module component, it is a bug that the SDT(9) KPI allows one to specify the
function component of an SDT probe. Currently, the module component is
filled in automatically if left unset; this is not yet true for the function
component, but will be addressed by some ongoing work.
MFC after: 3 days
in kern_gzio.c. The old gzio interface was somewhat inflexible and has not
worked properly since r272535: currently, the gzio functions are called with
a range lock held on the output vnode, but kern_gzio.c does not pass the
IO_RANGELOCKED flag to vn_rdwr() calls, resulting in deadlock when vn_rdwr()
attempts to reacquire the range lock. Moreover, the new gzio interface can
be used to implement kernel core compression.
This change also modifies the kernel configuration options needed to enable
userland core dump compression support: gzio is now an option rather than a
device, and the COMPRESS_USER_CORES option is removed. Core dump compression
is enabled using the kern.compress_user_cores sysctl/tunable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1832
Reviewed by: rpaulo
Discussed with: kib
I2C real-time clock (RTC).
The DS3231 has an integrated temperature-compensated crystal oscillator
(TXCO) and crystal.
DS3231 has a temperature sensor, an independent 32kHz output (which can be
turned on and off by the driver) and another output that can be used as
interrupt for alarms or as a second square-wave output, which frequency and
operation mode can be set by driver sysctl(8) knobs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1016
Reviewed by: ian, rpaulo
Tested on: Raspberry pi model B
libgeom do so successfully
Tested by running `geom part list` produced from a -DWITHOUT_DYNAMICROOT built
world
PR: 198078
Reported by: Eir Nym <eirnym@gmail.com>
replace it with the absolute path of .PARSEDIR, so that sub-makes
launched from objdirs (eg kernel) can still find the correct mk files.
Reviewed by: obrien
The primary focus of these changes is to modernize FreeBSD's
tape infrastructure so that we can take advantage of some of the
features of modern tape drives and allow support for LTFS.
Significant changes and new features include:
o sa(4) driver status and parameter information is now exported via an
XML structure. This will allow for changes and improvements later
on that will not break userland applications. The old MTIOCGET
status ioctl remains, so applications using the existing interface
will not break.
o 'mt status' now reports drive-reported tape position information
as well as the previously available calculated tape position
information. These numbers will be different at times, because
the drive-reported block numbers are relative to BOP (Beginning
of Partition), but the block numbers calculated previously via
sa(4) (and still provided) are relative to the last filemark.
Both numbers are now provided. 'mt status' now also shows the
drive INQUIRY information, serial number and any position flags
(BOP, EOT, etc.) provided with the tape position information.
'mt status -v' adds information on the maximum possible I/O size,
and the underlying values used to calculate it.
o The extra sa(4) /dev entries (/dev/saN.[0-3]) have been removed.
The extra devices were originally added as place holders for
density-specific device nodes. Some OSes (NetBSD, NetApp's OnTap
and Solaris) have had device nodes that, when you write to them,
will automatically select a given density for particular tape drives.
This is a convenient way of switching densities, but it was never
implemented in FreeBSD. Only the device nodes were there, and that
sometimes confused users.
For modern tape devices, the density is generally not selectable
(e.g. with LTO) or defaults to the highest availble density when
the tape is rewritten from BOT (e.g. TS11X0). So, for most users,
density selection won't be necessary. If they do need to select
the density, it is easy enough to use 'mt density' to change it.
o Protection information is now supported. This is either a
Reed-Solomon CRC or CRC32 that is included at the end of each block
read and written. On write, the tape drive verifies the CRC, and
on read, the tape drive provides a CRC for the userland application
to verify.
o New, extensible tape driver parameter get/set interface.
o Density reporting information. For drives that support it,
'mt getdensity' will show detailed information on what formats the
tape drive supports, and what formats the tape drive supports.
o Some mt(1) functionality moved into a new mt(3) library so that
external applications can reuse the code.
o The new mt(3) library includes helper routines to aid in parsing
the XML output of the sa(4) driver, and build a tree of driver
metadata.
o Support for the MTLOAD (load a tape in the drive) and MTWEOFI
(write filemark immediate) ioctls needed by IBM's LTFS
implementation.
o Improve device departure behavior for the sa(4) driver. The previous
implementation led to hangs when the device was open.
o This has been tested on the following types of drives:
IBM TS1150
IBM TS1140
IBM LTO-6
IBM LTO-5
HP LTO-2
Seagate DDS-4
Quantum DLT-4000
Exabyte 8505
Sony DDS-2
contrib/groff/tmac/doc-syms,
share/mk/bsd.libnames.mk,
lib/Makefile,
Add libmt.
lib/libmt/Makefile,
lib/libmt/mt.3,
lib/libmt/mtlib.c,
lib/libmt/mtlib.h,
New mt(3) library that contains functions moved from mt(1) and
new functions needed to interact with the updated sa(4) driver.
