This allows people to still write statically linked applications that
call strchr() or strrchr() and have a local variable or function called
index.
Discussed with: bde@
http://www.graphicsgems.org/
At the time it claimed to be 3-4 times faster than the traditional
algorithm.
PR: 18769
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
The index() and rindex() functions were marked LEGACY in the 2001
revision of POSIX and were subsequently removed from the 2008 revision.
The strchr() and strrchr() functions are part of the C standard.
This makes the source code a lot more consistent, as most of these C
files also call into other str*() routines. In fact, about a dozen
already perform strchr() calls.
As I looked through the C library, I noticed the FreeBSD MIPS port has a
hand-written version of index(). This is nice, if it weren't for the
fact that most applications call strchr() instead.
Also, on the other architectures index() and strchr() are identical,
meaning we have two identical pieces of code in the C library and
statically linked applications.
Solve this by naming the actual file strchr.[cS] and let it use
__strong_reference()/STRONG_ALIAS() to provide the index() routine. Do
the same for rindex()/strrchr().
This seems to make the C libraries and static binaries slightly smaller,
but this reduction in size seems negligible.
problem by adding -fno-strict-aliasing to CFLAGS. Since this is a global
issue that just happened to manifest on PowerPC, add this to CFLAGS
unconditionally.
MFC after: 1 week
This version of libcompiler_rt adds support for __mulo[sdt]i4(), which
computes a multiply and its overflow flag. There are also a lot of
cleanup fixes to headers that don't really affect us.
Updating to this revision should make it a bit easier to contribute
changes back to the LLVM developers.
lib/libc/gen/strtofflags.c became const, but gcc did not warn about
assigning its members to non-const pointers. Clang warned about this
with:
lib/libc/gen/strtofflags.c:98:12: error: assigning to 'char *' from 'const char *' discards qualifiers [-Werror,-Wincompatible-pointer-types]
for (sp = mapping[i].invert ? mapping[i].name :
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Reviewed by: jilles
The built-in atomic operations are not implemented in our version of GCC
4.2 for the ARM and MIPS architectures. Instead of emitting locked
instructions, they generate calls to functions that can be implemented
in the C runtime.
Only implement the atomic operations that are used by <stdatomic.h> for
datatype sizes that are supported by atomic(9). This means that on these
architectures, we can only use atomic operations on 32-bits and 64-bits
variables, which is typically sufficient.
This makes <stdatomic.h> work on all architectures except MIPS, since
MIPS and SPARC64 still use libgcc. Converting these architectures to
libcompiler_rt is on my todo list.
This library implements the C11 threads interface on top of the pthreads
library. As discussed on the lists, the preferred way to implement
this, is as a separate library.
It is unlikely that these functions will be used a lot in the future. It
would have been easier if the C11 working group standardized (a subset
of) pthreads and clock_nanosleep(). Having it as a separate library
allows the embedded people to omit it from their system.
Discussed on: arch@, threads@
Add an API for alerting internal libc routines to the presence of
"unsafe" paths post-chroot, and use it in ftpd. [11:07]
Fix a buffer overflow in telnetd. [11:08]
Make pam_ssh ignore unpassphrased keys unless the "nullok" option is
specified. [11:09]
Add sanity checking of service names in pam_start. [11:10]
Approved by: so (cperciva)
Approved by: re (bz)
Security: FreeBSD-SA-11:06.bind
Security: FreeBSD-SA-11:07.chroot
Security: FreeBSD-SA-11:08.telnetd
Security: FreeBSD-SA-11:09.pam_ssh
Security: FreeBSD-SA-11:10.pam
At work we have a single tftp server that provides installation data for
a variety of operating systems. I'd rather place our FreeBSD-related
files in a subdirectory, instead of the root.
It would be nice if this setting could be run-time configurable, but at
least in our specific case, this is not possible, as pxeboot is
chainloaded through pxelinux.
Sponsored by: Kumina bv
3730:
Fix issue 174 (Windows path names, not relevant for FreeBSD)
3734:
Merge r1989: archive_clear_error should set errno to 0.
3735:
Merge r3247 from trunk: Clear errors before returning
from archive_read_support_format_all()
3799:
Check the position before dereferencing the pointer.
This avoids dereferencing one byte past the end of a string
3824:
Merge r3823 from trunk for issue 199 (hang in iso9660 reading)
Obtained from: http://code.google.com/p/libarchive
MFC after: 2 weeks
The following additional vendor revisions are applied:
Revision 3740:
Use archive_clear_error() to clear the error markers.
Obtained from: http://code.google.com/p/libarchive
MFC after: 2 weeks
Fixes extraction of Zip entries that use length-at-end without specifying
either the compressed or uncompressed length. In particular, fixes bsdtar
extraction of such files.
