This makes it possible, through src.conf(5) settings, to select which
LLVM targets you want to build during buildworld. The current list is:
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_AARCH64
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_ARM
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_MIPS
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_POWERPC
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_SPARC
* (WITH|WITHOUT)_LLVM_TARGET_X86
To not influence anything right now, all of these are on by default, in
situations where clang is enabled.
Selectively turning a few targets off manually should work. Turning on
only one target should work too, even if that target does not correspond
to the build architecture. (In that case, LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH will not be
defined, and you can only use the resulting clang executable for
cross-compiling.)
I performed a few measurements on one of the FreeBSD.org reference
machines, building clang from scratch, with all targets enabled, and
with only the x86 target enabled. The latter was ~12% faster in real
time (on a 32-core box), and ~14% faster in user time. For a full
buildworld the difference will probably be less pronounced, though.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11077
used portion of the current thread's time slice if the current thread
belongs to the process being queried (i.e., if clock_gettime is invoked
with a clock ID of CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID or the value provided by
passing getpid(2) to clock_getcpuclockid(3)).
The CLOCK_VIRTUAL and CLOCK_PROF timers already make this adjustment via
long-standing code in calcru(), but since those timers are not specified
by POSIX it seems useful to add it here so that the higher accuracy is
available to code which aims to be portable.
PR: 228669
Reported by: Graham Percival
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 week
When the load is "high" (an arbitrary value) top(1) previously moved the
cursor to the top-left of the screen as an acknowledgment. In practice,
on modern machines, even relatively slow ones, it looked more like a
glitch. Remove the logic.
The current header formatting is a giant format string that changes
global state during the format process.
Make the following changes:
- use sbuf to build up the header rather than use the above
pseudo-dynamic one
- Change name length to 10
- Reduce size of RES and SIZE by making humanize more aggressive
- Restore a version number line to the copyright. This may be required
by the copyright (and may not be; its unclear)
This is also a pre-req to implementing TOPCOLOR from newer versions of
top(1)
Discussed with: allanjude, rpolka, danfe, rgrimes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15801
userland, conceptually similar to what i2c(8) provides for i2c devices.
Submitted by: Bob Frazier
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15029
This patch adds a counter that limits the number of disabled mirrored DSs
to mirror level - 1. It also makes a small change that keeps a Write that
has failed with EACCES when attempted by a client to a DS from disabling
the DS.
This patch only affects the pNFS server.
The Linux /proc/stat entry has grown over time
v2.5.41 <
user, nice, system, idle
v2.5.41
user, nice, system, idle, iowait, irq
v2.6.11
user, nice, system, idle, iowait, irq, softirq, steal
v2.6.24
user, nice, system, idle, iowait, irq, softirq, steal, guest
v2.6.32 >
user, nice, system, idle, iowait, irq, softirq, steal, guest, guest_nice
Some applications (e.g. nodejs) depend on the correct number of entries
and will abort otherwise.
Fix is to print the correct number of entries based on the value of
osrelease set either in sysctl or the jail settings. Change is similar
to approach used by illumos.
Reviewed by: emaste, imp (mentor)
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15858
The Linux compatibility code was converting the version number (e.g.
2.6.32) in two different ways and then comparing the results.
The linux_map_osrel() function converted MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH similar to
what FreeBSD does natively. I.e. where major=v0, minor=v1, and patch=v2
v = v0 * 1000000 + v1 * 1000 + v2;
The LINUX_KERNVER() macro, on the other hand, converted the value with
bit shifts. I.e. where major=a, minor=b, and patch=c
v = (((a) << 16) + ((b) << 8) + (c))
The Linux kernel uses the later format via the KERNEL_VERSION() macro in
include/generated/uapi/linux/version.h
Fix is to use the LINUX_KERNVER() macro in linux_map_osrel() as well as
in the .trans_osrel functions.
PR: 229209
Reviewed by: emaste, cem, imp (mentor)
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15952
The refactoring in r335479 overlooked the fact that the dynamic kenv can
also be switched to if hintmode == 0. This is problematic because the
checkmethod bits are only ever ran once, but it worked previously because
the use_kenv was a global state and the first lookup would enable it if
occurring after the dynamic environment has been setup.
Extending our local definition of use_kenv to include all non-STATIC
hintmodes as long as the dynamic_kenv is setup fixes this. We still have
potential issues if the dynamic kenv comes up while we're doing an anchored
search through the environment, but this is not much of a concern right now
because:
1.) The dynamic environment comes up super early in boot, just after kmem
2.) This is going to get rewritten to provide a safer mechanism for the
anchored searches, ensuring that we continue using the same environment
chain (dynamic env or static fallback) for all anchored search invocations
Reported by: mmamcy
X-MFC-With: r335479
than assigning spigen device names in order of creation, this uses a device
name that corresponds to the owning spibus and chip-select index.
