Stop using auth_getval() now that it always returns NULL. Instead,
hardcode the default to what it would be if we didn't hardcode it,
i.e. DES if supported and MD5 otherwise.
Finally nuke auth.conf, nine years after it was deprecated. The only
thing it was still used for was to set the "global default" password
hash. Since the stock auth.conf contained nothing but comments, the
global default was actually the first algorithm in crypt(3)'s list,
which happens to be DES; I take the fact that nobody noticed as proof
that it was not used outside of crypt(3).
The only other use in our tree was in the Kerberos support code in
in tinyware's passwd(1). I removed that code in an earlier commit;
it would not have compiled anyway, as it only supported Kerberos IV.
The auth_getval() function is now a stub that always returns NULL,
which has the same effect as a functional auth_getval() with an
empty auth.conf.
Pedro F. Giffuni [Tue, 12 Jun 2012 15:04:18 +0000 (15:04 +0000)]
Add experimental support for amdfam10/barcelona from the GCC 4.3 branch.
Initial support for the AMD barcelona chipsets has been available in the
gcc43 branch under GPLv2 but was not included when the Core 2 support
was brought to the system gcc.
AMD and some linux distributions (OpenSUSE) did a backport of the amdfam10
support and made them available. Unfortunately this is still experimental
and while it can improve performance, enabling the CPUTYPE may break some
C++ ports (like clang).
Special care was taken to make sure that the patches predate the GPLv3
switch upstream.
Tested by: Vladimir Kushnir
Reviewed by: mm
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Michael Tuexen [Tue, 12 Jun 2012 14:02:38 +0000 (14:02 +0000)]
Add a IP_RECVTOS socket option to receive for received UDP/IPv4
packets a cmsg of type IP_RECVTOS which contains the TOS byte.
Much like IP_RECVTTL does for TTL. This allows to implement a
protocol on top of UDP and implementing ECN.
Michael Tuexen [Tue, 12 Jun 2012 13:57:56 +0000 (13:57 +0000)]
Deliver IPV6_TCLASS, IPV6_HOPLIMIT and IPV6_PKTINFO cmsgs (if
requested) on IPV6 sockets, which have been marked to be not IPV6_V6ONLY,
for each received IPV4 packet.
Randall Stewart [Tue, 12 Jun 2012 12:44:17 +0000 (12:44 +0000)]
Note to self. Have morning coffee *before* committing things.
There is no mac_addr in the mbuf for BSD.. cheat like
we are supposed to and use the csum field since our friend
the gif tunnel itself will never use offload.
Alexander Motin [Tue, 12 Jun 2012 11:08:51 +0000 (11:08 +0000)]
- Limit r214102 workaround to only x86. On arm it causes more problems
then solves because of cache coherency issues. This fixes periodic error
messages on console and command timeouts.
- Patch SATA PHY configuration for 65nm SoCs to improve SNR same as
Linux does.
- Use CLOCK_MONOTONIC instead of CLOCK_REALTIME, because CLOCK_MONOTONIC
does not wrap into negative in near future. This fixes any potential
problems using "pthread_cond_timedwait()".
- Fix a bug where the "libusb_wait_for_event()" function computes an
absolute timeout instead of a relative timeout. USB transfers do
not depend on this timeout value.
- Add dependency towards LibPthread to Makefile, because LibUSB v1.0
needs this library to function correctly.
Kirk McKusick [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 23:07:21 +0000 (23:07 +0000)]
In softdep_setup_inomapdep() we may have to allocate both inodedep
and bmsafemap dependency structures in inodedep_lookup() and
bmsafemap_lookup() respectively. The setup of these structures must
be done while holding the soft-dependency mutex. If the inodedep is
allocated first, it may be freed in the I/O completion callback when
the mutex is released to allocate the bmsafemap. If the bmsafemap is
allocated first, it may be freed in the I/O completion callback when
the mutex is released to allocate the inodedep.
To resolve this problem, bmsafemap_lookup has had a parameter added
that allows a pre-malloc'ed bmsafemap to be passed in so that it does
not need to release the mutex to create a new bmsafemap. The
softdep_setup_inomapdep() routine pre-malloc's a bmsafemap dependency
before acquiring the mutex and starting to build the inodedep with a
call to inodedep_lookup(). The subsequent call to bmsafemap_lookup()
is passed this pre-allocated bmsafemap entry so that it need not
release the mutex if it needs to create a new one.
Reported by: Peter Holm
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 1 week
Alan Cox [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 21:41:16 +0000 (21:41 +0000)]
Avoid unnecessary atomic operations for clearing PGA_WRITEABLE in
pmap_remove_pages(). This reduces pmap_remove_pages()'s running time by
4 to 11% in my tests.
Martin Matuska [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 11:35:22 +0000 (11:35 +0000)]
Introduce "feature flags" for ZFS pools (bump SPA version to 5000).
