filling in the same defaults that the current userland module uses.
This allows an old geom_nop.so userland module to work with a new kernel.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21972
the request. It is the same as gctl_get_paraml() except that the request
is not marked with an error if the parameter is not present.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21972
I/O requests after the given number have been allowed though.
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Reviewed by: rpokala kib 0mp mckusick
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21593
GEOM is supposed to be topology-agnostic, but the GPT and BSD partition code
has arbitrary restrictions on nesting that are annoying in cases such as
running VMs on raw partitions (since the VM's partitioning scheme is not
visible to the host).
This patch adds sysctls to disable the restrictions except in the case of
BSD label (and similar) partitions with offset 0 (where we need to avoid
recursively recognizing the label).
Submitted by: Andrew Gierth
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21350
The Zstd format bumps the CLOOP major number to 4 to avoid incompatibility
with older systems. Support in geom_uzip(4) is conditional on the ZSTDIO
kernel option, which is enabled in amd64 GENERIC, but not all in-tree
configurations.
mkuzip(8) was modified slightly to always initialize the nblocks + 1'th
offset in the CLOOP file format. Previously, it was only initialized in the
case where the final compressed block happened to be unaligned w.r.t.
DEV_BSIZE. The "Fake" last+1 block change in r298619 means that the final
compressed block's 'blen' was never correct unless the compressed uzip image
happened to be BSIZE-aligned. This happened in about 1 out of every 512
cases. The zlib and lzma decompressors are probably tolerant of extra trash
following the frame they were told to decode, but Zstd complains that the
input size is incorrect.
Correspondingly, geom_uzip(4) was modified slightly to avoid trashing the
nblocks + 1'th offset when it is known to be initialized to a good value.
This corrects the calculated final real cluster compressed length to match
that printed by mkuzip(8).
mkuzip(8) was refactored somewhat to reduce code duplication and increase
ease of adding other compression formats.
* Input block size validation was pulled out of individual compression
init routines into main().
* Init routines now validate a user-provided compression level or select
an algorithm-specific default, if none was provided.
* A new interface for calculating the maximal compressed size of an
incompressible input block was added for each driver. The generic code
uses it to validate against MAXPHYS as well as to allocate compression
result buffers in the generic code.
* Algorithm selection is now driven by a table lookup, to increase ease of
adding other formats in the future.
mkuzip(8) gained the ability to explicitly specify a compression level with
'-C'. The prior defaults -- 9 for zlib and 6 for lzma -- are maintained.
The new zstd default is 9, to match zlib.
Rather than select lzma or zlib with '-L' or its absense, respectively, a
new argument '-A <algorithm>' is provided to select 'zlib', 'lzma', or
'zstd'. '-L' is considered deprecated, but will probably never be removed.
All of the new features were documented in mkuzip.8; the page was also
cleaned up slightly.
Relnotes: yes
Follow-up on r322318 and r322319 and remove the deprecated modules.
Shift some now-unused kernel files into userspace utilities that incorporate
them. Remove references to removed GEOM classes in userspace utilities.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21249
- Use new zlib headers;
- Removed z_alloc and z_free to use the common sys/dev/zlib version.
- Replace z_compressBound with compressBound from zlib.
While there, limit LZMA CFLAGS to apply only for g_uzip_lzma.c.
PR: 229763
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota j email ne jp> (with changes,
bugs are mine)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20271
Similar to what was done for device_printfs in r347229.
Convert g_print_bio() to a thin shim around g_format_bio(), which acts on an
sbuf; documented in g_bio.9.
Reviewed by: markj
Discussed with: rlibby
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21165
This allows to simulated disk that is responding slowly to the IO requests.
Reviewed by: markj, bcr, pjd (previous version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21052
If g_mirror_taste encountered an error at g_mirror_add_disk, it might
try to g_mirror_destroy the device with the G_MIRROR_DEVICE_FLAG_TASTING
flag still set. This would wait on a worker to complete the destruction
with g_mirror_try_destroy, but that function bails out if the tasting
flag is set, resulting in a deadlock. Clear the tasting flag before
trying to destroy the device.
