This allows replacing "sys/eventfilter.h" includes with "sys/_eventfilter.h"
in other header files (e.g., sys/{bus,conf,cpu}.h) and reduces header
pollution substantially.
EVENTHANDLER_DECLARE and EVENTHANDLER_LIST_DECLAREs were moved out of .c
files into appropriate headers (e.g., sys/proc.h, powernv/opal.h).
As a side effect of reduced header pollution, many .c files and headers no
longer contain needed definitions. The remainder of the patch addresses
adding appropriate includes to fix those files.
LOCK_DEBUG and LOCK_FILE_LINE_ARG are moved to sys/_lock.h, as required by
sys/mutex.h since r326106 (but silently protected by header pollution prior
to this change).
No functional change (intended). Of course, any out of tree modules that
relied on header pollution for sys/eventhandler.h, sys/lock.h, or
sys/mutex.h inclusion need to be fixed. __FreeBSD_version has been bumped.
This is a prerequisite of unifying kernel zlib instances.
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20191
One of the fun issues with scanning has been how the existing
ANI values were programmed into the hardware when channels were
changed. If you're on a really crappy channel and ANI has made
you deaf then when you scan you continue to be deaf on all channels.
This code passes in a flag to startpcureceive which in AR5416 and later
is also used to enable ANI. This allows it to know if it's a normal
operation or a scan operation.
This fixes my situation at home where a temporary spot of a device
going deaf due to interference starts scanning and .. can't hear
anything until I restart.
Now, this isn't the full fix - ideally:
(a) all the ANI config and per-channel information would be migrated
to the shared HAL stuff and enabled for all of the NICs;
(b) when a station reassociates and some other error conditions
(like missed beacons, NF calibration failures, etc) a knob
to reset ANI parameters would likely help recovery.
But hey, I'm committing bits of code again! woo!
Tested:
* AR9344 (2G), STA operation
When building libnv without a debug those arguments are no longer used
because assertions will be changed to NOP.
Submitted by: Mindaugas Rasiukevicius <rmind@netbsd.org>
MFC after: 2 weeks
When building libnv without a debug those arguments are no longer used
because assertions will be changed to NOP.
Submitted by: Mindaugas Rasiukevicius <rmind@netbsd.org>
MFC after: 2 weeks
The drivers were removed in r344299 so there is no need to keep the
firmware files in the src tree.
Reviewed by: imp, jhibbits, johalun
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19583
Embedded lzma decompression library becomes a module usable by other
consumers, in addition to geom_uzip.
Most important code changes are
- removal of XZ_DEC_SINGLE define, we need the code to work
with XZ_DEC_DYNALLOC;
- xz_crc32_init() call is removed from geom_uzip, xz module handles
initialization on its own.
xz is no longer embedded into geom_uzip, instead the depend line for
the module is provided, and corresponding kernel option is added to
each MIPS kernel config file using geom_uzip.
The commit also carries unrelated cleanup by removing excess "device geom_uzip"
in places which were missed in r344479.
Reviewed by: cem, hselasky, ray, slavash (previous versions)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19266
MFC after: 3 weeks
In r343986 we introduced a double free. The structure was already
freed fixed in the r302966. This problem was introduced
because the GitHub version was out of sync with the FreeBSD one.
Submitted by: Mindaugas Rasiukevicius <rmind@netbsd.org>
MFC with: r343986
nvpair_create_stringv: free the temporary string; this fix affects
nvlist_add_stringf() and nvlist_add_stringv().
nvpair_remove_nvlist_array (NV_TYPE_NVLIST_ARRAY case): free the chain
of nvpairs (as resetting it prevents nvlist_destroy() from freeing it).
Note: freeing the chain in nvlist_destroy() is not sufficient, because
it would still leak through nvlist_take_nvlist_array(). This affects
all nvlist_*_nvlist_array() use
Submitted by: Mindaugas Rasiukevicius <rmind@netbsd.org>
Reported by: clang/gcc ASAN
MFC after: 2 weeks
never get here, however a test for SOLARIS, as redundant as this test is,
serves to document that this is the illumos definition. This should help
those who come after me to follow the code more easily.
MFC after: 1 month
Remove #ifdefs for ancient and irrelevant operating systems from
ipfilter.
When ipfilter was written the UNIX and UNIX-like systems in use
were diverse and plentiful. IRIX, Tru64 (OSF/1) don't exist any
more. OpenBSD removed ipfilter shortly after the first time the
ipfilter license terms changed in the early 2000's. ipfilter on AIX,
HP/UX, and Linux never really caught on. Removal of code for operating
systems that ipfilter will never run on again will simplify the code
making it easier to fix bugs, complete partially implemented features,
and extend ipfilter.
