This lock gets deleted in sys/netpfil/ipfw/ip_fw2.c:vnet_ipfw_uninit().
Therefore, vnet_ipfw_nat_uninit() *must* be called before vnet_ipfw_uninit(),
but this doesn't always happen, because the VNET_SYSINIT order is the same for both functions.
In sys/net/netpfil/ipfw/ip_fw2.c and sys/net/netpfil/ipfw/ip_fw_nat.c,
IPFW_SI_SUB_FIREWALL == IPFW_NAT_SI_SUB_FIREWALL == SI_SUB_PROTO_IFATTACHDOMAIN
and
IPFW_MODULE_ORDER == IPFW_NAT_MODULE_ORDER
Consequently, if VIMAGE is enabled, and jails are created and destroyed,
the system sometimes crashes, because we are trying to use a deleted lock.
To reproduce the problem:
(1) Take a GENERIC kernel config, and add options for: VIMAGE, WITNESS,
INVARIANTS.
(2) Run this command in a loop:
jail -l -u root -c path=/ name=foo persist vnet && jexec foo ifconfig lo0 127.0.0.1/8 && jail -r foo
(see http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2010-November/021280.html )
Fix the problem by increasing the value of IPFW_NAT_SI_SUB_FIREWALL,
so that vnet_ipfw_nat_uninit() runs after vnet_ipfw_uninit().
it is all in the one place again. Rename libc/iconv/iconv.c to
bsd_iconv.c. Compile the wrappers into libc.a so that WITHOUT_DYNAMICROOT
works again.
Discussed with: kib (and partly stolen from his patch)
3-clause BSD license as specified by Oracle America, Inc. in 2010.
This license change was approved by Wim Coekaerts, Senior Vice
President, Linux and Virtualization at Oracle Corporation.
bhyve supports a single timer block with 8 timers. The timers are all 32-bit
and capable of being operated in periodic mode. All timers support interrupt
delivery using MSI. Timers 0 and 1 also support legacy interrupt routing.
At the moment the timers are not connected to any ioapic pins but that will
be addressed in a subsequent commit.
This change is based on a patch from Tycho Nightingale (tycho.nightingale@pluribusnetworks.com).
In r208160, sctp_it_ctl was made a global variable, across all VNETs.
However, sctp_init() is called for every VNET that is created. This results
in the same global mutexes which are part of sctp_it_ctl being initialized. This can result
in crashes if many jails are created.
To reproduce the problem:
(1) Take a GENERIC kernel config, and add options for: VIMAGE, WITNESS,
INVARIANTS.
(2) Run this command in a loop:
jail -l -u root -c path=/ name=foo persist vnet && jexec foo ifconfig lo0 127.0.0.1/8 && jail -r foo
(see http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-current/2010-November/021280.html )
Witness will warn about the same mutex being initialized.
Fix the problem by only initializing these mutexes in the default VNET.
commit 772d6fbcf592209aa1ab1b61714e8ae72a5b1698
Author: Dmitrij Tejblum <tejblum@yandex-team.ru>
Date: Sun Jun 2 13:48:44 2013 +0400
Convert some versions of EXTRACT_{16,32,64}BITS() to inline functions.
It removes the vast majority of strict-aliasing warnings from GCC.
The code was easier to read without __DECONST and clang didn't report
any error. I thought the cast was enough...
MFC after: 3 days
X-MFC-With: r258549
Instead of assuming that plain sh test programs exist in the source
tree in their final form and are marked as executable, generate them
from a list of sources.
By default, just assume that the source file for a program P is P.sh
but allow the caller to customize the inputs. Similarly, also allow
the caller to apply sed(1) replacements on the output. These will
both be useful in hooking existing test code from tools/regression/
into the test suite.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
This was missed when this file was first imported. Its atf.test.mk
counterpart is already being installed and these are necessary if we
want "make" within the source tree (not via "buildworld") to work.
Approved by: rpaulo (mentor)
drm_le_cmp() (qsort_r()'s callback) receives pointers to elements in the
array passed to qsort_r(), not the elements themselves.
Before this fix, the use of qsort_r() shuffled the array, not sorted it,
because the compare callback accessed random memory locations, not the
expected elements.
This bug triggered an infinite loop in KDE/xserver:
1. KDE has a kded module called "randrmonitor" which queries xserver
for current monitors at startup and then listens to RandR
notifications from xserver.
2. xserver handles the query from "randrmonitor" by polling the
video device using the "drm_mode_getconnector()" ioctl. This
ioctl returns a list of connectors and, for those with a
connected monitor, the available modes. Each modes list is sorted
by the kernel before returning. When xserver gets the connectors
list, it sorts the modes lists again.
In the case of this bug, when two modes are equal (in xserver's
compare function PoV), their order is kept stable (ie. the
kernel order is kept for those two modes). And because the list
was shuffled by the kernel, the order of two equal modes was
frequently changed in the final modes list in xserver.
3. xserver compares the returned connectors list with the list
obtained earlier. In particular, it compares the sorted
modes lists for each connector. If a property of a connector
changes (eg. modes), xserver sends a "RRNotify_OutputChange"
notification.
Because of the change of order between equal modes, xserver sent
a notification after each polling of the connectors.