Test Plan:
sysctl debug.fail_point.mnowait="1%return"
kyua test -k /usr/tests/sys/geom/class/mirror/Kyuafile
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20744
NANDFS has been broken for years. Remove it. The NAND drivers that
remain are for ancient parts that are no longer relevant. They are
polled, have terrible performance and just for ancient arm
hardware. NAND parts have evolved significantly from this early work
and little to none of it would be relevant should someone need to
update to support raw nand. This code has been off by default for
years and has violated the vnode protocol leading to panics since it
was committed.
Numerous posts to arch@ and other locations have found no actual users
for this software.
Relnotes: Yes
No Objection From: arch@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20745
When it comes to megabytes of text, difference between sbuf_printf() and
sbuf_cat() becomes substantial.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
On large systems those sysctls may generate megabytes of output. Before
this change sbuf(9) code was resizing buffer by 4KB each time many times,
generating tons of TLB shootdowns. Unfortunately in this case existing
sbuf_new_for_sysctl() mechanism, supposed to help with this issue, is not
applicable, since all the sbuf writes are done in different kernel thread.
This change improves situation in two ways:
- on first sysctl call, not providing any output buffer, it sets special
sbuf drain function, just counting the data and so not needing big buffer;
- on second sysctl call it uses as initial buffer size value saved on
previous call, so that in most cases there will be no reallocation, unless
GEOM topology changed significantly.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
rename the source to gsb_crc32.c.
This is a prerequisite of unifying kernel zlib instances.
PR: 229763
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20193
operations already in its queue were not being properly drained.
The GEOM framework does the queue draining, but the module needs
to wait for the draining to happen. The waiting is done by adding
a g_nop_providergone() function to wait for the I/O operations to
finish up. This change is similar to change -r345758 made to the
memory-disk driver.
Submitted by: Chuck Silvers
Tested by: Chuck Silvers
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netflix
- Triple DES has been formally deprecated in Kerberos (RFC 8429)
and is soon to be deprecated in IPsec (RFC 8221).
- Blowfish is deprecated. FreeBSD doesn't support its successor
(Twofish).
- MD5 is generally considered a weak digest that has known attacks.
geli refuses to create new volumes using these algorithms via 'geli
init'. It also warns when attaching to existing volumes or creating
temporary volumes via 'geli onetime' . The plan is to fully remove
support for these algorithms in FreeBSD 13.
Note that none of these algorithms have ever been the default
algorithm used by geli(8). Users would have had to explicitly select
these algorithms when creating volumes in the past.
Reviewed by: cem, delphij
MFC after: 3 days
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20344
Allow users to specify multiple dump configurations in a prioritized list.
This enables fallback to secondary device(s) if primary dump fails. E.g.,
one might configure a preference for netdump, but fallback to disk dump as a
second choice if netdump is unavailable.
This change does not list-ify netdump configuration, which is tracked
separately from ordinary disk dumps internally; only one netdump
configuration can be made at a time, for now. It also does not implement
IPv6 netdump.
savecore(8) is already capable of scanning and iterating multiple devices
from /etc/fstab or passed on the command line.
This change doesn't update the rc or loader variables 'dumpdev' in any way;
it can still be set to configure a single dump device, and rc.d/savecore
still uses it as a single device. Only dumpon(8) is updated to be able to
configure the more complicated configurations for now.
As part of revving the ABI, unify netdump and disk dump configuration ioctl
/ structure, and leave room for ipv6 netdump as a future possibility.
Backwards-compatibility ioctls are added to smooth ABI transition,
especially for developers who may not keep kernel and userspace perfectly
synced.