Unsupported previous version FreeBSD code and some older NetBSD code
has also been removed.
What remains is supported FreeBSD, NetBSD, and illumos. FreeBSD and
NetBSD have collaborated exchanging patches, while illumos has expressed
willingness to have their ipfilter updated to 5.1.2, provided their
zone-specific updates to their ipfilter are merged (which are of interest
to FreeBSD to allow control of ipfilters in jails from the global zone).
Reviewed by: glebius@
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19006
The KPI have been reviewed and cleansed of features that were planned
back 20 years ago and never implemented. The pfil(9) internals have
been made opaque to protocols with only returned types and function
declarations exposed. The KPI is made more strict, but at the same time
more extensible, as kernel uses same command structures that userland
ioctl uses.
In nutshell [KA]PI is about declaring filtering points, declaring
filters and linking and unlinking them together.
New [KA]PI makes it possible to reconfigure pfil(9) configuration:
change order of hooks, rehook filter from one filtering point to a
different one, disconnect a hook on output leaving it on input only,
prepend/append a filter to existing list of filters.
Now it possible for a single packet filter to provide multiple rulesets
that may be linked to different points. Think of per-interface ACLs in
Cisco or Juniper. None of existing packet filters yet support that,
however limited usage is already possible, e.g. default ruleset can
be moved to single interface, as soon as interface would pride their
filtering points.
Another future feature is possiblity to create pfil heads, that provide
not an mbuf pointer but just a memory pointer with length. That would
allow filtering at very early stages of a packet lifecycle, e.g. when
packet has just been received by a NIC and no mbuf was yet allocated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18951
length of the struct in memmove() rather than an unintialized variable.
This fixes the first of two kernel page faults when ipfs is invoked.
PR: 235110
Reported by: David.Boyd49@twc.com
MFC after: 2 weeks
Book-E powerpc uses 64-bit vm_paddr_t, and 32-bit powerpc has 32-bit pointers,
so gcc errors with cast to pointer from integer of different size. As this will
not actually be used in reality anyway, simply quiet the warning by casting
through uintptr_t.
MFC after: 3 weeks
MFC with: r343168
sendfile(2) appears to now use DMAP wherever possible. These addresses are not
managed by pmap, so pmap_kextract() returns a 0 physical address, causing
failure.
This change fixes nginx running on P5020 SoC.
MFC after: 3 weeks
In FreeBSD, this is normal situation that the Tx ring is being full. In
hat case, the packet is put back into drbr and the next attempt to send
it is taken after the cleanup.
Too much logs like this can cause system instability and even cause the
device reset (because keep alive or cleanup could be missed).
To fix that, the log level of this message is changed to debug.
Upon this change upgrade the driver version to v0.8.2.
Submitted by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon, Inc.
This merge brings in a couple new files, which needed to be attached to the
build; a new dependency on <limits.h>, which must be stubbed; and a name
change in the Context parameter constants, from ZSTD_p_foo to ZSTD_c_foo.
Significantly, it fixes a kernel build error with GCC where floating-point
functions were included in the kernel build, by hiding them under the same
compile-time #ifdef that already covered their invocation. That issue was
introduced to FreeBSD in the 1.3.7 update and tracked upstream here:
https://github.com/facebook/zstd/issues/1386
The full 1.3.8 release notes can be found on Github:
https://github.com/facebook/zstd/releases/tag/v1.3.8
Relnotes: yes
The interesting thing is that looking through Darren's commit logs,
the line containing an extern ppsratecheck() definition was removed
from the v5-1-RELEASE branch but not from HEAD (I have taken his
CVS tree and converted it to GIT). There is a commit adding an
additional #if defined to the empty block. I can only assume that
this was intentional for something later. Looking through HEAD the
extern ppsratecheck() is there. However if we put it back it would
conflict with a static ppsratecheck() definition in fil.c when
building ipftest.
Therefore we remove this empty block.
ppsratecheck() is a function in the FreeBSD kernel. However ipftest
cannot call the ppsratecheck() in the kernel. Therefore one exists in
fil.c for use when building the userland ipftest utility which
approximates the packet filter in userland for testing of ipfilter
rules against packets captured with tcpdump.
MFC after: 1 week
framework is available. pfil(9) has been in FreeBSD since FreeBSD 5
and according to svn log was first committed to HEAD in 2000, therefore
it is safe to say the check is no longer needed in FreeBSD.
pfil(9) first appeared in NetBSD 1.3 (hence the name NETBSD_PF).
Therefore it is safe to say that it is supported by every NetBSD system
today. The framework also exists in illumos.