Obtained from: http://code.google.com/p/libarchive
Reported by: Patrick Lamaiziere <patfbsd@davenulle.org> (freebsd-stable@)
MFC after: 1 week
from scratch, copying needed functionality from the old implemenation
on demand, with a thorough review of all code. The main change is that
interface layer has been removed from the CARP. Now redundant addresses
are configured exactly on the interfaces, they run on.
The CARP configuration itself is, as before, configured and read via
SIOCSVH/SIOCGVH ioctls. A new prefix created with SIOCAIFADDR or
SIOCAIFADDR_IN6 may now be configured to a particular virtual host id,
which makes the prefix redundant.
ifconfig(8) semantics has been changed too: now one doesn't need
to clone carpXX interface, he/she should directly configure a vhid
on a Ethernet interface.
To supply vhid data from the kernel to an application the getifaddrs(8)
function had been changed to pass ifam_data with each address. [1]
The new implementation definitely closes all PRs related to carp(4)
being an interface, and may close several others. It also allows
to run a single redundant IP per interface.
Big thanks to Bjoern Zeeb for his help with inet6 part of patch, for
idea on using ifam_data and for several rounds of reviewing!
PR: kern/117000, kern/126945, kern/126714, kern/120130, kern/117448
Reviewed by: bz
Submitted by: bz [1]
- if pw is NULL and oldpw is not NULL then the oldpw is deleted
- if pw->pw_name != oldpw->pw_name but pw->pw_uid == oldpw->pw_uid
then it renames the user
add new gr_* functions so now gr_util API is similar to pw_util API,
this allow to manipulate groups in a safe way.
Reviewed by: des
Approved by: des
MFC after: 1 month
yet (see LLVM PR 9788), and warns about it, rub it out for now. When
clang grows support for this attribute, I will revert this again.
MFC after: 1 week
conversion between enum desdir/desmode from include/rpc/des.h, and enum
desdir/desmode from include/rpcsvc/crypt.x. These are actually
different enums, with different value names, but by accident the integer
representation of the enum values happened to be the same.
MFC after: 1 week
warn about it. I guess this was originally done to silence a bogus
warning by an older version of gcc, but I could not reproduce it with
any version of gcc that I have access to.
MFC after: 1 week
versions of pthread_md.h have a special case of dereferencing a null
pointer. Clang warns about this with:
In file included from lib/libthr/arch/i386/i386/pthread_md.c:36:
lib/libthr/arch/i386/include/pthread_md.h:96:10: error: indirection of non-volatile null pointer will be deleted, not trap [-Werror,-Wnull-dereference]
return (TCB_GET32(tcb_self));
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lib/libthr/arch/i386/include/pthread_md.h:73:13: note: expanded from:
: "m" (*(u_int *)(__tcb_offset(name)))); \
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lib/libthr/arch/i386/include/pthread_md.h:96:10: note: consider using __builtin_trap() or qualifying pointer with 'volatile'
Since this indirection is done relative to the fs or gs segment, to
retrieve thread-specific data, it is an exception to the rule.
Therefore, add a volatile qualifier to tell the compiler we really want
to dereference a zero address.
MFC after: 1 week
__noreturn macro and modify the other exiting functions to use it.
The __noreturn macro, unlike __dead2, must be used BEFORE the function.
This is in line with the C and C++ specifications that place _Noreturn (c1x)
and [[noreturn]] (C++11) in front of the functions. As with __dead2, this
macro falls back to using the GCC attribute.
Unfortunately, clang currently sets the same value for the C version macro
in C99 and C1x modes, so these functions are hidden by default. At some
point before 10.0, I need to go through the headers and clean up the C1x /
C++11 visibility.
Reviewed by: brooks (mentor)
vs. the comment documented "If we are working with a privileged socket,
then take only one attempt". Make the code match.
Furthermore, critical privileged applications that [over] log a vast amount
can look like a DoS to this code. Given it's unlikely the single reattempted
send() will succeeded, avoid usurping the scheduler in a library API for a
single non-critical facility in critical applications.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Discussed with: glebius
than silently failing and returning success.
Without this, code calls pthread_once(), receives a return value of
success, and thinks that the passed function has been called.
Approved by: dim (mentor)
not disabled in the usual way (by adding it to __DEFAULT_NO_OPTIONS in
share/mk/bsd.own.mk), and because the test for MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS in
Makefile.inc1 was incorrect.
Pointy hat to: dim
MK_LIBCPLUSPLUS=yes to enable). This is a work-in-progress. It works for
me, but is not guaranteed to work for anyone else and may eat your dog.
To build C++ using libc++, add -stdlib=libc++ to your CXX and LD flags.
Bug reports welcome, bug fixes even more welcome...
Approved by: dim (mentor)
system calls to provide feed-forward clock management capabilities to
userspace processes. ffclock_getcounter() returns the current value of the
kernel's feed-forward clock counter. ffclock_getestimate() returns the current
feed-forward clock parameter estimates and ffclock_setestimate() updates the
feed-forward clock parameter estimates.