Reviewed by: markj, scottl (earlier version)
Relnotes: maybe
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19996
There's a race between the initialization of devsoftc.mtx (by devinit)
and the creation of the geom worker thread g_run_events, which calls
devctl_queue_data_f. Both of those are initialized at SI_SUB_DRIVERS
and SI_ORDER_FIRST, which means the geom worked thread can be created
before the mutex has been initialized, leading to the panic below:
wpanic: mtx_lock() of spin mutex (null) @ /usr/home/osstest/build.135317.build-amd64-freebsd/freebsd/sys/kern/subr_bus.c:620
cpuid = 3
time = 1
KDB: stack backtrace:
db_trace_self_wrapper() at db_trace_self_wrapper+0x2b/frame 0xfffffe003b968710
vpanic() at vpanic+0x19d/frame 0xfffffe003b968760
panic() at panic+0x43/frame 0xfffffe003b9687c0
__mtx_lock_flags() at __mtx_lock_flags+0x145/frame 0xfffffe003b968810
devctl_queue_data_f() at devctl_queue_data_f+0x6a/frame 0xfffffe003b968840
g_dev_taste() at g_dev_taste+0x463/frame 0xfffffe003b968a00
g_load_class() at g_load_class+0x1bc/frame 0xfffffe003b968a30
g_run_events() at g_run_events+0x197/frame 0xfffffe003b968a70
fork_exit() at fork_exit+0x84/frame 0xfffffe003b968ab0
fork_trampoline() at fork_trampoline+0xe/frame 0xfffffe003b968ab0
--- trap 0, rip = 0, rsp = 0, rbp = 0 ---
KDB: enter: panic
[ thread pid 13 tid 100029 ]
Stopped at kdb_enter+0x3b: movq $0,kdb_why
Fix this by initializing geom at SI_ORDER_SECOND instead of
SI_ORDER_FIRST.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kevans, markj
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20148
destroy_dev_sched_cb() is excessively asynchronous, and during media change
retaste new provider may appear sooner then device of the previous one get
destroyed.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
provider grows, GELI will expand automatically and will move the metadata
to the new location of the last sector.
This functionality is turned on by default. It can be turned off with the
-R flag, but it is not recommended - if the underlying provider grows and
automatic expansion is turned off, it won't be possible to attach this
provider again, as the metadata is no longer located in the last sector.
If the automatic expansion is turned off and the underlying provider grows,
GELI will only log a message with the previous size of the provider, so
recovery can be easier.
Obtained from: Fudo Security
providers mediasize changes.
While here, use GEOM nomenclature to describe providers instead of calling
them device nodes.
Obtained from: Fudo Security
Tested in: AWS
While geom_flashmap has always supported label names for its slices, it does
so by appending "s.labelname" to the provider device name, meaning you still
have to know the name and unit of the hardware device to use the labels.
These changes add support for device-independent geom_flashmap labels, using
the standard geom_label infrastructure. geom_flashmap now creates a softc
struct attached to its geom, and as it creates slices it stores the label
into an array in the softc. The new geom_label_flashmap uses those labels
when tasting a geom_flashmap provider.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19535
In revision 254095, gpt_entries is not set to match the on-disk
hdr_entries, but rather is computed based on available space.
There are 2 problems with this:
1. The GPT backend respects hdr_entries and only reads and writes
that number of partition entries. On top of that, CRC32 is
computed over the table that has hdr_entries elements. When
the common code works on what is possibly a larger number, the
behaviour becomes inconsistent and problematic. In particular,
it would be possible to add a new partition that on a reboot
isn't there anymore.
2. The calculation of gpt_entries is based on flawed assumptions.
The GPT specification does not dictate that sectors are layed
out in a particular way that the available space can be
determined by looking at LBAs. In practice, implementations
do the same thing, because there's no reason to do it any
other way. Still, GPT allows certain freedoms that can be
exploited in some form or shape if the need arises.
PR: 229977
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19438
Embedded lzma decompression library becomes a module usable by other
consumers, in addition to geom_uzip.
