Set it based on hint.acpi.0.rsdp. Initially, hint.acpi.0.disabled will be
respected. "Using System Defaults" will override whether it's explicitly
disabled by hint and re-load it based on whether it's present on the system.
Unlike the 4th version, this is not restricted to x86. I have no strong
reasoning for this, so this is definitely open to change.
This submenu is likely going to go away in favor of kernel selection as it
is done in forth at the moment, but for the time being don't descend into it
if we have no kernels available for listing.
OK. We don't really need a bsd.stand.mk, and it was causing a -fPIC
for the toolchain to be added (bogusly) when building on amd64. Pull
all relevant defs back into defs.mk and delete bsd.stand.mk.
This saves about 15-20k on i386 loader and zfsloader which when
combined with Lua give us a lot more stack space in those constrained
environments.
bootp/arp/rarp/rpc all use the sendrecv implementation in net.c. tftp has
its own implementation because it passes an extra parameter into the recv
callback for the received payload type to be held.
These sendrecv implementations are otherwise equivalent, so consolidate
them. The other users of sendrecv won't be using the extra argument to recv,
but this gives us only one place to worry about respecting timeouts and one
consistent timeout behavior.
Tested by: sbruno
Reviewed by: sbruno, tsoome
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14373
metadata load files were consolidated in r329190, and these relocation fixup
bits were inadvertently dropped in the process. Re-add them to fix boot with
ubldr.
Glanced over by: jhibbits
X-MFC-With: r329190
Scan only the BLOCK IO MEDIA once instead of each time for each type of
device (fd, cd and hdd).
Leave the mechanism to free and reprobe all devices if one day we want
to implement a "dev rescan" thing.
Reviewed by: imp, tsoome
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14334
readip() doesn't, at the moment, properly indicate to callers that it has
timed out. One can tell that it's timed out if errno == EAGAIN when it
returns, but this is not ideal. Restructure it a little bit to explicitly
set errno to ETIMEDOUT if we've exhausted tleft.
I found two places that care about where it timed out or not: sendrecv in
net.c and sendrecv_tftp. Both are structured to pass smaller timeout values
to readip while tracking a larger timeout. Neither of them were able to do
this properly with readip not indicating ETIMEDOUT, so fix it.
While here, straighten out the time (t/t1) usage in sendrecv_tftp.
This would have manifested itself in periodic failures to NFS/TFTP boot for
no apparent reason because MINTMO/MAXTMO were not actually being respected
properly. Problems were not reported with NFS, only TFTP.
Reported by: sbruno
Reviewed by: sbruno, tsoome
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14350
Summary:
All metadata.c files are very similar, with only trivial changes. Unify them
into a single common file, with minor special-casing where needed.
Reviewed By: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13978
These are the .lua files from from Pedro Souza's 2014 Summer of Code
project. Rui Paulo, Pedro Arthur and Wojciech A. Koszek also
contributed.
Obtained from: https://wiki.freebsd.org/SummerOfCode2014/LuaLoader
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code
Improve the SoC lua menu code to bring it in line with forth
menu functionality
Submitted by: Zakary Nafziger
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
Use loader.setenv and loader.unsetenv instead of loader.perform
Convert from include("/boot/foo.lua") to foo = require("foo");
to bring in line with latest lua module conventions.
Enforce a uniform style for the new .lua files:
o hard tab indenation for 8 spaces
o don't have if foo then bar; else bas; end on one line
MFC After: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14295
liblua glues the lua run time into the boot loader. It implements all
the runtime routines that lua expects. In addition, it has a few
standard 'C' headers that nueter various aspects of the LUA build that
are too specific to lua to be in libsa. Many refinements from the
original code to improve implementation and the number of included lua
libraries. Use int64_t for lua_Number. Have "/boot/lua" be the default
module path. Numerous cleanups from the original GSoC project,
including hacking libsa to allow lua to be built with only one change
outside luaconf.h.
Add the final bit of lua glue to bring in liblua and plug into the
multiple interpreter framework, previously committed.
Add LOADER_LUA option, currently off by default.
Presently, this is an experimental option. One must opt-in to using
this by defining WITH_LOADER_LUA and WITHOUT_FORTH. It's been
lightly tested, so keep a backup copy of your old loader handy.