- Document the syscalls in the ffclock.2 man page.
- Regenerate the script-derived syscall related files.
Committed on behalf of Julien Ridoux and Darryl Veitch from the University of
Melbourne, Australia, as part of the FreeBSD Foundation funded "Feed-Forward
Clock Synchronization Algorithms" project.
For more information, see http://www.synclab.org/radclock/
Submitted by: Julien Ridoux (jridoux at unimelb edu au)
is unencrypted. This defeats the nullok check, because it means a
non-null passphrase will successfully unlock the key.
To address this, try at first to load the key without a passphrase.
If this succeeds and the user provided a non-empty passphrase *or*
nullok is false, reject the key.
MFC after: 1 week
Noticed by: Guy Helmer <guy.helmer@palisadesystems.com>
load of _l suffixed versions of various standard library functions that use
the global locale, making them take an explicit locale parameter. Also
adds support for per-thread locales. This work was funded by the FreeBSD
Foundation.
Please test any code you have that uses the C standard locale functions!
Reviewed by: das (gdtoa changes)
Approved by: dim (mentor)
allow the built-in operations to be redefined, at least not without
excessive force).
Instead, just disable LLVM's support for atomic operations for now.
Nothing in either clang or the tablegen tools currently depends on it.
This still allows users of head built before r198344 to upgrade to
top-of-head seamlessly.
change here is to ensure that when a process forks after arc4random
is seeded, the parent and child don't observe the same random sequence.
OpenBSD's fix introduces some additional overhead in the form of a
getpid() call. This could be improved upon, e.g., by setting a flag
in fork(), if it proves to be a problem.
This was discussed with secteam (simon, csjp, rwatson) in 2008, shortly
prior to my going out of town and forgetting all about it. The conclusion
was that the problem with forks is worrisome, but it doesn't appear to
have introduced an actual vulnerability for any known programs.
The only significant remaining difference between our arc4random and
OpenBSD's is in how we seed the generator in arc4_stir().
OpenBSD's version (r1.22). While some of our style changes were
indeed small improvements, being able to easily track functionality
changes in OpenBSD seems more useful.
Also fix style bugs in the FreeBSD-specific parts of this file.
No functional changes, as verified with md5.
Some header file parts of this patch were taken from a patch submitted
by Maya Erez <merez@codeaurora.org> to the LibUSB developers list.
MFC after: 1 week
Some consumers of PAM remove the /dev/ component (i.e. login), while
others don't (i.e. su). We must ensure that the /dev/ component is
removed to ensure that the utmpx entries properly work with tools such
as w(1).
Discussed with: des
MFC after: 1 week
to be gcc's default before r198344, calls to atomic builtins will not be
expanded inline. Instead, they will be generated as calls to external
functions (e.g. __sync_fetch_and_add_N), leading to linking errors later
on.
Put in a seatbelt that disables use of atomic builtins in libstdc++ and
llvm, when tuning specifically for the real i386 CPU. This does not
protect against all possible issues, but it is better than nothing.
This variable was added in r82352 back in 2001, but even then it didn't
have any use. Because it's not marked static, the C compiler won't
complain about it.
Discussed with: des
The size passed to strlcat() must depend on the input length, not the
output length. Because the input and output buffers are equal in size,
the resulting binary does not change at all.
madvise(2) except that it operates on a file descriptor instead of a
memory region. It is currently only supported on regular files.
Just as with madvise(2), the advice given to posix_fadvise(2) can be
divided into two types. The first type provide hints about data access
patterns and are used in the file read and write routines to modify the
I/O flags passed down to VOP_READ() and VOP_WRITE(). These modes are
thus filesystem independent. Note that to ease implementation (and
since this API is only advisory anyway), only a single non-normal
range is allowed per file descriptor.
The second type of hints are used to hint to the OS that data will or
will not be used. These hints are implemented via a new VOP_ADVISE().
A default implementation is provided which does nothing for the WILLNEED
request and attempts to move any clean pages to the cache page queue for
the DONTNEED request. This latter case required two other changes.
First, a new V_CLEANONLY flag was added to vinvalbuf(). This requests
vinvalbuf() to only flush clean buffers for the vnode from the buffer
cache and to not remove any backing pages from the vnode. This is
used to ensure clean pages are not wired into the buffer cache before
attempting to move them to the cache page queue. The second change adds
a new vm_object_page_cache() method. This method is somewhat similar to
vm_object_page_remove() except that instead of freeing each page in the
specified range, it attempts to move clean pages to the cache queue if
possible.
To preserve the ABI of struct file, the f_cdevpriv pointer is now reused
in a union to point to the currently active advice region if one is
present for regular files.
