getopt(3) returns int type not char. Using char triggers the
-Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare warning with clang.
Change the type of the variable used for holding the return value
of getopt(3) to int to match the prototype and eliminate the warning.
MFC after: 1 week
Introduce the OpenBSD syntax of "scrub" option for "match" and "pass"
rules and the "set reassemble" flag. The patch is backward-compatible,
pf.conf can be still written in FreeBSD-style.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: never
Sponsored by: InnoGames GmbH
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38025
Commit 896516e54a added a new NFS mount option
used for Kerberized NFSv4.1/4.2 mounts. It specifies that
AUTH_SYS be used for state maintenance (also called system)
operations. This allows the mount to be done without the
"gssname" option or a valid Kerberos TGT being held by the
user doing the mount (so it can be specified in fstab(5) for
example).
Reviewed by: gbe (manpages), karels
MFC after: 3 months
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39469
A machine might exist on multiple networks, all of which offer, say, default
routes or name servers. There's no easy way to indicate in the config
that those options are only valid for a single interface.
Now, we can write:
interface "lan0" {
request routers;
require routers;
}
interface "lan1" {
ignore routers;
}
And only take action on default routes offered on lan0.
Tested by: Jose Luis Duran <jlduran at gmail dot com>
MFC after: 2 months
Reviewed by: allanjude, imp
Sponsored by: Zenith Electronics LLC
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
Pull Request: #693
For clone create and rename operations, the interface name get back can be
different from the one passed to ioctl(). Use the interface name we get back
so that ifconfig will not return unexpected ENXIO.
PR: 270618
Reviewed by: kp
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39396
route.c uses newroute() to handle the "route get" command. The logic
inside newroute() adds RTF_GATEWAY flag if "-interface" flag is not
specified. That results in the inconsistent RTM_GET message with
RTF_GATEWAY set but no RTAX_GATEWAY provided. Address this in the
translation code by checking if the gateway is actually provided.
Notable upstream pull request merges:
#12194 Fix short-lived txg caused by autotrim
#13368 ZFS_IOC_COUNT_FILLED does unnecessary txg_wait_synced()
#13392 Implementation of block cloning for ZFS
#13741 SHA2 reworking and API for iterating over multiple implementations
#14282 Sync thread should avoid holding the spa config write lock
when possible
#14283 txg_sync should handle write errors in ZIL
#14359 More adaptive ARC eviction
#14469 Fix NULL pointer dereference in zio_ready()
#14479 zfs redact fails when dnodesize=auto
#14496 improve error message of zfs redact
#14500 Skip memory allocation when compressing holes
#14501 FreeBSD: don't verify recycled vnode for zfs control directory
#14502 partially revert PR 14304 (eee9362a7)
#14509 Fix per-jail zfs.mount_snapshot setting
#14514 Fix data race between zil_commit() and zil_suspend()
#14516 System-wide speculative prefetch limit
#14517 Use rw_tryupgrade() in dmu_bonus_hold_by_dnode()
#14519 Do not hold spa_config in ZIL while blocked on IO
#14523 Move dmu_buf_rele() after dsl_dataset_sync_done()
#14524 Ignore too large stack in case of dsl_deadlist_merge
#14526 Use .section .rodata instead of .rodata on FreeBSD
#14528 ICP: AES-GCM: Refactor gcm_clear_ctx()
#14529 ICP: AES-GCM: Unify gcm_init_ctx() and gmac_init_ctx()
#14532 Handle unexpected errors in zil_lwb_commit() without ASSERT()
#14544 icp: Prevent compilers from optimizing away memset()
in gcm_clear_ctx()
#14546 Revert zfeature_active() to static
#14556 Remove bad kmem_free() oversight from previous zfsdev_state_list
patch
#14563 Optimize the is_l2cacheable functions
#14565 FreeBSD: zfs_znode_alloc: lock the vnode earlier
#14566 FreeBSD: fix false assert in cache_vop_rmdir when replaying ZIL
#14567 spl: Add cmn_err_once() to log a message only on the first call
#14568 Fix incremental receive silently failing for recursive sends
#14569 Restore ASMABI and other Unify work
#14576 Fix detection of IBM Power8 machines (ISA 2.07)
#14577 Better handling for future crypto parameters
#14600 zcommon: Refactor FPU state handling in fletcher4
#14603 Fix prefetching of indirect blocks while destroying
#14633 Fixes in persistent error log
#14639 FreeBSD: Remove extra arc_reduce_target_size() call
#14641 Additional limits on hole reporting
#14649 Drop lying to the compiler in the fletcher4 code
#14652 panic loop when removing slog device
#14653 Update vdev state for spare vdev
#14655 Fix cloning into already dirty dbufs
#14678 Revert "Do not hold spa_config in ZIL while blocked on IO"
Obtained from: OpenZFS
OpenZFS commit: 431083f75b
VLAN identifier 0xFFF is reserved. It must not be configured or
transmitted.
