Emulate NMIs on systems where they are not available by using timer
interrupts on other cpus. Each cpu will use its softlockup hrtimer
to check that the next cpu is processing hrtimer interrupts by
verifying that a counter is increasing.
This patch is useful on systems where the hardlockup detector is not
available due to a lack of NMIs, for example most ARM SoCs.
Without this patch any cpu stuck with interrupts disabled can
cause a hardware watchdog reset with no debugging information,
but with this patch the kernel can detect the lockup and panic,
which can result in useful debugging info.
Signed-off-by: Colin Cross <ccross@android.com>
The heapmask in the client generally wasn't being used. This
patch removes it.
Change-Id: I3526723fbf8f2e81c28c0733deb583ea14bdd837
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
There is some confusion between when to use the heap type and when
the id. This patch clarifies this by using clearer variable names
and describing the intention in the comments. Also fixes the client
debug code to print heaps by id instead of type.
Change-Id: Ie8b3dadded52e18590fcb2ca94001f6ed46ef07d
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
This patch adds support for a chunk heap that allows for buffers that are
made up of a list of fixed size chunks taken from a carveout. Chunk sizes
are configured when the heaps are created by passing the chunk size in the
priv field of the heap platform data.
Change-Id: Ia9e003f727b553a92804264debe119dcf78b14e0
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
Tracing adds actual speed since this is expected to be key to the
choice of target speed.
Change-Id: Iec936102d0010c4e9dfa143c38a9fd0d551189c3
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
We have found that faulting in the mappings for cached
allocations has a significant performance impact and is
only a benefit if only a small part of the buffer is
touched by the cpu (an uncommon case for software rendering).
This patch introduces a ION_FLAG_CACHED_NEEDS_SYNC
which determines whether a mapping should be created by
faulting or at mmap time. If this flag is set,
userspace must manage the caches explictly using the SYNC ioctl.
Change-Id: I227561f49e0f382a481728fb55ac5c930fc26025
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
The control request will be used by the host to enable/disable USB audio
and the ioctl will be used by userspace to read the audio mode
Change-Id: I81c38611b588451e80eacdccc417ca6e11c60cab
Signed-off-by: Mike Lockwood <lockwood@google.com>
Place SLPZ pin in sleep state at system suspend time if a GPIO is
provided by board platform data.
Change-Id: I93c61fa0ae474e968e0f909209c9bfcaafe3dd2c
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
Add a generic battery power supply and glue logic for talking to the
board battery driver. This driver handles common chores such as:
* periodic battery level and health monitoring
* kernel log reporting and other debugging features for key
properties provided by different charger, fuel gauge, etc.
components
* ensure properties such as battery health are made available to
userspace
* common processing for board-level battery/case temperature sensors
and policy for charging status based on battery health
Based on work by himihee.seo@samsung.com, ms925.kim@samsung.com, and
joshua.chang@samsung.com.
Change-Id: I5fa8e8d68811d84820b7a130b0245ad2b5b6d36b
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
Not useful to have a separate, non-realtime workqueue for speed down
events, avoid priority inversion for speed up events.
Change-Id: Iddcd05545245c847aa1bbe0b8790092914c813d2
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
This is deprecated in favor of using the dma_buf api which will
automatically sync a buffer to memory when it is mapped to a device.
However, that functionality is not ready, so this patch adds the
ability to sync a buffer explicitly.
Change-Id: Ia15810a13cd5c4b939f4afa5c8e721c89fac76d4
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
This patch adds cache maintenance operations to ion. As per mailing
list discussions regarding dma_buf, cache operations are done implicitly.
At buffer allocaiton time the user can select whether he'd like mappings
(both kernel and user) to be cached. When cached mappings are selected,
no mappings will be created for a buffer at mmap time. Instead pages will
be faulted in one at a time so we can track which pages require flushing
before dma. When the buffers are mapped for dma (via the dma_buf apis)
any pages which were touched will be synced for device.
Change-Id: Id5d6894e8bb52af038c91dd895143bf3b4203b0b
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
And supply name will be used as wakeup source name.
Change-Id: I53075491c6e1a4c66755afe8a40b7166cd8d6cb2
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
This patch adds an interface to return and sg_table given a
valid ion handle.
Change-Id: Icd948c60c1af0a4279f337bcd591cd39b46325e8
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
Ion now uses dma-buf file descriptors to share
buffers with userspace. Ion becomes a dma-buf
exporter and any driver that can import dma-bufs
can now import ion file descriptors.
Change-Id: Ia04d6d72fb301dc088eb8db6576822e9260ff332
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
Rather than requiring each platform call memblock_remove or reserve
from the board file, add this to ion
Change-Id: Ie418a692c13e9e0cfe93ecc83d253d3ce860fc83
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
Switch these api's from scatterlists to sg_tables
Change-Id: I8b99e39633df009d472ce24704fa26af7bb50fa2
Signed-off-by: Rebecca Schultz Zavin <rebecca@android.com>
Adds a new trace event to be called from clk_set_parent. Some
cpufreq drivers, including Tegra, reparent the cpu clock to a
slower clock while the main pll is relocking, tracing
clk_set_parent allows traces to show how for long the cpu is
running slower.
