Catch up with renaming of "Japanese" to "ja_JP.eucJP". Comment out the
statement that EUC is provided for compatibility with UNIX-based systems;
this is not a very good opening paragraph.
- fixed a length of the sadb extension in the case of pfkey_send_x5().
- used getprotobynumber() for printing a upper layer protocol name.
- modified the output format against the change of the setkey syntax
about a icmp6 type/code.
- don't enumerate reserved fields. use memset.
Obtained from: KAME
Aside from the POSIX requirements for pthread_atfork(), when
fork()ing, take the malloc lock to keep malloc state consistent
in the child.
Reviewed by: davidxu
it around an application's fork() call. Our new thread libraries
(libthr, libpthread) can now have threads running while another
thread calls fork(). In this case, it is possible for malloc
to be left in an inconsistent state in the child. Our thread
libraries, libpthread in particular, need to use malloc internally
after a fork (in the child).
Reviewed by: davidxu
mbstate_t object that they ignore. The zeroing is fairly expensive, and it
will never be necessary in these functions; when we support state-dependent
encodings, we will pass in a pointer to the file's mbstate_t object, and
only zero it at the time the file gets opened.
tcpdump -y ieee802_11 will work in the basic senses, including the
code compilation for filters (where you may specify "link[]" to refer
to parts of the 802.11 header, as well as treat it like a normal
Ethernet header). Previously, it was just too far off to do anything
useful for us.
* While I'm here, fix some compile problems that will result from lex
and yacc namespace polution when linking with -lpcap. The namespace
is now "pcapyy*" instead of "yy*", and it tests fine with world and
some external applications that may or may not use "yy*".
index referencing it. We need to know the original type and name
so that we know what to put in the table when we reconstruct it.
o Clear the table entries before we rebuild it to avoid that we
end up with stale data.
o Sequentially populate the table entries from the chunks. For the
chunks that have an index (now referencing the saved copy) we
use the saved type and name. This way we can handle unknown types
better. In all cases we update the start and end LBAs.
rather than generating an error. This is consistent with other tools
printing user and group names, and means you can read the ACL using
our tools rather than being up a creek.
PR: 56991
Submitted by: Michael Bretterklieber <mbretter@a-quadrat.at>
filling in the GPT entry. Both are already in sector numbers (LBA)
and exactly what we need for the entry. We now write a structurally
correct GPT partitioning.
part of the disk. The first appears to be a typo and instead of
dividing the media size with the sector size, we multiplied. The
second is an off-by-1 error that's the result of mixing up count
and index. The code in question is only applicable for virgin disks
and is used to create the "whole" chunk, which covers only the GPT
usable portion of the disk.
mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() directly. GB18030, GBK and UTF2 are left
unconverted; GB18030 will be done eventually, but GBK and UTF2 may just
be removed, as they are subsets of GB18030 and UTF-8 respectively.
platforms except ia64 and use Int_Open_Disk() in open_ia64_disk.c
on ia64. We need to know more than GEOM can provide us so we're
forced to read from the disk. Move uuid_type() to open_ia64_disk.c
and remove all references on non-ia64.
o Pass the GEOM conftxt to Int_Open_Disk() so that only Open_Disk()
needs to know about GEOM and libdisk can more easily be used with
media not handled by GEOM.
o Create an ia64 specific definiton of struct disk on ia64, because
we don't need/have most of the fields other platforms need and
other fields not applicable on platforms other than ia64.
o Do not compile change.c on ia64. It's too PC specific.
o In Fixup_Names() in create_chunk.c, try all partition numbers
that are valid for the GPT disk. We have the total number of
partitions that can be allocated in the disk structure on ia64.
Also, use the GPT partition naming if we're creating one under
a chunk of type "whole". It's a GPT partition in that case.
o In Create_Chunk(), compile-out the PC specific code on ia64 that
checks BIOS geometry restrictions.
o In Debug_Disk() in disk.c, dump the ia64 specific fields.
o Save the partition index in the chunk on ia64 so that we can
preserve it when we write the data back to disk. This avoids that
partitions get moved around or swapped after installing FreeBSD,
which may render a disk unusable.
