{readline,history}.h are in /usr/include/edit so as to not conflict with
the GNU libreadline versions. To use the libedit readline(3) one should
add "-I/usr/include/edit" to their Makefile
(spelled "-I${DESTDIR}/${INCLUDEDIR}/edit" within the FreeBSD source tree).
* Enable its use in the BSD licensed utilities that support readline(3).
* To make it easier to sync libedit development with NetBSD, histedit.h
is moved into libedit's directory as history shows shown we keep merging
it into that location.
Obtained from: NetBSD
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Add new RAID GEOM class, that is going to replace ataraid(4) in supporting
various BIOS-based software RAIDs. Unlike ataraid(4) this implementation
does not depend on legacy ata(4) subsystem and can be used with any disk
drivers, including new CAM-based ones (ahci(4), siis(4), mvs(4), ata(4)
with `options ATA_CAM`). To make code more readable and extensible, this
implementation follows modular design, including core part and two sets
of modules, implementing support for different metadata formats and RAID
levels.
Support for such popular metadata formats is now implemented:
Intel, JMicron, NVIDIA, Promise (also used by AMD/ATI) and SiliconImage.
Such RAID levels are now supported:
RAID0, RAID1, RAID1E, RAID10, SINGLE, CONCAT.
For any all of these RAID levels and metadata formats this class supports
full cycle of volume operations: reading, writing, creation, deletion,
disk removal and insertion, rebuilding, dirty shutdown detection
and resynchronization, bad sector recovery, faulty disks tracking,
hot-spare disks. For Intel and Promise formats there is support multiple
volumes per disk set.
Look graid(8) manual page for additional details.
Co-authored by: imp
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc. and iXsystems, Inc.
it possible for the kernel to track login class the process is assigned to,
which is required for RCTL. This change also make setusercontext(3) call
setloginclass(2) and makes it possible to retrieve current login class using
id(1).
Reviewed by: kib (as part of a larger patch)
* Some values changed in POSIX.1-2001; provide the former value if a program
requests compliance to an earlier version of POSIX. [1]
* Add missing _POSIX_CLOCKRES_MIN constant. This is a maximum value but
otherwise works the same as the minimum values.
PR: standards/104743
Submitted by: bde [1] (not exact #ifdefs, but the values)
MFC after: 2 weeks
setting. It can be built by setting the WITH_ICONV knob. While this
knob is unset, the library part, the binaries, the header file and
the metadata files will not be built or installed so it makes no impact
on the system if left turned off.
This work is based on the iconv implementation in NetBSD but a great
number of improvements and feature additions have been included:
- Some utilities have been added. There is a conversion table generator,
which can compare conversion tables to reference data generated by
GNU libiconv. This helps ensuring conversion compatibility.
- UTF-16 surrogate support and some endianness issues have been fixed.
- The rather chaotic Makefiles to build metadata have been refactored
and cleaned up, now it is easy to read and it is also easier to add
support for new encodings.
- A bunch of new encodings and encoding aliases have been added.
- Support for 1->2, 1->3 and 1->4 mappings, which is needed for
transliterating with flying accents as GNU does, like "u.
- Lots of warnings have been fixed, the major part of the code is
now WARNS=6 clean.
- New section 1 and section 5 manual pages have been added.
- Some GNU-specific calls have been implemented:
iconvlist(), iconvctl(), iconv_canonicalize(), iconv_open_into()
- Support for GNU's //IGNORE suffix has been added.
- The "-" argument for stdin is now recognized in iconv(1) as per POSIX.
- The Big5 conversion module has been fixed.
- The iconv.h header files is supposed to be compatible with the
GNU version, i.e. sources should build with base iconv.h and
GNU libiconv. It also includes a macro magic to deal with the
char ** and const char ** incompatibility.
- GNU compatibility: "" or "char" means the current local
encoding in use
- Various cleanups and style(9) fixes.
