This can be used to check existing images but will be used in the future to
find EFI ESP images placed in El Torito catalogs so they can be used for
hybrid boot purposes.
Reviewed by: imp (code), sbruno (man page), bcr (man page)
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14952
Add a new "interleave" allocation policy which stripes pages across
domains with a stride or width keeping contiguity within a multi-page
region.
Move the kernel to the dedicated numbered cpuset #2 making it possible
to assign kernel threads and memory policy separately from user. This
also eliminates the need for the complicated interrupt binding code.
Add a sysctl API for viewing and manipulating domainsets. Refactor some
of the cpuset_t manipulation code using the generic bitset type so that
it can be used for both. This probably belongs in a dedicated subr file.
Attempt to improve the include situation.
Reviewed by: kib
Discussed with: jhb (cpuset parts)
Tested by: pho (before review feedback)
Sponsored by: Netflix, Dell/EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14839
Minor rewordings, markup fixes or enhancements, and some typo fixes. Add a few
sentences clarifying the special zero duration.
PR: 227012
Submitted by: Mateusz Piotrowski (0mp@) (earlier version)
List enum values on separate lines to minimize diffs as new types are
added. Split the enum values up into groups and use some simple sorting
within groups (scalar enums are sorted by size, then base, all other
groups are generally sorted alphabetically).
No functional change.
summits at BSDCan and BSDCam in 2017.
The TCP Blackbox Recorder allows you to capture events on a TCP connection
in a ring buffer. It stores metadata with the event. It optionally stores
the TCP header associated with an event (if the event is associated with a
packet) and also optionally stores information on the sockets.
It supports setting a log ID on a TCP connection and using this to correlate
multiple connections that share a common log ID.
You can log connections in different modes. If you are doing a coordinated
test with a particular connection, you may tell the system to put it in
mode 4 (continuous dump). Or, if you just want to monitor for errors, you
can put it in mode 1 (ring buffer) and dump all the ring buffers associated
with the connection ID when we receive an error signal for that connection
ID. You can set a default mode that will be applied to a particular ratio
of incoming connections. You can also manually set a mode using a socket
option.
This commit includes only basic probes. rrs@ has added quite an abundance
of probes in his TCP development work. He plans to commit those soon.
There are user-space programs which we plan to commit as ports. These read
the data from the log device and output pcapng files, and then let you
analyze the data (and metadata) in the pcapng files.
Reviewed by: gnn (previous version)
Obtained from: Netflix, Inc.
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11085
The general idea here is to provide userspace programs with well-defined
sources of entropy, in a fashion that doesn't require opening a new file
descriptor (ulimits) or accessing paths (/dev/urandom may be restricted
by chroot or capsicum).
getrandom(2) is the more general API, and comes from the Linux world.
Since our urandom and random devices are identical, the GRND_RANDOM flag
is ignored.
getentropy(3) is added as a compatibility shim for the OpenBSD API.
truss(1) support is included.
Tests for both system calls are provided. Coverage is believed to be at
least as comprehensive as LTP getrandom(2) test coverage. Additionally,
instructions for running the LTP tests directly against FreeBSD are provided
in the "Test Plan" section of the Differential revision linked below. (They
pass, of course.)
PR: 194204
Reported by: David CARLIER <david.carlier AT hardenedbsd.org>
Discussed with: cperciva, delphij, jhb, markj
Relnotes: maybe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14500
As indicated in Committers guide Chapter 6, point 9
"Optional: Update Ports with Personal Information"
Approved by: tcberner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14653
On an RRQ, tftpd doesn't exit as soon as it's finished receiving a file.
Instead, it waits five seconds just in case the client didn't receive the
server's last ACK and decides to resend the final DATA packet.
Unfortunately, this created a 5 second delay from when the client thinks
it's done sending the file, and when the file is available for other
processes.
Fix this bug by closing the file as soon as receipt is finished.
PR: 157700
Reported by: Barry Mishler <barry_mishler@yahoo.com>
MFC after: 3 weeks
POSIX explicitly states that the application must declare union semun.
This makes no sense, but it is what it is. This brings us into line
with Linux, MacOS/Darwin, and NetBSD.
