| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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types, so refactor the code here to grab them when length is zero.
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make's processing of top-level and included makefiles. Point
out at make.conf(5) and __MAKE_CONF when telling about sys.mk.
Reviewed by: ru
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a FreeBSD extension of sys.mk. A xref to make.conf(5)
will be enough here.
Requested by: ru
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MFC after: 2 weeks
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exits due to a signal.
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changes the indentation style from 4 spaces to 8 spaces which we expect to
see in other FreeBSD source files.
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profiling from microseconds to nanoseconds in 1996. Picoseconds are
already needed.
Describe the choice of units for the per-call times in detail.
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Pointed out by: Amir Shalem
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appear to be never called:
(1) If a function is never called according to its call count but it
must have been called because its child time is nonzero, then print
it in the flat profile. Previously, if its call count was zero
then we only printed it in the flat profile if its self time was
nonzero.
(2) If a function has a zero call count but has a nonzero self or child
time, then print its total self time in the self time per call
column as a percentage of the total (self + child) time. It is
not possible to print the times per call in this case because the
call count is zero. Previously, this was handled by leaving both
per-call columns blank. The self time is printed in another column
but there was no way to recover the total time.
(1) partially fixes the case of the "never called" function main() and
prepares for (2) to apply to main() and other functions. Profiling
of main() was lost in the conversion from a.out to ELF, so main()'s
call count has always been zero for many years; then in the common
case where main() is a tiny function, it gets no profiling ticks, so
main() was completely lost in the flat profile.
(2) improves mainly cases like kernel threads. Most kernel threads
appear to be never called because they are always started before
userland can run to turn on profiling. As for main(), the fact that
they are called is not very interesting and their callers are
uninteresting, but their relative self time is interesting since they
are long-running.
Almost always printing percentages in the per-call columns would be
more useful than almost always printing 0.0ms. 0.1ms is now a long
time, so only very large functions take that long per call. The accuracy
per call can approach 1-10 nsec provided programs are run for about
100000 times as long as is necessary to get this accuracy with high
resolution kernel profiling.
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MFC after: 5 days
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you want to see, e.g., sendmail arguments mail(1) will use.
-H is not an independent flag, it's a modifier. Also explicitly
say that -H will cause mail(1) to exit as soon as it prints the headers.
MFC after: 5 days
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Approved by: novel (mentor)
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Add a flags argument to wait_for_lock so that O_NONBLOCK can be
passed to open if a user doesn't want the open to sleep until the
lock becomes available.
Submitted by: Amir Shalem (partially modified)
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for mutual exclusion:
A brief description of the problem:
1) Proc A picks up non-blocking lock on file X
2) Proc B attempts to pickup lock, fails then waits
3) Proc C attempts to pickup lock, fails then waits
4) Proc A releases lock
5) Proc B acquires lock, release it to pickup a non-blocking version
6) Proc C acquires lock, release it to pickup a non-blocking version
7) Both process B and C race each other to pickup lock again
This occurs mainly because the processes do not keep the lock after they have
been waiting on it. They drop it, attempt to re-acquire it. (They use the wait
to notify when the lock has become available then race to pick it up). This
results in additional CPU utilization during the race, and can also result
in processes picking locks up out of order.
This change attempts to correct this problem by eliminating the test/acquire
race and having the operating system handle it.
Reported by: kris
Tested by: kris
MFC after: 1 week
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Split commands into two groups: one with optional count and one with
required argument. Changed synopsis line accordingly.
Added some hopefully-helpful comments based on experiments, knowing
that not all hardware works the same.
PR: docs/84101
Approved by: keramida
MFC after: 3 days
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replacement and has additional features which make it superior.
Discussed on: -arch
Reviewed by: thompsa
X-MFC-after: never (RELENG_6 as transition period)
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- Utilize show_stat() in sidewaysintpr() loop. This makes periodic
statistics to honor -h flag.
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whine when the file cannot be found and opened.
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pathname edits before comparing pathnames on disk to those in the archive.
Thanks to: Gareth Bailey, Lowell Gilbert
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Thanks to: Diego "Flameeyes" Petten?
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Submitted by: Leonardo Chiquitto Filho
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Approved by: pav (mentor)
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PR: bin/86343
Submitted by: Matej Vela <vela@debian.org>
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PR: conf/82051
Submitted by: Derek Jones <derek at wahila dot com>
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PR: conf/86193
Submitted by: Matthias Buelow <mkb at incubus dot de>
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Thanks to: Divacky Roman
PR: bin/84993
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retrieve statistic information for them.
Pointed out by: Pawel Worach < pawel.worach at gmail.com >
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that critical as the program exits after this point anyway, but this may
not always be the case.
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Pointed out by: ru
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-- Made the synopses more precise.
-- Added argument to flag in option description.
-- Moved -b default and limits to option description (to un-hide).
-- Noted several behaviors that were not mentioned.
-- A few more trivial changes.
PR: docs/46787
Approved by: keramida
MFC after: 3 days
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a -B option which causes bpf peers to be printed. This option can be
used in conjunction with -I if information about specific interfaces
is desired. This is similar to what NetBSD added to their version of
netstat.
$ netstat -B
Pid Netif Flags Recv Drop Match Sblen Hblen Command
1137 lo0 p--s-- 0 0 0 0 0 tcpdump
205 sis0 -ifs-l 37331 0 1 0 0 dhclient
$
$ netstat -I lo0 -B
Pid Netif Flags Recv Drop Match Sblen Hblen Command
1174 lo0 p--s-- 0 0 0 0 0 tcpdump
$
-Add bpf.c which stores all the code for retrieving and parsing bpf
related statistics.
-Modify main.c to add support for the -B option and hook it into the
program logic.
-Add bpf.c to the build.
-Document this new functionality in the man page and bump the revision
date.
-Add prototype for bpf_stats function.
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type should be int rather than Boolean.
PR: bin/84528
Submitted by: Max Okumoto <okumoto@ucsd.edu>
MFC after: 3 weeks
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getsockopt().
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the generated code still doesn't compile as we lack tinfo, t_getinfo and
friends.
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more than 4 days - waste of memory.
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD (liamfoy)
MFC after: 3 days
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