Previously lualoader would remain silent, rather than printing
command_errmsg or noting that a command had failed or was not found.
Approved by: re (gjb)
We no longer really need a separate zfsloader. It was useful when we
were first supporting ZFS and had limited ability to properly boot off
of ZFS without the special boot loader. Now that the boot loader has
matured, go the way loader.efi pioneered and just build one
binary. Change the name of the loader to load in the secondary boot
blocks to be just /boot/loader. Provide a symbolic link from zfsloader
to loader so people who have not upgraded their boot blocks are not
affected. This has the happy benefit of making coexistence easier as
well (fewer binaries in the matrix).
Discussed with: allanjude@, kevans@
RelNotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16361
This moves the bulk of the geli support from lib386/biosdisk.c into a new
geli/gelidev.c which implements a devsw-type device whose dv_strategy()
function handles geli decryption. Support for all arches comes from moving
the taste-and-attach code to the devopen() function in libsa.
After opening any DEVT_DISK device, devopen() calls the new function
geli_probe_and_attach(), which will "attach" the geli code to the open_file
struct by creating a geli_devdesc instance to replace the disk_devdesc
instance in the open_file. That routes all IO for the device through the
geli code.
A new public geli_add_key() function is added, to allow arch/vendor-specific
code to add keys obtained from custom hardware or other sources.
With these changes, geli support will be compiled into all variations of
loader(8) on all arches because the default is WITH_LOADER_GELI.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Microchip Technology Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15743
Eliminate 4 of the copies of the arg parsing in /boot/laoder
by using boot_parse_cmdline.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16205
While ../zfs/libzfs.h mostly works, there are a few situations where
it does not. Eliminate the problem by using plain libzfs.h, like we do
for ufs support. This fixes the weird cases, and is easier to
understand. It also follows the general style convetion of avoiding
../ in #includes.
If a disk is of an oddball size, like the 200mb + 512b used in rootgen.sh,
when disk_open() is called on a GELI encrypted partition, attempts to read
the partition table fail, as they pass through the decryption process which
turns the already plaintext data into jibberish.
When reading the partition table, always pass a slice and partition setting
of -1, and an offset of 0. Setting the slice to -1 prevents a false
positive when checking the slice against the cache of GELI encrypted
slices.
Reviewed by: imp, ian
Sponsored by: Klara Systems
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15847
e.g. boot_mute, boot_single, boot_verbose, and friends; we checked for these
in multiple places, consolidate into common/ and allow a setting of "NO" for
any of these to turn them off. This allows systems with multiple
loader.conf(5) or loader.conf(5) overlay systems to easily turn off
variables in later processed files by setting it to NO.
Reported by: Nick Wolff @ iXsystems
Reviewed by: imp
r330809 replaced duplication of devdesc struct fields with an embedded copy
of the devdesc struct, to avoid fragility. That means all the scattered
comments indicating that structs must match are no longer valid. Likewise
asserts that attempted to mitigate some of the old fragility.
Reviewed by: imp@
* Make autoboot() a static function in stand/common/boot.c, so it does
not shadow local variables in gptboot.c and zfsboot.c.
* Remove -Winline from the Makefiles for gptboot, gptzfsboot and
zfsboot, as gcc will always fail to inline some functions, and there
is nothing we can do about it.
* For gcc <= 4.2.1, silence -Wuninitialized for isoboot, as it produces
a false positive warning.
* Remove deprecated and unnecessary -mcpu=i386 flag from stand/defs.mk,
as there is already a -march=i386 flag further in the file.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15628
r329190; sparc64 kernels are always 64-bit but with that revision
in place, the loader was treating them as 32-bit ones.
- In order to reduce the likelihood of this kind of breakage in the
future, #ifdef out md_load() on sparc64 and make md_load_dual() -
which is currently local to metadata.c anyway - static.
- Make md_getboothowto() - also local to metadata.c - static.
- Get rid of the unused DTB pointer on sparc64.
