LLDB depends on libclang as it uses Clang as the expression parser.
Previously setting WITHOUT_CLANG but leaving LLDB enabled (as default)
resulted in a build failure.
Users who set WITHOUT_CLANG in order to reduce build time or size
might want to set WITHOUT_LLDB in addition to WITHOUT_CLANG, or use
WITHOUT_TOOLCHAIN instead.
PR: 260993
Reported by: eugen
Reviewed by: dim
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Darwin/macOS does not have pipe2(2).
Apply a similar guard as in f3d7ace4b235422e5ccff0315f2965ac935241d8
after 43a5ec4eb41567cc92586503212743d89686d78f.
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src/pull/574
It turns out that we still need xlocal.h protection for when we're
cross building on Linux. Linux doesn't have this file, but os/x
does. Before, we'd assume we didn't have it, like old FreeBSD, when
cross compiling. After the latest update, all that code was removed so
cross compiling needs to be handled separaetly. Do so by defining
HAVE_XLOCALE_H only when we're not building on linux. This allows us
to build the mkmagic build tool needed to build file(1).
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: jrtc27
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33741
in handling the cpuset sizes different from sizeof(cpuset_t).
For both cases, cpuset size shorter than sizeof(cpuset_t) results
in EINVAL on Linux.
For sched_getaffinity(), be more permissive and accept cpuset size
larger than our cpuset_t, by clipping the syscall argument and zeroing
the rest of the output buffer. For sched_setaffinity(), we should allow
shorter cpusets than current ABI size, again zeroing the rest of the bits.
With this change, python os.sched_get/setaffinity functions work.
Reported by: se
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
The MINIMUM_SUPPORTED_OSREL is 1002501 (FreeBSD 10.3), and xlocale is
supported there.
While I'm there, explicitly use config.h generated with --disable-bzlib
--disable-xzlib instead of deleting them manually.
MFC after: 2 weeks
If I'm not mistaken, the underlying sendmsg() for nvlist_send() is
failing with ENOBUFS. In turn, nvlist_recv() returns NULL because it
didn't receive the expected number of file descriptors.
Adjusting net.local.dgram.recvspace worked on my local machine, but on
CI the test still fails consistently.
PR: 260891
This is a re-application of commit
2d82b47a5b4ef18550565dd55628d51f54d0af2e, which was reverted since it
broke with syslog daemons that don't adjust the /dev/log recv buffer
size. Now that the default is large enough to accomodate 8KB messages,
restore support for large messages.
PR: 260126
As with other runtime components like libc or libcxxrt.
If desired we can stop linking devd statically after this change (to
achive approximately no net change in required root filesystem size).
We must set SHLIBDIR with ?= before including <src.opts.mk>, otherwise
that will have set SHBLIDIR to its default value of /usr/lib.
Otherwise, "make delete-old-libs" would suggest to delete libc++.so.1
from /usr/lib, while there was not yet a copy in /lib.
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33123
The introduction of <sched.h> improved compatibility with some 3rd
party software, but caused the configure scripts of some ports to
assume that they were run in a GLIBC compatible environment.
Parts of sched.h were made conditional on -D_WITH_CPU_SET_T being
added to ports, but there still were compatibility issues due to
invalid assumptions made in autoconfigure scripts.
The differences between the FreeBSD version of macros like CPU_AND,
CPU_OR, etc. and the GLIBC versions was in the number of arguments:
FreeBSD used a 2-address scheme (one source argument is also used as
the destination of the operation), while GLIBC uses a 3-adderess
scheme (2 source operands and a separately passed destination).
The GLIBC scheme provides a super-set of the functionality of the
FreeBSD macros, since it does not prevent passing the same variable
as source and destination arguments. In code that wanted to preserve
both source arguments, the FreeBSD macros required a temporary copy of
one of the source arguments.
This patch set allows to unconditionally provide functions and macros
expected by 3rd party software written for GLIBC based systems, but
breaks builds of externally maintained sources that use any of the
following macros: CPU_AND, CPU_ANDNOT, CPU_OR, CPU_XOR.
One contributed driver (contrib/ofed/libmlx5) has been patched to
support both the old and the new CPU_OR signatures. If this commit
is merged to -STABLE, the version test will have to be extended to
cover more ranges.
Ports that have added -D_WITH_CPU_SET_T to build on -CURRENT do
no longer require that option.
The FreeBSD version has been bumped to 1400046 to reflect this
incompatible change.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33451
Text requests and responses can span multiple PDUs. In that case, the
sender sets the Continue bit in non-final PDUs and the Final bit in
the last PDU. The receiver responds to non-final PDUs with an empty
text PDU.
To support this, add a more abstract API in libiscsi which accepts and
receives key sets rather than PDUs. These routines internally send or
receive one or more PDUs. Use these new functions to replace the
handling of TextRequest and TextResponse PDUs in discovery sessions in
both ctld and iscsid.
Note that there is not currently a use case for large Text requests
and those are still always sent as a single PDU. However, discovery
sessions can return a text response listing targets that spans
multiple PDUs, so the new API supports sending and receiving multi-PDU
responses.
