We should be getting back as many bytes as we asked for, and we
don't handle shortages at all, so just reject anything that's
not right.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15629
value of $HOME and always use the home directory from the passwd
database, unless $HOME was unset, in which case it would use (null).
While there, clean up handling of netrcfd and add debugging aids.
MFC after: 3 weeks
It seems a shame to ruin the patina of the June 4, 1993 date
on abort.3, especially since it still matched the date of
the SCCS ID, but those are the rules.
Reported by: araujo
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
I didn't know abort2 existed until it was mentioned on a mailing list.
Mention it in related pages so others can find it easily.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Dell EMC
As many people has pointed out, using assert(3) shall be not the best approach
to verify if strdup(3) has allocated memory to string.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 4 weeks.
Sponsored by: iXsystems Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15594
vendor provided pmu-events tables and sundry cleanups.
The vendor pmu-events tables provide counter descriptions, default
sample rates, event, umask, and flag values for all the counter
configuration permutations. Using this gives us:
- much simpler kernel code for the MD component
- helpful long and short event descriptions
- simpler user code
- sample rates that won't overload the system
Update man page with newer sample types and remove unused sample type.
vendor provided pmu-events tables and sundry cleanups.
The vendor pmu-events tables provide counter descriptions, default
sample rates, event, umask, and flag values for all the counter
configuration permutations. Using this gives us:
- much simpler kernel code for the MD component
- helpful long and short event descriptions
- simpler user code
- sample rates that won't overload the system
Update man page with newer sample types and remove unused sample type.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 4459d43eff815bec08ccc5533dbe5de846f03128
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Sat May 26 00:06:31 2018 -0700
libpmc: fix pmu function signatures for non amd64
commit a2cb8bbc586c65d41f9b291430a2261ec67b59fe
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 22:38:11 2018 -0700
pmcstat: fix indentation of usage
commit f686954b15ff56a833ac80404898977cb80a265b
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 22:19:49 2018 -0700
pmclog(3): add callchain and pmcallocatedyn, remove pcsample
commit 73e13a0d2e9498c81c150d14d022050cee7511bb
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 22:19:00 2018 -0700
pmclog.h: GC pcsample field
commit 3e93ffd65da641fa657539dad3c48e281f8b5798
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 22:05:57 2018 -0700
hwpmc: make Intel core CPUs use external event tables
commit 634f5fae1e1644ac324003136c66cd9c619d1c93
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 22:00:06 2018 -0700
pmclog: update log record types, bump PMC_MAJOR
- explicitly make log record types a multiple of 8 bytes
- hook in pmu event types for pmc_allocate records
- remove references to no longer PCSAMPLE record
commit 83d84fcd2d65bdf6ddcb2e155a22f0cfa2a9c225
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 21:52:10 2018 -0700
libpmc: add support for having vendor table driven pmc_allocate
commit 9e6ad63c40c2fce8404847ace5078ca6cb33a736
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 19:11:33 2018 -0700
hwpmc_core: add accessors for EVSEL & UMASK, make IAP_UMASK useful to user
commit 859dceb93daa6419a48c794db99b6758e5b041c9
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 19:09:45 2018 -0700
pmcstat: update usage and man page as well as make -L consistent with pmccontrol
commit 79c7d8597e28c2eb13f5f9113e65ec2792ca57b1
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 18:07:03 2018 -0700
pmu_util: add support for all current intel event keywords
commit d8089c7f6a6c8527f38324252b1ffb47004694c6
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 17:45:00 2018 -0700
add description for new arguments
commit 058336740bab53c62ec88a3a026ea848cf3878c6
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 17:38:15 2018 -0700
libpmc: move pmu_events table and pmu_utils out of libpmcstat so that they can be used by pmc_allocate
commit 049b66b382e2f833c3f47bc8df9e750cb265709f
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 16:12:41 2018 -0700
pmcstat: hook pmu_events counter description utility routines in
commit f5e01e7b37a691dc045e1aa16b3ebdd162515de8
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 16:11:59 2018 -0700
pmu_events: add utility routines for listing counters and their descriptions
commit cba4d4f8907f772279f86f18f915e0d74d33ac56
Author: Matt Macy <mmacy@mattmacy.io>
Date: Fri May 25 16:09:50 2018 -0700
pmu-events: expand out skylake regex to simplify string matches
The tool is built separately in buildworld in a subdirectory rather than
how other build-tools are done. Subdirectory builds in lib/libpmcstat
remain broken since the tool cannot be auto-built from here.