Cyl_Aligned(), Prev_Cyl_Aligned() and Next_Cyl_Aligned() into
tautologies on ia64. GPT removes all notion of tracks, heads and
sectors per track, so there are no alignment considerations.
doesn't have any meaning and only results in lines longer than 80
characters.
o In Delete_Chunk2(), also look for chunks of type "part" under
chunks of type "whole" on ia64. They're not only under chunks of
type "freebsd" there.
as wrappers around the deprecated 4.4BSD rune functions. This paves the
way for state-dependent encodings, which the rune API does not support.
- Add __emulated_sgetrune() and __emulated_sputrune(), which are
implementations of sgetrune() and sputrune() in terms of
mbrtowc() and wcrtomb().
- Rename the old rune-wrapper mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() functions to
__emulated_mbrtowc() and __emulated_wcrtomb().
- Add __mbrtowc and __wcrtomb function pointers, which point to the
current locale's conversion functions, or the __emulated versions.
- Implement mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() as calls to these function pointers.
- Make the "NONE" encoding implement mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() directly.
All of this emulation mess will be removed, together with rune support,
in FreeBSD 6.
when the current implementation won't use it, anyway. Just pass NULL.
This will need to be changed when state-dependent encodings are
supported, but there's no need to take the performance hit
in the meantime.
in KAME implementation, even when no policy is installed
into kernel, getaddrinfo(3) sorts addresses. Since it
causes POLA violation, I modified to don't sort addresses
when no policy is installed into kernel,
Obtained from: KAME
This enable us to use /dev/fwmem* as a core file.
e.g.
ps -M /dev/fwmem0.0 -N kernel.debug
dmesg -M /dev/fwmem0.0 -N kernel.debug
gdb -k -c /dev/fwmem0.0 kernel.debug
You need to set target EUI64 in hw.firewire.fwmem.eui64_hi/lo before
opening the device. On the target arch, (PCI) bus address must be
equivalent to physical address.
(We cannot use this for sparc64 because of IOMMU.)
No objection in: -audit
send strhash(3) off to sleep with the fishes. Nothing in our tree uses it.
It has no documentation. It is nonstandard and in spite of the filename
strhash.c and strhash.h, it lives in application namespace by providing
compulsory global symbols hash_create()/hash_destroy()/hash_search()/
hash_traverse()/hash_purge()/hash_stats() regardless of whether you
#include <strhash.h> or not. If it turns out that there is a huge
application for this after all, I can repocopy it somewhere safer and
we can revive it elsewhere. But please, not in libc!
that are only in libc.so.5. This broke some 4.X applications linked
to libm and run under 5.X.
Background:
In C99, isinf() and isnan() cannot be implemented as regular
functions. We use macros that call libc functions in 5.X, but for
libm-internal use, we need to use the old versions until the next
time libm's major version number is bumped.
Submitted by: bde
Reported by: imp, kris
documented naming scheme (unfortunately the documentation isn't in the
tree as far as I can tell); no repocopy is required as there is no
history to preserve.
- replace simple and almost-correct implementation with slightly hackish
but definitely correct implementation (tested on i386, alpha, sparc64)
which requires pulling in fpmath.h and the MD _fpmath.h from libc.
- try not to make a mess of the Makefile in the process.
- enterprising minds are encouraged to implement more C99 long double
functions.
(aka RFC2292bis). Though I believe this commit doesn't break
backward compatibility againt existing binaries, it breaks
backward compatibility of API.
Now, the applications which use Advanced Sockets API such as
telnet, ping6, mld6query and traceroute6 use RFC3542 API.
Obtained from: KAME
the denormal/unnormal trap, is not a standard IEEE trap. We did
not exclude it from being returned by fpgetmask(), nor did we make
sure that fpsetmask() didn't clobber it. Since the non-IEEE trap
is not part of fp_except_t, users of ifpgetmask()/fpsetmask() would
be confronted with unexpected behaviour, one of which is a SIGFPE
for denormal/unnormal FP results.
This commit makes sure that we don't leak the denormal/unnormal mask
bit in fp_except_t and also that we don't clobber it.
closer to reality. More work remains to be done. st_mtime should
be the most complete based on IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, a
review of ufs_vnops.c, and some experimentation.
about the fpu code here. It should be using fxsave/fxrstor instead of
saving/restoring the control word. The SSE registers are used a lot in
gcc generated code on amd64. I'm not sure how this all fits together
though.
section alignnment of 16 bytes for amd64 and this breaks file(1).
