Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brooks Davis
b60998c633 Replace use of the pipe(2) system call with pipe2(2) with a zero flags
value.

This eliminates the need for machine dependant assembly wrappers for
pipe(2).

It also make passing an invalid address to pipe(2) return EFAULT rather
than triggering a segfault.  Document this behavior (which was already
true for pipe2(2), but undocumented).

Reviewed by:	andrew
Approved by:	re (gjb)
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6815
2016-06-22 21:11:27 +00:00
Ruslan Bukin
7813f8309c Do not generate code for sbrk syscall -- sbrk support was removed.
Pointed out by:	andrew
2016-05-25 16:38:10 +00:00
Ruslan Bukin
b7b46892f9 Remove legacy brk and sbrk from RISC-V.
Discussed with:	andrew
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by:	HEIF5
2016-05-25 14:08:21 +00:00
Ed Maste
dae2d550d6 libc: stop exporting curbrk and minbrk in the private namespace
They are not used anywhere else in the base system and are an internal
implementation detail that does not need to be exposed.

Reviewed by:	kib
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5728
2016-03-24 18:47:19 +00:00
Ruslan Bukin
0bfee92849 Bring in initial libc and libstand support for RISC-V.
Reviewed by:	andrew, emaste, kib
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by:	HEIF5
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4943
2016-01-17 15:21:23 +00:00
Ruslan Bukin
1fdcc5e5c0 Start support for the RISC-V 64-bit architecture developed by UC Berkeley.
RISC-V is a new ISA designed to support computer research and education, and
is now become a standard open architecture for industry implementations.

This is a minimal set of changes required to run 'make kernel-toolchain'
using external (GNU) toolchain.

The FreeBSD/RISC-V project home: https://wiki.freebsd.org/riscv.

Reviewed by:	andrew, bdrewery, emaste, imp
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by:	HEIF5
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4445
2015-12-11 22:55:23 +00:00