Create libdl.so.1 as a filter for libc.so.7 which exports public dl*
functions. The functions are resolved from the rtld instead, the goal
of creating library is to avoid errors from the static linker due to
missed libdl. For static binaries, an empty .o is compiled into
libdl.a so that static binaries still get dl stubs from libc.a.
Right now lld cannot create filter objects, disable libdl on arm64
when binutils are not used.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, dim (previos version); emaste
Exp run: PR 220525, done by antoine
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11504
The benefit of BIT_FLS() is that ffsl() can be implemented with a
count leading zeros instruction which is more widespread available.
Submitted by: Sebastian Huber <sebastian.huber@embedded-brains.de>
MFC after: 1 week
`MK_ZONEINFO_LEAPSECONDS_SUPPORT == yes` and
`MK_ZONEINFO_OLD_TIMEZONES_SUPPORT == yes`.
Keep `LEAPSECONDS` and `OLDTIMEZONES` for backwards compatibility,
but print out a warning notifying users that they should use the new
variables, in an effort to migrate them to the variables. This is being
done mostly for automated build tools, etc, that might rely on these
variables being set. The variables will be removed in the future on
^/head, e.g., after ^/stable/12 is cut.
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Reviewed by: bdrewery
Differential Revision: D11376
the terminal work properly out of the box when logging over a serial
line, which is quite important for the user experience on boards like
Raspberry Pi. It doesn't affect cases where the terminal size is
already non-zero, such as SSH or vt(4) sessions.
Note that this doesn't handle a scenario pointed out by rgrimes@:
when the terminal is resized after login, the terminal size won't
get updated even after logging out and back in.
Reviewed by: imp
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10642
- Address most of the post-commit comments on D11128.[1]
- Reference the man pages for the lock types supported by the provider.
- Add a BUGS section.
- Eliminate some redundancy by describing similar probes in the same
paragraph.
- Fix several inaccuracies, particularly in the probe argument
descriptions.
Submitted by: wblock [1]
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11293
Instead of using GID_FT SNS request to get list of registered FCP ports,
use GID_PT to get list of all Nx_Ports, and then use GFF_ID and/or GFT_ID
requests to find whether they are FCP and target capable.
The problem with old approach is that GID_FT does not report ports without
FC-4 type registered. In particular it was impossible to boot OS from
FreeBSD FC target using QLogic FC BIOS, since one does not register FC-4
type even on new cards and so ignored by old code as incompatible.
As a side bonus this allows initiator to skip pointless logins to other
initiators by fetching that information from SNS instead.
In case some switches do not implement GFF_ID/GFT_ID correctly, add sysctls
to disable that functionality. I handled broken GFF_ID of my Brocade 200E,
but there may be other switches with different bugs.
Linux also uses GID_PT, but GFF_ID is disabled by default there, and GFT_ID
is not supported.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
In some cases bsd.linker.mk reports an error like:
make[4]: ".../share/mk/bsd.linker.mk" line 56:
Unknown linker from LD=ld -m elf32ppc_fbsd:"
For now change this to a .warning, and then assume GNU ld 2.17.50.
At present the linker type detection is used only for enabling build-id,
and we can carry on without it when type detection fails.
Also, show errors from ${LD} --version to aid in failure diagnosis.
Successful invocations of ${LD} --version produce no output on stderr
so this will not create any spam in non-failing builds.
Tested by: swills
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11424
- Including bsd.own.mk isn't required since no MK_<foo> knobs are being
manipulated.
- Update documentation to note that ${FILES} is installed via bsd.progs.mk,
not bsd.prog.mk.
MFC after: 1 month
- TESTSDIR doesn't need to be specified after r289158.
- Including bsd.own.mk isn't required since no MK_<foo> knobs are being
manipulated.
- TESTS_SUBDIRS should be written out in an append format, one entry
per line, to provide a better, more conflict resistant example.
MFC after: 1 month
AKA Make time_t 64 bits on powerpc(32).
PowerPC currently (until now) was one of two architectures with a 32-bit time_t
on 32-bit archs (the other being i386). This is an ABI breakage, so all ports,
and all local binaries, *must* be recompiled.
