NB: Using NULL for default values in-case someone
or something uncomments it and reboots. See
check-password.4th(8) for additional details.
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10 stable/9
When taking user input, don't show asterisks as the user types
but instead spin a twiddle. Implement Ctrl-U to clear user input.
If the buffer is empty, either because the user has yet to type
anything, presses Ctrl-U at any time, or presses backspace enough
to end in an empty buffer, the twiddle is erased to provide feed-
back to the user.
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-to: stable/10 stable/9
locking out everyone in the case of setting a password longer than
the maximum (currently 16 characters). Now the required password is
truncated to the maximum input that can be read from the user.
PR: kern/198760
MFC after: 3 days
MFH: stable/10 stable/9
Implement a subset of the multiboot specification in order to boot Xen
and a FreeBSD Dom0 from the FreeBSD bootloader. This multiboot
implementation is tailored to boot Xen and FreeBSD Dom0, and it will
most surely fail to boot any other multiboot compilant kernel.
In order to detect and boot the Xen microkernel, two new file formats
are added to the bootloader, multiboot and multiboot_obj. Multiboot
support must be tested before regular ELF support, since Xen is a
multiboot kernel that also uses ELF. After a multiboot kernel is
detected, all the other loaded kernels/modules are parsed by the
multiboot_obj format.
The layout of the loaded objects in memory is the following; first the
Xen kernel is loaded as a 32bit ELF into memory (Xen will switch to
long mode by itself), after that the FreeBSD kernel is loaded as a RAW
file (Xen will parse and load it using it's internal ELF loader), and
finally the metadata and the modules are loaded using the native
FreeBSD way. After everything is loaded we jump into Xen's entry point
using a small trampoline. The order of the multiboot modules passed to
Xen is the following, the first module is the RAW FreeBSD kernel, and
the second module is the metadata and the FreeBSD modules.
Since Xen will relocate the memory position of the second
multiboot module (the one that contains the metadata and native
FreeBSD modules), we need to stash the original modulep address inside
of the metadata itself in order to recalculate its position once
booted. This also means the metadata must come before the loaded
modules, so after loading the FreeBSD kernel a portion of memory is
reserved in order to place the metadata before booting.
In order to tell the loader to boot Xen and then the FreeBSD kernel the
following has to be added to the /boot/loader.conf file:
xen_cmdline="dom0_mem=1024M dom0_max_vcpus=2 dom0pvh=1 console=com1,vga"
xen_kernel="/boot/xen"
The first argument contains the command line that will be passed to the Xen
kernel, while the second argument is the path to the Xen kernel itself. This
can also be done manually from the loader command line, by for example
typing the following set of commands:
OK unload
OK load /boot/xen dom0_mem=1024M dom0_max_vcpus=2 dom0pvh=1 console=com1,vga
OK load kernel
OK load zfs
OK load if_tap
OK load ...
OK boot
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D517
For the Forth bits:
Submitted by: Julien Grall <julien.grall AT citrix.com>
output frequency of the "twiddle" IO progress indicator. The default
value is 1. For larger values N, the next stage of the animation is only
output on every Nth call to the output routine. A sufficiently large N
effectively disables the animation completely.
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.
No objections from: net@
bootloader. Implement the following routines:
pcibios-device-count count the number of instances of a devid
pcibios-read-config read pci config space
pcibios-write-config write pci config space
pcibios-find-devclass find the nth device with a given devclass
pcibios-find-device find the nth device with a given devid
pcibios-locator convert bus device function ti pcibios locator
These commands are thin wrappers over their PCI BIOS 2.1 counterparts. More
informaiton, such as it is, can be found in the standard.
Export a nunmber of pcibios.X variables into the environment to report
what the PCI IDENTIFY command returned.
Also implmenet a new command line primitive (pci-device-count), but don't
include it by default just yet, since it depends on the recently added
words and any errors here can render a system unbootable.
This is intended to allow the boot loader to do special things based
on the hardware it finds. This could be have special settings that are
optimized for the specific cards, or even loading special drivers. It
goes without saying that writing to pci config space should not be
done without a just cause and a sound mind.
Sponsored by: Netflix
If the user specifies in /boot/loader.conf:
loader_brand="mycustom-brand"
Then "mycustom-brand" will be executed instead of "fbsd-logo".
Submitted by: alfred
Obtained from: FreeNAS
lindev(4) was only used to provide /dev/full which is now a standard feature of
FreeBSD. /dev/full was never linux-specific and provides a generally useful
feature.