Uses a separate TRACE_EVENT instead of the clock event class to
allow the event to contain string names for the child and the
parent.
Signed-off-by: Colin Cross <ccross@android.com>
Send notifications when the label becomes active after an idle period.
Send netlink message notifications in addition to sysfs notifications.
Using a uevent with
subsystem=xt_idletimer
INTERFACE=...
STATE={active,inactive}
This is backport from common android-3.0
commit: beb914e987
with uevent support instead of a new netlink message type.
Change-Id: I31677ef00c94b5f82c8457e5bf9e5e584c23c523
Signed-off-by: Ashish Sharma <ashishsharma@google.com>
Signed-off-by: JP Abgrall <jpa@google.com>
This is required to pass the headers_check
Change-Id: Ic4c773973278cbdf1cb4eb66473826cb96ccbfb3
Signed-off-by: Andrey Konovalov <andrey.konovalov@linaro.org>
Based on previous patches by Tero Kristo <tero.kristo@nokia.com>,
Brian Steuer <bsteuer@codeaurora.org>,
David Ng <dave@codeaurora.org>,
Antti P Miettinen <amiettinen@nvidia.com>, and
Thomas Renninger <trenn@suse.de>
Change-Id: Ic55fedcf6f9310f43a7022fb88e23b0392122769
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
USB accessory mode allows users to connect USB host hardware
specifically designed for Android-powered devices. The accessories
must adhere to the Android accessory protocol outlined in the
http://accessories.android.com documentation. This allows
Android devices that cannot act as a USB host to still interact with
USB hardware. When an Android device is in USB accessory mode, the
attached Android USB accessory acts as the host, provides power
to the USB bus, and enumerates connected devices.
Signed-off-by: Mike Lockwood <lockwood@android.com>
USB gadget function driver used by the Android framework to
implement the MTP and PTP protocols. It creates a character device
that provides an interface for fast transfer of files and
supports transferring files greater than 4GB.
Signed-off-by: Mike Lockwood <lockwood@android.com>
Add input_register callback which gets called after
hid_configure_usage is called for all the reports
and before the input device is registered. This allows
individual drivers to do extra work like input mapping just
before device registration.
Based on discussions with David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
Change-Id: Idab6fb4f7b1e5e569bd0410967288717e9d34c98
Signed-off-by: Jaikumar Ganesh <jaikumarg@android.com>
Changed to add return code to input_configured instead of
adding input_register
Signed-off-by: Arve Hjønnevåg <arve@android.com>
The original xt_quota in the kernel is plain broken:
- counts quota at a per CPU level
(was written back when ubiquitous SMP was just a dream)
- provides no way to count across IPV4/IPV6.
This patch is the original unaltered code from:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/xtables-addons
at commit e84391ce665cef046967f796dd91026851d6bbf3
Change-Id: I19d49858840effee9ecf6cff03c23b45a97efdeb
Signed-off-by: JP Abgrall <jpa@google.com>
This module allows tracking stats at the socket level for given UIDs.
It replaces xt_owner.
If the --uid-owner is not specified, it will just count stats based on
who the skb belongs to. This will even happen on incoming skbs as it
looks into the skb via xt_socket magic to see who owns it.
If an skb is lost, it will be assigned to uid=0.
To control what sockets of what UIDs are tagged by what, one uses:
echo t $sock_fd $accounting_tag $the_billed_uid \
> /proc/net/xt_qtaguid/ctrl
So whenever an skb belongs to a sock_fd, it will be accounted against
$the_billed_uid
and matching stats will show up under the uid with the given
$accounting_tag.
Because the number of allocations for the stats structs is not that big:
~500 apps * 32 per app
we'll just do it atomic. This avoids walking lists many times, and
the fancy worker thread handling. Slabs will grow when needed later.
It use netdevice and inetaddr notifications instead of hooks in the core dev
code to track when a device comes and goes. This removes the need for
exposed iface_stat.h.
Put procfs dirs in /proc/net/xt_qtaguid/
ctrl
stats
iface_stat/<iface>/...
The uid stats are obtainable in ./stats.
Change-Id: I01af4fd91c8de651668d3decb76d9bdc1e343919
Signed-off-by: JP Abgrall <jpa@google.com>
The socket matching function has some nifty logic to get the struct sock
from the skb or from the connection tracker.
We export this so other xt_* can use it, similarly to ho how
xt_socket uses nf_tproxy_get_sock.
Change-Id: I11c58f59087e7f7ae09e4abd4b937cd3370fa2fd
Signed-off-by: JP Abgrall <jpa@google.com>
PPP handles packet loss but does not work with out of order packets.
This change performs reordering of incoming data packets within a
sliding window of one second. Since sequence number is optional,
receiving a packet without it will drop all queued packets.
Currently the logic is triggered by incoming packets, so queued
packets have to wait till another packet is arrived. It is done for
simplicity since no additional locks or threads are required. For
reliable protocols, a retransmission will kick it. For unreliable
protocols, queued packets just seem like packet loss. Time-critical
protocols might be broken, but they never work with queueing anyway.