Tested by: andreast, others
MFC after: Never
Relnotes: Yes
GNU binutils includes two linkers: ld.bfd and ld.gold. For clarity use
LINKER_TYPE=bfd to refer to ld.bfd, the original binutils linker that
identifies itself as "GNU ld".
Discussed with: bdrewery
The ports binutils stores the version in the 5th word so just look for
a version using a pattern instead.
Reported by: rpokala
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This is similar to r289659 for bsd.compiler.mk.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11310
This is similar to r300350 for bsd.compiler.mk.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11309
- Rename _SKIP_READ_DEPEND to _SKIP_DEPEND since it also avoids writing.
- This now uses .NOMETA to avoid reading any .meta files related to
DEPENDOBJS. Objects not in OBJS/DEPENDOBJS may still have their .meta
files read in if they are in the dependency graph.
- This also avoids statting .meta and .depend files in the META_MODE +
-DNO_FILEMON case.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Otherwise in META_MODE it may create an objwarn.meta if only bsd.obj.mk
is included; bsd.sys.mk already had .PHONY: objwarn.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This likely broke completely with r308599.
Apply the same fix for 'make destroy' which is a DIRDEPS_BUILD thing.
PR: 219819
Reported by: trasz
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
LIBADD is only supported for in-tree builds because we do not install
share/mk/src.libnames.mk (which provides LIBADD support) into /usr/share/mk.
So if a partial checkout is done then the LIBADDs are ignored and no LDADD is
ever added.
Provide limited support for this case for when LIBADD is composed entirely of
base libraries. This is to avoid clashes with ports and other out-of-tree
LIBADD uses that should not be mapped to LDADD and because we do not want to
support LIBADD out-of-tree right now.
Reported by: mckusick, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The BSDL dtc has grown the needed features (overlays mostly) and is able to
compile all of our base DTS.
You can use WITH_GPL_DTC is you need the GPL one or DTC= in make.conf(5)
to specify an alternate location for the compiler to use.
Discussed with: emaste, imp
Since buildenv exports SYSROOT all of these uses will now look in
WORLDTMP by default.
sys/boot/efi/loader/Makefile
A LIBSTAND hack is no longer required for buildenv.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Add a make.conf DTC variable that control which DTC (Device Tree Compiler)
to use.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9577
This fixes these cases which would rebuild every time:
make[6]: /usr/obj/usr/src/libexec/rtld-elf/tests/libpythagoras/.depend, 1: ignoring stale .depend for /usr/obj/usr/src/tmp/usr/tests/libexec/rtld-elf/libm.a
make[6]: /usr/obj/usr/src/lib/libxo/tests/encoder/.depend, 1: ignoring stale .depend for /usr/obj/usr/src/tmp/usr/tests/lib/libxo/libxo.a
make[7]: /usr/obj/usr/src/lib/libthr/tests/dlopen/dso/.depend, 1: ignoring stale .depend for /usr/obj/usr/src/tmp/usr/tests/lib/libthr/dlopen/libpthread.a
The problem is that some Makefiles will override LIBDIR to where they want
their library to install. bsd.libnames.mk will then use ${LIBDIR} to define
where *existing* libraries are. This then leads to looking for the
libraries in the *target* place rather than the *expected* place.
We may want to expand this (and all of the other *DIR variables in bsd.own.mk)
into something like what Ports has, a PREFIX and a LOCALBASE. PREFIX being
where things are being installed to and LOCALBASE being where they already are.
For now store the default expected LIBDIR into LIBDIR_BASE and use that for
library locations.
Reported by: sbruno
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This uses a hack to get the CMD from the meta file rather than
.ERROR_CMD since bmake currently blanks the value for non-jobs
mode.
Reviewed by: sjg (indirectly)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Zap trailing white and double spaces
Remove extra coma which is not required.
Bump date.
Reviewed by: gnn
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11142
stack modules.
It adds support for mangling symbols exported by a module by prepending
a string to them. (This avoids overlapping symbols in the kernel linker.)
It allows the use of a macro as the module name in the DECLARE_MACRO()
and MACRO_VERSION() macros.
It allows the code to register stack aliases (e.g. both a generic name
["default"] and version-specific name ["default_10_3p1"]).
With these changes, it is trivial to compile TCP stack modules with
the name defined in the Makefile and to load multiple versions of the
same stack simultaneously. This functionality can be used to enable
side-by-side testing of an old and new version of the same TCP stack.
It also could support upgrading the TCP stack without a reboot.
Reviewed by: gnn, sjg (makefiles only)
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11086
All manpages in base are now compatible with mandoc(1), all roff documentation
will be relocated in the doc tree. man(1) can now use groff from the ports tree
if it needs.
Also remove checknr(1) and colcrt(1) which are only useful with groff.
Approved by: (no objections on the mailing lists)
Normally META_MODE ignores host files for "meta mode" decisions on whether a
file should be rebuilt or not. This is because a simple installworld can
update timestamps and cause the next build to rebuild all host tools, when the
previous ones may not have any changes in the source tree. These tools are
normally still ABI compatible. They are only rebuilt if NO_META_IGNORE_HOST is
set from the workaround/hack in r301467.
One of the major problems with this is when a host tool has objects spread
across many revisions that have mixed-ABI. For example, if struct stat were to
change on the host, some objects for a tool may have different ideas of that
struct's definition. If just 1 source file were modified and rebuilt and
linked into the tool, then that toll will have mixed-ABI objects and crash.
This exact thing happened with the ino64 commit in r301467 followed by a
trivial update to libbfd in r318750. The resulting binary would crash in
buildworld.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
See r301467 for more details on NO_META_IGNORE_HOST. Usually the full
list of host ignores should have no real impact on the host tools. The
headers however may reliably define what the ABI is for the host. It
may be useful to allow using the headers for the build but still not
caring about things like /bin/sh, /lib/libedit.so, etc.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Update the documentation to catch up with r273174, which renamed
getenv -> kern_getenv
setenv -> kern_setenv
unsetenv -> kern_unsetenv
Leave the old links in place to support finger memory.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
The INSTALL_AS_USER option tells "install" to use the current
user name as the owner of the installed file. The "install"
command executed by the build is statically linked, so it does not
load nsswitch modules, such as nss_ldap.so, so it fails when
the user is only defined in such a database.
Fix it to use the current UID instead of user name. This works
for all users. I expect it is also slightly more efficient.
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10862
Move INSTALL_AS_USER into bsd.init.mk to maximize the chance that
it has final authority over fooOWN and fooGRP.
Reviewed by: sjg
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10810
In FreeBSD we only use mdoc(7) format. A template is available as mdoc.template
The usage of man(7) format is discouraged and this file was driving people into
the front direction as a template to use.
roff documentation from the build.
Those documents will be added to the doc tree and distributed as PDF from
the documentation website. As they are valuable has history, but do not match
current FreeBSD
Further more, the ascii format we were using to distribute them is not really
accurate for such documents.
more details:
https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2017-May/018211.html
bhyve was recently sandboxed with capsicum, and needs to be able to
control the CPU sets of its vcpu threads
Reviewed by: emaste, oshogbo, rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10170
user (with -DNO_ROOT), resulted in warnings looking like these:
share/man/cat8:
user (9, 3819, not modified: Operation not permitted)
permissions (0755, 0700, modified)
The BSD.usr.mk is already taken care of in etc/Makefile.
Submitted by: Alex Richardson <alr48@cl.cam.ac.uk>
Reviewed by: bdrewery
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9212
Extend the ino_t, dev_t, nlink_t types to 64-bit ints. Modify
struct dirent layout to add d_off, increase the size of d_fileno
to 64-bits, increase the size of d_namlen to 16-bits, and change
the required alignment. Increase struct statfs f_mntfromname[] and
f_mntonname[] array length MNAMELEN to 1024.
ABI breakage is mitigated by providing compatibility using versioned
symbols, ingenious use of the existing padding in structures, and
by employing other tricks. Unfortunately, not everything can be
fixed, especially outside the base system. For instance, third-party
APIs which pass struct stat around are broken in backward and
forward incompatible ways.
