This contains some new testcases in /usr/tests/...:
- .../lib/libc
- .../lib/libthr
- .../lib/msun
- .../sys/kern
Tested on: amd64, i386
MFC after: 1 month
drain timeout handling to historical freebsd behavior.
The primary reason for these changes is the need to have tty_drain() call
ttydevsw_busy() at some reasonable sub-second rate, to poll hardware that
doesn't signal an interrupt when the transmit shift register becomes empty
(which includes virtually all USB serial hardware). Such hardware hangs
in a ttyout wait, because it never gets an opportunity to trigger a wakeup
from the sleep in tty_drain() by calling ttydisc_getc() again, after
handing the last of the buffered data to the hardware.
While researching the history of changes to tty_drain() I stumbled across
some email describing the historical BSD behavior of tcdrain() and close()
on serial ports, and the ability of comcontrol(1) to control timeout
behavior. Using that and some advice from Bruce Evans as a guide, I've
put together these changes to implement the hardware polling and restore
the historical timeout behaviors...
- tty_drain() now calls ttydevsw_busy() in a loop at 10 Hz to accomodate
hardware that requires polling for busy state.
- The "new historical" behavior for draining during close(2) is retained:
the drain timeout is "1 second without making any progress". When the
1-second timeout expires, if the count of bytes remaining in the tty
layer buffer is smaller than last time, the timeout is extended for
another second. Unfortunately, the same logic cannot be extended all
the way down to the hardware, because the interface to that layer is a
simple busy/not-busy indication.
- Due to the previous point, an application that needs a guarantee that
all data has been transmitted must use TIOCDRAIN/tcdrain(3) before
calling close(2).
- The historical behavior of honoring the drainwait setting for TIOCDRAIN
(used by tcdrain(3)) is restored.
- The historical kern.drainwait sysctl to control the global default
drainwait time is restored, but is now named kern.tty_drainwait.
- The historical default drainwait timeout of 300 seconds is restored.
- Handling of TIOCGDRAINWAIT and TIOCSDRAINWAIT ioctls is restored
(this also makes the comcontrol(1) drainwait verb work again).
- Manpages are updated to document these behaviors.
Reviewed by: bde (prior version)
libstdc++ before gcc r244057 expected that libc provided
__cxa_thread_atexit_impl, and libstdc++ implemented
__cxa_thread_atexit, by forwarding the calls to _impl. Mentioned gcc
revision checks for __cxa_thread_atexit in libc and does not provide
the symbol from libstdc++ if found.
This change helps older gcc, in particular, all released versions
which implement thread_local, by consolidating the implementation into
libc. For that versions, if configured with the current libc, the
__cxa_thread_atexit is exported from libstdc++ as a trivial wrapper
around libc::__cxa_thread_atexit_impl.
The __cxa_thread_atexit implementation is put into separate source
file to allow for static linking with older libstdc++.a.
gcc bugzilla: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=78968
Reported by: Hannes Hauswedell <h2+fbsdports@fsfe.org>
PR: 215709
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
the mapping which might be accessed by other threads.
If a pointer to the /dev/hpet register page mapping was stored into
the hpet_dev_map, other threads might access the page at any time.
Never unmap it, instead, keep track of mappings for all hpet units in
smal array. Store pointer to the newly mapped registers page using
CAS, to detect parallel mappings.
It appeared relatively easy to demonstrate the problem by arranging
two threads which perform gettimeofday(2) concurently, first time in
the process address space, when HPET is used for timecounter.
PR: 215715
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Apple had them at the start but moving them to the end is better for
faster reading and fits better what is done in other FreeBSD headers.
MFC after: 5 days
This argument is not a bitmask of flags, but only accepts a single value.
Fail with EINVAL if an invalid value is passed to 'flag'. Rename the
'flags' argument to getmntinfo(3) to 'mode' as well to match.
This is a followup to r308088.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Adding %b support to vfprintf for parity with kernel space requires
more discussion/review.
In particular, many parties were concerned over introducing a
non-standard format qualifier to *printf(3) which didn't already
exist in other OSes, e.g. Linux, thus making code which used %b
harder to port to other operating systems.
Requested by: many
This 6 times gettimeofday performance, as measured by
tools/tools/syscall_timing
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8789
This is a direct port of the kernel %b format.
I'm unclear on if (more) non-portable printf extensions will be a
problem. I think it's desirable to have userspace formats include all
kernel formats, but there may be competing goals I'm not aware of.
Reviewed by: no one, unfortunately
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8426
These functions are supposed to return a value between [_2^31, 2^31).
This doesn't seem to work on 64-bit systems, where we return a value
between [0, 3^32). Patch up the function to use proper casts to int32_t.
While there, fix some other style bugs.
MFC after: 2 weeks
A specially crafted sockaddr_dl argument can trigger a static buffer overflow
in the libc library, with possibility to rewrite with arbitrary data following
static buffers that belong to other library functions.
Reviewed by: kib
Security: FreeBSD-SA-16:37.libc
Instead of failing with ENAMETOOLONG, which is swallowed by
pthread_set_name_np() anyway, truncate the given name to MAXCOMLEN+1
bytes. This is more likely what the user wants, and saves the
caller from truncating it before the call (which was the only
recourse).
Polish pthread_set_name_np(3) and add a .Xr to thr_set_name(2)
so the user might find the documentation for this behavior.
Reviewed by: jilles
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
This uses the same fix as r294894 did for the mlock test. The code from
that commit is moved into a common object file which PROGS supports
building first.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8689
As of r234483, vnode deactivation causes non-VPO_NOSYNC pages to be
laundered. This behaviour has two problems:
1. Dirty VPO_NOSYNC pages must be laundered before the vnode can be
reclaimed, and this work may be unfairly deferred to the vnlru process
or an unrelated application when the system is under vnode pressure.
