Define architectural load bases for PIE binaries.
MFC r198203 (by marius):
Change load base for sparc to match default gcc memory layout model.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Use zfs_read() instead of xfsread() to read /boot.config. xfsread() fails
short read requests, so the result was that a /boot.config smaller than 512
bytes was ignored. boot2 uses fsread() instead of xfsread() to read
/boot.config already, so this makes zfsboot more like boot2.
Approved by: re (kib)
Print routing statistics as unsigned short rather than unsigned int,
otherwise sign extension leads to unlikely values when in the negative
range of the signed short structure fields that hold the statistics.
The type used to hold routing statistics is arguably also incorrect.
Approved by: re (bz)
Link GSS mechanics modules against libgssapi so they will not fail due
unresolved symbol errors when in turn libgssapi was loaded with RTLD_LOCAL
flag set (which is the default).
Approved by: re (kib)
In regards to the "Starting foo:" type messages at boot time, create
and employ a more generic solution, and use it in the individual rc.d
scripts that also have an $rc_quiet test:
1. Add check_startmsgs() to rc.subr.
2. In the rc.d scripts that use rc_quiet (and rc.subr) substitute
variations of [ -z "$rc_quiet" ] with check_startmsgs
3. In savecore add a trailing '.' to the end of the message to make it
more consistent with other scripts.
4. In newsyslog remove a : before the terminal '.' since we do not
expect there to be anything printed out in between to make it more
consistent.
5. In the following scripts change "quotes" to 'quotes' where no
variables exist in the message: savecore pf newsyslog
6. [Does not apply in RELENG_8]
7. In the following scripts separate the "Starting foo:" from the
terminal '.' to make them more consistent: moused hostname pf
8. In nfsclient move the message to its own line to avoid a style bug
9. In pf rc_quiet does not apply to the _stop method, so remove the
test there.
10. In motd add 'quotes' around the terminal '.' for consistency
Approved by: re (kib)
Change the default transport protocol for use by the Mount protocol
and the NFS Null RPC done by mount_nfs from UDP to TCP, so that it is
consistent with the kernel, which already uses NFS over TCP by
default. Without this change, doing an NFS mount
against a server that only supports UDP results in an unusable
mount point if a transport protocol option wasn't specified for the
mount.
Approved by: re (kib)
In nanosleep(2), note that the calling thread is put to sleep, not the
whole process. Also explicitely name the parameter that specifies
sleep interval.
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Fix the typo mentioned in the PR, and one additional.
Fix caps while I'm here.
PR: conf/138087
Submitted by: Chris Petrik <c.petrik.sosa@gmail.com>
Approved by: re (kib)
In function do_rw_wrlock, when a writer got an error and before returning,
check if there are readers blocked by us via URWLOCK_WRITE_WAITERS flag,
and resume the readers. The error must be EAGAIN, otherwise there must
have memory problem, and nobody can rescue the buggy application.
Approved by: re (kib), davidxu
Refine r195509, instead of checking that vnode type is VBAD, that is
set quite late in the revocation path, properly verify that vnode is
not doomed before calling VOP.
Approved by: re (bz)
If provider is open for writing when we taste it, skip it for classes that
depend on on-disk metadata. This was we won't attach to providers that are used
by other classes. For example we don't want to configure partitions on da0 if
it is part of gmirror, what we really want is partitions on mirror/foo.
During regular work it works like this: if provider is open for writing a class
receives the spoiled event from GEOM and detaches, once provider is closed the
taste event is send again and class can rediscover its metadata if it is still
there. This doesn't work that way when new class arrives, because GEOM gives
all existing providers for it to taste, also those open for writing. Classes
have to decided on their own if they want to deal with such providers (eg.
geom_dev) or not (classes modified by this commit).
Reported by: des, Oliver Lehmann <lehmann@ans-netz.de>
Tested by: des, Oliver Lehmann <lehmann@ans-netz.de>
Discussed with: phk, marcel
Reviewed by: marcel
Approved by: re (kib)
r197831:
Fix situation where Mac OS X NFS client creates a file and when it tries
to set ownership and mode in the same setattr operation, the mode was
overwritten by secpolicy_vnode_setattr().
PR: kern/118320
Submitted by: Mark Thompson <info-gentoo@mark.thompson.bz>
r197842:
Fix white-spaces.
r197843:
On FreeBSD it is enough to report provider removal when orphan event is
received, we don't have to do it on every ENXIO error in I/O path.
Solaris has no GEOM so they have to handle it in a less clean way.
r197860:
File system owner is when uid matches and jail matches.
r197861:
Allow file system owner to modify system flags if securelevel permits.
Approved by: re (kib)
Per their definition, atomic instructions used in conjuction with
memory barriers should also ensure that the compiler doesn't reorder paths
where they are used. GCC, however, does that aggressively, even in
presence of volatile operands. The most reliable way GCC offers for avoid
instructions reordering is clobbering "memory".
Not all our memory barriers, right now, clobber memory for GCC-like
compilers.
Fix these cases.
Approved by: re (kib)
Fix tcsh losing history when tcsh terminates because the pty beneath it
is closed.
