This diff primarily adds/removes flags to make the tests compatible with
sort. Two tests are removed. One test is changed to expect fail due to
a bug.
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30217
It appears that the stackframe layout can be slightly different depending on
compiler and target architecture. For example, when using CHERI LLVM for RISC-V
we can actually overflow the buffer by up to 8 bytes without SSP detecting it.
Fix this by increasing the overflow to 15 bytes.
Reviewed By: ngie, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28997
I did this without a full vendor update since that would cause too many
conflicts. Since these files now almost match the NetBSD sources the
next git subtree merge should work just fine.
Reviewed By: lwhsu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28797
Since 4581cefc1e
ATF opens the results file on startup. This fixes problems like
capsicumized tests not being able to open the file on exit.
However, this test closes all file descriptors above 3 to get a
deterministic fd table allocation for the child. Instead of using closefrom
(which will close the ATF output file FD) I've changed this test use
the lowest available fd and pass that to the helper program as a string.
We could also try to re-open the results file in ATF if we get a EBADF
error, but that will fail when running under Capsicum.
Reviewed By: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28684
Since 4581cefc1e
ATF opens the results file on startup. This fixes problems like
capsicumized tests not being able to open the file on exit.
However, this test closes all file descriptors just to check that
socketpair returns fd 3+4 and thereby also closes the ATF results file.
This then results in an EBADF when writing the result so the test is
reported as broken.
While system calls that create new file descriptors (must?) use the lowest
available file descriptor number, it does not seem useful to test this
property here. Drop the check for FD==3/4 to unbreak the testsuite.
We could also try to re-open the results file in ATF if we get a EBADF
error, but that will fail when running under Capsicum.
Reviewed By: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28683
The rpc_control() API does not accept the CLCR_SET_RPCB_TIMEOUT command,
it only accepts RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_GET/RPC_SVC_CONNMAXREC_SET, so it was
not doing anything.
Instead of incorrectly calling this API, use clnt_create_timed() instead.
I noticed this because the test was timing out after 120s in the CheriBSD CI.
Reviewed By: ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28478
After d3338f3355, the lib/msun test case
'hypotl_near_underflow' would fail to compile on platforms where long
doubles weren't 80 bit, like on x86. Disable this particular test on
such platforms for now.
PR: 253313
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-With: d3338f3355
This adjusts the factor used to scale the subnormal numbers, so it
becomes the right value after adjusting its exponent. Thanks to Steve
Kargl for finding the most elegant fix.
Also enable the hypot tests, and add a test case for this bug.
PR: 253313
MFC after: 1 week
The basic issue here is that grep, when given -m 1, would stop all
line processing once it hit the match count and exit immediately. The
problem with exiting immediately is that -A processing only happens when
subsequent lines are processed and do not match.
The fix here is relatively easy; when bsdgrep matches a line, it resets
the 'tail' of the matching context to the value supplied to -A and
dumps anything that's been queued up for -B. After the current line has
been printed and tail is reset, we check our mcount and do what's
needed. Therefore, at the time that we decide we're doing nothing, we
know that 'tail' of the context is correct and we can simply continue
on if there's still more to pick up.
With this change, we still bail out immediately if there's been no -A
flag. If -A was supplied, we signal that we should continue on. However,
subsequent lines will not even bothere to try and process the line. We
have reached the match count, so even if the next line would match then
we must process it if it hadn't. Thus, the loop in procfile() can
short-circuit and just process the line as a non-match until
procmatches() indicates that it's safe to stop.
A test has been added to reflect both that we should be picking up the
next line and that the next line should be considered a non-match even
if it should have been.
PR: 253350
MFC-after: 3 days
The null pattern semantics were terrible because I tried to match gnugrep,
but I got it wrong. Let's unwind that:
- The null pattern should match every line if neither -w nor -x.
- The null pattern should match empty lines if -x.
- The null pattern should not match any lines if -w.
The first two will stop processing (shortcut) even if additional patterns
are specified. In any other case, we will continue processing other
patterns. If no other patterns are specified beside a null pattern, then
we match if neither -w nor -x or set and do not match if either of those
are specified.
The justification for -w is that it should match on a whole word, but the
null pattern deos not have a whole word to match on.
Empty pattern files should never match anything, and more importantly, -v
should cause everything to be written.
PR: 253209
MFC-after: 4 days
SVN r343917 fixed this for in-tree clang, but when building with a newer
out-of-tree clang the test was still marked as XFAIL.