In a ports exp-run a moderate number of ports fail due to a lack of
approprate autotools-like discovery mechanisms or local patches. A
commit to address them will follow shortly.
PR: 224300, 224443 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: emaste, jhb, kib
Exp-run by: antoine
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14492
The source of error is a rounded increment being too large and thus the loop
steps slightly past 'last'. Perform a final comparison using the formatted
string values (truncated precision) to determine if we still need to print
the 'last' value.
PR: 217149
Submitted by: Fernando Apesteguía <fernando.apesteguia AT gmail.com>,
Yuri Pankov <yuripv AT icloud.com> (earlier version)
Reported by: Martijn Dekker <mcdutchie AT hotmail.com>
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
With all values identical it was possible for Var() to return a negative
value due to limited floating point precision, resulting in "nan"
reported as Stddev.
Variance cannot actually be negative, so just return 0. We can later
investigate alternate algorithms for calculating variance to reduce the
effect of catastrophic cancellation here.
Reported by: Arshan Khanifar <arshankhanifar_gmail.com>
Approved by: phk
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
A subtle logic bug, probably introduced in r311895, caused tail to print the
first two lines of piped input in forward order, if the very first character
was a newline.
PR: 222671
Reported by: Jim Long <freebsd-bugzilla@umpquanet.com>, pprocacci@gmail.com
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
because the whole idea of this utility is rather broken.)
This originally come from NetBSD, and was later reworked a bit.
Reviewed by: des@ (earlier version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4981
Summary:
r329077 caused gcc to emit uninitialized use warnings. Attempting to
fix those warnings yielded the following warnings:
usr.bin/tftp/main.c: In function 'main':
usr.bin/tftp/main.c:181: warning: variable 'el' might be clobbered by
'longjmp' or 'vfork'
usr.bin/tftp/main.c:182: warning: variable 'hist' might be clobbered by
'longjmp' or 'vfork'
This is a known bug in gcc, found at
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24239
Work around that by simply marking hist and el as static.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14302
Introduce WITH_/WITHOUT_LLVM_COV to match GCC's WITH_/WITHOUT_GCOV.
It is intended to provide a superset of the interface and functionality
of gcov.
It is enabled by default when building Clang, similarly to gcov and GCC.
This change moves one file in libllvm to be compiled unconditionally.
Previously it was included only when WITH_CLANG_EXTRAS was set, but the
complexity of a new special case for (CLANG_EXTRAS | LLVM_COV) is not
worth avoiding a tiny increase in build time.
Reviewed by: dim, imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D142645
This bug was first reported 14 years ago. The problem was understood 8.5
years ago. A patch that is functionally identical to this one was proposed
almost 8 years ago and languished in the PR system / Bugzilla.
PR: 63197
Submitted by: lxv AT omut.org, fernando.apesteguia AT gmail.com
Reported by: freebsd AT nbritton.org
If the interrupt count is very high (greater than ~42M), notably on one-shot
execution on long running systems, the intermediate multiplication step in the
rate calculation will overflow the width of a 32-bit architecture long (32
bits), causing the rest of the calculation to calculate with a truncated value,
and report very low rates (sometimes 0).
MFC after: 2 weeks
When building FreeBSD the makefiles invoke find with various flags such as
`-s` that aren't supported in the native /usr/bin/find. To fix this I
build the FreeBSD version of find and use that when crossbuilding.
Inserting lots if #ifdefs in the code is rather ugly but I don't see a
better solution.
Reviewed By: brooks (mentor)
Approved By: jhb (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13306
Add libxo output support
Merge exp41_intpr and exp_intpr function. The only difference is to print
NFSV4.1 operations in exp41, add a third arguement to control that.
printtitle was set to 1 and don't have a switch, add a -q options to control it.
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: Gandi.net
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14012
Tests were disconnected so that running `make check` in usr.bin/awk did not
have any effect, but CI runs use installed tests. Fully disconnect tests/
from the build for the time being as a short term solutio
Reported by: lwhsu
This is a prerequisite to adding support for the monotonic clock
Reviewed by: ken, imp
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14030