The reasoning behind this, is that if we are consistent in our
documentation about the uint*_t stuff, people will be less tempted to
write new code that uses the non-standard types.
I am not going to bump the man page dates, as these changes can be
considered style nits. The meaning of the man pages is unaffected.
MFC after: 1 month
Ignore the NAT_T extension types so we can at least dump the SADB from
the in-base libipsec/setkey without error when NAT_T support is present
in the kernel, though not printing the additional information yet.
However in case there is no NAT_T support in kernel still consider them
to be an error.
MFC after: 8 weeks
At first, I added a utility called utxrm(8) to remove stale entries from
the user accounting database. It seems there are cases in which we need
to perform different operations on the database as well. Simply rename
utxrm(8) to utx(8) and place the old code under the "rm" command.
In addition to "rm", this tool supports "boot" and "shutdown", which are
going to be used by an rc-script which I am going to commit separately.
If the utmpx database gets updated while an application is reading it,
there is a chance the reading application processes partially
overwritten entries. To solve this, make sure we always read a multiple
of sizeof(struct futx) at a time.
MFC after: 2 weeks
conditional code parts not used by or applicable to FreeBSD.
The new implementation is supposed to be able to cope with changes to
the 'l' versions of the msghdr structs now used as well as to if_data
allowing future changes without breaking things.
This restores carp(4) config support in HEAD after r231504.
Reviewed by: glebius, brooks
MFC After: 3 months
on extended and extensible structs if_msghdrl and ifa_msghdrl. This
will allow us to extend both the msghdrl structs and eventually if_data
in the future without breaking the ABI.
Bump __FreeBSD_version to allow ports to more easily detect the new API.
Reviewed by: glebius, brooks
MFC after: 3 days
LOGIN_SETPRIORITY is set, and setting the priority (rtprio or
setpriority) fails.
PR: kern/164238
Submitted by: Alexander Wittig <alexander@wittig.name>
Reviewed by: des
Approved by: cperciva
MFC after: 1 month
when the child process execs daemon's target program thanks to flock(2)
semantics. So, we apparently have to leak the open pidfile's file
descriptor to keep the lock for the pidfile(3) functions to work properly.
Test case demonstrated by trociny:
ref8-amd64:/home/trociny% uname -r
8.2-STABLE
ref8-amd64:/home/trociny% daemon -p /tmp/sleep.pid sleep 10
ref8-amd64:/home/trociny% daemon -p /tmp/sleep.pid sleep 10
daemon: process already running, pid: 19799
kopusha:~% uname -r
10.0-CURRENT
kopusha:~% daemon -p /tmp/sleep.pid sleep 10
kopusha:~% daemon -p /tmp/sleep.pid sleep 10
kopusha:~%
checking the returned oldlen: when ENOMEM is due to the supplied
buffer being too short the return oldlen is equal to buffer size.
Without this additional check kvm_getprocs() gets stuck in loop if the
returned ENOMEM was due the exceeded memorylocked limit. This is
easily can be observed running `limits -l 1k top'.
Submitted by: Andrey Zonov <andrey zonov org>
MFC after: 1 week
the signal handlers with the context information in the deferrred
case.
Only enable the use of getcontextx(3) in the deferred signal delivery
code on amd64 and i386. Sparc64 seems to have some undetermined issues
with interaction of alloca(3) and signal delivery.
Tested by: flo (who also provided sparc64 harware access for me), pho
Discussed with: marius
MFC after: 1 month
fit into existing mcontext_t.
On i386 and amd64 do return the extended FPU states using
getcontextx(3). For other architectures, getcontextx(3) returns the
same information as getcontext(2).
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 month
profiling and kernel profiling. To enable kernel profiling one has to build
kgmon(8). I will enable the build once I managed to build and test powerpc
(32-bit) kernels with profiling support.
- add a powerpc64 PROF_PROLOGUE for _mcount.
- add macros to avoid adding the PROF_PROLOGUE in certain assembly entries.
- apply these macros where needed.
- add size information to the MCOUNT function.
MFC after: 3 weeks, together with r230291
NetBSD's rev 1.6 of this file, on !defined(SOFTFLOAT_FOR_GCC). These
functions are provided by libgcc, so we don't need them. This should
unbreak mips.
the function bodies require only 2 to 10 instructions. However, it
leads to application binaries that refer to a private ABI, namely, the
softfloat innards in libc. This could complicate future changes in
the implementation of the floating-point emulation layer, so it seems
best to have programs refer to the official fe* entry points in libm.
original vendor, but we're using their heavily modified version.)
This brings in functions for long double emulation (both extended and
quad formats), which may be useful for testing, and also for replacing
libc/sparc64/fpu/.
the LDADD/DPADD to lose the -lpam, and causing openpam_dynamic() to fail
due to "openpam_get_options" being undefined.
This would cause obscure console log messages like:
openpam_dynamic(): No error: 0
openpam_load_module(): no pam_unix.so found
and other helpful messages which are no help in diagnosing the problem.
Fortunately this change was not mfc'ed to 9.x, it isn't broken there.
progress information. The first is that fetch_read() (used in the HTTP
code but not the FTP code) can enter an infinite loop if it has previously
been interrupted by a signal. The second is that when it is interrupted,
fetch_read() will discard any data it may have read up to that point.
Luckily, both bugs are extremely timing-sensitive and therefore difficult
to trigger.
PR: bin/153240
Submitted by: Mark <markjdb@gmail.com>
MFC after: 3 weeks
use softfloat.
Thanks to Ian Lepore for testing and debugging this patch. The fenv
regression tests pass (at least for Ian's arm chip) with this change.
dynamic rounding modes, but FPUless chips that use softfloat can support it
because everything is emulated anyway. (We presently have incomplete
support for hardware FPUs.)
Submitted by: Ian Lepore
requested value was handled incorrectly, and the function retuned NULL
instead of the truncated result.
Fix this and also remove unnecessary check for buf != NULL, which alway
retuns true.
MFC after: 3 days
The wtmpcvt(1) utility converts wtmp files to the new format used by
utmpx(3). Now that HEAD has been branched to stable/9 and 9.0 is
released, there is no need for it in HEAD.
MFC after: never
for pidfh in libutil.h in its place.
This allows us to hide the contents of the pidfh structure, and also
allowed removal of the "#ifdef _SYS_PARAM_H" guard from around the
pidfile_* function prototypes.
Suggested by pjd.
The C11 folks reinvented the wheel by introducing an aligned version of
malloc(3) called aligned_alloc(3), instead of posix_memalign(3). Instead
of returning the allocation by reference, it returns the address, just
like malloc(3).
Reviewed by: jasone@
This switches us to using -isoC-2011 as the symbol name which is used by
groff and mdocml. It follows the change to 4 digit years as done with
IEEE Std 1003 post-1999.
MFC after: 2 weeks (groff changes only)
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