Reviewed by: jilles, kib, arch@
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 month
the word alignment, some versions of gcc do require 16-byte alignment.
Make sure the stack is 16-byte aligned before calling a subroutine.
Inspired by: PR amd64/162214
MFC after: 1 week
as it is required by amd64 ABI. Add a comment for the places were
the stack is accidentally properly aligned already.
PR: amd64/162214
Submitted by: yamayan <yamayan kbh biglobe ne jp>
MFC after: 1 week
When booting the system, truncate the utx.active file, but do write the
BOOT_TIME record into it afterwards. This allows one to obtain the boot
time of the system as follows:
struct utmpx u1 = { .ut_type = BOOT_TIME }, *u2;
setutxent();
u2 = getutxid(&u1);
Now, the boot time is stored in u2->ut_tv, just like on Linux and other
systems.
We don't open the utx.active file with O_EXLOCK. It's rather unlikely
that other applications use this database at the same time and I want to
prevent the possibility of deadlocks in init(8).
Discussed with: pluknet
working MI one. The MI one only needs to be overridden on machines
with non-IEEE754 arithmetic. (The last supported one was the VAX.)
It can also be overridden if someone comes up with a faster one that
actually passes the regression tests -- but this is harder than it sounds.
- Handle cases where exp(x) would overflow, but ccosh(x) ~= exp(x) / 2
shouldn't.
- Use the ccosh(x) ~= exp(x) / 2 approximation to simplify the calculation
when x is large.
Similarly for csinh(). Also fixed the return value of csinh(-Inf +- 0i).
exp(x) scaled down by some factor, and the challenge is doing this
accurately when exp(x) would overflow. This change replaces all of
the tricks we've been using with common __ldexp_exp() and
__ldexp_cexp() routines that handle all the scaling.
bde plans to improve on this further by moving the guts of exp() into
k_exp.c and handling the scaling in a more direct manner. But the
current approach is simple and adequate for now.
As the underlying block is 4KB if the PMC throughput is low the measurement
will be reported on the next tick. pmcstat(8) use the modified flush API to
reclaim current buffer before displaying next top.
MFC after: 1 month
library," since complex.h, tgmath.h, and fenv.h are also part of the
math library. Replace the outdated sentence with some references to
the other parts.
and the caller requested other process' PID by passing non-NULL pidptr
argument, we will wait at most 100ms for the PID to show up in the file and if
it won't, we will store -1 in *pidptr.
From now on, pidfile_open() function never sets errno to EAGAIN on failure.
In collaboration with: des
MFC after: 1 week
- Rename __kernel_log() to k_log1p().
- Move some of the work that was previously done in the kernel log into
the callers. This enables further refactoring to improve accuracy or
speed, although I don't recall the details.
- Use extra precision when adding the final scaling term, which improves
accuracy.
- Describe and work around compiler problems that break some of the
multiprecision calculations.
A fix for a small bug is also included:
- Add a special case for log*(1). This is needed to ensure that log*(1) == +0
instead of -0, even when the rounding mode is FE_DOWNWARD.
Submitted by: bde
no longer "fast" on sparc64. (It really wasn't to begin with, since
the old implementation was using long doubles, and long doubles are
emulated in software on sparc64.)
round-to-nearest mode when the result, rounded to twice machine
precision, was exactly halfway between two machine-precision
values. The essence of the fix is to simulate a "sticky bit" in
the pathological cases, which is how hardware implementations
break the ties.
MFC after: 1 month
libusb_dev_kernel_driver_active() works. In case of
libusb20 the manpage was wrong and in case of
libusb10 the implementation was wrong.
Submitted by: Kai Wang
MFC after: 3 days
fenv.h that are currently inlined.
The definitions are provided in fenv.c via 'extern inline'
declaractions. This assumes the compiler handles 'extern inline' as
specified in C99, which has been true under FreeBSD since 8.0.
The goal is to eventually remove the 'static' keyword from the inline
definitions in fenv.h, so that non-inlined references all wind up
pointing to the same external definition like they're supposed to.
I am deferring the second step to provide a window where
newly-compiled apps will still link against old math libraries.
(This isn't supported, but there's no need to cause undue breakage.)
Reviewed by: stefanf, bde
Even though POSIX allows us to return simply /dev/tty as a pathname
identifying the controlling terminal of the running process, it is nicer
if this function were actually useful, by returning the actual pathname
of the controlling terminal.
Implement ctermid() by using the kern.devname sysctl to resolve the
actual name of /dev/tty. Don't use devname(3), since it may return bogus
strings like #C:0x123.
As of FreeBSD 6, devices can only be opened through devfs. These device
nodes don't have major and minor numbers anymore. The st_rdev field in
struct stat is simply based a copy of st_ino.
