standard core target by declaring coreops_suppress_target with
initializer. This is also happening for non-cross kgdb, by
virtue of having fbsd-threads.c in libgdb and having it do the
exact same thing. Since fbsd-threads.c is not included in in
libgdb when building a cross debugger, we ended up with more
than 1 core file targets (the standard gdb core file target and
kgdb's libkvm based core file target) and this behaves the same
as not having a core target at all.
implementation. This fixes the toolchain and kernel-toolchain targets
when building from older FreeBSD versions where make is fmake.
Reported by: luigi
Sponsored by: DARPA/AFRL
MFC after: 3 days
- Update FreeBSD version in:
- UPDATING
- sys/conf/newvers.sh
- Add 11.0 FreeBSD version for manual pages
- Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1100000
Approved by: re (implicit)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
r256095:
- Add gnu/usr.bin/rcs back to the base system.
r256120:
- Add WITHOUT_RCS back to src.conf.5.
r256121:
- Remove UPDATING entry regarding gnu/usr.bin/rcs removal.
Requested by: many
Approved by: re (marius)
Discussed with: core
The libarchive-based replacements have been used since 2009; the GNU
ones were kept to support source upgrades from FreeBSD 6.
Approved by: re@ (delphij)
To enable them, set WITH_GCC and WITH_GNUCXX in src.conf.
Make clang default to using libc++ on FreeBSD 10.
Bumped __FreeBSD_version for the change.
GCC is still enabled on PC98, because the PC98 bootloader requires GCC to build
(or, at least, hard-codes the use of gcc into its build).
Thanks to everyone who helped make the ports tree ready for this (and bapt
for coordinating them all). Also to imp for reviewing this and working on the
forward-porting of the changes in our gcc so that we're getting to a much
better place with regard to external toolchains.
Sorry to all of the people who helped who I forgot to mention by name.
Reviewed by: bapt, imp, dim, ...
The old (2.1) GNU patch has outlived its days. The major
local changes have been moved into the less restrictedly
licensed patch(1) we adopted in usr.bin/ .
A much newer version of GNU patch is available in the
ports tree (devel/patch).
Disconnect from the build and remove.
-maes option, but not the -mpclmul option as I ran out of bits in
the 32 bit flags field... You can -D__PCLMUL__ to get this, but it
won't be compatible w/ clang and modern gcc...
Reviewed by: -current, -toolchain
As promised, drop the option to make the older GNU patch
the default.
GNU patch is still being built but something drastic may
happen to it to it before Release.
echo xxx | grep -D skip xxx
returns nothing. Instead of just removing added S_ISFIFO condition
(originally absent in this version of grep), make it work as latest
GNU version does: don't skip directories and devices if fd == STDIN_FILENO.
The BSD-licensed patch(1) command has matured and it's behaviour
can be considered equivalent to the older version of GNU patch
in the tree.
The switch has been extensively tested [1] and only two ports
presented regressions, which have since been fixed.
For convenience a new WITH_GNU_PATCH option is available,
but it will likely be removed in the near future.
PR: 176313
Approved by: portmgr
accurately fills the read buffer.
Callers of pgets() still mis-process the buffer contents if the read line
contains NUL characters, but this at least makes pgets() accurate.
The former makes a copy of stdin, but was not accurately putting the
content of stdin into a temp file. This lead to the undercounting
the number of lines in hunks containing NUL characters when reading
from stdin. Thus resulting in "unexpected end of file in patch" errors.
debug files for userland programs and libraries. The "-g" debug flag
is automatically applied when WITH_DEBUG_FILES is set.
The debug files are now named ${prog}.debug and ${shlib}.debug for
consistency with other systems and documentation. In addition they are
installed under /usr/lib/debug, to simplify the process of installing
them if needed after a crash. Users of bsd.{prog,lib}.mk outside of the
base system place the standalone debug files in a .debug subdirectory.
GDB automatically searches both of these directories for standalone
debug files.
Thanks to everyone who contributed changes, review, and testing during
development.
Change several int variables to size_t, ssize_t, or ptrdiff_t.
This should fix the bug described in CVE-2012-5667 when an input
line is so long that its length cannot be stored in an int
variable.
This is based on NetBSD's revision which says:
This change to NetBSD's version of GNU grep 2.5.1 (licenced under
GPLv2) was made without direct reference to any code licenced
under GPLv3.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 3 days
When looking up the absolute path for a kld, call find_kld_path() first.