The vadvise syscall (aka ovadvise) is undocumented and has always been
implmented as returning EINVAL. Put the syscall under COMPAT11 and
provide a userspace implementation.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15557
More firmly suggest mmap(2) instead.
Include the history of arm64 and riscv shipping without brk/sbrk.
Mention that sbrk(0) produces unreliable results.
Reviewed by: emaste, Marcin Cieślak
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15535
on thread in post-processing.
To generate stacks for just ${THREADID}:
pmcstat -R ${PREFIX}.pmcstat -L ${THREADID} -z100 -G ${PREFIX}.stacks
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
- Define NO__SCCSID in CFLAGS to preserve existing behavior of omitting
SCCS IDs by default.
- While here, fix the $FreeBSD$ in pw_util.c to use __FBSDID.
It causes the 32bit compat build of libmd to fail with:
libmd/rmd160c.c:86:9: error: 'ripemd160_block' macro redefined
#define ripemd160_block ripemd160_block_x86
^
libmd/ripemd.h:122:9: note: previous definition is here
#define ripemd160_block _libmd_ripemd160_block
- Add xo_format_is_numeric() with improved logic to decide if format
strings are numeric, so json output quotes them
- Convert docs to sphinx/rst
- update tests
Includes fix for PR 221676:
27d3021cc3 (diff-5a0d468963477f7daedb8308c219dd80)
PR: 221676
MFC after: 5 days
Rather than using #ifdef's around a static char array, use the
existing helper macro from <sys/cdefs.h> for SCCS IDs. To
preserve existing behavior, add -DNO__SCCSID to CFLAGS to not
include SCCS IDs in the built library by default.
Reviewed by: brooks, dab (older version)
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15459
Each TCP connection that uses the system default cc_newreno(4) congestion
control algorithm module leaks a "struct newreno" (8 bytes of memory) at
connection initialisation time. The NULL-pointer dereference is only germane
when using the ABE feature, which is disabled by default.
While at it:
- Defer the allocation of memory until it is actually needed given that ABE is
optional and disabled by default.
- Document the ENOMEM errno in getsockopt(2)/setsockopt(2).
- Document ENOMEM and ENOBUFS in tcp(4) as being synonymous given that they are
used interchangeably throughout the code.
- Fix a few other nits also accidentally omitted from the original patch.
Reported by: Harsh Jain on freebsd-net@
Tested by: tjh@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15358
While <sys/sysctl.h> includes <sys/queue.h> unconditionally, it is only
actually used in code which is conditional on _KERNEL. Make the #include
itself conditional as well, and fix userland code that uses <sys/queue.h>
for other purposes but relied on <sys/sysctl.h> to bring it in.
MFC after: 1 week
A non-alloc note section should not have a PT_NOTE program header.
Found while linking ghc (Haskell compiler) with lld on FreeBSD. Haskell
emits a .debug-ghc-link-info note section (as the name suggests, it
contains link info) as a SHT_NOTE section without SHF_ALLOC set.
For this case ld.bfd does not emit a PT_NOTE segment for
.debug-ghc-link-info. lld previously emitted a PT_NOTE with p_vaddr = 0
and FreeBSD's rtld segfaulted when trying to parse a note at address 0.
LLVM PR: https://llvm.org/pr37361
LLVM review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46623
PR: 226872
Reviewed by: dim
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Rtld is not compatible with SSP, and since we link libc_pic.a to rtld
to have the basic support like memory and string copy functions, we
have to both carefully limit libc use, and to provide the ssp support
shims. This change makes the libc use in rtld more straighforward but
still limited, and allows to remove the shims, to be done in the next
commit.
Submitted by: Luis Pires
Reviewed by: bdrewery, brooks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15283
The caph_enter function should made it easier to sandbox application
and not force us to remember that we need to check errno on failure.
Another function is also checking if casper is present.