The menu code, coming in the next commit, hasn't been exhaustively
tested. A LUA boot loader is 60k larger than a FORTH one, which is
80k larger than a no-interpreter one. Subtle changes in size
may tip things past some subtle limit (the binary is ~430k now
when built with LUA). A future version may offer coexistance.
Bump FreeBSD version to 1200058 to mark the milestone.
Pedro Souza's 2014 Summer of Code project. Rui Paulo, Pedro Arthur,
Zakary Nafziger and Wojciech A. Koszek also contributed. Warner Losh
reworked it extensively into its current form.
Obtained from: https://wiki.freebsd.org/SummerOfCode2014/LuaLoader
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code
Relnotes: Yes
MFC After: 1 month
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14295
r328536 broke symbol loading on amd64 at least (and probably other
arches). r328826 contained the problem to ppc only by adding
pre-processors guards.
Fix this properly by moving the endianness conversion to separate
helper functions, and make the conversion more robust by using sizeof
instead of having to manually code the size of each field.
Finally list the fields in each structure in a macro in order to avoid
code repetition.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kib emaste wma
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14267
reflect what scripting language was compiled into the loader. I
anticipate that being able to find this out quickly from the OK prompt
will be useful in troubleshooting in the future.
Since it's not possible to unset a variable easily, create a new
variable 'PIC' to signal that we are creating a shared object that we
want to install. defs.mk refains from defining NO_PIC and ITNERALLIB
when PIC is defined. This unbreaks userboot.so building.
4 space indentation with a mix of tabs and spaces is a hassle. Update
to project-standard hard-tabs with 8-space indentation in these files.
This matches the new code coming in better as well.
As a followup to r328101, ignore relocation tables for ELF object
sections that are not memory resident. For modules loaded by the
loader, ignore relocation tables whose associated section was not
loaded by the loader (sh_addr is zero). For modules loaded at runtime
via kldload(2), ignore relocation tables whose associated section is
not marked with SHF_ALLOC.
Reported by: Mori Hiroki <yamori813@yahoo.co.jp>, adrian
Tested on: mips, mips64
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
PowerPC Apple hardware, and likely all Open Firmware systems.
The loader would allocate memory for its heap at whatever address Open
Firmware gave it, which would in general be the lowest unallocated address,
usually starting a page or two above 0. As the kernel is linked at 1 MB,
and loader insists on running the kernel at its link address, any heap
larger than 1 MB would overlap the kernel, causing loader memory allocations
to corrupt the kernel and vice versa.
Although r328806 made this problem much worse by increasing the heap size
to 8 MB, causing 88% of the loader heap to overlap with the kernel, the
problem has always existed. The old heap size was 1 MB and, unless that
started exactly at zero, which would cause other problems, some number of
pages of the loader heap still overlapped with the kernel.
This patch solves the issue in two ways and cleans up some related code:
- Moves the loader heap inside of the loader. This guarantees that the
heap will be contiguous with the loader and simplifies the heap
allocation code at no cost, since the heap lives in BSS.
- Moves the loader, previously at 28 MB and dangerously close to the kernel
it loads, a bit higher to 44 MB. This has the effect of breaking loader
on non-embedded PPC machines with < 48 MB of RAM, but we did not support
those anyway.
The fundamental problem is that the way loader loads ELF files is
incredibly fragile, but that can't be fixed without fundamental
architectural changes.
MFC after: 10 days
The cross-endian loader change in r328536 (review D12422) broke symbol
loading on (at least) amd64 kernels. Temporarily paper over the issue
by restricting the cross-endian support to only powerpc, until a proper
fix arrives.
Submitted by: royger
preference to LIBFICL{,32}. LIBFICL{,32} are now always defined, but
LDR_INTERP{,32} is defined empty when building w/o forth (aka the
simple interpreter) and defined to LIBFICL{,32} when we are building
forth.
I had thought that this would be useful. However it was committed too
late, and wound up being unused. It's in the way of future work now,
so retire it rather than bring it forward.
loader scripts. However, that path won't be taken after all it
seems. Remove this code before it decays into uselessness. Also remove
build dependencies on forth no longer needed.
This has never been installed. It was added to the tree disconnected
to the build in FreeBSD 5 (17 years ago) and has never been used as
far as I can tell. The desired improvements never really happened
(despite a couple minor cleanups along the way). It's relevance is
long past, so better to retire it.
