The atf cp_test.sh sample file should have never been marked executable in
the first place because this file needs to be "built" first before being
usable.
The new suite.test.mk file contains all the logic needed to install test
programs under /usr/tests/ and to support Kyua as the run-time engine.
This file is included by default by bsd.test.mk so Makefiles do not need
to care about its existence.
Specific Makefiles can define NOT_FOR_TEST_SUITE to indicate that whatever
test programs they are building are not supposed to be installed under
/usr/tests/ nor run by Kyua. (The effect of passing this setting is that
suite.test.mk is simply not included.)
NOT_FOR_TEST_SUITE should never be used by Makefiles in the base system.
This functionality is provided so that third-parties can hook in their
own test code, with different semantics, if they wish. This was asked
for by sjg@.
Change {atf,plain,tap}.test.mk to be internal implementation details of
bsd.test.mk. Makefiles that build tests should now only include bsd.test.mk
and declaratively specify what they want to build, without worrying about
the internal implementation of the mk files.
The reason for this change is to permit building test programs of different
interfaces from a single directory, which is something I had a need for
while porting tests over from src/tools/regression/.
Additionally, this change makes it possible to perform some other requested
changes to bsd.test.mk in an easier manner. Coming soon.
AppleTalk was a network transport protocol for Apple Macintosh devices
in 80s and then 90s. Starting with Mac OS X in 2000 the AppleTalk was
a legacy protocol and primary networking protocol is TCP/IP. The last
Mac OS X release to support AppleTalk happened in 2009. The same year
routing equipment vendors (namely Cisco) end their support.
Thus, AppleTalk won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
IPX was a network transport protocol in Novell's NetWare network operating
system from late 80s and then 90s. The NetWare itself switched to TCP/IP
as default transport in 1998. Later, in this century the Novell Open
Enterprise Server became successor of Novell NetWare. The last release
that claimed to still support IPX was OES 2 in 2007. Routing equipment
vendors (e.g. Cisco) discontinued support for IPX in 2011.
Thus, IPX won't be supported in FreeBSD 11.0-RELEASE.
for FreeBSD standards. Very little, if any, content was
modified.
These are not yet linked to the build.
Submitted by: Abhishek Gupta (abgupta!microsoft dot com)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
After several months of testing and fixing (and breaking)
various parts of release/release.sh changes, it is now
possible to build FreeBSD/arm images as part of the release
process.
When EMBEDDEDBUILD is set in the release.conf file, release.sh
will create the build environment, then run a separate script
in release/${XDEV}/release.sh [1]. Currently, only arm is
supported.
The release/${XDEV}/release.sh configures the build environment
specific for the target image, such as installing gcc(1),
installing additional third-party software from the ports tree,
and fetching external sources.
Once the build environment is set up, release/${XDEV}/release.sh
runs Crochet, written by Tim Kientzle, which builds the userland
and kernel, and creates an image that can be written to an SD
card with dd(1). Many thanks to Tim for his work on Crochet.
Sample configurations for FreeBSD/arm boards are in the
release/arm/ directory, and Crochet configuration files for each
board are located in release/tools/arm/. Supported boards at this
time are: BEAGLEBONE, PANDABOARD, RPI-B, and WANDBOARD-QUAD.
Adding support for additional boards will continue in the
projects/release-embedded/ branch, and incrementally merged back
to head/.
Many thanks to the FreeBSD Foundation for the support and
sponsorship of this project.
[1] XDEV is used in order to keep the various configurations
organized by architecture, but since TARGET and TARGET_ARCH
are used to build the chroot, the values of those variables
cannot be used.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Use counter(9) for rt_pksent (former rt_rmx.rmx_pksent). This
removes another cache trashing ++ from packet forwarding path.
- Create zini/fini methods for the rtentry UMA zone. Via initialize
mutex and counter in them.
- Fix reporting of rmx_pksent to routing socket.
- Fix netstat(1) to report "Use" both in kvm(3) and sysctl(3) mode.
The change is mostly targeted for stable/10 merge. For head,
rt_pksent is expected to just disappear.
Discussed with: melifaro
Sponsored by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
(1) Invoke cpp to bring in files via #include (although the old
/include/ stuff is supported still).
(2) bring in files from either vendor tree or freebsd-custom files
when building.
(3) move all dts* files from sys/boot/fdt/dts to
sys/boot/fdt/dts/${MACHINE} as appropriate.
(4) encode all the magic to do the build in sys/tools/fdt/make_dtb.sh
so that the different places in the tree use the exact same logic.
(5) switch back to gpl dtc by default. the bsdl one in the tree has
significant issues not easily addressed by those unfamiliar with
the code.
- Add a VCSCMD variable that defaults to 'svn checkout',
and update places 'svn co' is used directly.