This includes XML parser helper functions that application writers
can use when writing code to query tape parameters.
rescue/rescue/Makefile:
Add -lmt to CRUNCH_LIBS.
src/share/man/man4/mtio.4
Clarify this man page a bit, and since it contains what is
essentially the mtio.h header file, add new ioctls and structure
definitions from mtio.h.
src/share/man/man4/sa.4
Update BUGS and maintainer section.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.c,
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_all.h:
Add SCSI SECURITY PROTOCOL IN/OUT CDB definitions and CDB building
functions.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.h
Many tape driver changes, largely outlined above.
Increase the sa(4) driver read/write timeout from 4 to 32
minutes. This is based on the recommended values for IBM LTO
5/6 drives. This may also avoid timeouts for other tape
hardware that can take a long time to do retries and error
recovery. Longer term, a better way to handle this is to ask
the drive for recommended timeout values using the REPORT
SUPPORTED OPCODES command. Modern IBM and Oracle tape drives
at least support that command, and it would allow for more
accurate timeout values.
Add XML status generation. This is done with a series of
macros to eliminate as much duplicate code as possible. The
new XML-based status values are reported through the new
MTIOCEXTGET ioctl.
Add XML driver parameter reporting, using the new MTIOCPARAMGET
ioctl.
Add a new driver parameter setting interface, using the new
MTIOCPARAMSET and MTIOCSETLIST ioctls.
Add a new MTIOCRBLIM ioctl to get block limits information.
Add CCB/CDB building routines scsi_locate_16, scsi_locate_10,
and scsi_read_position_10().
scsi_locate_10 implements the LOCATE command, as does the
existing scsi_set_position() command. It just supports
additional arguments and features. If/when we figure out a
good way to provide backward compatibility for older
applications using the old function API, we can just revamp
scsi_set_position(). The same goes for
scsi_read_position_10() and the existing scsi_read_position()
function.
Revamp sasetpos() to take the new mtlocate structure as an
argument. It now will use either scsi_locate_10() or
scsi_locate_16(), depending upon the arguments the user
supplies. As before, once we change position we don't have a
clear idea of what the current logical position of the tape
drive is.
For tape drives that support long form position data, we
read the current position and store that for later reporting
after changing the position. This should help applications
like Bacula speed tape access under FreeBSD once they are
modified to support the new ioctls.
Add a new quirk, SA_QUIRK_NO_LONG_POS, that is set for all
drives that report SCSI-2 or older, as well as drives that
report an Illegal Request type error for READ POSITION with
the long format. So we should automatically detect drives
that don't support the long form and stop asking for it after
an initial try.
Add a partition number to the sa(4) softc.
Improve device departure handling. The previous implementation
led to hangs when the device was open.
If an application had the sa(4) driver open, and attempted to
close it after it went away, the cam_periph_release() call in
saclose() would cause the periph to get destroyed because that
was the last reference to it. Because destroy_dev() was
called from the sa(4) driver's cleanup routine (sacleanup()),
and would block waiting for the close to happen, a deadlock
would result.
So instead of calling destroy_dev() from the cleanup routine,
call destroy_dev_sched_cb() from saoninvalidate() and wait for
the callback.
Acquire a reference for devfs in saregister(), and release it
in the new sadevgonecb() routine when all devfs devices for
the particular sa(4) driver instance are gone.
Add a new function, sasetupdev(), to centralize setting
per-instance devfs device parameters instead of repeating the
code in saregister().
Add an open count to the softc, so we know how many
peripheral driver references are a result of open
sessions.
Add the D_TRACKCLOSE flag to the cdevsw flags so
that we get a 1:1 mapping of open to close calls
instead of a N:1 mapping.
This should be a no-op for everything except the
control device, since we don't allow more than one
open on non-control devices.
However, since we do allow multiple opens on the
control device, the combination of the open count
and the D_TRACKCLOSE flag should result in an
accurate peripheral driver reference count, and an
accurate open count.
The accurate open count allows us to release all
peripheral driver references that are the result
of open contexts once we get the callback from devfs.
sys/sys/mtio.h:
Add a number of new mt(4) ioctls and the requisite data
structures. None of the existing interfaces been removed
or changed.
This includes definitions for the following new ioctls:
MTIOCRBLIM /* get block limits */
MTIOCEXTLOCATE /* seek to position */
MTIOCEXTGET /* get tape status */
MTIOCPARAMGET /* get tape params */
MTIOCPARAMSET /* set tape params */
MTIOCSETLIST /* set N params */
usr.bin/mt/Makefile:
mt(1) now depends on libmt, libsbuf and libbsdxml.
usr.bin/mt/mt.1:
Document new mt(1) features and subcommands.
usr.bin/mt/mt.c:
Implement support for mt(1) subcommands that need to
use getopt(3) for their arguments.
Implement a new 'mt status' command to replace the old
'mt status' command. The old status command has been
renamed 'ostatus'.
The new status function uses the MTIOCEXTGET ioctl, and
therefore parses the XML data to determine drive status.
The -x argument to 'mt status' allows the user to dump out
the raw XML reported by the kernel.
The new status display is mostly the same as the old status
display, except that it doesn't print the redundant density
mode information, and it does print the current partition
number and position flags.
