Due to markup issues, the DESCRIPTION OF MEMORY section is rather
unreadable; rework it a bit, using subsections for different lines of the
top output, and move it closer to description.
While here, pet manlint ordering other sections as expected.
Submitted by: Yuri Pankov <yuripv@yuripv.net>
Reviewed by: eadler
Approved by: re (gjb), krion (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17369
This is a direct commit to a generated file. Simon plans to fix this
upstream before the next import.
PR: 231557
Approved by: re (gjb)
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
This leverages CONFS to handle the install and purges an old comment.
Approved by: re (blanket, pkgbase), bapt (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17215
Update libarchive to 3.3.3
As all important changes have already been merged from libarchive git
this is just version number bump, documentation update and some
polishing for cpio tests. Other source code changes are not relevant to
FreeBSD.
Approved by: re (gjb)
MFC after: 1 week
We generate the installed objcopy man page from ELF Tool Chain's
elfcopy, but the sed expresion used for this ended up producing
"objcopy, objcopy - copy and translate object files".
Instead of replacing the first "elfcopy" with objcopy, just remove it.
Approved by: re (gjb)
imprudent reuse of static buffers, the end-of-transfer statistics
displayed when stdout is not a tty always ended up as 0 B / 0 Bps.
Reorganize the code to use caller-provided buffers, tweak the ETA
display a bit, and reduce the visual differences between the tty and
non-tty end-of-transfer displays.
PR: 202424
Approved by: re (gjb@)
Don't just exit when encountering the 'q' command if we edit file
inplace, and give mf_fgets() a chance to actually handle the
inplace case.
Also add a regression test.
Submitted by: Yuri Pankov <yuripv@yuripv.net>
Approved by: re (kib)
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16798
Previously, x86 used static ranges of IRQ values for different types
of I/O interrupts. Interrupt pins on I/O APICs and 8259A PICs used
IRQ values from 0 to 254. MSI interrupts used a compile-time-defined
range starting at 256, and Xen event channels used a
compile-time-defined range after MSI. Some recent systems have more
than 255 I/O APIC interrupt pins which resulted in those IRQ values
overflowing into the MSI range triggering an assertion failure.
Replace statically assigned ranges with dynamic ranges. Do a single
pass computing the sizes of the IRQ ranges (PICs, MSI, Xen) to
determine the total number of IRQs required. Allocate the interrupt
source and interrupt count arrays dynamically once this pass has
completed. To minimize runtime complexity these arrays are only sized
once during bootup. The PIC range is determined by the PICs present
in the system. The MSI and Xen ranges continue to use a fixed size,
though this does make it possible to turn the MSI range size into a
tunable in the future.
As a result, various places are updated to use dynamic limits instead
of constants. In addition, the vmstat(8) utility has been taught to
understand that some kernels may treat 'intrcnt' and 'intrnames' as
pointers rather than arrays when extracting interrupt stats from a
crashdump. This is determined by the presence (vs absence) of a
global 'nintrcnt' symbol.
This change reverts r189404 which worked around a buggy BIOS which
enumerated an I/O APIC twice (using the same memory mapped address for
both entries but using an IRQ base of 256 for one entry and a valid
IRQ base for the second entry). Making the "base" of MSI IRQ values
dynamic avoids the panic that r189404 worked around, and there may now
be valid I/O APICs with an IRQ base above 256 which this workaround
would incorrectly skip.
If in the future the issue reported in PR 130483 reoccurs, we will
have to add a pass over the I/O APIC entries in the MADT to detect
duplicates using the memory mapped address and use some strategy to
choose the "correct" one.
While here, reserve room in intrcnts for the Hyper-V counters.
PR: 229429, 130483
Reviewed by: kib, royger, cem
Tested by: royger (Xen), kib (DMAR)
Approved by: re (gjb)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16861
netascii is obsolete and inefficient. It isn't even supported by many
clients. Better to use binary mode by default.
Reviewed by: cem
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16869
The current kernel ifunc implementation creates a PLT entry for each
ifunc definition. ifunc calls therefore consist of a call to the
PLT entry followed by an indirect jump. The jump target is written
during boot when the kernel linker resolves R_[*]_IRELATIVE relocations.
This implementation is defined by requirements for userland code, where
text relocations are avoided. This requirement is not present for the
kernel, so the implementation has avoidable overhead (namely, an extra
indirect jump per call).
Address this for now by adding a special option to the static linker
to inhibit PLT creation for ifuncs. Instead, relocations to ifunc call
sites are passed through to the output file, so the kernel linker can
enumerate such call sites and apply PC-relative relocations directly
to the text section. Thus the overhead of an ifunc call becomes exactly
the same as that of an ordinary function call. This option is only for
use by the kernel and will not work for regular programs.
