1) fix typo preventing compilation (missing comma).
2) in SLOCK_WHERE, display cpu number in the MP case.
3) the folowing race condition was observed in _simple_lock:
cpu 1 releases lock,
cpu 0 grabs lock
cpu 1 sees it's already locked.
cpu 1 sees that lock_holder== "cpu 1"
cpu 1 assumes that it already holds it and barfs.
cpu 0 sets lock_holder == "cpu 0"
Fix: set lock_holder to LK_NOCPU in _simple_unlock().
cause a core to drop, and whether the core dropped, or, if it did
not, why not (i.e. error number). Logs process ID, name, signal that
hit it, and whether the core dump was successful.
logging only happens if kern_logsigexit is non-zero, and it can be
changed by the new sysctl(3) value KERN_LOGSIGEXIT. The name of this
sysctl and its function are taken from FreeBSD, at the suggestion
of Greg Woods in PR 6224. Default behavior is zero for a normal
kernel, and one for a kernel compiled with DIAGNOSTIC.
to go to the inversion list is incomplete. If the cylinders are equal
block numbers must be checked.
This caused lockups if some buffers with the same cylinder were cycling
through the list, as it may happen with softdep enabled.
Fixes PR #9197.
- If RB_ASKNAME, only dumpdv holds the results asked interactively.
Examie dumpspec only when !RB_ASKNAME. This allows us to override
dumps on none in kernel config file by booting kernel with RB_ASKNAME.
- Slightly rearrange code so that it more matches to comment.
execute certain functions when a process does an exec(). Currently
uses a global list. Could possibly be done using a per-process list,
but this needs more thought.
until all device driver discovery threads have had a chance to do their
work. This in turn blocks initproc's exec of init(8) until root is
mounted and process start times and CWD info has been fixed up.
Addresses kern/9247.
The rule is that you don't get to call scheduler-related functions (e.g.
wakeup()) above the clock interrupt. Going to statclock unnecessarily
hoses e.g. serial interrupts on the SPARC.
be issued/completed in order; that is, provide a barrier for I/O queues.
- Change the buffer driver queue links to a TAILQ, rather than using
a home-grown equivalent. Provide BUFQ_*() macros to manipulate buffer
queues; these deal with the barrier provided by B_ORDERED.
- Update disksort() accordingly, and provide 3 versions:
- disksort_cylinder(): historical disksort(), which keys on
b_cylinder (and b_blkno for the case when b_cylinder matches).
- disksort_blkno(): sorts only on b_blkno. Essentially the
same as disksort_cylinder(), but with fewer comparisons.
- disksort_tail(): requests are simply inserted into the queue
at the tail. This is provided as an option so that drivers
can simply have a pointer to the appropriate sort function.
Note that disksort() now pays attention to B_ORDERED.
if you com* at pcmcia?, and com3 and com4 as pcmcia cards, and removed
and reinserted the card that was com3, it would become com5. if you then
removed and reinserted com4, it would become com6. etc.) Now, instead
of incrementing FSTATE_STAR configuration entries for a driver when
a cloning instance is attached, leave it alone, and scan the device softc
array (starting at the first cloning unit number) for units which are
available for use. This wastes a tiny bit of time (can require a linear
scan of the softc table for the device), but device attachment should be
relatively infrequent and the number of units of each type of device
is never particularly large anyway.
(Previously buffers could be marked dirty by the cleaner, and possibly by
other means.)
Also check for softdep mount in vfs_shutdown before trying to bawrite
buffers, since other filesystems don't need it and lfs doesn't bawrite.
(This fragment reviewed by fvdl.)
Partially addresses PR#8964.
due to massive changes in KAME side.
- IPv6 output goes through nd6_output
- faith can capture IPv4 packets as well - you can run IPv4-to-IPv6 translator
using heavily modified DNS servers
- per-interface statistics (required for IPv6 MIB)
- interface autoconfig is revisited
- udp input handling has a big change for mapped address support.
- introduce in4_cksum() for non-overwriting checksumming
- introduce m_pulldown()
- neighbor discovery cleanups/improvements
- netinet/in.h strictly conforms to RFC2553 (no extra defs visible to userland)
- IFA_STATS is fixed a bit (not tested)
- and more more more.
TODO:
- cleanup os-independency #ifdef
- avoid rcvif dual use (for IPsec) to help ifdetach
(sorry for jumbo commit, I can't separate this any more...)
uncleanly due to a lost connection, it would hang in closef() waiting
for the usecount to go back to 1.
An audit of FILE_USE() vs FILE_UNUSE() usage led me to discover some
incorrect error-path code..