- After sourcing a configuration file, prefix SRCBRANCH,
PORTBRANCH, and DOCBRANCH with the SVNROOT.
- Properly capitalize 'FreeBSD.org' in the default SVNROOT.
- Update Copyright.
release.conf.sample:
- Add an example to use git instead of svn, by nullifying
SVNROOT, and setting SRCBRANCH, DOCBRANCH, and PORTBRANCH
to the URL fo a git repository.
release.7:
- Document VCSCMD.
Submitted by: Rick Miller (based on)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
- Support for double-tap and drag.
- Support for 2-finger horizontal scrolling which translates to page-back/forward events.
- Single finger tap is equivalent to a left-button press.
- Two-finger taps are mapped to the right-button click.
- Three fingers are mapped to middle button.
- Add sysctl to disable single finger tapping.
- Fix for multiple open of /dev/atp0
- Enhanced support for the Fountain/Geyser family by adding Geyser4.
- Update manual page.
Submitted by: Rohit Grover <rgrover1@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
UCL is heavily infused by nginx configuration as the example of a convenient
configuration system. However, UCL is fully compatible with JSON format and is
able to parse json files.
UCL is used by pkg(8) for its configuration file as well for the manifest format
in packages, it will be used in base for the pkg boostrap (signature checking
and configuration file parsing.)
libucl has been developped and is maintained by vsevolod@
bsd.sys.mk, where it really belongs. This also causes the flag to get
added when clang is *not* the default system compiler, but is still
used, e.g. by setting WITH_CLANG_IS_CC manually.
MFC after: 3 days
directives, since on sparc64 we must still GNU as, which does not
support those directives.
Note there are several programs and libraries in our tree, which are
always compiled with -g, even if DEBUG_FLAGS is not set by the user!
It is a small and lightweight Mail Transport Agent.
It accepts mails from locally installed Mail User Agents (MUA) and delivers the
mails either locally or to a remote destination. Remote delivery includes
several features like TLS/SSL support, SMTP authentication and NULLCLIENT.
Make dma conditional to new WITHOUT_DMA option and make it respect WITHOUT_MAIL
Reviewed by: peter
Discussed with: emaste, bz, peter
all of the features in the current working draft of the upcoming C++
standard, provisionally named C++1y.
The code generator's performance is greatly increased, and the loop
auto-vectorizer is now enabled at -Os and -O2 in addition to -O3. The
PowerPC backend has made several major improvements to code generation
quality and compile time, and the X86, SPARC, ARM32, Aarch64 and SystemZ
backends have all seen major feature work.
Release notes for llvm and clang can be found here:
<http://llvm.org/releases/3.4/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
<http://llvm.org/releases/3.4/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
MFC after: 1 month
gpioled(4).
Tested on RPi and BBB (using the hardware I2C controller and gpioiic(4) for
the I2C tests). It was also verified for regressions on RSPRO (MIPS/ar71xx)
used as reference for a non OFW-based system.
Update the gpioled(4) and gpioiic(4) man pages with some details and
examples about the FDT/OFW support.
Some compatibility details pointed out by imp@ will follow in subsequent
commits.
Approved by: adrian (mentor, implicit)
- Create a separate 'return values' section and move some statements about
return values to that section.
- Note that each invocation of va_start() and va_copy() must be paired with
va_end() in the same function.
MFC after: 1 week
allow mrsas(4) from LSI to attach to newer LSI cards that are support by
mrsas(4). If mrsas(4) is not loaded into the system at boot then mfi(4)
will always attach. If a modified mrsas(4) is loaded in the system. That
modification is return "-30" in it's probe since that is between
BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT and BUS_PROBE_LOW_PRIORITY.
This option is controller by a new probe flag "MFI_FLAGS_MRSAS" in mfi_ident
that denotes cards that should work with mrsas(4). New entries that should
have this option.
This is the first step to get mrsas(4) checked into FreeBSD and to avoid
collision with people that use mrsas(4) from LSI. Since mfi(4) takes
priority, then mrsas(4) users need to rebuild GENERIC. Using the
.disabled="1" method doesn't work since that blocks attaching and the
probe gave it to mfi(4).
Discussed with: LSI (Kashyap Desai)
which deals with the "ix prefix being shared by two drivers"
situation is forthcoming.
Thanks to dwhite for the ixgbe history lesson.
MFC after: 1 week
commit 6b569451b92c48ccf1768da32e7e89189e1aa253
Author: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
Date: Mon Jan 27 22:50:46 2014 +0000
Always install nmtree as mtree.
For compability, link mtree to nmtree.
X-MFC after: never
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
commit c1acf022c533c5ae27e0cd556977eafe3f5959eb
Author: Brooks Davis <brooks@one-eyed-alien.net>
Date: Fri Jan 17 21:46:44 2014 +0000
Add an option WITHOUT_NCURSESW to suppress building and linking to
libncursesw. While wide character support it useful we'd like to
only need one ncurses library on embedded systems.