The final form of this optimization is up for debate; for now, this
change is simple and static enough to be acceptable as an interim
solution.
Reviewed by: emaste
Discussed with: arichardson, dim
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16748
Fixes courtesy of arichardson and jmg:
- HACKING was pointing to the wrong place
- Added headers were being relied on implicitly, but libstdc++ did not
comply with the unspoken wishes of dtc.
MFC after: 1 week
grep(1) changes:
- Pet mandoc & igor.
- Stylize the text more with macros when appropriate.
- Stylize equal signs in long options (e.g., "--color=auto") with
the "Cm" macro as suggested by mdoc(7).
- Add missing arguments to --exlude, --exclude-dir, --include and
--include-dir.
- Remove a duplicate entry for the --context flag.
- Use a list in the EXAMPLES sections to make it easier to tell
which paragraphs belong to which example.
- Cross reference zgrep(1).
zgrep(1) changes:
- Fix Nd.
- Split synopsis into paragraphs for readability.
- Cross reference bzip(1), grep(1) and xz(1).
Reviewed by: bcr
Approved by: mat (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16779
It was #ifdef'd out in the 4.4BSD import and hasn't been re-enabled
since then.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16804
Instead of doing a second pass to skip empty lines if we've specified -I, go
ahead and check both at once. Ignore critera has been split out into its own
function to try and keep the logic cleaner.
As noted by cem in r338035, coccinelle invokes diff(1) with the -B flag.
This was not previously implemented here, so one was forced to create a link
for GNU diff to /usr/local/bin/diff
Implement the -B flag and add some primitive tests for it. It is implemented
in the same fashion that -I is implemented; each chunk's lines are scanned,
and if a non-blank line is encountered then the chunk will be output.
Otherwise, it's skipped.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Notable fixes:
- Overlays may now be generated properly without -@
- /__local_fixups__ were not including unit address in their structure
- The error reporting a magic token was misleading, reporting
"Bad magic token in header. Got d00dfeed expected 0xd00dfeed"
if the token was missing. This has been split out into a separate message.
MFC after: 1 week
The fix is only partial and causes an asymmetry which breaks a test in
multi_test.sh.
We should consider both parts of the issue found in OpenBSD[1], but for now
just revert the change.
[1] http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20180728110010
Reported by: asomers
The bug was that isalnum() is not exactly equivalent to previous code which
also allowed characters "$" and "_", so check for those explicitly.
Reported by: tuexen@
While STACKSIZE macro is indeed problematic on some systems, the commits
were wrong to shrink il[] and cstk[], because they need to be of the same
size as p_stack[] as they're accessed with the same index ps.tos.
to match reality (slightly different to what was submitted in the
PR: use english word instead of math-symbol).
- Wrap the corresponding part to below 80 characters per line.
Submitted by: yamagi@yamagi.org
PR: 202202
Sponsored by: Essen Hackathon
This helps with pkgbase as it tags this as a config file so it is handled as
such
Approved by: allanjude (mentor)
Sponsored by: Essen Hackathon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16673
SVN r337458 erroneously partially reverted r265885.
This is immediately visible when running the Kyua/ATF tests for
usr.bin/printf, which actually test sh's printf builtin.
PR: 229641
When invoked on a large list of files, it is most common for a small number of
uids/gids to own most of the results.
Like ls(1), use pwcache(3) to avoid repeatedly looking up the same IDs.
Example microbenchmark and non-scientific results:
$ time (find /usr/src -type f -print0 | xargs -0 stat >/dev/null)
BEFORE:
3.62s user 5.23s system 102% cpu 8.655 total
3.47s user 5.38s system 102% cpu 8.647 total
AFTER:
1.23s user 1.81s system 108% cpu 2.810 total
1.43s user 1.54s system 107% cpu 2.754 total
Does this microbenchmark have any real-world significance? Until a use case
is demonstrated otherwise, I doubt it. Ordinarily I would be resistant to
optimizing pointless microbenchmarks in base utilities (e.g., recent totally
gratuitous changes to yes(1)). However, the pwcache(3) APIs actually
simplify stat(1) logic ever so slightly compared to the raw APIs they wrap,
so I think this is at worst harmless.