Approved by: delphij (mentor)
Obtained from: The NetBSD Project
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2009
calling thread's unique integral ID, which is similar to AIX function of
the same name. Bump __FreeBSD_version to note its introduction.
Reviewed by: kib
__assert() is called when an assertion fails. After printing an error
message, it will call abort(). abort() never returns, hence it has the
__dead2 attribute. Also add this attribute to __assert().
MFC after: 3 weeks
- Provide function prototype for nlm_syscall
- Don't assign a variable from the stack to a global var[1]
- Remove unused vars
Found by: clang static analyser [1]
Reviewed by: dfr
I've noticed various terminal emulators that need to obtain a sane
default termios structure use very complex `hacks'. Even though POSIX
doesn't provide any functionality for this, extend our termios API with
cfmakesane(3), which is similar to the commonly supported cfmakeraw(3),
except that it fills the termios structure with sane defaults.
Change all code in our base system to use this function, instead of
depending on <sys/ttydefaults.h> to provide TTYDEF_*.
to amd64, i386, and pc98. The headers are installed to /usr/include/x86
during an installworld, and an 'x86' symlink is created for kernel builds
similar to 'machine' so that the headers can be included as <x86/foo.h>.
Reviewed by: imp
functions set or get pthread_rwlock type, current supported types are:
PTHREAD_RWLOCK_PREFER_READER_NP,
PTHREAD_RWLOCK_PREFER_WRITER_NONRECURSIVE_NP,
PTHREAD_RWLOCK_PREFER_WRITER_NP,
default is PTHREAD_RWLOCK_PREFER_WRITER_NONCECURSIVE_NP, this maintains
binary compatible with old code.
same null value, the code can not distinguish between them, to
fix the problem, now a destroyed object is assigned to a non-null
value, and it will be rejected by some pthread functions.
PTHREAD_ADAPTIVE_MUTEX_INITIALIZER_NP is changed to number 1, so that
adaptive mutex can be statically initialized correctly.
All the "Minimum Values" (POSIX.1-2008 XBD 13 Headers <limits.h>) are now
correct. These should all be exactly as they are in the specification; the
possibly higher values we support are announced differently.
PR: standards/104743
Submitted by: gcooper
MFC after: 2 weeks
The completer recognizes characters escaped with backslashes as being
literal parts of a word, and adds backslashes to avoid almost all
misinterpretation. In particular, filenames containing spaces can be
completed correctly.
For bug compatibility with the NetBSD version, the improved completion
function has a new name, _el_fn_sh_complete, and _el_fn_complete is
unchanged.
Submitted by: Guy Yur
This will be used to provide filename completion in sh(1).
Changes from the NetBSD code:
* wide character support disabled, as in the rest of libedit
* config.h and related portability stuff reduced/disabled, as in the rest
of libedit
Submitted by: Guy Yur
Obtained from: NetBSD
SUSv4 requires that implementation returns EINVAL if supplied path is NULL,
and ENOENT if path is empty string [1].
Bring prototype in conformance with SUSv4, adding restrict keywords.
Allow the resolved path buffer pointer be NULL, in which case realpath(3)
allocates storage with malloc().
PR: kern/121897 [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
wcstoimax and wcstoumax, rather than spelling it __wchar_t. This is necessary
to use these functions in C++ where wchar_t is different to __wchar_t and is
a built-in type.
It may be better to use __wchar_t here and to simply define __wchar_t as being
wchar_t in C++ mode rather than to bring in wchar_t, but this is less invasive
and follows our existing practice, and restores wchar_t usage in this file to
what it was before r1.8.
Erwin ran an exp-run with libcompat and <regexp.h> removed. It turns out
the regexp library is almost entirely unused. In fact, it looks like it
is sometimes used by accident. Because these function names clash with
libc's <regex.h>, some application use both <regex.h> and libcompat,
which means they link against the wrong regex library.
This commit removes the regexp library and reimplements re_comp() and
re_exec() using <regex.h>. It seems the grammar of the regular
expressions accepted by these functions is similar to POSIX EREs.