Simply display device numbers as hexadecimal, using "%#jx". This is
allowed by POSIX, since it explicitly states things like the following
(example taken from ls(1)):
"If the file is a character special or block special file, the
size of the file may be replaced with implementation-defined
information associated with the device in question."
This makes the output of these commands more compact. For example, ls(1)
now uses approximately four columns less. While there, simplify the
column length calculation from ls(1) by calling snprintf() with a NULL
buffer.
Don't be afraid; if needed one can still obtain individual major/minor
numbers using stat(1).
Import the rest of HID improvements from the branch:
- improve report descriptor parser in libusbhid to handle several kinds of
reports same time;
- add to the libusbhid API two functions wrapping respective kernel IOCTLs
for reading and writing reports;
- tune uhid IOCTL interface to allow reading and writing arbitrary report,
when multiple supported by the device;
- teach usbhidctl to set output and feature reports;
- make usbhidaction support all the same item names as bhidctl.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, inc.
1. Allow the caller to select active mode.
2. Fix the envar logic so it *always* overrides the caller's flags.
3. Document the change from active to passive.
conversion, conversion must fail and errno must be set to E2BIG.
PR: standards/160673
Submitted by: Henning Petersen <henning.petersen@t-online.de>
Reviewed by: pluknet
Approved by: re (kib), delphij (mentor)
ISO images with tar.
Vendor revision 3648 (merge of 3647):
Additional fix to issue 168 because the change of r3642 was not sufficient.
- Make sure "CL" entry appear after its "RE" entry which the "CL" entry
should be connected with.
- Give consideration to the case that the top level "RE" entry has
already been exposed outside before its tree.
Approved by: re (kib)
Obtained from: libarchive (release/2.8, svn rev 3648)
MFC after: 3 days
Upstream revision 3645 (merge of 3642):
Change the mechanism handling a rr_moved directory,
which is Rockridge extension that can exceed the limitation of
a maximum directory depth of ISO 9660.
- Stop reading all entries at a time.
- Connect "CL" entry to "RE" entry dynamically, which "CL" and "RE"
have information to rebuild a full directory tree.
- Tweak some related tests since we use Headsort for re-ordering
entries and it cannot make a steady order when the keies of
the entries are the same.
http://code.google.com/p/libarchive/issues/detail?id=168
Reviewed by: kientzle
Approved by: re (kib)
Obtained from: libarchive (release/2.8, svn rev 3645)
MFC after: 3 days
A "process descriptor" file descriptor is used to manage processes
without using the PID namespace. This is required for Capsicum's
Capability Mode, where the PID namespace is unavailable.
New system calls pdfork(2) and pdkill(2) offer the functional equivalents
of fork(2) and kill(2). pdgetpid(2) allows querying the PID of the remote
process for debugging purposes. The currently-unimplemented pdwait(2) will,
in the future, allow querying rusage/exit status. In the interim, poll(2)
may be used to check (and wait for) process termination.
When a process is referenced by a process descriptor, it does not issue
SIGCHLD to the parent, making it suitable for use in libraries---a common
scenario when using library compartmentalisation from within large
applications (such as web browsers). Some observers may note a similarity
to Mach task ports; process descriptors provide a subset of this behaviour,
but in a UNIX style.
This feature is enabled by "options PROCDESC", but as with several other
Capsicum kernel features, is not enabled by default in GENERIC 9.0.
Reviewed by: jhb, kib
Approved by: re (kib), mentor (rwatson)
Sponsored by: Google Inc
capability mode and capabilities.
Right now no attempt is made to unwrap capabilities when operating on
a crashdump, so further refinement is required.
Approved by: re (bz)
Sponsored by: Google Inc
Partial merge of 2431 from trunk: Retry writes on EINTR.
This should fix the SIGINT handler in bsdtar.
Note: The rest of r2431 can't be merged, since it interacts
with a big write-side rearchitecture.
PR: bin/149409
Reviewed by: kientzle
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 3 days
in order to account for LP64 targets when cross-debugging on ILP32,
allowing r224683 to compile on ILP32.
Note that thr_p{read,write}_{long,ptr}() still incorrectly use the size
of the respective types on the host rather than that on the target when
accessing the target address space which still needs to be fixed. This
means that r224683 alone may not be sufficient to solve the problem it's
intended to fix when cross-debugging.
Approved by: re (hrs)
violated ECMA-119 (ISO9660): allow reserved4 to be 0x20 in PVD.
This allows tar to read FreeBSD distribution ISO images created
with makefs prior to NetBSD bin/45217 bugfix (up to 9.0-BETA1).
In addition, merge following important bugfixes from
libarchive's release/2.8 branch:
Revision 2812:
Merge 2811 from trunk: Don't try to verify that compression-level=0
produces larger results than the default compression, since this isn't
true for all versions of liblzma.