Reviewed by: emaste, cem (partially)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14557
by doing most of the work in a new function prison_add_vfs in kern_jail.c
Now a jail-enabled filesystem need only mark itself with VFCF_JAIL, and
the rest is taken care of. This includes adding a jail parameter like
allow.mount.foofs, and a sysctl like security.jail.mount_foofs_allowed.
Both of these used to be a static list of known filesystems, with
predefined permission bits.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: D14681
This driver supports legacy, 32-bit PCI devices, and had an ambiguous
license. Supported devices were already reported to be rare in 2003
(when an earlier version of the driver was removed in r123201).
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15245
Discovered during investigation into the PR - the description of
AT_FDCWD was somewhat confusing.
PR: 222632
Submitted by: Jan Kokemüller <jan.kokemueller@gmail.com>
MFC after: 1 week
procedure to obtain the user-friendly name of another Bluetooth unit.
Reviewed by: emax, wblock (docs)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13456
This is necessary to make sure that functions that can have stack
protection are not used to update the stack guard. If not, the stack
guard check would fail when it shouldn't.
guard_setup() calls elf_aux_info(), which, in turn, calls memcpy() to
update stack_chk_guard. If either elf_aux_info() or memcpy() have
stack protection enabled, __stack_chk_guard will be modified before
returning from them, causing the stack protection check to fail.
This change uses a temporary buffer to delay changing
__stack_chk_guard until elf_aux_info() returns.
Submitted by: Luis Pires
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15173
This fixes media display for 802.11 wireless devices.
Software outside the base system that uses these media types and
defines should use #ifdef IFM_FDDI or IFM_TOKEN to include or remove
support.
Reported by: zeising
Reviewed by: emaste, kib, zeising
Tested by: zeising
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15170
EFLAGS copy that lives out of a basic block!" errors on i386.
Pull in r325446 from upstream clang trunk (by me):
[X86] Add 'sahf' CPU feature to frontend
Summary:
Make clang accept `-msahf` (and `-mno-sahf`) flags to activate the
`+sahf` feature for the backend, for bug 36028 (Incorrect use of
pushf/popf enables/disables interrupts on amd64 kernels). This was
originally submitted in bug 36037 by Jonathan Looney
<jonlooney@gmail.com>.
As described there, GCC also uses `-msahf` for this feature, and the
backend already recognizes the `+sahf` feature. All that is needed is
to teach clang to pass this on to the backend.
The mapping of feature support onto CPUs may not be complete; rather,
it was chosen to match LLVM's idea of which CPUs support this feature
(see lib/Target/X86/X86.td).
I also updated the affected test case (CodeGen/attr-target-x86.c) to
match the emitted output.
Reviewers: craig.topper, coby, efriedma, rsmith
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: emaste, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43394
Pull in r328944 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Expose more of the condition conversion routines in the public
API for X86's instruction information. I've now got a second patch
under review that needs these same APIs. This bit is nicely
orthogonal and obvious, so landing it. NFC.
Pull in r329414 from upstream llvm trunk (by Craig Topper):
[X86] Merge itineraries for CLC, CMC, and STC.
These are very simple flag setting instructions that appear to only
be a single uop. They're unlikely to need this separation.
Pull in r329657 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Introduce a pass to begin more systematically fixing PR36028
and similar issues.
The key idea is to lower COPY nodes populating EFLAGS by scanning the
uses of EFLAGS and introducing dedicated code to preserve the
necessary state in a GPR. In the vast majority of cases, these uses
are cmovCC and jCC instructions. For such cases, we can very easily
save and restore the necessary information by simply inserting a
setCC into a GPR where the original flags are live, and then testing
that GPR directly to feed the cmov or conditional branch.
However, things are a bit more tricky if arithmetic is using the
flags. This patch handles the vast majority of cases that seem to
come up in practice: adc, adcx, adox, rcl, and rcr; all without
taking advantage of partially preserved EFLAGS as LLVM doesn't
currently model that at all.
There are a large number of operations that techinaclly observe
EFLAGS currently but shouldn't in this case -- they typically are
using DF. Currently, they will not be handled by this approach.
However, I have never seen this issue come up in practice. It is
already pretty rare to have these patterns come up in practical code
with LLVM. I had to resort to writing MIR tests to cover most of the
logic in this pass already. I suspect even with its current amount
of coverage of arithmetic users of EFLAGS it will be a significant
improvement over the current use of pushf/popf. It will also produce
substantially faster code in most of the common patterns.
This patch also removes all of the old lowering for EFLAGS copies,
and the hack that forced us to use a frame pointer when EFLAGS copies
were found anywhere in a function so that the dynamic stack
adjustment wasn't a problem. None of this is needed as we now lower
all of these copies directly in MI and without require stack
adjustments.
Lots of thanks to Reid who came up with several aspects of this
approach, and Craig who helped me work out a couple of things
tripping me up while working on this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45146
Pull in r329673 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Model the direction flag (DF) separately from the rest of
EFLAGS.
This cleans up a number of operations that only claimed te use EFLAGS
due to using DF. But no instructions which we think of us setting
EFLAGS actually modify DF (other than things like popf) and so this
needlessly creates uses of EFLAGS that aren't really there.
In fact, DF is so restrictive it is pretty easy to model. Only STD,
CLD, and the whole-flags writes (WRFLAGS and POPF) need to model
this.
I've also somewhat cleaned up some of the flag management instruction
definitions to be in the correct .td file.
Adding this extra register also uncovered a failure to use the
correct datatype to hold X86 registers, and I've corrected that as
necessary here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45154
Pull in r330264 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Fix PR37100 by teaching the EFLAGS copy lowering to rewrite
uses across basic blocks in the limited cases where it is very
straight forward to do so.
This will also be useful for other places where we do some limited
EFLAGS propagation across CFG edges and need to handle copy rewrites
afterward. I think this is rapidly approaching the maximum we can and
should be doing here. Everything else begins to require either heroic
analysis to prove how to do PHI insertion manually, or somehow
managing arbitrary PHI-ing of EFLAGS with general PHI insertion.
Neither of these seem at all promising so if those cases come up,
we'll almost certainly need to rewrite the parts of LLVM that produce
those patterns.
We do now require dominator trees in order to reliably diagnose
patterns that would require PHI nodes. This is a bit unfortunate but
it seems better than the completely mysterious crash we would get
otherwise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45673
Together, these should ensure clang does not use pushf/popf sequences to
save and restore flags, avoiding problems with unrelated flags (such as
the interrupt flag) being restored unexpectedly.
Requested by: jtl
PR: 225330
MFC after: 1 week
-> PROC_PDEATHSIG_STATUS for consistency with other procctl(2)
operations names.
Requested by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 13 days
With SOFTFLOAT, libc and libm were built correctly, but any program
including fenv.h itself assumed it was on a hardfloat systen and emitted
inline fpu instructions for fedisableexcept() and friends.
Unlike r315424 which did this for MIPS, I've used riscv_float_abi_soft
and riscv_float_abi_double macros as appropriate rather than using
__riscv_float_abi_soft exclusively. This ensures that attempts to use an
unsupported hardfloat ABI will fail.
Reviewed by: br
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10039
Allow processes to request the delivery of a signal upon death of
their parent process. Supposed consumer of the feature is PostgreSQL.
Submitted by: Thomas Munro
Reviewed by: jilles, mjg
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15106
This will faciliate a WITH_SYSTEM_LINKER option.
Reviewed by: dim
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15110
[X86] Add 'sahf' CPU feature to frontend
Summary:
Make clang accept `-msahf` (and `-mno-sahf`) flags to activate the
`+sahf` feature for the backend, for bug 36028 (Incorrect use of
pushf/popf enables/disables interrupts on amd64 kernels). This was
originally submitted in bug 36037 by Jonathan Looney
<jonlooney@gmail.com>.
As described there, GCC also uses `-msahf` for this feature, and the
backend already recognizes the `+sahf` feature. All that is needed is
to teach clang to pass this on to the backend.
The mapping of feature support onto CPUs may not be complete; rather,
it was chosen to match LLVM's idea of which CPUs support this feature
(see lib/Target/X86/X86.td).
I also updated the affected test case (CodeGen/attr-target-x86.c) to
match the emitted output.
Reviewers: craig.topper, coby, efriedma, rsmith
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: emaste, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43394
Pull in r328944 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Expose more of the condition conversion routines in the public
API for X86's instruction information. I've now got a second patch
under review that needs these same APIs. This bit is nicely
orthogonal and obvious, so landing it. NFC.
Pull in r329414 from upstream llvm trunk (by Craig Topper):
[X86] Merge itineraries for CLC, CMC, and STC.
These are very simple flag setting instructions that appear to only
be a single uop. They're unlikely to need this separation.
Pull in r329657 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Introduce a pass to begin more systematically fixing PR36028
and similar issues.
The key idea is to lower COPY nodes populating EFLAGS by scanning the
uses of EFLAGS and introducing dedicated code to preserve the
necessary state in a GPR. In the vast majority of cases, these uses
are cmovCC and jCC instructions. For such cases, we can very easily
save and restore the necessary information by simply inserting a
setCC into a GPR where the original flags are live, and then testing
that GPR directly to feed the cmov or conditional branch.
However, things are a bit more tricky if arithmetic is using the
flags. This patch handles the vast majority of cases that seem to
come up in practice: adc, adcx, adox, rcl, and rcr; all without
taking advantage of partially preserved EFLAGS as LLVM doesn't
currently model that at all.
There are a large number of operations that techinaclly observe
EFLAGS currently but shouldn't in this case -- they typically are
using DF. Currently, they will not be handled by this approach.
However, I have never seen this issue come up in practice. It is
already pretty rare to have these patterns come up in practical code
with LLVM. I had to resort to writing MIR tests to cover most of the
logic in this pass already. I suspect even with its current amount
of coverage of arithmetic users of EFLAGS it will be a significant
improvement over the current use of pushf/popf. It will also produce
substantially faster code in most of the common patterns.
This patch also removes all of the old lowering for EFLAGS copies,
and the hack that forced us to use a frame pointer when EFLAGS copies
were found anywhere in a function so that the dynamic stack
adjustment wasn't a problem. None of this is needed as we now lower
all of these copies directly in MI and without require stack
adjustments.
Lots of thanks to Reid who came up with several aspects of this
approach, and Craig who helped me work out a couple of things
tripping me up while working on this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45146
Pull in r329673 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):
[x86] Model the direction flag (DF) separately from the rest of
EFLAGS.
This cleans up a number of operations that only claimed te use EFLAGS
due to using DF. But no instructions which we think of us setting
EFLAGS actually modify DF (other than things like popf) and so this
needlessly creates uses of EFLAGS that aren't really there.
In fact, DF is so restrictive it is pretty easy to model. Only STD,
CLD, and the whole-flags writes (WRFLAGS and POPF) need to model
this.
I've also somewhat cleaned up some of the flag management instruction
definitions to be in the correct .td file.
Adding this extra register also uncovered a failure to use the
correct datatype to hold X86 registers, and I've corrected that as
necessary here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45154
Together, these should ensure clang does not use pushf/popf sequences to
save and restore flags, avoiding problems with unrelated flags (such as
the interrupt flag) being restored unexpectedly.
Requested by: jtl
PR: 225330
MFC after: 1 week
While Arcnet has some continued deployment in industrial controls, the
lack of drivers for any of the PCI, USB, or PCIe NICs on the market
suggests such users aren't running FreeBSD.
Evidence in the PR database suggests that the cm(4) driver (our sole
Arcnet NIC) was broken in 5.0 and has not worked since.
PR: 182297
Reviewed by: jhibbits, vangyzen
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15057
Originally, on the VAX exect() enable tracing once the new executable
image was loaded. This was possible because tracing was controllable
through user space code by setting the PSL_T flag. The following
instruction is a system call that activated tracing (as all
instructions do) by copying PSL_T to PSL_TP (trace pending). The
first instruction of the new executable image would trigger a trace
fault.
This is not portable to all platforms and the behavior was replaced with
ptrace(PT_TRACE_ME, ...) since FreeBSD forked off of the CSRG repository.
Platforms either incorrectly call execve(), trigger trace faults inside
the original executable, or do contain an implementation of this
function.
The exect() interfaces is deprecated or removed on NetBSD and OpenBSD.
Submitted by: Ali Mashtizadeh <ali@mashtizadeh.com>
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14989