After this commit, 1 low-profile port will be broken, but the maintainer
already has a patch for it sitting in his mailbox.
These header files only provide functionality that can be used in
combination with libcompat. In order to prevent people from including
them without any actual use (which happens a lot with <sys/timeb.h>),
put a warning here to make people more aware.
This means we have to lower WARNS for libcompat, which is no big deal.
Note that due to e.g. write throttling ('wdrain'), it can stall all the disk
I/O instead of just the device it's configured for. Using it for removable
media is therefore not a good idea.
Reviewed by: pjd (earlier version)
The ttyslot() function was originally part for SUSv1, marked LEGACY in
SUSv2 and removed later on. This function only makes sense when using
utmp(5), because it was used to determine the offset of the record for
the controlling TTY. It makes little sense to keep it here, because the
new utmpx file format doesn't index based on TTY slots.
The utmpx interface is the standardized interface of the user accounting
database. The standard only defines a subset of the functions that were
present in System V-like systems.
I'd like to highlight some of the traits my implementation has:
- The standard allows the on-disk format to be different than the
in-memory representation (struct utmpx). Most operating systems don't
do this, but we do. This allows us to keep our ABI more stable, while
giving us the opportunity to modify the on-disk format. It also allows
us to use a common file format across different architectures (i.e.
byte ordering).
- Our implementation of pututxline() also updates wtmp and lastlog (now
called utx.log and utx.lastlogin). This means the databases are more
likely to be in sync.
- Care must be taken that our implementation discard any fields that are
not applicable. For example, our DEAD_PROCESS records do not hold a
TTY name. Just a time stamp, a record identifier and a process
identifier. It also guarantees that strings (ut_host, ut_line and
ut_user) are null terminated. ut_id is obviously not null terminated,
because it's not a string.
- The API and its behaviour should be conformant to POSIX, but there may
be things that slightly deviate from the standard. This implementation
uses separate file descriptors when writing to the log files. It also
doesn't use getutxid() to search for a field to overwrite. It uses an
allocation strategy similar to getutxid(), but prevents DEAD_PROCESS
records from accumulating.
Make sure libulog doesn't overwrite the manpages shipped with our C
library. Also keep the symbol list in Symbol.map sorted.
I'll bump __FreeBSD_version later this evening. I first want to convert
everything to <utmpx.h> and get rid of <utmp.h>.
now type sema_t is a structure which can be put in a shared memory area,
and multiple processes can operate it concurrently.
User can either use mmap(MAP_SHARED) + sem_init(pshared=1) or use sem_open()
to initialize a shared semaphore.
Named semaphore uses file system and is located in /tmp directory, and its
file name is prefixed with 'SEMD', so now it is chroot or jail friendly.
In simplist cases, both for named and un-named semaphore, userland code
does not have to enter kernel to reduce/increase semaphore's count.
The semaphore is designed to be crash-safe, it means even if an application
is crashed in the middle of operating semaphore, the semaphore state is
still safely recovered by later use, there is no waiter counter maintained
by userland code.
The main semaphore code is in libc and libthr only has some necessary stubs,
this makes it possible that a non-threaded application can use semaphore
without linking to thread library.
Old semaphore implementation is kept libc to maintain binary compatibility.
The kernel ksem API is no longer used in the new implemenation.
Discussed on: threads@
Std 1003.1-2008. Both Linux and Solaris conforms to the new definitions,
so we better follow too (older glibc used old BSDish alphasort prototype
and corresponding type of the comparision function for scandir). While
there, change the definitions of the functions to ANSI C and fix several
style issues nearby.
Remove requirement for "sys/types.h" include for functions from manpage.
POSIX also requires that alphasort(3) sorts as if strcoll(3) was used,
but leave the strcmp(3) call in the function for now.
Adapt in-tree callers of scandir(3) to new declaration. The fact that
select_sections() from catman(1) could modify supplied struct dirent is
a bug.
PR: standards/142255
MFC after: 2 weeks