Revision 2817:
Merge 2814 from trunk: Fix Issue 121 (mtree parser error)
http://code.google.com/p/libarchive/issues/detail?id=121
Revision 2820:
Fix issue 119.
Change the file location check that a file location does not exceed
volume block. New one is that a file content does not exceed volume
block(end of an ISO image). It is better than previous check even
if the issue did not happen.
While reading an ISO image generated by an older version of mkisofs
utility, a file location indicates the end the ISO image if its file
size is zero and it is the last file of all files of the ISO image,
so it is possible that the location value is the same as the number
of the total block of the ISO image.
http://code.google.com/p/libarchive/issues/detail?id=119
Revision 2955:
Issue 134: Fix libarchive 2.8 crashing in archive_write_finish() when
the open has failed and we're trying to write Zip format.
http://code.google.com/p/libarchive/issues/detail?id=134
Revision 2958:
Followup on Issue 134:
1) Port test_open_failure to libarchive 2.8 branch to test
the problem reported in Issue 134.
This test also shows that archive_read_open() sometimes
fails to report open errors correctly.
2) Fix the bug in archive_read.c
3) Comment out the tests that close functions are invoked
promptly when open fails; that's fully fixed in libarchive 3.0,
but I don't think it's worth fixing here.
Revision 3484:
Use uintmax_t with %ju
Revision 3487:
Fix issue 163.
Correctly allocate enough memory for a input buffer saved.
http://code.google.com/p/libarchive/issues/detail?id=163
Revision 3542:
Merge 2516, 2536 from trunk: Allow path table offset values of
0 and 18, which are used by some ISO writers.
Reviewed by: kientzle
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 3 days
Accessing it as an int causes failure on big-endian LP64, i.e. mips64be,
powerpc64 and sparc64.
Reviewed by: marcel
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
o get the physical address and size of the PBVM page table. This
can be found in the bootinfo structure, of which the physical
address is recorded as the ELF entry point.
o translate region 4 virtual addresses to physical addresses using
the PBVM page table.
In _kvm_kvatop() make the distinction between physical address and
core file offset a little clearer to avoid confusion. To further
enhance readability, always store the translated address into pa
so that it's obvious how the translation from va to pa happened.
Approved by: re (blanket)
* Decouple the path supervision using a separate HB timer per path.
* Add support for potentially failed state.
* Bring back RTO.min to 1 second.
* Accept packets on IP-addresses already announced via an ASCONF
* While there: do some cleanups.
Approved by: re@
MFC after: 2 months.
proc_attach always frees any struct proc_handle data
that it allocates, but that is supposed to be done
only in error conditions.
PR: bin/158431
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
dynamic memory allocation to hold per-CPU memory types data (sized to
mp_maxid for UMA, and to mp_maxcpus for malloc to match the kernel).
That fixes libmemstat with arbitrary large MAXCPU values and therefore
eliminates MEMSTAT_ERROR_TOOMANYCPUS error type.
Reviewed by: jhb
Approved by: re (kib)
- Fix usbhidctl and usbhidaction to handle HID devices with multiple
report ids, such as multimedia keyboards.
- Add collection type and report id to the `usbhidctl -r` output. They
are important for proper device understanding and debugging.
- Fix usbhidaction tool to properly handle items having report_count
more then 1.
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 2 weeks
These system calls have already been implemented in the kernel; now we
hook up libc symbols so userspace can drive them.
Approved by: re (kib), mentor (rwatson)
Sponsored by: Google Inc
-g, by reverting r219139. The LLVM PR referenced in that revision was
fixed in the mean time, and we imported a clang snapshot soon
afterwards, so the temporary workaround of disabling clang's integrated
assembler is no longer needed.
In this particular case, using e.g. DEBUG_FLAGS=-g causes clang to
output certain directives into assembly that our version of GNU as
chokes on.
Reported by: dougb
Approved by: re (kib)
This includes a structural change regarding atomic ops. Previously they
were enabled on all platforms unless we had knowledge that they did not
work. However both work performed by marius@ on sparc64 and the fact that
the 9.8.x branch is fussier in this area has demonstrated that this is
not a safe approach. So I've modified a patch provided by marius to
enable them for i386, amd64, and ia64 only.
- Clamp the string length to 255 bytes when getting
the interface description.
- Clamp data request length to 65535 bytes when doing
control requests.
MFC after: 3 days
Formerly, in this case an error was returned but the pid was also returned
to the application, requiring the application to use unspecified behaviour
(the returned pid in error situations) to avoid zombies.
Now, reap the zombie and do not return the pid.
MFC after: 2 weeks
In C90, NULL is guaranteed to be declared in <stddef.h> and also in
<string.h>. Though the correct way to define NULL in FreeBSD is to
include <sys/_null.h>, other parts of libstand still require <string.h>
to build; therefore, we keep <string.h> in stand.h and add a note about
this;
- Removing no longer used 'Prototype' definition. Quote from bde@:
'Cruft related to getting incomplete struct declarations within
prototypes forward-declared before the structs. It doesn't mean
"prototype" but only part of a prototype-related hack. No longer
used.'
