In order to compile lib32 libraries and other 32-bit code on arm64,
<machine/foo.h> needs to be redirected to an arm header rather
than arm64 when building with -m32. Ifdef the arm64 headers that
are installed in /usr/include/machine and used by user-level software
(including references from /usr/include/*.h) so that if __arm__ is
defined when including the arm64 version, <arm/foo.h> is included
rather than using the rest of the file's contents. Some arm headers
had no arm64 equivalent; headers were added just to do the redirection.
These files use #error if __arm__ is not defined to guard against
confusion. Also add an include/arm Makefile, and modify Makefiles
as needed to install everything, including the arm files in
/usr/include/arm. fenv.h comes from lib/msun/arm/fenv.h.
The new arm64 headers are:
acle-compat.h
cpuinfo.h
sysreg.h
Reviewed by: jrtc27, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D40944
See commit 8fad2cda93 ("bsd.compat.mk: Provide new CPP and sub-make
variables") for the context behind this change.
Reviewed by: emaste, brooks, jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D40924
Currently rtld_paths.h will #undef _PATH_ELF_HINTS in order to override
this to the right value if included afterwards, but the other way round
does not work as elf-hints.h tries to define an already-defined macro to
a potentially different value. Thus, guard the definition here so that
rtld_paths.h's definition continues to take precedence.
Note that, although all in-tree uses of _PATH_ELF_HINTS have included
rtld_paths.h already, pax-utils wants _PATH_ELF_HINTS from elf-hints.h
and so we cannot just drop the define. In-tree uses must just continue
to make sure that they include rtld_paths.h to get the right value for
libcompat builds as is already required.
Reviewed by: kib, brooks, jhb, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D40918
After removing the -FreeBSD and -NetBSD, we're left with a nuber of
BSD-2-Clause AND BSD-2-Clause, so tidy that up.
Discussed with: pfg
MFC After: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
The SPDX folks have obsoleted the BSD-2-Clause-NetBSD identifier. Catch
up to that fact and revert to their recommended match of BSD-2-Clause.
Discussed with: pfg
MFC After: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
The SPDX folks have obsoleted the BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier. Catch
up to that fact and revert to their recommended match of BSD-2-Clause.
Discussed with: pfg
MFC After: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
if_wg.h was installed via dev/wg in LSUBDIRS and also explicitly. We
want to install only wg/if_wg.h not the other headers, so add dev/wg to
the skip list in the copies and symlinks targets.
PR: 271266
Reviewed by: kevans
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D40031
Some points for the future:
- libc is not the right place for sorting algorithms.
Probably libutil is better suited for this purpose or
a dedicated libsort. Should move all sorting algorithms
away from libc eventually.
- CheriBSD uses capabilities for memory access, and could
benefit from a standard memswap() function.
- Do something about qsort() in FreeBSD's libc like:
- Mark it deprecated on FreeBSD, as a first step,
due to missing limits on CPU time.
- Audit the use of qsort() in the FreeBSD base system
and consider swapping to other existing sorting
algorithms.
Discussed with: brooks@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36493
This reverts commit a7469c9c0a.
This reverts commit 7d65a450cd.
This reverts commit 8dcf3a82c5.
The bsort(3) algorithm works by swapping objects, similarly to qsort(3),
and does not require any significant amount of additional memory.
The bsort(3) algorithm doesn't suffer from the processing time issues
known the plague the qsort(3) family of algorithms, and is bounded by
a complexity of O(log2(N) * log2(N) * N), where N is the number of
elements in the sorting array. The additional complexity compared to
mergesort(3) is a fair tradeoff in situations where no memory may
be allocated.
The bsort(3) APIs are identical to those of qsort(3), allowing for
easy drop-in and testing.
The design of the bsort(3) algorithm allows for future parallell CPU
execution when sorting arrays. The current version of the bsort(3)
algorithm is single threaded. This is possible because fixed areas
of the sorting data is compared at a time, and can easily be divided
among different CPU's to sort large arrays faster.