Reviewed By: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28390
Add shims to map NetBSD's API to CPUSET(9). Obviously the invalid input
parts of these tests are relatively useless since we're just testing the
shims that aren't used elsewhere, there's still some amount of value in
the parts testing valid inputs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27307
Part of the libregex functionality leaked into the tests it shares with
the standard regex(3). Introduce a P flag to set the REG_POSIX cflag to
indicate that libc regex should effectively do nothing while libregex should
specifically run it in non-extended mode.
This unbreaks the libc/regex test run.
Reported by: Jenkins
This is the last of the needed GNU expressions before we can unleash bsdgrep
by default. \b is effectively an agnostic equivalent of \< and \>, while
\B will match every space that isn't making a transition from
nonchar -> char or char -> nonchar.
Instead of using a simple global++ as the data race, with this change we
perform the increment by loading the global, delaying for a bit and then
storing back the incremented value. If I move the increment outside of the
mutex protected range, I can now see the data race with only 100 iterations
on amd64 in almost all cases. Before this change such a racy test almost
always passed with < 100,000 iterations and only reliably failed with the
current limit of 10 million.
I noticed this poorly written test because the mutex:mutex{2,3} and
timedmutex:mutex{2,3} tests were always timing out on our CheriBSD Jenkins.
Writing good concurrency tests is hard so I won't attempt to do so, but this
change should make the test more likely to fail if pthread_mutex_lock is not
implemented correctly while also significantly reducing the time it takes to
run these four tests. It will also reduce the time it takes for QEMU RISC-V
testsuite runs by almost 40 minutes (out of currently 7 hours).
Reviewed By: brooks, ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26473
This fixes a "suggested parens" compile warning-into-error
that shows up on gcc-6.4.
Reviewed by: ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26789
As of r363471, tmpfs is included in all GENERIC kernel configs. This
results in a warning being emitted for each call to kldload(8):
module_register: cannot register tmpfs from tmpfs.ko; already loaded from kernel
Check for the presence of the module via kldstat first to quiet this
warning.
Reviewed by: asomers, arichardson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26632
An old it_value of {4,3} is valid. Allow it.
Reviewed by: bdrewery
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26445
zgrep should exit with success when given multiple files and the
pattern is found in at least one file. Prior to this change,
it would exit with success only if the pattern was found in _every_ file.
Reviewed by: dab ngie
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26616
got_sigalrm is a global with external linkage and must therefore have a
previous extern declaration. There's no reason to maintain the status quo
there, so just make it static.
The result var is unused.
This part of the test has not been upstreamed, presumably because it exists
solely for sem_clockwait_np. We should perhaps consider moving it into its
own test file outside of ^/contrib/netbsd-tests, but this can happen later.
MFC after: 1 week
v1.17 of this file included a fix that I just submitted upstream to fix a
warning about prevent_inline with external linkage not having been
previously declared.
MFC after: 1 week
In IEEE 1003.1-2008 [1] and earlier revisions, BRE/ERE grammar allows for
any character to be escaped, but "ORD_CHAR preceded by an unescaped
<backslash> character [gives undefined results]".
Historically, we've interpreted an escaped ordinary character as the
ordinary character itself. This becomes problematic when some extensions
give special meanings to an otherwise ordinary character
(e.g. GNU's \b, \s, \w), meaning we may have two different valid
interpretations of the same sequence.
To make this easier to deal with and given that the standard calls this
undefined, we should throw an error (EESCAPE) if we run into this scenario
to ease transition into a state where some escaped ordinaries are blessed
with a special meaning -- it will either error out or have extended
behavior, rather than have two entirely different versions of undefined
behavior that leave the consumer of regex(3) guessing as to what behavior
will be used or leaving them with false impressions.
This change bumps the symbol version of regcomp to FBSD_1.6 and provides the
old escape semantics for legacy applications, just in case one has an older
application that would immediately turn into a pumpkin because of an
extraneous escape that's embedded or otherwise critical to its operation.
This is the final piece needed before enhancing libregex with GNU extensions
and flipping the switch on bsdgrep.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799.2016edition/
PR: 229925 (exp-run, courtesy of antoine)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10510
- Handle whitespace with long flags that take arguments:
echo 'foo bar' > test
zgrep --regexp='foo bar' test
- Do not hang reading from stdin with patterns in a file:
echo foobar > test
echo foo > pattern
zgrep -f pattern test
zgrep --file=pattern test
- Handle any flags after -e:
echo foobar > test
zgrep -e foo --ignore-case < test
These two are still outstanding problems:
- Does not handle flags that take an argument if there is no
whitespace:
zgrep -enfs /etc/rpc
- When more than one -e pattern used matching should occur for all
patterns (similar to multiple patterns supplied with -f file).