Kinfo sysctl MIBs ABI is changed in backward-compatible way, but
there is no general mechanism to handle other sysctl MIBS which
return structures where the layout has changed. It was considered
that the breakage is either in the management interfaces, where we
usually allow ABI slip, or is not important.
Struct xvnode changed layout, no compat shims are provided.
For struct xtty, dev_t tty device member was reduced to uint32_t.
It was decided that keeping ABI compat in this case is more useful
than reporting 64-bit dev_t, for the sake of pstat.
Update note: strictly follow the instructions in UPDATING. Build
and install the new kernel with COMPAT_FREEBSD11 option enabled,
then reboot, and only then install new world.
Credits: The 64-bit inode project, also known as ino64, started life
many years ago as a project by Gleb Kurtsou (gleb). Kirk McKusick
(mckusick) then picked up and updated the patch, and acted as a
flag-waver. Feedback, suggestions, and discussions were carried
by Ed Maste (emaste), John Baldwin (jhb), Jilles Tjoelker (jilles),
and Rick Macklem (rmacklem). Kris Moore (kris) performed an initial
ports investigation followed by an exp-run by Antoine Brodin (antoine).
Essential and all-embracing testing was done by Peter Holm (pho).
The heavy lifting of coordinating all these efforts and bringing the
project to completion were done by Konstantin Belousov (kib).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation (emaste, kib)
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10439
ENA is a networking interface designed to make good use of modern CPU
features and system architectures.
The ENA device exposes a lightweight management interface with a
minimal set of memory mapped registers and extendable command set
through an Admin Queue.
The driver supports a range of ENA devices, is link-speed independent
(i.e., the same driver is used for 10GbE, 25GbE, 40GbE, etc.), and has
a negotiated and extendable feature set.
Some ENA devices support SR-IOV. This driver is used for both the
SR-IOV Physical Function (PF) and Virtual Function (VF) devices.
ENA devices enable high speed and low overhead network traffic
processing by providing multiple Tx/Rx queue pairs (the maximum number
is advertised by the device via the Admin Queue), a dedicated MSI-X
interrupt vector per Tx/Rx queue pair, and CPU cacheline optimized
data placement.
The ENA driver supports industry standard TCP/IP offload features such
as checksum offload and TCP transmit segmentation offload (TSO).
Receive-side scaling (RSS) is supported for multi-core scaling.
The ENA driver and its corresponding devices implement health
monitoring mechanisms such as watchdog, enabling the device and driver
to recover in a manner transparent to the application, as well as
debug logs.
Some of the ENA devices support a working mode called Low-latency
Queue (LLQ), which saves several more microseconds. This feature will
be implemented for driver in future releases.
Submitted by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Jakub Palider <jpa@semihalf.com>
Jan Medala <jan@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon.com Inc.
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10427
The ccr(4) driver supports use of the crypto accelerator engine on
Chelsio T6 NICs in "lookaside" mode via the opencrypto framework.
Currently, the driver supports AES-CBC, AES-CTR, AES-GCM, and AES-XTS
cipher algorithms as well as the SHA1-HMAC, SHA2-256-HMAC, SHA2-384-HMAC,
and SHA2-512-HMAC authentication algorithms. The driver also supports
chaining one of AES-CBC, AES-CTR, or AES-XTS with an authentication
algorithm for encrypt-then-authenticate operations.
Note that this driver is still under active development and testing and
may not yet be ready for production use. It does pass the tests in
tests/sys/opencrypto with the exception that the AES-GCM implementation
in the driver does not yet support requests with a zero byte payload.
To use this driver currently, the "uwire" configuration must be used
along with explicitly enabling support for lookaside crypto capabilities
in the cxgbe(4) driver. These can be done by setting the following
tunables before loading the cxgbe(4) driver:
hw.cxgbe.config_file=uwire
hw.cxgbe.cryptocaps_allowed=-1
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10763
This includes NVMe device support and adds support for the following adapters:
SAS 3408
SAS 3416
SAS 3508
SAS 3516
SAS 3616
SAS 3708
SAS 3716
Reviewed by: ken, scottl, asomers, mav
Approved by: ken, scottl, mav
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10095
This function permits a range of one scatter/gather list to be appended to
another sglist. This can be used to construct a scatter/gather list that
reorders or duplicates ranges from one or more existing scatter/gather
lists.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
to the example, change the architectures to something more common,
and improve description of defaults for TARGET.
Reviewed by: bdrewery, ngie, imp (older revisions)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10654
This allows for building the world against the already-created
host/sysroot environment. It is not overly useful outside of cases of
large-impact changes such as a testing a new compiler. It will
allow quickly getting back to an error in the target-phases of the
build where a new compiler is being used.
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This could be seen in lib/libkvm/tests where kvm_test_common.o was
a common dependency, but one of the recursed progs had a special
CFLAGS+= -I that changed the build command. This would cause
all recursed builds to rebuild while fighting over the meta file
and object file.
Reported by: Mark Millard
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Also fix bad whitespace in sort_unique after r314809.
The parse_path syntax error came up in DIRDEPS_BUILD as the following
and emptied out all Makefile.depend files due to it:
# python share/mk/meta2deps.py
File "share/mk/meta2deps.py", line 538
rdir = os.path.realpath(dir)
^
IndentationError: unexpected indent
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Attempt to catch up to the KPI changes from r292373, and perform
some other tidying while in the area.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10579
This will help application developers simulate end of tape conditions.
To inject an error in sa0:
sysctl kern.cam.sa.0.inject_eom=1
This will return the next read or write request queued with 0 bytes
written. Any subsequent writes or reads will go along as usual.
This will also cause the early warning position flag to get set
for the next position query. So, 'mt status' will show the BPEW
(Beyond Programmable Early Warning) flag on the first query after
an error injection. After that, the position flags will be as they
are in the underlying tape drive.
Also, update the sa(4) man page to describe tape parameters,
which can be set via 'mt param'.
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_sa.c:
In saregister(), create the inject_eom sysctl variable.
In sastart(), check to see whether inject_eom is set. If
so, return the read or write with 0 bytes written to
indicate EOM. Set the set_pews_status flag so that we
fake PEWS status in the next position call for reads, and the
next 3 calls for writes. This allows the user to see the BPEW
flag one time via 'mt status'.
In sagetpos(), check the set_pews_status flag and fake
PEWS status and decrement the counter if it is set.
share/man/man4/sa.4:
Document the inject_eom sysctl variable.
Document all of the parameters currently supported via
'mt param'.
usr.bin/mt/mt.1:
Point the user to the sa(4) man page for more details on
supported parameters.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
Start with some words about linear address space and its layout, then
explain pointers models and ABIs, providing explanation to the
structure of the tables.
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
'Future-proof' cheri wording by: brooks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10596
After FreeBSD SVN revision 236814, the pass(4) driver changed from
only doing error recovery when the CAM_PASS_ERR_RECOVER flag was
set on a CCB to sometimes doing error recovery if the passed in
retry count was non-zero.
Error recovery would happen if two conditions were met:
1. The error recovery action was simply a retry. (Which is most
cases.)
2. The retry_count is non-zero. (Which happened a lot because of
cut-and-pasted code.)
This explains a bug I noticed in with camcontrol:
# camcontrol tur da34 -v
Unit is ready
# camcontrol reset da34
Reset of 1:172:0 was successful
At this point, there should be a Unit Attention:
# camcontrol tur da34 -v
Unit is ready
No Unit Attention.
Try it again:
# camcontrol reset da34
Reset of 1:172:0 was successful
Now set the retry_count to 0 for the TUR:
# camcontrol tur da34 -v -C 0
Unit is not ready
(pass42:mps1:0:172:0): TEST UNIT READY. CDB: 00 00 00 00 00 00
(pass42:mps1:0:172:0): CAM status: SCSI Status Error
(pass42:mps1:0:172:0): SCSI status: Check Condition
(pass42:mps1:0:172:0): SCSI sense: UNIT ATTENTION asc:29,2 (SCSI bus reset occurred)
(pass42:mps1:0:172:0): Field Replaceable Unit: 2
There is the unit attention. camcontrol(8) has a default
retry_count of 1, in case someone sets the -E flag without
setting -C.
