must be recalculated. The blk_check pass of suj checker explicitely marks
inodes which owned such blocks as needing block count adjustment. But
ino_adjblks() is only called by cg_trunc pass, which is performed before
blk_check. As result, the block use count for such inodes is left wrong.
This causes full fsck run after journaled run to still find inconsistencies
like 'INCORRECT BLOCK COUNT I=14557 (328 should be 0)' in phase 1.
Fix this issue by running additional adj_blk pass after blk_check, which
updates the field.
Reviewed by: jeff, mckusick
MFC after: 1 week
Currently, 'ifconfig laggX down' does not remove members from this
lagg(4) interface. So, 'service netif stop laggX' followed by
'service netif start laggX' will choke, because "stop" will leave
interfaces attached to the laggX and ifconfig from the "start" will
refuse to add already-existing interfaces.
The real-world case is when I am bundling together my Ethernet and
WiFi interfaces and using multiple profiles for accessing network in
different places: system being booted up with one profile, but later
this profile being exchanged to another one, followed by 'service
netif restart' will not add WiFi interface back to the lagg: the
"stop" action from 'service netif restart' will shut down my main WiFi
interface, so wlan0 that exists in the lagg0 will be destroyed and
purged from lagg0; the "start" action will try to re-add both
interfaces, but since Ethernet one is already in lagg0, ifconfig will
refuse to add the wlan0 from WiFi interface.
Since adding the interface to the lagg(4) when it is already here
should be an idempotent action: we're really not changing anything,
so this fix doesn't change the semantics of interface addition.
Approved by: thompsa
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
headers for TSO but also for generic checksum offloading. Ideally we
would only have one common function shared amongst all drivers, and
perhaps when updating them for IPv6 we should introduce that.
Eventually we should provide the meta information along with mbufs to
avoid (re-)parsing entirely.
To not break IPv6 (checksums and offload) and to be able to MFC the
changes without risking to hurt 3rd party drivers, duplicate the v4
framework, as other OSes have done as well.
Introduce interface capability flags for TX/RX checksum offload with
IPv6, to allow independent toggling (where possible). Add CSUM_*_IPV6
flags for UDP/TCP over IPv6, and reserve further for SCTP, and IPv6
fragmentation. Define CSUM_DELAY_DATA_IPV6 as we do for legacy IP and
add an alias for CSUM_DATA_VALID_IPV6.
This pretty much brings IPv6 handling in line with IPv4.
TSO is still handled in a different way and not via if_hwassist.
Update ifconfig to allow (un)setting of the new capability flags.
Update loopback to announce the new capabilities and if_hwassist flags.
Individual driver updates will have to follow, as will SCTP.
Reported by: gallatin, dim, ..
Reviewed by: gallatin (glanced at?)
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC with: r235961,235959,235958
- Add low-level support for SATA Enclosure Management Bridge (SEMB)
devices -- SATA equivalents of the SCSI SES/SAF-TE devices.
- Add some utility functions for SCSI SAF-TE devices access.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
- old yacc(1) use to magicially append stdlib.h, while new one don't
- new yacc(1) do declare yyparse by itself, fix redundant declaration of
'yyparse'
Approved by: des (mentor)
Allow tso4 and tso6 be set individually given we have the bits.
This will help with drivers not working as expected during the
transition time and later.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Reviewed by: gnn
MFC After: 1 week
The NAND Flash environment consists of several distinct components:
- NAND framework (drivers harness for NAND controllers and NAND chips)
- NAND simulator (NANDsim)
- NAND file system (NAND FS)
- Companion tools and utilities
- Documentation (manual pages)
This work is still experimental. Please use with caution.
Obtained from: Semihalf
Supported by: FreeBSD Foundation, Juniper Networks
defined by the SNIA Common RAID Disk Data Format Specification v2.0.
Supports multiple volumes per array and multiple partitions per disk.
Supports standard big-endian and Adaptec's little-endian byte ordering.
Supports all single-layer RAID levels. Dual-layer RAID levels except
RAID10 are not supported now because of GEOM RAID design limitations.
Some work is still to be done, but the present code already manages basic
interoperation with RAID BIOS of the Adaptec 1430SA SATA RAID controller.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
them and commit separately.
1. Rewrite the way growfs(8) finds the device and mount point. This makes
it possible to use e.g. "growfs /mnt"; it's also used to display more
helpful messages.
2. Be more user-friendly, using descriptive messages, like this:
OK to grow filesystem on /dev/md0, mounted on /mnt, from 9.8GB to 20GB? [Yes/No]"
3. Allow to specify the size (-s option) just like with mdconfig(8), i.e. with
postfixes ("mdconfig -s 10g").
4. Reload read-only filesystem after growing.
Reviewed by: kib, mckusick (earlier version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation