SRCS.<prog> must be explicitly defined when using the PROGS* functionality
for each program to be built.
As there are no plain test programs in the system yet, this was not
detected.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
C++ programs need to be added to PROGS_CXX, not PROGS, and the code was
actually doing both. Just keep the registration into PROGS_CXX to
prevent possible obscure build problems.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
These are largely syntactic sugar. However, they improve code
readability where an RB_FOREACH() or RB_FOREACH_REVERSE()
traversal has been interrupted and must be resumed. Performance
is improved by avoiding unnecessary traversal from the head node.
There is no reason to keep the two knobs separate: if tests are
enabled, the ATF libraries are required; and if tests are disabled,
the ATF libraries are not necessary. Keeping the two just serves
to complicate the build.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
The addition of the TESTS knob and its enabling of the build of tests in
lib/libcrypt/tests/ broke the build. The reason is that we cannot descend
into tests/ subdirectories until all prerequisites have been built, which
in the case of tests may be "a lot of things" (libatf-c in this case).
Ensure that we do not walk tests/ directories during the bootstrapping of
the libraries as part of buildworld.
Reviewed by: freebsd-testing
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
- Rename "aux.[ch]" to "util.[ch]" which is a more common name for
utility functions and allows checkout on some non-FreeBSD systems
where the "aux.*" namespace is reserved.
- Fix some compile warnings while at it.
PR: usb/183728
MFC after: 2 weeks
libc++.a during the early build stages (bootstrap-tools, build-tools,
cross-tools), since it is not possible to know in advance which C++
library is available on the host system.
Instead, just use the bootstrap compiler's built-in default. This
should eventually make it possible to build stable/9 on head, or on
stable/10, which ship without libstdc++ by default.
X-MFC-With: 255431
MFC after: 3 days
good. This caused libc to spoof the ports libiconv namespace and
provide a colliding libiconv.so.3 to fool rtld. This should have
been removed some time ago.
This includes the following:
- use separate memory regions for VALE ports
- locking fixes
- some simplifications in the NIC-specific routines
- performance improvements for the VALE switch
- some new features in the pkt-gen test program
- documentation updates
There are small API changes that require programs to be recompiled
(NETMAP_API has been bumped so you will detect old binaries at runtime).
In particular:
- struct netmap_slot now is 16 bytes to support an extra pointer,
which may save one data copy when using VALE ports or VMs;
- the struct netmap_if has two extra fields;
MFC after: 3 days
to a virtual machine then we implicitly create COM1 and COM2 ISA devices.
Prior to this change the only way of attaching a COM port to the virtual
machine was by presenting it as a PCI device that is mapped at the legacy
I/O address 0x3F8 or 0x2F8.
There were some issues with the original approach:
- It did not work at all with UEFI because UEFI will reprogram the PCI device
BARs and remap the COM1/COM2 ports at non-legacy addresses.
- OpenBSD GENERIC kernel does not create a /dev/console because it expects
the uart device at the legacy 0x3F8/0x2F8 address to be an ISA device.
- It was functional with a FreeBSD guest but caused the console to appear
on /dev/ttyu2 which was not intuitive.
The uart emulation is now independent of the bus on which it resides. Thus it
is possible to have uart devices on the PCI bus in addition to the legacy
COM1/COM2 devices behind the LPC bus.
The command line option to attach ISA COM1/COM2 ports to a virtual machine is
"-s <bus>,lpc -l com1,stdio".
The command line option to create a PCI-attached uart device is:
"-s <bus>,uart[,stdio]"
The command line option to create PCI-attached COM1/COM2 device is:
"-S <bus>,uart[,stdio]". This style of creating COM ports is deprecated.
Discussed with: grehan
Reviewed by: grehan
Submitted by: Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com)
M share/examples/bhyve/vmrun.sh
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.c
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/legacy_irq.h
M usr.sbin/bhyve/Makefile
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/bhyverun.c
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/uart_emul.h
M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_uart.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.c
M usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_emul.h
M usr.sbin/bhyve/inout.h
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.c
AM usr.sbin/bhyve/pci_lpc.h
The ng_create_one() and ng_mkpeer() functions in network.subr are
now not used anywhere, but I left them, since they can be useful
in future in netgraph scripting.
Submitted by: pluknet