We currently use a set of subroutines in kern_gzio.c to perform
compression of user and kernel core dumps. In the interest of adding
support for other compression algorithms (zstd) in this role without
complicating the API consumers, add a simple compressor API which can be
used to select an algorithm.
Also change the (non-default) GZIO kernel option to not enable
compressed user cores by default. It's not clear that such a default
would be desirable with support for multiple algorithms implemented,
and it's inconsistent in that it isn't applied to kernel dumps.
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13632
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
In the freestanding boot compile environment, standard headers are not
available. Curiously, only building with clang exposed this as compiles
with external GCC still succeeded.
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
The __dmadat variable is a statically allocated I/O buffer. The type is
declared in the ufsread.c source file and clang warns if a variable is
defined before it's type is declared.
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
malloc(9): drop the __result_use_check attribute for the kernel allocator.
My bad: __result_use_check just checks the for the general and we always
want to make sure allocated memory is used, not only checked for nullness.
Add it to reallocf since that was missing.
The __result_use_check attribute was brought to the kernel malloc in
r281203 for consistency with the userland malloc.
For the case of the M_WAITOK flag, the kernel malloc(), realloc(), and
reallocf() cannot return NULL so in that case the __result_use_check
attribute makes no sense.
We don't have any way of conditionalizing such attributes so just drop it.
MFC after: 3 days
Reduce the geli tests' runtime by about a third:
* In integrity_test:copy, use a file-backed md(4) device instead of a
malloc'd one. That way we can corrupt the underlying storage without
needing to detach and reattach the geli device.
* In integrity_test:{copy, hmac, data} and onetime_test:{onetime,
onetime_a}, move reads of /dev/random out of the loop.
MFC after: 2 weeks
pfioctl() handles several ioctl that takes variable length input, these
include:
- DIOCRADDTABLES
- DIOCRDELTABLES
- DIOCRGETTABLES
- DIOCRGETTSTATS
- DIOCRCLRTSTATS
- DIOCRSETTFLAGS
All of them take a pfioc_table struct as input from userland. One of
its elements (pfrio_size) is used in a buffer length calculation.
The calculation contains an integer overflow which if triggered can lead
to out of bound reads and writes later on.
Reported by: Ilja Van Sprundel <ivansprundel@ioactive.com>
Similar to calloc() the mallocarray() function checks for integer
overflows before allocating memory.
It does not zero memory, unless the M_ZERO flag is set.
Reviewed by: pfg, vangyzen (previous version), imp (previous version)
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13766
The previous language did not make it clear that 'Files' are
the files specified above. Clarify it.
Reported by: dana <dana@dana.is>
Reviewed by: dana <dana@dana.is>
MFC After: 1 week
The sid controller on the H3 is generally identical in location, size, and
efuse offset to the a64 and the a83t. The main difference is that the H3 has
a silicon bug that sometimes causes the rootkey (at least) to be garbled
unless first read by the prctl registers.
This device is currently not in our DTS and, as of now, is not yet present
in mainline Linux DTS.
Tested on: OrangePi One
Technically supported on the later SoCs, this will only really be used to
add support for the H3 sid. The H3 has a silicon bug that manifests itself
by returning garbled rootkeys unless first read via the prctl registers.
The trick is not to destroy an md(4) device during a test. That can create
a "double-free" situation, because we also destroy md devices during test
cleanup.
MFC after: 2 weeks
ian@ pointed out that BUS_PASS_DEFAULT + $anything is bogus, given that
BUS_PASS_DEFAULT is defined as __INT_MAX. Instead, we take a page out of
imx6_usbphy's book and use BUS_PASS_DEFAULT - 1000 to achieve the desired
effect of syscon_generic attaching before if_awg and other potential
consumers, but late enough that more specialized implementations should have
no problem attaching instead.
Reported by: ian
I'm leaving readonly_test and nokey_test alone for now. In a future commit
they should be broken up into several smaller test cases and distributed
between multiple files.
Reviewed by: ngie
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13717
It still needs to be before if_awg at least in order to be available for
other operations, but it should not be attaching before interrupt
controllers at the very least.
This should make errors involving syscon register space colliding with other
devices a little more innocent, but these conflicts should really be tracked
down and resolved. One such conflict is with the Raspberry Pi 3 local
interrupt controller, noticed by tuexen@
Reported by: tuexen
- Use `-r` for "reverse" mode and to match DragonFlyBSD.
- Move defines around to clear up logic
- use `errx` instead of `fprintf` and `exit`
PR: 35109
Submitted By: philipp.mergenthaler@stud.uni-karlsruhe.de
Submitted on: 2002-02-19
Reviewed by: kevans