This enables locating the module in a different directory than the one
stored in kernel memory.
With this change, kgdb can now be run on a kernel & vmcore whose associated
modules are located in the same directory as the kernel. This makes
independent triaging of problems much easier.
This change also does not break the normal kgdb use case where no arguments
are specified; in that case kgdb loads the running kernel and its modules.
Reviewed by: adrian
Approved by: ken (mentor)
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 1 month
* document the kgdb -b flag
* better verify what's valid with -b
* add more comprehensive command line help
PR: kern/175743
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon@gmx.de>
on a core, when the core was stopped, by calling kgdb_trgt_core_pcb().
This has 2 advantages:
1. We don't need to include a machine-specific header anymore and as
such kthr.c is truly machine independent. This allows the code to
be used in a cross-debugger.
2. We don't need to lookup stoppcbs in generic code when it's an
inherently target-spicific symbol. It does not exist for ia64.
Implement kgdb_trgt_core_pcb() for all architectures, except ia64, by
calling a common function called kgdb_trgt_stop_pcb(). This function
differs from kgdb_trgt_core_pcb() in that it gets the size of the PCB
structure as an argument and as such remains machine independent.
On ia64 the PCB for stopped cores is in the PCPU structure itself.
This for better scaling. The implementation of kgdb_trgt_core_pcb()
for ia64 uses the cpuid_to_pcpu[] array to to obtain the address of
the PCB structure.
DragonflyBSD and install it as bsdpatch. WITH_BSD_PATCH makes it
default and installs GNU patch as gnupatch.
Submitted by: pfg
Obtained from: The DragonflyBSD Project
be used on the host system (and not installed on the device, if required). The
GPL'd one is still available if there are any devices that need it (make
universe passes with it, including kernels that use fdt, but there may be some
out-of-tree ones). WITH_GPL_DTC can be used to select the old one, for now.
Probably won't be MFC'd, but we'll remove the GPL'd version in head after the
new one has had a lot more testing and ship it in 10.0.
This allows a remote session to be specified with '-r' as well as a
non-default baudrate setting using '-b'.
TODO: add to the kgdb manpage.
MFC after: 2 weeks
ARM EABI support is disabled by default and can be enabled by setting
WITH_ARM_EABI when building, however only the kernel-toolchain target will
work with this flag until the rest of the support is added.
share/mk/sys.mk instead.
This is part of a medium term project to permit deterministic builds of
FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Erik Cederstrand <erik@cederstrand.dk>
Reviewed by: imp, toolchain@
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 2 weeks
1. Don't do upgrade_checks when using bmake. As long as we have WITH_BMAKE,
there's a bootstrap complication in ths respect. Avoid it. Make the
necessary changes to have upgrade_checks work wth bmake anyway.
2. Remove the use of -E. It's not needed in our build because we use ?= for
the respective variables, which means that we'll take the environment
value (if any) anyway.
3. Properly declare phony targets as phony as bmake is a lot smarter (and
thus agressive) about build avoidance.
4. Make sure CLEANFILES is complete and use it on .NOPATH. bmake is a lot
smarter about build avoidance and should not find files we generate in
the source tree. We should not have files in the repository we want to
generate, but this is an easier way to cross this hurdle.
5. Have behavior under bmake the same as it is under make with respect to
halting when sub-commands fail. Add "set -e" to compound commands so
that bmake is informed when sub-commands fail.
6. Make sure crunchgen uses the same make as the rest of the build. This
is important when the make utility isn't called make (but bmake for
example).
7. While here, add support for using MAKEOBJDIR to set the object tree
location. It's the second alternative bmake looks for when determining
the actual object directory (= .OBJDIR).
Submitted by: Simon Gerraty <sjg@juniper.net>
Submitted by: John Van Horne <jvanhorne@juniper.net>
internal knowledge that "cd" is a shell's built-in. Such makes
may attempt to exec() "cd" that in turn will fail on systems that
lack the "cd" executable.
Reworked this by eliminating the root cause.
Submitted by: Simon Gerraty <sjg@juniper.net>
r238211:
Support TARGET_ARCH=armv6 and TARGET_ARCH=armv6eb
This adds a new TARGET_ARCH for building on ARM
processors that support the ARMv6K multiprocessor
extensions. In particular, these processors have
better support for TLS and mutex operations.
