Notable upstream pull request merges:
#13680 Add options to zfs redundant_metadata property
#13758 Allow mounting snapshots in .zfs/snapshot as a regular user
#13838 quota: disable quota check for ZVOL
#13839 quota: extend quota for dataset
#13973 Fix memory leaks in dmu_send()/dmu_send_obj()
#13977 Avoid unnecessary metaslab_check_free calling
#13978 PAM: Fix unchecked return value from zfs_key_config_load()
#13979 Handle possible null pointers from malloc/strdup/strndup()
#13997 zstream: allow decompress to fix metadata for uncompressed
records
#13998 zvol_wait logic may terminate prematurely
#14001 FreeBSD: Fix a pair of bugs in zfs_fhtovp()
#14003 Stop ganging due to past vdev write errors
#14039 Optimize microzaps
#14050 Fix draid2+2s metadata error on simultaneous 2 drive failures
#14062 zed: Avoid core dump if wholedisk property does not exist
#14077 Propagate extent_bytes change to autotrim thread
#14079 FreeBSD: vn_flush_cached_data: observe vnode locking contract
#14093 Fix ARC target collapse when zfs_arc_meta_limit_percent=100
#14106 Add ability to recompress send streams with new compression
algorithm
#14119 Deny receiving into encrypted datasets if the keys are not
loaded
#14120 Fix arc_p aggressive increase
#14129 zed: Prevent special vdev to be replaced by hot spare
#14133 Expose zfs_vdev_open_timeout_ms as a tunable
#14135 FreeBSD: Fix out of bounds read in zfs_ioctl_ozfs_to_legacy()
#14152 Adds the `-p` option to `zfs holds`
#14161 Handle and detect #13709's unlock regression
Obtained from: OpenZFS
OpenZFS commit: 2163cde450
Work is ongoing to add support for pfsync over IPv6. This required some
changes to allow for differentiating between the two families in a more
generic way.
This patch converts the relevant ioctls to using nvlists, making future
extensions (such as supporting IPv6 addresses) easier.
Sponsored by: InnoGames GmbH
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36277
Added support for application management interface. There are two types of commands supported:
1. Firmware IOCTLs: These ioctls are meant for firmware
consumption. Driver acts as a transport for these.
2. Driver only IOCTLs: These ioctls are meant for driver
consumption. Driver will serve these ioctls without sending them down
to firmware.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36448
Previously we relied on the .s.o rule in share/mk/bsd.suffixes.mk to
tell make that linux_support.o is built from linux_support.s, even
though we do not use the .s.o rule to assemble it.
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35864
The fasttrap pid provider has been in place for a long time, but stopped
getting built by efe88d92da in preparation for 64-bit atomics. 32-bit
emulation of 64-bit atomics was added in 9aafc7c05.
MFC after: 3 weeks
MODULES_OVERRIDE has traditionally taken precedence over EXTRA_MODULES
and WITHOUT_MODULES as the exact list of modules to build. Over time,
things have been added that has broken this. Move the .endif that makes
this the case to the right place. The so called 'ALL_MODULES' option is
the only thing with higher precedence, but it's not quite all the
options anymore (though it is much more of them, and doesn't quite
work on !x86).
Sponsored by: Netflix
The previous commit added references to to the syscallnames arrays, but
failed to add the relevant source files to the module build. Thus, the
modules failed to load due to missing symbols.
Reported by: cy
Fixes: 1da65dcb1c ("linux: populate sv_syscallnames in each sysentvec")
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sort the entries alphabetically, and list them with one entry per line.
This makes the diffs much cleaner when adding or removing a new entry,
as I will do in the next commit.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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
Now that armv[45] are removed, simplify some tests for armv[67] that are
now either always true, or always true when we're on arm.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Ah, the joys of pushing a commit with a dirty editor buffer that all the
checks in git didn't catch... Also, my eyeballs missed it too :(.
Fixes: ba9f71ddec
Noticed by: jrtc27
Sponsored by: Netflix
When building a kernel without FDT these modules don't build. As they
depend on FDT and don't work with ACPI disable them.
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37178
This is the last part for ARM64 Hyper-V enablement. This includes
commone files and make file changes to enable the ARM64 FreeBSD
guest on Hyper-V. With this patch, it should be able to build
the ARM64 image and install it on Hyper-V.
Reviewed by: emaste, andrew, whu
Tested by: Souradeep Chakrabarti <schakrabarti@microsoft.com>
Sponsored by: Microsoft
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36744
2782ed8f6c fixed the standalone module
build. REmove the now duplicate includes for opt_acpi.h and
opt_platform.h. Als remove the if_mdio.h again in both the Makefile
and the implementation file as it is not (currently) used.