MK_CTF, MK_SSP, MK_PROFILE, NO_PIC, and INTERNALLIB are always the
same, so set them in defs.mk. MAN= is common, so set it here too.
This removes a lot of boring repetition from the Makefiles that added
almost no value.
Whether we should be overwriting the loaded FDT module with the 'fixed up'
version or not was questionable when this was added, and now that overlays
are possible this is downright wrong.
Overlays can increase the size of the blob, so writing it back to the
original VA will generally write past the end of the block and start
clobbering other things in memory.
Rip it out- it was questionable to begin with, it's doing bad things now,
and it serves no purpose since the modified blob will be copied into place
rather than relying on this to reflect the changes.
Reviewed by: gonzo
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14130
akin to what Pedro Souza and Wojciech Koszek did in the lua GSoC with
interp.h, interp_simple.c and changes to interp.c and interp_forth.c,
but completely redone from scratch.
This effectively restores the spirit of r326712 (my first attempt to
bring in Pedro's and Wojciech's work) updated for new requirements
that had silently broke their original work. This change also differs
by using fixed function names instead of function pointers to simply
things. Only one interpreter at a time may be compiled in.
Also of note: we take a mutable string, pass it in via a const char *
pointer into intrp_forth's interp_run(). We then cast away the const
to pass into ficlExec since ficl would require extensive changes to
properly const-poison. See Sections 6.5.2.5 and 6.7.3 of C11 standard
noting it's only UB if you modify a const object through a non-const
pointer, but not char [] -> const char * -> char * as here.
Move prototypes to proper section now that we don't have modified
versions of strtol and strtoul in libsa. Add prototypes for new
strtoll and strtoull. Use prototypes copied from stdlib.h instead of
the old hand-rolled ones.
(I forgot to move this file form my lua branch in r328613)
since they suffice. Create xlocale_private.h which provides the most
minimal locale implementation we can get away with. Add strtoll and
strtoull from libc.
On POWER8 with current petitpoot, the loader.kboot might be
run as little-endian application. The FreeBSD kernel is
always big-endian, so the load_elf_* routines must be aware
of proper endianness of all fields.
Submitted by: Wojciech Macek <wma@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: IBM, QCM Technologies
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12422
Example overlays seen in other places use a compatible property on root node
of an overlay to specify SOC compatibility. These don't get merged into base
FDT as they're not part of a fragment, but it's expected that consumers of
the overlay may want to check it.
If /compatible on the overlay is missing, just apply it. This is the "I know
what I'm doing" mode for those wanting to whip up a quick overlay and apply
it. An overlay intended for distribution should include /compatible so as
not to break a user's system.
If /compatible on the overlay exists, honor it and cross-check it with
/compatible on the base FDT. If /compatible on the base FDT is missing in
this case, don't apply the overlay rather than risk breaking the system.
Move the COPYOUT of overlay material to before we allocate space for
next_fdtp so that we can avoid the allocation and copy into next_fdtp if we
already know that the overlay can't apply.
This gives way to the possibility of autoloading overlays found in
/boot/overlays, since this provides a means of filtering out overlays not
applicable to the current board.
Reviewed by: gonzo
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13969
This should have been done as part of r327350, but due to lack of foresight
it came later. In the different places we apply overlays, we duplicate the
bits that check for fdt_overlays in the environment and supplement that with
any other places we need to check for overlays to load. These "other places"
will be loader specific and are not candidates for consolidation.
Provide an fdt_load_dtb_overlays to capture the common logic, allow passing
in an additional list of overlays to be loaded. This additional list of
overlays is used in practice for ubldr to pull in any fdt_overlays passed to
it from U-Boot environment, but it can be used for any other source of
overlays.
These additional overlays supplement loader.conf(5) fdt_overlays, rather
than replace, so that we're not restricted to specifying overlays in only
one place. This is a change from previous behavior where loader.conf(5)
supplied fdt_overlays would cause us to ignore U-Boot environment, and this
seems nonsensical- user should have sufficient control over both of these
aspects, or lack of control for good reasons.
A knob could be considered in the future to ignore U-Boot supplied overlays,
but the supplemental treatment seems like a good start.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), gonzo (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13993