Add first feature "com.delphix:async_destroy" (asynchronous destroy
of ZFS datasets).
Implement features support in ZFS boot code.
Illumos revisions merged:
13700:2889e2596bd6
13701:1949b688d5fb
2619 asynchronous destruction of ZFS file systems
2747 SPA versioning with zfs feature flags
Adrian Chadd [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 07:44:16 +0000 (07:44 +0000)]
Wrap the whole (software) TX path from ifnet dequeue to software queue
(or direct dispatch) behind the TXQ lock (which, remember, is doubling
as the TID lock too for now.)
This ensures that:
(a) the sequence number and the CCMP PN allocation is done together;
(b) overlapping transmit paths don't interleave frames, so we don't
end up with the original issue that triggered kern/166190.
Ie, that we don't end up with seqno A, B in thread 1, C, D in
thread 2, and they being queued to the software queue as "A C D B"
or similar, leading to the BAW stalls.
This has been tested:
* both STA and AP modes with INVARIANTS and WITNESS;
* TCP and UDP TX;
* both STA->AP and AP->STA.
STA is a Routerstation Pro (single CPU MIPS) and the AP is a dual-core
Centrino.
Adrian Chadd [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 07:29:25 +0000 (07:29 +0000)]
When scheduling frames in an aggregate session, the frames should be
scheduled from the head of the software queue rather than trying to
queue the newly given frame.
This leads to some rather unfortunate out of order (but still valid
as it's inside the BAW) frame TX.
This now:
* Always queues the frame at the end of the software queue;
* Tries to direct dispatch the frame at the head of the software queue,
to try and fill up the hardware queue.
TODO:
* I should likely try to queue as many frames to the hardware as I can
at this point, rather than doing one at a time;
* ath_tx_xmit_aggr() may fail and this code assumes that it'll schedule
the TID. Otherwise TX may stall.
Adrian Chadd [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 07:15:48 +0000 (07:15 +0000)]
Retried frames need to be inserted in the head of the list, not the tail.
This is an unfortunate byproduct of how the routine is used - it's called
with the head frame on the queue, but if the frame is failed, it's inserted
into the tail of the queue.
Because of this, the sequence numbers would get all shuffled around and
the BAW would be bumped past this sequence number, that's now at the
end of the software queue. Then, whenever it's time for that frame
to be transmitted, it'll be immediately outside of the BAW and TX will
stall until the BAW catches up.
It can also result in all kinds of weird duplicate BAW frames, leading
to hilarious panics.
Adrian Chadd [Mon, 11 Jun 2012 06:59:28 +0000 (06:59 +0000)]
Revert r233227 and followup commits as it breaks CCMP PN replay detection.
This showed up when doing heavy UDP throughput on SMP machines.
The problem with this is because the 802.11 sequence number is being
allocated separately to the CCMP PN replay number (which is assigned
during ieee80211_crypto_encap()).
Under significant throughput (200+ MBps) the TX path would be stressed
enough that frame TX/retry would force sequence number and PN allocation
to be out of order. So once the frames were reordered via 802.11 seqnos,
the CCMP PN would be far out of order, causing most frames to be discarded
by the receiver.
I've fixed this in some local work by being forced to:
(a) deal with the issues that lead to the parallel TX causing out of
order sequence numbers in the first place;
(b) fix all the packet queuing issues which lead to strange (but mostly
valid) TX.
I'll begin fixing these in a subsequent commit or five.
Use the previous stack entry protection and max protection to correctly
propagate the stack execution permissions when stack is grown down.
First, curproc->p_sysent->sv_stackprot specifies maximum allowed stack
protection for current ABI, so the new stack entry was typically marked
executable always. Second, for non-main stack MAP_STACK mapping,
the PROT_ flags should be used which were specified at the mmap(2) call
time, and not sv_stackprot.
Alexander Motin [Sun, 10 Jun 2012 11:17:14 +0000 (11:17 +0000)]
Partially revert r236666:
Return PROTO_ATA protocol in response to XPT_PATH_INQ.
smartmontools uses it to identify ATA devices and I don't know any other
place now where it is important. It could probably use XPT_GDEV_TYPE
instead for more accurate protocol information, but let it live for now.
Andrew Turner [Sun, 10 Jun 2012 10:40:22 +0000 (10:40 +0000)]
Remove an unneeded increment from initarm. The variable is uninitialised,
is not used in this part of the function and correctly initialised later
when it is used.
Mitsuru IWASAKI [Sun, 10 Jun 2012 02:38:51 +0000 (02:38 +0000)]
Some fixes for r236772.
- Remove cpuset stopped_cpus which is no longer used.
- Add a short comment for cpuset suspended_cpus clearing.
- Fix the un-ordered x86/acpica/acpi_wakeup.c in conf/files.amd64 and i386.
