those partitioning schemes that have this concept. Implement it as an
override for mbr's setting 0x80 in the flags for the first partition
when we have boot code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4403
UUIDs are not portable.
o Move mkimg_uuid() to a new file and merge both gpt_uuid_enc()
and vhd_uuid_enc() into a single mkimg_uuid_enc() that lives
in the same file.
o Move the OS-specific implementation of generating a UUID to
osdep_uuidgen() and provide the implementations for FreeBSD,
macOS and Linux.
o Expect the partitioning scheme headers to be found by having
a search to the directory in which the headers live. This
avoids conflicts on non-FreeBSD machines.
inclusion of <sys/queue.h>.
Move the inclusion of the disk partitioning headers out of order
and inbetween standard headers and local header. They will change
in a subsequent commit.
be used on both macOS and Linux. STAILQs are not. In particular,
STAILQ_LAST does not next on Linux. Since neither STAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE
nor TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE exist on Linux, replace its use with a regular
TAILQ_FOREACH. The _SAFE variant was only used for having the next
pointer in a local variable.
1. macOS nor Linux have MAP_NOCORE nor MAP_NOSYNC. Define as 0.
2. macOS doesn't have SEEK_DATA nor SEEK_HOLE. Define as -1
so that lseek will return -1 (with errno set to EINVAL).
3. gcc correctly warns that error is assigned but not used in
image_copyout_region(). Fix by returning on the first error.
Not only is the header unportable, the encoding/decoding functions
are as well. Instead, duplicate the handful of small inlines we
need into a private header called endian.h.
Aside: an alternative approach is to move the encoding/decoding
functions to a separate system header. While the header is still
nonportable, such an approach would make it possible to re-use the
definitions by playing games with include paths. This may be the
preferred approach if more (build) utilities need this. This
change does not preclude that. In fact, it makes it easier.
otherwise format_resize(), which is called right after, isn't
getting the current/actual image size. Rather than rounding up,
format_resize() could end up truncating the size and we don't
allow that by design.
MFC after: 1 week
Generally the first argument in calloc is supposed to stand for a count
and the second for a size. Try to make that consistent. While here,
attempt to make some use of the overflow detection capability in
calloc(3).
mkimg has had a number of functional additions after the last time the
version was incremented. Do so now, to r292082's commit date, so that
users can determine what is supported.
Reviewed by: marcel
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6882
mkimg(1) uses a swap file to back input file chunks. When the output file
is being written out, blocks of the swap file are mapped and their contents
copied. This causes the backing VM pages to enter the active queue, and when
the output file is large relative to system memory (as is generally the
case), can result in a shortfall of inactive memory. This causes the
pagedaemon to aggressively scan the active queue and swap out process
memory in an attempt to meet the shortfall. Because mkimg's input files
are typically the intermediate result of some build process, there's no
need to push them all through the active queue. Use madvise(2) to indicate
that the backing pages may be reclaimed in preference to active pages. In
the case of the swap file, these pages will be freed as soon as mkimg
exits anyway.
When using mkimg on a desktop-class system with large amounts of dirty
process memory, this change substantially improves mkimg runtime and
reduces swap usage.
Reviewed by: marcel
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6654
after r298107
Summary of changes:
- Replace all instances of FILES/TESTS with ${PACKAGE}FILES. This ensures that
namespacing is kept with FILES appropriately, and that this shouldn't need
to be repeated if the namespace changes -- only the definition of PACKAGE
needs to be changed
- Allow PACKAGE to be overridden by callers instead of forcing it to always be
`tests`. In the event we get to the point where things can be split up
enough in the base system, it would make more sense to group the tests
with the blocks they're a part of, e.g. byacc with byacc-tests, etc
- Remove PACKAGE definitions where possible, i.e. where FILES wasn't used
previously.
- Remove unnecessary TESTSPACKAGE definitions; this has been elided into
bsd.tests.mk
- Remove unnecessary BINDIRs used previously with ${PACKAGE}FILES;
${PACKAGE}FILESDIR is now automatically defined in bsd.test.mk.
- Fix installation of files under data/ subdirectories in lib/libc/tests/hash
and lib/libc/tests/net/getaddrinfo
- Remove unnecessary .include <bsd.own.mk>s (some opportunistic cleanup)
Document the proposed changes in share/examples/tests/tests/... via examples
so it's clear that ${PACKAGES}FILES is the suggested way forward in terms of
replacing FILES. share/mk/bsd.README didn't seem like the appropriate method
of communicating that info.
MFC after: never probably
X-MFC with: r298107
PR: 209114
Relnotes: yes
Tested with: buildworld, installworld, checkworld; buildworld, packageworld
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
This is not properly respecting WITHOUT or ARCH dependencies in target/.
Doing so requires a massive effort to rework targets/ to do so. A
better approach will be to either include the SUBDIR Makefiles directly
and map to DIRDEPS or just dynamically lookup the SUBDIR. These lose
the benefit of having a userland/lib, userland/libexec, etc, though and
results in a massive package. The current implementation of targets/ is
very unmaintainable.
Currently rescue/rescue and sys/modules are still not connected.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
netbsd-tests.test.mk (r289151)
- Eliminate explicit OBJTOP/SRCTOP setting
- Convert all ad hoc NetBSD test integration over to netbsd-tests.test.mk
- Remove unnecessary TESTSDIR setting
- Use SRCTOP where possible for clarity
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Divison
is taken to match the geometry and only when the geometry is max'd
out, is the actual recorded size taken.
Note that qemu has the same logic for the fixed VHD format. However
that is known to conflict with Microsoft Azure, where the recorded
size of the image is what counts.
Pointed out by: gjb@
The image is not accepted for provisioning otherwise. Bump the
VHD creator tool version and the version of mkimg to signify our
success in provisioning.
Note that this also imapcts the dynamic VHD images.
Tested by: gjb@
of megabytes. This is on top of having the image rounded to the
matching geometry of the image size.
By rounding up to the next MB after rounding to the geometry, we
lost idempotency. Subsequent calls to resize the image will keep
increasing the image size.
Tested by: gjb@
multiple of the cylinder size. This is what qemu-img seems to
be doing. Make sure to handle boundary cases where increasing
the image size by 1 cyclinder's worth would also result in a
change of geometry.
a capcity is given, no partitions are required. When no partitions are
given, no scheme needs to be specified either. This makes it possible
to create an entirely empty disk image. To add an empty partitioning
table, specify the scheme.
Bump the version to 20150222.
number of clusters it occupies. It's not the number of entries in the table,
as it is for the L1 cluster table.
For small images, the two are the same. With the unit tests based on small
images, this change has therefore no effect on the unit test. For larger
images (like the FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE image), this gives a discrepancy that
actually shows up when running "qemu-img check".
Bump the version number of mkimg.
While here, fix a white-space bug.
MFC after: 1 week
with 128K of random data and truncated to 800K can have SEEK_DATA return -1
when given an offset of 128K. On UFS, the SEEK_DATA returns 800K (the size
of the file). SEEK_HOLE on ZFS seems to behave the same as UFS.
To handle this, map -1 to the size of the file (`end') when lseek returns
this for either SEEK_HOLE or SEEK_DATA. When sparse files are not supported
by the file system both `hole' and `data' will now be equal to `end' and we
will treat the entire file as data. This way, the -1 return for SEEK_DATA
on ZFS will end up doing the right thing.
Reported by: gjb@
MFC after: 3 days