Before:
./cp: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, AMD x86-64, version 1 (FreeBSD), for \
FreeBSD 127.7.9, statically linked, stripped
after: ^^^^^^^
./ls: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, AMD x86-64, version 1 (FreeBSD), for \
FreeBSD 5.0.1, dynamically linked (uses shared libs), stripped
The reason for this is that the NOTE sections are not contiguous
internally. If the note section has an alignment of 16, then anything
that looks for the data is supposed to round up the payload start to
the next multiple of the alignment. But FreeBSD/amd64 broke because the
structure is declared as a single structure, not a (header,payload) group,
where the payload had an explicit alignment roundup.
The alternative is to change things like file(1) to ignore the ELF payload
alignment rules for the PT_NOTE section only for FreeBSD.
- fix hard sentence breaks
- sprinkle a few .Vt's where neccessary
- remove incorrect use of `\-'
- proper quoting using .Dq, instead of manual ``...''
Approved by: des@ (mentor)
Reviewed by: ru@
On ia64, where there's no libc_r at all, libkse is now the default
thread library by virtue of these links.
The reasons for this change are:
1. libkse is slated to become the default thread library anyway,
2. active development and maintenance is only present for libkse,
3. GNOME and KDE, both in the process of being supported on ia64,
work better with KSE; even on ia64.
there to support sysinstall, and enabling DEBUG creates spurious
console output that can't be read anyway... This slightly cleans up
the visual impression of the system install by not spamming the console
during the labeling of the disks.
(fstp stores a mem32 value, fstpl stores a mem64 value)
This fixes ghostscript for 'make release' on amd64. Ghostscript for some
reason thinks it is a good idea to use -fno-builtin, which means it is
vulnerable to bugs in libc that are normally hidden by the builtin gcc
functions. Oops.
can clear the pointer to mutex, not the thread doing mutex
handoff. Because _mutex_lock_backout does not hold scheduler
lock while testing THR_FLAGS_IN_SYNCQ and then reading mutex
pointer, it is possible mutex owner begin to unlock and
handoff the mutex to the current thread, and mutex pointer
will be cleared to NULL before current thread reading it, so
current thread will end up with deferencing a NULL pointer,
Fix the race by making mutex waiters to clear their mutex pointers.
While I am here, also save inherited priority in mutex for
PTHREAD_PRIO_INERIT mutex in mutex_trylock_common just like what
we did in mutex_lock_common.
Skinny is the protocol used by Cisco IP phones to talk to Cisco Call
Managers. With this code, one can use a Cisco IP phone behind a FreeBSD
NAT gateway.
Currently, having the Call Manager behind the NAT gateway is not supported.
More information on enabling Skinny support in libalias, natd, and ppp
can be found in those applications' manpages.
PR: 55843
Reviewed by: ru
Approved by: ru
MFC after: 30 days
for interrupted field.
Also in _thr_sig_handler, retrieve current signal mask from kernel not
from ucp, the later is pre-unioned mask, not current signal mask.
pthread_md.h. This commit only moves the definition; it does not
change it for any of the platforms. This more easily allows 64-bit
architectures (in particular) to pick a slightly larger stack size.
THR_SETCONTEXT as PANIC(). The THR_SETCONTEXT macro is currently not
used, which means that the definition we had could be wrong, overly
pessimistic or unknowingly right. I don't like the odds...
The new _ia64_break_setcontext() and corresponding kernel fixes make
KSE mostly usable. There's still a case where we don't properly
restore a context and end up with a NaT consumption fault (typically
an indication for not handling NaT collection points correctly),
but at least now mutex_d works...
state for amd64 was twice as large as necessary. Peter
recently fixed this, so the comment no longer applies.
Also, since the size of struct mcontext changed, adjust
the threads library version of get&set context to match.