As ipfilter code is shared and exchanged between FreeBSD and NetBSD, and
at some point in the future illumos too, and as all three platforms have
pfil(9), the redundant NETBSD_PF #defines and #ifdefs are removed.
MFC after: 1 week
PR: maybe related to 233998 (inconclusive at this time)
Submitted by: byuu <byuu AT tutanota.com> (previous version)
Reviewed by: imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18506
The flag is not used by anything for years and supporting it requires an
explicit read from the lock when entering slow path.
Flag value is left unused on purpose.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
is dead). This includes collaterally removing code shared by HP/UX,
SGI, and Linux, where IP Filter will in all likelihood for various
reasons never run again.
MFC after: 1 week
following the MFV of r254219 into r255332. In addition the 'FreeBSD'
macro was never defined in ipfilter 5.1.2 thus it never would have
been enabled in the first place.
This work is prompted by a general cleanup of the IP Filter code
prompted by working to resolve a PR. More to follow.
MFC after: 1 week
sparcv9 atomics compatible with the FreeBSD kernel by using instructions
which access the appropriate address space.
Atomic operations within the kernel must access the nucleus address space
instead of the default primary one. Without this change but the increased
use of CK in the kernel, machines started to panic after some minutes of
uptime due to an unresolvable fault in ck_pr_cas_64_value().
libnv used fcntl(fd, F_GETFL) to test whether fd is a valid file
descriptor. Aside from being racy, this check requires CAP_FCNTL
rights on fd. Instead, use fcntl(fd, F_GETFD), which does not require
any capability rights.
Also remove some redundant fd_is_valid() checks to avoid extra system
calls; in many cases we were performing this check immediately before
dup()ing the descriptor.
Reviewed by: cem, oshogbo (previous version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17963
This fixes two problems, one where epoch calls could occur before all
the readers had exited the epoch section, and one where the epoch calls
could be unnecessarily delayed.
Approved by: re (glebius)
Revert r338177, r338176, r338175, r338174, r338172
After long consultations with re@, core members and mmacy, revert
these changes. Followup changes will be made to mark them as
deprecated and prent a message about where to find the up-to-date
driver. Followup commits will be made to make this clear in the
installer. Followup commits to reduce POLA in ways we're still
exploring.
It's anticipated that after the freeze, this will be removed in
13-current (with the residual of the drm2 code copied to
sys/arm/dev/drm2 for the TEGRA port's use w/o the intel or
radeon drivers).
Due to the impending freeze, there was no formal core vote for
this. I've been talking to different core members all day, as well as
Matt Macey and Glen Barber. Nobody is completely happy, all are
grudgingly going along with this. Work is in progress to mitigate
the negative effects as much as possible.
Requested by: re@ (gjb, rgrimes)
becomes -1, except these are unsigned integers, so they become very large
numbers. Thus are always larger than the maximum bucket; the hash table
insertion fails causing NAT to fail.
This commit ensures that if the index is already zero it is not reduced
prior to insertion into the hash table.
PR: 208566
are situated next to error counters and/or in one instance prior to the
-1 return from various functions. This was useful in diagnosis of
PR/208566 and will be handy in the future diagnosing NAT failures.
PR: 208566
MFC after: 3 days
Bring in https://github.com/jedisct1/libsodium at
461ac93b260b91db8ad957f5a576860e3e9c88a1 (August 7, 2018), unmodified.
libsodium is derived from Daniel J. Bernstein et al.'s 2011 NaCl
("Networking and Cryptography Library," pronounced "salt") software library.
At the risk of oversimplifying, libsodium primarily exists to make it easier
to use NaCl. NaCl and libsodium provide high quality implementations of a
number of useful cryptographic concepts (as well as the underlying
primitics) seeing some adoption in newer network protocols.
I considered but dismissed cleaning up the directory hierarchy and
discarding artifacts of other build systems in favor of remaining close to
upstream (and easing future updates).
Nothing is integrated into the build system yet, so in that sense, no
functional change.
in ipf_nat_checkout() and report it in the frb_natv4out and frb_natv4in
dtrace probes.
This is currently being used to diagnose NAT failures in PR/208566. It's
rather handy so this commit makes it available for future diagnosis and
debugging efforts.
PR: 208566
MFC after: 1 week
is defined in sys/socket.h where it's defined as 28.
A bit of trivia: On NetBSD AF_INET6 is defined as 24. On Solaris it is
defined as 26. This is probably why Darren defaulted to 26, because
ipfilter was originally written for SunOS 4 and Solaris many moons ago.
MFC after: 2 weeks
The nvlist_append_{bool,number,string,nvlist,descriptor}_array() functions
allows to dynamically extend array stored in the nvlist.
Submitted by: Mindaugas Rasiukevicius <rmind@netbsd.org>
When we are removing element form the nvlist we should also clean parent,
because the array is not a part of the nvlist anymore.
Submitted by: Mindaugas Rasiukevicius <rmind@netbsd.org>
All information which are need for those operations is already stored in
the cookie.
We decided not to bump libnv version because this API is not used yet in the
base system.
Reviewed by: pjd
If we fail noise floor calibration then we may end up with a deaf NIC
which we can't recover without a full chip reset.
Earlier chips seem to get less stuck in this condition versus AR9280/later
and AR9300/later, but whilst here just fix up the AR5212 era chips to also
return NF calibration failures.
This HAL routine would only return failure if the channel was not configured.
This is a no-op until the driver side code for doing resets and the HAL
code for being told about the reset type (and then handling it!) is
implemented.
Tested:
* AR9280, STA mode
* AR2425, STA mode
* AR9380, STA mode
Plenty of allocation sites pass M_ZERO and sizes which are small and known
at compilation time. Handling them internally in malloc loses this information
and results in avoidable calls to memset.
Instead, let the compiler take the advantage of it whenever possible.
Discussed with: jeff
I'm in the process of reworking how the reset path works with an eye
to better recovery when the chips hang and/or go RF/PHY deaf.
This is the first step in a lot of unification and API changes.
* Change ena-com BIT macro to work on unsigned value.
To make the shifting operations safer, they should be working on
unsigned values.
* Fix a mutex not owned ASSERT panic in ENA control path.
A thread calling cv_broadcast()/cv_signal() must hold the mutex used for
cv_wait(). Fix the ENA control path code that has this problem.
Submitted by: Krishna Yenduri <kyenduri@brkt.com>
Reviewed by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Tested by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
It should fix ck_pr_[load|store]_ptr on mips and riscv, make sure no
*fence instructions are used on i386, as older cpus don't support it, and
make sure we don't rely on gcc builtins that can lead to calls to
libatomic when linked with -O0.
MFC after: 1 week
Drop our local patch and restore full vanilla upstream code in
contrib/libb2.
No functional change intended. explicit_bzero() should continue to be used.
Obtained from: libb2 b4b241a34824b51956a7866606329a065d397525
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Includes our local patch to conditionalize use of __builtin_clz(ll) on
Clang's __has_builtin() (which is just defined to false when building with
GCC).
The issue is tracked upstream at https://github.com/facebook/zstd/pull/884 .
Otherwise, these are vanilla Zstandard 1.3.4 files.
Reported by: allanjude, Yann Collet
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The upstream repository is on github BLAKE2/libb2. Files landed in
sys/contrib/libb2 are the unmodified upstream files, except for one
difference: secure_zero_memory's contents have been replaced with
explicit_bzero() only because the previous implementation broke powerpc
link. Preferential use of explicit_bzero() is in progress upstream, so
it is anticipated we will be able to drop this diff in the future.
sys/crypto/blake2 contains the source files needed to port libb2 to our
build system, a wrapped (limited) variant of the algorithm to match the API
of our auth_transform softcrypto abstraction, incorporation into the Open
Crypto Framework (OCF) cryptosoft(4) driver, as well as an x86 SSE/AVX
accelerated OCF driver, blake2(4).
Optimized variants of blake2 are compiled for a number of x86 machines
(anything from SSE2 to AVX + XOP). On those machines, FPU context will need
to be explicitly saved before using blake2(4)-provided algorithms directly.
Use via cryptodev / OCF saves FPU state automatically, and use via the
auth_transform softcrypto abstraction does not use FPU.
The intent of the OCF driver is mostly to enable testing in userspace via
/dev/crypto. ATF tests are added with published KAT test vectors to
validate correctness.
Reviewed by: jhb, markj
Obtained from: github BLAKE2/libb2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14662
Link __bswap[ds]i2() intrinsics in to libzstd for riscv, where the C runtime
apparently lacks such intrinsics.
Broken in r330894.
Reported by: asomers
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Includes patch to conditionalize use of __builtin_clz(ll) on __has_builtin().
The issue is tracked upstream at https://github.com/facebook/zstd/pull/884 .
Otherwise, these are vanilla Zstandard 1.3.3 files.
Note that the 1.3.4 release should be due out soon.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Silence a Coverity warning about 'windowSize' being uninitialized.
(Yes, nothing that calls this routine actually uses the windowSize
value. Still, appeasing Coverity is pretty harmless in this case.)
Reported by: Coverity
Reviewed by: Yann Collet
Obtained from: zstd 606374269cf3485972c90b993fbb84dc20da032f
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Rename ACPI_IVRS_HARDWARE_NEW to ACPI_IVRS_HARDWARE_EFRSUP, since new definitions add Extended Feature Register support. Use IvrsType to distinguish three types of IVHD - 0x10(legacy), 0x11 and 0x40(with EFR). IVHD 0x40 is also called mixed type since it supports HID device entries.
Fix 2 coverity bugs reported by cem.
Reported by:jkim, cem
Approved by:grehan
Differential Revision://reviews.freebsd.org/D14501
Defaulting to CK_MD_RMO has the unfortunate side effect of generating
memory barriers that are useless on those arches, and the even more
unfortunate side effect of generating lfence/sfence/mfence on i386, even
if older CPUs don't support it.
This should fix the panic reported when using IPFW on a Pentium 3.
Note that mfence and sfence might still be used in a few case, but that
shouldn't happen in FreeBSD right now, and should be fixed upstream first.
MFC after: 1 week
IVRS can have entry of type legacy and non-legacy present at same time for same AMD-Vi device. ivhd driver will ignore legacy if new IVHD type is present as specified in AMD-Vi specification. Earlier both of IVHD entries used and two ivhd devices were created.
Add support for new IVHD type 0x11 and 0x40 in ACPI. Create new struct of type acpi_ivrs_hardware_new for these new type of IVHDs. Legacy type 0x10 will continue to use acpi_ivrs_hardware.
Reviewed by: avg
Approved by: grehan
Differential Revision:https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13160
The definitions otherwise leak into anything that includes zstd.h,
which is not desirable for native FreeBSD code.
Reviewed by: allanjude, cem, imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14352
Mechanically replace uses of MALLOC/FREE with appropriate invocations of
malloc(9) / free(9) (a series of sed expressions). Something like:
* MALLOC(a, b, ... -> a = malloc(...
* FREE( -> free(
* free((caddr_t) -> free(
No functional change.
For now, punt on modifying contrib ipfilter code, leaving a definition of
the macro in its KMALLOC().
Reported by: jhb
Reviewed by: cy, imp, markj, rmacklem
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14035
libfdt highlights since 1.4.3:
- fdt_property_placeholder added to create a property without specifying its
value at creation time
- stringlist helper functions added to libfdt
- Improved overlay support
- Various internal cleanup
Also switch stand/fdt over to using libfdt for overlay support with this
update. Our current overlay implementation works only for limited use cases
with overlays generated only by some specific versions of our dtc(1). Swap
it out for the libfdt implementation, which supports any properly generated
overlay being applied to a properly generated base.
This will be followed up fairly soon with an update to dtc(1) in tree to
properly generate overlays.
MFC note: the <stdlib.h> include this update introduces in libfdt_env.h is
apparently not necessary in the context we use this in. It's not immediately
clear to me the motivation for it being introduced, but it came in with
overlay support. I've left it in for the sake of accuracy and because it's
not harmful here on HEAD, but MFC'ing this to stable/11 will require
wrapping the #include in an `#ifndef _STANDALONE` block or else it will
cause build failures.
Tested on: Banana Pi-M3 (ARMv7)
Tested on: Pine64 (aarch64)
Tested on: PowerPC [nwhitehorn]
Reviewed by: manu, nwhitehorn
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13893
This is in contrib code but since we only have mallocarray(9) in current
we will not upstream this.
This effectively brings back r327934, which was reverted to correct the
log message.
Add an implementation of the intrinsics invoked by __builtin_ctz{,ll} and
__builtin_clz{,ll}, and include this compilation unit on platforms that lack
assembly intrinsics for those builtins (MIPS and RISC-V).
Future cleanup work might involve bringing these into a mini libcompiler-rt
for the standalone kernel environment. Or cleaning up the approach upstream
takes for builtins in standalone environments (or just FreeBSD). For now,
at least this builds, and doesn't require modifying the vendor code.
Reported by: jeff, markj, mizhka
Reviewed by: jhb (earlier version), rpokala (comment text earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
that was not allocated will be accessed.
This necessitated refactoring state seed allocation from
ipf_state_soft_init() into a new common ipf_state_seed_alloc() function
as it is now also used by ipf_state_rehash() when changing the size of
the state hash table in addition to by ipf_state_soft_init() during
initialization.
According to Christos Zoulas <christos@NetBSD.org>:
The bug was encountered by a NetBSD vendor who's customer machines had
large ipfilter states. The bug was reliably triggered by resizing the
state variables using "ipf -T".
Submitted by: Christos Zoulas <christos@NetBSD.org>
Reviewed by: delphij, rgrimes
Obtained from: NetBSD ip_state.c CVS revs r1.9 and r1.10
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13755
Mock userspace headers and include mocked headers first in compilation
command to inject kernel headers and override e.g., malloc(3) with
malloc(9).
Submitted by: allanjude
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), bapt (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10407
This change was made to allow zstd(1) to be a dropin replacement for gzip(1) and
friends, allowing easy integration, in particular with newsyslog(8). At the
price of having a zstd(1) command which by default behaves differently than what
upstream default, confusing users.
newsyslog(8) has been adapted to now be more flexible in what it accepts as
compression program, so we can switch back zstd(1) to its default behaviour
Reported by: many
The existing check of the GCC version number is not sufficient
This fixes the build on sparc64 in preparation for integrating ZSTD into
the kernel for ZFS and Crash Dumps.
plain-vanilla ETH microcode. The QOS_VLAN firmware added support in microcode
for handling IEEE 802.1q tags, but the npe(4) driver did not actually
support the relevant signalling. As a result, it was impossible to use
VLANs with npe(4). Switching to the more basic microcode (same license)
removes the on-NIC promisisng and makes vlan(4) work on both NPE interfaces.
Ref: https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arm/2012-August/003826.html
In addition to some small style fixes to the ARMv6 vDSO, this release
includes a new vDSO that can be used for the execution of ARMv6/ARMv7
code on 64-bit platforms.
Just like for i686 on x86-64, this new vDSO is responsible for padding
arguments and return values to 64-bit values, so that the kernel can
easily forward system calls to the native system calls.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
link-local addresses when VIMAGE is enabled will cause a so-called NULL
pointer dereferencing issue.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
The driver was printing out a lot of information upon failure, which
does not have to be interested for the user.
Changing logging level required to rebuild driver with proper flags. The
proper sysctl was added, so the level now can be changed dynamically
using bitmask.
Levels of printouts were adjusted to keep on mind end user instead of
debugging purposes.
More verbose messages were added to align the driver with the Linux.
Fix building error introduced by the r325506 by casting csum_flags to
uint64_t.
Submitted by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: byenduri_gmail.com
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12868
Compared to the previous version, v0.16, there are a couple of minor
changes:
- CLOUDABI_AT_PID: Process identifiers for CloudABI processes.
Initially, BSD process identifiers weren't exposed inside the runtime,
due to them being pretty much useless inside of a cluster computing
environment. When jobs are scheduled across systems, the BSD process
number doesn't act as an identifier. Even on individual systems they
may recycle relatively quickly.
With this change, the kernel will now generate a UUIDv4 when executing
a process. These UUIDs can be obtained within the process using
program_getpid(). Right now, FreeBSD will not attempt to store this
value. This should of course happen at some point in time, so that it
may be printed by administration tools.
- Removal of some unused structure members for polling.
With the polling framework being simplified/redesigned, it turns out
some of the structure fields were not used by the C library. We can
remove these to keep things nice and tidy.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
The newest ena-com HAL supports LLQv2 and introduces
API changes. In order not to break the driver compilation
it was updated/fixed in a following way:
* Change version of the driver to 0.8.0
* Provide reset cause when triggering reset of the device
* Reset device after attach fails
* In the reset task free management irq after calling ena_down. Admin
queue can still be used before ena_down is called, or when it is
being handled
* Do not reset device if ena_reset_task fails
* Move call of the ena_com_dev_reset to the ena_down() routine - it
should be called only if interface was up
* Use different function for checking empty space on the sq ring
(ena-com API change)
* Fix typo on ENA_TX_CLEANUP_THRESHOLD
* Change checking for EPERM with EOPNOTSUPP - change in the ena-com API
* Minor style fixes
Submitted by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Amazon.com, Inc.
Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon.com, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12143
Rework the dTSEC and FMan drivers to be more like a full bus relationship,
so that dtsec can use bus_alloc_resource() instead of trying to handle the
offset from the dts. This required taking some code from the sparc64 ebus
driver to allow subdividing the fman region for the dTSEC devices.
This adds some support for ARM as well as 64-bit. 64-bit on PowerPC is
currently not working, and ARM support has not been completed or tested on the
FreeBSD side.
As this was imported from a Linux tree, it includes some Linux-isms
(ioread/iowrite), so compile with the LinuxKPI for now. This may change in the
future.
In rS323851, some casts were adjusted in calls to nvlist_next() and
nvlist_get_pararr() in order to make scan-build happy. I think these changes
just confused scan-build into not reporting the strict-aliasing violation.
For example, nvlist_xdescriptors() is causing nvlist_next() to write to its
local variable nvp of type nvpair_t * using the lvalue *cookiep of type
void *, which is not allowed. Given the APIs of nvlist_next(),
nvlist_get_parent() and nvlist_get_pararr(), one possible fix is to create a
local void *cookie in nvlist_xdescriptors() and other places, and to convert
the value to nvpair_t * when necessary. This patch implements that fix.
Reviewed by: oshogbo
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12760
The most important change in this release is the removal of the
poll_fd() system call; CloudABI's equivalent of kevent(). Though I think
that kqueue is a lot saner than many of its alternatives, our
experience is that emulating this system call on other systems
accurately isn't easy. It has become a complex API, even though I'm not
convinced this complexity is needed. This is why we've decided to take a
different approach, by looking one layer up.
We're currently adding an event loop to CloudABI's C library that is API
compatible with libuv (except when incompatible with Capsicum).
Initially, this event loop will be built on top of plain inefficient
poll() calls. Only after this is finished, we'll work our way backwards
and design a new set of system calls to optimize it.
Interesting challenges will include integrating asynchronous I/O into
such a system call API. libuv currently doesn't aio(4) on Linux/BSD, due
to it being unreliable and having undesired semantics.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
initialize nvp on every loop iteration and the code under 'fail'(!) label
detects success by checking of nvp != NULL.
Submitted by: pjd@
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Wheel Systems
to 'fail' on error it was treated as success, because nvp!=NULL. Fix this
by not handling success under 'fail' label and by using separate variable
for parent nvpair.
If we succeeded to allocate nvlist, but failed to allocated nvpair we
would leak nvls[ii] on return. Destroy it when we cannot allocate nvpair,
before we goto fail.
Submitted by: pjd@ and oshogbo@ (minor changes)
Found by: scan-build
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Wheel Systems
initially NULL, which is not possible. Change the loop to
'do {} while (array != NULL)' to satisfy scan-build and assert that
array really cannot be NULL just in case.
Submitted by: pjd@
Found by: scan-build
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Wheel Systems
Make scan-build happy by casting to 'void *' instead of 'void **'.
Submitted by: pjd@
MFC after: 1 month
Found by: scan-build and cppcheck
Sponsored by: Wheel Systems
Now that CloudABI's sockets API has been changed to be addressless and
only connected socket instances are used (e.g., socket pairs), they have
become fairly similar to pipes. The only differences on CloudABI is that
socket pairs additionally support shutdown(), send() and recv().
To simplify the ABI, we've therefore decided to remove pipes as a
separate file descriptor type and just let pipe() return a socket pair
of type SOCK_STREAM. S_ISFIFO() and S_ISSOCK() are now defined
identically.
Now that all of the packaged software has been adjusted to either use
Flower (https://github.com/NuxiNL/flower) for making incoming/outgoing
network connections or can have connections injected, there is no longer
need to keep accept() around. It is now a lot easier to write networked
services that are address family independent, dual-stack, testable, etc.
Remove all of the bits related to accept(), but also to
getsockopt(SO_ACCEPTCONN).
With Flower (CloudABI's network connection daemon) becoming more
complete, there is no longer any need for creating any unconnected
sockets. Socket pairs in combination with file descriptor passing is all
that is necessary, as that is what is used by Flower to pass network
connections from the public internet to listening processes.
Remove all of the kernel bits that were used to implement socket(),
listen(), bindat() and connectat(). In principle, accept() and
SO_ACCEPTCONN may also be removed, but there are still some consumers
left.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
MFC after: 1 month
The CloudABI specification has had some minor changes over the last half
year. No substantial features have been added, but some features that
are deemed unnecessary in retrospect have been removed:
- mlock()/munlock():
These calls tend to be used for two different purposes: real-time
support and handling of sensitive (cryptographic) material that
shouldn't end up in swap. The former use case is out of scope for
CloudABI. The latter may also be handled by encrypting swap.
Removing this has the advantage that we no longer need to worry about
having resource limits put in place.
- SOCK_SEQPACKET:
Support for SOCK_SEQPACKET is rather inconsistent across various
operating systems. Some operating systems supported by CloudABI (e.g.,
macOS) don't support it at all. Considering that they are rarely used,
remove support for the time being.
- getsockname(), getpeername(), etc.:
A shortcoming of the sockets API is that it doesn't allow you to
create socket(pair)s, having fake socket addresses associated with
them. This makes it harder to test applications or transparently
forward (proxy) connections to them.
With CloudABI, we're slowly moving networking connectivity into a
separate daemon called Flower. In addition to passing around socket
file descriptors, this daemon provides address information in the form
of arbitrary string labels. There is thus no longer any need for
requesting socket address information from the kernel itself.
This change also updates consumers of the generated code accordingly.
Even though system calls end up getting renumbered, this won't cause any
problems in practice. CloudABI programs always call into the kernel
through a kernel-supplied vDSO that has the numbers updated as well.
