update mrsas(4) since big-endian is supported since
e34a057ca6
Reviewed by: bdragon, gbe
Sponsored by: Eldorado Research Institute (eldorado.org.br)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28475
The 'reldoc' target includes release-related documentation on
installation medium. Since the switch from XML to ASCIIDoctor,
the file locations have moved, and it will take some time to sort
out how this target should work now.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
This is a handy script for creating and updating Differential revisions
from git commits. It tries to avoid forcing the user to manage their
git tree in any particular way, but makes two major assumptions:
- there is a one-to-one mapping between git commits and Differential
revisions,
- the title of a Differential revision is the same as the summary line
of the corresponding commit.
A verbose description of the script's functionality is provided in its
usage message, which should probably be converted to a man page.
A description of workflows using git-arc is here:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-hackers/2021-January/056979.html
There are some loose ends but this is functional enough to be useful.
Discussed with: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28334
On arm64 we can select how strongly we order device memory. Currently
we use the strongest type of non-Gathering, non-Reordering, no Early
write acknowledgement. This is equivalent to VM_MEMATTR_SO in the 32-bit
arm code.
Create a new memory type to remove the no Early write acknowledgement
option to create a memory attribute that is equivalent to the arm
VM_MEMATTR_DEVICE.
Keep the the old nGnRnE memory as what we provide for VM_MEMATTR_DEVICE
until we can test nGnRE on more hardware. A method for dynamically
switching back may be needed as at least one vendor is known to have
broken nGnRE memory.
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
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
FreeBSD pvscsi and vmx work with VMware ESXi Arm "Fling"; provide these
in GENERIC for a convenient out-of-the-box experience.
PR: 253202
Reported by: Vincent Milum Jr
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
X700 family of controllers has limited number of available VLAN
HW filters. Driver did not handle properly a case when user
assigned more VLANs to the interface which had all filters
already in use. Fix that by disabling HW filtering when
it is impossible to create filters for all requested VLANs.
Keep track of registered VLANs using bitstring to be able
to re-enable HW filtering when number of requested VLANs
drops below the limit.
Also switch all allocations to use M_IXL malloc type
to ease detecting memory leaks in the driver.
Reviewed by: erj
Tested by: gowtham.kumar.ks@intel.com
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28137
Conout does contian the default output device name.
ConOutDev does contain all possible output device names, so we can
use it as fallback, when there is no ConOut.
PR: 253253
When OFED was upgraded to Linux v4.9, a bunch of Linux-specific
netlink changes were dropped. Unfortunately, there was a mismerge
in this process and as a result ib_sa_cancel_query() would fail to
cancel an outstanding MAD.
This was causing rdma_destroy_id() to hang indefinitely waiting
for the MAD to complete and release the final reference.
Sponsored by: Dell Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28421
Reviewed by: hselasky, kib
MFC after: 2 months
Consider the following scenario:
1. A delayed_work struct in the WORK_ST_TIMER state.
2. Thread A calls mod_delayed_work()
3. Thread B (a callout thread) simultaneously calls
linux_delayed_work_timer_fn()
The following sequence of events is possible:
A: Call linux_cancel_delayed_work()
A: Change state from TIMER TO CANCEL
B: Change state from CANCEL to TASK
B: taskqueue_enqueue() the task
A: taskqueue_cancel() the task
A: Call linux_queue_delayed_work_on(). This is a no-op because the
state is WORK_ST_TASK.
As a result, the delayed_work struct will never be invoked. This is
causing address resolution in ib_addr.c to stop permanently, as it
never tries to reschedule a task that it thinks is already scheduled.
Fix this by introducing locking into the cancel path (which
corresponds with the lock held while the callout runs). This will
prevent the callout from changing the state of the task until the
cancel is complete, preventing the race.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28420
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 2 months
These tests create jails with the same name, so they cannot be run in
parallel.
Reviewed By: lwhsu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28482
The output now contains http-alt instead of 8080 and personal-agent
instead of 5555.
This was probably caused by 228e2087a3.
Reviewed By: kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28481
This includes improvements to the atf-sh helper functions that
significantly reduce the number of spawned processes for each test
and therefore speeds up running the testsuite noticeably.