Add a new command, 'mt locate', that will supersede the
old 'mt setspos' and 'mt sethpos' commands. 'mt locate'
implements all of the functionality of the MTIOCEXTLOCATE
ioctl, and allows the user to change the logical position
of the tape drive in a number of ways. (Partition,
block number, file number, set mark number, end of data.)
The immediate bit and the explicit address bits are
implemented, but not documented in the man page.
Add a new 'mt weofi' command to use the new MTWEOFI ioctl.
This allows the user to ask the drive to write a filemark
without waiting around for the operation to complete.
Add a new 'mt getdensity' command that gets the XML-based
tape drive density report from the sa(4) driver and displays
it. This uses the SCSI REPORT DENSITY SUPPORT command
to get comprehensive information from the tape drive about
what formats it is able to read and write.
Add a new 'mt protect' command that allows getting and setting
tape drive protection information. The protection information
is a CRC tacked on to the end of every read/write from and to
the tape drive.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 1 month
probes to userland programs and libraries without also needing to link
libelf.
dtrace -G places the __SUNW_dof symbol at the beginning of the DOF (DTrace
probe and provider metdata) section in the generated object file; drti.o
now just uses this symbol to locate the section. A complication occurs
when multiple dtrace-generated object files are linked together, since the
__SUNW_dof symbol defined in each file is global. This is handled by
using objcopy(1) to convert __SUNW_dof to a local symbol once drti.o has
been linked with the generated object file. Upstream, this is done using a
linker feature not present in GNU ld.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1757
Reviewed by: rpaulo
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
libarchive(3) doesn't support the new liblzma API yet, but this change
allows us to enable multi-threaded xz compression.
``make release'' should now finish in half the time on a machine with
several cores and fast disks (our typical build server).
This behaviour only applies when building a release and it doesn't
affect buildworld/installworld. To disable threaded xz compression,
set XZ_THREADS=1.
Reviewed by: gjb
Tested by: gjb
has been removed and the driver has been greatly simplified and
optimised for FreeBSD. The driver is currently not built by default.
Requested by: Bruce Simpson <bms@fastmail.net>
SHLIB_NAME_FULL so that the full binary is relinked when a dependency
changes. Right now the existing full binary is left as-is and only
the objcopy to remove debug symbols is run.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1834
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 3 days
update paths; and include everything in the "base" distribution.
The "games" distribution being optional made sense when there were more
games and we had small disks; but the "games-like" games were moved into
the ports tree a dozen years ago and the remaining "utility-like" games
occupy less than 0.001% of my laptop's small hard drive. Meanwhile every
new user is confronted by the question "do you want games installed" when
they they try to install FreeBSD.
The next steps will be:
2. Removing punch card (bcd, ppt), phase-of-moon (pom), clock (grdc), and
caesar cipher (caesar, rot13) utilities. I intend to keep fortune, factor,
morse, number, primes, and random, since there is evidence that those are
still being used.
3. Merging src/games into src/usr.bin.
This change will not be MFCed.
Reviewed by: jmg
Discussed at: EuroBSDCon
Approved by: gjb (release-affecting changes)
This brings support for multi-threaded compression. This brings close
N times faster compression where N is the number of CPU cores.
Because of this, liblzma now depends on libthr.
Soon libarchive will be modified to use the new lzma API.
Thanks to antoine@ for the exp-run.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1786
Reviewed by: bapt
allows the user to request administrative changes to individual devices
such as attach or detaching drivers or disabling and re-enabling devices.
- Add a new /dev/devctl2 character device which uses ioctls for device
requests. The ioctls use a common 'struct devreq' which is somewhat
similar to 'struct ifreq'.
- The ioctls identify the device to operate on via a string. This
string can either by the device's name, or it can be a bus-specific
address. (For unattached devices, a bus address is the only way to
locate a device.) Bus drivers register an eventhandler to claim
unrecognized device names that the driver recognizes as a valid address.
Two buses currently support addresses: ACPI recognizes any device
in the ACPI namespace via its full path starting with "\" and
the PCI bus driver recognizes an address specification of
'pci[<domain>:]<bus>:<slot>:<func>' (identical to the PCI selector
strings supported by pciconf).
- To make it easier to cut and paste, change the PnP location string
in the PCI bus driver to output a full PCI selector string rather
than 'slot=<slot> function=<func>'.
- Add a devctl(3) interface in libdevctl which provides a wrapper around
the ioctls and is the preferred interface for other userland code.
- Add a devctl(8) program which is a simple wrapper around the requests
supported by devctl(3).
- Add a device_is_suspended() function to check DF_SUSPENDED.
- Add a resource_unset_value() function that can be used to remove a
hint from the kernel environment. This is used to clear a
hint.<driver>.<unit>.disabled hint when re-enabling a boot-time
disabled device.
Reviewed by: imp (parts)
Requested by: imp (changing PCI location string)
Relnotes: yes
Add separate software Tx queue limit for non-TCP traffic to make total
limit higher and avoid local drops of TCP packets because of no
backpressure.
