Missed issues in truss on at least armv7 and powerpcspe need to be
resolved before recommit.
This reverts commit 3889fb8af0.
This reverts commit 1544e0f5d1.
This more clearly differentiates system call arguments from integer
registers and return values. On current architectures it has no effect,
but on architectures where pointers are not integers (CHERI) and may
not even share registers (CHERI-MIPS) it is necessiary to differentiate
between system call arguments (syscallarg_t) and integer register values
(register_t).
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Reviewed by: imp, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33780
Notably, the current compat_options only makes sense for native and
freebsd32 ABIs. For the others, it just adds cruft. Switch to having
sets of compat options, and default to the native set. Setup the other
ABIs where it doesn't make sense to opt-out of the native set.
This removes some redundant COMPAT_FREEBSD* stuff from Linuxolator bits.
line_expr in makesyscalls.lua is fixed to allow empty strings to be
specified, since they're harmless.
Reviewed by: brooks, kib (both earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33356
This type is for system call multiplexers (syscall(2), __syscall(2))
that don't have a normal handler and instead are handled in the
machine-dependent syscall code.
Reviewed by: kib, imp
While we can detect most ABI changes through analysis of
syscalls.master with suitable annotations, to cases are handled
in the core implementation and others have changes that can not be
infered. Add two new config variables syscall_abi_change and
syscall_no_abi_change which override the detected value. Both are
space-seperated lists of syscall names.
Reviewed by: kevans
Use pattern matching including matches of _Contains_*_ argument
annotations to (mostly) determine which system calls require
ABI-specific handling. Automatically treat syscalls as NOPROTO
if no ABI changes are present.
Reviewed by: kevans
The obsol and unimpl config variables are space-seperated lists of
syscalls that should treated as being declared OBSOL and UNIMPL.
The allows an ABI to exclude select system calls listed in
syscalls.master.
Reviewed by: kevans
On 32-bit architectures, 64-bit arguments are passed in pairs of
registers. On non-x86 architectures these arguments must be in evenly
aligned registers which necessiciates inserting a pad register into the
argument list. This has historically been supported by adding ifdefs
around padded and unpadded syscall defintions in syscalls.master.
In order to enable generation of 32-bit support files from the base
syscalls.master, pull this support in to makesyscalls.lua enabled by
adding pair_64bit to abi_flags.
The changes to sys_proto.h simply add #ifdef PAD64_REQUIRED
around pad arguments in struct <syscall>_args. In systrace_args(),
replace static syscall index values with post-incremented indexs
allowing a simple ifdef around the argument. Under -O1 or higher
code generation is identical. systrace_entry_setargdesc() is a bit
more complicated as we switch on argument indices. Solve this
with some use of define/undef pairs to compute the correct indices.
Reviewed by: kevans
Replace long-derived types with their abi equivalent where
required by the target ABI. There are two cases:
- All pointers to types that go from 64-bit to 32-bit between the
default ABI and the target ABI.
- Signed arguments that go from 64-bit to 32-bit (these require
sign-extension before passing to general kernel ABIs).
This adds four new config variables: abi_long, semid_t, abi_size_t,
and abi_u_long which default to long, size_t, and u_long respectively.
Reviewed by: kevans
Translate instances of intptr_t to the config value abi_intptr_t
(defaults to "intptr_t"). Used in CheriABI to translate intptr_t
to intcap_t for hybrid kernels.
Reviewed by: kevans
When the string %%ABI_HEADERS%% is found in syscalls.master, replace
it with the contents of the abi_headers config variable. This allows
an ABI-specific syscalls.conf to add lines like:
#include <compat/freebsd32/freebsd32.h>
when working from a shared syscalls.master.
Reviewed by: kevans
Improves our error reporting, ensuring that we aren't just ignoring
errors in the common case.
Note specifically the boundary where we have to change up our error
handling approach. It's fine to error() out up until we create the
tempdir, then the rest should try to handle it gracefully and abort().
A future change will clean this up further by pcall'ing all of the bits
that cannot currently error() without cleaning up.
This was previously needed only for CloudABI, which used it to generate
its capenabled from syscalls.master. CloudABI was removed in
cf0ee8738e, so we don't need to support this anymore. Others looking
to do similar things should come up with a more integrated technique,
such as a .conf flag or pattern/glob support. brooks suggests that it
could be done in modern makesyscalls.lua by adding a config flag to
specify always-on/initial flags (CAPENABLED).