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Introduce a TAP_TESTS_PERL primitive to list test programs written in perl.
Only do this in tap.test.mk because I only expect perl-based test programs
with this interface.
This is very similar to TAP_TESTS_SH but the difference is that we record
in the Kyuafile that the test program requires a perl interpreter. This
in turn makes Kyua mark the test as skipped if the perl package is not yet
installed, instead of mysteriously failing to run the program.
MFC after: 5 days
Introduce a new, per-test-program TEST_METADATA.<program> variable that
contains a list of key/value paris describing metadata properties for
that test program. These properties are later written into the
auto-generated Kyuafile when using the KYUAFILE=auto functionality.
This is to avoid having to supply hand-crafted Kyuafiles when the needs
for metadata overrides are trivial.
While doing this, and because I am documenting TEST_METADATA, take the
chance to document the TEST_INTERFACE setting as well.
MFC after: 5 days
When generating a Kyuafile in the KYUAFILE=auto case, use a filename
that is unlikely to clash with the filename used by explicitly-provided
Kyuafiles.
This allows a Makefile to set KYUAFILE=yes and provide a Kyuafile in
the same directory when such Makefile was previously relying on
KYUAFILE=auto.
Fixes issues with new Kyuafiles not being picked up in NO_CLEAN builds
(although manual intervention is required once, unfortunately, as
described in UPDATING).
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 1 week
The origin of WEP comes from IEEE Std 802.11-1997 where it defines
whether the frame body of MAC frame has been encrypted using WEP
algorithm or not.
IEEE Std. 802.11-2007 changes WEP to Protected Frame, indicates
whether the frame is protected by a cryptographic encapsulation
algorithm.
Reviewed by: adrian, rpaulo
Most relevant features:
- netmap emulation on any NIC, even those without native netmap support.
On the ixgbe we have measured about 4Mpps/core/queue in this mode,
which is still a lot more than with sockets/bpf.
- seamless interconnection of VALE switch, NICs and host stack.
If you disable accelerations on your NIC (say em0)
ifconfig em0 -txcsum -txcsum
you can use the VALE switch to connect the NIC and the host stack:
vale-ctl -h valeXX:em0
allowing sharing the NIC with other netmap clients.
- THE USER API HAS SLIGHTLY CHANGED (head/cur/tail pointers
instead of pointers/count as before). This was unavoidable to support,
in the future, multiple threads operating on the same rings.
Netmap clients require very small source code changes to compile again.
On the plus side, the new API should be easier to understand
and the internals are a lot simpler.
The manual page has been updated extensively to reflect the current
features and give some examples.
This is the result of work of several people including Giuseppe Lettieri,
Vincenzo Maffione, Michio Honda and myself, and has been financially
supported by EU projects CHANGE and OPENLAB, from NetApp University
Research Fund, NEC, and of course the Universita` di Pisa.
clang-specific or gcc-specific flags, introduce the following new
variables for use in Makefiles:
CFLAGS.clang
CFLAGS.gcc
CXXFLAGS.clang
CXXFLAGS.gcc
In bsd.sys.mk, these get appended to the regular CFLAGS or CXXFLAGS for
the right compiler.
MFC after: 1 week
In practice the old test (using MK_CLANG_IS_CC) is similar, but
COMPILER_FEATURES provides the information we actually want to test.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
This change fixes some cases where bsd.progs.mk would fail to handle
directories with SCRIPTS but no PROGS. In particular, "install" did
not handle such scripts nor dependent files when bsd.subdir.mk was
added to the mix.
This is "make tinderbox" clean.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
This file provides support to build test programs that comply with the
Test Anything Protocol. Its main goal is to support the painless
integration of existing tests from tools/regression/ into the Kyua-based
test suite.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
-Wno-enum-conversion. In earlier clang versions (before 3.2), the
latter did not exist, and suppressing enum conversion warnings was
really the goal of this warning suppression flag.
This should enable the same kind of warning again as was fixed by
r259072 ("incompatible integer to pointer conversion passing 'Elf_Addr'
(aka 'unsigned int') to parameter of type 'void *'"), and which was only
emitted by gcc.
Noticed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
specifying 'WITH_DVD=1' during 'make release'.
This caused some problems during the freebsd-update builds for
10.0-BETA4.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
giving access to functionality that is not available in capability mode
sandbox. The functionality can be precisely restricted.