PR: 230491
Reported by: Thomas Hurst <tom AT hur.st>
Discussed with: gad@
Using a space as the magic character would result in problems if the command
started with a number:
- For a 'valid' number n, n < size of argv, it would erroneously get
replaced with that argument; e.g. `apply -a ' ' -d 1rm x => `execxrm x`
- For an 'invalid' number n, n >= size of argv, it would segfault.
e.g. `apply -a ' ' 2to3 test.py` would try to access argv[2]
This problem occurred because apply(1) would prepend "exec " to the command
string before doing the actual magic number replacements, so it would come
across "exec 2to3 1" and assume that the " 2" is also a magic number to be
replaced.
Re-work this to instead just append "exec " to the command sbuf and
workaround the ugliness. This also simplifies stuff in the process.
PR: 226948
Submitted by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
MFC after: 1 week
The precision with the conversion specifier b is specified by POSIX: see
point 7 in the reference documentation.
This corrects previous wrong log in r337440.
Reference: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/printf.html
PR: 229641
Reported by: Rudolf Cejka
Submitted by: Garrett D'Amore (illumos)
MFC after: 1 week
It does not make sense to show a "thread count" column when displaying
threads separately. In fact we don't, but do show the header for this
column. Fix this.
The precision with behavior is "unspecified" by POSIX (as of 2018), but
most implementations seem to have taken it to be treated the same as for
"s"; applied after the unescaping.
Adopt the same treatment on our printf.
PR: 229641
Submitted by: Garrett D'Amore (illumos)
We don't generally support the weird case of regular expresions delimited
by an opening square bracket ('[') but POSIX says that inside
bracket expressions, escaping is not possible and both '[' and '\'
represent themselves.
PR: 230198 (exp-run)
Obtained from: OpenBSD
The abidump routine output an ABI tag when -A was specified for records
that were not displayed due to type or pid filtering. To fix, split
the code to lookup the ABI from the code to display the ABI, move the
code to display the ABI into dumpheader(), and move dumpheader() later
in the main loop as a simplification. Previously dumpheader() was
called under a condition that repeated conditions made later in the
main loop.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16608
I inadvertently broke 'wc -L' in r326736. We must skip the fast path if -L
was specified, in addition to the existing check for the -l option.
Document long-standing -L behavior (count varies depending on whether wc(1)
is run with the -m option or not) in wc.1. That behavior dates back to the
introduction of the -L option, but was not documented.
PR: 230300
Reported by: <amstrnad+bugzilla AT gmail.com>
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
The timespecadd(3) family of macros were imported from NetBSD back in
r35029. However, they were initially guarded by #ifdef _KERNEL. In the
meantime, we have grown at least 28 syscalls that use timespecs in some
way, leading many programs both inside and outside of the base system to
redefine those macros. It's better just to make the definitions public.
Our kernel currently defines two-argument versions of timespecadd and
timespecsub. NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeDesktop.org's libbsd, however, define
three-argument versions. Solaris also defines a three-argument version, but
only in its kernel. This revision changes our definition to match the
common three-argument version.
Bump _FreeBSD_version due to the breaking KPI change.
Discussed with: cem, jilles, ian, bde
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14725
Update vendor/libarchive/dist to git 2c8c83b9731ff822fad6cc8c670ea5519c366a14
Important vendor changes:
PR #993: Chdir to -C directory for metalog processing
OSS-Fuzz #4969: Check size of the extended time field in zip archives
PR #973: Record informational compression level in gzip header
MFC after: 1 week
- Advance ctold for f1 and ctnew for f2
- ungetc() if the character is unexpected
- Don't break early when we hit the combination on one side
PR: 230049
Reported by: maskray <emacsray gmail com>
Reviewed by: bapt, maskray
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16451
The original intention was 4 columns but with a usable a result. In
practice this was not the case. Increase the number of columns to 5
until humanize_number learns alternative ways of presenting the number.
Requested by: many
Ref D15801
Some of the changes are in the libexec/tftpd directory, but to functions that
are only used by tftp(1) (they share some code).
* strcpy => strlcpy (1006793, 1006794, 1006796, 1006741)
* Unchecked return value and TOCTTOU (1009314)
* NULL pointer dereference (1018035, 1018036)
Reported by: Coverity
CID: 1006793, 1006794, 1006796, 1006741, 1009314, 1018035
CID: 1018036
MFC after: 2 weeks
Remove procedural code that did the scanning, which was faulty and didn't
support complex constants such as 0x1p-61. Replace it with a finite state
machine expressed as a transition table. The table was rewritten by hand
from lx's output, given parts of grammar expressed as regular expressions.
lx is Katherine Flavel's lexer generator, currently available at
https://github.com/katef/libfsm and the parts of grammar were taken from
http://quut.com/c/ANSI-C-grammar-l-2011.html and extended to support binary
integer constants which are a popular GCC extension.
Reported by: bde