OpenSSL BIO classes provide an abstraction for dealing with I/O.
OpenSSL provides BIO classes for commonly used I/O primitives backed
by file descriptors, sockets, etc. as well as permitting consumers
of OpenSSL to define custom BIO classes.
One of the methods BIO classes implement is a control method invoked
by BIO_ctrl() for various ancilliary tasks somewhat analgous to
fcntl() and ioctl() on file descriptors. According to the BIO_ctrl(3)
manual page, control methods should return 0 for unknown control
requests.
KTLS support in OpenSSL adds new control requests. Two of those new
requests are queries to determine if KTLS is enabled for either
reading or writing. These control reuquest return 1 if KTLS is
enabled and 0 if it is not.
serf includes two custom BIO classes for wrapping I/O requests from
files and from a buffer in memory. These BIO classes both use a
custom control method. However, this custom control method was
returning 1 for unknown or unsupported control requests instead of 0.
As a result, OpenSSL with KTLS believed that these BIOs were using
KTLS and were thus adding headers and doing encryption/decryption in
the BIO. Correcting the return value removes this confusion.
PR: 253135
Reported by: Guido Falsi <mad@madpilot.net>
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28472
Submitted by: Andre Fernando da Silva <andre.silva@eldorado.org.br>
Reviewed by: luporl, alfredo, kadesai (on email)
Sponsored by: Eldorado Research Institute (eldorado.org.br)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26531
Add endiannes conversions in order to support big-endian platforms
Submitted by: Andre Fernando da Silva <andre.silva@eldorado.org.br>
Reviewed by: luporl, alfredo, kadesai (on email)
Sponsored by: Eldorado Research Institute (eldorado.org.br)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26531
If a M_WAITOK contig alloc fails, the VM subsystem will try to
reclaim contiguous memory twice before actually failing the
request. On a system with 64GB of RAM I've observed this take
400-500ms before it finally gives up, and I believe that this
will only be worse on systems with even more memory.
In certain contexts this delay is extremely harmful, so add a flag
that will skip reclaim for allocation requests to allow those
paths to opt-out of doing an expensive reclaim.
Sponsored by: Dell Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28422
Reviewed by: markj, kib
- limit maximum segment size to 2048 bytes. Although dwmmc supports a buffer
fragment with a maximum length of 4095 bytes, use the nearest lower power
of two as the maximum fragment size. Otherwise, busdma create excessive
buffer fragments.
- fix off by one error in computation of the maximum data transfer length.
- in addition, reserve two DMA descriptors that can be used by busdma
bouncing. The beginning or end of the buffer can be misaligned.
- Don’t ignore errors passed to bus_dmamap_load() callback function.
- In theory, a DMA engine may be running at time when next dma descriptor is
constructed. Create a full DMA descriptor before OWN bit is set.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The lock around callout_drain() is unnecessary and may cause
deadlock when one closes a timer descriptor during timer execution.
Reviewed By: delphij
Submitted By: ankohuu_outlook.com (Shunchao Hu)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28148
This reverts commit 710e45c4b8.
It breaks for some corner cases on big endian ppc64.
Given the stage of the release process it is best to revert for now.
Reported by: jhibbits
On Linux, read(2) from a timerfd file descriptor returns an unsigned
8-byte integer (uint64_t) containing the number of expirations
that have occurred, if the timer has already expired one or more
times since its settings were last modified using timerfd_settime(),
or since the last successful read(2). That's to say, once we do
a read or call timerfd_settime(), timer fd's expiration count should
be zero. Some Linux applications create timerfd and add it to epoll
with LT mode, when event comes, they do timerfd_settime instead
of read to stop event source from trigger. On FreeBSD,
timerfd_settime(2) didn't set the count to zero, which caused high
CPU utilization.
Submitted by: ankohuu_outlook.com (Shunchao Hu)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28231
This fixes running the du tests with /tmp as tmpfs (which is what we do in the
CheriBSD CI).