Reported by: Jithesh Arakkan @ Chelsio
Reviewed by: mav
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33548
As with other runtime components like libc or libcxxrt.
If desired we can stop linking devd statically after this change (to
achive approximately no net change in required root filesystem size).
Reviewed by: imp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33123
The states macro is the type for engine.c to use, with states1 being a
local macro for regexec to use to determine whether it can use the small
matcher or not (by comparing nstates and 8*sizeof(states1)). However,
macro bodies are expanded in the context of their use, and so when
regexec uses states1 it uses the current value of states, which is left
over as char * from the large version (or, really, the multi-byte one,
but that reuses large's states). For all supported architectures in
FreeBSD, the two have the same size, and so this confusion is harmless.
However, for architectures like CHERI where that is not the case (or
Windows's LLP64 as discovered by LLVM and fixed in 2010 in 2e071faed8e2)
and sizeof(char *) is bigger than sizeof(long) regexec will erroneously
try to use the small matcher when nstates is between sizeof(long) and
sizeof(char *) (i.e. between 64 and 128 on CHERI, or 32 and 64 on LLP64)
and end up overflowing the number of bits in the underlying long if it
ever uses those high states. On weirder architectures where sizeof(long)
is greater than sizeof(char *) this also fixes it to not fall back on
the large matcher prematurely, but such architectures are likely limited
to the embedded space, if they exist at all.
Fix this by swapping round states and states1, so that states1 is
defined directly as being long and states is an alias for it for the
small matcher case.
Found by: CHERI
This will be used in future changes to support large text requests
spanning multiple PDUs.
Provide wrapper functions keys_load/save_pdu that operate use a PDU's
data buffer.
Reviewed by: mav
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33547
When keys are loaded from a received PDU, a copy of the received keys
block is saved in the keys struct and the name and value pointers
point into that saved block. Freeing the keys frees this block.
However, when keys are added to a keys struct to build a set of keys
later sent in a PDU, the keys data block pointer is not used and
individual key names and values hold allocated strings. When the keys
structure was freed, all of these individual key name and value
strings were leaked.
Instead, allocate copies of strings for names and values when parsing
a set of keys from a received PDU and free all of the individual key
name and value strings when deleting a set of keys.
Reviewed by: mav
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33545
Move some of the code duplicated between ctld(8) and iscsid(8) into a
libiscsiutil library.
Sharing the low-level PDU code did require having a
'struct connection' base class with a method table to permit separate
initiator vs target behavior (e.g. in handling proxy PDUs).
Reviewed by: mav, emaste
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33544
Checking there are still bytes left must be done before dereferencing
the pointer, not the other way round. This is harmless on traditional
architectures since the result will immediately be thrown away, and all
callers are in separate translation units so there is no potential for
optimising based on this out-of-bounds read. However, on CHERI, pointers
are bounded, and so this will trap if fed a string that does not have a
NUL within the first len bytes.
Found by: CHERI
Reviewed by: brooks
__FBSDID() places the provided string in the output object's .comment
section. However, with the transition to Git $FreeBSD$ is no longer
expanded and so we emitted a literal $FreeBSD$.
$FreeBSD$ will be addressed in a holistic manner in the future, but at
least avoid embedding it into everything linked on FreeBSD (via csu).
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33594
It's useful for small image to fetch some data but we don't want to
install utilities nor bloat runtime.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Beckhoff Automation GmbH & Co. KG
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33463
Move some needed binaries/libs from FreeBSD-utilities to FreeBSD_runtime.
This is everything needed to boot to multiuser with FreeBSD-rc installed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Beckhoff Automation GmbH & Co. KG
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33435
YP is less and less used, split them to users have the choice to not
install them.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Beckhoff Automation GmbH & Co. KG
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33441
This codepath used uint64_t's in place of pointers in structs and
arrays to allow 32-bit code to use 64-bit version of ioctls. Now
that we support 32-bit compat natively this is no longer needed.
Reviewed by: hselasky, jrtc27 (prior version)
. Disconnect imprecise.c from the build. This file can be deleted.
. Add b_tgammal.c to the build for ld80 and ld128 targets. The ld128
is a 'git mv' of imprecise.c to ld128/b_tgammal.c.
* lib/msun/ld80/b_expl.c:
. New file. Implement __exp__D for ld80 targets. This is based on
bsdsrc/b_exp.c.
* lib/msun/ld80/b_logl.c:
. New file. Implement __log__D for ld80 targets. This is based on
bsdsrc/b_log.c.
* lib/msun/ld80/b_tgammal.c b/lib/msun/ld80/b_tgammal.c
. New file. Implement tgammal(x) for ld80 targets.
Submitted by: Steve Kargl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33444
Reviewed by: pfg
. Disconnect b_exp.c and b_log.c from the build.
* lib/msun/bsdsrc/b_exp.c:
. Replace scalb() usage with C99's ldexp().
. Replace finite(x) usage with C99's isfinite().
. Whitespace changes towards style(9).
. Remove include of "mathimpl.h". It is no longer needed.
. Remove #if 0 ... #endif code, which has been present since svn r93211
(2002-03-26).