There is no point to make non-TCP limit high since without backpressure
UDP stream easily overflows any sensible limit.
Split early drops statistics since it is better to have separate counter
for each drop reason to make it unabmiguous.
Add software Tx queue high watermark. The information is very useful to
understand how big queues grow under traffic load.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Approved by: gnn (mentor)
__attribute__((format(...))), and the -fformat-extensions flag was
removed, introduce a new macro in bsd.sys.mk to choose the right variant
of compile flag for the used compiler, and use it.
Also add something similar to kern.mk, since including bsd.sys.mk from
that file will anger Warner. :-)
Note that bsd.sys.mk does not support the MK_FORMAT_EXTENSIONS knob used
in kern.mk, since that knob is only available in kern.opts.mk, not in
src.opts.mk. We might want to add it later, to more easily support
external compilers for building world (in particular, sys/boot).
triggers way too many times for the version of libc++ we have in base at
this point. While here, fix the compiler version check for
-Wno-unused-const-variable.
This helps to reduce code size in statically linked applications.
Submitted by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
MFC after: 2 weeks
The core kernel part is patch file utimes.2008.4.diff from
pluknet@FreeBSD.org. I updated the code for API changes, added the manual
page and added compatibility code for old kernels. There is also audit and
Capsicum support.
A new UTIME_* constant might allow setting birthtimes in future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1426
Submitted by: pluknet (partially)
Reviewed by: delphij, pluknet, rwatson
Relnotes: yes
in bitfield argument is wrong, as it will be treated as bit 10, causing any
code printing >=10 bits with bit 10 on as having a trailing comma.
Newline (intended one) should be part of the format string (already present
in the examples).
Also fix grammar and kill EOL whitespace in comment while here.
PR: 195005
Approved by: bdrewery
FreeBSD developers need more time to review patches in the surrounding
areas like the TCP stack which are using MPSAFE callouts to restore
distribution of callouts on multiple CPUs.
Bump the __FreeBSD_version instead of reverting it.
Suggested by: kmacy, adrian, glebius and kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1438
r273823-r273826, r273833, r273836, r273944, r274069-r274071,
r274134, r274211, r274280-r274285, r274287-r274288, r274292,
r274296-r274297, r274356, r274533, r274725, r274726, r274729,
r274734, r274771, r274945-r274946, r277180, r277183-r277184,
r277186-r277187, r277250-r277253, r277263-r277264, r277383-r277384,
r277393-r277395, r277438-r277439, r277447, r277455:
r273823:
Move virtual machine / cloud provider targets and
options from release/Makefile to their own Makefile.
r273824:
Add glue to allow enabling building cloud provider VM images
by default.
When WITH_CLOUDWARE is not empty, add CLOUDTARGETS to the
release/Makefile 'release' target.
r273825:
Avoid hard-coding the Azure image file format. While here,
avoid using OSRELEASE for the output file name.
r273826:
Remove a few vestiges of passing an exit code to panic().
r273833:
Initial commit providing a mechanism to create openstack images
as part of the release build.
r273836:
Fix output file name for openstack images. No further conversion
is necessary for this VM file target, so there is no need to append
the '.raw' suffix here.
r273944:
Uncomment the cloudinit rc.conf(5) line.
r274069:
Add line continuation so OPENSTACKCONF is actually included in the env(1).
r274070:
Add a 'vm-cloudware' target, used to drive all targets in CLOUDTARGETS.
r274071:
Add examples for WITH_CLOUDWARE to release.conf.sample.
Add WITH_CLOUDWARE evaluation to RELEASE_RMAKEFLAGS.
r274134:
Initial rewrite to consolidate VM image build scripts into one.
r274211:
Add write_partition_layout() used to populate the final image.
Fix duplicated mkimg(1) call in vm_create_disk().
Add primitive (untested) PowerPC/PowerPC64 VM image support.
Note: As it is currently written, the /boot/pmbr and
/boot/{gptboot,boot1.hfs} use the build host and not the target
build. Fixing this is likely going to be a hack in itself.
r274280:
Return if vm_create_disk() is unsuccessful.
r274281:
Add CLEANFILES entry for VM targets
r274282:
Add vm_extra_pre_umount() prototype to vmimage.subr.
r274283:
Fix DESTDIR for installworld, and make sure it is created before use.
r274284:
Move usage() from vmimage.subr to mk-vmimage.sh, in case vmimage.subr
has not been sourced.
r274285:
Spell 'OPTARG' correctly. Actually call vm_create_base().
r274287:
Fix line continuation in write_partition_layout().
Remove variable test that is no longer needed.
r274288:
Fix scheme flag to mkimg(1).
r274292:
mount(8) and umount(8) devfs(5) as needed.
r274296:
Change path for mk-vmimage.sh from ${TARGET}/ to scripts/ now that
it is consolidated into one file.
Fix paths for the base image and output disk image files.
r274297:
Call cleanup() after everything is done.
r274356:
Remove a stray directory from CLEANFILES.
r274533:
Set the boot partition type to 'apple-boot' for powerpc.
r274725:
In vm_install_base(), copy the host resolv.conf into
the build chroot before attempting to do anything that
requires working DNS (i.e., pkg bootstrap).