Most important code changes are
- removal of XZ_DEC_SINGLE define, we need the code to work
with XZ_DEC_DYNALLOC;
- xz_crc32_init() call is removed from geom_uzip, xz module handles
initialization on its own.
xz is no longer embedded into geom_uzip, instead the depend line for
the module is provided, and corresponding kernel option is added to
each MIPS kernel config file using geom_uzip.
The commit also carries unrelated cleanup by removing excess "device geom_uzip"
in places which were missed in r344479.
Reviewed by: cem, hselasky, ray, slavash (previous versions)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19266
MFC after: 3 weeks
The DIOCGETZONE ioctl can be used to fetch the zone list of an SMR
drive, and the caller specifies the number of entries it wants to fetch.
Clamp the caller's request to a sane limit so that a user cannot attempt
large allocations. Callers already need to invoke the ioctl multiple
times to fetch the full list in general, so there's no harm in limiting
the number of entries returned.
Fix style while here.
admbug: 807
Reported by: Ilja Van Sprundel <ivansprundel@ioactive.com>
Reviewed by: asomers, ken
Tested by: ken
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19249
Otherwise a privileged user can trigger a memory allocation of
unbounded size, or an integer overflow in the subsequent
geom_alloc_copyin() call, leading to out-of-bounds accesses.
Hard-code a large limit to circumvent this problem.
admbug: 854
Reported by: Anonymous of the Shellphish Grill Team
Reviewed by: ae
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19251
gmirror's sc_flags is shared between some on-disk state and some runtime
only state. There's no real reason for that and they could probably be
split up. Until they are, locate all of the flags for the same field
nearby each other in the source, for clarity.
No functional change.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
g_handleattr() fills out bp->bio_completed; otherwise, g_getattr()
returns an error in response to the query. This caused BIO_DELETE
support to not be propagated through stacked configurations, e.g.,
a gconcat of gmirror volumes would not handle BIO_DELETE even when
the gmirrors do. g_io_getattr() was not affected by the problem.
PR: 232676
Reported and tested by: noah.bergbauer@tum.de
MFC after: 1 week
Mutexes in I/O path there were used twice per I/O to atomically access
several variables to close and/or destroy the device on last request
completion. I found the way to fit all required info into one integer,
suitable for atomic operations. It opened race window on device close,
but addition of timeout to the msleep() there should cover it.
Profiling shows removal of significant spinning time on those mutexes
and IOPS increase from ~600K to >800K to NVMe on 72-core systems.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
I mistakenly added a lock assertion to this routine at the last minute
without confirming it was held during g_mirror_create. It isn't (it isn't
even initialized yet). Mea culpa. Access is exclusive in both callers,
just not always by that particular lock.
Reported by: lwhsu
X-MFC-With: r341840, r341674
r341674 inadvertently introduced a bug where newer mirror components being
tasted would clear the high sc_flags that are not controlled by component
metadata, such as G_MIRROR_DEVICE_FLAG_TASTING. This could plausibly expose
a small window of time during STARTING where device destruction might race
with mirror component addition, probably resulting in a crash.
Reviewed by: markj
X-MFC-With: r341674
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18521
Re-apply r341665 with format strings fixed.
If we happen to taste a stale mirror component first, don't reject valid,
newer components that have differing metadata from the stale component
(during STARTING). Instead, update our view of the most recent metadata as
we taste components.
Like mediasize beforehand, remove some checks from g_mirror_check_metadata
which would evict valid components due to metadata that can change over a
mirror's lifetime. g_mirror_check_metadata is invoked long before we check
genid/syncid and decide which component(s) are newest and whether or not we
have quorum.
Before checking if we can enter RUNNING (i.e., we have quorum) after a NEW
component is added, first remove any known stale or inconsistent disks from
the mirrorset, rather than removing them *after* deciding we have quorum.
Check if we have quorum after removing these components.
