in gpart(8) and boot(8), adding references to gptboot(8) in both.
Reviewed by: jhb, ae, pjd, Paul Schenkeveld <bsdcan@psconsult.nl>, david_a_bright@dell.com (portions), gjb
MFC after: 1 week
sbin/devd/devd.cc
All output will now go to syslog(3) if devd is daemonized, or stderr
if it's running in the foreground.
sbin/devd/devd.8
Remove the "-D" flag. Filtering messages by priority now
happens in the usual syslog way. For performance reasons, a few
extra-verbose debugging statements are now conditional on the "-d" (do
not daemonize) flag.
etc/syslog.conf
etc/newsyslog.conf
Direct messages from devd(8) to /var/log/devd.log, but leave it
disabled by default
Reviewed by: eadler
Approved by: gibbs (co-mentor)
MFC after: never (removed a command-line option from devd)
which is presently: AES-XTS, no authentication. Create provider
with pagesize as sectorsize by default.
- Rewrite parsing code for geli(8)-backed swap options, now options
are required to be exact match, and unrecognized options will trigger
a warning.
- Don't initialize GELI device if it's already initialized. This
restores previous behavior.
- Don't duplicate file descriptor when working with geli(8) and
gbde(8) as there is no need to communicate with the utility other
than exit status.
- When calling swap_on_off_* routines, which_prog can only be SWAP_ON
or SWAP_OFF. Eliminate unneeded case branches by replacing switch
with if's.
- Plug a few memory leaks.
Reviewed by: hrs (but bugs are mine)
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-with: r252310, r252332, r252345
- Reconnect with some minor modifications, in particular now selsocket()
internals are adapted to use sbintime units after recent'ish calloutng
switch.
device names "md" or "md[0-9]*" and a "file" option are specified in
/etc/fstab like this:
md none swap sw,file=/swap.bin 0 0
- Add GBDE/GELI encrypted swap space specification support, which
rc.d/encswap supported. The /etc/fstab lines are like the following:
/dev/ada1p1.bde none swap sw 0 0
/dev/ada1p2.eli none swap sw 0 0
.eli devices accepts aalgo, ealgo, keylen, and sectorsize as options.
swapctl(8) can understand an encrypted device in the command line
like this:
# swapctl -a /dev/ada2p1.bde
- "-L" flag is added to support "late" option to defer swapon until
rc.d/mountlate runs.
- rc.d script change:
rc.d/encswap -> removed
rc.d/addswap -> just display a warning message if $swapfile is defined
rc.d/swap1 -> renamed to rc.d/swap
rc.d/swaplate -> newly added to support "late" option
These changes alleviate a race condition between device creation/removal
and swapon/swapoff.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: wblock (manual page)
a new firmware command.
NVMe controllers may support up to 7 firmware slots for storing of
different firmware revisions. This new firmware command supports
firmware replacement (i.e. firmware download) with or without immediate
activation, or activation of a previously stored firmware image. It
also supports selection of the firmware slot during replacement
operations, using IDENTIFY information from the controller to
check that the specified slot is valid.
Newly activated firmware does not take effect until the new controller
reset, either via a reboot or separate 'nvmecontrol reset' command to the
same controller.
Submitted by: Joe Golio <joseph.golio@emc.com>
Obtained from: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 3 days
This includes pretty printers for all of the standard NVMe log pages
(Error, SMART/Health, Firmware), as well as hex output for non-standard
or vendor-specific log pages.
Submitted by: Joe Golio <joseph.golio@emc.com>
Obtained from: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after: 3 days
commands.
Also improve the checking of device node names, so that better error
messages are displayed when incorrect names are specified.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
usage message for each nvmecontrol command. This helps reduce some code
clutter both now and for future commits which will add logpage and
firmware support to nvmecontrol(8).
Also move helper function prototypes to the end of the header file, after
the per-command functions.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
specified, only md(4) devices which have the specified file as backing
store are displayed.
- Use MD_NAME instead of "md".
- Use _PATH_DEV instead of "/dev/".
MFC after: 1 week
C11 atomics now work on all the architectures. Have at least a single
piece of software in our base system that uses C11 atomics. This
somewhat makes it less likely that we break it because of LLVM imports,
etc.
- When operating on a core file (-M) and -c is specified we don't clear
the message buffer of the running system.
- If we don't have permission to clear the buffer print the error message
only. That's what Linux does in this case, where this feature was ported
from, and it ensures that the error message doesn't get lost in the noise.
Discussed with: antoine, cognet
Approved by: cognet
This allows setting attributes on tables. One simply does not provide
an index in that case. Otherwise the entry corresponding the index has
the attribute set or unset.
Use this change to fix a relatively longstanding bug in our GPT scheme
that's the result of rev 198097 (relatively harmless) followed by rev
237057 (damaging). The damaging part being that our GPT scheme always
has the active flag set on the PMBR slice. This is in violation with
EFI. Existing EFI implementions for both x86 and ia64 reject the GPT.
As such, GPT disks created by us aren't usable under EFI because of
that.
After this change, GPT disks never have the active flag set on the PMBR
slice. In order to make the GPT disk bootable under some x86 BIOSes,
the reason of rev 198097, one must now set the active attribute on the
gpt table. The kernel will apply this to the PMBR slice For (S)ATA:
gpart set -a active ada0
To fix an existing GPT disk that has the active flag set in the PMBR,
and that does not need the flag, use (again for (S)ATA):
gpart unset -a active ada0
The EBR, MBR & PC98 schemes, which also impement at least 1 attribute,
now check to make sure the entry passed is valid. They do not have
attributes that apply to the table.
The "failok" option doesn't have any effect at all unless specified in
fstab(5) and combined with the -a flag. The "failok" option is already
documented in fstab(5).
PR: 177630
No objection: eadler
MFC after: 1 week
recreating the filesystem, check for and output the -i, -k, and -l
options if appropriate.
Note the remaining deficiencies of the -m option in the dumpfs(8)
manual page. Specifically that newfs(8) options -E, -R, -S, and -T
options are not handled and that -p is not useful so is omitted.
Also document that newfs(8) options -n and -r are neither checked
for nor output but should be. The -r flag is needed if the filesystem
uses gjournal(8).
PR: bin/163992
Reported by: Dieter <freebsd@sopwith.solgatos.com>
Submitted by: Andy Kosela <akosela@andykosela.com>
MFC after: 1 week
If an expander returns 0x00 (no device attached) in the ATTACHED DEVICE
field of the SMP DISCOVER response, ignore the value of ATTACHED SAS
ADDRESS, because it is invalid. Some expanders zero out the address
when the attached device is removed, but others do not. Section
9.4.3.10 of the SAS Protocol Layer 2 revision 04b does not require them
to do so.
Approved by: ken (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
been printed. This provides compatibility with other *nix systems
(including Linux).
While here use stdbool booleans for 'all'.
PR: bin/178295
Submitted by: Levent Serinol <lserinol@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: will