In vm_extra_pre_umount(), remove the resolv.conf before
the disk image is unmounted from the backing md(4).
r274726 (cperciva):
Silence errors when umounting the chroot's /dev, since it
probably doesn't exist when we're running this.
Unmount filesystems before attempting to destroy the md which
holds them.
r274729 (cperciva):
Unmount filesystem and destroy md before we read the vnode from
disk and package it into a disk image. Otherwise we end up
packaging an unclean filesystem.
r274734 (cperciva):
Merge duplicative vm-CLOUDTYPE targets before additional duplication
gets added by the impending arrival of ec2 and gcloud.
r274771 (cperciva):
Add NOSWAP option which can be set by a vmimage.conf file to specify
that no swap space should be created in the image. This will be used
by EC2 builds, since FreeBSD/EC2 allocates swap space on "ephemeral"
disks which are physically attached to the Xen host node.
r274945:
In vm_extra_install_packages(), only bootstrap pkg(8) if
VM_EXTRA_PACKAGES is empty.
In vm_extra_pre_umount(), cleanup downloaded packages if pkg(8) was
bootstrapped earlier.
r274946:
Fix indentation nit.
r277180:
In vm_extra_install_base(), do not install waagent in the openstack
image, because it is not used. This appears to be a copy mistake.
Remove vm_extra_install_base() from the openstack.conf entirely,
since it does not need to be overridden.
r277183:
Enable the textmode console by default for VM images, since there is
no way to tell if the environment will be able to use the
graphics-mode console.
r277184:
Enable password-less sudo for openstack images.
r277186:
Update the VM_EXTRA_PACKAGES list for the openstack images.
The documentation suggests doing a "just fetch this and run it"-style
bootstrap, from which the list of dependencies was obtained (in
github, at: pellaeon/bsd-cloudinit-installer)
There is one Python dependency unmet, oslo.config, which is not in
the Ports Collection.
r277187:
Add a comment to note that setting hw.vga.textmode=1 is temporary.
r277250:
Remove vm_extra_install_base() for the Azure image, now that the
waagent exists in the ports tree.
Add sysutils/azure-agent to the VM_EXTRA_PACKAGES list.
In vm_extra_pre_umount(), remove the explicit pkg(8) install
list, as dependencies are resolved by sysutils/azure-agent.
r277251:
Add a 'list-cloudware' target to print the list of supported CLOUDWARE
values and a description.
Add the AZURE_DESC and OPENSTACK_DESC descriptions.
r277252:
Update release(7)
r277253:
Add 'list-vmtargets' target, which produces a list of all supported
VM and cloud provider images.
Add VHD_DESC, VMDK_DESC, QCOW2_DESC, RAW_DESC image descriptions.
Format the output to make a bit more readable.
Update release(7) to document the list-vmtargets target.
r277263:
Add initial support for the GCE (Google Compute Engine) cloud hosting
provider image.
r277264:
Style and line length cleanup.
r277383:
Remove the console setting from rc.conf(5), which is not used there.
While here, set console to include vidconsole in the loader.conf(5).
r277384:
Fix an indentation nit.
No functional changes.
r277393:
Remove the pkg-clean(8) call from vm_extra_pre_umount() since the
function is often overridden.
Add vm_extra_pkg_rmcache() to call pkg-clean(8) to avoid duplicated
code.
r277394:
Move resolv.conf(5) removal back to vm_extra_pre_umount() where it
belongs.
The GCE image needs resolv.conf(5) to exist (created as part of the
image setup), so it cannot be removed.
r277395:
Comment the line that configures ttys(5) to 'off', which makes it
impossible to test that the image boots.
Add a note explaining why the line is commented, and not (yet) removed
entirely.
r277438:
Move the 'install' bits that are specific to virtual machine images
from the Makefile to Makefile.vm.
Rename the 'install' target to 'release-install', and add a new
'vm-install' target.
Add a new 'install' target that invokes the new targets.
r277439:
Add WITH_CLOUDWARE to the list of make(1) variables for the release
build.
r277447:
Remove hw.vga.textmode=1 from the VM image loader.conf, which was
included during test builds and not intended to be included when
merging this project branch back to head.
r277455:
Remove mk-azure.sh, which is no longer needed.
MFC after: 1 month
X-MFC-To: stable/10 (requires mkimg(1))
Help from: cperciva, swills
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
use floating point hardware instructions (because all armv6/7 systems we
support have fp hardware), but it passes args using a soft-float compatible
ABI. This should give noticible performance improvement (but not as much
as using the armv6hf arch).
Some users build FreeBSD as non-root in Perforce workspaces. By default,
Perforce sets files read-only unless they're explicitly being edited.
As a result, the -f argument must be used to cp in order to override the
read-only flag when copying source files to object directories. Bare use of
'cp' should be avoided in the future.
Update all current users of 'cp' in the src tree.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
all supported VM and cloud provider images.