The CAM_PASS_ERR_RECOVER behavior was only broken with the
CAMIOCOMMAND ioctl, which is the synchronous pass(4) API. It has
worked as intended (error recovery is only done when the flag
is set) in the asynchronous API (CAMIOQUEUE ioctl).
sys/cam/scsi/scsi_pass.c:
In passsendccb(), when calling cam_periph_runccb(), only
specify the error routine when CAM_PASS_ERR_RECOVER is set.
share/man/man4/pass.4:
Document that CAM_PASS_ERR_RECOVER is needed to enable
error recovery.
Reported by: Terry Kennedy <TERRY@glaver.org>
PR: kern/218572
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
r316647 corrected the build of tblgen and libllvm as dependencies for
LLD so undo the temporary seat-belt.
We still want to extend the build infrastructure to automatically detect
the case where the host LLD can be used instead of building a bootstrap
LLD, and likely extend libllvmminimal to meet LLD's needs for cases
where the build includes LLD but not Clang.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
1. Wrap at <80 columns for readability when editing. Rewrap some lines
prematurely wrapped to better fit in <80 columns and not waste
vertical space.
2. Fix SEE ALSO sorting (sort by section first, then manpage name).
3. Tweak the compound device description slightly by adding soft stops
via commas.
MFC after: 1 week
Reported by: igor [3], manlint [2]
Sponsored by Dell EMC Isilon
When this option is enabled, only gdb and kgdb are installed to
/usr/libexec for use by crashinfo(8). Other bits of GDB such as
gdbserver and gdbtui are not installed. For this option to be
effective, GDB must be enabled.
Rework r317094 to re-enable GDB on all platforms but enable
GDB_LIBEXEC on platforms for which the GDB in ports is a superset of
functionality.
Reviewed by: emaste, kib
Suggested by: kib
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10449
patm(4) devices.
Maintaining an address family and framework has real costs when we make
infrastructure improvements. In the case of NATM we support no devices
manufactured in the last 20 years and some will not even work in modern
motherboards (some newer devices that patm(4) could be updated to
support apparently exist, but we do not currently have support).
With this change, support remains for some netgraph modules that don't
require NATM support code. It is unclear if all these should remain,
though ng_atmllc certainly stands alone.
Note well: FreeBSD 11 supports NATM and will continue to do so until at
least September 30, 2021. Improvements to the code in FreeBSD 11 are
certainly welcome.
Reviewed by: philip
Approved by: harti
The GNU extension bits in the base system are old, no longer faithful
to upstream, and surprising in some regards. Switch to documenting
WITH_GNU_GREP_COMPAT and default GNU_GREP_COMPAT to OFF in the name of
good behavior.
According to http://www.regular-expressions.info, GNU extensions:
- Add missing quantifiers to BREs: \?, \+
- Add branching to BREs: \|
- Add backreferences (\1 through \9) to EREs
- Add \w, \W, \s, and \S corresponding to :alnum:, [^[:alnum:]],
:space:, and [^[:space:]] respectively
- Add word boundaries and anchors:
\b: word boundary
\B: not word boundary
\<: Strt of word
\>: End of word
\`: Start of subject string
\': End of subject string
These extensions are still available in /usr/bin/grep by default today,
as it is still GNU grep. As part of the bsdgrep migration plan these
extensions may be added to bsdgrep's regex support if necessary.
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: cem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10114
Bugs have been found in the fastmatch implementation as used in bsdgrep.
Some have been fixed (r316495) while fixes for others are in review
(D10098).
In comparison with the fastmatch implementation, Kyle Evans found that:
- regex(3)'s performance with literal expressions offers a speed
improvement over fastmatch
- regex(3)'s performance, both with simple BREs and EREs, seems to be
comparable
The regex implementation was imported in r226035, and the commit message
reports:
This is a temporary solution until the whole regex library is
not replaced so that BSD grep development can continue and the
backported code gets some review and testing. This change only
improves scalability slightly, there is no big performance boost
yet but several minor bugs have been found and fixed.
Introduce a WITH_/WITHOUT_BSD_GREP_FASTMATCH knob to support testing
of both approaches.
PR: 175314, 194823
Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu>
Reviewed by: bdrewery (in part)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10282