- Replacing iaddr_t with uintptr_t;
- Removing use of long double to determine alignment. Use a fixed 16 byte
alignment instead;
Reviewed by: bde
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD (partially)
MFC after: 1 month
this fix only applies to zalloc.c, the other part of libstand such like
qdivrem.c still gives compilation warnings on sparc64 tinderbox builds;
therefore, WARNS level isn't changed for now.
Submitted by: Garrett Cooper <yanegomi@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: bde
about the parent USB device:
- libusb20_dev_get_parent_address
- libusb20_dev_get_parent_port
- Rename libusb20_compat01.c into libusb01.c
MFC after: 3 days
(1) Coding style changes.
(2) If the server does not acknowledge any blocksize option,
revert to the default blocksize of 512 bytes.
(3) Send ACK if the first packet happens to be the last packet.
(4) Do not accept blocksize greater than what was requested.
(5) Drop any unwanted OACK received if a tftp transfer is already
in progress.
(6) Terminate incomplete transfers with a special no-error ERROR packet.
Otherwise we rely on the tftp server to time out, which it does
eventually, after re-sending the last packet several times and spamming
the system log about it every time. This idea is borrowed from the
PXE client, which does exactly that.
Submitted by: Alexander Kabaev <kan@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed and Tested by: Santhanakrishnan Balraj <sbalraj at juniper dot net>
If a file is mapped with with MAP_PRIVATE, no write permission is required
and changes do not end up in the file. Therefore, tools like fuser and fstat
should not show the file as open for writing.
The protection as displayed by procstat -v still includes write in this
case, and shows 'C' for copy-on-write.
o Set TP using inline assembly to avoid dead code elimination.
o Eliminate _tcb.
Merge from r161840:
Stylize: avoid using a global register variable.
Merge from r157461:
Simplify _get_curthread() and _tcb_ctor because libc and rtld now
already allocate thread pointer space in tls block for initial thread.
Merge from r177853:
Replace function _umtx_op with _umtx_op_err, the later function directly
returns errno, because errno can be mucked by user's signal handler and
most of pthread api heavily depends on errno to be correct, this change
should improve stability of the thread library.
MFC after: 1 week
------------------------------------------------------------------------
r172854 | marius | 2007-10-21 10:03:18 -0700 (Sun, 21 Oct 2007) | 16 lines
Changed paths:
M /head/lib/libstand/tftp.c
- Given that we tell the compiler that struct ip is packed and 32-bit
aligned, GCC 4.2.1 also generates code for sendudp() that assumes
this alignment. GCC 4.2.1 however doesn't 32-bit align wbuf, causing
the loader to crash due to an unaligned access of wbuf in sendudp()
when netbooting sparc64. Solve this by specifying wbuf as packed and
32-bit aligned, too. As for lastdata and readudp() this currently is
no issue when compiled with GCC 4.2.1, though give lastdata the same
treatment as wbuf for consistency and possibility of being affected
in the future. [1]
- Sprinkle const on a lookup table.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
send along the "blksize" option specified in RFC2348,
and the "tsize" option specified in RFC2349.
Add code to parse the TFTP Option Acknowledgement (OACK) packet as
specified in RFC2347.
For TFTP servers which support the "blksize" option, we can
specify a TFTP Data block size larger than the default 512 bytes
specified in RFC1350. This offers greater read performance when
downloading files.
We request an initial size of 1428 bytes, which is less than the
Ethernet MTU of 1500 bytes. If the TFTP server sends back an OACK
packet, then use the block size specified in the OACK packet.
Most times it is usually the same value as what we request.
If the TFTP server supports RFC2348, we will see performance improvements
by transferring files over TFTP with larger block sizes.
If we do not get back an OACK packet, then we most likely we
are interoperating with a legacy TFTP server that does not
support TFTP extension options, so default to the block size of
512 bytes.
(2) If the "tftp.blksize" environment variable is set, then
take that value and use it when sending the TFTP RRQ packet,
instead of 1428. This allows us to set different values of
"tftp.blksize" in the loader, so that we can test out different
TFTP block sizes at run time.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Fixed by: rodrigc
unwanted packet(non-tftp). Change this to retransmit the packet(request or ack) only after
a timeout.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Fixed by: Santhanakrishnan Balraj <sbalraj at juniper dot net>
In sendrecv_tftp:
* Upon receving an unexpected block of data or error, resend the ACK
immediately instead of waiting till the expiry of receive data timeout
to resend the ACK.
* change the receive timeout value between retries to be 2xMINTMO.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Fixed by: Santhanakrishnan Balraj <sbalraj at juniper dot net>
to increase in steps of MINTMO, instead of doubling the timeout for every
retry.
