the default open behavior doesn't work.
klds opened via 'sharedlibrary' (and during startup) do have their
sections listed in 'info files'.
- Change the 'add-kld' command to use filename completion to complete its
argument.
and build a section table from the kernel file so that 'info files' output
for kgdb now matches the usage of gdb on a regular file with the exception
that we don't list sections for memory in the crash dump.
FTSENTs and uses only what fts_read() has just returned can rely
on fts_path being NUL-terminated. Under these conditions, a plain
vanilla "%s" format can be safely used to printf an fts_path.
OK'ed by: rwatson
cplus_demangle_type. This is the rev 1.50-1.51 change.
Our addr2line, etc.. would crash if used on C++ code that contains
certain symbol types. One example is
_ZN13PatternDriver23StringScalarDeleteValueC1ERKNS_25ConflateStringScalarValueERKNS_25AbstractStringScalarValueERKNS_12TemplateEnumINS_12pdcomplementELZNS_16complement_namesEELZNS_14COMPLEMENTENUMEEEE
o conversion to callout(9) API.
o add a missing driver lock in bfe_ifmedia_sts().
o use our callout to drive watchdog timer.
o restart Tx routine if pending queued packets are present in
watchdog handler.
o unarm watchdog timer only if there are no queued packets.
o don't blindly reset phy and let phy driver handle link change
request in bfe_init_locked().
o return the status of mii_mediachg() to caller in
bfe_ifmedia_upd(). Previously it always returned 0 to caller.
o add check for IFF_DRV_RUNNING flag as well as IFF_DRV_OACTIVE
in bfe_start_locked().
o implement miibus_statchg method that keeps track of current
link state changes as well as negotiated speed/duplex/
flow-control configuration.
Reprogram MAC to appropriate duplex state. Flow-control
configuration was also implemented but commented out at the
moment. The flow-control configuration will be enabled again
after we have general flow-control framework in mii layer.
Reported by: Yousif Hassan < yousif () alumni ! jmu ! edu >
Tesdted by: Yousif Hassan < yousif () alumni ! jmu ! edu >