In sys_fcntl(), avoid leaking a file descriptor usecount in an error
case of F_SETFL; don't return, instead go to "out" to clean up. I
suspect that the F_SETFL would fail because vop_fcntl is not
implemented in deadfs.
just for reference purposes.
This commit includes 1.4 -> 1.4.1 sync for kame branch.
The branch does not compile at all (due to the lack of ALTQ and some other
source code). Please do not try to modify the branch, this is just for
referenre purposes.
synchronization to latest KAME will take place on HEAD branch soon.
to be back on the AGE queue. Otherwise we risk recycling a set
of buffers with (soft) dependencies on the AGE list, which may
last forever if the vnode they belong to is locked (i.e. the syncer
won't get to the buffers they depend on, so their dependencies
are never flushed).
are handled as arrays; that is, a truncated old value is returned, alongside
with ENOMEM, if the buffer is too small.
- in all int, quad, and single struct cases, and all specials handled inside
this file, oldlenp semantics are now as documented in the manual page, that
is, a NULL oldp, but non-NULL oldlenp returns the needed size
[I had to change the oldlenp handling, so I thought I should make it as
advertized. Formerly, the subroutines would not know when a NULL oldlenp
was passed, do the work anyway, and the value would be thrown away.]
This is needed as a first step to make gethostname() and getdomainname()
conform to its own manual page and SUSV2. (See pr 7836 by Simon Burge)
default, as the copyright on the main file (ffs_softdep.c) is such
that is has been put into gnusrc. options SOFTDEP will pull this
in. This code also contains the trickle syncer.
Bump version number to 1.4O
be used uninitialized when name[0] != PROC_CURPROC and
proclists[0]->pd_list == NULL; actually, this can never happen
(proclists[0] == &allproc), but the compiler can not know this, so it
complains
recover from failures to accept a socket successfully. Problem suggested
by this:
> It would appear (from two "panic: closef: count < 0" failures in less
> than 12 hours) that Darren's fix to accept(2) for lost file descriptors
> isn't quite correct. His fix inserts a call to closef() to handle one
> of several possible error conditions. However everywhere else in the
> socket code in the same file where falloc() cleanup is necessary the
> function used is ffree().
core filename format, which allow to change the name of the core dump,
and to relocate it in a directory. Credits to Bill Sommerfeld for giving me
the idea :)
The default core filename format can be changed by options DEFCORENAME and/or
kern.defcorename
Create a new sysctl tree, proc, which holds per-process values (for now
the corename format, and resources limits). Process is designed by its pid
at the second level name. These values are inherited on fork, and the corename
fomat is reset to defcorename on suid/sgid exec.
Create a p_sugid() function, to take appropriate actions on suid/sgid
exec (for now set the P_SUGID flag and reset the per-proc corename).
Adjust dosetrlimit() to allow changing limits of one proc by another, with
credential controls.
- Call configure() after setting up proc0.
- Call initclocks() from configure(), after cpu_configure(). Once the
clocks are running, clear `cold'. Then run interrupt-driven
autoconfiguration.
Tree structure:
- sys/arch/sh3: sh3 generic code
As commented, in-chip device drivers are put into sys/arch/sh3/dev.
- sys/arch/evbsh3: sh3 evaluation boards (pure sh3 CPU, no fancy external HW)
- sys/arch/mmeye: Brains mmEye, www.brains.co.jp
MI source code includes couple of #ifdef for sh3-coff support.
(sh3 uses coff or elf)
Needs some more improvements, especialy in sys/arch/sh3/conf/files.sh3,
to compile the tree (due to last minute tree structure change).
approximation of reality if the MD code doesn't. This variable is the
equivalent of "tickfix" for the non-NTP path.
This allows an alpha kernel (where hz=1024) with "options NTP" to
synch up quite nicely (as opposed to having an frequency error of
~560ppm, which is outside the capture range of the PLL).
If the entry is found in name cache, cache_lookup() does all the
necessary locking now, simplifying the interface and making the
code easier to follow and maintain.
The code now also removes the entry from cache when it's either invalid
(vget() fails) or the vnode has been recycled while waiting for the lock.
In that case, unlock/relock of the directory vnode has been eliminated too.
Both changes could lead to sligh performace improvement in same cases.
Furthermore, obscure bug has been found and eliminated for ISDOTDOT in the
lockparent && ISLASTCN case: if the vget() succeded and the re-lock
of the directory vnode not, we returned the error with the '..' vnode still
locked.
For simplicity, cache_lookup() now returns 0 if the positive entry was found
in cache, -1 if not found and ENOENT or error returned by the locking
functions in any other case.
Many thanks to Bill Studenmund and especially Charles Hannum
for invaluable advices and code to get this right.