Obtained from: Juniper Networks
Fixed by: Santhanakrishnan Balraj <sbalraj at juniper dot net>
It seems there have only been a small amount to the compiler-rt source
code in the mean time. I'd rather have the code in sync as much as
possible by the time we release 9.0. Changes:
- The libcompiler_rt library is now dual licensed under both the
University of Illinois "BSD-Like" license and the MIT license.
- Our local modifications for using .hidden instead of .private_extern
have been upstreamed, meaning our changes to lib/assembly.h can now be
reverted.
- A possible endless recursion in __modsi3() has been fixed.
- Support for ARM EABI has been added, but it has no effect on FreeBSD
(yet).
- The functions __udivmodsi4 and __divmodsi4 have been added.
Requested by: many, including bf@ and Pedro Giffuni
As noted in Austin Group issue #370 (an interpretation has been issued),
failing posix_spawn() because an fd specified with
posix_spawn_file_actions_addclose() is not open is unnecessarily harsh, and
there are existing implementations that do not fail posix_spawn() for this
reason.
Reviewed by: ed
MFC after: 10 days
as long as this does not happen, we need to fix interfaces to userland
in order to not break run-time accesses to the structure.
Reviwed by: kib
Tested by: pluknet
similar to what we do for binutils. When clang's default triple starts
with 'amd64-', it does not pass a proper -target-cpu option to its
first stage.
This can lead to problems, for example when structs are memcpy'd, and
clang erroneously assumes they are 16-byte aligned. It will then use
the 'movaps' SSE instruction to implement the copy, which results in a
bus error if the struct is really 8-byte aligned.
I encountered this issue when gcc's /usr/libexec/cc1 started crashing
with SIGBUS, after rebuilding world with clang ToT, but it also affects
the version of clang that we have in the tree. We were just lucky until
now, apparently. :)
Some files keep the SUN4V tags as a code reference, for the future,
if any rewamped sun4v support wants to be added again.
Reviewed by: marius
Tested by: sbruno
Approved by: re
file and processes information retrieval from the running kernel via sysctl
in the form of new library, libprocstat. The library also supports KVM backend
for analyzing memory crash dumps. Both procstat(1) and fstat(1) utilities have
been modified to take advantage of the library (as the bonus point the fstat(1)
utility no longer need superuser privileges to operate), and the procstat(1)
utility is now able to display information from memory dumps as well.
The newly introduced fuser(1) utility also uses this library and able to operate
via sysctl and kvm backends.
The library is by no means complete (e.g. KVM backend is missing vnode name
resolution routines, and there're no manpages for the library itself) so I
plan to improve it further. I'm commiting it so it will get wider exposure
and review.
We won't be able to MFC this work as it relies on changes in HEAD, which
was introduced some time ago, that break kernel ABI. OTOH we may be able
to merge the library with KVM backend if we really need it there.
Discussed with: rwatson
* Cleanup usage of iov's.
* Add support for SCTP_TIMEOUTS socketoption.
* Fix a bug in sctp_recvmsg(): return the msg_flags in case of an error.
* Fix a bug in the error handling of sctp_peeloff(): return the -1.
cpuset_t objects.
That is going to offer the underlying support for a simple bump of
MAXCPU and then support for number of cpus > 32 (as it is today).
Right now, cpumask_t is an int, 32 bits on all our supported architecture.
cpumask_t on the other side is implemented as an array of longs, and
easilly extendible by definition.
The architectures touched by this commit are the following:
- amd64
- i386
- pc98
- arm
- ia64
- XEN
while the others are still missing.
Userland is believed to be fully converted with the changes contained
here.
Some technical notes:
- This commit may be considered an ABI nop for all the architectures
different from amd64 and ia64 (and sparc64 in the future)
- per-cpu members, which are now converted to cpuset_t, needs to be
accessed avoiding migration, because the size of cpuset_t should be
considered unknown
- size of cpuset_t objects is different from kernel and userland (this is
primirally done in order to leave some more space in userland to cope
with KBI extensions). If you need to access kernel cpuset_t from the
userland please refer to example in this patch on how to do that
correctly (kgdb may be a good source, for example).
- Support for other architectures is going to be added soon
- Only MAXCPU for amd64 is bumped now
The patch has been tested by sbruno and Nicholas Esborn on opteron
4 x 12 pack CPUs. More testing on big SMP is expected to came soon.
pluknet tested the patch with his 8-ways on both amd64 and i386.
Tested by: pluknet, sbruno, gianni, Nicholas Esborn
Reviewed by: jeff, jhb, sbruno
[mixing the two can be quite bad -- they define the same context structures,
but with differing structure members (and sizes)]
Update the hash function support comments, and update config_freebsd.h
to match.
Approved by: kientzle