Add VHD_DESC, VMDK_DESC, QCOW2_DESC, RAW_DESC image
descriptions.
Format the output to make a bit more readable.
Update release(7) to document the list-vmtargets target.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Add a "CLOUD HOSTING MACHINE IMAGES" section,
documenting the CLOUDWARE and WITH_CLOUDWARE
make(1) environment variables.
- Document the vm-cloudware and list-cloudware
targets.
- Add release/Makefile.vm, release/tools/*.conf
and release/tools/vmimage.subr to FILES.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Quoting 19 years bpf.4 manual from bpf-1.2a1:
"
(SIOCGIFADDR is obsolete under BSD systems. SIOCGIFCONF should be
used to query link-level addresses.)
"
* SIOCGIFADDR was not imported in NetBSD (bpf.c 1.36) and OpenBSD.
* Last bits (e.g. manpage claiming SIOCGIFADDR exists) was cleaned
from NetBSD via kern/21513 5 years ago,
from OpenBSD via documentation/6352 5 years ago.
periodic(8) run, taken from uname(1) '-U' and '-K'
flags.
Reviewed by: allanjude, dvl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1541
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Close a migration race where callout_reset() failed to set the
CALLOUT_ACTIVE flag.
- Callout callback functions are now allowed to be protected by
spinlocks.
- Switching the callout CPU number cannot always be done on a
per-callout basis. See the updated timeout(9) manual page for more
information.
- The timeout(9) manual page has been updated to reflect how all the
functions inside the callout API are working. The manual page has
been made function oriented to make it easier to deduce how each of
the functions making up the callout API are working without having
to first read the whole manual page. Group all functions into a
handful of sections which should give a quick top-level overview
when the different functions should be used.
- The CALLOUT_SHAREDLOCK flag and its functionality has been removed
to reduce the complexity in the callout code and to avoid problems
about atomically stopping callouts via callout_stop(). If someone
needs it, it can be re-added. From my quick grep there are no
CALLOUT_SHAREDLOCK clients in the kernel.
- A new callout API function named "callout_drain_async()" has been
added. See the updated timeout(9) manual page for a complete
description.
- Update the callout clients in the "kern/" folder to use the callout
API properly, like cv_timedwait(). Previously there was some custom
sleepqueue code in the callout subsystem, which has been removed,
because we now allow callouts to be protected by spinlocks. This
allows us to tear down the callout like done with regular mutexes,
and a "td_slpmutex" has been added to "struct thread" to atomically
teardown the "td_slpcallout". Further the "TDF_TIMOFAIL" and
"SWT_SLEEPQTIMO" states can now be completely removed. Currently
they are marked as available and will be cleaned up in a follow up
commit.
- Bump the __FreeBSD_version to indicate kernel modules need
recompilation.
- There has been several reports that this patch "seems to squash a
serious bug leading to a callout timeout and panic".
Kernel build testing: all architectures were built
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1438
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Reviewed by: jhb, adrian, sbruno and emaste
legitimacy of removal is proved by the fact that implementation contained
a critical bug: the response allocated was sizeof(pointer), while should
had been 2*sizeof(struct ng_cisco_ipaddr). The reason for ng_iface(4) to
support ng_cisco(4) message isn't explained anywhere, and code comes from
original Whistle import.
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
DCTCP congestion control algorithm aims to maximise throughput and minimise
latency in data center networks by utilising the proportion of Explicit
Congestion Notification (ECN) marked packets received from capable hardware as a
congestion signal.
Highlights:
Implemented as a mod_cc(4) module.
ECN (Explicit congestion notification) processing is done differently from
RFC3168.
Takes one-sided DCTCP into consideration where only one of the sides is using
DCTCP and other is using standard ECN.
IETF draft: http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bensley-tcpm-dctcp-00
Thesis report by Midori Kato: https://eggert.org/students/kato-thesis.pdf
Submitted by: Midori Kato <katoon@sfc.wide.ad.jp> and
Lars Eggert <lars@netapp.com>
with help and modifications from
hiren
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D604
Reviewed by: gnn
These tools are now from the ELF Tool Chain project:
* addr2line
* elfcopy (strip)
* nm
* size
* strings
The binutils versions are available by setting in src.conf:
WITHOUT_ELFTOOLCHAIN_TOOLS=yes
Thanks to antoine@ for multiple exp-runs and diagnosing many of the
failures.
PR: 195561 (ports exp-run)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
socket-buffer implementations, introduce a return value for MCLGET()
(and m_cljget() that underlies it) to allow the caller to avoid testing
M_EXT itself. Update all callers to use the return value.
With this change, very few network device drivers remain aware of
M_EXT; the primary exceptions lie in mbuf-chain pretty printers for
debugging, and in a few cases, custom mbuf and cluster allocation
implementations.