Even though we don't use it, it appears something else requires it to
be != 0 to work. This breaks tftp boot in loader.efi, so revert until
that can be sorted out.
Since we do free subtopic and desc in help_getnext(), we need to set them also
NULL, so we make sure we dont get double free().
Approved by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15082
With r328289 we attempt to make sure we free the resources allocated in
help_getnext(), however, it is possible that we get no resources allocated
and help_getnext() will return early.
Make sure we have pointers set to NULL early in help_getnext().
Reported by: Andy Fiddaman
When booted via isoboot(8) loader will be handed a disk that simply contains
an ISO9660 image. Currently this confuses it greatly. Teach it how to spot
that it's in this situation and that ISO9660 has one "partition" covering
the whole disk.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14915
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by
little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a
great soul has simply nothing to do. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
The current system is fragile and requires very careful layout of all
*_devdesc structures. It also makes it hard to change the base
devdesc. Take a page from CAM and put the 'header' in all the derived
classes and adjust the code to match.
For OFW, move the iHandle h_handle out of a slot conflicting with
d_opendata. Due to quirks in the alignment rules, this worked.
However changing the code to use d_opendata storage now that it's a
pointer is hard, so just have a separate field for it.
All other cleanups were to make the *_devdesc structures match where
they'd taken some liberties that were none-the-less compatible enough
to work.
Make sure { on the same line as struct for all struct *devdesc. Move
some type definitions to next to the dv_type define, since that's what
sets the d_type.
As noted in D14267 load_elf.c has a variety of indentation styles. Move
to standard 8 column hard tab indents, 4 space second level indents.
Also includes some whitespace cleanups found by clang-format.
There's no reason to have multiple copies of lszfs and
reloadbe. Consolidate them into one location. Also ldi_get_size is the
same everywhere (except sparc64). Make it the same everywhere as the
common definition is more general and will work on spar64.
If we failed to execute the input line as pure lua, run the command through
parse for consistent argument parsing. Pass the parsed arguments through to
a global "cli_execute" written in Lua, which is expected to either handle it
or pass it back through to interp_builtin_cmd (via loader.command).
lua-handled cli commands will then exist as globals in whatever module they
most belong in, and invocations at the loader prompt will magically dispatch
to them if they exist.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14450
metadata load files were consolidated in r329190, and these relocation fixup
bits were inadvertently dropped in the process. Re-add them to fix boot with
ubldr.
Glanced over by: jhibbits
X-MFC-With: r329190
Summary:
All metadata.c files are very similar, with only trivial changes. Unify them
into a single common file, with minor special-casing where needed.
Reviewed By: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13978
liblua glues the lua run time into the boot loader. It implements all
the runtime routines that lua expects. In addition, it has a few
standard 'C' headers that nueter various aspects of the LUA build that
are too specific to lua to be in libsa. Many refinements from the
original code to improve implementation and the number of included lua
libraries. Use int64_t for lua_Number. Have "/boot/lua" be the default
module path. Numerous cleanups from the original GSoC project,
including hacking libsa to allow lua to be built with only one change
outside luaconf.h.
Add the final bit of lua glue to bring in liblua and plug into the
multiple interpreter framework, previously committed.
Add LOADER_LUA option, currently off by default.
Presently, this is an experimental option. One must opt-in to using
this by defining WITH_LOADER_LUA and WITHOUT_FORTH. It's been
lightly tested, so keep a backup copy of your old loader handy.
The menu code, coming in the next commit, hasn't been exhaustively
tested. A LUA boot loader is 60k larger than a FORTH one, which is
80k larger than a no-interpreter one. Subtle changes in size
may tip things past some subtle limit (the binary is ~430k now
when built with LUA). A future version may offer coexistance.
Bump FreeBSD version to 1200058 to mark the milestone.
Pedro Souza's 2014 Summer of Code project. Rui Paulo, Pedro Arthur,
Zakary Nafziger and Wojciech A. Koszek also contributed. Warner Losh
reworked it extensively into its current form.