4. "randrmonitor" receives a notification, triggered by its query. The
notification doesn't contain the new connectors list, therefore, it
asks for the new list using the same function: go back to step #2.
MFC after: 3 days
option, unbreak the lock tracing release semantic by embedding
calls to LOCKSTAT_PROFILE_RELEASE_LOCK() direclty in the inlined
version of the releasing functions for mutex, rwlock and sxlock.
Failing to do so skips the lockstat_probe_func invokation for
unlocking.
- As part of the LOCKSTAT support is inlined in mutex operation, for
kernel compiled without lock debugging options, potentially every
consumer must be compiled including opt_kdtrace.h.
Fix this by moving KDTRACE_HOOKS into opt_global.h and remove the
dependency by opt_kdtrace.h for all files, as now only KDTRACE_FRAMES
is linked there and it is only used as a compile-time stub [0].
[0] immediately shows some new bug as DTRACE-derived support for debug
in sfxge is broken and it was never really tested. As it was not
including correctly opt_kdtrace.h before it was never enabled so it
was kept broken for a while. Fix this by using a protection stub,
leaving sfxge driver authors the responsibility for fixing it
appropriately [1].
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon storage division
Discussed with: rstone
[0] Reported by: rstone
[1] Discussed with: philip
when there is an invalid character in the output codeset while it is
valid in the input. However, POSIX requires iconv() to perform an
implementation-defined conversion on the character. So, Citrus iconv converts
such a character to a special character which means it is invalid in the
output codeset.
This is not a problem in most cases but some software like libxml2 depends
on GNU's behavior to determine if a character is output as-is or another form
such as a character entity (&#NNN;).
Although <&0 does nothing, it is a redirection affecting standard input and
should therefore disable the </dev/null redirection implicit in a background
command.
It turned out that on pSeries machines the call into OF modified the trap
vectors and this made further behaviour unpredictable.
With this commit I'm now able to boot multi user on a network booted
environment on my IntelliStation 285. This is a POWER5+ machine.
Discussed with: nwhitehorn
MFC after: 1 week
Google released and enhanced version of gcc-4.2.1 plus their local
patches for Android[1].
The patches are owned by Google and the license hasn't been changed
from the original GPLv2. We are only bringing a subset of the
available patches that may be helpful in FreeBSD. Changes specific
to android are not included.
From the README.google file[1].
Patches applied to google_vendor_src_branch/gcc/gcc-4.2.1:
gcc/Makefile.in
gcc/c-common.c
gcc/c-common.h
gcc/c-opts.c
gcc/c-typeck.c
gcc/cp/typeck.c
gcc/doc/invoke.texi
gcc/flags.h
gcc/opts.c
gcc/tree-flow.h
gcc/tree-ssa-alias-warnings.c
gcc/tree-ssa-alias.c
Backport of -Wstrict-aliasing from mainline.
Silvius Rus <rus@google.com>
gcc/coverage.c:
Patch coverage_checksum_string for PR 25351.
Seongbae Park <spark@google.com>
Not yet submitted to FSF.
gcc/c-opts.c
gcc/c-ppoutput.c
gcc/c.opt
gcc/doc/cppopts.texi
libcpp/Makefile.in
libcpp/directives-only.c
libcpp/directives.c
libcpp/files.c
libcpp/include/cpplib.h
libcpp/init.c
libcpp/internal.h
libcpp/macro.c
Support for -fdirectives-only.
Ollie Wild <aaw@google.com>.
Submitted to FSF but not yet approved.
libstdc++-v3/include/ext/hashtable.h
http://b/742065http://b/629994
Reduce min size of hashtable for hash_map, hash_set from 53 to 5
libstdc++-v3/include/ext/hashtable.h
http://b/629994
Do not iterate over buckets if hashtable is empty.
gcc/common.opt
gcc/doc/invoke.texi
gcc/flags.h
gcc/gimplify.c
gcc/opts.c
Add Saito's patch for -finstrument-functions-exclude-* options.
gcc/common.opt
gcc/doc/invoke.texi
gcc/final.c
gcc/flags.h
gcc/opts.c
gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/Wframe-larger-than.c
Add a new flag -Wframe-larger-than- which enables a new warning
when a frame size of a function is larger than specified.
This patch hasn't been integrated into gcc mainline yet.
gcc/tree-vrp.c
Add a hack to avoid using ivopts information for pointers starting
at constant values.
Reference:
[1]
https://android.googlesource.com/toolchain/gcc/+/master/gcc-4.2.1/
Obtained from: Google Inc.
MFC after: 3 weeks
unlocking the rtld bind lock results in the processing of ast and
recursing into the check_deferred_signal(). Nested execution of
check_deferred_signal() delivers the signal to user code and clears
si_signo. On return, top-level check_deferred_signal() frame
continues delivering the same signal one more time, but now with zero
si_signo.
Fix this by adding a flag to indicate that deferred delivery is
running, so check_deferred_signal() should avoid doing anything. Since
user signal handler is allowed to modify the passed machine context to
make return from the signal handler to cause arbitrary jump, or do
longjmp(). For this case, also clear the flag in thr_sighandler(),
since kernel signal delivery means that nested delivery code should
not run right now.
Reported by: Vitaly Magerya <vmagerya@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: davidxu, jilles
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week