FYI, any change layout/size change to any arch's struct
mcontext will likely need some minor changes in libpthread.
always widen the imputed netmask if it is narrower than the specified octets.
fixes a strange behaviour where inet_net_pton would always return 4 (bits)
for multicast addresses no matter how many octets were specified.
negotiated with Paul Vixie, original author of this function.
PR: standards/53151
Submitted by: Max Laier <max@love2party.net>
Optained from: OpenBSD
to avoid potential memory leak, also fix a bug in pthread_create, contention
scope should be inherited when PTHREAD_INHERIT_SCHED is set, and also check
right field for PTHREAD_INHERIT_SCHED, scheduling inherit flag is in sched_inherit.
2. Execute hooks registered by atexit() on thread stack but not on scheduler
stack.
3. Simplify some code in _kse_single_thread by calling xxx_destroy functions.
Reviewed by: deischen
should be a value past to pthread_attr_setguardsize, not a rounded up value.
Also fix a stack size matching bug in thr_stack.c, now stack matching code
uses number of pages but not bytes length to match stack size, so for example,
size 512 bytes and size 513 bytes should both match 1 page stack size.
Reviewed by: deischen
a shared library or any other dyanmic allocated data block, once
pthread_once_t is initialized, a mutex is allocated, if we unload the
shared library or free those data block, then there is no way to deallocate
the mutex, result is memory leak.
To fix this problem, we don't use mutex field in pthread_once_t, instead,
we use its state field and an internal mutex and conditional variable in
libkse to do any synchronization, we introduce a third state IN_PROGRESS to
wait if another thread is already in invoking init_routine().
Also while I am here, make pthread_once() conformed to pthread cancellation
point specification.
Reviewed by: deischen
specified directory is not found in the mount list. Before the
MNT_BYFSID changes, unmount(2) used to return ENOENT for a nonexistent
path and EINVAL for a non-mountpoint, but we can no longer distinguish
between these cases. Of the two error codes, EINVAL was more likely
to occur in practice, and it was the only one of the two that was
documented.
Update the manual page to match the current behaviour.
Suggested by: tjr
Reviewed by: tjr
no peer address information is desired.
PR: 56044
Submitted by: Felix Opatz <felix@zotteljedi.de> and
Bernd Luevelsmeyer <bdluevel@heitec.net>
MFC after: 1 month
value for getcontext() in a preserved register rather than on the stack.
The second time around, the stack value would likely have changed so we
can't depend on it for the return value.
otherwise the return from the syscall stub for getcontext will pop off
the return value for the caller to the getcontext stub and it will appear
as though the setcontext() syscall returned instead of the getcontext().
The same bug exists on amd64, a fix is coming there too.
The bug can be demonstrated with this test code fragment:
main()
{
ucontext_t top;
if (getcontext(&top) == 0) {
write(2, "PING!\n", 6);
/* Cause a return value of 1 from getcontext this time */
top.uc_mcontext.mc_eax = 1;
setcontext(&top);
err(1, "setcontext() returned");
}
write(2, "PONG!\n", 6);
_exit(0);
}
instead of long types for low-level locks.
Add prototypes for some internal libc functions that are
wrapped by the library as cancellation points.
Add memory barriers to alpha atomic swap functions (submitted
by davidxu).
Requested by: bde
the default label support in /etc/mac.conf. Rather than maintain
each default label type in an explicit global variable in mac.c,
keep a list of defaults loaded from the configuration file.
Generalize the parsing so that we support both the older:
default_file_labels foo
default_ifnet_labels foo
default_process_labels foo
And also a new:
default_labels file foo
default_labels ifnet foo
default_labels process foo
We now accept arbitrary object classes in the first argument. If
the same object is specified more than once, we discard the
earlier definition in favor of the later one.
Add a new API, mac_prepare_type(), which accepts a mac_t to
prepare, as well as an object name in the second argument, which
will pull a default label set for the object out of the
configuration loaded by mac_init_internal(). This permits the libc
to adapt to new objects known about by applications but not by libc
at compile-time.
Also liberalize the error handling a bit: if we're using implicit
initialization (i.e., the application didn't explicitly initialize
the MAC code), ignore syntax errors and only use valid lines. In
the future, we may want to add explicit warnings and do this a
bit more consistently.