X-MFC with: ba7319e909
MFC after: 70 days
Now that we properly define INTRNG generically on all the platforms that
need it in opt_global.h, we don't need to define it here.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37110
New driver to ACPI generic event device, defined in ACPI spec.
Some ACPI power button may not work without this.
In qemu arm64 with "virt" machine, with ACPI firmware,
enable devd check devd message by
and invoke following command in qemu monitor
(qemu) system_powerdown
and make sure some power button input event appear.
(setting sysctl hw.acpi.power_button_state=S5 is not work,
because ACPI tree does not have \_S5 object.)
Reviewed by: andrew, hrs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37032
Import two files left out initially from the driver needed for debugfs
support [1]. Adjust the driver further to make it compile on FreeBSD.
This is currently turned off and needs more LinuxKPI/lindebugfs work.
Being in the tree will allow us to collaboratively work on it and
then we can enable it for good.
Obtained from: Linux wireless-testing (tag: wt-2022-10-19) [1]
2c9078b9abcb884e27360340aaa7dfd4c0de29b3
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 days
DPAA2 is a hardware-level networking architecture found in some NXP
SoCs which contain hardware blocks including Management Complex
(MC, a command interface to manipulate DPAA2 objects), Wire Rate I/O
processor (WRIOP, packets distribution, queuing, drop decisions),
Queues and Buffers Manager (QBMan, Rx/Tx queues control, Rx buffer
pools) and the others.
The Management Complex runs NXP-supplied firmware which provides DPAA2
objects as an abstraction layer over those blocks to simplify an
access to the underlying hardware. Each DPAA2 object has its own
driver (to perform an initialization at least) and will be visible
as a separate device in the device tree.
Two new drivers (dpaa2_mc and dpaa2_rc) act like firmware buses in
order to form a hierarchy of the DPAA2 devices:
acpiX (or simplebusX)
dpaa2_mcX
dpaa2_rcX
dpaa2_mcp0
...
dpaa2_mcpN
dpaa2_bpX
dpaa2_macX
dpaa2_io0
...
dpaa2_ioM
dpaa2_niX
dpaa2_mc is suppossed to be a root of the hierarchy, comes in ACPI
and FDT flavours and implements helper interfaces to allocate and
assign bus resources, MSI and "managed" DPAA2 devices (NXP treats some
of the objects as resources for the other DPAA2 objects to let them
function properly). Almost all of the DPAA2 objects are assigned to
the resource containers (dpaa2_rc) to implement isolation.
The initial implementation focuses on the DPAA2 network interface
to be operational. It is the most complex object in terms of
dependencies which uses I/O objects to transmit/receive packets.
Approved by: bz (mentor)
Tested by: manu, bz
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36638
This is a new DTrace provider which allows arbitrary kernel instructions
to be traced. Currently it is implemented only for amd64.
kinst probes are created on demand by libdtrace, and there is a probe
for each kernel instruction. Probes are named
kinst:<module>:<function>:<offset>, where "offset" is the offset of the
target instruction relative to the beginning of the function. Omitting
"offset" causes all instructions in the function to be traced.
kinst works similarly to FBT in that it places a breakpoint on the
target instruction and hooks into the kernel breakpoint handler.
Because kinst has to be able to trace arbitrary instructions, it does
not emulate most of them in software but rather causes the traced thread
to execute a copy of the instruction before returning to the original
code.
The provider is quite low-level and as-is will be useful mostly only to
kernel developers. However, it provides a great deal of visibility into
kernel code execution and could be used as a building block for
higher-level tooling which can in some sense translate between C sources
and generated machine code. In particular, the "regs" variable recently
added to D allows the CPU's register file to be accessed from kinst
probes.
kinst is experimental and should not be used on production systems for
now.
In collaboration with: markj
Sponsored by: Google, Inc. (GSoC 2022)
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36851
Add the glue code to support netlink in Linuxolator.
linux_common(4) now depends on netlink(4).
All netlink protocol constants are consistent with the Linux version.
However, certain OS-specific constants such as AF_INET6, interface
flags or default routing table id, are different between FreeBSD and
Linux. Thus, it may be needed to rewrite some message parts or even
rewrite the whole message, adding or removing some TLVs. The core
netlink implementation code provides efficient rewriting callbacks
which Linuxolator now uses.
Reviewed by: dchagin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36361
MFC after: 2 months
Netlinks is a communication protocol currently used in Linux kernel to modify,
read and subscribe for nearly all networking state. Interfaces, addresses, routes,
firewall, fibs, vnets, etc are controlled via netlink.
It is async, TLV-based protocol, providing 1-1 and 1-many communications.