This mostly touches a lot of Makefiles to extend
existing patterns for inferring CPUARCH from ARCH.
It also configures:
* GCC to default to arm1176jz-s
* GCC to predefine __FreeBSD_ARCH_armv6__
* gas to default to ARM_ARCH_V6K
* uname -p to return 'armv6'
* make so that MACHINE_ARCH defaults to 'armv6'
It also changes a number of headers to use
the compiler __ARM_ARCH_XXX__ macros to configure
processor-specific support routines.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@freebsd.org>
"gnusort". Most of the BSD sort development work was done by
Oleg Moskalenko <oleg.moskalenko@citrix.com>.
- GNU grep can be set to default by setting WITH_GNU_GREP. It will cause
BSD sort to be installed as "bsdsort".
Portbuild tested by: linimon
"bsdsort" and GNU sort will be the default "sort". When WITH_BSD_SORT
is set, BSD sort will be the default "sort" and GNU sort will be installed
as "gnusort".
This makes our naming scheme more closely match other systems and the
expectations of much third-party software. MIPS builds which are little-endian
should require and exhibit no changes. Big-endian TARGET_ARCHes must be
changed:
From: To:
mipseb mips
mipsn32eb mipsn32
mips64eb mips64
An entry has been added to UPDATING and some foot-shooting protection (complete
with warnings which should become errors in the near future) to the top-level
base system Makefile.
installs clang as /usr/bin/cc, /usr/bin/c++ and /usr/bin/cpp.
Note this does *not* disable building and installing gcc, which will
still be available as /usr/bin/gcc, /usr/bin/g++ and /usr/bin/gcpp. If
you want to disable gcc completely, you must use WITHOUT_GCC.
MFC after: 2 weeks
and processes in a kernel image. This allows examination of threads that
have exited or are in the late stages of exiting.
Tested by: avg
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
This also replaces the local fix in r219209 that made .Ac emit
ASCII angle quotes with an official fix. In the official fix,
ASCII quotes are output when using the .Aq, .Ao and .Ac calls,
but only when nested into the .An macro.
PR: gnu/154822
If WITH_BSD_GREP is not set, it will be 'bsdgrep' and GNUgrep will be
'[ef]grep'. Otherwise, BSD-grep will be the grep family, and GNUgrep
will be 'gnugrep'.
Discussed with: brooks
Some files keep the SUN4V tags as a code reference, for the future,
if any rewamped sun4v support wants to be added again.
Reviewed by: marius
Tested by: sbruno
Approved by: re
cpuset_t objects.
That is going to offer the underlying support for a simple bump of
MAXCPU and then support for number of cpus > 32 (as it is today).
Right now, cpumask_t is an int, 32 bits on all our supported architecture.
cpumask_t on the other side is implemented as an array of longs, and
easilly extendible by definition.
The architectures touched by this commit are the following:
- amd64
- i386
- pc98
- arm
- ia64
- XEN
while the others are still missing.
Userland is believed to be fully converted with the changes contained
here.
Some technical notes:
- This commit may be considered an ABI nop for all the architectures
different from amd64 and ia64 (and sparc64 in the future)
- per-cpu members, which are now converted to cpuset_t, needs to be
accessed avoiding migration, because the size of cpuset_t should be
considered unknown
- size of cpuset_t objects is different from kernel and userland (this is
primirally done in order to leave some more space in userland to cope
with KBI extensions). If you need to access kernel cpuset_t from the
userland please refer to example in this patch on how to do that
correctly (kgdb may be a good source, for example).
- Support for other architectures is going to be added soon
- Only MAXCPU for amd64 is bumped now
The patch has been tested by sbruno and Nicholas Esborn on opteron
4 x 12 pack CPUs. More testing on big SMP is expected to came soon.
pluknet tested the patch with his 8-ways on both amd64 and i386.
Tested by: pluknet, sbruno, gianni, Nicholas Esborn
Reviewed by: jeff, jhb, sbruno
Therefore, we also need to install the new tmmintrin.h header containing
the related intrinsic functions, similar to xmmintrin.h, emmintrin.h,
etc.
Reported by: George Liaskos <geo.liaskos@gmail.com>
This (almost) gives us the address space back (at the bottom) that we lost
at the top.