NB: This is a difficult-to-test change as it touches many drivers for
which I don't have physical devices. Instead we've gone for intensive
review, but further post-commit review would definitely be appreciated
to spot errors where changes could not easily be made mechanically,
but were largely mechanical in nature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1440
Reviewed by: adrian, bz, gnn
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Phabric: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1247
Reviewed by: jhb, avg
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Corporation
sys/kern_subr_taskqueue.c:
Modify taskqueue_drain_all() processing to use a temporary
"barrier task", rather than rely on a user task that may
be destroyed during taskqueue_drain_all()'s execution. The
barrier task is queued behind all previously queued tasks
and then has its priority elevated so that future tasks
cannot pass it in the queue.
Use a similar barrier scheme to drain threads processing
current tasks. This requires taskqueue_run_locked() to
insert and remove the taskqueue_busy object for the running
thread for every task processed.
share/man/man9/taskqueue.9:
Remove warning about live-lock issues with taskqueue_drain_all()
and indicate that it does not wait for tasks queued after
it begins processing.
As a side-effect now info pages will always be built/installed if
MK_INFO == yes, whereas before their presence was conditional based on the
value of MK_INFO
This .mk file might be removed in the future, pending discussion on -arch. For
now unbreak its use outside of src (with the only use in ports according to
bapt being devel/cvs*)
X-MFC with: r276551, r276556
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: D1413
roughly 10 years, and the driver has not enjoyed any significant maintenance
since long before that. Despite well-meaning efforts from a number of
people, myself included, it never made the jump to 64-bit and was relegated
to the back-corners of i386. Now its frailty is hampering forward progress
with Clang. Any renewed engineering efforts are of course welcome and can
happen outside of the tree. No MFC of this is planned.
raft of new warnings that appear to be on by default in clang 3.5.0.
Fix RPI-B build issues with new clang not liking the ability to pass
arbitrary flags to as, since some flags are more arbitrary (and thus
verboten) than others.
These warnings should be actually fixed in the code, but this is a
band-aide to get things (almost) building again.
Clarify some statements around PMTUD blackhole detection to make
the behavior more clear in the man page.
Submitted by: Mikhail <mp@lenta.ru>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Recent binutils considered the .gnu.warning.symbol section as a fatal error when
run with --fatal-warnings which makes any users of "insecure" functions from
libc failing to build with recent binutils.
Introduce a new macro: LD_FATAL_WARNINGS=no to run ld(1) with
--no-fatal-warnings for the users of "insecure" functions
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1320
A _NEW flag passed to _init_flags() to avoid check for double-init.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1208
Reviewed by: jhb, wblock
MFC after: 1 Month
for counter mode), and AES-GCM. Both of these modes have been added to
the aesni module.
Included is a set of tests to validate that the software and aesni
module calculate the correct values. These use the NIST KAT test
vectors. To run the test, you will need to install a soon to be
committed port, nist-kat that will install the vectors. Using a port
is necessary as the test vectors are around 25MB.
All the man pages were updated. I have added a new man page, crypto.7,
which includes a description of how to use each mode. All the new modes
and some other AES modes are present. It would be good for someone
else to go through and document the other modes.
A new ioctl was added to support AEAD modes which AES-GCM is one of them.
Without this ioctl, it is not possible to test AEAD modes from userland.
Add a timing safe bcmp for use to compare MACs. Previously we were using
bcmp which could leak timing info and result in the ability to forge
messages.
Add a minor optimization to the aesni module so that single segment
mbufs don't get copied and instead are updated in place. The aesni
module needs to be updated to support blocked IO so segmented mbufs
don't have to be copied.
We require that the IV be specified for all calls for both GCM and ICM.
This is to ensure proper use of these functions.
Obtained from: p4: //depot/projects/opencrypto
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: NetGate
support, make this explicit in src.opts.mk, by updating the default
settings.
The defaults become as follows:
* If the host compiler is not C++11 capable, use gcc and disable clang.
* On x86, enable clang, make it the default cc, and disable gcc.
* On little-endian ARM, enable clang, but not the full build, make it
the default cc, and disable gcc.
* On PowerPC, enable clang, but enable gcc and make that the default cc.
* On everything else, use gcc, and disable clang.
This can be amended later, if we get e.g. sparc64 or big-endian ARM
working with clang.
Reviewed by: imp, brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1294
termcap entry reordering requires ex (which is available via usr.bin/vi), which
breaks on build hosts where installworld is run with MK_VI == no (or when
make delete-old is run on ^/projects/building-blocks as vi, et al, are
removed on the branch when the knob is tweaked to => "no")
Reordering termcap was believed to improve performance, but the file is now
accessed via /etc/termcap.db, so /etc/termcap (and /usr/share/misc/termcap by
proxy) access is less preferred.
Reordering the file broke the historical comment <-> entry mapping as well,
which could muddle the purpose of entries in the file, so it could be
potentially harmful to readers in its reordered state.
Discussion took place on hackers@ here:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-hackers/2014-December/046657.html
Discussed with: -hackers, mp
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Set WITH_ELFTOOLCHAIN_TOOLS in src.conf to use the elftoolchain version
of the following tools:
* addr2line
* elfcopy (strip / mcs)
* nm
* size
* strings
Reviewed by: bapt (earlier version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1224
to how they differ. This will assist users in selecting which interface
is more appropriate for their purposes.