Example: /dev/spigen0.1 would be a child of spibus0, and use cs = 1
The intent is for systems like Raspberry Pi to have a consistent way of
using an SPI interface with a specific cs value from a user application.
Otherwise, there is no consistent way of knowing which cs pin will be
assigned to a particular spigen device. The alternative is to specify
everything in "the right order" in an overlay file, which is less than
ideal. Additionally, this duplicates (to some extent) the way Linux handles
a similar situation with their 'spidev' device, so it would be somewhat
familiar to those who also use Linux.
A new kernel config option, SPIGEN_LEGACY_CDEVNAME, causes the driver to
also create /dev/spigenN device name aliases, with N incrementing in the
order of device instantiation. This is provided to ease the transition
for existing systems using the original naming convention (particularly
when these changes are MFC'd to stable branches).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15301
So that the ptrace code will catch it and report it to attached
debugger. Enables debugging of threaded Linux binaries with FreeBSD
debugger.
Submitted by: Yanko Yankulov <yanko.yankulov@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15880
An RFSTOPPED thread can't clean TDB_STOPATFORK, which is done in the
fork_return() in its context, so parent is stuck forever. Triggered
when trying to ptrace linux process. Instead of waiting for the new
thread to clear TDB_STOPATFORK, tag it as traced and reparent to the
debugger in do_fork(), and let it only notify the debugger when run.
Submitted by: Yanko Yankulov <yanko.yankulov@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-Note: keep p_dbgwait placeholder intact
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15857
time through the mbuf chain during copy and TSO limiting.
It is used by both Rack and now the FreeBSD stack.
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15937
Post r335356 it is possible to have an inpcb on the hash lists that is
partially torn down. Validate before using. Also as a side effect of this
change the lock ordering issue between hash lock and inpcb no longer exists
allowing some simplification.
Reported by: pho@
Without a call to check_free_callbacks() clients waiting for grant
references would not be woken up even when there are sufficient grant
references available.
The check was likely left out as a mistake when the function was first
added.
Note that other functions used to free grant references already call
check_free_callbacks.
Submitted by: pratyush
Reviewed by: royger
Differential review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15899
We always install ELF Tool Chain's elfcopy as objcopy, so to avoid
confusion rename the src directory containing our reach-over Makefile
to match.
Requested by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Summary: POWER8 and POWER9 use a single CPU register, per core, to change clock
speed. Everything else is handled by the on-chip controller. This change
necessitates a change to the cpufreq global kernel driver to bump supported
levels, as the device tree for these systems can have theoretically 256
different options. On my POWER9 Talos, the list consists of 100 items. At
16.67MHz intervals, that allows for a change of roughly 1.67GHz between lowest
and highest.
This has only been tested on the POWER9. However, since they're similar, this
should work on POWER8 as well.
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15932
Some complexity exists in these bits that isn't needed. The sysctl handler,
upon change to '2', runs through the current set of hints and sets them in
the kenv.
However, this isn't at all necessary if we're pulling hints from the kenv,
static or dynamic, as the former will get added to the latter in
init_dynamic_kenv (see: kern_environment.c). We can reduce this
configuration to just adding static_hints to the kenv if we were previously
using them.
The changes in res_find are minimal and based on the observation that once
use_kenv gets set to '1' it will never be reset to '0', and it gets set to
'1' as soon as we hit fallback mode. Later work will refactor res_find a
little bit and eliminate this now-local, because it's become clear that
there's some funkiness revolving around use_kenv=1 and it being used to
imply that we're certainly looking at the dynamic_kenv.
Reviewed by: ray
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15940
Using MMCCAM on AllWinner boards is now possible, reaching highest
possible data transfer speed.
For now, MMCCAM doesn't scan cards on boot. This means that scanning
has to be done manually and that it's not possible to mount root FS
from MMC/SD card since there is no block device at the boot time.
For manually scanning the cards, run:
# camcontrol rescan X:0:0
Where X is the bus number (look at camcontrol devlist to determine
bus number assigned to the MMC controller).
Reviewed by: manu
Approved by: imp (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15891
The new stand/ structure installs loader.conf(5) and defaults/loader.conf
regardless of interpreter. The only thing gating installation now is
MK_BOOT.
Reported by: eadler