Start with the following services:
- system.dns - provides API compatible to:
- gethostbyname(3),
- gethostbyname2(3),
- gethostbyaddr(3),
- getaddrinfo(3),
- getnameinfo(3),
- system.grp - provides getgrent(3)-compatible API,
- system.pwd - provides getpwent(3)-compatible API,
- system.random - allows to obtain entropy from /dev/random,
- system.sysctl - provides sysctlbyname(3-compatible API.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
by hastctl(8), hastd(8) and auditdistd(8) and will soon be also used
by casperd(8) and its services. There is no documentation and pjdlog.h
header file is not installed in /usr/include/ to keep it private.
Unfortunately we don't have /lib/private/ at this point, only
/usr/lib/private/, so the library is installed in /lib/.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
requires process descriptors to work and having PROCDESC in GENERIC
seems not enough, especially that we hope to have more and more consumers
in the base.
MFC after: 3 days
mentioned in UPDATING, you can even do it as an as-needed operation after
doing a buildworld/installworld. You can set WITH_LIB32=yes in make.conf
or src.conf.
Mention that the automatic mode switch from umass to u3g needed by some
devices does not work unless the driver is loaded before the device is
connected.
MFC after: 1 month
In its stead use the Solaris / illumos approach of emulating '-' (dash)
in probe names with '__' (two consecutive underscores).
Reviewed by: markj
MFC after: 3 weeks
Instead of assuming that plain sh test programs exist in the source
tree in their final form and are marked as executable, generate them
from a list of sources.
By default, just assume that the source file for a program P is P.sh
but allow the caller to customize the inputs. Similarly, also allow
the caller to apply sed(1) replacements on the output. These will
both be useful in hooking existing test code from tools/regression/
into the test suite.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
This was missed when this file was first imported. Its atf.test.mk
counterpart is already being installed and these are necessary if we
want "make" within the source tree (not via "buildworld") to work.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
adapters. Both devices support Gigabit Ethernet and USB 2.0, and the AX88179
supports USB 3.0. The driver was written by kevlo@ and lwhsu@, with a few
bug fixes from me.
MFC after: 2 months
This change adds some sample test cases to share/examples/tests/
demonstrating the basic usage of the atf and plain interfaces.
These test programs are fully-functional and are installed as part
of the test suite, which guarantees that the sample code remains
correct. However, they currently mostly serve as a placeholder for
additional examples and may be incomplete (depending on how you
look at them). I will see what else can be useful while working on
documentation.
As a bonus, the addition of these tests exercise the *.test.mk files,
one of which (plain.test.mk) was not yet in use, and also demonstrates
that it's possible to mix different kinds of test programs into the
same test suite.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
SRCS.<prog> must be explicitly defined when using the PROGS* functionality
for each program to be built.
As there are no plain test programs in the system yet, this was not
detected.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
C++ programs need to be added to PROGS_CXX, not PROGS, and the code was
actually doing both. Just keep the registration into PROGS_CXX to
prevent possible obscure build problems.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
These are largely syntactic sugar. However, they improve code
readability where an RB_FOREACH() or RB_FOREACH_REVERSE()
traversal has been interrupted and must be resumed. Performance
is improved by avoiding unnecessary traversal from the head node.
There is no reason to keep the two knobs separate: if tests are
enabled, the ATF libraries are required; and if tests are disabled,
the ATF libraries are not necessary. Keeping the two just serves
to complicate the build.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
The addition of the TESTS knob and its enabling of the build of tests in
lib/libcrypt/tests/ broke the build. The reason is that we cannot descend
into tests/ subdirectories until all prerequisites have been built, which
in the case of tests may be "a lot of things" (libatf-c in this case).
Ensure that we do not walk tests/ directories during the bootstrapping of
the libraries as part of buildworld.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
- Rename "aux.[ch]" to "util.[ch]" which is a more common name for
utility functions and allows checkout on some non-FreeBSD systems
where the "aux.*" namespace is reserved.
- Fix some compile warnings while at it.
PR: usb/183728
MFC after: 2 weeks
libc++.a during the early build stages (bootstrap-tools, build-tools,
cross-tools), since it is not possible to know in advance which C++
library is available on the host system.
Instead, just use the bootstrap compiler's built-in default. This
should eventually make it possible to build stable/9 on head, or on
stable/10, which ship without libstdc++ by default.
X-MFC-With: 255431
MFC after: 3 days
good. This caused libc to spoof the ports libiconv namespace and
provide a colliding libiconv.so.3 to fool rtld. This should have
been removed some time ago.
This includes the following:
- use separate memory regions for VALE ports
- locking fixes
- some simplifications in the NIC-specific routines
- performance improvements for the VALE switch
- some new features in the pkt-gen test program
- documentation updates
There are small API changes that require programs to be recompiled
(NETMAP_API has been bumped so you will detect old binaries at runtime).
In particular:
- struct netmap_slot now is 16 bytes to support an extra pointer,
which may save one data copy when using VALE ports or VMs;
- the struct netmap_if has two extra fields;
MFC after: 3 days