Region 0 has traditionally been reserved for IA-32 emulation, which has not
been of great interest. By starting 64-bit processes at the 4G boundary we
at least preserve some of the advantages:
1. Any invalid pointer cast (from int to pointer and back) will still
always fail and not only when more than 4GB of memory is in use.
2. Memory sharing between 64-bit and 32-bit processes is still possibly
by using addresses < 4G.
x86 CPU support, better support for powerpc64, some new directives, and
many other things. Bump __FreeBSD_version, and add a note to UPDATING.
Thanks to the many people that have helped to test this.
Obtained from: projects/binutils-2.17
These changes are needed to fix n32 compile after the recent change of
mips n32 MACHINE_ARCH to mipsn32eb/mipsn32el.
Reviewed by: imp, bz (earlier version)
Also remove local overrides that are now in the contrib tree.
This is a direct commit to contrib/ as we will no longer import any
newer groff snapshots, due to licensing issues.
MFC after: 3 weeks
dialog is distributed from GPLv2 to LGPLv2 and introduces a number of new
features and a new and better libdialog API. The existing libdialog will
be kept temporarily as libodialog for compatibility purposes until sade,
sysinstall and tzsetup have been either updated or replaced.
__FreeBSD_version is now 900030.
Discussed on: -current
Approved by: core
Obtained from: http://invisible-island.net/dialog
It was used mainly to discover and fix some 64-bit portability problems
before 64-bit arches were widely available.
Discussed with: bde
Approved by: kib (mentor)
Implement MACHINE_ARCH=mips64e[lb] to build N64 images. This replaces
MACHINE_ARCH=mipse[lb] TARGET_ABI=n64.
MACHINE_ARCH=mipsn32e[lb] has been added, but currently requires
WITHOUT_CDDL due to atomic issues in libzfs. I've not investigated
this much, but implemented this to preserve as much of the TARGET_ABI
functionality that I could. Since its presence doesn't affect the
working cases, I've kept it in for now.
Added mips64e[lb] to make universe, so more kernels build.
And I think this (finally) closes the curtain on the tbemd tree.
thread specific informations.
In order to do that, and in order to avoid KBI breakage with existing
infrastructure the following semantic is implemented:
- For live programs, a new member to the PT_LWPINFO is added (pl_tdname)
- For cores, a new ELF note is added (NT_THRMISC) that can be used for
storing thread specific, miscellaneous, informations. Right now it is
just popluated with a thread name.
GDB, then, retrieves the correct informations from the corefile via the
BFD interface, as it groks the ELF notes and create appropriate
pseudo-sections.
Sponsored by: Sandvine Incorporated
Tested by: gianni
Discussed with: dim, kan, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
it exists in order to allow arch-specific overrides. This fixes the
binutils (and world) build on powerpc64 after recent TBEMD merges.
Reviewed by: imp
TARGET_BIG_ENDIAN is now completely dead, except where it was
originally supposed to be used (internally in the toolchain building).
TARGET_ARCH has changed in three cases:
(1) Little endian mips has changed to mipsel.
(2) Big endian mips has changed to mipseb.
(3) Big endian arm has changed to armeb.
Some additional changes are needed to make 'make universe' work on arm
and mips after this change, so those are commented out for now.
UPDATING information will be forthcoming. Any remaining rough edges
will be hammered out in -current.
This is done by prepending the file to elfxx-ia64, not appending it.
Additionally, reduce diffs between Makefile.amd64 and Makefile.ia64;
instead of echo'ing defines in Makefiles, just add the needed define to
elf-fbsd-brand.c directly, as it is only used for amd64 and ia64.
tc-sparc-fixed.c entirely, since the fix has been integrated into
contrib/binutils/gas/config/tc-sparc.c by upstream. Define TARGET_OS
in addition to the other TARGET_XXX defines.
Unlike for modules with dso type, in elf object modules all the sections
have virtual address of zero. So, it is insufficient to add module base
address to section virtual address (as recorded in section header) to
get section address in kernel memory.
Instead, we should apply the same calculations that are performed by
kernel loaders (in boot code and in kernel) when they lay out sections
in memory.
Discussed with: jhb, np
MFC after: 3 weeks
a variety of bugs in binutils related to handling of 64-bit PPC ELF,
provides a GCC configuration for 64-bit PowerPC on FreeBSD, and
associated build systems tweaks.