Signed-off-by: Chia-chi Yeh <chiachi@android.com>
This governor is designed for latency-sensitive workloads, such as
interactive user interfaces. The interactive governor aims to be
significantly more responsive to ramp CPU quickly up when CPU-intensive
activity begins.
Existing governors sample CPU load at a particular rate, typically
every X ms. This can lead to under-powering UI threads for the period of
time during which the user begins interacting with a previously-idle system
until the next sample period happens.
The 'interactive' governor uses a different approach. Instead of sampling
the CPU at a specified rate, the governor will check whether to scale the
CPU frequency up soon after coming out of idle. When the CPU comes out of
idle, a timer is configured to fire within 1-2 ticks. If the CPU is very
busy from exiting idle to when the timer fires then we assume the CPU is
underpowered and ramp to MAX speed.
If the CPU was not sufficiently busy to immediately ramp to MAX speed, then
the governor evaluates the CPU load since the last speed adjustment,
choosing the highest value between that longer-term load or the short-term
load since idle exit to determine the CPU speed to ramp to.
A realtime thread is used for scaling up, giving the remaining tasks the
CPU performance benefit, unlike existing governors which are more likely to
schedule rampup work to occur after your performance starved tasks have
completed.
The tuneables for this governor are:
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/interactive/min_sample_time:
The minimum amount of time to spend at the current frequency before
ramping down. This is to ensure that the governor has seen enough
historic CPU load data to determine the appropriate workload.
Default is 80000 uS.
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpufreq/interactive/go_maxspeed_load
The CPU load at which to ramp to max speed. Default is 85.
Change-Id: Ib2b362607c62f7c56d35f44a9ef3280f98c17585
Signed-off-by: Mike Chan <mike@android.com>
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
Bug: 3152864
Move the x86_64 idle notifiers originally by Andi Kleen and Venkatesh
Pallipadi to generic.
Change-Id: Idf29cda15be151f494ff245933c12462643388d5
Acked-by: Nicolas Pitre <nicolas.pitre@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Todd Poynor <toddpoynor@google.com>
When enabled, tracks the frequency of network transmissions
(inbound and outbound) and buckets them accordingly.
Buckets are determined by time between network activity.
Each bucket represents the number of network transmisions that were
N sec or longer apart. Where N is defined as 1 << bucket index.
This network pattern tracking is particularly useful for wireless
networks (ie: 3G) where batching network activity closely together
is more power efficient than far apart.
New file: /proc/net/stat/activity
output:
Min Bucket(sec) Count
1 7
2 0
4 1
8 0
16 0
32 2
64 1
128 0
Change-Id: I4c4cd8627b872a55f326b1715c51bc3bdd6e8d92
Signed-off-by: Mike Chan <mike@android.com>
This patch adds a notifier which can be used by subsystems that may
be interested in when a task has completely died and is about to
have it's last resource freed.
The Android lowmemory killer uses this to determine when a task
it has killed has finally given up its goods.
Signed-off-by: San Mehat <san@google.com>
__u16 sco_pkt_type is introduced to struct sockaddr_sco. It allows bitwise
selection of SCO/eSCO packet types. Currently those bits are:
0x0001 HV1 may be used.
0x0002 HV2 may be used.
0x0004 HV3 may be used.
0x0008 EV3 may be used.
0x0010 EV4 may be used.
0x0020 EV5 may be used.
0x0040 2-EV3 may be used.
0x0080 3-EV3 may be used.
0x0100 2-EV5 may be used.
0x0200 3-EV5 may be used.
This is similar to the Packet Type parameter in the HCI Setup Synchronous
Connection Command, except that we are not reversing the logic on the EDR bits.
This makes the use of sco_pkt_tpye forward portable for the use case of
white-listing packet types, which we expect will be the primary use case.
If sco_pkt_type is zero, or userspace uses the old struct sockaddr_sco,
then the default behavior is to allow all packet types.
Packet type selection is just a request made to the Bluetooth chipset, and
it is up to the link manager on the chipset to negiotiate and decide on the
actual packet types used. Furthermore, when a SCO/eSCO connection is eventually
made there is no way for the host stack to determine which packet type was used
(however it is possible to get the link type of SCO or eSCO).
sco_pkt_type is ignored for incoming SCO connections. It is possible
to add this in the future as a parameter to the Accept Synchronous Connection
Command, however its a little trickier because the kernel does not
currently preserve sockaddr_sco data between userspace calls to accept().
The most common use for sco_pkt_type will be to white-list only SCO packets,
which can be done with the hci.h constant SCO_ESCO_MASK.
This patch is motivated by broken Bluetooth carkits such as the Motorolo
HF850 (it claims to support eSCO, but will actually reject eSCO connections
after 5 seconds) and the 2007/2008 Infiniti G35/37 (fails to route audio
if a 2-EV5 packet type is negiotiated). With this patch userspace can maintain
a list of compatible packet types to workaround remote devices such as these.
Based on a patch by Marcel Holtmann.
Rebased to 2.6.39.
Change-Id: Ide1c89574fa4f6f1b9218282e1af17051eb86315
Signed-off-by: Nick Pelly <npelly@google.com>