Obtained from: https://wiki.freebsd.org/SummerOfCode2014/LuaLoader
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code
Relnotes: Yes
MFC After: 1 month
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14295
r328536 broke symbol loading on amd64 at least (and probably other
arches). r328826 contained the problem to ppc only by adding
pre-processors guards.
Fix this properly by moving the endianness conversion to separate
helper functions, and make the conversion more robust by using sizeof
instead of having to manually code the size of each field.
Finally list the fields in each structure in a macro in order to avoid
code repetition.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kib emaste wma
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14267
reflect what scripting language was compiled into the loader. I
anticipate that being able to find this out quickly from the OK prompt
will be useful in troubleshooting in the future.
4 space indentation with a mix of tabs and spaces is a hassle. Update
to project-standard hard-tabs with 8-space indentation in these files.
This matches the new code coming in better as well.
As a followup to r328101, ignore relocation tables for ELF object
sections that are not memory resident. For modules loaded by the
loader, ignore relocation tables whose associated section was not
loaded by the loader (sh_addr is zero). For modules loaded at runtime
via kldload(2), ignore relocation tables whose associated section is
not marked with SHF_ALLOC.
Reported by: Mori Hiroki <yamori813@yahoo.co.jp>, adrian
Tested on: mips, mips64
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
The cross-endian loader change in r328536 (review D12422) broke symbol
loading on (at least) amd64 kernels. Temporarily paper over the issue
by restricting the cross-endian support to only powerpc, until a proper
fix arrives.
Submitted by: royger
This has never been installed. It was added to the tree disconnected
to the build in FreeBSD 5 (17 years ago) and has never been used as
far as I can tell. The desired improvements never really happened
(despite a couple minor cleanups along the way). It's relevance is
long past, so better to retire it.
akin to what Pedro Souza and Wojciech Koszek did in the lua GSoC with
interp.h, interp_simple.c and changes to interp.c and interp_forth.c,
but completely redone from scratch.
This effectively restores the spirit of r326712 (my first attempt to
bring in Pedro's and Wojciech's work) updated for new requirements
that had silently broke their original work. This change also differs
by using fixed function names instead of function pointers to simply
things. Only one interpreter at a time may be compiled in.
Also of note: we take a mutable string, pass it in via a const char *
pointer into intrp_forth's interp_run(). We then cast away the const
to pass into ficlExec since ficl would require extensive changes to
properly const-poison. See Sections 6.5.2.5 and 6.7.3 of C11 standard
noting it's only UB if you modify a const object through a non-const
pointer, but not char [] -> const char * -> char * as here.
On POWER8 with current petitpoot, the loader.kboot might be
run as little-endian application. The FreeBSD kernel is
always big-endian, so the load_elf_* routines must be aware
of proper endianness of all fields.
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: IBM, QCM Technologies
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12422
Right now, we'll leak memory when we display a help topic because we
don't free t, s, d that we've just used when breaking out of the loop.
NB: coverity just reported t, but s and d also leak.
CID: 1007776
Always free dev and fstyp before strduping new values to assign to
them. Free them at the end of the loop. This keeps them from leaking
for mal-formed /etc/fstab lines.
CID: 1007777, 1007778, 1007779
Sponsored by: Netflix
ELF object files can contain program sections which are not supposed
to be loaded into memory (e.g. .comment). Normally the static linker
uses these flags to decide which sections are allocated to loadable
program segments in ELF binaries and shared objects (including kernels
on all architectures and kernel modules on architectures other than
amd64).
Mapping ELF object files (such as amd64 kernel modules) into memory
directly is a bit of a grey area. ELF object files are intended to be
used as inputs to the static linker. As a result, there is not a
standardized definition for what the memory layout of an ELF object
should be (none of the section headers have valid virtual memory
addresses for example).