. New minimax polynomial coefficients.
. Add comments to explain origins of some constants.
. Use ansi-C prototype. Remove K&R prototype. Add static to prototype.
* lib/msun/bsdsrc/b_log.c:
. Remove include of "mathimpl.h". It is no longer needed.
. Fix comments to actually describe the code.
. Reduce minimax polynomial from degree 4 to degree 3.
This uses newly computed coefficients.
. Use ansi-C prototype. Remove K&R prototype. Add static to prototype.
. Remove volatile in declaration of u1.
. Alphabetize decalaration list.
. Whitespace changes towards style(9).
. In argument reduction of x to g and m, replace use of logb() and
ldexp() with a single call to frexp(). Add code to get 1 <= g < 2.
. Remove #if 0 ... #endif code, which has been present since svn r93211
(2002-03-26).
. The special case m == -1022, replace logb() with ilogb().
* lib/msun/bsdsrc/b_tgamma.c:
. Update comments. Fix comments where needed.
. Add float.h to get LDBL_MANT_DIG for weak reference of tgammal to tgamma.
. Remove include of "mathimpl.h". It is no longer needed.
. Use "math.h" instead of <math.h>.
. Add '#include math_private.h"
. Add struct Double from mathimpl.h and include b_log.c and b_exp.c.
. Remove forward declarations of neg_gam(), small_gam(), smaller_gam,
large_gam() and ratfun_gam() by re-arranging the code to move these
function above their first reference.
. New minimax coefficients for polynomial in large_gam().
. New splitting of a0 into a0hi nd a0lo, which include additional
bits of precision.
. Use ansi-C prototype. Remove K&R prototype.
. Replace the TRUNC() macro with a simple cast of a double entities
to float before assignment (functional changes).
. Replace sin(M_PI*z) with sinpi(z) and cos(M_PI*(0.5-z)) with cospi(0.5-z).
Submitted by: Steve Kargl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33444
Reviewed by: pfg
hwpmc has been utterly broken for userspace binaries, and has been
labeling all samples from userspace binaries as dubious frames. The
issues are that:
-The check for ph.p_offset & (-ph.p_align) == 0 was mostly bogus. The
intent was to ignore all executable segments other than the first,
which when using BFD appeared in the first page, but with current LLD
a read-only data segment appears before the executable segment,
pushing the latter into the second page or later. This meant no
executable segment was ever found, and thus pi_vaddr remained
0. Instead of relying on BFD's layout, track whether we've seen an
executable segment explicitly with a local bool.
-Shared libraries were not parsing the segments to calculate pi_vaddr,
resulting in it always being 0. Again, when using BFD, the executable
segment started at the first page, and so pi_vaddr was genuinely
meant to be 0, but not with LLD's current layout. This meant that
pmcstat_image_link's offset calculation gave the base address of the
segment in memory, rather than the base address of the whole library
in memory, and so when adding that to pi_start/pi_end to get the
range of the executable sections in memory it double-counted the
offset of the first executable segment within the library. Thus we
need to do the exact same parsing for ET_DYN as we do for ET_EXEC,
which is simpler to write as special-casing ET_REL to not look for
segments. Note that, whilst PT_INTERP isn't needed for shared
libraries, it will be for PIEs, which pmcstat still fails to handle
due to not knowing the base address of the PIE; we get the base
address for libraries by MAP_IN events, and for rtld by virtue of the
process's entry address being rtld's, but have no equivalent for the
executable.
Fixes courtesy of jrtc27@.
Reviewed by: jrtc27, jhb (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33055
Sponsored by: Netflix
This look like a copy and paste leftover.
Reported by: enh@google.com (via freebsd-numerics@)
Reviewed by: Steve Kargl <sgk@troutmask.apl.washington.edu>
MFC after: 3 days
This works around brokenness in buildworld's bootstrapping logic: it
uses the source tree's metadata to collect dependency info (such as,
"libdwarf depends on libz") but links against static host libraries.
If these two are out of sync, as is the case if one builds a commit
prior to the introduction of the libz dependency, then the build fails
when trying to statically link nm(1).
Mitigate the problem by defining a weak uncompress() symbol which simply
returns an error. This ensures that the build won't fail when
statically linking libdwarf without zlib. The downside is that any
tools using libdwarf without zlib will now hit a runtime error if they
attempt to decode compressed sections, but at least they'll fail
deterministically, and compressed debug info is only enabled by default
in main.
In particular, this fixes building of branches lacking commit
dbf05458e3bd, such as releng branches, stable/12 and 13 and old
revisions of main. Previously the nm(1) build would fail with:
ld: error: undefined symbol: uncompress
>>> referenced by libdwarf_elf_init.c:233
>>> (/usr/src/contrib/elftoolchain/libdwarf/libdwarf_elf_init.c:233)
>>> libdwarf_elf_init.o:(_dwarf_elf_init) in archive
>>> /usr/lib/libdwarf.a
Reported by: dim, ler, krion
Reviewed by: imp, emaste
Fixes: dbf05458e3bd ("libdwarf: Support consumption of compressed ELF sections")
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D33419