Obtained from: projects/ppc64
dialog(1) is run without arguments and works as expected. Therefore,
it should be part of the manual as well.
Note: dialog(1) has not been updated for many years and is not actively
maintained at the moment.
PR: docs/139682
Submitted by: manolis@
Discussed with: jkim@
MFC after: 2 weeks
of of 4 causes _end to be word aligned, which will be returned by sbrk.
malloc(3), when compiled for n32, expects sbrk to return an 8-byte aligned
value.
Approved by: rrs (mentor)
MIPS-III because FreeBSD relies on a number of MIPS-III features; the ABI
default would be MIPS-I which we don't intend to support. Our old default
before I switched to using the ABI default was MIPS32.
o) Add TARGET_ABI to the MIPS toolchain build process. This sets the default
ABI to one of o32, n32 or n64. If it is not set, o32 is assumed as that is
the current default.
o) Set the default GCC cpu type to any specified TARGET_CPUTYPE. This is
necessary to have a working "cc" if e.g. mips64 is specified, as binutils
will refuse to link objects using different ISAs in some cases.
o) Add support for n32 and n64 ABIs to binutils and GCC.
o) Add additional required libgcc2 stubs for n32 and n64.
o) Add support for the "mips64r2" architecture to GCC. Add the "octeon"
o) When static linking, wrap default libraries in --start-group and
--end-group. This is required for static linking to work on n64 with the
interdependencies between libraries there. This is what other OSes that
support n64 seem to do, as well.
o) Fix our GCC spec to define __mips64 for 64-bit targets, not __mips64__, the
former being what libgcc, etc., check and the latter seemingly being a
misspelling of a hand merge from a Linux spec.
o) When no TARGET_CPUTYPE is specified at build time, make GCC take the default
ISA from the ABI. Our old defaults were too liberal and assumed that 64-bit
ABIs should default to the MIPS64 ISA and that 32-bit ABIs should default to
the MIPS32 ISA, when we are supporting or will support some systems based on
earlier 32-bit and 64-bit ISAs, most notably MIPS-III.
o) Merge a new opcode file (and support code) from a later version of binutils
and add flags and code necessary to support Octeon-specific instructions.
This should also make merging opcodes for other modern architectures easier.
Reviewed by: imp
utilities and related support files for manual pages, which were previously
controlled by MAN. For POLA, the default depends on MAN, i.e., WITHOUT_MAN
implies WITHOUT_MAN_UTILS and WITH_MAN implies WITH_MAN_UTILS. This patch
is slightly improved by me from:
PR: misc/145212
freebsd-based names for filenames. This allows us to eliminate
almost all of the uses of ${MACHINE_ARCH} here to do special things, and
instead we use it to include filenames. This makes new architectures easier
to support.
Although groff_mdoc(7) gives another impression, this is the ordering
most widely used and also required by mdocml/mandoc.
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: philip, ed (mentors)
Note that this is actually a no-op for most users, as this GNU
cpio was broken on -HEAD and 8-STABLE since last March until
the recent fix.
FreeBSD 8.0+ uses BSD cpio by default and the code is being
actively maintained.
Blessed by: kientzle
With hat: secteam
MFC after: 3 days
is to be provided by --suffix). Looking at the usage here in diffutils,
it seems that we can just get rid of the -b .orig stuff. This resolves
a problem that can triggered if we move toward to a more permissively
licensed patch(1) program.
on mips. Its not fully done yet but its a start.
Obtained from: JC - c.jayachandran@gmail.com
M gnu/usr.bin/gdb/kgdb/trgt_mips.c
M gnu/usr.bin/gdb/arch/mips/init.c
M gnu/usr.bin/gdb/arch/mips/Makefile
M gnu/usr.bin/Makefile
M contrib/gdb/gdb/mips-tdep.h
kvm_nlist skips lookup for entries that have n_type != N_UNDF.
N_UNDF happens to be zero, so n_type typically has a correct
value by accident, but not always.
Note: jhb has a patch that replaces kvm_nlist use with direct
gdb parsing.
MFC after: 5 days
X-MFC-Note: unless jhb commits kvm_nlist => kgdb_parse change
compatibility level with the GNU counterparts and have shown to be mature
enough. For now, the GNU versions aren't removed from the tree, just detached
from the build.
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2008
Portbuild run by: erwin
Approved by: delphij