Tested by: jdolecek
Rewieved by: wrstuden, mycroft
detect a little earlier if we've dup-put'd. Otherwise, underflow occurs,
and subsequent allocations simply hang or fail (it thinks the hardlimit
has been reached).
by the Single UNIX Specification version 2, rather than the SVR2-derived
types. While I was here, I did a namespace sweep to expose the constants
and strucutures, and structure members described by SUSv2; documentation
updates coming shortly.
Fixes kern/8158.
that is priority is rasied. Add a new spllowersoftclock() to provide the
atomic drop-to-softclock semantics that the old splsoftclock() provided,
and update calls accordingly.
This fixes a problem with using the "rnd" pseudo-device from within
interrupt context to extract random data (e.g. from within the softnet
interrupt) where doing so would incorrectly unblock interrupts (causing
all sorts of lossage).
XXX 4 platforms do not have priority-raising capability: newsmips, sparc,
XXX sparc64, and VAX. This platforms still have this bug until their
XXX spl*() functions are fixed.
allocations should fail if the pool is at its hard limit.
Document flag in pool(9).
Use it in mbuf.h for the first allocate call for M_GET, M_GETHDR, and
MCLGET, so that m_reclaim gets called even for blocking allocations.
mbufs since you might overwriting valuable data. (think of
m_copy'ed data from a TCP re-transmission queue. Since those
might be in clusters and referenced in two sockets).
call with F_FSCTL set and F_SETFL calls generate calls to a new
fileop fo_fcntl. Add genfs_fcntl() and soo_fcntl() which return 0
for F_SETFL and EOPNOTSUPP otherwise. Have all leaf filesystems
use genfs_fcntl().
Reviewed by: thorpej
Tested by: wrstuden
Schroder <perseant@hitl.washington.edu>, unlock the mounted on
vnode before we call VFS_ROOT so that we cover the case where the new
root vnode shares a lock with the mounted-on vnode. Note that we have
asserted vfs_busy on the new fs before unlocking, so no other process can
steal the mount out from under us.
The problem was due to an interaction between the doomed unmounts done by
amd and getnewvnode.
I convinced myself that it's ok for getnewvnode() to do a sleeping vfs_busy().
Tested with multiple builds running while another process attempted to unmount
/usr once a second.
too. Remove some needless code duplication by adding a "drain" argument
to the ACQUIRE() macro (compiler can [and does] optimize the constant
conditional).
locking primitive directly to lock it, since those will never attempt
to call printf() to display debugging information (and thus deadlock
on recursion into the kprintf_slock).
- Now compatible with MULTIPROCESSOR (requires other changes not yet
committed, but which will be later today).
- In addition to tracking simple locks, track exclusive spin locks.
- Count spin locks like we do sleep locks (in the cpu_info for this
CPU).
- Lock debug lists are now TAILQs, so as to make the locking order
more obvious when dumping the list.
Also, some suggestions from Bill Sommerfeld:
- SIMPLELOCK_LOCKED and SIMPLELOCK_UNLOCKED constants, which may be
defined in <machine/lock.h> (default to 1 and 0, respectively). This
makes it easier to support architectures which use test-and-clear
rather than test-and-set.
- Add __attribute__((__aligned__)) to the `lock_data' member of the
simplelock structure. This makes it easier to support architectures
which can only perform atomic operations on very-well-aligned memory
locations. NOTE: This changes the size of struct simplelock, and
will cause a version bump.
first in line for the specified identifier. For use in places where
you don't want a Thundering Herd.
While here, add an optimization to wakeup() suggested by Ross Harvey.
calls to reflect this. Also, block statclock rather than softclock during
in the proclist locking functions, to address a problem reported on
current-users by Sean Doran.
write lock when doing PID allocation, and during the process exit path.
Use a read lock every where else, including within schedcpu() (interrupt
context). Note that holding the write lock implies blocking schedcpu()
from running (blocks softclock).
PID allocation is now MP-safe.
Note this actually fixes a bug on single processor systems that was probably
extremely difficult to tickle; it was possible that schedcpu() would run
off a bad pointer if the right clock interrupt happened to come in the
middle of a LIST_INSERT_HEAD() or LIST_REMOVE() to/from allproc.
and PID allocation MP-safe. A new process state is added: SDEAD. This
state indicates that a process is dead, but not yet a zombie (has not
yet been processed by the process reaper).
SDEAD processes exist on both the zombproc list (via p_list) and deadproc
(via p_hash; the proc has been removed from the pidhash earlier in the exit
path). When the reaper deals with a process, it changes the state to
SZOMB, so that wait4 can process it.