Diagnosed by Ted Anderson:
New signal queuing logic was introduced in 6.15 and allows the signal handlers
to be run explicitly by calling handle_pending_signals, instead of
immediately when the signal is delivered. This function is called at
various places, typically when receiving a EINTR from a slow system call
such as read or write. In the pty exit case, it was called from xwrite,
called from flush, while printing the "exit" message after receiving EOF
when reading from the pty (note that the read did not return EINTR but
zero bytes, indicating EOF). The SIGHUP handler, phup(), called
rechist, which opened the history file and began writing the merged
history to it. This process invoked flush recursively to actually write
the data. In this case, however, the flush noticed it was being called
recursively and decided fail by calling stderror.
My conclusion was that the signal was being handled at a bad time. But
whether to fix flush not to care about the recursive call, or to handle
the signal some other time and when to handle it, was unclear to me.
However, by adding an extra call to handle_pending_signals, just after
process() returns to main(), I was able to avoid the truncated history
after network outages and similar failures. I verified this fix in
version 6.17.
Approved by: re (kib)
When releasing a read/shared lock we need to use a write memory barrier
in order to avoid, on architectures which doesn't have strong ordered
writes, CPU instructions reordering.
Approved by: re (kib)
sh: Fix crash when undefining or redefining a currently executing function
Add a reference count to function definitions.
Memory may leak if a SIGINT arrives in interactive mode at exactly the wrong
time, this will be fixed later by changing SIGINT handling.
PR: bin/137640
Approved by: re (kib)
Fix RTS/CTS flow control, broken by the TTY overhaul. The new TTY
interface is fairly simple WRT dealing with flow control, but
needed 2 new RX buffer functions with "get-char-from-buf" separated
from "advance-buf-pointer" so that the pointer could be advanced
only when ttydisc_rint() succeeded.
Approved by: re (kib)
Remove tcp_input lock statistics; these are intended for debugging only
and are not intended to ship in 8.0 as they dirty additional cache
lines in a performance-critical per-packet path.
Approved by: re (kib, bz)
In tcp_input(), we acquire a global write lock at first only if a
segment is likely to trigger a TCP state change (i.e., FIN/RST/SYN).
If we later have to upgrade the lock, we acquire an inpcb reference
and drop both global/inpcb locks before reacquiring in-order. In
that gap, the connection may transition into TIMEWAIT, so we need
to loop back and reevaluate the inpcb after relocking.
Reported by: Kamigishi Rei <spambox at haruhiism.net>
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re (kib)
unifdef NFSCLIENT because the nlm depends on the nfsclient even if NFSCLIENT
is not defined.
Now the nfslockd module works with the nfsclient module.
Reviewed by: kib
Approved by: re (kensmith)
Remove a log message from production code. This log message can be
triggered by a misconfigured host that is sending out gratuious ARPs.
This log message can also be triggered during a network renumbering
event when multiple prefixes co-exist on a single network segment.
Approved by: re
Previously, if an address alias is configured on an interface, and
this address alias has a prefix matching that of another address
configured on the same interface, then the ARP entry for the alias
is not deleted from the ARP table when that address alias is removed.
This patch fixes the aforementioned issue.
PR: kern/139113
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: re
The flow-table associates TCP/UDP flows and IP destinations with
specific routes. When the routing table changes, for example,
when a new route with a more specific prefix is inserted into the
routing table, the flow-table is not updated to reflect that change.
As such existing connections cannot take advantage of the new path.
In some cases the path is broken. This patch will update the affected
flow-table entries when a more specific route is added. The route
entry is properly marked when a route is deleted from the table.
In this case, when the flow-table performs a search, the stale
entry is updated automatically. Therefore this patch is not
necessary for route deletion.
Reviewed by: bz, kmacy
Approved by: re
Kib didn't see the previous commit before I committed it. I had assumed
implicit approval when he requested the merginfo. So pointhats to me
all around. This commit was reviewed by kib.
Approved by: re (kib)
Fix some unexpected potential NULL de-references in kernel mode due to
usage of pre-8.0 wifi operations with the ndis driver wrapping a Win32/64
wifi driver.
Submitted by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Approved by: re
Use __NO_STRICT_ALIGNMENT to determine whether de(4) have to apply
alignment fixup code for received frames on strict alignment
architectures.
MFC r197463:
Consistently use bus_addr_t.
MFC r197464:
Destroy dmamap in dma cleanup.
MFC r197465:
Align Tx/Rx descriptors on 32 bytes boundary instead of PAGE_SIZE.
Also align setup descriptor on 32 bytes boundary. Tx buffer have no
alignment limitation so create dmamap without alignment
restriction[1]. Rx buffer still seems to require 4 bytes alignment
limitation but we can simply use MCLBYTES for size to map the
buffer instead of TULIP_DATA_PER_DESC as the buffer is allocated
with m_getcl(9).
de(4) supports up to TULIP_MAX_TXSEG segments for Tx buffers,
increase maximum dma segment size to TULIP_MAX_TXSEG * MCLBYTES.
While I'm here remove TULIP_DATA_PER_DESC as it is not used anymore.
This should fix de(4) breakage introduced after r176206.
Submitted by: jhb [1]
Reported by: WATANABE Kazuhiro < CQG00620 <> nifty dot ne dot jp >
Tested by: WATANABE Kazuhiro < CQG00620 <> nifty dot ne dot jp >,
Takahashi Yoshihiro < nyan <> jp dot freebsd dot org >
Approved by: re (kib)