Reviewed by: brooks, imp
MFC after: never
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32095
According to https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc:
CloudABI is no longer being maintained. It was an awesome experiment,
but it never got enough traction to be sustainable.
There is no reason to keep it in FreeBSD.
Approved by: ed (private mail)
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31923
The CAPENABLED flag indicates that the syscall can be used in capsicum
capability mode. It is intended to replace capabilities.conf.
Reviewed by: kevans, emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31349
We generally like to avoid style changes when other changes are not
planned. In this case there are some makesyscalls.lua changes in the
pipeline, and this cleans up style nits in generated files that were
highlighted by experiments with clang-format.
Reviewed by: brooks, kevans
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30235
RESERVED syscall number are reserved for local/vendor use. RESERVED is
identical to UNIMPL except that comments are ignored.
Reviewed by: kevans
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27988
designated initializers. This makes it easier to modify 'struct sysent'
layout.
Reviewed by: kevans
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26530
There were two separate issues here:
1.) #if/#else wasn't taken into account at all for maxsyscall figures, but
2.) We didn't validate contiguous syscall numbers anyways...
This kind of inconsistency is bad as we don't currently ensure explicit
indexing of, e.g., the sysent array if one syscall is unimplemented/missing.
This could be fixed and might be more robust, but it's also good to have the
"documentation" that comes from being explicit as to what the missing
syscalls are.
The new version looks much like the awk version; stash off the current
'last highest syscall seen' if we hit an #if, restore to that if we hit an
#else, and make sure that we're explicitly always defining the next syscall.
The logic at the tail end of process_syscall_def that moves maxsyscall has
been 'cleaned up' a little since we're now ensuring that it's monotonically
increasing earlier in the function. At the moment I think it's unlikely we'd
see range-definitions that are not UNIMPL, but there's no reason to
specifically handle that case for bumping maxsyscall there.
This change was provoked by reading the commit message for r363832 and
realizing that this validation hadn't been included in the initial rewrite
to lua.
Reviewed by: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25945
This makes makesyscalls.lua more parallel-friendly, or at least not as
hostile to the idea. We get into situations where we're running parallel if
we end up with MAKE_JOBS>1 entering any of the sysent targets, since each
output file is recognized a distinct build step that needs to be executed.
Another commit will add some .ORDER to further improve the situation.
Reported by: jhb
Reviewed by: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23098
These are insignificant as far as declarations go, and we've historically
allowed it. fhlinkat in ^/sys/kern/syscalls.master, for example, currently
has a trailing comma after its final argument that this version of
makesyscalls is ignoring (not by conscious decision).
Fix it for now by actively stripping off trailing whitespace/commas until
we decide to actively prohibit it.
The current version will strip out #include directives appearing inside strings, which is clearly wrong. Improve the processing entirely in the following ways:
- Strip only whole-line comments on every single iteration
- Abort if we see a malformed line that doesn't match the key=value format
- For quoted (backtick or double quote) strings, we'll advance to the end of
the key=value pair and make sure there's not extra stuff left over
- For unquoted key=value pairs, we'll strip any trailing comments and verify
there's no internal whitespace
This has revealed the caveat that key/value pairs can't even include escaped quotes (and haven't been able to). I don't know if this is actually problematic, as we're usually looking at cases like "#include <foo>" or raw identifiers.The current version will strip out #include directives appearing inside strings, which is clearly wrong. Improve the processing entirely in the following ways:
Reviewed and noticed by: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22698
This currently requires a suitable lua + luafilesystem + luaposix from the
ports tree to build. Discussion is underway in D21893 to add a suitable lua
to the base system, cleverly disguised and out of the way of normal
consumers.
makesyscalls.sh is a good target for rewrite into lua as it's currently a
sh+sed+awk script that can be difficult to add on to, at times. For
instance, adding a new COMPAT* option (that mimicks the behaivor of most
other COMPAT* options) requires a fairly substantial amount of copy/paste;
see r352693 for instance. Attempts to generate part of the awk script for
COMPAT* handling was (very kindly) rejected with a desire to just rewrite
the script in a single language that can handle all of it.
Reviewed by: brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21775