Add a P_ZOMBIE() macro, which treats a proc in SZOMB or SDEAD as a zombie,
and update various parts of the kernel to reflect the new state.
body of reaper(), right before the call to uvm_exit(). cpu_wait() must
be done before uvm_exit() because the resources it frees might be located
in the PCB.
remove simplelockrecurse, lockpausetime and PAUSE():
none of these serve any purpose anymore.
in the LOCKDEBUG functions, expand the splhigh() region to
cover the entire function. without this there can still be races.
- When the exit signal is specified to be 0, don't just assume they
meant SIGCHLD. In the Linux world, this appears to mean "don't deliver
an exit signal at all".
- Simplify P_EXITSIG(); don't check against initproc here, just change
the exit signal to SIGCHLD if reparenting to initproc.
A very simple clone(2) test program now works, and the MpegTV package
starts, but doesn't run properly yet (I believe there is a separate
bug which keeps it from working properly).
getnewvnode now checks this bit, and it if's set makes sure a vnode's not
locked before removing it from the free list.
Closes PR 7954 by Alan Barrett <apb@iafrica.com>.
Fix and document naming convention for vnode variables (always use
lvp/lvpp and uvp/uvpp instead of a hash of cvp, vpp, dvpp, pvp, pvpp).
Delete old stale #if 0'ed code at the end.
Change error path code in getcwd_getcache() slightly (merge common
cleanup code; shouldn't affect behavior any).
mp->mnt_flags & MNT_MWAIT is replaced by mp->mnt_wcnt, and a new mount
flag MNT_GONE is created (reusing the same bit).
In insmntque(), add DIAGNOSTIC check to fail if the filesystem vnode
is being moved to is in the process of being unmounted.
getnewvnode() now protects the list of vnodes active on mp with
vfs_busy()/vfs_unbusy().
To avoid generating spurious errors during a doomed unmount, change
the "wait for unmount to finish" protocol between dounmount() and
vfs_busy(). In vfs_busy(), instead of only sleeping once, sleep until
either MNT_UNMOUNT is clear or MNT_GONE is set; also, maintain a count
of waiters in mp->mnt_wcnt so that dounmount() knows when it's safe to
free mp.
tested by running a "while :; do mount /d1; umount -f /d1; done" loop
against multiple find(1) processes.
(Sorry for a big commit, I can't separate this into several pieces...)
Pls check sys/netinet6/TODO and sys/netinet6/IMPLEMENTATION for details.
- sys/kern: do not assume single mbuf, accept chained mbuf on passing
data from userland to kernel (or other way round).
- "midway" ATM card: ATM PVC pseudo device support, like those done in ALTQ
package (ftp://ftp.csl.sony.co.jp/pub/kjc/).
- sys/netinet/tcp*: IPv4/v6 dual stack tcp support.
- sys/netinet/{ip6,icmp6}.h, sys/net/pfkeyv2.h: IETF document assumes those
file to be there so we patch it up.
- sys/netinet: IPsec additions are here and there.
- sys/netinet6/*: most of IPv6 code sits here.
- sys/netkey: IPsec key management code
- dev/pci/pcidevs: regen
In my understanding no code here is subject to export control so it
should be safe.
listen/accept (PR_LISTEN flag in protosw) and detect obvious faults in
parameters passed. It is still possible for the address used for copying
the socket information to become invalid between that check and the copyout
so close the connection's allocated fd if the copyout fails so that we can
return EFAULT without allocating an fd and the application not knowing about
it. Ideally we'd be able to queue the connection back up so a later accept
could retrieve it but unfortunately that's not possible.
which use uvm_vslock() should now test the return value. If it's not
KERN_SUCCESS, wiring the pages failed, so the operation which is using
uvm_vslock() should error out.
XXX We currently just EFAULT a failed uvm_vslock(). We may want to do
more about translating error codes in the future.
the process (i.e. pre-Reno behavior). The 4.4BSD behavior (introduced
in Reno) caused transient errors to stick incorrectly.
This is from PR #7640 (Havard Eidnes), cross-checked w/ FreeBSD, where
Bill Fenner committed the same fix (as described in a comment in the
Vat sources, by Van Jacobsen).
looking up a kernel address, check to see if the address is on this
"interrupt-safe" list. If so, return failure immediately. This prevents
a locking screw if a page fault is taken on an interrupt-safe map in or
out of interrupt context.
has PAGEABLE and INTRSAFE flags. PAGEABLE now really means "pageable",
not "allocate vm_map_entry's from non-static pool", so update all map
creations to reflect that. INTRSAFE maps are maps that are used in
interrupt context (e.g. kmem_map, mb_map), and thus use the static
map entry pool (XXX as does kernel_map, for now). This will eventually
change now these maps are locked, as well.
vslocking here?! copyout() on its own seems to suffice just about everwhere
else, and it's not like the process is going to exit; it's in a system
call!