Reviewed by: gbe@, delphij@, pauamma_gundo.com (manpages)
Sponsored by: NVIDIA Networking
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36493
These were brought in by the libbind import, but these functions were
never actually implemented anywhere, only header declarations and symbol
map entries were imported.
Fixes: 046c3635cd ("Bring final version of libbind:")
Fixes: e45764721a ("Update our stub resolver to final version of ...")
Reported by: ld.lld 16 being --no-undefined-version by default
Sponsored by: https://www.patreon.com/valpackett
Reviewed by: emaste
Pull request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src/pull/700
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38407
Add mostly glibc and msl compatible secure_getenv. Return NULL if
issetugid() indicates the process is tainted, otherwise getenv(x). The
rational behind this is the fact that many Linux applications use this
function instead of getenv() as it's widely consider a, "best
practice".
Reviewed by: imp, mjg (feedback)
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src/pull/686
Signed-off-by: Lucy Marsh <seafork@disroot.org>
For endian.h to work instead of sys/endian.h, some software needs
byteswap.h available. It must define {__,}byteswap_{16,32,64}.
Included sys/_endian.h to get an appropriate __byteswap16, etc
and defines the new macros in terms of them. Enhance _endian.h
to allow it to be included from here too.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32051
Add endian.h. This includes sys/endian.h and then adds extra defines
that glibc defines with double underscores for our
_{BIG,BYTE,LITTLE,PDP}_ENDIAN macros. We also define __FLOAT_WORD_ORDER
to be the same as _BYTE_ENDIAN since FreeBSD doesn't currently define
this, and the default with glibc is exactly this for our platforms.
Move common parts of endian.h and sys/endian.h into sys/_endian.h
to limit namespace pollution from endian.h
All this gives us good compatibility with Linux. There may be one or two
upstreams that haven't integrated the patches I tried to send up.
There are some minor differences:
o The extra glibc macros are not defined. These are all
controlled with either __ at the start, or only defined
when glibc is being built. We also don't define macros
that are used internally in glibc that would pollute
the namespace.
o For complete compatibility, this change must also be
paired with providing a glibc-compatible byteswap.h.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: mhorne, markj, jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31962
GCC 12 (unlike GCC 9) does not match a function argument passed to the
old qsort_r() API (as is used in the qsort_r_compat test) to a
function pointer type via __generic. It treats the function type as a
distinct type from a function pointer. As a workaround, add a second
definition of qsort_r for GCC 12 which uses the bare function type.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37410
The includes build is kind of funky, as we support either copying or
symlinking files into /usr/include. For `copies`, we were supplying
the include/ ${TAG_ARGS}, which puts packages into `FreeBSD-runtime`,
without any consideration to the fact that we're installing headers.
Let's copy the approach that the `symlinks` target uses for now, and
add ",dev" to the TAG_ARGS so that headers at least end up in
FreeBSD-runtime-dev, which is more appropriate. Some of these includes
are actually technically supposed to be in *other* packages and their
INCSGROUP's PACKAGE setting is actually correct, but this is less
trivial to solve. This is a bandaid to fix the immediate problem of
some headers ending up in two different packages.
PR: 267526
Reviewed by: dfr, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37256
Rework getaddrinfo(3) to return different error values for unresolvable
names (same as before, EAI_NONAME) and those without a requested addr
(EAI_ADDRFAMILY) when using DNS. This is implemented via an added
error in the nsswitch layer, NS_ADDRFAMILY, which is used only by
getaddrinfo(). The error is passed through nsdispatch(3), but that
routine has no changes to handle this error. The error originates in
the getaddrinfo DNS layer called via nsdispatch(), and is processed
by the search layer that calls nsdispatch().
While here, add a little style to returns near those that were
modified.