2. Deactivation of a vnode with dirty VPO_NOSYNC pages requires a scan of
the corresponding VM object's memq for non-VPO_NOSYNC dirty pages; if
the laundry thread needs to launder pages from an unreferenced such
vnode, it will reactivate and deactivate the vnode with each laundering,
potentially resulting in a large number of expensive scans.
Therefore, ensure that all dirty pages are laundered upon deactivation,
i.e., when all maps of the vnode are removed and all references are
released.
Reviewed by: alc, kib
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8641
We return [EMLINK] instead of [ELOOP] when trying to open a symlink with
O_NOFOLLOW, so that the original case of [ELOOP] can be distinguished. Code
like cmp -h and xz takes advantage of this.
PR: 214633
Reviewed by: kib, imp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8586
When wcstof() skipped initial space and then parsing failed, it set
endptr to the first non-space character. Fix it to correctly report
failure by setting endptr to the beginning of the input string.
The fix is from theraven@, who fixed this bug in wcstod() and
wcstold() in r227753.
While I'm here:
Move assignments out of declarations in wcstod() and wcstold().
This is against my personal preference, but it is our agreed style(9).
Set endptr correctly on malloc() failure in all three functions.
Remove an incorrect comment: This is pointer arithmetic,
so the code was not actually making that assumption.
wcstold() advanced the wcp pointer beyond leading whitespace
and then reset it back to the beginning of the string.
Do not reset it. This seems to have no functional effect,
since strtold_l() also skips leading whitespace. I'm making
the change to keep this function consistent with wcstof() and
wcstod(), and because the C11 spec prescribes the use of iswspace()
to skip leading space.
Reported by: libc++ unit test for std::stof(std::wstring)
MFC after: 8 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
do any speculations about readahead, and use exactly the amount of readahead
specified by user. E.g. setting SF_FLAGS(0, SF_USER_READAHEAD) will guarantee
that no readahead at all will be performed.
Hardfloat is now default (use riscv64sf as TARGET_ARCH
for softfloat).
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8529
Now that the changes to the dirname(3) function had some time to settle,
let's go ahead and use the same approach for replacing basename(3) by a
simple implementation that modifies the input string, thereby making it
thread-safe and guaranteed to succeed.
Unlike dirname(3), this function already had a thread-safe variant
basename_r(3). This function had its own set of problems, like having an
upper bound on the pathname length. Keep this function around for
compatibility, but remove most references from the man page. Make the
man page more similar to that of dirname(3).
As the basename_r(3) function is only provided by FreeBSD (and Bionic),
depending on its use is even more implementation defined than assuming
that basename(3) is thread-safe.
Reviewed by: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8382
We have locale files generated on EL machines (e.g. during cross-build
on amd64 host), but then we are using them on EB machines (e.g. MIPS64EB),
so proceed byte-swap if necessary.
All the libc tests passed successfully, including Russian collation.
Tested by: br@, Hongyan Xia <hx242@cam.ac.uk>
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by: HEIF5
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8281
Specifically, use .Ta instead of tabs to separate column entries. While
here fix a few other things:
- Use .Sy for all column headers (previously only the first column header
was bold)
- Use .Dv to markup constants used for MIB names.
- Use "1234" and "4321" for the byte order descriptions without
thousands separators.
- Mark up header files in the first table with .In.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Summary:
The Freescale e500v2 PowerPC core does not use a standard FPU.
Instead, it uses a Signal Processing Engine (SPE)--a DSP-style vector processor
unit, which doubles as a FPU. The PowerPC SPE ABI is incompatible with the
stock powerpc ABI, so a new MACHINE_ARCH was created to deal with this.
Additionaly, the SPE opcodes overlap with Altivec, so these are mutually
exclusive. Taking advantage of this fact, a new file, powerpc/booke/spe.c, was
created with the same function set as in powerpc/powerpc/altivec.c, so it
becomes effectively a drop-in replacement. setjmp/longjmp were modified to save
the upper 32-bits of the now-64-bit GPRs (upper 32-bits are only accessible by
the SPE).
Note: This does _not_ support the SPE in the e500v1, as the e500v1 SPE does not
support double-precision floating point.
Also, without a new MACHINE_ARCH it would be impossible to provide binary
packages which utilize the SPE.
Additionally, no work has been done to support ports, work is needed for this.
This also means no newer gcc can yet be used. However, gcc's powerpc support
has been refactored which would make adding a powerpcspe-freebsd target very
easy.
Test Plan:
This was lightly tested on a RouterBoard RB800 and an AmigaOne A1222
(P1022-based) board, compiled against the new ABI. Base system utilities
(/bin/sh, /bin/ls, etc) still function appropriately, the system is able to boot
multiuser.
Reviewed By: bdrewery, imp
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5683
Back in 2015 when I reimplemented these functions to use an AVL tree, I
was annoyed by the weakness of the typing of these functions. Both tree
nodes and keys are represented by 'void *', meaning that things like the
documentation for these functions are an absolute train wreck.
To make things worse, users of these functions need to cast the return
value of tfind()/tsearch() from 'void *' to 'type_of_key **' in order to
access the key. Technically speaking such casts violate aliasing rules.
I've observed actual breakages as a result of this by enabling features
like LTO.
I've filed a bug report at the Austin Group. Looking at the way the bug
got resolved, they made a pretty good step in the right direction. A new
type 'posix_tnode' has been added to correspond to tree nodes. It is
still defined as 'void' for source-level compatibility, but in the very
far future it could be replaced by a proper structure type containing a
key pointer.
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8205