Also validate during parsing to prevent potential integer overflow.
Reviewed by: #network, melifaro
Fixes: c7cffd65c5 Add support for stacked VLANs (IEEE 802.1ad, AKA Q-in-Q)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39282
When recovering a system that is unbootable due to some
problem with the active BE, it is likely you'll be booted
from a rescue image running UFS. In this case, bectl
needs help finding the zpool root that you want to operate
on. In this case, improve the error message to suggest
specifying a root, rather than just emitting a generic
error message that might imply, to the naive user, that
there is a ZFS compatibility issue between the rescue
image and the on-disk ZFS pool.
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39346
The algorithm for laying out new directories was devised in the 1980s
and markedly improved the performance of the filesystem. In those days
large disks had at most 100 cylinder groups and often as few as 10-20.
Modern multi-terrabyte disks have thousands of cylinder groups. The
original algorithm does not handle these large sizes well. This change
attempts to expand the scope of the original algorithm to work well
with these much larger disks while still retaining the properties
of the original algorithm for small disks.
The filesystem implementation is divided into policy routines and
implementation routines. The policy routines can be changed in any
way desired without risk of corrupting the filesystem. The policy
requests are handled by the implementation layer. If the policy
asks for an available resource, it is granted. But if it asks for
an already in-use resource, then the implementation will provide
an available one nearby the request. Thus it is impossible for a
policy to double allocate. This change is limited to the policy
implementation.
This change updates the ffs_dirpref() routine which is responsible
for selecting the cylinder group into which a new directory should
be placed. If we are near the root of the filesystem we aim to
spread them out as much as possible. As we descend deeper from the
root we cluster them closer together around their parent as we
expect them to be more closely interactive. Higher-level directories
like usr/src/sys and usr/src/bin should be separated while the
directories in these areas are more likely to be accessed together
so should be closer. And directories within commands or kernel
subsystems should be closer still.
We pick a range of cylinder groups around the cylinder group of the
directory in which we are being created. The size of the range for
our search is based on our depth from the root of our filesystem.
We then probe that range based on how many directories are already
present. The first new directory is at 1/2 (middle) of the range;
the second is in the first 1/4 of the range, then at 3/4, 1/8, 3/8,
5/8, 7/8, 1/16, 3/16, 5/16, etc.
It is desirable to store the depth of a directory in its on-disk
inode so that it is available when we need it. We add a new field
di_dirdepth to track the depth of each directory. Because there are
few spare fields left in the inode, we choose to share an existing
field in the inode rather than having one of our own. Specifically
we create a union with the di_freelink field. The di_freelink field
is used to track inodes that have been unlinked but remain referenced.
It is not needed until a rmdir(2) operation has been done on a
directory. At that point, the directory has no contents and even
if it is kept active as a current directory is no longer able to
have any new directories or files created in it. Thus the use of
di_dirdepth and di_freelink will never coincide.
Reported by: Timo Voelker
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39246
- passing I/O commands through nda requires nsid field to be set (it was
unused when going through nvme_ns_ioctl())
- ccb's status can be OR'ed with the flags, use CAM_STATUS_MASK
Reviewed by: imp (cam)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D37696
Test regression fixed in 4630a3252a. Add two tests that do not
use the verbose flag, so the code path in question can be reached:
1. Respond with a proper ICMP destination host unreachable packet.
2. Respond with a doctored ICMP destination host unreachable packet,
that has the ICMP Identifier field modified (+1 bit).
Reviewed by: cy
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39244
This change converts all kernel rtsock interactions in route(8)
to Netlink.
Based on the WITHOUT_NETLINK_SUPPORT src.conf(5) variable, route(8)
now fully operates either via Netlink or via rtsock/sysctl.
The default (compile-time) is Netlink.
The output for route delete/add/get/flush is targeted to be exactly
the same (apart from some error handling cases).
The output for the route monitor has been changed to improve
readability and support netlink models.