Instead only the last pattern is used for matching:
zgrep -e rex -e nfs /etc/rpc
(This problem is masked in the unpatched version by the "any
flags after -e" problem.)
Add tests for the above problems.
Update the mange and add references to gzip(1) and zstd(1) and also
document the remaining known problems.
PR: 247126
Approved by: markj
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25613
The version that ended upstream was ultimately slightly different than the
version committed here; notably, statvfs() is used but it's redefined
appropriately to statfs() on FreeBSD since we don't provide the fstypename
for the former interface.
The revokex test does not work when the scratch directory is created on NFS.
Given the nature of NFS, it likely can never work without looking like a
security hole since O_SEARCH would rely on the server knowing that the
directory did have +x at the time of open and that it's OK for it to have
been revoked based on POSIX specification for O_SEARCH.
This does mean that O_SEARCH is only partially functional on NFS in general,
but I suspect the execute bit getting revoked in the process is likely not
common.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23573
The RCSID data was wrong, so this is effectively a record-only merge
with correction of said data. No further changes should be needed in this
area, as we've now upstreamed our local changes to this specific test.
In FreeBSD's O_SEARCH implementation, O_SEARCH in conjunction with O_RDWR or
O_WRONLY is explicitly rejected. In this case, O_RDWR was not necessary
anyways as the file will get created with or without it.
This was submitted upstream as misc/54940 and committed in rev 1.8 of the
file.
Coverity correctly reports this as a resource leak. It's an admittedly minor
one, but plug it anyways.
This has been submitted upstream as misc/54939.
CID: 978288
O_SEARCH is defined by POSIX [0] to open a directory for searching, skipping
permissions checks on the directory itself after the initial open(). This is
close to the semantics we've historically applied for O_EXEC on a directory,
which is UB according to POSIX. Conveniently, O_SEARCH on a file is also
explicitly undefined behavior according to POSIX, so O_EXEC would be a fine
choice. The spec goes on to state that O_SEARCH and O_EXEC need not be
distinct values, but they're not defined to be the same value.
This was pointed out as an incompatibility with other systems that had made
its way into libarchive, which had assumed that O_EXEC was an alias for
O_SEARCH.
This defines compatibility O_SEARCH/FSEARCH (equivalent to O_EXEC and FEXEC
respectively) and expands our UB for O_EXEC on a directory. O_EXEC on a
directory is checked in vn_open_vnode already, so for completeness we add a
NOEXECCHECK when O_SEARCH has been specified on the top-level fd and do not
re-check that when descending in namei.
[0] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23247
The current code clearly intended for these to be octal based on the values
used, but the octal prefix was forgotten. Add it now for correctness, but
note that we don't currently execute these tests.
This has been submitted upstream as misc/54902, so I've omitted the standard
FreeBSD markers that we tend to put into netbsd-tests for upstream-candidate
identification.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 3 days
unifdef(1): Improve worst-case bound on symbol resolution
Use RB_TREE to make some algorithms O(lg N) and O(N lg N) instead of O(N)
and O(N^2).
While here, remove arbitrarily limit on number of macros understood.
Reverts r354877 and r354878, which disabled the (correct) test.
PR: 242095
Reported by: lwhsu
It turns out that a test of backtrace symbol resolution and formatting
requires symbols. Another option mightt be building with -rdynamic instead,
but this works for now.
Re-enabled skipped CI test, as it should now pass.
PR: 241562
Submitted by: lwhsu
Reported by: lwhsu
X-MFC-With: r354126, r354135, r354144
The bogus requirement was causing CI infrastructure (which does not mount
procfs) to skip the test. Procfs has not been needed by libexecinfo on
FreeBSD (nor NetBSD) for years. Both now use a sysctl to obtain the path to
the current process image.
X-MFC-With: r354126
When an empty pattern is encountered in the pattern list, I had previously
broken bsdgrep to count that as a "match all" and ignore any other patterns
in the list. This commit rectifies that mistake, among others:
- The -v flag semantics were not quite right; lines matched should have been
counted differently based on whether the -v flag was set or not. procline
now definitively returns whether it's matched or not, and interpreting
that result has been kicked up a level.
- Empty patterns with the -x flag was broken similarly to empty patterns
with the -w flag. The former is a whole-line match and should be more
strict, only matching blank lines. No -x and no -w will will match the
empty string at the beginning of each line.
- The exit code with -L was broken, w.r.t. modern grep. Modern grap will
exit(0) if any file that didn't match was output, so our interpretation
was simply backwards. The new interpretation makes sense to me.
Tests updated and added to try and catch some of this.
This misbehavior was found by autoconf while fixing ports found in PR 229925
expecting either a more sane or a more GNU-like sed.
MFC after: 1 week