The function savestr allows NULL return values during Plan A patching so in
case of out of memory conditions, Plan B can step in. In many cases, NULL
value is not properly handled, so use xstrdup here (it's outside Plan A/B
patching, which means that even Plan B relies on successful operations).
Clean up some whitespaces while here
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
number of clusters it occupies. It's not the number of entries in the table,
as it is for the L1 cluster table.
For small images, the two are the same. With the unit tests based on small
images, this change has therefore no effect on the unit test. For larger
images (like the FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE image), this gives a discrepancy that
actually shows up when running "qemu-img check".
Bump the version number of mkimg.
While here, fix a white-space bug.
MFC after: 1 week
Introduce strtolinenum to properly check line numbers while parsing:
no signs, no spaces, just digits, 0 <= x <= LONG_MAX
Properly validate line ranges supplied in diff file to prevent overflows.
Also fixes an out of boundary memory access because the resulting values
are used as array indices.
PR: 195436
Obtained from: OpenBSD (CVS pch.c rev 1.45, 1,46, common.h rev 1.28)
MFC after: 1 week
Check fstat return value. Also, use off_t for file size and offsets.
Avoid iterating over end of string.
Obtained from: OpenBSD (CVS rev. 1.41, 1.43)
MFC after: 1 week
- Compatiblity with existing manpages has been improved
- Now support ".so" directive with compressed manpages (which fixes a regression
we have since we have new man(1))
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
o Introduce a notion of "not ready" mbufs in socket buffers. These
mbufs are now being populated by some I/O in background and are
referenced outside. This forces following implications:
- An mbuf which is "not ready" can't be taken out of the buffer.
- An mbuf that is behind a "not ready" in the queue neither.
- If sockbet buffer is flushed, then "not ready" mbufs shouln't be
freed.
o In struct sockbuf the sb_cc field is split into sb_ccc and sb_acc.
The sb_ccc stands for ""claimed character count", or "committed
character count". And the sb_acc is "available character count".
Consumers of socket buffer API shouldn't already access them directly,
but use sbused() and sbavail() respectively.
o Not ready mbufs are marked with M_NOTREADY, and ready but blocked ones
with M_BLOCKED.
o New field sb_fnrdy points to the first not ready mbuf, to avoid linear
search.
o New function sbready() is provided to activate certain amount of mbufs
in a socket buffer.
A special note on SCTP:
SCTP has its own sockbufs. Unfortunately, FreeBSD stack doesn't yet
allow protocol specific sockbufs. Thus, SCTP does some hacks to make
itself compatible with FreeBSD: it manages sockbufs on its own, but keeps
sb_cc updated to inform the stack of amount of data in them. The new
notion of "not ready" data isn't supported by SCTP. Instead, only a
mechanical substitute is done: s/sb_cc/sb_ccc/.
A proper solution would be to take away struct sockbuf from struct
socket and allow protocols to implement their own socket buffers, like
SCTP already does. This was discussed with rrs@.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
- 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
man(1) now first test the manpage to run with mandoc to make sure it can be
rendered.
In case groff cannot be found (because base has been built WITHOUT_GROFF) it
recommands to install groff from the packages
usr.bin/locate:
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:249:29: error: taking the absolute value of unsigned type 'unsigned int' has no effect [-Werror,-Wabsolute-value]
MAXPATHLEN, abs(i) < abs(htonl(i)) ? i : htonl(i));
^
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:249:29: note: remove the call to 'abs' since unsigned values cannot be negative
MAXPATHLEN, abs(i) < abs(htonl(i)) ? i : htonl(i));
^~~
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:274:32: error: taking the absolute value of unsigned type 'unsigned int' has no effect [-Werror,-Wabsolute-value]
MAXPATHLEN, abs(word) < abs(htonl(word)) ? word :
^
usr.bin/locate/locate/util.c:274:32: note: remove the call to 'abs' since unsigned values cannot be negative
MAXPATHLEN, abs(word) < abs(htonl(word)) ? word :
^~~
The problem is that ntohl() always returns an unsigned quantity. In
this case, it's expected to be cast back to a signed integer, but to
stop complaints about abs() we just store it into an integer, and don't
call ntohl() again.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1196
mandoc(1) does not provide an equivalent of the GNU groff's soelim(1) as an
external binary. It does provide the funcitonnality but internally.
Lots if manpages in ports uses ".so" directives to include the content of
another manpage, which works properly if the manpages are not compressed.
With compressed manpages it will fail. So we need to preprocess those manpages
with soelim(1) before compressing them.
soeliminate(1) add the minimum functionnality from soelim(1) required for that
task, in order to still be able to prepare properly those manpages in case we
ship the base system only with mandoc as a manpage renderer.
soeliminate(1) accept all the arguments from soelim(1) for compatibility but
only '-I dir' is really functionnal.
Name it soeliminate and not soelim, so groff from base or ports can still call
soelim(1) for its internal use and avoid potential incompatibilities
MFC after: 1 month
- Dump an NT_X86_XSTATE note if XSAVE is in use. This note is designed
to match what Linux does in that 1) it dumps the entire XSAVE area
including the fxsave state, and 2) it stashes a copy of the current
xsave mask in the unused padding between the fxsave state and the
xstate header at the same location used by Linux.
- Teach readelf() to recognize NT_X86_XSTATE notes.
- Change PT_GET/SETXSTATE to take the entire XSAVE state instead of
only the extra portion. This avoids having to always make two
ptrace() calls to get or set the full XSAVE state.
- Add a PT_GET_XSTATE_INFO which returns the length of the current
XSTATE save area (so the size of the buffer needed for PT_GETXSTATE)
and the current XSAVE mask (%xcr0).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1193
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
proper way to ensure that the command line compile works the way we intend.
Add explicity DPADD statemens on LIBMD and LIBPTHREAD depending on which
options are used in the build.
Reviewed by: andrew
MFC after: 2 weeks