Other behaviour changes:
* exact prefix lookup (route -n get a.b.c.d/e) is not yet supported.
* route monitor does not show the change originator yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39007
The variable oicmp, which holds the original ("quoted packet") ICMP
packet in a structured way, did not have a copy of the original ICMP
packet obtained from the raw data.
The code was accidentally removed in 20b4130314. Bring it back.
Reported by: Coverity Scan, cy
Reviewed by: cy
CID: 1506960 (UNINIT)
Fixes: 20b4130314
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39233
In certain setups (e.g., autonomous APs) it is extremly helpful to have
a way to map the BSSIDs to names for both normal status output as well
as the scan list. This often allows a quicker overview than remembering
(or manually looking up) BSSIDs.
Call ether_ntohost() on the bssid and consult /etc/ethers
and print "(name)" after the bssid for the status output and "(name)"
at the end of the line after the IE list.
MFC after: 10 days
Reviewed by: adrian, cy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39192
Allow users to configure the address to send carp messages to. This
allows carp to be used in unicast mode, which is useful in certain
virtual configurations (e.g. AWS, VMWare ESXi, ...)
Reviewed by: melifaro
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38940
Allow carp configuration information to be supplied and retrieved via
netlink.
Reviewed by: melifaro
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39048
The function pr_pack() prints out a packet, if the IP packet contains
options, these are printed as well.
Test the functionality fixed in
70960bb86a.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38470
Ping used to provide some sort of packet sniffing capabilities, this was
in an era where hubs were used and tcpdump wasn't invented.
pr_iph() is a function that prints the IP header of the packet.
pr_retip() is essentially a wrapper function to pr_iph(), that also
displays the source and destination ports of a TCP or UDP packet.
After ef9e6dc7ee some of this
functionality was almost removed, to only display packets sent by us
(26+ years ago).
At this point, reaching this code path was only possible by doctoring
the original packet.
After 46d7b45a26 this code path can never
be reached.
Remove the code.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38475
When an ICMP packet contains an IP packet in its payload, and that
original IP packet contains options, these options were not displayed
accordingly in pr_iph().
pr_iph() is a function that prints the original "quoted packet" IP
header, with only an IP struct as an argument. The IP struct does not
contain IP options, and it is not guaranteed that the options will be
contiguous in memory to the IP struct after
d9cacf605e.
Pass the raw ICMP data along with the IP struct, in order to print the
options, if any.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38469
The sizeof(struct ip) is 20.
The sizeof(struct in_addr) is 4.
No functional change intended.
Reviewed by: asomers, markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39125
In the IP header, Flags + Fragment Offset is a 16-bit field.
Use ntohs() instead of ntohl(), otherwise the Flags/Fragment Offset
values may not display correctly.
Before (DF set)
Vr HL TOS Len ID Flg off TTL Pro cks Src Dst
4 5 00 0054 0001 0 0000 40 01 b6a4 192.0.2.1 192.0.2.2
After (DF set)
Vr HL TOS Len ID Flg off TTL Pro cks Src Dst
4 5 00 0054 0001 2 0000 40 01 b6a4 192.0.2.1 192.0.2.2
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38479
It is better to mention the externel command for showing
the routing table as using an explicit command.
PR: 231579
Suggested by: karels
Reviewed by: karles, gbe
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39075
Instead of passing 0xff's for all unset parameters, prefer reasonable
defaults. It is much easier to use it this was without specs in hand.
MFC after: 1 week
If a directory entry has an illegal inode number (less than zero
or greater than the last inode in the filesystem) the entry is removed.
If a directory '.' or '..' entry had an illegal inode number they
were being removed. Since fsck_ffs knows what the correct value is
for these two entries fix them rather deleting them.
Add much more extensive cylinder group checks and use them to be
more careful about rebuilding a cylinder group.
Check for out-of-range block numbers before trying to free them.
When a directory is deleted also remove its cache entry created
in pass1 so that later passes do not try to operate on a deleted
directory.
Check for ctime(3) returning NULL before trying to use its return.
When freeing a directory inode, do not try to interpret it as a
directory.
Reserve space in the inostatlist to have room to allocate a
lost+found directory.
If an invalid block number is found past the end of an inode simply
remove it rather than clearing and removing the inode.
Modernize the inoinfo structure to use queue(3) LIST rather than a
handrolled linked list implementation.
Reported by: Bob Prohaska, John-Mark Gurney, and Mark Millard
Tested by: Peter Holm
Reviewed by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38668