The current implementation supports the subset of NETLINK_ROUTE
family. To be more specific, the following is supported:
* Dumps:
- routes
- nexthops / nexthop groups
- interfaces
- interface addresses
- neighbors (arp/ndp)
* Notifications:
- interface arrival/departure
- interface address arrival/departure
- route addition/deletion
* Modifications:
- adding/deleting routes
- adding/deleting nexthops/nexthops groups
- adding/deleting neghbors
- adding/deleting interfaces (basic support only)
* Rtsock interaction
- route events are bridged both ways
The implementation also supports the NETLINK_GENERIC family framework.
Implementation notes:
Netlink is implemented via loadable/unloadable kernel module,
not touching many kernel parts.
Each netlink socket uses dedicated taskqueue to support async operations
that can sleep, such as interface creation. All message processing is
performed within these taskqueues.
Compatibility:
Most of the Netlink data models specified above maps to FreeBSD concepts
nicely. Unmodified ip(8) binary correctly works with
interfaces, addresses, routes, nexthops and nexthop groups. Some
software such as net/bird require header-only modifications to compile
and work with FreeBSD netlink.
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36002
MFC after: 2 months
Use the correct option to suppress warnings due to discarding const
from pointers on GCC vs clang.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36780
While for in-kernel we already have LINUXKPI_INCLUDES in kern.pre.mk
for kmod builds we've not had a common define to use leading to various
spellings of include paths.
In order for the include list to be expanded more easily in the future,
e.g., adding the "dummy" includes (for all) and to harmonize code,
duplicate LINUXKPI_INCLUDES to kmod.mk and use it for all module Makefiles.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36683
Notable upstream pull request merges:
#13725 Fix BLAKE3 tuneable and module loading on Linux and FreeBSD
#13756 FreeBSD: Organize sysctls
#13773 FreeBSD: add kqfilter support for zvol cdev
#13781 Importing from cachefile can trip assertion
#13794 Apply arc_shrink_shift to ARC above arc_c_min
#13798 Improve too large physical ashift handling
#13799 Revert "Avoid panic with recordsize > 128k, raw sending and
no large_blocks"
#13802 Add zfs.sync.snapshot_rename
#13831 zfs_enter rework
#13855 zfs recv hangs if max recordsize is less than received
recordsize
Obtained from: OpenZFS
OpenZFS commit: c629f0bf62
This diff extends LinuxKPI to support simple attribute files in debugfs.
These simple attributes are an essential component for compiling drm-kmod
with CONFIG_DEBUG_FS enabled.
This will allow for easier graphics driver debugging using
Intel's igt-gpu-tools.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D35883
Sponsored by: Google, Inc. (GSoC 2022)
This merges TCA6416, TCA6408 drivers and adds PCA9555 support.
They handle 8 pin and 16 pin ICs with basic INPUT/OUTPUT functionality.
The register map is fairly similar so there is no point in having two
separate drivers.
Reviewed by: kd
Obtained from: Semihalf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36559
As all ISA sound card drivers have been removed sndbuf_dma no longer
serves any purpose.
Reviewed by: mav
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D34671
Import the most recent versions of the firmware images for the
rtw89 driver.
This is based on linux-firmware at 2f2f0181581d3e35bfdb9fc65f609ee9d3fbaeb7.
The license of the firmware matches the previously added rtw88(4) firmware
and you can find a copy in sys/contrib/dev/rtw89fw/LICENCE.rtlwifi_firmware.txt.
Add build infrastructure to create the .ko files but do not yet hook
it up to the build until all parts are in the tree.
Approved by: core.11 (imp) [2022-03-27]
MFC after: 6 weeks
Import rtw89 based on wireless-testing at (tag: wt-2022-09-02)
78667a29c116c6b186a37e28cd8dd7fa9923aee8 with adjustments for FreeBSD.
For the moment this will stay disconnected from the build until the
last bits are flushed out, but this will help people with a card to
do testing and possibly help improving.
Given the lack of full license texts on non-local files this is
imported under the draft policy for handling SPDX files (D29226). [1]
Approved by: core.11 (imp) [1] [2022-03-27]
MFC after: 6 weeks
Although originally socket was intended to use with ipfw(4) only, now
it also can be used with pf(4). On a kernel without packet filters,
it still can be used to inject traffic.
CWARNFLAGS must be added to after including kern.mk, otherwise all the
warnings set in kern.mk are ignored. This is why the
-Wmissing-prototypes warnings were not seen previously.
While here, drop -Wno-pointer-sign as it is doesn't seem to be needed,
but add -Wno-cast-qual to silence warnings for various casts of const
pointers to non-const pointers.
Reviewed by: MichalX.Gulbicki_intel.com, markj
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D36332