Reviewed in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37139 with related changes.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 1 month
EAI_ADDRFAMILY and EAI_NODATA are not in RFC 3493, but are available
and used in many other systems. It is desirable to have at least one
of them in order to distinguish between names that do not resolve and
those that do not have the requested address type. A change to
getaddrinfo() will use EAI_ADDRFAMILY. Both were "#if 0"; re-enable,
conditioned on __BSD_VISIBLE, and update comments. Also add comments
and __BSD_VISIBLE conditional for the last three EAI errors, which
are not in the RFC or POSIX. Note, all of these are available in
NetBSD and OpenBSD, and EAI_ADDRFAMILY and EAI_NODATA are available
in Linux (glibc).
Reviewed in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37139 with related changes.
Reviewed by: bz
MFC after: 1 month
This commit brings back the driver from FreeBSD commit
f187d6dfbf plus subsequent fixes from
upstream.
Relative to upstream this commit includes a few other small fixes such
as additional INET and INET6 #ifdef's, #include cleanups, and updates
for recent API changes in main.
Reviewed by: pauamma, gbe, kevans, emaste
Obtained from: git@git.zx2c4.com:wireguard-freebsd @ 3cc22b2
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36909
glibc-based interface.
Unfortunately, the glibc maintainers, despite knowing the existence
of the FreeBSD qsort_r(3) interface in 2004 and refused to add the
same interface to glibc based on grounds of the lack of standardization
and portability concerns, has decided it was a good idea to introduce
their own qsort_r(3) interface in 2007 as a GNU extension with a
slightly different and incompatible interface.
With the adoption of their interface as POSIX standard, let's switch
to the same prototype, there is no need to remain incompatible.
C++ and C applications written for the historical FreeBSD interface
get source level compatibility when building in C++ mode, or when
building with a C compiler with C11 generics support, provided that
the caller passes a fifth parameter of qsort_r() that exactly matches
the historical FreeBSD comparator function pointer type and does not
redefine the historical qsort_r(3) prototype in their source code.
Symbol versioning is used to keep old binaries working.
MFC: never
Relnotes: yes
Reviewed by: cem, imp, hps, pauamma
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17083
Various RPC functions used a bare pointer in function prototypes to
describe fixed-length buffer arguments but used a fixed-length array
in the function definition. The manual page for these functions
describes the parameters as being fixed-length buffers, so update
the prototypes to match the definitions.
Reviewed by: imp, emaste
Reported by: GCC -Warray-parameter
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36757
Add a strverscmp(3) function to libc, a GNU extension I implemented by
reading its glibc manual page. It orders strings following a much more
natural ordering (e.g. "ent1 < ent2 < ent10" as opposed to
"ent1 < ent10 < ent2" with strcmp(3)'s lexicographic ordering).
Also add versionsort(3) for use as scandir(3)'s compar argument.
Update manual page for scandir(3) and add one for strverscmp(3).
Reviewed by: pstef, gbe, kib
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35807
Add a target to ensure the presence of /usr/include/i386
before we try to install files. In the buildworld/installworld path
it gets created different ways, but for distribute (used in releases)
we need it in the subdir.
(Creating of this the x86, pc, powerpc directories is far too complex.
We should look for ways to simplify it.)
Reported by: lwhsu
Fixes: a09ea2bbc3
Addition to D31491 in order to actually resolve the top root cause.
Currently rpcbind gets contact address from connectionless xprt->xp_p2
member of a transport and will fail to get it when working over
connection oriented transport, leading to a guess game in terms of
contact address on rpcinfo requests like RPCBPROC_GETVERSADDR or
RPCBPROC_GETADDRLIST and poor returns which may influence a user
of a call and specifically reported on OSX clients, which tend to
not provide address hint from rpcinfo request to a server.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35220
Install the i386 md_var.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a mostly kernel-only header required by procstat's ZFS support.
It is pulled in by the i386 machine/counter.h.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Install the i386 counter.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a kernel-only header required by procstat's ZFS support.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Install the i386 pcpu_aux.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a kernel-only header that is required by procstat's ZFS support.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp
Install the i386 pcpu.h under /usr/include/i386 on amd64 and include
when targeting i386.
This is a kernel-only header and should not be required, but
procstat's zfs support includes this with _KERNEL defined.
Reviewed by: jhb, imp