Additionally, add a knob, kern.geom.mirror.launch_mirror_before_timeout, to
force gmirrors to wait out the full timeout (kern.geom.mirror.timeout)
before transitioning from STARTING to RUNNING. This is a kludge to help
ensure all eligible, boot-time available mirror components are tasted before
RUNNING a gmirror.
Add a basic test case for STARTING -> RUNNING startup behavior around stale
genids.
PR: 232671, 232835
Submitted by: Cindy Yang <cyang AT isilon.com> (previous version)
Reviewed by: markj (kernel portions)
Discussed with: asomers, Cindy Yang
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18062
If we happen to taste a stale mirror component first, don't reject valid,
newer components that have differing metadata from the stale component
(during STARTING). Instead, update our view of the most recent metadata as
we taste components.
Like mediasize beforehand, remove some checks from g_mirror_check_metadata
which would evict valid components due to metadata that can change over a
mirror's lifetime. g_mirror_check_metadata is invoked long before we check
genid/syncid and decide which component(s) are newest and whether or not we
have quorum.
Before checking if we can enter RUNNING (i.e., we have quorum) after a NEW
component is added, first remove any known stale or inconsistent disks from
the mirrorset, rather than removing them *after* deciding we have quorum.
Check if we have quorum after removing these components.
Additionally, add a knob, kern.geom.mirror.launch_mirror_before_timeout, to
force gmirrors to wait out the full timeout (kern.geom.mirror.timeout)
before transitioning from STARTING to RUNNING. This is a kludge to help
ensure all eligible, boot-time available mirror components are tasted before
RUNNING a gmirror.
When we are instructed to forget mirror components, bump the generation id
to avoid confusion with such stale components later.
Add a basic test case for STARTING -> RUNNING startup behavior around stale
genids.
PR: 232671, 232835
Submitted by: Cindy Yang <cyang AT isilon.com> (previous version)
Reviewed by: markj (kernel portions)
Discussed with: asomers, Cindy Yang
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18062
superblock has a check-hash error, an error message noting the
superblock check-hash failure is printed and the mount fails. The
administrator then runs fsck to repair the filesystem and when
successful, the filesystem can once again be mounted.
This approach fails if the filesystem in question is a root filesystem
from which you are trying to boot. Here, the loader fails when trying
to access the filesystem to get the kernel to boot. So it is necessary
to allow the loader to ignore the superblock check-hash error and make
a best effort to read the kernel. The filesystem may be suffiently
corrupted that the read attempt fails, but there is no harm in trying
since the loader makes no attempt to write to the filesystem.
Once the kernel is loaded and starts to run, it attempts to mount its
root filesystem. Once again, failure means that it breaks to its prompt
to ask where to get its root filesystem. Unless you have an alternate
root filesystem, you are stuck.
Since the root filesystem is initially mounted read-only, it is
safe to make an attempt to mount the root filesystem with the failed
superblock check-hash. Thus, when asked to mount a root filesystem
with a failed superblock check-hash, the kernel prints a warning
message that the root filesystem superblock check-hash needs repair,
but notes that it is ignoring the error and proceeding. It does
mark the filesystem as needing an fsck which prevents it from being
enabled for writing until fsck has been run on it. The net effect
is that the reboot fails to single user, but at least at that point
the administrator has the tools at hand to fix the problem.
Reported by: Rick Macklem (rmacklem@)
Discussed with: Warner Losh (imp@)
Sponsored by: Netflix
handling slightly out-of-bound requests properly (r340187).
Perform range check here rather then rely on g_delete_data() to DTRT.
The g_delete_data() would always return success for requests
starting just the next byte after providers media boundary.
MFC after: 4 weeks
from setting the volume serial number. This unbreaks older boot blocks
that don't support serial numbers, and allows boot0cfg to set the serial
number itself if requested by the user.
Submitted by: lev@, yuripv@
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17386
i/o into last_sector+N is handled differently for N==1 and N>1 cases to
accomodate that, so some other approach would be needed to fix DIOCGDELETE
ioctl(2).