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Reviewed By: ngie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28398
This makes roundup2/rounddown2 type- and const-preserving and allows
using it on pointer types without casting to uintptr_t first. Not
performing pointer-to-integer conversions also helps the compiler's
optimization passes and can therefore result in better code generation.
When using it with integer values there should be no change other than
the compiler checking that the alignment value is a valid power-of-two.
I originally implemented these builtins for CHERI a few years ago and
they have been very useful for CheriBSD. However, they are also useful
for non-CHERI code so I was able to upstream them for Clang 10.0.
Rationale from the clang documentation:
Clang provides builtins to support checking and adjusting alignment
of pointers and integers. These builtins can be used to avoid relying
on implementation-defined behavior of arithmetic on integers derived
from pointers. Additionally, these builtins retain type information
and, unlike bitwise arithmetic, they can perform semantic checking on
the alignment value.
There is also a feature request for GCC, so GCC may also support it in
the future: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=98641
Reviewed By: brooks, jhb, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28332
Commit 5619d49e07 made the getgrgid() call inside bsm work as
intended so we now print "wheel" instead of a numeric 0 in the rgid field.
Reviewed By: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28462
The RW fields in this register reset to architecturally unknown values,
so initialize these to the proper rounding and denormal mode.
MFC after: 1 week
Glen (@gjb) noticed that I am haven't mentioned the authors of the
WireGuard device driver in the manual page.
This is commit addressed this commit.
Reviewed by: gjb, brueffer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28464
X-MFC-with: e59d9cb412
This fixes an issue where a private key contained bits that should
have been cleared by the clamping process, but were passed through
to the scalar multiplication routine and resulted in an invalid
public key.
Issue diagnosed (and an initial fix proposed) by shamaz.mazum in
PR 252894.
This fix suggested by Jason Donenfeld.
PR: 252894
Reported by: shamaz.mazum
Reviewed by: dch
MFC after: 3 days
Currently, we encode the full path and compile flags for the build
compiler in libatf. However, these values are not correct when
cross-compiling: For example, when I build on macOS, CC is set to the
host path /usr/local/Cellar/llvm/11.0.0_1/bin/clang-11. This path will
not exist on the target system.
Simplify this logic and use cc/cpp/c++ since those binaries will exist
on the target system unless the compiler was explicitly disabled.
I'm not convinced ATF needs to encode these values, but this is a
minimal fix for these tests when using a non-bootstrapped compiler.
Reviewed By: ngie, brooks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28414
The tests create a 1GB test file and this causes the tests to fail in the
CheriBSD CI setup where we run tests with a tmpfs mount on /tmp. Tmpfs
does not support sparse files and it appears that tmpfs default to creating
a 1GB mount, so there is not enough space to run these tests.
Instead of checking for at least 1GB of free space, this commit skips the
tests on file systems that do not support sparse files.
Reviewed By: kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28463
I changed the Makefile to use SRCS instead of LDADD, but since there is
still and absolute path to the source the .o file was created inside the
source directory instead of the build directory.
It would be nice if this was an error/warning by default, but for now just
fix this issue by using .PATH and the base name of the file.
Reported by: cy, peterj
ROUTE_MPATH was added to the GENERIC kernel in r368648.
According to the plan in D27428, it was enabled with `net.route.multipath` sysctl set to 0.
Given enough time has passed, this change enables route multipath by default.
The goal is to ship FreeBSD 13 with multipath turned on.
Reviewed By: donner, olivier
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28423
kern.proc.proc_td returns the process table with an entry for each
thread. Previously the description included "no threads", presumably
a cut-and-pasteo in 2648efa621.
Description suggested by PauAmma.
PR: 253146
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
to be a true RFC 6598 NAT444 setup, where each network segment (e.g. user,
subnet) can have their own dedicated port aliasing ranges.
Reviewed by: donner, kp
Approved by: 0mp (mentor), donner, kp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23450
DataSN for solicited Data-Out is per-R2T. Since we handle whole R2T
in one go, we don't need to store it anywhere, especially in global
per-command structure. This may allow us to handle multiple R2T per
command at once, if we decide, or may be relax locking.
Rename the second use of that field to io_referenced_task_tag.
MFC after: 1 month