The kernel and loader were not checking the SHF_ALLOC flag but loading
any program sections with certain types such as SHT_PROGBITS. As a
result, the kernel and loader would load into RAM some sections that
weren't marked with SHF_ALLOC such as .comment that are not loaded
into RAM for kernel modules on other architectures (which are
implemented as ELF shared objects). Aside from possibly requiring
slightly more RAM to hold a kernel module this does not affect runtime
correctness as the kernel relocates symbols based on the layout it
uses.
Debuggers such as gdb and lldb do not extract symbol tables from a
running process or kernel. Instead, they replicate the memory layout
of ELF executables and shared objects and use that to construct their
own symbol tables. For executables and shared objects this works
fine. For ELF objects the current logic in kgdb (and probably lldb
based on a simple reading) assumes that only sections with SHF_ALLOC
are memory resident when constructing a memory layout. If the
debugger constructs a different memory layout than the kernel, then it
will compute different addresses for symbols causing symbols in the
debugger to appear to have the wrong values (though the kernel itself
is working fine). The current port of mdb does not check SHF_ALLOC as
it replicates the kernel's logic in its existing kernel support.
The bfd linker sorts the sections in ELF object files such that all of
the allocated sections (sections with SHF_ALLOCATED) are placed first
followed by unallocated sections. As a result, when kgdb composed a
memory layout using only the allocated sections, this layout happened
to match the layout used by the kernel and loader. The lld linker
does not sort the sections in ELF object files and mixed allocated and
unallocated sections. This resulted in kgdb composing a different
memory layout than the kernel and loader.
We could either patch kgdb (and possibly in the future lldb) to use
custom handling when generating memory layouts for kernel modules that
are ELF objects, or we could change the kernel and loader to check
SHF_ALLOCATED. I chose the latter as I feel we shouldn't be loading
things into RAM that the module won't use. This should mostly be a
NOP when linking with bfd but will allow the existing kgdb to work
with amd64 kernel modules linked with lld.
Note that we only require SHF_ALLOC for "program" sections for types
like SHT_PROGBITS and SHT_NOBITS. Other section types such as symbol
tables, string tables, and relocations must also be loaded and are not
marked with SHF_ALLOC.
Reported by: np
Reviewed by: kib, emaste
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13926
ifuncs can be only called in the (early boot) kernel environment, so
postpone resolving until early stage of the kernel boot. This commit
is performed in advance to make loaders on most machines updated
before ifuncs appear in the kernels.
Reviewed by: emaste, jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13838
removing this argument, and expanding when rc is NULL. This
effectively completes the back out of custom scripts for tftp booted
loaders from r269153 that was started in r292344 with the new path
tricks that obsoleted it.
Submitted by: Netflix
Don't print when we can't find a file. Copy it instead to the error
buffer. Higher level routines determine if it's appropriate to print
the error message.
Also, remove dead code (labeled bogusly lost functionality) since we
never used that functionality. Remove unused arg from interact() too.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Create an interp class. Use it to separate out the different types of
interpreters: forth and simple with function pointers rather than
via #ifdefs.
Obtained from: lua boot loader project
(via https://bsdimp@github.com/bsdimp/freebsd.git lua-bootloader)
Sponsored by: Netflix
latter aren't used. Prefer sys/link_elf.h to link.h so we're only
dependent on the kernel tree. The default installation of link.h just
includes this file, and any benefit from that is outweighed by the
hassle it causes. This reduces the footprint of files needed from the
system includes (or sysroot in buildworld).
Sponsored by: Netflix
greater than 2^31-1, then the result will be huge. This is unlikely,
as we don't support that many sections, but out of an abundace of
caution cast to size_t so the multiplication won't overflow
mysteriously when size_t is larger than 32-bits. The resulting code
may be a smidge larger, but this isn't super-space critical code.
CID: 1194216, 1194217, 1194222, 1194223, 1265018, 1265019,1265020,
1265021
Sponsored by: Netflix