Document this in UPDATING and bump __FreeBSD_version. This will be documented
in the PH shortly.
Reported by: jkim
conditionally include (but ignore failures) /boot/loader.rc.local and
/boot/menu.rc.local -- to make customizing the menu easier.
Reviewed by: alfred
Discussed on: -hackers
menu. This is reported to save headaches on some PPC systems where unload
followed by load does not produce the desired results wherein if-given
the opportunicy to abort the initial loading sequence, you can customize
the first load.
Reviewed by: nwhitehorn, kan
Discussed on: -current
kernel selection menu to the beastie menu. List of kernels is taken from
`kernels' in loader.conf(5) as a space (or comma) separated list of names
to display (up to 9). If not set, default value is "kernel kernel.old".
Does not validate that kernels exist because the next enhancement will be
to allow selection of the root device.
Discussed on: -current
MFC after: 3 days
The ng_create_one() and ng_mkpeer() functions in network.subr are
now not used anywhere, but I left them, since they can be useful
in future in netgraph scripting.
Submitted by: pluknet
Looking pretty good; this mostly works now. New code includes:
* Read cached entropy at startup, both from files and from loader(8) preloaded entropy. Failures are soft, but announced. Untested.
* Use EVENTHANDLER to do above just before we go multiuser. Untested.
and add support for default underride to $loader_version, acting as a way to
name a release. Release text is not displayed for the aforementioned feature
of alternate display layout (introduced in r254237); however, for all other
layouts (incl. default), the release name is displayed at lower-right.
See version.4th(8) for additional information and/or historical details.
NOTE: Also a minor edit to version.4th(8) while we're here.
Prior to r222417, setting `password' in loader.conf(5) did not prevent boot
but instead only prevented changes to boot options by prompting for password
if autoboot failed or the user interrupted the countdown sequence.
After r222417 the same machine with `password' set in loader.conf(5) would no
longer boot without _always_ entering the password.
This patch restores the old (8.x and older) functionality for password in
loader.conf(5) while adding a new bootlock_password feature to replace the
edge-case should anybody desire the regressed functionality (HINT: great for
PXE servers and/or private distributions).
loader.conf(5) was updated to be more clear with-respect to password setting
(previous text was misleading).
Documentation (loader.conf(5) and check-password.4th(8)) has been updated to
include notes on the new bootlock_password setting.
Special thanks to Alex Verbod for bringing this to my attention and helping to
refine the loader.conf(5) text.
PR: conf/170110
Submitted by: Vitaly Zakharov <ded3axap@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: Alexander Verbod <alexander.verbod@gmail.com>
Committed with changes to support the following from loader.conf(5):
+ console="vidconsole comconsole" (not just console="comconsole")
+ boot_serial="anything" (not just boot_serial="YES")
+ boot_multicons="anything" (unsupported in originally-submitted patch)
PR: conf/121064
Submitted by: koitsu
Reviewed by: gcooper, adrian (co-mentor)
Approved by: adrian (co-mentor)
Make the following interface changes to my beastie boot menu:
+ Move boot options to a submenu
+ Add a new "Boot Single" menu item
+ Make "Boot" item and new "Boot Single" item reverse when boot_single is set
+ Add new "Load Defaults" item (in new "Boot Options" submenu) for overridding
loader.conf(5) provided values with system defaults.
Reviewed by: adrian (co-mentor)
Approved by: adrian (co-mentor)
+ Cleanup syntax, slim-down code, and make things more readable
+ Introduce new +c! operator and ilk to reduce heap usage/allocations
+ Add safemode_enabled? safemode_enable and safemode_disable functions
+ Add singleuser_enabled? singleuser_enable singleuser_disable functions
+ Add verbose_enabled? verbose_enable and verbose_disable functions
+ Centralize strings (also to reduce heap usage)
Reviewed by: peterj, adrian (co-mentor)
Approved by: adrian (co-mentor)
submenus. See menusets.4th(8) for additional details including examples.
Discussed on arch and recommended for inclusion at the devsummit.
This change does not alter the appearance or user experience, only enhances
possibilities.
Reviewed by: adrian (co-mentor)
Approved by: adrian (co-mentor)
GIANT from VFS. This code is particulary broken and fragile and other
in-kernel implementations around, found in other operating systems,
don't really seem clean and solid enough to be imported at all.
If someone wants to reconsider in-kernel NTFS implementation for
inclusion again, a fair effort for completely fixing and cleaning it
up is expected.
In the while NTFS regular users can use FUSE interface and ntfs-3g
port to work with their NTFS partitions.
This is not targeted for MFC.