The option was added only to ease the transition from GNU Binutils to
ELF Tool Chain tools, and that process is now complete (for the viable
replacements). Noting the removal in UPDATING is sufficient as we have
not shipped a release with the option.
Reviewed by: brooks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3240
with the net80211 stack.
Historical background: originally wireless devices created an interface,
just like Ethernet devices do. Name of an interface matched the name of
the driver that created. Later, wlan(4) layer was introduced, and the
wlanX interfaces become the actual interface, leaving original ones as
"a parent interface" of wlanX. Kernelwise, the KPI between net80211 layer
and a driver became a mix of methods that pass a pointer to struct ifnet
as identifier and methods that pass pointer to struct ieee80211com. From
user point of view, the parent interface just hangs on in the ifconfig
list, and user can't do anything useful with it.
Now, the struct ifnet goes away. The struct ieee80211com is the only
KPI between a device driver and net80211. Details:
- The struct ieee80211com is embedded into drivers softc.
- Packets are sent via new ic_transmit method, which is very much like
the previous if_transmit.
- Bringing parent up/down is done via new ic_parent method, which notifies
driver about any changes: number of wlan(4) interfaces, number of them
in promisc or allmulti state.
- Device specific ioctls (if any) are received on new ic_ioctl method.
- Packets/errors accounting are done by the stack. In certain cases, when
driver experiences errors and can not attribute them to any specific
interface, driver updates ic_oerrors or ic_ierrors counters.
Details on interface configuration with new world order:
- A sequence of commands needed to bring up wireless DOESN"T change.
- /etc/rc.conf parameters DON'T change.
- List of devices that can be used to create wlan(4) interfaces is
now provided by net.wlan.devices sysctl.
Most drivers in this change were converted by me, except of wpi(4),
that was done by Andriy Voskoboinyk. Big thanks to Kevin Lo for testing
changes to at least 8 drivers. Thanks to Olivier Cochard, gjb@, mmoll@,
op@ and lev@, who also participated in testing. Details here:
https://wiki.freebsd.org/projects/ifnet/net80211
Still, drivers: ndis, wtap, mwl, ipw, bwn, wi, upgt, uath were not
tested. Changes to mwl, ipw, bwn, wi, upgt are trivial and chances
of problems are low. The wtap wasn't compilable even before this change.
But the ndis driver is complex, and it is likely to be broken with this
commit. Help with testing and debugging it is appreciated.
Differential Revision: D2655, D2740
Sponsored by: Nginx, Inc.
Sponsored by: Netflix
ethernet controller. The ethernet controller is emulated by VMware
Fusion (for example) and is a good device to demonstrate how to use
the bus space and busdma functions due to its simple programming.
The program sets up the DMA structures, sends a DHCP discover packet,
waits 2 seconds, and iterates over the receive ring for an offer.
ELF Tool Chain elfcopy is nearly a drop-in replacement for GNU objcopy,
but does not currently support PE output which is needed for building
x86 UEFI bits.
Add a src.conf knob to allow installing it as objcopy and set it by
default for aarch64 only, where we don't have a native binutils.
Reviewed by: bapt
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2887
identification (e.g. isa:0x3f0 or pci0:2:1:0). In libbus,
the device is turned into a path name. For bus_space_map(),
the resource is now specified in a second argument.
Before:
bus.map('/dev/proto/pci0:2:1:0/pcicfg')
busdma.tag_create('/dev/proto/pci0:2:1:0/busdma', ...)
Now:
bus.map('pci0:2:1:0', 'pcicfg')
busdma.tag_create('pci0:2:1:0', ...)
Rationale: ident(1) is useful out of RCS, lot of scripts are using ident(1) and
failing when base is built WITHOUT_RCS.
This version is:
- fully compatible with RCS 5.7 ident.
- fully compatible with RCS 5.9 ident.
- passes all ident test from GNU RCS 5.9 test suite
This version has support for: svn extension for the Keyword id (double colon and
# before last $)
Différences with GNU RCS ident:
- no long options as found in GNU RCS 5.9 (but not commented there).
- '-V' reports nothing but has been added for compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3200
Reviewed by: pfg
because for no mailwrapper case we have:
/usr/sbin/sendmail -> /usr/sbin/mailwrapper
/usr/sbin/mailwrapper -> /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail
Add comment explaining it.
While here:
1. have the Python bindings contain constants for the space
identifiers and the sync operation.
2. change the segment iterators to return None when done,
not ENXIO.
It is required for other tools in base and/or ports like dma(8) or any MTA
available in ports. It is also build and installed anyway even if world is built
WITHOUT_SENDMAIL
Off by default, build behaves normally.
WITH_META_MODE we get auto objdir creation, the ability to
start build from anywhere in the tree.
Still need to add real targets under targets/ to build packages.
Differential Revision: D2796
Reviewed by: brooks imp
This change among other things improve search capabilities over the manpages
allowing fine grain query.
A new build option WITHOUT_MANDOCDB has been added to keep the ancient version
of the database and the tools. The plan is to entirely remove this option before
11.0-RELEASE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2603
Clang uses compiler-rt for the code coverage runtime, and ports GCC
provides its own libgcov.
PR: 200203 (exp-run)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Without these CFLAGS settings a cross-compile won't find the headers
anywhere.
Tested:
* mips (32, big endian) cross-build w/ LOCAL_DIRS including these
tools.
previous releases.
Also add a stdlib.h wrapper, which declares the function, otherwise the
compiler may assume it returns int, which can cause segfaults on LP64
architectures.
Reviewed by: bapt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2558
Clang's OpenMP support will emit Intel OpenMP API library calls,
and will therefore require libiomp (or whatever name is settled on).
An up-to-date version of libgomp is included in ports or pkg GCC.
Thus, there is no reason to build base libgomp without base system GCC.
PR: 199979 (exp-run)
Reviewed by: pfg
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2459
- Optional components go in OptionalObsoleteFiles
- Move gperf removal to be based on MK_GCC only, not MK_CXX and MK_GCC
Reviewed by: imp, sbruno
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2421