Obtained from: https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudabi
list.h includes a number of FreeBSD headers as a workaround for the
LIST_HEAD name collision. To reduce pollution, avoid including list.h
in commonly used headers when it is not explicitly needed.
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11249
This patch currently supports:
- ibcore as a kernel module only
- krping as a kernel module only
- ipoib as a kernel module only
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
It turns out that this is useful on hornet and wasp SoCs but it isn't
enabled in ye olde HAL /unless/ you were using a version from one of the
business units building USB targetted devices. It eventually got fixed
for all of them as people started wanting to use the USB ports on their
SoCs (eg for flash storage, bluetooth, 4G/LTE widgets, etc.)
This is actually a fix from ath9k but I'm merging it with the available-but-
disabled code in the QCA reference HAL.
Tested:
* AR9331 SoC
Summary:
The Ubiquiti Unifi Security Gateway is virtually identical to the
EdgeRouter Lite, with a smaller PCB and apparently a different board identifier.
Simply adding the new board identifier alongside the ERL identifier, FreeBSD
boots successfully, and can access the needed peripherals (tested with USB
booting, and basic pings on one ethernet interface)
Reviewed By: adrian
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10639
ipfilter man pages. This also currently restricts keep frags to only when
keep state is used, which is redundant because keep state currently
assumes keep frags. This commit fixes this.
To the user this change means that to maintain the current behaviour
one must add keep frags to any ipfilter keep state rule (as documented
in the man pages).
This patch also allows the flexability to specify and use keep frags
separate from keep state, as documented in an example in ipf.conf.5,
instead of the currently broken behaviour.
Relnotes: yes
Memory is malloc'd, then a search for a match in the fragment table
is made and if the fragment matches, the wrong fragment table is
freed, causing a use after free panic. This commit fixes this.
A symptom of the problem is a kernel page fault in bcopy() called by
ipf_frag_lookup() at line 715 in ip_frag.c. Another symptom is a
kernel page fault in ipf_frag_delete() when called by ipf_frag_expire()
via ipf_slowtimer().
MFC after: 1 week
from the .depend files after the build:
cp -r ../vendor/edk2/MdePkg/Include sys/contrib/edk2
cd lib/libefivar
make
pushd `make -V .OBJDIR`
cat .depend*.o | grep sys/contrib | cut -d' ' -f 3 |
sort -u | sed -e 's=/full/path/sys/contrib/edk2/==' > /tmp/xxx
popd
cd ../../sys/contrib/edk2
rm -rf Include
for i in `cat /tmp/xxx`; do
svn cp svn+ssh://repo.freebsd.org/base/vendor/edk2/dist/MdePkg/$i $i
done
svn cp svn+ssh://repo.freebsd.org/base/vendor/edk2/dist/MdePkg/MdePkg.dec .
The original EDK2 repo is ~265MB, the MdePkg is ~23MB, all
MdePkg/Includes is ~7MB and this minimal set is ~1.3MB.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.
Submitted by: Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
* flesh out a "get default DFS parameters" routine
* remove the stub that returns NULL
* fix up the enable DFS method to do what FreeBSD does - specifically, allow pe_enabled
to be set/cleared.
This allows the radar pulse reporting code to function, but it doesn't yet
do anything useful.
* add debugging
* disable the manual noise floor calibration and tracking done by the HAL;
this interferes with the normal calibration path and will lock up the RX
side
* don't program short report / priority if they're provided as NOVAL.
under a shared read lock. This patch attempts to upgrade the lock to
an exclusive write lock. If the exclusive write lock fails to be
obtained, the current fragment is not placed at the head of the list.
This portion of the patch was inspired by NetBSD ip_frag.c r1.4 (which
effectively removed the section of code that performed the reordering).
The patch to sys/contrib/ipfilter/netinet/ip_compat.h adds the
MUTEX_TRY_UPGRADE macro to support the patch to ip_frag.c.
The patch to contrib/ipfilter/lib/rwlock_emul.c supports this patch
by emulating the mutex in userspace when exercised by ipftest(1).
Inspired by: NetBSD ip_frag.c r1.4
MFC after: 1 month
Languages like C++17 and Go provide direct support for slice types:
pointer/length pairs. The CloudABI generator now has more complete for
this, meaning that for the C binding, pointer/length pairs now use an
automatic naming scheme of ${name} and ${name}_len.
Apart from this change and some reformatting, the ABI definitions are
identical. Binary compatibility is preserved entirely.
Include netinet/in.h before ip_compat.t which will then check if
IPPROTO_IPIP is defined or not. Doing it the other way round,
ip_compat.h would not find it defined and netinet/in.h then
redefine it.