Kirk McKusick [Sat, 9 Jun 2012 22:26:53 +0000 (22:26 +0000)]
When synchronously syncing a device (MNT_WAIT), wait for buffers
to become available. Otherwise we may excessively spin and fail
with ``fsync: giving up on dirty''.
ds_guid of 0 is special, as it is used by snapshot receive code to
differentiate between an incremental and full stream.
Be sure not to generate guid equal to 0.
Reported by: someone who saw 0 being generated as 64bit random guid
MFC after: 3 days
Alexander Motin [Sat, 9 Jun 2012 13:07:44 +0000 (13:07 +0000)]
One more major cam_periph_error() rewrite to improve error handling and
reporting. It includes:
- removing of error messages controlled by bootverbose, replacing them
with more universal and informative debugging on CAM_DEBUG_INFO level,
that is now built into the kernel by default;
- more close following to the arguments submitted by caller, such as
SF_PRINT_ALWAYS, SF_QUIET_IR and SF_NO_PRINT; consumer knows better which
errors are usual/expected at this point and which are really informative;
- adding two new flags SF_NO_RECOVERY and SF_NO_RETRY to allow caller
specify how much assistance it needs at this point; previously consumers
controlled that by not calling cam_periph_error() at all, but that made
behavior inconsistent and debugging complicated;
- tuning debug messages and taken actions order to make debugging output
more readable and cause-effect relationships visible;
- making camperiphdone() (common device recovery completion handler) to
also use cam_periph_error() in most cases, instead of own dumb code;
- removing manual sense fetching code from cam_periph_error(); I was told
by number of people that it is SIM obligation to fetch sense data, so this
code is useless and only significantly complicates recovery logic;
- making ada, da and pass driver to use cam_periph_error() with new limited
recovery options to handle error recovery and debugging in common way;
as one of results, CAM_REQUEUE_REQ and other retrying statuses are now
working fine with pass driver, that caused many problems before.
- reverting r186891 by raj@ to avoid burning few seconds in tight DELAY()
loops on device probe, while device simply loads media; I think that problem
may already be fixed in other way, and even if it is not, solution must be
different.
Mitsuru IWASAKI [Sat, 9 Jun 2012 00:37:26 +0000 (00:37 +0000)]
Add x86/acpica/acpi_wakeup.c for amd64 and i386. Difference of
suspend/resume procedures are minimized among them.
common:
- Add global cpuset suspended_cpus to indicate APs are suspended/resumed.
- Remove acpi_waketag and acpi_wakemap from acpivar.h (no longer used).
- Add some variables in acpi_wakecode.S in order to minimize the difference
among amd64 and i386.
- Disable load_cr3() because now CR3 is restored in resumectx().
amd64:
- Add suspend/resume related members (such as MSR) in PCB.
- Modify savectx() for above new PCB members.
- Merge acpi_switch.S into cpu_switch.S as resumectx().
i386:
- Merge(and remove) suspendctx() into savectx() in order to match with
amd64 code.
Jilles Tjoelker [Fri, 8 Jun 2012 22:54:25 +0000 (22:54 +0000)]
sh: Do not assume that SIGPIPE will only kill a subshell in builtins/wait3.0
test.
POSIX says that SIGPIPE affects a process and therefore a SIGPIPE caused and
received by a subshell environment may or may not affect the parent shell
environment.
The change assumes that ${SH} is executed in a new process. This must be the
case if it contains a slash and everyone appears to do so anyway even though
POSIX might permit otherwise.
John Baldwin [Fri, 8 Jun 2012 21:30:35 +0000 (21:30 +0000)]
Several updates:
- Consistently refer to rmlocks as "read-mostly locks".
- Relate rmlocks to rwlocks rather than sx locks since they are closer to
rwlocks.
- Add a separate paragraph on sleepable read-mostly locks contrasting them
with "normal" read-mostly locks.
- The flag passed to rm_init_flags() to enable recursion for readers is
RM_RECURSE, not LO_RECURSABLE.
- Fix the description for RM_RECURSE (it allows readers to recurse, not
writers).
- Explicitly note that rm_try_rlock() honors RM_RECURSE.
- Fix some minor grammar nits.
John Baldwin [Fri, 8 Jun 2012 18:32:09 +0000 (18:32 +0000)]
Split the second half of vn_open_cred() (after a vnode has been found via
a lookup or created via VOP_CREATE()) into a new vn_open_vnode() function
and use this function in fhopen() instead of duplicating code from
vn_open_cred() directly.
Dimitry Andric [Fri, 8 Jun 2012 17:08:27 +0000 (17:08 +0000)]
In usr.bin/sort, use another method of silencing warnings about unused
arguments, which does not trigger self-assignment warnings in certain
circumstances (for example, using clang with ccache).