Approved by: grog (co-mentor)
MFC after: 2 week
- MK_FILE will conditionalize building lib/libmagic and usr.bin/file
- MK_SQLITE3 will conditionalize building lib/libsqlite3, and will disable
MK_SVN/MK_SVNLITE by proxy
Customize according to MK_GAMES and MK_VI, in particular comment out lines
that would change behavior
Change dot.cshrc and dot.profile to not check for /usr/games/fortune based
on the new behavior in customizing the files
implementation, merge ^/head r275078 through r275117.
Note that all the extraneous mergeinfo is there because Subversion
created it. I'll hopefully be able to remove it again when merging back
to head.
- bootparamd
- bootpd
- finger/fingerd
- ftp/ftpd
- hastctl/hastd
- iscsid, et al
- rbootd
- talk/talkd
- tcpd, et al
- tftp/tftpd
Add src.conf entries for the various components and do a best effort
at adding components to tools/build/mk/OptionalObsoleteFiles.inc
This is a thin wrapper around the kernel interface which should make
it easier to write GPIO applications. gpioctl(8) will be converted to
use this library in a separate commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1183
Reviewed by: adrian, loos
Discussed on: arm@, embedded@
Relnotes: yes
LIBADD will automatically set DPADD and LDADD when needed including their
dependencies, LIBADD automatically handles private and internal libs so that
the end user Makefile does not have to care about it.
This allows to reduce overlinking on the base system leaving the framework get
the dependencies properly.
It also allows to built components binaries statically.
To use it:
Replace:
DPADD= ${LIBARCHIVE} ${LIBSSL}
LDADD= -larchive -lssl
by:
LIBADD= archive ssl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1209
Reviewed by: brooks imp
supported hardware list. Judging by the PCI driver attachment, dpt_pci.c
only supports a single adapter rather than the various PCI adapters listed.
The list of EISA adapters listed somewhat overlaps with the device IDs in
dpt_eisa.c. It's not clear which devices are ISA-only devices.
Initially in_matrote() in_clsroute() in their current state was introduced by
r4105 20 years ago. Instead of deleting inactive routes immediately, we kept them
in route table, setting RTPRF_OURS flag and some expire time. After that, either
GC came or RTPRF_OURS got removed on first-packet. It was a good solution
in that days (and probably another decade after that) to keep TCP metrics.
However, after moving metrics to TCP hostcache in r122922, most of in_rmx
functionality became unused. It might had been used for flushing icmp-originated
routes before rte mutexes/refcounting, but I'm not sure about that.
So it looks like this is nearly impossible to make GC do its work nowadays:
in_rtkill() ignores non-RTPRF_OURS routes.
route can only become RTPRF_OURS after dropping last reference via rtfree()
which calls in_clsroute(), which, it turn, ignores UP and non-RTF_DYNAMIC routes.
Dynamic routes can still be installed via received redirect, but they
have default lifetime (no specific rt_expire) and no one has another trie walker
to call RTFREE() on them.
So, the changelist:
* remove custom rnh_match / rnh_close matching function.
* remove all GC functions
* partially revert r256695 (proto3 is no more used inside kernel,
it is not possible to use rt_expire from user point of view, proto3 support
is not complete)
* Finish r241884 (similar to this commit) and remove remaining IPv6 parts
MFC after: 1 month
The canonical standalone debug directory established by the GNU
toolchain is /usr/lib/debug, and we use it when WITH_DEBUG_FILES is set.
Mention it in the file system hierarchy page.
Reviewed by: bcr
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1134
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.
No objections from: net@
Split it into two modules: if_gre(4) for GRE encapsulation and
if_me(4) for minimal encapsulation within IP.
gre(4) changes:
* convert to if_transmit;
* rework locking: protect access to softc with rmlock,
protect from concurrent ioctls with sx lock;
* correct interface accounting for outgoing datagramms (count only payload size);
* implement generic support for using IPv6 as delivery header;
* make implementation conform to the RFC 2784 and partially to RFC 2890;
* add support for GRE checksums - calculate for outgoing datagramms and check
for inconming datagramms;
* add support for sending sequence number in GRE header;
* remove support of cached routes. This fixes problem, when gre(4) doesn't
work at system startup. But this also removes support for having tunnels with
the same addresses for inner and outer header.
* deprecate support for various GREXXX ioctls, that doesn't used in FreeBSD.
Use our standard ioctls for tunnels.
me(4):
* implementation conform to RFC 2004;
* use if_transmit;
* use the same locking model as gre(4);
PR: 164475
Differential Revision: D1023
No objections from: net@
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Otherwise there's nothing for ctfconvert to do, and it ends up emitting an
error for each object file. Also remove some redundant checks from
bsd.prog.mk and bsd.lib.mk.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1111
Reviewed by: imp
a kludge. However, it also effectively works around the issues for
high -j builds on systems that do not have the rm fixes.
A better fix would be to rmdir here, and fix the places where we're
sloppy and not list all the files we create in CLEANFILES, should
anybody have the time to chase them all to ground.