While here, add support for a MAC_CONFFILE environmental variable,
which may be used to specify an alternative mac.conf configuration
file if the application isn't running with modified privilege
(issetugid()).
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
critical region, we wrap some syscalls for thread cancellation point, and
when syscalls returns, we call _thr_leave_cancellation_point, at the time
if a signal comes in, it would be buffered, and when the thread leaves
_thr_leave_cancellation_point, buffered signals will be processed, to avoid
messing up normal syscall errno, we should save and restore errno around
signal handling code.
gethostname()'s old and new signatures without requiring a library
bump. Note that programs which called gethostname() with a negative
argument were already broken, since the same type conversion was done
by the old implementation. Add a note in the Makefile so that whoever
next bumps the libc revision will delete the kluge at the same time
(as it will no longer be necessary). This is only operative on 64-bit
platforms.
Submitted by: marcel
when the buffer is not long enough to hold the current host name.
POSIX does not standardize error returns for gethostname(), so it
doesn't matter which one we use, but ENAMETOOLONG is at least a little
more intuitive, and mi suggests the existence of prior art. I've been
running with this change for a while on my home machine with no
effect. At the same time, I've updated the prototype for
gethostname() to use the correct standard type (size_t) for the
namelen argument.
All of the in-tree callers fall into one of the following categories:
1) Call perror() or equivalent when gethostname() fails.
2) Ignore gethostname()'s return value entirely, potentially resulting
in data corruption if the buffer is too small.
3) Fall back to a (possibly sensible) default value if gethostname()
fails.
Many of the callers I examined shows signs of confusion about the
correct sizing of the host name buffer. gethostname(3) now has more
information about this, as well as updated standards information.
PR: 48114
Submitted by: mi (in part)
yet, so we can protect some locking code from being interrupted by signal
handling. When KSE mode is turned on, reset the thread flag to scope process
except we are running in 1:1 mode which we needn't turn it off.
Also remove some unused member variables in structure kse.
Tested by: deischen
binaries in /bin and /sbin installed in /lib. Only the versioned files
reside in /lib, the .so symlink continues to live /usr/lib so the
toolchain doesn't need to be modified.
have execute permissions. Run "perl verify" instead. Replace all
occurences of the hardcoding of ./verify with $(VERIFY) to allow
it to be overridden as well.
- All those diffs to syscalls.master for each architecture *are*
necessary. This needed clarification; the stub code generation for
mlockall() was disabled, which would prevent applications from
linking to this API (suggested by mux)
- Giant has been quoshed. It is no longer held by the code, as
the required locking has been pushed down within vm_map.c.
- Callers must specify VM_MAP_WIRE_HOLESOK or VM_MAP_WIRE_NOHOLES
to express their intention explicitly.
- Inspected at the vmstat, top and vm pager sysctl stats level.
Paging-in activity is occurring correctly, using a test harness.
- The RES size for a process may appear to be greater than its SIZE.
This is believed to be due to mappings of the same shared library
page being wired twice. Further exploration is needed.
- Believed to back out of allocations and locks correctly
(tested with WITNESS, MUTEX_PROFILING, INVARIANTS and DIAGNOSTIC).
PR: kern/43426, standards/54223
Reviewed by: jake, alc
Approved by: jake (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
otherwise masks all signals until fork() returns, in child process,
we reset library state before restoring signal masks until we reach
a safe to point.
Reviewed by: deischen
didn't provide a constant for one of them (non-IEEE denormal trap),
in an attempt to not support it probably, it's not we are left with
the lower 5 bits.
o Properly mask the passed or returned fp_except_t. Not doing so
causes instant core dumps by trying to write an invalid value to
ar.fpsr. Now that we're masking, stop using exclusive-or to invert
bits.
This fixes the illegal instruction fault encountered when building
mozilla.
o fix the len argument of memcmp(3) to be the size of the node field
of the uuid structure, not the size of the uuid structure itself.
We're comparing the node fields...
o uuid_compare(3) is specified to return -1, 0 or 1, depending on
the outcome of the comparison. memcmp(3) returns the difference
between the first differing bytes. Hence, we cannot ever return
the return value of memcmp(3) as-is.
PR: standards/55370
Submitted by: Konstantin Oznobihin <bork@rsu.ru>